SrvWwy-Third Year EnrED AND MANAGED -Y SuDENTs or THE UNIrvEITry of MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORIT' OF BOARD mCONTmOL OF STUDENT PULCATIONS "'Wh~er* OpInions Atr STUDENT Pm ucATIONs Bw,., ANw ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 r c Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID MARC Hatcher Should, Support Fair Housing Ordinance US UNIVERSITY President Harlan H. Hatcher has again remained silent in a situation where he could help to eliminate discrimina- tion in Ann Arbor, The president's duty in such matters is set down in Regents Bylaw 2.14 which says that the University '"shall work for the elimination of discrimination . . from non-University sources where students and the employes of the University are involved." THROUGHi THE WORK of the Human Rela- tions Board of Student Government Coun- cil and from the advice of members of the Office of Student Affairs, President Hatcher should be aware that discrimination in hous- ing does exist, affecting many groups connect- ed with the University. For instance, the HRB telephoned local land- lords at random and found that over 50 per cent of those called would not rent to Negroes. There are more than 1800 students, profes- sors, medical residents, researchers and visit- ing scholars from foreign countries living in Ann Arbor. The large number of people af- fected has led James M. Davis, director of the International Center at the University, to say publicly that, "until the Center can be assured that foreign students will receive the same consideration as any others," the Cen- ter has to "cushion" these students from "the discrimination that exists in Ann Arbor." HE PRESIDENT is therefore explicitly aware that the conditions outlined in the Regen- tal policy on non-discrimination are prevalent in Ann Arbor, affecting the lives of a substan- tial segment of the University community. Yet, last year,, President Hatcher elected not to "work for the elimination of discrim- ination" in Pittsfield Village, a housing de- velopment which would not admit students Dilemma of Th4 and faculty of certain racial groups. He wa urged to support the action of groups to inte grate the development. Howover, the presider declined to make a public statement of th University's policy despite the fact that th action would have implemented the Regente bylaw. Another opportunity to implement the by law presented itself during the last few week Tomorrow, the City Council is going to con sider the enactment of a fair housing or dinance. Specific, enforceable legislation woul provide the legal means whereby the Univer sity could guarantee to students- those right outlined in its policy on non-discrimination. An ordinance involving control of the renta and sale of properties and regulation of th activities of real estate agents, landlords, an finance institutions, combined with the es tablishment of an enforcement commission would be the means by which discrimination i2 housing would be eliminated as a major Uni versity problem. ]RESIDENT HATCHER could have greatl: increased the probability of the passage o such an ordinance by stating publicly th University's support of its provisions. How ever, he failed to do so, again indicating by hi inaction, an apparent unwillingness to imple ment the Regental policy on non-discrimina tion. Though he may be working behind the scenes, this type of action has had no effect The president should act as moral leader o the University community, implementing it policy with a public statement. The consequences of his inaction are grave expressing themselves primarily in the faces of students rejected by bigoted landlords. Con- tinued inaction on the part of the president would be a disgrace to the University. -FRED RUSSELL KRAMER Associate Editorial Director as e- nt ie is al Y- s. a- r- d r- ts al e id n, n - y e -. ;s f t BERI N MAA H P MISSISSIPPI FREE PRESS: Crusading Staff Brings New Opinions to State DOMESTIC PEACE CORPS: New Frontier for Youth J ACKSON (CPS) --Mississippi's newspapers are not known for moderate positions on the inte- gration question. The Jackson dailies, followed by most papers in the state, have printed diatribes against James Meredith and the federal government In recent months that are, to put it midly, shocking to a casual reader from outside the South. Even the mild stand of the University of Mis- sissippi student newspaper editor against the violence at Ole Miss brought the low-level ,insinuations about her morality and good sense. But in the midst of the state's racial hatred and atmosphere of invective, one dissenting voice, al- beit small, is beginning to make itself felt. The Mississippi Free Press, less than a year old, now weekly provides Mississippians with a point of view that has never appeared in their press. Founded last December by mem- bers of the Student-Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, Southern student action group, the paper is now under the direction of Charles Butts, 20 years old, who left Ober- lin College, Ohio, to work for in- tegration in the South. * * * BUTTS WORKED for some time in Fayette Cousty, Tennessee, helping sharecroppers evicted from their farms for registering to vote. Hecame to Jackson and the Free Press determined "to convince Ne- groes that they are not inferior, but indeed are human beings en- titled to all the rights enjoyed by other citizens." Currently running the technical end of the paper is Miss Lucy Komisar, a senior on leave of ab- scence from Queens College, New York. Miss Komisar worked for two years on the Queens Phoenix student newspaper at Queens. She has been active in civil rights work during most of her college life, was Jailed last year after a sit-in at a segregated Maryland restaurant. The 21-year old circulation manager of the Free Press, made news this week as he sought to become the second Negro to enter the University. Turned down by the university on grounds that he was unqualified, Greene has filed a suit in Federal Court seeking a court order to admit him. A native of Greenwood, Miss., which is also the headquarters of the White Citizens' Council. THE FREE PRESS staff is paid a subsistence salary of $20, a week, largely financed by donations from Northern college students. Stu- dents at Tougaloo College, the state's only integrated college, help with office work of the news- paper. Things have not been all rosy for the Free Press, however-t cannot be printed in Mississippi, and has to be printed in Memphis, hundreds of miles away. Local 'ight hood' IN THE period known as the Dark Ages, or nighthood, every- one was in the dark. Higher edu- cation survived only because of illuminated manuscripts, which were discovered during a routine burning of a library. It is interest- ing to reconstruct a typical class- room scene: a group of dedicated students clustered around a glow- ing piece of parchment, listening to a lecture in Advanced Monasti- cism, a 10 year course. If somet found it hard to concentrate, it3 was because they were dreamingt about quitting before exams and. going off on a crusade. . Some left even sooner, before the end of the lecture, having spied a beautiful damsel being pursued by a dragon who had de- signs on her. Damsels, who werex invariably in distress, wrought havoc on a young man's grade point average.1 --Richard Armourz University of Chicago Alumni Magazine t By ELLEN SILVERMAN Negro Today: A Question of Relative Values LAST WEEK the administration of a small Negro college in Arkansas suspended 10 of its students for their refusal to obey a warning to stop demonstrating in a series of local sit- ins. Why? Why were the students suspended? Why were only these 10 willing to disregard the warning and continue to demonstrate? More important, why were only 45 students at maxi- mum out of a student body of 1600 willing to demonstrate at all? On Feb. 1, 17 members of the Pine Bluff Student Movement, most of them also stu- dents at Arkansas Agriculture, Mining and Normal College, began sit-in demonstrations in a local Pine Bluff dime store. A FEW DAYS LATER AM&N President Law- rence Davis requested all of his students taking part in the demonstrations to stop their activities. On Feb. 11, notices were placed in all of the college buildings asking that all students who were still sitting-in see Davis. These students, 10 of them, received their suspension notices the next day. They continued to sit-in. According to Davis the administration did not back the sit-ins for several reasons. Fore- most was the fear that official sanction of such demonstrations would only tend to antag- onize the legislature which is scheduled to appropriate funds for the state-supported col- lege this year. Never friendly to begin with, any additional irritant might result in a seri- ous cut-back of the school's appropriations. DAVIS SAID he was also very concerned about the danger to the students. Violence spreads easily in a small Southern town, and t would' not take long for anger to move from a main street lunch counter to school buildings on a nearby campus, especially if he anger were generated by people on that campus:' The campus government also failed to sup- ort the movement. Although the Student Non- violent Coordinating Committee had approach- d AM&N as far back as November in an ef- ort to plan simultaneous demonstrations all icross the South on Feb. 1, James Dorsey, head A campus government, claims the campus was oo disorganized then and now to take part in uch a movement. He said the college would nly consider acting as a unit on a matter ike sit-ins and at present that would be im- ossible. Superimposed on these facts is the larger attern of Negro-white relations in Pine Bluff. ,though by no means welcoming an altera- ion of the status quo, the citizens of the town ave apparently come to realize that change s in the air and have decided the best way to retend it isn't is to arrange for it to come s quietly and as slowly as possible. Because ; f this new realism, various community lead- rs have taken it upon themselves to organize roups whose functions are to ease the idea of itegration into the community as painlessly c +hpv ran-ThiRs..m.m o-nt rna wi na c THESE, THEN, are the reasons why, backed by 90 per pent of the student body, the ad- ministration opposed the Pine Bluff Student Movement. But there is more to it than these easy-to- digest answers. And there is much more to it than the superficial observation that the peo- ple involved are "just scared." Here, under- neath the worry about appropriations and the safety of the college community, and in some cases the fear, lies the basic dilemma of the Negro in America. THE PARADOX of the Negro in the United States is this-in order for him to overcome the impossibilities and the irrationalities tor- menting his race, he is forced into a position where the attainment of his long range goals requires the outward repudiation of many of his active, immediate beliefs. He must at all costs maintain a cooperative relationship with the white because only the white can help him build schools, give him a better job, and increase his wage scale. Such a cooperative relationship is not without cost. The cost varies with the situation but however small or large it turns out to be it always in- volves some degree of acquiescence to the white's way of thinking. Perhaps it. be merely the adoption of cer- tain mannerisms in preference to his own. It might be the decision to stay on a Northern campus until graduation instead of going down South and working with voter registration or with SNCC. It might be self-control when the word "nigger" inadvertantly falls from his em- ployer's lips. In some instances it might be the necessity to forbid college students from staging demonstrations if these demonstra- tions would antagonize the whites, and if the rewards to be gained from a continued amnesty seem greater than those to be gained from a desegregated lunch counter. Things lose their clarity and the decision to act is made on the basis of the relative ad- vantages to be gained from not acting. Com- promises have to be made culturally, idealist- ically, and politically. The over-all pattern has to be considered before the individual pattern. The over-all pattern has to be achieved as quickly as possible and the individual pattern of action may slow this attainment down con- siderably. The Negro becomes confused and wonders who is really on his side. Does he even dare be on his own side anymore? WHY WERE the 10 students suspended. Be- cause President Davis places the continued education of his students above the immediate integration of Woolworth's. Undoubtedly he sometimes regrets that he can no longer see issues in terms of unqualified action and that he cannot shake himself free from a cautious evaluation of each new situation. With matur- ity comes a sense of responsibility, however stuffy and distasteful the word may sound. Why were only 10 per cent of the students willing to demonstrate to begin with? Because, they want to go to school. They want to be able to get an education. Who ultimately will hn 1 ++ , r irvn +. U - .... .....4 - &U l BASKING IN the success of the overseas Peace Corps, Presi- dent John F. Kennedy has sent three proposals for a new, do- mestic corps to Congress. Kennedy proposed a National Service Corps, open to all ages, which would work in hospitals, or Indian reservations and in social and educational institutions. It is presumed that this -group would berpatterned after the Peace Corps, requiring that the corps- men 'have the necessary skills for such work. The programs would service areas where workers are needed a n d provide employment for youth, one of the major problems in the labor market today. The "home town youth corps" would provide employment for semi-skilled or. unskilled youth, both sexes, in the 16 to 21 age group. The- President noted that this would boost the economy, cut unemployment and train young people. The third proposal encompasses a "youth conservation corps" to work in parks and forests and build national roads. This, of course, is patterned after Presi- dent Franklin D. Roosevelt's Civil- ian Conservation Corps which op- erated in the 1930's. T H E PROPOSALS, . whether passed or not, point out one of the major problems in modern American society. Young people who have graduated from high school and not gone on to college are finding it increasingly diffi- cult to secure jobs in an already crowded labor market. The un- employment rate within the econ- omy is high and the June gradu- ates only increase the number of unemployed each year. The problem of high-school drop-outs, too, is significant. This increasingly important segment of the high school population plagues not only educators, who constantly reevaluate programs to fine ways to stimulate youth in order to keep them in school, but, economists as well. These drop-outs usually do not have sufficient skills to go into any white collar or executive posi- tions and they, too, push into the semi- or unskilled labor market, forcing unemployment figures higher and higher. ALL THREE Kennedy proposals would serve to alleviate these overflow problems. Both the indi- vidual and the society profit by the operation of the corps. In the home-town and conser- vation corps the training received by the member will certainly be useful and most likely saleable in the future. The young people who enter these groups will probably be semi- or unskilled labor accord- ing to present plans and the gain- ing of a trade or skill will enable them to return to the labor market with better potentialities for employment. The economy, of course, will benefit by the removal of these youth from the -market. Unem- ployment will go down and once returnine to the market. youth now under the auspices of the national park system, could be utilized for hiking, camping and sightseeing if a "minimum" of effort is put into development. He cited the building of access roads, hiking trails and shelters as possible projects for the corps. These projects are now being neglected because of the shortage of men. Trained conservationists are now utilized in other areas re- quiring the additional training such as park administration or wildlife preservation., Not many young men today go into the field to aid in the de- velopment of parks for public use and the corps would not only stimulate such work but also pro- vide many urban males with op- portunities not otherwise available to them in the urban environ- ment. The home-town corps can, of course, operate well only if the local community is both aware of problems within it and anxious to alleviate them. However, the applicability of such programs to disadvantaged areas; such as city slums, and depressed areas, such as West Virginia, is obvious. Tak- ing West Virginia as an example, if the corps were to go into effect, men now unemployed would go back on a payroll and the com- munity itself would benefit from the operations of the corps. The National Service Corps is based on different assumptions. The object is neither to train youth nor to provide employment for semi-skilled. Indeed, the corps requirements preclude member- ship without "necessary skills" for the jobs proposed. This presup- poses at least a high school and probably some college education. * * * WHILE THE Peace Corps ap- pealed to the imaginations of many college students, the domes- tic corps is less "flashy." But the number of students already inter- ested shows that while this corps would probably have fewer appli- cants than the overseas corps, support would not be lacking. Social workers and teachers in disadvantaged areas are coping with problems which are presently almost too great to handle. Major urban school systems are already beginning to deal with the prob- lems of adult illiterates but only on a minor scale. Any help in the area would immediately a i d adults by providing them suffi- cient education to secure employ- ment and thus leave the relief rolls which are voluminous in most cities. This, of course, is not the only area which needs consideration in the slums. Teachers' aides, social case workers and public health officials are desperately needed to help improve the socio-eco- nomic status of the slum-dweller who is usually Negro in Detroit or Chicago or Puerto Rican in New York. S * * 4. THE ORIGINAL proposals which Kennedy made are small. Five thousand or so workers is the initial proposal for the National Service Corps. But these are to be taken as beginnings, Although Congress is currently worried about the increasing ex- penditures of the government and hopes to cut from domestic spend- ing in the budget to offset in- creased spending in the areas of defense and space programming, the corps expenditures should be looked at with favor. Employment will increase tax monies and stimulate economic growth. The new corps are needed for both a better economy and a better society. Youth here seems to provide the answers for the future. police keep close watch on the paper's staff members, and Butts was beaten after a picture of him with an article attacking the Free Press appeared in a Jackson paper. The paper has gotten some fi- nancial support from some local Negro businessmen, students at Oberlin, Earlham College, Swarth- more College, Harvard, Brandeis, Notre Dame, and Indiana Univer- sity have sponsored subscription drives to aid the Free Press. In a recent article, the American Liberal asserted that the Free Press was beginning to have a real Impact, not only in Mississippi, but also in Washington, simply be- cause it regularly prints news and articles that do not normally get into print in the state. By ex- posingg examples of brutality and giving big play to shootings and beatings of integration workers, the paper has called attention to many incidents that might have otherwise gone unnoticed. LIPPMANN: Cuba Tloday By WALTER LIPPMANN IN THE past week, the adminis- stration has gone to extra- ordinary lengths to win the coun- try's confidence in the reliability of its information about the mili- tary situation in Cuba. The crisis of confidence origi- nates in what happened in the six weeks before the October con- frontation. During the month of September and into October, the administration was insisting that the Soviet Union had not brought offensive weapons into Cuba Se. Keating was insisting that they had. When he was found to have been right, there occured a loss of confidence in the adminstra- tion's intelligence services which it is still struggling to repair. On two occasions it was explain- ed to me by high officials how're- liable was our photographic sr- veillance of the island and how certainly we could detect the exact nature of the weapons being in- stalled in Cuba. These private explanations came after the Pres- ident had said categorically in his press conference of Sept. 13 that "these new shipments do not con- stitute a serious threat to any other part of the hemisphere.'' Some two weeks later, on Oct. 3, the under secretary of state, Mr, Ball, gave to a Congressional com- mittee a summary of the Intel- ligence information which came from the CIA. The point of the summary was that there were no Offensive weapons in Cuba. But in fact there were. A week late, on Oct. 10, Sen. Keating in- sisted that there were intermediate range missiles in Cuba, and five days later the President received the photographs which confirmed the charge. * s* , THIS IS HOW Sen. Keating won the right to be listened to, and this is why the administra- tion has now, belatedly, made the right move, which is to arrange for consultation and an exchange of information between Sen. Keat- ing and the CIA. This should put an end to the unseemly controversy about who is telling the truth. But I am not sure it will repair altogether the damage done to public con- fidence by the misleading infor- mation given out in September and October. Photographs taken on Aug. 29 of the San Cistobal area and on Sept. 5 at Sagua La Grande show positively that no missile sites had been built. The next photo- graph referred to by Mr. Hughes is that of Oct. 14. It shows inter- mediate range missile sites being erected. This is the photograph which precipitated the interna- tional crisis. WHERE, we are bound to ask, was our photographic intelligence between Sept. 5 and Oct. 14? That was when the administration was telling the country that there were no offensive weapons in Cuba. This is the source of the infection which will have to be removedif full confidence is to be restored. Having said this, I would say that there is no reason to doubt the thoroughness Or the reliability f our photographic surveillance f Cuba and of the sea around it. The situation is extraordinary. We are depending on being able to fly daily photographic reconnaissance planes at high and low altitude. In Cuba, there are a large num- ber of the latest anti-aircraft weapons manned by Soviet sol- liers. We may say, how come? Up to the present, the Soviet anti-air- craft gunners are not attacking our reconnaissance planes. They nust be under orders from Mos- cow, where it is well-known that f the planes were attacked there would be an immediate reprisal. But where does this leave us? [t leaves us with a fragile revised version of the ;original Khrusn- hey-Kennedy agreement. We are LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Triangles Initiate Fraternity New Look To the Editor: WITH REFERENCE to Burton Michaels'recent editorial "Can Phi Kappa Tau Succeed?" we would like to point out that such a plan has been in effect since September, 1961, in the policies of the University chapter of Triangle fraternity (engineers, architects and scientists.) We have replaced the traditional hell week with a work week in which actives, pled- ges, and alumni, living in the house participate in equal meas- ure. Our pledge program includes no hazing; pledges attend all house meetings where the voicing of their opinion is encouraged. Pledg- ing only engineering, architecture, chemistry and physics majors, we have stressed academics: last spring our pledge class was first on camnu with a 3 1R veriage rest of the fraternity system: Phi Kappa Tau is our first disciple. -University Chapter Triangle Fraternity Review... To the Editor: IT IS COMPLETELY beyond my comprehension how anyone can turn in the literary hash which Miss Barbara Finch turns in and get it published under the mis- nomer: review. Several months ago the same reviewer treated us to an insipid review of the bad movie version of Tennessee Wil- liams' mad comedy, "Period of Adjustment." In that review which contained such notable phrasing as, "The line which are spoken- and there were some wonderful ones . . ." also informed us (and here my memory for these things fails me slightly) that the comedy was 'unlike a Peter Sellers . ." Well movie fans we have now been treated to a review of one Mr. Sellers may well be the master of slapstick, but it certainly was not evident in "Waltz of the Toreadors," which is anything but a slapstick comedy. The condescending tone with which the review entirely dismisses the serious aspects of this film with, "who can't excuse a few nostalgic scenes . ."and "we can also excuse a few bitter scenes," indicate only a tragic' misunder- standing of the movie. Mr. Sellers is perhaps one of the finest actors in the motion picture industry today, and the serious, often semi- tragic scenes in this film are to its credit, not to its detriment. For when comedy is able to rise above the silliness of the situation com- edy and pass into the realm of serio-comic realism, then we must only admire and applaud those concerned with the work. The reviewer obviously, for she says so, "didn't come to hear thoughts on old soldiers"; she "came to see comedy." It is la- mentable that one isnot +abl e to