PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24,1955 ?AGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 24. 1955 __ . _ _ _... .,..... ___ A_, ,,, OPPENHEIMER BAN: .Movie Reminds Us It Could Happen Here DREW PEARSON: Shape Qf Things To Go SIX SHOWINGS of the Oppenheimer-Murrow Film interview presented in the Rackham amphitheater yesterday drew six full houses. At the University of Washington, no one heard or will hear the famed physicist. All of which proves, I suppose, that having a more 'liberal' viewpoint at this University we have nothing to fear. But then again, the reasons for refusing to allow Dr. Oppenheimer's personal appearance in Seattle could just as easily apply in Ann Ar- bor. President Henry Schmitz, of Washington, based his decision on a government ruling that Oppenheimer was a risk to the security of his country. Yet that government also governs us. PRESIDENT SCHMITZ feels that as the lead- er of a tax-supported institution, he must be careful to keep his campus as uncontroversial as possible. Yet, our University is also tax-sup- ported. Could it happen here? Not too many years ago Alexander Ruthven, then President of the University laughed off the threat of Communist student groups, saying that this University welcomed controversial discussion. Today we have a 'lecture committee' which reviews any proposed speaker before that in- dividual can lecture on this campus. In certain cases, there have already been bans, which some persons have claimed "might establish prece- dents." STRANGELY ENOUGH, President Schmitz said that he too welcomed controversial is- sues when he took his post at Washington. Now the History department at Washington is saying his action "might lead to a danger- ous precedent." But they're wrong. The period of dangerous precedents is over. This is the real thing. .' --Murry Frymer A College, by Any Other Name, Shouldn't Worry the Regents WITH a suppressed glee, we notice that the Board of Regents will discuss the proposi- tion of changing the name of what is now called Michigan State College. University President Harlan H. Hatcher, it is reported, will ask the Regents to form a com- mittee with members of the State Board of Ag- riculture to consider the problem. The problem itself is not merely one of se- mantics, as it would seem on the surface. The Spartans are looking for university status, even if in name only. To call the institution Michi- gan State University, or something strikingly similar, would not make the school any more a university than it now is. NOW THAT the Spartan football powers no longer be, something is needed to raise again the prestige of the greatest burden on this generation of taxpayers. People might not stop to think whether a name is deserved, and university sounds better than college. Ironically enough ,most people are not con- cerned with the difference in terms. A name change for MSC would probably impress only the legislators who like the new sound. As a prestige factor, a new name would prob- ably be valueless, and as a reward for past ac- complishments, meaningless. The real issue is whether the name is deserved by the school's present standards and attributes, whether it is, in fact, a university, and, basically, what makes a university, as distinct from a college. AS MENTIONED, we are glad to see that the Regents are taking up the problem of defin- ing a university. This is assuming no intention on their part to confine themselves to periph- eral matters of little consequence. We would like to suggest, however, that the Regents give more time to pressing University problems that seem to have been ignored, and not worry about what we'll be calling Michigan State next year, unless they are seriously con- cerned that a new name might put MSC on the same level as the University of Michigan. -Jim Dygert New Language Requirement Hardship for Many U.S. Drops Cheating Charges WASHINGTON - A p e c uli a r thing happened down in Tex- as the other day. It was Saturday, February 12, and Federal Court seldom meets on Saturday. But a special prosecutor for Attorney General Brownell went into court in Houston and asked U.S. District Judge Ben Connally to dismiss cri- minal charges against five men indicted for secretly mixing frost- damaged Canadian wheat, graded as hog feed, with good govern- ment-owned American wheat, and then selling it as edible wheat. They also had collected wheat subsidies from the U.S. Govern- ment and were charged with de- frauding Uncle Sam of $1,700,000. Despite this, Attorney General Brownell ordered the indictments against the five men dropped. That there was clear guilt in the case, however, was shown by the fact that the company for which most of them worked, the Argentine Bunge Corporation, pleaded. guilty and was fined $5,000. A corporation, of course, can- not go to jail. Individuals can. And one of the individuals in- volved was E. H. Thornton, Sr., son of the college roommate of Gov. Allan Shivers who is now Shivers' highway commissioner, his campaign manager, and one of those closest to Shivers in the en- tire state of Texas. C. K. Richards, the special pro- secutor sent by Attorney General Brownell to dismiss the case on Feb. 12, 1955, was the same prose- cutor who had indicted the five men for Brownell on June 10, 19- 54. The reason he was in such a hurry and got the court to sit on Saturday was because trial was to start in a week. Richards carefully carried out Brownell's orders but seemed un- happy about it. "I have nothing more to say. about this thing," he said as he left the court. In Washington, however, it is known that Governor Shivers, the man who swung Texas for Ike, lunched at the White House short- ly before the indictments were dis- missed. Shivers refused to tell newsmen at the time what he had discussed with the President. Kansas City Pattern WHAT HAPPENED in Galveston followed a pattern set only one month before in Kansas City when another special prosecutor for Attorney General Brownell, Earl A. Jinkinson, went into Fed- eral Court and moved to dismiss a criminal case against Roy Ro- berts, close personal friend of Ike's and publisher of the Kansas City Star. Texas Skulduggery THIS WRITER happens to have been among the first to ex- pose influence peddling around the White House during the Truman Administration. Therefore let's take a thorough look at what hap- pened in Galveston to the father of Governor Shivers' close friend and the man who re-elected him last summer. The records show that it was probably the most flagrant case of cheating the government on grain ever seen in the U.S.A. "On foggy days," testified E. H. Thornton, Sr., before a Senate agriculture subcommittee, "the windows of the elevator would be conveniently left open to permit moisture to enter the elevator, thereby increasing the weight of the wheat. This practice would in- ure to the benefit of the elevators as overages." "Thornton admitted," reported the Senate committee, "that the elevator, during a five-year per- iod, reaped, a profit of over a mil- lion dollars on overages." Elevator B was owned by the City of Galveston. It was man- aged by the father of Governor Shivers' close friend. Thornton made no apologies for cheating the government. On the other hand he complained that government inspection was too strict. "Thornton testified," continued the Senate committee, "that ele- vator B had too much Federal in- spection and disclosed that he had pleaded with the U.S. Department of Agriculture overa aperiod of time for less supervision at ele- vator B, and more inspection at other elevators. "Other testimony convinced the subcommittee," reported the sena- tors, "that there had been a woe- ful lack of inspection at elevator B." Hog vs. Human Wheat THE SENATORS went on to ex- pose in great detail how the Bunge Corporation had shipped frost-damaged wheat into the U.S.A. from Canada, paying 13 cents less than the usual duty be- cause it was "unfit for human con- sumption." mhi:.An..- A "A... f -__ _ I, _- J' , .. ', " a LETTERS TO THE EDITOR STUDENTS who enter the University in 1956 will have to meet a proficiency requirement in a foreign language, based on two years of college work. The present requirement is one year of a foreign language in college or four years in high school. The revised requirement means that a stu- dent will have to take an extra year of a lan- guage and/or pass a test based on two years of college language study. (Of course, virtually all students will have to take a second year of the foreign language to pass the examination.) THE QUESTION arises whether this second year of the language is beneficial enough to the student to warrant his spendiig extra time in a field in which he does not plan to concen- trate. Three assumptions concerning the advantages and need for foreign language study are com- monly accepted. One, that language contact increases cultur- al contact and understanding; two that knowl- edge of more than one culture enables better understanding of one's own culture; three, that increased international communication today -politically, economically, and socially - in- creases the need for a greater number of lingu- ists. But one year in college or four years in high school can be ample time to make a student aware of his own culture and of the importance of inter-cultural understanding and communi- cation. It is also enough time to separate those students interested in continuing language study from those who prefer to spend their time in a chemistry lab. True, the second year in a foreign language increases a student's proficien- cy. However, this proficiency is certainly not necessary for all students in Literary School. OF COURSE to the student majoring in a foreign language the new requirement will have no adverse effect, since he-will be taking advanced language courses anyway. But to the student concentrating in literature or the social sciences, an extra year of a for- eign language may be met with disapproval, even though his field of concentration is closely allied with foreign language study. And to the student majoring in science, whose interests and abilities lie in zoology or physics, facing an extra year of a foreign lan- guage can be distasteful and a burden to his college program. AT ANY RATE, all students uninterested in studying a foreign language beyond the first year will find the new requirement taking time away from preparation for their field of con- centration. They will find that their limited choice of electives will be cut even further. . The Literary College's intention to develop more broadminded individuals through further language study, and the new methods for better language learning, are commendable. However, when every minute and opportunity at college is valuable and important to the individual and his interests, the udent cannot afford to spend more time than is necessary in a subject which he may not particularly like and in which he does not plan to concentrate. --Shirley Croog x ,41 III. IV i i jlii o I e r J X ' f s:/, J x y V 4.. r j; . DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN A Good Trick... To the Editor: I WISH Dave Tice would tell us how he managed to hear two concerts (Brubeck and the Buda- pest Quartet) at once. There are many of us who would have liked to pull such a maneuver. Somehow I suspect that he did- n't really do justice to one or the other. -Betty Cope (EDITOR'S NOTE: Reviewer Tice at tended the 7 p.m. Brubeck show and the 8:30 p.m. Budapest concert.) A Suggestion . . To the Editor: FIND Mr. Gene Hartwig's pro- posed modifications of the "in- defensible" student driving ban both interesting and timely. A better and more efficient plan would be to have the University install a special electronic mag- netor in every student's car which would be touched off by a radar screen if he comes within five miles of the campus. This would automatically stop the car's en- gine thus insuring adequate park- ing facilities on campus for fa- culty members and those students whose magnetors weren't working that morning -Melvin L. Selzer . * .* LYL Speaker... To the Editor: THE Labor Youth League is sponsoring a number of speak- ers this semester whom we hope you will feel welcome to come and hear. Our purpose is to help bring a progressive point of view to the campus-a point of view which is often difficult to be heard these days, even though everyone has a fully legitimate right to examine it or to adhere to it. This Friday evening at 7:30 p.m. we are presenting Elizabeth Moos, Sixty-Fifth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Eugene Hartwig .......Managing Editor Dorothy Myers ....... .City Editor Jon Sobeloff .........Editorial Director Pat Roelofs ......Associate City Editor Becky Conrad.........Associate Editor Nan Swinehart.......Associate Editor David Livingston........Sports Editor Hanley Gurwin ....Assoc. Spo-ts Editor Warren Wertheimer ........Associate Sports Editor Roz Shlimovitz........ Women's Editor Janet Smith Associate Women's Editor John Hirtzei......Chief Photographer Business Staff Lois Pollak.........Business Manager Phil Brunskill, Assoc. Business Manager Bill Wise .........Advertising Manager Mary Jean Monkoski Finance Manager Telephone No 23-24-1 Member The Associated Press Michigan Press Association Associated Collegiate Press The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights or republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second class mail matter, Published daily except Monday. Subscription during regular school year: by carrier, $6.50; by mail $7.50. an educator, a member of the Na- tional Council of American-Soviet Friendship, and author of "The Educational System of the Soviet Union." She will speak on "Edu- cation in the Soviet Union," and show two films entitled "Children in the Soviet Union" and "Altai." The address is 103 South 4th Street. You are cardially invited. -Mike Sharpe Labor Youth League * * * B~adI ay . To the Editor: IN THREE and one half years at Michigan I've read a lot of drivel and slop by Daily "critics." I've been able to stomach most of it. However, William Wiegand's dissection of "Bad Day at Black Rock" in Sunday's paper was more sour milk than even I can keep down. It sounds like he took an advanced course in "criticism" and never quite got over it. Few movies have gripped me or stirred me more than "Black Rock." Just why I don't know. I as not a "critic" myself (for which I am eternally thankful) nor can I say why I enjoy a movie I'm not supposed to like or why I don't enjoy a movie I am sup- posed to like. I do know that this movie grabs hold of human na- ture in spots and that it is re- freshingly simple throughout-a factor that must have caused Mr. Wiegand much discomfort and fidgeting during the film. Some of the dialogue may be oblique and self conscious, but it is generally witty and provoking. Why Mr. Wiegand feels rich vocabularies belong only in university circles is beyond me. It is unfortunate, too, that the character analyses bored him. Spencer Tracy's performance was one of the best I have ever seen, but this sparkling review spent so much space finding fault it had no room to comment on the main role. Such distorted criticism suggests Mr. Wiegand is a person who enters a theater expecting the worst and who leaves think- ing he has found it. Perhaps it shows impudence and bad breed- ing on my part to stick up for a movie in which Mr. Wiegand's dramatic standards were offended, but I liked "Black Rock" immen- sely. I guess I just don't know any better. -Michael Montgomery, '55 * * * Berlin Orchestra .. . To the Editor: WE DEAD your article in yester- day's Daily on the protest against the tour of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. Both of us being natives of Berlin, we were deeply disappointed by this nar- row-minded attitude which, ten years after the end of the war, tries to exclude one of the finest orchestras in the world. Mr. von Westermann is right in holding that music has nothing to do with politics-an attitude shar- ed by both England and France where the Orchestra has played in recent years. The Berlin Philhar- monic comes here on a tour, now financed by the German govern- ment, to offer its art, for the first time in 40 years, as part of the American-German policy towards better understanding. The fact that some of the musicians are ex- Nazi party members seem to us ridiculously irrelevant. It is a known fact that everybody hold- ing any position whatsoever had to be a party member in order to keep that position. Thus to make statements ,like the New York mu- sicians did, containing phrases like "Nazi-led and Nazi-managed;" is irresponsible. insulting and 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 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication (be- for 10 a.m. on Saturday). Notice of lectures, concerts and organization meetings cannot be published oftener than twice. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1955 Vol. LXV, No. 96 Notices President and Mrs. Hatcher will hold an open house for University faculty, staff, and townspeople Sun., Feb. 27, rom 4:00-6:00 p.m., at the President's House. Freshman Testing Program: Make-up sessions for Freshmen who missed any of the Aptitude tests given during Ori- entation Week Jan. 31-Feb. 4 will be held Wed., Feb. 23 and Thurs., Feb. 24. Report to Room 110, Rackham Build- ing at 7:00 p.m. For further informa- tion call Ext. 2297. The following Public School systems are interested in teachers in the fol- lowing fields: Michigan Battle Creek, Michigan - (Springfield School) Teacher Needs: First Grade, Second Grade. Seventh Grade,Integrat- ed Subjects, Arts and Crafts for Ele- mentary, and Secondary Combination, Science, English and Social Studies. Clarkston, Michigan-Clarkston Com- munity Schools. Teacher Needs: Com- mercial, English, Industrial Arts, Math- ematics, kindergarten, early and later elementary, Kinde, Michigan-Teacher Needs: Ear- ly and Later Elementary, Music and Band, Science and Mathematics, His- tory, English, Commercial, Agriculture. Home Economics and Administration. Monroe, Michigan - Teacher Needs: High School - Speech, dramatics and English, Swimming and Physical Educa- tion (women), Mathematics and Driver Training, Public Librarian. Jr. High-English, Social Studies and Journalism. Elementary - Kindergarten, First, Fourth and Sixth Grades Tecumseh, Michigan-Teacher Needs: Jr. High Math and Science, Senior High Social Studies, Librarian and Fourth Grade Teacher. California Los Altos, California-Teacher Needs: Early and Later Elementary, Seventh and Eighth Grade, Girls' Physical Edu- cation, vocal Music, Speech Correc- tionist, Specialist in Reading, Industrial Arts and Home Arts Teacher. Los Angeles, California - Teacher Needs: Mathematics, Science, Industri- al Arts, English, Social Studies, Girl's Physical Education, Early and Later Elementary. A. G. Andresen and H. W. Baldwin, Personnel Administrators, will be in Chicago, Illinois interviewing prospec- tive teachers Feb. 26, 27, 28 and March 1. For additional information, contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Ad- ministration Bldg., NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. All veterans who expect education and training allowance under Public Law 550 (Korea G.I. Bill) must get instruc- tors' signatures for the month of Feb. by March 1 and turn Dean's Monthly Certification into the Dean's. office be- fore 5:00 p.m. March 3. Art Print Loan Collection. All re- served pictures will be reserved till Sat., Feb. 26. Office Hours this week will be Thurs. 3:00-5:00 p.m.; Fri., 10:00- 12:00nm and 1:00-5:00 p.m.: Sat., 10:00- 12: 0m. Office Hours throughout this month are posted on the door of the office, 115 Administration Bldg. All pic- tures that have not been picked up may be rented, beginning Mon., Feb. 28. The office will also be open for faculty mem- bers and employees of the University. The following student sponsored so- cial events are approved for the coming week-end. Social chairmen are reminded that requests for approval for social events are due in the Office of Student Affairs not later than 12:00m. on the Mon. prior to the event: Feb. 25- Delta Tlleta Phi Delta Upsilon Hawaii Club Huber House Robert Owen Co-op House Strause House victor Vaughan Feb. 26- Alpha Delta Phi Chinese Students Club Chi Phi Chi Psi Delta Tau Delta Delta Theta Phi Delta Upsilon Hayden House Kappa Sigma Nu Sigma Nu Phi Chi Phi Delta Phi Phi Kappa Sigma Phi Rho Sigma Phi Sigma Kappa Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Nu Tau Delta Phi Theta Chi Zeta Beta Tau Zeta Psi Feb. 27- Phi Delta Phi PERSONNEL REQUESTS: New York State Civil Service an- nounces the following exams: open to N.Y. state residents, applications ac- cepted up to April 1, 1955, Insurance Sales Representative, Compensation Claims Investigation and Compensation Investigator, Senior Account Clerk, Bridge Repair Foreman, Construction Wage Rate Investigator, Matron, Associ- ate in Industrial Education, Case Work. er, Junior Case Worker, Assistant Super- visor of Case Work (Child Welfare), Senior Nurse; candidates for following exam must be legal residents of the following counties: Bronx, Kings, Nas- sau, New York, Queens, Richmond or Suffolk,-Senior Office Machine Opera- tor (Calculating), applications accepted up to April 1, 1955; candidates for fol- lowing exams open to any qualified citizen of the U.S.-Senior Social Work- Hurey Hospital, Personnel Dept., Flint, Mich-announces an opening for a female Physical Therapist, must have B.S. in Phys. Edu. plus advanced train- ing in Physical Therapy, or graduation from School of Nursing; applicants must be registered with American Registry of Physical Therapists. Western Adjustment & Inspection Co.,-Chicago, Ill., - offers continuous training program for young men in- terested in Adjustment profession; Company maintains 247 branch offices in thirteen Mid-western states. For further information concerning the above positions, contact the Bu- reau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 371. Lectures Lecture sponsored by the ACS Stu- dent Affiliate. Thurs., Feb. 24, 4:00 p.m. in Room 1400 Chemistry. Louis F. Pe- ser, professor of chemistry at Harvard, will speak on "New Techniques for the Organic Laboratory." Justice William 0. Douglas speaks tonight in Hill Auditorium, 8:30 p.m., on the current Lecture Course. "De- mocracy versus Communism in S.E Asia." Tickets are on sale today 10:00 a.m.-8:30 p.m. in the Auditorium bo office. The William W. Cook Lectures on American Institutions - Eighth Series: 'The Politics of Industry" - Walton Hamilton of Washington, D.C. All lec- tures will be given in Room 100, Hutch- ins Hall, at 4:00 p.m. The public is cor- dially invited. Lecture II, Thurs., Feb. 24: "Revolution and Counter-Revolu- tion." Lecture III, Mon., Feb. 28: "Gov- ernment By the Honorable Company." Student Bar Association presents the special lecture, "Negotiating the Labor Contract," by Richard J. Fritz, labor. relations specialist, Thurs., at 7:00 p.m. in Room 100 of Hutchins Hall. Dr. Stanley Sapon of the Language Aptitude Project, Harvard University, will speak on "Foreign Language Prog- nosis Tests and their Implications for Foreign Language Teaching," 4:15 p.m., Auditorium B, Angell Hall. Academic Notices Make-up Examinations in History will be given Sat., Feb. 26, 9:00 a.m.-12:00 m.., 1433 Mason Hall. See your instructor for permission and then sign list in History Office. 402 Interdisciplinary Seminar on the Application of Mathematics to Social Science will meet Thurs., Feb. 24, Room 3401 Mason Hall from 4:00-5:30 p.m. C. H. Coombs and R. C. Kao will speak on "Non-Metric Factor Analysis." Seminar in Organic Chemistry. Thurs., Feb. 24, 7:30 p.m. in Room 1300 Chem- istry. Henry N. Beck will speak on "The Nef Reaction." Seminar in Analytical-Inorganic- Physical Chemistry. Thurs., Feb. 24, 7:30 p.m. in Room 3005 Chemistry. Thomas Houser will speak on "Kinet- ics of the Thermal Decomposition of Chlorohydrocarbons." Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., Feb. 24, at 4:00 p.m. in Room 247 West Engineering. Craige E Schensted of WRRC will speak on "The WKB Method and the Derivation of Asymptotic Formulas for Scattering Problems." Anatomy Semiiar: Fri., Feb. 25, 4:00 p.m., 2501 E. Medical Bldg., Dr. James K. Avery, "Calcification of the Teeth." Makeup examination for Political Sci- ence 52 final examination will be given Sat., March. 5, 9:00 a.m.12:00m. See Mr. Curtis in 4619 Haven Hall. German make-up final examinion in I, II, 31 will be held at 3:00 p.m, Mon., Feb. 28 in Room 110, Tappan Hall. Stu- dents concerned are required to regis- ter with the departmental secretary by Feb. 25. M.A. Language 'Examination yin His- tory. Fri., March 4, 4:15-5:15 p.m. 411 Mason Hall. Sign list in History Office. Can bring a dictionary. Law School Admission Test, Appli.. cation blanks for the- April 23 admini- stration of the Law School Admission Test are now available at 110 Rack. ham Building. Application blanks are due in Princeton, N.J. not later than April 13 1955. Aeronautical Engineering Colloquium. Today at 4:00 p.m., in Room 1504 East Engineering Bldg. Eugene Turner will discuss "Experiments on Luminous Shock Wave." College of Engineering conducts the annual Materials Handling Essay Con- test, open to all engineering students. Prizes of up to $100.00. Essays to be submitted by May 2. Contact Prof. Q. C. Vines, 237 West Engineering Building. Actuarial Seminar will meet at 4:00 p.m., Thurs., Feb. 24, in Room 3212 A.H. Prof. Nesbitt will continne the discus- sion of "Interpulation in terms of Op- erators." History of Mathematics Seminar. Thurs., Feb. 24, at 2:30 pm., in Room 3232 A.H. Miss Lucille Pinette will dis- cuss "The Beginnings of Analytic Ge- ometry." Logic seminar will meet Fri., Feb. 25 at 4:00 p.m. in 3010 Angell Hall. Dr. Buchi will conclude his discussion of "Definability in Formal Systems" and Dr. Lyndon will speak on the topic "Tarski's Theory of Algebraic Classes." Astronomical Colloquium. Fri., Feb. 25, 4:15 p.m., the Observatory. Dr. Wil- liam Liller will speak on "The Appli- cation of Image Converter Tubes to Astronomy." Events Today Christian Science Organization Testi- monial Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Fire- side Room, Lane Hall. International Center Tea. Thurs., Feb. 24, 4:30-6:00 p.m., Rackham Building. La P'tite Causette will meet Thurs., Feb. 24 from 3:30-5:00 p.m. in the left I 1 . CURRENT MOVIES I A Architecture Aud. . ALL THE KING'S MEN with Broderick Craw- ford, Joanne Dru, John Ireland and Mercedes McCambridge. ON ITS LATEST visit, All the King's Men looks just as good as it did in its initial ap- pearance in 1949 when it won the Academy Award for the year's best film. Bhe story, gener- ally based on the career of Louisiana's Huey Long, concerns a backwoods, "hick" politician, Willie Stark, who rises to political supremacy on his own will and determination in an uni- dentified Southern state. The politician, brilliantly played by Broder- ick Crawford in a loud, vibrant interpretation, is a self-made and -educated man who becomes obsessed by his personal charm and power. He eventually succeeds in alienating his wife, his son, and his friends; and on the day of his greatest personal triumph, when he has suc- ceeded in defeating an impeachment movement, ha is.---fnaa i fa -f,.--+il m P-A that they lack dimension when placed next to Willie, who constantly dominates thestory and action. Perhaps the best thing about All the King's Men is that it presents as accurate and power- ful a picture of human violence as has ever been done. Photographed in a small California town by Script Writer-Producer-Director Rob- ert Rossen, it boasts mob scenes that are power- fully and skilfully directed. There is the terrible irony of the crowds who follow Willie like a god, but are unable to see his shortcomings, the manner in which his confidence, loudness, and blustering good nature are only devices to em- ploy their ignorance to his own advantage. Rossen has used many non-actors and towns- people to give the film heightened realism; the photography is stark and documentary-like, the camera ever probing. THE BEGINNING and end of the film are giv- en to a study of the relationship between the masses and government, Rossen ultimately de- cidina that min is hv v nnture orrumt the