Seven-Theird Y*r EWMDr AND MAN AS =T STUDENTS OF THE UNvEI SmTY OF MicIGAN UNDEK AVIHOIRM OF OARD D CONTOL OF STUDENT PUBLCATIONS "WhereiFe STUDENT NVMICATIONS BLDG., AwN Ai.o, Mmm., PHoNE wo 2-3241 Truth Will i'reV'ji Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in at; reprints. FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL SATTINGER LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: The Degeneration Of The Daily 2a.°f =s . r P s 00ors e ' .t . try 9t. y 'F New Hampshire Primary Shows GOP Split T HE PRIMARY in the Granite State was significant-quite telling in fact. Per- haps it isn't so much of a weathervane for the Republican party, as it was a rude awakening for the presidential hopefuls. They were at last faced with a contest of political strength; and so far as I can tell, they all lost. The alleged winner, United States Am- bassador Henry Cabot Lodge, was per- haps the biggest loser, for now he is in the race in earnest. Whether Lodge is official- ly running or not, he had a campaign machine working for him in New Hamp- shire that rivaled those of Sen. Goldwater and Gov. Rockefeller; nor was any ex- pense spared in Lodge's behalf. And to top it all off, Lodge's own son George was actively and openly spearheading his father's campaign. This all adds up to Lodge being a candidate whether he likes it or not. And now, with his "mandate" from those "millions" of voters in New Hamp- shire, Lodge today, like Eisenhower in 1952, is put in the position of having to put up or shut up and do it right away. As you will recall, Ike "put up," but Lodge finds himself faced with a little more op- position. If he puts up, he may well find he will later be shut up as just another politician. If he returns to campaign, he may well end up in the same category as Goldwater and Rockefeller. SPEAKING OF Sen. Barry Goldwater, he took his lumps. On the order of Cassius Clay, the Arizona senator practically bragged at one point of having 60 per cent of the New Hampshire vote in his pocket; but unlike Clay the senator didn't come out on top. I don't think there is' any question but that he had widespread support in New Hampshire at one time, so his drubbing there should serve as a lesson to his campaign technique. If he had the support once, then he himself must. have scared it off, for no one took it away from him. (Lodge wasn't there, re- member.) The same thing goes for Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. He can talk all he wants about going into New Hampshire as an underdog; he came out the same way. His position was not improved, in spite of what he's been telling the press. New Hampshire was just plain unimpressed with Nelson Rockefeller and with Happy and all the rest of the entourage. I doubt seriously whether it had much to do with his controversial remarriage; that is largely a delusion of the press, since it was not even a whispered issue in the campaign. Perhaps Rockefeller privately realizes his New Hampshire lesson: he doesn't look like a president, he doesn't act like a president-he doesn't even talk like a president. AS FOR THE REST of the field, Richard Nixon failed to gain his hoped for "spontaneous" endorsement, which, espe- cially in the light of Lodge's showing, cripples the Nixon draft in San Fran- cisco. Margaret Chase Smith only proved one of two things: Either the country clear- ly is not interested in a woman president or she hasn't convinced them that she's the woman. And further, her showing was not even good enough to make her a serious vice-presidential contender, which in spite of her public protestations, must be her goal. Governors Scranton and Romney found that their little Alphonse and Gaston act failed to attract any favorable attention whatsoever, which means that if they want to be nominated they may have to campaign in earnest. TO MY WAY of thinking, the New Hamp- shire primary actually proved only one thing: The New Hampshire GOP is still as badly split as it ever was, and a neutral third party went up the middle of the schism. Lodge, from neighboring Massachusetts, long a sentimental hero of many New Englanders, simply provided New Hamp- shire voters with a reason not to vote for one of the GOP's three battling func- tions in that state. The election was not between Goldwater, Rockefeller and Nix- on; it was between Mrs. Styles Bridges- Sen. Norris Cotton, former Gov. Hugh Gregg, and former Gov. Wesley Powell. Each faction grabbed onto a candidate and started running, with the result that a total outsider went up the middle to win. This happened in 1962, when the Democrats took advantage of the split to win the governorship and a Senate seat and it happened again last Tuesday. TO ME, this only proves one thing. Until New Hampshire Republicans learn to quit trying to spread themselves too thin, elections there will prove very little. As of now they are not much more than a waste of money. --MICHAEL HARRAH - . ..... . (YE T" .w~~~~ ~ ww- ~~ .:. ":. - ,. i V.. * - I -101i is %%wv% Lw 0 %%m %m o / - % L, SIDELINE ON SGC: ThecOfficer Elections Game THE LIAISON: Suelching A etivism by Barbara Lazarus, Personnel Director ~!EhIL IN THE FAIRLY conservative world of academia, professors who become so- cial activists and who are willing to speak their mind against university or societal injustices have a rough time surviving. Although society needs a university or a place for ideals and social criticism, those professors who work for civil rights or stand on principle are stifled by the academic power structure and conserva- tive system. A university is like any other communi- ty, and it uses the same sanctions in punishing deviant members that any small town uses. In order to succeed in professorial ranks, one must teach, have enough office hours to make a pretense of seeing students and do a reasonable amount of research. A professor has a home, a family and mixes with other pro- fessors. He may run for political office, take some interest in local community affairs or do research for political figures. But these are all part of an accepted societal concept of a well integrated com- Editorial Staff RONALD WILTON, Editor DAVID MARCUS GERALD STORCH Editorial Director City Editor BARBARA LAZARUS........ ..Personnel Director PHIILIP SUTIN........... National Concerns Editor GAIL EVANS.................Associate City Editor MARJORIE BRAHMS .... Associate Editorial Director GLORIA BOWLES .................... Magazine Editor MHADT YA .R.. ...... .nntributing Editor munity member, and social activism de- viates from this pattern of the more stable, docile life. Professors who fight hard for civil rights by picketing or who rail against their university on the stu- dents' behalf, may be looked upon with a suspicious eye as practicing conduct un- becoming a faculty member. YOUNG PROFESSORS, who perhaps are the ones most repressed by such a system, are always or almost always be- ing evaluated by older, more conservative department members. This higher, older level tends to set a tone within the de- partment, and this atmosphere can in- hibit activism by working to intimidate and eradicate it. Like society at large, it is safer to be silent. It is true that some professors fight for their beliefs and although disturbed by the atmosphere still fight; but in doing' so jeopardize their positions .A university deals with many aspects of society - it studies its history, political thought, philosophy and culture. But a university has an obligation to allow leeway for some of its members to use this knowledge for constructive criticism. THE UNIVERSITY has lost and may con- tinue to lose men of this activist strain. Men who are not humiliated to picket, not unwilling to look outside their closed system and not accepted with "the es- tablishment." They make an institution dynamic because they use their knowledge and- hodtidan 1ols at onv osts- andi t is By MARY LOU BUTCHER WHILE every Student Govern- ment Council officer election has its inevitable measureof wheeling and dealing, Wednesday night's results reflect the growing apolitical nature of SGC and the discarding of meaningful diversity among Council members. Although the division among Council members was close, it was not a political division but one based chiefly on personal interests and friendships. * * * BOTH Thomas Smithson and Douglas Brook have been declared candidates for the Council presi- dency since last semester; both have earned respect for their per- formances in their previous exec- utive committee positions. Fur- thermore, the two had agreed ear- ly in the race, that whoever was defeated would try for the execu- tive vice-presidency. Yet, the 10-9 split which favored Smithson is especially significant since his edge came from captur- ing the votes of two ex-officios of traditionally conservative organi- zations-Interfraternity Council and the Michigan Union. Moreover, earlier in the officer campaign, Smithson had a chance for a better margin of votes, since newly elected Council member Eugene Won was uncommitted and reportedly had leanings to- ward Smithson. * * * BUT IT turned out that anoth- er newly elected member, Barry Bluestone, in his zeal for promot- ing the election of Smithson as well as a straight "liberal" execu- tive committee (including himself as a candidate for the office of ad- m i n i s t r a t i v e vice-president) stepped on Won's toes by trying to "deal".him into the treasurer's post. Won turned down the deal as an insult, and consequently began wavering toward the Brook camp. Thereafter, Smithson disclaimed any part of Bluestone's move and apparently had not yet lost Won's vote. But further antagonism of Won by Bluestone Wednesday aft- ernoon clinched the shift to Brook. It was reported later that Won would indeed have liked to have been nominated as a candidate for treasurer; but his refusal to take part in the politicking lost him a nomination for the post as well as a good chance of winning. * * * IN SOME respects, Won's deci- sion reflects the actions of the 'typical" independent voter. New on Council, he has little interest in the political maneuvers that characterize any legislative body. Moreover, his announced inten- tion to vote for whatever seems best, cannot be taken too seriously since his judgment of what actual- ly seems best was known to be wavering throughout the officer campaign week. The surprise of the election came with Council's selection of Doug Brook over Howard Schech- ter to the executive vice-presi- dent's post. Shechter had 11 votes Lion--was another surprise in the evening's proceedings, and was given many interpretations- by other Council members. Brook speculated that she didn't really want the job; Smithson noted that she may have wanted to let someone new get in on the executive committee and get some experience. Other sources have it that she really did not feel she could work with Smithson as Council president. ELECTION of Gary Cunning- ham over Don Filip to the trea- surer's office was the one predict- able result due to Cunningham's GENERATION: Magazine Has Variety; Espouses Half-Truth THE NEW number of Genera- tion exhibits both the high technical competence of campus writers and artists and the variety of creative activity that engages them. Balanced and catholic interest is this number's first virtue: the customary assortment of fiction, poetry and criticism gains weight from Mr. Bergman's essay-on aes- thetics and derives piquancy from Fowler's photographs and a se- quence of sketches by Franklin Ettenberg. For this virtue, the edi- tors deserve congratulation. Perhaps the most impressive sign of their commitment to va- riety as well as originality was their decision to print Dagmar Schultz's translations of several lyrics by Else Lasker-Schueler- and to print the German text be- side the English. In addition, there is the timely piece by Lynn Coffin on Benjamin Britten's "War Re- quiem." TWO FEATURES of the issue may provoke objections: its epi- graph and its preoccupation with private, subjective experience. The epigraph is Rilke's "Works of art are of an infinite loneliness and with nothing to be so little reached as with criticism. Only love can grasp and hold and fairly judge them." This, of course, is a disarming half-truth; or rather, two of them. It reminds one of the old priestly claim that you cannot "criticize" religion because it is "beyond rea- son;" you can only believe. You grasp, hold, judge through faith alone. I do not believe priests when they talk this way. I do not believe poets when they talk this way. Especially I do not believe edi- tors who talk this way about their own publication. It all sounds so terribly shamanic. * * * IT EXPLAINS, I suspect, the burial of Carl Oglesby's brilliant dramatization of a social moment ("The Conversion") in the middle of the magazine and the appear- neither funny nor profound; only tedious. Shamanic. Also-to its credit-Faulknerian, when the rhetoric works. Rilke's "lonely lovey art" theory leads straight to subjectivism, the second objectionable feature of the new Generation. With few ex- ceptions, privacy calls the tune, the kind of privacy that grows from cultural privation; that is, the loneliest, loviest privacy you can imagine. Even this would be satisfactory (albeit disturbing since cultural undernourishment ought not occur in the Catholep.. istemiad of Michigan), could we avoid the uncomfortable suspicion that all the privates want to be generals. Every loving lad yearns to become Christ. * s * AND OUR suspicion is con- firmed by Mr. Bergmann's theor- etical justification for precisely this kind of literary Messianism. Because of literature's focus on particulars, its essential privacy, its atomism, it puts to shame all old systems of abstract thought. ". . . We can no longer turn to philosophy when the question 'How should I live?' plagues us and philosophers should no longer attempt to answer it." And behold: since literature gives us private kicks, the writer must be our new priest. "If any- one can teach morality to mankind it is the writer," says Mr. Berg- mann. Down with philosophy, the- ology, science, deans and disci- pline! Up with art because art is love! * * * MY exaggeration is deliberate as an illustration of one tendency in modern literary and artistic criticism which needs correction. It should not be taken, however, as a condemnation of the latest Generation. Ettenberg's five-stage "Figure Composition" demon- strates the modern artist's ability to break out of private experience in an isolated moment, if only to record the decomposition of emo- tion in time. Some will mistake his record of this norpafne w a , Q'm nmaom. edge in having sat on Council prior to this semester. Evidence of political differences Wednesday night or in the prior efforts of campaigners was not a part of the officer elections. Brook, for instance, admitted to Adalemo, that he had not ap- proached Adalemo with any pro- posals for the operation of the presidency since he was fairly sure that Smithson had Adalemo's vote. The issue then as indicated by Brook's belief and the votes cast by Council members was "person- al"-not commitments to distinct political offerings on the part of officers. To the Editor: FOR YEARS The Michigan Daily has been widely known as the New York Times of college news- papers. Whether or not that was once a justified accolade, The Daily's performance in immediate memory makes me wonder if The Daily is not now The House of Usher of college newspapers. A new staff of senior editors will assume authority next week, and it is my hope that they, with the assistance of the understaff, will exert herculean effort and devotion to the task of rebuilding The Daily. Unfortunately, I do not believe that this will in fact hap- pen, for reasons described in the remainder of this letter. Since each block to success is decisive in itself, the order in which the problems are discussed does not indicate anecessary order of se- verity. All are severe. ** * IT SEEMS to me that The Daily has a false emphasis, partly betrayed on the editorial page, and immediately evident when talking to the present understaff. There is an insensitivity to the fundamental issues, trends and nature of the nation, the com- munity and the University. There is a crippling emphasis on straight news coverage, perhaps stimulated by a desire to emulate "regular" city newspapers, resulting in a confusion about the role of a uni- versity newspaper in the educa- tional process of those who read and write the paper. To a significant degree, I believe that this emphasis on straight news, extensive and accurate cov- erage of the campus and the world, has been prompted by a plethora of shallow criticisms con- tinuously hurled at The Daily by students and faculty challenging a misquote or bemoaning the fact that The Daily neglected to cover an important lecture. While it is a good idea to quote accurately, and while it would be nice to cover all the lectures on campus, the student newspaper becomes distorted in its vision and forgetful of its purpose when it expends too much precious time, energy and imagination coping with these problems. The very fact that criticism of The Daily cen- ters around technical aspects of operation and publication is an excellent indication that the paper offers no more important chal- lenges. *~ * * THIS, I submit, is tragic. It seems to me that The Daily staff should set about to ask em- barrassing questions, to investigate sacred cows in our institutions and in our select women's residence halls, to bring to light and mer- cilessly question the premises which underlie the University, the civil rights movement, the Gold- water supporters, research and knowledge and every other aspect of life and society. Several years ago, when The Daily approached this level, it was endlessly attacked for its icon- oclasm, to the. point that the staff itself began to believe that attack without constructive coun- ter-proposal is "irresponsible". This feeling, now thoroughly em- bedded in the staff, has produced the most lack-luster Daily editor- ial page of this decade. * * * MY CRITICISM of The Daily, therefore, centers on this hesi- tancy to inspect, attack, analyze pitilessly and expose even to dessi- cation all the juicy details of the University and. the nation, their misdirection and their dangerous haughtiness. I am afraid that The Daily staff is yielding by default what will likely be its last chance to think and speak freely, and to exercise the intellect in the most critical way without fear of economic loss or personal threat. The new senior staff must begin as soon as appointed to reverse this recent trend away from criti- cism and investigation. That staff must now lead the entire under- staff toward consistent editorial radicalism, and be prepared again for the shallow and persistent To Europe?.... 0 To the Editor: AFTER having closely followed the plans for the Michigan Un- ion air charter to Europe, I re- ceived notice that contracts and money for reserving seats on the flight could be turned in at. the Union's student offices after 3:00, March 12. 2:00 p.m., March 12: With money and contracts in hand I -arrive at the student offices of the Union. To my surprise, there is no waiting line. I locate an officer of the Union and I am informed of the situation: "Well, there were enough. people here at 8:30 this morning. We let them sign up then so they wouldn't have to wait in line all day." Others arrive, and all are told the same thing: "All the seats on the flight are full and so is the waiting list." My i i m e d i a t e thoughts are similar to. all the others who found no line and no places left on the flight when time for registering has not yet arrived: 'If I had known they would allow people to reserve places at 8:30 and then go to classes, I would have been here too." . * * *- CERTAINLY if the Union Is to be an instrument of service to the students, it should follow a policy that would allow students to rely on the word of its officers and the notices authorized by those of- ficers. The precedent set by this de- cision leaves the student with the idea that he can rely on the Union's word only at his peril. What possible meaning can there be in a notice of a time for regis- tration for any (Union program if a crowd around the student offices can induce the officers to change that time. By operating in this manner, the Union becomes a dis- service to the University for which it was created. -Bruce Laidlaw, '63L . squeals of misunderstanding peo- ple who shout "Iconoclasm". This will not be an easy 44k- and it will almost certainly relations with at least son ministrators. But there can deals or understandings wlerebt The Daily holds back an editorial analysis in exchange for channels of news collection with the admin- istration. If the University condemns The Daily for editorializing with in- sufficient information, then let the University supply the missing information to The Daily. Under no circumstances should The Daily sacrifice its editorial em- phasis in the hopes of gaining ac- cess to more factual news. The fact that such sacrifices have been recently made again characterizes the undue and improper emphasis on straight news which has in- fected The Daily. One can wonder if the up-com- ing senior staff possesses the per- sonal qualities of radical honesty and devotion to The Daily which will be needed to inspire the uin- derstaff, breathe fire into' the edi- torial page and stand up to an irate and even hostile administra- tion. I wonder if the up-coming sen- iors will escape the immature, op- portunistic view of The Daily as a "good place to have worked:" I wonder if the staff will force into responsibility' those who would make the spoils system an integral part of . The Daily appointment process, those who substitute pet- tiness for principle and self-ag- grandizement for dedication. I WISH I could con clude this by noting that I have inexhaust- able faith in the ability and in- tegrity of the up-coming seniors. Unfortunately, I have no such faith for their collective shallow- ness is appalling,,and when com- pounded by the pettiness of some, it is frightening. I am reduced to the faint hope that responsible and dynamic underclassmen will somehow be attracted to The Daily according to what it might be, rather than driven away by what it has become. -Michael Zweig, '64 "I'd Be For It, But It Might Set A Precedent" - -- "y* Af,? , - {{4 ...A. Wl-U S"% M-4>'I 1f10' * -