&enty-second Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ere Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. " Phone NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail" orials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. "You Might Call It More of an Abyss Meeting" - -,-w - -3 jEVA A pt5A MAM T COtFEgR E 2 ',- t - ~ -.16- TV STATION: Quality Education Through State System Y, MARCH 18, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: HARRY PERLSTADT After the Sigma Nu Case: Complications and Hazards rHEN STUDENT GOVERNMENT COUNCIL begins to play with the Sigma Nu case on ril 4, it will inaugurate a series of adventures o the murky, hazardous and delicate area of riminatory membership selection by fra- hlties and sororities. igma Nu was, the best possible case the nmttee on Membership had. The frater- y's oft-quoted bias clause (members must "without Negro blood") Is. in obvious con- iction to Regents Bylaw 2.4 and an SGC ulation. The chapter openly admits the use is discriminatory, and has become scared ugh of Impending Council action to apply a waiver from the national. ifter Sigma Nu, though, violations of the iversity's non-discriminatory policy are less, zr-cut. In spite- of numerous rumors con- 'ing a bias clause in Trigon's archives, and hough several members and other fraternity Dials have admitted privately that the group a Christian clause, there has been no pub- evidence yet that this is true. Lambda Chi ha's troubles have been with a provision in ritual which' demands a profession of Chris- 1 faith from the pledges, Alpha Tau Omega I Phi Delta Theta are also on shaky-ground. y have waivers from their nationals' bias use, but the constitutions retain "gentle- n" or "socially acceptable" phrases which e been interpreted by the nationals at times a discriminatory basis. THE LATTER three examples, it is certain that the nationals' restrictions have the ef- t of being tiiscrimiatoy. The ritual is an Wclad requirement, and the waivers aren't good if socially acceptable clauses are ap- 'd. It's another thing to prove, however, that se provisions always and necessarily will be :riminatory. A non-Christian could presum- y lie his way throush, Lambda Chi's recital, i the ATO and Phi Delt clauses are not dis- ninatory in their wording. :o the Council someday will have to de- e'whether its jurisdiction rightfully includes effect of such selection criteria, as well as statements which are strictly and literally :4iminatory. This issue will undoubtedly be- de a heated point of debate on our middle- the-road SGC. N6THER COMPLICATION in affiliate bias is the question of approval by nationals of University locals' proposed pledge classes. page three of the University Regulations icernihg Student Organizations booklet, one is the following standard which campus ups must meet: "The- organization's program 4 its direction is (sic) in the hands of stu- t :members; all offices shall be held by dents, and voting shall be restricted to stu ororities select their members after obtain- GoourdOld1DaYs 'UDENTS AT TrHE UNIVERSITY' in the 1840's and 1850's were almost all from farm tes and were used to a simple life, according Jniversity historian Wilfred B. Shaw. , 'hey were carefully watched by the faculty l admonished at two, daily chapel exercises. ir hours were carefully provided for, and y could not leave campus after 9 p.m. 'heir courses were compulsory, and their endance at classes was insured by numbers the class-room benches which had to be Y covered, LAD TO SEE there's been some progress in student affairs. -R. SELWA Ing two recom~mendations by women in the prospective pledge's home town. Both fraterni-. ties and sororities must send their lists of pledges to national headquarters for final ap- proval . It is no secret that the sororities' recom- mendation system has allowed discriminatory selections by the home-town selectors. In the past, there have been cases where nationals have rejected pledges on a discriminatary bas- is, although in almost all instances the locals' pledge lists are rubberstamped. At some point, the Council will again have to make a difficult decision: whether the Uni- versity regulation that "direction (of an orga- nization) be in the hands of student members" outlaws control of membership selection by off- campus bodies. Although this would be a logi- cal implication, the question of how strictly to interpret the regulation (it does not specifical- ly ban off-campus influence) will provide more fireworks for SGC consideration. THE PROBLEM of discrimination in affiliate membership selection is a mess. Any action taken, will touch on issues and points which are not clear-cut or easily defined. But SGC's slow struggle against bias has been helped very little by IFC and Panhel. At other universities-Cornell, for example- fraternity "and sorority associations themselves are spearheading legislation to get rid of bias clauses and suspend houses that don't drop them.t But about all Inter-fraternity Council and Panhellenic Association have done hers is en- gage in behind-the-scenes investigation, and discussion with groups in trouble. This limited action has brought about many rumors but no tangible, beneficial results. IFC did' adopt a resolution last fall disap- proving of bias restrictions and promising to work with locals, nationals and SGC to hasten the clauses' departure. Unfortunately, the resolution contained no steps providing for punitive measures against non-complying fraternities. Since there were no teeth in the statement, it became nothing more than a meaningless sop to campus opin-. ion. FC AND PANHEL could have done something substantial. Infornation concerning the houses' status with bias clauses should have been put into the rush booklets. Any rushee deserves to know whether a certain house is discriminatory or not. This information, which will never be revealed by any affiliates during rush, can be obtained by rushees only by asking "the much-neglected confidential rush counse- lors. IFC and Panhel are supposed to protect the best interests of fraternities and sororities. It is in the best interests of these groups, as well as the University itself, to be part of a system which is just. Voluntary or involuntary arbi- trary discrimination weakens the system, and pollutes the professed ideals of brotherhood. If IFC and Panhel had taken serious action in addition to uttering serious words, the clean- ing-up process would be going a lot more smoothly. A group in trouble is much more likely to reform if it sees that its own system's leaders as well as SGC mean business. The Council can cope with the open and honest discrimination practiced by Sigma Nu, but the real work in eliminating the much more prevalent furtive and evasive bias can come only from within the system and not without. So SGC is going to have to do what IFC and Panhel should have done. It will have to clean house. First one is Sigma Nu. -GERALD STORCH By BARBARA LAZARUS Daily Staff Writer THE ESTABLISHMENT of a state-wide system of education- al television stations is being con- sidered by a Michigan advisory. committee. It could bring a new and vital force to education in Michigan. Currently there are two operat- ing educational stations in the state area: WTVS in Detroit and WMSB in Onondago, near Jack- son. Michigan State operates on a share time basis with the com- mercial station WILX The amount of available funds will determine the development of a complete educational net- work. The expense of an operating station is very high. The -federal government may help out in the form of the revised Magnuson- Roberts Bills. This bill is expected to provide matching funds for the construction of television equipment. If Michigan can meet the expenses, then the project could begin very shortly. *' * * - THE PLAN for a state system of educational TV was developed last year in a report by Prof. James B. Tintera of Michigan State University. Lynn M. Bartlett, State Superintendent of Instruc- tion appointed a Citizen's Commit- tee to first study the situation. From this committee was drawn a working committee which draft- ed the organized study. The rapid growth of student population and the rising costs of Michigan education bring out the need for new educational facilities. Michigan enrollment has grown by 500,000 in the last 10 years. In order to keep pace with the grow- ing enrollment, 50,000 new teachers will be needed by 1970. * * * THE COMMITTEE conducted several surveys to see the recep- tion and attitudes of educators to educational TV.{ The support by Michigan educa- tors ,seems to ,be very favorable. The teacher's fear of replacement by TV is vanishing, and he now sees it as a vital assistance and supplement. The state supported colleges and universities are either using TV now or are planning to use it in the future. On the University level there appears to be less willingness to cooperate on shared use of in- structional televised material than among private and public secon- dary school systems. * * *. PROF. TINTERA suggested that . the most feasible system of dis- tribution is a combination of broadcasting stations in the lower peninsula with a single micro- wave connection for the Upper peninsula. This micro-wave system in the U.P. could be connected with the existing Michigan Bell Telephone system., In the early stages, production, centers presently found in the col- leges would provide, on contract basis, the video-tapes for dis- tribution. This study would use the various present educational facilities used in some schools around the state. The report recommended that three transmitters be constructed to cover portions of the state not receiving educational TV recep- tion. Dr. Tintera has suggested that there will be one near Alpena and two in the western portion of the state. This could mean that Ann Arbor would not be one of the first stations built, because of its closeness to Detroit. THE UNIVERSITY'S present facilities do not include either a station or a transmitter. The Tele- vision Center under the direction of Prof. Garnet R. Garrison, Uni- versity IDirector of Broadcasting, records some 100 programs a year on kinescope and video-tape. The number of' University programs broadcast each year numbers well over 2000. The Center also serves many departments within the Uni- versity with closed-circuit on- nections. These programs present some of the University's finest teachers giving varied lessons in everything from economics to American liter- ature. The programs are in de- mand all over the country and they enrich many educational and commerial TV'stations. EDUCATIONAL programs com- ing from Detroit often do not reach the Ann Arbor area. The people of the University Commun- ity are intellectually alert to new developments and could use the facilities to bring culture, care- ful news analysis, or non-credit courses eo theevening viewer. Daytime broadcasting could reach the nearby area .with prepared courses of instruction. A station in Ann Arbor could also serve as a uniting fore to the student population. Student can- didates for SGC and current is- sues would reach a larger audience. In short, the creative possibilities of such a station are limitless. It could bring a wealth of knowledge to an interested area of Michigan. Prof. Tintera estimated that the cost of three transmitters and the construction of station facilities would be $2,103,000. Costs would %be higher for three full outlet stations. * * * THE HOPE for a University TV station to service the Southeastern area should not die. If the Legis- lature does appropriate the funds, the value of Ann Arbor as the location should be kept in mind. The fine teachers and' the high quality of the present Unversity TV Center's productions should show the possible heights that television instruction can reach. The legislation in Congress will make the costs less burdensome to the state. The tool of instructional TV could have numerous benefits' for the public school teacher shortage. Television, located at such a center of quality learning as the University, could provide -an enriching, vitalizing and stim- ulating boost to the entire area of state education. INTEGRATION: Louisiana: Jails and Road Gangs By RONALD WILTON Daily Staff Writer T HE PAPERS don't pay too much attention to the civil rights struggle in the South these days; it's not the explosive type of issue that sells newspapers. But when former Daily Editor Tom Hayden came up from the South to speak to Challenge last Sunday he brought with him some of the biggest news to come out of that area recently. It concerns the sovereign state of Louisiana; and how it may have a way to ham- string the integration movement. The story starts with Dion Dia- mond, a 20-year-old Negro who is field secretary for the Student Non-Violent, Coordinating Com- mittee. He showed up at Southern University, (the largest Negro Uni- versity in the country) in Baton Rouge one day in January to ob- serve and speak to demonstrators against segregation who were stag- ing a campus-wide protest against discrimination. He was arrested Feb. 1 on charges of trespassing. The charge was later changed to criminal an- archy and bond was set at $13,000. Diamond couldn't raise the money; he was put in solitary confine- ment, which in the South seems to be reserved for integrationists and sexual perverts. CHUCK McDEW, a 22-year-old Negro from Atlanta and head of SNCC's voter registration project, and Robert Zellner, 22-year-old white who is a field secretary for SNCC were also in Louisiana. Hearing of Diamond's arrest they went to see him and bring him some books; although they knew that the one place in the South that integrationists should stay away from (besides Klan meetings) is a jail. At the jail they were promptly arrested and charged with vagrancy. McDew could probably qualify as one of the richer vagrants in existence as he had several hun- dred dollars in his pocket. A few days later the charge was changed to criminal anarchy; the reason given was that they were trying to pass Diamond integrationist li- terature. According to Hayden, the DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN. New Book-Banning Boost ENATOR LYNN 0. FRANCIS, chairman of the Senate Education Committee, stated at obscene books "are poisoning the minds d morals" of Michigan children. Ie listed four books which he thought were this category: "Brave New World," by Aldous xley, "Tropic of Cancer" by Henry Miller, 'atcher ; in the Rye," by J. D. Salinger and ady Clhatterley's Lover," by D. H. Lawrence. Applying this same philosophy, a school trict near Grand Rapids -has banned "Brave w World" after parents protested it was fit reading. for high school students. The rel had been used as a text for required ding at the Forest Hills High School. Banning books from high schools is a serious ck to effective school teaching. Such a move dermines the freedom and integrity of high 'ool faculties. When teachers and librarians in high schools chosen, they are vested with the duty of ching their subject in the manner they Editorial Staff , JOHN ROBERTS, Editor , r at O 14PWAACw Tle ritlVfF mNQ li7 think will best promote in their students in- terest and knowledge of their subjects. If we are. to consider high schools at all useful, we must assume the teacher is most capable of deciding how he is to teach. If the school board considers a teacher incapable of this decision, he should be fired. IF PARENTS are to decide what is to be taught, then high school is merely a place to memorize formulas. Teachers are denied the freedom to teach anything which goes beyond the accepted beliefs of everyone in the com- munity. But high school should be a place for learn- ing, a place where different ideas are ex- changed, and where a desire for further edu- cation is stimulated. Teachers can only be effective if they are encouraged to be enthusiastic and creative. They can not do this if such a basic decision as what books shall be read in class is denied them. The real poison is not in obscenity, but in sterility which will be the result of teaching and learning without freedom from restriction in materials. High schools can only turn out thinking in- dividuals by moving into new concepts and The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m., two days preceding publication. FRIDAY, MARCH 16 General Notices Staff Parking Lot No. N-5-S, located on South Thayer at the Northwest corner of Hill Auditorium has been closed to Staff Paid Parking as of March 11, 1962. Residence Hall Scholarship: Women students wishing to apply for a Resi- dence Hall Scholarship for the academic year 1962-63 for Helen Newberry Resi- dence may do so through the Office of the Dean of women. Applications must be returned complete by March 31. Stu- dents already living in this residence hall and those wishing to live there next fall may apply. Qualifications will be considered on the basis of academic standing (minimum 2.5 cumulative average), need, and contribution to group 'living. The University of Michigan Blood Bank Association, in cooperation with the American Red Cross, will have its regular Blood Bank Clinic on March 28, 1962. The Clinic hours are 10:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and from 1:00 to 3:30 Ip.m. Any full-time or part-time reg- ularly employed staff member of the University interested in becoming a member or renewing his membership should contact the Personnel Office, 1028 Administration Bldg., Extension 2834. Faculty, College of Architecture and Design:. The freshman five-week prog- ress reports (all grades) are to be sent to Room 207, Architecture Bldg. (Dean's Ofice) before 5:00 p.m., Wed., March 21. The following student sponsored so- cial events are approved for the com- ing weekend. Social chairmen are re- minded that requests for approval for social events are due in the Office of Student Affairs not later than 12 o'clock noon on the Tuesday prior to the event. MARCH 16- Alice Lloyd, Mixer; Alpha Chi Ome- ga, Twist Party; Alpha Tau Omega, Party; Cooley, House Lounge Party; Sig- ma Alpha Mu, TGIF; Theta Chi, Casual Party; Vaughan, Pajama Party; Zeta Tau Alpha, Informal Party. Kappa Sigma, St. Patrick's Party; Kelsey House, Lounge Dance-Open Open House; Lambdia Chi Alpha, Party; Mar- tha Cook, Fire & Ice (Square Dancing); Michigan House, Date Dance-Open- Open House; Phi Alpha Kappa, Dance; Phi Delta Phi, Dance; Phi Delta Theta, Dance; Phi Epsilon Pi, Party; Phi Kappa Psi, House Party; Phi Kappa Sigma, Party; Phi Kappa Tau, House Party; Phi Sigma Kappa, Record Dance; Psi Upsilon, Dance; School of Public Health Club, Dinner Dance; Reeves, Open Open & Lounge Dance: Sigma Alpha Epsilon,' Dance; Sigma Chi, Par- ty. Sigma Phi, Band Dance; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Dance; Strauss, Ratskeller; Tau Kappa Epsilon, Square Dance; Theta Chi, Informal Party; Theta Delta Chi, Dance; Theta Xi, Party; Trigon, Dance; Tyler-Prescott, Open Open; Van Tyne House, Open Open House & Dance; Wenley House, Open Open; Williams House, Corridor Party; Zeta Beta Tau, Party; Zeta Psi, Band Dance. MARCH 18- Markley, Open Open House; Phi Sig- ma Sigma, Pledges on Parade. Box Office opens Mon., 10 a.m., at -Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre for tickets to the next U-M Players show, Graham Greene's "'The Living Room." Wed. through Sat., March 21-24, 8:00 p.m. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Wed. and Thurs. performances $1.50, 1.00; Fri. and Sat. performances $1.75. 1.25. Box office open 10-5 Monj & Tues., Mar. 19 & 20; 10-8 Mar. 21-24. Tickets also available for "The Merry Wives of Windsor," to be presented Thurs. through Mon. (except (Sun.), April 26- May 1, 8:00 p.m. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, at $2.00, 1.50 for Fri. & Sat. performances, $1.75, 1.25 for all other performances; and for "Henry IV, Part Two," to be presented Mon. throuah Sat., May 7-12, 8:00 p.m. Trueblood Aud., Frieze Bldg.. at $1.75. 1.25 for Fri. & Sat, performances, $1.50, 1.00 for all other performances. Mail orders may be addressed to Uni- versity Pinvers, Mendelsohn TheQtre, with checks payable to University Plav- ers and a self-addressed, stamped en- velope. Summary of Action Taken by Sfvident Government Council at its Meeting of March 14, 1962 Annroved: Minutes of the previous meeting. Adopted: That Student Government Council arant temnorary reenonition for one year to the Colleryiate Club of the University Reformed Church. Defeated: That the Council end a letter iurP'inP_ ti 4Pnts to isnthv their books were "The Ugly American," "The Scotsborough Case" and a book of stories by Richard Wright entitled "Eight 'Men." The "Ugly American" provides some justifi- cation for the integration litera- ture charge; after all it is about a white American working with some South East Asians. * -4' * "WHAT IS criminal anarchy?" It is a nice little all-inclusive law designed to take care of people who "advocate doctrines leading to the subversion of the state of Louisiana." Its a little bit like "conduct unbecoming a student" but the penalties differ. The Louisiana law provides for 10 to 30 years on a road gang. Bond for McDew and Zeller was set at $7,000 each. By this time, SNCC had gotten together with different sources and raised the money. After 11 days in jail they were released. Diamond- was still in the pit. On Tuesday, the three of them were arraigned in Baton Rouge. Zelner and McDew were formally chargedwith criminal anarchy, to which they both pleaded innocent. The trial date was set for May 28. They were given back the $1,000 bond each they had posted on the vagrancy charge. Diamond, for some reason, was luckier. The state charged him with disturbing the peace. He will be tried next month. THAT ZELLER and McDew will be convicted is virtually a forgone conclusion. From there the con- viction must, beappealed through several Louisiana courts 'before it can reach the lowest federal court. Thus the two men face a mini- mum of two to four years in prison before they will have even a faint chance of having their conviction overthrown. Meanwhile they will spend their time working on a Louisiana road gang. Zellner especially will have it rough. He is, unfortunately, white. The Southerner's attitude towards the Negro is that he is a trouble- maker, but he can be intimidated or kept in a hole out of sight. Zellner is different; he repre- sents the crack in the dam of hatred separating the two races that could eventually lead to the dam's destruction. He is not just someone who can be thrown in jail and forgotten about. They must make an example of him which will keep any Southern white from ever challenging the existing order. * * * MEANWHILE, SNCC will keep working and the freedom buses will ride; trying to discover Amer- ica, that legendary country where freedom, brotherhood and justice are supposed to live. And on their search they will pass along a dusty road with a road gang work- ing along its side. One can only hope that if the bus is successful in its search these men will hear about it. Justification A CATHOLIC theologian and a Protestant Episcopal minister WUOM RECORD RELEASE: Power fulOres tes Part of a Series? HE ENVELOPE for WUOM's new album of Euripides' Orestes gives no clue to what almost any listener will want to know immediately: Is this a single shot, or are we to have more? If the album is to stand by itself (which 'it does, very nicely), "Orestes" seems an odd choice.. Its warmest admirers have justified its screaming melodrama and weird ending (Orestes is killing Helen's innocent da hter and Electra is firing the palace, when Apollo suddenly descends and everyone gets married) either by claiming Euripides meant it as a joke or by assuming textual corruption. But no one, at least after this reading,- will deny that many scenes are extraordinarily powerful. William Arrowsmith's introduction, not so much a defense of the play as of his translation, is both printed on the jacket and read on the record by Professor Arrowsmith himself. His reading adds absolutely nothing, especially since he sounds not quite familiar with the words. His translation has no serious rival, but the history of Euripides in English is too sad for that to be a compliment. 2. P. Coleridge made Helen's confused Phrygian slave .cry, "Alack, alack! oh! whither can I fly, ye foreign dames . . .?" etc. Arrowsmith renders this, "jump down boom! below, Oh, oh. Where can run, where go? Mebbe foreign ladies know?" This is more clever on paper than when heard. It is, of course, better than the other, but, it is not enougl; to be better than E. P. Coleridge. Arrowsmith is good, in places brilliant, but he lacks any gift for the lyrical; his choruses are long speeches. The whole production is beautifully timed. If it remains a stage play put on records, rather than a performance for recording, this Is after all what it tries to be. Jerry Sandler's direction is more than competent throughout and often succeeds in bringing across a sense of action hadly possible without a physical stage. The final scene, just before Apollo's entrance ex machina, is tremendously effective., * * * * THE CAST is generally excellent. The voices are not only good, but distinct from one another in quality and in manner. Marvin Diskin, as Orestes, is by turns sick, vicious, loving, cowardly and insane-all without making the single character unbelievable. Nancy Heusel wisely underplays Electra where she can, so that when her time comes to rave, she has nower to snare. Victnr Dial and