PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TWO TilE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUARY 7,1966 w 'THAT DARN CAT': Disney Film Sunny, Sinless; Great for Kid Sisters ByROBERT MOORE ing foray into, literally, a federal husband, a mamma's boy duck- At the Michigan Theatre case. The cat, D.C., is probably hunter, and a confused jeweler. After they park their bicycles the most effective actor in the Venerable Ed Wynn plays one of Ate:15ra they atherbtoge movie. Cool and athletic, it peram- the incidental parts. at 7p5 a.m., they gather together bulates up the wrong stairway in- Blundering and blonde as usual, ball befopreaygr Around 12 noon to a den of bank robbers who are Hayley Mills plays little Patti they have cheese sandwiches and holding a bank teller hostage. D.C., Randall, the movie's main char- warm milk-toast for lunch. At 5 naturally, doesn't lose his cool; acter. (Little did I say? It must wam mhiyk-tdasthorlurnce h m-in his own sweet time, D.C. takes be noted that Miss Mills, although melv. they pedal home, brace them- the Federal Bureau of Investiga- not grown up, is growing up. selves with fortified whole milk tion on an electronic wild cat- Gentlemen, an era is ending.) and orange juice, and go to bed chase (it takes 50 minutes on the Miss Mills' considerable talents w tg . screen!). Finally, all ends in jus- are wasted, unfortunately. Except The Walt Disney movie-ma- tice, love, and a Bobby Darin for one short impersonation scene, chine mentality may not lead a theme song. the funny-faced teenager does life as childish as all that; but A comedy can either make you nothing that most other young there is a quality about Disney laugh on the outside or- amuse actresses couldn't do. Dorothy movies that leads yott to believe you on the inside. This is a belly- Provine and Dean Jones provide the writer was six, the producer laugh movie, with a good, spright- love interest, good looks, and not seven, and the business manager ly dialogue and a gag-sprinkled much else. fifteen. plot. Disney's trolls do not achieve Your little sister would like the Walt Disney movies are con- the respectability of sophistica- movie very much. So would your sistenly implausible, shallow and tion, but then, they never tried, senile uncle in Omaha who laughs bright as a :child's daydream. It In the sunlit, sinless, suitable-for- too loud. It is a good silly movie; is almost as easy to enjoy them as family-viewing tone they adopt, but, unfortunately, silly movies it is to criticize them. "That Darn Cat" is good, but not aren't very good. The latest Disney movie to great. There will never be a Disney toddle into Ann Arbor is "That The best parts of the movie are movie about Viet Nam, sex or the Darn Cat," a family comedy about the incidental characters thrown problem of alienation in society. an inscrutable Siamese cat that in like big hunks of chocolate: a A Disney movie is always a game, glides from a simple alley-pick- nosey neighbor, a long-suffering aimed at delight and not depth. AT U. OF TEXAS: Former, Harvard Professor Breaks,*Agreement To Teach moommu Suspended Students Reinstated Collegiate Press Service BOWLING GREEN, Ky. -A court ruling nas temporarily reinstated three students to West- ern Kentucky State College after they were suspended for a satire on sex which appeared in their off -campus magazine. The three-Robert Johns, Sam- uel Lawson and Frank Bonasso, all juniors-were suspended in- definitely by a faculty committee after the article, "In Defense of Morality," which satirized the social practice of "allowing males complete sexual freedom while re- quiring women to remain chaste," appeared in the second issue of their mimeographed publication, the Skewer. Travel They went into Warren County' Circuit Court after an appeal to Western President Kelly Thomp- son was turned down. They wrote Thompson that they had "in- tended no discredit to Western." "Vulgarity is noncompatible with the purposes and objectives of Western," Thompson said. The basic issue, he declared, was whether an institution "has the right and responsibility to es- tablish a moral and ethical cli- mate for its students." The court order was given pend- ing a final appeal to the regents of the college. It will allow the students to return to classes. The three charged before the court that the suspension was "arbi- trary and malicious," that it vio- lated Kentucky and United States constitutional provisions regard- ing due process, and that the publication was a part of their private lives and should not affect their relationship with Western. Not Obscene Western Dean of Students Charles Keon, a member of the faculty committee which handed down the suspensions, said the ar- ticle in the Skewer was neither obscene nor profane but "was written in such a way as to be generally objectionable." Johns, Lawson and Bonasso are seeking help from the American Civil Liberties Union and the American Association of Univer- sity Professors. The Louisville chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, pro- fessional journalism society, has appointed a three-man committee to investigate the incident. Read The Daily! MANNING LECTURE: Says Activists Must Be Thinkers, Students Too By BRUCE WASSERSTEIN The great danger with student activism is "pretense" according to John Manning, administrative assistant to the dean of junior- senior counseling. Manning, giving the keynote speech during a student-faculty discussion of student activism dur- ing orientation, said that the student activist must carefully balance his role as a student and as an activist. "If you belie one or the other," Manning said, "you will be a phoney." The ideal model of the student activist according to Manning is as the modern decendent of the balanced "renaissance man." Thought with Action According to Manning physical action such as protests must be balanced by genuine intellectual stimulation. The activist, according to Man- ning, must act out of intellectual commitment rather than acting for the sake of acting. Otherwise, Manning said, the activist is doomed to failure. Yet, Manning noted that there is considerable conflict between the "academic pressures of a great university and one's dedication to the activist cause. And, Manning commented, sometimes the pro- duct of this conflict is the per- son who discovers that he cannot both be a student and an activist. Protests Natural To Campuses Manning however said that it is natural for protest movements to flourish on university cam- puses because of the blending of liberalism and idealism which are present. The idealism of the campus, he said, is a byproduct of the rise of social morality in our society. DIAL 8-6416 "WAY-OUT .. . FUNNY! IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR A FILM THAT'S DIFFER- ENT, THIS IS CERTAINLY IT!" -=William Well, Cue-Magazine While dogmatic moralism has fell into intellectual disfavor, Manning said, students are taking on the values of the idealistic academic community. Today's Activism Manning remarked that essen- tially students are no more "ac- tive" than students of other gen- erations. The difference is that their interests lie in more publicly noticeable areas. Manning point- ed out that the public does not notice when students use their energy as fraternity officers and homecoming committee members, but do when they are protesting! the war in Viet Nam. School.Time is J OLYMPIA TIME O4m o University Typewriter Center Home of OLYMPIA, the Precision Typewriter 613 E. William St 665-3763 Attn. Social Chairmen! JLB Enterprises presents the fantastic VANGUARD S 4 40 Read and Use Daily Classified Ads ma ike your bookings early by calling 663-4304 NOW GJYTM1TIT DIAL 5-6290 * By NANCY KOWERT Collegiate Press Service AUSTIN, Tex.-A retired Har- vard English professor and Pulit- zer Prize-winning author has bro- ken an agreement to teach at the University of Texas because he refused to sign the state- required "Loyalty Oath." Dr. Howard Mumford Jones, who described the oath as "thor- oughly vicious," was to be a visit- ing professor of English during the spring semester. He had taught general literature at Texas from 1919 to 1925. It was the second loyalty oath case this fall. Earlier, Bayard Rustin, a controversial civil rights leader, refused to sign the Mary- land loyalty oath before appear- ing at the University of Maryland. Rustin did speak after the state's attorney general ruled the oath was not necessary for one or two appearances. Oath Unexpected The 73-year-old Jones, an ex- ORGANIZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student or- ganizations only. Organizations who are planning to be active for the Spring Term must be registered in the Office of Student Organizations by Jan. 27, 1966. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. * * * Bahat Student Group, Fireside dis- cussion: "The Future of Man," Fri., Jan. 7, 8 pm., 3545 SAB. All interested welcome. Guild House, Friday noon lunch, "The Climate of Protest in the Univer- sity," Vice-President Richard Cutler, Jan. 7, 12-1 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. * * * Newman Student Association, Com- munity mass and supper, 5 p.m., square dance, 8 p.m., Newman Student Center, 331 Thompson. pert on -American literature and culture, had made arrangements with the Texas administration to come to Austin next February. "Then, they sprang the Loyalty Oath on me," Jones. said. "It's a disclaimer oath, not a loyalty oath," Jones told the Daily Texan by telephone, saying he feels such oaths "assume a person is guilty until he proves himself innocent." The oath, in its present form, was. passed by the Texas legisla- ture in 1953 and requires that every potential state employe (which includes all university per- sonnel): - . . Is not and never has been a member of the Communist Party; . . . Has not during the pre- ceding five-year period been a member of any organization which the U.S. Attorney General has designated as totalitarian, fascist, communist, or subversive; -- ... Has not during the pre- ceding five-year period been a member of any communist politi- cal organization. "This faculty oath violates the principles of the American Asso- ciation of University Professors," Jones wrote in a letter telling Chancellor Ranson of his decision. "It violates the principles of equity since attached to the form is a list of scores (a total of 290) of organizations alleged to be sub- versive or disloyal on the grounds that they appear on some other lists compiled I know not how," the letter continued. "I have combatted this kind of oath all my life as a member of the faculty at various state uni- versities and at Harvard Univer- sity," he wrote. Calls Oath 'Affront' "I once (in 1950) declined to teach during the summer term at the University of California (at Los Angeles) because that institu- tion then demanded an oath like yours." Jones went on to say that "the oath is an affront to me as a, responsible American citizen who has worked for his government and several times taken an oath to defend it." Dr. Norman Hackerman, vice chancelor in charge of academic affairs, said he "regretted Jones' decision not to come to the uni- versity." He said the university has a "neutral position" toward the oath. "We just administer it," he said. "He said earlier this year that he would be glad to come," Dr. C. L. Cline, chairman of the Eng- lish department said. "It was only when he got the official papers to fill out that he balked., We made him an offer of a salary beyond anything made by any professor in this department," Cline con- tinued. Jones was to teach senior and graduate level English courses inl American literature. The courses will not be offered now that Jones is not coming. A Cross Camputs STARTING NEXT WEDNESDAY "THOSE MAGNIFICENT MEN IN THEIR FLYING MACHINES" OE It's Murderously ;Funny [ FRIDAY, JAN. 7 Noon - Richard Cutler, vice- president of student affairs, will speak on "the Climate of Protest in the University" at the Guild House; 802 Monroe. Lunch will be served for 25c. 4 p.m.-Prof. Justin Aronfreed of the University of Pennsylvania will speak on "The Internalization of Social Control through Punish- ment" at a department of psy- chology colloquium in Aud. B. 7 and 9 p.m.-Mae West and Cary Grant will star in "I'm No Angel" at the Cinema Guild in the Architecture Aud. Ph. 483-4680 E~anc" N CARPENTER ROAD FREE IN-CAR HEATERS ADM. ADULTS $1.00 NOW SHOWING "Superb, E Mafifcent!" 1 u Redbook PLUS [!P~PANAVISION YNAMATMON* I 9NACOL BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:30 PTP PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM "Tantalizing!" -N.Y. Times "Stunning!" -N.Y. 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