r Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN _ UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "If People Get Educated, And If They Can Vote, What's To Become Of Us?" DELTA COLLEGE: Dismissals Sour Promising Future A "Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail' Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinians of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. IEDNESDAY, APRIL 24, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: ELLEN SILVERMAN GSC Must Overcome Graduate Apathy. GRADUATE STUDENT Council Is the official voice of 10,000 graduate students on this campus, with hypothetical representation from every graduate department. It meets monthly in the Rackham building to discuss and act on problems facing the graduate student. Its emphasis is academic, not political. GSC is facing two major interrelated prob- lems hindering its effectiveness. One is in- ternal-lack of interest among graduate stu- dents, the other external-uncertain areas of authority, untested power, and little campus recognition. The council has an official membership of 80 or more, most of whom have never attended a meeting. They once indicated a preference for representing their respective departments, and then let the matter drop. There are close to 30 members who come more or less frequent- ly; with a few regulars and a core of leaders. Average attendance is 20. Recently it has been extremely difficult for the council to get a quorum-only one quarter of its "known" mem- bers. Poor attendance continually hampers any significant GSC action. IE LACK of interest among graduate stu- dents is both explainable and unfortunate. Graduates are not in Ann Arbor for student politics, spring weekends, fraternities, football games or panty raids. The graduate world is an intensive academic one, the antithesis of the undergraduate one - at least on this campus.. The graduate student faced problems as an undergraduate which he faces in different form now. He may have objected to them as an undergraduate, but his ivory-tower-fixation interferes with any desire to work on them now. In removing themselves from undergraduate adolescent idiocy, graduates have withdrawn a little too far, ignoring their role in correcting their current problems-from a backward i- brary system, rapidly rising graduate tuition costs and arbitrarily short language screening test periods to parking restrictions. HE SITUATION is unfortunate because graduate students could play an intelligent and mature role on this campus, offsetting the superficial concerns of the undergraduate. The graduate-undergraduate difference is the essen- tial contrast between the General Library and the UGLI, between GSC and Student Govern- ment Council. Just recently, faculty opponents to student- faculty government have been using the past record -of SGC as evidence that students are not ready for the responsibility. And in the next breath they have indicated to GSC that they would not have the same categoric oppo- sition to graduate students. There are many problems on this campus that could be dealt with effectively by a grad- uate council-the more important concerns of SGC: not calendaring of Paul Bunyan balls, but housing discrimination; not campus politi- cal parties, but the Conference on the Uni- versity. THE LEADERS of GSC feel this problem acutely. They have been making a con- certed effort to attract members and to raise attendance, but their methods rather seem to be backfiring. Attendance is dropping instead. It is getting harder and harder to get a quorum at meetings, Last Thursday's meeting was a perfeet example of the effect of the attendance problem on GSC activity. It was a perfect ex- ample of what a meeting should not be. It was rather pathetic. The executive committee began things by presenting a motion endorsing the present work to include students in the deliberation of com- mittees of the University Senate. The motion also requested a role for GSC in selecting the students, and placing some graduates on the committees. One GSC member, against the motion, then pointed out the absence of a quorum. There were 17 members present, and it had been ob- vious from the beginning that a quorum was lacking. The absence of quorum could not be determined officially, since numbered among the missing was the membership chairman with the membership lists. The member almost got away with blocking action on the proposal. fE REST of the membership, in favor of the proposal, looked for a way out of the parliamentary difficulty. D e b a t e centered around the preposterous situation - members who attend meetings show an interest, the Editorial Staff MICHAEL OLINICK, Editor JUDITH OPPENHEIM MICHAEL HARRAH Editorial Director City Editor CAROLINE DOW..................Personnel Director JUDITH BLEIER ...............Associate City Editor FRED RUSSELL KRAMER .. Assoc. Editorial Director CYNTHIA NEU.Co-Magazine Editor HARRY PERLSTADT............. Co-Magazine Editor TOM WEBBER................, .....Sports Editor JAN WINKLEMAN ............Associate Sports Editor membership lists are full of dead wood, the rule of the majority is being impeded by one ob- structionist. Finally, in somewhat dubious parliamentary procedure,, the body voted to adjourn, since there was no quorum, hold a special meeting immediately after, and suspend the quorum rule as the first order of business in the new meeting. It worked, but did not make GSC look like a very representative organization. The proposal then passed easily. GSC has taken to greater publicity to attract members. It has just acquired a bulletin board in Rackham and a mimeograph machine and is now mailing out minutes. But attendance is not picking up. Lack of interest among graduate students brings along another GSC problem. Of the members who do attend meetings, only a few have been willing to do any work. Now however, with a new active executive committee as an example, and moderate amount of browbeat- ing as a stimulus, members have been coming around to doing more of their share of what needs to be done. A group is now revising the orientation hand- book for incoming graduate students, and al- though progress has not yet been very visible, the members have at least expressed a willing- ness to take on the job. There is also a new library committee which hopefully is about to look into a group of "archaic rules and back- ward methods" in the University librarysystem. Still, to anyone attending a meeting, it is obvious that almost all of the work is carried on by the small handful of leaders that is pushing GSC along. Without Vice-President Michael Rosen the council would be little indeed. GSC'S EXTERNAL problems arise directly out of these internal difficulties. Since GSC has continually been hampered with lack of sufficient interest, it has been unable to take much public action of any significance. As a result its authority is untested in many areas, and it remains a little-known campus group. The council is doing its best to change these situations-as best they can with their con- tinuing internal problems. Since January GSC has an impressive record. It has: Proposed an extensive reorganization of SGC, with election of members from individual schools and colleges-an "academic basis"; Endorsed work on fair housing and called for a statement from University President Harlan Hatcher supporting fair housing legislation; Conducted a student poll on the proposal from Rep. Lester Allen (R-Ithica) that would charge students from $1200 to $1500 upon graduating; Interviewed and endorsed candidates in last month's SGC election campaign, and called for the removal of ex-officios from the body; Co-sponsored a lecture on the Emancipation Proclamation 100 Years Ago and Today by Dr. Herbert Apetheker,seditor of an extreme left publication; Called on Gov. George Romney to appoint intelligent and concerned educators to his "blue ribbon" Citizens' Committee on Higher Educa- tion; Decried the erosion in confidence in the University prompting recent faculty resigna- tions because of doubts that the state and the Legislature are willing to support the Univer- sity with sufficient funds; Endorsed work on student-faculty govern- ment, and called for graduate influence in the selection and interviewing of candidates for stpdent representation on faculty committees; The council has also seen its past president, Edwin Sasaki, come in third in the SGC elec- tions and later be elected executive vice-presi- dent. THESE RECENT accomplishments are even more impressive when compared to GSC's former years and to SGC's record in the same period. However, when organizations suddenly de- cide to become active they face certain prob- lems. After GSC decided to co-sponsor Ape- theker, Council President Steven Maddock was called in by a high official in the graduate school and queried about the action. Other mild pressures have been applied to other GSC members to the effect that a graduate should be all academic and not spend his time on student councils. GSC still has a considerable amount of un- tested authority because the council's measures have never significantly been challenged. (Al- though SGC has continually ignored GSC re- quests for direct graduate representation on it, GSC has not pushed the requests farther.) In addition, there are not enough people who introduce enough different motions to enlarge the council's scope. JF GRADUATE Student Council is ever going to be able to take a really active role on this campus, as it should, it must solve its internal problems. The external problems will solve themselves automatically afterwards. GSC has much more potential than SGC, not only because it is made up of graduates in- SY } ' , of-- ...b.... tS6 *; -rg I - "4 l, i 't, V.. F; 1 (F ,'f '4 S LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Threepenny' Disappointing To the Editor: I WOULD LIKE to comment on Michael Juliar's overly-enthu- siastic review of the film version of "The Threepenny Opera." I have seen the off-Broadway and- the Ann Arbor Civic Theatre ver- sions, and am fairly well-acquaint- ed with both the German and English record productions of the play, and I found the film, time- venerated as it may be, highly disappointing. Mr. Juliar says: "And then there are the lyrics and the songs. They have that 'disenchantment and wry optimism,'vas the opening titles of the movie put it. They are the blood and soul." Unfortunately for those who are better acquaint- Bd with the songs, the lack of many of the cleverest and most telling of these was too greatly apparent. The bitter "Morning Anthem" of Mr. Peachum, the love-mocking "Instead-of Song" of Mr. and Mrs. Peachum, Mrs. Peachum's "Ballad of Sexual Dependency," and Macheath's "Ballad of the Easy Life," the "How to Survive Song," and many others are en- tirely cut from the film version, or at best are heard only in the background score * * * FOR "The Threepenny Opera" is, above all, a musical satire, and much of this is lost on the screen. Instead we are shown too many shots of Macheath's gang stealing all sorts of wedding and house- hold equipment (which could have been just as easily and much more subtly suggested by the simple presence of these objects in the warehouse in which Macheath has chosen to take up residence). The ending of the film version, also, is different from that of the theatre and, if equally as unlikely, it .is neither as exciting nor as tuneful. The success of Macheath as a bank president through the work of Polly is hardly as sus- penseful as his split-second rescue from the gallows, and as incon- gruous as his receiving the Order of Knight of the Garter and a fabulous yearly income * * * MR. JULIAR has, perhaps, al- lowed himself to become too im- pressed by the very dramatic his- tory of the actual celluloid on which the film was made to be entirely objective as to the quality of the work presented. One is will- ing to make concessions to the ravages of time and cinematic act- ing tradition, but we have been cheated by the production as well. One might just as well see "Aida" without the Triumphal March, or "Hamlet" without the "To be or not to be" soliloquy. We have seen an opera, or operetta, without song, and it has been, frankly, boring. It is not so much that, as the title of Mr. Juliar's article reads: "'Threepenny' Cuts Up" as that "Threepenny" has been cut up. -Linda Zak, '63 Springtime .. . To the Editor: ( NCE AGAIN Spring has swept present danger" to the remaining males on campus. However, its solution to the problem leaves much to be desired. It does not solve the problem, but only focuses adverse attention to it. Since it is poor policy to criticize without offering constructive help, I will offer an alternate solution. INSTEAD OF removing the doors; the Administration should have set up co-ed johns in the UGLI. This would have many ob- vious -advantages. 1) The occurrence of any homo- sexual activities among males would be cut at least in half, due to the 50-50 chance of meeting a girl. 2) The unpublicized homosexual activity among females would also be greatly reduced. 3) Privacy would be restored to the stalls once again. . d The overcrowded conditions in tne cottee lounge would be re- lieved due to the two new social- climbing facilities on each floor. 5) The male's thoughts of love would again return to his favorite subject, females. Let's not be short-sighted, the removal of the doors does not even infinitesimally solve the underly- ing problem. Surely my solution does more to help the basic prob- lem of homosexuality than does the administration's. -Aaron Grossman, '63 Coverage,... To the Editor: YOUR POOR coverage of the Interfraternity Council Sing of April 17 prompts me to write this letter. The story was incomplete and poorly written-one of the saddest attempts at journalism I have seen in a long time. However, my main purpose in writing is to give credit to Enoch Estep, '3M, who directed the Delta Upsilon group which won the IFC Sing this year. Your re- porter chose to leave the identity of the director unknown both within the story itself and in the cutline under the picture of the group which shows nicely the back of the director's head. Certainly the men of Delta Up- silondeserve praise for their ex- cellent performance, but credit should also be given Mr. Estep, who arranged the medley of songs the group sang and who was re- sponsible for guiding their voices into the melodious blend the aud- ience heard at IFC Sing Wednes- day night. -Barbara Knight Youngblood, '61 History*. . . To the Editor: THE DAILY movie review by Steven Hendel on "The Longest Day," was the strangest mixture of valid criticism and poor criticism I have read in a long time. The remarks about poor acting and poor dialogue were certainly true. They were bad. But in regard to "fragmenting" the plot, Mr. Hen- del is extremely out of line. effort was made to show the scope of the event. As it was the subject was only lightly touched in the time allotted. "Diminishing re- turns on gunfire?" I would say a lack on the reviewer's part to comprehend the magnitude of the invasion unfolding before his eyes. Just for the record Lt. Col. Theodore Roosevelt was Brig. Gen. Theodore Roosevelt. A little his- torical accuracy that the reviewer could have practiced. -David Ruggles, '63 Reviews... To the Editor: JT IS with a rather hesitant hand that I pick up my pen and pro- ceed to criticize a fellow journalist, however, I feel that the situation has become so intolerable that nothing else remains. I am referring to the members of the Daily staff who have auda- city to pass themselves off as pseudo-intellectuals with the nec- essary capabilities of reviewing a local movie. This letter was prompted by the recent Dick Pol- linger review of "Diamond Head," which I viewed the night previous to his critique. First, a good reviewer does not have to resort to sick little exhi- bitions of witticism when trying to convey an idea. I am referring to his lines: "Charlton Heston ... in his spare time practices smiling like he just came from the ortho- dontist;" or another, ". . . and a vision of Miss Mimieux throwing her flat little chest around the big screen. . ." Such cute com- ments are highly unnecessary, and in the case of Mr. Heston, basic- allly false from my standpoint. Second, a rather sketchy read- ing of his article will convince the reader that Pollinger (and his associates), I dare say, has never made an honest attempt at criti- cizing a movie. If he had, this movie review would have stated specifically what was good and what was bad with the picture. * * * FOR EXAMPLE, P olli n g e r never mentions that the movie was entirely too long (close to two hours) he never mentions that Heston's performance was not a very convincing portrayal of an angry man in several scenes; he never mentions that the viewer is left in some doubt as to whether Sloane (Yvette Mimieux) goes for the doctor-brother because she loves him or because she is attempting to spite her own broth- er; he never mentions that George Chakiris had the physical appear- ance of and aptly portrayed a calm cool realist; and he never came right out and said what he felt to be the theme of the movie because I rather doubt if he took the time to try to understand it. * *~ * IT APPEARS that Pollinger was so busy trying to formulate some tremendous masterpiece of witti- cism (which for all he was hoping might some day appear in Time Magazine because it was so good) that he never bothered to give the reader a review of the movie. I (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of a two part series on the current problems at Delta College.) By MARJORIE BRAHMS Acting Associate Editorial Director SMALL, friendly Delta College is an ideal place to learn. There the faculty is free to experiment, close rapport between students and faculty has developed and the surroundings are bright and en- couraging. Yet some people fear there will be an exodus of faculty members, disillusioned by the fail- ure of Delta to fulfill its bright potential. The dismissal by Delta's Board of Trustees of two faculty mem- bers, Don Woodworth and the Rev. Marshall Hier, has triggered a rash of faculty complaints and student protests. Behind the dis- missals, particularly that of Wood- worth, is the right-wing politics of the board, creating a policy of constriction opposed to the orig- inal freedom promised to the fac- ulty. Faculty members were al- ready upset by the delay in its becoming a four-year degree granting institution. The politics behind the failure of Delta to pro- gress beyond its two-year status has made many hopeful faculty and students, many looking for- ward to a merger with the Uni- versity, discontented with the col- lege and the board's policy against merging and thereby losing the community status of Delta. * * * THE TROUBLE at Delta stems from a letter posted on an "opin- ion board" in a main corridor, on which Delta persons can comment on any matter. It was devised to stimulate free discussion; ironical- ly, it may have resulted in dis- couraging that very thing. Woodworth posted a letter ex- pressing his viewpoints on United States foreign policy toward Cuba; the views were uncomplimentary to the Kennedy Administration. Also, Woodworth had previously participated in a demonstration protesting nuclear testing. Clearly, he is a man interested in express- ing his opinions and positions, unpopular though they may be in the Bay City-Saginaw-Midland area. Some students and faculty have hypothesized that Woodworth's views caused his dismissal. In an interview last week, Wood- worth contemplated his plans for the future and expressed disillu- sionment with the future of Del- ta: "This is the only community of 100,000 plus, in the United States which doesn't have a de- gree-granting college. It is a de- pressed area educationally with a lower standard of living than the rest of Michigan. Also it has few- er college graduates. I think the four-year college is a lost cause." * * THE DILEMMA at Delta, how- ever, extends far beyond faculty discontent such as Woodworth's. The board's action may not only result in increased faculty depar- ture but may also make new fac- ulty members wary of coming to Delta. This problem is deadly for a new school like Delta, built on a promise of freedom, experimenta- tion and expansion. Woodworth explained the ad- vantages of teaching at Delta:the curriculum is highly integrated and not decompartmentalized; the student bears more responsibility for his own work than do stu- dents at other, larger schools, and there is less authoritarian pres- sure from the instructor; the role of the teacher is a "kind of re- source person" and he teaches as part of a team which "holds the students in common." These innovations in teaching methods and concepts point to a bright future for Delta. The stu- dents seem to like it there and they should. At Delta there is an opportunity for the closest of stu- dent-teacher rapport, a condition which has resulted in the unusual situation of students calling teach- ers by first names. In addition to reports on en- croachment on a faculty member's right to speak, there are charges ,of abuse of academic due process. On this point students and faculty were adamant; they charged that the real problem was that Wood- worth was not accorded a hearing to state his case. Moreover, a bill of particulars listing the reasons for his dismissal was never given to him. In the case of Rev. Hier, a bill of particulars was presented. * * * THAT THE CHARGES for Woodworth were never made pub- lic confuses the issues since it then becomes nearly impossible to declare a violation of academic freedom without specifically list- ed charges. Woodworth and Rev. Hier learn- ed Feb. 28 that their contracts had not been renewed by the board although they had received recom- mendations from their deans. Woodworth, on the same day, ap- plied to the Teaching Faculty Executive Committee for an ad hoc committee to investigate his case and the committee was ap- pointed. Both committee reports concerned the procedure followed in the failure to renew the con- tracts. Prof. Robert Pettengill, chair- The faculty believes, although it has not been given a bill of par- ticulars in Woodworth's case, that there is something of which to be suspicious. An atmosphere of dis- trust is coupled with a feeling of discontent because the promised four-year college and tenure sys- tem have not materialized. That is unfortunate for a new school. Hopefully, it will not be fatal to the reputation, functioning and growth of Delta. Yet this problem can only be remedied in the future by more intelligent handling of faculty matters by the board. LIPPMANN: Congress- P- May1i Pass Tax Bill By WALTER LIPPMANN THERE HAS come to be general agreement in Washington that the only big and new measure which has a chance to be passed by Congress is the tax bill. There are, of course, many other things that we ought to be generally concerned about-notably the in- adequacy of our educational sys- tem. But there we are immobil- ized by the deadlock over the church schools. The tax bill touches all our in- terests, even education, since an expanding economy would pro- duce more revenue for the states and localities as well as the federal government. It touches almost every other public matter, be it the race for the moon or unem- ployment and juvenile delinquency. A measure which will stimulate economic growth is the hub of the wheel from which all the spokes radiate. * * * ALTHOUGH the House has completed its hearings, there are few outward signs of what tax measures Congress is in fact go- ing to enact. There has been one decisively important development since the administration sent its proposals to Congress. Though it is not admitted4 officially, tax re- form, except in more or less token face-saving details, h a s been abandoned. The bill which will go to the House this summer will be a bill to reduce taxes. This will put before the Con- gress and the country the basic question: shall we reduce taxes, though this means a' bigger budgetary deficit, in order to stimulate economic growth by evoking a greater demand for con- sumer goods and a greater invest- ment in capital goods? Two quite separate witnesses have recently testified on this question. The one is Mr. Maud- ling, chancellor of the exchequer in the Conservatile government of Great Britain. The other is Gov. Rockefeller, the leading contend- er for the Republican nomination for President. It is a most interest- ing and significant fact that the British chancellor and the New York governor take their stand on the same economic doctrine which is the foundation of the Kennedy fiscal policy. All three are concerned with the same problem, a sluggish rate of growth accompanied by unem- ployment. All of them propose in principle the same remedy. All of them derive this remedy from the same school of economic thinking, that of the Swedish economists and John Maynard Keynes. All of them propose to overcome slug- gishness by expanding demand, and all of them propose to do this by 'reducing taxes and accepting budgetary deficits. (Mr. Maudling not only reduces taxes, but ji- creases government expenditures.) All three believe that the way eventually to balance the budget will be to produce more tax rev- enues from an expanding economy. * * * PRECISE comparisons cannot be made between the Maudling budget and the Kennedy budget. For one thing, the British have no budget like our highly misleading administrative budget, which we call the budget. Furthermore, the British economy and the British population are much smaller than ours. The British national product is about 14 per cent of the American,' and the British popu- lation is only 30 per cent of ours. But, insofar as the two budgets are comparable, the calculations which I have seen show that in relation to the size of the two economies, the British cash deficit is somewhat larger than ours. Gov. Rockefeller's contribution to the discussion is in a statement issued on April 6. It is, I think, no misrepresentation to say that the statement endorses the theory and the main substance of the admin- istration program. The governor, who is in search of Republican votes, does not, of course, want it too widely realized that there is such fundamental similarity be- tween the Kennedy and the Rocke- feller diagnosis of, and the Ken- nedy and the Rockefeller prescrip- r I 4 A I I I I