'We Don't Service Trucks, But We'l Give You Parking Space" At the Ca is Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN here Optnlons Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY 6F BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Tr, WlPSTUDENT PUBLICATIONS BI DG.* ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDITH OPPENHEIM .... I-By, oad to Suicide SOHN ROBERTS, Editor DRESSING DEVELOPMENTS in southern Mississippi forced me to miss most of this, week's Student Government Council meeting. It's too bad, for I'm told that the ,morass of insult and injury that developed has had an important result - after years of self- congratulation, $GC is finally getting fed up with itself. When SGC was first put together, its archi- tects had high hopes for Its future. SGC was Officially Recognized by the Regents. It was equipped with an impressive array of powers and responsibilities. One of these, its control over student organizations, was unmatched by any other student government in the coun- try. True, a veto power remained in the hands of the administration, but SGC after 1959 could count on the support of a Committee on Referral which was stacked with pro-- student government members. BUT THE DREAM of the Founding Fathers has never materialized, and part of the' trouble is their fault. Fundamental weaknesses were built into SGC. In the first place, it was saddled with petty administrative tasks, such as calendaring which exhaust the Council's, time and energies. More importantly, seven ex-officios were made voting members of SGC. The logic of that move is- not obvious. Perhaps the ex-officios were added because they were regarded as a kind of aristocracy, and SGC a kind of Council of the Estates. If so, the University of Michigan is about the only place on earth where the aristocracy hasn't been shunted into a powerless "upper house" or ousted from government altogether. Or perhaps it wasn't the aristocracy, but the interests and organizations themselves that needed representing-sort of like having delegates from General Motors and Kleenex in -the U. S. Senate. After all, SGC has a. budget only one-tenth that of The Daily and one-hundredth that of the Union, and could hardly carry much weight without represen- tation from organizations more powerful than itself. If this was the intention, SGC cannot appropriately be called, a council of the aris- tocracy. It is, instead, rather more compar- able to a fascist state. THE PRESENCE of ex-officios as full vot- ing members greatly limits the council-- in some instances they may actually hurt it. All editors of The :Daily do not necessarily make effective council members. Presidents of IQC almost never do. And no matter h'w ineffective they are, they cannot be voted out. In addition, any ex-officio worth his salt has primary allegiance to his own organization. Even if he maintains strict impaitiality in his voting (a dubious assumption), he is never impartial in the division of his time and interests. For most ex-offcios, SGC is a not- particularly-enjoyable chore, one of the nui- sance responsibilities which goes with their jobs. Almost half of the council is thus inherently opposed to any move to take on more, work or meet more frequently, both necessary if SGC , is to expand its sphere of effective action. So part of what's wrong with SGC can be traced to its structure. A much more im- portant source is the members themselves and the habits they are developing. WHEN ROGER SEASONWEIN, Philip Power and Mary Wheeler quit the council, they left a leadership vacuum which has yet to be filled. None of the remaining "liberals" have been able to take their place. And the logical leaders of council - the officers - aren't inspiring anyone. Richard Nohl, with his mellifluous voice, makes his President's report sound like a beer commercial. Per Hanson regards SGC as a mildly-diverting toy. John Martin is too busy Repressing Rage to contribute much. And William Gleason's chief talent is his skill at deserting sinking ships. Leaderless, the Council has taken actions which are unintelligent and unfair. My per- sonal respect for SGC was, already drooping because of last spring's effort to reprimand The Daily. It died with a shudder two weeks. ago "when the Council refused to appoint Sharon Jeffrey and Robert Ross to its vacant positions because they were too "controversial." This week SGC sank to new'depths. Its Com- mittee on Membership selection-hardly a radical group-had recommended a time limit for the filing of statements by fraternities and sororities. The committee needed more information so it could stop thrashing Alpha Tau Omega, which was getting to be tiresome, and shift its attention to, other organizations. But the council refused. In an atmosphere saturated with terms like "education," "pa- tience,", and "good faith," it voted to send still another letter, weakly worded and ex- travagantly sympathetic, to the recalcitrant organizations. The letter said that SGC does not wish to set a time limit, but "feels it may have to" if the statements are not filed soon. This, of course, is a bald lie. SGC, as presently constituted, would never take strong action against the fraternity system and everyone on Washtenaw Avenue knows it. As MUCH as by its actions, SGC is dis- gracing itself by its conduct. Petty bicker- ing and peevishness pervade every meeting. Motions are railroaded through. Debate is suppressed or curtained by parliamentary tac- tics. No one listens to anyone else. Often friendly enough to one another outside the council room, the members become grim, re- lentless opponents around the table. SGC is dying. Over a period of years, its serious institutional defects might have proved fatal anyway. But if it dies now, it will have suicided. ad Letter' menting the procedures that are necessary for. change. After Vice-President Lewis has strongly-- and rightfully-admonished both fraternity and sorority presidents to file the needed in- formation, one would expect much stronger, action on the part of SGC. The letter should not simply serve as a reminder; affiliates have been reminded several times already. THE WORDING of the Council's motion ranges from circumlocution to mendacity. For example, the motion states "that the Council feels it is to the advantage of the groups in question to clarify their positions and to dispel, inaccurate images of their membership selection policies by submitting statements." Of course, this may simply be regarded as a pleasantry. For, if ther are actually many affiliate groups with questionable membership policies, it will be to anything but their ad- vantage to clarify them. And, assuming that fraternities and sororities not having bias clauses submit their statements, it will clarify nothing to anybody but the Membership com- mittee members for the information will stop there. Or take the Council's contention that it "hopes and assumes. that the groups involved will submit the required statements on their own initiative." Why? Approximately ten months have passed since SGC originally ap- proved the membership selection ruling. It seems that with that long an interval, any- one who was willing to submit a statement on his own initiative 'would have done so long ,ago. T IS PROBABLE that many groups are hesitant about turning in their statements because as yet there exists no public know- , II IIr1 1 Amt-HOF ยข ti 1 (TEAMSTER LOCALS z j t i THE RUSSIAN-MADE Othello is one of the offerings in the United States Cultural Exchange program. This is a program which was formulated early in 1958, and since "Othell" was made In 1955, the Russian film-makers cannot be accused of making the picture merely to dazzle an American audience with scenic effects. The color camera work, the rich costumes, the lighting effects and the vastness of the background are brilliant in their own right, but they severely over shadow and stifle the play. You become so involved in the spectacle that the actors often seem to be intruders who have wandered into all this lavishness. The filming is undeniably beautiful, but there are pitfalls in using such an approach to Shakespeare. It is a style which is more reminiscent of Wagnerian opera than the economy and simplicity of the Elizabethan stage. Fortunately, the director did not try to Impose a pseudo- psychological point of view upon the play which would have forced the actors into being ludicrous in the middle of all this majesty. ** * * HE ALLOWS OTHELLO full reign in expressing the jealousy of a middle-aged man who suspects his youthful wife of infidelity. Iago is plainly and simply a man seeking revenge upon a superior who has treated him unjustly. Desdemona is naive, loving and incap- able of doing any of the things of which she is accused. The inter** pretations are broad and clearly defined, so that the breast-beating of Othello is not quite as repulsive as it would be given other con- ditions' of over-all interpretation. The score of Aram Khatcbaturian is well suited to the film since it combines a flavor of medieval power and simplicity with the embellishments of the nineteenth century. Since the picture makes its strongest impact visually, It is difficult to understand why they decided to dub in English voices. Not that the voices are inadequate,' they are quite good, but the .problem of matching -sound with the lip movements of the actors was a distraction which was unnecessary, The original Russian dialogue with English subtitles would have been much more satisfactory. -Richard Burke At the Michigan-'The Hustler' R OBERT ROSSEN'S The Hustler is a fine movie in the tradition of On the Waterfront and Marty. The acting is unmarred by such current trends as bad writing or photographing-or the appear- ance of a rock and roll star, in a minor roll. Paul Newman has been unfortunately associated with so many young-executive-going-places flicks that one might forget that he is one of today's major' acting talents. But, Mr. Newman's character- ization of Fast Eddie, the hardened poolroom hustler "looking for an excuse to lose," is so gentle and frank that It goes deeper than female tear-ducts in -audience reaction-it brutally digs into social intelligence begging for recognition as a human being. Piper Laurie was right: she is an actress. Hollywood will most likely admit its mistake when the Academy Award nominations are posted. George C. Scott and Myron McCormick present definitive char- acterizations from a world so unreal that in less capable hands they would ge unbelievable. Jackie Gleason overc&mes the handicap of being associated with low-comedy by creating (without dramatically significant lines) a real person from the abstraction which he plays. S* * * ROBERT ROSSEN, producer, director and co-author, will cer- tainly be a welcome addition to the list of the few living creative motion-picture geniuses.-His constant use of detail and expert motion- picture techniques makes punctuatiol of a scene with a single slow tear almost unbearable in intensity. Mr. Rossen unfortunately under-paced a few scenes which are particularly painful for the audience after enjoying the. remarkable sequence in which tension is sustained throughout a twenty-minute pool game-without even an elementary explanation of how the game is played. Apparently, he wanted to create reality by having the characters occasionally muffle their lines, but he breaks .the excellent illusion of. reality already achieved by causing half of the audience to whisper, "What did she (Piper Laurie is the biggest offender) say?" Inspite' of these small' short-comings, The Hustlers is a motion picture with which future realistic film-ventures into the human tragedy will be compared. -Milan Stitt :;Aa s . .'* "w,4'~ r ear TODAY AND TOMORROW- Sen. Fulbright: True Conservative SGC's 'De4 14 FAILING to set a definite deadline for the submission of reports to its membership committee, Student Government Council has failed to. follow the commitment implicir in its original motion dealing with affiliate bias. If SGC sincerely expects unwarranted bias among fraternities and sororities can be eliminated, then the Council must aid in imple- Aiversary THE CHEERING CROWDS at today's big game will hardly remember that just one year ago on October 14, women's hours were extended to 2 a.m. and over 10,000 students cheered wildly in front of the Michigan Union. That night, John F. Kennedy called upon University students "to comprehend the nature of the situation facing America today and offer themselves to the cause of the United States." Not only students, but faculty members and' hundreds of private citizens have heeded to the President's call. Today, just one year later, 55 volunteers have completed their first week of Peace Corps training at the University. T HE PEACE CORPS volunteers, who will leave for Thailand in January to devote two years of service to the Corps, spent 60 hours in seminars and lectures this week. Most of them- will be unable to attend to- day's game because of the difficult project before them. While 103,000 fans pack into the Michigan Stadium, the Peace Corps volun- teers will spend the afternoon studying the Thai language, culture and political institu- tions. In this quiet and devoted manner, whether o. not thpvAr ae of " i+ +tpv will hp nam_ By WALTERLIPPMANN SEN. FULBRIGHT has now be- gun to run for re-election, and al1 the signs indicate that over and above the local issues in Ar- kansas,the campaign will be of great interest to the nation as a whole. For an important part of the opposition to the Senator comes from outside of Arkansas. It comes from radical right ex- tremists like Sen. Goldwater among" the Republicans and Sen. Thurmond among the Demorats It is highly significant and very interesting indeed that they have chosen to do battle not with a man of the left, but with as gen- uine a conservative in the great tradition of conservatism as exists in our public life today. Thus the Arkansas senatorial campaign will bring a confronta- tion between traditional American conservatism and a wholly new phenomenon, a radical reaction sailing under the flag of conserva- tism. This reactionary radicalism has as little relation to conserva- tism as the so-called peoples' de- mocracies beyond the Iron Cur- tain have to democracy. THE TRUE Conservatives of whom the greatest in this century is Churchill, are indissolubly at one with the constitutional sources of the nation's life. For them the nation is a living thing which grows and changes, and they think of themselves as participating in this growth and change. Because they themselves are so secure and certain about what is essential and fundamental, the most intelligent conservatives are liberal in tem- per and progressive in policy. Sen. Fulbright is that kind of conservative, and so he is stand- ing challenge to the reactionary radicals who are in revolt against all the main developments of the twentieth century. * * * THEY ARE AGAINST the con- sequences of modern science and technology which have brought into being a concentration of masses of people uprooted from their ancestral ways of life. These radical reactionaries are against the welfare state which provides these urban masses with some of that personal security which their ancestors in the country made in their communities. And they are against the regulation of this enormously complex economy, though without regulation it would churn itself up into crisis and chaos. The reactionary radicals, who would like to repeal the twentieth century, are, so they tell us, vio- lently opposed to Communism. But Communism also belongs to the twentieth century and these re- actionary radicals do not under- stand it and do not know how to resist it. Thus they do not want the alliances with which we have contained Communism in Europe at the armistice lines of World War II. They are, against foreign aid which is used to help new coun- tries and weak countries help themselves without succumbing to Their responsibility in foreign. affairs is such that if the Presi- dent did for the country what they say he ought, to be doing, there. would be going on at one and the same time another Korean War in Southeast Asia, a: somewhat small- er Algerian war in Cuba, and a thermo-nuclear war about Berlin. * * * - SEN. FULBRIGHT, with .the authority and with the intimate knowledge' that come to him as chairman of the Foreign Relations: Committee of the Senate, has stood firmly against such irresponsi- ble nonsense. The nation is great- ly in his debt. The role he plays in Washington is an indispensable role. There is no one else who is so powerful and also so wise, and if- there were any 'question of removing him from public life, it would be a national calamity. Not only has ,he been the bra-v SPLIT FEDERATION: / JamacaGos It Alone By TOM HENSHAW Associated Press Feature Writer SECESSION is becoming a trou. blesome word on the interna- tional scene. In recent months, Katanga province has tried to secede from the Congo, Syria has broken off from the United Arab Republic, and Jamaica has split away from the fledgling West: Indies Federa- tion. Jamaica's decision to go it alone passed almost unnoticed last month, a strange develop- ment since it's only 500, miles from Miami and 100 miles from Castro's Cuba. Jamaica is best known for cal-t ypso, strong black rum, tourists and the 17th Century pirate, Sir Henry Morgan. It's less known for its deposits of bauxite, the parent ore of stra- tegic aluminum, and the "First Africa Corps," a terrorist group that seeks the .return of all Ne- groes to Africa. The island covers 4,411 square miles and supports 1,630,000 people. FROM APRIL 22, 1958 until last month Jamaica was the key but lukewarm member of the West Indies Federation, a sprawling cpl- lection of 13 British island col- onies due for independence in 1962. Th le other major Islands are: Antigua, Barbados, Dominica, Gre- nada, Montserrat, St. Christopher, Nevis (birthplace df American pa- triot Alexander Hamilton), An- guilla, St. Lucia, St.Vincent, Trin- idad and Tobago. In a referendum Sept. 19, Ja- maica voted, 251,935 to 216,400, to quit, stripping the federation of 56 per cent of fits population and most of its economic wealth. * * * JAMAICAN politics are best ex- plained in terms of. personalities. Two men dominate Jamaica po- litically-Chief Minister Norman est and wisest of advisers. He is also the most far-seeing and con- structive. It has been said of him all too often that he has been right too soon. 'That is a great compli- ment. -In our democracy .some- body who is listened to must be right before it is popular to be. right. He was, I think, the first Ameri- can public man who realized that: if Western Europe was to co-exist with the Soviet Union, it would have to unite. And he is the first responsible American statesman to be saying that the necessary counterweight to the development of the Communist power is a muph closer political and economic in- tegration of the Western World.- THE DECISION must be niade by the voters of Arkansas. But what 1s at stake is important to the whole nation. fc) 1961 New York Herald Tribune, Inc. 4 . :....... . --a= soldier of fortune who likes to be called "Good Old Busta." His trademark is a head of bushy white hair; his power rests with the poor and uneducated. * * * Bustamente, with his popular appeal to the Jamaican masses and a jail record (1940-41) foi. 1 e a d i n g demonstrations and strikes, would seem to be a natur- RIGHT NOW, Jamaicans are getting ready to negotiate for their independence. Independence day has not yet been set but it will be sometime in 1962. Talks with the British this winter will