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. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: 0b1 AY, APRIL 29, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: FRED RUSSELL KRAMER Daily-Board Clashes Could Be Avoided AN EARTHQUAKE is now in progress. It is shaking the very foundations of The Daily. These foundations-the basic facts of The Daily's existence-have been the source of continuous and profound debate during the past eight days. When the earthquake is over, if The Daily is still standing, these basic facts which are The Daily's foundation, must emerge clear and well-defined, in the hope that future tremors may be avoided. This editorial is an attempt to pin down these facts. T HE UNIVERSITY is the publisher of The Daily. It owns and is ultimately respon- sible for it.'A publisher, since the publication is his, makes all decisions regarding its nature. The University then, may print a newspaper of any description, a magazine, a public- relations sheet, a comic book or anything else it wishes and call it "The Michigan Daily." It may also set up whatever arrangement strikes its fancy in order to get the thing produced. If the Regents want to run the whole opera- tion, they have the right. If they choose to delegate any or all of those roles, they may do so in whatever direction and under what- ever conditions they choose. So much for the publisher's right. What of his obligations? AS LONG AS he is the whole organization, the publisher of course has no internal obligations. But when people other than the publisher are brought into the organization, he has responsibilities to them. His obligation is this: it is his paper and he may set up the conditions, restriction and benefits under which these others will work and anyone who comes to work must agree to these conditions. But once he sets them up he must abide by them. If the publisher breaks an agreement or alters it without consent of the others, they have the right , to use whatever legitimate means are at their disposal to force the publisher to live up to his agreement. We have said that the University, meaning the Regents, is The Daily's publisher. All pre- ceeding remarks about the rights and obliga- tions of a publisher therefore apply here. NOT TOO SURPRISINGLY, the Regents don't do all the publishing, reporting, editing, business managing, typesetting and press operating with their own 16 hands. In fact, they go to the opposite extreme, by setting up the Board in Control of Student Publications and giving it "authority and control" (Bylaw 31.04) over The Daily and other student publications. The Board, as publisher, chooses not to publish The Daily itself. It invites students to do the editing, writing and business managing of the paper. The stu- dents, too, join under an agreement, though its substance is very different from that of an employment contract, since students join for other reasons than earning wages. THIS AGREEMENT with the students is the Code of Ethics. In joining The Daily, a student in effect says, "I agree to abide by the Code of Ethics." He of course retains the right to .try to convince the Board to modify the code, but he nevertheless has pledged to act according to it while it is in effect. In effect, the Code of Ethics says that stu- dents have complete authority over the content of The Daily, within certain restrictions, which it procedes to describe. Since the senior editors are responsible for carrying out the code, the Board has a right to see that only students able and willing to handle this responsibility become senior editors. This fact justifies the power of the Board to make appointments. At the same time, the Board has guaran- teed to the senior editors that it will itself abide by the code. If it attempts to place restrictions upon The Daily which go beyond those in the Code of Ethics, it is violating its agreement and creating adequate grounds for protest. The student staff then has a right to fight this action by whatever methods it feels are best. A CLAUSE in the Code of Ethics reads: "The editorial page of The Daily shall be open to all points of view. Intelligent editorial ex- pression by all members of the staff shall be encouraged ... Freedom of expression grounded in fact shall be the editorial policy of The Daily." The fact is, however, that granting the Board the power to make appointments gives the Board an open door to violating this clause. It gives the Board the power-though not the right-to base its selections on any criteria it desires, including political views and attitudes. THIS POWER, if used to influence the political views of Daily editorials, is a violation of the freedom of opinion set by the Code. If the Board habitually appoints people to senior editorial positions whose editorials ar o a. a inar a . tn t-,ra ..a ... . lacefat., . +ha 4 the student staff of The Daily, by violating the freedom promised by the Code of Ethics. These powers of the Board emphasize that if the Code of Ethics is to be meaningfully enforced, the students must be assured of two things: First, that the Board does indeed make its selections by proper criteria (in other words, that the basic agreement is really honored); and second, that its decision has been reached with a knowledge as complete as possible of the petitioners involved in regard to their qualifications for the positions. The Board's good intentions are not enough. THE FIRST of these essential safeguards is completely absent from the appointments process. The new senior staff list emerges intact from a closed meeting. The staff can only guess at the rationale behind the selections, with its guesses predicated on whatever the appointees can deduce from their Board in- terviews, plus inaccurate rumors, plus in- accurate "leaks" by Board members. The second safeguard is provided to some extent by the recommendations of the out- going senior editors. They have been in the ideal position-due to several years' close con- tact-to evaluate the petitioners for the new senior staff. The seniors are not all-wise and should not be all-powerful, but their advice is essential to a wise decision. The present appointments process does not take full advantage of this resource. The out- going editor can simply present the recom- mendations to the Board, along with as com- plete evaluation of the petitioners as possible, and then must leave. If new questions arise later, he is not there to answer them, unless the Board sends for him, in which case he must present his views and then leave. To correct these conditions, we suggest three changes in the setup between The Daily and the Board, each of which would contribute to im- proving their relationship. 1 THE EDITOR of The Daily shoulld be made an advisory, non-voting member of the Board attending all its meetings. He probably should be required not to di- vulge the proceedings of these meetings, ex- cept by permission of the Board. During appointments, the benefit of his presence is obvious. He could provide advice and insight during the whole process, rather than just at the beginning of it. During the rest of the year, this same in- sight could provide the Board with a fuller understanding of The Daily, which could aid in all its deliberations regarding the paper. 2IF, DURING the appointment process, the Board is seriously considering appointing a staff differing from the seniors' recommenda- tions, it should call in the outgoing seniors to comment on the proposed changes, before they are finalized. If the Board considered the out- going seniors wise enough to make recom- mendations in the first place, should it not consider them wise enough to shed light on any proposed revisions? 3. The Board should draw up, before ap- pointments, a list of criteria on which it will select students for each senior position. Such criteria should include willingness to uphold the Code of Ethics, a degree of journalistic ability, knowledge of .The Daily and the Uni- versity, as well as the possession of the special- ized skills needed for a certain position. TO REQUIRE these skills is well within the limits of the code, since it states that Daily writing must include logical thinking, regard for facts, good journalistic practice, news judgement and other qualities which require definite abilities. The list should also specify certain criteria which may not be used, such as the person's political views and his private activities. The Board should then commit itself to the policy of giving the outgoing seniors and the petitioners for the posts a statement explain- ing its reasons for appointing a certain person to a certain post-explaining the appointment in terms of the previously-established criteria -in every case where a decision differed from the seniors' recommendation. This is not proposed as a device to give the senior recommendations absolute power nor is it a suggestion that the Board should be weakened. It is simply a necessary procedure if students on the staff are to know-as they have a right to know-whether or not the basic agreement, the Code of Ethics, has been maintained. If the Board members believe, as we feel they must, that this agreement must be maintained, and if they have no hidden motives in deviating from the seniors' recom- mendations, they should not object to this process. IT MIGHT BE argued that a semi-public declaration of the reasons for switching appointments would be painful to those in- volved. But if a person is dropped or moved to a lower position, the bruised feelings come mainly from this action itself and from hor- rible speculations as to the reasons for it- by the nerson involved and by the rest of the To the Editor: THE CURRENT working rela- tionships between Daily editors and members of the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications are regrettable to some of those sym- pathetic to the continued freedom and journalistic excellence of The Daily. After talking with both editors and board members about the current controversy, it appears that the underlying issues and forces involved are so largely con- cerned with individual personali- ties, ambiguous terms ("editorial freedom, authority") subtle psy- chological frustrations and power plays, that these issues do not suit themselves to short, public dis- cussion. But, a few general re- irarks may be appropriate. First, the Regents have given the Board authority to make edi- torial appointments, and have power. If the editors don't like given Daily editors none of this this, they can talk to the Regents about it. Is the legal power of the Board without bounds? It seems that if a Board decision was motivated by partisan political considerations, e.g., an attempt to appoint a Democrat, Republican, liberal or conservative, then this might be open to legal challenge as an ad- ministrative action at a state uni- versity. Otherwise, for the Board to concern itself with preventing libel and irresponsible reporting, or with making The Daily a better servant and leader of the commu- nity, does not seem beyond its power, but, indeed, within its duties. * * * BUT HOW should the Board ex- ercise this power and concern in light of its role on the University campus? In my opinion, not very often, not very much, only after every effort at cooperation and com- munication, only for reasons that make sense, and not to punish or prove authority. In the present controversy, the Board probably made a mistake in changing the well-thought-out recommendations of the senior editors in three respects. One fa- miliar with the internal operations of the paper must conclude that these changes will not alter the format of the paper measurably, they present personality conflicts best avoided and place persons in positions incompatible with their interests and talents, plus the fac- tor of setting off a major conflict between the editors and the Board. Though the motivation for the changes seems to be largely a sym- bolic power display, felt to be nec- essary after an accumulated per- iod of poor communication with Daily editors, it can at least be said for the Board that the poor communication was not mostly their fault. * * * BUT STILL the concerns of the Board should be different from those of corporation directors, for example, whose opportunities to command are unlimited. The Board has an educational role to allow students to mature by par- ticipation in the creative and re- sponsible acts of putting out a newspaper, not just any kind of newspaper, but a paper which, in terms of broad news coverage and editorial freedom, is probably the best you can find on an American college camnus. To provide students with mo- tivation to produce a great paper, and to provide the best environ- ment for maturehaction requires much of the Board in terms of diplomacy, forgiving, patience and respectyfor traditional freedoms that have been earned by respon- sible performance. Second, as for the student edi- tors. They should legitimately battle to protect The Daily's 71 years of editorial freedom, while also working to improve The Daily's service to its readers and potential readers in the campus community. If they can read the Regent's By-laws they will know that they must do these things in cooperation with the Board; if they are wise, they might well re- alize that this cooperation will make their editorial freedom more impregnable to those that would mute a free student press. NOW, someday there may be a Board unsympathetic with a free press, but the large majority of the present one is not. Many are hard working and have fair con- cern for avoidance of libel, respect for what is reasonable in the Code of Ethics, and a desire to improve the services of The Daily to a complex community readership, more than 40 per cent of which are graduate students, and many, faculty' The Board's concern for these matters should not be confused with restricting student freedom to print news or write opinion edi- torials. The latter is not properly an is- sue in the present controversy (witness the bold and critical edits by the junior and seniors editors of late), and, if the Board ever minesit arenr issue then will '-c t to Board members will be working in the best interests of the paper, if, instead of measuring their suc- cess by how much power they can secure for themselves, they mea- sure it by seeing how much they can togzther improve the essential business of the newspaper - pre- senting responsibly, broad news coverage and depth analysis, edi- torializing with maturity and in- telligence, and seeking ways to im- prove its service to readers. -James Elsman Jr., '62L Editorial Director, 1957-58 Board in Control of Student Publications Member, 1960-61 Implications , , To the Editor: WE WERE unhappily surprised to learn of The Daily's crisis. In particular, two implications for the newspaper's future con- cern us. The Beard in Control of Stu- dent Publications has served as a Board sAction valuable adjunct to The Daily - its existence has encouraged staff members to feel their responsibili- ties more deeply and it has acted as a buffer between the staff and. coercive or irrational elements in the community. We realize that the relationship of the Board to The Daily is formally ambiguous. but it rests on traditions of many years' standing which have ampli- fied the scanty formal statements. One of these "common laws" is that The Daily initiates propos- als to change structure and policy and that the Board accepts or re- jects these. Never has the Board taken, the initiative on either of these matters. Thus, the Board's proposal to establish co-editorial directors shakes the foundations of its historic relationship to The Daily, a relationship which has helped The Daily become a fine newspaper. * * * FURTHER, we fear that The Daily staff's morale has been badly broken by the crisis. It is very dif- ficult for the staff to reorganize after the normal appointments procedure; all staff members must learn new jobs and at the same time establish new working rela- tionships with each other. The present break with normal pro- cedure is discouraging this very important adjustment, with dele- terious effects on the immediate future of the paper. More importantly, the staff's future commitment to their work has probably lessened as a result of the crisis. Staff members have always felt- that their promotions would be based largely on the quality and extent of their work. These are the most important cri- teria which senior editors take into account in formulating their recommendations. With nearly half of the seniors' recommenda- tions disdained, in effect the role of experience in the granting of prestigious appointments is dis- "Where Do We Go From H~ere?" I dained. One motivation to work is lost. - * * ALSO, one reason why students continue to devote such extra- ordinary amounts of time and en- ergy to their work on The Daily is that they are trying to fulfill the role of a free press in a demo- cratic society. If they no longer feel free to report and editorialize on events they deem important - subject to the Code of Ethics and the laws of libel - then another attachment to their work is sev- ered. The recent editorials by the outgoing 'seniors and the present night editors indicate that the Board has created this feeling. We hope the Board will be able to ease the ruptures. -John Weicher, City Editor 1958-59 -Dale Cantor, Personnel Director 1958-59 -Joan Kaatz, Magazine Editor 1959-60 -Nan Markel City Editor 1960-61 --Thomas' Kabaker, Magazine Editor 1960-61 Dismayed To the Editor: HAVE READ with a great deal of dismay accounts of the pres- ent difference of opinion between The Daily senior editors and the Board in Control of Student Pub- heations. In the past, this Board has often acted to protect The Daily from outside pressures of various types, but apparently now the motives of the Board's actions are being questioned. When I served on the Board, several years back, the chairman was Professor John Reed. Prof. Reed was an administrator of the highest quality; he interpreted the Board's purpose and functions as primarily advisory, but had not hesitated to intervene in 1953 when the University administra- tion was considering the imposing of censorship on The Daily. In general, Board members were informally told that they were legally responsible for ap- pointing staffs of the various pub- lications, but that, in general, rec- ommendations of out-going staffs would be followed unless there was some good reason for doing oth- erwise. Several times in the past, people unfriendly to The Daily had been elected to this Board, but their attempts to re-direct poli- cies of The Daily were invariably stifled by the chairman. * * * BUT RECENTLY, it is said, Board members have begun to imagine that their main task is second-guessing staff aPpoint- ments. Board meetings usually last for several hours, business matters sort are considered at length, and of a more or less uninteresting it is not difficult to see why Board members. find it hard to resist a final fling where they attempt to substitute their judgemndnt for the judgernent of students. Since the rules are written so that the Board has final, rather than ad- vcmsry authority, ill-advised Board action is final. It would be unfortunate if the Bard were abolished since it has acted in the past to protect pub- lications from outside influence. But I hope that future Boards will not contain such a high proportion of people who forget their posi- tions and try to play student edi- tors. Department of Pharmacology. -David Kessel Harvard University Legality To the Editor: IN THE controversy over who is going to edit The Daily next year, I am oppressed by te fail- ure of the Board in Control of Student Publications and those who defend it to argue to the point. The chairman asserts the legality of their action when no- body had questioned it. A law pro- fessor should recognize that the law is sometimes ridiculous and everything that ,is legal is not necessarily wise. Nor is it any more to the point to argue that the students are sometimes irresponsible, foolish, unwise, and immature. As a teach- er, I have long since'come to ac- cept the fact that students some- times have something to learn. If they didn't, I would be out of a job. I have complained as much as the next man about The Daily (as a card-carrying Democrat, I would be happy if they demoted Mr. Harrah to copy-boy) and it is possible, even probable, that the Board's choices for the editorial staff are better than the staff's own choices. ** * EVEN SO, surely it is more im- portant that The Daily editors op- erate in an atmosphere of free- dom than that they be saved from making mistakes. We don't pro- duce maturity of judgment in stu- dents by telling them what to do, but rather by giving them the maximum possible rope to strangle their own foolishnesses with. Short of libel, I don't see any jus- fmifir tn . orstnnina Ter D aily d UNDERSCORE: New Military Rule Emerges By PHILIP SUTIN Daily Staff Writer THE IMPENDING full military take-over of the Argentine gov- ernment is another incident in an increasing trend toward military dictatorship in underdeveloped nations. Once confined to Latin America, this form of revolution and gov- ernment has spread as far around the world as South Korea. Military dictatorship is not new. It is probably as old as the civ- ilized state. When Caesar crossed the Rubicon and subsequently en- tered Rome, he defied the Roman barrier against military coups. * * *. UNTIL RECENT YEARS, how- ever, the military was merely the vehicle for an ambitious, power- seeking leader. This has changed. The old, South American "cau- dillo" military boss is gone. Tech- nicians in uniform have replaced him. Most military coups in under- developed nations fill a political vacuum. Many states now in army hands were launched by their former colonial masters as demo- cracies. However, Democracy prov- ed corrupt and inefficient. The government was not solving the staggering problems of industrial development, illiteracy, poverty and economic stability. These dif- ficulties were compounded by ma- jor and petty graft and favoritism which eroded what little national wealth existed. * * * THE CIVILIAN democracy was often weakened further by the cold war and American foreign policy. The Western view of these committed and semi-committed The overthrow of the Farouk re- gime by the Egyptian army 10 years dgo marks the first modern emergence of the military-tech- nician ruler. Only Turkey's Ata- turk had been a dictator of this type. Nasser, who eventually seized power, has proved to be transi- tion between the old and the new type of military dictator. He is as personally ambitious as he is concerned with his country's wel- fare. Personal and national ag- grandizement are uppermost in his mind. This sets him apart from the other Asian, African and La- tin American dictators who were to follow him. * * * 1955 MARKED the emergence of the new type in South America. Argentina, followed within two years by Venezula and Columbia, fell under the rule of the military technician. These leaders saw themselves as caretakers as the country shifted from a deposed dictatorship to a democracy. The military in all three countries kept their word; the government returned to democratic freely- elected hands. Thus a new role for the military was created. Today most military regimes claim-for the public rec- ord at least-to be caretaker re- gimes, saving the country from repressive dictatorship or inept Democracy. Between 1959 and the present, military rule has cut a swath across underdeveloped Asia. Tur- key, Iraq, Pakistan, Burma (twice), Laos and South Korea have fallen into military hands. Vietnam has thwarted attempts at military take-over. Sudan as well as Egypt are un- the standard of living at the ex- pense of his civil liberties. The government will be efficient and scrupulously honest as military regimes in Turkey, Pakistan, Bur- ma- and South Korea prove. The military will take an in- creasing role in the economy and will perform many other civilian functions as well. The country in all likelihood will prosper. * * * HOWEVER, there is a price. Civil liberties will diminish greatly both on a political and personal level. Military rule is basically authoritarian, the amount varying with the temper of the regime. This tolerance of criticism and democratic procedure ranges from virtually none in Egypt and South Korea to local Democracy in Paki- stan where the military "guided democracy" allows the populace to make village decisions under the imposed national rule of Ayub Khan. * * * MILITARY RULE, reflecting the ascetic officer tradition, is puri- tanical. Crime and corruption are contrary to the ethic of duty and, service that many military tech- nicians tenaciously hold. Thus corruption, wastefulness and in- efficiency usually trigger the coup and the new regime follows up its victory with a straitlaced house- cleaning. In South Korea this vengence has gone to the extreme of hanging businessmen for prof- iteering.j Military rule under the new breed of technicians has its mixed blessings and depends on the lead- er. This tenuous relationship is decidedly a retrogression in the political progress of the fledg- ling, underdeveloped country, for