'When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" 'firM-61all 743atj Six y)-Eighth Year 1.1)1'1.) ANN A. D.- Y STUDI N[TS cOF TilL Uj.Vr}ftlr'S ITYOMI( iIIGAN UND-R AUTIIORIY Of BOARD IN CONTROL 0J STUDENTr PUBlCATIOs STUIENI Pum ATIONs hIPo. r AN\ AnioAtMI1ci.iPJone No 2-3241 A Business Investment-With No Hope Of Ever Making A Profit? Editorials printed in T :he Michigan Daily express the in diiidual op>inions of staf writers or the editors. This ms he noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, JULY 11, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: LANE VANDER SLICE Religious Myths, Invented by Man, Need 20th Century Reformation Y GO- .Y '7"T-7 "Ay K 1 AT THE STATE: I The Barbaric 'Vikings' Bellow and Battle IE V KINGS." a' tale of high romance on the foggy poisonous sea roars tween the North Country and rugged old England. It as te usual plot of to boys chase girl. But one boy gets her, the Kirk Douglas as the one-eyed son of the Viking chief acts his u ual sneering self. Here grimaces an actor who has at least twenty- ive vsion : of a sneer and he looks at home in this particular role. Te.lcation .onful itheoviCeh s its rugged and beautiful aspects enhanlll'(cd bycolorfu.'il phot1[ography11, a ide M-screen and1(Janlet Leigh. The convncigly zu'aricbatle cnes addl considera;bly to the Confusion andi excitet of the 1film. Tony%-Curtis wariTng the pommI~el Stonle of AMERICANS are noted for being a pragmatic . and practical people; thus there is little surprise that theologian Richard Niebuhr in his speech "Religion in Contemporary Amer- ica" warned "Christianity faces the danger of becoming a utilitarian faith - a faith that is practiced for the sake of getting something here and now." But the threat is -nothing new to Christi- anity, which became an officially recognized religion after Constantine reportedly saw a flaming cross and the legend "By this con- quer," then won the battle of Milvian Bridge (312) and subsequently converted. The threat was even stronger when the Church, having evolved from persecuted to persecutor, insti- tuted the Inquisition which, especially in 13th century Spain, led many to accept the faith for the very utilitarian purpose of staying alive. But beyond the material results gained "here and now," religion, a system of faith and wor- ship, has a deeper use that many now are be- ginning to acknowledge. Prof. Niebuhr, of Yale Divinity School cited in his talk six factors that comprise the complex thing called reli- gion: "1) a sense of the holy; 2) a sense of wonder or of being, as it were, surprised by joy; 3) the need to pray; 4) the need to identi- fy ourselves with a Cause which transcends, that endures when all passes; 5) obedience to the requirements of that Cause and 6) an ul- timate sense of orientation we have in the world, or the role we play in the total drama which is bein genacted." YET ALL OF THESE, both the senses and the needs, have the effect of satisfying, or at least make the attempt to do so, man "here and now," in this life. Religion when examined for its effect upon men and their reason for embracing it, can be readily seen as a method of fulfilling a void, or the "sense of aloneness' as Prof. Niebuhr put it. As the world has painfully witnessed in the past few decades, this need can be fulfilled and the elements can be provided by the re- ligions of Nazism, communism and nationals ism. Particularly when observing American Communists, one is struck by their sense of a mission, identification with a cause, and the religious faith by which they accept the dog- trines in the scriptures of Marx and the inter- pretations of Lenin and Stalin. Reserving moral judgements, which are shaped by one's own beliefs, one must admit these religions, essentially the products of the 20th century, have taken unshakable holds ' upon millions of people in the 20th century. PROF. NIEBUHR may not have had these other forms in mind and may not have been advocating fighting zeal with zeal, but he did note that religious faith must be placed in the concept of the twentieth century, and de- mythologize" itself, changing those elements which depend upon primitive conceptions of the world. Religion must be "re-mythologized" in 20th century terms, and its doctrines made justifi- able by modern concepts, he said. However, religion's reluctance, hesitancy, in- ability or in some forms, refusal to do so finds reflection in Christianity's falling, through the centuries, from the center of the individual's everyday concern to the present position on the periphery of his thoughts and actions. In- dicated is religion's inability to completely fill, with the myths of the pasts, modern man's voids or needs in light of his changing concepts. However, to reject the myths, or doctrines of the past does not mean, as some would quickly charge, the deification of science. It is quite revealing that in "Inherit the Wind," which relates the 1925 trial of John Scopes who taught evolution, the final action shows de- fense attorney Henry Drummond (Clarence Darrpw) weigh the Bible in one hand and a copy of Darwin's "Theory of Evolution" in the other. He decides to take both. WHILE religion in essence may be and al- ways has been psychologically utilitarian, fulfilling man's needs "here and now," science is only an influence on his concept of the world and does not answer his sense of aloneness. If anything, it increases it. But with man's concepts differing between the centuries and various cultures, there is also a variance in the doctrines that fit these concepts and thus satisfy his needs. Implied is, through the years, a need for adaptability in religious doctrine. This should not be difficult. A line in "Inherit the Wind" reads "God created man, and man, being a gentleman, re- turned the compliment." In view of the mul- titude of religious doctrines that claim to be THE true divinely revealed faith, the line, be- yond its sarcasm, sheds a good deal of insight on how men develop their religions to fit their conceptions of the world. De-mythification, as suggested by Prof. Niebuhr, is not impossible if men continually and honestly examine their faith. -MICHAEL KRAFT Co-Editor I~ ' F"tp t .. ::P' ' 1 (Ilerbo40I n actfn WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Goy. WilliamsR ee Py DREWI'EAISON WASHINGTON-A lot of people have been asking what it was Goldfine's agents were discussing on that Sunday night when their room was bugged. Frankly, it was a long way from any earth-shaking plot. It was a plan to make public various thank - you letters from governors who had received vicuna cloth from Goldfine via Governor Dwinell of New Hampshire during the Governors' Conference in 1955. The Goldfine crew shuffled through the letters to pick the most embarrassing ones and finally selected those of Governor Leader of Pennsylvania, Gov. Mennen Williams of Michigan, and Ex- Governor Lausche of Ohio, all Democrats. There was some discussion over whether to withhold Lausche's let- ter because he had now been elect- ed to the Senate, and was never considered a party - line senator anyway. "This is a Democratic-controlled committee," argued one Goldfiner, "and our purpose is to embarrass the Democrats," SOMEONE then proposed in- cluding at least one RepublicaiV and suggested releasing a letter from J. Bracken Lee, the Ex- Governor of Utah, because, though a Republican, he was now defeated and pretty much out of politics. Apparently it was not realized that Lee is now preparing to run for the Senate. The Bracken Lee idea, however, was ruled out. It was finally de- cided that Democrats only were to be embarrassed. So the letters of Governor Leader, who is running for the Senate from Pennsylvania. Governor Williams, who is running for an unprecedented sixth term in Michigan and is a presidential candidate. and finally Ex-Gov- ernor, now Senator, Lausche of Ohio, were selected. In brief. the so-called conspira- tors laid an egg. THITS WRITER, who for some years has specialized on getting the insde news from cobim t meetings and smoked-filled roOmts. has been the subject of consider- able ribbing on havinu his ac\ sleuth caught in company with the ace sleuth of the Harris Con- gressional Committee. The ribbing is justified. Two wrongs don't make a right, but the mistake Baron Shacklette, the Harris Committee's chief in- vestigator, made was in "buggin" the room next to him in the Shera- ton-Carlton Hotel instead of using the Washington Police. The Metropolitan Police re Lot supposed to bug rooms or h wis for either private individuals or congressional committees. It is strictly against the rules. How- ever, they do it just the same. It's become something of a habit lately for big businessmen who are under investigation and have plenty of money to spend, to hire detectives to probe congressmen. Most congressmen are just as clean as Ike's provrbial "hound's tooth," and many of them are a lot clean- er. But a ith evi the cletaest a smart, investhit(or can sometines dig up a skeleton which can hurt in a tough election battle. Shack- lette, the commnittee's ex-iinvestiga- thr . was checking on tis counter- espiona ge. . ? lly IT'S A SAl) Ira-esIv on life in the nations ('afital that few hotel voOims are 100 per cent saf e if you van to disenu , matters highly cciiiidem 1 Nor am e lp'i ae of- 1k s When you w nt into the of-- fice of I rmer f'ecn- ary of the rsurv Hero Mor e Inthaum he usually pushcd a secaet button on his del wlnhIi tuined on a re- cordiuc machin(. President Eisen- hower. w he i comma uder of NATO, could push a Iii te lever on his desk Which rerorded the conversation of vidsitr I have nevr i-llac 'd a micro- phone iin anyone's icom in my life or taliped a telephouc awire, and ne\ cr sli:t. lut when 11 don't want to let e ither g mnment investiga- tors or private gunishoes know of myon ceit th grden o talk in ani a utcmobile. '1he New York Timle( recently revealed that newsmen were being 5had~owed by a'p mts of the Eisen- howx c AdmunustratiOn. This is true, but it's an old story. I was shadowed more under the Truman administration. The chief reason for lhe shadowing is to ascertain a newsman's sources. the sword requiter, a sort of a sinin swrd paystie nabashed hero to the hilt of his famous ~word stone, Ernest Borgnine plays the chief of the Viking horde with a beard and barbaric bellow. And his lungs lit. the part. The dialogue is not.hing out of the ordinary, interrupted only by the r ,oars and groans of battle and the yawling for the help of Oden, the aarlike god of the Vikings. "The Vikings" along with a Btgs Bunny cartoon should prove to be an evening of bloody enter- tainIent. It also beats the heat and that one eyed god, television, for it offers one-eyed Kirk Douglas for one hour and fifty minutes. -Genny Leland -,, rof iterTs' ROTErS IN LAW," is a moderatly amusing British comedy about a pair of friendly youg layers and their misad- ventures before the bar. Produced by the Boulting Broth- frs. who used many of the same peoile to better advantage in "Priivates' Pr-ogress." it offers sev- e al entertaining courtroom scenes and a comic interlude on the golf ne as i mjor attractions. Thes, pus he sual sturdy BEng- ral chaciter aicting, notably by Miles Mal-son as a bumbling suc- cesful older ba-rister, and Terry Thomas as a crook with a legal ndyid, he'p buoy up the film nearly et y time i.t appemrs determined to s-nk. Ian Carmichael plays the hero- a ec-faced. wide-eyed young man \ has just passed his ba- exm,. le is obstinately clumsy, fright- ened, and generally incompetent: indleed, the film spends too much time elaborating this ineptness, and his irrational incredulity at ec es jsetback. However, a s;, 'in ! ,f:h±tc judge-, finally helps lin gain confidence in himself (which, from the evidence pre- seuted, is hardly justified), and he is on his way. "Brothers In Law" runs a pre- dictabit course, but is amiable and unpretentious on the whole, and can certainly be viewed without discomfort. - Bernhard Kendler LETTERS to the EDITOR Religionl . To the Editor: X WAS INTERESTED in the letter of Prof. Clark (July 8) in which. he criticizes Michael Kraft's "su- perficial" and "immature" edi- torial concerning religion in con- temporary society (June 27). The "real" question of the superna- tural nature of Jesus Christ, Prof. Clark states, is to be decided for each person, "as an act of pure faith, having objectively examined the evidence." This is an interest- ing way to draw a conclusion. Prof. Clark also says that "the reason religion has lost Itsmean- ing for much of society lies in the rejection of its supernatural char- acter." True enough. Many can- not turn back to "first century Christianity," as Prof. Clark so aptly puts it-even if "value and pertinence" are there. How can one, with intellectual honesty, create a belief in the supernatural merely because there is a need to believe? - Illda E. Wenner, '57 Review * To the Editor: THE ANN ARBOR Club for the Suppression of Reviewers Who Are All Too Witty and Clever would like to point out to David Kessel, that the part of Hornbeck, as played so well by Al Phillips in the Speech Department's current production of "Inherit the Wind" is (actually H. L. Mencken, don't you know, and NOT William Ran- dolph Hearst, don't you know.) -- Thomas Stebbins Grad. nLuiA Sh Translated JEAN ANOUTILH (Five Plays). 340 pp. New York: Hill and Wang. $3.95 (paperback, $1.75). ONE OF FRANCE'S best-known and most thought - provoking dramatists is at last represented by a collection, in English, of five of his more outstanding plays in this new volume, "Jean Anouilh." Theatergoers in London and New York have been familiar with the drama of Anouilh through produc- tions of "Antigone" and "Legend of Lovers" (Eurydice), both of which are represented in this selection, and, more recently, "The Lark," which was not only success- ful in New York and throughout the country on tour, but was pro- duced on television as well. In "Antigone, Anouilh creates his own poetic, questioning version of the famous Greek play. The new "Antigone" has in some ways been brought up to date by Anou- ilh, but in other ways remains un- changed, showing that, whether the language be Greek or French slang (1942 style), the eternal questions are no different. Anouilh builds on another Greek legend in "Eurdice," but the setting of this Orpheus story is entirely modern French. The three plays that complete this Dramabook edition are "The Ermine," "The Rehearsal," and "Romeo and Jeannette," none of which has been previously publish- ed in this country before. Together, the five plays com- prise a representative cross-sec- tion of Anouilh's work to date. The English versions have been care- fully and delicately rendered by four translators and all that is im- portant in the French has been preserved in the English. A pensive, questioning author who stands for the time and age in which he lives, Anouilh well de- serves the new and renewed audi- ence that this collection of his plays should bring. - Vernon Nahrgang OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan lDaily assumes no editor- ial'responsibility. Notices should be 4. aw ,., 4 Should Reserve Opinion on Mall Plan HE MALL Era may be upon us, architec- turally speaking, of course. It seems that everywhere you look nowadays, Washington, D.C., Grand Haven and on the bulletin board of the Ann Arbor Chamber of Commerce, a mall is to be seen. City officials are even contemplating con- verting into a mall' a downtown section of Woodward Avenue, Detroit's main street. The mall depicted in the Ann Arbor Chamber of Commerce office is the "idea" which the City Planning Commission has proposed for the South State Street business district, better known in city circles as the Loop area. The illustrated plan, a word which the head of the traffic committee of the Chamber of Commerce, John Paup, has been careful to stay away from (it's still an idea to him), would provide State Street with trees, benches and best of all, remove traffic, as street pave- ment gives way to a park-like area. The artist has drawn people in various poses along the mall. One would get the idea that they are shoppers. It is a concept acceptable to the State Street merchants. At this point there can be no pro or con about the proposed mall, The idea is still too wet behind the ears for an opinion to be given. There are too many details which still have to be ironed out. If the Regents will sell the corner of Uni- versity property at State and North Univer- sity to the city of Ann Arbor so that Thayer and William can be joined . . . if a way to get to the City Car Port is set up, so that the pros- pective shopper doesn't have to go blocks out of his way to park .. . If traffic can be re-routed to avert the an- ticipated bottle-neck of cars at State and Washington . . . if a method to facilitate store delivery' service can be found . . At the moment, there are too many ifs. Not until these ifs are resolved will it be proper to assign the ayes and nays to the mall proposal. -JUDY DONER I HAS ITS OWN, SPECIAL QUALITY: Netherlands Is Going Places, Doi Things INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Ike's Canadian Talk By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press Foreign News Analyst PRESIDENT Dwight D. Eisenhower took per- suasion to Ottawa and left the butter tub at home. By his very presence, and that of Secre- tary of State John Foster Dulles, he expressed concern aver policy differences in the economic field which have divided the two governments. By his words he promised and asked a rea- sonable approach to specific problems.' In general he told the Canadiiins that, at some points, everybody had to be willing to take it on the chin in order to present the strongest possible general front against Com- munist expansion. One of his strong points was that Canada, in her trade relations with the United States and Editorial Staff MICHAEL KRAFT DAVID TARR Co-Editor Co-Editor ROBERT JUNKER N.................. t Editor EDWARD GERULDSEN................. Night Editor SUSAN HOLTZER .....Night Editor LANE VANDERSLICE------------- Ni!?ht Editor the world as a whole, isn't doing too badly. Imbalance at some points, and American in- vestment control in certain fields, nevertheless leaves Canada with a general profit, the Presi- dent pointed out. He cited the premium Amer- icans pay for Canadian dollars as proof. President Eisenhower thinks foreign aid shipment of American farm surpluses abroad, especially wheat, may interfere with Canadian exports, but is partially balanced by removing the threat to world prices poised by bursting granaries. WITH HIS REMARK that the trade imbal- ance between the two countries was due to what Canadians wanted to buy, he came very close to inviting them to impose import quotas if they wished or dared, although he probably didn't intend that. With regard to the power of American-owned industries in the Canadian economy, he said Canada had the power of law over their acti- vities, implying she could use it if she wished or dared take chances with the development which has resulted. Then, the President agreed that all such matters needed more careful joint considera- tion and would receive it. (John weicher. Daily City Editor. is touring Europe this Burner. Taa the first of a series of articles describing countries, their people and events.) By JOHN WEICHER Special to The Daily AMSTERDAM--Holland is a good place for an American visitor to begin a trip through Europe. It preserves a special quality of its own, while at the same time approaching American levels of anima- tion, particularly in its cities. Prices of goods in store windows are roughly comparable to those in the United States-a 17-inch table model television set. for instance, costs the equivalent of $220, and men's suits sell for $40 in depart- ment stores. How much of the average Hollander's income this repre- sents is another question. More people do not have cars, apparently-bicycles and motor- cycles are more common in the cities, and the highways have a special lane on one side for these vehicles. This suggests a somewhat lower standards of living than the American, but distances are extremely short in Holland, and bicycles will serve most purposese as well as cars, AMERICAN popular culture has made its way into Holland- among the movies here are "The Ten Commandments" and "The King and I" with subtitles. Unfortunately, these are counterbalanced with an assortment of B-grade and worse films. "Teen-age problem" films and low-calibre Westerns dot the mar- quees here-all with Dutch subtitles. The impression of America these films must give the Dutch burghers disturbs the United States traveler. Books from America are also found in .abundance here-some in English, some translated. Among the latter may be found works of such authors as Daphne du Maurier, Mickey Spillane and Earl Stan- ley Gardner-perhaps not the most prepossessing writets who could be translated. \ * * * AMERICAN political writings seem to attract little attention here -the only one noted was a work of Sumner Welles available for the equivalent of 25 cents in a close-out sale at one store. In literature, Dutch taste tends more to classics, apparently-several translations of Homer and numerous works on the Bible were prominently fea- tured, both in book stores and in the book sections of large depart- ment stores. It is, however, in music that the United States has made the biggest splash over here. Charlie Parker, Gerry Mulligan, Chet Baker and .of course, Louis Armstrong (whose popularity is amazing. are all leading sellers here as are several English jazz musicians. All kinds of jazz seems popular, from Dixieland to the worst modern. Some musical shows are selling well here also-"Li'l Abner," for example. a ' A SPEAKING GENERALLY, the Dutch seem to like Americans very much-remembering the part the United States played in two IT 1 DyFER T in Rotterdam, which of course suffered far more in 1940-apartment housing of the larger modern slum-clear- ance sort is common-but there, even, some of these new buildings have the sne, time-tested construction of the older houses. It is a remarkably flexible style-useful even in windmills. No one moves slowly in Holland. The Dutch are a nation of taxi- drivers, even when on bicycles or on foot-and no one stops until a red light forces him to. The same holds true at work-the qualities of industry for which the eountiy has always been noted are still present. A garan1uan recla!ation p'o.ect is now under way on the Zuider Zee that will make Hoover Dam and similar American projects look like small potatoes. The Netherlands is going places and doing things. " ' r,.,' , 'Y y * :. MEMmNEMME m ,