U~g Ā£itgattu BatI SSeMty-Piftb Year EDrrED AND MANAGED BY STUDEN'TS OF THE UNmvSrrYT OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHOrTY OF BOARD IN CONT&OL OF STUDENT PUBLCAT ONs LL .* Each Time I Chanced To See Franklin D. Images from a Somber January Afternoon by H. Neil Berkson I' Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MATNARD ST., ANN AARmo, MIC. Truth Will Prevail NEws Pxnvw: 764-0"52 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This -must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, 27 JANUARY 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN BRYANT The Theatre Protests: Success Requires Prudence ABOUT THIRTY STUDENTS made fools of themselves over the weekend. They thought that movie prices, as well as oth- er prices, are too high for this college town. They decided to do something about it and, for all their efforts, attracted a moderate amount of attention. They tried to hold a "stay-in" at the Michigan Theatre Friday and Saturday evening at the end of the first show and a boycott of the 9 p.m. show. They also tried to convince students that they, should boycott the State Theatre entire- ly. The results were encouraging Friday at the Michigan Theatre, mainly because Student Government Council had done the urging. Saturday night was a flop. The demonstrations did not succeed for various reasons. It was the first weekend of men's rush. Women were still rushing. It rained Friday night; the snow was deep and cold Saturday night. Many Ann Arbor residents and high school stu- dents had not heard about the proposed demonstrations and came to the theatres anyway. The highly praised "Mary Pop- pins" at the Michigan Theatre is a Walt Disney movie and therefore attracted the family crowd. BUT IT WAS NOT THIS that caused the picketers to look foolish. Through their senseless and juvenile singing, taunting, chanting and cajoling, they alienated many people-students and Ann Arborites - who might otherwise have been sympathetic to their cause. The picketers hurled childish insults at the manager of the Michigan Theatre, hoarsely shouted at patrons that they should not attend the show, sang their civil rights songs with new words appro-. priate to the price increase and generally acted more like students having fun pro- testing than protestors out to influence people to right a wrong. Quiet, ordered marching in front of the theatres-nothing said, the only com- munication being signs and leaflets - would have been more effective in gain- ing patrons' sympathies and the theatre management's respect. STUDENTS STILL CAN redeem them- selves and their cause if they will act more intelligently this weekend, when they intend to demonstrate again. They must find substantiative proof of sev- eral of their assumptions about the state of movie houses in this town. They have assumed that: -There is no legitimate economic rea- son for Butterfield Theatres to raise prices; -Butterfield is making a profit in Ann Arbor, if not at its theatres in other towns throughout the state; -Butterfield has a monopoly and has purposefully kept competition from set- ting up its own theatres in Ann Arbor; -The University has influence because of its Class B stock and two representa- tives on the board of directors of the Butterfield organization and can repre- sent the students' interests there, and -Whatever the case, the University should be looking out for the welfare of its students in this controversy., THESE ASSUMPTIONS must be cleared up before any widespread support will be picked up by the protestors. Maybe a meeting between Butterfield and SGC would verify or refute some of these as- sumptions. The others will have to be clarified by the students through discus- sions with theatre managers, University administrators and other members of what the protestors would probably call the "bureaucratic set." While this is going on, student support should be active. It should also be calm and ordered. Naturally, students are having fun with "stay-ins" and boycotts and picketings. It is part of the student attitude to pro- test. But the protest must be meaningful. Without clear and purposeful fore- thought, the theatre demonstrations will die out, and any good that may have come out of them-such as settling a basic issue: the University's responsibility toward its students - will never be real- ized. -MICHAEL JULIAR LOOKING OUT from Mason Hall, the Diag and sur- rounding area merge and disappear, covered by a solid sheet of ice. Nevertheless, two constant streams of students move in different directions, walking a little faster, perhaps, but otherwise unaffected by the impu- dence of winter. Thus the Academy. Events strike from within and without, yet the institution has a nature which transcendsthem. THE CLASSROOM comes back into focus. Your professor has operated oblivious to your absence. Rela- tively spontaneous as teachers go. Few notes, much discussion. Learn to think! He wants to have individual conferences with everyone. All too rare. What can the University be reduced to? The books are there, the facilities, in large part. More important, the faculty. TheEUniversity has yet to banish the skilled teacher from its midst. Some departments are out to eliminate him. Some theorists argue he isn't necessary. Commitment creates commitment, however. If students respond at all, they respond in large part of models, ON THE OTHER side of the street, the administra- tion labors as it always does, continually juggling a list of priorities, knowing that no element of the University can ever be all that it should but trying to insure that none is ever too much what it shouldn't. Its failures evoke abuse; its successes go unnoticed, often unknow- able. How do you create the balance? How do you provide the perspective? Where criticism, where praise. Thus the Academy. r[HE PROGRESS of the residential college has been questioned by everyone from Regent Power to mem- bers of the college's faculty planning committee. The latest idea for the college, however, a faculty-student government, is both productive and progressive. In the midst of growing concern over how to provide extra-classroom perspective, student participa- tion in educational policy decisions is an excellent proposition. The experience will be valuable both in terms of responsibility and an opportunity to view their own goals in a broader context. Sooner or later, someone will wonder whether stu- dents are equipped to participate in the college's policy decisions. Positive evidence exists: Dean Thuma's student committee-not the faculty-has worked out this thoughtfully detailed proposal for a joint government. IN THE PAST YEAR, under the leadership of Larry Phillips, Graduate Student Council has revived. GSC has ably examined such issues as graduate housing and student parking; it has been represented on more University-wide committees; it has expanded services to the graduate community. In Jim McEvoy, Phillips has a capable and articulate successor. The new GSC president is best known for an inability to understand the goals of the John Birch Society. He took this position out of a general desire to "make things happen." McEvoy has never quite been an introvert,, and there is no reason for him to change now. AS STUDENT Government Council remains in a tailspin, with no visible, willing candidates for its own first all-campus officer election next month, a definite leadership vacuum exists on campus. Mr. McEvoy may just fill it. i r i (I "My Idea Of .A Great Society Is Plent Of Leisure" ' t My~w" j:'y' ---- e ar l V1C * 2y ECONOMY MOVE: Make Quad Breakfast Worse-If Possible By ROGER RAPOPORT THERE ARE 1200 residents in South Quadrangle. Sixty-five of them ate breakfast last Satur- day and 68 ate breakfast on Sun- day. On a good weekday morning perhaps 300 or 25 per cent of the quadrangle residents eat breakfast. This is no accident; it results from skillful planning by the ac- countants, dieticians and5 cooks of University food service. As stat- ed on the back of all meal tickets the board rate is "based on an expected percentage of absentee- ism." Food service expects the vast majority of students not to eat breakfast, resulting in "the economy which makes the present. board rates possible." Nonetheless a small but stub-, born minority persists in rising to eat quadrangle breakfasts. This is unfortunate because preparing breakfast for this small number of students is uneconomical:- food service must face overhead costs for utilities and hire cooks, bus boys and staff men to work at breakfast. * * IF FOOD SERVICE really want- ed to economize it would abolish breakfast. This wouldn't be easy. After all, the quadrangle is obliged to serve breakfast as long as there are students crazy enough to eat it. Food service has done a fine job of discouraging most quaddies from breakfast by providing burnt toast, orange juice, cocoa and stale dry cereal as mainstays. For variety, eggs are alternately boiled, fried and scrambled six daysa a week, with a pancake or piece of Without Support SO THE UNIVERSITY of Michigan Stu- dent Employes Union isn't going to picket. But they were, and that's just as bad. It's bad because the UMSEU can't ac- complish anything by picketing, just as it can't accomplish anything by simply go- ing to the manager or owner of a store and asking' (or demanding!) that he raise the wages of his student employes. What the UMSEU doesn't seem to real- ize is that it will never be able to ac- complish anything until it has support from a much larger segment of the stu- dent body than it has at present. It doesn't have massive support now, which is, too bad, but the really sorry part is that it probably never will. T11RE HAS BEEN LITTLE "student ac- tion" of any import on this campus in the recent past, not because there were no issues or because of increased academ- ic pressure, but because the character of the student body at the University is not one that will support direct action of any sort. The student body is conservative, on the whole, and it considers the shunning of H. NEIL BERKSON, Editor KENNETH WINTER EDWARD HERSTEIN Managing Editor Editorial Director ANN GWIRTZMAN.............Personnel Director BILL BULLARD ..............Sports Editor MICHAEL SATTINGER .... Associate Managing Editor JOHN KENNY..........Assistant Managing Editor DEBORAH BEATTIE.Associate Editorial Director LOUISE LIND.......Assistant Editorial Director in Charge of the Magazine TOM ND... ...Associate Sports Editor GARY WYNER........... Associate Sports Editor STEVEN HALLER...............Contributing Editor MARY LOU BUTCHER............Contributing Editor JAMES KESON ................... Chief Photographer NIGHT EDITORS: Lauren Bahr, David Block, John Bryant, Robert Johnston, Michael Juliar, Laurence Kirshbaum, Leonard Pratt. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: William Benoit, Bruce Bigelow, Gail Blumberg, Michael Dean, John Mere- dith, Barbara Seyfried, Judith Warren. Business Staff such social action as picketing its first real step toward the gray flannel world of adulthood. It's a pity that the students don't seem to realize how loud their collective voice would be-don't realize what an effec- tive, economic strength they have col- lectively. STUDENT ACTION-pickets, sit-ins, and the like-aren't even necessary. Stu- dent inaction would do the job if it were the proper form of inaction, the boycott. A complete boycott of any one of the major book, clothing or food stores could change the complexion of the entire eco- nomic establishment of the campus-area merchants. It is doubtful that the merch- ants would be bloodthirsty enough to let a boycotted store go bankrupt - they would have to get together and reassess their whole outlook toward the exploita- tion of students. But a theoretical situation like this will remain theory because the student body isn't enough interested in its own welfare to work for its improvement. And the student "activists" (those who are ready to picket at the drop of a hat) ac- tually hurt the cause rather than help it, because whenever there is any semblance of organization, as there was at last week's abortive movie stay-ins, they are always too worried about who is going to lead the "student movement" and who is going to take credit for it if it suc- ceeds. -THOMAS COPI Moo THE ASSOCIATED PRESS is terribly naive. Case in point: this week is an occasion known as Farmers' Week at Michigan State University. The five-day event be- gan Monday with a weighing-in for feeding project hogs. After more than 100 seminars on such tonics as Avrshire cat- LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: The Rational Route to Problem Solving French toast usually thrown in on the seventh. The most obvious method of discouraging students from eating breakfast would be to make it worse than it already is. Con., ceding that breakfast foods are already at rock bottom, there are two things that are worse- lunch foods and dinner foods. * * * SINCE BREAKFAST can't be any worse than' it is, why not substitute a few of the real qua- die travesties from other meals? How about oriental soup (the euphemistic name for a broth of fried watercress, mushrooms, pars- ley, tea, onion, pepper, garlic and cabbage) as a daily mainstay? or breakfast might consist of stuffed cabbage, embamados, and peas and mushrooms. With all the miserable lunch and dinner dishes currently being served in the quadrangle, there are an infinite number of break- fast possibilities. How about bak- ed creole, spaghetti, fruit am- brosia and blue plums? Or per- haps some the that city chicken served with those mashed pota- toes that are so hard and lumpy they have to be pried from e scoop? The great thing is that these items are left in such great quan- tities that the food service would not even need totprepare them fr breakfast. Al the' cooks would have to do is freeze up the lunch and dinner leftovers and thaw them out for breakfast. After all, that's the way a good share o lunch and dinner is prepared al- ready. Then the sky would be the limit on raw quaddie burgers, ham balls and pineapple ring, macaroni neopohtan, embamados, and Della Robbia. THESE DISHES, which already discourage many students from eating lunch and dinner, undoubt- edly would cut down breakfast attendance. Another method would be to exploit a device that cur- rently discourages most students from even consideringsbreakfast. The breakfast serving time of 7:20-8:05 necessitates getting up early for every student that does not have an 8 o'clock class. How- ever several hundred students who have 8 o'clocks are up anyway and might as well try to get through a breakfast. The way to exclude these quad- dies would be to move the break- fast hours back to 6:20-7:05. Then only a few early risers, such as Psychology 110 students going to feed their rats, would get up for breakfast. NOW THEN, every Thursday and Sunday several hundred stu- dents skip dinner in preference to wearing a suit and tie or fancy dress to meet clothing regulations. Why not extend this same rule to apply to all breakfasts? This would turn away many students. By this time only a handful of four-year quad veterans, relying on Pepto-Bismol, will be around to meet anything the quad cooks can throw at them. The final crushing tactic is the one a few enterprising West Quad- rangle cooks used recently when they decided to quit early one evening. They simply didn't pre- pare enough to eat and thus food ran out before the line did. By this time getting up for breakfast would be out of the question. What Psychology 110 student would want to get up at 6 onock.Dto nn a iit and hone ' ( q To the Editor: MR. JOHNSTON ("A Sword of Damocles," Jan. 24) does not seem to understand the role of the student in today's society. It is, indeed, true that there are many unfair conditions at the Univer- sity. However, since we are, hope- fully, educated people, we must as a community believe in a ra- tional, reasonable approach to the solving of problems. Mr. Johnston must realize, being part of an academic community, that what hurts the University will ultimately hurt us as students. I do not excuse the administration or the faculty for those injustices perpetrated. However, I will con- tinue to believe that if we all remain rational these problems eventually can be solved. The University community can be a valuable place to test out new ways of solving problems in which there is intense emotional involvement on both sides. Let us try to solve these problems in an enlightened way, as befits edu- cated people, and let us not resort to violent methods wherein those who advocate those methods have most to lose by their use. -Gloria M. Paulik, Grad Ineffective To the Editor: THE BUTTERFIELD chain will defeat us because our present method of attack is ineffective. The sit-in was a good start but cannot be continued because stu- dent interest and support will diminish as can be shown in other incidents, such as quad food. against the theatres but to fight to win students, teachers and the University over to our side. The question is one of supply and de- mand. As long as tPe students will continue to keep up the demand, there is really no reason to lower prices. 1) All student organizations im- mediately should find common terms on which to unite. 2) A survey should be taken to discover which students go to the theatres and why. 3) There should be an increase of poster distribution. 4) WCBN should allow free po- litical advertisements to the dif- ferent organizations in its role as the student-oriented station. The more people who stay home on Friday and Saturday, the bet- ter it will be for the campus station which will increase its listening audience. 5) The Daily should increase its editorial comment to explain the day by day situation to the stu- dents. It should also increase the letters to the editor column, and the organizations should keep up a steady stream of letters which could also help to keep the stu- dents away from the theatres. Furthermore, this student news- paper should reverse its neutral position and, unlike its coverage of the sit-in, serve to incite the students to action. . 6) The faculty should organize to remind its students each day that they must not go to the theatres, for the student body must be explained the gravity of the situation and the possible further increases in all areas of Ann Arbor. appeal without signs and boy- cotts to the theatre-goers to re- consider in light of the price in- crease. 10) There should be. issued a statement representing all the student organizations explaining, very clearly the problem and its possible consequences if no action is taken, 11) There should be more se- crecy involved in all the plans that are to be carried out. There should be more immediate acts and fewer long-discussed, pub- licized plans. 12) We must be prepared for a long range offensive if we are to be realistic. 13) We should get the backing of the University officials, who should feel some responsibility in the matter. 14) We should work to win over the Ann Arbor community to our side through the community or- ganizations. -Stephen Schneider, '68 TWELFTH TIME- Rubinstein Triumphs In Romantic Recital' ARTUR RUBINSTEIN electrified Ann Arbor for the twelfth time in his career last night at Hill Auditorium. Rounding out a dozen appearances over the course of twenty-five years, the great pianist presented works from the heart of the roman- tic repertoire. Like most Rubinstein recitals, there was no single high- light, but a-continual series of triumphs. The recital opened with one of the first romantic masterpieces, the Schubert "Grand B-flat Sonata," continued with three short Brahms selections, sustained its excitment through the Schumann "Kreisleriana," and ended sweepingly with three Chopin selections. The three encores included two Chopin favorites and a scintillating Villa-Lobos miniature as a finale. * * * * EXCEPT FOR the Villa-Lobos, all the works on the program were written within a period of 65 years and a space of 300 miles. The variety of approach which Rubinstein brings to pieces sharing funda- mentally the same vocabulary is nothing less than amazing. Although billed as "the last of the great romantic pianists," Rub-