e Ir ir4iia &i Siwat-Ff bai n E=TED Axv MA11AdUZ ETSTuDwmTSOF TiE UxrmfTy rT Muats MMDEAL AUMTORM!TOF BOARDfl n COWmIOx. OFSTUMMTr ?uW~ueaO FEIFFER 'WMhff OCInions Ar Pre%420 MAYNARD ST., ANN Ai~ab,, Mimj Trth bWm Preai 4, MT D0 w ® I SEEA A t WHERE LOVE o f17 GREAT FARMS' E7 ANP 6AW.T -.~ ~ cM651 I 6Cr MEN AT WORK, CN(MEvkAT NEws PHONE: 74-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, 14 JANUARY 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN BRYANT 0,WfAT I% i LSEE, OF 0f IVEA4t;5 YOU %, ~ ~ EIAW.JL2CNtTRAfRt- MR G 1Ew-- JeS- Z I : ALL- THE MAUU .MEN PEOPLE .6RSWIMS 1A6 AMJP CLOSED MINDS OR NIM& . , " WIPE, IJSEEA RIC14HA1?VS1OF CXJK- ARMIWe AWP flW ARTS. Romney as a Politician Has a Long Way To Go GOV. GEORGE ROMNEY seems to have learned something from his unhappy experience with the 1963 state Legisla- ture when the complete lack of coopera- tion between Romney and the Democratic legislators resulted in the scuttling of the governor's fiscal reform program. Many observers commented at the time that the Democrats voted against the program, which was similar to tax plans they had supported under Governors Wil- liams and Swainson, because Romney had not called them in to discuss the plan prior to its presentation. He deliv- ered his program and seemed to expect it to pass as a matter of course. Romney counted on the Republican ma- jority in the Legislature to get his fiscal plan through and believed it unnecessary to deal with the Democrats until it was too late. Now, however, with great Demo- cratic majorities in both state houses, he is forced to consider them if he wants his legislative program to pass. THAT HE REALIZES this is evidenced by the two meetings he held recently with Democratic legislative leaders. At these meetings the participants defined what they thought the areas of differ- ence would be in the forthcoming session of the Legislature. They did not attempt to find any solutions. The purpose of the meetings, then, was simply political; by holding them Rom- ney showed that he doesn't want to re- peat his previous political blunder. But though the governor seems to have learn- ed this lesson, he still must watch hig political step, or he may find that he will alienate his fellow Republicans by too much pandering to the Democrats. Auditor General Allison Green, outgo- ing House speaker, and Lt. Gov. William Milliken (R-Traverse City) were the only Republicans besides Romney present at the two meetings. It took Sen. Garland Lane (D-Flint), who seems to be watch- ing Romney's political moves more close- ly than the governor himself, to suggest that the Republican minority leaders be present at future meetings--a sugges- tion to which the governor readily assent- ed. BUT THIS IS THE TYPE of idea the governor should have presented on his own. Romney has certainly become more astute politically in the last two years, but he has a long way to go before he can legitimately present a flawless political image. --THOMAS R. COPI c1R D, BUTWMT g Wfg.?15. j SOurJP AMP STONG, HEWN OUTrF M ROC-K OF6WVE * MTAKE 0M W~& -MEW ~ % VIIT 1tX) W 5 MR-ALR-- 1fMT 1566E A MAMATE FOR? MAPP1MES. L SE w PRHILJW W~ES OF MMl~- FAT M19I KMtJY 'TALL- AJM. ~ CfAMG AS ONE, 'ON WARD 1TO THEN 6RaT S£OCIETY!~ WILL ALLU-^' IG lH6 COMA' OFALL- ALE. WOMEN AT lWC- 0, Tat. I SEEC MACK MR PRE$1 - ''.. FfI.AL 6 fAOWY PUCfT- OF- RICH AMP POOR, ALL- THE- OW-PANN) 'YOVM4 PEOPL E ?eD16AMP LtIr[VJ SMALL AWP C .j , LAR6 . /v FROM 'THE WORLD OF APU' TO 'TOM JONES': A Review of 1964's Best and Most Popular Films By MICHAEL JULIAR A MOTION PICTURE should be judged on its enduring value as cinematic excitement. If the eye, ear and mind will mull over the experience of seeing the pic- ture, if some excitement is savor- ed and can be expected to be savored again, the film is a suc- cess and will be seen for genera- tions. This film is a masterpiece; it cannot be expected every year. But it can be hoped for. After watching scores of films every year, one becomes tired of the common celluloid passed along as top-notch, must-see experi- ences. For instance, when as mild a piece of entertainment as "The Americanization of Emily" is en- thusiastically applauded, I ques- tion the quality of the criticism of the young art. One cannot separate entertain- ment from what is supposed to be intellectually exciting. It is a com- mon American trait, an obvious example of our anti-intellectual culture, that when we relax, all thoughts and ideas-anything re- motely connected with the mental processes-are to be foregone. * * * AMERICANS go to a movie theatre to salve the mind. But the cinema is not a Turkish bath. It is a form of expression and so- called arty or intellectual works are also the most exciting and therefore the most entertaining. Unfortunately, our culture does not subscribe to this precept and the only way to support this ex- pensive medium is to keep it on a commercial level 99 per cent of the time. But attacks on this commer cial- ism now get a bored reaction from the film makers. We exacerbate the patrons of the local theatres Revolt, Movie- Goers WHAT DO YOU DO when a monopoly raises its prices? Unhappy University moviegoers face this problem. In December, all three campus-area theatres quietly slipped the tab up from $1 to $1.25 a head. Since all three are part of the same theatre chain, the Invisible Hand is unlikely to intervene in behalf of the exploited con- sumer. Various irate students have suggest- ed various ways to ease prices back down. Among them: -The classic method: Have a riot. -The Ghandian method: Boycott these theatres until the price is reduced. Both of these methods, while quite satisfying and possibly effective, lack originality, so subtler techniques have been suggest- ed. -The getting your money's worth method: Stage a sit-in of sorts. Since the admission charge has been raised by 25 per cent, movie patrons should increase correspondingly the length of time they remain in the theatre. There's a certain justice in the procedure: all the patrons at the 7 o'clock show would stay for the first quarter of the 9 o'clock show. Few potential 9 o'clock customers, of course, would be willing to wait around until 9:30, but that's show biz. -The free enterprise method: Bring in some competition. Given a rapidly ex- panding student body, it shouldn't be im- possible to attract some non-Butterfield- chain theatres to Ann Arbor. 1WHATEVER THE METHOD, it is time for an expression of consumer senti- ment. -KENNETH WINTER Managing Editor "This Is The Great Society?" 4, 1 ¢. Y ' ' TK r ,,.. , 7 fL F T i 1 % i j ,. - fsy __--_ World View from New York and get a "don't watch it if you don't like it, or go to your art theatre" reaction. It may seem to be a losing cause most of the time, but it is the only way a serious critic can react. Since the University campus is little different from the average community, the film-going stu- dent has little appreciation of the film as art or what constitutes a good motion picture. The theory, history (except for that of a few stars) and techniques of movie making are unknown to him. A MOVIE is meant to be enter- taining, most students believe. Whether or not it is an art form is something entirely irrelevant to them. This review of the year's best and most popular films is written, as the average Daily movie criticism is, for the student who has an interest in the cinema and inswhat someone elseeth.nks about the medium. It must in- clude the presentations at the Cinema Guild to make possible a decent-sized list of the good films that have been presented to Ann Arbor this year. "SEDUCED AND ABANDONED" -the second best film I have seen this year. It was not only funny and sardonic, but director Pietro Germi used the medium with tech- nical virtuosity to create visual impressions that can only be done with the film. For some, the act- ing was too heavily boistrous, but I accepted every iota of energy put into the parts by the irrate father, the dishonored daughter and the dishonoring young man. As an incisive examination of the Sicilian character, it is merciless and human. "A HARD DAY'S NIGHT" seeing this was like being ener- gized, pumped with pep pills and 'shot to the moon. It is one of the few movies I have ever seen that demonstrated what the motion picture can do. Done in semi- documentary fashion, the movie made the spectator feel that he was a part of the action, not just a witness. This was done with many editing and compositional techniques that one can only ad- mire. It was like watching spon- taneous combustion take place. Whether what was shown of the four moppets was true to life or only good acting fun on their part is not important. I do have some reservations on how the chase scene at the end was han- dled and the soporific crudity of some of the jokes. And half of the dialogue should have been sub- titled for our American ears. But my eye was usually too busy to worry about what my ear was missing. Some of the films of last year that were outstanding to a lesser extent were "The Easy Life"'and "America, America." THEN THERE were the popu- lar films. "DR. STRANGELOVE"-Strik- ing to some people because of the way it handled some subject matter that had been taboo at the time, was forced, unfunny and only momentarily terrifying. "TOM JONES"-Actually from 1963, but shown in Ann Arbor in 1964, was a one-shot laugh for those who had not read the book in a while. It was a silly and prudish exercise, even though some individual scenes did rise to the occasion. "CLEOPATRA - It fell with the thunderous sound of $42 mil- lion ringing in our ears. Two very fine films never made it to the city last year and maybe never will. Louis Malle's "Le Feu Follet" ("The Fire Within") and during a semester. I saw all but five of the programs. The outstanding film of the semester, and of the entire year, was by Satyajit Ray-"The World of Apu." He is the finest director in the world today. He operates in a tradition that is less in- novation than that of many of his co-workers in the European countries, but there is no finer humanist. He is the poet of the cinema. There are very few artists, even in other mediums, that can equal him. Jean Vigo's last film, "L'Atal- ante" did not make him very well known. Accordingly, it was sparsely attended when it came to the Guild. Too many people missed a stimulating experience. FEDERICO Fellini's "The Nights of Cabiria" displays a characteris- tic enthusiasm for life. Akira Kurosawa's "Ikiru" was too meaty and satiating to satisfy all tastes because of Kurosawa's passion for the doomed protagon- ist. But it is.a masterpiece. Everybody is familiar with "Modern Times." Michelangelo Antonioni's "L'- Avventura" needs several viewings ROOFTOP VIEW FROM SAIGON; OFFICIAL VIEW FROM WASHINGTON; WORLD VIEW FROM NEW YORK. "When Ngo Dinh Diem's government fell, more than a year ago, a Time/Life News Service correspondent watched the attack on the palace from a rooftop less than 200 yards away. "Time/Life's Washington staff turned up the hard news of the coup itself two hours before anything came through on the Saigon ticker. "In New York, editors were getting re- action stories." So reads the opening of a two-page, full-color advertisement in a national magazine this week for Time/Life News Service, "the largest newsgathering force of any publication or broadcast network in the world." EVIDENTLY TIME has a pretty short memory. Last month when David Hal- berstam, Pulitzer Prize-winning New York H. NEIL BERKSON, Editor KENNETH WINTER KEDWARD HERSTEIN Managing Editor Editorial Director ANN GWIRTZMAN ............... Personnel Director BILL BULLARD....................Sports Editor MICHAEL SATTINGER .... Associate Managing Editor JOHN KENNY ............ Assistant Managing Editor DEBORAH BEATTIE.... Associate Editorial Director LOUIS LIND.......... Assistant Editorial Director in Charge of the Magazine TOM ROWLAND............Associate Sports Editor GARY WINER ..,............. Associate Sports Editor STEVEN HALLER...............Contributing Editor MARY LOU BUTCHER............Contributing Editor JAMES KESON ................... Chief Photographer NIGHT EDITORS:..David Block, John Bryant, Robert Johnston, Laurence Kirshbaum, Karen Weinhouse. * 4ZT xmA TI NUTfT." VnT' . * ,.. T a1,p T Biiam by anyone who wishes to under- stand why it is such a fine film. Still, I will always prefer Fellini to Antonioni's paced and symbolic introspection. D. W. Griffith's "The Birth of a Nation" is too commonplace to- day to allow us to understand what it meant to a 1915 audience. That would not be true of a real masterpiece, which would continue to be significant to most people after any amount of mimicking and unchecked plagiarism. * * * THERE WERE two films that attracted large audiences and were no disappointments. Mae West in "She Done Him Wrong" was fun, and the college audience knows how to accept the innu- endoes and double-entendres in her repertory. "Notorious" had a loose end or two, but is one of the best Alfred Hitchcock films. He is the 'master of what Francois Truffaut thinks must be done by any film maker who calls himself an artist- creating an emotion in the audi- ence (which is not hard to do) and sustaining that emotion as long as necessary (which is ex- tremely difficult). Times South Viet Nam correspondent spoke here, he told at length of a friend, Charles Mohr, Time's Southeast Asia bu- reau chief. It seems that Time asked Mohr for a dispatch on the situation in Saigon dur- ing the summer of 1963. Mohr filed a long pessimistic story, saying that things were not looking good for Diem. The Time editors with their "New York world-view" chose to disregard their cor- respondent's story. They ran an article saying that indeed things were looking good for Viet Nam and Diem. When Mohr asked what had happened to his dispatch, the editors wrote and said he "did not understand the big picture." Well a few weeks later Diem fell: Time was wrong. Mohr quit shortly thereafter. AS THE AD SAYS: "This is an example of how Time In- corporated endeavors to bring informa- tion and understanding to people every- where." -R. RAPOPORT Details A REPORT issued today by the Indus- trial Development Division of the In- stitute of Science and Technology indi- cates that Michigan's future economic growth is largely dependent on utiliza- tion of new technologies that the being nurtured in the state universities' re- search programs. To quote, "New technologies can fur- ther vitalize the state's already strong machinery and metalworking industry base." 'MEMBER OF THE WEDDING': Great Play, Good Film At the Cinema Guild "THE MEMBER of the Wedding," released in 1952, was directly adapted from the highly-regarded stage version of Mrs. Carson McCullers' 1946 novel. The "plot" itself is tenuous; the substance and delight of the work are contained in character portrayal. Frankie is a 12-year-old girl in a small contemporary Georgia town whose brother is getting married. Having only a 7-year-old neighbor boy as a pal, Frankie despairs of not belonging-of being only a "I," not part of a "we." Her love for the soon-to-be married couple is also a desire for joining them to become part of a we-three, and she decides to accompany them on the honeymoon "and forever and ever." On the stage, superb and definitive performances were turned in by the leads. Such a stereotyped role as the Negro cook/mammy will probably never be more satisfactorily portrayed than by Ethel Waters. * *' * * AS FRANKIE, Julie Harris passionately pursued her search for identity and a sense of belonging. Her volatility and tantrums accur- ately and sympathetically reproduced the awkwardness, physical and emotional, of the uncertain pre-teen. Indeed, the sense of alienation seems almost psychopathological, if not an unwitting existential cry. The film preserves nearly all that shone so brilliantly under the lights, but an important flaw is introduced. Unlike theatre perform- ances, we see, through the camera's eye, Miss Harris as too grown up for the role. Her face. neck and the expressions intertwined thereon. PASSING THE PLAQUES: Present ing Awards.,for Unsung'College Heroes By ROGER RAPOPORT EACH YEAR outstanding achievement in the arts, sciences and industry is recognized through various awards. There are the Emmy Awards, Academy Awards, Pulitzer Prizes, and Nobel Prizes. However, a large number of significant achievements on the college level go unnoticed. Therefore in the hope that worthy universities, administrators, institutions and students receive the acclaim they deserve, here are the first annual "Unsung College Heroes Awards:" LIPTON TEA AWARD-To Mrs. Harlan Hatcher. When an angry student mob came to her back door after a protest rally, she met their demands by inviting them all back to the President's tea the next day. MACHIAVELLI AWARD-To University of California at Berkeley Chancellor Edward Strong. He saw that all the bathrooms in the administration building were lock- ed before the 18-hour Dec. 5 student sit-in began.f> MAHATMA GANDHI AWARD- To the passive University of Cali- fornia students at the Berkeley sit-in. Total damage to the ad- ministration building amounted to a set of hinges taken from two locked bathroom doors. A. B. DICK MIMEOGRAPH AWARD - To University Prof. MRS. HATCHER TONSOR Stephen Tonsor who called off a History 101 mid-term examination five minutes after it started. His secretary hadn't run off enough copies of the test. THE CECILLE B. DEMILLE AWARD-To Notre Dame University for winning an injuction against "John Goldfarb Please Come Home." THE JOE MCCARTHY AWARD-To "Newsweek" magazine for calling Students for a Democratic Society "socialist oriented." THE JOHN PETER ZENGER AWARD-To the administration of Roosevelt University, Chicago, for firing the editorial board of the Roosevelt Torch for printing a true story that the president was being fired and the school was $700,000 in debt. JOHN PHILLIP SOUSA AWARD-To Leonard Falcone, director of the Michigan State University Marching Band. Falcone said he'd be happy to go back to South Bend after his band was attacked there by a mob of Notre Dame r students at the Notre Dame- ' Michigan State game, resulting in $700 damage. ASPHALT JUNGLE AWARD- To the students of the University of Detroit for running down Liver- nois to the John Lodge Freeway A and blocking all six lanes of traffic for two hours to protest the university's decision to drop RUSSELL REVELLI football. JOHND EWEV AWARD-To aliforni Tniiit tof Tehnnonov I