Sevntwy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail" I 11 WOMEN & CHILDREN FIRST Great C easer's Ghost By DICK POLLINGER j Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in al; reprints. URDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: GERALD STORCHI Regen Assistance No Real Help rHE RECENT TREND of students and faculty who are dissatisfied with the Jniversity administration to seek help from the Regents is potentially danger- )us. The Regents are not the University lure-all which some people think they re. It is dangerous to look to the Regents ; fill the leadership void at the Univer- >ty. The problem arises because many peo- le do not understand the role of*the re- ent. A recent Carnegie Foundation study ndicated that people "conceive of the oard as the pinnacle of power hierarchy. rothing could be further from the truth. 'he heart of the university community is he men and women who carry forward he university's central tasks of teaching nd research." rHE REGENTS delegate administrative powers to their hired representatives, hie educational experts-reserving for hemselves only broad policy making pow-, rs. Regents do not and should not enter nto the day-to-day affairs of the Univer- ity. Regent Eugene B. Power of Ann Arbor ointed out during his campaign for re- lection last spring that the Regents ap- oint the University administrators to andle daily problems, and if they are not atisfied with the results, the board re- ains the power to replace key personnel. 1'URTHERMORE, at a public institution like the University, the Regents repre- ent an arm of the public. They are elect- I at large on a partisan ticket. As Re- ent-elect William B. Cudlip of Grosse ointe said during his campaign last >ring, the Regent is a University liaison ith the public. This link with the public is both good ad bad. Since Regents are usually com- unity leaders, they pan plan an impor- int role in protecting the institution om "improper pressures or attack and articularly from outside interference th legitimate teaching functions," ac- irding to the Carnegie study. On the other hand, if the Regent suc- imbs to public pressures, the Universi- 's 'position of leadership may be jeop-1 'dized. The University's function is to tide society, not to mirror it. It is to these people in the Regental nbo of being neither public servant nor lucational expert that students and fac- ty have looked for help. FOR EXAMPLE, when it was rumored that the administration was making a comprehensive study of student activi- ties, student leaders, tired of evasive an- swers from administrators, turned to the Regents for assistance. Last spring during the Ann Arbor fair housing controversy,. students and faculty alike held private consultations with various Regents in hopes of getting the University to take a stand on the local ordinance. These ex- amples are typical of the trend. With each consultation the Regents are slowly being brought into closer and clos- er contact with the day-to-day affairs of the institution. If the trend continues, operational decisions could well drift out of the hands of the supposed educational experts and into the hands of the quasi- public servants, the Regents. It is ironic that students and faculty see the Regents as more sympathetic toward the educa- tional goals of the University than the administration. THE QUALITY of the University would decline rapidly if the Regents were to assume the responsibility for such daily, obligations as planning curriculum, de- ciding the relative merits of a residential 'college, choosing research projects or de- ciding women's closing hours. The Re- gents, as citizens and'businessmen, simply don't have the educational know-how to pilot a great University. The board can only act in the better in- terests of the University when it has, com- petent advice from administrators and faculty. OF COURSE, the Regents must be kept informed about the University. If the administration doesn't do an adequate job of feeding the Regents information, students and faculty should fill them in.' It is only when students approach the Re- gents for assistance without understand- ing the function of the Regent and the implications of going to a board member that the danger arises. Clearly, the Regents should evaluate the reasons behind the recent barrage of stu- dent and faculty consultation. If the rea- sons hinge on student and faculty dissat- isfaction with the administration, per- haps it is time for the Regents to seek some new leaders for the University. -GAIL EVANS Associate City Editor LAST WEEK I played with a small band at an empty bar in Clinton, Mich., and, there being nothing to do during the breaks, we all went across the street to the general store and loaded up with Batman and Superman comics. I am happy to report that what we all suspected 10 or 15 years ago is, in its own quiet way, a stunning reality. Super- man has survived. Not without some changes, of course, but funda- mentally it's like you'd never been away. One reason for Superman's super-adaptivity (and Batman's as well) is probably that his powers, as great as they were, were none- theless limited, and he had to act ingeniously in using them to solve seemingly impossible problems. Not like,. say, Green Arrow (and Speedy), who had an arrow ex machina for any situation-I remember one which actually robbed a bank and spread tear gas. It was bril- liant while it lasted, but boundless fantasy is ultimately quite un- gratifying, and the Green Arrow is no longer among the front ranks. * *' * * ANOTHER REASON probably was Superman's naturalness of character. Good and evil existed as real choices, of course, but Super- man (or Batman) was a little vain, and he could dish out some hos- tility when he felt like it, too. Not the selfless goodly-goodiness of Captain Marvel, nor the artificial ethic of Shazman and all that that stood for. I remember that Parents' Magazine endorsed Captain Mar- vel because of his purity. One is never too young to recognize a kiss of death, especially a terrific one like that. The good Captain has never quite recovered, nor did Parents' Magazine. Together, Superman and Batman trod the narrow path of sur- vival, ascending tortously through the thickets of luridness (remem- ber "Tales of the Crypt?) across the bivouacs of several wars (remem- ber reading "RAKATAKATAKATAKA" aloud, with feeling?), past Riverdale (who ever really read Archie, anyway?), and into the Goth- am and Metropolis of today. The Mirror has folded but the Daily Planet is better than ever. Why? * * * * BECAUSE StJPERMAN and Batman (and Lois Lane, Jimmy Ol- sen, Superboy, Robin, The Joker, Mr. Mxyzptlk, Jor-El, even Lana Lang) did for American war babies almost what Wagner did for Germans of another era, what Faulkner did for English graduate stu- dents, or what Tolkein or Millne did for kids with hipper parents.. The Superman episodes of today are very strongly science-fiction- alized, which only reflects what captures the fancy of imaginative, intelligent adolescents (Superman's author has probably remained 17 for longer than most). But, strangely, today's episodes are dispro- portionately concerned with the waning of, and threats of, Superman's powers. I leave it to the clinical psychologists to infer what they wish about a comic strip like Superman whose author is probably into middle age. All in all, though there's no keeping a good' thing down. It may be a trivial archetype, but too many people know who said "Great Caesar's ghost" for the Superman-Batman myth ever to recede into final obscurity. CINEMA GUILD: 'Rules of the Game': {I l Ai SIDELINE ON SGC: The Last of the Technicalities By MARY LOU BUTCHER AFTER careful consideration of the Committee on Referral's report and recommendations, Stu- dent Governmefit Council unani- mously adopted a slightly revised version of its Regulations on Mem- bership in Student Organizations. Hopefully, Council has encounter- ed the last of objections based on procedural technicalities and will soon be able to implement the membership selection plan. Implementation of the plan is contingent on the aproval of Vice- President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis. His acceptance or rejection of the plan must be made within one week. The Committee on Referral had imposed a stay of action on Coun- cil's adoption on Oct. 2 of the original membership selection plan in order to study provisions which were "of questionable validity." Council dealt with the referral committee's criticisms in a manner which reflects a mature consid- eration of the issues involved and suggests a genuine desire on the part of Council to insure a fair and technicality-free procedural guide to its Membership Commit- tee. WHILE REJECTING the refer- ral committee's contention that SGC does not have the authority to appoint a nop-student member to its proposed membership tri- bunal, Council did vote to omit Middle Way Evanorates 'HE BREAKING POINT is nearing in America's racial crisis. Recent civil ghts demonstrations have become in- easingly violent. Recent events in Birm- gham indicate the day may have passed ien demonstrations, in that city and rhaps elsewhere, can remain peaceful. Last Monday, Rev. Martin Luther King, . and Rev. Fred L. Shuttlesworth an- unced that demonstrations would re- me in Birmingham if the city failed to et their demands that it hire Negro licemen. Tuesday the Associated Press ported: "Negro leaders held up renewal mass demonstrations yesterday to give y officials more time to consider re- ests that Negro policemen be hired." King was quoted as saying: "If Negro licemen are hired in a reasonable time, will not demonstrate." However, the tile said the Negro leaders were not ting any deadline in order "to avoid e impression of using undue pressure." HIS IS A RATHER remarkable position for men desiring to improve the posi- n of their race in a city, that has done thing without "undue pressure" and y little even with it. There must have n more behind the decision to postpone demonstration than the almost hum- us notion that simply more time would enough to get the city to alter its posi- n. t is not very difficult to guess what the I reason must be; Negro leaders know t further demonstrations will be viol- ones. Their last planned protest sev- I weeks ago had to be called off at the ..,..,. ~r '4 ,l t 2 c jA {{t l last minute when demonstrators showed up with rifles and threatened to start open shooting at the first sign of police provocation. They knew the same thing could be expected if another demonstra- tion were held now. A dilemma to which there is no easy solution is faced by both moderate Negro leaders and Negroes in general. If even peaceful protests are no longer possible, the leaders must choose between a policy of urging improvement in the Negroes' position from whites who have never listened to them at the risk of losing their, leadership to more militant men-or they themselves will have to sanction what{ they know will be violence. The individual Negro will be faced with an equally difficult dilemma. He must either agree to be passive, and thus be quite certain of gaining nothing in his struggle for equality for a long time to come, or he must act in a manner that may well hurt him much more than help him. THE MIDDLE ALTERNATIVE, the one that would get this nation safely out of' the consequences of these dilemmas, is rapidly evaporating. Peaceful demonstra- tion, the type of protest that is non-viol- entbut effective, is no longer possible, at least in some places. Before the possibility is gone entirely, the Negro must be shown that his peace- ful efforts using this method have not been in vain. A strong civil rights bill must be passed by Congress. Negroes must be allowed to secure their voting rights. The economy must be beefed up to the point that it is able to absorb the 10 per cent of the nation's Negroes that are un- employed-about three times the national average. Throughout the North, as well as the South, white leaders must begin to SVETLOVA: Faulty Mixture THE PERFORMANCE of the Marina Svetlova Dance En- semble was neither here nor there, but everywhere with everything. I have been watching elegant, mature artists, of obvious talent and vast experience whose whole performance was undermined by faulty programming and inade- quate facilities. Strangely enough, each per- former was quite good. Marina Svetlova displayed the artless grace and ease which mark the true prima ballerina. In addition, she is a skillful actress who uni- fies movement and facial expres- sion to create the proper mood. Partnered by Oleg Briansky, whom I could not help feeling would have been better at another time or another place, Svetlova per- formed several greats of the clas- sical ballet. Outstanding was her short, but poignant performance of Saint-Saens' "Dying Swan." THE TOP PERFORMER of the evening was Jose Barrera, an aristocrat of Flamenco dancing who gave a flawless performance, proving his versatility with the magnificent classical Spanish dancing of "Vira Navarra" by Larregia. Completing the company was Theodor Haig, accompanist and pianists, playing three solo concert pieces that might just as sections establishing an appeal procedure to the vice-president for student affairs. The referral committee objected to the provision of the member- shipregulations which authorize "a Membership Tribunal composed of three members of the Univer- sity selected by SGC" but speci- fies only that "at least two of the members shall be selected from the student body." The implication is that the third member might be selected from the faculty. The committee noted that ac- cording to the terms of the Stu- dent Government Council Plan adopted by the Regents on Nov. 20, 1959, Council is authorized "to serve as an appointing body for the selection of student commit- tees and student representatives to University committees." The report stated that the com- mittee "is of the opinion that the provisions of the SGC Plan quoted above limits the SGC to selecting 'students' as members of student committees." .S *S ** HOWEVER, a dissenting opinion submitted with the report by Ken- neth B. McEldowney, Grad, noted that a "'student' committee' only signifies that a given committee is responsible to a student body, in this case SGC, not that the mem- bership should be restricted only to students." Retiring President Thomas Brown, '66L, agreed with Mc- Eldowney's opinion, pointing out that Prof. Richard L. Cutler, Chairman of the Student Rela- tions Committee in a letter to the Committee on Referral stated that the SRC had adopted a reso- lution declaring it "has no objec- tion to a faculty member being requested to serve and agreeing to serve on the Membership Tri- bunal, so long as it is clearly un- derstood that the faculty member is not acting as an official rep- resentative of the faculty." Brown also pointed out that Council is bound by the wording of the SGC Plan and cannot de- cide on the intention of the plan. The plan does not specify that only students may be appointed to student committees. S. 5 COUNCIL'S VOTE to eliminate the sections dealing with the ap- peal process was based on a desire to remove any question of future legal technicalities. The report concluded that "the proposed appeals system is clearly beyond the competence of the SGC to establish under its present char- ter of authority. "It cannot vest a veto authority in the vice-president for student affairs that will operate before the SGC has had an opportunity to assume the responsibility for the action vetoed. "It cannot specify criteria for the exercise of his veto other than those specified in the SGC Plan, and in so doing eliminate the functioning of the Committee on Referral as an advisory agency in the operations of the SGC." IF THE SECTIONS dealing with the appeals had been retained, there might be "a conflict of ju- dicial procedure" at a later time the vice-president prefer to re- verse his initial ruling once Coun- cil had either accepted or rejected the tribunal's conclusions. Brown noted that the three criteria which the original mem- bership regulations specified for appeals were: whether there was sufficient evidence to justify the tribunal's decision; whether there was prejudicial error committed by the tribunal in interpreting and applying the membership selection rules; and whether the penalty was too severe. Council decided that to leave the appeals section in would ac- tually be forcing the vice-president to decide an organization's guilt or innocence on the basis of ju- dicial technicalities and not on the question of its violation of membership selection regulations. * * * ANOTHER CRITICISM raised by the referral committee was the provision in the membership plan specifying: "All sanctions must be immediately imposed by SGC and cannot be altered by the Coun- - cil." The committee noted that it "is of the opinion that the language of this paragraph should be re- vised so as to indicate that SGC assumes the responsibility to re- view and accept, reject or modify the penalties recommended by the Membership Tribunal." THE PROVISION criticized by the referral committee does not prevent Council from rejecting the tribunal's decision on any case but, rather, from altering the pen- alty recommended by the tribunal in any case. This stipulation thus reserves the judicial function to the Membership Tribunal. Wednesday's Council discussion clearly indicated that SGC is con- cerned with establishing the fair- est and most expiditious proce- dures for applying to student or- ganizations Regents Bylaw 2.14 which prohibits discriminatory membership policy. * * * 'AFTER A YEAR of working out explicit procedural details and re- solving controversial legal ques- tions, Council has taken a great step forward in adopting the fin- ished draft of its membership regulations. The question of whether SGC is to take the most crucial step of all-the actial implementation of the regulations-now rests with Vice-President Lewis.' LETTERS to the EDITOR To the Editor: THE HEADLINE above the ar- ticle concerning the Michigan Union Board of Directors meeting in Friday's Daily was misleading and I feel that a few comments may be helpful. The headline read: "Board accepts proposal on Union- League Merger." No such proposal A Modriao WE NEED TAKE Jean Renoir's disclaimer no more seriously than Twain's when the director insists that his social fantasy, "The Rules of the Game," is not social criticism, but merely an entertainment. It is true that "Rules" is neither as anti-war as "The Grand Illusion" nor as anti- science as "Picnic in the Grass." The film is Renoir's twentieth- century adaptation of Beaumar- chais' "The Marriage of Figaro." As a result the critical dimension is submerged in the form, and is less explicit than in the other films. It may be the case, however, that this choice of form provides the most helpful key to all three films. Jean Renoir has the fullness of an eighteenth century sensibility, but an equally clear perception of contemporary society. The same tension exists in his art as that of writers like Cervantes and Flau- bert. He is traditionalist while re- maining a realist. It is his twen- tieth century treatment of an eighteenth century form that brings out and resolves both sides of this tension. -In this respect "Rules"mis Renoir's greatest achievement. "RULES" is a comedy of mar- riage and morals-at least osten- sibly. An aviator, Andre, has fallen in love with a marquise while the marquis is having an affair with another woman. A friend, Octave (played by Renoir) ;invites -the aviator to the country home of the marquis for a holiday. The, contre-temps begin. Renoir has retained the joie de vivre of Beaumarchais' original. He has chosen a vocabulary that allows him to communicate a sense of fullness. His camera, for example, is always unobtrusive. In the final party sequence, where the machinery of coincidence and discovery is playing itself out, he allows several very long takes without a cut. The emphasis is on a mobile camera and movement within the frame. He has little sense of static composition. There is always a sense of improvisation in his handling of the actors for ex- ample. As a result, Renoir's cin- ema is neither montage-oriented, like that of the Russian silent directors, or more recently God- ard, nor is it image-ori ted like that of Antonioni or Begmann. * * * RENOIR HIMSELF undercuts the affirmative side of his art in the handling of the final se- quence. In Beaumarchais the Countess and Maid exchange cos- tumes, and their marriages are saved. Mistaken identity is an engine for comedy. Renoir however makes it some- thing quite different. The mar- quise realizes that she wants to own. As Andre goes running up the path to the greenhouse he is shot by the angry husband and falls "like a rabbit." The scene, gets much of its force because Renoir has fore- shadowed it so brilliantly in the hunting sequence. Human bestial- ity is the keynote, as the rabbits run, are shot, and die twitching. In "Rules," as well as in "The Grand Illusion," Renior shows a synipathy for the aristocracy. Men like the Marquis, La Fensnay, have a code, a set of rules, which is in many ways noble. The "accident" in the final sequence, however, follows logically from the hunting sequence. The pastime of a class provides the metaphor for a final bestiality. The rules of the game are no longer viable. -David Zimmerman MICHIGAN: In Sac 0 Of Love / A WARM beautiful, disappoint- ed youngj woman enters the dingy English streets and a de- praved houseful of boarders look- ing for a love which she has never found. Living among the boarders is a young writer who has also sought and never discovered that clean type of love. They meet, and Les- lie Caron and Tom Bell prove evil is impotent when two people mean something to each other. "THE L-SHAPED ROOM" could be a great love story. If one can ignore the contrived obstacle that the screen playwrite has placed in the path of these two people, and concentrate instead on the way that they rise above a spir- itual stench of their surroundings, then -one can experience and en- joy an intense film a little remi- niscent of "Phaedra." But the film never quite tran- scends the pettiness of realism. If you have ever witnessed the de- struction of something fine, then you will understand the grotes- queness of a plot which hampers and thwarts two potentially great artists. One wishes the sound were turned off so only the visual part, excellently acted and ably directed, would remain. There is plenty of comedy and pathos in the boarding house, but none of it is allowed to blanket the somewhat bizarre artifact that is itself smothering both love and laughter. The credits do not all go to the actors and actresses. There is some imagery and sym- bolism, not philosophical, which is truly outstanding. The director has .1 i r ,