V THE MCHI+GAN DAILY 1F ?TAYV SEPI'I'M1 El?4. 15 .,.Ia.d~ P*t THE MIHIGAN111 y 0 rr .a r, lvi"t n 3 v, 1ZY a a r Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 "Help! Ambulance! Lawyers! We've Been Run Down!" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1955 NIGHT EDITOR: GAIL GOLDSTEIN Still A Long Way 10 Go In 'U' Housing THE ENTIRE University community wel- ' E HAVE YET to see the justice in charging comes the news, belated though it may be, present residence hall dwellers for units that another residence hall is being planned. that others will occupy. Certainly some finan- cial arrangements can be worked out so the Providing the Regents approve, the new csofutrcntutinanbpo-te building should be ready in less than two years cost of future consruction can be pro-rated and will house around 600 women. over the useful life of the building and paid for, along with interest charges, by the resi- Weeks of abute housing shortage and hun- dents as they use the facilities. dreds of students in overcrowded living facili- Perhaps if enough legislators hear from the ties have been uncomfortable evidernce of the folks back home on how poor living conditions seriousness of the housing situation. One of are in Ann Arbor, they can be persuaded to its most tragic aspects was its sheer predict- loan the residence halls the needed money, or ability, and we have yet to hear from any federal sources might be tapped. University official who was surprised by the At any rate, now is the time to plan not only cruelties of supply and demand in Ann Arbor. for 1957 but for 1967 as well. Foresight, while a rare human attribute, is not too much to BUT THIS.is history, and with two qualifi- expect from the officials of a great university. cations the heartiest applause is in order-PETE ECKSTEIN for the new University action. There's A Moral First, there is the question of "giving back" Tyler, Prescott and Chicago Houses to the Here Somewhere men, as is planned on completion of the new women's housing. From all appearances and The police in Clark, New Jersey conceived a the attitudes of most-of the students in them, new idea to cut down on the city's traffic co-educational quads seem to be a success. accidents. Not only is there mature association, but dress, They placed, on the side of a city road, a language and behavior patterns reportedly wrecked car as "horrible example" of what can have been elevated by the situation. happen if drivers are careless. Secondly, there arises the eternal question of On exhibit. The driver in back also looked at the who will get the bill. Presumably most of the exhibit not noticing the car in front had $50 increase in residence hall fees this year will slowed. The two cars crashed. go toward the costs of construction and paying Which is only a horrible example of what off current debt so the residencehalls may "horrible examples" can do. be re-mortgaged as a souce of funds. --M. F. TODAY AND TOMORROW: Ike's Qik Return Needed -BY WALTER LIPPMAN too, rn~~() :a .- , 4 1 ^,,.+. AT THE MICHIGAN 'Hunter' Dramatic, Stark Terror Tale "NIGHT of the Hunter" is a complex exercise in grotesque terror and human pity. Structurally, it has elements of both a mother goose tale and a passion play; pictorially, it is a bizzarely photo- graphed backdrop for a simple story of depression-days, backwoods horror. 4 WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Soiet Still Wants U.S. Food -DY DREW PEARSON rP E REPORTS from Denver about the Pres- ident's condition have been so encouraging that no decision needs to be, or in fact can be, taken at this time about the delegation of his powers. The question was first raised, quite properly and responsibly, by Mr. Haggerty on Sunday after the President was stricken. When he raised the question in a message to the Attorney General, Mr. Hagerty was pre- paring for the possibility that the President would need a long convalescence. Since Sun- day the doctors have done much to allay the fear that the President will be wholly inca- pacitated for some months to come. But the outlook in Denver is regarded as so favorable and because this happens to be a time when there is a lull in public affairs, it is possible to mark time. It is possible even to suppose that before the lull in affairs ends the President will have recovered sufficiently to carry on. But if it is too early to take de- cisions, it is not in the least too early to delib- erate about what it may be necessary and wise to do if for a considerable time the President cannot do much work. THE TAKING of decisions about this must wait until the extent of the President's dis- ability can be determined by his doctors. That determination cannot, we are told, be expected for about two weeks. But while decisions are being deferred, it is no service to the President or to the country to let the American public think that everything is so well organized at the White House, that everything is so clearly and finally determined by the Cabinet and the National Security Council, that the govern- ment can carry on indefinitely without the President's active participation. THE PRESIDENCY is an enormous office which imposes on one man the functions of Chief of State, Chief of the Administration, Commander-in-Chief, Chief of his Party, rep- resentative of the nation, and its moral and political leader. Certain of these functions can be suspended for a time and certain of them can be carried on by others. But the fact of the matter is that the burdens of which the President can be relfeved are those which are the least important and the least taxing to, his health. The hard part is also the part which can least easily be carried on for him by others. This is, first of all, the mlaking of those high Editorial Staff Dave Baad......................... Managing Editor Jim Dygert .............................. City Editor Murry Frymer......................Editorial Director Debra Durchslag.........Magazine Editor David Kaplan ........................Feature Editor Jane Howard ........................ Associate Editor Louise Tyor.........................Associate Editor Phil Douglis ............................ Sports Editor Alan Eisenberg ................ Associate Sports Editor Jack Horwitz ................. Associate Sports Editor . Mary Hellthaler .............Women's Editor Elaine Edmonds...........Associate Women's Editor John Hirtzel ................. Chief Photographer Business Staff Dick Alstrom ............. ..... Business Manager Rn .Ttr t ~ ".a.. .a - - .__s --. ___ and grave and ultimate decisions on which hang the issues of war and peace. Last year the situation in Indo-China and in the Formosa Strait, the question of whether to hold the summit meeting in Geneva, called for danger- ous and difficult decision- of this kind. Only the President could have made them. We may soon be facing very grave questions in our own military-policy resulting from the talks about disarmament, and grave questions about our system of alliances resulting from the talks about Germany. It is also virtually impossible for the Presi- dent to escape the responsibility of party leader, at least as it affects the choice of his successor. 'WHEN THE bad news came over the week end, it was natural enough to say, as Mr. Dulles did, that there is a team and that the principles and policies under which this team operates are well known to all its members. But that cannot be true for more than a short time. The question is who, in President Eisen- hower's absence, would keep the team a team when old policies have to be altered to meet new developments, when new policies have to be formed. Under President Eisenhower the Treasury ,the State Department, and the three services in the Pentagon have been kept lined up as a team. During his convalescense, who is going to keep them lined up? That is the big question to which there is no plain and evident answer. Part of the answer is, no doubt, that in so far as the President cannot act, decisions will be reached by groups of Cabinet officers, ad- ministrative assistants and Congressional lead- ers who are concerned with the particular issues. There will be many in Washington who will want, even if the President's disability is considerable and rather prolonged, to muddle through by improvising such arrangements and devices. WE MUST consider the disadvantages of muddling though, and whether anything can be done about them. The paramount disadvantage of the muddling through method is that there will be nobody who can accept public responsibility, as did the President in his press conferences and speeches, for the administration as a whole. The powers of the President will not be tied together and focused. They will be parceled out among a heterogenous and largely anonymous collection of office hold- ers and party leaders. Over any prolonged time this will be very unsatisfactory. It will be particularly unsatis- factory now because the President's illness has almost certainly ruled him out for 1956. Yet there are within his own official family several men who are entitled to consider them- selves in the running for his succession. In the muddling through process they may be tempted to think about how doing this or not doing that will serve their own presidential pros- pects. And even if they are not tempted, they will in an atmosphere of undefined power be suspected of being tempted. For Mr. Nixon the situation could become so confused that he would never know whether he was usurping his powers or failing to exercise them. WORD has reached the Agri-' culture Department that Rus- sia is still anxious to make a deal for surplus U.S. rood. The offer came from Communist chief Nik- ita Khrushchev himself during a private audience in Moscow with five U.S. Senators. The question was brought up by farm-minded Sen. Milt Young, North Dakota Republican, who asked whether it would be pos- sible for America to trade sur- plus American crops to Russia. "It not only would be possible but desirable," replied Khrushchev through an interpreter. Sen. Estes Kefauver, Tennessee Democrat, then launched into a technical discussion of the two nations'farm problems. At one point, Khrushchev remarked mis- chievously: "You have helped us to be self-sufficient by refusing to sell us surplus food." * * * HE REFERRED to the Soviet program to bring new farm land under cultivation. The American agricultural attache later confirm- ed to the Senators that Russia has opened 75,000,000 acres to farm- ing. This was forced, in part, by the Administration's refusal to sell surplus food behind the Iron Cur- tain. The Russians can thank Sen. Joe McCarthy, who raised such a clamor against trade with the Soviet bloc that the Admin- istration lost its nerve and dropped plans for a sale. Secretary of Ag- riculture Benson had repeatedly recommended disposing of our sur- plus crops behind the curtain, but Secretary of Commerce Weeks fought against it. Finally the Ad- ministration, worried about the political repercussions of McCar- thy's clamor, sided with Weeks. * * * MORE THAN 40 Senators and Congressmen went to Russia this summer. And only one was re- fused a visa. He is Congressman W. R. Poage of Texas, who was promised a visa but didn't get it at the last minute. Poage and Congressman Har- old Cooley of North Carolina, Democrats, went together to the Russian Embassy before leaving Washington where they were as- sured they could pick up their visas in Helsinki at the Interpar- liamentary Union. On the same day the visas were supposed to be ready, however, Poage made an anti-Communist speech at Helsinki. Speaking on disarmament, he declared that the Reds should agree to Ike's inspec- tion plan, warned that past ex- perience of the U.S. made us re- luctant to place our trust in words alone. Result: That afternoon Harold Cooley and the others got their visas, but there was none for Poage. He went to the Soviet Em- bassy to inquire. Everyone played dumb. He then went to the Sov- iet delegation to the Interparlia- mentary Union. Nn results. Fin- ally he had U.S. Ambassador Jack M c F a 11 telephone Ambassador Chip Bohlen in Moscow. Bohlen went to the Kremlin to inquire. Again everyone played dumb. Poage finally gave up, turned over to Cooley the Helsinki-Mos- cow-Warsaw reservation he had prudently secured beforehand. (Copyright, 1955, Bell Syndicate, Inc.) The preacher (Robert Mitch rght hand knuckles, HATE on his left. To tell his favorite story, he locks his hands together and shows how each force tries to overcome the other. When he is preachingin a*frenzied revivalist meeting, the right hand wins. But on the lonely country roads, riding in black on a white horse, his left hand has full possession of his mind and body. He marries a widow (Shelley Winters) to get the $10,000 bank loot her ex-husband has hidden. The treasure's location is known only to the widow's children (Bil- ly Chapin and Sally Jane Bruce), who are sworn not to reveal its whereabouts. The preacher kills the widow and the children flee down the river, on the bottom of which their mother lies, sitting in the family car, her long, blond hair streaming among the water vege- tation. The good woman (Lillian Gish) takes them in and offers them food and shelter. But through the dark night, they hear the song of their hunter and wait for him. IT IS EVIDENT that although "Hunter" is a chilling exercise in terror, and its suspense mounts to screaming proportions, it is for the most part a treatise on hu- man behavior. Its major themes are the fight between good and evil, the indestructability of child- ren and their ability to face dan- ger, and the force of human kindness. These motifs are con- vincingly expressed by the per- formers, each of whom seems ideally cast for his role. Director Laughton has put a great deal of integrity and care into his film, and it is the kind of cinematic adventure which lends itself to thorough analysis. Its stark photography is clustered with symbols, like a fruit-laden tree. Many of the symbols are conventional morality images (e. g., black-suited preacher on white horse). * f R HOWEVER, DIRECTOR Laugh- ton may have a point in his ex- pressed worry that viewers may tend to embue the picture with more than is %ally there. He insists that the river voyage ani- mals serve no other function than to set a dream mood. "Night of the Hunter" is like- ly to be discussed avidly for the next few months. Its major ef- fect, nonetheless, still lies in its engrossing blend of terror and warmth and not in its symbolism. -Ernest Theodossin LETTERS to the E DITOR ~ Support SBX... To the Editor: OF COURSE text books cost a fortune - what else besides "mark up" will pay for rent and extra help? The book stores are not in business for student benefit but for a profit! We all complain about the book stores' high prices on used texts; meanwhile, the student book ex- change must call for books "ur- gently needed." Why pay for big ads and fancy displays? If every one of us would co-operate, the exchange can work for mutual good: we could sell last year's books and buy used texts for new courses at a. fair price. Let's support our Student Book Exchange and thus help each other get a break when buying used books. -Bernie Rozran, '58 um n) has LOVE tattooed on his .DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daiy Orriclal Bulnetn is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for the Sunday edition must be in by 2 p.m. Friday. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1955 VOL. LXVII, NO. S General Notices University Directory. All additions and corrections for listings already sent in must be reported by Friday, Oct. 7. For further information, call Florence Boyd. 1523 Administration Bldg., Ext. 2152. Activities sponsored by student or- ganizations: All activities and projects sponsored or produced by student or- ganizations must receive the approval of the Student Government Council. Petitions for consideration by the Council should be submitted to the Administrative Secretary of the Coun- cil in the Office of Student Affairs at least two weeks before the event is to take place. Petition forms may be secured in the Office of Student Af. fairs, 1020 Administration Building. Petitions from officially recognized, reg- istered student organizations only will be considered, and activities and pro. jects under the sponsorshipof an in- dividual student or group of students not constituting a recognized organiza- tion are not permitted. (See CLOSED SOCIAL EVENTS.) Closed Social Events for members and invited guests only sponsored by stu- dent organizations at which both men and women are to be present must be registered in the Office of Student Affairs, 1020 Administration, and are subject to approval by the Dean of Men. Application forms may be se- cured in the Office of Student Affairs, 1020 Administration Building. Requests for approval must be submitted to that office NO LATER THAN NOON OF THE MON. BEFORE THE EVENT IS SCHEDULED. A list of approved social events will be published in the Daily Official Bulletin on Thurs. of each week. In planning social programs for the semester, social chairmen will want to keep in mind the seven day period prior to a final examination period, social events may not be scheduled. Final examinations for the present semester begin on Jan. 23. Applications for grants in support of research projects: Faculty members who wish to apply for grants from the Re- search Funds to support research pro. jects should file their applications in the Office of the Graduate School not later than Fri., Oct. 7. Application dorms will be mailed on request, or can be obtained in Room 1006 Reckham Building, Ext. 372. Applicants are urged to file their requests before the final due date to expedite handling. Applications for summer faculty re- search fellowships. Faculty members who wish to apply for Summer Faculty Research Fellowships for the Summer Session of 1955, may secure application forms from the Office of the Graduate School, Room 1006 Rackham Building, or the forms will be mailed on request. These applications should be filed in the Office of the Graduate School by Fri., Oct. 7. Applications for Phoenix Project Re- search Grants. Faculty members who wish to apply for grants from the Michigan Memorial-Phoenix Project Research Funds to support research in peacetime applications and Implica- tions of nuclear energy should file applications in the Phoenix Research Office, 118 Rackham Building, by Fri., Oct. 7, 1955. Application forms will be mailed on request. Telephone 2560. Student Government Council. Sum- mary of action taken at the meeting of September 28, 1955: Approved: Minutes of meeting of May 25, 1955. Summerinterim action: Sailing Club to Wisconsin, July 22-24. Appointment of alternate William Tenbrook to Joint Judiciary Council to fillvacancy. Schedule of meetings: Board In Review, Oct. 4; withrepresentatives from Faculty Senate, October 18; with Regents, October 27. Appointment of two highest ranking male members of the Council to serve on the Lecture Committee. Activities: November 12, Men's Glee Club, combined concert, Hill Aud., November 18, Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Association to spon- sor Jazz concert, Hill Auditorium. Action taken by delegation to NSA naming Stanley Martin as an alter- nate delegate at the Congress. Study Committee of six to consider a policy for operation and structure for the Administrative Wing. Authct. ized' Administrative Wing Coordinatdt to proceed with plans for mass meet- ing. November 15, 16 as the dates for the campus elections this fall. Unanimously endorsed: Program of cooperation between the Judiciary Councils of the University of Michigan and Michigan State University whereby a Joint Council will hear any discipline cases involving students from either school which may arise from incidents related to the Michigan-Michigan State game. 'p i _I 4 OBSTINATELY AMATEURISH: University Theatre-' Distressing' (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following article appeared in the Autumn, 1955 issue of "Act," British drama maga- zine, published in Leeds, England, and is here reprinted in part.) By MILTON LEVIN T HE "tributary theatre" is a gatherum term covering almost. anything not operating in Man- hattan, and to many it has ap- peared as the vital hope of the living theatre. Here in Ann Arbor the past year has provided an excellent opportunity to evaluate the work of this branch of the theatre. Ann Arbor is the home of the Uni- versity of Michigan which has 20,000 students and teachers in addition to the city population of some 30,000. The University, through its speech department, provides a varied theatre bill, this year com- prising "Hamlet," Elmer Rice di- recting his own "Dream Girl," "The Skin of Our Teeth" (Thorn- ton Wilder), a new play by James Harvey "The Clugstone Inheri- tance," and a number of 'labora- tory' productions of one-act plays. THE PROGRAM is varied but the productions, with few excep- tions, are generally distressing. The key word is usually "Experi- mentation," and a rather trite ex- perimentation at that. A student season provides a surfeit of flam- boyant costumes, grotesque make- up and tricky sets, as well as far too bad diction, even worse pro- jections and an almost total in- ability to deal with plays that call for any kind of realism or subt- 1 PfI7. productions and general hocum. * * * ALL OF THIS is certainly gloomy, but Ann Arbor has this year offered an opportunity to see something better. This was the Dramatic Arts Center, a new group presenting arena produc- tions. These productions were inter- esting, not only because of the arena but because they revealed an attempt to come to grips with drama of some substance. Elmer Rice, after leaving Ann Arbor, wrote in the New York Times that he was much impress- ed with the amount of dramatic activity here. A closer look shows some unpleasant features. * * * MUCH OF the activity around the University seems to come from the speech department and its crowd of would-be starlets and leading men, whilst most of the student body is almost totally un- aware of the existence of the theatre. Only the DAC seems to be building a reputation for quality. It is not true, as far as Ann Arbor is concerned, that it is in the tributary theatre where the only real vitality can -be found. This will suffice, I think, for about 95 per cent of American theatre. Exhibit A: Animal spirits are no substitute for real vitality; lacking competent vocal and phy- sical training and generally lack- ing competent direction, the stu- dent actors develop no style, no flexibility, no understanding and "She Stoops to Conquer," Campus' "Caligula" became "Antigone," and an original American play had "No Exit" substituted.) Exhibit C: everything remains on an obstinately amateurish level - acting, direction, sets, everything. There is activity; there is en- thusiasm; but the "tributary the- atre" is a misnomer, for this not a theatre which does much to contribute to the strength of the theatre. Instead, to change meta- phors, it is primarily a parasitic theatre, at best a kind of bene- ficial parasite. .4 LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Sibley - .- r'" hi' I I