:, 1g idpw &zirtgtn tt Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BYS TUDENTS 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 WI prevaiH" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. * 1* DAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL HARRAH The Slate System In Campus Elections LELI - y . .nwi p r . University Outlet Helps Young Writer LETTERS TO TIU EDIT rro " * Con .. 001 GROUPS ENDORSING CANDIDATES for Student Government Council serve a legiti- mate and very necessary function in the operation of the democratic political process which is the basis of student government. In choosing candidates to endorse, groups such as Quadrants, the Inter-fraternity Coun- cil and Young Democrats admittedly emphasize their own interests at the "expense" of those of the whole community. And it is perfectly logical that they should do so. WHEN A PARTICULAR course of 'action- the withdrawal of recognition from fra- ternities with bas clauses, for example-is good in one way and bad in another, it will obviously be desired by some and fought by those who are in a position which makes that course undesirable. One very effective *ay for' a group to ad- vance or prevent the pursuit of a certain goal is to urge the election of people whose interests correspond to its own. Any group firmly convinced of the values of its way of thought and mode of operation and concerned that they be perpetuated will, therefore, be- coe involved in the political process. That they should become involved is not only logical but necessary and desirable for the maintenance of democratic government. For the proper defense/ of particular goods by particular persons is of great importance In the attainment of the common good, the goal of democracy. The common good cannot be defined as a course of action or a set of ends which is equally desirable for all citizens. It can only be defined as the good of a multitude having conflicting individual interests and purposes- and, therefore, incapable of attainment unless these particular interests are taken care of by particuar agents or groups. THAT GROUPS should endorse candidates is inherent in their reasons for formation. Individuals organize themselves into groups because of a sharply felt need to break down sdciety into meaningful units, to construct a frame of reference from which to view the chaotic world. Interquadrangle Council, for example, exists because students living in the 'quads felt a need to establish themselves as a group apart from the undifferentiated mass of University students, -having special problems and needs and so a special point of view. This point of view inevitably influences their perception of political matters and may justifiably lead them to work for the election of candidates with the same point of view. OBVIOUSLY, ENDORSEMENT can be done foolishly. Candidates may be supported merely because they have a specific view with no consideration given to their intelligence, knowledge and understanding of the Univer- sity and its operation or their ability to work effectively with other Council members. Groups that endorse candidates without these qualifi- cations are defeating their own purpose. Because their criteria for selection can al- ways be called into question, groups endorsing candidates cannot expect all their members to vote the "party line." And individuals within groups are not absolved from their obligation to carefully consider the merits of each can- didate running for office. But if groups endorse candidates for sound and well-articulated reasons, they N are per- forming a service for their membership and, so, for the community. -SUSAN FARRELL Personnel Director VARIOUS NON-POLITICAL groups within the University have come out in support of (and by inference, in opposition to) can- didates for SGC. Great langer lies dormant in this' action. For while these groups unques- tionably have the right to these statements, they may be misinterpreting a responsibility' rather than fulfilling one. On political issies, a citizen always owes his highest loyalty to the community. When he is faced with" the obligation to vote, the prime issue is always what is in the best interests of the entire community The in- terests of any grouping subordinate to the community, be he a part of that grouping or not, must always be a secondary concern. Each voter must make his decision on an individual basis. Everyone has different cri- teria for judging the worth of a person run- ning for office. Ideas which sound messianic to some will sound disastrous to others. Ac- tions which appear forceful to some will appear insane to others. It is very difficult for even two people to come to exactly the same con- clusions on all aspects of a candidate. GROUP ACTION tends to confuse the prime issue of the election in two ways. In the first place, the Group, almost by definition, emphasizes its own interests at the expense of those of the community. One illustration is the remark atributed to the late Charles Wilson: "What'sgood for General Motors is good for the country." This'attitude, while inde- fensible, is necessarily prevalent in any major group. Thus a group slate of candidates must coincide with the needs of the group. Rarely can it reflect community interests. A group slate, then, is meaningless in,terms of the standards a voter must use in making up his mind. If a voter is influenced by the group, he sacrifices the interests of the entire community. The slate serves him as a crutch. Further, that opinion is, at best, a majority opinion. It cannot: possibly take into account the feelings of all the individuals which com- pose it. Thus members are sometimes held responsible for beliefs they do not actually hold. TWO 9ASES call for special consideration. The first is a political party. This type of group exists for the purpose of supporting or opposing people and programs and could not exist otherwise. There is quite a difference between these grqups and groups such as labor unions and churches, YD's and YR's (who are definitely not parties in terms of this campus), Quadrants and IFC. Their survival does not depend on political programs. Their role in politics is only in proportion to cer- tain issues which affect them. THERE IS ONE more group to consider-the newspaper. Theoretically, the newspaper has no private interests. Its most important ob- ligation is to give the community all the facts with impartiality. Then, as a knowledgeble observer, it can venture into personal analyses on its editorial pages, with appropriate reason- ing. For the newspaper also has an obligation to interpret. If, ,however, a newspaper shirks its first responsibility or merely puts forth choices minus any rationale, then' that newspaper is just as much in the wrong as any other group. In a situation where the only valid standard is individual judgment, any appeal not based on objectivity is a disservice to the community. Just as the individual has certain rights, he has the responsibility of avoiding the evils of a group slate. He can both abdicate his rights and avoid his responsibilities. Then, however, society is worthless. -H. NEIL BERKSON A . 1f I I '4 F 6o -1 I. I~m I 9 C4A tjf, ro .. -1 Sf "4 To the Editor: ONE WOULD BE tempted to dis- miss Michael Qlinick's edi- torial on artists and the Univer- sity as a piece of understandable immaturity if it did not so com- pletely express the somewhat ter- rifying assumptions of most of the writers who appeared on the symposium last week. Two re- current attitudes of mind seem to me particularly open to question The First is that a writer has no obligation to anything other than the cultivation of his own talent. Any sort of contract be- tween him and the society which he professes to represent (and to which he must appeal both for an audience and for a living) con- stitutes a limitation of his free- dom. To ask a writer for co- operation or even for simple gen- erosity is to threaten his integ- rity by demanding that he make undignified concessions to "middle class morality." The Second is that a writer must seek out "reality"-an ar- ticle which the university by definition can never put up for sale. It is more "real," apparently, to be sensitive and ignorant than sensible and educated. Even "if; education is desirable,the assump- tion is that to get a "real" educa-. tion at an institution patently dedicated to it is impossible. ** * I SUBMIT that a university, for all its faults, is the only modern institution (aside from the foundations of the Fords and Rockefellers) which gives a writer an honest opportunity to write. Creative writing courses are val-' uable because they give dignity to the profession of writing. True, "creative authors do not create other creative authors" but nei- ther does creative art happen in a fundamentally hostile environ- ment where the ruling values leave no room for art at all. Artists flourish when they meet other artists in an envronment where art is important. It is to the credit of our uni- versities that artists are no longer obliged to lick the boots of the great (as were Spenser and Dr. Johnson)' to keep themselves fed and in clothes. Today the alter- native to a university career for a writer without private means is usually journalism or television- "real" if you will but commercial and middle class in the worst sense * * * AS FOR THE stultifying effect which Mr. Olinick claims that a university has upon its writers, it is difficult to see that reading books and taking courses can be stultifying in any other way than to give the writer a sense of humility in the face of a public to which he would 'like to feel superior. The only thing unreal about educatibn-is the dream that pro- vokes the desire for it. To attack this kind of unreality is to attack the fundamental reasons for art anywhere and at any time, for as a great writer of our century reminds us, "In dreams begins responsibility." -Anne Hitchcock, Grad. YD Suppor. .. To the Editor: TN THIS COLUMN on Sunday John Allen attacked a recent editorial in the "Young Dem Date- line." I feel the points he raised are invalid for the reasons which will be explained. Mr. Allen asks' what criteria automatically equate the people best qualified for SGC with "other Democrats." In the first place, the fact that the Voice candidates are Democrats was not the main. point of the editorial; I stressed the liberalism of the candidates and not their party affiliation. Actually, the information that they are Democrats was mostly disclosed in a parenthetical re- mark, and I am sure that any English major will agree with me that the most important part of a sentence is not put in parentheses. And even if the editorial had said (which it did not) that we felt the Voice ,candidates were better qualified partially because they were Democrats, wouldn't this have been a logical staid for a Democratic party news- paper? Would Mr, Allen deny us the right to support candidates from our own party? I think he must remember that, as a party newspaper, the "Dateline" is frankly biased. NEXT MR. ALLEN asks why, if there are other Democrats run- ning, should we not support them too? This is an absurd proposi- tion. As I stated above, the editor- ial advocated the election of the Voice candidates because they are liberals and the YD club here at Michigan is a liberal organization. Under Mr. Allen's logic, the YD club would have to support Harry Byrd or Howard Smith simply because they are Democrats, al- though we don't believe in their policies. Secondly, doesn't the executive board of the YD's have a right to support whomever they wish for election? Can't they, select whom they would like to have seated on SOC just like any other group on campus? Third, Mr. Allen inquires if the YD's are asking other organiza- tions to vote against Voice to ex- press their preference for non- Democratic candidates. Of course not. Again this arises from his misinterpretation of the import- ance of the fact tat the Voice candidates are Democrats. The editorial was asking liberals t vote for other liberals and the in- formation that these other liberals were Democrats was extraneous. Finally, he wants to know what sort of intelligent judgment th YD executive board ws requesting Its members to make "on the basis of the criteria given." Hither Mr. Allen did not, read farther than the first paragraph or else he con- veniently forgot that over one- half of the editorial was devoted. to describing the Voice platform and to listing the qualifications of that party's candidates. Would this not provide 'the "reasonable basis" Mr. Allen de- sires for asking Yl's to elect those running on the Voice ticket? -Mary Beth Norton,'4 Editor, "Young Dem Dateline" - I SIDELINE ON SGC: Croysdale's '0 n-Campus' Issue By JUDITH OPPENHEIM Daily Staff Writer Student Government Coun- cil should express student opinion only in those areas which directly affect the af- fairs of the student body dur- ing its tenure at the Univer- sity. -David Croysdale MAUL CARDER at Wednesday night's Student Government Council meeting called David Croysdale's motion on expression of student opinion the most "on- campus"' issue the Council has discussed all year. Carder, fortunately, is exag- gerating, but the motion is cer- tainly timely. The so called "on- campus, off-campus" controversy is mentioned in the platforms of almost all the 13 SGC candidates and is one of the topics most fre-Z quently discussed at SGC open houses. Croysdale's motion is so vaguely worded that it leaves the Council free to interpret its implication as it pleases in each individual case. However, Croysdale's debate left no doubt as to the intent of the statement. When he says SGC should con- cern itself only with issues directly affecting students during their tenure at the University, he is saying there should be no more telegrams to the President about the voter registration problem in the South or denunciations of the movie "Operation Abolition" or protests against the activities of the House Committee on Un- American Activities. The "on-campus off-campus" issue is one of the most important in the campaign and it is a pity that Croysdale's motion was not worded in such a way as to make the point in question quite clear. *'* * THE SGC PLAN states as one of the functions of the Council the obligation to "serve as the official representative of the University student community in expressing opinion and interest to appro- priate faculty, administrative and student agencies and to the out- side student and world commun- ity." .Croysdale, is proposing to in- terpret this statement to exclude expression of student opinion on anything not clearly and techni- cally relevant, in the narrowest sense, to University students as such. * * * CROYSDALE and several other Council members seem to feel that since SGC cannot be completely, informed on all aspects of such "off-campus" issues, it is irre- sponsible to express an opinion on them in the name of the stu- dent body. Since the Council cannot really take decisive action in any of these areas, they say, it had better leave them to groups: which are free to act directly to implement their resolutions. The final argument, and the. one most frequently stressed, is that discussion of "off-campus issues" takes up time which the Council would better spend on dis- cussion of "on-campus issues.' ** * SEVERAL COUNCIL MEMBERS and the majority of candidates refuse to accept this narrow in- terpretation of issues relevant to students. Students do not give up their world citizenship when they enter a university, their objection goes, and therefore any issue of con- cern to humanity is within the legitimate purview of a group responsible for expression of stu- dent opinion. People may and do form strong opinions without knowing every fact pertinent to an issue, they say, and point out that, if - no legislative body ever took a. stand on an issue when it lacked some particle of information, very little legislation would ever be enacted (particularly at the Coun- cil table). The last point of contention was, the charge brought up by the "on-campus" faction that stu- dents don't want the Council to spend its time considering "off- campus" questions. * * * THIS EVENTUALLY will prove to be the deciding factor. If enough candidates are elected who favor consideration of "off- campus" issues, the issues will be discussed with the apparent bless- ing of the constituency. If -the voters choose candidates who oppose such discussion ob- viously attempts to raise "off- campus" questions will be thwart- ed. * * * THE CONSTITUENTS must re- member that when the Council acts, it acts in their name. If they have a philosophy of student government, they must cast their ballots in such a way as to im- plement this philosophy. This means that the election must be decided on issues, and this is one issue the constituency must con- sider especially carefully. TURN an educated nation's attention to the problem of helping others do what they have already accomplished seems to many like a lackluster chore bet- ter left to social workers. For- tunately there are still enough ag- ricultural centers, dubbed "cow colleges" by many in the coun- try, upon whom the President may call and whose workers have been the most successful persons this nation has sent abroad. -in Kennedy in Power, by James Crown and George Penty 1 TODAY AND TOMORROW: Giant Step in Tariff, Trade ';r The Big Clean Bomb THE SOVIET UNION has exploded several bombs in what appears to be the release of international frustration. Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev has -been stymied temporarily on the Berlin Front by the West; in the Balkans, by the Albanians, in Central Asia by his desire not to .upset the Afro-Asian bloc, and in East Asia by the Communist Chinese. As to internal Soviet affairs he is apparently still troubled by the "anti-party" bloc of V. M. Molotov, and Stalinist ideas. He has to do something to keep up his image. The impact of the Soviet Astronauts has worn off since last August and apparently, another shot 'is not ready. The only thing he can do is drop his bombs., Editorial Staff JOHN ROBERTS. Editor THE UNITED STATES has suddenly found itself in a' windfall of propaganda advan- tages and nuclear debris. The United States appears to have gained an advantage in the race for peace. But our politicans have reached a con- clusion which is almost as psychologically dis-oriented as the Russian's. We must, in a great American tradition, drop bigger and better bombs. Its the ultimate triumph of free capitalistic society. We discover that a major element of this country- isbusily preparing for war. The Reservists have been called up and people are being war-conditioned. Everyone who is anyone must have a fall- out shelter. They are in vogue. People must actually think that they can go into their shelters, live for a few weeks out of touch with the rest of the society, and tlen emerge into a somewhat dustier world with melted buildings and carry on life as they have always known it. By WALTER LIPPMANN IN A STATEMENT issued jointly by Mr. Christian Herter and Mr. Will Clayton, and published as a Congressional document by Rep. Hale Bogg's Committee, they say that "the time has come for the United States to take a giant step." The giant step is in the field of tariffs and trade policy, and the direction of the giant step is towards a much closer trading relationship with the non-f Communist world. The purpose of the step is to increase greatly the prosperity of the non-Communist world. The, significance of the step is that it will draw together the non- Communist world into a union quite capable of confronting the Communist orbit confidently, of competing with it effectively, and of co-existing with it securely. ** * IT IS A GRANDIOSE under- taking. But it is not a vision in the air. The Atlantic Community has existed as an historic fact since the Spanish and the Por- tuguese, the French, the British, the Dutch and the Swedes, col- onized North and South America some three centuries ago. That there has always been an Atlantic Community since then is attested by our own history. Be- ginning with colonial times there has been no great war in Europe in which Americans have not be- come engaged. The experience of the Second World War has taught the Ameri- can people that it would be an history. It has become undesir- able to adhere to our traditional tariff policy, because we cannot afford to miss the opportunity to participate in a movement which will lift the non-Communist world, out of the doldrums. ** * THESE ARE big words, and they might well be so much hot air if it were not , that, there is< al- ready under way negotiation of the terms of the new trading com- munity. We shall not come di- rectly into these negotiations un- til Britain, having taken care of the vital interests of the Com- monwealth, has been accepted as a member of the Common Market. More or less simultaneously there will come into it also, with cer- tain reservations, Switzerland, Austria, and the Scandinavian countries. When this has been accom- plished, we shall have to be ready to take what Messrs. Herter and Clayton call the giant step. The enlarged Common Market will con- tain over 300,000,000 people work- ing and living in what will very soon be a free trade area. There can be no doubt that in such a big market European in- dustry will advance spectacularly. This will confrorit us with the question of whether we should seal ourselves up in our ownmar- ket or'move to open up access for our exports to the much larger European markets. If we choose to open up the access, we shall not obtain it as a favor or be- cause Europe is grateful to us, or even because Europe depends up- .n a'fn .cry a .. .rnm t a m - rm tionship can be worked out is in effect to authorize the President to negotiate an economic arrange- ment with the Common Market providing for a broad reciprocal reduction of tariff walls. Agreeing n 'this much, there is some difference of opinion about the political tactics that the Pres- ident, shouldr adopt. Some think that he should go to Congress during the coming session and ask for new legislation to replace the old legislation which expires in June. Others think that he should declare and explain the new policy to this session of Congress, but that he should postpone specific legislation until 1963. * * * THE ARGUMENT of the first group is that letting the existing legislation expire without sub- stituting any in its place would give the impression of a retreat from the policy of liberalizing trade. Pressing trade policy issues will arise before the new Com- mon Market comes into being which require that the President possess sufficient authority to deal with them. The argument of the second group is that so great a change in our traditional tariff policy, this "giant step," requires a longer period of education and public debate than we have yet had. Dropping such legislation into. a Congress which is preoccupied- with an election would almost certainly mean a scrimmage of special interests and a debate at a much lower level than the sub- ject requires. They feel satisfied that nothing Will be lost by the 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. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3 General Notices The University of Michigan Blood Bank Association, in cooperation with the American Red Cross, will have its regnia Rnr 'Rank Clinic on Nov. 16. Applications for - Fellowships and Scholarships in the Graduate School for 1962-63 are now available. Competition closes February 15, 1962. Applications and information may be obtained in the Graduate School Offices, Rackham Bldg. or in departmental offices. Renewal forms are availablenat the Graduate School. Only students who. Intend to enroll in the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies for 1962-63 may apply. Ford Foundation announces doctoral dissertation fellowships for 1962-63, for students in Sociology, Anthropology, Psychology, Political Science and Sta- tistics, whose dissertations bear on busi- ness nrnhlms. Stinnd of $254O dA-