Seventy-Second Year EDIEDA ND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIvERSrrY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are eS TUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail" Editdrials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. 'U' APPROPRIATION IN BALANCE: State Senate Battles over Tax Question JRDAY, MARCH 31, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL OLINICK Forced Integration Needed in the North IIGHT YEARS AGO the Supreme Court de- clared segregation in schools unconstitu- mnal. The South has hardly begun to cooper- e with the letter of the law and the North L3 adopted educational policies inconsistent th the spirit of the law. In one part of the untry, there is no mixing of the races be- use the law prohibits it; in the others, dis- imination in housing makes it impossible. It the results are the same-Negroes are evented from going to school with whites. This situation should not exist. Northern n-integration is just as harmful to the inority as Southern segregation. In its 1954 cision, the Supreme Court declared, "to parate (children) from others of similar e and qualifications solely because of their ce generates a feeling of inferiority as to eir status in the community that may affect eir hearts and minds in a way unlikely ever be undone." , The Northern Negro has the same feelings of feriority because of de facto segregation as es the Southern Negro because of de jure gregation. An attempt to alter the situation ould be made in the North as well as in the uth. Forced integration has, positive advantages well. First, a considerable amount of early ntact with another race helps to dispel ejudical feelings. Second, facilities would come truly equal if both Negroes and whites tend the same school. In addition, whites come aware that the only Negroes in the >rld are not janitors, maids and garage echanics. B UT THE OBSTACLES to change in the North are different from those in the South. The fight cannot be carried on in the courts, because no laws requiring segregation exist. The battleground for integration must bej the community itself. And most communities are opposed to integration in the schools be- cause of the cost and the transportation prob- lems involved. The amount of money spent on integration and the amount of "bussing" required depends both on the city and the type of solutions offered. In Chicago, a professor of education at the University of Chicago urged that racial quotas be set up for public high schools. Robert J. Havighurst recommended that the city school board require all public high schools to admit no less than 20 per cent and no more than 50 per cent Negro students. In Detroit, the transportation problems would be few and the expense would be small. This is because the pattern of segregated housing in Detroit often produces all-Negro neighbor- hoods closely situated to all-white neighbor- hoods. More Negroes could easily go to white schools with little difficulty. And it is not necessary to mix each. and every grade in every school. THE PROBLEMS of de facto segregation are not without solutions that can work. Educa- tien experts must get to work on the specifics. And the difficulties and expense involved would certainly be worth the correction of the social injustice going on in every small Southern town and every large Northern city. -RICHARD KRAUT Republican Regulars -14 Arthur H. Dehmel of Union- ville Charles S. Feenstra of Grand Rapids Lynn0.Francis of Midland Clyde H. Geerlings of Holland Clarence C. Graebner of Sag- inaw Perry W. Greene of Grand Rapids Frederick H. Hilbert of Way- land Harold W. Hughes of Prescott Harry R. Litowich of Benton Harbor Carleton H. Morris of Kala- mazoo Elmer R. Porter of Blissfield Joseph R. Smeekens of Cold- water Lloyd A. Stephens of Scott- ville Paul C. Younger of Lansing GOP Moderates (Solid)-3 Haskell L. Nichols of Jackson Farrell H. Roberts of Pontiac Stanley 0. Thayer of Ann Arbor GOP Moderates ('Wavering)-4 John W. Fitzgerald of Grand Ledge William G. Milliken of Trav- erse City Thomas F. Schweigert of Pe- toskey John H. Stahlin of Belding GOP Regular (Wavering)-1 Frank G. Beadle of4St. lair The Democrats-1O Charles S. Blondy of Detroit Basil W. Brown of Detroit Patrick J. Doyle of Dearborn Raymond C. Dzendzel of De- troit Garland Lane of Flint Charles O. McManiman of Houghton Stanley Novak of Detroit Philip O. Rahoi of Iron Mt. Stanley F. Rozycki of Detroit George H. Steeh of Mt. ClemensI Vacancy to be Filled- 1 (Due to death of William E. Miron, D-Escanaba) Election-Monday, April 2 Kent T. Lundgren (R-Men- ominee) Prentiss M. Brown, Jr. (D-St. Ignace) Vacancy not to be Filled-1 (Due to resignation of Harold M. Ryan, D-Detroit) By MICHAEL HARRAH Daily Staff Writer THE UNIVERSITY'S annual ap- propriation from the state has become the temporary victim of the current battle over taxes in the Michigan State Senate. Sen. Elmer Porter, chairman of the Appropriations Committee, has announced that he will take no action on any appropriations until the tax issue is settled one way or another. Sen. Haskell L. Nichols has serv- ed notice that he willask to have. Sen. Clyde H. Geerlings' Taxation Committee discharged from fur- ther consideration of all matters currently before it Monday night. It takes 18 votes to pull off such a manuever, and Geerlings frankly doubts Nichols can muster them. NICHOLS' SHOWDOWN Mon- day evening will be important, since it will prove once and for all whether there are enough votes to pass an income tax. All proponents of the income tax are expected to vote in favor of Nichols' motion, all opponents against it, because it is essentially the income tax which Geerlings refuses to report out for debate. In spite of Geerlings' confidence, Nichols could succeed. This would mean that al bills in the commit- tee would come onto the floor for debate, including the controversial statewide income tax. * * * - THE ISSUE is basically partisan, but a few Republican mavericks have been muddying up the waters. The Democrats-all 10 of them-favor the enactment of an income tax to provide the neces- sary revenue to get the state out of debt. The Republican Regulars -all 14 of them-favor nuisance taxes to accomplish the same pur- pose. The balance then hinges upon the votes of the remaining eight senators-seven Moderate Repub- licans, who have wavered back and forth on the tax issue, and Sen. Frank G. Beadle, who is currently working on an income tax proposal of his own. If the 14 Republican Regulars can muster just four more votes, they can block the Nichols maneu- ver, proving that a majority of the Senate is opposed to an income' tax. On the other hand, If the Democrats and the three Solid Republican Moderates can come up with five more votes, an in- come tax could pass the Senate Monday night. THE BALANCE of power among the Moderates lies with four sena- tors who have been wavering on the tax issue: John Fitzgerald, William Milliken, Thomas Schwei- gert and John Stahlin. In addition, Beadle, who is normally a mem- ber of the Regulars, could well be coerced into backing Geerlings for old times sake. If any four of these five sena- tors, the wavering Moderates and Beadle, side with Geerlings, the income tax issue is read. However, since it takes 18 votes to discharge the Taxation Committee, the Mod- erate-Democratic coalition would have to win all five of those votes. Anything short of that would give a victory to Geerlings by default. * * * AN UNKNOWN factor will be introduced on Tuesday, when the winner of a special election in the Upper Peninsula will be sworn in. The election Monday will be close, but Republican Kent Lundgren is given an edge. Ludgren, a con-con delegate, has not committedhimself on the tax issue, but his UP Republican col- leagues all oppose an income tax. Should he side with Geerlings in the future, the victory for the Regulars would be even more de- cisive. However, should Democrat Pren- tiss M. Brown, a Democrat down the line, win the special contest, the Democrat-Moderate coalition would be just that much closer to victory. * * * ON THE SURFACE, it appears that Geerlings will win. None of the four wavering Moderates rep- resent districts that sympathize with the enactment of an income tax, and Geerlings could make things rough for them in the elec- tion this fall, if he wished to. Also, Geerlings' defeat hinges on whether or not the Democrat coa- lition can scrape up every Republi- can who is undecided. And if the Republicans can't always get these GOP waverers, it won't be any easier for the Democrats to pull it off. 41 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Faculty Turnover And City Planning TODAY AND TOMORROW: Reapportionment Relief? Th e rrowingChoice By JOHN ROBERTS, Editor A COUPLE OF YEARS ago the Honors Steer- ing Committee circulated a questionnaire asking for comment on the desirability of Eonors housing. The idea was presented with profound ineptness, and Honors students voted its down three to one. Now the proposal has come up again, and many of the same objec- tions are, being raised against it. It is time these objections were given a critical scrutiny. The main reason people oppose Honors hiousing is that it smacks of elitism. Good democrats allA students bristle at any proposal which seems to accord special treatment to people merely because they were born with brains. Many students privately frown on the whole concept of an Honors program but con- ent themselves with the fact that Honors students are, at least, unidentifiable in the utside world. A scheme like Honors Housing brings out this latent disapproval by making Honors students conspicuous. It makes them nto an aloof aristocracy. And this grates on' he midwestern Populist bias. ANOTHER OBJECTION some students have to Honors housing is that it leaves the door open to brainwashing. This is the fear hat Honors housing would be a Brave New world where students' values and beliefs would be corrupted-the first step in the creation f a class of Alpha's. Recent proposals that the Jniversity "engineer" the extra-classroom en- rironment of students are grist for this mill. A final set of objections which hasn't come ip yet but probably will are the petty com- Ilaints from students who will be inconvenienc- d if Honors housing is instituted. The plan to )egin Co-ed housing next fall was torpedoed >artly by objections of this sort-some girls in klice Lloyd and the graduate students in East quad didn't want to move. If Martha Cook is xpanded and made into an Honors house as >ne plan suggests,, there is sure to be protest. The fact that there are objections does not nean the whole idea should necessarily be bandoned. Honors housing can be either rood or bad, depending on the reasons for which it is instituted. I2HE UNIVERSITY should provide as many alternatives as possible to the student who wants to experiment with different styles of ife. This means the University should remove mpediments to experimentation by a student with activities,, classes or housing. It should educe residence hall contracts to one semester, irculate information about various opportun- ties on campus, and be willing to grant re- earch or activities sabbaticals to students. The University should also take positive steps to reate new alternatives. Honors housing could e one such step. It is no secret that for most students Uni- ersity Residence Halls are intellectual deserts. lonors students are usually required to look cf;r * *al D il elsewhere for companionship. Some form into small knots, like the mathematics students who congregate in the South room of the MUG. Others drift into student activities. Many just do without intellectual relationships of any sort. There is no question that some of these students would prefer Honors housing to their present alternatives. This new alternative should be available to them. The argument that the University should not give special treatment to Honors students does not seem tenable from this point of view. Dozens of other groups get special treatment. Sports enthusiasts benefit from the University's sprawling athletic plant. The SAB was built for the minority involved in student activities. Graduate students can get, a carrell in the library. To deny that academically oriented students are entitled to some special facilities is both inconsistent and faintly anti-intellec- tual. BUT OF COURSE this oversimplifies the argument. I doubt that anyone would ob- ject to Honors housing if it were just a neutral service made available by the University to students meeting certain prerequisites. The issue is not the service but the intent. And the intent may be so objectionable that Honors housing should be rejected, or at least post- poned° until the University has rethought its goals. For several years the University has been ambivalent in its 'attitudes toward extracur- ricular activities. A Student Activities Building was erected and a Vice-President for Student Affairs brought in as evidence of their impor- tanance, and University announcements speak yaguely of the enriching benefits of activities if not carried too far. On the other hand, most faculty members see them as little more than distractions which interfere with the real busi- ness of getting an education. The latest indications are that the faculty viewpoint is winning out. Participation in ac- tivities is waning as the increased academic demands of the classroom force students to economize on their time. And judging from the comments of some of its proponents, the pro- posal for Honors housing is intended to add to the progressively academic orientation of the University. Many faculty members hope that getting students into Honors housing will keep them out of extracurricular activities. PLAINLY, HONORS HOUSING will be no neutral facility which a student joins if he is so inclined. The pressure to sign up will be considerable, and it will increase with time. Students in the house will also be under pres- sure-pressure to stay out of activities and devote all their time to academic concerns. The people who object to social engineering have a point. Students in Honors housing, finding extra-curricular activities impossible, would undoubtedly come around to the view that they are pretty unimportant anyway. It is time that somebody decided if student activities are worth saving. More importantly, it if +;ma enmPannp examined. the idea that To the Editor: IT IS WELL KNOWN, in and out of Michigan, that this state is having financial difficulties, and that these difficulties are affecting the University of Michigan. The University is increasingly becom- ing a rich vein for faculty recruit- ers to explore-over and above the usual competition for a good mind. There has already been a notice- able exodus from the faculty ranks. Of the present staff one group has already received tempting offers but tentatively refused them large- ly from a preference to live in Ann Arbor. There is a second group who also value their roots here but are beginning to consider other possibilities because of continu- ously overdue salary increases and the over-all tightness which af- fects the facilities they need to work with. The factor I am pointing to in this whole familiar picture is that Ann Arbor as a place to live has been a definite asset to the Uni- versity. It occurs to me that Uni- versity officials may be taking this for granted because they live here too, and so regard it as a "given." The city of Ann Arbor doesn't seem to have any understanding or concern with this. They talk "research center of the midwest" on the one hand, and with the other indulge in a commercial orgy which reached a peak in 1961. While presenting Ann Arbor as a pleasant place to live, and using the University to promote the idea of a good research environment, they are busily converting the city into a "little Detroit" in the most haphazard, unplanned, and taste- less way possible. Rezoning com- mercially and a preoccupation with weighty and profitable pro- jects such as liquor licensing seems to absorb them to the exclusion of any general, long-range planning. Little, if any, consideration is given to what kind of city will serve us best in the long run. Only one example, but a classic in its way, is the limited access, divided "bypass" highway which will slash through the northwest residential section of Ann Arbor next year if the strange "mar- riage" between our overwhelming- ly Republican city government and Democratic Mr. Mackie of the State Highway Department con- tinues. The location of this high- way was conceived some 20 years ago; consequently it now goes through one of the few "un- touched" corners of the city. The general fact that this is a pleas- ant, middle income housing area should be argument enough; the additional point here is that this area is heavily populated with both staff members and students of the University. I recommend, therefore, that the' University show some interest in the environment it thrives on. A few more shopping centers, ex- pressways, and "blob" restaurants and Ann Arbor will be no different from any other chromium-plated, discount-facial-tissue city in the country. It certainly cannot enjoy the reputation of being a uniquely pleasant place to live, a reputation it undoubtedly has among people who haven't been here recently. -Torry Harburg gLetters to the Editor should be typewritten, doubiespaced and lim- ited to 300 words. Only signed let- ters will be printed. The Daily reserves the right to edit or with- hold any letter.) By WALTER LIPPMANN IN HIS BRILLIANT and moving dissenting opinion, Mr. Justice Frankfurter called the decision of the Supreme Court in the Ten- nessee apportionment case "a massive repudiation of the ex- perience of our whole past in as- serting destructively novel judicial power." Coming from him, the most learned of the judges, and support- ed by Mr. Justice Harlan with h;is great legal wisdom, this strong language is enough to give pause not only to the layman but to the judges who will for a long time to come be working under this new finding. BEING A LAYMAN myself, I find it useful as a beginning to fix in mind the facts of the case which was started on its way to the Supreme Court by a group of citizens of Tennessee. The heart of the complaint was that the constitution of Tennes- see has been violated over a period of half a century, and that they are unable to obtain a remedy from the Tennessee courts, the Tennessee legislature, or by an election under the existing ap-, portionment. The constitution of Tennessee says that there are to be not more than 99 members of the House of Representatives and 33 members of the Senate. The General Assem- bly, which is the name of the whole legislature, is to allocate, at least every ten years, the seats among the counties or districts "according to the number of quali- fied voters in each." ALTHOUGH that is what the constitution says, ;there has been no reapportionment since 1901. In the intervening 60 years the legis- lature has rejected all bills to carry out the mandate of the con- stitution requiring a reallocation every 10 years. In Tennessee only the General Assembly can pass the legislation to carry out the law of the constitution. But the legislature, as now con- stituted, will not pass these laws. It nullifies the constitution, and no majority of the voters in Ten- nessee can make it obey the con- stitution. Fifty representatives elected by one-third of the voters control the Lowpr House and if there were a reapportionment ac- cording to the Tennessee consti- tution, 17 out of these 50 would lose their seats. Inside of Tennessee there is no remedy and the state is in the grip of a self-perpetuating rural minority. S* * * THIS SITUATION, which exists in several other states, means that there is no legal remedy for a very serious wrong. It is a very serious wrong that in the Ten- nessee Senate 20 out of the 33 members are elected by 37 per cent of the voters, and that in the House of Representatives 63 mem- bers out of 99 are elected by 40 per cent of the voters. It is a serious wrong because such a state legislature is not and cannot be sufficiently interested to deal with the mounting problems of the growing cities. * *, * MR. JUSTICE Frankfurter's comment on this crucial point is that "there is not under our con- stitution a judicial remedy for every political mischief, for every undesirable exercise of legislative power. The Framers carefully and with deliberate forethought re- fused so to enthrone the judiciary. In this situation, as in others of like nature, appeal for relief does not belong here (that is, in the Supreme Court). Appeal must be to an informed, civically militant electorate." If there is no judicial ,remedy for a serious wrong affecting the welfare of the urban masses, and if, as is in fact the case in Ten- nessee, relief cannot be had from the electorate, however informed and civically militant the majority may be, what happens then? If all the doors are closed, how do the city people of Tennessee get relief? It is always a dangerous situation when the doors are clos- ed against judicial or public or political relief and against peace- ful change. * * *' WHAT HAS actually happened is that the six justices, the rmaj or- ity of the court, have opened a little the one door of Federal jgdi- cial relief. They have opened it only a crack at the moment but there is no doubt that the two dissenting justices are, fully jus- tified in warning the country that if the door is opened wide, the courts may become dangeroilpy in- volved in state politics all aver the' nation. This would be an appailing thing to contemplate, to have Fed- eral judges drawn into becoming the arbiters of the political af- fairs of each state. ONE MUST CONCLUDE, I think, that we must not do again what was done after the 1954 decision in the school segregation case. We must not leave the ap- plication of' the new rule to hap- hazard local law units. There must be national leader- ship this time, and it should come from the President and from the Republican and Democratic lead- ers. The burden of working. uut the strategy and the tactics of the movement for fairer and more realistic representation should be on the politicians and not on the judges. (C) 1962, Now York Herald Tribune, Inc. ...-- a- - - -- p AT THE MICHIGAN: Miscast 'Majority' Still Comic ALEC GUINESS, looking about as Japanese as Winston Churchill, and Rosalind Russell, looking about as Jewish as Pat Suzuki, ooze across the screen for two hours and 15 minutes of sometimes-amusing silliness called "A Majority of One." In short, Russell, as a little Jewish lady who's never been west of Flatbush Avenue, goes to Japan and "discovers that all men are brothers under the skin. After convincing foreign-service oriented daughter and hubby, she and Guiness walk off into the sunset clutch- ing a bottle of Sake and a box of Smith Brother's cough drops. Plagued by such troubles as an oily Japanese houseboy in a leather jacket and a baseball cap, who drinks Cokes while reading comic books, love and inanity eventually score a dual triumph. The film's brightest moments come when it tries to be funny with such lines as "you're so bigoted you won't even eat a piece of bacon." * * * * WHILE THE HUMOR is often pointed, the moral is insipidly presented. Brotherly love is a tried and true theme for a movie and that's the big problem. It is presented in a trite and maudlin manner. Inspired by the financial success of the French New Wave, the producers couldn't justify filming a movie that is merely funny. Bells ring and trumpets sound as Miss Russell profoundly pronounces to her "enlightened" children, "Now who's bigoted?" But the movie is redeemed by the fact that the dialogue is only occasionally interrupted hb the nlot MV sz S+* V1 s "r+ l dr.^._.ya'