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 Play Out the Play' -at Stra ro n Opinions Are Free ruth Will Prevail" 'orials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AUGUST 8, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT JUNKFM FuBbright's Criticism Warranted, But Useless IKE HAY while the sun shines," the old naxim goes, but yesterday Sen. William ght gave the old maxim a political twist. utlook for the free world today is not but turning this to his advantage, Sen. ght made political hay by his attack oil iministration's foreign policy. called the United States foreign policy :quate, outmoded and misdirected . in part on a false conception of our al interests and in part on an erroneous sal of the world in which we live." In "The New York Times" said may well a fresh Democratic attack on Admin- on foreign policy, Sen. Fulbright said that ited States foreign policy reflects a "dan- apathy" and "a quite incomprehensible ingness to look facts in the face." mother section of his speech, Sen. Ful- either misunderstood the current Middle crisis or was playing to the galleries, chose to ignore larger immediate con- tions to call "the safety of our men in. iddle East" our "primary concern at the nt." EPT for the last, all of Sen. Fulbright's icisms seem at least plausible. It does as he said, that wve "have one foot over, ink," it does seem that we have lost con- ble ground to the Russians since World I ended. Most important of all, it does to be trie that we should look to our- for the cause of many of our failures. however much Sen. Fulbright's rhetoric ed up his cliches, they will still remain . Critics of an administration's foreign have been active since the end of the I World War with much the same ins. ough Sen. Fulbright did not deliver it, he ted the type of speech that is needed, he said we should not put off a recon- sideration of our foreign policy any longer. We may intuit, or think we intuit, that something is wrong with American foreign policy, but if no other way of doing things is suggested, then the Administration's foreign policy "wins" by default. Sen. Fulbright and other important and knowledgeable critics have done little but criticize, .instead of coming up with a sensi- tive, intelligent alternative for our present foreign policy Perhaps the lack of sugges- tions indicates the difficulty of devising a for- eign policy that is both imaginative and takes into consideration all the problems that the United States must face. THERE have been suggestions, of course, but they have been mainly of a horatory nature, I.e., calls for a "forward looking" or "searching" foreign policy that will enable the United States to "confront the crucial issues that face us in the years ahead.". The words may be brighter and more pol- ished than those given here, but in all cases the actual machinery of the plan is not put out in plain sight. "How?" is a question too little answered in foreign policy discussion. Some advice that pretends to be practical: has been given, but it is usually advice that considers only a few aspects of a complicated problem. No critic in a position of influence has suggested an idea for anything resembling a comprehensive foreign policy, yet they all say that the problem is a comprehensive one. As Sen. Fulbright is one of the Democratic party's chief foreign policy spokesmen; we may hear a constructive program by him in the next few weeks. But until that time, if it comes, Sen. Fulbright himself should realize the truth of the aphorism which he applied to the Ad- ministration. "(A man) is not really a failure until he starts blaming others." -LANE VANDERSLICE Southern Approach a Misnomer rHE SOUTH is allowed to take its own e in the implementation of, the Supreme order to integrate its public schools, as people contend that it should, it may, forever. ere has been considerable talk about dis- ug the emnotional make-up of the South- eople by forcing them to relinquish a "trait V" which is as much a part of the South rn liquor and black eyed peas. There is logic in this reasoning. The Little Rock ent was a good example of what can hap-, f the Southerner's feelings are not taken account. However, indications are that feelings are more than being taken into nt; that, in fact, they are being catered recent court decision testifies to this. federal district court judge set 1965 as a ative" date to begin the integration of ls in Prince Edward County, Virginia. case, in the heart of Virginia's black-belt, een awaiting a decision since 1954, when s one of the original five cases on which United States Supreme Court based its regation decision. >arently time was not of the essence to udge. A minimum of 11 years will have ed, that is providing the "tentative" date tes more than tentative, before he would seek to have integration dispel segrega- 'VEN years is a long time. It is enough ne for an entirely new generation to be ughly indoctrinated by its parents and associates with the segregation principle. It is 11 years for the evil root to more deeply im- bed itself in the Prince Edward community. It seems, then, that the repercussions of the Little Rock incident are actually of more im- port than the incident itself. These repercus- sions manifest themselves in government fear that another Southern community will stage a "Little Rock." And thus the stalling in the blind .hope that either the situation ,will re- solve itself or that perhaps if everyone shuts their eyes, when they .reopen them, the entire issue will have dissolved. THE SITUATION is certainly not a desirable one, regardless of one's views. On one hand is the South - unyielding, threatening to use nothing short of force to maintain segregation. On the other the federal government, more specifically the judciary, is obliged to follow the decision of its highest court, yet is un- willing to stick its neck out so far that it is reddened by popular opinion or by foreign sentiment. The situation does not lend itself to com- promise. Indeed, the federal government's de- cision to give Prince Edward County more time to consider that its schools will be inte- grated has been interpreted in the South as giving in. to the "southern approach to inte- gration." The term is .a misnomer - a mis- nomer because in actuality the only thing the South intends is to maintain its segregation tradition. -JUDITH DONER Much Ado About Nothing ALTHOUGH the accompanying music may have been Elizabe- than, there is more than a touch of the 19th century in the "Much Ado About Nothing" production at Stratford, Ontario. The Canadian group costumes Shakespeare's comedy of plotters and lovers in fashions from the last century and rolls the audi- ence with a heavy melodramatic hand from the same era. But the slapstick and broad humor is delightfully applied, lightened by a mock serious ap- proach that fits the play's title. The group reveals its most effec- tive handling of the over-empha- sis technique in the second act as Benedick overhears his plot- ting friends discuss Beatrice's supposed love for him. THE OTHER elements of the melodrama are also emphasized. Hero swoons dramatically when her virtue is questioned and the villain, Don John is dressed in black. However he lacks more than a mustach. Bruno Gerussi as the brooding plotter is too spitful rather than spiteful as he schemes revenge. In planning to dupe Claudio into doubting first Don Pedro and then Hero, Gerussi's Don John relies too much on sputtering emotion and not enough on a cunning approach. Revelations of a different type of emotion are handled quite con- vincingly by both Beatrice (Eileen Herlie) and Benedick (Christoph- er Plummer) as they let their masks of mutual scorn disinte- grate, allowing a love affair to be- gin. The couple are well matched in their immense abilities. Miss Her- lie can lash cuttingly with a sharp shrew's tongue, yet, just as effec- tively, melt into a silly girl when hearing of Benedick's affections. Plummer magnificently fills the role of the woman-hating soldier, showing he can both swagger with disdain and stagger with love. Equally well, he handles the slap- stick of the second act, showing a sense of timing and facial expres- sion that finds and sustains any pretext for a laugh. AS IN HIS other comedies, Shakespeare employs solid doses of irony in "Much Ado About Nothing." Plummer creditably utilizes it to the fullest. Tony van Bridge provides the necessary gruffness to Dogberry as an English cop and rather de- lightfully fulfills the dumb police- man stereotype. The clowning episodes with Verges and the buffoons of the night watch are generally directed by Michael Langham, with a re- freshing lightness. However, there are scenes, especially when they nab Conrad and Don John's co- conspirator, Borachio, o u t s i d e Hero's window, that the slapstick becomes almost too heavy, re- minding one of the "Keystone Cops." In contrast, the "heavy" scenes, in the church when Claudio hu- miliates Hero and disrupts their wedding, and later when he lays a wreath at what he thinks is her grave, are uniformly well done and provide colorful spectacle to the mirthful comedy. -Michael Kraft AT NORTHLAND: Sweet-Sour Satisfying MELVYN Douglas and a polished cast of supporting perform- ers are providing excellent enter- tainment at Northland Playhouse this week in a pre-Broadway pro- duction of "Sweet and Sour." The problems of a turn-of-the- century Jewish family comprise the plot of the show. The elabor- ate Victorian stage settings are well- executed and a treat to see. "Sweet and Sour" makes its strongest pitch to those whose background and experience en- ables them to identify themselves .with the situations portrayed. But there is sufficient universal appeal in the show to make it a worthwhile evening for almost everyone. The dialect portions have been watered down so that the lines are readily understand- able.'. MELVYN DOUGLAS is cast as Pa, an ' overbearing but lovable eye-glass salesman who has four maiden daughters. The girls are single because Pa feels no man is quite good enough for them. Yet, he blames them. Due to Douglas' strong perform-- ance of the part, Pa emerges as a warm, human person rather than a tyrant. Th ehe. memers nf the cst King Henry I Part I NEW YORK PRO MUSICA: Group's Pefracs'ryFine' Entrance to the Festival Theatre IN THE production at Stratford, Ontario, of what is probably the finest of Shakespeare's history plays, "King Henry IV, Part I," the action begins with a few tell- ing lines from the last scene of Richard SI and ends with an even briefer extract from Henry V, spoken by him as Prince Hal. This minor manipulation of dia- logue, in providing the audience with continuity by showing what has come before, why the situa- tion exists and what will follow ii the next ruler's time, illustrates one thing: The most complete un- derstanding and highest enjy ment of this play comes onlywith close acquaintance and study. While "King Henry IV, Part I" is physically a superb production at Stratford, there aspects of the Shakespeare work that are not clearly brought out for the audi- ence, aspects that are often even disguised from recognition. * * * THE MOST unfortunate of these Is theconflictbewee Prine Hal and Hotspur. As the latter, Jason Robards, Jr., ini spite of a fine, resonant voice that is deeply effective, loses much of the meaning and artistry of the verse by allowing himself to be caught up in the rhythm of recitation, a rhythm he easily communicates to the audience. Robards is nevertheless a strik- ing figure and an actor with yet undeveloped potential. The only other criticism of his Hotsp.Ur is that, with a beard, he is made to look a good deal older than Pince Hal and the obvious audience comparison of the two young Eig- lishmen is long in coming. Even the ultimate encounter of Hotspur and Prince Hal in the final act, as well staged as it is, loses effect from lack of prepara- tion. * * * THE FINEST performance comes from Douglas Rain, whose Prince Hal is outstanding. A very forceful, direct and at all times kingly young man, Prince Hal is everything that S h a k e s p e a r e made him. Rain's characterization has . personality and depth. As Sir John Fastaff, Douglas Campbell is equally successful in communicating the Shakespeare role. Campbell's Falstaff is a weary, weighted old sot who pro- vides many laughs at his own ex- pense - and expanse. In other roles, Max Helpmann as King Henry IV, William Hutt as Worcester, Ted Follows as Poins and Douglas, Christopher Plummer as Bardolph, and Powys as Glendower all provide very fine support, to the very successful production. * * 9 THE technical staff, too, has made its immense contribution to this success - a contribution that transcends all others. The staging, lighting, and cos- tuming are excellent throughout, building a very great visual Im- age through contrasts of dark and light and color for the setting of the Shakespearean verse. Direction by Michael Langham fails only with Hotspur; it is at other times well evidenced in the impressive production that thrives on visual and verbal contrasts. --Vernon Nahrgang 'BEGGAR'S OPERA: Excellently Staged. A WORTHY assortment of Can- adian artists has been as- sembled at Stratford to present twelve performances of John Gay's infamous "]eggar's Opera." the first large-scale musical work to be produced by the Festival. Its hero a highwayman, its heroine the daughter of a receiv- er of stole ngoods, "The Beggar's Opera" satires the political and social situation in 18th century London. Gay's opera was first performed in 1728, and has appeared in one guise or another ever since. A re- cent adaptation. THE STRATFORD Festival presentation of "The Beggar's Op- era" is excellently staged with bits of scenery hung from the stage roof to make quick transi- tions possible. Make-up and costuming are patterned after the illustrations of Hogarth, according to designer Brian Jackson. Robert Goulet sings the role of Macheath the highwayman; he is truly the "singing actor" required for this part. Maxine Miller, as heroine Polly Peachum, is proper- ly sweet. But the best acting on stage comes from Chester Watson, who AS PART OF the more and more varied Stratford Shakes- pearian Festival the New York Pro Musica presented last Sat- urday a concert of miscellaneous 15th and 16th century music. In the succeeding four centuries there have been such great changes in the occidental musical idiom that It is easy to overlook the differences between the sever- al compositions of the Renais- sance; one vague classification, "antique music," serves in gener- al to embrace them all. This does not by any means im- ply a dull evening: there is in this early music a sense of simple yet earnest melodic and harmonic ex- perimentation; there are harbin- gers of devices to be fully instru- mented only after a century or more in the golden age of classi- cal music; and there is of course great beauty, both in the music itself and in the subtly shifting tones of the unfamiliar instru- ments. * * * THE PERFORMANCES were very fine. The ensemble consisted of but six singers and four instru- mentalists, with some of the sing- ers handling an occasional re- corder or percussion instrument. The curious instruments were described after intermission. The portative organ is a small device with a single manual, which is played with one hand, the oth- er operating a single bellows. Its tone is only slightly different from the recorder, and the blend- ing of these two was beautifully effected during the performances. The bass viol differs in several respects from the violoncello, which it superficially resembles: it has six strings, frets on the finger- board, and, most important, a dif- ferently shaped body and sound slots. These last give it a sound much. purer and somewhat more nasal than the usual "string tone." In fact the only rich tones were those of the harpsichord, which was used almost entirely as con- tinuo, the instrumental melodies being carried by the strings and woodwinds. * * * THE SINGERS were all good and expertly trained, but not in- dividually outstanding: thus they were at their best in the ensemble pieces, which were very fine in-. deed. The countertenor lacked the eerie, at first almost nauseating quality, usually associated with that strange register, so that his solo pieces were disappointing. The two sopranos had complete- ly different voices: Betty Wilson's is the pure white type; Bethany Beardslee's, darker, more richly colored. The two were appropri- ately deployed, the unhappy mournful aria being given to Miss Beardslee. The overall balance of the even- ing must have been due in large measure to the musical director, Noah Greenberg. * * * THE FIRST part of the pro- gram was devoted to-works of Early Flemish Masters, including the selection most savored of the audience: a set of dances by Tiel- man Susato. These dances were actually of lighter substance than most of the program, but apparently titillated through their amusing orchestra- tion, involving a congeries of curious percussion instruments: small drum, bells, fingercymbals, etc. The second half of the program comprising Renaissance Spanish Music, was more interesting to me. The music was obviously Re- naissance, but not at all what I should have called Spanish. It' sounded like the standard pre- classic music of Italy or mid- Europe.' There were several sets of varia- tions for harpsichord with record- er or viol, alone, which were ob- vious elementary precursors of the fuller sets of variations to fol- low in succeeding centuries. The Recercada Quinta of Diego Ortiz was, in fact, described in the pro- gram as "actual textbook models of improvisational procedures." The program concluded with a group of villancicos, sort of folk- songs, which were marked by amusing and nearly scurrilous verses. I left in great spirits, but still ruminating on the lack of "Spanish" in the music. * * * ON OUR return to Ann Arbor I found the answer to the musico- logical puzzle. It seems that what is usually re- ferred to as "Spanish Music" is perhaps better called Moorish. The Moors occupied much of the Iberian peninsula for some seven and a half centuries before the Renaissance, and their influence' was wide-spread. -j. Philip Benkard INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Challenge for the UN By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst UNITED STATES, having escaped a nmit conference which could have pro- only a new high in international recrim- n, now proposes to substitute construe- roposals for the Middle East. Y include attempts through the United is to take the militancy out of the Arab alist movement; to make fair. distribu- rd development of water and other re- s, and to settle the refugee problem. ning up the Middle East problem in the . Nations General Assembly will set off the most outlandish debates in the his- f such bodies. TA Khrushchev still will have the oppor- ity to make his propaganda play. The . States will reply with its dossier on in- aggression. But Khrushchev has given effort to put President Eisenhower per- ' on the defensive in a public , ebate ternational morals. .ishchev can be well met by. American als that the United Nations itself move establish stabilizing institutions to re- :olonial policies in the area. - hat, the United States will be playing a It will also put the Soviet Union on the spot by demanding that she cooperate in stabiliza- tion instead of concentrating on disruption. IF INSTITUTIONS are offered which can be accepted by the Arabs themselves, then So- viet opposition would be a display of evil temper which she cannot afford. Development of natural resources will not alone suffice. An atmosphere will be required in which the Arabs will be helped to work out their own destiny, with the United Nations as arbiter of their rights with dev4loping com- panies. At the core of any such efforts will be rela- ions between the Arabs and' the State of Is- rael, which will have -to agree if the water resources of ,her neighborhood are to be put to proper use. The chief form of colonialism still existing in the Middle East is the participation of out- side governments in the companies which pro- duce the oil. ' U OPEAN policy has been to keep the Arabs divided in order to make control of the re- sources easier, whereas Arab union is the natur- al state if they can be diverted from their mil- itancy against Israel. "THE WINTER'S TALE' Production Overly Serious "THE WINTER'S TALE" is a comedy of mixed emotions; it brings together the tragic and the comic in a series of events that is in turn serious, sad, amusing, shocking and incredible. For those .who take it too seriously it be- comes a puzzling play. In the current production at Stratford, Ontario, it seems at times that director Douglas Camp- bell has indeed taken the play very seriously, with the result that the tragic elements have been intensi- fled while some of the more comic or startling moments have been dulled. The most famous stage direction sombre staging of the production. If, indeed, "a sad tale's best for winter," the sadness is here. * * * "THE WINTER'S TALE," for its melange of moods, is a fine play to watch, at Stratford. The listen- ing, however, is more difficult. With one major exception - Douglas Rain as the Young Shepherd-the cast seems to fail to bring out the verse in any of its beauty or to render it particularly meaningful even for the most attentive audi- ence. Acting and staging are excellent throughout, but the language re- mains a weakness for many. As lie's Paulina are fine characteri- zations that contribute much to the production's success. Bruno Gerussi contributes to the lighter side of "The Winter's Tale in the role of Autolycus, the pick-pocket who is obviously a man of the world. Gerussi, with orchestral support, makes much of the play's songs-=which are not Shakespeare's best. MOST OUTSTANDING of all, however, is Douglas Rain as the Young Shepherd. Here is the most direct, most mastered perform- ance: The country bumpkin who is rather dumb in the city but fairly sharp nn the farm is niaed with