"The News Doesn't Sound Any Better" Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 t 'en Opinions Are Free 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. EESDAY. OCTOBER 2 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: VERNON NAHRGANG Educational Polcy Primarily A Faculty Function t -5- 7 y .2 I. .. 1 43 4 TRA14SATLAATIC CABLE r d)A AT THE STATE: Homosexuality Diluted In 'Tea and Sympathy' E iy / ' . UNIVERSITY President-Emeritus Alexander Ruthven has come up with a suggestion which institutions of higher education in this state might well heed. It is particularly re- vealing coming from a man once intimately acquainted with education's administrative arm. In making his proposal for a 17-member com- mittee with a faculty majority to study and ad- vise the Legislature on state-supported colleges and universities, the Univerity's elder states- man said, "Though it has become a platitude it is no less a fact that essentially a college or university is its faculty. "The academic staff," Dr. Ruthven contin- ued," is always in the best position to know the needs of its departments and schools, as well as the educational needs of society. That in- stitution functions best in which the adminis- trative staff*considers itself a service unit to facilitate, not to direct, the work of the faculty. This concept is familiar to the academic world and it is surprising that in this country it has not been applied, except sporadically,' in the larger field of state planning of education." CONSIDMRING this University's administra- tion's increasing tendency to act before consulting the faculty, Ruthven's statement is quite an admission. For while the administra- tion goes out of its way to point out that the deans of the various schools exercise almost complete authority over their schools, it does not recognize, for instance, that in admitting ever-increasing numbers of students it is act- ually limiting the scope of the decisions which the faculty can make. The faculty does have the power to decide policy, true, but only within the perimeter drawn by the administration. Essentially, the faculty children can build their mud pies and roads but they cannot get out of the sandbox their administrative parents have built for them. How sure is the administration that an in- creased enrollment will have little effect upon the academic standards of the University? How often has it consulted the faculty before assur- ing the Legislature that the University is pre- pared to handle unprecedented influxes of stu- dents? "IT MAY BE true that a business can be run on the assumption that 'Father knows best,' " Dr. Ruthten says, "but this is not true of educational institutions." While the faculty may not be acquainted with the intricacies of Legislature log-rolling and lobbying, it does have some knowledge of what conditions are necessary in a proper education. It is acquaint- ed with the advantages and disadvantages of large classes. It knows what the approximate amount of personal studenst-faculty' contact should be. It can contribute fresh, imaginative ideas on educational policy, unhampered by considerations of what effectthese ideas will have on the University's appropriations versus those of sister institutions. The faculty has the ability to decide what is necessary for maximum education, then to obtain the necessities. The administration, on the other hand, decides what it can do with what it can get. Practically, the administrative approach is the better. But colleges and univer- sities have not progressed by relying on the practical approach to educational policy prob- lems. Institutions have advanced most by solv- ing their problems imaginatively and enthusi- astically. BY COMBINING the talents of the faculties of all state-supported colleges and univer- sities, more can be accomplished than by com- peting with administrations of other schools for funds. Indeed, as Dr. Ruthven has said, "If cd-ordination and long-range planning of in- struction and research are needed in Michigan, and there is little doubt that they are, the studies, to be of value, might be made most successfully by the faculties themselves with the support of the college administrations, the legislature and the public." Recognizing the fact that a college or uni- versity is truely its faculty, Ruthven's proposal should be given serious consideration by the Legislature. -RICHARD SNYDER Daily Editor, IT IS happily clear by now that the power of the Hollywood cen- sor is diminishing and that the antiquated Production Code is be- ginning to crack. The theme of homosexuality, hitherto off-limits in American films, forms the basis of "Tea and Sympathy" the film based on the prize-winning play by Robert Anderson. The spectre of censorship is still with us, how- ever, and the film is certainly not as powerful or consistent as the stage version was. Author Anderson has also writ- ten the screenplay, and although much of the original is retained, there have been a number of com- promises made to mass moral right that hurt the quality of the film. By rights a picture should be judged on its own grounds, but in this case it is quite necessary to compare it to the play. There has been some cutting, some adding, a great deal of muddling the focal point; some "loading" of the plot- it is all to the detriment of the final product. 4 * k # i I f ,r~9~ I4 WAL4acK~FISr- WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: I Could Children Bring Truce? By DREW PEARSON Decisive Action in SGC STUDENT Government Council is well past the midpoint of its two year trial period, but occasionally it lumbers along like a turtle. Many of its projects, eargely initiated, get bogged down in committee wrangles and wind tip being tabled or referred back to committee. A good example of decisive action came last week, however, when SGC refused to accept a recommendation from th Campus Chest com- mittee. Since its inception last spring, the com- mittee has met with many disappointments. Several campus organizations are unhappy about a combined campus fund-raising project, despite the fact that it would simplify their administrative problems and pacify both stu- dents and faculty. There is good reason to be- lieve that, a combined appeal would net more cash in the long run, since members of the campus community would be "hit" only once a 'year, and would be carefully educated as to the purpose, nature and goals of the drive. However, because it is impossbile to combine this appeal with the Ann Arbor Community Chest this fall, revenue from a spring drive may be less than the committee' eventual hopes. For this reason, the committee proposed that the Campus Chest drive be postponed until next fall, when cooperation with the Commu- nity Chest is feasible. BUT SGC said no, and with good reason. The committee has six months to work on a concerted drive which could conceivably bring in a good deal more money than the five or six drives which have operated on the cam- pus in the past. The Council felt that some- thing like Campus Chest could be put off in- definitely while people waited for the "proper" time to arrive, and that Campus Chest is im- portant enough to be started immediately. If the committee accepts SGC's recommenda- tion and starts Campus Chest rolling immedi- ately, the drive could very well be a credit to the Council and the campus. Other SGC action, however, shows signs of dragging on forever. A motion to co-sponsor United Nations Week with the International Student Association has been tabled for two weeks, mainly for study by the finance committee. The time has long passed when SGC's co-sponsorship could be of help to ISA in obtaining speakers. SGC should take the initiative in supporting that most neglected segment of the University com- munity, foreign students. A STUDY of the Sigma Kappa situation may come up this week. If it does, the Council should be given a pat on the back for quick ac- tion, action which may have a decisive effect on how many girls pledge that sorority next Sunday, However, if the study, proposed last week, drags on, for another week, it will do Sigma Kappa very little good and possibly a great deal of harm. SGC has been quick, yet careful in important action such as deferred rush and the driving ban. It can keep on doing so and finish out its trial period in an unheard-of blaze of prestige, if it avoids falling victim to lethargy and let's-put-it-off-itis. -TAMMY MORRISON Washington, D.C. Sept. 29, 1956 Dear Drew, I AM NOW home from the Holy Land, and I still haven't written you about the camels I saw over there. I saw them in Beersheba in the south of Israel which is where Abraham used to bring his sheep and his camels and his goats to get water. In the Beersheba market I saw some Arabs loading camels onto a truck. The Arabs seem to be quite up to date and carry their camels by truck. But this truck already had three camels in it, which is a lot of camels for one truck; so a fourth camel just didn't want to get in. I didn't blame her. Because there wasn't room. But the Arabs beat that poor camel and y a n k e d heri and whipped her, until finally she squeezed into the truck on top of the other camels. Later I saw the camels being unloaded at the farm of Sheik Souleman outside the city. They looked happier when they got out of that -truck. * * * AS I told you in my last letter, there are lots of Arabs living in Israel in peace with the Jews. It's the Arabs outside Israel who don't live in peace. Probably you have seen the headlines in the newspapers lately about the shooting between the Arabs and the Jews who don't live in peace on the opposite sides of their border. Some of the worst of this shooting has been around Jerusalem, the Holy City where Christ was buried. * * * JUST A FEW weeks ago, your granddaddy was in Jerusalem and talked to a Jewish immigrant from Algiers who had a ladder tied to the balcony in front of his house. I saw the ladder and asked him why he had it in such a peculiar place. He explained that the main entrance to his house faced an Arab machine-gun nest and that sometimes the Arabs shot at him as he went in his front door. So, when they were in a shooting mood, he didn't use his main en- trance, but lowered the ladder from his balcony and went in and out of his house that way. I looked at the main entrance to his house and there, all around the doorway, were bullet holes. The Arab machine-gun nest was only about as far away as across the street. But the Arabs were not in a shooting mood that day. And inasmuch as it was a hot day and cool on that side of the house, we sat down beside his main entrance to take a rest. Nothing happened. No Arabs shot at us. In fact, most of the time in Jerusalem they don't shoot. * * * THAT illustrates what I wrote you before, that there should be no real trouble between the Arabs and the Jews. As the chief rabbi of Jerusalem reminded me, the Jews and Arabs are cousins. They both are descended from Abraham - the Jews from his son Isaac and the Arabs from his son Ishmael. Yet today, Maj. Gen. E. L. M. Burns, the Canadian who heads the United Nations truce commis- sion, has been cabling the State Department that war between Is- rael and the Arab States is more tai be feared than ever. He is ter- ribly worried about it and has in- f o r m e d Secretary Dulles that something drastic must be done. The Jews have given the world some of the greatest scientists, some of the greatest artists, great- est writers, greatest businessmen. But so far they haven't been able to solve this greatest problem of all - peace. The word Jerusalem comes from the old Hebrew "Jeru- sholayem," which means "peace." But today in Jerusalem there is no peace. And I was thinking that per- haps the solution to this trouble, the way to bring peace, might be quite simple - just to stop shoot- ing, arrange a real truce, and be- gin working at some people-to- people friendship. Perhaps if the statesmen of the world won't push this, maybe it could be inspired by little boys like you. * * * IF, FOR instance, the little boys of Israel and the Arab states de- manded of their fathers that this constant shooting back and forth across the border stop, then it might stop. Perhaps if they de- manded that it stop for at least 30 days, and that no one on either side lift a finger for 30 days 4o matter what the provocation, then fr6m that 30 days of thinking about peace, there might come more peace. That's true too of the little boys in Israel and thq Arab States. I -don't know exactly how we could get the idea across to them, but if they all demanded an end to this useless shooting back and forth across the land from which came the Man who wanted to bring us peace, then perhaps His dream might be fulfilled. After all, it was He who taught that a little child shall lead them. Perhaps this is a foolish idea of mine. But where the statesmen and soldiers and diplomats of the Holy Land have failed, maybe the children might succeed. I hope to see you quite soon. Love from Your Grandfather. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) THE STORY concerns an ado- lescent boy in a prep school who is thought "odd" by his fellow stu- dents. Tom Lee is very different from the rest: a product of a bro- ken home, he keeps to himself much of the time, eschews sports and dating, prefers to listen to classical music and is well-versed in womanly arts taught to him by a servant when he was a child. Al- though the word "homosexual" is never used in the film, the boys call him "sister-boy." They find him increasingly feminine because of his walk, his attitude and, es- sentially, his particular charac- teristics. It is the author's point that he is not an homosexual, but an unloved boy who has traveled a singular road because of events in his life. In any case, the only one who shows love and affection for him is the wife of the headmaster of his rooming house. She is more sensitive than the rest, more per- ceptive, and knows from experi- ence the things that can torment a young, troubled boy. As Tom's school life grows increasingly painful and horrible because of the social and sexual stigma at- tached to him, he attempts to prove that he is a man, in the sexual sense, by sleeping with a town slut. When this fails, for various reasons, he tries to kill himself. What finally redeems him, and saves him, is the love of the headmaster's wife, who of- fers herself to him in affection and understanding. IT IS NECESSARY to go into this much plot in order to point out the failings of the picture. Perhaps the biggest failure is the muddy obscuring of the most im- portant point of the story. There is no time, in the film, when Tom seems to kge afraid he really is a homosexual. In the play, the mo- tivation for his action was, after a certain transitional point, that he feared this in himself. The flim, however, seems to skirt this, or in any case never makes it clear until the last scene. As a result, the last scene does not make any real sense. The confes- sion from Tom that he is worried about his sexuality comes like a bolt from the blue, because the emphasis during the rest of the film was on the increasing an- guish he felt when taunted. The big scene with Ellie, the loose-moralled girl, does not come off at all for'that reason. When, as he is about to take the sexual ini- tiative, she makes reference to his hands being "soft as a girl's," one has the feeling that his sub- sequent crack-up comes as a re- sult of this being the final insult he can bear. ADDITIONALLY, the film has seen fit to completely leave out the important part of the play c o n c e r n i n g the latent actual homosexuality of the headmaster. This is a tremendously important facet in the entire scheme of the story, because it gives meaning to the troubles of the marriage be- tween he and his wife and because it accounts for his outward dis- gust with Tom. Possibly, to the discerning audi- ence, this factor is still in the story. But there is no use kidding --Hollywood has junked it at the expense of the film's complete moral statement. Finally, an epilogue has been added that is really objectionable. It serves to punish the wife slight- ly for doing an immoral thing by Hollywood standards, to let us know that Tom turned out to be Jack Armstrong, the All-Male Boy. What is essentially paradoxical is that it takes the edge off the film's thesis, and suddenly forces old-fashioned moral judgement on a film that tries to point out the failings of that same old-fash- ioned moral judgment. * * * ALL THIS is not to imply that there is not much on the credit side in "Tea and Sympathy." Much of the original script is re- tained and has great distinction. The actors, most of them from the original Broadway cast, do a superb job, and this is especially notable in the case of Deborah Kerr whose performance is ont of the finest to emerge from the screen in a long while. As the wo- man who loves and understands Tom, she plays with great depth and thought in her characteinsa- tion. John Kerr is admirable. Leif Erikson makes the husband a much-more three d i m e n s i o n- a"l character than the film does. Vincente Minelli has directed with respect for the twilight at- mosphere that pervadedthe lay. The gentle, poetic qualities of the film far outprove the sensation- alism suggested by the ads. "Tea and Sympathy" is a step in the right direction, but it Is very regrettable that Hollywood cannot yet call a spade a spade. -David Newman DAIL'Y OFFICIAL BULLETIN 4 *1 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Dewey's Speech Draws Comment The Daily Official Bulletin is an of- ficial publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. No- tices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preced- ing publication. TUESDAY, OcTC BER 2, 1956 VOL. LXVII, NO. 12 General Notices Regents' Meeting: Fri., Oct. 26. Com- munications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands by Oct. 17. University Directory. All additions and corrections for listings already sent in must be reported by Fri., Oct. 5. For further information, call Florence Boyd, ext. 2152. Blue Cross Group Hospitalization, Medical and Surgical Service Programs for staff members will be open from Oct. 8 Jhtru Oct. 19, 1956, for new ap- plications and changes in contracts now in effect. Staff members who wish to include surgical and medical services should make such changes in the Per- sonnel Office, Room 3012 Administra- tion Building. New applications and changes will be effective Dec. 5, with the first deduction on Nov. 30. After Oct. I19, no new applications or changes can be accepted until April, 1957. University Choral Union -- first re- hearsal Tues. Oct. 2, at 7:00 p.m. sharp, in Aud. A, Angell Hall. All members are requested to arrive early enough to be seated on time. Applications for Phoenix Project Re- search Grants. Faculty members who wish to apply for grants from the Mich- igan Memorial-Phoenix Project Re- search in peacetime applications and implications of nuclear energy should. file applications in the Phoenix Re- search Office, 118 Rackham Building, by Wed., Oct. 3, 1956. Application forms will be mailed on request. Telephone 2560. Application for Grants in support of Research Projects: Faculty members who-wish to apply for grants from the Research Funds to support research pro- jects should file their applications in the office of the Graduate School not later than Wed.,. Oct. 3. Application forms are available in Room 1006, Rack- ham Building. Applications for Summer Faculty Re- search Fellowships: Faculty members who wish to apply for Summer Faculty Research Fellowships for the Summer Sess~n of 1957 may still secure applica- tion forms from the Office of the Grad- uate School, Room 1006, Rackham Building. They must be filed in the Of- fice of the Graduate School by Wed., Oct. 3. A ' AI Bicycles Are Ever With Us SIDEWALKS and street crossings in Ann Ar- bor are no longer safe for pedestrain traffic, Editorial Staff RICHARD SNYDER, RICHARD HALLORAN Editorial Director Managing Editor LEE MARKS City Editor GAIL GOLDSTEIN............ Personnel Director ERNEST THEODOSSIN ............ Magazine Editor JANET REARICK.... .. Associate Editorial Director MARY ANN THOMAS ............ Features Editor DAVID GREY .................. Sports Editor RICHARD CRAMER ..........,Associate Sports Editor STEPHEN HEILPERN ........ Associate Sports Editor VIRGINIA ROBERTSON....... ... Women's Editor JANE FOWLER............Associate Women's Editor ARLINE LEWIS .......,.... Wonin's Feature Editor VERNON SODEN .............. Chief Photographer Business Staff DAVID SILVER, Business Manager MILTON GOLDSTEIN .... Associate Business Manager WILLIAM PUSCH ............ Advertising Manager c'HARLES WILSON. ...........Finance Manager PATRICIA LAMBERIS ..........Accounts Manager HENRY MOSES.....Circulation Manager Bicycle riders have become the number one menace to public safety. Although the light is green and the cars all stopped, whoever ventures to cross the street takese his life in his hands. Those bicycles in the opposite direction down the street may be a few yards away, but they have no sight for a red light and don't know how to slow down. Equally unknown to bike riders, in any case completely disregarded is the Stop sign. Turns from South University to State Street are made without flinching and without the slightest cessation of speed. These demons on wheels have also found a new delight - the newly-completed Union driveway, which allows West Quad and other, back street dwellers to reach their respective domains at a mininium of time and a maximum of speed merely by turning off State Street into the passing crowd. THIS is truly a greater problem than that of parking; given a hundred bicycles piled in front of the General Library, odds are the stu- dent will eventually be able to pass the blockade at no danger to his physical self. Personality Criticism? To the Editor: HAVING brought Tom Dewey, a well-known Michigan Alumnus and former editor of The Michi- gan Daily, to Hill Auditorium, the Young Republicans must feel sadly let down. Undoubtedly, many of the people present, who heard the talk by this twice-defeated candidate for the presidency, went out of curiosity and out of loyalty to the Republi- can party to hear what Dewey had to add to the national campaign which up to now has been on a fairly high level. What we did hear was a rehash of Dewey's speeches in his un- successful campaigns of 1944 and 1948. Nothing was added. It was just another of his typical, low harangue harking back to dead issues and low criticisms of per- sonalities. Only when he described the de- plorable conditions which exist in some of the areas of Asia and the Near East did he reach a level Dewey gained his reputation as a prosecutor of criminals in New York and his speech resembled that of a prosecutor,not that of a statesman. I hope that when the Young Democrats bring a speaker to Hill Auditorium he will discuss the is- sues facing our national life and not mere carping criticisms of personalities. -Lewis C. Reimann, '56 Foreign Policy . To the Editor: RECENT rumors of efforts in Russia to oust the Khrushchev administration suggest deficiency in our foreign policy and in the handling by the press of Russia's position with respect to the West. Regardless of his motive, whether it be to relax Western defense, to provide a basis for propaganda to conquer underde- veloped parts of the world, or genuinely to establish a founda- tion forpeacefulacoexistence, it is a fact that Khrushchev has af- Western good will cannot fail to reach the Russian mind, more cynical and discerning than before. It seems that we are slow to take advantage; does not produce the desired response in the West, namely a higher regard for Russia and full exploitation of the possi- bilities of coexistence and mutually', profitable exchanges of all kinds, hostile elements in Moscow who believe that the only fruitful poli- cies are rigid domination of its own people and antagonism toward the West, may gain considerable strength, and once again come into power. A well posed smile re- turned to Russia might preserve its interest without risking seduc- tion, and might conceivably dispel some. of the awkwardness in East- West relations. -Charles Riley Amen ... To the Editor: FOR THE June 1956 graduate now battling the exigencies of ally with quotes from Dewey's speech, the article stated that he received a 'standing ovation" from an audience of over 4000 'enhtusi- astic receivers" who interrupted his speech twenty-six times for applause. If this is true, it can only demonstrate the grimly real fact that even Ann Arbor has its- share of people who don't think. There are, no doubt, reasons for being a Republican. If one is a captain of industry, unhampered by any historical vision, unfettered by any social prospective and tan- concerned for things other than business here and business now, he should vote Republican. / But Ann Arbor is a university community. Its essential reason for existing is to develop the indi- vidual student's ability .to think, with some prospective, about the world. His education is the tool he uses to place his times, his na- tion and his social role into a total configuration. This election year, in Adlai Stevenson, we have a candidate wxhn nncac tn* hoapn n, MClitiwhi ch 'C I