Seventy First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Where Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. " Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. URDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: HARRY PERLSTADT "ISuccess! We Got Another Old Lady Trying To Escape While We Were Evicting Her From Her Home" AT THE MICHIGAN: The Woof LITTLE THINGS mean a lot to "Romanoff \and Juliet." And one big thing-the person of Peter Ustinov, parading in full dress as the honorable President of Concordia, the remarkable nation of five square miles which harbors the events of the film. There will probably never be a dud if Ustinov is in it. His deft handling of expression and motion is a delight to watch, and such touches give more genuine humor to films than his lines do. Since the direction and screenplay are Ustinov's as well, he must bear AT some of the blame for the faults THE CAMPUS of the film. - - * TH PO i otig peil-U R'k ' RI 'I7N / -.- i _ r',. Fraternities, Sororities. Must Be Given. Deadline EHE AUTUMN DEBATE on fraternity and sorority membership information is fast be- ining a Student Government Council tradi- on. Last year in early October John Feldkamp itroduced a motion to require submission to he Council of the parts of sorority and fra- rnity constitutions which pertain to mem- ership selection. It took the Council nearly wo months to come to a decision on the issue, ut the motion as it finplly emerged in De- ember asked for much more- complete infor- ation from the affiliates. No time limit was A then. At the first October meeting of this year, esse McCorry, chairman of the committee on embership in student organizations, urged ie, Council to set a December time limit for ling of information, since only a. portion of ae sororities and fraternities have submitted aything. One of the Council's top-of-the-head iggestions was to wait until December and ien start talking about a time limit. There seems to be no good reason to pro- 'astinate until December;-.just as there seems be no good reason for the procrastination f the fraternities and sororities up to this oint. )ANHELLENIC President Susan Stillerman claims the sorority t presidents haven't sub- fitted the information because + f a "basic )nfusion" about what'information they should irn in. Yet the motion passed last Decem- er states in the most complete terms possible iat the required statement must list "all cur- mt rules, regulations, policies, written or oral greements, or any other written or unwritten iteria which in any way affects the selection members. Accompanying such ;shall be the roup's interpretation of these provisions as their ability to comply with the University egulation on Membership." The regulation is perfectly clear. Further- ore, the members of the committee on mem- ership and Vice-President Lewis have all Unbecoming T IS OBVIOUS that the sub-committee on discipline, in clarifying its feelings on riots, aids and demonstrations, is only trying to curb anty ratids and other such pointless gather- gs. But the subcommittee's statement on us particular aspect of "conduct unbecoming student" could have further implications if is not carefully phrased; it could, under Mme interpretations in the future, be taken as limitation upon the right of students to or- anize and demonstrate for some meaningful id. The committee then must be careful to draw ie distinction between an organized, non- olent political demonstration, for example, nd a panty raid, which can be construed as o more than a useless riot which the Univer- ty has every reasonable right to curb. There lust be a distinction between ends rather ian a blanket condemnation of the means. --D. MARCUS been on campus ever since last December, willing and anxious to answer questions on the ruling and expedite the submission of informa- tion. The only possibilities for confusion lie in contradictory information received from other sources or in failure to use the available re- sources to clear up the confusion. An under- standable problem, however, has been the re- fusal to cooperate of National Panhellenic As- sociation, which represents all but one of the sororities on campus. But in this matter.also the University was willing to offer assistance to the local groups. INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL President Robert Peterson blamed the fraternities' failure to file information on "apathy or lack of awareness ... of the urgency of the regula- tion." This, too,, seems to be a rather flimsy excuse. All organizations involved in the reg- 'ulation received letters in January explaining the procedure. Later in the spring,,another let- ter was sent to, all groups that had not yet turned in statements. There has certainly been discussion of the regulation, and its ixhplica- tions throughout the University. Anyone >di- rectly affected by this regulation, who didn't know about it or didn't take any interest in complying, certainly lies open to the charge of irresponsibility. Per Hanson hit closest to the real difficulty in saying that many groups didn't file because they are currently in violation of the Univer- sity ruling. , Cerainly, the first response of a violating group would be fear. This fear is legitimate in the broad context of the group's status as a' recognized student organization on this cam- pus. It is not a reasonable fear when applied to the submission of information concerning membership practices to -the committee on membership in student organizations. The com- mittee has stated repeatedly that, it needs this information before it can begin to consider the status of violating groups. SUBMISSION of the information, in itself, does not mean an immediate suspension of the group. It merely means that the commit- tee will begin to work ,on the particular prob- lem of the violating group, and can begin to cooperate with the group on removal of the membership restrictions. On the other hand, refusal to submit infor- mation is in itself a violation of the require- ments for recognition as a student organiza- tion at the University. John Feldkamp's inter- pretation of ,the regulation last year was that failure to submit information could be grounds for loss of recognition. At this point, neither possibility carries much weight because there is no timerlimit on sub-, mission of information. The only way to make the regulation meaningful--and the only way to make SGC's role as official recognizer of student organizations meaningful-is to estab- lish a time limit immediately, and stop the procrastination. -PAT GOLDEN Associate City Editor THE PLOT ;is nothing special-- its very reminiscent of last sea- son's "The Mouse That Roared." It's the saga of a little country which loses its diplomatic virginity by a quirk of fate on the floor of the UN. The main action centers on the efforts of Russian and American ambassadors to gain the favor of Peter, the President, with wheat, arms and liquor. But there's more to it than that. 'As the title indicates, there is a Hatfield-McCoy romance bit be- tween the son of the, Russian ambassador and the daughter of the American ambassador. The latter character, represented by Sandra Dee, is left to adorn the film here and there rather than to contribute much to the action or dialog. The sin of signing this actress for the part is thus some- what whitewashed. * * * THERE ARE so many little laughs in the film that the effect is one of gentle amusement rather than hilarity. Thus, it is less funny than "The Mouse," but more pleas- ing. Typical of the obvious gag lines -which add little to the more subtle touches of the lead actor -are the American ambassador's line "We'll give them everything they want ... until they appre- ciate the democratic way of life" (or should I use a capital D?), and the admission that Concordia's national income comes chiefly from printing stamps with defects. ' A plot which ends up pairing off two couples so neatly, is always trite, of course. AND THERE ARE those little disturbing things which may have been introduced for humor. Like a "poor country" with such lavish surroundings (in ;color, yet) and a blonde beauty of 19 from an Ameican university who has never been kissed. Of the technical factors in the production the music is the best- handled. Also on the bill is a ditty by Walter Lantz which reviews every stock gag and situation in the history of cartoons. But Sandra Dee was much more nauseating. -Richard Ostling Moves "THE RISKISHA-MAN," al- though somewhat marred by a poor job of sub-titling, is a film of outstanding technical and ar- tistic quality. The story, set in he Japan of the early ninteen hundreds, de- picts the moving - struggle of a laborer to overcome the heart- breaking isolation imposed upon him by the remnants of a caste-. system. r EVERYONE LOSES: Reuther, Strikes Again TOSHIRO MIFUNE plays the title role of Matsu with excep- tional energy and sensitivity. The joy of being partially accepted into the world to which his in- tegrity and compassion entitle him is gradually replaced by anguish as Matsu becomes less and less a part of that world. Perhaps even more impressive than Mifune's fine performance is the magnificent photography which marks the film from be- ginning to end. Both color and composition are handled with un- usual skill. The exciting rituals and pageants of Japan, of course, offer a wealth of opportunity for such artistry. A claim of excessive senti nen- tality might well be made against the film were it not fir; the fact that Mifune is in complete con- trol of his characterization. What could become maudlin in less cap- able hands is genuinely moving in his. HIKEKO TAKAAJNE, portray- ing the woman Matsu loves but can never hope to posses, reflects the strange mixture of budding equality and ancient social stratif- ication which alternately raises and destroys her admirer's hopes for happiness. Striking techniques of photo- graphy are employed to mirror, in nature, the emotions and crises of the characters. Traces of the "pathetic fallicy" are evident, to be sure, but are made largely in- significant by the unity of mood which is thereby achieved. -Ralph Stingel r' By MICHAELHARRAH Daily Staff Writer UNITED AUTO WORKERS' President Walter Reuther has called his second idiotic strike in less than a month and it's high time that some check be devised to stop these unnecessary hijiiks. The current Ford strike was call- ed for no better reason than to back up a senseless threat. To be certain, Walter Reuther had no choice but to call a strike, but a man in his position should be re- sponsible enough not to make, needless threats. CONSIDER the facts: Armed with a somewhat bizarre contract with American Motors (which was more political cam- paign platform for George Romney than a victory for labor), Reuther went into "intensive" bargaining with General Motors. GM was un- impressed, but still in earnest. At the very outset he threatened to strike and set a specific deadline -a deadline which even the fed- eral mediation board found hard to believe. General Motors claimed it could not possibly meet the deadline and still make a good contract. Tough, replied Reuther. A plea from Sec- retary of Labor Arthur Goldberg only got the strike deadline put off-from the Friday before La- bor Day to the Tuesday following. That in itself makes one suspicious that Reuther would have struck as originally intended, had it not been that he feared internal re- percussions from employees losing vacation pay. * * * 1 SO HE STRUCK GM. The giant auto corporation professed they were progressing as fast as they could. All economic issues were settled. Only local disputes re- mained-things which could not be worked out until the economic points were settled upon. The federal mediation board,the labor department and even the President publicly took a dim view of the strike. But the UAW struck anyway. Perhaps they had to, in order to keep face. But their heart was not in it. Some of the major locals refused to go out and still others didn't stay out. /"And when differences were settled at last, Reuther was unable to control several wild-cat strikes. What it all amounted to was two weeks of an ill-advised and quite unpopular mess. One would think Reuther would learn.. . * * H BUT HISTORY repeats itself at Solidarity House. The new-and- different AMC contract had little effect at GM, so the GM contract, which contained little more than the old one, was a slap in the face to the UAW boss. He tackled Ford next. Impressed with GCS's handling of the prob- lem, Ford decided they had a few rights and things to say in this whole matter of new contracts too. So they informed Reuther they would have to negotiate his offer, and Ruether informed them of their strike date. It was GM all over again' Gold- berg pleading, Kennedy frowning, the federal mediator proclaiming the needlessness of a strike, Ford "working as fast as we can," and Reuther all the while preparing for a strike. Ford was struck early this week. All the economic issues were set- tled; only local grievences remain- ed. Again there was no better rea- son for the strike than Reuther's vanity. APPARENTLY, the UAW boss does not learn from his own mis- takes, or else he's power crazy. Strikes were originally conceived to force management to come to terms. But when management (by most everyone's standards) is do- ing its best to reach agreement, is a strike justified? Let's put the shoe on the other foot. If lock-outs were legal and management didn't like the way things were going, would they be justified in locking out the work- ers when the union was earnestly trying to come to terms? The answer in both cases is no. There's but one difference: Man- agement cannot stop work, even when their complaint is well taken; but unions can strike when- ever it takes their fancy. * * * - NOW, HOWEVER, the UAW is abusing this power. It wouldn't. seem that they.should be allowed to strike. whenever they feel like it, for there's too much at stake. In the past it was thought that unions were reasonable enough to Oppositi"on "I WANT to tell you Socialists.. . that I am entirely at variance with you philosophy . .. Econom- ically, you are unsound; socially, you are wrong; and industrially, you are an impossibility." -Samuel Gompers use the liberal powers of the strike wisely, but in view of the UAW actions plus continuing troubles at such vital places as Cape Ca- naveral, one can only conclude that labor has lost it prospective in the matter. Just as management had to be stopped from upsetting a locality with a lock-out, so must labor now be stopped from doing the same thing with needless strikes. One way of course to settle the matter would be to pass legislation requiring unions to apply to the federal mediation board or the National Labor relations board for permission to strike. Then perhaps the people' of the nation would have some say in the matter. As it is now, they alone are unheard. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Fire and Red Tape -~~~ 'ietne By HAR / 3-2-1-LEARN! VEY MOLOTCH, Editorial Director 4 ARLY LAST WEEK I returned to Mason Hall's language lab for the first time since layed ,down my Politzer French workbook vo years ago. With great dismay, I learned at despite one vibrant Daily editorial and ie almost revolutionary letter to the editor manding its withdrawal, the time clock still ood on the window sill. I'm anti-time'clocks, mainly because I'm nti-time. Time itself is a worthless entity, and is absolutely ridiculous to set up mechanisns measure it. Of course the officials who -have set up is system have done it probably not to easure time, per se, but to use this measure- ent-relative and worthless, though it may ,-in the name -of the great god education. WILL LAY myself upon the altar of self- sacrifice and let it be known that at least r Harvey Molotch, the time-clock failed, iserably for all concerned. How well -I re- ember my sessions in the language lab. Twice week I carefully placed a Henry Miller ,vel,' freshly smuggled into the U.S. by a iend between the pages of my Politzer work- >ok-it was then child's play to smuggle it to the language lab. Soon I began looking rward to my sessions in the lab, for I knew at not only was I acquiring the longest Led-in - punch card on the racks, but that ere- was another passage of Henry Miller aiting with the earphones. No doubt, there are many of you out there (esoterics, we'll call you) who will say that the time clock brought me Henry Miller and Henry Miller is art, and I learned, and I was fulfilled. I won't debate the literary merits of Henry Miller as I am still quite illiterate. But during those hours as a freshman I know I was not being fulfilled; I was not reading art -I was waddling in FILTH, I knew it was filth, and I kept reading precisely because it was filth. I still have the book, and I'll show anyone the underlined passages. I never learned any French; I seldom even turned on my earphones. I did, however, pick up some fine English idomatic phrases from the entourage of foreign students invariably shouting around me-"I'11 see you, I'll see you, I'll see you, I'll see you," ad infinitum. Despite all this, I used to leave the lab with a real feeling of satisfaction-I had more than fulfilled my obligation; the lan- guage lab and I were as one. I prayed to God that myI instructor was not one of those. who I heard never even checked the- time- cards. I had worked so hard, and besides, after a while, I began to feel that perhaps through osmosis by such close proximity to French tapes, I was actually learning. I WASN'T LEARNING a thing. Last year I was in France and couldn't speak a sen- tence or understand a Frenchman's simple directions. Yet the University of Michigan To the Editor: A STARTLING FACT was un- covered at Alice Lloyd Hall during Tuesday night's fire: al- though the lever on the corridor, fire alarm box was pullel as soon as the fire was discovered, the main gong did not go off to warn the girls until after the arrival of the firemen. The result was, of course, chaos, with half the girls running outside after hearing shouts and screams of-"Fire!" with the other half either insisting it was a false alarm, or left sitting in dazed confusion. The delayed action of the main fire gong was due to no mechani- cal failure in the apparatus itself, but rather to foolish planning on the part of whoever set it up. When the lever on the little cor- ridor alarm is pulled, a signal is sent directly to the fire station, but the dorm-wide gong is not touched off; instead, a signal is triggered in the housemother's of- fice, and if she happens to be in, she immediately pulls the ,switch for the main alarm, unless, of course, she wishes to check for a false alarm. From Tuesday night's results, it is obvious that the time taken out for this red tape can cause mass confusion and panic, and could very well mean the difference be- tween life and death, should the fire be serious enough. Most uni- versity women are mature enough to be trusted with "live" fire alarms in their living quarters and if a false alarm did occur, wouldn't that annoyance be worth the sav- ing of time, panic and, possibly, of lives later on? -Jeannette Hoffman, '64 -Gretchen Groth, '64 Curtains . . To the Editors: WE ARE WRITING in angry protest to the unreasonable demand of Mr. L. A. Schaadt that the cafe curtains hanging in our room be removed. First, we must point out that dormitory rules pertaining to the to be proven that the public makes a habit of staring at residence halls and making crucial observations of each window. It is therefore even more remote that someone would stand outside, finger point- ed, and scream, "Look their win- dow is different from everybody else's." IN BROCHURES that women residents receive, the philosophy of dormitory living is expressed as one trying to provide as home- like an atmosphere as possible. We know our curtains have achieved 'this. However, from Mr. Schaadt's point of view, the devices which create this atmosphere must go. In addition to the bright little cur- tains, the colorful prints of mu- seum paintings, which hide the dirt, cracks and peeling paint of our drab' gray walls, must now go, too, because the use of mask- ing tape is being put on the for- bidden list. We can now use push -pins only. Have you ever tried to put 48 pushpins in a plaster wall? We fully realize that we are living in an institution-but we prefer not to liken it to a convent or a penitentiary. If the admins- trators of this university are going to devote valuable time to such petty things as curtains and mask- ing tape, rather than to the great- er and more pertinent problems existing on our campus, i.e. pro- cess of registration, course im- provements, faculty ,fire alarms, etc., then, we can only say it will eventually be curtains for the Uni- versity of Michigan. - -Shelly Ruth Stern, '64 -Linda Shulman, '64 Homecoming.. To the Editor: BECAUSE of all the inquiries, I would like to explain how the Homecoming petitions were judg- ed. The judging, which took place Tuesday night, was out of the hands of the Central Committee. The Judges were Mike Balgley from the Union, Allyn Thomp- As far as any duplications which were accepted, their ideas were different enough to allow no prejudice in the upcoming judging, October 21. As far as an intellectual 1mpli cation, we have added an "intel- lectual twist" to a rah-rah week- end. We never intended to do away with the rah-rah aspect, only to add something to it. We wanted the foreign students to take part in this all-American, traditional weekend, and they are. There is no apathy with this year's Homecoming, and I hope there will none in future Home- comings, and I hope that future Homecomings carry on with our "intellectual twist." In conclu- sion, I would like to state that the views I stated are my own, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Central Commit- tee. -Aaron Grossman, '63 Homecoming Displays Co-chairnan Elephants .., To the Editor:' HAT IS WTONG with editorial writer Harry Perlstadt? He failed to see the really threatening significance of the three elephants being built for Homecoming. They are obvious manifestations of the (heaven forbid!) rising conserva- tive movement on this campus! -Patricia Wilson, '64 Vitality. To the Editor: IN ALL THE EXCITEMENT of the impending retirement of xDeborah Bacon as Dean of Wo- men it is to be hoped that her contribution and great dedication to the University is not ignored. Many will disagree with some of her solutions for the multitude of problems which confronted her daily; but none can deny her loyalty and keen spirit which she brought to her office.~ DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m., two days preceding publication. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7 General Notices ards for N.S.F. Fellowship programs. Events Saturday Faculty Recital: Percival Price, Uni- versity Carillonneur, will present a re- cital on Sat., Oct. 7 at 12 Noon at Bur- ton Memorial Tower. Placement The following schools have listed teaching vacancies for the school year 1961-1962.%