'w ta un 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 Critics and Criticism, Constant Comment hen Opinions Are Free Truth Wiu Prevail' Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. DECEMBER 6, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: KENNETH McELDOWNEY 'rof essional Study of Urban Renewal Looks Encouraging THE RAMBLING and often incoherent story of urban renewal in Arn Arbor, headed for a quiet denouement within the last few months, is acquiring a sequel. Councilman Lloyd Ives has proposed that the city engage "a' recognized, disinterested pro- fessional consulting firm" to do a thorough study of Ann Arbor's municipal rehabilitation problem. The City Council will consider his proposal gn Monday. Ives has suggested that: "the firm .. . review and make recommendations on scope of re- habilitation effort required, areas of city need- ing attention, types of rehabilitation action appropriate, amount of municipal capital out- lay foreseen, governmental assistance available for financing private aspects of over-all effort, procedures for relocating displaced families, if any; and any other subjects deemed important by the firm." A report and recommendations would be sub- T asNew Idea HE STATE ROUSE of Representatives h suggested, as an addition to the $34 million dollar Senate "nuisance tax" plan, an additional five dollar tax on all moving traffic violations. By the time this is declared unconstitu- tional, it ought to have brought in a five or six million dollar "Wvndfall," and added a new chapter to the "Taxation by Un- constitutionality" philosophy seemingly prevalent in the Legislature. --P.P. mitted to the City Council by the firm not later than six months from the date of contract. THE PROPOSAL is an attempt to bring a rational and disinterested approach to the answering of a highly-charged emotional ques- tion: what should be the provisions of an effective urban rehabilitation program in Ann Arbor? The answer would be non-partisan, free from the bewildering pressures of neighborhood meetings, interest groups, misplaced good in- tentions, fear, ignorance and political maneu- vering. A consulting firm wants "just thenfacts, ma'am." Their recommendations would not bej politically colored-professional and undeniably competent. CHANCES ARE SLIM that any consulting firm's recommendations would vary in any significant respect from the old urban renewal plan rejected last summer-including even the relocation bugbear. But American respect for experts is legendary: it may be easier to accept the considered opinion of an expert than the hammered-out efforts of citizens' groups and the City Council. And there would be precious little chance for charges of arbitrary action by "the government"-local or federal. The obstacles to implementation of any urban rehabilitation program remain-primarily in high cost and difficulties in the relocation of any displaced families. It would still be an up- hill fight, but with the understanding of most of the community, the problems could be solved. In any case, a consulting firm would bring a fresh, unweary outlook to a situation which badly needs one. --SUSAN FARRELL By JO HARDEE Daily Review Staff BETWEEN the docility of com- plete ignorance and the sophis- tication of Aristotlean imitation stands a creature known, some- times less than affectionately, as the Daily reviewer. Many readers have alternate mental images of him as a sadistic neurotic who delights in destruction or as a sophomoric "nebish" with middler class sentimental notions of taste. Neither picture is particularly accurate description of the 20 or more reviewers who write periodi- cally for the editorial columns of The Daily. These people range from mathematics majors with a sensitive appreciation of instru- mental music to Professors of Eng- lish to laboratory technicians who review art. Most of the amateur critics are male. Since women have not been historically marked by reticence to criticize, it is a puzzlement that there are few who are willing to do so in print. * * * SOME OF THE staff just wan- der into the Student Publications Building and say "I'd like to write reviews." Such volunteers are given trial material to criticize before being turned loose upon an unsuspecting reading public. Others, such as teaching fellows in English or fine arts, are recom- mended by profesors as capable of intelligent criticism in a particu- lar medium. A third category is the man sought out as an "ex- pert," perhaps the Engineering and Science Editor of the Univer- sity News Service to review a book on IGY or a practicing poet to review a new collection of campus poetry. If the reviewer combines wit with competence he is doubly ap- preciated. SOME REVIEWERS have, of course, carried "wit" a bit too far. There was, for example, the young man who arrived too late to review a movie and instead waxed ecstatic for considerable space over the popcorn available at the theatre. Another "critic" described the architecture of the theatre after dismissing the movie playing there in one paragraph. Other reviewers have peppered their copy with criticisms of administrators, praises of certain sororities, and unsubtle references to female anatomy. Frequently the ,staff picks up stereotyped phrases which appear with uncomfortable frequency in reviews. Last summer one alert reader, finding the word "grim" in three separate reviews inquired whether the grimlins had taken over The Daily. , * * * THERE IS a tendency among those new to The Daily review staff to emulate the Time Maga- zine style of criticism complete with alliteration, quips, sarcasm, and cleverisms. One explanation of this trend is that new reviewers are generally assigned to such epics as "Rock, Rock, Rock" or "The Last Badman Rides Again" about which it is difficult to be "of high seriousness." Just how qualified are any of these people to write witily or ser- iously about a medium is a ques- tion irrate readers occasionally ask, especially when they. dis- agree wvith a review. Such head- lines as "Daily Reviews Evoke 'Scathing' Student Response" have from time to time loomed large and black on the editorial page. * * * REVIEWS have merited such adjectives as "adolescent," "inept," "revolting," and even "woolly"-- often when deserved. Unfortunate-; ly readers have sometimes ques- tioned the right of students to criticize professional performances or performers. The philosophy of The Daily review staff, if any universal phil- osophy exists in such a free-lance atmospheres is that a review is always the opinion of one person- and must be accepted as such by the reader. The 'validity of that opinion is tested by the experience and critical abilities of the reader himself. Most reviewers do not pretend to be professional critics although they usually possess background and training in a particular field that adequately qualifies them'for their role as evaluator. Most of them realize that they can make errors in judgement and court enlightened criticism of their work. PERIODICALLY a review, either because of its constructive nature, its perceptiveness, or because of the controversy it arouses causes improvement in or evaluation of the object criticized. A recent case in point is the re - evaluation of "Generation" Magazine largely undertaken after rather unfavorable criticism both by its reviewer and by student critics writing letters in response to the review. Possibly the re- evaluation would have taken place in any event, but it was intensified by the stormy and healthy contro- versy of "amateur" critics. No matter how constructive re-- views may be, they have created and will continue to arouse criti- cism from various quarters-per- formers and performer's friends, Justly and unjustly irate readers, and those who are naive enough to disagree with the printed word. Intelligent reviewers would be the last to wish this to disappear- most of them enjoy excitement. 'kf c~kI~k ~4 f ~dot 11 _i 4 ' " <; " ::. -- t ,; Y AT HILL AUDITORIUM: Messiah Performance Ordinary At Best DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER: Experimental Films Sparkle. SGC Plan Revisited THE RECENT downward trend of the popu- larity and influence of SGC is not an idle function of extraneous issues. Replacement of the present group with another, differently de- vised group, cannot be expected to remedy the present problems. This is because the present situation arose directly as a result of the Uni- versity Administration's high-handed procedure following the SGC Sigma Kappa decision of last year. Certainly, there was no lack of student in- terest in SGC last year, nor was any lack of qualified candidates noticed. Perhaps the un- paralleled write-in vote for former Council President Maynard Goldman last November will help establish this fact. But the disenchantment of students for their student government de-; veloped almost immediately after the last Board' in Review meeting, and has continued without a break thereafter. It is to be expected that no- one who values his time would have any in- terest in affiliation with a mock-government. THE QUESTION of a presidential veto of SGC actions has always been unsettled until now. In the past, some justification for such action was expected. But in the new plan, veto power has finally been clarified. It is not for use by the President,s presumably in time of crisis, when a grave threat to the well-being of the Uni- versity community (or more likely, fraternity property values) might be posed by an SGC decision. Instead, veto power has been dele- gated down a rank, to a vice-president. Why not give veto power to the dean of wom- en and have done with it? Although SGC suggested that the alumnus member of the Committee on Referral be dropped, the Regents apparently thought that this inclusion might lead to the establishment of better public relations with the alumni. And the alumnus is to be chosen by the Board of Directors of the Alumni Association, a group with leanings only slightly to the right of Charlemagne. UNDER THESE conditions, it is remarkable that any students choose to associate them- selves with a group so mistrusted by the Regents and the University Administration. Curiously enough, after clamping additional controls on SGC, occasioned by the Council's decision to attempt to eliminate a clearly discriminatory group from the campus, the Regents simultaneously propose that the Uni- vrsity shall work for elimination of discrimina- tion. Not through SGC they won't. -DAVID 'KESSEL Guest Writer THE DRAMATIC Arts Center should be heartily congratu- lated for its first offering of the new season, seven experimental art films, which amused, disturbed, scintillated, but never bored. This reviewer must admit that up to now he had never been to a ' showing of experimental or creative films and did not know what exactly to expect. Visions of being subjected to the - artsy- craftsy flooded his head. However this was not to prove true for any of these films can be enjoyed by even the most unini- tiated. This was an extremely well balanced program that ranged from a brilliant satirical cartoon about Hollywood through an ex- cellent Alfred Hitchcockish mys- tery to a hand painted abstract visualization of a jazz trio. THE MOVIES were introduced and commented upon by James L. Lindbacher, head of the Dearborn Public Library's film department. Mr. Lindbacher proved to be a very helpful and witty guide through this new territory. The evening got off to a rousing start with a brilliant British car- toon, "The History of The Cinema" by Halas and Bachler, the team who made the renowed "Animal Farm." This cartoon's satire is that of the deft jab instead of the heavy handed wallop. The light touch turns out to be more deadly be- cause the more the viewer thinks about the film with its seeming artlessness, the more aware he be- comes of its genius. One particularly slashing touch was having the same old joke-a man falls into a manhole; a second man comes along but does not fall in the hole because he uses the first man's head as a bridge-as it appears in the original silent movies, then in talking pictures, and finally on a wide, wide screen. This makes the point that nothing is ever new under the Southern California sun. *' * * "THE HUNTER in the Forest," a Swedish film, was next. It was. an exercise in "pure cinema" - moving pictures with no dialogue and natural sounds with a musical score. "The Hunter" was in black and white because its creator, Arne Suchsdorff, feels that the film is a black and white medium in which color detracts. This is a debatable point but all will con- cede that this movie proves that plain old black and white on a small screen can be breathtaking when a master like Suchsdorff uses it. The photographic poem, "Car- nival" coupled with music by Mil- haud of the same title was the. perfect wedding of sight and sound. Again this was pure cinema for there was no story, just shots of an amusement park in full swing, deserted during the day, and beginning to awake at dusk for its nightly fling. One technique that added greatly to the riotious atmosphere of the park was the excellent superimpositions of the carnival's many lights. "THE GENTLEMAN In Room Six" used the gimmick of the sub- jective camera in which the lens of the machine becomes the eyes of the narrator. Suspense and mood were built up to a climax which was topped by the revelation of the identity of the narrator. "A Chairy Tale" by Norman Mc- Laren tells the story of a man who wants to sit down to read a book. But his chair has a mind of its own and must be subdued. This film is the greatest piece of comedy since Chaplin. * * * A CREATIVE documentary about "The Third Ave. El" in New York City was followed by the one truly "out" film of the evening, "Begone Dull Care." This is a handpainted film in which the artist scratched, dyed and painted his way to an abstract world of beauty. Parts of it are like jetting over gigantic rolls of kitchen linoleum and others are like a multicolored drag strip. The only drawback to this picture is that it becomes very eye fatiguing because its dazzling patterns race by so rapidly. The D.A.C. should be thanked once again for putting on a truly exciting and enjoyable evening of distinctive film fare. -Patrick Chester AS HAS become traditional in Ann Arbor at the beginning of the Advent season, the Choral Union under the direction of Les- ter McCoy with the assistance of the Musical Society Orchestra and assorted soloists performed George Frideric Handel's "Messiah." Needless to say, "Messiah" is one of the monuments of music and there need be no excuses for performing it at any time. How- ever, if one wishes to make a tra- dition of performing such a work year in and year out, it should be expected that each year might see some improvement and some interesting innovations in the performance. It is usual to give a curtailed performance of "Messiah". There- fore, it could be possible to use different portions of the work in succeeding years and to vary the work to that extent, This is not the case with the Choral Union to any degree. This year's chorus was on the whole rather agreeable if one wants to consider the group as strictly an untrained amateur or- ganization. I am willing to con- cede that it is an amateur group. But not untrained. IF A MASSIVE chorus is not able to negotiate a florid line without recourse to the use of as- pirate "h's", then it is my opinion that it should not sing a florid line. The huge chorus so often em- ployed in this work is a mistake from the very beginning, The most beautiful sounds of the chorus were in the soft singing. Oftentimes in loud passages the group resorted to shouting. This was particularly noticeable in "The Hallelujah Chorus" despite the at- tempt to disguise it by having the audience participate. The orchestra was no worse than ever, but, I'm sorry to say, that is no compliment. The trum- pet player, who usually stars in his big opportunity, "The Trum- pet Shall Sound," failed to bring it off. With the exception of the solo- ists brought in for last May's per- formance of Handel's "Solomon," I have never heard a more inade- quate quartet of singers. Not one of them showed the least concept of how to sing this music. "Messiah" is full of pitfalls for the unwary singer. The slightest fault in musicianship, vocal pro- duction, or artistry is immediately noticeable. * * * SARAMAE Endich, the soprano, has a pleasant voice with a poor top range. Many sopranos of her caliber are to be found in any re- spectable school of music. Gladys Kriese sang the alto solos in a throaty and often in- : "THE MESSIAH" religious emphasis audible voice. If she should try to brighten and project her voice, it might be heard. The tenor, Charles O'Neill, has a not very pretty voice and no idea of the meaning of his text or of a musical line. Yi-Kwei-Sze sang the bass solos with some authority, but in no particularly impressive manner. -Robert Jobe New Books at Library Bowles, Chester - The Coming Political Break-Through; N.Y., Harper & Bros., 1959. Burlingame, Roger - I Have Known Many Worlds; N.Y., Dou- bleday & Co., 1959. Campanella Roy-It's Good To Be Alive; Boston, Little, Brown & Co., 1959 Canaday, John-Mainstreams of Modern Art; N.Y., Simon & Schu- ster, 1959. rv MAX LERNER: What Ike Will See Italian Exhibit Demonstrates Variety of Influences NEW DELHI -- What will President Eisen- hower see when he comes to New Delhi and to India? He will see two cities: an old one with mina- rets and towers, with slums and dirt and a jangling Bedlam of sound; and a new one with beautiful tree-shaded st'reets and stately resi- dences. He will see in these two cities the old and the new India. Rarely on this sub-Continent does one see the contrast so sharply. On the one side is the India of caste, poverty, superstition, of swarming people, of bazaars and mosques and Hindu temples. On the other side is the India of the Third Five Year Plan, of government buildings and clerks, of the big luxury hotels and the Diplomatic Enclave and the Parlia- mentary debates. HE WILL SEE a bicycle civilization, whose streets are jammed with cyclists pedaling to and from work. Back of this he will see a horse-and-cart civilization, with gallant little horses pulling the two-wheel Kangas or car- riages into which a whole joint family may be crowded. Back of this again he will see a bullock-and-cart civilization, with the bullock trudging through the busiest streets as he has trudged for centuries along untraveled roads, stoical and unhurried, while the driver lies sprawled out on the cart in unheeding sleep. He will see traffic-snarls that make New York or Boston or Detroit seem like models of order and discipline. When you are driving in an automobile and trying to pass a motor-cycle scooter-rickshaw which in turn is passing a dozen bicycles, while toward you comes a bus He will see women of every description, from the most stylishly dressed ones to a few who still wear the black veil of purdah over their faces. He may even, if he is lucky, see beautiful young women clothed in the most fragile look- ing saris in delicate colors, carrying heavy loads on their heads as workers on construction jobs. HE WILL SEE vendors selling delicacies, and peddlers with their bicycles loaded down with wares, going from door to door with hope of atle never extinguished. He will see barbers squatting on the grass or the sidewalk, clipping the hair of some humble farmer just in from the village, for whom a haircut by a barber has become the mark of a new living-standard. He will see Hindu marriage-processions in the street, with the groom riding on a white horse to meet the bride; and funeral processions, with the corpse carried on the shoulders of the mourners, with some musicians in the lead if he was an old man. HE WILL SEE prosperous business-men dressed in their best white or yellow coats and gaiters; and their wives with jewels in their noses, and the red dot painted in the middle of their foreheads. He will perhaps see a young Maharajah in a sports car, or an elderly one with the frayed vestiges of a glory he once possessed. He will see Communist farm workers marching down the avenue with red banners, chanting slogans. He will see troops of school-children in their shorts and jackets marked with their school insignia. THE CURRENT show at the Museum of Art, "Painting in Post-War Italy: 1 9 4 5 - 19 5 7" opened yesterday and will be on view until December 20. The ex- hibition is a vital one, particular- ly since it represents the painting phase of the minor renaissance Italy has enjoyed since the end of World War II. The exhibition, chosen by the well known Italian art critic,. Lioriello Venturi, certainly indi- cates a far-ranging and almost exuberant vigor of style. It is de- cidedly internationalist in tone. Though one senses an excited, agitated involvement with con- temporary idioms, there is little to suggest an "Italian" quality as such. The strong back wash of European painting flooded into the war-splattered and provin- cially narrowed boot of Italy al- most before the fighting ended in 1945. Perhaps even more potent was the slightly later influence of American abstract expressionism. These pictures give clear evidence of the 'strength of the influence even among the older painters. * -* * THE ITALIANS were anxious and eager to imbibe the intoxicat- ing qualities of the international art developments. They had them- selves contributed to the earlier THOUGH we can roughly sense the generations, the show as a whole demonstrates a convincing cross-section of the dominant themes and styles of twentieth century painting. However, the imposed concepts of schools and movements, the categorizing of painters into nice pigeonholed fragments does much to distort the essentially unique and indi- vidual quality each painter pos- sesses. It is a particular sentient ex- pression in form that character- izes an artist. Though we may gain insight into the adjunctive (the social and historical or bio- graphical) aspects of art, it is only in terms of a basic relation- ship between onlooker and paint- ing in an immediately empathet- ic quality that painting is seen and appreciated. The work does not have to be understood through the prism of an Italian label. *S * * THERE WERE several paint- ings that were especially reward- ing. Giorgio Morandi's "Still Life" is a good example of this artist's economy of means, of the work of a lyrical painter who holds an in- terior monologue with the univer- sal nonentities such as bottles, jugs, and cups. - Morandi has never submitted to the blandishments of his contem- porary peers, and has expressed a solitary, poetic insight in his own manner. Sergio Romiti, one of the younger painters, is also a deli- cate and essentially intellectual artist. His "Composition" is a finely balanced canvas with softly brushed tones of gray and brown. Though he is abstract, he is much closer to Morandi than is Emilio Vedova, whose tempera "Cruci- fixion" is a shrill romantic tour de force of avant garde art. * * * MASSINO CAMPIGLI'S "The Streets" evokes tthe fixed images of more primitive art, but, para- doxically, in recalling the past he makes strong comments for today. Afro, perhaps the best known of the Italians in the United States is represented by "Citera." This painting is a fresher, bolder color statement in comparison to some of the very cloying, sweet, and thinly painted examples I am familiar with. Whereas Afro is elegant, Gut- tuso displays vitality. Though Guttoso insists upon communicat- ing in creating representational figures which the masses could understand, there is a wealth of good, strong painting in "The Mine." It is spectacular and vivid, but the moral tones are set with a knowing painting hand. * * * ALBERTO BURRI is another vigorous figure. His "Combustion" is dark and ominous. Though the material is unusual, burlap, this work succeeds in creating an im- age that does not go beyond painting as is often intimated when unusual materials are used. Rather it simply makes its point in a fresh manner. There are many other worth- while paintings: Santomaso's "Re- membering a Walk" quiet and evocative; Capogrossi's "Surface" which is certainly a spatial per- spective which could only grow out of a concern with the me- chanical nature of our century; Magnelli's "Nothing Involuntary" a geometric discipline that is al- most formula compared to the more imaginative Capogrossi. Alfred Chigbrine's "Evening" is a relatively successful linear :} E rS R im ____.__.... ~