xt Bail Seventy-Second Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN _ UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions AreFre STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevai 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 24, 1962 ACTING NIGHT EDITOR: GERALD STORCH Hatcher's Action Shows Courage Salome (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is a first in a series of reviews of the Metropolitan Opera performances in Detroit this week.) A T ABOUT seven o'clock Tuesday evening Brenda Lewis was rendered virtually voiceless by an infection which had been plaguing her for a week, and the Metropolitan Opera Company was forced to play another round of musical chairs with itself, this time with a one-hour time limit. Phyllis Curtin, who hadn't sung the part since last December (with the Vienna State Opera - and never with the Met) stepped innocently off the plane in Detroit and was rushed to Masonic Temple to sing "Salome." Vocally, the part is an exception to Miss Curtin's usual style, and in addition it demands a good deal of acting, not to mention that dance that put Salome on the map. All considered, Miss Curtin did an aston- ishing job. * * * * IT MUST have been a night of deja vu for her, however, not only because Walter Cassel (Jochanaan) and John Alexander (Norroboth) had both sung with her the very first time she did the role, but also for reasons which will unfold later. Karl Liebl (Herod) was up to his usual magnificence of acting and had the best luck of anyone in throwing his voice over an orchestration which Strauss himself trimmed down after everyone in Dresden com- plained that he couldn't hear the singers. But it is still a vast orchestra by anyone's standards. MISS CURTIN is scheduled to sing Fiordiligi in "Cosi Fan Tutte" Saturday, and we shall have a chance to see how well she can follow one difficult role with another so different. She told me this morning that she was advised against that very sequence of roles in Vienna, but that she does not anticipate any trouble since she sometimes used "Salome" as an exercise: long ago her voice teacher made her learn to sing through the part on the syllable "ah", just for discipline. Hark well, music students, the Etudes you save may be your own. -Richard Pollinger LAST NIGHT, academic freedom at the Uni- versity was more than just a phrase. Two controversial figures, Carl ,Braden and Frank Wilkinson, gave speeches using University fa- cilities. Despite pressure from various indi- viduals, including state Sen. John P. Smeekens, to halt the talks, University President Harlan Hatcher flatly refused. Hatcher said he refused because the student organizations sponsoring Wilkinson and Bra- den's appearance had followed procedures out- lined in Regent's bylaw 8.11. But his decision was more than mere compliance with a Re- gental decision: it was an act of great intellec- tual honesty. When faced with a choice between avoiding controversy and promoting the true purpose of, the University, he chose the latter. Despite precedents set by his less laudable counterparts at Wayne State and Michigan State Universi- ties, he did not choose to assume extraordinary powers and clamp the lid on the free exchange of ideas. PRESIDENT HATCHER undoubtedly dis, agrees with some of the ideas Braden' and Wilkinson expressed last night. But his deci- sion shows that he is willing to allow the - people of the University to evaluate these ideas for themselves. He has not set himself up as the arbiter of truth on this campus as Presi- dent's IHannah and Hilberry have done on theirs. He has acknowledged that we all have something to learn and has refused to limit the areas in which we may search for knowl- edge. Unlike those who would squelch contro- versial speakers, President Hatcher has refused to damn these men as liars or fools before even hearing them. Maybe they are liars. Maybe they are fools. Or maybe they conveyed priceless glimpses of truth. The only way to find out is to listen to them, listen to their critics and decide for ourselves. This is the principle on which democracy is based. This is the principle on which the Uni- versity ought to operate. It is a wise principle. Unless someone is so presumptuous as to claim a monopoly on absolute truth, he would be foolish to write off any man as a potential source of ihsight. He would also be foolish not to be constantly evaluating all viewpoints. S IS THE basis of the democratic belief In personal liberty. It is not just a hollow phrase, to be brushed aside when unpopular views arise, but a foundation for the-,establish- ment of the best conceivable society. For this reason, the University community, a community especially dedicated to the search for truth, should be especially open to all ideas. However, the University is also a public in- stitution, and, as such, is frequently subject to pressures which oppose this search. When, in the face of such opposition, a University president decides to uphold the basic idea of his institution, his decision is a commendable one. 1 MAINTAIN this type of intellectual hon- esty requires no mean courage, especially for the head of a public institution. He must .please the Legislature, the holder of the Uni- versity's purse strings. He must answer to a public which misunderstands the purpose of a free University, a public which interprets his decision in terms of pro- or anti-Communism, and nothing more. All too many people feel that knowledge in certain fields - such as social ideology - has in their own time,, and in their own minds, been fully and adequately explored. They feel that their time, their na- tion, and they themselves have reached a sum- mit from which no further progress can be made. They have lived so long with their basic assumptions, be they religious or political or social, that they can no longer allow these values to be questioned. A great University is free from this provin- cialism. By his action, President Hatcher has implicitly asserted that the principles of the University must come first, that a university which compromises this principle is not a great university, no matter how generous its legis- lative appropriation. President Hatcher's courageous decision de- serves a long, enthusiastic round of applause from all who interpret a University in these terms. Hopefully, this is the first glimpse of an encouraging change in University policy. THERE ARE still improvements to be made. Regents' Bylaw 8.11, reflecting the public's fears for its basic assumptions, is still on the books. Speakers advocating the violent over- throw of the government or proposing "conduct, which violates the fundamentals of our accept- ed code of morals" cannot appear on Univer- sity property. In short, this bylaw is aimed at circumscribing the range of ideas in which the academic community is encouraged to deal. President Hatcher's decision was not an easy one. To do away with Bylaw 8.11 will be an even more difficult move. When WSU repealed its speaker ban last year, its board of governors faced tremendous public pressure in the form of an extensive petition campaign for rein- statement of the old rule. Led by individuals unconnected with WSU, this campaign tried to make that institution a passive reflector of their ideas. Ann Byerlein, a Detroit nurse who led the pro-speaker ban forces in the WSU contro- versy and who came to the University Tuesday in an attempt to convince administrators to reverse the decision, said, "We can stir up quite a bit of fire when we get going." Undoubtedly she can; but if President Hatcher and the Regents can continue to show the kind of courage and honesty that allowed Wilkinson and Braden to speak, her "fire" won't char the University's greatness. Whatever the legislative appropriation, whatever the public reaction, we must not forget that the idea of Michigan is freedom. -DAVID MARCUS -KENNETH WINTER MSU SPEAKER BAN: A Classic Case Progress Visible In University Activities By PHILIP SUTIN Daily Staff Writer THE BARRING of Robert G. Thompson from the facilities of Michigan State University is a classic case of imposing a speaker ban. It contains all the elements- public clamor, the legislative threat, the vocal defenders, and the administration cave-in-that marks this sort of controversy. The Young Socialists, who spon- sored the event, planned their lec- ture quietly enough. Behind the scenes they had talked to MSU President John Hannah, who had tacitly approved the program since he merely advised them about the dangers to the university appro- priation. However he said nothing about barring Thompson from MSU's student union. In fact at one point, the union had takenthe room away from the Young So- cialists and it was later restored to them. Enter Karl Lady. When the head of the Conservative Club heard of the Young Socialists' program, he wrote a short protest against the speech which was sent to the press and to legislature, as is the custom of the club. The re- lease, Laidy said, was not a very long detailed argument, but rath- er a short but effective, protest. SEN. JOHN Smeekens and Rep. William Marshall followed Lady's lead by introducing a resolution in the legislature which would de- clare Communist speakers using tax-supported state college and DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) The Upholstery House, Inc., Glendive, Mont.-Firm does contract interior dec- orating & furnishing. Have openings for interested & qualified students. Caro State Hospital, Caro, Mich. - Med. Lab. Suprv or Med. Lab. Tech. Either male or female with BA in Med. Tech. or Bacteriology. Central Soya, Fort Wayne, Ind.-(1) Electrical Engnr. Some exper. in plant operations, esp. with circuits & auto- matic control is desirable. Age: 30. (2) Chemical Engnr. Couple of yrs. exper. in food, cereal, or fermentation process- ing desired. Will travel about 50 per cent of time. (3) Research Assoc. in Chemistry. PhD Chem. or Bio-Chem. 1-5 yrs. exper. with protein or related prod- ucts. Conn. Civil Service-Employment In- terviewer for Conn. resident. Degtee in field pertinent to position. File applica- tion by May 31. * * * For further Information, please call General Div., Bureau of Appts., 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544. Part-Time Employment The following part-time jobs are available. Applications for these jobs can be made in the Part-time Place- ment Office, 2200 Student Activities Building, during the following hours: Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. til 12 noon and 1:30 til 5 p.m. Employers desirous of hiring students for part-time or full-time temporary work, should call Bob Hodges at NO 3-1511, ext. 3553. Students desiring miscellaneous odd jobs should consult the bulletin board in Room 2200, daily. MALE 1-Ann Arbor resident to sell insur- ance. 1z-time during school, full- time during summer vacation and vacations during the year. 1-To do yardwork through the sum- mer. Must have your own equip- ment. All day Saturday. 3-Engineering students to do apart- ment maintenance in exchange for rooms with private bath. (Quiet studious boys). No cooking, drinking or parties. Must be available for two or three years, summer and winter. -Several boys for yard jobs. 1-Meat clerk. Must have experience with meats. 4 or 5 days per week, from 4 or 5 p.m. until 9 p.m. 6-To take Inventory. Mn. of half university facilities against state policy. Marshall claimed that the reso- lution recognized that the consti- tutional status of the three state universities makes compliance non-compulsory. But the very na- ture of the motion-which would be binding on Michigan's six non- Constitutional state colleges and university-coupled with legisla- tive consideration of appropria- tions, made the threat quite clear. Last year, Sen. Elmer Porter, chairman of the Senate Appropri- ations Committee which handles higher education appropriations, was unhappy about Wayne State's lifting of its long-standing Com- munist speaker ban and the,,uni- versity's appropriation was cut $200,000 below the previous year. r , , MEANWHILE, according to Young Socialist Club president Jan Garrett, Hannah was putting pressure on the club to cancel Thompson's appearance. He urged All-University Student Govern- ment President William Howard to revoke the recognition of the club on the basis of technicalities concerning the number of mem- bers - So Hannah polled his board of trustees. Four of its members sup- ported Hannah. One opposed him, saying he would not be a? party to legislativeublackjacking. One was unavailable. The use of the union room was denied. Hannah used the standard line of reasoning. The trustees recog- nized the need for students to know about Communism, but, he said, they should get their infor- mation from faculty members competent in the field and who have "an obligation to tell the truth." "The University never has or will knowingly invite a Communist to preach his treason on campus for we see no point in providing a platform for an exponent of Communism who is not bound to tell the truth," Hannah declared. * * * THE LANSING branch of the Alnerican Civil Liberties Union, the MSU chapter of the American Association of University Profes- sors, and the Model United Na- tions, a student issues conference that meets three times a year, is- sued protests. The speech was finally held off- campus FOR proponents of free speaker policy, the current trend is not an optimistic one. Law is not particu- larly on their side and it will take courage, as evidenced by Univer- sity President Harlan Hatcher to uphold this principle. The Hunter College case and the Riverside California decision set two somewhat weak but re- cent precedents in the matter. In the Hunter College case a New York judge ruled that colleges and universities cannot be arbitrary in determining which outside group can use their facilities and which cannot. The Riverside decision upheld the University of C a l i f o r n i a branch's right to regulate speaker policy under the doctrine of "in loco parentis." Both decisions are at low level and subject to appel- late change. Neither is considered a strong precedent in court, Prof. Paul Kauper of the law school said recently. * PROF. KAUPER further be- lieves that the courts will be slow to find university action in speaker cases unreasonable and to over- turn speaker ban policies. Thus the courts are not about to pro- vide a remedy for this situation. Protest action is of little avail for administrators listen to the legislators who hold the keys to FEW THINGS follow a process of development which is single-minded in purpose and un- interrupted in execution, whether they be per- sons, concepts-or a University. Psychologists tell us that for infants the pro- cess of maturing is a jerky one, often lacking both direction and control. "If we observe an infant we notice that he appears to be a mass of movement," comments a leading source on the subject. "Most of his movements are un- differentiated and undirected." The University is no babe - it observes its 145th "birthday" August 26-and four years is a relatively brief period of time in which to study it. Yet during the past four years the University has often appeared as "'a mass of movement" whose actions are 'undifferentiated and undirected." In short, it appears that the University, despite its age, is still in the process of maturing. THE NATURE of this maturing can best be sketched by reviewing some of the events, both significant and insignificant, which have occurred here since 1958. They were calling the University 'the big 'U' long before 1958, but it has grown even bigger since then. The past four years added more students, more professors to teach them and more buildings to house them. All this growth took place despite a thrift-minded Legislature which rarely appropriated money the Univer- sity considers sufficient. Repercussions of the greater size ranged from the 1958 opening of Mary Markley Hall, large enough to accommodate 1,200 women residents, to the discontinuation of the tradition-steeped J-Hop, found to be unsuitable as an all-campus dance. Looking to the future, the University de- cided that a full-year tri-mester calendar would be the most efficient way to cope with its "growing pains." O.VER THE PAST four years as in the past, this countinual growth has affected the University's academic standards-it has raised them. Because the rate of people seeking to enter invariably exceeds the rate of student body growth, the University can afford to be particular about whom it accepts. And it is. But all the while the University has been jacking up its academic standards, it has achieved the remarkable accomplishment of maintaining its high standingin non-academic fields. One of these fields, sports, is often re- garded in fact, as anti-academic. Yet sports are the only contact with the University for a great many more people than any administrator probably ever suspected. Examined in the light of rising academic standards, the University's four-year athletic record is respectable enough to stir the heart of any loyal alumnus - or prospective alum- nus. Wolverine teams have consistently ranked among the leaders in nearly all -sports in the highly-regarded Big Ten conference. Neither have stepped-up academic pressures since 1958 noticeably decreased overall student activities outside the classroom. It is true that Student Government Council cannot claim to have attracted any appreciable more campus concern for its affairs. Likewise, the "Gargoyle" humor magazine has disappeared from the campus scene, apparently with no one missing it enough to revive it. BU' SUCH instances of much-discussed stu- dent apathy have been offset in the last few years by a new tactic of liberal student activity and the emergence of organized con- servative student activity. The liberal groups perfected the "demon- stration" by employing it against such diverse targets as anti-Negro discrimination, atomic warfare and the House Committee on Un- American Activities. At the same time, the hitherto silent voice of conservative students began to be heard, culminating in the organiza- tion of a University chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom. As students stepped up their activities, the University appeared more and more willing to extend to them more responsibilities. It seemed to excuse the precedents toward irresponsibility established by the rise of a beatnik set and the new tradition of spring vacations at Ft. Lauder- dale. 'J7HE DAILY'S sense of responsibility as a student-operated newspaper reached a peak, of sorts, when in 1958 it played a key part in exposing a ring of students who were distrib- uting tickets for a collegiate football score gambling ring. Faith in the newspaper's re- sponsibility to select its own staffs was tumbled, however, last month when the Board in Control of Student Publicationse overturned appoint- ments for next year's senior editorial staff. Yet beyond these momentary setbacks, the University this year laid promising groundwork for a reorientation of the Office of Student Affairs toward more student responsibility. To date, the student body has shown little inter- est in the plans, but perhaps the preliminary concepts fail to affect the individual student directly. At the same time as the University has ex- panded its students' sphere of responsibility, it has broadened its own horizons -nationwide and even worldwide. Symbolic of this develop- ment were President Harlan Hatcher's junkets to theSoviet Union in 1959 and to Latin Amer- ica this winter. The symphony band in the winter followed up President Hatcher's Soviet trip with an excursion of its. own, as the first American collegiate band ever to tour the Soviet Union. Soon thereafter, the University completed final arrangements on a program for juniors to study for a year in France. The University's new worldwide orientation was rounded out when it spawned early support for the Peace Corps and then trained a crop of Corpsmen for serv- ice in Thailand. CONTRIBUTING generously to the national scientific effort, University scientists and engineers fulfilled a growiig number of fed- eral research contracts. They even launched their own exploratory rockets and high-alti- tude balloons. This host of events, four years' worth, may be aptly described as "a mass of movement," to use the psychologist's words. Yet closer ex- amination .shows that it is not without direc- tion or control. The University has grown a little bigger. Its academic standards have edged a little higher, but not at the sacrifice of non-academic pur- suits, It has conceded a few more responsibili- ties to its students. It has acquired a more nationwide and worldwide outlook. These events -- small when it is considered that they occurred in so brief a span of the University's life - nevertheless loom large when placed in the University's process of development. In the past four years, the Uni- versity has matured a little. -PETER STUART Magazine Editor, 1961-62 i I The Subtle War Creeping Revisionism THE CONSERVATIVES have often decried what they call "creeping inflation." Quite apart from economics, the University is ex- periencing "creeping change." And creep the changes do, for they go unnoticed and unher- alded; but they are vitally changing the face of the University in the Office of Student Affairs. The need for change in the University has been recognized by the administration, faculty, and students. With the publication of the OSA Study Committee (Reed) Report suggestions were put into a formalized statement of struc- ture. Thus far, however, the administration and the Regents have been reluctant to accept the structure as it stands. Their concern is war- ranted and their evaluation of other proposed structures may indeed unearth new and better ideas for implementing the philosophy of the report. But it is highly unusual that while all of the consideration proceeds, the changes that the committee recommended are quietly implemented, piece by piece. THE FIRST such change stands out since it was so recently made. The new position of director of housing was formally approved by the Regents last Friday. This in itself, is a clear interpretation of the Reed Report's phil- osophy in action. It substantially eliminates the "cleavage" cited in the report between men Business Staff CHARLES JUDGE, Business Manager MARY GAUER...........Associate Business Manager MERVYN KLINE ................Finance Manager ROGER PASCAL...............Accounts Manager and women students and places the burden of responsibility for all students' housing on one person. Changes in the Office of Student. Affairs reflect a new, increased emphasis on students. The offices of admissions and records have been taken out from the authority of the OSA and transferred to the authority of the Office of Academic Affairs. Changes in the housing facilities, however, began before the Regents' meeting Friday. Senior women were allowed to move into apart- ments with parental approval and the com- plexion of each house is changing. ASSEMBLY Association's experiment in up- per class housing has been endorsed by both women students and the administration and consequently next year Mosher Hall will be transformed into an upperclass house. This clearly is in line with the proposals of the study committee which recommended that "a greater variety of housing arrangements should be offered with experiments tried in freshmen houses, languages houses and honors houses." In the piocess of making Mosher an upper- class dorm, Mary Markley Hall will certainly become a freshman-sophomore dorm. This was shown by the fact that for the first time in many years, women were not required to make Markley a choice in their housing preferences which practically insured upperclassmen the right to transfer from Markley. COEDUCATIONAL housing, another proposal of the Reed committee is also in the process of change. The Shiel committee recommended that it be instituted and had concrete plans for the action to be taken by next fall. How- ever, when women protested it resulted in postponement of the plans until September 1963. But the main stream of action is appar- AFTER DINNER, a group of us clustered around a professor whose courses always touch on some of the burning public issues of the day. Someone asked, "Of all the things go- ing on in the world today, what is the most important issue?" "The salvation of individual human souls," replied the teacher. With all our modern governments can do, here's a guy who's really burying his head in sentimental sand, many of his colleagues would say. But once in a while you find a scholar who realizes that whatever country, whatever issue, whatever century, mankind's own evil usually manages to mess things up. What kind of evil is it? After all, it's really pretty hard to find evil. Neither I nor my friends have much. Now over in Europe things are a lot different .. . A CONSERVATIVE theologian would trace man's evil to The Fall. But an intelligent professor at Michigan offers a more reasonable explanation of the saga of Adam and Eve. You see, it's an allegorical myth of curiosity (what's in that apple, anyhow?) versus authority ("But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat.") Man's wonderful curiosity won out, glows the professor. People around the University are content to explain away a more prfound interpretation of the tale-that man has a tendency to do wrong, and is held responsible for it. The same symp- tom is evident in society as a whole. Prof. Ger- hard Lenski's religious research in Detroit found very strong belief in such things as the exist- ence of God, God's response to our prayers, or Jesus as God's only Son. But the idea that "in life after death some persons will be punished" was believed by only about half of the subjects. People are inclined to overlook evil, or to shut it out of their thinking. And the idea that a God would hold a man responsible for his be- liefs and actions is certainly troublesome to a society which prizes "togetherness." object to it when religious concepts are men- tioned. They will object to a statement like this, which seems arrogant: "The inhabitants of hell are where they want to be and where they belong." But this idea is not basically egocentric, because it's based on the Judeo-Christian belief that the glorified ego is band and will be held account- able. The writer, C. S. Lewis (better-known here as an authority on Renaissance English) adds that the pride-ful man won't enjoy heaven be- cause his ego is too big to fit into God's realm. After all, the Psalmist asks his God "What is man that Thou art mindful of him?" And Christ demands that his followers lose their lives in order to find Life. A religious humility is unpopular in a Uni- versity. The idea that a lot of the world's troubles stem from men's exaggerated egos is disliked. The idea that a man will be punished for his unwillingness to surrender his ego to a Saviour and His ideals is unfair and unpleas- ant, they say. But the vocal majority has no more proof than the theologian, and consider- ably less basis. -RICHARD OSTLING Associate Editorial Director, 1961-62 Counter Bluff WEST GERMAN Chancellor Konrad Aden- auer has at last sounded off in public con- cerning his views on the United States State Department's plan to put a 13-nation commis- sion in charge of the access routes between Berlin and West Germany. It won't work says the Chancellor, and the current United States-Soviet talks on West Berlin are sure to end in failure. But he sees no war resulting from this predicted flop. The Chancellor is right again, if you ask us. The State Department's gutless proposal would x. ,, f. ;