1> i The Michigan Daily Centennial Edition - Friday, October 19, 1990 - Page 7 Arthur Miller: staffer turned playwright by Gil Renberg Over the years, the University of Michigan has produced many tal- -nted graduates, such as Gerald Ford, Mike Wallace, Clarence Darrow and krthur Miller. What Ford was to olitics, what Wallace was to televi- Sion news and Darrow to law, Arthur Miller has been to literature. Miller, who graduated from V4ichigan in 1938 and majored in English, is regarded as one of this :entury's leading playwrights. While attending Michigan, he devoted him- ,elf to writing five plays, two of which won Hopwood awards for out- ;tanding dramatic writing. He also ;pent roughly a term working for the Daily as a reporter and Night Editor. "I spent my time writing plays," he said. "I wasn't spending too much time at the Daily." Still, being on the Daily "was a very educational experience" for Miller. "I had to meet a lot of objec- tions to my way of thinking from very intelligent people. That taught me to broaden my own view," he said. Miller remembered the Daily as ( being "a very confrontational news- paper... We were into all kinds of issues, like fascism and labor unions and racism, which had never been part of the Daily's interest." This change in the newspaper's content was caused by a power shift that occurred around 1937, Miller said. "For the first time it was not in the hands of the fraternities... (that) had handed it down one to the other... The paper was captured by the radicals in 1937... and it became an extremely interesting newspaper," Miller recalled. While under the control of the "fraternity guys," the Daily was "a conservative and extremely boring their struggle for control of the newspaper," he said. Among Miller's most memorable experiences at the Daily were the meetings at which the paper's edito- rial policies were decided upon after hours of debate. Miller said, "We used to spend whole nights argu- ing... That sharpened your wits, be- cause there were all kinds of editorial fights as to what position we should take... There was one vital issue af- ter another." For over fifty years, Miller's '(The Daily) was a very educational experience. I had to meet a lot of objections to my way of thinking from very intelligent people. That taught me to broaden my own view' -Playwright Arthur Miller "His works are examinations of American society," said University English Prof. James Gindin, who specializes in 19th and 20th century fiction. Miller has written approximately 20 plays, as well as several short stories, screenplays and novels. He won the Pulitzer prize for "Death of a Salesman," which opened in 1949. He said that he does not have a fa- vorite from among his works, but added, "I'm terrifically proud of "The Crucible." "The Crucible," which Brater called "a very great play," is about the Salem witch trials, which were held in Massachusetts in 1692. Many people believe the play was meant to be a thinly-veiled criticism of the communist witch-hunts or- chestrated by Senator Joseph McCarthy in the 1950s. Miller de- nied that the play was specifically aimed at McCarthy and his support- ers. Said Gindin, "It gets at some of the issues in the McCarthy hear- ings... (But) it had broader applica- tions... (it) was saying something in a broader way about America." Brater said that the "climate of fear and intimidation" during the Red Scare concerned Miller and inspired him to write "The Crucible." "He saw (in the witch trials)... a very appropriate analogy to the hysteria that was going on in the United States," Brater said. Miller's response to McCarthyism was not confined to his writing. In 1956, he stood up to the powerful House Committee on Un-American Activities by refusing to divulge the names of associates who were communist. "My con- science will not permit me to use the name of another person and bring trouble to him," he told the commit- tee. Miller was convicted of con- tempt of Congress, although the conviction was overturned two years later. Miller had been called before the congressional committee to talk about his connections over the years with colleagues who were allegedly communists. "I had signed a thou- sand things over the period of twenty years before that protesting this and that, and I had attended a couple of meetings with Communist writers," he said. However, Miller believes that the hearing was called for a different rea- son. "It was basically a publicity thing... a way of getting elected and riding the wave of anti-Soviet" sen- timents, he said. "Before my hearing... the chair- man of that committee agreed to call it all off if he could have a photo- graph taken with Marilyn Monroe (to whom Miller was married for four years)," Miller said. Miller, who was born in New York City, lives in Roxbury, Conn., with his third wife, Inge Morath, and has four grown children. Although he turned seventy-five last Wednesday, Miller is still writing. A new play, titled "The Ride Down Mt. Morgan," will open in London in a few months. Miller refused to describe his most recent work. "Well, you'll just have to wait and see," he said. "It's a contemporary work about living in this mad- house." Having worked at the Daily for half a year, Arthur Miller is certainly qualified to write about life in a madhouse. newspaper," Miller said. "When the Depression hit in the early thirties there was a lot of dnhappiness that the paper didn't really deal with the main issues of the day... The new people who came in were really in- terested in that kind of stuff... Those people were finally victorious in plays have addressed such vital is- sues as family relationships, depres- sion, hatred and political persecu- tion. "I think he writes about ques- tions of ethics and morality that we face in a materialistic society," said Enoch Brater, a University Professor of English and Theater. Investigatory skills honed at the Daily used to land Pulitzer Prize WHAT THEY DO NOW 0..: S. Daily editors Jim Tobin and Anne Marie Lipinski get a chuckle over a story. Tobin works for the Detroit News, Lipinski for the Chicago Tribune. by Geri Alumit In September, 1974 Ann Marie Lipinski climbed a few small steps with nervousness and apprehension. But because she ascended those stairs-which happen to lead up to the Daily's offices-today she is able to climb steeper stairs-those of the Chicago Tribune-with confi- dence. "Working at the Daily is the best job I've ever had. You don't realize it until you get out of there. But for most people in journalism,. the op- portunity to run your own newspa- per never comes again," Lipinski said. Fresh out of Ann Arbor in 1978 with a degree in American Studies, Lipinski began a summer internship at the Chicago Tribune. This tempo- rary job became permanent in the fall and eventually led her to the po- sition of Investigations Editor. In October 1987, Lipinski and two other reporters did a series of stories on corruption within Chicago's City Council. The fol- lowing year, as a result of this se- ries, Lipinski won the Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting. Hailing from the Detroit suburb of Trenton, Lipinski was at first overwhelmed by the challenges of the Daily, but she quickly adjusted and overcame her fears. One of her first positions at the Daily, which helped her sharpen her investigative skills, was City Hall beat reporter. "It was an exciting time politi- cally for Ann Arbor because it was when the first Black mayor was elected," Lipinski said. "It prepared me a lot for this job because it gave me a chance to learn about govern-. ment." Lipinski said she is now able to appreciate the huge amounts of re- sponsibility the Daily gave its "news-pounding pupils." In 1976, the Daily sent Lipinski to cover the Democratic National Convention in New York City. "It was such a kick for me because I was 19 or 20 and it was something that older journalists wait a long time to do." "The Daily gave us all a chance to be real journalists; we were all out there competing with big time newspapers, and television stations," Lipinski said. "We all took the Daily really seriously and we tried to make it as professional as possible." Lipinski said she was always far more stimulated by the Daily than the classroom. "It is an activity that made you feel like a significant member in such a big school. A lot of my friends then were envious of my experience. "My education at the University was the Daily - it taught me about the people, I learned about the world," she said. The Daily provided her with some of her dearest friends, many of whom she still keeps in close con- tact. Lipinski said she had recently returned from visiting another former Daily reporter, Sarah River, who now works for The New York Times. "The Daily has produced a lot of the people I really admire in this profession. They are doing the kind of reporting that I really look up to," she said. "I don't know anyone who will look back and say their time was not well spent in that building. "In some perverse way we were almost like a family," she said. "We would not have been there if we didn't want to be. It was an experi- ence that expanded all of our hori- zons." the newspaper1 business and through talking about the changes he's seen over the years. "There are some structural trends that should give one pause, and worry one." He holds up three fingers to count off the trends. "One, the decline of voting, particu- 4 larly among those who are the have-nots. Two, the massive increase of special in- terest spending in politics. Three, the de- cay of the media from principled journal- ism to sensationalism. "These trends taken together make it difficult to visualize American taking the lead in promoting significant change as opposed to just responding. Most people don't even think of how America should be leading the world in an idealistic direc- .* tion." cal television studio, where Hayden is appearing on a political talk show ("it's a show for political junkies", says Hayden, grinning). The panel consists of two journalists, two pollsters, a campaign reform lobby- ist, and a politician. Despite Hayden's stated criticisms of the media, he is ob- viously enjoying himself on the show. During the taping, an almost yin/yang clarity emerges between Hayden and the panelists. in 1982. But just as Hayden the radical always had establishment connections, Hayden the legislator has not been assim- ilated into the power structure. Few of his bills were passed into law under con- servative governor George Deukmejian, and he threw himself into environmental of changing the environment on the indi- vidual, as if the individual is to blame, or is the cause. "I think it's institutional power struc- tures and patterns that are the problem." Once again, Hayden has run into an institutional brick wall. Proposition 128, if passed, would phase out 20 cancer- causing pesticides (and direct $40 million to research on alternative pesticides), re- duce certain fuel emissions by 40 percent by the year 2010, and set aside $300 mil- lion to purchase California's ancient red- wood forests. Chemical companies (such as ICI, who manufacture some of the carcino- genic pesticides) and agribusiness have poured $1.5 million into an advertising campaign opposing the proposition, dn~hhinor it bTh Huj'pn Tntintve'inth shrivelled and more expensive. But noth- ing happened." Hayden maintains that Californians are very aware of environmental issues. "What we're trying to do is transform. environmental consciousness in this state, transform it and translate it into ac- tion - a choice at the ballot: people ver- sus special interests." Hayden is virtually guaranteed re-elec- tion to his Santa Monica-based assembly seat, and although his name is now ir- reparably tied to Proposition 128, he re- mains philosophical about it. "If it passes, I won't get any credit for it, but if it fails, I'll get all the blame", he says, laughing. Even though his opponents have been quick to tie his name to the proposition, shreds. Hayden comes across as serious thinker answering ideologues. On the way back from the studioi ask him what his political plans are. "Well, I'm killing myself right noW trying to make this (proposition) pasĀ§ I'm not sitting back thinking about who I'm going to do the next day." Nov. 6 sees a coalescence of a number of factors that will affect Hayden's polit- cal future. Apart from his own campaign and Proposition 128, the voters will &- cide upon their next governor. Demo- cratic candidate Dianne Feinstein has en- dorsed Proposition 128, while Sen. Pete Wilson, the Republican candidate, has opposed it. Has he had enough of Sacramento and the legislature? rnnld AhP i'coid hi " he savs