Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, J u l y 9, 1968 i TuesayJul 9-196 A look at bWild in ythe Streets" by Daniel Okrent " ,4gr";a;"+,.cpr,{r,. rs}:::'.=:fi :^; ;"::+5:"}}:";" }ok;.:"."."::vJ{.:"r,.", " ."r."." " M." :": "a.":.": -.:+.".::" :t . .: M.M.{.ave:.".":: r:: r.=:::: r..x"." " :v.. .. r..... r........ .. a :.. :..:".".".".M:::.": xMJ : w.:::":rv e:-.:".rr.; n"."."."."::.:.:M."." v:::.v^::.M.v ".v."::M:."." :::v ;M,., . ,....... r,+ ":. .o. " :"vr "."J.........: n::M.ir:::"::$:dY":".M,.,. ,J .w:: "." M.". r }vl " . . rr...... r.....:... . ".:r.M 'rJ ??k:{4:.M..dM:.:".^.".".:".::^...n :s:::":4$: :"}: ,:,."............... rr.". r."M::".":":":::eM .....^. .,.},rr4:":":-:4 ".M:.".".":.".M.M: ".".A" :."RM. E .............a....r.......r...... ..,,,.........{.......:...,.,.«...........n...rv.4,"mrr."ro:!4 :4r.:M.".":eM:rr.":"::";:,:":r.4'r::"."."."."v.,'ati:"::;":r,":"}:titi^}:v:::r" {.."Y%: DAILY OFFICIALBULLETIN :;'~^'':'" :1::: Afv .p . :YYa .. .,,f"rnK'r.";.".:".2':"."."Ys":ti";J :rf"- sir:: V"^"":rNP :rrAYMMM: ":r: :M. ,, ...tR": 4M""r V.M:" ."."rrM :vp:..r-M,, "."".. .. r. h:" ..M "'1. g, ,., ..r. .:.. . ^. " .M: '. :^: t: I.".r f.J f."." . fir,.. rf r... 1 }Y.%":':":'..... J"": r.M.l ":""""::":ti :.}} :"J.::::':::::.."::'Jr.^r :" ::'. " M.M "'^S .., a">{.M S:::\.. M }°.}r ,.+7r """'r., .4 :" r... r rr ..".' Sr. r.,r," ..}f..},.}:"} $7rr °:"?}: :::rv:." :::::::::::::... J:: ": "Fra." r fr cJ ' r r....r.lno":{: ti 'r."' n.".^..,'+7L". :":%+7v''w:"~r.r.,,,,":4: .".r:M.err=.4C::....r.:.::."."."nvav."." i%::......d:"}i :":;r,"}e"}:tiC4{ti.:^."F.QinM:F"::" r:s4":."MS.M' M.".:".{J :"Y~r;'} A:M61,::Y:J^V.::"rr:.".l':rrb:"."."#M:".rm mr ,, ,.,.; What is it that makes a film commendable? The question, because of its complexity and the number of factors involved, is almost impos- sible-even unreasonable-to an- swer. Acting, script, direction, mo- tive, achievement of objective, literary unity, pictorial attractive- ness, innovation are all contribut- ing factors, and never will one film score well in each. In fact, some films do horribly in the great majority of cate- gories but, because of one redeem- ing quality, still emerge with high grades. One such film, despite a host of drawbacks (some incredibly glar- ing). is Wild in the Streets. An improbable product with an un- likely theme, it' succeeds in only a very few categories, but its ac- complishment in these is so great that all of its embarrassing de- ficiencies can be excused. The acting is a joke, the direc- tion over-kicky, the screenplay a corny put-on, the idea trite and hard to swallow. But the combination of these four normally disasterous "attri- butes" mixed together in some wierd blend of tongue-in-cheek humor and heart-in-stomach rage, goes down easy because it goes down so damn hard. Director Barry Shear is from the stable of American Interna- tional pictures, the company that created the whole Beach Blanket- Hot Rod genre, and since then has been attempting to develop an audience for that era's current counterpart: the teeny bop-psy- chedelic-turn on-freak out. Wild in the Streets is definitely in the mold, but Shear seems to know something that few of his counterparts at A-I, save Roger Corman (St. Valentine's Day Mas- sacre, Creature from the Haunted Sea), are aware of. He sees the truth of the teenies. Shear's film lifts the worst of this teeny-boppiesm and drops it into a political context. Grass- smoking, baby-making, "entour- age"-sporting, guitar-strumming, pop idol Max Frost (Christopher Jones) is the leader of Califor- nia's unbridled youths as he takes them to political power through the threat of riot. "We're 52 per cent" of the pop- ulation; he croons to his under-25 "troops," and his accountant, a less-than-credible kid who plays bass guitar and graduated from the Yale Law School at 15, tells him that that's enough to take over the country. In concert with a sickeningly obsequious congressman (Hal Hol- brook) who is trying to capitalize on Max's movement, the "troops" get the voting age lowered to 15. As well as the mandatory age requirement f o r congressman. And senators. And the president. When, of course, Max moves into the White House, the action doesn't stop, but it does start to sour. Everyone over 30 is forced into concentration camps, and is fed LSD daily, while slack-shirted guards maintain law -and order. Eventually, the eight-year-olds plan the inevitable countercoup to wrest control from the "old" teenagers. Now, these last nuances of the plot might tend to destroy the good that went before it. But, like occasionally jarring cliches that mar the first three-fourths of the film, it can be overlooked. This is so because there is too much good for this intruding bad to diminish to any great extent. The four qualities which I men- tioined earlier - the acting, the direction, the screenplay, the idea -are the heroes, and would be in- advertant were it not for the way they mesh together. Christopher Jones resembles a somewhat mindless, terribly con- ceited pop idol, a spoiled child who is playing this part in the film be- cause he wants to push forward an otherwise dull career. But this negative facet of Jones' personal- ity is tapped beautifully here. This is exactly what most celluloid pop stars are like in real life. He is playing himself. Shelley Winters, as Max Frost's mother, overplays her suburban- nag stereotype. But, again, most suburban-nag stereotypes over- play their own lives. Similarly, Diane Varsi as an acid freak who is the first of the "troops" to make it to Congress (she wears a Jerry Rubin-ish tri-corner hat- and very little else-on her first day on the floor of the House) has all the mindlessness that the role calls for. Shear, who performed his first coup in choosing this bunch to do the acting, exploits them won- drously. Interweaving some color news- reel footage from, Oakland's in- duction center riots of last Octo- ber, he has the cops bashing the right heads at the right times. He fast-cuts the musical num- bers to get in the motion of the not-bad band, and he builds up to the "taking of Washington" scene with some steadily increas- ing intercutting to TV news re- ports of the growing size of the youth movement that is sweeping the country. But perhaps the best mani- festation of the picture's theme comes across in an incredibly hon- est script. Max Frost has no for- eign policy because "if there's no foreign policy, man, there can't be no wars." Shelley Winters tells an inter- viewer that "if my son is para- lyzing the country, I'm sure he has reason to do it." And even the cortege of creeps that surrounds Max (Richard Pryor as Stanley X the anthro- pologist drummer is the best) speak with all the wisdom of self- evident Truth. And, as it is, the teenies take the country. They do it because they are "right." Because "everything that is wrong with the world is that way because the old men have done it." Because they "want it." Because they "can use it." Because beneath this dubious logic, it is finely portrayed that the even queerer sense that nor- mally prevails in government and politics in the United States of America, 1968, is at least as wrong as they are. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Anny Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. Fall and winter subscription rate: $4.50 per term by carrier ($5 by mail); $8.00 for regular academic school year1 ($9 by mail). The Daily Official Bulletin is am 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 3528 L. S, & A. Bldg., be- before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear only once. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270, TUESDAY, JULY 9 Day Calendar Audio-Visual Education Center Sum mer Previews - Humanities Films Their Aims and Uses and Doll's House Part I: The Destruction of Illusion Multipurpose Rm., Undergraduate Li- brary, 1:30 p.m. CIC Film: "Bisywe Hwanga," (The Young Martyrs of Canton) will be shown at 8:00 p.m. in Aud. A of Angel Hall. General Notices The Margaret Bell Women's Poo summer hours for students are: Mon.- Fri., 4:30-6:00 p.m.; Tues. & Thurs. 8:00-9:00 p.m.; Mon. & Wed., 7:00-9:00 p.m.; Sunday, 3:00-5:00 p.m. (co-recrea- tional. Women holding a current W.S.I are needed to life guard during 3B Anypne interested should call the poo (769-4950). CIC Lecture Series: Prof. James I Crump will speak on "The Effect of at 7:30 in Noble Lounge of Oxford Apartments, 627 Oxford Road. Statement Concerning the Role of the Administrative Board and the Dean and Executive Committee on Matters of Discipline In the Faculty Code, the faculty of the College of LiteraturehScienceyand the Arts has delegated to the Admin- istrative Board the power vested in them by the Regents to discipline stu- dents on academic grounds. The Board intervenes in cases where the integrity of a student's conduct as it relates to the educational goals of theCol- lege has been called into question. This mandate was clarified in the ploicy statement issued by the Administrative Board in December 1967, in which the Administrative Board strongly urged that a judiciary be established at the University level and that this Board be consulted in its establishment. How- ever, until the establishment of such a judiciary or in the event that no University-wide authority assumes jurisdiction, the Administrative Board reserved the right to hear and. adjudi- cate cases in which studnets have dis- rupted other individual's participation in activities or functions conducted under the auspices of the University. The Dean and Executive Committee of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, in association with the Administrative Board, reaffirm this policy. Furthermore, they note as an aspect of their jurisdiction the follow- ing resolutions adopted by the Student Government Council on Sept. 14, 1967: 1. Individual or mass acts that de- stroy University property or signifi- cantly interfere with the free move- ment of persons or things, on the cam- pus, are prohibited. 2. Intentional disruption of Univer- sity functions by depriving others of needed quiet, light, heat, or other physical conditions of work, is pro- hibited. Not only is the Administrative Board, by action of the faculty, empowered to hear cases involving academic dis- - cipline, but also the Dean of the Col- lege is empowered by the faculty t refer cases of student discipline of a non-academic nature to any properly constituted University authorities on discipline. (Faculty Code, B 7.03) This includes the Administrative Board. e l Provisional Procedures of 1 the Administrative Board (These are now in process of study and development by the Administrative Board.) The Board has enacted the following 1guidlines to ensure: 1. The College'srexplicit acknowledg- - ment of its responsibility to provide duly appropriate and clearly evident - procedures governing the disposition of cases wherein the legitimacy of the %student's relationship to the College and its educational effort has been questioned, and 2. Intelligible commmunication to all parties concerned of the nature and operation of such procedures. f The College has traditionally and formally held the disciplinary functions of' the Administrative Board to ac- commodate two major concerns of its faculty. The Board has been charged not only with the equitable disposition of cases in which student dishonesty has been demonstrated, but also with a deliberate effort to consider such matters within the Board's mandate for counseling in general. In short, the zBoard would fail to fulfill its charge were it to observe only the judical character of such cases; it has a clear responsibility to conduct its proceed- ings with explicit reference as well to the purely educational character of the student's relationship to the College. Under this two-fold mandate, the Col- lege has chosen to refrain from estab- , lishing procedures fashioned merely on ianalogous judical models of a civil or scriminal kind, while at the same time it has incorporated in its procedures the basic guarantees recognized as in- herently appropriate to the constitu- tional expectations of our society. 31. A member of the University fac- ulty or staff, or a registered student who initiates a complaint falling with- in the Board's mandate, must regis- ter his complaint with the Chairman of the Administrative Board. The Chair- man shall require a written bill of particulars, specifying the nature and circumstances of the alleged miscon- duct. The Dean of the College will also receive a copy of this bill of particu- lars. 2. The Chairman, upon receiving the bill of particulars will determine whether there Is cause to proceed fur- ther. Should he determine that the matter should proceed, he shall imme- diately notify the student of the na- ture of the complaint. Should the mat- ter be dismissed, the student shall likewise be informed, and the matter shall not be revived later to the stu- dent's disadvantage. 3. The studentashall have opportun- ity to review the matter with the Chairman of the Board, who shall at this time explain the relationship of the issue to the common expectations of the College, and furnish the stu- dent with a written description of the Board's procedures. The student, with the approval of the Chairman, may waive in writing a formal hearing by the Board,eand request the Chairman to arbitrate a resolution of the Com- plaint. In such cases, the Chairman may consult with any relevant parties before making a final disposition of the case. 4. The student shall be notified of the time and place of the hearing, and be given ample time to prepare his defense. The student may Offer whatever evidenc is pertinent to his defnse, and may produce bot docu- ments and persons who wish to testify on his behalf. Members of the Admin- istrative Board shall resolve questions of relevance in such matters. 5. The student may, prior to the hearing, confer with any member of the Board for counsel or advice con- cerning the pending case. He may also invite any member of the Board to be present as his adviser during the hear- ing, an action which will preclude that member's participation in the resolu- tion of the case. 6. Administrative Board representa- tion at the hearing in the matter must include elected faculty members, stu- dent members and members ex officio. 7. The person originating the com- plaint shall be present to respond to questions which the Board or the student may wish to ask. Once all rele- vant testimony is given and before the Board has begun' its deliberation, how- ever, both the complainant and the student shall withdraw. 8. The Board's proceedings in all sych cases shall not be public, and shall be open only to the 'parties described above. Only members of the Admin- istrative Board shall be present during the Board's deliberation, which shall ordinarily begin immediately upon hearing all evidence and statements. 9. Minutes of all proceedings shall be kept by the Secretary of the Board. This record, together with all related documents, shall in no case be re- produced, and shall be kept in° the confidential files of the Administra- tive Board, and not in the student's counseling dossier, 1. The results of the Board's proceed- ings shall be set forth in writing to the student, his parents, if he be a minor, and the complainant, regard- less of the action taken. Under cer- tain circumstances the Board may vote to waive any communication to the student's parents. 11. In instances where the penalty involves suspension or expulsion the student may petition the Dean of the College for atrehearing of hiscase, as provided in the Faculty Code B 7.03 and B 7.06. The Dean may invite the Executive Committee of this College to hear such appeals brought before him. APPENDIX A Present Disciplinary Authority of Various College Bodies, According to Faculty Code and Regents' Bylaws 1. Governing Faculty: "Except as hereinafter provided, the several governing faculties shall have power of discipline over cases of mis- conduct committed by their own stu- dents. Any faculty desiring to do so may delegate all or any portion of its powers in this regard to the dean or other administrative head, to a dis- ciplisary committee, to the Committee on Student Conduct . . . It may also delegate, or authorize its dean or other administrative head to delegate, power over any specific case of misconduct to any of the aformentioned disciplinary bodies." (Regents' Bylaws, section 8.15, para. 2). "The Governing Faculty of the Col- lege shall be in charge of the affairs of the College except to the extent that such affairs are hreinafter placed in charg of the, Dean and Executive Com- mittee . . . It shall exercise such other powers as are ordinarily, exercised by school or college governing faculty." (Faculty Code, A 2.01 (b)) "The several administrative officers and subordinate authorities of this College shall have power to make such rules and regulations as shall be nec- essary and proper for the administra- tion of their duties and functions . All such rules and regulations shall be stated in writing, compiled by the is- suing authority and filed with the Sec- retary to the Faculty. He shall from time to time, but at least once each year, report all such rules and regula- tions to the Executive Committee and to the Faculty." (Faculty Code, A 2.01 (c)) 2. Dean: "The authority vested in this Faculty by the Regents to hear and determine cases of discipline of a non-academic nature is delegated to the Dean of this Colleg. He may refer such cases to any properly constituted University author- action: provided, however, that, in case the alleged misconduct is penalized by suspension or expulsion the student (Continued on Page 6) Automatic Stick Shift After to these many years our humble little bug has gone automatic. Gone is the clutch. Gone is the wifely whine, "It's cute, but I can't drive it." Gone is an era of Volkswagendom.Sniff. And in its place? A Volkswagen you can drive all over town without shifting. Only on the highway do you shift. Once. (This is an economy move.Which, after all, is still the name of the game But you 'do have a choice in the mater- you can drive it the easy way (described above). Or you can start out in low and take it through the gears like a regular stick shift. The automatic stick shift is an option: you pay a little more. But you do a little less. 1 Howard Cooper Volkswagen INC. 2575 So. State St., Ann Arbor Phone 761-3200 AUtaORsZE Open Mon. & Thurs. till 9 P.M. Overseas Delivery Available 11 Last 2 Days POSSIBLY 'NATIONAL PRIMARY': McCarthy backers ponder action ,& By The Associated Press Democrats opposed to the pres- idential aspirations of Vice Presi- dent Hubert H. Humphrey are considering staging what they call a "national primary" prior to the Aug. 25 Democratic national con- vention Allard D. Lowenstein said yesterday. Lowenstein, a backer of Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, was a prime mover here of the "dump John- son" campaign against the Presi- dent last winter and an organizer of the Coalition for an Open Con- vention that met two weekends ago in Chicago. He said the "primary" would be conducted by mail or at polling booths set up around the country and would be designed to demon- strate that a Humphrey candidacy could not win the presidency. "There is nothing inevitable about the nomination of Hubert Humphrey unless we opt out, and decide we don't want to fight, and that we will not do," Lowenstein told a group of students at the City College of New York. Lowenstein said that if the vot- ers were presented with a choice among Humphrey, Republican Richard M. Nixon and independ- ent George Wallace, "it could pro- duce the unraveling of the whole democratic process in this coun- try." He predicted trouble in slums and among military draftees. Meanwhile, in Washington Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy says flatly he would not become an independent presidential candidate if 'he loses the Democratic nomination - but that he could support a fourth party drive by someone else. McCarthy also indicated Sunday he may abandon his announced hopes of going to Paris to learn firsthand from North Vietnamese diplomats the prospects for settle- ment of the Vietnam war. The Minnesota Senator again refused to say he could support Vice President Hubert H. Hum- phrey as the Democratic presiden- tial nominee and said he could support a fourth party drive un- der specific conditions. But McCarthy said with no res- r _ __-I ervations he would not be the candidate heading such a ticket. Earlier, he had said he would not "lead" a fourth party effort. Humphrey, meanwhile, said he would support McCarthy if the Senator became the Democratic presidential nominee. Republican Nixon said he will have the edge in November be- cause the Democratic convention "will go the way of the bosses" and Humphrey will be nominated "over the objection of a majority of the Democratic voters." In other political developments: -New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, GOP presidential bid- der, said the Johnson adminis- tration's "lack of a national trans- portation policy is a drag on the economy and an aggravation to everyone." -Third party presidential can- didate George C. Wallace said it now appears he will be on the November ballot in every state ex- cept Ohio, and said he will con- tinue to fight to get on Ohio's ballot. Haber cites joys, tribu during literary colleg -The Gallup Poll reports -he Democratic Party is presently showing great strength at the con- gressional level - 58 per cent support to 42 per cent for Repub- licans - after losing 47 House seats to the Republicans in 1966. -New Jersey Gov. Richard J. Hughes, chairman of the Demo- cratic National Convention cre- dentials committee, says he ex- pects McCarthy delegates from Connecticut "and some other states" may stage a walkout.s I ation0nS e career Planning, Arthur M. Ross. Haber will help Ross familiarize himself with the state's economy and its relation to University finances. In addition, he will assist in long-term academic planning. He will be working with Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan F. Smith and University deans and department heads on problems involved in the recruit- ment of Negro faculty. In recent weeks he has been President Fleming's representative on student-faculty committees working on proposed by-laws, growing out of the Report on De- cision-Making in the University. *i (Continued from Page 1) classroom knowledge in work with the mentally disturbed and cul- turally deprived. Student support for these courses, he says, indicate a "strong desire for education relevant to one's surroundings." He also notes that national em- phasis on mathematics and the sciences has contributed to strong University departments in these fields. But he feels that international scientific competition and a desire for immediate relevance in educa- tion have caused a "dangerous neglect" in the humanities. He maintains that departments in philosophy and languages and lit- erature have often been given lower priority than they merit. "Students want relevance," he says. "But on the other hand, it would be a sad thing if all of lib- eral education were based only on today's relevance. Why then, would we study Plato? We need to discover the relation of the past to the present, and the present to the future. "We live in a period of multiple revolution - in science, technol- ogy, in education and living standards and even in morals. The best education for adjustment to this revolution is some under- standing of historical and philo- sophical values, not only to pre- pare one to make a living but to enjoy life." Haber would like to see every student receive a four-year educa- tion in liberal studies "and not worry about making a living until the fifth and sixth year." In his new post as an adviser to the University president and executive officers, Haber will in- deed be involved in "budget- making and personnel." One of his primary jobs will be to work with newly appointed Vice Presi- dent for State Relations and i ATTENTION FRESHMEN Reserve your textbooks NOW Pick them up when you return for fall classes. NO CASH REQUIRED-ol advance orders guaranteed. Save up to 1 on Folletts used books. Drop in or moil your reservation cord to FOLLETTS 322 S. State St. Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 This Sunday, July 14--7 and 9:05 p.m. Architecture Auditorium CHARLIE CHAPLIN in THE GOLD RUSH SHORT from the Chicago Film Co-Op 75c - Sunday Night Film Series - 75c I 7 Uncle Gene Wants MASS MEETING WEDNESDAY %dk Mt At Ending D DIAL Wednesday 8-6416 IF YOU'RE THIRTYr YOU'RE THROUGH W0001nG $l/l r I /7) A, T NATIONAL SENERAL CORPORATtON 3rdFOX EASTRN TATRS COMPLETE SHOWINGS WEEK! IDIn IEELU U1:00-3:00-5:00 375 No. MAPLE RD.-7691300 7:15-9:30 WEDNESDAY SHOWINGS- 3:00 - 5:00 - 7:15 - 9:30 - I I I . . ik I