Seventy-Second Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Vn ere Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Truth Will PFrevall" TODAY AND TOMORROW: Fallout Shelter Panic Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers orthe editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AY, NOVEMBER 17, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: HARRY PERLSTADT Women-in-the-Quads Vote: What Can Public Pressure Do? RESSURES FROM the Regents, the ad- ministration and an aroused public are verwhelming the IQC proposal to allow wo- aen in the quadrangles. They will probably nake fair-minded consideration of the matter mnpossible. Presidentl Thomas Moch and his associates Lave done their best to make the motion echiically perfect so that it can be considered olely on the basis of merit. To meet objections that the plan might iot be physically feasible, they organized a ommittee which showed in detail how it might e implemented in West Quadrangle. And to rove that the men themselves really wanted he rule change, they got the house councils a most housing units to hold referendums. Vith heavy turnouts, the vote has ranged rom 80 to 94 per cent favorable. Y IRONING OUT the details in advance, Moch and IQC have made it possible for he Board of Governors to come directly to rips with the fundamental question involved. tripped of its embellishments, that question s simply this: does one group of people, the niversity, have the right to restrict the per- Anal lives of another group, the students, Oithout their consent? No one should underplay the complexity of Liat question. It is conceivable that the Board f Governors, after considering it carefully, 4ould conclude that the University does have uch a right. This conclusion would be open A attack on various philosophical and educa- ional grounds-most of them already discussed i The Daily-but it would at least be a irect answer to the question. JNFORTUNATELY, it now appears that the Board of Governors is never going to get hat far in its deliberations. Moch and IQC id their work well, but they failed to plan or the most complicating factor-protest from be University's constituency. Outraged letters and phone calls are re- ortedly swamping the Administration Build- ig, creating tremendous pressure to simply ear up the proposal from IQC without even bnsidering it on its own merits. Some of this protest is flatly nonsensical. he Ann Arbor News and The Daily have rinted a number of incredible letters from ysterical citizens. One alleged that the IQC iotton was written by "trained students .. . 4h are forwarding a master plan which will ut them in control of the University." An- bher letter, to Assembly President Sally Jo awyer, warned' of "subversive elements" who re "subtly manipulating" the students. 3UT IT IS NOT FAIR of course to regard such remarks as typical. Without doubt, uch of the protest is coming from ordinary, mnsible citizens who don't fear a student volution but are genuinely upset at the rospect of their sons and daughters being qposed to extra temptations. They have a gitimate right to express their concern, and ie University owes them the courtesy of a earing. eH Hornung an PHE ARMY has shown hesitation, uncer- tainty, and a lack of purpose in evaluating e physical qualifications of professional hletes in the current activation of the ser- ces. Take the case of Green Bay Packer star half- xck Paul Hornung. Hornung, the vital cog the Packer machine, set a new NFL single- ason scoring record and was named to the ague's all-pro team in 1960. ORNUNG WAS ORDERED to report for an army physical on Oct. 21. The decision on ese tests was kept secret, stipposedly, because the "extreme delicacy" of the situation. Then, on Oct. 27, Hornung was ordered to port to the Great Lakes (Ill.) Naval Hospital r "further testing." The announced reason r these further tests was a pinched nerve Hornung's neck. The further tests com- ted, he was given a two-week deferment ich allowed him to play in two crucial id-season games for the Packers. The announced purpose of the deferment is for "reviewing and rechecking" the test sults. IHowever, as Hornung himself later revealed, my physicians had classified him as physic- y ineligible for military duty at the con- usion of the first series of tests. It is in-; resting to note that Hornung made this velation public only after finally and ir- vocably accepted by the Army- ET US, for the sake of argument, concede ,the possibility that the results of the first ries of tests were inconclusive and that this cessitated the second series; and let us fur- er concede that the Army physicians did )7OPtat.~n EtF r, i ilnPA tun a l b n BUT IF A MAN of greatness can not let himself be dominated by the will of the masses, the same must be true of an institution which aspires to greatness. Public opinion is only a factor. It should not become an ir- resistable imperative-panicking the Univer- sity into snap judgements or causing it to forsake its normal decision-making channels. But that is exactly what seems to be happening with the IQC proposal. According to the Regents Bylaws, the Board of Governors "shall determine and give effect to general policies with respect to the use ,of the residence. halls." This means that the administration and the Regents themselves are not regarded as policymakers as far as the residence halls are concerned. But events of the last few days raise doubts about this. WHEN THE IQC motion first came up, most members of the Board expressed guarded approval of it. Only Dean of Women Deborah Bacon was openly hostile. But as public protest has mounted, the Board members have been increasingly pressured by University admin- istrators to vote against it. Now, even the Regents are reportedly putting on the screvs. By the time the Board of Governors con- venes Monday, the issue may already have been killed-not because it is poorly wrked out, not because it conflicts with the edaca- tional objectives of the University-but simply because too many parents, taxpayers and legis- lators don't like it. A UNIVERSITY SHOULD aim at imbuing students with the wisdom to build a ner- sonal philosophy and the courage and integ- rity to defend it. Administrators and faculty members should have enough strength of character to teach these principles by example. But it is unfortunately true that the sup- posed leaders of this institution are paralyzed by their fear of a vastly overgeneralized public. They habitually sacrifice principle for some undefined quality called "the good of the University." THE IQC MOTION to allow women in the quadrangles will be at stake Monday. But, more important, the whole process by which the University Community makes decisions will also be at stake. I repeat: the only relevant question is whether the University should have the right to impose restrictions on students without their consent. Let the IQC motion be debated in these terms and the entire community will profit, whatever the decision. BUT IF the Board of Governors members submit to pressure from the administration and reject the motion out of hand, they will have betrayed the highest principles of the teacher and scholar. And if the administration allows itself to be stampeded by public clamor it will have forfeited any claim to respect from the student body or the public itself. --JOHN ROBERTS Editor d the Army secretive. unpublicized rejection of Hornung, its later reversal, and the ensuing acceptance. THERE'IS SUSPICION that, after their ini- tial decision, the Army higher-ups began to wonder what form public reaction to the decision would take. There is also suspicion that this afterthought prompted both the retraction of the in ineligi- bility ruling and the second series of tests. There is further suspicion that after the announcement that the second series of tests would be necessary, the charges by Iowa's Republican Senator John Miller and others were influential in the Army's alteration of Its original decision. Miller charged Hornung's case had "been handled in such a way as to cause widespread suspicion" and that "the availability of Hornung to play in two key games . . . was the real reason underlying his deferment." CLEARLY, the Army should not assume that all professional athletes are automatically qualified for military duty simply because their occupations necessitate their repeatedly taking part in strenous physical activities. Many top athletes-Mickey Mantle and Ray Berry are excellent examples-are totally un- qualified for military duty due to serious knee and bone injuries, and other disabilities. But it would be wrong not to accept Hornung solely because he is a professional athlete -~ of course it hurts the Packers to lose the NFL's top scorer, but it hurts a business firm to lose a rising young executive; it hurts a faculty to lose a brilliant young professor; and it hurt The Daily to lose its Editorial Director, Harvey Molotch. DUT THFESE L.OSESareirrelevaint. By WALTER LIPPMANN THE FEAR and bewilderment which enshroud the business of fallout shelters are threatening to corrupt the morale of our people. The evil comes from telling them that they are in danger of being exterminated, and that they can and should save themselves sep- arately, each family for itself, and the devil take the hindmost. This is the way to breed panic. It is like telling the passengers of a ship that the ship may sink and that while there are not enough life preservers for everyone, each man should try to make one for himself. * * * LET US FIND OUT if we can how we got into this mess and how we can get out of it. The record shows clearly, it seems to me, that the trouble was caused by what the President said about shelters in the address of July 25, dealing with the Berlin crisis. The popular excitement and interest in shelters date from that address. For in it the nation was told, or at least encouraged to believe, that at Vienna in June Khrushchev had delivered a six months ultimatum to Kennedy, and that sipce we rejected the ul- timatum firmly, a thermonuclear war was quite possible by the end of December. It was in this context that the President told the people that in the coming months he would let every citizen know what steps he could "take without delay to pro- tect his family in case of attack." It was a very bad mistake to tie together the six months dead- line about Berlin with a call for immediate action to each citizen to save his family. For the fact is that no serious program of fallout shelters can conceivably be carried out in six months by private ini- tiative. But being told to try it has frightened people without do- ing anything to save them. LETTERS to the IEDITOR --- Quadrants . To the Editor: AT TODAY'S meeting of the East Quadrangle Quadrants it was brought to my attention that in The Daily of November 7 it, was printed that the East Quad Quadrants had backed certain stu- dents that were running for of- fices on SGC. I gave no notice to The Daily and as far as we could tell no one in our group contacted The Daily. We never even discussed the candidates at any of our meetings. We feel that we may have been associated with these students and are quite disturbed that the ar- ticle was printed. If you did get the knowledge from any student source I strongly urge you to drop him from your source list. We feel that since we have been wrongly represented to the Stu- dent Body at Michigan that even at such a late date a correction should be printed. -J. Downs Herold President, East Quad. Quadrants (Letters to the Editor should be limited to 300 words, typewritten and double spaced. The Daily re- serves the right to edit or withhold any letter. Only signed letters will be printed.) THAT THE IMPRESSION con- veyed by the address of July 25 was a mistake is evident from the fact that only two months earlier, in the President's Special Message of May 25, he had expounded the concept of civil defense coolly, clearly, and exactly. In view of the state of mind which now pre- vails in the country, what he said then is worth quoting at length. "This Administration has been, looking very hard at exactly what civil defense can and cannot do. It cannot be obtained cheaply. t cannot give an assurance of blast protection that will be proof against surprise attack or guaran- teed against obsolescence orde- struction. And it cannot deter a nuclear attack.- "We will deter an enemy from making a nuclear attack only if our retaliatory power is so strong and so invulnerable that he knows he would be destroyed by our re- sponse. If we have that strength, civiladefense is not needed to de- ter an attack. If we should ever lack it, civil defense would not be an adequate substitute. "But this deterrent concept as- sumes rational calculations by ra- tional men. And the history of this planet is sufficient to remind us of the possibilities of an irrational attack, a miscalculation, an acci- dental war which cannot be either foreseen or deterred. The nature of modern warfare heightens these possibilities. "It is on this basis that civil de- fense can readily be justified - as insurance for the civilian popula- tion in the event of such a miscal- culation. It is insurance we trust will never be needed-but insur- ance which we could never forgive ourselves for foregoing in the event of catastrophe. "Once the validity of this con- cept is recognized, there is no point in delaying the initiation of a nationwide long-range program of identifying present fallout shel- ter capacity and providing shelter in new and existing . structures. Such a program would protect mil- lions of people against the hazards of radioactive fallout in the eveii, of a large-scale nuclear attack. "To assure effective use of these shelters, additional measures will be required for warning, training, radiological monitoring, and stock- piling of food and medicines. And effective performance of the en- tire program requires not only new legislative authority and more funds, but also sound organiza- tional arrangements." S* * THE CRUCIAL DIFFERENCE between May 25 and June 25 is this. Before his encounter with Khrushchev in Vienna, the Pres- ident saw clearly and said clearly that a serious shelter policy would have to be "a long - range pro- gram," that it could not be cheap, and that it would require new planning and new organization. On July 25 he gave the impres- sion, though his exact words do not say so, that a shelter program could be carried out as an emer- gency measure against the six months ultimatum. It is the treatment of the policy on shelters as an emergency meas- ure which has caused all the trou- ble. Why this policy as an emer- gency measure was decided upon between the month of June and the last week of July is a question we shall have to leave to the his- torians. What we have to do now, however, is clear enough. We have to return to the policy and doc- trine of the message of May 25, and the sooner this ter. The message of May 25 lays down two propositions. The first is that our only true defense against nuclear attack is to main- tain at all costs a retaliatory power "so strong and so invulnerable" that an aggressor would be de- stroyed even if he made the first strike. The second proposition is that since the first proposition "as- sumes rational calculations by ra- tional men," we have to protect ourselves also against irrational calculations by irrational men. It is against this, not against the Berlin crisis and not against de- liberate aggression but against ir- rationality, that we should build shelters in a long-range program. This second proposition can use- fully, I think, be developed some- what further. The main danger of an irrational war is that one or the other of the nuclear powers will find itself in a dead-end street from which there is no exit except by surrender or mutual sui- cide. One of the nuclear powers could maneuver the other nuclear power into a position that amounts to intolerable provocation. Or one of the nuclear powers could ma- neuver itself into the dead-end .street by making impossible de- mands from which it was unable to recede without humiliating loss of face. These are the situations which could easily enough, even in this democracy, engender irrational ac- tions by mass pressures of people who had lost their heads. * * * IT IS THE BUSINESS of diplo- macy to avoid getting into and to avoid getting the other side into the dead-end street. This is the nuclear age, and in the nuclear age war cannot be employed by diplomacy as an instrument of na- tional policy. Until the nuclear age, which began only about ten years ago, a government could, as George Washington said, "choose peace or war, as our interest guid- ed by Justice, shall counsel." This is no longer possible as be- tween nuclear powers. They can- not choose war, and therefore the national interest has to be promot- ed and defended by other means. As between contending nuclear powers, nuclear weapons can be used only to neutralize other nu- clear weapons. (c) 1961 New York Herald Tribune, Inc. DAMLY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily O ficial Buletn is an official publication of TheUniJaver- 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 ztp.m., two days preceding publication. FRIDAY, NOVEMER 17 General Notices College of L. S. & A. Honors Assembly Nov. 17, Aud. A at 4:15 p.m. Oliver Edel, prof of cello and chamber music, will present the first of a series of lectures on the use of various musical instru- mnents in small ensembles. Foreign Student scholarships. The deadline for tuition Scholarship appli- cations for second semester is Dec. 15. Forms are available from the Counsel- ors at the International Center. summary of Action Taken by Student Government Council at Its Meeting of November 15, 1961 Approved: Minutes of the previous meeting. (Continued on Page 8) done, the bet- CHORAL UNION EXTRA SERIES: Cleveland Orchestra- Sensitive and Vigorous FROM THE OPENING PAGES of the Haydn Symphony, No. 92, finely controlled playing and careful balance of parts were evident in last night's performance by the Cleveland orchestra under the leader- ship of George Szell. It is to Mr. Szell's credit that he can refrain from introducing unwritten additions to the composer's work, and yet instill life to the presentation. Subtle nuances may be less spectacular than some of the interpolations of other conductors, but they are more tasteful. And, Szell is tasteful. This symphonic product of Haydn's later life abounds with grace, wit, and surprise as do so many of this genius' compositions. * * * * WITH THE SECOND WORK' on the program, the audience was still in the presence of masterful and yet virile writing. Hindemith's "Concert Music for String Orchestra and Brass Instruments" is the work of a master craftsman but surpasses being merely "good on paper." This vigorous, dramatic piece is full of energy and complemented with contrasting lyricism. The Cleveland brass were sharp, crisp, and gusty and the strings executed their virtuoso parts effectively. Hindemith wrote this work at the age of 35 for the fiftieth anniver- sary of the Boston Symphony. It possesses an intellectual depth and listenability that makes it one of the fine products of this century. * * * * THE FINAL WORK was the "Second Symphony" of another master, Johannes Brahms. This is the lightest and most lyrical of his four symphonies. Szell's realization of this work was caressing rather than sugary romantic, once more a result of his good taste. The characteristic rhythmic vitality of Brahms were present in the performance along with consistent-fine solo playing by the wind instruments. The only percussion on the entire concert was timpani, and again a very satisfactory balance of this orchestral voice was main- tained. Szell's goal is to conduct an orchestra through a performance which has the clarity and precision of a chamber group. By and large he achieves this. There were spots of imperfection in ensemble attacks, but the person who expects to hear the perfect performance will die unhappy. * * * * SZELL'S LONG YEARS of experience have beenapplied to his orchestra with great success. The city of Cleveland should be proud and thankful to have him there. -Donald Matthews AT THE MICHIGAN Social .Hatreds Flare" in Powerful 'own' DON'T GO TO "Town Without Pity" for entertainment. It is a pow- erful movie which involves you so deeply in emotional crisis and so- cial inhumanity that you forget its basic setting-a court martial trial -has been exploited many times. Four enlisted men serving in Germany are charged with the rape of a town girl, and it is Kirk Douglas' sticky job to keep them from the death penalty as an Army defense counsel. Beneath the surface fer- ments pent-up hatred between social classes, townspeople and soldiers, parents and the person who threatens to take away their son or daugh- ter, the ugly and the beautiful. Because the strict German father of Karen (Christine Kaufman) cannot bear toexact anything but a death sentence for the wrong committed against his perfect daugh- ter, he ruins her life, with help from other townspeople. This is ac- companied by snickers from the tart inhabitants of the "Florida Bar," where scenes of the seamy German youth culture are reminiscent of our own-except for slight glamourization. Here is one trial picture where the climax comes after the main court scenes are over. * * * *, THE EVENTS bear some resemblance to the highly successful "Anatomy of a Murder," with the grunching rock and roll of Dimitri Tiomkin replacing the jazz of Duke 'Ellington. Both movies are in black and white, both revolve around a life-and-death trial situation. Both are authentic in their effects. Kirk Douglas is a fine actor, but there are only rare moments when he is allowed to leave the niche of Army-lawyer-in-courtroom and reveal his talent. To help fill in for German-speaking actors, a voice of female ice floats in after the initial dramatic sequence (which precedes the credits, a very good technique if not overused). When the voice ap- pears in human form it turns out to be a petulant, cute, hard-working tabloid journalist. You're never sure if she is a villain or not, which is a pleasant change from ordinary stereotypes.' When ,the actions of other reporters floating around the sensational trial are hinted at late in the film, you really wonder. After such a sober movie, you will probably feel in need of some relief, so stick around for the next show and watch the previews of Elvis's latest. --Richard Ostling SOPH SHOW: 'Guys and Dolls'; Actually Swvings l I "One Of Our Best Portrait Artists - He's Painted Out Some Of The Most Famous Men Of The Last 40 Years" ZOOMING IN from virtually no- where last night, Soph Show, with a cast of thousands, dazzled a normally emotionless crowd of stuents and townsfolk. Surrounded by a vast orchestra (the horn solos were actually playe'd by a' horn) the chorus and dancers floated through some fairly intricate arrangements. Somehow, Ray Rusnak's name was left off the program-an un- intentional touch of high irony- since he ostensibly shouldered the immense burden of training and conducting what was certainly the best sounding Soph Show orches- tra and chorus in at least five years, * * * MARCIA KATZ as Adelaide is a real knockout; she has no trouble with the part, which would send a lesser actress back to Mich'- igras skits. James Benson, as Sky; Masterson doesn't sing too loud, but then neither did Marlon Brando if you remember the mo- vie. Matthew Cohen and Martin Laker are as good a pair of crap- shooters (Harry the Horse and Big Julie) as ever came out of Chicago for real. Beverly Karan- ovich, as Sarah Brown, has pierc- which blinks on and off in seven- teen colors, everything is slick and convincing. The scene changes really change on time, the peo- ple behind the scrims don't show until they are supposed to, people in crowds don't bump into each other even when they aren't look- ing. There is a chorus line produc- tion of "Take Back Your Mink," complete with reprise, successfully calculated to break up the audi- ence. In it, some very cute coeds do an amazing strip-tease. There is a lot of shakin', bumpin' and other stuff going on, and when they dance in the chorus line, they aren't quite together but who cares? USUALLY in reviewing a stu-, dent production, the reviewer makes a conscious effort to be nice to something which is tradition- ally wretched. This time I feel no guilt whatsoever in recommend- ing Soph Show to all. It's not the Broadway cast, but for all its length (three hours), it swings. -Dick Pollinger Accumulation I