4r Alrjlgau uallf Seventy-Fifth Year EDrrED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS NEW LIBERALIZATIONS: Activists Aidin Reforming OSA Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, MAY 8, 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL BADAMO Attitudes Must Change To Conform to Reality IN A RAPIDLY CHANGING world, changes in attitude invariably lag be- hind changes in reality. Probably one of the most potentially dangerous areas is conflict management. As Prof. Kenneth Boulding of the eco- nomics department once expressed it, "right now we are engaged in a race be- tween learning and disaster." Nations will have to learn how to han- dle their disagreements if the world is going to continue to exist. But the ad- ministration's present policy is not lead- ing the world closer to this goal. NUMEROUS QUALITIES are needed to handle peace, but President Johnson seems incapable of exhibiting them. The first element is. attitude, the atti- tude of the American people as well as that of the President. Conflict situations are heavily dependent upon a realistic concept of what other nations are like. The Detroit Area Survey, last year, showed that many people formulated their attitudes towards foreign nations simply on the basis of whether the na- tion was Communist or non-Communist, "developed" or "underdeveloped." IF ANY TYPE of mature handling of in- ternational problems is to be reached, these attitudes must be changed, or at least the basis for these attitudes must change. The federal government is the one agent which can do something about this. People cannot do it without a stimulus, and certainly business would not get in- volved. For this reason President Johnson's condemnation of Communism simply be- cause it is Communism is highly irration- al and if anything, will have a detrimen- tal effect on any future development of world peace. Thus the federal government suffers from the same "faulty vision" that the public does. BOULDING ALSO had an idea for how an international organization could carry out the education chore. He sug- gested that what was needed was a set of data stations. There would be one data station for every 50,000 people. These stations would run sample surveys and conduct other projects in order to test that particular "social sphere." With this information being dissem- inated to all nations, perhaps the U.S. attitude toward other nations might be modified in the context of reality. The Communist ideology exists and will probably continue to exist for a long time. What makes the data stations so im- portant is that it would allow the ad- ministration to bargain and deal with the Communists without having to rational- ize every act to a simple-thinking public. The administration would also develop a more realistic approach in making poli- cies. If predictions can be made as to how a nation will react to a policy, conflict can be avoided by implementing or not implementing it. AGAIN PRESIDENT JOHNSON fails at this. The U.S. intervention in the Do- minican Republic showed a decided lack of diplomacy, respect and common sense. By unilaterally sending troops into the Dominican Republic, after Latin America, has suffered under the burden of numer- ous U.S. interventions, the U.S. created the general impression of a bully. The entire situation could have been handled through the Organization of American States in the first place, or through diplomatic channels. This could have been done by threaten- ing U.S. intervention instead zf actually sending in the Marines. Whus, U.S. offi- cials would have respected the autonomy of the Dominican Republic. PRESIDENT KENNEDY seemed to dem- onstrate the usefulness of this meth- od during the Cuban crisis. He was ve,:y careful not to embarrass the Russians, thereby making their withdrawal easier. The U.S. and Johnson need a lesson in tact, or possibly a lesson in how to get, along with their neighbors. ALTHOUGH IT COULD be said that Johnson was justified in sending the Marines in because he felt that American lives were in danger, the entire situation could have been worked out differently so that the U.S. would not have to face the ire of other Latin American nations. -BARBARA SEYFRIED EDITOR'S NOTE: In today's ar- ticle, the fourth o fa series, Philip Sutin, Grad, discusses the reorga- nization of the Office of Student Affairs. By PHILIP SUTIN IN 1961 the University began lay- ing the groundwork for a ma.. jor change in student life - the full-year calendar or trimester. University President H a r 1a n Hatcher appointed Prof. William Haber of the economics depart- ment to head a faculty committee on calendar changes. The committee, reflecting wide- spread faculty sentiment, reject- ed the quarter system for a three equal terms plan. The Senate Ad- visory Committee on University Affairs agreed with the faculty committee, which had done as much of a selling job on full- year operation as a study on new calendars. Regental approval fol- lowed. Even at that time there were warnings to begin planning for the changes that trimester would bring, but 1962 and the possibil- ity of getting sufficient funds seemed so far away. There were more immediate concerns. THE 1961-62 school year saw student activism reach its high point and slowly decline as some of its immediate goals were reach- ed and reform worked itself out. That summer saw the first gen- eration of student activists gradu- ate. Daily Editor Tom Hayden, acting on his convictions, be- came a civil rights worker in the South. Other prominent person- alities went into various forms of eclipse. On Sept. 30, 1961, Dean of Wom- en Deborah Bacon ,after over a year of criticism from student and faculty campus groups, resigned her post. There was great exhil- aration as the student activists saw their hated foe quit. "I am personally out of tune with some of the changes which seem inevi- table in the years ahead," she candidly explained. THE DAILY, at the height of its power, held the best party in re- cent years that night. The editors' work in compiling the evidence against the dean of women and constant campaigning against the OSA showed the Daily's power to force change and "get" an un- popular administrator. Changes were in the offing, as Miss Bacon correctly noted. Act- ing on a general consensus with- in the OSA, the upper administra- tion, the faculty and students, Lewis appointed an eight-member faculty committee, chaired by law professor John Reed, to consider revisions of both the OSA's phi- losophy and structure. The committee with faculty from a broad spectrum of the University was appointed in the summer of 1961. Four students - two liberal activists, Brian Glick and League rresident Bea Nem- laha, and two conservatives, Un- ion President Paul Carder and As- sembly Dormitory Council Presi- dent Sally Jo Sawyer - were named to it by SGC at the end of September. .LEWIS CHARGED the commit- tee with reforming the OSA. The vice-president, however, was a member of the committee. But his relationship to it was unclear. At first, he was considered a re- source person to whom the group would submit its report. He later became a full voting member, causing some student suspicion about the independence of the committee. The Reed Committee worked se- cretly through the fall and early spring of 1962. It decided early to adopt the functional approach- elimination of the deans offices and replacing them with coun- seling, student organizations and WORKING GROUPS of students, pushing for reform in the Uni- versity community-such as the executive board of Student Gov- ernor's Conference, shown above in a 1962 meeting-were instru- mental as pressure groups in effecting reforms in University policy. UPHOLD 14(B): Right-To Work Must Be Ensured V REAT CONCERN is voiced in Washington for the protection of the civil rights of individuals and minority groups. But what of the right of the American worker to join-or not to join-a union? This particular issue doesn't seem to Interest those who are in the forefront of the civil rights battle. There is a strange silence about the evil of compulsory unionism and its denial of individual civil and human rights. (Note, we did not say evil of unionism but rather compulsory unionism.) The great weight of the federal government is thrown into the human rights movement --in schooling, in housing, in public accommodations. But what of the human rights of the man who, in order to hold a job, is forced to join an organization that may be diametrically opposed to his prin- ciples and views. IN 19 STATES that man is protected by the right-to-work laws. And Section 14 (b) of the Taft-Hartley Act upholds the states in enacting these laws. Now, the push is on in Wash- ington to have Congress repeal 14 (b). We don't know what the legislators will do when the issue. comes before them, but we do know what the American public thinks. A national poll shows that the public is against repeal of 14 (b) by more than a two-to-one mar- gin. In fact, nearly two-thirds of the adult public favor a national law making all union membership voluntary. IT IS TO BE HOPED that Con- gress gets the message. discipline, housing and financial aid offices across sexual lines. There was general agreement about this most basic change. Stu- dents and faculty did not split along interest and policy lines. THE COMMITTEE also agreed that the responsibility for the OSA should be fixed in one place -the vice-president for student affairs. One of the major com- plaints of the OSA's activist critics was the lack of a place where the blame for wrongs could be placed. A sticky issue was the creation of a dean of students below the vice-president. Student members objected to the intermediary ad- ministrator diffusing responsibil- ity. The position was included in the original report, but was later deleted by the Regents. Philosophically, the committee called for the OSA "to stimulate in each student the maximum in- tellectual growth of which he is capable and enable him through the resultant development of character and abilities to make maximum contribution to his so- ciety." SEVERAL ATTEMPTS were made to influence the committee's work. Fifteen, student leaders and 15 faculty members held four se- cret meetings to consider reform- ing the University. This group grew out of student-faculty dis- cussions at Prof. Kenneth Bould- ing's house. The discussions were primarily concerned with peace activities. At one meeting, talk turned to uni- versities-first concerning the cold, war, then to university reform in general. The idea for the secret student-faculty "Bund," as the group was called, came from a similar one at UCLA. The "Bund" held four meetings during the winter of 1961, but nothing significant came from them. Some described them as largely social hours. STUDENTS and faculty failed to communicate effectively with each other. They could not reach a common ground on the need for change, let alone a plan of action. Some participants blamed the failure on the selection of un- sympathetic faculty members. The gulf in generations and the dif- fering interests were also factors. Mark Chesler, a participant in the "Bund," cited student fail- ings. The students did not know what they wanted the facultyto do. They could not decide on key issues and then pin the faculty down to a course of action. Thus the "Bund" became a dis- cussion society, not an action group, conspiratorial or otherwise. THE MOST clearly stated aims of student activists at this time appeared in the Glick-Roberts motion. This five-page document was introduced to SGC Nov. 29, 1961. Council at that time was tied up in membership regula- tions with debate extending until 2 a.m. SGC conservatives also wished to avoid the issue, as dem- onstrated when they voted down a request for a special meeting to consider it. They delayed con- sideration until Jan. 4, 1962, when it was defeated. The motion - designed to be SGC's recommendationstodthe Reed Committee - consisted of three parts: 1) a condemnation of the residence hall Board of Governors for failing to liberal- ize women's visiting privileges ,in the quads as IQC requested (this passed); 2) policy statements on non-academic life; 3) a student bill of rights. "SGC believes that students should have this responsibility for genuine self government, not only as a matter of principle, but be- cause it would benefit students, the University as an educational community and the society at large," its rationale declared. THE MOTION urged that all ju- diciary authority be shifted to a membership except those estab- lished by the group itself. Dou- ble jeopardy between civil and University authorities would be eliminated. THIS MOTION summed up the goals of the activists in reforming the University. It clearly stated the rationale for their campaign against OSA policies, for a fair judiciary system and against speaker bans. Its fate reflected the campus apathy outside the political com- munity which lay behind the council conservative p o s i t i o n. There was no public outcry for the motion's adoption either be- fore or after its defeat. Conservative council members rejected the activists' view that students were an integral part of the University community with equal standing and rights as fac- ulty and administration in attain- ing an educational goal. INSTEAD, they saw students as workers in a labor-management situation with student government serving as a "union" seeking their improvement. Thus, by close mar- gins, the conservative majority voted down the motion until its makers withdrew its hollow shell. Interquadrangle Council, mean- while, urged the residence hall Board of Governors to allow wom- en in men's rooms from noon to one half hour before closing. The request came from several mem- ber houses. It had wide, if some- times half-joking support within the quads. However ,the proposal was rejected by the board. DAILY EDITOR John Roberts suggested a noontime Diag dem- onstration in favor of the pro- posal with the broader aim of in- volving usually apathetic quad- rangle residents in direct action for OSA change. However, IQC rejected the demonstration, fear- ing that it would turn into a pan- ty raid. The proposal, the quadrangle conferences and the report of the retiring IQC president to the Board of Governors represented that organization's contribution to student activism. While it may seem slight, it indicated the depth of the movement, as the quads harbor the most apathetic, poli- tically disinterested students on campus. IQC generally shies awayfrom demanding changes In the status quo, although it seeks negotiated adjustments from time to time. When it functions well at all, it is usually a service organization. WHILE STUDENTS were pres- suring for liberalizing change, out- side forces sought to maintain the status quo. The Alumnae Council provided the most formid- able opposition, fighting to re- tain the dean of women's office. After the Reed Report was re- leased, the Detroit Free Press rid- iculed the efforts of Roberts and others for change, implying they were nothing but a small group of radicals who lacked support from the generally satisfied student body. Alumni Association Secretary John Tirrell attacked the move- ment in the Michigan Alumnus, declaring that going to the Uni- versity was a privilege, not a right. Students give up some of their nominal e1vil liberties when they agree to attend the Univer- sity, he said. RIowever, these protests did not deter the Reed Committee, Lewis or the Regents. The committee re- port was a moderate document lacking the sweeping grants of authority the activists wanted. It laid down a philosophy to guide the OSA and restructured it more efficiently, but did not change the OSA's functions. THE REGENTS discussed the Reed Report from February to May, consulting the committee, SGC and others before making a decision. Minor changes, such as dropping the proposed intermediary dean of students, were made by the Regents. They approved the Reed Report's philosophy at their May meeting. The major lines of re- organization were sketched out, but the actual changes did not come until July. While the Reed Report was still being considered by the Re- gents, the OSA moved toward re- form. The residence hall Board of Governors approved the prin- ciple of coed housing, suggesting Alice Lloyd and East Quadrangle as possible sites. JOINT JUDIC proposed reforms that included public hearings, pro- tection from double jeopardy and availability of counsel and de- fense witnesses two weeks after the report was issued. In line with the Reed Report's call for an end to arbitrary sex- ual divisions, the Union explored the possibility of merging with the League. The next year was to see SGC enter a new era of liberal-con- servative splits, off-campus sil- ence and finally conservative co- hesion and victory. The activity of other organizations such as Voice continued, but a new political cli- mate was about to envelop the campus. TUESDAY: Campus conserv- atives and liberals vie for pow- er with the eventual victory of the conservatives. Voice contin- ues its activities to create a new climate. I New Princeton Plan Avoids Grade-Grubbing --The National Association Manufacturers of LAST WEEK Princeton decided to allow students the option of receiving a pass or fail designation rather than grades for one course each semester. Old Nassau's dean, J. Merill Knapp, said that the new option system will let "students elect courses which they might not oth- erwise take because of the pressure of grades." The new Princeton system is experi- mental but not radical; it partially fills the void left by an ultra-competitive vol- legiate system whose grade-grubbing products are restricted to taking courses 'which are compatible with their self- perceived abilities. Such systems are nothing new to the academic world. Several colleges such as the California Institute of Technology give no grades in the freshman year while other schools, such as Sarah Lawrence College, give no grades at all. One of the prime assets of the Univer- sity is its ability to offer a wide variety of courses. Many students are, however, afraid to venture beyond the disciplines to which they were introduced in high school. JUDITH WARREN ...................,,... Co-Editor ROBERT RIPPLER ......................... Co-Editor EDWARD HERSTEIN..................Sports Editor JUDITH FIELDS..................Business Manager PRESENTLY the University attempts to forcibly expose the student beyond his area of specialization through its distri- bution requirements. This system, al- though somewhat useful, is often self- defeating. For example, the affinity shown by stu- dents for escape-hatch courses, which seem to be specially designed to let stu- dents get through their distribution re- quirements without too much pain, nulli- fies the advantages of the University dis- tribution system; yet, students who enroll in such courses are merely reacting rea- sonably to the pressures of their environ- ment. After all, graduate schools cannot tell if you are "well rounded"; they can only tell what grades a student has on his transcript. As Time Magazine's headline on an article about escape-hatch courses states, "An A's an A." A University program embodying both distribution requirements and the option plan would succeed better than a unilat- eral system in achieving the aim of pro- ducing a well rounded student. The two methods would supplement each other to bring about the best finished product. While distribution requirements are based on the pessimistic assumption that students will not tjke courses out of their area of specialization if they are not forc- ed, the option plan is based on the op- timistic assumption that students will 'CAT BALLOU': New Spoof Gives Straightaway Fun At the Michigan Theatre TO QUOTE from the advertisements, "No problems, no messages, no philosophies, no way-out art, no way-in techniques . . . just straightaway plain pleasure. Is that the way to make a funny movie?" In many cases, no; but for Harold Hecht, whose new film, "Cat Ballou," has just begun its Midwest premiere here, this policy seems to have been ideally chosen. "Cat Ballou" is a gem. Like the old "Maverick" plots, "Cat Ballou" is a spoof; but unlike "Maverick," it has its roots far more solidly anchored in the realm of slapstick. Lee Marvin may have used a double for those wild drunk-rider scenes, but the effect is the same; and although the idea of a man trying to take a bath in the midst of a train robbery is a dusty cliche by now, it does not wholly betray its age amidst its cinematic surroundings. THE STORY of "Cat Ballou" may or may not be based upon fact; considering the way in which the true stories of Wyatt Earp and Wild Bill Hickok have been changed beyond recognition for movies and TV shows, this is not of overwhelming significance. The story of the next-of-kin of a dead man vowing revenge upon the men who shot up Dear Old Dad is ageless, and the fact that it is a young woman in this case serves to make the tale more ingenious than other similar ones. As "Cat Ballou," Jane Fonda is no more or less convincing an actress than the part demands. In addition to filling out a pair of Levis admirably, Miss Fonda displays a wide range of facial ex- pressions, but she generally seems more at home when comedy is called for. Michael Callan and Dwayne Hickman generally seem to be reading from the script, and the latter's voice unfortunately hasn't deepened any since his "Dobie Gillis" days. But the real star of the show is Lee Marvin, who plays two different gunfighter roles with aplomb (and, in one case, with an artificial nose-to replace one bitten off in a fight!). One of the various ideas woven into the plot is his comeback from a drunken ZORBA THE GREEK: A Little Madness, Then The Dance... At the Campus Theatre "ZORBA THE GREEK," the first of many great novels by Nikos Kazanzakis, is an earthy irrational dance through the joys and griefs of existence. True to the Greek character, both comic and tragic masks are worn with equal intensity. The film, unlike the novel, is uneven, jerky, and not all of one piece-though it soars at many points on the strength of several of its actors. A kind of Nietzschean Overman with a Greek twist, Zorba-por- trayed by Anthony Quinn-initiates a youth over a period of months to a lifetime of experiences: passion, marriage, fear, death, the col- lapse of dreams. The experiences and the comment upon them in this novel and later ones caused Kazanzakis to be regarded as something more than merely "unorthodox." His savage satire upon conventional morality (crossing before murder) and institutionalized religion' (bumbling monks) earned him international praise, yet national damnation. QUINN IS A perfect Zorba; he knows and enjoys what Zorba is and does: he embodies the spontaneousness, the power, the intuitive- ness. The role demands an entire range of emotional responses; Quinn delivers with style and gusto. His English counterpart does not fare so well. The "contemplative" man, he is too weak, too often. He mouths lines, moves woodenly. His ineptitude is starkly dramatized in scenes with the widow, Irene Papas-whose eyes and hands are more ex- pressive than anything in the entire film, except perhaps Zorba's dance. Lila Kednora is brilliant as Madam Hortense, Zorba's Boubou- lina, his pathetic little "jade." The jerks and flat spots in the film are primarily poor screen- writing (nothing new from Hollywood). Between novel and film, too many vital "clues" are left out. The youth in the novel is Kazanzakis, what is dramatized is the agony of choice between a life of action and one of contemplation. His novel is of the Buddha. The film omits this vital clue and consequently, the youth's inaction appears invalid and unconvincing. M1 A! 2* q