Sixty-Eighth Year S- EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN When Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials' printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This mus t be noted in all reprints. "Pity About The Cold War. Their Land Mass Would Accommodate Our Newer And Longer Cars" COMOE JAY, MAY 13, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS TURNER NAACP Segregation Charges Lower University's Reputation o E I DRAMA SEASON: Miller Retains Power In New 'Bridge' Version AS A PLAYWRIGHT, Arthur Miller strives for an honesty and a dimension most modern dramatists would quail at. Whether he succeeds, which he has done with brilliance, or fails, Mr. Miller is unique in today's theatre, and perhaps tomorrow's. "A View From the Bridge" which opened the Drama Season last night, is a work of enor- mous pretensions, encompassing a strict classical conception of drama with the seamiest side of present day Naturalism. When I first saw the play in New York it was part of a double bill and considerably shorter than the present version. Mr. Miller's new script is better than the old because it explains much of what had been hazy. But it is a lesser play because it now over explains. Part of its terrific power was once in its subtlety. With that lost, the play is guilty of forcing some of its ideas upon the. audience. The intellectual quality is obscured; the emotive quality is still dynamic. And so, last night, al- though I was extremely moved, I kept wishing a few judicious cuts had been made. s * s :. >4' 'EL M S 1 ARGE universities have a tendency to move 'slowly and with a great deal of deliberation id debate - if they feel like it. But in some cases, the complex administra- ve machinery can swiftly be cleared of all d tape, special committees and other me- ianical obstructions. This administrative usecleaning usually comes when a univer- y uncovers a problem and finds it to be of serious and urgent nature. But all too often, e words "serious" and "urgent" are not at- ched to campus issues instituted by the stu- nt body. The question of dormitory segregation seems fall into this classification. The possibility discrimination in University residence halls s been debated, studied and reviewed. TUDENT - ADMINISTRATIVE committees have been formed, petitions distributed and scussions held on the subject since the Con- egational Disciples Guild brought the issue the campus' attention last fall. To date, le positive action has- been taken by the niversity to prove or disprove the existence of such practices.' The Michigan State Conference of National Association for the Advancement of Colored People learned of the University's housing ap- plications and filed a formal resolution with the University and Governor G. Mennen Wil- liams. Charging dormitory segregation in Univer- sity residence halls, the state NAACP confer- ence called upon the Governor to take the "ne- cessary action" to bring a halt to the alleged practices. The organization has even proposed an "outside investigation" if immediate steps are not taken. In light of the recent American Association of University Professors condemnation, the University certainly has not improved its repu- tation in the eyes of the Michigan resident. Bad publicity has proven disastrous to edu- cational institutions in the past - especially state-supported institutions. The 'implications of AAUP condemnation may be reached too far to be' easily corrected by the University. But the University can act on the NAACP discriminatory charges. While they may not all be based on proven fact, the feelings expressed in recent charges represent a setback in Uni- versity-taxpayer relations. -BARTON HUTHWAITE THE PLAY adheres to Greek tragedy purposefully. Even the chorus is presented, represented by a narrator who also figures in the plot. The idea is good. The execution is not so successful, for lawyer Alfieri speaks a piece too literate, too self-consciously fulfilling a literary heritage. It does not harmonize with the immediacy of drama, though much of what it says is fine to read. With these reservations, and all they entail, "A View From the Bridge" is still brilliant. In spite of its excesses and over-sensitivity to literary form, the play has a rare force. The plot concerns a Brooklyn longshoreman Eddie Carbone, a simple, somewhat inarticulate man who lives with his wife and 18-year- old niece. Carbone is over-solicitous of the girl and cannot help being jarred by her sudden change into womanhood. As the play begins, he i is engaged in secretly' sneaking two relatives from Italy into the coun- try, illgeally and unbeknownst to the immigration authorities. Marco is a hard working man with a wife and sick children back home he AT THE STATE: must, support. ut shis brother Rodolfo Is a Bu i rte oof salight-headed youth, impractical and still a boy. In a short time, Rodolfo and Carbone's niece Catherine fall in love and so be- gins the destruction, in the Hel- lenistic tradition, of Eddie Car- I-- - * -x-*MA 1.. -1441,- , 1 , - - I t' .4 -'1 iriticism Shows 'U Statement Need E NATIONAL Association for the Advance- University Residence Hall system-at least at WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Italian Politics in Retrospect bone. For Eddie, although he does not realize it, is in love with the girl. As the tensions mount he projects a monstrous fiction on the boy and, in an electric scene, brings about a denouement as in- evitable and as bloody as any in Sophocles. ment of Colored People has been fregently criticized-perhaps rightfully-for moving too fast. Desegregation is a delicate problem, the argument runs, so that progress should be slow and deliberate. There are times, however, when daring, purposeful action is necessary; there are times when America must clearly state we are striving-striving successfully-to fulfill our ideological goals. This is one of those times. Little Rock, the South'in general, and northern cities like New York, Chicago and Detroit are obvious examples of our most serious failing-the lack of some our proud claim of tolerance. As disgraceful as the situation in these places is, we have an even greater disgrace. ANN ARBOR is the hone of one of the coun- try's greatest Universities. Ann Arbor has no sprious racial or religious problem and has no provocation for one. The University is dis- tinguished for its International students' pro- gram and proud of its tradition of liberal education. America's greatest disgrace-as many' inter- national students will attest-is that great centers of liberal thinking like Ann Arbor should have a tolerance problem. True, we do not have race riots or lynching, but we do have open discrimination. The city and the University allow it in room- ing houses and apartments. The University will approve an off-campus housing facility even if the owner admittedly practices segregation. The present-not only fails to actively encourage integration of roommates, but in effect, through the wording on the application blanks, asks the student if he has any prejudices. OUR NOTORIOUSLY "apathetic" student body is making enormous strides to over- come bigotry-at least written acknowledge- ment of it-at the University. They have been working in the area of fraternities and sorori- ties, University residences and off-campus hous- ing. This work has not been carried out irre- sponsibly by self-made martyrs, nor by loud chavinists, nor by "wide-eyed liberals." The work has been quietly and efficiently carried out by intelligent concerned students. AMONG these people, opinion varies as to bow far and how quickly the University should move. But there is one minimum that all seem to agree upon: the University of Michigan should .firmly and clearly declare that it is unequivocally opposed in principle to discrimi- nation. Further, it should publicly pledge that it will strive as rapidly and as determinedly as possible to end discrimination in the University and in the community. It would be an additional shame 'if the University had to be forced into such a program by state-wide politics. It would be a terrible thing for the University to acknowledge that it is more responsive to outside political neces- sity, than the ideals of its own students. -JAMES SEDER .1 (EDITOR'S NOTE: Drew Pearson is now in Italy covering the forthcom- ing Italian elections - the first na- tional vote of a major western power since the Russian Sputnik. This is his first dispatch from Rome.) ROME-Visiting modern, thriv- ing, energetic, ancient Rome to- day brings a lot of memories. They go back a long way and en- compass a lot of the heartaches, the woes, the political ups and downs, and the great human vic- tories of Italy. The firstmemdry goes back to the days before Mussolini, right after World War I, when I ar- rived in Rome with a knapsack on my back, an economizing young tourist taking a couple of weeks off from postwar reconstruction work in Montenegro to gaze bug- eyed at the wonders of ancient Rome. Rome was sleepy, lethargic and delightful. * * * IT WAS also awash with patri- otic boasts that it alone had won the war and of nationalistic de- mands for Fiume, parts of Aus- tria and the Adriatic Coast. Stop- ping in Fiume en route back to Yugoslavia I was arrested by swaggering Italian Carabinieri be- cause I spoke Serb. An American passport and proof that I was born in the distant city of Evans- ton, Ill., finally won my release. That was in 1920. My next memory of Italy was in 1923. Mussolini had just taken over. It was his proud boast that the trains now ran on time. They By DREW PEARS4 did. But traveling from Milan to Rome, my trunk was neatly rifled, a pair of gold cuff links removed. Maybe, I thought, the new fascist regime could do with less effi- ciency and more honesty. I finally secured an interview with Mussolini. I was a green newspaperman then and Musso- lini sensed it. I have never for- gotten the drama of my entrance -a rather dark, long room in the Palazzo Chigi, a man- crouched over a desk at the far end of the room, what seemed an endless walk across the room, the bare in- laid floor, portraits on the wall,, a stern, bald-headed figure in uni- form, his frown, his intensity. "Your name is Pearson," he said, wasting no time. "You have come to ask me about commu- nism. It is finished, gone forever. We have banished it from Italy-- completely." * * * - I HAVE thought of that inter- view many times during recent visits and especially today as Italy prepares to go to the polls in a great national test of Communist strength. Banishment of Commu- nism or any political party by force never pays, and Italy now has the biggest Communist Par- ty of any country outside Russia. On the same day I marched nervously across the room toward the desk of Il Duce, I interviewed Francisco Nitti, ex-Premier of Italy and leader of the democratic opposition which had fought fascism. He was genial, friendly, talked about the need for a free press, free speech. Next day his home was ran- sacked by a gang of fascists, his f u r n i t u r e broken, his papers strewn about the street. Nitti went into exile. I doubt if my in- terview had anything to do with the raid, as Nitti's pro-democratic statements to me had not yet been published. The raid was just part of the fascist technique of stamping out not only Commu- nism but all political opposition. There was another visit to Italy -in 1936, when an arrogant fascist regime had just ridden roughshod over helpless Ethiopia. It was a visit I remember with no pleasure. * * BROADCASTING shortwave from Milan on Jan. 3, 1948, I sug- gested to American listeners that citizens of Italian descent write * their friends and relatives in Italy encouraging them in their battle for a democratic republic, and to so vote in the 1948 elections. They did. Later an average of a million letters a week poured out of the New York Post Office for Italy. The Communists made no gains that spring. Today Italy faces another great ejection. They come every five years here, and they are just as vital to this new democracy as our four-year elections are at home. Perhaps more so, because ancient Italy is very new politically. (Copyright 1958 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) p Equal Time.,for Studies WOMEN'S Judiciary Council's success in ex- tending women's closing hours till mid- night during the coming examination period deserves commendation, but it should be, an initial step in a re-examination of women's hours. In view of the closing hours .of the new undergraduate library, the 11 p.m. curfew pre- viously imposed on coeds during exam time seems senseless. Few indeed are the coeds who hop into bed promptly at 11:30 on the eve of a final exam. The time extension gives women an additional hour of study time free from interruption. League Senate unanimously approved the trial plan effecting such an extension. The lack of debate on the proposal indicates such an extension appears wholly valid to a cross sample of Michigan women. Women's Judic and League-and -'in essence, all women on' campus-should now look ,into the broader question of establishing midnight as the stand- .ard weekday closing hour for women. New library hours demand a re-evaluation and ultimate change in women's closing hours. THE LIBRARY is open until midnight each. weekday, yet every evening at 10, a mass exodus of women begins. By 10:20 the library seems to have become part of a men's school containing only a few female invaders. This is not merely an argument for women's rights, for it appears evident that a midnight curfew would greatly benefit coeds in their studies. The library offers students a quiet and decidedly comfortable place to study. It also provides excellent reference facilities. Idealisti- cally, at least, it is the aim of every university student to study as successfully as he can SUCCESSFUL studying depends on efficient use of time, and a 10:30 curfew can be detrimental to a student's study schedule. Often the evening affords the only time when a student can depend on a Afrolonged period of study. The library is preferred study spot for many coeds and present closing hours may mean a significant interruption in studying. Admittedly there are many coeds who would not care to stay in the library until a care- fully calculated few minutes before midnight. But there are many who would. In full consider- ation of those desiring to use the library to its full advantage, the weekday closing hours should be changed. -RUTH BERS INTERPRETING THE NEWS: World Revolves Around U.S. Money THE combination of Brooklyn longshoremen with the patterns of the tragic flaw comes alive in Mr. Miller's hands. Last night's production lived up to it in most departments and failed in a few others. Director John O'Shaugh- nessy staged the play wtih an ap- preciation of the dramatic excite- ment and did not fall slave to the literary devices. As Eddie Carbone, Luther Adler gives .a gigantic performance, growing slowly from a humorous and simple man into a tormented, but always recognizable, person. Not once did he lose contact with the flesh and blood of the role. It is a difficult role - he must be human and he must be an im- mense portrait' of Man at the same time. Adler is more tlan capable of coping with that. The other performances were generally, good, except in the real- ly disastrous performance of Sally Mills as the girl. Miss Mills chose to play the all-important role .of Catherine as if she were doing Corliss Archer. Alan Mixon and Louis Zorich did well with the two immigrants, while Martin Wolfson's hard, tough-talking Alfieri made the part a little more palatable Even when Arthur Miller misses, he is better than his con- temporaries. " -David Newman ,Suspicion DOES the American Association of University' Professors take adequate action against "violators of academic freedom?" Does it fail to to "follow through" in protect- ing teachers against "unfair prac- tices?" Note the phrasing of the ques- tions, which are taken from 'a piece of "straight" reporting on the education page of the New York Times. The tacit premises: 1) a university that incurs the Association's displeasure is eo ipso a "violator of academic freedom," and 2) a finding by the Associa- tion that a "practice" is "unfair" makes the practice unfair. The AAUP, far from being what it pretends to be, is merely an association of 10,000 university professors. It was captured, many years ago, by academic-freedom extremists who have attempted to put over axioms about the teach- ter's relation to his university, to his society, and to truth that, in our own view at least, will not bear even the most casual critical ex- amination; and, in the recent struggle over the Fifth Amend- ment, it has lent powerful support (for despite its small membership it is powerful) to those who would undermine our internal secritr For all three reasons the presumption, when a dispute arises between the Association and a university, is not the side of the Association. And it behooves all of us, therefore, to examine each and every such dis- pute on its merits. No one, we trust, will understand us to wish the nation's teachers to be left wholly at the mercy of the administrators of its institutions I "MARJORIE Morningstar" occa- sionally verges on being cute, but most of the time it is just plain silly. This story of a young prin- cesh who conquers west-side New York and the lower Catskills is neither convincing nor particular- ly entertaining. "Marjorie Morningstar" bears strong resemblances to Little Or- phan Annie. Marjorie is better situated, of course, but the tri- umphs and tragedies of both hero- ines have a common interminable quality. The history of Marjorie Morningstar might have been more successfully conveyed through the comic strip medium than thl cinema. This adaptation of Her- man Wouk's novel could easily have been an adaptation from something out'of the Sunday fun- nies. Marjorie Morganstern is an as- pirting actress who makes the mis- take of falling in love with the wrong man. Natalie Wood plays this young Jewish girl, who ulti- mately reaches emotional maturity right before your very eyes. Marjorie's mistake is Noel Air-. man, played by Gene Kelly. He is a reprobate entertainer who ap- parently did not have a proper religious childhood. Noel is world- ly-wise, and most anxious to infuse some of his wisdom on Marjorie. She resists, of course, because she's got a five thousand year heitage of Moses and the ten command- ments backing her up, not to men- tion her mother. Marjorie's been well'brought up and consequently knows what's right. * * * NOEL, who isn't in the market for a wedding band, fails to come up to Mrs. Morganstern's stand- ards for her daughter. Marjorie dutifully tries to give him up for some better prospect, but her hea won't let her. Anyway, wherever she goes, there is a constant whirlpool of promising young doctors, lawyers, and playwrites who invariably fall in love with her. But Our Gal Sunday leaves them all broken- hearted. Marjorie won't sacrifice her principles for sex, love, fame or anything. The moral of the story is that if you're beautiful, good, religious, and rich, you can afford to be independent. Ed Wynn, who play's Marge's Uncle Samson, is about the only solid, un-stereotyped character in the film. Unfortunately, he dies of a ' heart attack half-way through. Now that the warmer weather has finally hit Ann Arbor, there seems little reason for anyone wanting to sit through the history of Marjorie Morganstern. It may be sociologically sound, but it really isn't much of a movie. -Beverly Gross DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity "of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Building, before 2 p.m. the -day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1958 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 160 L 1,4 {, No U.S. Sticks for Latin Stones By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst f ENTY-FIVE years ago the United States was so con- cerned with depression at home, was so isolated from world af- fairs, that the rantings of a couple of dictators in Germany and Italy made small impression. Today the almost unintelligible mouthings of a bunch of Commu- nists in an ideological dispute are a factor in an important Congres- sional debate. They have a clearly recognizable effect on world af- fairs, and promise to cost the United States money. After World War II, Yugoslavia looked like just another one of the Soviet Union's new Eastern Euro- pean satellites. Then dictator Tito refused to knuckle under to Sta- lin's control and was read out of the Communist family. Three years ago Khrushchev tried to win him back. Now events have revived Yugoslavia's show of in- dependence. The Soviet Union is threatening again, with the vocal aid of Com- munist regimes in China, Albania and Czechoslovakia, to put the economic clamps on Tito if he doesn't recognize that all Commu- nist countries must follow the Kremlin's wishes to promote world conquest. Britain's Manchester Guardian calls the Communist rift an op- portunity for the West, suggest- ing an economic aid program without ideological conditions, conducted through the United Na- tions if possible. "It will help to preserve both peace and freedom in the world at large if the West is seen to help a country which wants to preserve its independence - even if that country happens to be Communist," the paper said yes- terday. Senators were saying much the same in Washington, 'though without any reference to the UN. The old idea of nonpolitical aid programs through the UN, how- ever, was being revived in an- other quarter by Thomas K. Fin- letter, former Air Force secretary, who recommended one for the Middle East. The United States would pay, just the same. Twenty - five years ago the United States revolved within herself. Today the world revolves around her treasury. To The Editor Letters to the Editor must be signed and limited to 300 words. The Daily reserves the right to edit or withhold any letter. . - ,a DOWN in South America, all is not sweetness and light, the good citizens have been throwing stones at the Vice-President of the United States of Amer'ica. This stone-throwing has come upon the United States as somewhat of a surprise. Although there are millions of people somewhere in the world who for one reason or another would like to see a well- laced rock caroom off of Richard M. Nixon's skull, the astonishing thing is that a South American did it - and not just one or two of them but whole mobs. If the State Department and the Executive office 'are alarmed thev might well h heeause The unfortunate truth is that in countries painfully close to home, United States prestige has evidently taken a nose dive. The reason could be that we have just not paid as much attention to these countries because of a pre- occupation with European affairs. But ev-,a more tragic than such demonstrations would be to consider this provocation to cut off all aid to South America or even the countries in- volved. Sen. John Cooper (R-Ky.) suggests such a course. He is advocating a serious and idiotic move. It has not yet been shown that these riots are Progress . * To the Editor: SOMETIMES it is very difficult in admitting that one is an alumnus of certain educational in- stitutions when that particular institution hits the headlines either for discrimination or in defense of some discriminatory policy. This is especially true of the alumnus who finds himself in return to their homelands and into positions of leadership. The Michigan Daily has had a long and fine heritage in its many fights for freedom . . . certainly this year's staff has lived up to the fine tradition and set a pace for the future. Again, congratulations. -Morse Saito, Kobe, Japan i