r Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "I'd Like To Speak To The Head Of The House" "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 opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AY, APRIL 28, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: GERALD STORCH Educational Research Leads Way to Excellence THE UNIVERSITY in many ways is an ex- periment. It is founded on the assumption that quality and quantity can be reconciled Nobody yet knows if this assumption is true. The final test of this proposition will not be, furnished by fate or chance or even the Legis- lature. Rather its success or failure rests upon the University itself and the attitude with which the institution faces the future. If the University continues to use the same methods of education used since the end of World War II when it began to mushroom in size, it is doomed to failure. The University is characterized by too many large lectures, mass courses and few or no attempts to relate the academic and non-academic spheres. On the other hand, the University can make use of its state of transition to experiment. It can become a more dynamic and even greater institution than it ever has been. THE PROBLEM is always how to institution- alize quality. In a small university or college, the solution is not difficult if the institution has decent financial backing. Small classes, close student-teacher relationships, an atmos- phere of exploration and discovery and high faculty salaries are easier to achieve. In the University, these objectives are more difficult to attain. Here it is easy for students to get lost. It is difficult for them to form close relationships with their instructors. Stu- dents are also likely not to be infected .with any sort of a University ethos. Many leave the Uni- versity with little more than a transcript. Particularly in the area of stimulating stu- dent interest, the University has been doing ex- citing work. The idea of a small college within the literary college structure is aimed at creat- ing the best possible opportunity for exciting students about their work. The Little-Greene experiment-where students living in these two residence. hall houses were placed as much as possible in the same classes-has been extreme. ly successful. THE UNIVERSITY is also engaged in research on evolving more effective teaching tech- niques. The Center for Research on Teaching and Learning has been exploring a variety of classroom methods ranging from programmed learning to aiding any University faculty mem- ber requesting help or new ideas on teaching. The Center for the Study of Higher Education keeps tabs on trends in higher education throughout the University, state and nation. In addition, the Center has been working to de- velop programs for training college adminis- trators. These programs have gained wide support among both administrators and faculty. For example, it is well-known that two of the staunchest supporters of the new college idea are University President Harlan Hatcher and Vice-President for Academic Affairs Roger W. Heyns. While they have both left the planning of this project to the faculty-where it belongs -they have reportedly given strong support and encouragement to the project from its be- ginnings. Similarly, the Center for Research on Teach- ing and Learning came out of a faculty com- mittee. The administration, and particularly Vice-President Heyns, quickly implemented it. In the case of the Center for the Study of High- er Education, many administrators have taken on "understudies"-individuals studying uni- versity administration at the Center-who can observe administrators at work first-hand. Educational research will continue to re- ceive support from the University. Its value is clear. The need for new ideas and the imple- mentation of these ideas is obvious. With them, rests the future greatness of the Univer- sity. -DAVID MARCUS Acting Editorial Director - .+ ---- """" 'r .------- / ..ti '~ .III R I y~t'yfi * .. A FACE IN THE CROWD By RONALD WILTON, Acting Editor UNDERSCORE: Report Axes Foreign Aid ARCHITECTURE FILMS: Experimental Movies Offer Fusion of Arts -OF ALL the appropriations that have to go through the Congressional meat grinder each year, none is more pulverized than foreign aid. Presidential appropriation requests are regularly slashed by hundreds of millions of dollars, and the going has steadily gotten rougher. In an effort to restrain the often irrespon- sible hatchet-men on the Capitol, President John F. Kennedy took a calculated gamble. He appointed a committee composed of men such as Gen. Lucius Clay, Eugene Black, Robert Lovett, and Robert Anderson-wealthy Repub- lican businessmen and supposedly internation- alists-in the hope that their underwriting of the President's $4.9 billion aid request would, in the words of Kenneth Crawford of News- week magazine, "bury Congressional dissenters under a mound of respectability." UNFORTUNATELY for the President, the businessmen showed their true colors. "We believe," they said, "the United States should not aid a foreign government in projects establishing government owned industrial and commercial enterprises which compete with existing private endeavors." "Had the Marshall plan been predicated on such a principle," said Crawford, Great Britain, France, and Italy, all socialist to a degree, would have been ineligible." Though this is perhaps an exaggeration, it is certainly true that they would have been - ineligible' for a great deal of the aid which was so successful in rebuilding those countries. Even the United States would be ineligible for its own aid for such projects as the TVA., Crawford points out that the report was often ambiguous and inaccurate. It recom- mended a $500 million slash in "present pro- grams." But are these measured by last year's $3.9 billion appropriation, or the $4.9 billion projected by the President for this year? The report recommends denying .aid henceforth to Portugal, but Portugal doesn't get any now. WHAT THEN, are the results of the report? According to Crawford, it "so much re- flects the countinghouse attitude in general tone that it is already grist for the Communist Editorial Staff MICHAEL OLINICK, Editor JUDITH OPPENHEIM MICHAEL HARRAH Editorial Director~ City Editor CAROLINE DOW..................Personnel Director JUDITH -BLEJIER ....... ....Associate city Editor FRED RUSSELL KRAMER .. Assoc. Editorial Director CYNTHIA NEU .................. Co-Magazine Editor HARRY PERLSTADT.............Co-Magazine Editor TOM WEI3LER ................. Sports Editor JAN WINKLEMAN ........... Associate Sports Editor propaganda mills." And with little wonder. "The report nowhere suggests that simple com- passion might justify aid. Nor does it contain any direct reminder that most foreign aid funds are spent in this country, thus creating jobs and producing profits for private enterprise." Yet the President was forced to find the report "heartening" and to reduce his foreign aid request to Congress by $400 million. Furthermore, Gen. Lucius D. Clay is pre- pared to tell Congress that Kennedy's reduced foreign aid request can be cut by at least $300 million more, according to a recent ar- ticle in the New York Times. At the heart of all this cutting and slashing is a conflict between the role the President envisions for foreign aid and the view taken by Clay and many Congressmen. The Clay committee was charged by the President to- examine the military and economic aid pro- grams and determine whether "their scope and distribution was contributing to the optimum security of the United States and the economic and political stability of the free world." But the committee's own definition of its work was that "our examination of United States for- eign assistance programs and consideration of them in this report has been based on the sharp criterion of their value to the security of our country and of the free world." THE CRUCIAL DIFFERENCE between the two is that the Clay committee did not seem too concerned over the "economic and political stability" of the United States and the free world, but merely its "security." Of course it is a moot question whether or not such a distinction is possible, but apparently the Clay committee thought that it was, the technique being to emphasize military aid and do most of the cutting in the economic sphere. Needless to say, the security achieved by this method is at best tenuous. One is re- minded of what happened in Cuba after the United States had supported Batista for so long. Of course, the committee deserves some credit for 'not openly advocating the type of Central Intelligence Agency-inspired revolution which was fabricated in Guatemala.; It suc- ceede~d in installing rightists that wouldn't establish competing government owned in- dustrial and commercial endeavors. However, the fact that Guatemala is now on the verge of a leftist (if you're a liberal) or Communist (if you're a conservative) revolt which may well end whatever security there was in that nation is a consequence of such procedures that both the CIA and the Clay committee choose to overlook. The fact of the matter is that economic, not military aid is the road to stability. Wherever people are starving, wherever there is a giant gap between the rich and the poor, conditions 'r Ving fn,. A ii A wn h nwvp +h TTniteA SOON AFTER taking office, the new Daily editor must decide whether he wants his own col- umn. Often the idea is rejected; the editor may feel that he will be too busy, that he does not want to write for a deadline or that there is simply no need for a column. In the last few years these disadvantages have triumphed; the last Daily editor to write a col- umn was Tom Turner in 1959-60. The others have been content to express themselves from time to time through the signed editorial. My decision to write a column was determined by my concept of. the editor's job. He has two main functions; internally he coordin- ates the work of The Daily staff and externally he serveg as official liaison between the paper and the community. It is this latter func- tion which motivates column writ- ing. * * * SINCE HE IS NOT tied down to the day to day operation of the paper, the editor is able to con- centrate on all aspects of the Uni- versity. He talks to student lead- ers, faculty and administrators. Besides gathering information, he transmits to these individuals his own concerns, those of the Daily staff and students in general. To the people he meets he becomes a face in the crowd, in contrast to the faceless stream of people who flow across the diag or through the corridors of Angell Hall every day. The number of people the edi- tor can see is limited. Usually he is restricted to top administra- tors, several important faculty members and several student lead- ers. To the rest of the campus he remains a by-line on the news or editorial pages with only the word editor under his name to distin- guish him from the rest of the staff. To the majority of the com- munity, The Daily remains a face- less, depersonalized organization. It is easy for people to criticize such an institution because it seems that there is nobody on the staff to whom they can relate. EDITORIALS tend to emphasize depersonalization. They are writ- ten to present proposals, criticize wrongs and influence people's ideas. To be effective they must be explanatory. They are analog- ous to one man addressing a crowd through a microphone, he is ad- dressing the group, not the per- son. A column attempts to emphasize personal communication. It always runs under the same headline in a specific place on the page at spe- cific intervals. This regularity, added to the fact that use of the column is limited to one person or a small group, allows the reader to feel closer to the writer. It is like a man speaking through a telephone to the same crowd where each member is equipped with his own receiver. It is person to per- son communication. * * s WRITING A COLUMN has an- other advantage. It allows the edi- tor to write about The Daily and correct some misconnepntionsabout From 1950 until five years ago, political activity on campus ran for the most part through regular- ly organized channels. The main organizations, the Young Demo- crats and Republicans and the lo- cal chapter of the National Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Colored People, were all reflec- tions of adult groups. Five years ago the start of the sit-ins saw the birth of a new type of politi- cal action outside of established organizations. Liberals, who were politically oriented, were looking aroundfor ameans of being .ac-, tive. Because, of the nature of its activities they rejected the Union and because of a conservative stranglehold on leadership posi- tions they rejected the housing units. Except for election to Stu- dent Government Council The Daily was the only place where liberals could have access to the campus political process. Now, however, things are differ- ent. There is Voice political party, Friends of SNCC and Americans Committed to World Responsibil- ity. Politically conscious liberals join these organizations. People who presently join the paper do so for many reasons other than political activity. The desire to act in a liberal political capacity falls low on the list.. LETTERS to the EDITOR To the Editor: THIS WEEK shall now be re- named "Animal Week" in honor of the fact that the animals on this campus have finally come out of their long winter's hibernation, which started last April after the last "Animal Week." Every year, about this time, along with the coming of Spring, come the many animals who go under an assort- ment of ridiculous names such as Michigamua, Druids and others. Their sole purpose for, existence is to exist. They have three meet- ings a year. The first is probably held in the middle of March when they decide of whom to make fools. The second is now when they proceed to make fools of the "chosen few" and themselvesas well..The third is a couple of hours after the first to wash off the mud, paint, garbage and as- sorted junk gathered in the day's circus and to adjourn until next March when the nonsense starts all over again. * * * THE SECOND MEETING is the one which draws all the attention of the campus for here they shine. Some of the animals are "dressed" in their animal skins which show that they are new animals. Others are dressed in ANIMAL skins which show that they are old ani- mals and that it is they who have the honor of running the circus. It is the old animals who splash the paint on the new animals. It THE ISSUES with which Daily editorials deal also come back to haunt the paper. Somehow areas such as the Office of Student Af- fairs, the administration, academ- ic policy and student rights ac- quired the liberal label in the past. While these issues have lost this, label as far as SGC is concerned, they are still liberal when Daily writers comment about them. When a writer comes out and says that students should have the pow- er to set rules governing their own own conduct, it is being lib- eral. When SGC makes recom- mendations on women's hours and sends them to the administration urging their adoption, it is being moderate and acting in the best interests of the students. Irresponsibility is another charge opponents of The Daily like to hurl around. It has become a catch-all phrase for everything from a bad picture to a typographical error. In most cases the cause of the charge is the person's disagree- ment with an editorial or the way a certain story was played. No- body ever calls The Daily irre- sponsible when he agrees with the writer's opinions. There have been cases where Daily reporters were unable to lo- cate news sources to check back storieshandafterthe story had run the source claimed he was misinterpreted. One can argue that the story should not have run. The point is that this misin- terpretation is not deliberate, hap- pens very rarely and every attempt is made to check stories back. THE DAILY is founded on the principle that students can re- sponsibly run a great newspaper; we trust our reporters and justifi- ably so. The Daily has been pub- lished for 72 years and is general- ly acknowledged to be the best college paper in the country. This is not the record of an irrespon- sible journal. It is ridiculous to expect every- body to agree always with what Daily staff members say - there would be something wrong if this happened. Yet it is not too much to ask that the right to express opinionsabe respected and also the opinions themselves. They are honest attempts to voice concern and contribute to the betterment of the University and education in general. They are attempts which are in the interest of the whole community. Disagreement with the opinion expressed should be coun- tered with logical arguments. The Letters to the Editor column is always open. Merely brushing off the opinion as "liberal," "conserv- ative" or "irresponsible" is intel- lectually dishonest and immature. * * * THE JOB of interpreting The Daily to people is a continuous one. This column is the first step in what will be a year-long proj- ect. At times one is discouraged by the extent of misunderstanding about The Daily. But sometimes something happens to make it worthwhile. Last year I was covering a pan- ty raid, standing on the outskirts of a crowd of men gathered be- FRIDAY NIGHT the Architecture Aud. was the scene of one of the more vigorous and creative showings of films Ann Arbor has seen this year. As part of its sixth annual open house, the College of Architecture and Design present- ed Parker Tyler, poet, art and film critic, speaking on "The Archi- tecture of the Film: Word, Sight and Sound." The seven short films that were presented weren't the completely senseless and unintel- ligibly symbolistic films some peo- ple have come to expect from the avant-garde. They were original, mostly ex- citing and all fascinating. * * * "PACIFIC 231," which won a Cannes Film Festival prize in 1949, was not a "documentary," as the opening titles said, but an attempt to create a mood or at- mosphere through music and im- ages. The film was a portrait of a locomotive. The camera concen- trated on its moving parts - the bulk and power of the machine. Tracks and overhead wires criss- crossed and meandered by the train on its short journey. Arthur H o n n e g e r, the contemporary French composer, supplied the mu- sic which was as mighty and bombastic as Pacific 231 itself. An exhilarating mood of action, pow- er and movement was fully creat- ed. The excitement is only imme- diate, though, and it is doubtful the film was meant to be more than a mood piece. "Dance Chromatic," the second film, is a synthesis of the fertile imaginations of the choreograph- er, the musician, the painter and the film-maker. The artists suc- ceeded in creating a montage of movement, color and art which was truly exciting. The German film "Hallucina- tions" I leave for the viewer to in- terpret for himself. Feet, arms and torsos were intertwined with men. and women attempting to commu- nicate with each other in a se- ries of short, more or less static scenes. Weird sounds added to the oddities on the screen. "Halluci- nations" may cause hallucinations in many viewers. THE OPENING VOICE of "Sub- ject Lesson" explained in over- wrought tones that what was to follow would be unintelligible to the conscious but the viewer should let the movie invade his subcon- scious. There were some restless members in the audience who couldn't hold back their sighs as the boredom and mystical sym- bolism overran its stay. Also, the celluloid wasn't worth it. Some of the scenes were interesting just for their composition but it tended too strongly to the symbolic ec- centricities of many avant-garde films. If my subconscious under- stood it, it didn't tell my conscious. The most human, and there- fore the most humorous and en- joyable film, was "A Chairy Tale." A man enters, reading, and at- tempts to sit on a plain white chair he chances to meet. The chair has other ideas, though, aft- er much fighting, chasing around and speechless conversation of emotion, the chair and the man come to an understanding, and the chair cheerfully condescends to the man sitting in its lap. It's such a simple situation between a living organism and a plain, phys- ical object that one may just sit back and enjoy the event. But it has, for all its silliness, a univer- sal meaning-understanding can bring about a resolution of prob- lems that physical mastery can- not. "VISIBLE 3: an Illuminated Poem," Is a series of drawings done on the screen illuminating an accompanying poem.Unfortu- nately, the poem is mostly unin- telligible since it was presented in bits and fragments. In the last film, "Hand Writ- ten," poetry and music are com- bined, as in almost all the other films, to create an adoration of the human hand. It is more pom- pous than poetic.. * * * THE SEVEN FILMS emphasized techniques rather than plot, char- acter, or, except for two or three, a message or idea. Then artists were playing with the equipment at hand to develop a specific au- dience reaction. Whether it was laughter, bewilderment or senti- ment, the film-makers clearly demonstrated that they are creat- Pride To the Legislators: .. NO TOUR can show you what the students see, what makes them proud of the university, what makes them stay here for four or more years. % Most of the students never see the projects you've visited. They want your support of the univer- sity budget requests for other reasons. They sit in classrooms that are sometimes overcrowded ing new ways of achieving these audience reactions. Also evident was the synthesis of art almost all the shorts had. The most obvious one was "Dance Chromatic" with its synthesis of choreography, painting, music and the cinema. Because of this juxta- position of many arts done ex- tremely well, the film is the most striking one of the seven. The usual giggles and sighs ac- companied the misunderstood and non-understood, laughter the hu- mbrous and applause the capti-. vating. They were more intriguing than the shorts the Cinema Guild often tags on to the beginning of its films, and definitely more fascinating than any other shorts or feature length movies the local theatres usually show. Of course, the interest people have In such productions is lim- ited, but on a college campus with such diversified and intelligent residents, more of these films would be welcome. It is these mostly unknown, but excitingly creative artists that are develop- ing the techniques that will be heard from in the future. -Michael Juliar AT THE STATE: Kaye Creditless THE PATTERN is clear now. Those clever Butterfield people actually do have a system for dis- tributing their films in Ann Arbor. They send all the foreign and good American films to the Cam- pus, all the splashy, publicized American films to the Michigan and the remainder to the State. Hence, the State gets that classic horror, "Horror Hotel," that 21 fun-filled salute, "Follow the Boys," and now that laugh riot, "The Man from the Diner's Club." "The Man from the Diner's Club" features the Poor Soul. This, time he's named Ernie Klenk Er- nie loves his boss' secretary, hates his job and makes mistakes such as issuing a credit-card to a Big Time hood out on ball. With the credit-card, the gangster intends to make his way -to Mexico. Poor Soul has to stop him or lose his job and his girl. THE MAN IS Danny Kaye who plays Jerry Lewis playing Fred MacMurray. Only there isn't any-i thing as clever as Flubber or as wild as Lewis in this movie to save it. Moreover, the film is so poorly' produced that .it is _quite apparent' when a stand-in replaces Kaye for the acrobatics. The only thing that saves the picture is Telly Sav- alas as Foots, the Gangster-who- got-credit. From the minute he appears, Savalas captures the show. He provides the perfect gangster, moaning about the two great evils of American society, the freeway and the income tax. He chews cigars, slaps goons about, conspir s and perspires his way to the orfly funny element in the movie. KAYE, on the other hand, is dis- appointing. He is seldom given a chance really to be Danny Kaye, one of the few comedians who can talk his audience into hysterics. Kaye knows the art of double- talk and rapid speech. But he is not and never has been' the Har- old Lloyd type who runs through intricate chase scenes. Doing so in the film, he looks more like the fourth of the Three Stooges, the one who didn't make it. -Hugh Holland Wet Powder STEEL is an administered-price industry. This in itself is not a menace to the economy, still less is it unique : most basic in- dustries inuthe citadel of free en- terprise administer prices by one : device or another. The trouble is that such prices are invested with a public interest, and the steel ty- coons have no way of cranking the public interest into their computa- tions, even if they regard it as a responsibility of theirs. The circuitous way in which they went about the present price increase shows that they are sen- sitive to governmental and public reaction. Wheeling Steel, one of the smallest of the larger com- panies, first ventured into the open, like a scout in an infantry ad- vance; the others cautiously fol- lowed when nothing happened. The enemy-President Kennedy- who had so cruelly mauled Roger Blough the last time, was in no position to repeat the performance. He had not kept his powder dry. IF THE JUSTICE department had sued to break up U.S. Steel; if Senator Kefauver had been able to get his committee to investigate costs and subpoena the officials of the steel companies, if among other cost data, the salaries, stock '1 ,, I1 I I