S nwy-Thbird Y ear EDrTED AND MANAGED S TUDENTS o THE UNVERSIrY OF c mGA UNDER AUTHORrT OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBDCATIONS TWhere Opinions *e STUDENT PUBLicATboNS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, Micx., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Wil Prevai" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must by noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP SUTIN BARTOK CONCERTO: Susskind, Fischer Run Full Range of Moods AST NIGHT Walter Susskind conducted the Toronto Symphony orchestra in a varied program, and demonstrated an ability to portray vividly the most extreme moods musically, without a sacrifice dynamically. Deserving special mention are the first flautist, who received a considerable workout, and handled his frequent solos with great Should SGC Consist Only of Elected Members? Vote Yes U NIVERSITY STUDENTS will have their first opportunity today to cast a vote for a democratic and representative Student Gov- ernment Council. On the referendum will be the question: should all members of SGC be elected by the student body? A strong yes vote is necessary - to attain a student government which can and will deal effectively and represenatively with the issues of real concern to students. THE PRESENT makeup of SGC is 40 per cent ex-officio, members who serve with a vote because they earned a top position in some other campus organization. These members are selected in a variety of ways, but none of them is chosen by the student body nor is any one of them responsible in any sense to the students. Most are not even responsible to their own organizations for stands they take as members of SOC. In fact, the original ra- tionale for seating ex-officios included a stipu- lation that they should not be considered as representatives of their organizations, but only as single individuals with much knowledge and leadership abilities. There is no means by which the average students can affect the vote of an ex-officio: , they have no power to recall an ex-officio or keep him from re-election. The ex-officio votes the way he wants on any question and never has to consider anyone else's interest but his own. Ex-officios have not been this cutthroat. But they do act to guard certain vested interests around the campus and serve to guarantee double and triple representation to many students. The quadrangle resident, for example, has a double vote: one in the regular Council election and another, in an indirect way, for IQC president. STUDENT GOVERNMENT Council has been given power by the Regents to act as the official representative voice of the students of the University. Resolutions are passed every Wednesday night which are interpreted to be the opinion of the University student body. Many things can be and are done in the name of the students. The faculty and administra- tion receive many letters stating that "this is the official voice of the students" on issues such as the speaker bylaw, the Office of Stu- dent Affairs reorganization, a student rights committee, perhaps even who should be the next two Regents. Behind every one of the these "expressions of student opinion" lies a vote on the Council table. The outcome of that vote is dependent on the decision of seven members who have absolutely no right to speak in the name of the student body. The votes of the ex-officios have had a pro- found effect on Council legislation-a pro- foundly negative one. The ex-officios do not have a University-wide perspective. They have been trained and experienced in the issues of student organization, and tend to regard the OSA as the vital center of all campus life. This is reflected in the kind of problems which are discussed at the Council table. A NY INVOLVEMENT of Student Government Council in issues affecting the student's academic life at the University has resulted from action of a handful of Voice members on SGC or, as in the case of student-faculty government, from someone outside SGC. Besides narrowing the range of issues con- sidered, the ex-officios as a whole have tended to obstruct proposals for University reform. They have split along progressive-reactionary lines by as much as 6-1. This year the split has usually been 4-3 with occasionally 5-2. On every close vote of SGC, the ex-officios have -decided the difference. Many motions which would have improved the student's lot by ask- ing for a better educational climate have been defeated or amended to the death because the ex-officios split reversed the decision which would have been made if only the elected members had voted. The 11 elect members, supposedly representative of the student body, cannot reflect the opinions of the students. The outcome of Council deliberations of the ideal speaker ban would have been different if the ex-officios had no vote. Kenneth Miller would have been elected president if only the repre- sentative SGC members could vote. THE DEVELOPMENT of strong elected mem- bers of SGC is hindered, in large part, by the very presence of ex-officio members with votes. The campus political structure ranks the ex-officio as more important than the elected member: not only does he vote on SOC, he is also the head of a major student or- ganization. With the exception of the SGC president, an elected member of SGC is in the second rank of "campus leaders." Few capable students strive to be in the second rank. The argument based on democracy would be enough to outweigh all arguments of effective- ness and leadership. The combination of the Vote No THE ATTEMPT of the liberal faction of this campus to take ex-officios off the Student Government Council indicates poor thinking. It is an indication of the sterility of the campaign by its very nature. Any time that a structural change can be the major issue, student government is not thinking too hard about the welfare of the students. It indicates poor thinking on the part of the liberals because they are becoming extremists at a time when moderation is most important and the reasons cited against ex-officios are either misleading or reveal a lack of foresight. THE LIBERAL faction is attempting, on the eve of a legitimate victory at the polls, to sweep all conservatism off the Council. In doing this they are weakening their own vic- tory by eliminating needed background, qual- ity, prestige and representation. If ex-officios are taken off it will be done under the false guise of "more democracy" on student govern- ment. Direct election often does not bring better representation or even more direct con- trols of the people on their legislators. In this case it would weaken the representation of various factions on the campus. It would also, by weakening the influence and quality of the Council, lessen the chances of effective representation of any student on University decisions. Directly elected candidates are, in general, responsible to no one group. They are theoreti- cally elected by the campus at large and, once elected, their actions reflect on no one but themselves. This often leads to slackness in responsibility and the loss of any student sense of participation. The ex-officios do rep- resent certain interest groups and, in most cases, feel a sense of responsibility to these groups. In neither case, of directly elected candidates, or of ex-officios, is there any sense of responsibility to any group. As "demo- cracy" is generally defined as an electorate electing a representative who is responsible to them, I cannot see where the liberals can legitimately claim that a "yes" vote on this referendum is in any way a vote for "more democracy. ,F AN ANALOGY to the federal system of government is needed, the Senate, respon- sible to and elected by the people at large, might be analogous to the directly elected can- didates while the House of Representatives, ap- portioned as to population and generally elect- ed by factions of interest groups, could be analogous to the ex-officios. This balance of interests and types of election has not brought tyranny, it could not be called "undemocratic" and it has tempered the extremist edges of American politics since their inception. Can this balance do the same for student government, or a student-faculty government? It can if it is recognized as a system of bal- ances and if all Council members can see their way clear to compromises. Ex-officios, with their greater experience and generally conservative outlooks, can be more of a service to, a Council that has a liberal majority. It can, if it is willing to compromise, offer a conscientious check on the Council actions. This will be the first time that ideologically prepared liberals will be in power. The services of a loyal opposition to strengthen the thinking of the flood of legislation to come would be quite welcome. INSTITUTIONALLY, are ex-officios good for Council? Yes. At the University where only fringe minorities feel an obligation to be really active in campus politics, ex-officios fill out the ranks of student government with proven leadership, experience and background in ad- ministration. They are the leaders of basically "service" oriented organizations and are a less emotionally involved and- representatives of legitimate interest groups. In addition they offer greater quality and prestige to the Council and indicate some degree of campus support for student govern- ment. Taking the ex-officios off is of dubious value as the Council is already scrounging for quality. Nor would it necessarily eliminate a conservative sinecure. The final question is whether the referendum is the way to effect any reform on Council. As written, it offers no alternative reform, such as requiring all ex-officios to be placed auto- matically on the ballot. As it stands now, the efforts of the liberals to reform the Council have not been thought out. The proposal is not even constructive. The original Council plans were carefully considered and debated and any changes deserve the same treatment. Vote no on the referendum. -CAROLINE DOW Personnel Director agility; and the piano soloist, Annie Fischer. Opening the concert was Beet- hoven's Leonore Overture No. 3. The orchestra artfully built up suspense, until the famous off- stagetrumpet sounds its clarion call, and the lively allegro ensues. In several instances the horn solos were mangled with flat or wrong notes, but Susskind makes the listener forget these technical mis- cues with a sonorous and almost overbearing ending. THE SECOND number, "Trip- tych," is an abstract work com- posed in 1959 by Canadian Pierre Mercure. It works around novel percussion combinations, and car- ries little melody, Definitely the high point was reached in the performance of Bartok's Piano Concerto No. 3. Bartok was gravely ill while writ- ing this, his very last work, and toward the end he worked fever- ishly to complete it. Dying in 1945, he finished all but the final seventeen bars, which were filled in by a colleague. This work is quite unlike the "typical" Bartok, drawing in part on Baroque and Classical forms. The tunes are definitely suggestive of the Hungarian Gypsy; however, the second movement contains a Bach-like choral, and a two-part- invention simulation in the piano. The rondo finale contains as trio a fugue of high polyphonic com- plexity, while the coda is an ex- tremely demanding Stretto nas- sage, which was handled brilliantly - by Miss Fischer, whose entire per- formance is to be commended. CONCLUDING the program was the Symphony No. 4 in G, by Antonin Dvorak. Where its great successor is termed the "New World," this might be called the "Old World," for especially in the adagio this "programmatic" work depicts beautifully an old Bo- hemian village with its band, fes- tival, and ceremonies. The orchestra was most effective musically in the second and fourth movements. The ending is loud and pompous, and these qualities were further educed by Susskind. A single en- core, Dvorak's Eighth Slavonic Dance, concluded the program in the same spirit. -Henry A. Shevitz LOVERS: Art Still In Cinema MOVIES SELDOM attempt to do anything today except de- rive a profit and provide an es- cape. "The Lovers of Teruel" satis- fies neither of these requirements. It will never make much money and rather than an escape it will haunt and bother the viewer. As for audience interest, in the sense that most American films provide interest Oie. sex, violence and ab- normalty) "The Lovers of Teruel" will be a great disappointment. But to that steadfast little minority that still cling to the cherished belief that the Cinema is primarily an Art Form, a sur- prisingly effective ally has ap- peared. "THE LOVERS of Teruel" is a brilliant attempt at fusing all the elements of reality, fantasy and illusion without becoming sensa- tional or trite. The photography is among the most interesting and effective yet accomplished. The use of color, played with a surrealistic touch, and the com- binations of all forms of dance tie. Modern Jazz, Classical Bal- let, Oriental Expression) arrive at new form. Sets, costumes, scenery and makeup heighten each move- ment and enforce each image. * * * " "THE LOVERS of Teruel" is a work of art. More importantly it is an important work of art cre- ated with thought and care to examine Love and Life. If you like your fare to be both stimu- lating and disturbing, if you go to a movie as you would an ex- hibit or a symphony then don't miss 'Lovers.' If you enjoy "Diamondhead," avoid the Campus until Friday when another of the assembly line English comedies rolls your way. But don't expect to be satisfied with "Lovers of Teruel," expect to be awed. -Hugh Holland CARPORT PLAN: Proceed with Caution By ROBERT SELWA ANN ARBOR should proceed with caution in considering the hotel-carport proposal before City Council and should consider al- ternatives in parking. A better pro- ject might be to make Washington street a parking facility instead of a thoroughfare. The proposal before Council is the building of a large new hotel at Fourth Street and Huron where the old Allenel Hotel is now, and the building of a carport next door at Fourth and Washington. The carport would be three or four stories high and would have 150 parking spaces-5O for the hotel, 20 for a nearby bank, and the rest for downtown shopers. The hotel-parking lot complex re- placing antiquated buildings in a central location, says City Ad- ministrator Guy Larcom, would spur downtown redevelopment. AN INVESTMENT company would build the hotel but the city would have to build the carport, and this is where the problems begin. To buy the property would cost the city $368,500 and to lease it would cost $28,510a year, in- cluding $5,000 in taxes. Since the city would intend to own the pro- perty eventually anyway, it would have to pay the full $368,500 in addition to the yearly leaseholds. The property would cost the city many times what it is worth if the leaseholds ran for many years. The city might not be able to lease all the property but might have to buy the Anderson property on Washington at an estimated price of $60,000. This would cut down on the yearly lease by about $3,600 but would add an initial cost of $60,000. This is a great deal considering the limited funds the city has for parking. Buying and leasing the property would be just the beginning. The city would have to demolish the buildings now on the property and this would cost $15,000. Then the city would have to construct the carport, and at the high price of $2,000 a parking space, this cost would come to $300,000. The car- port would bring in $26,000 a year in revenues but would cost $44,010 a year to operate. Thus the car- port would have an operating def- icit of $18,010 a year. And this does not include the cost of in- terest and principal on the rev- enue bonds to finance the con- struction. IN SHORT, the carport would be expensive to lease, expensive to build, and expensive to run. It would almost exhaust the city's parking fund (bonding capacity) of $500,000. The ,city does not have the money in the parking fund to buy the property, so it must lease it. With leasing and later building the carport, the city would have at most $185,000 for developing other parking fa- cilities. Subtract the purchase price of the Anderson property, which the city might have to do, and all that is left is $125,000. Meanwhile the State Street mer- chants are asking for a new off- street parking facility in their area-but there would be only $125,000 or at most $185,000 for ington street from Division to Ashley a series of parking lots. WASHINGTON STREET in that area is a one-way (westward) thoroughfare. This one-way policy could be continued, but traffic on it would be limited to people who want to park. Washington currently has parallel parking on both sides of the street. The park- ing could be converted to perpen- dicular or slanted on one side and, if there is room, on both sides. This would result in many more parking spaces. All the city would. have to do would be paint new parking lines, put up more meters, and put up 10-mile speed limit signs. Entrances to the on-street paik- ling lots would be at Division, Fifth, Fourth and Main. Exits would be at Fifth, Fourth, Main and Ashley. The traffic along Di- vision, Fifth, Fourth, Main and Ashley would not be impaired. In- deed it would be smoother because traffic lights would be replaced by stop signs on Wasnington, and cross traffic could go right through. There would still oe East- West avenues on the streets par- allel to Washington: Huron and Liberty. The merchants along Washing- ton woud benefit because cars would be parking right in front of their stores instead of at a car- port. The city would benefit be- cause, while off-street parking re- sults in financial losses, on-street parking results in gains. The city parking fund would be built up instead of depleted, and parking facilities could then be improved throughout the city instead of just at this one area. Perhaps with the gains from making Washington a series of on- street parking lots, the city even- tually could get the carport at Fourth anyway, in one swoop, thereby saving the money that would be wasted in leasing the property over many years. Shoppers, would benefit because they could park right in front of the stores. And redevelopment would be spurred. * ,. * THE ALLENEL Hotel has 60 rooms and suggests to its patrons that they use the parking garage that is already constructed and in operation a block away. This garage holds about 30 cars. The new, 176-room hotel could con- tinue the recommendation of the use of this garage, and the ad- ditional parking spaces that would be needed would be suppiied by the series of on-street parking lots on Washington. The hotel patrons need parking facilities from 4 p.m. to 9 a.m. and downtown shoppers need them from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. There would be little overlap and there would be maximum use of the Washing- ton parking lots-whereas there would not be maximum use at all times of the proposed hotel-car- port. Most of the parking units ini the carport would be wasted at night, but Washington street, would be used all the time. Altogether it would be much more economical to develop Wash- ington street as a facility exclu- sively for parking than it would be to carry out the carport pro- posal. And if the Washington street proposal is carried out, it not only would still be possible to finance the carport but it also would be much easier. The city could do both-but first it should do Washington. Elections CORRUPTION in elections is the great enemy of freedom. -J. Adams ** * To promise not to do a thing is the surest way in the world to make a body want to go and do that very thing. -Mark Twain I TELL YOU folk all politics is applesauce. Will Rogers He cast his vote-distrusting all the elected but not the law. -Karl J. Shapiro * * * THEY HAVE such refined and delicate palates That they can discover no one worthy of their ballots, And then when someone terrible gets elected They say, There, that's just what I expected! -Ogden Nash * * * More important than winning the election is governing the na- tion. That is the test of a politi- cal party-the acid, final test. -Adlai Stevenson LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Ex-Officios Must Go To the Editor: TN ORDER honestly and effec- tively to represent the interests of the students of the University, all members of Student Govern- ment Council must be democrati- cally elected by the student body.. Under the present structure of SGC, seven of Council's 18 mem- bers do not represent the students at large. We recognize the con- tributions that these ex-officios sometimes make to SGC. We feel, however, for the following reasons, that those contributions do not warrant the voting rights ex- officios receive: 1) Most importantly, ex-officio votes on SGC afford double or even triple representation to the members of certain special in- terest groups while denying it to members of other groups of equal or greater importance. Daily staf- fers, residents of quadrangles, wo- men's dormitories, fraternities and sororities all have guaranteed votes on SGC, while international students and residents of coopera- tive and private housing do not. 2) Most ex-officios are elected by only a handful of persons, some of whom may not be students. For example, both the editor of The Daily and the president of the Union are chosen by small bodies composed of students, faculty, ad- ministration and alumni. In nearly all cases, the representative link of the ex-officio with his con- stituency is tenuous; his tie with the student body is even more ob- scure. 3) Moreover, ex-officio members are limited in time by the burden of work imposed upon them by the organizations they lead. They. are too often unable to accept the full responsibilities of Council membership. 4) Although an ex-officio has knowledge of his own organization and ability to succeed in it, the assumption that he will conse- quently have a wide knowledge of student affairs has not always been found valid in practice. Ex- officio members represent paro- chial interests which often limit their involvement in the issues before SGC to those which directly affect their own organizations. They are often unwilling, as well as unable, to contribute to debate and legislation on other important matters. As individual students whose interest in student govern- ment is great, we urge wholeheart- edly a strong "yes" vote in the referendum today. We firmly be- lieve that student government will be strengthened and interest in SGC be augmented by the re- moval of undemocratic procedures in the choice of its members. -Edwin F. Sasaki, Grad -Thomas L. Smithson, '65 -Ken Miller, '64 -Mary Beth Norton, '64 -Mal Warwick, '64 NEW LOOK FOR SGC: Two Campus Parties Should Emerge By GLORIA BOWLES A STUDENT Government Coun- cil with a "new look" is a cer- tain result of today's elections, but other more long range effects may come out of the voting. Seven of 12 candidates vying for seats on SOC will be elected, with the probable return of three in- cumbents-Kenneth Miller, Mary Beth Norton, and Howard Abrams, giving liberals three seats on Council. Four other seats are up for grabs with liberal or conser- tion, with only two assured liberal votes. Other organizations are in transition, and new officers, yet unelected, will be sitting on Coun- cil in its first meeting after elec- tions. Both liberals and moderates have been speculating on a liberal majority on Council for the first time in recent history, and liberal chances of election of a Council president appear favorable. However, a campus whose poli- tical alliances become more clearly delineated with each election may posals for district election of can- didates, came out in favor of a conservative political party at the Panhellenic forum Monday night. Since its inception, the liberal Voice political party has urged and eventually begged conserva- tives to run candidates on a slate, and to formulate platform state- ments. "We've taken up the gaunt- let, and now we've put it down for the conservatives" said Ken- neth Miller recently. * * i UNTIL THIS election, conserva.- ment. A liberal victory may force, conservatives into facing political realities. The formation of a sec- ond party would be a most wel- come development. The apathy of voters who are confused on can- didates and issues could in great part be overcome by two groups working to inform the electorate. Parties in formulation of platform statements, encourage informed candidates. At the same time, those parties need to be cognizant of the wishes of the electorate, and thus pro-