cl Al Migan Dally Sixty-Eighth 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 ons Are Free 11 Prevail" s printed in The Michigan gaily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. 1$, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: VERNON NAHRGANG The Da ily's Role In the University Community ROLE of The Michigan Daily on campus been debated ever since its first issue tember 29, 1890. It then served a com- of a few thousand persons primarily ep-booster and chronicle of the Univer- rospering athletic program. It was not 1 then to see a front page headline and orial agree that the football team "must p,,' then The Daily has increased the size ember of its pages, extended their scope ude national and, international news eatly broadened its coverage of campus ts news columns have ceased to plead uses, while its editorial columns plead nore, and with greater diversity of opin- Daily's changing role on campus, how- annot realistically be discussed without fining the nature of the University com- it serves. ' COMMUNITY of nearly 30,000 is het- eneous in age, interests and outlook; eographically and organizationally di- Zany ways; individually it is often bust-, Ih thought, discussion and activity; ,col- r it is frequently inert. Its common goal progress of knowledge andrthe retreat prance, but its common problems are discussed among its segments. )aily is, it seems strange to say, the only on which serves this community jointly rsonally on a day-to-day basis. It and, thery publications, the University presi- he athletic teams, . the annual corn- ent exercises and the name of the ity of Michigan are among the few which represent the University commu- ntly and on a long-run basis. Among 'he Daily is unique in its ability to des- scuss and debate before the entire Uni- community its individual and collective a and problems. unique ability thus defines what the r ole of The Daily should be: the clear ion, discussion and debate of those which concern the University commu- it all of which, of course, occur within ines. .THER factor enters into The Daily's. tion: the financial independence af. by the paper's "monopolistic position" ipus and the editorial independence is "sixty-seven years of editorial free-, have permitted. This independence hat, while The Daily wants and some- quires for sustenance the respect of the it is also permitted to achieve what it requires most: self-respect and obedience to its own standards of what is important and what is praiseworthy. These standards may not be the best possible or even the best to be found within the Uni- versity community, but they are the only ones which the Daily can honestly follow and pre- sent to its readers. In granting the staff this freedom to follow its own standards, the community has a right to expect that those standards shall reflect the more mature, thoughtful and nobler parts of the staff. And given standards reflective of those parts, the community has a right to ex- pect greater conformity to them than it has learned to recognize in many segments of the nation's press. It has granted the Daily staff an "idealist's paradise" which it should expect the staff will neither ignore nor fail to appre- ciate. IN ATTEMPTING to gear its activities to this situation, The Daily cannot be many things which some members of the University from time to time expect it to be. In atempting to reflect in its editorial col- umns the most intelligent and informed stu- dent viewpoint possible, The Daily can never be a passive mirror of campus opinion, a mere; reflection of the consensus, nor can it ignore its responsibility to discuss and debate bygbecom- ing, a neutral observer of the campus scene, choosing to stimulate no one for fear of offend- ing anyone.. In attempting to describe objectively and fairly-- within the limits of human judgment - the news of the day, The Daily cannot be- come a purely political instrument, entirely de- voting itself to the furtherance of a particular viewpoint, however tempting that may be. In attempting to evaluate news And discuss events, The Daily must carefully apply its own standards of what is important and correct, and it cannot abdicate this sometimes frighten- ing responsibility by primarily becoming a pub- licity organ for campus groups or a public re- lations representative for the University. If it sometimes uncovers the unpleasant or criti- cizes the faulty, it -does so usually in the hope of improvement and always because only thus can it adequately serve the community. IN SHORT, in living up to its proper role on the University campus, The Daily must be, not a political tool, a passive reflection or a cheery glorification of life at the University, but a newspaper, one which lives up to the best deals of active, thoughtful, stimulating and honest journalism. -PETER ECKSTEIN Editor "If We're Gonna Have 'Em, We Might As Well Use 'Em" " . COURT 's FOLLOWIM4 EVoEP SEANS OF TEER o 0 Ii. FOLL'BC t P _rOaACCO ' F 7 1~ a PART OF UNIVERSITY LIFE: Students Must Know Issues Da ly Editorial Page MOVIES AND THEATER: Audience, Productions Both Need Improvenen By JEAN WILLOUGHBY rJMOUBLED EXILES from the vast amorhphous deserts of midwes television, class B movies, and soggy popcorn have traditioi looked to the university town as the sole outpost of civilized soc Here, supposedly, in this oasis of the intelligentsia, there exists a hU order of intellectuallife in all its varied phases. Great gatherings of literate people, united by an insatiable th for knowledge, with the wisdom of the ages and the finances of the s legislature at their command make inevitable in this harried individu mind, the perpetual presence of good music, good film entertainm BEET THE page you are now reading. It is The Daily staff's aim that this news- aper-and especially the editorial page- omplement the educational menu of the 'niversity, seeking to replace leakage from- tat has been "liberal" education, so much eeded in our too specialized and philistine ociety..; In pursuit of this objective, comment on this age will concern the gamut of disciplines >und in the Literary College's catalogue and hen some. For those undergraduates and grad- ates channeling most of their study in one eld, we hope a display of, and/or commentary ;on, the current ideas and events in a spec- um of fields will be of service. N THE MAIN, comment will be presented through four different types of articles:, The editorial. Written exclusively by Daily litorial staff members, of which there are early 80, student-written editorials are opin- nated comments, for the most part, upon in- rnational, domestic and campus politics and ciety, plus frequent critiques of University, Iministration, faculty and student body. Fol- wing an editorial policy uncommon in the ewspaper industry, The Daily does not have, i editorial line-that is, contradictory opin- ns often appear, where one editorialist might Ivocate recognizing Red China one day, and .e next day's paper an editorial could argue aintenance of the status quo. Inconsistency is its disadvantages in this field, but we see ore than sentimental value in expressive free- Editorial Staff PETER ECKSTEIN, Editor JAMES ELSMAN, JR. VERNON NAHRGANG Editorial Director City Editor )NNA HANSON... ~. ....Personnel Director kMMY MORRISON ...............Magazine Editor ILIAM HANEY ...,.......Features Editor 3SE PERLBERG........... .Activities Editor )WARD GERULDSEN ....Associate Editorial Director ROL PRINS .........Associate Personnel Director ,MES BAAD. M. ,........ .. Sports Editor UCE BENNETT.......... .Associate Sports Editor HN HILLYER .......,...-..Associate Sports Editor dom. The editorials will bear personal signa- tures, and it would aid the serious reader to identify the individual "lines" of the editorial- ists as the semester progresses. The columnists. Judging from The Daily's syndicated copy, a hasty observer would likely remark on the paper's Democratic bent, since our cartoonist, the renowned Herblock, plus writers Drew Pearson and Walter Lippmann, fill our columns. However, attesting to the non-partisanship behind playing this lineup, the trio has survived through both Republi- can and Democratic regimes in the Senior Edi- torial offices. We believe Pearson's approach to the understanding of government from the personalities-and-intrigues viewpoint is nearly as valuable as Lippmann's analytical and vis- ionary tack. Two Associated Press commentators, who generally eschew partisanship, J. M. Roberts. and William Ryan, will appear frequently. Lo- cally, Generation Editor David Newman will contribute a chatty appraisal of campus cul- tural life, and another staffer will write a weekly television column. A what-the-newstory- didn't-tell column will be written weekly by The Daily's reporter of Student Government Council. The reviews. A special staff of nearly 25 stu- dents and faculty supply critical comment on movies, plays, concerts, books and other cul- tural offerings in and out of Ann Arbor vicini- ty. Plays and concerts are reviewed the morn- ing after their opening. The features. Through this vehicle, we hope to achieve greatest latitude and depth. Staff writers-and in special cases, readers-will prepare articles on subjects geared to the University community. Such varied topics' as radiation hazards, medicine, the institution of marriage, faiths men live by and foreign stu- dents' anaylses of the United States= are in our year's plans. WE OF THE DAILY invite the reader to par- ticipate actively with us in expression of opinion on the editorial page. Besides reading the page regularly, we would welcome critical comment from readers in the form of letters- to-the-editor. As noted before, in some cases By VERNON NAHRGANG Daily City Editor THE MAJOR problem facing every mature University stu- dent today is the achievement of a proper balance between the aca- demic and the extracurricular. That, the academic work must be supplemented by the extracurricu- lar is no longer questioned; it is merely a matter of finding the most workable combination to suit the individual. On a campus of 24,000 or more, the opportunities for activity are unbounded No matter what the individual's field, there is a cor- responding activity outside the classroom to add to hi store of knowledge and experience in an often more practical way. Whether the student seeks to add to his studies through extra- curricular work, or whether he in- tends to supplement them by doing something /entirely different, the opportunity is there. Most mature students, over the years, seem to take advantage of that opportunity. Others waver, undecided, finally finding some participation more advantageous than none. THOSE WHO do become active In "outside" activities find them- selves leaders in the community, thinkers in an academic world. Those who fail to become active often keep, in contact with the campus world by following the "issues" and the problems, aca- demic or not, that plague the cam- pus year in and year out. An( these issues aredthe heart of the campus and its day-to-day life. They are the backbone of the University's existence, the nerves that tie together the semesters and make them differ from one another. For anyone not to be actively aware of the campus and its prob- lems is to live in a dark world and work blindly toward an endless goal. Fortunately, the rate of aware- ness at the University is higher than average; that rate is a tribute to the intelligence and ca- pability with which the University community operates. * * * BUT, before there can be aware- ness, there must be understanding. Here, as anywhere else, an under- standing of the issues is necessary to the following of them. New students must take the first opportunity to acquaint them- selves with the campus and its thought; they must become im- mediately aware so that they can take part all the sooner in the extracurricular world of the Uni- versity And, too, the issues are many. They concern academic matters of rising enrollments and falling standards, they involve the rights and duties of Student Government Council, they question the rights of small groups limiting member- ship on a racial or religious basis, they examine the relative import- ance in the University of such things as athletics and social affairs. But, numerous as they may be, these are important issues; they in numbers of students. The pro- jection shows that the present population of about 24,000 will be doubled bY ,1970. Obviously, the question is what to do with all these students. The problem is even more severe be- cause the steady increase yearly of 1,000 to 1,500 forces the Univer- sity, held back by lack of funds, to make short-range provisions to accomodate small additional num- bers instead of the needed long- range projects. There are several possible an- swers to the enrollments problem. One, current at Michigan State University, is to limit enrollments after a certain number. This can- not be the correct answer because it places a barrier to higher educa- tion for otherwise well-qualified persons.- ANOTHER being triedat the University of Detroit beginning this fall, is to televise classes. This method has its merits, but it also keeps the student further from the needed atmosphere of a Univer- sity community and its stimula- tion-which comes both from the teacher and from the other stu- dents. A third method, that current at the University, is to expand in all directions to meet the growing numbers. While perhaps superior to the other methods all told, it, too, has serious drawbacks and limitations. Lack of funds to both maintain present facilities and construct new ones, danger of being unable to provide capable instruction, and the need for personal instruction and stimulation are all inherent objections to a directionless expan- sion. But these are just part of the problems of enrollments and standards. More will undoubtedly be heard as this issue comes up for discussion again and again this fall-as the most important academic problem at the Univer- sity. * * * ANOTHER of th major prob- lems students must face, and one more specifically belonging to this campus, is the place of Student Government Council as the voice of the students. Having completed two full years as the official student body, SGC was given blanket approval by the University Regents last spring, finally.establishing it as the Uni- versity's student voice. But not only is SGC an im- proved student body-it is also a much listened to body. Many of SOC's resolutions and recommen- dations of the past two years have met with full consideration and approval of the University and in some cases the Regents. Calendaring, lecture committee, driving ban, student affairs-all these specific areas received SOC's consideration recently and result- ant recommendations, accepted by t h e University administration, have made their mark. R " * SGC, THEN, is a potentially powerful body. There can be no doubt that it is held in great esteem by the University. be watched, followed, listened to and understood. And the Indi- vidual must make an effort to pass along his thoughts to that group that represents him, for only then can SGC be a true student voice. A GROWING trend in human relations presents another con- cern for the wide-awake student on campus. Ann Arbor's human relations commission, established just this summer, and the human relations board operating in con- junction with SGC, are pointing. the way in this area. The .concern is for a wider ac- ceptance of other human beings on all levels-a breaking down of old, has-been social and economi- cal barriers among equal citizens.. The University's refusal to rec- ognize a group barring member- ship on racial or religious grounds is in line with this tradition--and it led to last year's most vital issue, that of "Sigma Kappa." The local sorority was called to question when its national sus- pended the charters of chapters at two others schools which had recently pledged Negro women.' After some months of debate and consideration, SGC, whose jurisdiction extends over all stu- dent organizations, found Sigma Kappa in violation of University rules and, after two more long months of deliberation, decided to give the sorority until the fall of 1958 to do something about the situation or cease to exist on cam- pus. What the sorority had to do was not outlined, however, and that alone will be a problem for cam- pus consideration this year. * , , YET THESE are far from being the only "issues" of which stu- dents should be aware. The lengthy list does not permit enumeration here. But these are the major ones; others may come up to surpass them, and if so, they will Abe watched and understood as they come. Meanwhile, it is in the best in- terests of the individual to make his acquaintance with these basic issues as soon as possible; they will enrich his University years with fullness and meaning. and above all, good theater. That the actuality might differ from the dream, that such a town as Ann Arbor or Madison or Lansing should be lacking in any one of these is, to him, inconceivable. Unfortunately-both for us and for him--the poor fellow would suffer a less than pleasant shock of disillusionment were he to ex- amine, with any degree of care or discernment, the reality of Ann Arbor's cultural milieu. Good music is undoubtedly here,' interesting movies come aroupd as often as might be expected, but good theater, the hallmark of an intelligent civilization, seems to have passed the town completely. Despite the existence of many extremely competent dramatic groups, an active and ambitious University department of speech, and potentially enthusiastic audi- ences, only one professional acting organization, the Ann Arbor Civic Theater, seems to promise produc- tions in town this year. THE REASONS for the appar- ently paradoxical phenomenon are not difficult to discover. Good theater is the result of an active, cyclical process, depending for its success upon the maintenance of a finely working inter-relationship between the creative and respon- ive forces. When draina proves continually dissatisfying to an audience, the people, refusing to repeat their subjection to boredom or disgust, do not support further perform- ances. Lack of support results in a financial drain 6n the acting group which, in turn, forces dramatic standards to be lowered still fur- ther. The checken and the egg develop simultaneously. This conclusion is a valid one; it forces responsibility for the effec- tiveness and inertia of Ann Arbor theater to be divided equally be- tween producers and consumers. Claims that student apathy, ig- norance, and disinterest create an essentially infertile field where no drama, however energetic, may survive are partially true. "Name"' plays-often worthless ones-draw the only substantial crowds, while more worthwhile1 productions are performed before rows of vacant seats. Elvis Presley and Yul Brynner seem to offer entertainment that is more appeal- ing to the average undergraduate than anything the stage can pro- vide. * * * ..THE FAULT, however, is not entirely due to the weakminded- ness of overgrown adolescents. Plenty of sensible people around town would be perfectly willing to support plays tht were reason- ably well chosen, well acted, and well produced. Unfortunately, they are not offered the opportunity. Works picked for box office appeal alone are often poorly writ- ten and -usually unsuited to the talents available. The few good plays that manage to reach actual presentation level are either, watered-down or over-esoteric in their appeal. Poor business management and sparse technical resources do not make for ready financial success even when attendance is high. , * * * THE SITUATION can get very little worse; it can, on the other hand, get infinitely better. Educa- tion brings with it several rather binding commitments,' and it seems possible that a responsibility to what may be called the arts is one of them. A small bit of discrimination on the part of both audience and producer would do a great deal to improve the general tone of the theater that still exists, and pos- sibly pave the way for a minor renaissance of local drama. MUSIC OUTLOOK: Ann A rbo Festive By DAVID KESSEL MUSICALLY speaking, Ann bor offers its students A townspeople a vast array of i terial encompassing a wide rai of compositions of all possi classifications. During the year, the progra brought to and originating in A Arbor compare in kind i not degree with the offerings to 1 musical appetites of New York a Boston. Thus the reasonably open-min ed individual can accumulate considerable amount of musi experience between football gai and coffee dates. For the would-be diletante p educated in things musical, I music school offers an assortml of courses in the so-called lite ture of music which are guarant4 to keep the student Ina perpeti whirl of recapitulations and velopments duringĀ° a semneter so of musical brainwashing, af which the successful pupil c astound members of the neal audience by exclaiming loud "Aha! There's the. reentrance the second sub-theme!" . . ! FOR THIS is the age of musi awareness. In every modern ho there sits a phonograph surrout ed by tattered recordings. Mus appreciation courses are offered leading magazines. One typ advertisenent shows a wide-e3 girl seated next to her astonis escort at a symphony, "That's Brahms' Fourth hey playing," she tells him, and h self: (Last month I didn't kn Beethoven' from Cole Porter)." This sudden desire of vast qua tities of people to "learn musi has been accompanied by immer upheavals nationally, and prop tionately appropriate upheavals cally. On the national scene, the pr ducers of phonographs and cordings are working at top'spei Orchestras and Opera compan are playing to ever-larger aid ences. And even here in Ann Ar sheltered by hedges and trees frc the cold winds, there has come change. DURING the year, an aAso ment of concerts at Hill Awt torium present the world's g orchestras to capacity audien In the spring, the May. Festi brings the Philadelphia Orchest here for a four day musical mar thon of national fame. Every noted musician of the ce tury has appeared at Hill Au torium: Rachmaninoff pljyed I piano concertos there, Frederi Stock and the old ChicagoASyi phony Orchestra played at' t Festivals for thirty years, Stoko ski and the Philadelphia pe formed. Practically every major cho work has been heard in Hill Auc torium at least once. * * * BUT DURING the years, a sub change has transpired so that now hear Mantovani along iw Ormandy and Munch. And at t May Festival, the loudest applat is given not to Verdi or Beethov or Debussy, but to the "Victo March." Still the overall picture remain unclouded. Within recent memo orchestral performances 'at ,1 have been generally excellent a occasionally superlative. In ti latter category belong The N York Philharmonic's Shostakovit Tenth, The Boston Symphon Daphnis & Chloe, Choral U3io1i Carmina Burana of Orff, The B 11 n Philharmonic's Beethovei Seventh, to mention a few. In the more informal catego the De Paur performance of Virt Thompson's "Four Saints in Thr Acts" was notable, along with son of the antics of the Boston Pops. * * * FOR SOME reason, the perfort ances of the Stanley Quartet lush Rackham Auditorium ha always attracted a particular elegant audience. This is the hea of the Ann Arbor seekers-afte serious-music and it is difficult i LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick BibId . - ../ \ I\ I