~jjg Aid ehan ~a Seventieth Year EDTED 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 Opinion-s Are Free Truth Will Prevail'" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. ODAY, JANUARY 10, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS HAYDEN Pro ected Theatre Worth the Gamble PROBABLY the most exciting aspect of the- atre in Ann Arbor right now is the prospect of a new professional theatre coming to town. New Yorkers Oliver Rea, Tyrone Guthrie, and Peter Zeisler approached Ann Arbor's Dramatic Art Center last fall about the possibility. Since then Ann Arbor has been competing with sev- eral large and well-known cities for the the- atre's location. The proposed theatre is to be established along the lines of the Shakespearean Festival Theatre in Stratford, Ontario. When this the- atre was established nine years ago in the small out of the way town, most people pre- dicted an immediate flop. But Tyrone Guth- rie directed for the first several seasons; and he is largely responsible for the theatre's sur- prising and immediate success. HY IS HE thinking about Ann Arbor as a possible setting for another professional theatre, along with the larger, though no more colorful cities of Milwaukee, Minneapolis, and. Cleveland? Firstly he is seeking a location that is near populated areas. All four locations can pro- vide this. But he is also interested in a city small enough so that the theatre can become identified with it, just as the Shakespearean Festival Theatre has become identified with Stratford, Ontario. Only Ann Arbor is small enough to make this possible. Githrie, Rea, and Zeisler expect to announce their decision on the theatre's location on Feb- ruary 15. Their considerations must depend to a considerable degree on pragmatic money matters. An initial sum of one and a half mil- lion dollars must be provided by the commu- nity of its location for building a theatre build- lng. The other, competing cities have already shown evidence of financial support; but Ann Arbor began showing official interest in the project as late as December, when the Chamber of Commerce pledged to cooperate in attempt- ing to obtain the New Yorker's decision. BUT SINCE then Ann Arbor has made an ef- fort to catch up with the others. The City Council and the City Planning Commission have recently announced their support of the project, and the University has expressed en- thusiasm as well. As popular as the topic of whether or not the theatre will locate here has been the ques- tion of how such a large professional theatre will fare in Ann Arbor. That it would be a tremendous cultural as- set to the community goes without saying. A large professional theatre in Ann Arbor would be an asset to the University as well, for it would be attractive to faculty members. IT WOULD give aspiring student actors the opportunity to observe and occasionally work with competent professionals. Columbia and Northwestern have two of the finest speech departments in the country, and both univer- sities are near meccas of professional theatre. Columbia is within subway distance of Broad- way (to say nothing of the numerous off- Broadway productions also in Manhattan), and Northwestern is less than an hour away from Chicago. Our nearest professional the- atre, however - r only one is open the year around - is in Detroit. The new project would give this entire re- gion the opportunity to see artistic, perceptive drama, directed by Guthrie - a boon to any area. BUT IN ORDER to survive, the theatre would have to seat on the average of 1,200 a'day for its entire 20 week season. Thus the theatre would be dependent not only on Ann Arbor residents and University students for its audi- ence, but on Detroit and its surrounding com- munities as well. But Detroit is reputedly not a theatre-going town. The only possible answer to this criticism is that Guthrie saw the audiences pour into the little town of Stratford from all parts of theatre-barren Canada. So perhaps supposed lack of theatre interest does not appear so discouraging to him. But the fate of a large professional theatre here remains a question mark. Its future could be the best of times or the worst of times. It could rise to the triumphant level of Stratford, Ontario - it could go direct the other way. In short, it is a gamble-as worthwhile endeavors usually are. --STEPHANIE ROUMELL The Play Series .basic Aim 'Experience' By LORA KRAPOHL Daily Staf Writer 'THE LABORATORY shows are done entirely by students. The faculty comes in only when needed and asked for," declared Albert Katz, coordinator of The Labora- tory Bill. "The Lab Playbill provides a training ground for actors, direc- tors, designers, lighting techni- cians, and includes all facets of production. While this is the prac- tical function, we have the aes- thetic function of all theaters- that is, to entertain. We try to put on good shows and we've been fairly successful." An example of the typical struc- ture of a lab bill is the production of parts of "Doctor Faustus" which was done last year. The leads were taken by relatively inexperienced undergraduate actors and the supporting actors were getting their first training in this lab bill. It was directed by a graduate student, props were designed by a senior in' design school, and light- ing was done as a fulfillment of the practical requirement for a course. *f 4 " THE BILLS, which are presented on Thursdays at 4:10 p.m. are de- signed to run from 30 to 40 min- utes, are followed by critiques which round out the entertain- ment-packed hour. This hour is the culmination of many weeks of effort. First the student director gets a production date, selects his script, and takes it to his faculty advisor. The facutly advisor takes it to the theater committee. Once it is accepted, faculty instruction to the student is over unless he requests further help. The costume and lighting tech- nicians select dates on which they can take a play and three weeks before this datedthey confer with the director and plan what they will do for their production. From then until the final week they work on their own. The designer works with the di- rector making the necessary small changes. * * * FOUR WEEKS BEFORE the date the director will hold read- ings which are open to all. For three weeks of the four they will rehearse five or six days a week -three or four hours a day. From Sunday through Wednesday of the last week the cast hold their final rehearsals from 6-12 p.m." stated Katz. All these elements come togeth- er in the dress rehearsal. The production crew has three days to make the production run smoothly. "The range of shows is typical of any academic theater," said Katz. Up until and through 1957- 58 the lab playbill was hindered by the necessity of renting Lydia Mendelssohn three times a se- mester to present its .efforts. Therefore only three directos got a chance to work and only three plays wre selected. When the Speech Department has moved to Frieze Building, the lab gained access to Trueblood Auditorium which is an excellent proscenium theater, and has the gym which has been remodeled in- to an arena theater. * * * NOW THAT the Lab Playbill no longer has to rent a theatre it plans on about10playstper se- mester. The range of the Lab shows has covered not only well- known playwrites such as Ten- nessee Williams, Conrad, Saro- yan, Inge, Moliere but also ori- ginals by unknowns such as "The Consent" by Mabelle Hsueh, a student at the University, and a medieval farce "Pierre Patelin" by an anonymous author. The Lab Playbill on Jan. 7, will make the first use of the arena theater. It will have a double bill: Sean O'Casey's "Bedtime Story" and "Hello Out There" by William Saroyan. This will be the second Saroyan play of the semester. On Jan. 14 the last Lab Playbill of the Semester will present both the light and the dark side of man caught by his environment. A comedy by Paul Green "No Count Boy" and a bitter Tennessee Wil- liams, "Mooney's Kid Don't Cry," will be given. "When Green sees a man caught by his environment, he laughs gently. Williams is frus- trated and he crys," said Mr. Katz. This spring historical styles of directing will be tried out when Shakespeare and Greek tragedy, as well as the comedy of Noel Coward will be presented. As Mr. Katz declared, "If you have a new, unusual idea the lab bill is the place to find out if it will work." Theatre FOR 23 YEARS: Civic Theater 3it of Broadway' Ike Myopic on Education in Ann Arbor IfHE FORMER president of Columbia Univer- sity spent sixty seconds discussing educa- tion the other day. His remarks, a fragment of the State of the Union message, should not go unnoticed to American educators, for they promise no good in the coming critical years. Mr. Eisenhower came out against increased Federal aid to schools. .. . the route to better- trained minds is not through the swift ad- ministration of a Federal hypodermic or sus- tained financial transfusion. The educational process is essentially a local and personal re- sponsibility and cannot be made to leap ahead by crash, centralized governmental action." O F COURSE. the traditional concept of local control can- not be eliminated overnight and replaced by stronger Federal aid in the form of "crash ac- tion." But no one is suggesting that local con- trol disappear, much less overnight. The need for aid is most evident in the area of school construction. Teacher's salaries are an equally critical need. Only the myopic could see no need for a "hypodermic" in these areas. Mr. Eisenhower suggests a "carefully rea- soned program for helping eliminate current deficiencies. It is designed to stimulate class- room construction, not by substitution of fed- eral dollars for state and local funds, but by incentives to extend and encourage state and local efforts." INCENTIVES, of course, are valuable. And as the President says, they are part of a "carefully reasoned" approach. But the contention here is that approaches should no longer be quite so careful, given the enormous swelling of needs expected in the coming decade. If by 1970 enrollments will have doubled, it takes little arithmetic to un- derstand the increased needs in construction and salaries. It is the sheerest complacency to assume that the local school boards, much less the public, will be able to meet the frighten- ing demands of the 1960s. And as the President wisely pointed out in his speech, "we cannot be complacent about educating our youth." -THOMAS HAYDEN By MAME JACKSON Daily Staff Writer A TOUCH OF the splendor and excitement of Broadway is captured in the Ann Arbor Civic Theater productions. For twenty-eight years, actors and stage hands -of the Civic Theater have combined their tal- ents to provide the community and University students with a variety of popular plays. All types of dra- ma have been attempted, from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar to Tennessee Williams' modern Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. The 1959-60 playbill consists of the plays, Diary of Anne Frank, Nude with a Violin, Major Bar- bara, Street Car Named Desire and Wonderful Town. S * * * PLAYS ARE CHOSEN by the director with the approval of the Theater's governing board. The board includes twelveddirectors and is headed by a president, vice- president and treasurer. Since1950the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theater has served as a playhouse for Civic Productions. Before that, three yearly perform- ances were given in Slauson Jun- ior High School where the organi- zation was working on a shoe- string-relying on card parties and donations for its support. Now, with a new location and five plays each year, the Civic Theater is completely self-supporting. Ted Heusel, Civic Theater di- rector for the past five years, re- cently told of the great effort and enthusiasm which goes into the production of each play. * * * HEUSEL SAID that the per- formers are selected about four or five weeks before the perform- ance. These then participate in a concentrated program of rehears- als every week-day evening dur- ing the three or four weeks pre- ceding opening nght. Rehearsals are held in a rented classroom in Ann Arbor High School. According to Heusel, acting is open to anyone.dAs many as fifty townspeople and University stu- dents tryout for each play. Regu- lar auditions are held, and the prospective performers are re- quired to read character parts. Heusel claimed that it is diffi- cult to find good men between the ages of thirty-five and fifty as they are busy earning their liv- ings and not able to spend much time acting. However, there are a few actors who participate reg- ularly in Civic Theater produc- tions. Among the stalwarts who have been with the CivichTheater sinc its beginnings are three Mi- chigan graduates, G. Davis Sel- lards, '22, Richard Cutting, '22, and A. B. Crandell, '18. * * * OFTEN THE CIVIC Theater is able to cast prominent professional actors who are passing through Ann Arbor. "One of the most stir- ring performances," Heusel said, "was given a few years ago by J. Michaels while he was convalesc- ing in Ann Arbor." Michaels is the man who, ac- companied by a portion of The William Tell Overture, shouts, ". ..and out of the west on his great horse, Silver, came the L-o- o-o-ne Ranger . . ." Michaels played the role of Captain Queeeg in the Civic Theater's production of The Caine Mutiny Court Mar- tial. All Civic Theater performances dent three -years ago when George Seaton, celebrated Hollywood pro- ducer and head of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sci- ences, was visiting Ann Arbor. At that time the Civic Theater cast was busy rehearsing for its production of Country Girl. Sea- ton, producer of the award-win- ning film, Country Girl, had seen the play thirty-eight times throughout the world. Interested in how a local, amateur playhouse would handle this play, he at- tended a rehearsal. Seaton was so impressed with the performance he saw that he returned opening night and sent flowers to the leading lady-a sig- nal tribute to the Ann Arbor Civic Theater and an acknowledge- ment of its fine performances. 7 Offers Varied Fare By STEPHANIE ROUMELL Daily Staff writer THE DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER was founded in 1954 as a successor to the Arts Theatre Club, which had maintained an arena theatre in Ann Arbor, but the attempt met with financial difficulties, and so after three years the Arts Theatre Club had to go out of existence. , The Dramatics Arts Center was formed by people who wanted to keep up the tradition of fine professional theatre in Ann Arbor. They leased the Masonic Temple Auditorium and ran plays there for three seasons with,a resident cast of professionals. But the plays Play Lab Provides Variety By SUE FARRELL Daily Staff Writer FJBE OFFICE IS large, as Uni- versity offices go, with desk and file cabinets set well in the back of the room, and one wall covered with postcards of Spain and Italy. Half a dozen straight chairs are scattered around the room. Books and papers obliter- ate the desk. An orange and black poster announces the dates of the Playbill series. The door was open and the light on. But no one was there. A young man-an instructor perhaps-rushed in, sat at the desk for a moment, grabbed a piece of paper, and on his way out said, "Prof. Halstead is in class, but he'll be back in a min- ute," Just as he left, three students walked in. One girl-tall, with a deep and lovely voice-talked ex- citedly of a new dance she had just learned. * * * PROF. HALSTEAD whirled in. "Be with you in a minute, but I've got to take a long distance phone call." Another girl dashed in, wrote Prof, Halstead a note and left. Prof. Halstead put the phone down and turned around. "Now you were the young lady who wanted to see me about .. " "About the Playbill series, sir. When it started, why, what you do, how you do it, everything." S* * * "WELL, OUR primary purpose is to train students; secondarily, we want to give students, faculty and townspeople the experience and variety of good theatre. "The first time there was a cur- ricular theatre at the University was in 1914. They gave their plays at private performances-meaning no admission charge-in thle the- atre in the women's gymnasium later they worked in University Hall which stood where Haven Hall is now. "Valentine Wynt came to di- rect in 1928 and by 1933 all the plays were being given in the Mendelssohn Theatre and in pub- lic performances-they charged admission. "WE PUT a heavy emphasis on pre-modern plays because they of- fer greater variety in acting style. Radio, television and other thea- ters do predominantly modern, naturalistic plays; this influences us even more toward choosing pre-modern plays so that we can give variety to the whole. "Our plays are approved by a theatre committee composed of a costumer, scene designer, our busi- ness manager, the directors and some instructors who do not di- rect. We usually have two major shows and four one-acts in re- hearsal." "Is it fun to choose the plays?" A wry smile came with the answer. * * .* "IT'S AGONY to equate all the factors. We can't make heavy de- mands on costume, scenery or cast in two successive plays. We want to provide variety for the audience and still we must give some con- sideration to the box office-first of all because we have to pay a good deal of our expenses and secondlysbecause acting before a full house, and therefore more responsive, is very important to our students." "And it's good that we have to consider the box office," Prof. Hal- stead continued, "because other- wise we could get terribly eclectic and do plays no one but the di- rector wants to do. "AT THE MOMENT we have more talented and experienced people than we have had for a long time and some who show great promise. But finding a way to communicate all the implica- tions of a play is especially diffi- cult with a pre-modern play where the students have had less personal experience with the lit- erary tradition and style of the period. "We have to find the right com- promise in style which will pro- ject as much of the period feel- ing as possible and still appeal to the modern audience which is so thoroughly conditioned to real- ism, even naturalism, that any other style seems strange. * * "THE OBJECTIVE of a direc- tor is to achieve sufficient unity so that there will be no jarring of style. In "Electra," for example, I was striving for a bigness of emotional reaction-and didn't succeed because most of the audi- ence was incapable of such a re- 4 ,x, ~ " 4 4 were stopped in 1957 when DAC had to leave the Masonic Temple Auditorium-the Masons wanted to use it for office space. N * * ANOTHER reason for ceasing the program was that the produc- tions had to be financially un- derwritten each year. The continu- ing difficulty that this presented made the DAC hesitate about go- ing on. *While at the Masonic Temple the DAC had supported other cul- tural activities. Art Exhibitions by the Ann Arbor Art Association were held regularly. It also worked in cooperation with children's classes in art and dancing, and drama held at pub- lic schools throughout the city. The children performed at the Masonic Auditorium. * * * ANOTHER CULTURAL activity that has continued away from the Masonic Temple is the play-read- ing group. This groupbhas pre- sented a number of public read- ings of plays, whicch has led to some full productions in the last year. The group gave Ionesco's "The Bald Soprano" last spring, and Prof. Kaplan remarked that other productions are planned. The DAC also sponsors an ex- perimental film program. The last presentation was given in early December, and the next program is planned for January 15 and 16 at the Ann Arbor Public Library. "We have kept a number of ac- tivities going," Prof. Kaplan cam- mented, all of which, we feel, are worth doing." SINCE THE theatre presenta- tions in the Masonic Auditorium stopped, Prof. Kaplan said that the DAC has been anxious to get professional theatre started again in Ann Arbor. "We have felt that the only way to do this is to get the very best in theatre here-the best ac- tors, directors, and an appropriate budget (one which would be 10 times as large as we could pro- vide) ." "For Ann Arbor has so many fine competing cultural activities," Prof. Kaplan pointed out, "that only the finest in professional theatre could get enough support to be a continuing success here." "But we realized thatsuch a theatre. would have to draw its support only in part from Ann Ar- bor. Other support would come from the entire region." * * * SO IN .THE fall of 1958 the DAC made vigorous efforts to find a way to set up a top quality pro- fessional theatre in Ann Arbor. As a result, Louis Simon, promi- nent in New York theatre, vis- ited Ann Arbor for a week and wrote a report on the prospects for professional theatre here. "Because of these 'efforts," Prof.. Kaplan related, "Oliver Rea, a New York producer, heard of us. He came to DAC and asked if we wanted a professional theatre here with Tyrone Guthrie as di- rector." The DAC now feels that its mis- sion is to helpmake possible the location of a new theatre in Ann Arbor," the DAC president de- clared. "But the DAC feels it can be in the background, now that a formal steering committee has been set up and a broader group is taking over." "We want to see the professional theatre come to Ann Arbor," he concluded, "regardless of what be- comes of DAC. 1 * { 1. Strike Legislation Needed NOW THAT the steel strike finally has ended, the pre-settlement talk of new strike legis- lation has also ended. The general opinion seems to be that strong governmental inter- ference in collective bargaining is not desir- able. And, as long as the strike has been settled anyway, it is felt that there is no immediate need for new strike laws. Such an attitude, however, disregards un- realistically the fact that situations like the 1959 steel strike could easily pop up again at any time in the future. The costs of future strikes might even be much greater than the recent one. Editorial Staff THOMAS TURNER, Editor HILIP POWER R BERT J'UNKER Edaitorial Director City Editor CHARLES KOZOLL .............. Personnel Director JOAN KAATZ ...................,Magazine Editor BARTON HUTHWAITE ............ Features Editor JIM BL"NAGH........................Sports Editor JAMES BOW. .............,. Associate City Editor PETER I'^ WSON .............. Contributing Editor FRED KATZ ............... Associate Sports Editor For the government to remain handicapped in its present disability to terminate these harmful strikes just because of a relatively lucky settlement this time is sheer and utter nonsense. How is it possible to think that with the present problem solved at last, there is no reason to prepare for what might - and prob- ably will -- occur again in the future? EVEN FROM the recent steel strike, damag- ing effects will be felt for quite some time. Steel shortages piled up from the record 116- day walkout are still acute. Countless workers in other industries were forced out of jobs. The money the steelworkers lost because of no pay during the four-month strike period will not be made up for by their new pay increase until many years from now. The national econ- omy was greatly endangered, and as of yet, we are still not quite sure what far-reaching effects this may have in 1960. If the government had had the tools at its disposal to 1) authorize fact-finding boards to pinpoint major labor dispute issues publicly before a strike develops or gets out of hand, 2) compel arbitration or mediation, or 3) even use certain seizure powers, the present strike might have been settled much quicker and J I