Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHMAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOp, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Troth Will'Preai" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff wiriters or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. "Well, Back To The Old Grind" URSDAY, APRIL 25, 1963 ACTING NIGHT EDITOR: kENNETH WINTER New Committees Offer Rallying-Point for Concern A T LONG LAST those students who have been soliciting for the end of in loco parentis and crying for greater student participation in University decision-making bodies have an op- portunity to make their voice heard. The newly constructed eight subcommittees of Student Government Council's Committee on University Affairs offer just that opportunity. Students must not, with an apathetic nod of approval, dismiss the chance to support these committees; they should petition for them and work diligently to make the transition from a faculty-administration dominated government to a student-faculty government. Yesterday, a major step toward affect- ing this new form of government, long deliber- ated by SGC, came in the form of an adver- tisement opening interviews for SGC commit- tees and related boards. PLACES FOR TWO PEOPLE on each of the eight committees were announced: educa- tional policies, campus planning and develop- ment, public relations, student relations, re- search policy, jniversity freedom and responsi- bility, professionalism in inter-collegiate ath- letics and year-round operations and calendar- ing change. Although actually subcommittees of the standing SGC Committee on University Affairs, these committees have been termed Senate Ad- visory Committee on University Affairs com- mittees because of the close functional relation- ship they will have with the SAC, the working body of the University Senate. in, the discussionis on student-faculty gov- ernment with the faculty group,-'Council came' to grips with a certain amount of oppositionJ from faculty members who pointed to the poor record of students in campus government. To achieve a satisfactory compromise with such objectors, Council agreed to establish a.transi- tional step toward student-faculty government. Instead of immediately placing students on SAC committees, it agreed to restructure its own committee system, part of which will close- ly parallel SAC. This compromise was a realistic action on Council's part. Students' record in government, admittedly, has been poor. Harriassed by an in- creasing academic burden, the student has been pressured more and more to abdicate responsi- bility or ignore completely the role he should play in University government. COUNCIL'S PLAN to involve students gradu- ually in a combined government would not add another burden to the student. Rather, it would offer him a chance to alleviate the pressures of a University whose code too long has been paternalistic. Plans for the channels toward combined gov- ernment have been drawn; what is needed now is the competent workmen to make the blue- prints a reality. S.GC has stipulated that those who seek ap- pointment to one of the committees related to SAC must fill out interview forms available in the Student Activities Bldg. In addition to the regular items, the forms will require a statement on the part of the interviewees on "the concepts and role of higher education and faculty-student government at the Uni- versity." The faculty criticism that students who can- not successfully govern themselves have no place in faculty government has too much fac- tual support to be dismissed as exaggeration. Hopefully, students concerned with the validity of this criticism and anxious to do something, concrete about it will petition for one of the new subcommittees. -LOUISE LIND i I AAI . 4 " / i \UNIVERSITY PLAYERS- Baird Shines In Truth-Fantasy4 THERE IS OFTEN more truth in fantasy than in so-called reality. "The Madwoman of Chaillot" presents the actual world under the guise of wild imagination. The University Players presenting the play this week at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre to an excellent job of keeping the problems of a mechanized world real and threatening. Jean Giraudoux writing his play in the black days of Nazi-occupied Paris saw an inevitable con- frontation between the forces of individualism and those that call for "a standardized worker with interchangeable parts." This question of the utmost solemnity-the possible loss of personal human dignity and worth-is kept in balance by flights into a dream world in which it is impossible to distinguish between memory and fact. The best part is no one wants to make the distinction-their merging is taken for granted and the question "what is real?" is invalid. It would be inaccurate to give the impression that this play isn't funny. It's a perfect escape for those who are tired of the distressingly "real" world, primarily because those real problems are put in their proper perspective. "Nothing is ever so wrong in this world that a sen- sible woman can't set it right in the course of an afternoon," The Madwoman explains. * * * * CLARIBEL BAIRD as The Madwoman is wonderful in her presen- tation of a woman who loves life, reveres freedom and believes in the eternal unity of all good men. Miss Baird could carry any production and audiences should consider themselves fortunate to have her com- bination of technical ability and innate spirit of the true lady in the part. Jack O'Brien, more locally well-known for his playwrighting, gave the role of the sewer man a mature characterization. The interchange between Miss Baird and O'Brien is one of the funniest in the play. O'Brien makes use of his entire body to complete the part of king of the sewers who holds swimming races during the summer months in his subterranean kingdom. Barbara Sittig, Joan Lieber and Janet Watson as the other three madwomen of Paris also gave charmingly funny performances above the average of most student actors. Those especially inclined towards cynicism should see "The Mad- woman of Chaillot." It reaffirms faith in life, young.-love and humanity. The happiness of the characters when they believe the world is at last delivered from evil is infectious. The deaf-mute is even momentarily free to speak in a voice that sings of beauty and faith. --Malinda Berry DELTA COLLEGE: Political Situation Endangers Potential, Ar ., ), i II 4 '4 'U' PROGRESS CONTINUES:- Federal Aid: Path to Survival. By PHILIP SUTIN Acting National Concerns Editor Structural Plans Waste Council's Time STUDENT GOVERNMENT COUNCIL cannot last long in its present form, a past SGC president has candidly observed. For the past six months plan after plan has been proposed to alter Council structure; each has been defeated, and additional ones keep appearing. But structural changes have a limited im- portance, and will not solve SGC's ills. All the proposals in this category have been basically unimportant. SGC debated several motions to remove ex- officios from the body, eventually putting the probletn before the student body in a referen- dum. A small majority voted to keep ex-officios and the controversy abruptly ended. Graduate Student Council presented a plan for proportional representation by schools and colleges with ex-officios on a non-voting ad- visory committee. No one bothered to introduce the plan at an SGC meeting. Everyone knew the proposals didn't have a chance for passage, let alone intelligent consideration. SGC's Committee on Student Concerns came up with an ingenious and unworkable geo- graphical districting plan which failed to take adequate precautions against gerrymandering. It was soundly defeated.' The only person who favored it, and incidentally still favors it, is the chairman of the committee who now sits on Council. FINALLY, THE COMMITTEE came up with another remarkable plan: to elect the pres- ident and executive vice-president from the campus at large instead of Council vote. A slightly differentproposal has been introduced by SGC's executive committee. More was worked out on these proposals last night. Sooner or later SGd is going to endorse one of these plans, get approval from the Office of Student Affairs and send it on to the Re- gents for final adoption in the Council plan. The change will be interesting, newsworthy and meaningless. The past history of student government demonstrates that changes in structure have few far-reaching effects. On this campus SGC replaced the old Student Leg- islature. Apparently, many considered the leg- islature a failure. SGC was thought to be the cure-all. The people pushing for a new struc- Editorial Staff MICHAEL OLINICK, Editor JUDITH OPP NHEIM MICHAEL HARRAH Editorial Director City Editor CAROLINE DOW........ ....... Personnel Director JUDITH BLEIER..........Associate City Editor FRED RUSSELL KRAMER .. Assoc. Editorial Director CYNTHIA NEU .................On-Magazine Editor HARRY PERLSTADT ..........Co-Magazine Editor TOM WEBBER.. . ...... . Sports Editor JAN WINKLEMAN.........Associate Sports ,Editor ture now claim that SGC is'also a failure and are bringing out their own home remedies. Reform groups on many campuses work for change and eventually achieve some success. Many follow the pattern. According to the for- mula, every so many' years the structure of the student government can be changed so that campus leaders think they are improving things. ADMITTEDLY, the authority and control of student governments has increased. But these gains come from changing attitudes with- in the universities, and not from changing structures. There is a point to which superficial changes can improve cumbersome organiza- tions, but after that point, change is meaning- less, or only worsens the situation. The future of student government at the University does not lie in petty alterations but in the conceptual change to a working student- faculty government. The steps leading to such a system have been coming slowly up to now but once SGC shows it is truly concerned in more things than partisan politics, fundamental. progress should hopefully take place with fac- ulty cooperation. --RICHARD KELLER SIMON Strategyv CLEVER DEMOCRATIC strategy came to light last Sunday after a climactic three hour State Central Committee meeting at which the party decided to seek a constitution vote recount. Earlier in the week, two Democratic mem- bers of the four-man Board of State Can- vassers had walked out rather than certify the April 1 tabulations. Viewed in retrospect, two facts make the walkout, which at the time seemed foolish, a logical precaution for the recount move. First, petitions for a recount must be filed with the Board within 48 hours of certifica- tion of the constitution, and a $5 cash deposit must be made at the time of petitioning for each precinct to be recounted. Second, the Michigan Democratic party is sadly short of funds. It is estimated that their current debt is $200,000 and a total recount would cost $26,045. WITH TWO MEMBERS of the four-man board in their organization, the Democrats can hold up certification of the document un- til the mid-May legal deadline for action. A holdup in procedures will give the State Central Committee the necessary time to raise money. Chairman Zolton Ferency - announced, Monday the formation of a Citizen's Recount Committee to canvass for funds. THEUNIVERSITY is making progress this year in its struggle against fiscal starvation. With the state budget awaiting final legis- lative action, the University is re- ceiving $1.5 milion more than last year and about $5 million in capi- tal outlay funds. The federal gov- ernment is adding another $31 million in research spending. In a reversal of recent form, the Legislature has made no cuts in the University budget. It faced less need to prune the higher educa- tion appropriation as it is looking toward this fall's special taxses- sion which should raise new reve- nue for the state. The University will see con- tinued support of its building pro- gram One new building-a fluids engineering building - will be started and the construction of four others is continuing. Gov. George Romney's "quick action" capital outlay planning program includes new dental school and medical science buildings. The federal government is spending almost as much at the University as the state. If both funds continue to grow at their present rates, the federal govern- ment should spend more than the state within the next three years. This year, University officials es- timate $31 million will be pumped here from Washington compared to $36.7 milion from Lansing. MOST FEDERAL money goes into specific research projects, mainly in the physical and health sciences. The defense department is the biggest contributor, putting in $14 million. The National Science Foundation and the Na- tionalInstitutes of Health give approximately .$6 million each year. A small amount is spent for the usual "federal aid," financing National Defense Education Act scholarships and building dormi- tories. However, these modest increases in state funds and the flow of federal funds do not do enough to meet the University's critical problems. Within a year, the "baby boom" will descend upon the Uni- versity. The admissions office es-. timates that applications will in- crease by one-third in the next three years while the slow growth of state support will leave enroll- ment static. There is not even enough money for the University to begin full-year operation, a scheme to educate more students faster in three full semesters a year. This problem is now hitting only the undergraduate level. In five years, this same population explo- sion will strike the graduate and professional schools. They are. more costly operations and, be- cause of their specialized nature, much harder to expand. Univer- sity President Harlan Hatcher warns that these schools must grow to serve the expanding com- munity. A * * Unfortunately, state spending will not be adequate for the Uni- versity's requirements. Michigan has a rapidly growing system of colleges and universities which justly demands an increasing pro- portion of the higher education appropriation. The state can no longer afford to lavish its money on the University as it did in the pre-depression era. Thus, the University should re- verse its stand-offish position on federal aid and enthusiastically endorse ahti promote it. Currently, it accepts 'and even. welcomes such funds for research, dormitories and scholarships, but refuses such money for faculty salaries. * * * "PSYCHOLOGICALLY," Presi- dent Hatcher told the University Press Club of Michigan last fall, "we have gone a long way down the road of expecting the federal government to be our agent. What we're really doing is transferring legislative power from lansing back to Washington because you may be able to generate quickly enough capital at some expense." This ambiguous statement typifies the University position. Yet, the University needs this money to maintain a high quality staff by paying them proper sal- aries. The actions of four pro- fessors who resigned from the ro- mance langijages department at the March Regents' meeting and the 114-including many of the University's top faculty-who took leaves in the next year and a half are an ominous warning. At the same time, in 1961 23 faculty members were granted leaves and only 51 received leaves last year. Last year's modest salary hike, financed by a tuition boost, seems not enough to satisfy many of the University's best professors who are being constantly tempted by offers of better salaries and work- ing conditions elsewhere. Federal money will also help the University teach more students by providing funds to pay for ex- panded staffs and new facilities. . s . THE UNIVERSITY'S own ex- perience with the federal govern- ment debunks the fear of federal control. The government has only demanded that the University con- form to standard accounting pro- cedures and its agencies have bent over backward to avoid dictating to the University. The University has willingly adapted to such con- trols and even seeks more federal research money. Further, the federal aid request this year is mainly a complex of vpecific area grant programs which mitigates fears of control that generalized federal support tends to generate. The University should abandon its stiff-necked attitude toward federal aid. This help can play a vital role in maintaining and ex- panding educational programs by bearing some of its costs. The University's experience has shown that fear of control has been un- founded; the fact that the money comes from Washington rather than Lansing should make no dif- ference. (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the se- ond of a two part series dealing with recent problems at Delta Col- lege.) By DAVID MARCUS Acting Editorial Director IT IS DIFFICULT to identify any single political or social group as the source of Delta College's problems. Some of them undoubtedly stem from the generally conservative political atmosphere of the Bay City-Midland-Saginaw area. It is a conservatism that extends be- yond politics. It isa fear of change and a deep-seated provincialism. Delta exists within and is con- trolled by this context. Its Board of Trustees are all local citizens. One of the major sources of op- position to Delta's proposed mer- ger with the University came 'from those who did not want any out- side control over Delta. Former state Sen. Lynn O. Francis of Midland, long a leader of the state's obstructionist Republicans, was among the local figures op- posing a University-Delta merger. Francis, satirizing Delta's desire to merge with the University, pro- posed that Delta become a branch of the University of Wisconsin. He wrote: "We've been far too provincial in our attitude toward Delta! Since we have a community worthy of recognition and renown, we should make available our grand resources to other less fortunate states... BUT THE OPPOSITION to the merger cannot be clearly placed among the ultra-rightists. It is vague and amorphous. There is indeed much open support for a merger; only the Midland news- paper opposed it editorially. Despite this support, the vaguely organized opposition was able to prevent the merger because of aid from larger and more powerful groups. For example, the local op- position combined forces with some of the other large state-supported colleges and universities who op- posed the merger because they claimed the University was em- pire-building. It was not some vaguely organ- ized pressure group that caused the' failure to renew Don Wood- worth's teaching contract. Clearly, Woodworth was given th axe for other than academic reasons. His dean had recommended that he be kept at Delta. He had ree- ommendations all the way up the line. But the board chose not to rehire him. KNOWING WOODWORTH gives a certain amount of insight into the resentment he may have caus- ed and the people he may have antagonized. He is a political ac- tivist, an open advocate of dis- armament and a critic of United States foreign policy toward Cuba. I'robably it is these views- which he has openly advocated in a number of situations-which prompted the Midland newspaper to run an editorial about how some professors use academic freedom as an unrestricted license. The editorial, which did not give any names, clearly left the impression that it was concerned with the Wnn~vrnrh rna~n the issues involved. Now it is too late:: Even if Delta could convince the Legislature to let it merge with the University, have a piggy-back plan or just expand the present arrangement for four years, the college would' still be in a poor position. Many faculty members who could teach the third and fourth year will have left by then. In addition, high quality faculty members will not be very likely to come to'an institution where free- dlom of inquiry ;appears doubtful. The issue is not local control as such. Every public institution has some degree of local control whether city-wide, county-wide or state-wide. The crucial question for Delta is whether or not local control is enlightened and tolerant. In Delta's, case, neither the board nor the people of the area have shown themselves ready to build and run a good college. CINEMA GUILD: Funny Valentine IF THE REST of the movies haven't changed by Thursday or Sunday, you can treat yoursif to the Frank Sinatra version of "Pal Joey" at the Cinema Guild. It won't play Friday or Saturday since the auditorium (and the rest of the building) will house the Architecture and Design Open House. I would like to play dirty pool by recommending the Open House instead of "Pal Joey." You can see Frank Sinatra spit olive pits into a golden ash tray any- time, if you care for that sort of thing, but only on Saturday night can you dance all free at a gen- uine Beaux-Arts costume ball. If you ever wondered what made "Pal Joey" a great musical comedy, however, you will have a difficult time finding out from the movie. Most of the songs are intact but the rest of the film is cut to shreds. Just when you most ex- pect those thousand violins to come rolling out of the sunset you get, instead, Kim Novak feeding a bagel to a dog. Now such a scene is not to be laughed at. Poignancy has never come easily to Miss Novak and to hear her sing "My Funny Valentine" adds a whole uncharted dimension to her already abundant personality. If Kim Novak was never your favorite actress, maybe Rita Hay- worth was and maybe you're a lot older than I am. In case Nelson Riddle was never your favorite musical arranger, you're out of luck. All those good Rodgers and Hart tunes never sounded so time worn. So unless you saw this film first the night your house burned down and you're going again to recap- ture te old nostalgia, You may simply prefer to be terribly clever and miss it both nights. -Dick Pollinger .Earthquake TODAY AND TOMORROW: Papal. Encyclical, Restates Basic Values By WALTER LIPPMANN BESET by rivals who promise a new order of human life and demoralized by anxiety and un- belief and aimlessness, there is in many Western men a yearning for a statement of the meaning and purpose of a free society. Now they have one. The statement has been made in the Easter encyclical letter of John XXIII, that most Christian Pope. Here is a restate- ment for the modern age of the central philosophy upon which are based the institutions which we mean to preserve and intend to develop. The encyclical is addressed not only to the clergy and the faith- ful, but "to all men of good will." The text bears out this greeting literally and organically. For the foundation on which the whole of the argument rests is that "the Creator of the world has im- printed in man's heart an order which has conscience reveals to him and enjoins him to obey." This proposition, which is the first principle of what is known as nat- some capacity to reason, and some inclination to follow it. "One must never," says the Pope, "confuse error and a person who errs. . . The person who errs is always and above all a human be- ing, and he retains in every case his dignity as a human person, and he must be always regarded and treated in accordance with that lofty dignity. Besides, in every human being there is a need that is congenital to his nature and never becomes extinguished, com- pelling him to break through the web of error and open his mind to the knowledge of truth." * * * IN SAYING previously that the encyclical is an historic event, I had in mind the fact that it comes just as the Western World is in transition from the postwar era. I venture to think that this ven- erable Pope will be better under- stood by the new political genera- tion that is coming to power in, the Western lands. There is, I be- lieve, a suction of opinion toward the center and away from the ex- tremes. In the. terms ofconnti nen-