Seventy-Second 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" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. NTESDAY, MARCH 7, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAML HARRAH City Council's Hollow Gesture Won't End Discrimination OSA IN TRANSITION: Lewis's ONDAY NIGHT, picketers confronted the Ann' Arbor City Council to ask public port of their Pittsfield village integration vement. The Council answered them with hollow gesture of passing a resolution say-' segregated housing is "contrary to public icy." his is just another substitution of platitudes action. If the Council really meant what aid, it would have passed the fair housing inance last November. Instead, the fair ising measure died for lack of a second. e whole matter was referred to the Human ations Commission for further study and t, for all practical purposes, was the end t.t row, three months later, the Council has to front the Pittsfield dilemma. This is the 1 -test of so-called gradualist policies. If Council, and more specifically Mayor Cecil Creal, can make use of their personal in- ence in order to persuade the Pittsfield ltors to integrate, their policies of slow The Bride HE MACKINAC BRIDGE has conquered more than miserable weather and rough ers. It has dispelled a long-standing belief- Michigan that financing a state public 'ks project through revenue bonds sold to rate investors is unfeasible 'he creation of the bridge brought cries of lfare spending" and "political pump-' ning." Some critics inferred that the bridge ild lose its novelty after the first few years i fall into disuse. 'his is not the case. Last year more than nillion vehicles crossed the bridge and toll eipts approached $5 million dollars. This enough to pay the interest on the bridge ds and retire $600,000 to a sinking fund ch will be used to pay the bond's principal m it is due in 1994. 3,TIME GOES ON, the bridge should handle more and more traffic. Perhaps the Upper insula, which is now losing population due the progressive depletion of its mines, will urbanized, partially due to the influence he bridge. a many respects the upper half of Michigan ideal for light industry. If this expected nge is realized, the bridge will not only be e to pay for itself, as it is now doing, but reap a large profit. Indeed, if the Upper insula is going to make such a change, existence of the bridge is a necessary pre- uisite. ow that the bridge has been built and ven feasible financially as well as physically, must compliment its creators for having' foresight that makes progress possible. --FRED RUSSELL KRAMER movement based on education will be vin- dicated to some degree T HE MAYOR will probably be unable to mediate the dispute. First, the realtor in-. volved is not a local businessman but a De- troit developer. It is unlikely that the mayor can put effective pressures on him. Further, his attitude has been one of "this is my busi- ness." He is dead set against integration and, his total concession to the picketers has been that he "might" let a few Negroes live in Pittsfield if they "didn't push him." He has agreed to meet with representatives of the picketers next Friday; but no concessions are in sight. The gradual approach won't work because of the inherent nature of discrimination. There is at least some evidence that formal educa- tion does not tend to diminish racial prejudice. Other researchers found that about the only way to reduce bias is for people of different races to come into contact with each other. The morning coffee hour between a Negro housewife and her white neighbor is a much more effective weapon against bigotry than a lot of self-righteous brotherhood committee meetings. The gradual approach has one important psychological defect: it presupposes that people must first understand each other before they come into contact. This is a false premise. Unless people meet and talk to each other' informally, as human beings, they will not reach understanding. IN THE CONTEXT of the City Council, there is more than a little hypocrisy about race relations. Only one of the councilmen is strongly in favor of pressing for direct improve- ments. Several of the others believe sincerely in a slow approach. But by and large the Council has used gradualism as an excuse for inaction. Whatever the councilmen's moral or per- sonal reasons for inaction, they have directly contributed to the underlying Uncle Tommism so prevalent in Ann Arbor. Many white citi- zens have followed the outward attitudes of their civic leaders and adopted it into a pa- ternalistic concern for Negroes. This was the' issue in the recent community center con- troversy-are Ann Arbor Negroes to exist as human beings, or by the grace of their white neighbors? It is in this paternalism conflict that the Council has failed to give positive direction. Monday's resolution is fine in principle; but it doesn't do anything There is a difference between saying that discrimination is against public policy and saying that discrimination in t'e sale of housing is a crime punishable by a fine of up to $100 and 90 days in jail. A fair housing ordinance would put some teeth into their noble mouthings. --DAVID MARCUS By MICHAEL OLINICK Daily Staff Writer ABOUT 10 MONTHS AGO, the University Senate's Student Relations Committee issued some advice. It urged Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis to clean up the mess in the OSA. Mr. Lewis apparently did not like the advice which came from his chief advisory board. So he created a new advisory board. We know it as the Reed Committee. The Reed committee has issued a report urging, among other things, the creation of three new advisory boards to help guide Lewis and the OSA. Lewis doesn't seem to be com- pletely enamored of all the advice of the Reed advisory group either -even though he was a member of that committee and sighed its report. He has stated that he does not like everything in the report (he won't specify precisely what) and may alter some of its advice when he in turn advises our beloved Regents. * * * ONE THING is certain, however: the advisory boards will stay. For, as Michigan Union President Paul C. Carder, a member of the Reed Committee, laughingly told Stu- dent Government Council last week, "Dr. Lewis wants as much advice as he can get." If the Reed Committee report is adopted, Lewis will have an Executive Council for Student Af- fairs, a Residence Hall Advisory Board and an Advisory Board on Discipline to give him advice which he can reject along with the advice he now gets from the SRC and SGC. * *. * THE CREATION of these ad- visory boards is an important pro- posal of the Reed Report since they provide the opportunity to bring the academic element into student affairs. The committees are supposed to be the consequence of the committee's philosophy of student affairs and philosophy of administration. The committee's descriptions of the advisory boards, however, con- tain some very apparent incon- sistencies and ambiguities, both in composition and duties. For no apparent reason, each board has a different number of members Percentage of administrative rep- resentation varies. The Executive Council, for ex- ample has 11 members: four fac- ulty, four students, three admin- istrators. The residence halls group would have 12 members, with equal student faculty and ad- ministration representation. The personnel on the judic board would be equally split also, but it would have only nine members. The committee offers no reason for the discrepancies in the num- bers of members, nor why one committee-the most important one-has an unequal distribution of power. The "troika" scheme ad- vanced in the committee's philos- ophy of administration is forgot- ten in the construction of the executive council. ANOTHER of the inconsisten- cies existing between the boards is the presence (or absence) of the administrator who is receiv- ing advice from the advisory board. The Executive Council exists to advise the vice-president; the vice-president serves as a mem- ber. The residence halls advisory board would be designed to advise the director of housing; the direc- tor of housing is a member. The judic advisory board, with similar duties, specifically excludes the assistant dean of students in charge of discipline. Why include the men to be ad- vised on the first two committees? The committee members will tell you that since these boards have no policy making powers, but exist to advise certain powerful administrators, the administrators should be sitting in on the meet- ings and participating in the dis- cussions. If this is true, why exclude the discipline dean from his advisory board? A common explanation that has floated out from the committee's closed chambers is that the com- mittee views this dean as relatively impotent who acts as secretary to a strong committee and merely administers its policy. * * * ALTHOUGH this explanation is inconsistent with the role of the administrator adopted for the other two boards, it does have some sense to it. But you ask, why is he called a dean and why-in the organiza- tion chart yanked out of the com- mittee's working draft but present- ed to SGC last week-is he put in a special box which contains the dean of students and associate dean, above the other offices in the OSA? Committee explanation: "We feel that the man in charge of discipline has a very vital role to perform and his importance rates the title of a dean." Inconsistent, you say? Perhaps the committee has a certain man in mind for the job and doesn't want his status lost by stripping the deanship title from his name? Committee explanation: Person- alities were never discussed, but consideration of them Wvas grub- ably subconsciously present. Yes, there is an inconsistency. . 4. * LET'S TAKE another look at the judiciary board. The commit- tee views the board's role as an adviser "on mattersof policy." It would also have the power to select the members of Joint Judi- ciary Council, a right now enjoyed by students. This is a step for- ward on the committee's path. toward getting the student "to participate fully in decisions af- fecting his welfare." On this advisory board sit the Dean of Students and the as- sociate dean and some other ad- ministrative officer who is not the discipline dean Seemingly, this third administrator can be plucked from any of the offices in the Salmon Loaf without par- ticular regard for his experience or interest in student affairs. But then again the committee implies that everyone in the University should be moving toward the same lofty educational goal-so it does not really matter who he is. (It also seems by the committee's language, its preciseness in de- fining the length of faculty and student terms, that this adminis- trator may serve forever.) THE RESIDENCE HALLS Ad- visory Board is the boldest back- ward step the committee makes. The committee would ask the board to undertake responsibility "for seeing that the general educa- tional purposes in student affairs are served in the residence hall system" while it strips away power from the students and faculty. The Residence Halls Board of Governors-which the advisory board would replace-now has the final say-so on policies governing the dorms and quads. Though the student representation is dis- proportionately small (two out of 11), the faculty members most often docile followers of the vice- president, and the board itself little more than a grumbling rub- ber stamp, it does represent fac- ulty and students and has the Regental responsibility to run the educational program in the resi- dence halls. The board as now constituted has the same potential for de- veloping into an energetic, vig- orous reformer of the residence halls as the advisory boards would have-and, if it ever reach- ed that idyllic state, would have the power to actually get things changed. .* * * THE EXECUTIVE Council pro- posed by the Reed committee would "consider whether the en- vironmental circumstances pro- vided by the University are con- sistent with the University's edu- cational purposes." What this means is again a cloudy issue. According to the student members of the commit- tee, the council could consider whatever subjects it wanted to. According to Lewis, its scope would be sharply restricted to the OSA. Again, the chairman of this Council is supposed to be a faculty member. There is no similar pro- vision for the other two boards. THE EXECUTIVE council would assist the Vice-President in formu- lating rules over student conduct' It would also act as grievance mechanism for students, an ad- , iirable idea, if it succeeds. The council, however, would be bound to report to the Regents at least once a year. This, in effect, could keep the committee silent when the vice-president chooses to ignore its advice The SRC faces the same problem now. It constitutionally is an ad- visory committee to Lewis and reports to the University Senate If Lewis continues his freeze on the Lehmann report of last spring, the committee has no power of its own to publicly release the docu- -ment. The executive council, working under similar conditions, could re- port its recommendations only to Lewis or to the Regents. The com- mittee would probably not have the authority, on its own, to no- tify the community about what it has been doing and thinking and advising. The pressure which the council can bring to bear against Lewis when he refuses to heed its ad- vice consists in sparking wide- spread public support for its posi- tion. If it can not reach that public, its cause is fated and it might as well flee to the fen. * * * HOW DOES the committee ra- tionalize increasing the power of administrators? One must look to the report's section on philos- ophy of administration: "The ad- ministration must concern itself with the 'administrability' of poli- cies and plans, providing for per- iodic evaluation of rules and pro- cedures, with flexibility to meet changing conditions and special problems without loss of stability." On the other hand, the com&.iit- tee sees the role of the faculty to provide the educational thrust to the non-academic experience. And of, course, the report mouths w:>me platitudes about students being ac- tive participants in the process. At one point in the committee's discussions about their structure, their proposed ideal gave all the policy making powers to these boards. But somehow, when the student members were studying for exams and the faculty mem- bers were grading them, the com- mittee had a meeting and-no- body seems clear exactly how-the; boards became mere advisers. * * * ANY PREDICTION of the ef- fects the advisory boards will ac- tually have must rely on the per- sonnel occupying the administra- tive offices being advised. If the Vice-President 'for Student Af- fairs, the Director of Housing and the Assistant Dean of Students for Discipline are honest men, judi- cious in their treatment of stu- dents, ready to admit mistakes, encourage evaluation of his office and follow the well thought out suggestions of his advisers, much progress can' be made in the area of student affairs - no matter what the rest of the structure looks like. The likelihood of seeing these kinds of administrators in the Ad-' ministration Bldg. or the SAB is small. The chief of the student affairs office and the adminis-, trator mainly concerned with dis- cipline ' now will most likely be the same men filling parallel po- sitions in the new structure. The" Director of Housing will probably fit the present mold of ineptitude and nondirection. * * * THE DIRECTOR of Housing position was pulled out from under the Dean of Students and made directly responsible to the Vice- President. The theory behind this, we are told, is that Lewis will bring in a strong and able ad- ministrator from outside the Uni- Device versity to fill the slot. The posi- tion is supposed to be an attrac- tive one: high pay, lots of power To get such a man and hold him here, you can't let a group of students and professors keep tell- ing him how to run his office. A good Director of Housing, coaxed here by the proposed strategy, wants to be as independent as pos- sible. In the other corner, stands the prime contender for the new posit tion of Assistant Dean for Dis- cipline, the man performing the job today: John Bingley. Bingley certainly has a great knowledge of student judiciaries and vast experience in rule enforcement. He isn't about to accept advice from a committee which no doubt has less competence in his field of specialization than he does. * * 4. IF MR. LEWIS is to continue in his present post (and the Reed committee never discusses replac- ing him) the odds are that he will persist in his past behavior with reference to the new advisory committees. He will shun major decisions, shunting them off to the .om- mittees to be studied and debated while the, controversy cools down. The committee, then reports to Lewis and he does whatever he had in mind to do in the first place-or whatever the higher levels of administration have de- creed must come to pass. Unless there is a major shakeup of personnel in the OSA-from the top of the pyramid on down-- little progress will be made in im- plementing the ideals of the Reed report philosophy. With the present administrators -occupying basically the same desks as before, the same confu- sion and paternalism will reign The advisory committees will only provide additional cubbyholes in which pr9posals for change will be bogged down. In addition, we will have an OSA run by administra- tors with the blame foisted on students and faculty. BURMA: Latest Army Coup: 1958 All Over Again? TODAY AND TOMORROW On Nuclear Testing By WAL.TER iPPrMANN NCE THE MIDDLE 'FIFTIES we have all suposed, and this included the Soviets, that easiest and simplest of the steps towards er relations would be a treaty 'to ban nu- r testing. This is no longer the case. On contrary, it must now be said that on a ban the deadlock is complete, and without e kind of scientific or diplomatic break- >ugh the issue is not at present negotiable. [IS IS A BITTER conclusion to have to :ome to. But the controversy has evolved to point where a treaty is possible only if side is willing to concede nuclear superior- to the other and to acept nuclear in- >rity for itself. If the Soviet Union would e to the treaty we are demanding, it id have to accept as permanent, enforced nspection, the existing American superiority uclear power. The Soviet Union would have ive up the attempts to overtake us. ad if we were to accept the kind of treaty Soviet Union is proposing, we would have ccept the risk that they could prepare in et to overtake us while we could not pre- to keep ahead of them. IT IS impossible for both sides to be superior, a treaty would be negotiable only here were an equality which both sides ved was real and lasting. We are a long from that theoretical situation. The nu- r art is young and new and this develop- t is as yet not only unrealized but not lictable the bottom this is why the Soviet Union not only done its series of tests, but is. cting the very idea of the kind of treaty we would like to have. Without testing, Soviet Union cannot expect to overtake the ed States, and with testing it might be to gain a decisive lead over the United es at least for a time. e for nur nrt will nnt acent the riskld The Soviet Union, for its part, is asking us not to test any more and is asking us to allow our scientists and technicians to work without being allowed to test their work by experimen- tation. N THE NUCLEAR RACE the stakes are so. high !that both sides are convinced that they must win the race. There may have been a moment in 1958-we cannot know for sure -when Mr. Khrushchev was strong enough politically to agree to a treaty with some in- spection which would in fact accept American nuclear superiority. That moment, if it ever existed, passed and' since the spring of 1960, since the U-2 re- vealed the effectiveness of our knowledge of Soviet bases, the Soviet government has want- ed no treaty and has devoted itself to pre- paring to overcome our nuclear lead. The President's decision to resume testing is intended to prevent the Soviet Union from getting the lead, and it is based on the con- viction-which is also the Soviets' conviction -that' there can be no security without su- premacy. While those convictions exist, there can be no nuclear test ban treaty. THUS THE RACE goes on, and we ask our- selves whether it can ever be brought to an end. To answer that question, we must enter the field of speculation. If we say that the race will end when there is nuclear equality which both sides can accept, then it may be that' this condition would exist if both sides invented and discovered an effective anti-missile defense. The prevailing scientific opinion is that this is improbable if not impossible and it would, of course, be a spectacular breakthrough. A workable equality might also prevail if each side were able to construct an invulnerable retaliatory or second strike force, one which would surivea nv rind of nre-emntiv attack- aY ~2 :~ly. IINAS I--E--ut--j _ 2 S By JAMES NICHOLS Daily Staff Writer APPARENTLY because of a pro- posed governmental shift to the left, Burma's military leader, Gen. Ne Win, has assumed . control of the nation for the second time in 40 months. This time, the near- bloodless coup seemed not to have the support of Premier U Nu, as the first one did, but again the people of Burma have received. the s h i f t without noticeable change in their daily life. In 1957; Nu's government found itself faced with eight separate rebellions. The rulers of the 33 near-autonomous feudal princi- palities in Northern and Eastern Burma agitated for freedom from the Rangoon government. Refugee soldiers of the defeated National- ist Chinese armies lived by orga- ed banditry along the Chinese bor- der, and two separate and quarrel- ing Communist factions waged in- termittent guerrilla war against the Burmese army. * * * U NU is botha shrewd politi- cian and a gentle- man, He is a Buddhist, as are virtually all the Burmese people, and he frequently threatens to leave politics for the peace and order of a monastery. The neutral Socialisf governs a nation with a 1,500-mile Chinese boundary. As a neutralist, Nu tried to avoid commitment to either side of the "cold war." His UN dele- gation joined (as India's did not) in condemning Russia's brutal suppression of the 1956 Hungarian revolt, but he has also attacked the United States for permitting weapons given to Formosa to be used by Nationalist Chinese guer- rillas against his troops. Nu regards neutralism as some- thing to be actively practiced, and says he feels it is his duty to rec- oncile the hostile halves of the world. "In Peiping, I told the Chi- nese how good the Americans are. In Washington, I told the Ameri- cans how good the' Chinese are. Some persons are apt to forget these things in the heat of the moment," he once said. * *. * IN 1957, hoping to end the gen- eral chaos, Premier Nu proclaimed general amnesty for the rebels, promising old crimes would be forgiven those who laid down their arms. The move permitted the Communists to form political par- ties, which many promptly did. But the Communist question split the ruling party into two ir-, reconcilable factions. The party, ponderously named the "Anti-Fas- cist People's Freedom League," disagreed on the wisdom of le- galizing the Communist movement. of the League met illegally and 'expelled the Premier. By Septem- ber of 1958$, each faction was charging the other with stockpiling arms and fomenting civil war. Finally seeing no other recourse, Nu balled on General Win, popu- lar commander in chief of the armed forces, to try to form a stable government with the gen- eral at its head. "We intended to hold general elections in November," Nu told the people of Burma, "but we came to realize that the public elec- tions could not be free and fair. I invited General Ne Win to make arrangements essential for holding such 'elections within six months. I am happy to say Ne Win has accepted my invitation.'' 4. * * NE WIN was a very well-liked figurq, both by the Burmese and by his many American friends. He was an important figure in the post-independence transformation period of 1949-50, serving for a time as: deputy premier. He had fought against the British colon- ialists in Burma, and continued the independellce struggle during World War II in a temporary al- liance with the Japanese, whom he later fought against. The quick-tempered profession- al soldier with the winning smile emerged from the war andthe in- cessant guerrilla fighting with a deep hatred for Communists. THOUGH WIN failed to rectify the entire nation within six months, he made remarkable prog- ress in ousting corruption and in- efficiency in Rangoon. He refus- ed loans from either East or West at first, adding bluntly that they were not needed. The rice-rich nation had good harvests in suc- cession, bringing production close to pre-war levels, and Win's deci- sion to accept American financial aid gave the nation a Rangoon- Mandalay highway which helped ip the transport of crops. By February, 1960, the success of the Burmese army in suppress- ing the Communist Rebels freed them to insure a peaceful elec- tion. U Nu's faction won over its former League-members by an overwhelming majority, and Ne Win, as promised, turned over the government to him. Whether this remarkable act will be repeated following the present crisis remains to be seen. Geography ~ FORMER FIRST LADY Eleanor Roosevelt recently disclosed the thought of giving nuclear weapons to the West Germans "terrified" i1 5 I I I -' .w ~ x '~....r' a-i~ ainu'a ~