Seventieth Year. . EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN n Opinions Are Fres UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD rw CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS I A1' '1 HE MI I GAIN : Orpheus Emerges As 'Fugitive Kind' NNESSEE Williams' latest gift to the silver screen is a- wierd film called "The Fugitive Kind." It is based upon his somewhat success- ful drama "Orpheus Descending," which I saw two years ago during its tryout run in Washington, D.C. "Orpheus" was a rewrite job of one of Williams' first produced win Prevail" $TUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. 9 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. URDAY, MAY 21, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP SHERMAN Khrushchev Defers Showdown on Berlin REMIER KHRUSHCHEV told East Germans last night that the critical problems be- een their sector and West Berlin must again rait another summit meeting of the Big Four, ich he said will probably take place in six eight months. He said the Soviet Union was willing to mark ne to maintain the status quo in the interests world peace. "We shall do nothing to sharpen. e international situation and bring it to the irst times of the cold war." Once again, the Soviet Premier has backed wn from his frequent threats to turn over East Germany the air and land corridors rough communist Germany Into the Western ne of Berlin. In the latest threat Khrushchev warned the est that unless they "cooperated" at the sum- it meeting on disarmament and solution of e Berlin dispute, he would carry out this reat. 'HE SUMMIT meeting has collapsed due to Khrushchev's maneuvering and he has amed President Eisenhower for the failure. hrushchev enlarged the U-2 spy plane in- dent out of proportion, in order to make the nited States appear to have poor intentions far as peace was concerned. Whether this piece of propaganda strategy was successful for the Soviet leader is debatable. What the summit break-up has shown is that Khrushchev apparently is very reluctant to relinquish control of Western corridors to Ber- lin, no matter how many times he may try to convince the East Germans that the day will come soon. Since 1948 when the Soviets kept a blockade around West Berlin, necessitating the famed Allied airlift, the Russians have used East Ger- many as a wedge to force the West.to at least listen to their demands. Attempts at obtaining meaningful concessions from the West have failed. ALLIED LEADERS realize that it would be disastrous to the West for Russia to hand over the control to the East German govern- ment. Such action would be serious enough for the West to go to war over or at least wage "policing action" of the Korean War variety over West Berlin and West Germany. The Allies cannot afford to give up Berlin and West Ger- many to the- Communists. They are necessary for the defense of free Europe and must be, maintained as allies. On the other hand, Khrushchev does not' want to go to war either. He knows that if he did relinquish his hold on East Germany and the corridors were blocked, there would be open conflict. He does not want war. Yet, almost paradoxi- cally, he can threaten the West with this action to gain an ear for his demands because the West does not want war either. BUT THE East Germans cannot forever re- main content while Khrushchev threatens the West and promises them complete control of Berlin and a reunited Germany under the Communist flag. Signs of East German tensions and expectations are present. The West must hope that Moscow can keep them under control to maintain the uneasy stalemate which exists. The latest series of diplomatic events has shown that both sides are sitting on a load of dynamite in Germany., Each threatens the other; neither wants to light the fuse. The world can fairly well count on the reluctance of both. What it must fear most is spontaneous com- bustion. -MICHAEL BURNS plays, "Battle Of The Angels." He something worth salvaging in this time and effort to re-do it. In the theatre, "Orpheus" was and one half hours, but it was in grim humor throughout and beau- tifully etched smaller, characters. TRANSFERRED to the screen, Williams and screen writer Meade Roberts have deleted all the hu- mor and have chosen to concen- trate on the three, principle char- acters, to the virtual exclusion of the others. There is one exception to this- they have expanded the role of Anna Magnani's invalid husband (Victor Jory) and this Is good,, but they have reduced the role of the sheriff's wife (Maureen. Stap- leton) to almost nothing. In the' play, she thought that she had a vision of and r'elations with Christ in the figure of Val (Marlon Brando), a.wandering g u i tar player. * s * Milkweed PARAPHRASE a recent lecture- Upon the depressing scene of the 1960 college campus bursts-The John Barton Walgamot Society, a springtime weed with a hopeful future. In the desperate seriousness which overcomes the college campus at times of world crisis and final exams, Hopwood winners who can mock the Hopwood lec- tures, "disinterested grads" who can sat- irize major traditional institutions( such as the English department lecture, and the Oxford critic) are badly needed, and' highly successful. So four and, one - half cheers for the JBW's. May they continue to milk the. sacred cows, and keep campus satire alive. -FAITH WEINSTEIN WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Mr. K Takes Stalin Line By DREW PEARSON Academicsin MSU ROTC ICHIGAN STATE University has advanced a new ROTC plan that will replace about half of the purely tactical instruction with icademics courses in a surprising move that nay upset many military personnel. Supporters of a strongly traditional college nilitary program seemed to have won a major rictory last month in the faculty-trustee dis- pute at East Lansing. The Board of Trustees >f MSU had voted 4-2 in April to continue the wmpulsory ROTC requirement for freshmen ind sophomores. Under the new plan, ROTC cadets will elect uch courses as political science, psychology, nd communications instead of tactical and ogistical courses. The classes will in general je instructed by regular faculty members. In, nilitary history, the emphasis will be placed >n its evolution and implications in today's world. Here it ,is expected that the faculty ecturer will be assisted by ROTC recitation leaders. EXCEPT FOR a small degree of faculty hesi- tancy, the reactions to the plan are en- husiastic on the MSU campus. Provost Paul Miller, speaking for the ROTC,'claimed that ,he program is based on the assumption that hey can develop a better officer this way than with entirely tactical courses. "Our aim," he aid, "is to make it a first class academic pro- ram." A t'quite positive" response has been dem- instrated by the student body. Miller said. Whether or not this indicates an awakening ntellectual undergraduate group at MSU, or in intense dislike of the present ROTC system ir even just a desire to change from the pos-. dbly boring tactical courses, this reaction can't ,e regarded as too surprising. 'HE VERY LEAST the students will gain is more hour credits from ROTC classes than hey have received before. The tactical courses usually. award one or two credits, where the icademic ones, like here, are valued at three md four. It Is this problems of credits that worries the,. faculty. Professor Ray Denny, president of the MSU hapter of the American Association of Uni- ersity Professors, said there was no objection o the philosophy behind the ROTC plan from he faculty but there were worries that it night be asking to crowd more academic cred- ts in a four-year sequence which is "already *acked*" 1fr 1tftbn at IN REACHING its decision to continue the compulsory military program last month, the Board of Trustees ignored a resolution of the faculty senate that asked for a change to a voluntary system. The, faculty demonstrated- their deeply-felt' opinions in, as Prof. Denny put it, "The only way we knew how to." They brought up a motion in the senate to remove all academic credit from ROTC courses. The. motion, though it was. defeated, was a very strong one and clearly expressed their views. What were the causes of this seemingly radical move by MSU? Provost Miller traces it to a nation-wide trend over the past several years to academize .the ROTC plan. This may have grown out of the curriculum changes in' stituted at West Point when a survey of its graduates revealed a need for more social, science and humanities instruction. tHFE MSU COMMITTEE on the Future of the University also accelerated the changes, Miller reported. In a rather strong plea, the. committee suggested curriculum reform in 4ll departments. Incidentally, it also recommended- a shifting to a voluntary ROTC program, Faculty action concerning ROTC must cer-, tainly also have been a factor in provoking Ethe revamping. Although the 'trustees ,refused to follow the advice- of the professors this year, the faculty had no intention of forgetting the, matter; Presumably, pressure would have been. directed toward the trustees and ROTC heads to drop the compulsory part of the program. Sooner or later one side would crumble under the force of the other, 'and past experience indicates that faculty senates are strongly. cohesive groups. NOW THAT the men who direct ROTC at MSU appear willing to drop some of the military aspects to insure a more academic training for their cadets, the faculty may accept this without immediately pushing for a voluntary program. What ever the true motivations behind the-' academizing of ROTC, the plan appears to be a very good one. While a' competent officer must possess certain technical skills and know- eldge, he will be a better leader if he is aware of the evolution of that knowledge and its consequences today. Tactical information is indeed important, but for a leader to direct men's action and lives, he must also under- stand the motivations and behavior of man. Details of past campaigns and battles may be immense aids to a military man, but exposure to the ideas of the world's important thinkers is needed to stimulate the thinking' that will produce the originalities that will enable him to gain his objective. B ERII - In this city onthe front line of the revived cold war, the story is told of Stalin's will and its advice to Premier Khrushchev. When Stalin died, so the story goes, he left two letters for Khrushchev, the first marked "to be opened in case of emergency," and the second marked "to be opened in case of extreme emer- gency." At' the 20th Communist Party. Congress, Khrushchev faced an emergency which he considered important enough to open the first Stalin letter. It read: "Blame me-Stalin." (This was the Congress-at which Khrushchev deliverel the long tirade excoriating Stalin for his policy of terrorism.) . During the Hungarian crisis, Khrushchev faced extreme emer- gency and opened the second let- ter. It read: "Act like me-Stalin." * * * KHRUSHCHEV had broken so much diplomatic crockery during his bull-in-the-summit show at Paris that he would have con- tinued acting like Stalin in Ber- lin, regardless. However, when you consider what's at stake in Berlin for Mr. K and for the Communist world, you can understand why he operates that way.. Walk past the Brandenburg Gate across the invisible line that separates West Berlin from East Berlin and you begin to get the picture. It used to be that East Berlin was a desert of rocks and rubble, twisted steel and signs 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 Adminsitration Build- ing, before 2 p m. two days preced- ing publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1960 VOL. LXX, No. 173 General Notices Distribution of Diplomas: If the e- ercises are held in the Stadium, dip- lomas for all graduates except those of the School of Dentistry, the Medical School, and Flint College will be dis- tributed from designated stations un. der the east stands of the Stadium, immediately after the exercises. The diploma distribution stations are on the level above the tunnel entrance. If the weather is rainy and the exercises must be held indoors, all diplomas ex- cept those of the School of Dentistry, the Medical School, and Flint College will be distributed from the windows of the Cashier's Office and the Office of Registration and Records in the lobby of the Ad. Build. Following the ceremony, diplomas may be called for until 9:00 p.m. Commencement Instructions to Fac- ulty Members: Convene at 4:15 p.m. In the first floor lobby in the Ad. Bldg. Buses will be provided in front of the Bldg. on State St. to take you to the Stadium or Yost Field House to join the procession and to take the place assigned to you on stage, as directed by the marhals at the end of the ex- reading "American bombers caused this destruction." * * * BUT TODAY it isn't. Today Stalinallee, the showplace of East Berlin, is a 'relatively prosperous, fairly attractive boulevard, with modern shops, solid, Moscow-type apartment houses, green parks'set. with gardens of pansies and calen- dulas. It isn't as prosperous as West Berlin, but the change since I last saw it is remarkable. Going beyond Stalinalee, beyond East Berlin, to East Germany the progress is even more remarkable. It shows why Khrushchev, to keep his place as leader of the Com- munist world, has to make an issue of Berlin, why he was so irate at Eisenhower and Adenauer for insisting there could be no change in the status of Berlin. , For East Germany today has become the keystone of the Com- munist economy. Unlike West Germany whose production is enriching its own people, East Germany's production is drained off by Russia. Without East German production, Khrush- chev's promises of a better life for his people would go bankrupt. * ** WHEN THE ALLIES, including Russia, decided to carve up Ger- many in order to destroy its ability ever to make war again, the industrial West was put under the occupation of the United States, France and England, the agricul- tural East was put under"Russia. For a time, the West Germans, unable to eat their wrecked ma- chinery and blackened factories, were fed by the United States. Now they have rebuilt their coun- try into the most prosperous in the world. ,Thety have accom- plished one of the miracles of the post-war period. But the East Germans, not be- cause of Communism, but because of the extraordinary energy of the German people, have also accom- plished a miracle. Today their ma- chine tools, precision instruments, light machinery, are an impor- tant key to Communist bloc in- dustrialization. Today they are Moscow's No. 1 trading partner. SO IN SOME respects Mr. K. is a political prisoner. He is under want or else see them drift over to the Chinese - Stalinist camp. And the East German leaders are inclined to be tough Stalinist fol- lowers anyway. Across the invisible line that separates East and West Berlin, however, is another group of Ger- mans, capitalistic, pro-American, also highly industrialized, far more prosperous, who are also playing for keeps. And the mere fact that they are across an invisible line, a constant haven for refugees, a continuing threat to Communism, is what makes the East Germans needle Khrushchev into delivering threatening speeches. * * * HE ABSOLUTELY must have recognition of East Germany. On his side of the line is a crack East German army of 23 divisions, a disciplined force of half a million men. The West German army eventually will be 12 divi- sions. It has ordered $1,400,000,000 of military supplies from the United States government, pay- able in cash; has ordered another. one billion from private American contractors. But the West German military system, still in embryo, today could be wiped out in short order by Communist forces-unless? it gets help from the United States. Those in brief are some of the reasons why Mr. K. holds the whip hand in Germany and 'why, with the break-up of the summit conference, he is in a position to crack the whip. (Copyright 1960, by the Bell Syndicate) THIS HYSTERICAL woman's ravings provided the motivations for her sadistic husband leading' a mob against Val and having him torn to shreds by a pack of ,viscious "nigger chasing" dogs. In. the movie, there are afew seconds of her. slobbering,. about the- seemingly- omni-present' rain and a few.'wails about her. "vis- ion." Thereupon beer husband tells Brando that he had better be out of town by. sunrise or else. The whole' episode would be vague and hazy to anyone who did not know the. original pla'y., The movie surpasses the play as to the death of Val. Instead of being ripped by dogs, Val is forced by the water pres- sure of fire hoses, wielded against him by the sheriff and pals, into a burning wine garden, the° fate that had befallen Miss Magnani's father years before. "INTERESTING" is the word to describe the overall impression left by this picture. There is abso- lutely no doubt as to the author- ship, because as usual Williams has oodles of dark frustration, seething passion, and flights of poetic prose. However, "Fugitive does not have the stark horror, that made "Suddenly, ,,Last Summer" so pathologically.-fascinating or the' fleshly delights that made "Baby Doll" such fun. One interesting thing in this, film .is that Miss Magnani's speech, even despite, her heavy Italianlacce t, is' on the' whole far easier to understand than "Bran- do's, with all his Method man- nerisms. Director Sidney Lumet employs light and shadow in his black 4nd white.photography for stunning visual effects. -Patrick Chester. must have thought that there was early failure in order to spend the an extremely rambling,,diffuse two some measure saved by' a spirit of AT THE CAMPUS: Vivid View Of Euroe T'S A PITY "Rosemary" could not entertain the patrons of the. Campus as nicely as Nadya Tiller, playing the movie's title role, dis-. tracted the business tycoons of the Common Market. The movie industry, even in corrupt Europe'. is regretfully not that sophisti' cated yet. At any rate, since Rosemary was a real person in a real situation, her easy conquest over the' conti- nent's 'fiancial giants indiates that Britain has little to worry about in the world of eommerce. I-t seems that every time the elite meet to discuss business, they take the inevitable break from their wives. The members of the board display rare cam raderie' even in pursuing the'i favorite pastimes. Each climbs into. his Rolls Royce, and with the precision of a funeral procession creeps to the Rialto for wine and women. ROSEMARY STOPS the entour- age on the evening of her debut, and climbs into the lead car. Un-' happily for-her, she picks the only man who cannot be seduced. This 'does not prevent her from climb- ing to the top, but forces her into loving him; which is the story's tragic flaw. A handsome but clever French- man then appears .to conduct business and meets Rosemary. He is- even more " corrupt than the rest. He does not try to win her- he convinces her she should tape her private conversations witht6p businessmen and passthem to him. With the information thus acquired, the French can conduct business with greater advantage. ROSEMARY 'gets greedy,.how- ever. Instead of turning' over the tapes to her French friend, she, keeps them for higher stakes;. marriage, respectability and love. These are producta sure to com- pete-i n the prevailing market' f hypocrisy ,and buffoonery, but ,the price of marrying a trollop is too dear for the offered merharidise. While Rosemary was industry's darling, she was quite welcome to society's. favor. But now she is grabbing at power not givento her. This cannot be tolerated, not even by the Frenchman. The circle of business friends closes with desperate loyalty, and the intruder i delivered her-due. ALWAYS in the background are her vagabond friends, who oned procured for a price, 'and now remind her of her rise. At the end they have sent another whore to breathe thinner air, and begin the vicious cycle again with fresh material. This leaves the viewer with' a vivid cross section of the new ,Europe..:. hypocrites on top whor have an'easy life, opportunists on the bottom who' also have an easy life, and the climbers selling body. and soul in order find an easy life. -Thomas Brien 'RAMBLERS' DELIGHTFUL: Trio Strums,. ,n In Improbable Concert THREE HIGHLY improbable young men collided last .night in the. Michigan 'Union ballroom, resulting in almost three hours of delightful-and equally improbable-musical entertainment. "The New Lost City Ramblers,"-Tom Paley, John Cohen, and Mike Seeger, by name-plucked, picked, and strummed on a variety of instruments (banjo, guitar, mandolin, autoharp), often:chiming in with vocal accompaniment to a number of tunes drawn from the musically fertile era of the 1930's. Wearing inscrutable deadpans, they ran through such old-timey ditties as "Battleship of Maine," "Darlin' Corey," and even some "real pitiful" ones like "On the Banks -of the Ohio," and "Tom Dooley" of which they sang the uncopyrighted version. SHUNNING COLORFUL sport. shirts, the trio wore clothes of the most sombre hue, ostensibly so they "wouldn't be mistaken for the Kingston Trio." However, there was no fear of this once they began to sing, for even in their wildest moments, the Kingston Trio could not hope to match the musical frenzy produced by a, fiddle, mandolin and banjo working on "The Man Who Wrote 'Home, Sweet, Home' Never Was a Married Man." The combination of instruments varied throughout the evening, with each member of the trio taking an opportunity for a solo stint, in addition to interesting dual combinations. They dispensed homely philosophy, such as "Beware, 0 Take Care," morality object lessons, such as "Frankie and Johnny" and "The Girl I Left Behind," and a goodly share of the depression and post-depres- sion political philosophy, in a trio of songs: "NRA Blues," "White House Blues," and "Franklin D. Roosevelt's Back Again," the latter written. In 1936 after his reelection. Hoary, hairy jokes in a musical dialogue, set to the fast-fiddling background of ."Arkansas Traveler," and a foot-stomping, all-out" finale-"There Ain't No Bugs on Me"-rounded off one of the liveliest musical evenings the cultural Mecca of the Midwest has seen in years--probably since the 1930's --Selma Sawaya' 'U i". LETTERS to the EDITOR I I Pooh: Goof . To the Editor: IN AN OTHERWISE most ac- curate report of my talk upon Winnie the - Pooh mlastThursday evening before members of the Wolgamot 'Sodeity, Faith Dixon Hunt misrepresents me' by writing of Pooh's "endless and. futile search for his own identity."I was, I- think, more concerned to stress Milne's theme of the._"re- cherche du moi." I am, Sir,'yours etc., -Reginald C. Ffines-Sotherby Tremble College, Oxon. Letters to the Editor must- be signed and limited to 300 words. The Daily reserves the right to edit or withhold any letter. gort By Michael Kelly _ i #& boode~ I- dl- --ttxrd be-do That seIP-same New World sj itnct tevry Ilrse: 00006-.. Like, LETHAL Poterity magi, LETHAL? will thank 1 ,M.-A" _