r g j~jiga faix 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. THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAM HARRAH Disgusting Quad Experience Calls for University Action PERHAPS the most disgusting experience on campus these days is a meal in the men's residence halls. A recent lunch saw one student scrape the residue of his main course into his neighbor's milk glass, while a second student drank his soup directly from the bowl. What he didn't finish of it got poured alternately on the table and the floor. It is nothing unusual to see dishes with food overturned on the tables, or milk soaked napkins flying through the air, or students spitting food and beverage at one another, or eating with their hands. T HE LANGUAGE is far from obscene-it is down-right pornographic; salt shakers fly through space with the greatest of ease, diners carry on their conversations audibly- between tables several yards apart. Students precariously balancing trays make their way down the close aisle between tables while their seated cohorts make every effort to jostle, trip, poke, or otherwise upset them. Dishes are broken, trays carelessly tossed about, and any woman who ventures in can hardly anticipate what type of reception she will encounter. THE STATE OF UNDRESS of the diners is appalling. Shirts are often unbuttoned half- way to the wearer's navel; pants, tighter than the skin on a peach, are usually dirty. They often don't wear socks. Honesty EVERY ONCE IN AWHILE in the complex world of politics, there comes along an honest politician, a man who will think out his stand on an issue and then stick with it and fight for it, no matter how unpopular his opinion might become, because he believes he is doing what is best for his government. And regardless of whether or not one agrees with such a man, one cannot help but admire his courage, when he must turn against his party, his friends and his constituents to make peace with himself. It is not easy to go out 'on a limb for some- thing you believe, especially, when there is tremendous pressure to stay within the fold. Such a situation has existed in the State Senate this year, and two men, Senators Stan- ley Thayer of Ann Arbor and Frank Beadle of St. Clair, found they had to oppose many of their Republican colleagues, to back an income tax package which they felt would help better the State of Michigan. B TH MEN found their actions quite un- popular, and they were both the object of numerous attacks. But they did not waiver, because they believed in a principle. The people of Michigan need not agree with these men, but they should be proud to know that there are politicians in their state gov- ernment who put a principle ahead of political expediency. As long as they serve, regardless of what tax is passed, Michigan will not be lost. -MICHAEL HARRAH, This is the usual, run-of-the-mill state of the situation, except on those rare evenings in some halls when students are required to dress in a coat and tie. This they do reluc- tantly, complaining and lobbying hard to get this last bastion of respectability eliminated too. In a college community there should be no excuse for anyone to eat in an atmosphere that would disgrace a pigsty. Surely these same students who wallow in each other's food in the quadrangles would have a knock-down, drag-out fight on their hands if they attempted their antics at home. YET THEIR SLOVENLINESS suggests an incredible lack of breeding-a quality which, if they have not overcome it by the time they get to Ann Arbor, the University should wring out of them. In spite of the laissez-faire, "let-us-go-to- hell-our-own-way" attitude to which many members of the student body subscribe, the University must realize that it has a respon- sibility to the rest of the world, upon which it will soon thrust these social boors, to turn out something that might be half-way respectable. And this responsibility the University must pursue even if it means the strictest type of discipline on record. THERE IS NO REASON on earth why these swine of the meal line should be allowed to create an atmosphere that does discredit to themselves and the University. They do not own the University; nor is the University honored by their presence., The Roman Catholic Bishops of the United States have issued a call to "stop the en- croachment of barbarism by deed and af- firmation . . The bishops describe as moral apathy the fact that American young people care not about the little decencies that make society bearable. It is moral deterioration. PERHAPS there is no logical reason for Americans to continue to live up to the standards of decency. True, they could exist like a society of animals, refusing to resist any desire or whim that overtook them. But such a society wouldn't be a very pleasant place to live. As an institution of higher learning, the University cannot permit this. Its educational responsibilities extend beyond the classroom, As a society we have come a long way in becoming civilized and refined. This was not a happenstance. It occurred only because people constantly battled the elements in so- ciety that wanted to mongrelize the human race. It only happened because someone insisted on decency and morality. THE UNIVERSITY must insist on this too. Above the presidium that frames Angell Hall is an excerpt from the Constitution of the State of Michigan, which, reads in part: "Religion, morality and education being necessary .. ." Morality-the University is committed to it. Perhaps it had better start enforcing it. The dining rooms would be a good place to start. -MICHAEL HAR14AH -Acting City Editor I.- . .. ~ 4* *~4~'~.* * * ~%.* ,...w, * A .. I ~ * * f 7e...,....7 %J~? .. ~-.. ... .4'.* F' * * *-~ -. - . 7i5* * d ~ '7 ~-- a. * if-.- * ,."*'~%a. ~ . 7... 8' ** * * *i'~.-~ / #.~ * .. .%'. -..j%*. * . , , .. . * - ... .~4 # '~ 4 * -~' * / ..... * .,' . ' *7~N~- 4 .. 'a' *.~.. * * ,. * d * ..~. II. . S .' * . V I, 4 *.. V. 4...@ ~/ 5- / * 7 ~0 4. . . . 5/. - / *e #5 ..*' . .' 4... .. . . / *** 5*. /1 ~- ~ * 5.. 4 0. '-S 4. 5. -t. .. S. - - ° * ®It2.St. Loudpoi4-t iSp&~t ,q S ~oWtEKS LEGISLATIVE APPORTIONMENT: Majority Rule Doesn't Prevail PREVIEW: .festival To Open: Varied Format Set T HOSE RESPONSIBLE for the May Festival programs are to be applauded on their choice of works for the 69th Festival. A wide variety of composers, forms, formats and styles is presented by the Philadelphia Orchestra, conducted half the time by Eugene Ormandy, and a fine roster of soloists. "Who's guilty," used at the bridge table, is a jocular expression meaning roughly, who dealt this mess? Here it is no joke. Some very good cards are distributed into six "hands" in a manner which comes perilously close to obscuring their excellence with imbalance. "Six 'theme' programs distinguish this year's series .. " says the Festival flyer-perhaps the pun of the year. To think that a musical program needs an explicit "theme" to make it palatable! The chosen "themes" are all restrictive in nature and result in each concert's comprising a narrower range of music than a random arrangement might have provided. Fortunately the music is generally of sufficient stature to survive an evening's over presentation; still, the idea is not felicitous. * * * TONIGHT'S PROGRAM presents contrasting works by Beethoven, theme for the day. The "Overture to Coriolanus" is probably the hardest work to begin with. Portraying the agony and indecision of Coriolanus with shifts between irregularly accented chords and a luscious singing string theme, Beethoven demands tremendous pre- cision from the orchestra and a delicate balance of nervous tension and lyricism from the conductor. To my ears only the late Wilhelm Furtwangler has properly projected this work, on discs, at any rate. In a calmer mood, and well suited to the Philadelphia strings, is the Pastoral Symphony, showpiece for the long phrase and the gradual decrescendo. After intermission Byron Janis returns to May Festival, moving up from the Rachmaninoff third, which he performed in 1956, to the Beethoven third. The "C Minor Concerto" is the most outwardly dramatic of the five. Between the almost classic first two and the subtle fourth and grandiose fifth, it is Beethoven in transition-in growth and power. * * * * THE FRIDAY CONCERT consists of compositions of two con- temporary English composers of quite different character. William Walton's music is by turns brittle and lush, often laced with clever humor. Ralph Vaughn Williams writes in a quieter, more subtle vein. None of the three works on the program is well known; only the first, "Partita for Orchestra" by Walton, has even been recorded: This work is followed by excerpts from Troilus and Cressida, an opera by the same composer. Phyllis Curtin and Richard Lewis are the soloists. After intermission appears the cantata "Dona Nobis Pacem" by Vaughan Williams for soprano, baritone, chorus and orchestra. The soloists will be Phyllis Curtin and Donald Gramm. The entire concert will be conducted by Thor-Johnson. THE GENERAL LEVEL of Saturday afternoon May Festival concerts has been raised considerably since the elimination of the agglomerated children's chorus, which,. on one afternoon I shall not soon forget, reduced the proceedings to recitations from "Alice in Wonderland." Despite the improvement, this concert is almost a children's concert, with light music by a set -of French composers: Gretry, Lalo, Milhaud, Francaix and Ravel, all of the second rank. Center of interest of this program should be the "Flower Clock for Oboe and Orchestra" by Jean Francaix. Most recent composition of the afternoon and by the youngest composer represented, there is at least hope that it will rise above the level of the remainder. The concert will end with a loud enough bang in the form of Ravel's "La Valse" to clear the air for the evening program. These proceedings have been V . .tin the hands of, the associate conductor, William Smith. * * * *i FROM THE CHILDREN'S CONCERT we move for Saturday night to old war horse corner. Curiously none of the thrice familiar numbers on the program has been played here recently, so this is a fine time to hear all the old favorites that nobody has played for so lon because they are always over-played. A fine opportunity. As a matter of fact the opening work, Stravinsky's "Fireworks," has never appeared in this series. Prokofieff's "Classical Symphony," second on the program has been absent for 10 years. The closing work, Tschaikowsky's "Pathetique," has, mirabile dictu, not graced our ears in 18 years. Just before intermission, Jerome Hines will sing excerpts from "Boris Godonov," a familiar enough role for him; but this time he will sing it in Russian, a new twist, in preparation for his forthcoming appearance at Moscow's Bolshoi Theatre. Sunday afternoon Thor Johnson resumes the helm to present Dvorak's unfamiliar "Requiem Mass." Composed between the popular "G Major" and "New World" symphonies, it was completed in 1891. I refrain from comment on this work, as I have never heard it. The "theme" for this concert is Dvorak. EUGENE ORMANDY will direct the final performances of the season on Sunday night. Three works by Richard Strauss constitute the program. Within that restriction, the programmers have achieved about as much variety as possible. "Don Juan," in performance nearly as often as the fabled Don himself, is the opener. Next Gyorgy Sandor, new chairman of the University's music department, will perform the "Burlesque for Piano and Orchestra," a great show-piece for piano and tympani. Mr. Sandor is perhaps best known for his Bartok recordings and performanaces, including a May Festival performance of the "Second Concerto" in 1958. But his superb recordings of Brahms show that his artistry is not one-sided and lead to high expectations for, this 'performance. The evening and the festival conclude with the slightly bombastic "Ein Heldenleben," with Anshel Brusilow taking the solo violin part. In prospect this looks like a particularly good set of concerts. See you there! -J. Philip Beukard LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Comments on Taxation a By MARK BLUCHER Daily Staff Writer (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is first in a three-part series on portionment.) the ap- )N FEBRUARY 7, the minority members of the Legislative Or- ganization Committee, consisting of seven Democrats, filed their proposal on state apportionment with the Constitutional Conven- tion, having decided that the majority proposal was not a sig- nificant enough reappraisal of Michigan's representative system. (In 1952 an amendment to the constitution was passed that froze the present Senate districts into the Constitution. This, in effect, made it impossible to reapportion the Senate districts which had not been changed since 1925.) Included with the minority re- port were reasons in support of its proposal. "We dissent (from the majority proposal) on the grounds that they are wrong in principle and in practice. The minority ac- curately perceived the growing need for a new apportionment formula for the legislature. * * * FIRST, MAJORITY rule does not prevail. A majority of the members of the legislature repre- sent a minority of the people of the state. As a result, some votes have been arbitrarily magnified while others have been -arbitrarily diluted. Second, since 1950, 10 legisla- tive bodies have been elected in Michigan (five Senates and five Houses of Representatives). On the basis of the popular vote the con- trol should have been split, with each party holding the majority for one-half of the time. In fact, all 10 legislatures were Republi- can. Thus, the legislature is, at once, biased against Democratic voters and unresponsive to public opinion. Further, a minority of rural Republican legislators have had the power to block any legislation while no other minority can ac- complish this feat. The over-all results of the present system is to cause a failure of both effective state government and popular sov- ereignty. SBX Needs Expansion The apportionment problem is especially acute in the Senate. In the past four elections the popu- lar vote for Republican Senators ranged from 46.7 per cent ,to 50.2 per cent. Yet, in every case, the Republicans had control by nearly two to one majorities. * * WITH THE PRESENT Sena- torial districts 'frozen' into the constitution due to the 1952 amendment, the deviation from equality of representation has gone from 6.5 to 1, after the 1952 amendment, to a present 12 to 1 deviation and a possible 28 to 1 variance by 1975 if no change is made. By freezing the Senatorial dis- tricts, the Senate has not re- sponded to changes in the voting pattern. Only one district in the state has 'swung' from one party to the other in state-wide elections during the past ten years, although DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 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. THURSDAY, MAY 3 General Notices Fulbright Awards for university lec- turing and advanced research have been announced for 1963-64 in Europe, the Near East, Far East, Africa and South Asia. Those applying must be U.S. citizens; for lecturing, must have a minimum of one year of college teac- ing experience; for research, a doctoral degree or recognized professional stand- ing; in certain cases, a knowledge of the language of the host country. For appli- cation forms and additional informa- tion write to: Conference Board of As- sociated Research Councils, Committee on International Exchange of Persons, 2101 Consttution Ave., Washington 25, D.C. Deadline for filing an application for these countries is Aug. 1, 1962. In- formation is also available locally at the Fellowship Office, 110 Graduate School. Dr. Harry Doukas, Program Director for National Science Foundation Grad- uate Fellowships will be available from 11 a.m. to 12 noon on Wed., May 9. in 118 Rackham Bldg., to meet any 1961-62 or 1962-63 N.S.F. Fellows who have problems they wish to discuss. Advance appointments are not neces- sary. Events The Henry Russel Lecture will be de- livered by Herbert C. Youtie, Research Prof. of Papyrology, Thurs., May 3, at 4:15 p.m., in the Rackham Amphithea- ter. His lecture topic is "Papyrologist: Artificer of Fact." Public Lecture: "Unity and Variety In Medieval Political Philosophy," will be discussed by Muhsin Mahdi, Asst. Prof. of Arabic, University of Chicago, on Fri., May 4 at 4:10 p.m. in Aud. C. Astronomy Department V I si t o r s' Night. Fri., May 4, 8:30 p.m., 2003 An- gell Hall. Dr. Dean B. McLaughlin will speak on "The Surface of Mars." After the lecture the Student Observatory, fifth floor, Angell Hall, will be open for inspection and for telescopic ob- servations of a double star and cluster. Children welcomed, but must be ac- the party distribution has changed greatly. Under the minority proposal for the senate the state would first be divided into four zones. One dis- trict would be allocated to each zone, and then 15 additional dis- tricts would be distributed among the four zones on the basis of their respective populations. * ,* CONSEQUENTLY, EACH zone would be divided into the number of districts it has been assigned with the population of the re- spective zones divided as nearly equally as possible among the dis- tricts assigned to each. Each of the 19 single member districts would select one person from each of the major parties to represent that district in the Sen- ate for the next two years. In other words, each political party may nominate only one person as can- didate for senator from each dis- trict, and the voter may vote for only one of thesecandidates. The two candidates receiving the high- est number of votes will be elected. Provision is made for the elec- tion of a third party candidate receiving at least 25 per cent of the total votes cast for senator in any one district. In the body of the Senate each senator will have a vote equal to the number of votes cast for him in the election. This holds true only if a senator de- mands, and receives support, for a roll call vote. * * * THE BASIC OBJECTIVE of the minority Proposal was to provide bipartisan representation for every district of the state, to make the Senate a body that would respond precisely to the popular will giving equality of representation to all voters regardless of where they may live, and to guarantee effec- tive representation for all areas whether sparsely or densely pop- ulated. The Senate "has lost all contact with the principle of popular sov- ereignty and is tending toward a condition having no resemblance whatever to popular sovereignty or representative government ... We must return to popular sovereignty and .equal representation if we are to have effective government in Michigan," the minority report said. 85% Cheaper SINCE the House of Representa- tive's voted to double the money and triple the representatives of the Peace Corps in overseas as- signments, it is interesting to note a report of one of the well-known but smaller religious denomina- tions on its missionary program, which in some ways parallels the Peace Corps activities. At a time when the Peace Corps had something more than 400 rep- resentatives in the field (the num- ber has since grown to 698), it was noted that the Corps was operat- ing on a budget of $30 million. At the same time, the world missions program of one Protes- tant denomination had -an equal number of missionaries in the field whn wr finnced by bud- THE STUDENT Book Exchange may not exist next year. No one has petitioned for manager. But this is not the only problem. SBX is on a dead-end street because no one is willing to support it. Students don't make use of. a service that could save them 20 per cent on the cost of books. Student Government Council has not played an active role in supporting the SBX, but instead has merely acted in a routine, organizational capacity. The Regents have further restricted the SBX by not permitting it to sell books and supplies out-right. Christopher Cohen, assistant manager of the SBX, says the real problem is the Regent's Bylaw, passed in 1929, which states that the Regents will not "encourage or approve the establishment of cooperative mercantile or- ganizations within University buildings." HE ADDED that the SBX could really be a service to the University and a going con- cern if it weren't for the Regents' restrictions. Actually the Regents' limitation on the SBX is inconsistant with the fact that there are other cooperatives in University buildings on campus right now. The University pharmacy, located in Health Service, the Union, League and residence hall snack bars, the Union barber shop, rooms and bowling alleys are all perfect examples of "mercantile organizations" which receive University sanction and com- pete with Ann Arbor merchants. B1nsiness Staff CHARLES JUDGE. Business Manager Certainly, if SGC were interested in helping the SBX become the valuable student service it could be, Council could put pressure on the Regents to rescind its unfair and restrictive policy. Council ought to re-evaluate the book ex- change concept and support a new student book service which would sell supplies and texts outright. Council cannot do this without strong student support. SGC AND THE STUDENT BODY as a whole could also help out by getting volunteers to clerk for one or two hours a semester. Cohen emphasized that he didn't mind do- ing the organizational work, but that Council couldn't expect to get a m'anager who would be willing to do all the clerking too. A new, more central location would be another boon to the book exchange. An attempt has been made and rejected to get the multi- purpose room of the undergraduate library between semesters. Some more convenient place must be found to help the students to help themselves save money. Last semester the SBX showed real promise of a successful future., It handled twice as many books, accounts, money and students as the previous semester. This service should not be permitted to die. -GAIL EVANS Gentleman's C THE SENATE is currently considering a bill on literacy qualifications for voter regis- Education "THE OPPONENTS of federal direction have good reason for their wariness. Control in some form-intentional or otherwise- has long'accompanied federal aid, largely because Congress tradi- tionally grants such aid only for specific purposes. The National Defense Education Act, for example, gave a huge financial boost to science and for- eign language study, but as a re- sult many schools simply skimped on history and English-a clear case of "federal control" to critics. The only answer, says Executive Secretary William G. Carr of the National Education Association, is for Congress to give aid without strings, and "trust the integrity, patriotism and good judgment of local and state school boards and administrators." pnr,. +M hat hrinr uiv or thers To the Editor: PERHAPS I am writing this let- ter in vain. I am afraid so. I am afraid that too many people are going to go on believing in the sheer stupidity of Michael Harrah. Nevertheless, I feel compelled to comment on his last editorial which expressed views similar to those which killed the state in- come tax this week. About two and a half years ago, when the state had no money to pay its employes, whenathe poor where suffering more and more from the nuisance and food taxes, when industry threatened to move away from Michigan because of its out-moded and unfair financial demands, one Republican Senator bluntly announced in the Legisla- ture "Michigan has no real finan- cial problem." And so they continued their old and crippled policy which had produced the situation in the first place until today the problem is worse than ever. M * Now let's see what would happen to the state if we were to go without teachers and subsidies, fire or police protection, sanita- tion and hospital facilities, (and other state-provided benefits) for two weeks while we simply put ourselves in the black. -* * * I KNOW PERSONALLY (and there must be more) of four non- partisan economic committees ap- pointed by the Legislature and the governor to study Michigan's tax problems. Composed of some of the most learned economists in the country, they all agreed that an income tax would be the best and fairest tax. Yet the Republican- dominated Legislature disregarded their own, advisors and voted exactly opposite. * * S I HAVE NOT even scratched the surface of all the irrational tactics employed by those, like Harrah. For the moment, it is too late anyway. The income tax is dead and Michigan will suffer in-