Seventy-T bird Year EDrrED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTs OF THE UiYErsrr OF MICHIGAN .L . UNDER AUTHORITY OF :BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDE T PULICATI0NS rWher Opi*los Fr STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. A AY, AUGUST 10, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: H. NEIL BERKSON RomneyE conomy Drive Deserts Michigan Needs GOV. GEORGE ROMNEY has apparently sold out the needs of Michigan and his campaign promises. His startling announce- ment Thursday that he will hold spending to $580 million next year and his indications today that he will not ask for an income tax in his fiscal reform program may well draw cheers from conservative, narrow-minded legislators, but only can bring dismay to supporters of vital state services. Romney yesterday promised a budget which his comptroller only a month ago said was impossible without deep cuts in necessarily- rowirl g state services, particularly mental health and higher education. Even so, the $610 million budget was a minimal one, designed to meet expected obligations, increasing services slightly only to meet population pressures. NOW TIE GOVERNOR claims he can pre- sent a budget that Is 'possibly$30 million cheaper. This will meet revenue expectations without fiscal reforms or a changed structure designed to bring in new revenue. Further, it was reported yesterday that Rom- ney is not going to ask for state income tax, but only request that the Legislature lay the ground rules on local option income taxes. How is he going to maintain a dynamic, growing state the voters elected him to expand and still keep the state budget down? What became of his promises for a reformed tax structure, easing burdens on small business and distributing the tax burden more evenly and flexibly through an income tax? What happened to Romney's eight plans for fiscal reform that the state has been studying so carefully these two months?, ALL SEEMS LOST at the first sign of crisis in the GOP ranks. Comptroller Glenn Allen, Jr.'s budget is a model of austerity. It covers only existing pro- grams and slight increases to meet population pressures in mental health and higher educa- tion. It also figures in funding provisions of the new constitution that require an added $17 million in state spending. Romney, after first including this $17 million in the original cut has conceded to the new document and now is talking of a $580 general fund budget and the $17 million--a total of $597 million. E $13 MILLION minimum can easily be cut from higher education and mental health, Allen points out. Further, programs like traffic safety improvements could be postponed. The governor also claims that $10 million can be saved by more efficient state operation. Only two months ago he declared that the only savings that h Y found he could make when he came into offi se was abandoning the governor's limousine for the standard car. Romney has yet to spell out how the state can save that money and not cutback services. Meanwhile, the state muddles through, un- able to properly meet its duties, especially to the young. Mental health still remains the state's most crucial unmet services, getting only an added $1 million in the Allen austerity bud- get. Hundreds of mentally disturbed children are on long waiting lists for state care and criminally disturbed youths lurk in city streets as juvenile courts cannot get them committed to state facilities. The Boys Vocational School at Whitmore Lake had to turn away 25 youths sent by Detroit Judge James Lincoln last April. HIGHER EDUCATION, desparately needed in varying manners if today's youths are to succeed, also goes untended. The University'is experiencing a sharp increase in applications. So are other state-supported institutions. Jun- ior colleges are not growing fast enough to train future technicians and give some limited higher education. Traffic safety is becoming an increasing state concern as the traffic death toll reaches new heights. Some action has to be taken to stem this useless killing.' Romney has even seemed to have abandoned his fiscal reform goal of creating a flexiblestax structure in favor of aiding local government. He has maintained his desire to stimulate economic growth and ease burdens on lower income groups, but without a flexible tax struc- ture, the other two goals are nearly impossible to attain. WHAT HAS CAUSED this tragic retreat? Apparently, "Many Republican legislators had warned him against a state income tax and some had criticized him for not trying hard enough to economize. Insiders say Rom- ney 'got the message' recently," as one press dispatch puts it. Yet, when the opposition seemed much stronger and Republicans did not have their current executive-legislative unity, an income tax-based, fiscal reform program nearly passed the Senate. Moderate senators have been added this year, seemingly making the job easier. Exercising his vaunted leadership, Romney could make a strong stand for a good fiscal reform program and get it passed. The manner in which he rode roughshod over the House leadership to ' pass the Olympic bills shows that Romney has the strength to get the job done. Basic Democratic support for an income tax makes passage easier. But Romney seems to have chosen the path of retreat and half-hearted measures. Fortu- nately, it is not too late for no. definitive com- mitment can be made until a specific tax program is spelled out. Romney still has the chance to prove whether he is a gallent warrior or a noisy fraud. --PHILIP SUTIN Co-editor Boarding House -- 4, -I "! L VOA CONTROVERSY- * I fian Democracy Challenged__"_"-- ". }} STRATFORD: Lively '4 Brigthen STRATFORD, .Ont.-The plan- ners of the Stratford Festival, always careful t6 include one com- edy in each season's Shakespeare repertoire, decided last year to re- peat "The Taming of the Shrew" (given previously in 1954) rather than attempt either "The Comedy of Errors" of "The Two Gentle- men of Verona," the only two comedies not yet performed at the Ontario theatre. This year, with renewed courage, Stratford has tackled "The Comedy of Errors," Shakespeare's slightest play, "The Comedy of Errors" concerns two Syracusans, Antipholus and Dromio, who arrive in Ephesus and are mistaken for their identical twins, Antipholus and Dromio of Ephesus. The confusion of iden- tities is very nearly the whole play; both confusion and play are resolved only when the twins Anti- pholus are brought together and reunited with their long-lost fa- ther and mother. As might be expected of a play that dwells for two hours on a case of mistaken identity, the hu- mor tends to be broad and the play readily lends itself to staging as- a farce. THE STRATFORD production, as directed by Jean Gascon, is a very busy farce that usese ele- ments- of commedia dell'arte to heighten both the action and the artificiality of the comedy. A band of punchinellos armed with clap- pers that serve as paddles and noisemakers often aidordapplaud the action; the Dromios, masked like the majority of players, ar- rive and depart with speed, stand and speak in on-foot-forward, toe-in-the-air attitudes, and shift their feet in quick, dance-like movements. Director Gascon has also created an unusually large amount of stage "business" for minor characters. Throughout the long first-act nar- rative of old Aegeon (father of the twins Antipholus), the local of- ficials are conspicuous in moving about, adjusting their chairs, tak- ing notes and, aided by the punch-, inellos, frequently interrupting the old man's ramblings. In a later scene, one of the merchants, who walks as if both knees were out of joint, walks during every line he speaks. And when no other business is under way, an actor may arrive early for the next scene, stand at the side of the stage and adjust his mask or juggle a stage property. As for the Shakespeare text, which moves right along under cover of all the visual effects, some of the lines are simply thrown away by the actors while others are rearranged to suit the mood of fast-played farce. The two long speeches of Luciana and Antipholus of Syracuse that begin Act III, Scene 2, are chopped up into dialogue; the last lines of. Antipholus speech are set to mu- sic and sung by him at intervals later in the scene. The acting throughout "The Comedy of Errors," is generally production, lacking in the real strong but, given the terms of the depth one finds in nearly all Strat- ford's stagings of Shakespeare. Nevertheless, it is in quality of acting, and in the ability to de- liver Shakespeare with authority, that the Ontario production clear- ly bests the current Stratford, play, an even noisier production Connecticut, staging of the same that also makes use of commedia dell'arte conventions (including punchinellos with paddles). * * *a KATE REID and Martha Henry, Comedy' s Festival as Adriana and Luciana, appear t stand above the sea of confusio: perhaps because they are the on] major characters who do not wea masks that submerge their ides titles. The roles of the twins An tipholus and Dromio are take by James Douglas and Petb Donat, and Eric Christmas at Douglas. Rain, all of them in mensely capable actors. But the attention of the at dience is continually drawn those in gratesque character rol( who have little to say and lots 1 do: William Needles as the dul of Ephesus, Hugh Webster as th quack Pinch, Amelia Hall as tl kitchen wench Nell, and others, a heavily masked, painted and cc tumed (by Robert Prevost at Mark Negin). In all, the production is so fu of comic invention and activi that individual reactions to it wl no doubt differ widely: those pe: sons seeking an evening's enter tainment may find the play live and exciting, but those more fa miliar with Shakespeare in gener and Stratford's usually tastef and creative staging of the con edies will probabaly find th year's "The Comedy of Error: badly overdone and a vulgariza tion of Stratford's own style. -Vernon Nahrgang LETTERS to the EDITOR A TH ME NIVRS panic. * Students who graduate Librar period are joini scholars who st before the 7 p.m of the "regulars of history of ar pictures they ha hasty perusal t*4 nation. The pressure o ing degrees, with who are far be "do-or-die" fina centage of their grade, or who examination sche into at least onec IDEALLY, final give the stude size the vast amo within a semest students shouldt and relate in af to achieve an ovi have done. Students mak waiting until th courses, as they sessions to "get too, makes a f Relax, It MA Get Better 3ITY'S student population is in scheduling a lengthy study or reading period which would give students the time to make have not entered the Under- examinations meaningful. y since the last examination ng the -throngs of book-laden BUT FINAL EXAMINATIONS may be at their ream there at 6:30 to arrive most ridiculous next semester, when the . throng and to usurp the seats University launches a tri-semester program ." At the same time, students which is expected to become a fixture on the t are lined up six deep before campus spene. ave not considered save for a Final examinations will be reduced to two 'o days before the final exami- hours instead of the current three, and a few students may have to take three finals during )f examinations is felt in vary- a single, day. The policy represents a turning a the burden on those students away from the European idea of end-of-year hind, who shall experience a examinations, which encourages independent l which represents a high per- scholarship among some students and total grade, sometimes the whole neglect of studies among others. have an especially charged There are two sides to the question. There edule. Almost every student fits is something to be said for a system that em- of the categories. phasizes finals, and thus makes great demands on the individual initiative of students. The examinations are intended to "do-or-die" final, however, presupposes a high- ent an opportunity to synthe- ly mature student population, and is unfor- ount of subject matter handled tunately too much to expect from under- er. While studying for exams, graduates, many of whose high school exper- have the opportunity to review iences have been generally mediocre. fairly relaxed manner in order - On the other hand, a system with no finals 'erall picture of the work they or end-of-semester examinations which are only as important as hourlies is probably more e a farce of examinations by fair, as it gives grades on the basis of over-all .e last minute to attack their performance. Until now, the University has engage in last-minute cram vacillated between the two systems, and exam- that grade." The University, inations policies have varied considerably from arce of examinations by not department to department. However, the University has apparently de- cided to turn toward the more flexible system. The decision is debatable and philosophers of education will continue the endless discussion of the validity of the final examination. But Editorial Staff because the decision has been made and the .................... ....Co-Editor policy established, students and their profes- .................... Co-Editor sors must work toward a de-emphasis of the ......C.... o-Sports Editor ............. Co-Sports Editor final, and an emphasis on work during the I ....................Night Editor semester. By DEB DAS of the University of Washington THE SUDDEN CONTROVERSY that appears to have flared up in India over relaying Voice of. America broadcasts from Calcutta is clear proof-if proof was ever needed--of the problems created by the principle of free speech. In its first flush of enthusiasm, the Indian government had agreed country in the Asian mainland which has been able to sustain and improve its democratic founda- tions since independence without threat of military dictatorship or. AT THE CAMPUS: Sleep"er Game' "A GAME FOR Six Lovers," cur- rently playing at the Campus Theater, is a rather intriguing film-and a "sleeper" it seems to me, whose chief merit is a per- vading lack of pretense about sex. Six people: a pair of ex-lovers (Miguel and Milena), a pair of present lovers (Fifine and Robert( and a pair of lovers-to-be (Cesar and Prudence) become involved in an elaborate game of free love.' Musical chairs, so to speak, but rather from the French word "chair"s meaning flesh. The event that brings the three couples into this promiscuous con- fluence is a conventional one: tie reading of a dead woman's last will and testament. * * * . AS A DEVICE, its use is crude yet forgiveable. In fact it forces the movie to keep extremely well within the classical unities of time and place-a set of conditions, that is known to lend itself re- luctantly to the fluid, facile art of the cinema. But director Jacques Doniol-Valcroze has ap- proached his problem well. The abundance ofzoom shots and travelling shots in the film helps turn our attention away from con- fining time-space limits, and to- ward the more intimate dimen- sions of plot and character. Noteworthy is the portrait of of the sensually pompous cook Cesar, whose traits are naturally exaggerated for comic purposes but never excessively so. The non- comic pieces of acting are han- dled in uninspired but faultless fashion. And when all three of the newly-formed couples are frolicking in bed, there comes a photographic climax: a swift smooth tracking shot completely around the house that is perhaps orgasmic by nature of its motion and is at least "embracing." THE PICTURE ends on a phrase-someone must lose in any game. For once the short subjects that were on view were also good. A to let the United States construct a two-million dollar transmitter in Calcutta in return for four hours of VOA broadcasting daily (mainly to South East Asia) for a period of five years. Now 'it, appears that Indian opinion is not giving the government easy passage over the issue. The Communist Party is crying imperialist wolf; the right- wing Jan Sangh and the Socialists have found it expedient to unite on the principle of national in- tegrity, and even the Freedom Party, traditionally and hard- headedly anti - Communist and radical pro-Western, is abstaining from commitment while it takes a long hard look. With the-ruling Congress Party The Menonist left is wavering in itself, things are not too serene. its support of the Nehrunian cen- ter; it is only the somewhat am- biguous- but tough Desai-Chaven right wing that seems to have ral- lied forces (for its own reasons) behind the official "Nehru" policy --there are strong reasons to be- lieve that they, and not Nehru, were the active agents behind the agreement in the first place. THE ISSUE has become some- thing of a hot potato in Indian democracy; nobody wants to take the responsibility for shelving it, but everyone would be happy if it was temporarily forgotten. Why all this fuss over a radio station-or, to put it more accur- ately, an extension to already existing radio facilities? At the cost of taking a lot of spice and action out of political reportage, All-India Radio has re- mained severely and colorlessly non-partisan. It reported political conventions, election results, plat- forms, without any emotional tremor; it leaned over backwards not to mention Congress Party policy; and the awkwardness with which it would have to report of- ficial acts of "Prime Minister Ne- hru"' (which was news, after all) was obvious to sensitive listeners. THE SHORTCOMINGS of such an approach to politics is obvious. But its merits must not be for- gotten. That India, the world's largest democracy, is also the only Learning THE ANCIENTS who wished to Tillustrate illustrious v i rt ue throughout the empire, first or- dered well their own states. Wish- ing to order well their states, they first regulated their families. Wishing to regulate their families, they first cultivated their persons. Wishing to cultivate their persons, they first rectified their hearts. Wishing to rectify their hearts, they first sought to be sincere in their thoughts. Wishing to be sin- cere in their thoughts, they first extended to the utmost their knowledge. Such extension of knowledge lay in the investigation of things. major subversion is a fact-though this is often ignored by Americans. What must not be forgotten is that the neutralization of radio, often used as a means to influence public opinion towards totalitarian thinking in underdeveloped coun- tries, may have contributed sub- stantially towards/ this result. All, the way in Asia, from Turkey to Viet Nam radio is an exclusive ideological weapon in government hands. And-all the way-demo- cracy has faltered, was threatened, or- has been overthrown. It is not difficult for an Indian (of what- ever political viewpoint) to make the necessary syllogism, and to convert it to a premise for action. There are many questions that a responsible Indian will want answered, whatever his sympathies for the free world, before he is prepared to decide on the question. Why was the project kept under wraps until the agreement was all but initialled-why did the Indian government not make an advance effort to prepare and educate In- dian opinion? What safeguards are being taken to ensure that the traditional control of a country over its own public media will not be surrendered to another power, however friendly? India, for all its newly-discovered basis of true alliance with the free world, has its own democracy to protect. An effort should have been made, on the part of the Indian government if by no other party, to ensure that proper appreciation of this principle was maintained. To the Editor: THE PLANS for possible future .expansionof the University are especially appealing in their design for beautiful and functional walk- ways. In view of the present dis- heveled conditions of the grounds, it is refreshing to think of plazas with fountains, grottos, esthetic bridges, and that "crescent of con- tinuous campus green." I would like to add a suggestion concerning a rather serious omis- sion in the planned walkways. In making their surveys, the John- son, Johnson and Roy people ap- parently did not venture on Thay- er St. between classes, for this great tide of traffic is entirely overlooked in their master plan for walkways. This is a most pressing problem at present and shows no sign of being alleviated under the plans for expansion. Part of the problem is made all too clear by the firm path worn across the lawn from North Uni- versity St. to the Diag, a message which the summer sidewalk pro- gram entirely ignored. Ideally, the block of Thayer St. between Washington and North University Streets should be clos- ed to vehicular traffic entirely and converted to one of those tree- shaded, lawn-bordered walkways, but the presence of a parking structure and a hotel obviously preclude that sort of arrange- ment. I would like to suggest, as an alternative, that no parking be allowed on the street. This would make it feasible to narrow the street and widen the sidewalk so that it can accommodate the mul' titude of students who must rush between classrooms in the Frieze Bldg. and those in the Angell- Mason-Natural Science Bldg. com- plex. It would also make life easier for both pedestrians and cyclists if a special lane could be set aside just for bicycles. -Mrs. U. R. Freimarek RONALD WILTON PHILIP BUTIN ... DAVE GOOD.. CHARLES TOWLE RUTH HETMANSK Y ' ,/t r 'K ' ,/"T' r. .,. 1 +r l [, ' yr f ,( f11 r y :. Z .. r, ,1 . i ' ,-, ti e - 's ,, i_ ,r; ,,., M F , - t, ;, ~ ;. L ,