1r idli ant4#tg Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN __ - UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are 'r STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Trutb 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. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: RONALD WILTON "Hope You Didn't Take Anything Personally--The Fact Is We Don't Even Get Along With Each Other" COMRADES: 'A Backward Glance O'er Traveled Roads' Membership Statements For the Record HIGH ON THE LIST of questionable entries in the booklet entitled "University Regula- tions concerning Student Organizations" are the rulings on submission by student organiza- tions of membership lists to the Office of Stu- dent Affairs and Student Government Council. The SGC regulation requires each group to submit to the Council "at the beginning of each semester or summer session either a member- ship list or a statement which lists those of Its members who wish to be listed and attests to the fact that there are at least 20 Uni- versity students who are members of this group and which lists the total number of members while noting what number of these individuals are University students and which are not." For the OSA, however, no such choice is permitted. The organizations must submit an alphabetized list of all members by the third week of school. The second alternative for statements sub- mitted to SGC permitting organizations to submit a statistics sheet rather than a mem- bership list seems very reasonable. It is time such an option were extended by the OSA as well. T HREE POSSIBLE REASONS come to mind for the requirement of membership lists: They could be used in case it were necessary, to contact a member of an organization in a hurry; they could be used' as a checklist to make sure that all participating students are academically eligible; or they could be used for compilation of a list of which students are participating in which activities. In the first instance, names of officers of all student organizations are readily available, so that lists 'of the total membership should be unnecessary for purposes of contact. The question of eligibility presents a prob- lem because there is room for considerable de- bate as to whether the University in fact ought to declare students ineligible to participate in extra-classroom activities. Probably eligibility standards, although clearly an instance of the infamous "in loco parentis" doctrine are justi- fiable on the grounds 'that the University, as an academic institution, owes it to the student to help him devote at least enough time to his courses to =muster a "2 point" overall average. But even accepting this 'admittedly shaky argument, it is not necessary for the Univer- sity to make a detailed investigation of eligi- bility by checking membership lists against transcripts. The regulations booklet says em- phatically in italic type "responsibility for observance of the eligibility statement is placed directly upon the student." It goes on to warn that participation in an extracurricular activity in violation of the requirement may subject a student to disciplinary action. F THE STUDENT has been warned, then, and has been told that the responsibility is his, why should the OSA check up? Why should it not be the responsibility of each organization merely to assure the OSA that all its members are eligible and for this information rely in turn upon the integrity of its members? As for participation records, the argument is more theoretical than practical. Probably the majority of students taking part in extra- curricular activities would not object to having their names on record as members. Neverthe- less, if, for any reason, a student does not want to go on record as a member of an organization to which he happens to pay dues, surely that should be his privilege. Boo, Who? LAST WEEK, Gov. John B. Swainson and his opponent George Romney debated before . the Economic Club of Detroit. The audience, composed almost entirely of Detroit business and civic leaders, was largely Repub- lican as exhibited by the constant applause for Romney. However, when Swainson digressed slightly from a question put to him, certain of the more avidly partisan members of the audience had the gross discourtesy to boo him. Maybe these few never realized that being couth means more than knowing which fork to use. "-D. MARCUS 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 WEBB3ER..................... Sports Editor DAVE ANDREWS ........... Associate Sports Editor JAN WINKLEMAN ........... Associate Sports Editor In most cases membership in a particular organization will do the student and his repu- tation no harm. There are instances, however, where such membership will be held against the student in later life. Recent political cam- paigns in Michigan have demonstrated just how seriously a man may be injured by un- scrupulous manipulation of information about his college activities. COLLEGE SHOULD be a period during which an individual, if he has not done so already, begins to take part in community affairs and to accept responsibility for fulfilling certain social roles. But it should also be a period of experi- mentation where a young person is given the widest possible leeway to explore areas of in. terest and various ideologies. He should be permitted to conduct his explorations with the certainty that they will not be held against him at some future time and that no one is "keeping tabs" on him. If he has no such assurance, he is not really free to experiment. Obviously this does not mean that college students should be able to violate any and all laws with impunity. They ought to be held accountable for their activities and statements while they are carrying them on. But as long as they remain within certain legal boundaries, they should be allowed to engage in political and social activities with a certain degree of anonymity if they desire it. FEW PEOPLE would deny that the University has a legitimate interest in several aspects of student organizations. Student Government Council, in recognizing organizations must have access to their constitutions and must know who the responsible officers are and what per- centage of the members are students. When an organization is sponsoring an event, the students in general have a right to know who will be the featured guest, where the activity is being held and what its nature is. When a student speaks or publishes a state- ment in the name of an organization, other students and the University as a whole then have a right to know the name of the student. But beyond this, the student should have the option of deciding for himself whether he wants his affiliation with an organization to become a matter of record. If the OSA has grave doubts as to the eligibility of any particular individual it knows to be participating, then it might check the record, but it ought, as a firm rule, to trust the question of eligibility to the student and the organization. STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS which have been requested to turn in membership lists ought to be allowed to poll their ranks before doing so to determine whether all who belong want their names on record. If any do not, their names should be omitted, and if the majority do not, the organization should simply give SGC and the OSA a numer- ical rundown of its membership. It shouldn't be necessary to request permission for such action from either SGC or the OSA. It should be the acknowledged right of every student organization. -JUDITH OPPENHEIM Editorial Director Supervision OF ALL the minor indignities perpetrated upon University women living in dormitor- ies, the policy of not allowing them to call police and fire departments from their rooms is the one with the most food for serious reflection. This policy is defensible on only one ground. That is that police and fire departments may be annoyed by constant prankster calling. This is one rationale given by the administration for the ruling. But neither the Ann Arbor Police nor the Fire Department feels itself annoyed by dormitory women calling it; on the con- trary representatives from both have stated they are opposed to the present policy. A student is not necessarily reporting rape and robbery when she wants to call the police. Perhaps she wants to find out much it costs to get a bike license. Or perhaps she calls the Fire Department to find out what the fire regulations are on fireproofing for paper dec- orations for the dorm dance. Can she call from the phone in her room? She cannot. OF COURSE the option of using the pay phone in the lobby is always open to her. This is annoying for her; and proves that those pranksters against whom the rule is ostensibly directed can continue to annoy the police eternally; i. e., while they have dimes and breath.' Perhaps the administration is worried about bad publicity that may result if certain oc- NNI.- jog; \ CAPITOL IN REVIEW: Congress Leaves Spotty Record By JOHN HERRICK "PERHAPS the best of songs is the resume of them, long af- terwards .. ." These are the words of Walt Whitman about his own poetry, and he probably would have been willing to extend it to his prose. Mr. Richard Baldridge and the APA prepared and presented one of these "best of songs" to the Ann Arbor audiences last week. The name of this song was "We, Comrades Three" a play by Mr. Baldridge based on the poetry and prose of Walt Whitman. And in many ways this play is literally a resume of Whitman's work. "I wanted a work part pageant, part vaudeville, part public drama, part private drama, part event using Whitman with purposed naive theatricality." These are the words of the playwright, Mr. Bald- ridge. At another time he referred to the play as a "pastiche." * * * BALDRIDGE has now had a chance to look back over his own roads, and has in some ways been more ruthless than his critics- many of whom were very ruthless. According to Baldridge the ma- jor fault of his play is lack of clarity. "The main action of the play both in structure and acting is not really clear. A great deal of this is caused by the actors try- ing to bludgeon the audience with the verse, rather than simply try- ing to communicate between themselves. "They hadn't fully digested the play. Also the play is too long in its present state for either actors or audience to sustain. It must be shortened and clarified. I'd really like to work the play down to a long one-act." * * * HE ADMITTED quickly that the play had been put together more with scissors and paste than any- thing else. Part of this he blamed on the critical lack of time. The play received three weeks of re- hearsal in New York with several major cast changes, and then had only a little over a week in re- hearsal here. There were revisions being made in the script up until the last week of rehearsal when it became necessary to freeze the play as it was, even though it was not really ready for an audience. There was a deadline to meet and the show had to go on. Another aspect of the difficulty of the play was almost forced up- on it by Whitman himself, with his climaxes and catalogs and lust. "There are far too many climaxes, too many 'curtain' lines right now." Anybody who has read Whitman would have no difficulty in agreeing with this. BALDRIDGE originally intended to have a small musical combo on the stage. This combo was to play "live" the overture to the play and the little musical ditties scattered through it, as well as the sound effects. It is really very unfortunate that. this could not have been done. Although again lack of time was the main reason for its de- ficiency, this music in itself would in my opinion, have done much to preserve or create the naive theatricality the playwright want- ed. APA did not have the time, the equipment, or the technicians to come up with a really good taped background, which would seem to me to add the wrong kind of re- ality and polish to the production. Whereas the life and excitement of live musicians would have add- ed tremendously to essential child- like fascination of the play. * * * I ALSO FELT, as did Baldridge, that lack of time and rehearsal effected the acting adversely. The actors-in varying degrees-did excellent jobs, at least as far as technique was concerned. But like Whitman's poetry, they tended too often to lapse into a kind of frantic, screaming hysteria. This is By PHILIP SUTIN WHEN PRESIDENT John F. rKennedy thinks of the 87th Congress he probably is reminded of a balky mule. Sometimes it carries the load, but often it kicks its master in the teeth. Such was the spotty record of the Congress that adjourned last week and Kennedy is now making foreys to the hustings to take some of the orneriness out of the beast. A consistant trend, strangely almost the direct opposite of the one that faced President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the late 1830,'s, marked this session of Congress. On international matters, the leg- islators expected leadership and responded with some historic laws. But on domestic issues, Congress was unsure and hesitant and gave Kennedy some of the worst de- feats of his political career. Just last week, Congress revo- lutionized American trade policy by passing the Trade Expansion Act with few changes from Ken- nedy proposals. This actbgives the President more flexibility in trade policy than he has had since before the Civil War. It allows him to cut. tariffs and make other trade ad- justments to meet the competi- tion of the Common Market and gain the markets of the emerg- ing nations. It also provides fed- eral help for industries and work- ers hurt by the resulting foreign trade. Also in the foreign field, Con- gress approved the Alliance for Progress and the Peace Corps, two of the most hopefully pro- gressive measures of the Kennedy administration. CONGRESS, in addition, stood resolutely behind the President when he asked for special legis- lation to meet the Berlin and Cu- ban crises. Foreign aid, though, is facing the end of the road. Kennedy managed to keep his program in tact only by avoiding a fight in the House and trying the Senate which responded favorably. How- ever, Congressional criticism of the program is mounting and becom- ing more sophisticated. Some thorough re-thinking of the pro- gram is necessary if it is to sur- vive another Congressional battle. In the related field of defense, Congress has been more than gen- erous with the President. Defense has become the chaste porkbarrell, almost impervious to criticism. So Congress maintained two programs the administration would like to have discarded. One was the B (now RS) 70; the other is the current, inefficient arrangement of the national guard. Kennedy avoided one by not spending the money allocated for it; he could not defeat the other. In fiscal measures, Congress grumbled, but went along. The debt ceiling was raised to over $300 billion and measures were ,taken to stop the gold outflow. Investment capital was encouraged by the tax reform bill, but loop- holes were extended, not closed, even Kennedy's charismatic charm could overcome that. Further in- jured by bad tactics, the plan died in the Senate and House Ways and Means Committee. Con- gressmen who were wavering on the issue, objected to Kennedy's end run tactics in the Senate and the measure lost by four votes. However, Kennedy and North- ern Democrats are using medicare as effective political issue and may pick up a few marginal dis- tricts on account of it. Aid to education also got en- tangled in the cross-currents of politics. Conflicting pressures of parochial school leaders, church and state separatists and segrega- tionists combined to make any education bill unacceptable to a segment of Congress, so no bill could be passed. Further, Congress tacked restric- tive overhead provisions onto their research appropriations bills. Par- ticularly, this, will result in uni- versities and colleges doing less basic medical and defense re- search. THE POSITIVE decision in edu- cation was the repeal of the Na- tional Defense Education Act dis- claimer oath provision. This will allow many schools such as Har- vard, which objected to the im- plications of the provision, to take advantage of the program, which aids teacher education and the training of scientific personnel. Kennedy failed to get his farm program through Congress. In- dividualistic farmers and their representatives failed to buy the control provisions of his proposal and Congress passed a patchwork farm program. Despite this,, the agriculture department has man- aged to diminish its surplus hold- ings. Congress embarassed the admin- istration with its long investigation of the Bille Sol Estes crop-allot- ment scandal. Ironically, the only loser to date on this issue was a Republican congressman from Minnesota who was associated with Estes. NO NEW major civil rights legislation was passed, as the ad- ministration preferred to work through executive and judicial channels which were more re- sponsive. However, legislation banning violence in interstate transporta- tion was passed as a result of freedom ride movement. As an after-thought to history, Congress passed a Constitutional amendment outlawing the poll tax and sent it the state for rati- to the EDITORR Truth ... To the Editor: ALTHOUGH I agree unreservedly fication. Only five states presently employ this patently discrimina- tory practice. On the negative side, Congress passed an amendment to the pos- tal pay raise bill that would re- strict the flow of allegedly Com- munist - initiated mail. Weaker than the original amendment, it still bans private citizens from getting "Communist" mail unless they specifically request the post office to deliver it. Educational in- stitutions are exempt from the provisions of the amendment. CONGRESSIONAL liberals made slight gains in modifying the crus- tacian Congressional rules. The House Rules Committee was al- legedly packed by the addition of two Democrats and a Republican to its membership. But two South- ern Democrats added to the five Republicans totaled tie votes that defeated a number of liberal pro- posals. The filibuster rule in the Sen- ate was modified to require 60 per cent present and voting to stop debate; but to the chagrin of Sen- ate liberals it was used success- fully only against them when they tried to filibuster against the Com- munications Satellite Bill. The fight of old men over House- Senate prestige made the 1962 session of the 87th Congress the longest in 12 years. Rep. Clarence Cannon, 83, fought Sen. Carl Hay- den, 84, over who has the preroga- tive on appropriations measures. Thus Congress had a spotty and fairly conservative record. In the coming elections, Kennedy is try- ing to elect his type of Democrats to break the essentially conser- vative bent of Congress. However, gerimandering and political al- legiences being what they are, the next session of Congress is unlikely to be much different from the last one. a fault for which even Whitman is often not forgiven and it never works on stage. The most fascinating part of this experiment, for that ,is after all what it was, was the scissors and paste script which Baldridge seemed to apologise for. Here is the poetry and the prose of one man, very often taken from his books word for word. And somehow, without marring the poetry, Baldridge managed to take these words of Walt Whitman and spread them around among five major characters and several minor ones. He did this without breaking or changing the mean- ings, although his literal use of many of the images did restrict the meaning to a degree. THE PEOPLE, these three Walt Whitmans, were real and dis- tinctly individual, each with a dif- ferent character each with a dif- ferent tone. Perhaps even more amazing is that even with all the admittedly excess verbiage and business, these lines jibed and conflicted to create exciting theatre and exciting drama. That this could be done at all is tribute both to Mr. Baldridge's talents as a playwright and Whit- man's ability to encompass all. "Very well then, I contradict my- self: (I am large-I contain mul- titudes)." (From Whitman's "Song of Myself") * * * THERE ARE hopes that this play, when worked over, will be- come part of the New York repe- toire for the APA. If it does, I for one want to see it, and I expect to come away even more enrap- tured than I did from this experi- ment. For in its failure, it has accomplished much and promises much more. Rather than condemning the APA for not "being up to par" on this play, I feel we should thank it even more for bringing some- thing new, fresh, and original to Ann Arbor, something all the more exciting because still in the pro- cess of being created. PHAKAVALI: 'Ensemble, Superb A PACKED Rackham auditorium on Monday night was shower- ed with color of music, dance, and costume by the Phakavali Dance Company from Bangkok,Thailand. Throughout, all dancing was performed'against a background of four,,white coated, cross-legged brilliant virtuosi of the Pi-Phat Orchestra, whose own musical mo- tions seemed to give and take fire from the motions of the dancers. This integrated art was a joy even to this reviewer, who knows very little about the culture of South East Asia. All the dances, of folk or courtly origin, were performed by solos, duos, and quartets from a com- pany of six women and two men. The foundation of their dancing is a perfectly balanced central align- ment of the body. From this cen- ter, impulses radiate into the limbs, which assume a bewildering variety of bent and curved pos- tures. THE TREATMENT of the fin- gers is famous, and not anly in dances where artificial fingernails throw the motions into relief. It is a style that emphasizes both grace and pride, as did the temple- domed headresses and the beauti- ful dancers. Court dances included a cere- monial invocation for quartet, a fluttering, airy, last solo of a bird goddess before her sacrifice, the Thai Silver Swan. Khon, a duel between the demon king and the good monkey king, based on the Ramayana epic, was done with superb mockery by two men. Fon- Leb was a fingernail dance with Chinese color. Dances of folk ori- gin included one in which the women literally "Dance between Clashing Poles," a graceful Drum Dance for four couples, and a blood curdling Sword Dance, in which, after intricate preliminar- ies, two men went to it with honed, naked blades. It is sur- prising, if the Phakavali have been on tour, that they still have two healthy dancers left for this num- ber. FOR THIS reviewer, Sud Jatri, a solo, was the distillation of the style. It is a ceremonial dance honoring all great teachers, and all great dancers gone before. The program notes say it is the foun- dation of Thai dance and drama. Sud Jatri is not only deeply rev- erent; it is an astounding illus- tration of waves of impulses, never breaking, projected from the body center to the extremeties. The music was nearly all spirit- ed, and four musicians did barely believable things with simple duple meter and pentatonic scales. The instruments were a bamboo xylo- phone, a lovely, croaking reed, a I 4 MOLINA AND COMPANY: Qualified .bravura JOSE MOLINA and his company closed the first Chamber Dance Festival last night with great bravura. The company danced beautifully and with amazing endurance for such a demanding pro- gram. Beginning with a typical opener, straightforward, gay, and informal the first half of the program was weakened by such slight pieces as "Viva Espana" sung by Maria Antonia, El Amante de Cordoba, Malaga la Bella and Bolerode Ravel. All were well performed but the dances suffered from lack of variation in movement, mood, accompaniment and use of space. * * * * A FEW high points broke the du'll repetitiousness of the first eleven numbers. Maria Antonia's sensitive rendering of "La Noche" added to the mood of the dance. Maria del Rocio's performance of "Tempos de Goya" was a welcome change to a gentler mood, although the dance, again, was slight. The waining enthusiasm of the audience was recaptured after intermission by Capriccio Espanol, a sensuous duet performed by Maria del Rocio and Senior Molina. Trite as the music is, a variety of mood was created by the subtle question and answer of the castanets and quick changes of tempo. These gave the dance dramatic shape. Emilio de Diego's guitar solo was exquisitely done and left the audience wanting more. . . . .*