PACE rOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY IlIU1tbDAY, APtt1L 17, IU54 PAUE tOUR IkiIJRSUAY. AIfsLIL 17, 1~k5~ U N _______________________________________________________ N Taft's Policies LRAMA "There Ain't No Such Animal" I T WAS THE same old line, the same old demagogic oratory, softened only by Sen. Robert A. Taft's one virtue-his candid honesty. Mr. Republican's perspective on contem- porary problems centers around a rather negative approach, which includes hack- neved tirades on corruption in govern- ment, influence peddling, Pendergastism, Red spys, and fat bureaucrats. Thus the courageous and profound observation yes- terday at Hill-"We need a return to hon- esty and integrity." The fact that nearly everyone-even the Democrats-is forthrightly against organiz- ed sin did not preclude the Senator's inces- sant hammering on these topics. Agreed, a change in Administration would more likely than not eliminate the fetid as- pects of the present federal government, but Mr. Taft's ideas on domestic and interna- tional problems do not necessarily indicate the need for a Republican Administration. The Republicans will have to stand on a much more positive platform before the GOP will be able to displace the Demo- cratic Party. Fighting Bob once more side-tracked pressing domestic issues. Nowhere did he mention the drastic unemployment situation and the need for a strengthened federal un- employment compensation act designed to alleviate the birth pains of a wartime in- dustry. In fact, Mr. Taft doesn't seem to consider any kind of social legislation important at the present time, whether it ik the enact- ment of a federal mining law te prevent the recurrence of mine disasters, or the sorely needed, much abused FEPC. He is content to criticize President Tru- man's executive directive ordering seizure of the Steel Industry. Taft, of course, would have affected the seizure differently-by an explicit law. But the effect-he won't admit -would have been the same, whether ac- complished by presidential order or by re- troactive law. In this vein, the Senator still will not recognize the steelworker's right to a just wage boost, after 15 months of lavish profiteering by the steel industry.I Senator Taft has allied himself with the forces of McCarthyism. In his eyes, the crude McCarthy has performed a "worthy public service," this despite the fact that, as Mr. Taft insisted, "Americans must be al- lowed to live their own lives and think what they want to think." Finally, there is Taft's opinion on for- eign policy, a policy which borders on myopic isolationism. It follows the Mac- Arthur line of throwing our troops into a Chinese blood bath. It debunks our pre- sent policy of containment, while ignoring our Allies in Europe. It miserly refuses to come to a showdown with Communism at the grass-roots by forwarding economic aid. It should be pointed out that in the past the Senator has voted against: . 1-Arming of American vessels prior to Pearl Harbor. 2-Selective Service. 3-Extension of Selective Service on the eve of Pearl Harbor. 4-Lend-lease. 5-Revising the Neutrality Act in 1941. 6-Continuance of the Hull reciprocal trade program. 7-American participation in the United Nations. 8-The British loan. 9-The North Atlantic Security Pact. 10-Point Four. If the Republican Party snubs Eisen- hower and his liberal backers and nomi- nates this man, we may as well resign ourselves to another four years of Demo- cratic reign. Indeed, Mr. Taft, "everything is incidental to the peace and liberty of the American people,". .. . and so are you. -Cal Samra Xettet TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. MOST OF greatest US bring to Shakespeare's plays the shadowy vestiges of He stands opposed to the Seaway project, which would the economic development of St. Lawrence be a boon to this country. He is implacably against Federal Health Insurance, but refuses to consider a rea- sonable alternative to the plan, which per- haps might be a grass-roots sponsorship of co-op hospitals to nurse slum and farm areas deficient in medical care. Inflation to Mr. Taft is only the mali- cious result of government spending. A rigid system of price controls, forestalling pres- sure from the bottom and not from the top, escapes his thinking. Report fron EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second in a series of three articles written from Vienna by Harvey Gross, a Fuibright fellow and former Daily music critic. T HAVE TRANSLATED this story from an underground humor magazine which ap- pears now and then in the Russian control. led areas of Eastern Europe. Its obviously apocryphal nature does not invalidate its psychological truth. Comrade Ivan, fresh from the steppes, arrives one night in Vienna. Because of crowded living conditions, Ivan is forced to share a room with an American. About midnight Ivan rushes from the house, screaming wildly and holding his left hand,' which is bleeding. A four-power command car rushes up, and the Russian officer asks Ivan what's the matter. "This damn Vienna!" shouts Ivan. "I ar- rive here late and I'm forced to share my bed with a swine of an American. When it's time to go to sleep I take off my shoes and tie them to my back, like a man: this Am- erican puts his shoes under the bed, like in the movies. I take off my watch and put it under the pillow, like a man: this American puts his watch on the bed-table, like in the movies. When I think this American sleeps, I take his watch, like a man: and then this American pulls out a revolver and shoots me, like in the movies!" Perhaps the only clue to Russian be- havior is its fine irrationality. One never is sure how they are going to act: some weeks they are friendly and accommodating; other weeks they may refuse to let you walk on the sidewalks which run in front of the Hotel Grand. They also have a sense of humor. They think it's very funny to issue travel permits to the wife but not to the husband, or to issue the travel permits five minutes after the one good train has left for Rome. We met our first Russians at the Enns River Bridge. We left Salzburg in the aft- ernoon, and at six o'clock we passed through Linz. A few minutes later the train slowly crossed over the Enns Bridge and stopped on the other side. Everyone stop- ped talking in our compartment, and an Austrian girl told me to hide my camera. Two soldiers came into our compartment; both of them were very blonde and both very young. The younger one was not ov- er sixteen years. That is always the big- gest surprise: they are so young. The boys who looked at our gray cards should have been in high school. It was the same when we went to Venice through the Semmering Pass. Except one of them was older: he looked at our papers and then he looked at us and sneered. He had his hat pushed back on his head and he lounged in the doorway; he was treating us to the ap- proved brand of socialist sarcasm. "Am- erikaner!" he said and looked at us and i Vienna-Il Sometimes they are very friendly. We think it depends on what the official line is that particular week. Sometimes they talk and make jokes. That is they make jokes with those who can speak Russian. Also they play jokes. One time they took an Austrian off the train at the Semmering. He was trembling all over and went dead white. He was sure he was going to be shot. They took him to the guard house and another Rus- sian came in carrying a bottle and glasses. They poured three glasses of vodka and they motioned him to drink. One of them pointed to him and said in bad German, "Prosit, Geburtstag, dein Geburtstag!" When they looked at his passport they saw that it was the man's birthday and they decided to have a celebration. It was a very happy birthday party. In Vienna you only see them on the trolley cars and walking on the Ring- strasse. They are never seen in restaur- ants or cafes; we have never seen them at the opera, at concerts, or in the theater. Russian civilians are more in evidence at the opera and the theater. They are ob- viously accorded more privileges than the soldiers, although we understand there is a "permitted" list of operas and plays they can attend without incurring any risk to their ideological outlook. Most of the Russian soldiers look very tough and in condition, although they are generally smaller than Americans. They still go armed in Vienna, although the war has been over for seven years here. They wear long coats that come down almost to their ankles, and the smaller ones look like the good soldier Schweik. Often- you see a pair carrying tommy guns walking along the Ring or the Kaernterstrasse. They are not on duty, but they carry their tommy guns. You cross the street when you see them com- ing like that because if they are drunk it might mean trouble. Any drunk soldier with a gun is trouble. We heard a story about the friendly American who tapped a Russian soldier on the shoulder and the Russian turned around and sawed him in two with his tommy gun. If they are walking in back of you and you know they are armed your back begins to crawl. Of course nothing ever happens, and there have been no incidents in Vienna for a long time. Vienna has been the quietest of the four power cities. -Harvey Gross Referendum, Results THE RESULTS of the speaker's ban ref- erendum show clearly that two thirds of the student body are opposed to the Pv~tnf #the T ,.Pn f lCnmmittppna 'fha private productions staged in the ill-illum- ined recesses of our own brain by Shakes- peare and us. These dim ghosts can some- times give an actual production a very rug- ged run for its money. The current Arts The- atre Production of Othello meets this com- petition with very spotty success. The most telling failure lies in the al- most staggeringly incredible conception of Iago. Bob Laning plays Shakespeare's crafty, subtle and intelligent villain with all the hammy grimacing and snickering of a comic "vice" in the old medieval, morality plays. His silent-movie crouch, leers and slyness couldn't have deceived a blind saint, much less the intelligent char- acters of Shakespeare's play. I offer proof of the comic distortion of a character who manages even in the enormity of his evil to gain our grudging admiration: He was facetiously hissed three times during the performance! For the villain Shakespeare created this treatment is about as logi- cal as the facetious hissing of Quisling would have been for the Norwegians in 1940. Iago on any stage should be under- played-the accumulating force of his evil engulfs the play and becomes the measur- ing rod of Othello's greatness as it is-, but an in-the-round production demands the most artful deception, Laning's ap- proach not only dulls Othello's tragedy, but slows the play up as well. Emilia, Iago's wife is almost as badly in- terpreted. It is conceivable that the director thought that a modern audience could not accept a lady's maid who didn't look like a Hollywood doxie with a toothsome grin and an empty head. Emilia can be played that way (and was) for four acts, but that leaves you with quite a problem in Act Five where her worldly wisdom, her quick wit and her great courage bring her to her somewhat glorious death. Ladies of some rank used to wait on ladies of higher station as a matter of course in Elizabethan times. Emilia was one. Not a great lady, but nota dumb trol- lop either. I don't think a modern audience would have any harder time accepting this arrangement than they do seeing men run around in tights. Jo Willoughby did what she was expected to do in this role quite ex- pertly, I thought, but she was asked to do the wrong things. The idea of having the Duke of Venice played by a young boy to better explain the need of Othello to the state, is not a bad one, but one more in the domain of the dramatist than the director, I would say. Erik Arneson played the young Duke with much aplomb, but the audience was a little tested in appreciating him because despite the switch in age, he was left with such lines as "I think this tale would win my daughter, too," and others just as difficult to swallow. Before I leave the complaints I would like to suggest to the director, Strowan Ro- bertson, that he read Act V again with an eye to the possible irony of some of Othel- lo's speeches of "fear." As director, Mr. Robertson has escaped the big problem of Iago's motivation by making Iago absurd, but if he faced the issue I think he would have to make Iago honestly and vehement- ly mad in the first scene of Act One, which should serve not only to reveal Iago's problem but also to set the mood of the whole play. From this one might conclude that the play offers a very unhappy evening's en- tertainment. It does not. Joyce Henry and Don Douglas as Desdemona and Cassio are not strikingly impressive, but both are very competent. The minor roles don't have the professional touch that has marked past Arts Theatre productions, but they are not handled clumsily. Harry Elton's Brabantio (Desdemona's father) is a bright tribute to Robertson's direction and Elton's remarkable talent. The justification for sitting through this production for four hours though rests sole- ly and magnificiently in Dana Elcar's por- trayal of Othello. From the first time Elcar opens his mouth, even with his first en- trance, one is siezed with the half-terrifying awareness that he is living to see one of Shakespeare's great characters brought ful- ly to life on the stage. Elcar has always been a superbly accomplished actor, but it seems incredible to me that someone not removed from Ann Arbor by immeasureable fame could do what he has done with this role. It is impossible for me to say how good I think he is. About the best I can do is say that, as artists, Laning and Robertson owe it to Mr. Elcar to do something about Iago. Mr. Lan- ing has unlimited potential as lago. He has ability, stage sense and intelligence. He could improve his characterization enor- mously just by buttoning his collar and standing erect like the soldier Iago was. He has the talent to do much more. For the integrity of the play and for the audiences that are to see it during the next three weeks, I sincerely hope he does. --John Briley New Books at the Library Ambler, Eric-Epitaph for a Spy. New a f' 0. r kf> V V V 1 a' ic l.1 U ON THE Washington MerryGo-Round with DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Senator Pat McCarran, czar of the powerful Sen- ate Judiciary Committee, has dropped his senate duties cold and gone out to Nevada to mend some snarled up political fences. In so doing, he has left the Justice Department without a chief and rudderless, since the new Attorney General, Jim Mc- Granery cannot be confirmed until McCarran comes back to Washington next month. Actually, the Judiciary Committee could proceed to act without MCarran, but if so, every member of the committee would risk the wrath of the most vindictive senator on capitol hill. Vindictiveness is one reason why McCarran has suddenly scooted back to Reno. For the Democratic czar of Nevada has suddenly found that his vindictiveness has got him into trouble-namely, into a million-dollar suit for the restraint of trade. Last month, McCarran got on the long distance telephone to Las Vegas and gave an ultimatum to gambling friends to yank their advertising out of the Las Vegas Sun. Reason was the Sun's support of a young Democratic candidate for the Senate, Tom Mechling, who has daredachallenge McCarraneand his former law partner, Alan Bible, also aspiring to the Senate. Following McCarran's phone call, the gamblers, hotels, bars and restaurants did yank their advertising out of the Sun. But Hank Greenspun, publisher of the Sun, is not a man to take things lying down. Last week he fired back with a lawsuit against the Senator, plus his secretary Eva Adams, plus various members of the Las Vegas gambling world. It's a conspiracy in restraint of trade suit which may be hard for McCarran to beat. * * * * * V. FOR VINDICTVE THIS IS NOT the first time McCarran has shown that his middle initial should be "V." for "vindictive." When Denver Dickerson of the Nevada Labor News dared criticize McCarran, the Senator also brought pressure on advertisers. More recently, McCarran discovered that Newbold Morris, the ex-crime-buster, was a member of the "Committee on Na- tional Affairs," which'has sought to improve the quality of the U.S. Senate. To this end, it contributed to Senator McCarran's opponent at his last election. According to Senate colleagues, this was why McCarran was so hostile toward Morris and refused to give him subpoena powers for his corruption cleanup. Again, when Columnists Joseph and Stewart Alsop dared criticize McCarran for his highhanded handling of the Internal Security Com- mittee, McCarran started an investigation to see whether one of their columns had violated the Espionage Act. This is the man who now has stymied the Justice Department by going back to Nevada for a month, letting the new Attorney General cool his heels waiting for confirmation. Note-Another thing that worries McCarran is Nevada opposition to his old law partner Alan Bible whom McCarran wants in the Senate. Nevadans figure that two law partners representing them in Washington would give McCarran a complete political monopoly hold on the state. They also like hard-working Tom Mechling who's run- ning against Bible. * * * * GLOOMY PALACE GUARD GLOOM CONTINUES to hang over the palace guard - the boys immediately around the President-who now see themselves out of office, out of limousines, out of other lush perquisites come next year. Gloom was deepest immediately after the Jackson-Jefferson day dinner when their chief broke the bombshell. That evening they lingered on, weeping in their cups and talking hopefully of another possible candidate on whose coattails they might cling. Only prospect that appealed to them was Governor Adlai Steven- son. But even this thought ended gloomily, for they agreed that the Governor of Illinois had two great handicaps: 1. his divorce; 2. the fact that he testified for Alger Hiss. These two factors, they believed, might prove political suicide. Actually, Stevenson's divorce was not of his choosing. His wife laid down an ultimatum that he get out of politics or she would go to Reno, and he felt that his job of being Governor of Illinois was not something he could drop, once elected, His record on Hiss is contained in a deposition dated June 21, 1949, and is based on Stevenson's association with Hiss when they both served in the State Department. Most of Stevenson's friends believe it would not hurt him. * * *, * POLITICAL PIPELINE TWO TRENDS are shaping up in the two political parties. Among Republicans it looks more and more like a Taft-Eisenhower dead- lock in convention, in which case the man to watch will be Governor Warren of California . . . Among Democrats more and more leaders are getting reconciled to Senator Kefauver. They admit that a man who has taken all the political hurdles and not trippe once must have real appeal to the voters . . . The man shaping up as the Democratic vice president begins to look like Averell Harriman, am- r 7 3# 3.II C'f WS*qK-jP.rA Peace , , To the Editor: IT SEEMS to us that here at the University more attention should be focused on the central question of the day-war or peace. For all students, regardless of political belief, it would be stimu- lating and important to have dis- cussion in the Daily on such im- portant issues as: "Is greater rearmament necessary?" "Can peace be achieved?" "Is it possible that big power negotiations would! be beneficial in opening the road to peace?" For instance, in the last few years there has been great feeling that some of the leaders of the big nations should meet to discuss and attempt to settle the differen- ces that are carrying the world to war. In the past year this feel- ing has manifested itself in a world-wide signature campaign calling the leaders of the U.S.S.R., the U.S., Great Britain, France, and People's China to such a meeting. Many object on the grounds that the U.N. is the vehicle for such talks. Yet the most populous country in the world is barred from the U.N. and now the U.N.] has become something of ,a. tool in the hands of the t.S. and other Western powers. The force of 600 million signa-1 tures so far collected has made itself felt. Among eight others of1 the United Nations, the Indiani government has supported the ap- peal. Rece%ly the French Presi-; dent has suggested a Big Four] meeting. Last week even the De- troit Free Press printed an edi- torial sympathetic to a similar proposal. But even so our admin- istration has so far been unrecep- tive to the idea of such confer-1 ences. However, the people can1 change' that attitude by making their opinions known. -Stephen Smale Frederick BurrI * * * Anti-Stevenson ... To the Editor: I F YOU are a liberal you can be a Young Progressive (they are the most liberal); a Young Demo- crat (they are all liberal) or a member of the Students for Demo- cratic Action, Civil Liberties Com- mittee or the Labor Youth League (these are the most loudly liberal). All of these groups think that Gov- ernor Stevenson of Illinois would make a fine president. Let us look at his record. Adlai Stevenson's administra- tion has been tainted by corrup- tion as you know it must be, when you look at the kind of men that secured his nomination. He was a political compromise from the hands of the Chicago political leaders. The first payoff was a thirteen million cigarette tax fraud in the Chicago area, that he knew about; the second was allowing his lieutenants to sell tens of mil- lions of dollars of inspected horse meat as beef. The only reason it came out is that Adlai wanted to drop John Boyle from the Demo- cratic ticket in Cook County, Boyle is States Attorney. So in- stead of covering up the scandal,' as was his duty, Boyle brought it into the open; the third blot on his administration was the pre- ventable mine disaster at Bloom- ington that claimed 119 lives. Let us examine the man's char- acter. He continues in the younger Roosevelt tradition. His wife has gotten an uncontested divorce. He hasn't the-character insight to see that Alger Hiss was a traitor. He follows the lead of Felix Frank- furter and Dean Acheson by call- ing Alger Hiss a man of fine char- acter. By now the college student should be able to distinguish be- tween honesty and dishonesty. The party bosses however, do not, nor do they want to. They want a man who will continue the great hand- outs so they can skim off the 5% cream. And the liberals fall in line right behind. The liberals want a man who stands, like an earthworm, for the all inclusive, nebulous liberal concept. Adlai Stevenson, with his character as an asset, seems to possess this liberal appeal. Students watch out for the Stevenson boom. -Ronald E. Seavoy * * * Pr o-Steveson*... To the Editor: THE reactionaries with their bil- lions of ill gotten profits have bought themselves victories in Nebraska, Wisconsin and Illinois. This proves that the greatest seg- ment of the Republican Party supports such un-American and reactionary policies as the Mc- Carran Act; the Un-American Activities Committee, and the hate A~rr. nno c Omnn.lng cv n Cttn who most stands for liberal prin- ciples. He has had the backbone to stand up against the railing attacks on such astute and liberal statesmen as John Carter Vincent, Owen Lattimore, John Stewert Service, John Remington, and Oliver Clubb. He has the integ- rity and foresight to lead our country down the road paved by the masterful work of Dean Ache- son, Felix Frankfurter, and Alger Hiss. -Gordon Comfort * * * 'Liberal Edueation' . * To the Editor: PLEVEN schools and colleges carry out instruction on the undergraduate level at the Uni- versity of Michigan. Ten are voca- tional: one educational. But the literary college itself has fallen prey to similar forces. "We are living in an age of specialism, In which the avenue to success for the student often lies in his choice of a specialized career ... Spe- cialism is the means for advance- ment in our mobile social struc- ture; yet we must envisage the fact that a society controlled wholly by specialists is not a wise- ly ordered society .. . In order to discharge his duties as a citizen adequately, a person must some- how be able to grasp the complexi- ties of life as a whole." Hence arises the distinction be- tween general and special educa- tion in the literary college. The former indicates "that part of a student's whole education which looks first of all to his life as a responsible human being and citi- zen," while the latter "that part which looks to the student's com- petence in some occupation." It is the very prevalence and power of this demand for special training that clearly demonstrates the need for a concurrent, balancing force in general education. To meet this need liberal arts colleges all over the country have added general education courses to their curriculum. Harvard Uni- versity perhaps best exemplifies this movement.sConcentration has been retained, but the pre-con- centration period offers such courses as Humanism in the West, Individual and Social Values in Fiction and Philosophy, Demo- cratic Theory and Its Critics, The Physical Sciences in a Technical Civilization, Principles of Biologi- cal Science. In contrast, our literary college has taken a cautious, half-step forward. A Great Books course has been grudgingly established, a few of the natural sciences have added "liberalized" courses. These measures are manifestly inadequate. The need for an ex- panded curriculum embracing courses of the Harvard type is imperative. The college must not continue to neglect the forces of vocationalism and specialism and their attendant evils. The problem is undoubtedly the most serious, facing undergraduate education today. For these reasons, the Thursday night meeting of the literary col- lege conference assumes great im- port. As in previous conference meetings a small group of inter- ested students and faculty will at- tend. It is to be hoped that addi- tional undergraduates and teach- ers will find the topic of education of sufficient consequence to merit their extra-curricular attendance. (Quotations from the Harvard report "General Education in a Free Society.") -S. Cain (( 'I A Sixty-Second Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Chuck Elliott ........Managing Editor Bob Keith ..................City Editor Leonard Greenbaum. Editorial Director Vern Emerson ........Feature Editor Ron Watts.............Associate Editor Bob Vaughn ...........Associate Editor Ted Papes..............Sports Editor George Flint ....Associate Sports Editor Jim Parker .....Associate Sports Editor Jan James............Women's Editor Jo Ketelhut, Associate Women's Editor Bvsfness Sta ff Bob Miller.........Business Manager Gene Kuthy. Assoc. Business Manager Charles Cuson .. ..Advertising Manager