e M~ign e N Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. 9 ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Opinons Are Free th. Will Preail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AT THE MICHIGAN 'Suddenly Last Summer': ANNESSEE WILLIAMS' "Suddenly Last Summer" is not just another film in the current trend in Hollywood toward the "adult." It is art. Many viewers may be repulsed by this film and find it highly unpleasant because it deals with homosexuality, insanity, cannibalism, and an abnormal mother-son relationship. No one would deny that any one of these things would be sufficient, enough to make any other movie distasteful. But the same artistic powers which enabled Sophocles to raise "Oedipus" from being a play about murder and incest have enabled "Suddenly Last Summer" to become a cinema milestone. The highest tribute that can be paid to this movie is to say that it should silence forever those -who say that Hollywood cannot produce movies of depth and sensitivity that are in the same class as those of Bergman and DeSica. Gore Vidal, who collaborated with Williams in adapting the original play for the screen, said this film is entirely symbolic. Thus, it can be :I Y, FEBRUARY 28, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS KABAKER Student Activities: Too Much Work, Too Little Fun ;HY ARE almost all student activities find- ing difficulties in recruiting and retaining ople? Perhaps the major worries at the Student tivities Building is finding new talent for ;ivities. Interest is so low that only three ople showed up at the recent Student Gov- iment Council mass meeting. Theoretically, extra-curricular activities are neficial to and popular with students. The ginal benefits, however, have been submerged d lost in the increasing complexity and ount of work required. Even the social aspect activities has been stifled by the amount of rk. Workers are too tired to be alluring. [n addition, the really interesting jobs are complex that it takes an expert to handle em. This proficiency can only be attained by ining in unimportant or routine jobs, thus aning candidates on drudgery. The largest op-out rate comes in the freshman year with wcomers feeling useless and being subject to ode pressure. ' THE STUDENT survives this, however, he usually lasts until his junior year when he gins to get interesting work, a lot of inter- ing work. As soon as he can handle the job is overworked, and his long-suffering grades ke the loss. The second big dropout comes in the junior ar. As one organization woman put it, "the 3lization that I had a year and a half left take advantage of the University facilities A the growing impossibility of doing a good i on either my studies or activities, made me ke a good look at the continuing value of tra-curricular activities." Studies often win t. HY IS IT BECOMING impossible to handle studies and outside activities? Originally, students worked in extra-curricular activities to take a breather from studies, meet people, gain notoriety, and train themselves for re- sponsibility in society. Combining these aims with student government, students gained these benefits while expressing their opinions and bettering theirĀ° lot. Nevertheless by far the major reason for extra-curricular activities was and still is the balancing of studies with re- laxation and outlets for creative energy. "Studies are really cutting into my extra- curricular activities. I think I am going to have to take some easy courses next semester" a student complained recently. This is one way out. OTHERS CURTAIL their activities when they find them taking too much time, thus put- ting more pressure on those left in. The nu- cleus of every organization becomes over- burdened as the rosters grow thin. Work turns into drudgery and produces another rash of casualties. Entering students see these over- worked personnel, measure their cla s .work by them and fail to join the activity. With no recruits, the vicious circle tightens. At present, the libararies are bustling while the activities offices are half empty. Student activities have thus become too com- plex to allow relaxed dabbling and too hectic and time-consuming to draw enough workers to ease the pressure. The pressure is heightened as the University tightens up on the academic requirements and the concept of the gentle- man's "c" becomes discredited, requiring even more academic effort from the students. The remedy for this situation is easier in theory than in practice. More people partici- pating in activities would ease each work load. As it , stands now, however, student activities appear not to offer enough for the amount of work they require. -CAROLINE DOW RACKHAM GRANT EXHIBITION: Cassara Etchings Experiment HE PRINT SHOW by Frank Cassara, Associate Professor in the School of Architecture and Design, currently displayed in the University Museum of Art, offers the viewer carefully conceived and faultlessly executed etchings that form his Rackham Grant Exhibi- tion. "Summer Interlude," a large intaglio printed in brown and ex- hibited together with its plate, introduces the show and suggests in itself many of the techniques and images developed further in the remaining works of the show. Carefully composed in a complex rhythm of dark and light planes, peopled by images of pause and meditation, skillfully slurred in printing to suggest the ambiguity rather than the clarity of the emotion it evokes, "Summer Inter- lude" is, as a result of all these considerations, an intimately sug- gestive observation on man's per- sonal isolation and the reminiscent nature of introspection. In this same mode, the artist further explores the overtones of tender melancholy in his "Musi- cian" and "Music Maker." of which the latter better illustrates his faculty for stretching a web of planes across the neutral surface of the relatively unworked plate, thus achieving a delicacy of bal- ance that suggests the ephemeral nature of the emotion he deals with. In a somewhat less representa- tional vein, Cassara develops glimpses of Nature into such works as the delicate "Mountain Mist" and the fleeting "Divergent Growth." Completely abstract, but equally impressive, are. the swirl- ing forms of "Vortex" and "After- math." IN HIS DEALINGS with these intimately felt and quietly appeal- ing emotions, contained for the most part in impressionistic Na- ture images, the artist is at his best. Other works, however, re- veal a conscientious exploration of both imagery and technique that testifies to a continuing search. He carefully extends his investi- gation of imagery toward the tra- ditional ("Mother and Child") and the non -representational: tries his hand at both large and tiny formats; works on both cop- per and zinc, as well as the less common aluminum. Cassara briefly considers the possibilities of bril- liant color and embossed surface obtained by cutting deeply into or completely through the plate ("Configuration No. 2"). He creates a haunting visceral image of man in his "Configuration"-'by stencil- ing a variety of somber colors on- to the surface of the plate; and thoroughly investigates the poten- tials of a more spontaneous ex- pression of emotion and creation of form than is common in the traditionally disciplined etching medium. IT IS IN THIS last area of in- vestigation that Cassara has been most consistently concerned, since the development of a new ground that permits the etcher more im- mediate expression was the speci- fic objective of the Rackham Grant of which this show is, so to speak, the final report. In this respect, the show is an unqualified success. Many of the prints could have been achieved with no other ground. Whether further development of such immediate expression in his etchings will be productive in artistic terms is a question Cas- sara alone can answer, and he only by continued work. In the meantime, the new possibilities his experiments reveal are of im- mediate interest to the etcher and his prints worthy of careful and appreciative viewing by artist and non-artist alike. --Dave May History of Art Teaching Fellow said, that Violet (Katharine Hep- burn) is not simply a depraved mother procuring young boys for her son, Sebastian. She is the amoral soul of her artist-son which enables him to do anything neces- sary for his creativity. THE KEY to this highly complex film, is there is one, may be the long monologue in which Violet tells of the voyage to the South Seas in which she and Sebastian witnessed newly-hatched sea tur- tles being preyed upon by great, black birds as they tried to reach the safety of the water. The birds would overturn the baby turtles and eat them by ripping open their soft undersides. So too, Nature destroys helpless mankind. Over and over this de- struction theme is reiterated. Vio- let feeds flies to her pet Venus fly traps. Sebastian is torn to pieces by the urchins he has used in his debauchery just as Orpheus was ripped to shreds by dogs. All three stars-Miss Hepburn, Elizabeth Taylor, and Montgomery Cif-are excellent beyond descrip- tion, Joseph L. Mankiewicz's direction and Oliver Messell's decor capture every shade and nuance in this perverse tale. The sequence in which Miss Taylor tells of Sebas- tian's death is photographed with exceptionally expressive camera techniques. -Patrick Chester .DALY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) let Spectroscopy of the Sun" on Tues., March 1 at 4:15 p.m. in Rackham Am- phitheater. Botanical Seminar: Dr. Frederick L. Crane. Univ. of Texas, will speak on "Comparative Biochemistry of Quin- ones" on Mon.. Feb. 29 at 4:15 p.m. 1139 NS. Refreshments will be served at 4:00 p.m. Placement Notices Summer Placement Service: The Summer Placement Service will be open every afternoon from 1:30 to 5, and all day Friday from 8:30 to 12 and from 1:30 to 5. Rm. D528 of the Student Activities Bldg. Beginning with Thurs., March 3, the following schools will have represen- tatives at the Bureau of Appointments to interview for the 1960-61 school year. Thurs., March 3: Deckerviile, Mich. -- Physics/Chem., Biol./Gen. Sci., 6th grade. Monroe, Mich. (Custer School) -- Elem. (K-3) Elemn. Phys Ed.. Jr. HS Math/Coaching Football or Sci./Math, Music Art, Speech Corr. Fri., March 4: Lincoln, Mich. (Alcona Comm. Schs.) -Comm., 1HS English, Soc. Stud.; Elem. (K-4). (Continued on Page 5) SATIRE Gargoyle Satisfies SUDDENLY, last summer, a Gar- goyle wandered into the din- ing room of a somewhat well- known sorority, gobbled up six final desserts, and vanished. Ac- tion was soon to follow. A coalition of Michigan Leaders were swift to point out that they firmly believed that participation in college education is not avail- able to its fullest extent throuogh Gargoyle. * WHAT ABOUT this Gargoyle? Superficially, it looks like a Read- er's Digest, with the same crust, but a new filling. Certain of the destable features of the real Read- er's Digest are duplicated in Gar- goyle, like the (shudder) Personal Glances, Life in Some United States and Humor from Uniform. Unfortunately, the traditional Gargoyle advertising departs from the Digest format, hence a schizo- phrenic division between satire and extraneous advertising styles. But, as Nixon often is supposed to have said, is not consistency the sign of a weak mind? Mostly, a satire of the Digest is in trouble, because the Digest it- self is already a travesty. Gar- goyle's satire keeps its head above water with material which, while not really satirical in itself, some- how lends to the net effect, Inas- much as the overall effect may be said to be a function of not only the innately satirical matter, but almost everything else. ENOUGH OF THIS improbably explanation; on to Gargoyle. After an, amazing mast-head, full of unlikely contributors, the magazine turns tq more intimate material, most of which is written out at great length, taxing the limited attention span of the poor reader. Soon after, material of predominantly local interest be- gins to compete with the Digest idiom, and we have a miniature but traditional Gargoyle, at length. Midway is a fold-out, with an image of the Haven-Mason hall region, full of astonishing detail. Turned over, this becomes a Play- mate of the Month, condensed from Playboy. Moving on, one can encounter succession of curious but invigorat- ing verbiage, eerily vulgar and al- ways faithful. Thus emerges a Gargoyle (three syllables, please), on the surface a glib parody, but behind its quiet boyish smile, cesspools full of rot- ting monsters. It satisfies. --David Kessel TODAY AND TOMORROW A Privileged Nation =By WALTER LIPPMANN 4.1 BILLION DOLLARS which the Presi- dent is asking Congress to appropriate for mutual security, or in plainer English for for- eign aid, will help to pay for a variety of pro- grams in many countries. These programs have a common purpose. It is to prevent the expan- ion of Communism beyond the frontiers which t reached before 1945 and 1954. In Europe this frontier is the line of the armistice of World War II, including the special case of West Berlin. In the Far East the line s that reached by the Chinese Communist 'evolution when it conquered mainland China. t is also the line of the armistice in the Korean War and the line of the armistice in the Indo- Chinese war. The object of American policy, which was irst formulated by President Truman, is to ontain the Russians, the Chinese, the North Koreans, and the Vietnamese at this frontier between the two great coalitions. The main nilitary instrument of this policy is the over- all military power of the United States. But in order to exert this power efficiently, we 'equire the support of allies like Britain and France and the use of bases in many other ountries on the periphery of the Communist oalition. The foreign aid program is made up n order to finance those allies and other coun- ries who will not or cannot wholly finance bemselves. ALTHOUGH these programs are all designed for the same purpose--to contain the spread f Communism-they have become much more ophisticated and complicated than they were >riginally. At the time of the seizure of Czecho- aovakia in 1948, the blockade of West Berlin .n 1948, and the attack on South Korea in 950, our policy of mutual aid for collective efense was directed against overt military ag- ression. In the last years of Truman and the Irst years of Eisenhower our military planning was based on the idea that what had happened when the North Koreans invaded South Korea was likely to happen in Europe and in the diddle East. This was the period when Gen. Eisenhower was the Supreme Commander in Western Eu- ope. It was then that he approved plans for a Vest European army which would have been pore than twice as big as the best that NATO ias ever been able, to achieve. Since those days, since the early fifties, the asic military situation in the world has hanged greatly. The Soviet Union has achieved arity in nuclear weapons. This has reduced ur nuclear power from that of an instrument I world diplomacy to a national deterrent gainst attack on the United States. At the ame time the Soviet Union has developed a igh rate of economic growth which acts as a ery powerful example and magnet in the un- ..r nr.,....+dra ... rofl. 4.. a,.nnnA a aiti ann spread of Communism. For one thing, the threat and possibility of overt military aggres- sion by the Soviet Union has declined almost to the vanishing point. There is, as a result, something unreal about building up armies on the Soviet frientier to fight the Red Army. It is unreal because there is no likely threat from the Red Army and it is doubly unreal because these armies would be impotent if there were. Yet, and this is a crucial although sophisti- cated point, in the underdeveloped countries it is the armies that make and unmake the gov- ernments. We have learned that lesson in Iraq and elsewhere. What is described as military aid and defense support in our appropriations is in a very considerable degree a subsidy to keep the army on the side of the government. SINCE THE PURPOSE of these subsidies is not wholly or essentially military, adminis- tration is often extravagant and wasteful. Worse still, because of the conspicuously high standard of life which prevails in the American armed forces abroad, our military aid is an almost certain recipe for getting the United States disliked. Nevertheless, these subsidies are a political necessity, and they cannot be discontinued until there has been organized a substitute in place of them as the source of stability. We shall have to go with the subsidies for the present. But we should do this with a clear understanding that they cannot go on very much longer, that the United States cannot expect for the whole future to pay for a coali- tion of small client states in Asia. THE FAINT beginnings of a new and better system to replace the existing one are indi- cated in the President's message. One of the indications is the emphasis he gives to a greater use of the World Bank and other international agencies to which the richer nations can con- tribute. Another indication, and a most en- couraging one, is that economic aid is not to be scattered about but is to be focussed and directed upon key countries, particularly upon India, Pakistan, and Taiwan, where there is a good prospect of proving that poverty can be conquered without totalitarianism. Still another indication is to be found in the last two paragraphs of the President's mes- sage. They strike a new note in the whole discussion. Here the President states the truth which will outlast all the changes of our policy. It is that we are "a privileged nation" and because of that we have a duty to the less privileged nations. This is, it seems to me, the right ground on which to stand. It is better than to try at every point in the argument to find some shred of selfish self-interest to mask our impulses of generosity. And I have a strong conviction that LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Honors Program Failures Cited To the Editor: IN READING Robert Farrell's February 16 editorial criticizing the literary college honors pro- gram, I feel that he was mistaken in the points he chose to make while missing very salient prob- lems. As a participant in the freshman-sophomore honors pro- gram who declined participation in the junior-senior program of my Department, I should like to note those criticisms he apparently missed. I believe a more constructive and fruitful line of criticism of the honors program is; first, are the classes in the program being instructed by the top men of the various departments of the Uni- versity; and second, is the honors program designed to serve the needs of all students who might be interested in taking it? I had the distinct feeling as I took both honors and non-honors courses in my freshman and soph- omore years that the honors courses were not markedly differ- ent in terms of interest and stimu- lation than the non-honors courses. I did not note the best- known instructors, the depart- ment chairmen, or the instructors whom students valued highly as among the honors instructors. I think the program can be con- siderably improved in terms of the instructors who participate in it. * * * SECONDLY, I do not feel that in all cases the honors program-- especially the junior-senior de- partmental programs, are designed to suit the needs of all students who enter them. In the Political Science Department, requirements for an honors degree include two semesters of political theory and four semesters of seminars during which much of the semester is spent in dealing with such theo- retical aspects of political science as "the problem of power" and "federalism." I realize that it is very difficult to construct a pro- gram to meet the needs and de- sires of all the students in it, but I feel further effort can be made in that direction hv the hnnors Satire . . To the Editor: WE WOUD like to thank The Daily for printing Rev. Luchs' obvious satire of fraternity life. With so much bombast being printed every semester during Rush, it is always pleasant to read someone with a real sense of humor. -Torre Bissell, '61 --Brereton Bissell, '61 --Donald Smith, Grad. -Donald Larkin, '62 --Simon Katzenellenbogen, '61 Tax the Rich.. . To the Editor: REGARDING the recent letter by Messrs. Nithammer, Lyons and Boodt, and the editorial "Sales Tax vs. Income Tax," by Mr. Stu- art, I feel that a few facts ought to be straightened out. 1) A sales tax taxes the amount of money that is spent; not the amount earned. 2) The higher a person's in- come, the smaller the percentage of it is spent. 3) For any given income, the more dependents a person has, the higher the percentage of income that is spent. From these facts, we can draw the conclusions that since low in- come citizens spend a larger per- centage of their income, they pay a higher percentage of their in- come in tax. Also, the more de- pendents a person has, the higher is the percentage of income that he pays in taxes. THUS, IT appears that we are taxing the people with the high- est number of dependents, and the people with the lowest income -the people who can least afford it-at a higher percentage of their income than the people with high- er incomes. Compare this to a state income tax which taxes the people with the higher income, and the peop'le with the least number of depend- ents-the people who can afford it-at the higher rate. It therefore seems to me that the only people who would sup- in Michigan" which is presented every Sunday from 5 to 6 p.m. as a courtesy of the WHRV Radio Station. This program presented in both languages, English and Spanish, features news, music and songs; dissertations about historical, cul- tural, and current topics, and in- terviews with special guests. The program, prepared and car- ried out by Venezuelan students on Campus, is intended as a means to help develop a better under- standing of Venezuela and other Latin American countries. --Jose Gilarranz, President Venezuelan Students Asso. "Off We Go-" 7tl Ali" FicliE 4s7pP c'ommow 9f ' dC LoIj w