PAGE TWO 4 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MARCH 7,'1953 I________________________________________________________________________________ I D R AMA OEDIPUS REX of Sophocles, presented by the Arts Theater Club. CERTAINLY this is one of the Club's most ambitious undertakings, and it is to their credit that they have attempted it. On the whole the production is at least faithful to Sophocles, which with a play of this nature is enough to make itrworth seeing. The presentation of Greek tragedy is a feat which is and has been a challenge to ,ontemporary dramatic groups, and the problems of transferring it successfully have been more or less overcome in this case. Perhaps the most forbidding barrier is to give the modern audience something of the experience of the early Greeks with- out going into detailed explanations of customs and theologies. The solution of- fered by the Arts Theater is rather bi- zarre; they have converted Oedipus into a tribal chieftain-which he may well have been but which Sophocles did not consider him. He and the other chief members of the cast are made to wear animal skins, and for a setting only a group of boxes - supposedly suggesting something like Stonehenge - is used. This does enable the audience to accept the strong reliance on fate and gods to account for the unique series of events,. but unfortunately makes unnecessary changes in character which tend to les- sen the effectiveness of the whole play. Oedipus is essentially a noble figure, of almost godlike stature, and the problems arising from his acts can be felt fully only in association with the complex society Sophocles painted. Neither of these fac- tors is made clear enough in this pro- duction. I The chorus itself forms another difficulty for the modern director; it is a tradition which is by this time alien, to the stage, and only an extraordinary willingness by the audience will make it fully acceptable. The Club has chosen to let the chorus dance the odes as it was done in fifth century Athens, but has had the odes themselves recorded to be played during the dance. The con- ception was well formed, but in practice it does not really work. The choreography is a loose combination of modern dance and what appears to be plain extemporization, which conveys the mood of the odes well enough, but the lines themselves are muffled by either the recording or the means of reproduction; as a result rather than acting as bridges or extensions from scene to scene they appear to be breaks. Len Rosenson as Oedipus brings as much to the role as the leopard-skin con- ception of the play would allow. His pre- sentation of Oedipus' tragic flaw is as violent as could ever be desired, and all the doubt and confidence which the king experiences are beautifully brought out. It is only disappointing to consider what he might have done had he been permit- ted to play Oedipus with the nobility of Sophocles' creation. Beth-Sheva Laikin is once again well-suited to her role-she seems to be able to achieve something akin to mastery in anything she is asked to do -but even she suffers from a lack ofj grandeur. She is a marvelous wife-and- mother, but is not a queen. The rest of the cast lends fine support to these two, particularly Gerald Richards, who portrayed Oedipus' brother-in-law Creon. He of the leads was best able to maintain the stature of the original play, and does much to stabilize the whole pro- duction. With the really excellent acting which these performers displayed the Arts Theater quite adequately meets the test of produc-j ing a classical tragedy. The faulty concep- tion of the play itself does detract from the overall impression which might have been conveyed, but it remains a Sophoclean drama. --Tom Arp BOOK REVIEW: The Sign of Jonas. THE SIGN OF JONAS by Thomas Mer- ton. Harcourt, Brace and Company. "97jHE SEVEN Storey Mountain" was Thomas Merton's account of his tor- mented search for truth and identity. That torment was partially resolved when he was converted to Roman Catholicism and further resolved when he became a novice in the Trappist monastery at Gethsemani, Ken- tucky. "The Mountain" attracted much at- tention at its appearance in 1948, since Cardinal Newman's "Apologia Pro Vita Sua" of 1864 was the most recent autobiography to which it could be compared. The two books have little in common since the cir- cumstance motivating the men to writing were so dissimilar. "The Sign of Jonas," a five-year jour- nal, is Merton's latest book and in it his great torment is reconciled if not resolved. Merton also shows how much he has grown in the past few years. He has matured spiritually and he has grown in his ability as a writer. There were things in "The Mountain" that could have remained be- tween a man and his God, simply on the basis of good taste, without injury to the book. Good taste is a characteristic of this book. Anyone who cannot for any reason accept as sincere Merton's belief in and practice of Roman Catholicism shouldn't read "The Sign of Jonas." Ofie need not believe all that Merton believes, or any of it, but one can- not doubt Merton's sincerity. The reader who cannot make more or less complete doctrinal identification with Merton must make a "wiltng suspension of disbelief." The read- er unable to suspend disbelief will find the book incomprehensible, or meaningless, or perhaps both. The journal begins when Merton has been at the monastery five years. Although he has passed through several lesser ord- ers, he has not yet become Father Louis. He comes to realize, contrary to his ex- pectations, that the priesthood is not *he end of his search, but the real beginning. His major obstacle is reconciling his de- sire for the contemplative life, since he believes only that life will yield him com- plete identity with his continuing author- ship, which is both a natural expression he can never quite escape or sublimate and a matter of obeying his superiors. Thomas Merton, or perhaps the ghost of him, seems pleased at his success as an author. Father Louis, however, finds this worldly and very materialistic success some- what in conflict with Saint Benedict's Rule, THE SAME VOICE that was heard at the Guildhall at the end of the war, then again in London urging Europe to unite, spoke from Capitol Hill on Inauguration by which Trappists live, and with his own desire for other worldiness. He is not troub- led with profits, since the monastery is his beneficiary. But new buildings, new General Motors trucks, and his fan-mail give him fair indication. Father Louis finds being a Trappist priest and a successful author akin to being a duck in a chicken coop, "And he (Father Louis) would give anything in the world to be a chicken instead of a duck." After "Seeds of Contemplation" appeared in 1949, he wrote: "Every book that comes out under my name is a new problem. To begin with, each one brings with it a searching examination of conscience. I always open the final, printed Job, with a faint hope of finding myself agreeable, and I never do . .. a book club is taking it and advertising it as a "streamlined 'Imitation of Christ'." God for- give me. It is more like Swift than Thomas a Kempis." In the eyes of Merton's superiors, how- ever, the major obstacle facing him during the years of this journal was less the one he was aware of and more a matter of time -time iii which he would learn to be pa- tient and wait for further blessings; time in which he would learn to be Father Louis. As one reads, Father Louis comes to recon- ciliation by accepting his paradoxical posi- *tion. It was a very real triumph for Father Louis who sees that the contemplative life for him will be a matter of being an author and the best-known Trappist alive, Saint Benedict's Rule not withstanding. He writes in his prologue: "The sign Jesus promised to the gen- eration that did notunderstand Him was the "sign of Jonas the prophet"-that is, the sign of His own resurrection. I feel that my own life is especially sealed with this great sign, which baptism and mon- v astic profession and priestly ordination have burned into the roots of my being, because like Jonas himself I find myself travelling toward my destiny in the belly of a paradox." The sights, encounters, and observations recorded during a busy life make "The Sign of Jonas" more than the record of a spiritual struggle and give the book charm. Litera- ture, music, fine arts, nature, philosophy, death-all these and many more things come into Merton's ken. His comments on literary figures cover nearly everyone who can be considered of contemporary import- ance, from Joyce to Stein, D. H. Lawrence to Evelyn Waugh, T. S. Eliot to Robert Low- ell. He comments on and quotes many older authors; for example, he draws a parallel between the asceticism of Thoreau and that of Saint John of the Cross. An interesting, if not wholly valid, parallel, and probably one not previously n'ade. MATTER OF FACT By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP W ASHINGTON-Roman history is prob- ably the Free World's best guide to what must be currently happening in the Kremlin. There was the time, for instance, when the Emperor Tiberius was dying. At the end, his coma simulated death. Being deceived, Caligula put on the Emperor's ring and accepted congratu- lations as the new wearer of the purple. Then the terrible old man roused him- self and called out. The terrified courtiers scattered like hens in a hawk's shadow. And the trembling Caligula saved him- self and won the empire by helping to strangle Tiberius in his bed. For the reasons implied by this episode, most American diplomats familiar with the Soviet Union assumed that Josef Stalin was dead already, as soon as they heard the announcement of his illness. It is not wise to say that tyrants are dead, or even dying, until it is certain they will not live to resent any jumping to premature con- clusions. But the question our diplomats found hard to answer was the question, "Who's Caligula?" As to the succession to Stalin, there are two schools of thought, deriving from two different interpretations of the recent changes in the structure of the Soviet gov- ernment. The first and ,more dramatic theory emanates from the Moscow Em- bassy, and is understood to be tentatively accepted by former Ambassador George F. Kennan. If this theory was correct, a mor- tal struggle for the succession to Stalin had already broken out, and was already convulsing Soviet society, even before his weakened heart failed the Russian dictator. In brief, those who hold this theory think that the Soviet Politburo was sharply divided, for a period of several years, over the crucial problem of staff- ing the Communist party Secretariat. This body in effect controls all patronage in the Soviet Union. Stalin himself won power through the Secretariat, by placing his own men in key posts. More recently, the Secretariat has been the strong- hold of Stalin's grim favorite, Malen- kov. The issue before the Politburo, it is arg- ued, was whether the long-delayed post- war reorganization of the Communist party should confirm Malenkov's control of the Secretariat. On this issue, it is be- lieved, Molotov and all the other senior members of the Politburo stood firm in op- position. Because of the split in the Polit- buro, it is further asserted, the official Communist Party Congress was put off from year to year, until only a few months ago. Three things happened at the Party Con- gress. The Politburo itself was dissolved; or rather it was melted into a new and much larger body, the Presidium. And besides abol- ishing the Politburo and creating the Presi- dium, the Congress approved a reorganized Secretariat, including only three former Politburo members, Stalin, Malenkov and Khruschev, plus a group of obscure officials allegedly drawn from the Malenkov faction. This seeming victory for Malenkov (which incidentally headed a split be- tween him and his former partner, Beria) is not considered truly final, according to the theory above quoted. If this theory is correct, Stalin only seemed to be con- firming Malenkov's power, but was in fact inaugurating another war to the death between the Party factions. This was the pattern of the period after Lenin's death, when Stalin encouraged each rival group to kill another until only Stalin was left. This interpretation of course suggests that Stalin's death will be the signal for an intensified struggle for power. But an op- posite view finds stronger support in the State Department. According to this view, the recent Party Congress instead marked the conclusion of the struggle for power, and the final triumph of Malenkov. Those who hold this opinion consider the new purge a sort of blood sacrifice to celebrate Malen- kov's success. They point out that the great purges of the thirties only started after Stalin had gained absolute power, and were Stalin's hecatomb of victory. In any case, whether or no there is a contest for power in the Kremlin, the re- moval of Stalin's influence is likely to prove a grim event. Wicked and sinister he might be. Yet Stalin was at least cautious, and at least acquainted with the Western World. The old man who thought Balzac was the best novelist and had rather con- servative views about the education of the young, has now been replaced by others whose knowledge of the West is drawn entirely from, Soviet demonology. Be- lievers in demonology are unpredictable enemies. Nor can one forget the rules that seem to govern the succession of tyrants Estab- lishers of tyrannies quite often possess a cer- tain beneficence. But an Augustus is suc- ceeded by a Tiberius; Lenin by Stalin; the beneficent tyrant by the tyrant who is cruel, efficient and stern. And as Tiberius was fol- lowed by Caligula, so the next heir to the full-blown tyranny tends to be a madman. Spring Will Be. A Little Late This Year i(-K "6 4.p4... - w~ ~ rw:. . 1 ..: +, ON THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND WITH DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Winston Churchill may have had uncanny om- niscience when he sent a confidential-message to President Eisen- hower by Foreigp Minister Anthony Eden that the chances of war had increased in the last 30 days. Churchill could not have foreseen the death of Joseph Stalin, and of course based his diagnosis on other factors. However, the fact is that the exit of Stalin from the most powerful position in the world today could well lead to one of the following alternatives: 1. World Peace-If Russia becomes so absorbed with her own problems, if she becomes torn with civil war over Stalin's succes- sor, then the rest of the world could settle down to peace. 2. World War-Should the Red leaders face too much up- heaval at home; or should they need an excuse to quiet unrest, then war might be one way out. Reporting from the edge of the Iron Curtain at Berlin last month, I cabled the following diagnosis of what was happening inside the vast area called Soviet Russia: --REPORT FROM BERLIN- "SOME PARTS of the overexpanded Soviet Union are gorged from too much conquest and are on the brink of revolt. Various other areas in the Soviet orbit are seething with unrest, and the Red leaders in the Kremlin need scapegoats. Hence the purges and the pogroms. "On the face of things, Russia Is a long way from war and is in no position to wage it. However, dictators sometimes start war to divert attention from their own failures. That is the greatest danger in Europe today. "To understand what is happening in the Soviet Union you have to remember that there are only about 45,000,000 Russians in the U.S.S.R. and the over-all policy of the Kremlin is to operate and to control the other parts of the Soviet Zones-from Mongolia to Czech- oslovakia and from Turkestan to Poland-for the sole benefit of these 45,000,000 Russians. "Thus, while the 45,000,000 around Moscow have never had it so good, the other diverse and nationally minded millions-who are expected to raise more crops, to build more factories, to lay more railroad lines and to support the Soviet war machine- are restless and rebellious. That is why a new word has been coined and added to the already long list of isms and for which one can now be tried for treason-nationalism... . "Today the greatest danger spot for revolt in the far-flung Soviet orbit is Poland. Peasants are seething over crop quotas and collective farms. . . . Other areas in which this restlessness is most apparent are the Ukraine, Czechoslovakia, Georgia (birthplace of Stalin), Ar- menia and Turkestan... . (Copyright, 1953, by the Bell syndicate) Backhaut ... . To the Editor: THE time is certainly ripe for1 a rational and objective an- alysis of the Bernie Backhaut sit- uation. During the past several weeks Bernie has forthrightly stat- ed his opinions, despite the ob- durate and insatiable attempts of1 certain political factions to dra-] goon him into altering his poli- tical beliefs to conform to their own mundane philosophies. When,1 however, Bernie "called 'em as he saw 'em," several notoriety seek- ing individuals lost in a megalo- mania that has been the foun- tainhead of petty political intrigue and reaction, have spewed forth a number of irrational and sub- jective diatribes which serve neith- er to answer nor to clarify the is- sues which Mr. Backhaut has so cogently and efficaciously set1 forth. In order to evaluate the Back- haut experiences and their up- shots in the proper perspective (which, thusfar, have been con- scienciously avoided by all con- cerned) we must begin to assign the proper weights to all the var- iables and let the scales balance as they may. Those guilty of as- persing, belittling, assailing, lam- pooning, defaming, libeling, be- spattering, traducing, calumniat- ing, vilifying, vituperating, and for all practical purposes criticizing Bernie without regard for the real and important attitudes which he has tended, should be arraigned, adjudicated and punished in the minds and hearts of those most sensitive to the misgivings and ne- fariousness of expatiating men- dacity. But from the Engine Arch to the Arcade, from Romance Languages to the Arboretum, to those of us who have been regularly reading Bernie's missives to The Daily with avid interest it is all but self evident that throughout the whole "stinking mess" Bernie has re- mained a bulwark of political in- tegrity, a ubiquitous critic of party loyalty and a staunch Apostle of progressive thought. -Norman Starr, '55 Jerome E. Singer, '55E Jerome D. Neifach, '55E Gershwin Concert .. To the Editor: SWAS certainly glad to see that the review of the Gershwin concert was not put under the heading of "music" but "concert." It certainly didn't qualify in the former category. Perhaps we can excuse Miss Young's eulogy of a very poor orchestra (if twenty- five pieces can be termed an or- chestra and not a chamber group) if she were to issue a statement saying she was very tired when she heard it or something similar to that. However, on second thought, I can see no excuse for calling an orchestra "charming" whose volume, was extremely thin in every piece except those in which the soloists performed (there they managed to pull them- selves together enough to drown out the performers) and whose general tone was as poor as this orchestra's was. As far as Mr. Maazel goes, he may have been "imminently pow- erful as chief co-ordinator," but he didn't seem to be functioning too well Monday night. To conclude, I might suggest to Miss Young that the next time she turns her hand to writing a music review, she tries criticizing the performance instead of discussing the compositions played. -Mary Rudolph * * * Gershwin Concert ... To the Editor: I FEEL that the behavior of the audience at the Gershwin -Phyllis Shaw ':'HE CURRENT danger arises largely from fear of Commu- nism. It can be counteracted by assurance to the public that every vigilance is being exercised under the law. This assurance may be provided by vigorous investigation, exposure and disclosure; by vig- orous prosecution when its need is shown; by steady and inteIsive education to the effect that con- spiratorial subversion differs from ideological dissent, and that civil liberty depends as much on the suppression of conspiratorial sub- version as on the protection of ideological dissent." -C. P. Ives, Associate Editor, The Baltimore Sun uI Orchestra concert should be called to public attention. I am referring to the fact that the majority of. the audience lacked the common courtesy and decency to applaud even long enough for the perform- ers to leave the stage. The crowd was even more rude at the close of the concert when many people began leaving before the bows and handshaking were completed. Personally I enjoyed the con- cert immensely. There may have been flaws in the performance of which I was unaware, since I am not a music 'critic but merely a music lover. However, any per- former, in my opinion, deserves more respect than this group re- ceived regardless of the quality of their performance. 'Perhaps the listeners did not like Gershwin's music, but in that case why would they attend an entire Gershwin program? It was humiliating to me to be a member of such an un- appreciative audience and I was extremely sorry for the artists who were subjected to this em- barrassment. It was also a shock to me because Ann Arbor audiences are usually enthusiastic. What was wrong? - 11-_Yuis !MY_ _a 4 I tetteg4 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 goo# taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. t 4 I' Y Sixty-Third Yea? Ed ed and managed, by students of the university of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Crawford Young......Managing EditOr Barnes Connable.........City Editor Cal Samra.........Editorial Director Zander Hollander ......Feature Editor Sid Klaus. ......,Associate City Editor Harland Britz........Associate Editor Donna Hendleman.....Associate Editor Ed Whipple..............Sports Editor John Jenks......Associate Sports Editor Dick Sewell..Associate Sports Editor Lorraine Butler......women's Editor Mary Jane Mills, Assoc. women's Editor Don Campbell .... Chief Photographer Business Staff Al Green..........Business Manager Milt Goetz....... Advertising Manager Diane Johnston ...Assoc. Business Mgr. Judy Loehnberg......Finance Manager Harlean Hankin, .. .Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor. Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during regular school year: by carrier, $6.00;« by mail $7.00. 1 4 4 [ DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN V1 The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the University. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2552 Administration Building before 3 p.m. the day preceding publication (before 11 a.m. on Saturday.) SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 1953 Vol. LXII, No. 105 Notices May Festival Single Concert Tickets will be placed on sale beginning at nine o'clock, Tuesday morning, Mar. 10, at the offices of the University Musical Society, Burton Memorial Tower, at $1.50, $2.00, and $2.50 each. It will be appreciated if those in line will expe- dite matters by arranging in advance, insofar as possible; to have the cor- rect payment amount available. By pur- chasing season tickets, a limited num- ber of which are available, particularly in the lower-priced brackets, a consid- erable savings in costs may be made. Alice Crocker Lloyd Fellowship of $750 Is offered for the academic year 1953-54. This award is open to women graduates of an accredited college or university. It may be used by a University of Michigan graduate for work at any college or university, but a graduate of another university will be required Computer), Prof. Harry Huskey, Wayne University Computation Laboratory, on leave from the Institute for Numerical Analysis, National Bureau of Standards, Los Angeles. Events Today Canterbury Club. Informal work par- ty at 2 p.m., with free supper at 6 p.m. All Episcopalian students are cordially invited to join in the work and fun. Roger Williams Guild. Bible Study Retreat with Prof. Rodney Branton, pro- fessor of New Testiment History at Colgate-Rochester. Meet at the Guild House, Saturday, at 1 p.m. to go with the Ypsi group to the retreat. Wear slacks-dress warmly. Bring notebooks, Bible, pencils, etc. There will be a small charge to cover our supper. Faculty Sports Night. I.M. Building, at 7:30 p.m. All equipment will be available to faculty families. Call Mrs. Dixon for further information, 25-8975. Hillel Saturday morningservices will be held at 9 *00 a.m. at the Hillel Building. Saturday Lunch at Lane, Hail. "Do You Agree?" a student-led discussion of Mrs. Barbara Ward Jackson's views. Time, 12 noon. Coming Events tLITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler AL,~ f~ x'q '. 1 ~ / r ,4 I t