"What's This Ugly Talk About Applying Rules To ME?" - NMI r 1 y ,C< JJ4 a1 'Los Olvidados': Impact of Real Squalor THE CINEMA GUILD is showing Luis Bunuel's "Los Olividados" this weekend. The theme is common enough-the financial and emo-. tional cast-offs of a big city-but it would do only minimal justice to the film to say that it is not a cliche. In face it would be restraint to the point of injustice. Not only the style but the force of the film is unique. The big city is Mexico and Bunuel, who began his career with the now classic surrealist film, "Le Chein Andalou," (to which film such men as Bergman, Hitchcock and the French New Wave owe a great deal) though he is not the first film-maker to discover the surreal- istic possibilities of Mexico, uses them with shattering effectiveness. MUCH CAN BE said, and I'm sure it has, about finding the right location for a film, butmore must be said after the film is made. If the director is a poet such asu- nuel, his sensitive and absolute involvement in the location he has chosen obligates the observer for .any satisfactory explanations of the film's effect. It is on the other hand, perhaps the most personal of the poet-film-maker's means of expression beside which "analysis" and "explanation" seem cold and crude. Bunuel's style is harsh. His ef- fects come fast and are meant to, hit hard and he doesn't repeat them. At the same time he knows how to understate with the best of the Neo-realists. Like them also his mastery is such that he can ex- cite and involve one through this understatement as Hollywood can only dream of doing. His sex is violent and direct, but only in im- plication, and needs none of the standard props. Neither does he work for super-characters nor even for any complicated character in- terrelationships. Not for him are there symbols. Rather there is a bluntness, a directness of attack. He works directly from the inside out, without impediments. If at times he seems to be speaking through gritted teeth, still if his fists are clenched, he swings. IN THE FIRST scenes the move- ments are violent; the scenes themselves alternate rapidly out- ward gathering up the characters while both plot and characters are held together only by. the direct- ness of each. As the film generates its own momentum this violenee becomes constrained and the cpm-, passion of the poet becomes mani- fest. From out of the hashish of smell and movements and sights and sounds, from out of the hope- lessness of a castoff gang, a hero emerges. But in no ordinary way. The impact of the dream is solid, but in the primitive relentlessness of the film's direction there is time for neither the boy nor the audi- ence to reflect and the only real emotional scene of the film is the last when the boy is literally given over to the ultimate filth of nature to perform its ultimate rites upon him.' --Robert Kraus CHURCHES: Seek Unity By GEORGE W. CORNELL Associated Press Religion Writer AN APPEAL TO the churches t break through the walls o denominationalism w a s issue yesterday by the National Counc of Churches. They were urged t labor for "full unity, visible an invisible, of the people of God." THE ASSEMBLY, representin most of the nation's major prc testant and orthodox churche urged these steps in efforts I achieve full unity: 1) furthe development of "corporate an common ministeries" serving a churches. 2) Recognition tha inter-denominational councils, o local or others levels, "partake o the nature of the church." Acknowledgement by each denom* ination of "the authenticity o Christian discipleship in all ti others" and a willingness to tru: them in caring for human soul 4) Action by all churches in ear community to "live and act. tC gether as one church in one place "Every congregation needs I recognize itself first of all. as part of Christ's universal churcl and only thereafter as a represen tative of a particular histor tradition," t h e pronouncemen said, THE MESSAGE, the main pr nouncement of the week-long a: sembly representing 33 denomina tions, with 40 million member applauded the growing ecumenica movement for Christian unity, ai said, "Through this movement th Church has been given a sharpen ed understanding of the tragec of its divisions and a clarifie vision of the greatness of its hop for ultimate unity." The tone of the message, ,hov ever, showed the mounting ur gency of church leaders to brir about a genuine solidarity o Christian bodies, an impulse- e: pressed in numerous proposa advanced at the assembly, INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Communist Cliches Reiterated By J. M. ROBERTS come up with the charge that Associated Press News Analyst the United States is blocking the T APPEARS THAT the world reunific'ation of that country. You is now to be subjected to a most wouldn't think they'd like to talk intensive reiteration of all the old so much about it, because it's true. Communist cliches. Joe Stalin tried to unify Korea Every year since the Korean by force of North Korean Com- War, for instance, the Reds have munist arms in 1950, and the War Conditions Affect Communist Scares the -Editor: ticized Kramer for making Bryan THE article "The University a "freak"; he has chided Kramer .nd The Alleged Communist," a for turning "his guns on Menc- erence is made in its context ken." What Mr. Kraus doesn't .t a communist scare was on realize is that 'in a movie there is -ing the spring of 1952. It is al- such a thing as a script. If he had contended that Mr. McPhaul taken the trouble to read the play y have been a victim of this (he can get it in an abridged ver- re. I believe that the American sion), Mr. Kraus would have dis- ple in 1952 had good reason to covered that the movie dialogue in r an ominous communist men- most scenes coincides exactly with . The party line at that time that of the play. And the play was s not one of "peaceful coexist- received quite well on Broaadway. e," but one of armed aggres- * n, and the Indo-Chinese war ALL THE "TRICKS" of Mr. I the Korean conflict were Kramer which Kraus refers to are n being waged against commu- in the script of the play. If the re- t forces. viewer wishes to criticize these, I Thirty-thousand soldiers gave suggest he read the play first. I ir lives in the Korean conflict, cannot call them tricks, but I can I conditions were such that it give that label to Mr. Kraus' state- ild easily have turned into a ments about Bryan as a villain- jor war. The circumstances not-villain, and about Kramer's ich prevailed during 1952 were miscasting. I would certainly have stly different from those at preferred to see Muni, Begley, and U during the recent contro- Randall again, but Mr. Kraus has sy over communist speakers, not given me one reason to believe d unless this fact is realized no that the actors were inadequate. I 1 conclusions can be made re- do not think they were. ding the parallels between the -Harvey Katz, '63L United States blocked that. The Chinese Reds moved in to pull some of the Communist fat out of the fire and thereby became a problem for Soviet leadership. BUT EVERY YEAR they bring it up, complete with all the faded charges of imperialism, andevery year in the United Nations tells them to agree to free elections or forget it. The only new items added to the list of Communist charges of im- perialism in recent years have been regarding the Congo and Cuba, which are new issues. But the controllers o the var- ious Communist -he4 countries, except Yugoslavia, hAve just held a big meeting remindful of the pre-war Comintern sessions and decided to try cold war a while longer before reconsidering the necessity for hot war. THEY ARE better organized now than they were in the '20 and '30s when the Comintern was laying down its blueprint for con- quest, and Khrushchev has a pro- paganda symphony instead of Stalin's one-string. bnd. Poland and Czechoslovakia are already playing prominent roles iT the Red attempt to penetrate Africa and Latin Amgerica. The tempo of the Peiping drum has been rising almost daily. One of the great objectives of the new Communist manifesto is to present the party cause as not merely Russian, where the taint of the new imperialism is so clearly discernible, but as a crusade of "liberated" peoples. * * * MORE ATTACKS on the West will be voiced through other Com- munist capitals as well as by Mos- cow. One hope of, the Soviets is to play on the fact that a very great many of the new African leaders have been so preoccupied with their own troubles and their own domestic politics that they know comparatively little about world affairs. They are not always able to detect distortions. So all the old distortions are to be gone oer again, with such new ones as opportunity offers. It's going to be boresome. And dangerous. CUBA: Student Manifesto FEU, CUBA'S national student association, this fall issued a statement of their position con- cerning university reform. The manifesto offers concrete proposals to correct education shortages: 1) opening the univer- sity to poor Cubans through an ef- fective scholarship program, 2) integration of the university, in the cultural life of Cuba, 3) re- structuring of curricula, including restaffing and changes in differ- ent faculties, 4) dismissal of "un- qualified, counter - revolutionary DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin Is an, official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Building, before 2 p.m. two days preceding publication. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9 General Notices The Institute 'of International Edu- cation has announced a student eir- change arrangement between thenRu- manian government and the United States. Awards will provide tuition and monthly stipend sufficient to cover living expenses. The United States will offer travel grants to supplement these awards. Candidates must be United States citizens, at least 21 years of age, must have at least one year of graduate training, and must have a knowledge of the Rumanian language. FULB3RIGHT APPLICATIONS f o r study in Poland will be accepted until January 10, an extension of the former deadline of November 15. Awards pro- vide tuition, living accommodations, and a monthly stipend. Further in- formattpn and application forms for the Rumanian and Polish programs are available at the Fellowship Office, Room 110, Graduate School. Deadline date for receipt of all application ma- terials is January 10. -Daily--Larry Vanice SPEECH DEPARTMENT: :I Placid Production', O FEW OF THEM have tongues so musical as O'Casey. And surely there are many, many fine moments in the current Speech De- partment production of "Purple Dust" when the lyrical and boisterous O'Casey production is able to gloriously thunder through the panelled walls of the old Lydia Mendlessohn Theatre. Listen to the music of Mr. O'Casey, delightfully sung by a proper- ly spirited Sherry Levy. Miss Levy is delightful to watch as she ef- fortlessly effectively trips the pleasing O'Casey rhythms off her nicely teasing tongue. From the first moment Miss Levy enters it is apparent that she is having an altogether wonderful time and oh, how successful she is in permeating her utter joy through the entire audience. The. petite Miss Levy made the big stage of the Lydia Mendlessohn glow last night. * * * , BESIDES MISS LEVY "Purple Dust" has other performances to recommend it. Howard Green is for the most part very effective as the tradition-bound Englishman who is Miss Levy's lover. And Marlowe Teig has fine feel for the O'Casey idiom also as the philosophical and rascalous workman who gloriously claims the heart of Miss Levy at the play's close. But unfortunately all is not working in harmony with this cur- rent Speech Department outing. Although director Norton has con- tributed some fine touches to the performance his pacing is highly uneven and insufficiently intense. The lyrical quality of O'Casey is not