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. FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: CYNTHIA NEU Open Discussion Must Mark' Conference on the University YTEARS OF HOPE and months of planning de- The steering committee has provided a half signed to break down barriers of communi- dozen ways to work toward the goals of the cations and thought within this academic com- conference through the weekend's activities. Be- munity culminate today in the initial session of sides the working papers, three major addresses the first Conference on the University will be presented as well as a "summing up" Unlike previous attempts to bring faculty speech outlining the major ideas broached in members, students and administrators together the workshops. for a discussion of current and long-range Uni- The 11 workshop groups will meet in informal versity problems, this conference is well coffee hours tonight, in more structured discus- thought out and scheduled to provide several sions and for dinner tomorrow. different settings in which varied modes of discussion are offered. THE MOST IMPORTANT aspect of the con- Comprehensive working papers and factual ference-whatrhappenswhen it ends-has materials were sent to the 165 delegates well in been provided for, too. A committee of facul- advance of the conference meetings. The par- ty, administrators and students will be elected ticipants should be prepared to use these ma- at the end of this year's conference to research terials as a springboard to deeper analysis of proposals that were advanced, organize their the basic issues underlying the transient as implementation wherever possible and "gener- well as recurrent problems of the University. ally see to it that the ideas of the conference do not die Monday morning." THE AIMS of the conference are lofty and Complete reports of the discussion group will E Abe mailed to all participants, the University perhaps idealistic, but some semblance of President, the Senate Advisory Committee and them must be achieved if this University is to Student Government Council. be a great one. The conference can lead to ut a incrase comuncatons mon grupsoftn Asupposition ef the conference is tha al increased communications among groups often delegates are motivated by a concern for the working in isolation and mutual hostility. University and that each was selected because It can provide a bureaucratized means for in- he could contribute something meaningful to stropection on the University's soft spots and its improvement. improve planning for the campus of the future. If the conference is to achieve a minimal It could serve to accelerate the push towards goal of giving each delegate a greater under- the democratizations of decision-making and standing of the University and a broader to challenge the stereotyped thoughts of Stu- knowledge of what other members of his com- dent Government Council officers, department munity are thinking, each participant must chairmen and University vice-presidents. give freely of his ideas and his experience. The conference could formalize a mass means The ultimate success of this conference-and of utilizing the imagination of the professor the ones which may follow it-depends on how unwilling to carry administrative duties, the seriously the participants reflect on the con- urgency and freshness of thought of the tran- ference's discussions during the other 362 days sient student, and the continuity and knowledge of the year. Delegates have shown a willingness of implementation requirements that the ad- to participate in a discussion of the condition ministrator has. and direction of the University by accepting invitations and preparing working papers. THE TOPIC of the conference this year is "The University as an Elite Institution," a T CARRY FORTH the aims of the confer- subject which particularly demands study at ence, they must also be ready to speak cand- this stage in the University's history. There are idly about the University, at least for the next factors, within and without the institution, three days. If their expressions of opinion are pressuring both for and against the University's full and honest ones, all the delegates should maintaining an elite role. walk out of the conference charged with excite- Rather than let the University drift without ment and new ideas-and there would be no a purposeful orientation for another two dec- need to urge them not to forget about the ades, a conference of this kind might prove to weekend when they return to their normal be the commencement of significant and deci- duties on Monday. sive long range planning for the campus-plan- The steering committee has set up a struc- ning which incorporates in its result the ture which can yield this kind of conference. thoughts of all the community's component It is up to the delegates to see that it does. groups. MICHAEL OLINICK OSA IN TRANSITION: Student By ELLEN SILVERMAN Daly Staff Writer PART OF the intensive study of the Office of Student Affairs Study Committee recommenda- tions has been done by students, both present and past. Students have exerted their right to evalu- ate the Reed Committee report and recommend their own changes for the formation of the Office of Student Affairs. Alumni too have expressed their views on the or- ganization and structure of the of- fice. Like the recommendations of the Faculty Senate subcommittee, so do these reports warrant con- sideration. Jack Tirrell, editor of the Michi- gan Alumnus, the alumni monthly magazine, in a March issue edi- torial presented the view of the alumni. He wrote, "from a rapid survey of documents, it (the Reed Report) would appear to be the most complete statement on out- of-classroom activities in the his- tory of the University. For this the committee is to be commend- ed..." BUT, TIRRELL points out, al- though the committee concisely sets forth a philosophy of purpose, it must realize that "it is manda- tory that the responsibility and authority for nonacademic student affairs rest with one person. Tirrell sees the role of the vice- president as the one of authority within the structure of the OSA. He claims that "it is incredible that the lack of definition, respon- sibility and placement of authority has been permitted for such an extended period." He contends that the recom- mendation of the Reed Committee for a dean and associate dean of students will further a confusing delineation of authority in the OSA structure. In a discussion of rule making, Tirrell notes that he feels "the Regents and the administration havenprimary authority in this area and should not delegate rule- making or student discipline." * * * SINCE students are on campus for a shorter time than faculty or administration, and since their primary purpose is academic pur- suits, there is no need for them to "administer the institution." Tirrell says that it is a privilege to attend the University, Conse- quently, the Regents, administra- tion and faculty are responsible for establishing all of the rules in both the academic and non-aca- demic areas. Those who don't agree, he argues, should feel free to leave. As an alumnus, Tirrell of course has the right to voice his opinion and also should feel the necessity to do so. Alumni in all walks of life add much to the formulation of University opinion for they have much to contribute of their knowl- edge of the world and of their gen- eral fields. However, Tirrell seems to forget that once he was a student. In the history of education after 1870 students have always been known to react to their environment. John Dewey's philosophy was based on the assumption of the need of the student to participate. * * FOR THE most part, educators no longer align themselves to a philosophy of mere memorization of facts. Students today are en- couraged to voice their own opin- ions and discuss vital issues. This has been true for a long time, and just as Tirrell's generation prob- ably did, today's University stu- dents are debating campus issues. Denying the right of students to participate in activities which vitally concern them is an ex- tremely authoritarian position. Tirrell has the right to join his preferred activities and participate in the running of them; students ought to be allowed the sam That the Office of Stud fairs should be run underi thority of the vice-preside just contention; any office the University structure g ultimate authority from t gents and must be respon them. But some student pa tion within an organizatio cially designed for stud needed. This implicit assumption dent participation in stud tivities has been asserted report by Student Gove Council on the study co recommendations. In its r SGC notes "the Council that the University, in p its educational goals, shou cern itself with the extr room experiences of its s It hopes, however, that t not be taken to encourage i er expansion of the insti role in the personal lives students." "NEITHER Council nor else asks 'absolute reign' f dents," the report notes.3 SGC recommends that should be a single admini officer, the vice-president,: sible for extra-curricular ties of the students. But S that a council of students a ulty be maintained to ad vice-president concerning and programs: "Student Government objects to 1) the confusion is with what should be, 2) t of recognition that servic be based on social consci LETTERS EDITOR Separation .. . To the Editor: WAS startled to learn t Board in Control of Publications has seen fit into the delicate area of a ments to The Daily staff. The Michigan board, a student publications boar deniably has the power t these or any other appoit to The Daily staff. * * * HOWEVER, it has beco ditional on most America puses where freedom of t dent press has come to( all to establish and nurtur uous but workable separe the student newspaper controlling body. This se has proved necessary due unique situation of the press: it cannot exist inde of the university or in ma of the student governmen must be free, able to oper editorialize without fear o al. The student press ca compared with the con press, as so many are won The student press is notr ed by profit; students do student newspapers for t ger pay received. * * * THUS, a tradition, to s tent extra-legal, has evol suring freedom of the press. It has evolved beca necessary in a free society The Board in Control its trust when it ar shufiled Daily appointme upset the traditional prote The Daily from governme terference. I can only ho the Board will realize i for it alone can rectify t take. -Mark D. Acuff National Coord Student Editori Affairs Confere: Groups e right. and that all students should be ent Af- encouraged to interest and involve the au- themselves in the government of nt is a the community, 3) the lack of rec- within ognition of the importance of stu- ains its dent privacy, 4) the implicit low he Re- appraisal of student capacities, 5) sible to the delegation of responsibility rticipa- based on the public's perception of n espe- accountability, and 6) the distinc- ents is tion between the University and its students," the report notes in dis- of stu- cussing the philosophy of the study ent ac- committee report. by the The Council would have pre- rnment ferred a statement of philosophy mmittee which is "less condescending, more eaction, sensitive to the needs and prob- agrees lems of students, more cognizant ursuing of the benefits to the University ld con- and society of extensive student a-class- authority to make decisions and tudents. more concerned with development his will of attitudes of critical examination mprop- and social responsibility." tution's SGC recommended a structure of its for the Office of Student Affairs which includes a vice-president as the sole administrator responsible anyone to the Regents for the administra- for stu- tion of housing, financial aid and In fact, scholarships, counseling, rule en- there forcement, judiciaries, student ac- strative tivities and organizations, religious respon- affairs, international center and activi- health service offices. GC asks * * * nd fac- THIS REMOVES from the au- vise the thority of the vice-president the policies bureaus of registration and rec- ords, appointments, admissions Council and school service and the admin- of what istrative staffs for the manage- the lack ment of bicycles and automobiles. e must These responsibilities, the report ousness contends, dilute the energies of the vice-president. A faculty-student council, form- ulated to advise the vice-president, would be subject to his review. It would formulate judicial policies and procedures and report annual- ly to the Regents.. A director of housing, directly responsible to the. vice-president, would have the authority over the operation of all University hus- ing. To replace the present Resi- hat the dence Halls Board of Governors, Student "direct channels" between the di- to step rector of housing, Interquadrangle ppoint- Council, Assembly Association and the University Senate Subcommit- s most tee on Student Relations would be ds, un- established. o make ntet A director of financial aid and scholarships would also be directly responsible to the vice-president. In addition there should be sep- me tra- arate directorships for the super- .n cam- vision of the University's investi- he stu- gatory agencies, supervision of the exist at International Center, Office of Re- e a ten- ligious Affairs and Health Service. ation of* * * and its STUDENT Government Council paration believes that Associate Advisers in to the the men's residence halls should student be eliminated. House directors in pendent the women's halls should be re- ny cases tained but "criteria for house di- t, yet it rector selection and qualfifications ate and of personnel presently holding f repris- that position should be reevalu- nnot be ated." nmercial The Council also recommends it to do. that men and women should be motivat- permitted to live outside of Uni- not join versity housing after the fresh- he mea- man year, if students under 21 ob- tain parental permission. It further recommends that the ome ex- University should build apart- ved en- ments and other types of living fa- student cilities for rental to students. Also, use it is optional coeducational housing . should be instituted. Both of these violated are recommended for institution bitrarily as soon as possible. nts and Council concludes its report with ction of recommendations for the revision ntal in- of section 8.03 of the Regent's by- pe that laws to remove the "conduct unbe- ts error coming a student" clause. Council he mis- would prefer to have the bylaw imply "that rules governing stu- dent extra-classroom conduct shall inator - be promulgated by the faculty- al student council and shall be de- nce signed only to protect the facilities ViewI of the University community and the rights of its members." * * * "SGC BELIEVES that all cases involving students accused of vio- lating T" n i v e r s i t y regulations should be heard by judiciaries and that students should always be entitled, at their option, to an open hearing ..." The Council's evaluation of the study' committee report is not only extensive but clearly defines au- thority within the Office of Stu- dent Affairs. There is a clear integration of participation in making policy student, faculty, administration without sacrificing the authority the vice-president needs. Inade- quacies existing within the pres- ent judicial systems are eliminat- ed. Recommendations for housing and residence hall staffs are not only needed but would be enthus- iastically accepted by students who have expressed their w i s h e s through various surveys. in short, SGC has shown a basic understanding of what students want and has, in a comprehensive study, presented what appears to be a workable, wholly integrated Office of Student Affairs organiza- tional structure. VOICE Political Party has en- larged upon SGC's report in its published reactions to the Reed Report. Voice notes that its re- port is based on the party's philos- ophy that "a student should be treated as a full participant in a community of scholars." Voice recommends a new office of academic programming and counseling which would shift the emphasis on counseling from the classroom buildings to the resi- dence halls in order to create an academic atmosphere there. Further, Voice recommends that no student should be forced to live in residence halls, with students under 21 required to submit par- ental permission for apartments. All student hoursashould be abol- ished, the party asserts. Voice notes its opposition to any form of speakers bans (a point no 9SA other report considers) and rec- ommends that the Regents' bylaw 8.11, preventing subversives from speaking on campus, be eliminat- ed. The ban is seen as an "insult to the community of scholars." Voice agrees with SGC that there is a need for a formal body where a student can go to present griev- ances, in confidence, regarding either University personnel or pol- icies "which were abridging his rights as a student and limiting his personal right to privacy." * * * VOICE'S proposals further ex- tend the rights of the student in the University. Abolition of all women's closing hours and re- quired residence in dormitories and quadrangles may assume too much responsibility on the part of the incoming freshman. However. the basic premise of a student's right to participate within the or- ganization of the Office of Student Affairs merely reaffirms what a majority of the reports consider a necessity. Reactions to the Reed Commit- tee Report vary from the extreme point of view that no student par- ticipation is needed in, the OSA (Tirrell's view) to the belief that the student is the basic element in the office, (Voice's view). * * * A MIDDLE of the road approach is often rejected merely because it does not take an extreme stand, and consequently is seen as a com- promise of everyone's principles. However, in the restructuring of the Office of Student Affairs, ev- eryone must be considered and ex- treme views can only be regarded as those of minorities. SGC's report reflects a sincere effort to reflect the opinions of the entire student body, from the rad- ical right to the radical left. It is comprehensive and fairly well thought-out. The authority of the University, well integrated with the right of the student to participate in mak- ing decisions regarding his extra- curricular life should be the aim of any ideal plan. SGC seems to have come closest to reaching it. 4 TODAY AND TOMORROW: Gaullist Europe By WALTER LIPPMANN AT THE STATE: 'Bird' Hits a Sour 'Note ON PAPER, Tennessee Williams' "Sweet Bird of Youth" is a pretty shabby effort. Transported to the stage it doesn't come off much better, and unfortunately the movie version isn't going to immortalize the work either. The fact is, in this particular gleeful probing of Southern decad- ence, Williams is too concerned with his characters, and not enough interested in why they are there at all. CHANCE WAYNE'S RETURN to his small Southern hometown on the arm of a fading Hollywood star to prove that he is about to "arrive" makes for interesting speculation, but the love interest between Wayne (Paul Newman) and the hometown sweetheart, Heavenly, is so transparently constructed and so ineffectually moti- vated that as the crux of the plot, it manages to dissipate whatever real interest might evolve. IF THE MOVIE is worth seeing at all,,then, it is through the superb acting performances of a few stars. Newman acquits himself admirably in the role of the visionary hero, which he created on Broadway, and he gets stunning help from Ed Begley, as the granite-faced, corrupt political boss of the town, and from Madeline Sherwood's excellent cameo of the neglected mistress. But without reservation the film is a tribute to the brilliant characterization of Geraldine Page as the Princess, FOR ANYONE who watched Miss Page portray the intensely delicate Amla of "Summer and Smoke" a few weeks ago, her per- formance as the Princess will come as a revelation. Miss Page constructs her character from the ground up, totally new in looks, mood, thought patterns, movement and inflection. Her phone conversation with Walter Winchell in New York is a beautifully timed, carefully delineated essay in what acting is all about. Williams' tacky little melodrama is well worth the effort for anyone who is curious to see one of the finest actresses of our generation steal the show from some fairly stiff competition. Un- fortunately, Tennessee himself isn't in the running. I AT HIS PRESS CONFERENCE on Tuesday Gen. de Gaulle made it quite clear that in his mind "Europe" should be organized and led by a Franco-German combination. The General does not regard Britain, which he describes as an "island," as genuinely European, and he thinks of the United States, though its presence is still necessary for defense, as destined even- tually to withdraw from Europe and in the near future to exercise a receding influence in European affairs. The true Europe is to be led by the Franco-Germans and not by the Anglo- Saxons. It is to make itself sufficiently powerful to come to terms with the Soviet Union and thus to have "Europe" extend from the Atlantic to the Urals. This is a formidable conception of policy. For the core of it, the Franco-German combi- nation, has real substance. In spite of their many wars there is an historical connection between France and the western part of Ger- many which goes back to the Roman Empire. Economically, the two countries are comple- mentary and in the Common Market they are creating an economy which is so rich and so dynamic that already it has a bargaining power in the world which, as we shall see in the pro- posed tariff negotiations, is superior to that of Britain and the Commonwealth and at least equal to that of the United States. There are also deep but mixed bonds of memory and of emotions which, unite the two peoples in the belief that war, which for both of them was a tragedy and a humiliation, must never again come between them. There is, too, the belief that while separately they are only medium-sized powers, combined they will be the core of a new great world power. In that con- nection we must remind ourselves that although Germany is solemnly pledged by treaty not to make nuclear weapons, the European nuclear striking forces, which Gen. de Gaulle wants so much, could be created much more quickly by Franco-German cooperation. YET THERE is another side to the picture. The Franco-German combination today is an alliance between de Gaulle and Adenauer. To say that is enough to warn us not to re- gard the Gaullist conception of Europe as an accomplished fact. I shall not attempt here to say, because I do wn# lrinT* -1e + -fil lnr~ i L',+evn .ttrt spread. But Gen. de Gaulle has dismantled representative government in France, replacing it with his own personal rule nourished by pop- ular plebiscite. Since France is not an heredi- tary monarchy, those who are concerned with such things are saying-not very loudly at pres- ent-that they do not see how representative government is to be restored and a stable suc- cession to Gen. de Gaulle arranged. Nevertheless, we must not make too much of the political instability of France. It is an old nation and with all the dreams of grandeur it is a completed and territorially satisfied na- tion. It has a highly educated population and its economy is flourishing. BUT THE INSTABILITY of Germany has pro- founder consequences. The retirement of Adenauer cannot be far off. Under his iron leadership the West Germans have followed his foreign policy, but it is most improbable that there is any successor to Adenauer whom the parties and the factions will follow in the same way. The Franco-German combination, which is the keystone of de Gaulle's policy, will no doubt remain. But I find it hard to think from what I learned in Berlin and Bonn that the existing policy will be followed with the same discipline, the same inflexibility, and the same dogmatism. I say this because I am persuaded that West Germany, which is defeated, divided from the rest of Germany, and is still haunted by the memories of Nazism, has not yet achieved the kind of sovereignty, the kind of self-confidence and self-assaurance, which enable it to make its own national policy. West Germany has made a brilliant economic recovery. But in world politics it is not as yet a principal power. It is the object of the diplomacy of the other powers, and its inner life is pushed and pulled from the outside. W E CANNOT PRETEND, and we should not try to pretend, that we believe in or would welcome a Franco-German "Europe." We shall not be alone in refusing to applaud it and in promoting a wider community. Opposed to the exclusive and restrictive Europe of de Gaulle and Adenauer, there is a liberal party within the whole area of the Common Market. Its leaders are Jean Monnet himself, M. Spaak, the foreigrn miniser o f Belium. nr.Hallstein. 4 -Jack O'Brien FREEDOM AND SECURITY: Locke and the Founding Fathers 4 (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the third in a series of articles analyzing the issue of individual freedom and national security.) By ROBERT SELWA Daily Staff Writer CAN A democratic society permit the advocacy of totalitarian views? Can it permit the associations of totalitarian groups? Can it allow those who seek the overthrow of tl'e government to associate freely and advocate fully their ideas? These are questions revolving around the issue of individual freedom and national security. Supreme Court justices have for- mulatedvarying partial answers, as we have seen. How valid these answers are depends to an extent on the in- tended nature of our society. We can get an idea as to this by stu- dying the philosophy prevalent in the American colonies at the time of the American Revolition Founding Fathers were frequently exposed to Locke's ideas in church Sunday mornings. LOCKE wrote that a man unites his person and his possessions - life, liberty and estate - to the body politic. In doing so a man subjects himself to the govern- ment and dominion of the body politic for the purpose of the pre- servation of property, which is "life, liberty and estate," From this argument it follows that individual "life, liberty and estate" depend on the authority of the body politic. In other words, authority guarantees the security of liberty. Locke says that the individual, in joining a society, gives up the power of doing whatsoever he wants for the preservation of him- self and the rest of mankind. He, gives it up to be regulated by laws made by the society. He parts with ''as much of his natural liberty, this is true and if they intend to threaten our "lives, liberties and estates," what should we do? According to Locke, we - the whole society - have a right to preserve ourselves. The community perpetually retains a supreme power of saving itself from the attempts and plots of anybody who would carry on designs against the liberties and proper- ties of the citizens. Locke said that if any one over- throws the government by force (takes away the established leg- islative"), he thereby takes away the umpirage which everyone has consented to for a peaceable deci- sion of all controversies. * * * EVERY MAN is born with a double right: "a right of freedom to his person" and a right to prop- erty, Locke stresses. He declares that "They (the citizens) will al- ways have a right to preserve what eliminate subversive elements, then apparently the mass, if it has the power, can rightfully 're- move its dissidents and rebels. * * * "THIS I am sure," Locke writes. "Whoever, either ruler or subject, by force goes about to invade the rights of either prince or people and lays the foundation for over- turning the constitution and frame of any just government is highly guilty of the greatest crime I think a man is capable of - being to answer for all those mis- chiefs of blood, rapine and deso- lation, which the breaking to pieces of governments brings on a country. And he who does it is justly to be esteemed the common enemy and pest of mankind and is to be treated accordingly." Would Locke, then, have sub- versives exported from the society under an Immigration and Na- tionality Act? Would Locke, then, have them prosecuted under a Smith Act? sons, but authority which is founded only in the constitutions and laws of the government, those, whoever they be, who by force break through, and by force jus- tify their violations of them, are truly and properly rebels ... (but) the properest way to prevent the evil is to show them the danger and injustice of it who are under the greatest temptation to run into it." * * * SHOW THEM the danger and injustice of their deed! Locke seems to urge. Show them how they threaten the peace of their society and the property-the life, liberty and estates - of all its members, including themselves. Developing this idea, how shall we show this to the subversives within our ,society? Perhaps, by example. If we can permit the full- est expression of all philosophies and opinions, even those who are totalitarian, and can still retain the stability of our society, we