"Isn't There Some Other Way?" * 4r g£td~igan 43aiIZ Sixty-Eighth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Vhen Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: DIANE FRASER A Merry Christmas ToAlI, and tO Some.. . WE MUST begin this Yuletide poem Happy knitting to Assembly Association, With blessings on the Hatcher home, To IHC-Merry Re-evaluation. And to his whole administration, To Newman and his Generation: We offer- humble admiration More sell-out sales, less consternation. And hope they will bring to fruition To Gargoyle and Jean Willoughby, A stable rate in our tuition. Your Daily slam . .. we'll wait and see. To Mr. Lewis a Christmas white To Ensian and Carey Wall: (We'll read our Huxley every night A graphic Christmas to you all. That we may suffer less abuse Judicious use of alcohol At the hands of Henry Luce). To Joint Judic's Robert Stahl. To the 'U's full-Nelson, Lyle, 'V7E BID farewell to Campus Chest Christmas presents in a pile. W ErC s To or Rgent-Hapy metigs.May the student's conscience rest. To our Regents--Happy meetings. ~o Brablec. Murphy-welcome greetings. To DAC: another lease. 'To Brablu r shf r ean en"Bud" Rea: To Hillel: may you pop in peace. Our wish for Dean of Men 'Bu"Rea U coeds, a big crop of grooms; No raids to turn his few hairs grey. Apartment dwellers, warmer rooms. Dean Bacon: may the campus scenes Few Christmas cards to Campus Mails Ne'er be filled with campus queens. But to 'U' Press, big Christmas sales. Lest women's cheers mar football sport T. Hawley Tapping: Hold the fort. No more the campus scene enhance. ERI's Folsom, a wish sincere Softer chairs and louder plaids, (new president of Rensselaer). New library for undergads. May the Russel Lecture never trouble you To Morley Beckett: less Asian Flu. History's Crane, Vernor W. To Senior Board: More things to do. A headlined wish to Leland Stowe: Let's not forget the dietician, May students to your lectures go. (Lay off the food-pile on nutrition). A sunny summer for N. Ed Miller. Consolations football team, An American sputnik for astronomy's Liller Next year we'll renew the dream. To Michigamua, Vulcans, Druids Consume your share of Christmas fluids. t WE NOW extend our jolly rhyme To campus leaders in their prime. To the Big Ten, more equalization. To SGC arond the table To campus athletes, more subsidization. We wish you strength to be more able. To Eldersveld, Ann Arbor's mayor, Who bearded Bill Brown in his lair, ToJohn Joe Collins a Christmas Merry, Two years devoid of woes, dejection Although he'd rather be on safari. And filled with parks, garbage collection. Thanks for Musket, Michigras too, To every campus dog a muzzle To Don Young and his Union crew, To Stockwell girls a place to nuzzle. To Union Senate (it's brand new), * * Parliamentary problems few. WIILE winding up this Yuletide poem To the League go our congrats To you the students, heading home. For keeping stocked on Buro-cats. We hope you rest, prepared to be, To Panhel and the IFC: Filled next year with apathy. May your presents be tres tweedy. --THE DAILY STAFF THE LIFE OF CHRIST: What One Believes To The Editor9 Poor, But Winsome ". . To the Editor: IT IS AT TIMES his innate curiousity and at times his insidious nature that force man to probe the cause of an action or phenomenon. Political seers have often sought the motives behind India's policy of neutralism. One of the pet misconceptions prevalent in the Western world is that such a policy gives her a lever to play one power bloc against the other in an attempt to squeeze as much economic aid as possible from each. It is often said that this is blackmail or encouched in' terms equally derogatory. Carping critics of India have often displayed a ghoulish pleasure in their attempt to hoodwink the unwary and disparage India by this (Herbiock Is on Vacation) COPYIUJIL 1951I. Ibe kPulzer Publisbint Ce. 8t. Louis Post-Dispatch J WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Entertainers Go Abroad By DREW PEARSON I AM FLYING across the Atlantic to visit American bases in the Azores, Morocco and Libya during the Christmas season. For the last two years, a group of entertainers organized by Michael Sean O'Shea have given their time and talent to go with me to bases near the North Pole. This time we are visiting North Africa. Since this is an area where Little Rock did more damage than Sputnik, I asked Abe Saperstein, owner of the Harlem Globetrot- ters, to let them come along. Abe graciously agreed, at considerable expense to himself; so the Globe- trotters are staging some exciting basketball with the United States All - Stars in North Africa. I'll report as the trip progresses. WHILE THE statesmen debate peace or war in Paris, the boys stationed out in mid-Atlantic and on the rim of the Sahara have been carefully watching. They should. They have most at stake. If war breaks, if some trigger- happy warmonger goes on a spree, they are the guys who'll be in the thick of battle within 15 minutes. Wars have changed a lot these days. They can come quickly. They can come irresponsibly. Here are some of the things those on the front line, and we on the home line, face: Missile monkey-business - A missile expert at Cape Canaveral, CONCERNING SGC: Fla., pushed the wrong button on a Snark the other, day. He meant to change its course, but he push- ed the destroy button instead and the Snark exploded. Suppose he had pushed another wrong button and sent it into Miami, Rio de Janeiro, or Mexico City? There can be no monkey- business with missiles these days. This is the kind of pushbutton warfare Mr. Dulles wants to in- stall in West Europe. War by starvation-Civil De- fense experts estimate that if war came to the U.S.A., the population would be out of food in three weeks. The grain elevators and food warehouses in the big cities would be knocked out first. War by weather-The Russians are reported to have a secret pow- der which, sprinkled on snow and ice melts it. This could melt the polar icecaps and flood the cities . f New York, Boston and Phila- delphia. * * * - POISON AND HEAT - Even if Russia doesn't melt the icecaps, Dr. Edward Teller says we are consuming so much coal, oil and gas that carbon monoxide in the air is getting higher, while the atmosphere is getting hotter. Thus, by the year 2,000, the polar icecaps might melt from industri- al heat and gases. All of this adds up to the fact that the world is getting more crowded, more complicated, and . there's more absolute necessity to get along with each other. We've got to regulate not only such things as auto traffic and the killing of seals in the Bering Strait (which we've done on a friendly basis with Russia for 50 years), but we've also got to regu- late how much carbon monoxide we put into the air. Among other things, it causes cancer. MRS. REVA BECK BOSONE, former congresswoman from Utah has been thinking about it so much she came to see me with an idea to exchange mothers with Russia. She would pick 50 or 100 American mothers and send them for two weeks to live in Russian homes; have the same number of Russian mothers come to live in American homes. Thewomen would have to be carefully chosen. Women like Mrs. Dorothy Houghton of Red Oak, Iowa, former president of the Federation of Women's Clubs, could do a great job directing this. "Why not. give the women a chance to work for peace?" says Mrs. Bosone. "They bring sons in- to the world, see them march off as soldiers. They have to bear the hardest brunt of war. If the moth- ers of Russia and the United States could get together and un- derstand each other, they could end war." (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate Inc.) analogy of blackmail to describe her policy. However, India's policy and her thought come much closer to another analogy than to that of blackmail. There is a very poor but win- some girl. Two rich men, with an ancient enemity between them, are wooing her for her affection. However, the girl does not love either of them. She finds good and bad qualities in both of them and so cares enough for both of them, to be their friend and to help them resolve their enmity. HER POVERTY forces her to go to one of the men and say, "Listen, I badly need some help, please give me some gifts. Re- member, however, the condition that even if you help me, I will still be the other man's friend too as I am yours. If you have some altruist interest in me, help me." If the man refuses, without the least hatred against him and still preserving her same old feelings for him, she now goes to the other man and makes the same request with the identical condition at- tached to it. At times both of them help her, at times only one helps her and at times none. NOW ONE of the men commits a heinous crime. The other man, because of his ancient enemity with that man, immediately asks her to condemn him outright and to renounce him. Though she condemns him for his crime yet she refuses to con- demn him outright and to re- nounce him totally, feeling that such downright condemnation and renunciation will do no good and she attempts to reform him and to bring' him on the right path again-all the time being a friend to both of the men and trying to resolve their feud. She would have done the same thing if the other man had com- mitted that crime instead of the first man. It is superfluous to explain the characters in the analogy - the girl is India, the two rich hostile men are U.S.A. and the Soviet Union and the heinous crime re- ferred to is the ruthless suppres- sion of the Hungarian Freedom Fight by Russia last year and In- dia's reaction and stand on it in the United Nations. -Thomas S. David, Grad. Fallacies To the Editor: FEEL that there are some Seri- ous fallacies in the Arab Club's letter concerning the Palestinian refugee problem. In this connec- tion several pertinent issues should be discussed. Israel is a small country about the size of Connecticut: Support- ing a million and a half refugees or ever a fraction of this number would severely strain the economy of a country of such small size. Already Israel is taking in enor- mous numbers of Jews from Eu- rope, Soviet Union, and North African countries. More important, one out of every nine Israelis is an Arab. To increase this ratio would create a dangerous fifth column which no country could tolerate. * * * NO ONE is proposing that the Indians be given back their for- mer land. Similarly, the State of Israel is a fait accompli. Israel is under no obligation to give these refugees their former properties. Israel has repeatedly offered to aid in resettling the Palestinian refugees in the various Arab coun- tries. This offer has been adam- antly declined by the refugees themselves and by those seeking to make political capital of their plight.+ These refugees left' Israel of their own accord during the War of Independence in 1948. They felt confident that the Arabs would win. After the Jews had been driven into the sea, they planned to return. Now they compound their troubles by refusing resettle- ment. It is a problem of their own making. fDILY I FFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editori- al responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- Ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1957 VOL. LXVII, NO. 77 General Notices Regents' Meeting: Fri., Jan. 10: Com munications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than Tues., Dec. 31. Late Permission: Women students who attended the hockey game on Tines. night, Dec. 17, had late permis- sion until 11:05 p.m. Library Hours for Christmas Vacation The General Library and its branches will be open on regularly scheduled hours until noon Sat., Dec. 21, when the Christmas recess officially begins. The General Library will observe the following schedule during the holiday period: Open: Sat., Dec. 21; Mon. Dec. 23; Thur. and Fri., Dec. 26 and 27 Open: Sat., Dec. 21 - 8:00 a.m. - 1 noon. Mon., Dec. 23, Thurs. and Fri., Dec. 26 and 27, Mon. and Tues., Dec. 30 and 31; Thurs. and Fri., Jan. 2 and 3- 8:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Closed: Sat., Dec. 21 after 12 noon, through Sun., Dec. 22; Tues., and Wed., Dec. 24 and 25.; Sat. and Sun., Dec. .2 and 29; Wed., Jan. 1; Sat. and Sun., Jan. 4 and 5, January Graduates may order caps and gowns from Moe's Sport Shop on North University, The Mary L. Hinsdale Scholarship amounting to $142.20 (interest on the endowment fund) is available to single undergraduate women who are wholly or partially self-supporting and who do not live in University residence halls or sorority houses. Single girls with better than average scholarship and need will be considered. Application blanks obtainable at the Alumnae Council Office, Michigan Laue, should be filed by Jan. 10, 1958. Summary, action taken by Student Government Council at its meeting held December 18, 1957. Approved: Minutes of previous meet- ing as amended(p. S1add "one mem- ber from The Daily Business staff" to composition of committee to study pos- sibility of compiling student opinions of courses.) Appointed: Student Course Evalua- tion Committee: Maynard Goldman, chairman, Ron Gregg, Vernon Narh- gang, Mort Wise. Student Participation Committee: Linda Rainwater, PeteaEck- stein. Ron Gregg, Mort Wise, Board In Review: Janet Neary. Announced: Appointment of Phil Zook as manager of the Student Book Exchange. Appointed: To Cinema Guild Board: Donna Wickham, chairman, Rosalind Farris, Dan Scholzman, Sherryl Givel- her, Howard Nack. To Human Relations Board: Joan Rod- man, Elizabeth Uchitelle, Barry Key- fetz. Received: Campus Chest report, prog- ress report of the Counselling Study Committee. Approved motion to apply for mem- bership in the Chamber of Commerce, with the president of SGC to serve as representative to that organization. Approved proposal for the organiza- tion of fund drives as follows: In the second semester ofseach year, the Stu- dent Government Council will formu- late the calendar of drives for the fol- lowing year. Requests for inclusion on this calendar shall be submitted on the petition form to SGC's calendar- ingecommittee before May. The Drives Calendar is subject to approval of the Council. Drives may, only under un- usual circumstances, petition the Council for a drive after the calendar is approved. There will be a limit of four drives per year. Tabled until the next meeting a mo. tion providing that the Executive Com- mittee, with the approval of the Coun- cil,tappoint at the next meeting a com- mittee of six Council members, work. ing in cooperation with the Interfra- ternity Council and the Panhelleni Association to study progress made in recent years in the area of fraternity and sorority membership restrictions and report to the Council at the meet- ing of February 13 on the facts and on possible Council policy in this area. Approved activities sponsored by stu- dent organizations as follows: Cinema Guild "Name the Flicks Con- test" December 12-Jan. 12 (Interim action) Dec. 18 J-Hop Fashion show, League Ballroom (Interim action); Jan. 11 Intercooperative Council, Torn Lehrer, Jo Mapes show, AAHS; Jan, 9 Political Issues Club, discussion What's Ahead for Labor?" Union; March 14 Apothecary Ball, League 9-12 Men's Glee Club, Mid-Year and Spring Tour programs. Additions and changes to calendar: Feb. 16-Mar. 2 Fraternity Rushing; Mar. 29 Business Admin. dance(change from Mar. 22); March 15 Model United Na- tions (afternoon). Academic Notices Seminar in Mathematical Statistics Mon.,Jan. 6, at 2 p.m. in Room 3209 A.H. G. P. Patil will speak on "Two- Moment-Estimates in Truncated Bi- nominals." Interdepartmental Seminar on Ap- plied Meteorology: Engineering. Mon., Jan. 6, 4 p.m., Room 307, West Engi- I: a ,2 i (EDITOR'S. NOTE - History paid no heed to the manger in Bethlehem - until, with the passage of time, "the greatest force that ever swept the planet" captured the souls of millions. The following ac- count by AP religion writer George Cornell probes some aspects of the mystery, and is a confession or one man's faith.) By GEORGE W. CORNELL Associated Press Religion Writer N O MONUMENT was raised to mark the place. No ancient registrar put down the. time. No magistrate proclaimed the day. No minstrels sang. No banners flew. No sculptor even carved the name. The world took no notice then, when Jesus Christ was born. It was a modest, quiet affair. And yet, for centuries afterward, the bells have rung, the poets sung, and holly hung from hearths of homes around the earth. The nights and lace, and tabernacles throb with "Hallelujah!" But back there when it all began, few cared, or even knew. Other matters seemed more crucial, then, more real, direct and absolute - the size of armies, strength of borders, power 'of thrones,, control of commerce, grasps for fortune, fame and property. With all of this, how be con- cerned about some child, or why? SO HISTORY paid no heed. It turned its head, and thought topass Him by. Yet strangely and bewilderingly, from that ignored event, from what seemed almost noth- ingness to nations and to men, from that in- credible old stable, there rose the greatest force that ever swept this planet. ".. . the Light of the World." Some cynics say that Jesus never actually was born. They say the books and stones and records current at that time don't mention him. It's all just make-believe, they say, a Editorial Staff PETER ECKSTEIN. Editor JAMES ELSMAN, JR. VERNON NAHRGANG Editorial Director City Editor DONNA HANSON.................Personnel Director TAMMY MORRISON...............Magazine Editor EDWARD GERULDSEN .. Associate Editorial Director WILLIAM HANEY,................. Features Editor ROSE PERLBERG................Activities Editor CAROL PRINS ......... Associate Personnel Director JAMES BAAD ......................... Sports Editor BRUCE BENNETT ............ Associate Sports Editor JOHN HILLYER .............Associate Sports Editor CHARLES CURTISS.............Chief Photographer mammoth legend that has captured people ever since. A curious notion, that, amid the sparkle, stir and deep-felt sentiment that culminates next week into the grandest birthday jubilee of all --the glad exuberance of Christmas. "For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour which is Christ the Lord . .." yET, you hear it nowand then, the question- ing of data. They cite the standard kind of evidence, all quite correct. It's true the tomes, the tablets and inscriptions of that day don't bear the name of Jesus. Berlin's Academy compiled 8,- 000 names preserved from Jesus' time, and his was not among theli. "And she brought forth her first-born son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger ...- Oddly, though, from that same day, an old inscription marks the birth of one called "God of Gods." But naturally it wasn't about Jesus. The world then, as usual, was preoccupied with what seemed weightier things. And so the scholars wrote of Caesars. "The birthday of God, the Emperor Augus- tus. " "Heaven and earth shall pass away: but My words shall never pass away." B UT THERE'S no record left, they say, no :court decree, no papers, no certificate or oath. Yes, it's technically correct, the Gospels even were not written in Christ's day. Not for about 30 years thereafter. His birth, His life, His meaning lived by spoken words, by faith and fervor - not by books or buildings. But those who niggle at the record choose to disregard the Gospels - calling them the preachments of impassioned partisans - not the sound, objective lines of history. Well, it's absolutely so. The publishers of Jesus' day, whoever they might be, did not see fit to elevate the Nazarene into their chronicles and rosters. It took some time, as always for balanced history, before it saw the truth aris- ing from the past. "For nothing is covered, that shall not be re- vealed; neither hid, that shall not be known." Josephus, in his famed first-century "An- tiquities," says that during Pilate's rule, there was a man named "Jesus . . , a doer of most wondrous works." A spurious passage, say the cynics. Perhaps. But then in quite another place, of undis- puted authenticity, Josephus tells how James, "the brother of Jesus, called the Christ," v, V Council Debates Bias Investigation, By JOHN WEICHER Daily Staff Writer WEDNESDAY night's Student Government Council meeting included almost a minor filibuster over a motion to create a commit- tee to look into progress in remov- ing fraternity and sorority mem- bership restrictions. Inter-Fraternity Council Pres-. ident Rob Trost talked several times on the question, until final- ly Union President Don Young and Scott Chrysler said the sub- ject had been run into the ground and should be brought to a vote. However, the Council could not muster the necessary two-thirds majority to close debate. Seven members voted against calling the question on the last vote, thus continuing discussion of the mo- tion, which was finally tabled aft- er 45 minutes of discussion. *'* * EARLIER, before debate opened, Peter Eckstein, co-sponsor of the motion, offered to table it for a week because of the short length of time between prepara- tion of the motion and the meet- ing. The offer was not accepted until it was repeated 45 minutes later. In those 45 minutes, Trost stressed the point that IFC and Panhellenic Association could pro- vide the Council with whatever facts it wanted in regard to re- moval of restrictions on member- ship. Only four camnus fraterni- of the motion, said the intent of the motion was also to go into the progress of the educational cam- paign urged by University Presi- dent Harlan Hatcher five years ago. Campus Chest also came in for a solid hour's debate. A motion by E x e c u t i v e Vice-President Ron Shorr establishing a drive for next year which would not be the only fund drive on campus, but would be open to charities wishing to join and receive calendaring pri- ority, was amended several times, in the process of which the con- cept of a Campus Chest run by SGC was dropped completely. The Council discussed permit- ting charities which had been re- jected for Campus Chest member- ship to petition for separate drives, until Administrative Vice- President Maynard Goldman pointed out that no more than four or five campus drives would seek recognition in the foreseeable future. ** * THESE DRIVES had been op- erating on campus for years and would continue, he said, without any additional ones being set up. At this point, Treasurer Scott Chrysler suggested that the ma- jor drives (Galens and the Fresh Air Fund) could handle their own solicitations very well without a unified drive, and the smaller charities could form a joint drive failure it was often termed and was gaining momentum, Young perhaps voiced the feeling of most SGC members (and many stu- dents) by saying Campus Chest had aroused more animosity than goodwill. Perhaps, as Goldman said, there is no need for a drive when there are only four or five charities on campus, as contrasted with Ann Arbor United Fund's 44. SGC closed members' time to the public at Wednesday's meet- ing. The Council did this simply by adjourning without having members' time and then discuss- ing matters informally after the meeting. Several members of the Council had expressed dissatisfaction with being quoted in The Daily on what, they said during members' time. SGC took-the view that members' time was for the use of members and not the student body. In it, members may comment on any- thing that strikes their fancy, al- though their remarks usually con- cern the evening's meeting. LAST WEEK, for instance, As- sembly President Marg Brake ex- plained her vote against the Con- gregational and Disciples Student Guild petition on residence halls integration in members' time. In all, members spent an hour last week on this part of the meeting. .x.' 1< -Bennett1 P.S. - Egypt recently her Jewish population. L. Fox expelled Protest Day . . To the Editor: WITH reference to your Decem- ber 10th editorial: December 10 - Human Rights Day -- was