TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29,195S_ a TWfl TIlE MICli1GAI~ DAILY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1955 Sixty-Fifth 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 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. This must be noted in all reprints. GORFREY TO OPERA TO GODFREY: by Pay Money if You Can Get It re Traveling Papers i r f } :' ;r_ . f : ,C 4, -- «ss Helen Keller's Birthday: A Meaningful Reminder 1 RECENTLY A considerable amount of public R interest has been stirred up over so-called subscription television; a system by which TV viewers pay for viewing certain features if they so choose. In practice, viewers would get or buy a de- codin gmachine worth $50-$100 which would be attached to their set. Also a punched card which when inserted in this machine would unscramble the signal so the subscription TV shows could be seen. Every month or so, the cards would be sent back to some distributor with a check or cash or boxtops depending on how often the card was used, and a new card would be sent out. In this way, so one is told, a really discriminating TV lover could avoid low-grade comedies, insipid variety shows, put- rid quiz programs, and the like, while also missing out on the unmentionable advertising which accompanies most TV. The subscription TV owner would have a reasonably steady diet of New York Philhar- monic, championship prize fights, first run theatre, and perhaps a choice bit of burlesque from time to time. The process, so say its sup- porters, is extremely democratic, since any- one who can't afford or doesn't want subscrip- tion TV could always turn to Ed Sullivan, This Is Your Life, One Man's Family, Dragnet, for free. A recent poll of Saturday Review of Litera- ture readers found them in favor of subscrip- Detroit tion TV by something like 3 or 4 to 1. However, it must be emphasized that Saturday Review readers are not by any means what one might call "average," but they do perhaps represent a significant minority. CHAMPIONSHIP prize fights are already televised by the Theatre Network Televi- sion people; one pays at the theatre box office to see these. The step from this to home sub- scription television is obviously a small one. But anyone who proposes putting first run films on subscription TV forgets the trend to cinemascope and color. And the argument that annoying advertising is eliminated by subscrip- tion TV seems somewhat less impressive when one considers that any competent radio re- pairman can install a "commercial-killer" on your set for $10. Perhaps subscription TV would pay enough to make TV presentations of the Metropolitan Opera, New York Philharmonic, Boston Sym- phony, Boston Symphony, May Festival or what have you possible. But it does seem un- likely that these people are going to clutter up their auditoriums with cameras and bright lights so that the card-punchers can escape Godfrey for an hour. Still, stranger things have happened. All things considered, though, one soemhow gets the feeling that sooner or later, subscription TV will tend to grab the programs which have highest appeal, in order to pay off the rather large investment necessary for all these decoding machines. In that case, Sat- urday Review readers might suddenly find the Opera and Symphony being broadcast free for them, while the people down the street have to pay $1.98 to see I Love Lucy. An unlikely pros- pect. One feature of subscription TV which should not be overlooked is the challenge of this de- coding problem to engineers and physicists. Surely no good electrical engineer is going to let someone charge him $1.52 to synchronize a video signal. A vast market is open for boot- leg decoders. One idea already suggested is that all the neighbors agree to paint the neigh- borhood electrical engineer's house and he, in turn, agrees to provide them with free decoded TV signals. No doubt some form of subscription TV will eventually be available. American enterprise never neglects a potential consumer. However it appears unlikely that the programs offered will be much if any improvement over the pre- sent conglomeration, or that the Symphony, Opera, and Theatre will be presented with any greater frequency than at present. Somehow, the idea of television, with its barnlike sound and overall poor picture quality on screens of limited size, has never seemed to be the ultimate form of communication. More- over, as Lord Russel said, "you always have to be looking at the damned thing." If the sub- scription TV money were spent on high quality FM, it might be perhaps most wisely spent. If you really want to see the Symphony or the Theatre or the May Festival, why not just go. And leave the FM set turned on for the people who just want to hear. For those who want neither to see nor hear, there will always be television. -David Kessel VV a -yi By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst T MUST HAVE been something like 40 years ago that my fa- ther took me to see Helen Keller at the Auditorium in Asheville, N.C. I was more interested in snakes and bicycles than in culture, but my father was a schoolmaster and when anything cultural came to town he went, and, perforce, so did I. The storybook line for the result is that I should have been greatly impressed for life by the brave struggle and achievements of this woman. The truth is that I then was just bored. I could conceive of what it meant to be blind, deaf and dumb, but not of the struggle to overcome such handicaps. Un- derstanding would come, but later. She was a relatively young and comely woman at the time, but to a boy she looked older than she does now to a man, although she is just entering her 76th year. She is still blind and deaf, but by no means dumb. Can you imagine what it would mean to try to learn to speak without any sounds to imitate? Helen Keller did. QINCE THAT time she has de- voted her entire life to carry- ing a message of courage, of hope and achievement, to the handi- capped. She has specialized in work for the blind, since that seemed to her to be the greatest need involving more people. But her lectures themselves have been living testimony of what could be done for the stone deaf. After the demonstration so many dears ago my father said on the way home: "Son, never forget what you have seen tonight. After seeing that woman, anyone with all the faculties should be ashamed not to put them to their fullest use. She has never seen the dawn in russet mantle clad, as Shakes- peare did, but she knows it just as well as he. She has the heart of a lion and the perceptions of a po- et."$ Helen Keller's teacher, -Anne Sullivan Macy, deserved and re- ceived from people all over the world a vast credit for the success of the team. Between them, they worked out techniques to help the blind 'which were as practical as their story of struggle was In- spiring. When Anne Sullivan,.later Mrs. John Macy, died nearly 20 years ago, many people thought Helen Keller would lose her effectiveness without her guiding hand. But it was not so. She has continued to travel the world, and since then has added two-books to the four she had written before, ensuring that her story will remain alive after she is gone. "Son, never forget . . Her 75th birthday was a good reminder.' .W .-- k}5 E'er dg " v':i DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Rockefeller Taken for Ride Leads Way ONCE AGAIN the people of Detroit are to be congratulated for conceiving big ideas and making them work. The current multi-million dollar drive to ob- tain funds .for capital improvements in 49 of the charity organizations of Detroit is the most recent example of the genius of the mass pro- duction city to do big things in a big way. As the American people's conception of pub- lic help expands, a choice of the best way to obtain the funds arises. Neither solicitation for each individual cause, with its duplication and wasted effort, nor governmental support with its attendant problems of "big government," seems to be the answer. Only the united drive method can make maximum use of the money donated without bringing the political consid- erations into the picture. It may be true that Detroiters pay more at- tention to the Red Wings than they do to the Art Museum and support the Tigers more than the symphony orchestra, but in the field of hu- man relationships, the basis of culture, they are showing the way to the rest of the world. tention to the Red Wings than they do to the In proving that great ends may be gained by extra-governmental organizations, they have adapted the ideas of the voluntary cooperative society of the past to the needs of today. Per- haps the idea of enlightened self-interest isn't as dead as it sometimes looks. --Ken Johnson By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Nelson Rocke- feller, whose family is one of the wealthiest in America, was playing penny-ante poker on the President's special plane en route to San Francisco. In the game with him were Congressmen Mill- er, Democrat of Oakland, Calif., Mailliard, Republican of San Fran- cisco, Younger of Ohio, and Scud- der of California, also Republi- cans. When the trip was over, Rocke- feller was down seven dollars to his Congressional friends. Remarked Harold Stassen, also with the Presidential party: "I am going to watch the stock market tomorrow morning. Nelson will probably have to dump a lot of stocks on the market to pay for his losses." LONG DESERTS FATHER S EN. RUSSELL LONG, Democrat of Louisiana, did his best to defeat his fellow Democrats dur- ing bitter closed-door meeting of the Senate Public Works Commit- tee when it voted last week on the one remaining big undeveloped power site in the United States, Hell's Canyon. With all other eeasily developed power sites already built, Hell's Canyon on the Snake River is of crucial importance to Oregon, Washington and Idaho. The Eis- enhower Administration has fav- ored its development by the Idaho Power Company. The Democrats, with the exception of Russell Long, have favored development by the government, on the ground that rivers and works of nature belong to the people, not private power companies. Russell Long, whose father, the late Kingfish of Louisiana, battled against the power companies, has strangely voted with the power companies. When the Dixon-Yates project was up for debate last summer, Long astounded his col- leagues by casting his vote against the Democrats and with the pow- er lobby. When the secret meeting of the Senate Interior Committee opened last week, Long at first sat silent. Six Republicans bitterly denoun- ced government operation of Hell's Canyon - including Millikin of Colorado, Watkins of Utah, Dwoi - shak of Idaho, Barrett of Wyo- ming. The only Republican who did not take a definite stand was Ku- chel of California. Though he spoke on the subject, he did rot definitely commit himself. All the Democrats present urg- ed that Hell's Canyon be develop- ed by the government, except Long. He sat grim and silent. Fine. ally, with Senator Murray of Mon,- tana absent in Geneva attending the International Labor Confer- ence, acting chairman Anderson of New Mexico pulled out a letter from Murray asking that the vote be postponed until his return. An- derson knew that a vote that day would mean a victory for the Ida- ho Power Company. It was at this point that Senator Long finally jumped in to oppose his fellow Democrats. Knowing that the Republicans had a one- vote margin, counting his. Long urged that the vote be taken im- mediately, that they not wait for Senator Murray to return. Senator Dworshak, Republican of Idaho, did likewise. However, they were overruled. Final vote on the last remaining big dam site was postponed for about a week. INSIDE THE PENTAGON H ERE IS the inside reason why Operation Alert was scheduled to test civil defense at the very time when the West is about to talk peace with Russia . . . The whole exercise was deliberately timed to build up public support in favor of the talks with Russia. The President and his advisers be- lieved the spectacle of thousands of government officials evacuating Washington to avoid a make-be- lieve hydrogen attack would dem- onstrate the wisdom of trying to avoid a horrible new war by talks around the conference table . . . The exercise was originally sched- uled to take place last year as part of "Operation Candor." . . . Secre- tary of Health Oveta Culp Hobby prepared to "rough it" during the H-Bomb evacuation test by going without her nylon stockings. How- ever, she wore a pair of immacu- late white gloves. The first atomic aircraft engine will be completed in ten months. It won't be ready to install in a plane that early, but it will be ready for ground tests.... Ameri- ca's first atomic-powered submar- ine, the Nautilus, will soon cross the Atlantic entirely under water. It won't surface once, its speed-- over 25 miles an hour. For a long time the military have wanted to run their own spy work instead of pooling it all un- der Allen Dulles and Central In- telligence. Now the National Se- curity Council has ordered Cen- tral Intelligence to transfer some of its intelligence functions to the Joint Chiefs of Staff. In fact, the Joint Chiefs have already assigned five super-secret officers to direct the new intelligence work. WASHINGTON PIPELINE MAYOR L. C. CLARK of Tulsa says he's sticking with his natural-gas friends and that this column had him wrong about switching to the other mayors who favor federal regulation of natur- al-gas transmission. Sorry for the error . . William Kern has been appoint- ed to the Federal. Trade Commis- sion, replacing veteran commis- sioner Jim Mead, Democrat. The law requires that the post go to a Democrat. But-Kern was recom- mended and sponsored for the job by Douglas Whitlock, former as- sistant to the Republican Nation- al Chairman .. . The Air Force's retired Gen. George Stratemeyer, hero of the McCarthyites, recently praised the anti-Semitic writings of Dr. John Beaty, professor of English at Southern Methodist University. Dr. Beaty's writings have already been repudiated by the Univer- sity. . . . The Western diplomatic colony is hopping mad at Marshal Tito for suddenly trebling and quad- rupling Yugoslav rents. This has turned Belgrade into probably the most expensive city in the world and has so infuriated some coun- tries that they are threatening to close down their embassies. (Copyright, 1955, Bell Syndicate, Inc.) The Daily Official Bull in is an official publication of the university of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the Uni- versity. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication (be- for 10 a.m. on Saturday.) Notice of lectures, concerts and organization meetings cannot be published oft ner than twice. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1955 VOL. LXVI, NO. 6 Notices Student Organizations planning to be active during the summer session must register in the Office of Student Af- fairs not later than July 1. Forms for registration are available in the Office of student Affairs, 1020 Administration Building. Use of the Daily Official Bulletin for announcement of meetings and use of meeting rooms in University Buildings will be restricted to officially recognized and registered student organizations. For procedures and regulations relat- ing to student organizations officers are' referred to UNIVERSITY REGULA- TIONS CONCERNING STUDENTAF- FAIRS, CONDUCT, AND DISCIPLINE. Copies are available in the Office of Stu- dent Affairs. The General Library and all the Di- visional Libraries will close at 6:00 p.m. Fri., July 2 and reopen at 8:00 a.m. Tues., July 5. Books needed for study over the long week-end may be charg- ed out on Fri. undernthe usualover- night regulations. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: Kickapoo Council of Girl Scout, Inc., Peoria, 111.-opening for a woman with a B.S. or B.A. with major in Soc., Psych., Educ., Phys. Ed., Recreation or any oth- er field transferrable to Girl Scouting. Should have approximately 5 years ex- perience in a responsible professional capacity in the field of educ., adult educ., recreation, social work or other comparable area. U.S. Civil Service announces exam for Cartographic Survey Aid GS-1 through GS-7. NORTHERN OAKLAND GIRL SCOUT COUNCIL, Pontiac, Michigan, has open- ings for a Field Director with a Mas- ter's degree in group work and for an Executive Director. Mich. State Civil Service anounces exams for Building Trades Itinerant Teacher 1V, Mobile X-Ray Unit Opera- tor I, and Mechanical Engineer. III. Allison Co. (a division of American Chain and Cable Co.), Bridgport, Conn., is looking for a Sales Engr. Should have training in Mech. E. or some mechani- cal aptitude, and some sales experience. Service experience is helpful. Between 25-35 yrs. of age and preferably married. This company manufactures abrasive cut-off wheels and is the largest com- pany in the country in that field. Prentice-Hall, Inc., for Jackson, Mich. area-men, 25-40 years of age preferred, with at least two years of college and some selling experience for tax and La- bor Division. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 371. Employment Registration with the Bureau of Appointments. The summer placement meeting of the Bureau of Appointments will be held at 3:00 p.m. on Wed., June 29, in Audi- torium B of Angell Hall. All seniors and graduate students who are interest- ed in registering with the Bureau in ei- ther the Teaching or General Division or both for employment after gradua- tion, after military service, or for fur ther promotions in the fields of edu- cation, business, industry, government, or in the technical fields are invited to attend. Registration material will be given out at the meeting. Students who have previously regis- tered with the Bureau and who are still in Ann Arbor or on campus for summer school are urged to bring their record up to date as to current address and summer class elections. Academic Notices Topology Seminar. Wed., June 29, from 3:00-5:00 p.m., in Room 3010 A. Prof. Young will speak on "Homology and Co. homology." Graduate Students expecting to re- ceive the master's degree in Aug., 1955, must file a dilpoma application with the Recorder of the Graduate School by Fri., July 1. A student will not be recom- mendedpforpa degree unless he has filed formal application in the office of the Graduate School. Schools of Business Administration, Education, Natural Resources and Pub- lic Health, and Music. Students who re- ceived marks of I, X, or 'no reports' at the end of their last semester or sum- mer session of attendance will receive a grade of "E" in the course or courses, unless this work is made up by July 20. Students wishing an extension of time beyond this date in order to make up this work should file a petition, ad- dressed to the appropriate official of their school, with Room 1513 Admin- istration Building, where it willbe transmitted. Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., June 30, at 4:00 p.m. in Room 247 West Engineering. Gilbert Be- guine will speak on "The Plane Strain Problem for the Infinite Sector." Exhibits Museum of Art. "Michigan Art Through Fifty Years" (through July 31). Alumni Memorial Hall. Open to pub- lic. Events Today Religion and Education Series. The Rt. Rev. Frank J. McPhillips speaks on "The Parochial School." Lane Hall Lunch Discussion 12:00 m. Thurs., June 30. Reservations by Wed. noon. DOB - Galley 2 E La Socedad Hispanica of the Depart- ment of Romance Languages will hold the first in a series of weekly meetings Wed., 7:30 p.m. in the East Conference Room, Rackham Building. Prof. Aurelio Matilla, official cartographer of the Spanish General Staff, and graduate of the Toledo Military Academy, Spain, and of the University of Madrid, will speak in Spanish on, "Spain in. M- rocco," Open to the public. Ring Round the Moon, by Jean Anou- ilh, with an English adaptation by Christopher Fry, will be presented at 8:00 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. All seats are reserved at $1.50- $1.10-75c. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Box Office is open from 10:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Hillel Foundation presents "Music Under the Stars." Concerto in F by Gershwin and Appalachian Spring by Copland, recorded, at 8:00 p.m. Thurs., June 30, at the Hillel Foundation. La Petite Causette, informal French : r r.rrs r s . s r swrrrr DRAMA REVIEW 'rr rrw.+r r rrr®rsrr wr rs r Jan de Hartog's THE FOURPOSTER, pre- sented by the Saline Mill Theatre; with Nan- cy Born and Ted Heusel. IN CONCEPTION and execution, this is one of the best theatrical productions to appear in these parts during the past few summers. The play is not a good one, and in technical matters the Saline Mill version of it tends to be slightly shoddy; but the professional qual- ity of the acting brushes aside all impediments. The elements of Mr. de Hartog's play are simple, and probably, by this time, well-known. He presents a series of six scenes in the mar- ried life of a Victorian couple; the action of the whole comprises 35 years, and the events selec.ed range from the wedding night to a nocturnal vigil when the grown son returns late from a party. But what Mr. de Hartog sacrifices in the unity of time he compensates for in unity of place: the entire play is set in the bedroom of the couple, and centers, as the title indicates, in the fourposter bed. The setting, designed by Shelton Murphy, is a little less than satisfactory. The bed con- cerned is crudely fashioned, but it makes too The Daily Staff Editorial Bard Jim Dygert Pat Roelofs Cal Samra NIGHT EDITORS Mary Lee Dingier, Marge Piercy, Ernest Theodossin Dave Rorabacher................. ...... Sports Editor obvious an attempt at realism to be impres- sionistic. It is also questionable whether the flimsy bedspread could even have withstood 35 years of the sort of treatment it gets in the six brief scenes. Miss Born has, in a few years' time, estab- lished herself as the reigning monarch of the local theater, and her performance during this run will be no disappointment to her follow- ing. After a brief and forgiveable shaky mo- ment in the first scene she waxed bright in the two-star firmament, and by the second act her performance surpassed that of Betty Field who appeared here in the role two years ago. Miss Born is an actress-the versatility de- manded by Mr. de Hartog's multi-faceted he- roine proves it-and it has aoout become time to ask her why she stays in this area when there are loftier pinnacles to be scaled.I MR. HEUSEL, who doubles in this produc- tion as male lead and director, performs a surprising reversal: to one accustomed to his achievements in both fields, it would be natural to expect the direction to surpass the acting. In "The Fourposter," however, it is possible to find isolated moments when a more demanding director would have been pre- ferred, while as a hero Mr. Heusel is impec- cable. His aging does not present the contrasts to be found in Miss Born's, but the process is gradual and certainly as credible. The play, of course, demands as much of an impression of the characters working together as the performers can produce, and it is in th iis at a n-,,nllr . a.q of tim Sui Writing Not So Difficult UPON entering the University a freshman finds, among other things, a curriculum requirement designed to fit into a general scheme of making him a well- rounded individual. Reference is to the year of English every liter- ary college graduate must have. Whether English 1 and English 2 are further designed to teach him to write, or as the instructor would put it, to express himself well with words, is an unanswerable ques- tion. The high school literary giant takes this sort of thing at its nuis- Writing a theme is quite simple, despite what they say in English courses. Anyone can write a theme. You need first a typewriter and some fingers with which to make it work. After the mechanical ne- cessities, you need a title, unless that has already been supplied by the instructor. The instructor is also necessary, else you wouldn't be writing a theme (this is the only real justification for English courses.) Because the title has al- ready been decided, or maybe only the theme of the theme (this is a real justification for abolishing LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibier' r - ~ A/ F~) i 1 f' r.. , 1