2 - The Michigan Daily - Saturday, February 12, 2005 OPINION aIje fftdiu ttIg JASON Z. PESICK Editor in Chief SUHAEL MOMIN Editorial Page Editor ALISON GO Managing Editor EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com NOTABLE QUOTABLE 44I still can't believe Michigan let me in. - Arthur Miller, reflecting at age 85 on his early college days, as quoted by Enoch Brater in "Arthur Miller's America." A 4hurIAIr lq[5 k2QO SAM BUTLER E-i S&APBOX 0 AN INTERVIEW WITH ARTHUR MILLER In 2000, Miller held a public interview with University English Prof. Enoch Brater. The transcript of the interview was published by Brater in a recent compilation of articles about Miller. Here are two excerpts: Enoch Brater: Let's begin with Ann Arbor. Why did you come to study at the University of Michigan? Why didn't someone like you go to City College in New York, which would have been a very logical path in the middle of the Depression? Arthur Miller: Well, I did go to City College for about three weeks in the evening; I was working during the daytime. But I couldn't stay awake, so I decided I'd work for a few years and make enough money to go to school in the daytime. I was a little better at staying awake in the daytime. Anyway, coming to Michigan was partly because at that time it was prob- ably the only university in the United States that had an active interest in creative writing. At least I knew of no other. There was that, and there was also that the tuition was so cheap, and money was difficult to come by. So those are the reasons. EB: Did your family think it was odd that you were coming all the way to the Midwest, leav- ing New York and all that world behind you? AM: I looked at it as a kind of adventure. I thought of it as the Wild West. I was amazed that in Detroit they had the same cars we had in New York! For a young guy, it was a great adventure. People didn't jump into airplanes in those days and fly off to some place. Moving around was a good deal more difficult. EB: When you were a student here, how often did you get back to New York? AM: I got back during the Christmas vacation, and that was about it. I usually had to work during the spring vacation, and in fact that's when I wrote my first play. So I got back once each year. EB: Tell us about The Michigan Daily. Why did you stop writing for the Daily? AM: Well, because I started to win prizes for my plays, and I wanted to spend more time writ- ing plays. I lost my impulse to do journalism because I tended to want to make the stories better, and that left fact behind a good deal of the time. I found I wasn't really made to be a reporter. The only thing about journalism was that they had a payroll, and that wasn't the case, in the theater. You were completely on your own there and could easily starve to death, but I decided to pursue the theatre because I loved it. Audience Member 2: My question is this; Because of your great courage during the McCarthy era, when you were summoned before the House Un-American Activities Committee did you have a certain righteous indignation? Where did you find the courage to confront bullies like those who were stick- ing up for McCarthy and following the crowd and the prevalent political times? Or did you have thoughts like other people would in your position, such as how is this going to affect my career? What can they do to me? What were your feelings right before you were forced to go before the committee? AM: First of all, I was not dependent profes- sionally on any corporation or big organization for my livelihood, unlike people who worked in Hollywood. The blacklist on Broadway the- ater in New York existed, but it was very spas- modic and weak, and I could always go back and write a play unless they put me in jail. So there was that. People who are totally depen- dent on the film studio know that their career was over if they resisted these investigations, and that's terribly important. I suppose by the time 1956 rolled around, which was the time that I got sucked into it, I'd already felt as I did for twenty years or more. Professor Brater earlier read from my testimony and from my editorials at The Michigan Daily that I was a confirmed anti-Fascist; and I felt that the civi- lization could go under if we had dictatorship, and that was a feeling I had for two decades by the time I was called. So I didn't feel I had much choice in the matter. But as I would emphasize again, I could follow through on my feelings because I knew I could always sit down at the typewriter and write a play which a screenwriter could not do or an actor or a director who worked on films. Audience Member 3: I was wondering what playwrights and possibly screenwriters you enjoy reading and what people you would rec- ommend for a young playwright to be reading nowadays. AM: If I were to try to educate anybody, I would start with the Greeks and Shakespeare and Ibsen and Strindberg, and I could name probably thirty other people in contemporary terms, you should know what Brecht was up to, what some of our contemporary writers are doing. The British writers at the moment are terrific dramatists. The variety is endless. There are many, many ways to attack a dra- matic problem, and offhand it would be hard for me to emphasize one over the other. Transcript taken from "Arthur Miller's America," courtesy of Enoch Brater and the University of Michigan Press. OFF THE STAGE Miller, aside from writing for the theater, was a prolific contributor to magazines and newspapers. While attending the University, he was a writer and an editor for The Michigan Daily, as well as The Gargoyle. In his later life, even after achieving fame as a playwright, Miller continued to write pieces for magazines and various periodicals. On Oct. 11, 1936, Miller wrote an editorial for the Daily condemn- ing the vice chairman of the board of the Chrysler Corporation for sympathizing with fascist ideology. We reprint the piece, in its original form, below. Mr. Zeder's Talk "Hitler is doing a great job, he's carrying on, he's putting his house in order..." Mr. Zeder stated. What we need is a re- dedication to the basic virtues of "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," Mr. Zeder also stated. Fine! Mr. Zeder, vice-chair- man of the Board, Chrysler Cor- poration. We all thank you, our mothers thank you, our fathers thank you. Saluta! Mr. Zeder for saving the liberals of this local- ity the trouble of convincing the people that American Big Busi- ness is Fascist and more treason- able to the American form of government than three times the number of Communists in Amer- ica today. Congratulations! Mr. Zeder and the Chrysler Corporation for explaining so concisely that it is Big Business which is behind the "people's" demand for a big- ger navy which General Smed- ley Butler told me had not ONE SINGLE PLAN FOR DEFEN- SIVE WARFARE BUT ONLY FOR OFFENSE IN FOREIGN WATERS. Some of us had thought that when you and the Republicans you are backing said you were for a "different way" of han- dling relief - for "progress of industry founded on sound principles," well we thought that perhaps you meant what Manufacturers, thank you for telling us in one breath your aim to Fascistize American industry and in the next that you would enjoy having we college men help you do it! We don't know how we can repay this debt to you - this debt we owe you for telling the Great American College Men YOUR- SELVES that he is preferred because it is more probable that with his training in "cultural sub- jects" he will help his bosses trim his uneducated fellow workers out of their just desserts. But we forget our President Mr. Ruthven. In our joy we for- get our President or maybe it was because his talk is on page 6. But he has also forgotten - our President Mr. Ruthven has. HE has forgotten that heavy indus- try moguls like our Mr. Zeder have been and are the richest, most powerful sect in the coun- try. He has forgotten that Mr. Zeder is a fascist. HE has for- gotten that being powerful they will not annihilate themselves - that being the most powerful sect in our American Democ- racy they will not annihilate themselves. HE must have for- gotten for he says the choice is not "between Fascism and Com- munism." Does HE believe Mr. Zeder's democracy will outlaw Mr. Zeder? He can't believe that, for Mr. Zeder told our President Mr. Ruthven in the Union that he prefers fascism. Mr. Zeder then, doesn't agree with our Presi- dent. For not only is Mr. Zeder a fascist, but he is a fighter like Hitler against Communism. Not only does Mr. Zeder find that the choice IS Fascism or Com- munism, but he must therefore completely disagree with our In 1953, Miller wrote an essay on life at the University, both in the 1950s and when he attended, for the now- defunct Holiday magazine. Selected quotations are reprinted below. University of Michigan My first affection for the Uni- versity of Michigan was due, simply, to their accepting me. They had already turned me down twice because my academ- ic record (I had flunked algebra three times in my Brooklyn high school) was so low as to be prac- tically invisible, but the dean reversed himself after two letters in which I wrote that since work- ing for two years - in a ware- house at fifteen dollars a week - I had turned into a much more serious fellow. He said he would give me a try, but I had better make some grades. I could not conceive of a dean at Columbia or Harvard doing that. I earned fifteen dollars a month for feeding a building full of mice - the National Youth Adminis- tration footing the bill - and out of it I paid $1.75 a week for my room and squeezed the rest for my Granger tobacco (two packs for thirteen cents), my books, laun- dry, and movies. For my meals I washed dishes in the co-op cafete- ria. My eyeglasses were supplied by the health service, and my teeth were fixed for the cost of materi- als. The girls paid for themselves, including the one I married. " " " But political facts were not all I learned. I learned that under cer- tain atmospheric conditions you could ice-skate up and down all the streets in Ann Arbor at night. I learned that toward June you could I left Ann Arbor in the spring of 1938 and in two months was on relief. But, whether the measure- ment was false or not, I felt that I had accomplished something there. I knew at least how much I did not know. I had found many friends and had respect of the ones that mattered to me. It had been a small world, gentler than the real one but tough enough. It was my idea of what a university ought to be. The student will need about a thousand dollars a year, which is cheaper than a lot of other places. He will get free medical care and hospitalization; he will be able to borrow money from the university if he needs it and may take nearly forever to pay it back; he will use modern laboratories in the scienc- es and an excellent library in the humanities; as a freshman he will live in new dormitories, and the girls will have to be in bed by ten thirty; if he flies to school he will land at Willow Run Airport, the safest in the country, owned now by the university; he will have radio station and a television sta- tion to try his scripts, if he writes, and if he is more literary than that he can try for a Hopwood Award in poetry, drama, the essay and the novel. He will meet students of many backgrounds. Two thirds of them will be from Michigan and a large proportion of those from small towns. About nine hundred will be foreign, including Japanese, 'Irks, Chinese and Europeans. If he is Negro he will find little discrimi- nation, except in a few Greek-letter fraternities. Most of his classes will be large in the first few years but his teachers have regular visiting hours, and with a little push he can get to know them. He will not be permit- 0 0 9 wwwn.ichigandaily.com EDITORIAL STAFF Jason Z. Pesick, Editor in Chief pesick@michigandaily.com Alison Go, Managing Editor go@michigandaily.com NEWS Farayha Arrine, Managing Editor' i