Save ty-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED SY STUDENTS F Tf E UNm ryrrf oF MuCwmAw UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLCATON. Where Opinions ArePreSTUDENT PumicATroNS BLDG., ANN AaBOR, MicH., PnoNE mo 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail" Editotials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. *T , .'J JRDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: STEVEN HALLER Annual Appropriation Hinders Planning ..NM li * . . I al HE UNIVERSITY'S PLANS for increas- ed enrollment depend on an annual tate budget appropriation. This depen- dence puts a serious crimp on long- ange planning within the University. If he University is to be able to cope ade- xuately and efficiently with future en- ollment, the Legislature must develop omething more than its present year-by- year commitment to higher education. The University's inability to plan with onfidence may lead to a serious crisis his coming year. If the budget is slashed' again this year, the University will not )e able to resign itself to "another year" f economizing, for next year the war rabies arrive en masse. According to a report prepared by the Michigan Council for Public Higher Edu- :ation, the number of entering freshmen n the state for 1964 is estimated to be about 51,000. In contrast, freshman en- 'ollment has remained steady at about :0,600 for the past three years. And for .965, a further increase of 12,000 is ex- >ected. These figures are not just scare-statis- ics prepared by a lobby group; they are lerived from the number of students ?resently in high school who in past years would be expected to go on to college. rHE UNIVERSITY has done as well as it can in planning for these increases hrough the, tentative trimester system and the residential college. Certainly if the University receives its ull budget request, the state of the Uni- ersity will be fine. The trimester system an begin to operate, allowing for more fficient year-round use of facilities. The esidential college plan-if the literary ollege faculty decides that it presents the est means of liberal arts expansion- ould be implemented to provide excellent ducation within the confines of a very arge institution. [UT WHAT if the appropriation doesn't come through? The residential college s not intended to allow for increased en- ollments without a corresponding in- rease in University funds. It cannot re- .uce the cost per student of education. nd the trimester system requires an ritial expenditure of $1.25 million by the legislature before it could provide for arger enrollments. After that, the tri- aester system would require sustained inancial support beyond the present ap- ropriation level. Clearly, if the budget is slashed, the niversity is going to have to make some retty quick decisions to maintain edu- ational standards in the face of the on- laught of applicants. The nature of the niversity's dependence on yearly appro- 'riations causes these decisions to be ased on budgetary rather than educa- ional considerations. [The University's decision to keep the number of outAof-state students constant is not in itself going to make sufficient room for even next year's applicants if the budget is inadequate. AS A RESULT, the University may have to resort to other means of keeping out the "excess" war babies. These means would probably manifest themselves through admission policies, in which case the University has these alternatives : 1) It can raise admissions standards for incoming freshmen, which seems rather ridiculous in the light of increas- ingly worse educational conditions; 2) It can raise tuition in an attempt to lower the number of students who can afford to come here; and 3) It can increase the flunk-out rate to get rid of students it doesn't want. ALL ARE UNDESIRABLE; all are possi- bilities. These, alternatives to a larger budget have not been faced. Freshmen applicants plan their lives further ahead than the one. year that the Legislature gives its appropriations. Whether or not a student gets into the University should not depend on such an external factor as whether the Legisla- ture decides to pay for Increased enroll- ment. ANOTHER INEFFICIENCY in the Uni- versity's dependence on yearly appro- priations is that it cannot adequately predict how many new faculty members it should hire for the next year. A full year is required to find and retain new faculty since most faculty contracts are made in the fall. Beyond that time, professors would not be willing to commit themselves to a new institution. Clearly, if the University were to plan for increased enrollment, it would first have to plan for increased faculty, and to do that it must know in advance that it will have something to pay them when the time comes. IF THE UNIVERSITY is to grow over the next few years without starts and stops, then the University must have a more reliable source of income. The Univer- sity must be able to make its plans with some confidence that they can be used. The University has spent a great deal of trouble and has gone to much inconven- ience in getting ready for the trimester. This effort will be wasted if slashed ap- propriations cause the plan to be dis- carded. For the University and other institu- tions to be able to plan for increased en- rollment, the state must be able to com- mit itself to educational appropriations for a period greater than the all-too- short one year. --MICHAEL SATTINGER 40 . k { . .. 3 Mt t t rA 4I 'I ~E~3, 45 DE 5gig6: J2 .. f ,,. tn! SY" Ap 3," K .'* er UM AWAYSIjA~ A t16~ ~JEM ~4iRTALIYLR f. "LATIN~ AMERKA FRATERNITY JUDIC: Initial Cases Show Problems A Critical Approach THERE ARE TIMES when one must wonder just how stupid some people in the state of Michigan take our legislators to be. Such a time arose last Wednesday. The scene: The. House Chambers in Lansing. The Time: Mid-evening. The Occasion: Public Hearings on Gov. Rom- aey's tax proposal. The Dramatis Per- sonae: State YR chairman Robert Deth- mners, Senators Clyde H. Geerlings (R- Holland), chairman of Senate Taxation Committee, and Charles S. Blondy (D- Detroit), Senate Minority Leader. HE SITUATION was this. Young Deth- mers, admittedly the State YR chair- man even though he claimed to speak nly for himself, appealed to the legis- ators to support the governor's tax pro- gram. And he spoke in a number of gen- eralities which all amounted to saying, n effect, that he was no tax expert but hat he thought the governor's program ;hould be supported. House Taxation Committee chairman Tames N. Folks (R-Horton) rebuked Dethmers for Implying that legislators would not consider each proposal care- fully, but the sharp retort came from 3londy. 'You are asking us to buy the gover- nor's programin toto and without ques- ;ion, and yet you admit yourself you Ion't even know what it is. I'd like to point out that we don't know for sure what the governor's proposals are, for he Editorial Staff RnLnWMTON Editor has indicated that he will soon submit amendments." IN EFFECT, Dethmers replied that he understood this, but that he was mak- ing a more general appeal. (And at last he said it point blank.) He was asking support of the Romney program simply because Romney had proposed it and without regard to what was in it. To this Blondy had several sharp re- marks, but they were honey-smooth com- pared to Geerlings' rebuttal. "I'm really afraid," the Holland Senator asserted. "I was a hero in my district for standing up and opposing this program when it had Soapy Williams picture on it; now my constituents walk up to me and say, 'Clyde, for 16 years we've tried to elect a Republican governor. -Now we've got one; for Heaven's sake, give him what he wants.' And I have to ask, 'Do you know what he wants?' and they tell me 'no.' "Now that's awful. I wouldn't buy a pig-in-a-poke from Williams, and I'm not going to buy one from "Romney, just because he's a Republican. I think we should consider each proposal on its merits and on its merits alone. "Gov. Romney has a nice trick he pulls sometimes. He says he's a citizen first and a Republican second. Well I can play that game too. And I'm going to consider each and every proposal as a citizen and not as a Republican. "You (Dethmers) are asking us to ac- cept blindly the governor's program, simply because he proposes it. I'm afraid that's not a very good reason." QUITE RIGHT, Sen. Geerlings. And it would seem that as distinguished a personage as the state YR chairman - urmlAral ++n- n('ra,. . oman By H. NEIL BERKSON INTERFRATERNITY Council is belatedly discovering that the problems of being a University judiciary are not slight. Earlier this week it received and disposed of two cases of fraternity group conduct viola- tions-the first since Joint Judi- ciary Council gave IFC jurisdic- tion in this area three weeks ago. The two cases spotlighted a num- ber of issues with which IFC must come to grips if itis to have an effective, responsible judiciary. FIRST; the IFC executive com- mittee is responsible for judicial functions within the fraternity system. The executive committee and the judic, in other words, are one and the same. This means that cases are tried by: The five senior officers of IFC; Five fraternity presidents-one from each of the districts into which the system is divided; Three alumni members; A representative of the Office of Student Affairs. The OSA representatiye is John Feldkamp. In judicial cases he serves strictly as an advisor with- out vote. When JJC approved the transfer of authority, it recommended that IFC establish a separate judicial branch to deal with the viola- tions. Rationalen: there would otherwise be a conflict between the executive and judicial func- tions of the committee. IFC HAS OPPOSED the change, arguing that its constitution authorizes it to be the fraternity judiciary. It has always judged violations of fraternity rules and regulations, as opposed to those of University rules and regulations. It is perhaps an unfortunate coincidence then, that the presi- dents of both accused houses, ATO (acquitted) and Zeta Psi (con- victed) are also members of the executive committee, i.e. they are members of the judic. Neither par- ticipated in the proceedings against his own house. Nevertheless, there was--and had to be-too much of an in- formal atmosphere. Here's a 14- man committee, which has work- ed closely together since April, suddenly called on to judge the outside affairs of two of its own members. Objectivity is implaus- ible in such circumstances. * * * THE NATURE of the com- plaints IFC will be considering presents a second problem. There are primarily two: an unregistered party and/or consumption or presence of alcoholic beverages in a house. A violation usually en- compasses both. While the liquor violation is clear-cut, the unregistered party is not. Any social functions must be pre-registered with and ap- proved by the OSA. Until this fall, women weren't allowed in fra- ternity houses except for such registered functions. Any other time that women were discovered ducting unregistered parties. Both were acquitted (Zeta Psi was con- victed on a liquor charge). In deciding the unregistered party question IFC had to grope about for new terms. It came with five criteria-all of which are tentative. If there is a sudden gathering of people in a frater- nity house: How did they get there? Was the gathering spontaneous or or- ganized? What did they do in the house? Was there a band and refresh- ments, for instance? What was the degree of parti- cipation? While IFC has no spe- cific yardstick, the more mem- bers present (in combination with the other circumstances), the more likelihood of a violation. How long did the situation last, an hour or an evening? How deeply was the chapter in- volved? Was there a chapter vote? Were house funds used? The criteria are certainly inter- related. No one of them could alone convict a house. *, * * IFC HAS DONE a good job in this virtual "no man's land." One wonders, however, whether the concept of the unregistered party is valid now that the automatic definition has been removed. The above criteria-or any other cri- teria-demand judgement - deci- sions which are much too fine. This isespecially so when the jurists have to rely on one witness, when they cannot see for them- selves what has occurred. The solution would be to elim- inate the registration require- ment for parties. Registration was only a means of keeping women out of the houses. Now that they are allowed, registration has no purpose. The OSA has to make this move: IFC would certainly wel- come it. * * * A THIRD ISSUE is that of evi- dence and testimony. The evidence is compiled by Harold Swoverland, investigator for the OSA. He is a familiar name to most Greeks. Appearing unannounced when- ever he suspects a chapter may be drinking or illegally partying, Swoverland will peer through windows, search the house for alcohol or do whatever else is necessary to get his information. He also investigates complaints received by the Ann Arbor police. Finding a violation, Swoverland reports to John Bingley, director of student activities and organiza- tions in the OSA. Bingley can refer the case to IFC or dispose of it himself. In the former case he draws up a report of the violation for IFC. Swoverland is never present at a hearing. (This was also true when Joint Judic handled the cases.) Bingley's report is read; the president of the accused house can then testify and answer ques- tions. * * * THE ATO and Zeta Psi presi- dents challenged both the tone and even certain facts of the re- Yn .c of - .hi . cil,firr- YM . --, for instance, fear that they will be dealt with harshly, while the big houses will be treated leniently. At some point, IFC may want to examine the entire issue of drinking regulations and their en- forcement. Liquor flows fairly freely in most, if not all of the houses on campus. Yet only a few houses are caught. This is strange when Swoverland has keys and access to every house at any time. The University is being unfair if it wants to make examples of a, few houses as a sop to public opinion. THIS IFC has good leadership., It earnestly wants to prove that, it can be responsible for its own.' In such terms the above problems are by no means insurmountable. CINEMA GUILD: Audible.' 'Oedipus' BRING YOUR BLINDERS to the Cinema Guild tonight and to- morrow; the delights of "Oedipus Rex" are purely auditory. Insensitive to the essential dif- ferences between the stage and the screen, the producers of this mo- vie have simply filmed a stage production. No adaptations have been made for the screen. The ac- tors wear the traditional Greek masks and perform on a proscen- ium stage. As a result, the action on the screen is uninteresting and frequently distracting. IT IS Sophocles' verse, beauti- fully rendered into English by William Butler Yeats, that carries this film. The essence of the stage is ora- tory. When the playwright wishes 1 to express something he must put words in the mouth of a character. As he creates verbal images, the cinematographer must create vis- ual images. Sound can contribute to a film, but it is not essential' By presenting an essentially ver- bal work in a visual medium, this film has the worst of both worlds. The visual possibilities of the cin- ema are not utilized, and the ora- tory, emanating from loud speak- ers rather than live actors, loses much of its expressive power. THE MASKS which the actors wear were designed for the stage where the audience is at a con- siderable distance from the per- formers. The film, with its close- ups, renders these devices irrele- vant. Furthermore, these masks hide subtleties of characterization which the camera is capable of picking up." Restricted to the proscenium stage, this play, as a film, seems unnecessarily cramped. The pos- sibilities of movement inherent in the cinema are never taken ad- vantage of. a a a - TO The EcfWo To the Editor: public without being a summation AS A GENETISIST, I have been of individual wills. Where are the much impressed by the char- "Righties?" Aren't they listening? acter of the civil rights movement -William Fleischman, Grad to date. It has shown itself to be an efficient educational endeavor. Tedious... It has caused many to realize in- consistancies in their own think- To the Editor: ing. It has demonstrated that ra- PROF. MARVIN FELHEIM'S re- cial prejudice is quite incompat- view of "Much Ado About able with beliefs in democracy, Nothing'" was essentially correct. morality and biological truth. It was unbelievable that APA It has had the same effect as should give a tedious performance the early passive efforts of the of such a delightful play. Prac- Indians had against the British. tically all the wit was smothered The Negro and the Indian have by Rabb and Marchand. the same advantage; they are * * * right. The Indians humiliated their THERE WAS LAUGHTER at opponent to defeat and were re- times, only because Shakespeare's spected for it. genius can usually squeeze through * * * any amateurish fumbling. Experi- RECENTLY, however, I have mentation is fine until it distracts heard statements which say in from enjoyment. To disagree with effect, "Cross our line and we'll the review, I thought Dogberrry slug you, and hire us for our race." rather successful as, a blundering Such statements are militant and bureaucrat. violent. They seem to be based Finally: are we, the audience, on the notion that there is a permitted to question at all the significant biological difference inclusion of this play in the sea- between the races and that the son? Personally, I would rather Negro is inately inferior to other see some imaginative interpreta- races. tion of the rarely performed Max As a biologist I can not yet be- Frisch, Bertolt Brecht, Frank lieve this. There is far too little Wedekind, et al, than to see again data to support this conclusion. I the best "Much Ado About No- think a violent approach to civil thing." rights problems will tend to dem- Richard Centing, Grad onstrate a falsehood; that the races are significantly different. Violence may bring about a sort CAMPUS: of solution to the problem, but this solution may turn out to be only / a truce such as exists betweent4J1J labor and management. Perhaps the labor-management truce is inevitable because of the intrinsic functional difference between the worker and the manager. I hope that such an uneasy truce will SATYAJIT RAY's "Two Daugh- not be the ultimate solution be- ters" is based on two short tales tween groups which are, in truth, by Ramindranath Tagore. "The not so different. Perhaps my Postmaster" is exquisitely simple. thoughts are parallel to those of A new postmaster comes to an iso- Mr. Sasaki. lated station and takes up his -William M. Thwaites, Grad boring duties. He is served by a young girl who bears his water Extension ... andcooks his food with hardly a Extenson...word. To the Editor: He begins to teach her to read; THE EDITORIAL by Marjorie when he falls ill with malaria, she Brahms entitled "Vote or on nurses him. The isolation and liv- Referendum," in your Oct. ' ing at the level of subsistence be- edition, was quite remarkable, in- gin to wear on the postmaster, so tended or not. Arguing against a he resigns his service and prepares popular vote for the offices of the t return to Calcutta. When he president and executive vice-presi- tries to say goodbye, she ignores dent of SGC, she quite effectively the rupee. In the last frame when threw the baby out with the bath he hears her offer water to her water, forcing the reader to be- new aster he rea izesand wh at come overwhelmingly skeptical of he has rejected. Through her lone- thejustification for SGC's exis- liness and endurance the girl be- Early in her editorial, Miss omes the eternal Blahms implies that, as a matter "SAMAPTI" (The Conclusion)i of faith, continuing the pretend an amusing treatment of )two game of representative student themes: the clash of traditional government is a goal to be pur- and modern values, and the proc- sued, but, later on, she seems to ess of maturing. An educated son question the legitimacy of stu- returns to his native village. His dent government, as it is effective- mother urges a girl on him but y applied. One very important he refuses the arranged marriage question which she implicitly asks, and chooses a tomboy instead. She and does not answer, then, is: Why reacts bitterly to this attempt to pretend at all? end her childhood. I find it interesting that if you He leaves. Her pet squirrel dies, were to substitute the word "State" signaling the end of youth. She is for SGC, and "citizens" for stu- able to write to him as wife to dents in Miss Brahms writing we husband. end up with a very socialist view * * / of government. In some way or AS IN THE FIRST films of the' other, we have a government , trilogy, Ray's camera is austere. which legislates on the basis of The beauty of "Two Daughters" is some sort of broad, generalized in his ability to catch the nuance public will; a public will which, in of character. some way, filters up from the -David Zimmerman WOMEN & CHILDREN FIRiST: $5500 and All. Red By DICK POLLINGER ONE OF THE advantages of going to a large school is the possibility of being listed in an impressive student directory. This year's directory, a familiar face from way back, will be on sale Monday for a dollar and represents a significant cultural landmark in its own right. However, it is fraught with traps for the unwary, and inpenetrable to all but the most refined sensibilities. For my lesson in the true reading of the directory, I went to the book's editor, Bill Hertlein, who is also an engineer of the most refined sensibilities. * * *. * HE RECEIVED MEI at the loading dock of the SAB amidst great commotion, for the arrival of a new directory is always likely to arouse a great deal of excitement. "These here are the directories," I was told by a welkin-eyed lad who seemed nearly moved to tears by the occasion, "and that there's the editor." Hertlein got right down to business:; "Have a directory," he said, producing a bright red book, "and look it over. Alpha Phi Omega, the service fraternity that I'm president of did the book again this year. We get 20 per cent of the profit to use for our projects. Last year we sent used textbooks to Ghana, and put out a 'Wolverine Handbook' for freshmen. Actually, any campus group can petition the Board in Control of Student Publications to produce the book. Last year's profits were about $5500, so you can see that it's- nothing to trifle with." * * * I WAS IN NO trifling mood so I took the book and thanked him, anticipating the mysteries which lay between its red covers. Like an old National Geographic, there is nothing unexpected on the cover of this year's directory. The fun starts when you open it up. It's no Manhattan directory, but there is a charm all of its own in its typewriter typography. Every other page bears an advertisement, except that with successive letters of the alphabet, the advertising pages change from odd-numbered ones to even-numbereds, and back again, an ingenious system which affords the analytical mind a pause for contemplation. The book has little else in the way of a plot-line (except the excitement of perusing the "Late Registration" members at the end) but the variety of its characters is nearly overpowering. There will a' v 4 r+ 1