Seventy-Second Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS 'Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL HARRAH INTEGRATION IN THE SOUTH: The Battle of Law with Law The Exceptional Student: Exueriment in Learning~ MOST HONORS STUDENTS aren't much dif- ferent from average undergraduates. They get slightly higher grades, but they flock to lecture courses, just like everybody else, prefer multiple choice exams to thought-provoking essays, and would probably rather listen than read. BUT THERE ARE significant exceptions. There are, in . every honors group (and sometimes outside of it), a few students who want to work on their own-creative, enthus- iastic young scholars who are only annoyed by the strictures of classes and the structure of credit hours. Frequently, these students do not do well. They get poor grades, refuse to attend classes, vent their excess energies in all kinds of extra- curricular activities, getting what education they can on their own initiative. These students need a special education- tailored to their individual needs and great in- dividual potential. It is up to the honors pro- gram to provide this education. It would not be very difficult. It would re-, quire considerable daring and imagination on the part of the administrators of the honors program. BUT IT IS TIME for the honors program to try a daring experience. Next year, Prof. OttoGraf, as head of the program, should pick ten students out of the freshman honors group. They would be chosen not necessarily according to grades or test scores, but for a proven capa- city for independent work shown in high school and a set of at least semi-definite goals. Each of,these students would be assigned to a permanent adviser-a man in his proposed .major field who would help him plan out his four years of school. The student would be given free rein to develop his personal inter- ests, under the guidance of his tutor. The studentIwould have only one required class each week-an hour-long tutorial. He could use the extra time as he likes-auditing courses, working in the library, attending lec- tures, writing essays and reports. He would hand in his essays at the weekly tutorial, where the tutor would go over them in great detail-suggesting additional reading where necessary and pointing out related sub- jects of interest. The tutor could also steer the student into reading and auditing courses in fields other than his own-working out a coherent program of study in related subjects, rather than the slap-dash choice of courses which now passes for a "liberal education" among so many un- dergraduates. If the student wants to do extensive work in other fields, the tutor can arrange to trade, students for awhile with a man in another field, or the honors program itself can arrange for other professors to act ,as short term tu- tors. AT THE END of four years in this program, the student would take a battery of com- prehensive examinations, conducted not by his tutor, but by an inter-departmental commit- tee. There would be examinations in his major field of study, in two or three related fields, and in language, if the student was not exempt from the requirement. He would also take the Graduate Record Examination, which would establish his credit with the graduate schools. At graduation, the student who had passed this course would be given a letter, certifying that he has graduated in good standing from an experimental program at the University, worth at least 120 hours of credit. If some grading system must be employed, his degree could be classed according to the results of the comprehensive and his tutor's recommendation. The graduate schools should be delighted to, have such students-trained in scholarship at the undergraduate level, able to work inde- pendently and creatively, with a wide back- ground in a special field and a certain liberal- ity of education. THERE ARE A NUMBER of problems with this program. The high schoolpreparation of the University freshman varies greatly-- few students would have sufficient background for independent work. But there are extraordinary high schools (Bronx High School of Science and Winnetka's New Trier, for example) which send a good many students here, and even in the weaker high school system, there are extraordinary students who have determinedly educated them- selves far beyond the high school level. And it is these students, more than any others, who could benefit from a program like this one. ANOTHER PROBLEM is cost. Obviously, a professor with 15 hours of tutorials a week teaches far fewer people than a lecturer who teaches 300 students per week. But there is no reason to expect that any one man would have to teach 15 tutorial students at any time.' Every professor with a minimal interest in education, or even in recruiting intelligent scholars for his field, should be willing to take two or three hours a week to guide a really interested undergraduate. And if fifty teachers in the literary college take on students for this program, it could be eventually expanded to around 150 students. THE PROGRAM probably shouldn't be much bigger than this. It is not intended to ever apply to all of the students in the literary college, or even most of the students in the honors program. But it could make all the difference in the world to the brilliant freshman who came eager and intense to the University which was to mean Higher Education-only to be disillusion- ed, disheartened and disgusted by elementary courses, an over-abundance of class hours, and professors who pace their lectures to the slower student. These brilliant freshmen are important far beyond the indication of their numbers, for they are the geniuses of the next generation. They deserve the most ingenious education the hon- ors program can devise for them. --FAITH WEINSTEIN Editorial Director (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the last of three articles on the federal government's power to speed inte- gration in the South.) By PHILIP SUTIN - SOUTHERN STATES have re- sorted to both legal and violent means in their battle to prevent, or delay, integration. These have included closing schools, modify- ing state attendence and trespass laws, legal harrassment of inte- gration organizations and officially sanctioned violent intimidation of these groups. Most of the states' attention has been focused on the schools. All Southern state legislatures have protested the Supreme Court's 1954 decision and have enacted laws designed to thwart it. Dodges, ranging from legislation closing public schools in case of integration to the modification of school attendence laws. PERHAPS the most popular de- vice is the pupil placement law. Under these laws the school boards are required to place students in schools on the basis of educational criteria. Because of the vagueness of these laws, assignment by race can be hidden by other factors. No one has tested the segregating aspect of their application to date. Another popular provision, ac- cording to a 1957 survey run by the Southern School News, is abolition or modification of com- pulsory attendence laws. Missis- sippi and South Carolina have re- pealed them. Every other Southern state except Florida, Tennessee and Texas has modified them to prevent citizens from being forced to attend integrated schools. Some states provide for the elimination of school districts or schools if they are ordered to integrate. Alabama, Mississippi and Virginia permit local option on the dissolving of districts while in South Carolina the legislature may abolish them. Mississippi has both provisions. Georgia had the latter system, but repealed the laws when a federal court in that state indicated they were uncon- stitutional. VIRGINIA'S Prince Edward County, one of the five original defendants in the school integra- tion suits, closed its public schools rather than integrate them. The white children go to private schools an dthe Negroes are left without any educational facilities. In the litigation with the Prince Edward County school board, the courts destroyed a number of de- laying measures. It barred all state aid and leasing of facilities to private, segregated schools. Similar decisions have invalidated laws in Alabama, Georgia and North Carolina. They have also nullified laws providing other aid to such institutions. LOUISIANA'S ATTEMPTS to prevent the integration of New Orleans schools resulted in the invalidation of other evasive measures. Laws limiting state funds to segregated schools in Louisiana, Georgia, North Carolina and Virginia were erased by courts last year. Further, Louisiana could no longer legally withhold funds from integrated schools. Events in Little Rock and New Orleans discredited the use of special powers by the governor to prevent integration. Georgia, Flor- ida, South Carolina and Virginia had such laws on their books. * * * STATE PROTESTS and nulli- fication declarations are popular and harmless approaches to delay- ing integration. After the 1954 decision, all the Southern state legislatures registered protest. A number of them passed nullifica- tion declarations seeking to uni- laterally declare the Supreme Court decision unconstitutional. These statements rest on three assertions: 1) The Constitution is a com- pact between sovereign states which may be modified unilater- ally by the states;' 2) the federal government is an agent of the states, using powers delegated by the Constitution; and 3) the states have the right to interpose their will when the fed- eral government oversteps its authority. THE NULLIFICATION doctrine was first proposed in 1798 in the Virginia and Kentucky resolutions against the Alien and Sedition Acts. Northerners used it during the War of 1812 and Southerners, held by South Carolina Sen. John C. Calhoun, made the doctrine famous during the tariff debates of 1832. However, nullification doctrines have never been accepted by the courts or by the bulk of the American people and have had no effect on integration decisions. In a number of border state cities, passive resistance to in- tegration has developed. When the schools were desegregated, the whites moved from the neighbor- hoods of an integrated school, leaving a segregated Negro in- stitution in its wake. This Northern trend is reflected in the all-time high of 80 per cent Negro students in the Washing- ton D.C. school system. Baltimore schools have experienced a ten- year loss of 175,552 whites and the gain of 40,754 Negroes. * * * THE STATES have resorted to other legal means to stem integra- tion. A favorite is the harrass- ment of the NAACP, and other integrationist groups. Lousiana, Mississippi and Virginia have laws requiring the registration of NA- ACP membership lists. In addition, South Carolina bars government employees, including teachers, from joining the organization. The NAACP is fighting these laws in the courts, but no final action has been taken on them. * -* * MISSISSIPPI has a unique in- stitution for fighting integration -the State Soverignty Commis- sion. It is composed of the gov- ernor, lieutenant governor, the attorney general, the speaker of the house, five legislators and three private citizens. According to Mississippi law, it is charged with "prohibiting by every lawful, peaceful and con- stitutional means the, implemen- tation of or the compliance with integration decisions " The Commission is the chief propagandist for segregation. It has sent speakers to all parts of the nation (including Michigan last summer)(and has grandiose Blast? FROM A RECENT news release: "The Pearl Harbor Survivors Association will hold their reunion at the Disneyland Hotel, Anaheim, ,California." See if they can survive that! -F.L.W. schemes for buying national net- work television time to defend segregation. Aside from this propaganda function, the commission watches over Mississippi to see that there is no wavering from diehard seg- regation. * * POLICE HARRASSMENT and other forms of non-legal intimida- tion are viciously used to prevent integration. Police dogs are train- ed to attackdemonstrators for integration. Negroes registering to vote have been attacked on city hall steps in Mississippi. Integra- tion leaders have been beaten, shot and even killed for activities. Former Daily Editor Thomas Hay- den, '61, recently cited the case of a leader in the Mississippi NAACP who was murdered by a state legislator during the recent campaign to register Negro voters. Since such acts of violence and terror are condoned by local of- ficials and courts, this intimida- tion is quite effective. But without recourse to a legal defense, integrationists are suc- ,cessfully meeting this violence. WHILE STATE DEFENSES have been mainly enocerned with edu- cation, the sit-ins and the tree- dom riders have presented the South with another challenge to segregation. Mississippi and Louisiana have passed stronger anti-trespass laws to thwart the integrationists. The Mississippi statute penalizes any person who "with intent to pro- voke a breach of the peace, or under circumstances such that a breach may be occassioned thereby . . . crowds or congregates with others" in any number of public or private places which are mainly sites of sit-in or freedom ride demonstrations. This sort of law has been viewed by state and federal judges as being unrelated to segregation. However, it was clearly not the intent of the legislature that pass- ed it. When Rep. Joe Wroten, of Washington County, Miss., ob- jected that a proposed trespass law may violate the right of peace- ful assembly, one of the bill's sponsors, Wroten reported, told him: "You know what the bill's for. There is no need to talk about it." The Jackson Clarion Ledger summed up this and four similar bills in the headline, "Segregation Bills Get Okay in House." The Mississippi Senate rushed the bill to the governor in case it would have been needed to quell a wade-in at the Biloxi beaches the weekend after it was considered. However, the Supreme Court has already indicated the law is unconstitutional by reversing a trespass conviction in Boynton vs. Virginia last December. This year, it will consider the first of th sit-in cases. If it follows form, it will sweep away this evasion to integration. THUS, ONE DODGE and eva- sion after another is being struck down by the courts. Soon segrega- tion will have no legal defense, leaving the South with non- violent, or more likely violent, re- sistance tactics left. Time will tell whether it is in the Southern temperament to re- sist integration only through pas- sive means. The South faces a choice as all the legal evasions are being closed-compliance or illegal and possibly violent re- sistance. --Daily-Larry Vanice Even Columbus Would Enjoy MUSKET HISTORY WAS REWRITTEN last night on the stage of the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, and a most pleasant retelling it was. LAND HO!, a new musical comedy by Jack O'Brien, Grad, opened a lively run of five performances as this year's MUSKET production. Christopher Columbus himself might not agree with this version of his famous sea voyage, but even he would have enjoyed himself in the company of zany sailors and highly improbable 'sea maidens, zestfully directed by Clarence Stephenson. O'Brien, not satisfied with a most palatable book for the show, added sprightly lyrics (some of them downright inventive!) and a bright music score, and then to make it a complete victory for the Irish, threw in a 'marvelously hilarious performance in the title role for good measure. Surely no one in the most enthusiastic audience (and they were enthusiastic) would disagree that this was O'Brien's night all the way. Fortunately, he did have some creative help. Conductor Bob James ran a taut ship, as he whipped through all the complexities in a well- disciplined orchestra and a well-rehearsed chorus of gobs and gals. His orchestrations revealed his grasp of tonal shades, syncopated rhythms, whimsical humor, and an occasional touch of sheer musical madness: all the ingredients that make for a good musical comedy. * * * * ALL THE COLORS of the rainbow were used in the costumes and decor: from Columbus' dandy pink boudoir below deck, to the pastel shades in the broom handles, and naturally, the fresh hues in the girls' low-cut sea-suits. Susan Breckenridge (Catherine) sang "Come Away" with a touch of the tipsy;'Mike Robbins (Pinzon) was a balanced foil for Columbus; Lavetta Loyd sang a lovely Marie in "Love Will Come" and "Other Nights, Other Dreams" (would that her acting matched her vocal ten- derness, but so goes it with musical comedy heroines); David Smalley (Morgan) added a pleasant voice as the Welshman. ON THE DEBIT SIDE, it must be noted that three hours is much too long a running time, not only for LAND HO!, but for just about any musical. Judicious cutting of both dialogue and musical numbers would leave the audience with the feeling that they want more, not that they finally had enough. While the collective volume of sailors and maidens was a joy to hear, the space limitations of the set added to the modest Lydia Men- delssohn working area, would suggest cutting down the overall number of singers, actors and dancers; this would ease manipulations from one part of the set to another, as well as giving the audience an oc- casional glimpse of space fore and aft. But, the above qualifications notwithstanding, LAND HOI Is a voyage well worth taking. -Jerry Sandler LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: English 123 Valuable, R eadings 'Gold Mines' TODAY AND TOMORROW Shale-up at State By WAL.TE R LIPMaNNi "Wait A Minute, Now - One At A Time" IN MANNER AND SUBSTANCE, the shake-up in the State Department is heartening evi- dence of the President's uncommon ability to learn from experience. It has been evident from the beginning of his term, dramatically evident after the Cuban affair, that the relations be- tween the White House and the State Depart- nent were unsatisfactory. The President's per- sonal advisers did not have the professional knowledge and diplomatic facilities which are in the State Department. Speaking broadly, the State Department did not have the full confidence of the White House, where policy is ultimately decided. As the consequences of this separation of responsibility from authority showed themselves during the spring, the first reaction within the Administration was to look for a scapegoat. He was to be Chester Bowles, and the ac- tivists in this venture talked and acted as if the removal of Chester Bowles would solve the problem of the relationship between the White House and the Department of State. Fortunate- ly, the ouster of Bowles was blocked. WITHIN the executive branch of the gov- ernment (which of course did not include Sen. Fulbright) Mr. Bowles had been the most conspicuous opponent of the Cuban adventure. It would have been scandalous to remove an opponent of the mistake when none of the proponents had been removed. Yet it was evi- dent then, as it is now, that Bowles, despite his exceptional abilities, was miscast as Under- secretary of State. It was not true, however, that the trouble centered in him. about the reorganization is that it is not built, as have been so many reorganizations in the past, on the summoning to Washington of a new personage to set things right. This reorganization consists entirely of a change of offices and not of persons. Al the key posts will be filled by men who have had nine months' experience in the Kennedy administra- tion. That is a good thing, when the men them- selves are good, in that even the very best new man needs many months to become broken in. AS I READ the terms of the reorganization, they mean that the State Department has grown so much stronger that the original ar- rangement, when so much power was centered in the White House staff, may come to be thought of in the future as a stop-gap arrange- ment to compensate for the initial weakness of the State Department. As the State Department has grown in com- petence, there has ceased to be good reason for the existence of a kind of duplicate State De- partment inside the White House. It is good that Mr. Rostow is going to the State Department as head of the Policy Planning Staff. This is the post which the President originally wanted him to fill. For Mr. Rostow's gifts, which are first rate, are, I venture to think, primarily those of the analyst and planner. THIS WILL NOT BE, we may be sure, the last or the only reorganization within the Ad- ministration. The key departments in modern times are State, Defense, Treasury, and Central .'...+ i+. ; ." ra '' -J,, To the Editor: AS a newly-appointed teaching fellow, I sharply disagree with Harry Perlstadt's negative criti- cism of freshman English courses. That the curriculum is open to criticism is evidenced by the in- ability, long after their freshman year, of many college students to string together a decent sentence in a recognizable language. But this concerns the effects, not the methods, of 123 which Perlstadt questions. Anyone who remembers his own public high school train- ing, and who has an opportunity to observe contemporary products of such, will recognize the neces- sity for the discipline of exposi- tory writing. Anyone who attempts to write creatively himself, as I do, will recognize the precedence in point of time of straight prose. Perlstadt's blanket statement that English 123 is a waste of tiime is patently false. The read- ings, far from being indifferent, are of intrinsic value for their in- formation and ideas. Their pres- entation is made on the selective basic of their rhetorical elements (some of the essays being perfect gold mines of these) which the student is expected to master in his own writing. The discussion of student essays is designed to give the class an objective view- point on what they had previous- ly thought beyond reproach., since it is difficult to acknowledge the ugliness of one's own baby. The superficialiality of these approach- es is measured by the teacher's. ability and the students' inter- ests, not by the contents of the course. * * * FURTHER, I doubt if the crea- tive instincts of potential artists are being stifled by English 123. For the most part, these instincts simply are not there; but those people who do have them will, ac- cording to the resistant nature of the artist, unlearn rules meant to guide their less gifted brothers, manage to sneak in an emotion or Freshmen . . To the Editor: MISS OPPENHEIM (Daily Mag- azine,nNov. 19) is guilty of following in the footsteps of many writers; the tearing down for dra- matic effect but offering nothing constructive. John Crosby, Drew Pearson and Robert Ruark em- ploy this device and garner huge audiences. Miss Oppenheim is on her way to becoming the saviour- of the current freshman class. If a student has beatnik learn- ings is it not because of some psychological shortcoming? A needless affectation? Were not the unshaven face, the dirty levis, the unkempt hair'a cry for attention? Imagine the relief at colleg . Con- formity with basic good mrnners. And what of the many students who have never been away from their families? Do they not need some discipline before they learn the 'ropes'? As with every other facet of endeavor, one gets as much, out, of something as he wants to. At- tending the mass-attended lecture opens up a new vista, a challenge, and should provoke a desire to learn more. With the advent of thousands of students to campuses all over the world, would Miss Op- penheim have 20-pupil seminars? There would be neither space nor personnel to pursue such a pro- gram. But the newly graduated high schooler must seek and probe and fashion an acceptance of re- buttal based on this lecture. * * * IF WE, ASSUME this adulthood in our frosh, does it not follow that exposure to English 123 can be a gratifying, zestful enlighten- ment through personal corridors of achievement? No, Miss Oppenheim, your ob- vious ploy is ill-concealed. As a parent of one of your disillusion- ed freshmen I find subtle changes for the better in my daughter. She complains about the food in her dorm, but must drink skim- -