Sen ty-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED ET STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSTY OF MCHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN COwMOL OF STUDENT PUBCMAONS "Where opinions Are Pre STUDENT PUsLCAtiIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, Mici., 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. HURSDAY, JULY 25, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: H. NEIL BERKSON "I Was Hoping They Wouldn't Schedule A Stop Here" Goverors' Conferences Lifts Rockefeller's Chances WHEN AMERICA'S MAYORS trekked to Hawaii for their annual convention last month, President Kennedy delivered a strong speech on the significance of the civil rights struggle. "The time for token moves and idle talk is over," he told the mayors, "these rights are going to be won." He asked them to "join with me" in "guiding along constructive chan- nels the attainment of a peaceful revolution, a peaceful revolution which will not only avoid disaster, but fulfill our highest obligations." The President has sent no such message to America's governors, currently having their week in the sun at Miami Beach. On the con- trary, indications are that the White House has told the 34 Democratic governors to stiffie all civil rights talk. Object: to prevent New York's Gov. Rockefeller, who aspires to a certain other job, from getting a forum and a spotlight. THE DEMOCRATS have done quite well-in the short view. Northern liberals and South- ern reactionaries became indistinguishable when, in order to keep a civil rights motion from reaching the floor of the conference, they eliminated the resolutions committee alto- gether. The peak of absurdity was reached when Washington's Gov. Albert D. Rossellini, the conference chairman, accused Rockefeller of "playing politics" with the civil rights issue. Rockefeller showed no such pettiness when he unhesitatingly backed the Kennedy civil rights package last month. Such maneuvers usually fail in the long run, Rockefeller has been pretty well shuttered and this time appears to be no exception. inside the conference hail, but he has certainly had his forum in the nation's press. The pemocrats have looked ridiculous. Moreover, since Democratic tactics are gear- ed toward the 1964 Presidential race, there is an object lesson to draw. The Goldwater move- ment is going to quiet down by convention iSCloSuIreS PENNSYLVANIA Supreme Court made a wise and far-reaching decision Monday. The Court, by a vote of 6-1, ruled a newspaper co ld refuse to 'disclesa its sources for news stories, thus reversing the convictions of Robert Taylor, president of the Philadelphia Bulletin, and Earl Selby, city editor of the Bulletin. Both men had been convicted of contempt of court for refusing to disclose to a grand jury investigating alleged corruption in Philadel- phia's municipal government the sources for Bulletin stories about alleged corruption. A Common Pleas Court judge had convicted Taylor and Selby without a jury, fined theni each $1000, and sentenced them to 15 days in jail.- TAYLOR AND SELBY contended a 1937 Penn- sylvania law permitted them to withhold the names of their sources. But Judge Bernard J. Kelley, who convicted them, said that be- cause they disclosed the sources in published stories, they could not invoke the state law.- The Pennsylvania decision if of utmost im- portance to members of the news media in the United States. It can be used as a precedent when similar situations occur. A good news source is invaluable to a report- er. A reporter is told many things "off the rec- ord" and only after he promises not to reveal the source of his story. Forcing a reporter to disclose who gave him a story violates one of the basic fundamentals of a democracy-the right of privacy. WHEN A REPORTER is told something in trust he promises not to reveal his source. Anyone who violates this confidence is guilty of a flagrant violation of newspaper ethics and soon will lose the trust of persons who are re- sponsible news sources. The Pennsylvania case is the latest in several incidents where reporters have been badgered and threatened because they would not violate a trust. A Congressional committee threatened a Scripps-Howard reporter with a possible con- tempt citation for refusing to tell them from whom he got his big "scoop"-which aircraft company was going to be awarded the TFX contract. Yet, the reporter steadfastly refused to dis- close his source during two hours of testimony before the committee.' News sources are invaluable to a reporter. They should be his business, not that of a Con- gressional committee or grand Jury. It is a good omen when a state supreme court upholds. this basic tenet of journalism. -OHIO STATE LANTERN Editorial Staff RONALD WILTON .... ................Co-Editor PHILIP SUTIN........................Co-Editor time; the Republicans will unquestionably pro- duce a strong civil rights candidate to face President Kennedy (best bet: Rockefeller- with Pennsylvania's Bill Scranton a good money second choice). In such a role Rockefeller has ably forced the Democrats on the defensive in the past week. Should he or a similar candidate be able to do the same against Mr. Kennedy, he would be our next president. The New York governor is emerging from the conference in a much stronger position than he was a week ago--H. NEIL BERKSON Obligation F OR THE SECOND TIME this year, three members of the I.U. Chapter of the Young Socialist Alliance have been indicted for viola- tions of the 1951 Indiana Anti-subversive Act. And for the second time this year, the case has passed out of the public domain and has been inserted in this nation's judicial machin- ery where, according to the Constitution, "the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury ..." When the case was bound over to the courts following the first indictment in May, The Daily Student maintained that the YSA trio's con- stitutional right to trial "by an impartial jury" was being imperiled by the circulation of cer- tain statements through the press. These state- ments-made by attorneys and 'private citi- zens were reported by news media as news, or as letters to the editor-often representing big- oted viewpoints and containing irrelevant but damaging accusations and insinuations. There is no place for such statements in this nation's legal system-certainly they do endanger the right of the accused to an impartial jury trial. As for The Indiana Daily Student, we again intend to stand by the Constitution and perform the role which we feel is our moral, ethical, and legal responsibility. And that does not include giving vent to such statements until and unless such statements appear as admissible evidence or testimony in a court of law. This will be our guiding principle in determining what ma- terial to print in The Student. IN ADDITION to private citizens and the press, we feel that public officials and others directly involved with this case must also real- ize a certain ethical, moral, or legal responsi- bility to insure the impartiality of the jury which will eventually hand down a ruling. In addition these persons have another code which should guide their actions. As members of the American Bar Association, they are ask-, ed to follow a minimal code of conduct called the Canons of Professional Ethics. Canon 20 of this code reads: Newspaper publications by a lawyer as to pending or anticipated litigation may interfere with a fair trial in the Courts and otherwise prejudice the due administration of justice. Generally they are to be condemned. If the ex- treme circumstances of a particular case jus- tify a statement to the public, it is unprofes- sional to make it anonymously. An ex parte reference to the facts should not go beyond quotation from the records and papers on file in the court; but even in extreme cases it is better to avoid any ex parte statement. Our point is this, we all have an obligation- whether we are the press, public officials, at- torneys, or private citizens-to insure-and thereby preserve-the constitutional rights of our countrymen. -INDIANA DAILY STUDENT Tax. Cut THE STABILITY that consumer and whole- sale prices have shown in the past 14 months reduces the reasons for not cutting taxes. The Washington Post reports that the Con- sumer Price Index has barely moved in that period. Furthermore, while consumer services rise in cost, consumer durable prices are fall- ing. Of course it is still possible that a tax cut could cause inflation. But since there is al- most no inflation now, the chances of future inflation from a tax cut are less than if there were current inflation. While the reasons why taxes should not be cut are minimal, the reasons why they should be cut are major. The growth in the national product that would result from a tax cut would mean a more vigorous economy with less unemployment. In turn, more jobs would lessen the racial tension that presently grips the nation, since Negroes, "the last to be hired," would be getting hired at last. Negro unemployment can be attacked economically as well as politically. With price stability and with racial tension the time is ripe for a tax cut. With the present slow rate of economic growth, the need is pressing. -R. SELWA AT THE CAMPUS: Double Feature, Double Success THE CAMPUS Theater is currently featuring two of the most raved about British films of the past five years-"Saturday Night and Sunday Morning" and "Room at the Top." "Saturday Night" is a fluid and well-constructed piece (why not?- director Karel Reisz has also written a fairly interesting book called "The Technique of Film Editing") and what's more, a strong per- formance by Albert Finney as a confused and antagonistic young factory worker deserves mention. The product of a narrow, tightly squalid neighborhood, he quite often philosophizes about his low status, trying either to rationalize it or deny that it bothers him: "I'm out for a good time. All the rest is propaganda," he says. He , messes around with a couple of girls and, happily I guess, walks off into the brickdust sunset with one of them (Shirley Anne Field). The other (Rachel Roberts) is a married women who becomes pregnant by him and after an attempt at abortion she decides to have their child anyway. A minor pictorial deficit was the unrealistic scene where the two soldiers beat up Albert Finney. (The stunt men were too awkward for my taste.) "ROOM AT THE TOP" is ultimately the better of the two films, however, directed as it is with an articulate flair by Jack Clayton. At times his scenes contain active bits of byplay with cigarettes, drinking glasses, and so on; and1sometimes a corner of the action seems to freeze onto our attention (or perhaps the less meaningful material just melts into the background as residual "business"). I like it be- cause it displays a conscious aesthetic selectviity behind the film's construction. The story line is basically this: A young auditor (Laurence Har- vey) gets his foot in the door of a large corporation owned by a man named Brown. His ambitions soar, (much like Clyde Griffith's ambi- tions in Dreiser's "An American Tragedy") to hopes of marrying the boss's daughter and thus getting the measure of prosperity he has always sought as a handsome by-product. He doesn't really love the girl, but he does find sexual satisfaction with an aging actress (Simone Signoret he has met. In the end, he is "shot-gunned" into an engagement with the girl and also warned to give up the actress. Tragedy ensues, of course. In spite of the soap-opera qualities one can read into this description though, let me 'emphasize the fact that it is not that kind of film at .all. It is excellent and rewarding. Run, don't walk, to see both these films at the Campus Theater. -Gary T. Robinson CHAMBER MUSIC: Modern Wo Sprks As Quartet Perlform~s _ V SEES REFORMS: Ir-anian Student Back's Shah (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following article is reprinted from the Indi- ana Daily Student, the student newspaper at the University of In- diana. The author is an Iranian student attending that university.) By PARVIS JENAB ACHANGE in the Iranian sys- tem would mean more than overthrowing a monarch and the top hierarchy of the government. The change in the present govern- ment of Iran will only worsen the situation. For, at least, the pres- ent regime has got one thing which other would-be regimes do not: that is the determination for the achievement of internal political stability necessary for other social and economic goals. A change of the present regime would not guarantee a democracy -a government in which a large number rule and a small number is ruled. How could those who usurp power maintain their politi- cal position and at the same time tolerate various opposition groups from Communists to pro-monarch- ists? How could they permit their blood-thirsty enemies-the repre- sentatives of these groups to be nourished in the parliament? Any attempt to give positive answers to these questions would be just like making mockery of ourselves. ONE OF THE GREAT achieve- ments of Reza Shah, the father of the present Shah of Iran, was the elimination of various autonomous local powers which indeed were sources of extreme weakness for our nation. He gave girth to a po- litically stable nation where the internal security and the liberty of the individual (in legal sense) came to ;be protected. Being him- self uneducated, Reza Shah began a social revolution and took nec- essary but unfinished steps to- ward economic development which indeed broke Iran from her im- mediate past forever. Reza Shah's realization of the necessity of a centralized political power meant that it was unfeasi- ble for the Iran of that time to pursue a democratic form of gov- ernment-a government run by the people. For, such a democratic framework for a people, born into conditions of autocracy and abso- lute monarchy not only through- out history but also in all dimen- sions of life (culture and sponta- neity), would have been more than harmful. The Shah of Iran was confronted by a relatively small core of in- tellectuals who by finding more and more about the standard of life in some developed countries of the West and partly as a result of contact with international Com- munist movement began a tenden- cy to overestimate the role of the government in economic and ocial matters. They started to doubt the efficiency of the government and all this led them to attribute all the slowness in our economic and social progress only to one factor, the government. But this was not true ,the government was not guil- ty of anything for it had done far more than its role justified its existence. There was something wrong with our social system the origin of which had to be search- ple could only be done gradually and in balance with other things. Within the limited ability (eco- nomic and social) of the govern- ment, if anything constructive could have been done, it would have been possibly only through centralized power and the cential- ized decision, that of the Shah himself. The toleration of any op- position in Western democratic sense was at the time unfeasible. For criticism and opposition in that country are not only far from being constructive, but are also in- herently destructive. A free elec- tion in Iran, for example, could mean free entry for Communists, anarchists, and other extremists. AT THE STATE: TLa Douce' Good, Bad A LITTLE (and only a little) rain has at last fallen to quench Ann Arbor's long draught of Hollywood films. Billy Wilder's "Irma La Douce," with all its faults, is really not toobad a pic- ture. Director Wilder gambled when he chose to transform a musical comedy into a dramatic comedy, and his success in this film is nearly balanced by some quite bad points. He is working with a most banal of themes: a prude and a prosti- tute and their inevitable conflict' in morality. He has also loaded the first part of the movie with scenes and dialogue that count- less lesser directors have long since exhausted for their comic value. Similarly, I suppose through the adaptation of the work from stage to screen, the whole film pro- gresses as merely one scene tacked onto another. That is, there is no sustained or strongly unifying theme other than the slight sus- pense of the final reconciliation of the two principals, and because of this weakness too much must de- pend on slapstick and jokes. Thus the film often weakens when there is an attempt at any intense drama. AFTER ABOUT AN HOUR the movie builds up a little momen- tum, and Jack Lemmon partly redeems it by his excellent hand- ling of dual roles with as much in- tensity as we would expect from Peter Sellars himself. Lemmon's normal "screen self" wonderfully fits the character of the prudish but amiable and adaptable Paris- ian cop, and his portrayal of the fictitious English Lord is ham- med up in true burlesque manner. Shirley Maclaine, cast as the B-girl, represents the most lack- luster portion of the entire film. She has succeeded in most of her earlier films by virtue of her so- called vitality and cuteness. As Irma she seems to have retired from. the comic role and her at- tempt at serious drama, as in "The Children's Hour," is quite uncon- vincing. IN CONCLUDING this article, I should say that the cause of our slowness in the last thirty years has not been the government, but our people with two hundred years of accumulated economic and so- cial stagnation behind. And the cause of our trouble in being slow at present is the lack of unanimity and support toward the regime and the existence of too much expec- tation of a government which is essentially for internal security and individual liberty (the main- tenance of order by seeing that laws are exercised). The efficiency of the operation of an economy under any system, whether capitalism or communism, depends essentially on each indi- vidual, his habits, motivations, and his understanding of the system- and his role in that system. The government is more of a guidance and, though planning plays a large role in socialist countries, the ul- timate success of the plan depends on the way that individuals in the system react to the demands of that system. I do no deny that there is not any corruption and mismanage- ment at government levels in Iran. But these social vices exist in dif- ferent degrees in any individual in that country. The question of corruption could not be removed by a change in government, but by inducing each individual to do away with hishmisbehavior and so- cially undesirable habits-a modi- fication of those parts of the cul- ture which nourish them. PACED by a contemporary work, the Stanley Quartet's second summer concert got well off the ground last night. The modern piece was Roberto Gerhard's Second Quartet, com- missioned by the Stanley Quartet and performed previously at last spring's Contemporary Music Fes-' tival. Divided into seven parts, Ger- hard's quartet is an arresting essay in post-Webernian style. Most obviously striking are the rather extreme sounds called for by the score: in the second sec- tion, at least three types of "col legno" (played with the wood of. the bow) are specified. Another technical "tour de force" is a shimmering effect of string har- monics in the sixth section. Beyond these stylistic devices, the piece presents a series of varying textures (rather a la Webern), which do not however, appear as isolated incidents, but, are linked within movements and between movements. One can easily believe (as I was told) that the work is "mathematically pro- portioned," but it still sounds like music and as such, the Stanley Quartet did it justice. S* * ALSO ON the program was a piece which hardly, classes as a second-run feature: the Beethov- en C-sharp mingr quartet. After nearly 140 years, it is still a diffi- cult piece, for the audience, as one can see looking around at a concert hall, and of course for the performers, who invariably look as if they need to be wrung out by the end of the work. The difficulty is somewhat par- adoxical; while the C-sharp minor is superficially a work of great disjunction, it nevertheless repre- sents Beethoven at his most uni- fied. The great challenge for any ensemble is to bring out the unity within the disparity and diversity. This the Stanley Quartet did with a fair degree of success (this is not meant as a kind of damn- ing with faint praise; I have yet to hear a performance of the C- sharp minor which is altogether convincing; perhaps I have just not lived long enough). * * * THERE WERE, of course, some points of contention. Intonation should really be excepted, since it was rather a humid evening. It must certainly be added that Hill Auditorium is hardly the perfect chamber music hall; one hears four separate voices going to var- ious parts of the auditorium rather than the warm, rather intimate sound one associates with Rack- ham (even the cheery glow of the floor lamp standing in the middle of the stands was missing). The third work on the program was a Haydn quartet, Op. 50, No. 3. which opened the evening. This, regrettably, did not receive the Stanley Quartet's usually deft handling of Haydn. One never minds a bit of opening raggedness in the first number, but somehow it never subsided. Although the piece disclosed some of the genial surprises one thinks of in connection with Haydn, on the whole it seemed to lack melodic sparkle and drive. -Mark Slobin ,yr y' " ; ,.:.,: ,r? ;:Y 1 A '{ :trt!. :r 3 :.}S. v :' t. i. } . ; .'." fig .Z Sreuse seve r> oe ' . s ^ " i.'vj rV''4 ." . Y' ,"' I I M