falrdiigan 3Batly Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THEUNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONs BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 [I 4 A SF lE t 53-- wombI fI "When Opinions Are Free Truth WM Prevail" AT LYDIA MENDELSSOHN: possible Production. Das Rheingold' Superb LAST NIGHT the School of Music and Department of Speech pre- sented Wagner's prologue to the mighty Ring, "Das Rheingold," at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. If I hadn't seen it with my own eyes and heard it with my own ears, I could never have believed it. It was superb! When this work was announced earlier this year, the cries of disbelief and dismay mounted rapidly-"It can't be done here." But it is being done this week. Prof. Josef Blatt conducted a performance that brought forth the highly colorful score splendidly. Mistakes there were in plenty, but the Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. EDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: KATHLEEN MOORE University Housing Facilities- Te Fourth Force: Co-ops FRATERNITIES and dormitories are not the only possibilities for living on the Univer- sity campus. Mention is often made of the ad- ditional choice: apartments. But the mention is usually pejorative: apartment living is por- trayed as devastating loneliness. It seems to me actually that apartment living is the ideal choice for those few individuals who have achieved sufficient maturity to satisfy their needs for human relationships with depth rather than numbers. There is yet a fourth way of living which combines some of the advantages of dormi- tories and fraternities. It is possible to live in a moderate sized house with a small group, while still retaining the personal freedom found in dormitories; it is possible to escape some of the restrictions and bad food of dor- mitories without having to subscribe to a cult. One can join one of several groups with a long tradition of open membership by living in a student cooperative. INTER-COOPERATIVE Council, com- pletely owned and operated by students, has built during the past 25 years a system of low cost eating and housing facilities serving about 250 students. This has been accomplished without outside assistance of any kind. There are at present four rooming houses for single women, two for single men, and one apart- ment house. Probably of primary interest to undergrad- uates are the facilities for single students. The Inter-Cooperative Council. ICC, rents its houses solely to groups of students with the understanding that they will be run on a co- operative basis. The ICC collects rent from the several houses and maintains an office in the Student Activities Building where those inter- ested can obtain information and sign living contracts if they wish. Any student who wishes to may join. The only membership restriction is the requirement of student status. No loy- alty oath is required. Open membership is one of the guiding prin- ciples of all cooperatives. Another is democ- racy. Each house is operated entirely by its members. They take turns cooking, washing dishes, and cleaning the common areas of the house. All decisions about house policy - what type of meals to serve, whether to have quiet hours for study, how many hours of work a week each member is to contribute -- are made at house meetings, each member having one vote. THIS TYPE of living is a valuable experi- ment for anyone who expects to live later in a democratically operated country. The di- versity of membership guaranteed by non- discrimination helps provide in the small all the problems that beset larger forms of gov- ernment. Demagogues arise from time to time, hold brief sway, and ultimately tumble; policy fluc- tuates in a seemingly random fashion from year to year; from time to time staff sociolo- gists wander among the members making ob- servations and learned remarks. The most remarkable thing about it, and on cold reflection this has amazed me more than once, is that it works. There is no . phony friendship, no artificial oaths of brotherhood; people are bound only by the common neces- sity of accomplishing a simple job: providing themselves with food and shelter. And it works. The organization has grown slowly over the years and always has its doors open to in- terested students. -J. PHILIP BENKARD Daily Guest Writer !Qt 1v-r *' f . spirit of the performance overcame tions of the stage and orchestra pit, the production was a chal- lenge from the beginning. That the staging problems were largely solved is to the credit of Ralph Duckwall, the designer, and his staff. USING A BASIC floor structure throughout, Duckwall varied the lighting and auxiliary fixutres to create the needed effect in each scene. The first and third scenes (in the Rhine and under the earth in Nibelheim) were almost suc- cessful. The other two scenes on the mountain top proved less so. Valhall appeared as a rather gi- gantic bunch of ripe bananas. The costumes were adequate (the Rhine maidens were fine) and the direction of Jack Bender served the singers well most of the time. * * * IN THE orchestral introduction Wagner paints a marvelous musi- cal picture of the bottom of the Rhine. In this performance the Rhine appeared a little murky at first (musically), but with each measure the orchestra picked up confidence and spirit and turned in a performance of extraordinary quality. The three Rhine maidens (Janet Ast, Karen Klipec, and Murial Greenspon) were lovely in sound and sight and were as graceful as could be desired. The role of Alberich, the mal- evolent dwarf, was brought off with honors by Jerry Lawrence. This role is by far the most de- manding, physically and vocally, in the score. Mr. Lawrence is to be commended. Wotan, the chief god, was per- formed by Charles Simms with imposing stature but not quite enough voice. The other gods: Fricka (Joanne Wiseman), Freia (Judith Hauman), Froh (Jerry Hakes), and Donner (David Smal- ley) were all ably handled. * * * MILLARD CATES brought his experience and excellent stage presence to a fine performance of the crafty god of fire, Loge. Just as flames flicker in constant movement, Mr. Cates covered the stage with his continuous motion. The two giants, Fasolt and Faf- ner (Donald Ridley and Richard Kretchmar) towered above the others physically and carried off their parts precariously, but well. Muriel Greenspon, doubling in the role of Erda, dominated the stage in her brief scene. The Nibelungs were fine and screamed frightfully. An amateur performance? I suppose it must be designated as such, but it is a fine one. -Robert Jobe them all. With the terrific limita- LETTERS to the EDITOR Brotherhood .. To the Editor: THE FOLLOWING article was printed last year in a neigh- borhood newspaper in Chicago. It was written by Rev. David H. Cole, minister of the First Universalist Church in Chicago: "It is one of the signs of the sickness of our times that we have Brotherhood Week, and all the trappings that go with the ob- servance. Perhaps no other ac- tivity displays our weakness so dramatically! "Brotherhood Week could only be observed in a society which has no brotherhood and where race relations are dispicable. Naturally if we had created a society where people were treated as people and races were recognized as the super- ficial thing they are, there'would be no need to make a fetish of brotherhood. ** * "BUT WE LIVE in a sick so- ciety. People have prejudice. Groups are discriminated against.: Second-class citizenship is granted to a large number of Americans. And so a minority of people go through the rituals of Brotherhood Week and pose the ideal of har- mony among people and speak of what a nice world this would be if we would only love one another. "Why do we hate and despise one another? It is because we are sick and because we are insecure. It is because our irrational and distorted feelings jnake us deny the ideal of brotherhood and block us from the salvation that comes only when we love one another. "AND BECAUSE we are this kind of people, the minority who believe in brotherhood must go through the rituals and hold the rest up to shame. And .little by little, we hope the rituals will rub off, and people will no longer be Jews or Negroes, or Irish, or Mexi- cans, or Puerto Ricans. "We will all be human beings and the unity of man will be dis- covered to be more of a blessing than the division created by our hostility. "May God speed the day when we can all be spared Brotherhood Week because brotherhood AS a fact." --CarI Goldberg, '63 THE NATIONAL SCENE: American Goals Committee More .Dragons for Romney GEORGE ROMNEY'S Citizens for Michigan movement may be facing an unexpected, and perhaps insurmountable obstacle. Results of the State Legislative Research Project show that legislators with college de- grees are more prone to be receptive to pressure groups. And Romney's main point is to remove the alleged powers of state pressure groups by what in effect amounts to an educational cam- paign. Perhaps more relevant, though, are other results which, if correct, may mean a legisla- ture, under present conditions, can never be reformed along Romney's lines: a Legislature of statesmen concerned with only the general interest. LEGISLATOR'S who are better thought of by their colleagues, who have served longer and who know more about the "game" of the Legis- lature are all more receptive to pressure groups, the survey indicates. These legislators are, ob- viously, the leaders of the legislature, the form- ers of its character and philosophy. It is not good to condemn a movement so noble and highminded as Citizens for Michigan; but it must be pointed out that a conceivably insurmountable obstacle faces it. It derives not particularly from the character of the Michigan Legislature, but is perhaps applicable to all such bodies. Romney has yet another dragon to joust with. -PHILIP SHERMAN By JAMES SEDER Daily Staff Writer "NATIONAL GOALS" or "na- tional purpose" used to be a concept that columnist Walter Lippmann and a few liberal econ- omists tossed around and every- body else ignored. Recently, how- ever, Washingto:n as a whole has become concerned with the na- tional goals question. The economic writer of the New York Times has summarized the argument for concern like this: "There is something wrong with a country that has bigger and better tailfins at the same time that it has a second-best defense posture, a worsening slum prob- lem, dirty rivers and streams, in- a d e q u a t e health services and wretched under-financing of edu- cation." THIS IS the intellectual aspect of the problem, but there is also a non-intellectual concern. Briefly stated, this argument goes, "The Russians are ahead of us in the missile race, they have a larger army and they seem ahead of us in space exploration. In addition, they seem to be catching up with us in consumer production. What, in Heaven's name, are we going to do?" Whichever way we approach it, it is becoming increasingly appar- ent that our rate of growth is much too slow to fulfill our rea- GENERATION: New Face Welcome TODAY AND TOMORROW ThePresident Decides By WALTER LIPPMANN TJHETEXT of Mr. Robert A. Lovett's testi- mony before the Jackson subcommittee of the Senate has now been made public. It deals with the question of how a President is sup- posed to decide the great interrelated questions of defense and of foreign policy. No President, no matter what his experience in military and diplomatic affairs, can possibly know the an- swers to all the great questions of policy. If he was a soldier in the World War, his military experience antedates the gigantic technological revolution in weapons which has occurred since the World War. If he dealt with foreign affairs in the 1940s, his experience antedates the change in the balance of power which has occurred since in 1949 the Soviet Union broke our monopoly of nuclear weapons. His experience antedates also the appearance of Red China as a formidable power in the world, and the rise in all the continents of the submerged masses of mankind. There is nothing so likely to cause wrong decisions of high policy as old soldiers reliving the last war and old retired diplomats who think that the last good days were the days when they were still in office. A PRESIDENT, whoever he is, has to find a way of understanding the novel and chang- ing issues which he must, under the Constitu- tion, decide. Broadly speaking, as Mr. Lovett's testimony shows, the President has two ways of making up his mind. The one is to turn to his subordinates-to his Chiefs of Staff and his Cabinet officers and Under Secretaries and the like, and to direct them to argue out the issues, and to bring him an agreed decision. On the whole this is President Eisenhower's method. The other way is to sit like a judge at a hearing where the issues to be decided are debated. After he has heard the debate, after he has examined the evidence, after he has heard the debaters cross examine one another, after he has questioned them himself, he makes his decision. This is the method intended by the authors of the National Security Act, who It is a much harder method in that it sub- jects the President to the stress of feeling the full impact of conflicting views, and then to the strain of making his decision, fully aware of how momentous it is. But there is no other satisfactory way by which momentous and complex issues can be decided. The alternative is to smother the issues and not to decide them if it is possible to evade them. WHEN WE TALK about choosing between the two methods, we must remember, of course, that no President will or can use any one of them exclusively. There are some issues which he can leave to the decisions of his subordi- nates. There are other issues which he has to decide after hearing the debate. But some Presidents will use one method more than they use the other, and Eisenhower is the kind of President who expects that normally his "staff" will bring him an agreed decision. As a staff officer in the Army he learned that this is the way the military business is transacted. His bent in favor of the agreed decision has, of course, been much ac- centuated by his illnesses, by the need to pro- tect him against the strains and the stresses of the Presidency. A President with a different training and a different temperament would use differently the policy-making machinery of the govern- ment. For while the machinery can be im- proved, as Sen. Jackson's studies may show, it is a truism that no government machinery is automatic and that the way it operates will depend upon the man who operates it. IN CHOOSING a President there are few things more important to look out for than the evidence of what the candidate has done and what he shows he is likely to do in operating the machinery by which decisions are reached. It is very hard to be sure that one has made the right choice since the office of President is enormously more difficult than 'WHE I showed a friend my review-copy of Generation, the first thing that struck him was the change in format. "It used to be about the size of the New Yorker," he mused. "Now it's more like the Reader's Digest." I don't know whether I prefer the oldorathe new format, butI know that I like most of the changes that have been made, and if this issue indeed looks more like the Readers' Digest, it has the undeniable virtue of looking less like the New Yorker, One thing is certain: The maga- zine looks different. A lot of us have complained over the last few years that Generation and its edi- tors were too heavily inbred, with Generation-type people writing DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. WEDNESIAY, MARCH2, 1960 VOL. LXX, NO, 112 GeneralNotices Tonight: Richard Wagner's opera, "Das Rheingold,'" presented by the De- partment of Speech and the School of Music. Box office open 10 a.m. Perform- ance 8:00 p.m. International Student and Family Ex- change have moved to new quarters at the Madelon Pound house (basement) 1024 Hill St., open Thursday mornings each week. 9:30-11 a.m. Topcoats and sweaters for men and women. Infants equipment and clothing and children's clothing. These are available for all Foreign Students and Families needing the above items. Martha Cook Building applications for residence are due March 10, 1960. Generation-type stories. This is certainly contradicted by the present issue; it seems that the editors have set out to prove something. And if they have not proved that a new form can be evolved with one issue, they have proved that old forms can at least be destroyed. I LIKE the fact that the new Generation provides a better bal- ance of stories and articles and that the articles are less self-con- sciously erudite and esoteric than many we have seen in previous issues. I like the range which the stories encompass; there is one here which is anything but a "Generation-type" story; it is "When Dry Summers End," by Lewis Horne, and for me it is the best thingeinthis issue of the magazine. It is a story about growing up, but it avoids the cliche; the characters are appeal- ingly unique and real and there is a glimpse of the best kind of professionalism in the handling of different, but subtlely different, modes of dialogue. I LIKE less "Craig Key" by Harlan Underhill; it is well writ- ten, but overwritten and under- played, or both. There is an enor- mous inherent interest in the characters, bt they move slowly and painfully through a swamp of syntax. The impulse of the reader is to get out his machete and hack out a clearing in the tropical Style. I like the two poems by Nathan Lyons, "The Healing of a Wound" and "The Swine Butchering." Some imagery goes astray, but they are rich and ordered . . . natural and yet disciplined, the difficult balance. * * * I DON'T like "Partisan Song." It reminds me, in its causiness, of all those "love-me-love-my-bren- gun" songs from Russia and Is- ,.'O ,z. sonable social objectives and maintain an adequate defense structure. Our present average gain in our gross national prod- uct is around three per cent; most analysts of the situation maintain that this growth rate must be in- creased to around five per cent. * * * ANOTHER aspect of the prob- lem - a more controversial one-- is over the use to which the "na- tional product" should be put. This problem was called to pub- lic attention a few years back wth the publishing of The Afflu- ent Society, written by liberal Harvard economist John Kenneth Galbraith. Galbraith maintains that too high a proportion of the national product is going to the "private sector" of the economy (consumer products) and too little is going to the "public sector" (schools, roads, missiles, etc.). The Administration has been following the President's some- what grammar schoolish approach to the state of the nation: every- body's happy, the Russians are still afraid to attack us and we are still way ahead of the Soviet Union in everything. Therefore, the true American way of life must bemaintained. What's good for General Motors is good for the nation (only don't say it in public). * * * FORTUNATELY, the President seems to have been pursuaded to take a somewhat more rational look at the problem. He has set up a nine-member Commission on National Goals to "identify the great issues of our generationtand describe our objectives in these various areas." The Commission, headed by Dr. Henry Wriston, president emeritus of Brown Uni- versity, contains men of outstand- ing ability. The President said, "The com- mission has the opportunity to sound a call for greatness to a resolute people, in the best tra- dition of our founding fathers." Although the President's rhet- oric can be discounted, the com- mission should be useful in fo- cusing attention on the entire problem of national goals. HOWEVER, the idea of setting up a nine member group to de- cide on the national goals is some- what fuzzy. People, at least in a democracy, don't decide their ob- jectives by listening for clarion calls from commissions. The pro- cess is not that simple. They choose their goals by reading ori- ginal thinkers like Lippmann and Galbraith, and being prodded by them into thinking and being dissatisfied. This dissatisfaction leads to an honest probing for an- swers. If and when an answer merges, it is not formulated by a committee or a commission. There is certainly n o t h i n g wrong in itself, with setting up a commission to look into the na- tional goals problem. In fact the AT THE MOVIES 'The 400 Blows' . . By SELMA SAWAYA ONE OF THE most winsome young actors in any country today is the juvenile star of "The 400 Blows," Jean Pierre Leaud. Leaud shines through the grey-and-white wide-screen cinema- tography of the film, although the lack of color does contribute quite a bit to the wintry atmosphere of the picture. Set predominantly in Paris, the story records the events in young Doinel's (Leaud) life which lead to his final, irrevocable decision at the conclusion of the film. HIS FATHER (Albert Remy) and his mother (Claire Maurier) turn in convincing performances as a pair of frustrated parents who have no idea why their son is becoming a juvenile delinquent. School fails to interest him, and the day he plays hookey, he discovers his mother with her lover. After a few more traumatic encounters, with his teacher (who looks and acts like an older Art Carney) and his father, Doinel is expelled from school. He and his comrade-also expelled-use "bor- rowed" money to live la vie gal en Paris-until they decide to pawn a typewriter from Doinel pere's office, and get caught returning it. Doinel is then sent to an observation center, and one of the best episodes of the film is his interview with the psychologist; here Leaud is at his expressive best. i 'Sink the Bismark!'. By PHILIP MUNCK THERE ARE sea stories and sea stories and sea stories by C. S. Forester. "Sink the Bismark" is a marvelously good adaptation of one of his finest. Adapted from a semi-factual novel, "The Last Nine Days of the Bismark," Forester tells the story of the combat life and death of what was then the world's most powerful battleship. Director Lewis Gilbert shot the film in black and white-much the same way as Forester wrote his story. Without neglecting the fact that human beings have human emotions which color their efficiency as fighting men, the film does a superb job of describing the intricate, chess-like logic of the machinery which traced the course -of the Bismark into the Atlantic and, ultimately, shaped her destruction. THE STORY is told, almost entirely, from the bridges of the Bismark, the British warships opposing her and the headquarters of the Chief of Naval Operations in the Admiralty Building, London. The two major decisions made were-() to strip convoys of escort vesse~~ls and nmecthP + h in..-~ , hint th l-a Di,,r, sandA(2)to +I. Aaeh