1, 1 Sixty-Eighth Year -____1hF; EDITED AND MANAGED BY ;STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Nhen Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail") STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. The Down-To-Earth Missile Race ,$ -- - *t . - f .rx '" k _ LYDIA MENDELSSOHN: "Desire' Enjoyable, Competent Production "DESIRE UNDER THE ELMS," Eugene O'Neill's great psychological tragedy of love and hate conflict, opened last evening in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre as a competent and thoroughly enjoyable pro- duction. As the second production in the current season of the speech de- partment's laboratory playbill, the play is most indebted for Its suc- cess to the fine, sensitive performance of Miss Bea Minkus, in the role of sensuous young -Abbie. Miss Minkus' acting was more than compe- tent. She displayed talent which is already richly developed, and which shows potential for much further enrichment. "Desire Under the Elms" has been described as O'Neill's most out- standing example of both perfection of execution and greatness. As in many of O'Neill's works, the play is built on several levels at the IDAY, DECEMBER 6.1957 NIGHT EDITOR: RICHARD TAUB Sorority, Independent Women Prove 'Honor' at Three-Fifths Mark W EDNESDAY'S SORORITY rushing meeting saw Panhellenic's honor code successfully ass the three-fifths mark in its test run. Much credit goes to the drivers, affiliated and dependent women, but equal praise is in ore for its engineer-Panhel. Last May, when the fact that rush would be eld in the spring was established beyond all oubt, the problem of contact rules between filiates and independents arose. Until this ar, rush had been a fall phenomenon. A arch 1956 Student Government Council deci- on changed rush, beginning 1957-58, to the iring. In smoke-filled Panhel delegate meetings, the les' aspect was hashed and re-hashed. On mpus it was number one conversation topic coed's coffee-breaks, and around the dinner ,bles. Women had "valid" support for their >inions which ranged from the strict one of o affiliate-independent contact to its no- striction-at-all opposite. After one especially harrowing session, Panhel 'ew a deep breath, summoned a surprising fount of courage and endorsed an honor code. hie code allowed independents to yisit friends' sorority houses and vice-versa as long as no ,tempt ,to pre-rush was made. Pre-rush was Mined as persuading a woman to join a given use or notifying an independent that a house ould like to pledge her. Both active and umnae sorority women were included in the ile. HE CODE was more than the no-rule pro- ponents had bargained for. But more im- portant, it showed that for once Panhel had the guts to follow through on what it really be- lieved, taking a firm stand in the midst of strong opposition, instead of enacting one of its usual wishy-washy "compromises." It showed most of all that Panhel was finally mature enough to act meaningfully, a fact many people on campus doubted. Panhel took a risk in setting up the code. Its new-found forcefulness was admirable, but if the code didn't work the organization's stock would have fallen and the chance of its ever sticking out its neck again would be very slim. Panhel was gambling on the integrity of Uni- versity women, especially its own, for affiliates, being better acquainted with the rules, had less excuse for breaking them. It put its chips on belief and trust in their honor. So far their faith can remain unshaken. Panhel President Marilyn Houck reports no violations in the three months the code has been in effect. Affiliated women have enjoyed free contact with independent friends. Best of all, there has been no undue emphasis on rushing. With a semester between the beginning of school and the beginning of rush, the rage to rush could have reached exaggerated propor- tions, a situation hardly comfortable for both sides, before, during and after rush. The honor code still has a good part of its course to cover. We hope we can say the same complimentary things about itFebruary 7, that we say today. -ROSE PERLBERG Activities Editor It I1 I . - , o y 1 t Z ^^.r tS':- {!:v , +L , F^ .: . . (Herblock Is on Vacation) Copyright. 1957. The Pulitzer Publishing CO. St. Louis Post-Dispatch III WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Goody Knight Bows Out By DREW PEARSON same time. O'Neill thought of ita also strong elements of regional folk drama, and of both expres- sionistic and naturalistic influ- ence. And like almost all of O'Neill's plays, the action centers about the lives of a small group of people caught in a web of tor- menting and conflicting relation- ships. The plot is based un an Oedi- pal conflict between young Eben and his senile but tyrannical father, Ephraim, which is furth- er . complicated by Ephraim's young bride Abbie, toward whom Eben is intensely attracted and yet at the same time repulsed. BEGINNING rather slowly, last evening's production Immediately warmed with the first appearance of Miss Minkus, and remained, with few exceptions, at a high dy- namic level until the final curtain. Howard Poyourow, in the role of Eben, gave a laudable perform- ance, which improved as the play progressed. Brendan O'Reilly, as Ephraim, offered what seemed to be an un- fortunate interpretation- of the aging father. He teetered and tot- tered around the stage until he appeared to be quite on the verge of falling into his grave. Such ex- aggeration of the senility of old Ephraim almost completely over- shadowed his domineering and vindictive qualities, and especially the turmoil of his own inner con- flicts. Had O'Reilly simply refrained from continuously weaving back and forth in an inebriated man- ner, his performance might well have been greatly improved. * * * SATISFACTORY performances were also given by Norman Hart- Weg and Fred Ashley, as Eben's brothers, although Ashley was rather awkward in his dialect speech. Incidentally, while leaving the theatre, the reviewer overheard the following comment from one of the "first-nighters" behind. him: "When the Daily review of this comes out, just take the re- verse of everything it says, and you'll have the truth." Maybe so . . . I hope not. -Dale McGhee to the EDITOR Open House in Our Town TO A GREAT MANY STUDENTS at the Uni- versity, the city government consists of the policemen who warn them against riding their bicycles down the wrong side of the street. As far as they are concerned, this is the sum of the activities carried on at City Hall. Of course, the city government does .more han this; to show just how much more, it is Iolding an Open House today and tomorrow at which the branches of the government will ixplain and demonstrate precisely what 'they do. Students are residents of Ann Arbor, how- ver seldom they may think of themselves as uch, and they are invited. The idea of having an Open House is ex- ellent. Ann Arbor is one of the fastest growing ities in the nation, and it is consequently faced vith new, acute problems. Citizens and students ften notice the failures of the administration n such a situation, rather than its continuing unctioning. By presenting the activities and nethods of the city government, the Open louse will explain the problems with which it must deal to the public and contribute to great- er understanding and good feeling on the part of citizens, who should then realize, for ex- ample, why the leaves aren't picked up im- mediately every fall. THIS SAME UNDERSTANDING among the students should be developed and the Open House is probably the best method of doing this. There are a large number of- offices in the building, many of which deal in services that are important to students as well as year- round residents, but the former seem to have no interest in the government. Students can learn much by dropping over to City Hall either today or tomorrow. The build- ing is within 15 minutes' walk of the main campus; even the most apathetic should find something interesting among the displays. And they would discover; perhaps to their surprise, that the city does much more for them than issue traffic tickets. -JOHN WEICHER L OS ANGELES - J. Goodwin Knight, Governor of Califor- nia, paced the floor of the ancient, gabled executive mansion in Sac- ramento. His fists were clenched. His expression was not happy. "I cleaned up the Samish liquor license scandals," he told friends who sat watching his tense pac- ing. "I cleaned up the Gus John- son banking mess. There hasn't been one taint of scandal or dis- honesty connected with my ad- ministration. Yet they won't give me a second term. "I kept peace between labor and management," he continued. "But they won't give me a second term. "True, I haven't got water for 'em. But only God can give us water, and short of God I did my best. I'm ready to call a special session of the Legislature tomor- row to consider water, There isn't a thing I haven't done for the state and people of California." THE GOVERNOR of California is a lonely man these days. He is also a sad and shamed man. What he said is true. He has conducted an honest administration. He has been a good governor. And the manner in which they deprived him of a second term goes to the roots of the worst in- fluence in American politics today -money. It's a fact that a few wealthy men can pick who runs for governor or the Senate in many states of the union. Since the age of 19, Goody's great ambition had been to be governor of California. He had been a good governor. Yet he couldn't be governor any more. The big bankers, the big-money boys he had counted on for cam- paign funds had shut off his water. They favored the Nixon- arranged deal to make Senator Knowland the next Governor Forty years before, another governor of California had paced the floor of the same ancient, gabled executive mansion in Sac- ramento. He was Hiram Johnson, and he, too, had been challenged by the big-money boys of Cal- ifornia. They then operated under the name of "The Southern Pacific Machine," and they, too, decreed who should sit in the governor's mansion in Sacramento. They op- posed Hiram Johnson but, unlike Goody Knight, Hiram refused to bow. He accepted the challenge, and with the help of William Ran- dolph Hearst, routed the big- money bosses. * * * THAT VICTORY helped to bring about the direct primary, by which politicaldcandidates were nominated by direct vote of the people, not by a few men sitting in banks or railroad offices or smoke-filled rooms. Thirty years before, in 1927, an- other prominent ?Republican fought the party bosses, this time in the Senate, and this time in Pennsylvania, not California. He was George Wharton Pepper, not- ed Philadelphia Lawyer, who battled against William Vare, GOP boss of Philadelphia, for a seat in the U.S. Senate. By this time the direct primary was in operation. Vare, sitting in a smoke-filled room, could not pick himself for the Senate. But he could spend the money to in- fluence or buy his seat in the Sen- ate. He spent plenty. Some people estimated it at around $200.400. Vare won. But public opinion revolted. They recognized this as a fla- grant violation of the direct pri- mary. The party boss who couldn't pick himself for the Senate had bought himself into the Senate. And the Senate, refusing to have its seats bought and bar- tered, voted 58 to 22 to bar Vare from taking his seat. Gov. Goody Knight, arriving in Washington to formally announce, his bow to the big-money bosses, registered at the same hotel on the same night with George Wharton Pepper, gnarled, frail, and 90. He came to Washington to receive a tribute from old friends. Bent in body but not in spirit, he had been defeated by the bosses, but never bowed to them. - * * . * GOODY KNIGHT called at the White House that day, conferredI with Nixon and bowed. He bowed out of the race for governor of California. On the surface, he may have been right. He knew that a million dollars had been spent in the last campaign to elect Knowland to the Senate, and that Knowland would have at least a million to back him for governor. He might have remembei ed that Hiram Johnson bucked the bosses and won. He might also have re- membered how Harry Truman in 1948 bucked the bankers and the big-money boys and also won. But if he did remember, he didn't follow their example. Gov- ernor Knight bowed out. (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) as classical tragedy, but there are AT THE STATE: Flying Spectacle F OR REASONS- best known to those more familiar with the Far East than I, the Japanese have entered into the flying rat race with a monster out of the coal mines. "Rodan" is an all-Japanese cre- ation, with cleverly dubbed-in voices, and has some of the most realistic scenes of destruction since Gargoyle sales day. Bodies are thrown about with abandon, blood is spattered, cliffs are exploded, rockets fire, volcanoes erupt, and bombs burst in air, And all in rea- sonably wide screen color. Curiously enough, an atomic blast awakens a hundred-ton bird to fly at supersonic speeds in the eastern skies, to the dismay of thousands. But is it eventually wiped out-just as you thought the film would never end. * * * IT MUST be said that the pro- ducers of "Rodan" have handled their admittedly banal subject with less than the usual care: there are no pretty-girl scientists, no boy wonders from college who tell off the Army, no bearded pro- fessors who put together a ray gun from an old radar set and an ice cream freezer. The actors, in their usual Japan- ese way, are more than exotic. The heroine is most interesting Al- though quiet and, for the most part, not on the scene. The only amusing part of this horror spectacular (n technicolor, no less) was when the monster's victims (or their remains) were hauled into the autopsy room for examination. It presents an inter- esting interpretation of Japanese medical procedure, even down to the affable, balding whitecoats. Texas was never like this, even in the travelogues. * * * BUT "RODAN" is more or less straight documentary, and gains much from this. All producers of Hollywood science-fiction-trash might well sit through this film a few times before gassing us all some more. If the fatalistic philosophy of "Rodan" upsets audiences some- what, movie-goers should still be fascinated by the many fine, gruesome effects. The so-called short subject, "Deep Adventure" is something else again. Note carefully the time schedule to avoid this spectacle which combined the dullness of an SGC meeting, the greasiness of Union food, and the banality of the travel agencies in - one un- shapely package -David Kessel DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 3) training program, you will be consid- ered for employment and if accepted, will be assigned to a base station. U. S. Marine Corps - See Tuesday's listings. For appointments contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin., Bldg., ext. 3371. Summer Placement: Ken Smith of Camp Charlevoix, Michigan will be at the summer place- ment office in the Student Activities Bldg. on Fri., Dec. , 8:30-12 a.m., to interview for boys' counselors. Miss Helen Anderson of the Grand Rapids, Michigan, Camp Fire Girls will be at the summer placement office on Sat., Dec. 7, 10-lg a.m. to interview girls for camp counselor positions. There will be a meeting open to all who are interested in any phase of camping at the Ann Arbor High School, Sat., Dec. 7, beginning at 8:30 a.m. There will be coffee and rolls, and an opportunity for camp owners, directors, and counselors to discuss their prob- lems with others in the same field. The only ticket required is a name tag with your address, camp affiliation, a camp idea, and a camp question. For further information contact Mr. Peterson at Ext. 3371, or go in person to D528, SAB, Tues. or Thurs, 1-5, or on Fri., 8:30712. Personnel Requests: Hap Byers Photography, Portage Lake, Mich. is looking for a Sales Manager I i $ t f K ; 1 :f 4 INTERPRETING THE NEWS: i The Impasse in Algeria Too Far To the Editor: 0 By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst FRANCEIS WILLING to give Algeria a con- siderable autonomy under a federal sys- tem, but all the arguments in the United Na- tions and elsewhere are not going to produce independence an any forseeable future. The reason is not colonialism. From the standpoint of colonialism, which connotes exploitation, Algeria has never been profitable. It is a poor country, with nothing to export except wines, which compete with French wines, a few fruits and early vegetables. France, in a sort of aid program, buys the ex- ports at prices higher than world levels. There is no market for them elsewhere. In addition, she makes a contribution of about 70 million dollars a year to Algeria's public services. Oil has now been found in the Sahara Desert, which lies in southern Algeria and other French African territories. Southern Algeria is only ' nominally a part of the area which is in revolt. BUT FRENCH policy toward Algeria was es- tablished before the presence of the oil was known. The reason for it is 1,200,000 residents of French extraction, 90 per cent of whom were born there, and 80 per cent of whose parents were born there, some of whose families go back to the 16th century. There is also, of course, fear of Communist infiltration into an unstable country, and the strategic location of North Africa for Europe's defense. There is France's long-standing con- sideration that Algeria is a part of France. It was there that the Free French made their headquarters prior to liberation of Metropolitan France in World War II. The sentiment runs deep. France believes most of the natives are with her for two reasons'. One is that they want an end to terror and a resumption of normal business. The other is that France has offered free elections, after a cease-fire, for establishment rebels don't know they would lose, don't they accept? . The Assembly, under the plan, would elect representatives to negotiate Algeria's future with France. The rebels say: "Independence first." THE REPLY of the Arab world to France's claim that Algeria is a part of France and its residents are French citizens is a question, "Do we look like Frenchmen?" The Arab world is bitter against France for not recognizing the "personality" of Algeria. To the Arabs, France's position that she cannot abandon 1,200,000 Europeans, mostly of French extractin, to the political mercies of eight times as many Arabs, is an excuse. They cite the equal treatment received by French colonials in Morocco and Tunisia, recently giv- en independence, where the proportions are about the same. On the citizenship matter, the Arabs, both Algerian and non-Algerian, assert that France has never treated them as equals, nor Algeria as an integral part of France. They cite a resolution offered in the U.S. Senate by John F. Kennedy calling on the United States to put her influence behind rec- ognition of the "independent personality of Algeria." The Arabs complain that France is so de- termined to repress their nationalist desires that she even refuses to permit the teaching of Arabic in the government schools, except as a second language in the French schools. THE FRENCH-ALGERIAN trouble goes back to the Napoleanic Wars, when the Dey of Algiers loaned wheat to France. There was a disagreement over the method of payment. During an argument, the Dey tapped the French consul's face with a little fly-whisk. The consul continued the conference, but France took it as an insult to her national honor. Being engaged in a colonial adventure in large areas of Africa, France finally worked the incident into what the Encyclopedia Brit- COUNCIL COMMENTARY: SGC Drops J-Hop Elections By RICHARD TAUB Daily Staff Writer WEDNESDAY was an eventful night for Student Government Council. The Council recommended that the Literary college adopt a more precise marking system, dropped a suggested plan for Student Book Exchange next semester, set up a committee to look into the possi- bilities of a student bookstore, and decided that J-Hop central com- mittee would not be chosen by all- campus elections. The Council also had what sev- eral members of the group called its first fillibuster. The first came after thorough debate, and it was passed on a close vote. But more important' the decision proved that SGC could approach an academic area with really mature consideration. One spectator commented after the meeting, "I did not know that SGC debated on such a high plain." It also represented one of the few real debates all year. PLANS FOR a Student Book would be taking a great financial risk. Cost of credit slips would probably reach $5,000. Zobk also suggested a paid staff of clerks. The Council was op- posed to this also, because of un- necessary expense. The exchange lost more than $200 this fall. Don , Young, Union president, moved that SGC's Student Activi- ties Committee look into the pos- sibility of a student bookstore. The store would carry school supplies and new books. Committees have looked into this problem before, and have always run up against Regents disapproval. The Regents have a policy of non - competition with local merchants. However, Young pointed out that the last time the Regents dis- approved the plan was in 1947. He suggested that there might be a change in attitude because of the increased costs of education. He also said the Union might be willing to provide the space and funds for such a store. The lack of these things in the past has also been a factor in Regental disap- proval. bourne and Bert Getz were those opposed. However, immediately after the second motion to close debate was defeated, Trost who had voted against closing, left the room, and a quick motion to close debate ended discussion. The idea had been considered because the elections committee found that J-Hop elections at the. same time as the SGC elections caused confusion and numerous other difficulties. Other Council members could not see the reasoning behind cen- tral committee elections. They said one could not tell a person's qualifications to run a dance through an all-campus election. Lois Wurster said that several other groups appointed the cen- tral committees to succeed them, and that these people were better qualified to judge on other's quali- fications. * * * DON YOUNG said that J-Hop was a service organization, as the Union or the League, whose offi- cers are not picked in all-campus elections, while organizations like SGC were legislative and should SGC HAS finally gone too far. The political geniuses of SGC are all ready to sit back and watch the Galens Annual Christmas Drive fall flat as a result of their ban on any collections on any campus area - including dormi- tories and State Street. It's interesting to note that enough people have found the Galens work worthwhile for many years (about 30) to make the an- nual Christmas Drive a success year after year. - SGC used a partial ban last year, but judging fromethe extended ban in 1957, Galens must have helped too many kids in the hos- pital during the last year in spite of SOC. Lets face it-the SGC Campus Chest Drive has been a flop--why should Galens lose their identity and effectiveness by being forced to join a losing cause? I'm not sure how other people feel, but I resent seeing SGC hin- der an extremely worthy cause when they have so little to offer. -P. F. Jewell, '58Med. Figures ... e Editor: I WAS quite impressed by a cer- tain figure quoted- by Mr. Ger- uldsen . hir December 4 editorial concerning the arms race. Th6e figure I refer to is th- one which stated that Russia has 175 "highly mobile, well-trained and equipped" divisions while the United States has only 17. This figure ignores two out- standing facts. The first is the "citizen-soldier" concept of the U. S. Army, which keeps a small num- ber of men on active duty, while having a large trained manpower pool in reserve. Any of several guard units and reserve units in the United States could go into r ' 9 -v ,_ 0 ;:A- ;s . I