of 4t AJlrd$gan Batty Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS 'WesOpilnions Are Frei 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. "Thank You-And Now How About Full Support?" . , LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Daily's SGC Editorial Suffused in Mysticism AY, DECEMBER 4, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: RONALD WILTON Year-Round Operations: The Cafeteria Plan THE UNIVERSITY is moving cautiously to- ward full-year operations. Next summer you might not notice a radical change but in the deans' offices in the individual schools and colleges an appreciable and significant transfer of power will have taken place. The substance of the recent change has been the transfer of the financial and policy re- sponsibility for summer school from the hands of the Summer Session Office into those of the individual deans. Consequently, it is now up to the discretion of the deans to plan the summer programs and to guide their respec- tive units into full-year operations according to the needs of these units. The importance of the change lies in the administrative area, one that will have little immediate effect on students. Primarily, the transition allows autonomy within the units as to choice between the present two and one-half semester and the proposed three semester plan, and the method of making the shift from the one into the other. YET THE FUTURE promises wonderful changes under the full-year program. With each unit offering the traditional summer ses- sion of six; and eight weeks, plus the slow addition, when needed, of courses spanning the third full semester, there will be a vastly improvedflexibility in the time schedule. As Dean Stephen Spurr of the natural re- sources school, who has been instrumental in the implementation of year-round operations, says in a report, the project is like a cafeteria. It can operate from morning until night and can serve many more people than a restaurant with table service at meals only. "The food will be just as good, the meals will take just as long to. eat, and most of our clients will come in three times a day." The greatest benefits of year-round opera- tions is that an increased number of students can be served in the same table space, to con- tinue the analogy, as always existed. This is not to say that the dining room is already big enough or the food is good enough; but if it's all we've got to subsist on, we take fullest advantage of it. had better THE NEW PROGRAM offers all sorts of ad- vantages such as the opportunity to work in the winter, rather than the summer, and still get a full year of school in. Faculty will be freer to do research and find part- time jobs, no longer restricted to the summer. Many students, however, are wary of get- ting a diluted education with the implementa- tion of the new calendar. On paper the advan- tages, which still remain to be tested, seem to outweigh by far any disadvantages; in fact they seem to obliterate them completely. In the new calendar, classes begin in early September and examinations will be over before Christmas. Between the first and second semesters there will be a three week period which is scot-free; no worries over three' term-papers and two exams the week following vacation. The second semester, relieved by a mid- semester recess of one week, will end in ' late May. After another three weeks the third se- mester will start. The cycle is never-ending; its beauty is that nothing short of death, pestilence or famine-or maybe the burning of Angell Hall-can stop its precision clockwork., JEANWHILE, HOWEVER, while the clock is just being wound up, there are plenty of problems in sight. Of primary importance is the question of appropriations. The deans will not know the extent of their budgets until the Legislature has decided its appropriations and responsibility and plans of the most excellent nature can't get off the ground without money to back them. Equally important is the question of facul- ty and student support for year-round opera- tions. The students that Dean Spurr expects to attend the third semester will be mainly grad- uate and professional students, students with high motivation to complete their education as quickly as possible without sacrificing quality, students who will attend the first half of the summer session and still have their vacation, and the school teachers and others who have traditionally attended the summer session. The last group will enter when the students attend- ing the first half of the summer session leave Hopefully this plan of something for everyone will attract all sorts o fnew students and enable the University to expand the number of people it services, a necessity in the face of the rapidly growing student populace. However, faculty must be willing to teach in the summer, vaca- tion in the winter, teach all-year round or in some way modify their traditional teaching schedule. T HE UNIVERSITY is doing much more to en- hance its glowing "public image" by open- ing its doors to an increased number of stu- dents than it could ever do through films, smil- ing at the public or any other public relations techniques. As tuition goes up and space per capita grows smaller, the University becomes less and less an institution of higher learning open to all. Yet with the gradual transition into the full-year operations, it will enable more students than ever to complete their education both in a shorter time and without sacrificing quality. If the project is well-accepted by students and faculty, the possibilities for growth are limitless. -MARJORIE BRAHMS . : .+ , z . AT %1 Cr " F c N o .. ON! II wiifMY li/ f \ ' ..-f!- M.ti ,': A P, y ' 4A" ',t7 t ya6Z ? #+ . W,4ttl! a(f't +ci 'F s'I" "p To the Editor: FROM EARLY TIMES, the num- ber seven, which happens to be the number of candidates to be elected in the forthcoming Student Government Council elec- tion, has had mystical signifi- cance. The ratings of these can- didates by The Daily is also sur- rounded by a certain mysticism. That is, they are a mystery to us. According to The Daily, the candidates were judged and placed "in order of the consistency of thought, logical development of ideas and apparent ability to turn their conceptions into effective programs." We admire the edi- torial staff's golden ideal, but we wonder at the magic elixir with which The Daily alchemists trans- muted the leaden qualifications of certain of the candidates into this golden ideal. Witness: The candidate rated as "four" by the Merlins of The Daily. "She utters, and undoubtedly believes, fine statements about the aims of the council, . . . with little qualification and less ap- parent thought." Is this a logical development of ideas? "Her de- bate would be ineffective, but her vote would aid the Council." Op- pose this to the candidate rated as "six." * * * "HE DISCUSSES issues intel- ligently and has framed criteria around which to judge the import- ance of motions. Given some time on Council to pick up knowledge about the University, he would become one of the most effective spokesmen for this group's (fra- ternities') viewpoints." On the basis of these qualifica- tions, and in fview of the stated criteria, how can the editors rate this candidate below one which they have deemed "little qualified . . . ineffective . . . of little thought?' If the editors of The Daily wish to pick candidates, why do they not stick to the criteria which they have advanced? That is to say, why do they cover up their true criteria with a set of false ideals? If they wish to pick candidates on the basis of political affiliation, at least let them admit it and not, try to mislead by obscuting this fact with a smokescreen of ideal- Ism. -Dale Stoner, '65 -John Binkley, '65 Training ... To the Editor: PLEASE HAVE David Fainberg look up "banned" and "sub rosa" in the dictionary. I'm afraid his English on the front page of a recent Daily makes both you and the English department (where I presume he had some training) look pretty feeble. -Prof. Sheridan Baker Criticism .. . To the Editor: ALTHOUGH The Daily has re- cently begun to distinguish it- self in regard to its dramatic criticism, it is obvious that those whom it chooses as arbiters of the public's musical tastes are in the long tradition of Daily re- viewers. One endures the usual academic prejudices against romantic music which The Daily never tires of printing, but when a reviewer totally damns a rather fine pro- duction, it is time to raise the cry which has so often been printed in these columns, but to no avail. Thew ase in point is Michael Wentworth's review of the New York City Opera Co. "Rigoletto." One is entitled to one's views, but when they are as choleric (as well as misconceived) as Mr. Went- worth's, your readers have the right to complain. * * * THE PRODUCTION was an en- tirely competent one with lapses in dramatic technique which are common on every opera stage in the wrld. The soprano was an ap- pealing Gilda whose lack of con- summate technique is largely due to her age and whose acting was above the average. The tenor made the Duke of Mantua plausible, which is no mean feat, and if he indulged a few Italian manner- isms, for the most part he sang with great flourish and good taste. One could ask far more of the production's Rigoletto, but he was not, as Mr. Wentworth suggests, inadequate. Mr. Wentworth com- plains of the balance between singers and orchestra, but he turns his attention to the wrong party. As one who experienced the same trouble the night before and found it rectified when I moved out. of balcony, I would !be inclined to find fault with the conversion of Hill Auditorium into a proscenium stage. * * * EVEN SO, however, the point is Mr. Wentworth's review. One won- ders how wlien he is so adept at dissecting a production, he could praise "La Traviata" so highly. That production was a thorough bore and a very badly sung one, at that. -Stuart Curran, Grad HISTORIAN'S DILEMMA: Cuban Crisis in retros pect By ROBERT SELWA IF THE HUMAN race does not destroy itself with nuclear, weapons or pesticides or over- population by the year 2000, his- torians may look back at the events in Cuban-United States relations with puzzlement. If they run across a description of these events such as what will follow, they might have a little troouble deciding if the period was the late 1890's or the early 1960's: "For the yellow journalists, trouble in Cuba meant another chance for sensational stories, ex- citement and adventure. For their competitors, the problem became one of maintaining caution and losing circulation. "THE INSURRECTION in Cuba was the culmination of many years of struggle between Cuban rebels and the existing Cuban regime. "A change in American policies affected the Cuban sugar market, increased hostilities and tended to bring hard times and unemploy- ment to Cuba. "Leading newspapers so handled the news of events leading up to the crisis in bad relations that a war psychosis was developed. It must not be forgotten, however, that the newspapers were cultivat- ing public opinion in a favorable atmosphere. "INTEREST in international af- fairs had been steadily growing in Values PAUL VARG, Michigan State University's Dean of the College of Arts and Letters, was one of those who drew up the speaker policy approved by the Michigan Coordinating Council on Higher Education. This policy, as the Michigan State News points out, places tighter restrictions on the advocacy of violence than does the Federal government. While Federal law prohibits speakers who incite immediate violence, the speaker policy bans advocay of violence in any form. We don't even stop to consider what this would do to certain American historical figures because we are far more interested in Dean Varg's rationalizations. "We felt the advocacy of violence was in- consistent with the Spirit of a University (sic)," said the eminent dean. Such language would be laughable if it weren't dangerously indicative of the flippant unconcern with which the values, the prin- ciples of a free education are being tossed aside in this country. Or perhaps to Dean Varg the "Spirit of a University" merely means Michi- gan State football. --H. NEIL BERKSON AT THE STATE: Absurd Thrills Abound IT'S AN all Warner Brothers night at the State for a while, starting with a new Looney Tunes about a "monster," which is a cut above average in fantasy but which has a most unsatisfying surprise ending. Roughly the same things can be said about the feature "What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?" No pretender to unity of plot (or any of that stuff), "Baby Jane" is a string of high tension incidents, a sort of detective story with no detective. Bette Davis is very impressive as Jane, a once child performer now old and bloat- ed and mad beyond belief. (The role itself, however, is filled with enough grotesque gimmicks to give any actress a head start.) Joan Crawford, her crippled sister and psychological straight man, gets bound, gagged, kicked, drag- ged, and generally harassed for a good two hours, most of which goes to show that no matter what you do, you can't make Joan Crawford ugly. There is comic relief: Victor Buono, a new gentle giant, romps through his part with spirit and taste, which is more than can be said for most actors who are seven feet tall. THE PHOTOGRAPHY generally is disappointing, though not with- out fine moments-an under- taker's billboard, a sun-tanned navel listening to a radio-yet one must await these moments as exceptions. The direction generally is heavy-handed: any given mo- ment of horror is underscored once with loud music, again with a close-up shot of someone's eyes popping, and then prolonged into a series of near-climaxes, until finally when the knife falls, it is quite too late to scream. (Con- sider, for example, the stairway scene or the rat-on-a-platter). Psychologically, of course, the movie is absurd, but then who ever worries about that when he can get scared out of his pants for 90 cents? In all, you might as well see "Baby Jane," as it's pretty scary and everyone is going to ask you if you've seen it anyway. It's no "Psycho,' but then it's no Con- stantine and the Cross either. -Dick Pollinger the United States, and many Americans cited the Monroe Doc- trine of 1823 as a justification for possible militaristic adventures in the Caribbean. The United States was taking part in a world-wide fight for power. Americans were feeling this growing sense of power in world affairs. And the news- papers played upon the sense of power andupon American pride, pointing to the American military forces that could be tested in battle. "The papers urged the U.S. to use force if need be to oust the regime in Cuba, suggesting that it would be an easy mark. The horror of the last war had faded and some Americans were wonder- ing if their country's military prowess wasstill secure. In short, the nation was ripe for war in Cuba. "American newsmen exaggerated the bad conditions in Cuba. Some of their stories were supposedly based on their eyewitness report- ing but others admittedly were recountings of the stories of Cu- ban refugees. American correspon- dentshwere expelled from Cuba, and the American press retaliated by working harder to get news unfavorable to the regime. Many papers stressed the need for in- tervention in Cuba. * * * "CONGRESS PASSED a resolu- tion calling for action on Cuba. People were saying something ought to be done in the name of the U.S. and the Monroe Doc- trine. The mood of the country was one of nationalism, offended pride and jingoism. "Finally the invasion of Cuba was launched . ..' By checking closely, the his- torian of the future might dis- cover that this description was probably drawn chiefly from Ed- win Emery's book, "The Press and America," and involved not the period of the early 1960's but that of the late 1890's. But then again he could not be sure . . HOW WOULD you feel if you were a new bride and the love of your life took you away in a 1939 black Cadillac hearse for a honeymoon night in the wet, run- down Ole Man River Motel? Also, to add to your bridal bliss, your new spouse gets soused, screams "Take yer clothes off, before I rip 'em off," anti then tells his best friend the next day that you're frigid. This could lead to some marital problems and some wild comedy and it does just that in Tennessee Williams' "Period of Adjustment." Originally written for Broad- way in 1960, "Period of Adjust- ment" is a comedy about normal people (believe it or not) with some usual, but funny marital problems. Jim Hutton plays George, a husband who is scared of sex. His wife, "Little Bit" (Jane Fonda), has got a case of the "I want to go back to Daddy" blues., When George arives at his best friend's house with his scream- ing wife, Ralph (Tony Franciosa) puts forth with a little counseling --"You're only going through a period of adjustment." The only drawback is his wife (Lois Nettle- ton) has taken a powder. It seems Ralph insulted her Daddy and accused her of making Junior a sissy. 'PERIOD OF ADJUSTMENT' Warm-Hearted Cornedy MANY HUMOROUS things hap- pen in the next few hours. Take for example the steady intoxica- tion of the local Christmas carol- ers. We see them throughout, the film and they get drunker and drunker. In the end they cause mayhem in the police station with Ralph, George and wives, and ver- sions of "Big Daddy" and mink- draped Mama. This is a comedy that does not rely on the unusual happening or event as in a Peter Sellers. The real comedy relies on the lines that are spoken and they are some wonderful ones. The acting of Jim Hutton and Tony Franciosa is superb and the pace of the film increases when they are on the screen. Miss Fonda is good, but cannot command our attention for long stretches. She has too many disturbing mannerisms which in- terfere with her character por- trayal. The expected Williams touches never happen. Junior is not bar- becued and neither is Big Daddy. It is nice to know Tennessee Wil- liams understands and writes very well about normal problems. It's also nice to leave a Williams film with a warm heart. If you need a study break or just a change of pace from "Baby Jane" go to this film and see Mr. Williams in a new light. -Barbara Finch Loss of Rea.Will Hurt Union THE NEW AMENDMENT to the Union Con- stitution which provides for the vice- president for student affairs or his special representative to replace the holder of the now defunct position of Dean of Men on the Union Board will probably mean the end of many years of service by Walter B. Rea on the board. It will be sad to see Rea leave because he has devoted much time and effort to improv- ing the Union and its services. He is well liked and respected by his fellow board members and has contributed to the good relations which exist between the Union and the OAS. He has played an important part in the selec- tion of Union officers. His probable leaving was brought about by the reshuffling of the OSA. Formerly the Dean of Men sat on the board as one of the ex- officios provided for in the Union's constitution. Now however he is special assistant to the vice-president and director in charge of finan- Business Staff LEE SCLAR, Business Manager SUE FOOTE....................Finance Manager RUTH STEPHENSON*............Accounts Manager SUE TURNER..........Associate Business Manager THOMAS BENNETT........... Advertising Manager Editorial Staff MICHAEL OLINICK, Editor JUDITH OPPENHEIM MICHAEL HARRAH Editorial Director City Editor cial aids, a position which leaves him with no logical connection with the Union. HIS OBVIOUS REPLACEMENT should be former assistant dean of men and present director of student organizations and activities John Bingley. His appointment would be a recognition of the importance of the Union's growing interest in broadening its appeal as evidenced to by the present union-league study committee, and would bring to the board a broader outlook than that encompassed by the old Dean of Men's position. Actually it would probably be best if vice- president Lewis himself could sit on the board, but it is likely that other commitments will keep him from this. In this case Bingley is his most logical representative. The male students on campus owe Rea a debt of gratitude for his efforts in aiding the growth and improvement of the Union. Hopefully Bingley will continue in this tradition and will bring fresh ideas and dynamism to a Union Board which is facing such important ques- tions as future relations with both the Wo- men's League and the OSA itself. -RONALD WILTON Old-Fashioned ]FULTON LEWIS III, at a Young Americans for Freedom-sponsored lecture, claimed that when a witness takes the Fifth Amendment when asked, "Are you a member of the Com- munist Party?" one could only assume that FEIFFER MC. IM-1, AM WICA, F'oV'WflAT Do YOU WANT TO K WHEN YOU 6ROW' VP?" T9 P6R~ FO W A AK WR-5i'NA-rT 6MR'ME 6tU531N= NR6 010 160 109M6)?" WHO 5 COO FR5T M6oPe OUR CAM~ERAS L-. 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