I' :ir. lojgart 43ttily Summer Reading for Relaxation, I 'LJI 3y] 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 Wil pr is printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. 12, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: SUSAN HOLTZER UN Fallout Report Misleadig,, Meaningless rHAT WAS supposed to be an important United Nations report on radiation has n released. The report deserves no atten- n whatsoever, for the estimates of radiation nage in it are both heavily padded and so efully qualified as to be both meaningless I misleading. In fact, the report actually ms designed to mislead. t is nice to find out, as the report asserts, t fall-out from nuclear weapons tests is a iger to mankind. We suspected this. But also suspect that nuclear war would be a iger to mankind as would hangnails. We not trying to be facetious; rather, we are nting out that dangers to mankind vary mn very important to very trivial. he whole tone of the committee report ild lead a naive reader to believe that the ger from atomic tests was awe-inspiring. eed, it led the New York Times to say that committee was "unequivocal in its depic- a of the danger to generations yet unborn." HAT DID the report say to bear this out? It estimated that even if atomic tests were pped this year, as many as 2,500 to 100,000 4es eventually will be born with major etic defects. ve will not even ask what a "major genetic ect" is. But does "eventually" mean in the t 10 or the next 1000 years? The number of rs obviously makes a difference. Also, it s the general public little good to know t as many as 2,500 to 100,000 babies will be ected by fallout. f the Ann Arbor chief of police predicted t from three to 1000 peoj.le would be killed. Ann Arbor traffic his prediction' would be ghed at, and rightly so, for it would be so eral as to be meaningless. Lnd so it is with the report's prediction. If committee that prepared the report does know what is going to happen any more cifically than this, the committee might bet- have seriously qualified their conclusions bring them in line with their well-qualified" cts." It should be noted too, that even the y low 2,500 number is not the minimum. phrasing is "as many as 2,500 to 100,000." nually because of the fall-out. But even such a comparatively straight-forward prediction as this was subject to qualification, as the Atomic Energy Commission pointed out, for after mak- ing this prediction, the committee could not say that there is any certainty that the fall- out will produce any additional cases of leu- kemia above the 15,000 cases attributed each year to background radiation. It is perhaps superfluous 'to point out that not only is it not certain that any additional cases of leukemia would be caused by testing but that the natural rate of leukemia is over seven times higher than the highest figure pre- dicted by the report. It might be interesting to ask how these fig- ures were arrived at, or, how, the committee came to its frightening conclusions. "The com- mittee's conclusions were based on indications that any added radiation exposure, no matter how slight, might be injurious. This appeared, to be most likely in the field of heredity, al- though in this area, as in most others touched on by the reports, the evidence was not found to be conclusive." The quote is from the New York Times; the emphasis is ours. YET ON THE basis of this tenuous evidence, the report was irresponsible enough to say that the knowledge that man's actions could, damage his genetic heritage "clearly empha- sizes the responsibilities of the present genera- tion, particularly. in view of the social con- sequences laid on human populations by un- favorable genes." But how much can atomic tests contribute to fall-out. The report says that even if weapons tests continue, according to one meth- od of computation, the radiation hazard super- imposed upon that from natural sources would not be substantially greater than the hazard from the natural causes. So the danger the committee is worried about is no greater than that caused by natural radiation, which no one is worried about. It is unfortunate that a report which will have a great deal of weight in many areas of. the world is so isleading as to the actual dangers involved. We hope that the people of the United States, with an opportunity to ex- amine the report by themselves, will see the inconsistencies it contains. -LANE VANDERSLICE America's Best Plays- 1951I1957 BEST AMERICAN PLAYS: Fourth Series-1951-1957. Edited with an Introduction by John Gas- ner. 648 pp. New York: Crown Publishers. $5.75. HERE in one volume are the 17 plays that certainly represent the "best" work of American play- wrights in the first half of the current decade. Although one or two plays are missing for varied 'legal reasons, "Best American Plays: Fourth Series" is the au- thoritative collection of complete plays for the 1951-57 period. (Actually, only one play in this anthology opened in New York later than 1955, and that one, Eugene O'Neill's "A Moon for the Misbegotten," was written In 1943.) Three writers are represented twice each in this fifth volume of John Gassner's collections of American theatre. William Inge's "Picnic" (1953) and "Bus Stop" (1955) are included, along with Arthur Miller's "The Crucible" (1953) and, in the new expanded version, "A View from the Bridge" (1955). Tennessee Williams' "The Rose Tattoo" (1951) is one of the 17, along with his "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" (1955) with both versions of the' third act, as the author saw it and as the director saw it. * * * THE OTHER plays, with the dates of their Broadway openings, are:. Jan do Hartog's "The Four- poster" (1951), John van Druten's "I Am a Camera" (1951), George Axelrod's "The Seven Year Itch" (1952), Robert Anderson's "Tea and Sympathy" (1953), Herman Wouk's "The Caine Mutiny Court- Martial" (1954). George S. Kaufman & Howard Teichmann's "The Solid Gold Cad- illac" (1954), Jerome Lawrence & Robert E. Lee's "Inherit the Wind" (1955), Ira Levin & Mac Hyman's- "No Time for Sergeants" (1955), Thornton Wilder's "The Match- maker" (1955) and Michael Gaz- zo's "A Hatful of Rain" (1955). * * * AS IN the earlier "Best Plays" volumes, which chronicle Ameri- can theatre. from 1916 to 1951 with 79 .outstanding dramas, editor Gassner has contributed an in- formative introduction and com- mentary on the period, as well as a select bibliography and list of supplementary plays that did not quite make the "best" list. Not only is the new "Fourth Series" a valuable volume with many hours of reading pleasure, but so is the whole set of five volumes, covering 40 years of American drama with 96 plays- an undertaking of which Gassner can be proud and to which the reader can look with great antici- pation. -Vernon Nahrgang' DAILY . OFFICIAL BULLETIN__ The Daily Official Bulletin i an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan, for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be set in "TYPEWRITTEN form t' Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m., the day preced- ing publication. TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1958 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 34S General Notices The General Library will observe the following hours from Aug. 10 through Sept. 21, 1958: OPEN: 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Mon. through Fri. CLOSED: Sat. and Sun. :Divisional libraries on shortened schedules will have their hours posted on the doors. Divisional libraries which, remain closed (including the Under- graduate Library) will be serviced by the Circulation Dept. of the General Library. Students under Public Law 550 (Korea ,.1. Bill) and Public Law 634 (Orphans' Bill)' who expect to change training in- stitution, or change course of study at the end of the Summer Session, should make application: for approval of such change before leaving campaus. Applica- tions for approval are available in the Office of veterans' Affairs, 555 Admin. Bldg. All 8-week session students who ex- pect to receive education and training allowance under Public Law 550 (Korea G.I. Bill) or Public Law 634 (Orphans' Bill) must fill inrVeterans Administra- tion Monthly Certifications in the Of- fice of veterans' Affairs, 555 Admin. Bldg., between Aug. 13 and 15. These certifications may be filled in 8:30-11:00. a$.m. and 1:30-3:30 pam. only. Al 8-week session students who ex- pect education and training allowanoo under Public Law 550 (Korea G.I. Bill) or Public Law 634 (Orphans' Bill) must get instructors' signatures for August (finals) at last class meetings or final examinations. Completed DEAN'S MONTHLY CERTIFICATION forms should be turned in to the Dean's Of- Tice by 5:00 p.m. Aug. 15. 'The Co ntende'- A Searching Novel 'PICNIC'-A scene from William Inge's "Picnic." The play is one of the collection in "Best American Plays: 1951-1957." 'HOTEL ROOM,' 'VIOLENCE': Woo ich's Works Not Mere Mytre THE CONTENDERS. By Jlohn Wain. 179 pp. New York: St. Martin's Press. $3.95. ANYONE who has ever glanced through a high school year- book and stopped to read what followed the graduates' names will probably recall an earnest, youth- ful desire, reflected under the heading of "ambition," for some- thing called success. Some of the students have written that they wish to be "a successful engineer," others have sought "success in college," and still others have simply hoped, perhaps less assuredly, for "suc- cess." If "The Contenders" were an American novel, it could accur- ately be interpreted as a search, on the part of three young men, for that quality called success. But "The Contenders" is not Aneri- can; it is a British novel, and it consequently deals with a greater, more meaningful and more search- in~g quest that even comes to examine the definition of success. 0* * THE THREE young men are Robert Lamb, Ned Roper, and Joe Shaw, the latter "narrating" the story of the other two and play- ing the part of best friend. Lamb and Roper are the contenders for -well, lacking a better term,.let'. call it success. Each has an idea of what he wants to do that is determined by his famnily and small - town background. Lamb will be an art- ist, Roper will take over his fathi- er's pottery factory. But one's way of life is not so easily followei there are other conditions that, knowing human nature, will have their influence. There is London-the city that represents "class" and "society" and what is "correct" and "best" for the small town people. Most of all for Roper, there is Lamb and what he will think; for Lamb, there is the need to show up Roper. quantity. One of the most me able moments is of Shaw sta ing about London for a day, d R'AIN'S scattered minor acters, from the aged actress mistress Celia to the aloe schoolteacher and Lamb's g cans (the "walrus" and "seal"), are all drawn brilli in few words, leaving wonde lasting impressions. "The Contenders" is a thorc ly entertaining, studied exar tion of some representatives c last younger generation in land, a searching novel that deed of its time. --Vernon Nabr WOLFE, OTHERS: Mystery Suggestioi THE STOPPED CLOCK B Townsley Rogers. New 1Yer mon and Schuster. JUST HOW GOOD a myste suspense novel is "The St Clock" is never clear unti end-when the reader realii he is nt sure there has N murder committed, even tho vcious, killer has been caugh Por the mystery and suspe "The Stopped Clock" is all 1 telling of the stor'y, -a Job Joel. Townsley Rogers ese with a forceful excellence tht ternately shocks and stuns reader. The story of a one-time I wood star whose past sud catches up with the obacur which she has been living for years, the new Rogers non guilty at times of much too coincidence in the happenin the last days of Nina Wandle of much more prolonged per tion into her past. But two strikes don't pu book out, and while Rogers' p tion is lengthy, it is very rewa at every surprising turn of the There is no detective in this and very little detection--ye narrative formula, with the of a beaten and dying w strong throughout, leads to a matic and satisfactory concl as impossiblycoincidental maybe. STRONG POISON. By Dorot Saers. 1930. New York:K & Bros. RT estimated that between 400 leukemia cases will develop an. HOTEL ROOM. By Cornell Wool- rich. 205 pp. New York: Random House. $3.50. VIOLENCE. By Cornell Woolrich. 246 pp. New York: Dodd, Mead & Co. $2.95. THERE is an American coun- terpart of England's Graham Greene, it is Cornell Woolrich, a mystery and suspense writer of long standing and firm reputation for tense novels and short stories written under his own name and that of William Irish. Woolrich's latest work, however,' is no mystery novel-not in the usual sense. Hardly a novel, either, for its episodes resemble short stories. "Hotel Room" is what the dust jacket (but not title page) labels it-"an entertainment." For Greene, the "entertainment" form is one of novel or novelette length that seems at first to be a well-constructed mystery or sus- pense story and that displays on reading a deeper, usually religious significance or ieaning. : * 4, * "HOTEL ROOM" is that. A series of seven episodes in the history of a single room (number 923) in a New York hotel from opening day in 1869 to closing day in 1957, "Hotel Room" reflects the major times and events of 20th century America while probing gently the faiths of an assortment of Ameri- cans. Unlike Greene, Woolrich does not probe deeply nor does he con- struct in"greatddetail. His stories are simply and broadly told, in universals that all are familiar with if not a little tired of. His "tour de force" is the creation of mood and feeling, through a tense simplicity that breeds passion and violence and often all the effects of a very bad nightmare. * * * WOOLRICH'S short stories, a new volume of which has just been pubished under the title "Vio- lence," are masterful writings that best reflect this ability to create the violent and powerful. In six stories, Woolrich explores the passions of flight, of unre- quited love, of suspicion., and. of a primitive moon-wor'ship. The "endings" are always effec-' tive, but the fun is in getting there, in racing the clock to see whether the executioner will die of poison before he can send off the con- demned man, in wondering wheth- er that man you knew personally did kill his wife. Like Greene, Woolrich creates the deepest of suspense and mys- tery in a matter of sentences. And, as in his earlier books, "The Bride Wore Black" and "The Phantom Lady,", both classics,. Woolrich never fails to pull off an effective climax arAd conclusion. * * * IF, AS IN "Hotel Room," Wool- rich's characters are never deeply or carefully developed, it is be- cause we recognize them instantly, -- and because these universals, have universal problems,uand uni- versal passions with which we are to be concerned. Thus the story of Room 923 be- comes the story of people, and vice versa. With marriage, death, and faith inside its door, the room be- comes a church, a symbol of life and all that it means. Yet "Hotel Room" is not a religious novel; it is simply an "entertainment." --Vernon Nahrgang THUS THERE are the con tenders, the two disturbed yours men whose tempestuous friend ship keeps them one step ahead each other, communicating an watching through intermediar Joe-Shaw, and finally doing a sot of primitive but distant battle i which they use wivet as trump. In the end, only Good Ole Jc Shaw seems to realize that "suc cess" is only as complicated a one makes it, that the measuring stick is personally and individuall fashioned. "The Contenders" is certainly serious novel, but it is also ligh and humorous. Author Joh Wain's most enjoyable scenes hav that magie ingredient that pro vides great humor - liquor -i J- ag rt c- ws ft China Policy Reasonable a INTERESTING that the State Depart- it should issue a 5,000 word statement iy the United States government should vill not extend diplomatic recognition to aunist China just when a new drive by a to get her Far Eastern partner into the d Nations is expected.,,Government offi--. have denied there is any connection, but s is so, the coincidence is indeed curious. statement, which says nothing that and his crew have not said before, con- a number of plausible arguments for the I States' stand on China. The policy ba- is that extending recognition would uce no tangible benefits ... and would be terial assistance to Chinese Communist s pts to extend Communist dominion ghout Asia." arguments presented in support of this develop a strong case. Recognition of the se regime probably would do much to un- ne governments of Far Eastern countries are struggling to remain separate from It is also claimed, again with a certain of validity, that the decline in the Na- ist regime on Formosa would cause many eas" Chinese to switch their loyalties to ommunist side. part of the government's argument that ikest is the contention that non-recog- may help hasten the fall of the regime on the mainland. It is Mr. Dulles' belief that the regime will one day pass from the scene. While this may someday happen, although we doubt it, when the time comes it will prob- ably be so far in the future that a complete overhaul of American policy toward China will long before have been needed, if not accom- plished. THE COMMUNIST Chinese regime is settled, in the Fad East for "many years to come.. The best the West can now hope to do is con- tinue to frustrate its attempts to expand. It is, of course, hoped the West will be more suc-' cessful than it has been in the last 10 years.. t While the United States' policy appears to be the most satisfactory alternative for the present, there will come a time, quite prob- ably in the not too distant future, when new ideas and new policies will be needed. The State Department's statement says that the physical existence of China is not being ignored by the American government, and, In fact, U.S. policies in the Far East are deter- mined by this existence. It is hoped that when 'it becomes necessary and convenient to diplo- matically recognize China, this country will be ready to do so without the sacrifice of pres- tige or influence in that area of the world. -DAVID TARRU Co-Editor 'The Elizabethans' HE present year is the 400th anniversary of the accession of Quee Elizabeth I to the throne of England. At Stratford-upon-Avon, th Shakespeare Birthplace Trustees are marking the occasion with a exhibition of books and related things under the general heading o "The Elizabethans." Among the items on display are first editions of Spenser's "Th Faerie Queen" and Shakespeare's "Lucrece," and an undated book o Psalms, with final page bearing an inscription and the signature o Elizabeth I. To complete the cycle, this last was loaned to the exhibitio by her namesake, Elizabeth II. The fifth Stratford-upon-Avon Poetry Festival also is going forwar now, its emphasis on Elizabethan poetry. -The New York Times Book Review "Testing-Aggressor! Imperialist! Assassin! Testing-"- 61.' N I R i lir it THE FIVE RED HERRINGS. in. Dorothy L. Sayers. 1931.1 York:.Harper & Bros One of the- most famous and mired of detectives in the 1i)1 of mystery fiction 'is a Bri nobleman, Lord Peter Wimsey name, a creation of Dorothy n Sayers, one of the most admire e mystery writers. n The Lord Peter Wimsey no f are currently being returned print, two at a time and ehro e logically. Four have so far been fissued: "Whose Body?", "Clo Sof Witness," "Unnatural Dea and "The Unpleasantness at n Bellona Club."Nowthe total is to six with "Strong, Poison" d "The Five Red Herrings." In "Strong Poison," Win takes on romantic entanglem' when he works to prove the ir cence of a young lady detectl story writer. In "The Five Red Herrin -WimweT sifts a Scottish village find the artist-killer of an aor victim. Both novels, character ically of their time, are devote( solving crimes and not to crea; penetrating characterizations. *, * * AS A RESULT, the modern re may find these novels quite un anything he has read lately. "The Five Red Herrings," reader must juggle a cast of male artists, the suspects, who pear only briefly, and six or se assorted officers, constables, spectors and sergeants who I equal space and a similar ni her of theories to be heard. Throughout the novel ther a good deal of timetable and m tal calisthenics-and the solU depends on little more, I iTERPRETING THE NEWS: B Vest Uniting on Middle East By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst HE NATIONS take their stances for the ted Nations Middle East debate the West to be pulling closer and closer together posals for settlements while the Soviet :lings to its propaganda line. a few days ago the West appeared to be ;ted to a merely argumentative confron- of the Soviet charges connected with and American military intervention. sed of aggression, they developed the. I that indirect aggression was the real i-which it is. this line of approach merely promised both sides on the defensive and produce to which would circle and re-circle all differences of attitude. THE WEST, in a search for some form initiative, has discovered that it can i fairly uniform approach to a joint 7 and economic program for the Middle close together on proposals which would give the United Nations a police force and an eco- nomic development program designed to elimi- nate some of the tug of war between the big powers and seek to change Arab militancy into Arab cooperation. There is strong doubt that any such package can be voted, or that it could be made to work, amid the tensions of the area. Fundamentally, Nasserism seeks to exploit Arab nationalism for. its own purposes while the Soviet Union seeks to exploit both. The West seeks to halt such exfloitation to defend its own interests in the cold war. Nobody sticks solely to the best inter- ests of the Middle East. EGARDLESS of the practicality of the West- ern proposals however, they promise to leave the Soviet Union chasing windmills in the debate unless it comes up with its own version of a seemingly constructive program. This is not impossible, despite Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko's addiction to his. V. f. ~E4E1AL ASEM ;c E4~ i } OWN Ila lk THE MOST striking thing this novel, however, is the a] ness and illogical reasoning which the forces of justice wo catch a murderer. The construction of a hypot cal solution to see if it fit facts, and then proving it, I unusual in today's mystery suspense novels, but it was all irregular in the early 1934's, a because it pretends to be a Ic procedure while it is actua hit-or-miss tactic. Yet both "Strong Poison' "'The Five Red Herrings") ar _;.. \ "a k --