A w~hic14yan Baitg 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 -When opinions are free, truth will prevail." FROM FOLK TO SOPHISTICATED: Modern Idiom Stressed At Year s Exhibits By THOMAS F. BERNAKY Daily Art Critic A RT EXHIBITS at the University galleries in 1955 ranged from folk art to the sophisticated art of the modern idiom with emphasis on the latter group. A comprehensive view of folk art from the "Iron Curtain' countries was presented under the aegis of the GARGOYLE. To this viewer the ,. 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. :, Y, DECEMBER 16, 1955 NIGHT EDITOR: LEW HAMBURGER WishingYou ( To Last All Th TO the Regents, balanced luncheons For honoraries, better functions. For Deborahs: Townsend and Dean Bacon Yuletide stockings not forgaken. To Russell Hussey, toy dinosaurs And to all janitors, cleaner floors. Deathless prose for Allan Seager For Rowe's playwrights, plaudits eager. Nemo, E. Hartwig and Tawfiq Khoury All rate boutonnieres in a hurry - NO delinquent patrons (minor) For a Liberty street diner. Cars for all who're twenty-one, For Margaret Rose, a. place in the sun. For League's Miss Mac, a long vacation, For Jaylee Duke, coordination. A partridge in a maple tree To Weinbaum, Bob, and IFC For Hazel Losh, galaxies brighter, And to Austin Warren, a Major Writer. FIGGY pudding to Walter, Erich For Union Opera, a brand-new lyric. A loud and resonant Christmas hymn. To all Assembly, and Jeanette Grimn. For dishwater brunettes, hair much blonder, Painless deadlines for Herbie Wander, Richard Braun and David Kessel And cheers to those who skate and wrestle, Not to mention basketball, Gymnastics, in fact, athletics all. WELL-STOCKED pantries for FBA And to M. ("Tim") Green, a bright Yule day. Sweet reposeto Hazel Frank Exciting agendas foreBerliner, Hank And to all who work for SGC A dramatic chapter in history. Solvent alumni to Tapping, T Hawley No loss of words for Weber, Wally. A meaningful January second To those to whom the Rose Bowl's beck- oned. Cheer to Crisler and*Oosterbaan And a hearty toast to Ed, Tom, Ron. DAINTY food for department teas, Crowded meetings for YR's, YD's. tI 7ihristmas Cheer rough The Year S For Barney Helzberg and Paula Strong Michigras triumphs loud and long. To President Ike, a heart well-rested For BusAd boys, funds well invested. Lots more space for IHC, a Sprig of holly for Thomas Bleha. A microscope to Marston Bates To probationed students, kinder fates. APPY thoughts of homes away ~ To all on the lists of ISA. To President Hatcher, a good trip east, To Music School, space increased. Succulent fruitcakes to Dean Rea For Veep Jim Lewis, a placid day. No infractions of campus rules To Glover and Cross, who deserve good yules. Rapt-eyed listeners for Glenn McGeoch And for Marvin Eisenberg, a Titian hue. ON-PARTISAN tunes for Prof. Revelli - And to the Band, a bowl of jelly. To Messrs. Zerman, Ostafin, Streiff, A good '56, and to Todd Lief Of the Michigan Union, another service. To fledgling dentists, no patients ner- vous. Ivy League polish for the lawyers And warming waits in Martha Cook foyers To the DAC, good lights and stages, And more advisors for English majors. 'UNIFIED Europe for Leland Stowe, For John E. Reed, the season's glow. Ring the gladsome Christmas bells For all young coeds and Bob Wells. To Shorey Peterson, G.N.P. For Prof. Pollock, a well-dressed tree, For Mayor Brown, no traffic jammed, i To remaining policemen, stockings crammed.' Accomplishments many for SRC And to Donna Netzer, the season's glee. 'U' EXPERTS LOOK IN FUTURE: Peace, Prosperity Predicted For '56 To all, in fact, The Daily wishes Tables groaning with holiday dishes, Fun, rest and peace, assignments fixed, And excellent prospects for '56. -THE DAILY STAFF By PETE ECKSTEIN Daily Staff Writer COMPLYING with The Daily request, University professors looked around their offices for crystal balls. Finding none, they somewhat reluctantly agreed to venture opinions as to what may happen in 1956. They all emphasized the may Politics.. . Prof. Daniel Wit of the political science department described Adlai Stevenson as a "good bet" for the Presidency. Stevenson, Prof. Wit said, is "reasonably sure" of the nomination. For the Republicans, "Chances are it'll be Mr. Nixon." Prof. Marshall Knappen of the political science department agreed that "Stevenson's chances are very good now." He described his as 85% sure of the nomination, but "lots of things could happen. He could have a heart attack. All the others could jump on him." The Republican contest, Prof. Knappen commented, is "much more of an open question. Any one of a half dozen candidates might be nominated. "As a wild guess-if you can get the right odds, put your money on Milton Eisenhower's nose." He mentioned, five-to-one as "worth taking the chance." VIf it's even money, however, that Vice-President Nixon will be his party's choice, Prof. Knappen con- cluded. . The Economy .. . Prof. G. Walter Woodworth of the business administration school said "the prospect looks as though the present level of business will hold, at least through the first half of the year." He warned.how- ever that "at such a high level, the economy is even more vulner- able to decline than it has been." He explained that while "people are still in a spending mood and inclined to borrow, garages are pretty full" and many new houses have been built and equipped. The danger is that spending levels in thosedsectors may not be main- tained. . However, commitments for re- cord expenditures on new plants and ,equipment for the first half of the year have been made, and Prof. Woodworth is confident of continued prosperity that far into the future at least. Prof. Paul McCracken of the business administration school was willing to predict further than his colleague. "For the year as a whole, we seem to be headed for a record national income," he pre- dicted. Supporting his contention, Prof. McCracken said "capital expendi- tures of business-for plant and equipment-are certainly going to be higher next year. "There's no evidence of any emergence of pessimism on the part of consumers which might draw them away from the market. Government expenditures are cer- tainly going to be higher than in 1955." He did cite some weak spots though. "We have a very tight money market-I think too tight. There's been a slowdown in resi- dential construction to 10% below that in the early part of the year." * * * International Affairs ... "There's always a possibility of war," Prof. Knappen commented, "but the chances are fairly good there'll be no major conflict." He describes Russia's economic drive in Asia as "most significant. They're likely to continue it in 1956. The Soviets found we've made good will" through economic aid and are trying it themselves. Prof. Wit predicted a "year of competitive co-existence, with maybe scattered violence. What the Geneva spirit represents will continue -- an agreement that it won't be to anyone's advantage to resort to all-out warfare. "Economic and technicalogical will increase. It's a natural corol- lary of the Geneva spirit." Any substantial agreement on East- West differences "will have to be postponed while maneuvering takes1 place." Touching on a few trouble spots, Prof. Wit commented the Middle East "will continue to bubble without breakiing into a major conflict." Following the French elections, Pierre Mendes-France's "chances are good for returning to power. A single, stable majority is another thing." The solidity of the Western alli- ance during 1956 "depends on the effectiveness of Ameridan leader- ship. I don't see it disintegrating," Prof. Wit added. Polish posters were second to none art in their ability to suggest through the medium of design and metaphor. The College of Architecture and Design sponsored their annual Stu- dent Exhibition in May. Abstract and non-objective representation was the dominant trend. Some showed a remarkable syn- thesis of technique and concept, while others seemed to subordi- nate the conceptual basis, which is so central to modern art, to tech- nique. This dichotomy is, however, to be expected in student art. MUSEUM PRESTIGE received a boost by its exhibition of the Win- ston Collection of 20th century painting and sculpture. This exhibit was in essence a tableau of the development of modern art. Such movements as Cubism, Futurism, Dadaism and Expressionism were manifested. , Modern art is now ready to be accepted by the "people with dirty fingernails," and is no longer the property of "avant garde" intellec- tuals. One of the reasons for this is modern art's affinity to popular modern music which has been ac- cepted. The tie is clear when one notes such records as Stan Ken- ton's "Improvisations," a la Paul Klee, and Do Shirley's "Piano Perspectives." More and more use is being made of such idioms of modern art. DUE TO FINANCIAL and physi- cal .limitations the Art Museum has limited its objectives to ac- quiring and exhibiting a repre- sentative collection of modern painting and sculpture. The Museum as it is now con- stituted dates back from 1946. In this relatively short period it has been exceedingly successful in satisfying these objectives. An indication of its success is the collection of British Art cur- rently on exhibit. Among the notable artists whose works are. being shown are Graham Suther- land (Churchill's "friend"), Robert Colquhoun, and Ben Nicholson. All of which requires much de- served kudos to Director Jean Paul Slusser, Curator Helen H. Hall and their staff. REPRISAL: What Is SA College Girl? (EDITOR'S NOTE The following was written and sent to us by Barbour resident Margaret Brake.) BETWEEN THE wisdom of motherhood and the innocence of youth, we find an adorable creature called a college girl. Col- lege girls come' in assorted sizes, weights, and sttes of infatuation. College girls are found every- where . . . in the doorways of dorms, the stands of a football stadium, inciting, panty raids and playing bridge. Fathers love them, little brothers detest them and housemothers protect them. A college girl is beauty with goo on her face, glamor in bermuda shorts, and joy with tears in her eyes. A college girl is a composite ... she has the tenderness of Florence Nightingale, the energy of Deborah Bacon, the industry of Madame Curie, the appetite of a bird, the aspirations of a movie star and when she wants something, it's usually a man. * ** SHE LIKES convertibles, clothes, fraternity parties, hope chests and college boys. She is hot much for hopeful mothers, irrate fathers, near-sighted professors,resident assistants, alarm clocks and eight o'clock classes. No one else is so late for a date, or so early for mail. Nobody else can cram into one pocket book five lipsticks, three combs, an empty checkbook, a billfold full of pic- tures, last- Sunday's earrings and an old History exam. She is a magical creature. You can lock her out of your heart, but you can't lock her out of the bath- room. You can get her off your mind, but you can't get her off your expense account. Might as well give up . she! is your jailer, your boss, your pet peeve . . . a big-eyed, innocent, boy-chasing bundle of anxieties. But when you come home loaded with worries and cares, she can and actually approached "serious" LETTERS to the EDITOR Receipts, Not Direction ANYONE who has followed the Dramatic Arts Center from the days of its early struggles is pleas- ed and heartened by recent, fav- orable publicity in The Daily. Mr. Theodossin admires Ralph Dis- chell and so do I. Yet the criti- cism of Joseph Gistirak in The Daily for Dec. 14th with its head- line, DAC Deserves Stronger Di- rection, makes me wonder if Mr. Theodossin knows the background of DAC, its continuous financial problem, and the enormous faith and hard work that men like Gis- tirak and Drischel have put into it. I wonder if Mr. Theodossin can explain the poor box-office for- many excellent productions. Why don't more University students at- tend DAC performances? Does the Masonic Temple address scare them away? Last month I at- tended the Chekhov play on the night of the advertised panel dis- cussion, when one might have ex- pected a decent turnout by those interested in modern drama. Yet they played to a handful of people, scarcely fifty. I marveled that they could give such an absorbing and dedicated performance to so meagre an audience. It is all very well to say, DAC Deserves Stronger Direction. Mr. Gistirak is a modest man and would be the first to admit 'his limitations. But if DAC produce tions merit your present praise, andt ifstronger directions is need- ed to improve them still further, let's have the box-office receipts, the well-known do-re-mi to make such improvement possible. DAC Deserves Packed Houses. With stronger support from the com- munity, and that includes students, stronger direction can become a more valid critical demand. -Dorothy R. True, '47 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN THE Daily official Bulletin 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. n~otices for the Sunday edition must be in by 2 p.m. Friday. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1955 VOL. LXVII, NO. 66 General Notices Arlene Sollenberger's concert, originally scheduled for Jan. 20, 1956, has been postponed to Feb. 14. Miss Sollenberger is an Instructor in voice in the School of Music. Late Permission: Because of the Hock- ey game Tues. and Wed., ec. 13 and 14, all women students have late per- mission on Tues., Dec. 13 until 11:30 p.m. and on Wed., Dec. 14 until 11:10 p m. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Edward G. Koch, Business Administration; thesis: "Business Condition, Public Policy, and Economic Behavior. An interpretation of the 1953-54 Recession," Tues., Jan. 3, 8th floor Conference Room, School of Business Administration, at 4:00 p.m. Chairman, P. W. McCracken. A.O.S. Meeting. Dr. S. G: Wallingford, will preside at the first "Symposium on the Stacking Fraction" on Tues., Jan. 3, at 8:00 p.m. in Room 3106 Chemistry. Doctoral > xamination for Leland Clif- ford Hendershot, Pharmacology; thesis: "Tachyphylaxis to Amines in Isolated Vascular Strips," Mon., Dec. 19, 103 Pharmacology Bldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chair- man, M. H. Seevers. Doctoral Examination for Harry Del- bert Thiers, Botany; thesis: "The Agar- icaceae of the Pine Belt and Adjacent Areas in Eastern Texas," Frig, Dec. 16, 1139 Natural Science Bldg., at 1:00 p.m. Chairman, A. H. Smith. Doctoral Examination for Vilma La- vetti Kohn, Zoology; thesis: "A Com- parative Study of Respiration, Cyto- chrome Oxidase, Apyrase, and Non- Specific Esterase Activities among Le- thal Hybrid, Gynogenetic Haploid, and Diploid Amphibian Embryos," Fri., Dec. 16, 2089 Natural Science Bldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, C. L. Markert. Placement Notices SIN THIS CORNER: 4 A Yeaj ByI H ISTORIANS have a way of summing up a period of existence in a clear, concise picture that makes it all look simple. But then, they usually wait about 25 years after the period, far enough away for the picture to make sense, for the countless strokes to mold into a com- plete unit. Still, those of us deep in the middle of the period will try to look around once in a while and try to recognize where we are. It's not the most accurate method, but the approaching end of the year is all the incentive we need. If there was any prevailing' spirit in 1955, it wais that of waiting. Some were waiting for war-it's been called imminent since 1948. Others were waiting for peace. After the first Geneva meeting last summer, some thought it had actually come. Today, most of that spirit is gone, but few are yet willing to concede the wait is a lost cause. Still there were others waiting for. other things. The American Negro, perhaps a cham- pion at the sport, was still waiting for his white man neighbor to call him equal. There was a great deal to discourage him in 1955. He saw his race mistreated, humiliated, and con- tinually hurt.- But he was aware that more of tlie white men were beginning to take his side, that he was not completely alone, that someday it would not be the same. &lw £iCktigau UaiI Editorial Staff Dave Baad..........................Managing Editor Jim Dygert ..............................., City Editor Murry Frymer...................'... Editorial Director r of Waiting MURRY FRYMIER EDUCATORS WERE waiting, trying desper- ately to move to meet the times, but forced into a nightmarish immobility. The problem was clear, a greater and still greater job of education was needed. But very little was done to get ready. Federal aid, greater incentive to. teachers, larger campuses-these were only parts of the answer. No one knew it all. Some people actually saw some of the waiting begin to pay off. Senator McCarthy and his imnmitators were partially stilled. Some of his spirit is still with us as we enter another year. But the liberals, many of whom fought him courageously while others shamefully ran to their corners, were coming back. The Supreme Court stood as a shining symbol to champion their cause. Again the bitterness was turning into hope. The world was more complex in 1955. The giant world powers, and even the other large nations were rudely awakened to find force in the never-before-heard-from little states. Morocco was demanding independence from a bewildered France. Who had ever listened to Morocco before? Yet these people were begin- ning to stir, beginning to think, talking about "rights." AND THE college student in 1955 was a little less sure of himself. He found himself tossed into a wind chamber, but with values and social stresses pulling on all sides. It was no longer a basic question of what he would do to the world, but what society would do to him. The college student was a little more afraid, a little more uncertain, a little less idealistic. This is all for the historian to judge better, perhaps in 1980. Some of the things people are waiting for today will be satisfied in 1980-but there'll be other things, other values, other de- sires. Here in 1955 we're a little confused and afraid, perhaps, but there's still the faith that all the waiting will someday bring results. It's the faith that bring us happily and expectantly to 1956. I 4 BOOKS IN REVIEW: Year's Fiction Puts High Spots Last By DONALD A. YATES Daily Book Reviewer LOOKING back on the fiction offerings for 1955, the most striking feature is that all the big noise came during the last half of the year. "Sincerely, Willis Wayde" was the most important title carried into June and it held up well until fall. But it was not until after the summer was well upon us that we were allowed a look at what will go down in literary history as the big (in both! senses of the word) novels of the year. One poetry title was particular- ly intriguing and enjoyable. Chris- topher Morley's "Gentlemen's Rel- ish" won't rate on anyone's list of classic contributions to the finest art but it is a nicely varied col- lection of delightfully fashioned insights into the literary and warmly human facets of that very intelligent booklover's soul. In the essay, Clifton Fadiman ("Party of One") wrote best in and about that specific form; Marianne Moore ("Predilections") wrote brilliantly on poetry as woven by some of our most notable contemporary poets; and Somer- set Maugham ("The Art of the Novel") had the readers' rapt at- tention all the way through his discussion of the world's ten great- taken. He has some good ideas and, shouting as loud as he is, someone is bound to take note of him. Finally, Frederick J. Hoffman's literary history, "The Twenties" seems to be a "must" for that group of devotees of Jazz Age literature. NOW FOR this year's fiction. In the humor department, the win- ner by acclaim was Max Hyman's "No Time For Sergeants," though not all (notably this reviewer) share this opinion. sThe prize "sleeper" of the year was, oddly enough, an import from France - Francoise Sagan's short, uncomplicated, but enchantingly told "Bonjour Tristesse." And to Mlle. Sagan's publisher goes a. citation for their policy of "laissez-faire" toward a singularly charming book title. J. P. Marquand's "Sincerely, Willis Wayde" came early to the bestseller lists and stayed late- deservedly. It was a very solid, very entertaining novel of the in- side of a business, and of a busi- nessman, presented as only the penetrating art of Marquand could have presented it. One of the also-rans of the season was a book entitled "The book was alive only a few months. ON SEPTEMBER 1 the big game season for critics was officially opened with the publication of Herman Wouk's "Marjorie Morn- ingstar." Following it in rapid succession were MacKinlay Kan- tor's "Andersonville," N o r m a n Mailer's "The Deer Park," and John O'Hara's "Ten North Fred- erick." "Marjorie Morningstar" has this' vote as the best novel of 1955. "Andersonville" impressed many people. Admiration for the story of the infamous Civil War prison camp was somewhat diminished by this reviewer by the feeling that it was - by some 200 pages - ser- iously overlong. "The Deer Park," from the pen of the author of "The Naked and the Dead," re- vealed Mailer's present preoccu- pation' to be one associated more with the biological than with the social function of his generation. O'Hara, in "Ten North Frederick," gave us a typical O'Hara presenta- tion of the personalities of a small Eastern town. The author 'has a remarkable ability for cutting away at the artificiality in his charac- ters and presenting them in terms that are readily comprehended. The four novels just mentioned 4 Debra Durchslag.................... Magazine1 David Kaplan ............... Feature] Jane Howard ........ ................ AssociateI Louise Tyor........................Associate1 Phil Dougli.........................Sports1 Alan Eisenberg.................Associate SportsI Jack Horwitz ................. Associate SportsI Mary Heldthaler.... .s.....Women'sI Mlaine Edmonds ............ Associate Women'sI Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor John Hirtzel....................Chief Photographer Business Staff Dick Aistrom................ .. Business Manager