Sixty-Seventh 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. 0 Phone NO 2-3241 With The Greatest Of Ease AT THE STATE 'Bandido' DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN "When Opinions Are Free Truth Wil Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. ' lg' ' -, .. ' . .: { r ., _, . !URDAY NOVEMBER 10, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: TAMMY MORRISON i I Contradiction, Confusion In Expansion Policy PRESIDENT HATCHER, in interpreting Uni- versity plans for expansion and enrollment, seems to be following a policy of telling every- one what they want to hear. This may be good public relations but it doesn't help clarify poli- cies for people who are sincerely interested in knowing where we're going in the next decade. The latest playon words is trying to explain how we're going to become increasingly "selec- 'tive" (speech to Faculty Senate) without rais- ing our admissions standards (luncheon address to high school principals and freshmen). Even though the University is planning to double in size, it will have to accept a decreasing proportion of applicants. This can only be ac- complished byPkraising admissions standards. And the President's contention that all quali- fied Michigan students will be free to come to their University doesn't clear things up. What does "qualified" mean? Isn't it dependent on what the admissions standards are? THIS POINT is not raised for argument's sake. It is the clue to whether the University's growth will, as the President has so often claimed, be "controlled." If our standards are going to remain the same, then the term "controlled growth" is meaningless because growth will be determined by factors beyond the University's. control. Another one of the President's statements which puzzlesdus is that the University program in the next decade will place the "emphasis on undergraduates." In light of the increasing percentage of graduate students we want to. know how and in what ways the program will emphasize the undergraduate schools. A third area of concern is the lag Jetween projected housing and projected enrollment. Surveys made last year, when the President estimated growth at the rate of 1200 a year, indicated serious hortages. The latest estimate is an increase of 1500 to 2000 a year. The administration's answer to queries on housing is always "the community can absorb the overflow." Sure it can-with little rat holes, unsanitary shacks and abortive rents. University expansion looks suspiciously "un- controlled" when it progresses in the face of inadequate housing, Projected housing (new Women's Dorm and the proposed Coed Dorm) will not even hold the shortage steady. We would have a lot more confidence in the administration's predictions of growth without chaos if we were paying reasonable rents. PROBLEMS OF enrollment and expansion are difficult ones. We realize that it is not easy to set meaningful policies in the face of constantly changing conditions. We are aware, too, that most of the problems are enormously complex and difficult to explain to laymen. But this doesn't excuse direct contradiction, meaningless phrases and interpretations appar- ently aimed at appeasement rather than clarity. We would earnestly suggest that the admin- istration, particularly the President, come up with some straight-forward explanations of what policies they're planning to pursue. -LEE MARKS City Editor j Li T i1 ,I I{ (V>.. ;a~ " ;a ' O"A V448 wr",st re+ 4 tz+N PST '" Typcal FOR THOSE who like the kind of improbable hero who hand- grenades a machine-gun establish- ment while chawing on a tooth- pick. "Bandido" offers the mad- dening dead-pan of Robert Mit- chum, whose lack of talent fits him nicely for his role. Mitchum, a typical nonchalant, invincible adventurer in a typical movie with a typical plot, is for- tunately in Mexico during one of those revolutions and learns the whereabouts and train schedule of Zachary Scott, an American plan- ning to sell arms to the govern- ment. Our hero hails a cabbie who takes him to a nearby town where said government is making war on the rebels. Mitchum promptly settles the issue and wins the reb- els'" friendship by depositing a couple of the hand-grenades he carries in his' pockets for such emergencies on government artil- lery posts from a hotel veranda overlooking the fireworks. AFTER AGREEING to financial terms, he and the rebel leader (GilberthRoland) proceed tocap- ture Scott's train. Scott promises to lead them to the guns, leav- ing his wife (Ursula Theiss) be- hind as hostage. Mitchum, how- ever, being the hero and all that, is much too smart for that trick and dispatches Miss Theiss for the guns and retains Scott as the hos- tage. (Scott evidently married to acquire a ready hostage.)' From there, the plot thickens, and includes Mitchum saving Miss Theiss from the rebels' anger when the guns are not where Scott indi- cated (she is obviously too pretty to die and he sort of likes her any- way), plus Mitchum's ending up in a rebel jail as a result of that mischief. Happily, Mitchum escapes with IScott, learns the real hiding place of the arms, and, after a series of well-timed coincidences, leads the rebels to them, knocking off a government force on the side. * * '* THE WHOLE THING is so har- rowing that Mitchum decides to give up the adventurous life and return to the States with, of all people, Miss Theiss. Despite .the . film's . profound lack of originality, however, it is no doubt entertaining to the un- critical viewer and excellent for drive-ins, else Hollywood would not turn out so many like it. One thing remains a mystery. And that is who the bad guys are, which is never clearly settled. One assumes the government is in the wrong, because Mitchum is on the other side; but the government troops conduct themselves with impeccable . manners . throughout the modeal, never so much as ma- liciously swatting a fly. Perhaps, though, it is also be- coming typical not to point out the villain, but to let us poor souls figure it out. Or maybe Hollywood is succumbing to relativism, or to the naive belief that vagueness is synonymous with value. -James Dygert TODAY AND TOMORROW: The Election and the Crisis Tito Shows Independence YUGOSLAVIA'S APPEAL through the United Nations that Russia withdraw her troops from Hungary has indicated that she is still quite independent of the Kremlin. \In recent weeks conferences between Russian leaders and Marshall Tito were evidently in- tended to influence the latter's thinking, particularly on such matters as Polish inde- pendence. But it would appear that Russia still is not master in Yugoslavia and Tito remains independent. If this is true it can help to explain why the Soviet Union took such drastic steps in Hungary and at the same time give some indication that the Polish incident is not yet over. Hungary did not propose to stop where Yugoslavia or Poland did in relation to Russia, but to become free and, in all probability, anti-Russian. This Russia just could not swallow. If the Soviet Union did put down the Hun- garian rebellion because of fear of complete breakup of their satellite block, there is some reason to believe they will not allow Poland to get away with an even lesser ,break than was attempted 'in Hungary. IT SEEMS ONLY NATURAL that Yugoslavia would support a UN resolution to get Russian troops removed from Hungary. Hungary and Poland have attempted what Marshall Tito accomplished several years ago. Since then Tito has become what might be called the "guiding light" for this reformation. He might also become its unofficial head. A sizable block of neutral nations under the guidance, if not complete leadership, of Mar- shall Tito would indeed present a formidable threat to Russia. Yugoslavia's protest of Russia's action is understandable since a free Hungary plus a free Poland would tend to enhance Marshall Tito's Communist world. HOWEVER, Yugoslavia's representative in the UN went on to say that all nations should refrain from interfering in Hungary's internal affairs since they are capable of handling them- selves. We cannot agree that. a country which has been subjected to ruthless action as Hun- gary has been will be able to recover on her own. The rest of the world has legitimate reasons to be very much concerned with Hungary and to do whatever they can, through the UN, to help them regain thgeir freedom. -DAVID TARR By WALTER LIPPMANN THIS TIME the professional ob- servers, with no, very serious dissenter among them, have long been foreseeing the grand results of the election. There has never been any real doubt that if Presi- dent, Eisenhower was physically able to run again, he would be in- vincible, what with the prosperity of the country, his personal pres- tige both in war and peace, and his achievements as the healer of the internal divisions of this coun- try. While Eisenhower was a cer- tainty from the beginning, it was highly probable that the Demo- cratic party would prove again that it is stronger than the Re- publican party. As this is written, I do not have available' definitive returns on the Congressional and gubernatorial elections. But the indications are that the corres- pondents, the commentators, and the pollsters have been essentially right in distinguishing between Eisenhower and his party. He has had an enormous vote of confi- dence. The Republican party has not had one. The campaign has been clean and decent, but not enlightening or interesting. It takes two to bring on a debate, and the Presi- dent refused to be provoked into debating anything. Since there was a great contented majority behind, him, he did not have to admit that there was any issue to de- were issues which were debatable might have been, to disturb his majority. SINCE THE WEEKEND the in- ternational situation may have reached, and perhaps passed, a very dangerous crisis. The Anglo- French intervention in Suez called for quick and decisive results, for an accomplished fact which creat- ed a new situation. In fact the in- tervention was so slow that in the interval-before the landings and while the Egyptian airfields were being bombed-the Eden govern- ment found itself in a whirpool of opposing forces at home and abroad. At this point the Soviet' govern- ment saw an opportunity which it promptly seized. It threatened to intervene on the side of Egypt, confident that in much of the world it would find sympathy. By this action the Soviet government has re-established its position in Egypt and among Egypt's allies. That position would have been lost 'had the Anglo-French interven- tion been a quick and complete success. To this dangerous threat the Eden government has responded by breaking off the military op- erations at a point where some but not all of its objectives have been achieved. We have responded, as we were bound to do, by warn- ing the Soviet government not to intervene. * * * THE BEST HOPE of the world now lies in the plan which has been voted by the United Nations, for an international force to police the occupied territory after the British, French and Israeli armies withdraw. The success of this un- dertaking is almost certain to de- pend on..whether the Soviet Union really backs it or really opposes it. We can only hope for the best. For the task which is now as- signed to the United Nations is far and away the most difficult in all its history, and yet the great powers, whose unanimity is so necessary to any United Nations action, are as never before divided among themselves. Fortunately, the management of the undertaking is in the hands of Mr. Dag Hammarskjold, as competent, as cool, as astute, and as objective a diplomat as we have seen for many a long day. 1956 New York Herald Tribune Inc. The Daily Official Bulletin is an of- ficial publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no 'editorial1responsibility. No- tices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 mm. the day preced- ing publication. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1956 VOL. LXVII. NO. 43 General Notices Anyone who has rooms to rent for weekends, contact the Union Student Offices. A few more ushers are urgently needed for the Combined Illinois-Michigan Glee Club Concert tonight at Hil Audi- torium. If you wish to usher at this concert please report to Mr. Warner at 7:30 p.m. this evening at the east door of Hill Auditorium. Correction: Late permission for all women students attending, the Con- cert at Hill Auditorium on Mon., Nov. 5, was 11:15. Late permission - All women stu- dents who attended the play at Lydia Mendelssohn on Thurs., Nov. 8, had late permission until 11:10. Late permission: All women students who attended the concert at Hill Audi- torium on Thurs., Nov. 8, had late permission until 11:10. Lectures University Lecture in Journalism. Don Shoemaker, executive director of South- ern Education Reporting Service, pub- lishers of Southern School News, will speak on "Progress of Desegregation" on Mon., Nov. 12, at 3 p.m. in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Plays Gilbert & Sullivan Society presents Ruddigore" Nov. 9 and 10. There are still a few tickets left. Academic Notices Law School Admission Test: Candi- dates taking ,the Law School Admis- sion Test on Nov. 10 are requested to report to Room 100, Hutchins Hall at s:45 a.m. Sat. Two tutorial sections of Sociology I will be offered during the second semes- ter to provide an opportunity for a more intensive and individualized in- troduction to sociology for superior students. Enrollment in each section is limited to ten students. Freshmen and sophomores with a grade point average of 3.0 are eligible to apply for admis- sion to these sections. Interested stu- dents should see Prof. Ronald Freed. man in Room 5626, Haven Hall on Mon. from 10-11 a.m. and 4-5 pim, and Fri., from 4-5 p.m. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for dropping courses without record will be Wed., Nov. 14. A course may be dropped only with the permis- sion of the classifier after conference with the instructor. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for removal of incompletes will be Wed., Nov. 14. Petitions for ex- tension of time must be on file in the Secretary's Office on or before Wed. Nov. 14. Faculty, College of Literature, Science Sand the Arts: Midsemester grades of "D" and "E" are due Wed.. Nov. 14. Send freshman and sophomore reports to 1210 Angell Hall and junior and senior re- ports to 1213 Angell Hall. Doctoral Examination for Vern Har- grave Vincent, Business Administra- tion; thesis; "Accounting Problems of the Tennessee Valley Authority", Sat., Nov. 10, 8th floor conference room, School of Business Administration at 9:30 a.m. Chairman, W. A. Paton. Doctoral Examination for Jack il- bert Scruggs, Pharmaceutical Chemis- try; thesis; "Derivatives of Homopiper- azine", Mon., Nov. 12, 2525 Chemistry 'Building, at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, F. F. Blicke. Placement Notices Personnel Requests: Clinton Machine Co., Clinton, Mich., has openings for Cost Accountants with U.S. Army, Ordnance Ammunition Command, Joliet, Illinois, needs men with training and 2-4 years of experi- ence in Statistics to work as Analyti- cal Statisticians GS 9-12. Institute of African-Amnerican Rela- tions, Inc., Washington, D.C., an- nounces a need for men and women in Accounting, Agriculture, Architecture, Economics--PhD, Engineering, Geogra- phy-Geology, History, Latin, Mathema- tics, Music-woman-MA, Physical Ed- ucation,'Math., Physics, Biology, Chem- istry, and General Science to teach and lecture in Sou~th Africa, Southern Rho- desia, the GoltdCoast, and Nigeria. U.S. Department of Commerce, office of Business Economics, Washington, D.C., is interested in applicants for Ju- nior Professional positions in the Econ- omics field at GS-5 and GS-7 levels. Re- quires a background in Economics and Statistics. Simmonds Aerocessories Inc., Tarry- town, N.Y., is looking for Mechanical Engineers with Internal Combustion experience and preferably some experi- ence in Fuel Injection systems. Would like to find men with some background in the automobile industry. This is a research and development organization, designers and manufacturers of spe- cialized aeronautical and engineering accessories. Wheelabrator Corp., Mishawaka, Ind., needs men between 25 and 35 years of age with training in Engineering and some Industrial Sales experience for the Field Sales Force for Wheelabrator Steel Shot and other metallic abra- sives. New York State Civil Service an- nounces examinations for men and wo- men in Engrg., Architecture, Mental Health, Recreation, Law, Health and Science, Education, Health Inspection, Farming, Construction, Maintenance, Social Work, Medicine and Dentistry, A 4 4 INTERPRETING THE NEWS: War Illogical Now, IMPERFECT BUT ALIVE: DAC's 'The Father' Stimulating Theater By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst NEW RUSSIAN troop deployments, the Hun- garian horror and the resort to force by two of the so-called peace-loving nations have- brought world tensions to a pitch which the Egyptian cease-fire has done little to ease. Friday's battle in the United Nations did nothing to promote peace. Yet it is a time, if there ever was one, for the repression of passions. Britain and France apparently have' recog- nized their mistake in resorting to force in Egypt, and are now urging quick organization of the UN international force that will permit them to withdraw. Israel has reversed her original intention Editorial Staff RICHARD SNYDER. Editor RICHARD HALLORAN NLEE MARKS Editorial Director City Editor GAIL GOLDSTEIN.................Personnel Director ERNEST THEODOSSIN..............Magazine Editor JANET REARICK,.........Associate Editorial Director MARY ANN THOMAS.:...............Features Editor DAVID GREY...............,.... ...... Sports Editor RICHARD CRAMER............Associate Sports Editor STEPHEN HEILPERN..........Associate Sports Editor VIRGINIA ROBERTSON.............Women's Editor JANE FOWLER ............. Associate Women's Editor ARLINE LEWIS............Women's Feature Editor JOHN HIRTZEL .................. Chief Photographer Business Staff DAVID SILVER, Business Manager MILTON GOLDSTEIN.....Associate Business Manager of keeping the Sinai Peninsula. There is hope that world reaction and the clear danger of 'starting a world war will restrain ' her from further adventures, such as an invasion of Jordan. THE UNITED NATIONS, alerting her air force and deploying fleets both to have them in position if needed and to avoid concentrations which might permit another Pearl Harbor, is being very careful to say what she is doing so that Russia will not misunderstand and fear a surprise. There was nothing to support rumors of general mobilization in the United States. Indeed, the tensions had mounted just when 'it seemed they should be relaxing after two hectic weeks. It is true that there are dangers of war. They come chiefly from two possibilities. One, the one that causes chief concern among American officials, is that somebody will make a fatal slip,.unwittingly creating a situation in which someone else will have to react. The other is that Russia might decide the North Atlantic Alliance has been sufficiently weakened, both by Anglo-French-American political differences and by the diversion of Anglo-French military power to the south side of the Mediterranean, to warrant a deliberate attack on Europe. THERE ARE good reasons for believing that Russia will do no such thing. Her officials have indicated they understand, just as well as it is understood in the West, that to chance war in these times is to chance annihilation'. Thev umderstand that it will be years before IN AUGUST Strindberg's "The Father," the Dramatic Arts Cen- ter has chosen what may be the most difficult play of its career. Under the direction of David Met- calf, 'the players deliver an essen- tially provacative performance, one that is more than mere en- tertainment and thus is, if un- even, still very worthy. "The Father" is a very curious play. Like most of Strindberg's work, it is inextricably wound up with his own life and it is one of a series of marital melodramas that evolved from a life of per- sonal strife and anguish. But it is not a really top flight job; and while one cannot brush it aside like a piece of lint, one must ack- nowledge that it is not a master- ful whole, rather possessing some individually effective scenes. The central characters, the Captain and his wife Laura, are drawn in immense proportions and the drama becomes superficially a conflict between two wills: the other characters - the Nurse, the Pastor, Bertha - are sketches which are used not as individuals in themselves, but as contributors to and revealers of the main con- flict. "THE FATHER'S" theme is an- nounced initially by Nojd (James E. Brodhead), a servant who has gotten a local lass pregnant. The Pastor (Ralph Drischell) asks him why he will not marry the girl if he is the father, whether he does not think it is wrong to leave her of children: "She sells her birth- right by legal contract and sur- renders all her rights. In return the husband supports her and her children." And then Laura begins to taunt him: how can he be cer, tain Bertha is his daughter? - * * * AS MANY playgoers are sur- prised to learn, Strindberg works out his characterization in essen- tially Freudian terms, even though he predates Freud's major work by a good many years. Yet, this should not be startling, for new ideas are not really born in the mind of a single man. And Strind- berg is, in many respects, a pro- phetic thinker and writer, one who questions and answers individual human motivation in twentieth- century terms and one who is im- mensely concerned with the social implications the emancipation of womanhood has brought. In "The Father, Strindberg makes his Captain a man ridden with Oedipal problems, to whom the Nurse points out, "The moth- er was your friend, you see, but the woman was your enemy." And he makes of Laura a somewhat non-intelligent woman who is completely amoral and who is de- sirous only of being a mother to a man who has since become a lover. To make paternal insecurity the theme of a tragedy is a difficult business, and Strindberg does not quite bring it off. For that matter, neither does the DAC.. Despite Strindberg's making the Captain problem has been displaced, pa- ternity emphasized as the diffi- culty when the difficulty is really the Captain's lack of perspective. Moreover, Strindberg constantly emphasizes Laura's inability to fool anyone else, while she man- ages to tie her husband's mind in the knots of insanity. Laura is too stupid and too silly to really be hated. "The Father" is more a work- ing out of Strindberg's emotional difficulties than a tragedy; and when the Captain goes into his monologue against women .who have left his embryo unnourished, given him disease and have tor- tured him, he becomes neither very noble or interesting, but an adolescent man who has destroyed himself through his own ridicu- lousness. * * * JOSEPH GISTIRAK plays the Captain with a one-toned raspi- ness, as a man entirely wrapped up in his own problems and unaware of the people who exist about him. Actor Gistirak is all too often so loud in his lines that the unistrut lighting quivers above. But in two scenes, where he talks with his wife about their early love and when, clad in straightjacket, he denounces the whole of woman- kind, he achieves real effective- ness. Yet his Captain is a self-cen- tered man devoid of any hu- mor, almost self-consciously seri- ous. Audrey Ward plays Laura with probably all the inflections that RALPH Drischell is a spineless Pastor and Marie Gilson a self- conscious mother type - in fact, nearly everyone in "The Father," from playwright to players, is self- conscious. But to Nell Burnside and direc- tor David Metcalf go many honors for making the role of Bertha be- lievable. She is one of Strindberg''s most impossbile characters, a sev- enteen-year-old girl who acts like an infant. Miss Burnside's playing makes Bertha not only, possible, but probable; it is a very good performance. DESPITE the inadequacy of both Strindberg and the DAC in "The Father," this is one of those rare performances that oughthnot to be missed. It is not that Ann Arbor has suddenly received great theater; more that "The Father" manages to be really stimulating theater. For all too long Ann Arbor has been given dull, listless things or things which were fun for two- and-a-half hours, but which have been forgotten an hour after the presentation. "The Father" is what the DAC has long been trying to do rather unsuccessfully - to bring stimulation to a defunct at- mosphere, to provoke thought in- stead of relaxation, to inspire audi- ence interest instead of audience vegetation. It has been too long a while for plays which were "nice" and "fun" and nothing more to dominate local theater. * * * - 14 I