} Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 hen Opinions Are Free Truth Wl Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. NESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1959 NIGHT'EDITOR: KATHLEEN MOORE I Ann Arbor: Possible Site For New Professional Theatre AGAIN THE opportunity has arisen for Ann Arbor to be the site of a professional theatre. Will interested residents and students dis- play their enthusiasm for this project or will they let some other city take advantage of this opportunity?" It is not such an absurd idea that the rela- tively small community of Ann Arbor could support a theatre as well as a large city such as San Francisco. Ann Arbor is extraordinary for its size in that it can boast many the cul- tural activities brought to town by the presence of the University. There is definitly an existing interest in the establishment of a theatre'here; however, it still remains to be seen if that in- terest is strong enough. PAST INTEREST and initiative were shown by the Dramatic Arts Center when they at- tempted to form a professional theatre and cul- tural center in Ann Arbor several years ago, but failed because of lack. of financial support. It was the inquiry of this group that brought theatrical producer, Oliver Rea to town Satur- day. The DAC may have attempted to establish a professional theatre here, but never has a theatre of this size and importance of the one now planned been considered. This theatre could bring added culture and national prestige and esteem to this active community. Michigan would become the first university to have a professional theatre oper- ating on its campus. If a success, the theatre and the com- munity would become a unique and valuable training ground for American actors and thea- tre people. -MILDA GINGELL 'Womens Week' and Its Goals N EXPERIMENT in "Weeks" has begun; and it is for the benefit of you and me as niversity women. Mothers, sociologists, and uture husbands are only a few sorts of indi- iduals who are becoming increasingly confused bout what women are doing - and why. During "Women's Week," President Hatcher, ir Dean of Women, other administrators and aculty, plus international women are join- ig us in evaluating our role as women in merica. Why bother at all? FE SUBTITLE for the week is "A Looking Glass of Conflicting Goals." What your oals are, and how you feel about them, de- ends on you. In fact, it is the wide variety f women's viewpoints about what they want it of life that makes their situation so con- using. Because of this, the following para- raphs reflect only one of many viewpoints. Why are some women faced with conflicting oals? The problem begins with the fact that variety of goals are open to us. One goal - arriage - is what most persons expect wo- en to aim at, and so women tend to follow heir expectations. This is a part of what is )metimes called "socialization." While we attend college, if not before, some us become duly impressed with the aims of igher education. For approximately four stim- lating years we are students, both officially nd in fact. The University encourages us to e good students, to see education for its own ike, and to develop our individual interests ad abilities. Many of us believe in and con- antly direct ourselves toward these ends. So far there is no conflict, unless we be- >me very interested in a particular field or areer. Then, because our beliefs, interests and abilities do not disappear on Commencement Day, they sometimes collide with our expected future role as a Wife. WE. CAN EITHER strike a balance or side- step the situation by giving up the home or the career. Obvious as these alternatives ap- pear, yet they often result in disappointment. The career girl wishes she were married; the "housewife" no longer feels intellectually stim- ulated. There are as many variations between these extremes as there are women. Each individual is in a unique situation; and it is up to her to be aware of it, so that she can come to the most satisfactory conclusions pos- sible to fulfill her own particular needs. Cer- tainly we can't easily resolve these difficult conflicts in our own minds, but I would like to offer one approach. CAN THINK of nothing which is more cre- ative or challenging than raising a child or contributing to the home in which we and our husbands and children will live. The develop- ment of a home requires the development of ourselves; and this involves all phases of our- selves and our interests-cultural and intel- lectual, as well as in homemaking. I do not mean to imply that the home is the only place in - which a woman can derive creative satisfaction or be of value. But perhaps we have a tendency to overem- phasize the kind of routine existence which is associated with the word "housewife." It is up to us to develop and take responsibility for the creative, constructive potential of homemaking. --KATY JOHNSTON President, Women's League Guest Writer , Onl (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following ar- ticle is excerpted from David Boroff's "On Wisconsin!" in the October is- sue of Harper's.) By DAVID BOROFF THE UNIVERSITY of Wisconsin, encompassing hill and wood and plain and fronting the waters of Lake Mendota, is a merging of dizzying polarities. It is a state in- stitution with relaxed admission standards. ("Any high - school graduate in the state who really wants to can shoulder his way in," an official admitted.) Nevertheless, it is one of America's great uni- versities;-in many ways the arche- type of the Big Ten-with a Ph.D. production rate up among the leaders. Amiably schizophrenic, it is at once an intellectual center and a playground for adolescents. Beer cascades endlessly, as one might expect in Wisconsin. Yet the Stu- dent Union sells five times as much milk as beer. U1W is a seat of liberalism, and its academic freedom statement of 1894 still reverberates; but the supervision of student life is re- pressively mid-Victorian. * * * THE UNIQUE flavor of the school - the way citizen-student and administrator stand nose to nose-was reflected in a recent meeting of the Contemporary Trends class at which President Conrad Elvehem was a speaker. A sports-shirted student got up and asked bluntly if friction be- tween the President and Dr. Joshua Lederberg was responsible for the departure of the Nobel Prize winner to the promised land of Stanford University. This stuck Dr. Elvehem as an entirely rea- sonable question, and he explained Lederberg's departure in terms of shifting' research interests. SOCIAL cartographers abound at UW, and they are quick to di- vide the students into Langdon Street (fraternity row), the dorm crowd, and the Independents. Langdon Street is identified with fun, anti-intellectual vigilantism, and consumption of beer little less than heroic. The dorm students- most of them at the far end of campus-are reputed to be small- town or rural, ingenuous, and in- tellectually unformed. The Inde- pendents spill out of rooming houses and apartments to oppose Langdon Street Philitia * * * CARNAL anarchy prevails no more at UW than at other univer- sities. Certainly, the administra- tion exercises a steely-eyed vigi- lance. Nevertheless, in warm weather there are beaches and cars. In the winter, according to a dorm supervisor, "sex is more challenging." This generation of students is much given to trappings of virtue. A member of a big "social" fra- ternity said: "Oh, the boys talk about sexy girls. They like to take them out once or twice but don't want to go steady with them." And the women students, for the most part, are girdled in propriety. However, one girl, a free-wheeling Independent, observed tartly: "The vividness with which so many nice girls describe what hap- pens to other girls would suggest that they're not as pure as they say:" Last Spring, a mass-circulation magazine featured a provocative article entitled: "Are We Making a Playground Out of College?" In it, UW was severely castigated as a high capital of frivolity. The Daily Cardinal, UW's newspaper, said: "We've made Wisconsin a play- ground; it's up to us to reconvert it into an institution of higher learning." . * * * HOW MUCH fun is enough? Has the University attained a bal- ance between the life of ideas and extracurricular activity, or is the very notion of a great university sponsoring the elaborate apparatus of fun an absurdity? This much is clear: the pursuit of fun is ubiquitous. There is lit- tle surcease from the relentless se- quence of Homecoming (floats and parades), Humorology (skits), Campus Carnival, Haresfoot ("All our girls are men, and everyone's a lady"), weekends on lakes (for which the fraternities charter buses), dances, and parties, par- ties, parties. One of these was a "Pink and Blue Party" where; in an unwitting parody of themselves, the boys came in blue, the girls in pink, "and they were all sup- posed to look like children." THE ROYAL road to matrimony was outlined to me: lavaliered in the sophomore year; pinned in the junior year; engaged in the sen- ior year. To be sure, there are anxieties. A sorority girl con- tfessed that if she is dateless on Saturday night she hesitates to be seen on Langdon Street. "I think it's a freshman's ischool," a sophomore girl said. '"Freshman year is a big blast. ;You're a new face and it's all snow and beer and fraternities. iThen when you're a sophomore tyou see the boys on the street, and it's just 'Hi. In the mean- time, they're looking over the new crop." THE BULLETIN boards proclaim the teeming diversity of campus, life. Under the sign for the An- nual Military Ball (ROTC formal) is the announcement of the third annual anti-Military Ball (infor- mal, with recorded music) whose theme is "The Street Where You Lived, or Dig You Later, Atom Crater." Wisconsin, of course, has Big Fotball. Even the morehserious students respond. to the zip and sparkle of a football weekend. One student described football as the only communal activity at the Uni- versity, and he spoke with genu- ine affection of the march to the stadium ("Nobody would think of driving"). But football players have be- come seriously devalued in recent years. They are Saturday's chil- dren, neglected the rest of the week. WHAT ABOUT intellectual life at UW? Estimates vary. A recent. study reveals that the University, despite its open-house philosophy, is getting. higher-ranking students from high schools than do the country's colleges as a whole. But the flaccidity of intellectual life grieves the faculty. "It's dif- ficult to get them to talk," a dis- tinguished teacher of literature observed. "They're so accustomed to a passive role." A girl made a bold assertion about mass education in one of her courses. Her instructor chal- lenged her thesis. "I take it back," she said meekly. There is, to be sure, a free com- merce of ideas on campus. It is UW's proud boast that it was BEER IN THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSI Visconsin ButW 11 t t a 1 { -1 d . 1 ... .. .... .\. . .. . .{yty ., , ,. Z' . _ . .,... ...w.... ,, . . .+ . ... *. . .I\V:.ir... . ehe -Daily-David Cornwell V UNION the last college campus to main- tain a chapter of the Labor Youth League, an allegedly Communist- front group. The small group finally died of inanition, and the shriveling-up process was no doubt accelerated by the Student Handbook, which let people know that the LYL was on the Attorney General's list. At one time, membership rosters of organizations had to be sub- mitted to the administration, but, the students successfully fought that regulation. The students have also officially opposed loyalty oaths in connection with the Na- tional Defense Education Act. * * * THE FACULTY at UW is con- sidered strong and no more fac- tious than most. Salaries are good but not good enough. The average for a full professor is $10,052; as- sociate professor, $7,572; assista- ant professor, $6,166; instructor, $5,068. The campus, which has been described as "sublime" by at least one visiting Englishman, is sup-, posed to be worth $1,000 a year, but assent to this quaint notion by' faculty is not, easily obtained. Careerism rockets along at UW, and relief is in sight only when one is a full professor with ten- ure. There is also fierce intercol- legiate rivalry for academic tal- ent, and a former president used to keep a scoreboard of faculty people who went to the University of Michigan-the big rival-and AND NEXT YEAR the 1960 Clause, which outlaws discrimina- tion in fraternities and sororities, goes into effect after a long and bitter debate. But the most acrimonious dia- logue has to do with apartment regulations and the supervision of student life. "Apartment living is new and will increase," an official pointed out, "but the rules are old and outmoded." In truth, they smack unpleasantly of 'a police state. A male student living in a building into which an unmarried woman moves is required to move out. A forty-five-year-old New Zealander lived in the same building as a seventy-one-year-old woman. Hal- ed before the Student Conduct Committee, he protested, "Really, I had no designs on her." THE UNIVERSITY views itself bitiously extended that the new shibboleth on campus is balance- between teaching and research, be- tween undergraduate and graduate work, between the liberal arts and professional education, between service to the state and to the nation. Maintaining quality in a school determined to give everyone a chance is also a headache. The fact that eight state schools have changed over from normal schools to four-year colleges may, in the Future, drain off weaker students. The University now gives ad- vanced standing to particularly able high school graduates, and it is instituting an honors program -but with a peculiarly egalitarian twist. "Our hope is to help gifted students without tagging them," the President said. "Our bright people will learn by rubbing shoul- iers with average ones." A great tradition is a burden as well as a joy. Has Wisconsin al- ready had its great day? "There is little doubt that it lost some of its fire between the war:," Vice President Harrington said. "There was a deflation of idealism, and other states began to originate things." At present there is a re- surgence, but to attain distinction in a highly competitive period is another matter. UW people cast a troubled look at the West, where the University of California-the General Motors of higher educa- tion-has been raiding faculties remorselessly. "Our problem," Har- rington said, "is to see if we can keep the two dozen or so innovat- ors on campus." (Copyright 1959 by Harper & Broth- ers. Reprinted from Harper's Magazine by special permission.) DEMOCRATS FACE REVISION: Liberals Face New Conditions, Concepts AX LERNER:, The Big Anything Goes NEW DELHI-Thus far I have seen nothing in the Indian press on the American quiz show scandals. Partly, I suppose, it is because of the absence of TV here. I have therefore had to catch up with the quiz confessions and in- vestigations through the American press. I write this just before the Van Doren testimony, but, with benefit of the press saturation up to that point. Three sets of people are involved, and each has a different-Measure and type of responsi- bility for what happened. In the shows that were rigged by their producers, the guilt of the producers was direct, inescapable, overwhelm- ing. They were the prime movers that set the whole sequence in train. The guilt of the contestants, whether they were actively involved or passively by their silence, was that of succombing to a tempting bait-in short, of being had. The guilt of the networks was that of blindness and acquies- cence in a set-up where they made profits and absolved themselves of responsibility for what occurred on the premises. pOR A CLOSER LOOK I start with the con- testants. I am not very Impressed with the people who are now discovering that they were corrupted by accepting coaching, and are com- ing forward to bear witness. After all, they didn't have to get corrupted, and didn't have to take the coaching. At any moment they could have bowed out, and simply walked off the condemned playground. One gets the impression of the confessors as a group from °every walk of life whose com- mon thread was a fascination with the Big Prizes. In the Never-never land in which every- thing was possible, they were overfocused on the impossible target that had become possible. They were True Believers in the religion of the big money, who were still unbelieving that any- one should be willing to pay them so much. So unbelieving were they, that the question of how it was to be done seemed almost irrelevant. Anyway it was aowhnllv new , et-un and thev AS FOR THE masters of the set-up, the pro- ducers of the shows, the air around them was heady with the smell of success, and they were so frantic with the fear of falling behind that they finally came to bow down to the idol of their tribe, the Big Anything-Goes. The show-let's call it Twenty-One, to be specific - was piling up sponsor enthusiasm, audience interest, rating, publicity, piling them up higher and higher. It finally rode you, in- stead of your riding it. You couldn't let down the sponsor, agency, network, audience. You couldn't let down your contestants and your-, self. So you did anything to push your show. You took no chances at anything going wrong. You did not leave to human nature and brains what could be improved by art and the deliberate fix. After all, everything in show-business is supposed to be contrived beforehand. It was impossible for these men who had been trained in the discipline of show-business and press- agentry to imagine values other than the tinsel ones of their world. It was a world in which, anything goes. THERE REMAINS the network role. I am, afraid that it was anything but a noble one. The network executives now say that they didn't know what was going on, which is hard to believe. Many of them doubtless knew, but they didn't dare rock the ratings. How indeed could it be otherwise in an in- dustry built on the principle ,not (as in other areas of business) of selling a product to the audience, but of selling the audience to a spon- sor? CBS President Frank Stanton has dra- matically announced that his network is peni- tent and will run no other big quiz shows. This is fine, but what it does is to put the burden and blame on a particular kind of show rather than on the principle which, in almost all shows, leaves the, format and content of the show to the sponsor and agency who are being wooed. Far worse as an approach is the report that the NBC executives are trying to sell the idea (EDITOR'S NOTE: The Daily pre- sents here the last in a series of articles on possible future develop- ments in the liberal wing of the Democratic party. The articles ori- ginally appeared in The Economist, an English journal devoted to world politics and business.) A MOVEMENT of this kind will differ from the New Deal in several respects. In the first place, it is rapidly becoming a badge of liberals to insist that the federal government is responsible for de- ciding the pace at which the na- tional economy ought to expand. Most of them agree with Mr. Leon Keyserling, the former economic adviser of President Truman, that the government must, and can, ensure an annual increase of four to five per cent a year in the gross national product. This is an issue which simply never confronted the New Deal" because all its energies were bent on hauling the economy back from death's door. The liberals' ideas about the way in which a five per cent increase can be achieved are still distinctly hazy; but the challenge of Russian com- petition is a spur to action just as unemployment was in the nine- teen-thirties. IN THE SECOND place, many liberals have begun to question certain allegiances which went unchallenged, a generation ago. The last 'two sessions of Congress have provided striking illustra- tions of thechange. When Congress has debated re- cent farm bills, large numbers of Democrats from the cities have refused to vote for higher price supports for agricultural commod; ities. The middle-of-the-road la- bour reform measure which was defeated in the House of, Repre- sentatives and. replaced by a stricter one was hammered out in committee by a number of Demo- crats - such as Representatives Thompson of New Jersey and Udall of Arizona - who are cer- tainly entitled to call themselves liberals. In drafting what they felt to be a reasonable. bill, they contended with, and. overcame, some muscu- lar opposition from individual trade unions as well as the disap- proval of the American Federation of Labour and Congress of Indus- trial Organisations. The Demo- cratic party of the New Deal has often been accused of having been a coalition of special -interests, though no doubt worthy ones, but nqw the farmers and the trade unions can no longer count on the party leaping to their support whenever they whistle. *i * * THE THIRD difference between the nineteen-thirties and the, nineteen-sixties is likelyto be the most important one. Today's shopping list for liberals concen- trates chiefly on such things as federal aid for housing and edu- cation, health insurance for old people and a better system of pub- lic transport.. Mr. Schlesinger's recipe for "qualitative" liberalism is based on the belief that most of these reforms are designed to improve the "quality" of American life, and are different from the "quan- titative" rescue operations con- ducted by the New Deal. The dis- tinction is partly semantic; the hacsin nrehlnmws __a++iAn avano h the economic chaos which preced- ed it; the liberals who then came into power had virtually carte, blanche, at least in the firstrfew years, to take what measures they thought fit. TODAY'S liberals have to per- suade an electorate, the majority of which is reclining comfortably on the cushions 'of', prosperity,. to accept expensive reforms in the name of the.national interest and the welfare of the less fortunate minority.'It has yet to be proved that a liberal programme, is realis-. able in such circumstances. That is why "practical" liberals, with a cautious eye cocked on the voters in the comfortable suburbs, are looking for a formula which can'. rally the middle class. The new Democratic radicalism -if it ever emerges from the realms of theory-will have a novel appearance. It cannot rely with assurance on what Marxists would call the alliance between intellectuals, workers and peas- ants, which was roughly the four- dation on which- the New Deal was built. Instead it has to recruit a substantial part of the new middle class into which so many of the "workers and peasants" have been transformed. At the moment, these feel no more than a vague uneasiness about the way their country is being run. The liberals have the enormous task of persuading them to con- vert some of the goods which they can see in front of their eyes -the television sets, cars and heaped supermarkets - into less obvious benefits like better,schools, stronger national defence and as- sistance to poor people at home and abroad. -The Economist DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ELLERY QUEEN ANNUAL: More Good Stories. From Mysterious Pens DEVOTEES of the crime fiction cult have a new Ellery Queen. anthology to browse through, one which has both good, very good and less-than-good stories, as usual.. The 14th Mystery Annual, like many of the others, contains stories old and new, by authors with well-established names in both the detective story and "straight" fiction fields and com- parative new-comers to the writ- ing field. Also included is the bo- nus of a short story which won the "Best 'First Story' of the Year" award in the contest held annually by Ellery Queen's Mys- tery Magazine. '* ** mess of limp rags, bits of velvet and silk . . . origin unknown," who slowly takes over a dressmaker's shop in London, this story builds to an unexpected and almost- funny climax.. psychological. Bradbury's orientation in this story, as in his other works, is * * * "THE LONG Black Shadow," which brought authoress Rose- mary Gibbons a first prize in EQ's short story contest, was written for a creative writing course known as English 341 at the Uni- versity of Texas. Written in the first person, it is an incident in the life of two little boys, one Ne- grn a n nh white- vt is aolmnthe The Daily' official Bulletin lisan 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 pm. Friday. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1959 VOL. LXX, NO. 38 General Notwes The Mary L. Hinsdale Scholarship amounting to $134.87 (interest on the endowment fund) is available to single undergraduate women, who are wholly or partially self-supporting, and who do not live in University Residence Halls or sorority houses. Girls.with better than average scholarship and need will be considered. Application blanks are available from the Alumnae Secretary, Alumni Memorial Hall and should be fliled by Nov. 30, 1959. Award will be granted for use during the second semester of the current aca- demic year, 1959-60 and will be an- nounced by the end of this semester. Law School: "Mastery of the Law," a film depicting legal education at the University of Michigan, will be shown at 2:30 p.m. and at 3:30 p.m. Wed., Public Law 550 (Korea ..I. Bill) or Public -Law 634 (Orphans' Bill) must sign Monthly Certification, VA Form VB7-6553, in the Office of veterans Af- fairs, 142 Admin. Bldg. before 3:30 p.m,. Fri., Nov. 6. Office hours during, the monthly certification period are: 8:30- 11:15 a.m., 1:15-3:30 p.m. Agenda, Student Government Coun- cil, Nov. 5:, 5 p.m., Council Room. Minutes of previous meeting. Officer reports: President -- Letters; Vice-President (Exec.);dVice-President (Admin.); Treasurer -- Appropriation, minutes mailings, Financial authoriza- tions. Old Business: Regulations Booklet re- vision. Committee reports: Student Activities Committee - Activities. New Business: Minutes mailings; Book Exchange, Seating of candidates. Members and constituents time. Announcements. Adjournment. Mail orders are now being accepted for tickets to Donizetti's opera, "Don Pasquale," to be presented Thurs.-Sat., Nov. 19-21, with the School of Music. General admission unreserved seating only- $1.00. Mail orders should be ad- dressed to: Play Production, Box Office, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Checks payableto PlayProduction. Single tickets also available for remaining productions, including "Epitaph for