Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSIrY OF MICHIGAN . - UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS here Opinions AFre 'STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail"!, torials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. Th must be noted in all reprints. INDIA, THREE MONTHS AFTER: Non-Alignment Largely Unchanged Y, FEBRUARY 6, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: BARBARA LAZARUS Financing the University: Two New Views Open Admissions. INCE WORLD vAR II the composition of the collegiate population has undergone a dical change. Prior to the war, low cost qual- y education was available to all students pplying to the University and scholarly high hool graduates from all over the nation Xnd an open door at "the Harvard of the rest." The post-war period saw the number of >llege applicants boom. Under the influence f the Cold War economy, emphasis was placed o the graduation of more scientists and engi- eers. Where once a high school diploma was ie key to success, the college degree became necessity. Even though the University more an doubled its size, it could not keep up with e rush. The resulting situation saw the Uni- rsity close its'doors to many. The state Legislature soon became aware the squeeze and began to pressure the Uni- rsity to provide more space for local stu- nts. The University responded by slowly cut- rg the percentage of students entering from her states. The increased number of less qualified stu- ints caused many prominent members of the culty to transfer to large. eastern universities here the student body was more cosmopolitan. a mani professors, the academic profession more than an educational assembly line; lution of student quality was often viewed as e ,first step in the conversion of the Univer- by into a higher level high school. In addition, increased faculty salaries and e rising cost of scientific and technical edu- ,tion forced the University to increase tuition eadily. This increase combined with the dilu- n of student quality has slowly led to the stitutionalization of high cost, low quality iucation. 'HE DEGRADATION of the University is saddening to many scholars. It has reached point where some members of the Legislature uld dictate the composition of the student dy in order to ensure education of their con- ituents. This is resulting in a student body lower quality and is creating a situation 4ereby the actions of the University are gov- ned by a fear of the Legislature. The results are all too evident. Acting out fear, the University no longer preserves aca- mic freedom. The University's speaker policy rbids any spoken opposition to any existing w', thereby enthroning any present injustice the unexamined vaults of an unenlightened stitution. In effect, the long list of recent mpromise has changed the nature of the liversity. It has become an educational fac- ry, whose parochial character is repugnant a scholar. 'HE UNIVERSITY must undertake a new de- parture in order to re-establish academic ex- hlence. The essential features of any new plan uld be an increase in the quality of the ident body and provisions whereby Michigan ildren will have the opportunity to receive education from the state. One possible plan is as follows: All Michigan idents who qualify for admission would at- ad the University free. Out-of-state students nuld pay tuition comparable to that charged large eastern universities. Admission would t be based on area of residence. This would ult in a university with over half the students >m other states. The Legislature would provide nds only for capital outlay and for extension vices at the University. Prominent professors would return to the at- sphere of academic excellence pervading Ann bor. Michigan residents who are qualified 1 have the opportunity of attending a really > rate university at no cost. IHE PROBLEMS of finance are not as dif- ficult as they first appear. At present the kiversity receives more than two-thirds of its >ney from sources other than the Legisla- 'e. The increase in tuition from the in- ased number of out-of-state students com- ied with the greater subsidation that is asso- ted with the most cosmopolitan universities uld fill the gap created by the necessary s of funds from the Legislature. Special at- ition would have to be paid to the scholarship ds of out-of-state students. However, the :rease of state loan programs, such as the w York program, and of federal support, h as NDEA loans, should help fill the mone- y gap. mplementation of the plan would be slow, ved to the growth of a network of smaller o-year and four-year colleges throughout the te. The money the Legislature would save >proximately $36 million a year) combined Ih smaller gains (for instance, Regents schol- hips would no longer be necessary for Michi- i students) would now go to support the wth of this state-wide network of schools provide for the education of the increased nber of Michigan students. This plan would in keeping with the University's present ns for the development of Delta College. n effect, the educational needs of the post- Regional Setup . THE STATE of Michigan is in trouble with its universities; it can't afford them. The financial squeeze will grow tighter in the next two years as the number of college applicants rises sharply. The demand for a college education grows each day and the legis- lators as well as their constituents want to guarantee the opportunity to get one in the same way as the high school diploma is now guaranteed. Michigan might be able to accomodate most of its qualified high school graduates in insti- tutions of higher education if it concentrated resources on providing basic undergraduate training. But the people of the state are proud that they have created a great university in Ann Arbor and want to maintain a top quality institution with heavy graduate enrollment and facilities for needed research. It seems clearer each day that the choice simply may be between general education for all or quality education for a few. MORE REASONABLE approaches to financing higher education are possible. There is no real reason why Michigan should maintain an elite university when other states do not. An ideal solution would be to let more of the states participate in the financing of the single great university, letting Michigan concentrate more of its resources on guaranteeing basic education to more youngsters. Such a solution is offered by the ideal of a regional university, financed by Michigan, Wis- consin, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio. Each state would contribute equally and have an equal number of students in attendance-or appro- priation and enrollment might be based on population of the respective states., Illinois, Indiana and Ohio at present make minimal attempts to provide top flight uni- versities in their home states. Each finances a large Big Ten campus which serves as the ma- jor university of the state providing bacca- laureate training to thousands of the state's high school graduates. Wisconsin boasts the university in Madison which ranks high in comparison to other midwest institutions, but that campus could not serve as the base for a regional university because of its geographical position and because without it the state of Wisconsin would have no other state college to absorb a great many native students: The University of Michigan is fairly centrally lo- cated and this state has other large state sup- ported colleges which could hold the surplus students. A REGIONAL university would draw, let us say, and average of $10 million from each of the states sponsoring it, yielding an appro- priation of $50 million, 40 percent greater than the present grant of the state legislature to the University. Enrollment could be set at 4,000 students from each of the five states and an additional 5,000 from other areas of the country. This would result in a university slightly smaller than the present one in Ann Arbor with a public appropriation several million dollars higher than the administration has ever re- quested from Lansing. The university thus created could be a truly great one. There would be enough money to hire the finest faculty and provide all needed facilities. The student body would be outstand- ing as it would include the very best students from the midwest with a provision for 5,000 non-area students to attract top students from the East as well as large numbers of interna- tional students. THE STATE of Michigan spends about $36 million a year on the University. If the ap- propriation were cut back to $10 million, the state would have an additional $26 million a year to apply to building up the nine other state supported colleges or to founding new ones. Enrollment ofMichigan residents at Ann Arbor would drop 12,000 but an extra $25 million could finance 20,000 at the rate the state now pays to educate Michigan State University students. There would be administrative problems in setting up such a regional university. Ob- viously it would have to come gradually in a series of steps allowing Michigan to taper off its appropriation to the University while de- signing slots on other campuses for the extra instate students. The othes states would also need time to stretch their budgets to include a $10 million outlay. Another problem would be electing regents to administer the regional university and guaranteeing that each state would live up to its particular end of the financial arrange- ment. For the state of Michigan, the advantages are immediate and great. The major stumbling block would be convincing the other four states that they cared enough for quality education and research to spend the extra (EDITOR'S NOTE-This is the first of a two-part analysis of the Indian scene two and one-half months after the big Chinese at- tack of October 20th. Tomorrow's article will concern domestic de- velopments. The writer is teaching English in Madras under a Fulbright grant.) Since these articles were written nearly one month ago, there have been several significant develop- ments in India: 1) Though some haggling is still going on, India and China have both indicated broad acceptance of the "Colombo" group's proposals for temporary territorial arrangements during a period of negotiation. In- dia's willingness to negotiate, how- ever little choice she may have in the matter, remains the root cause of the aimlessness overtaking the body politic. What are people to make of speeches like a recent one by Union Home Minister Lai Baha- dur Shastri? Lal Bahadur said: "Those who think in terms of war are not looking to their left and right . .. (Yet) we have to act in- telligently and increase our strength to counter any further danger." 2) Reports here indicate the West- ern powers might agree to provide air cover for India's vulnerable cities, a move which would tie her defense inextricably to theirs. Since India can't defend herself in the air, the move is logical enough militarily, but it would carry im- mense political implications and also presage renewed fears of Chi- nese action after the spring thaw. 3) R. K. Nehru, secretary-general of the External Affairs Ministry, re- turned from Moscow with further assurances of Soviet friendship, ad- ditional economic aid and tolerance for Western military aid. By PHILIP SHERMAN Daily Guest Writer INDIAN NON-ALIGNMENT, it turns out, isn't going to change quite so much as some people rather glibly expected. It's being recast in terms of a malevolent China, but for good reasons this is the only major change so far. The planned armaments pro- gram is actually the most radical "foreign policy" decision. India previously defended her territorial integrity and indepen- dent policy principally by con- ciliating, talking and capitalizing on the geometry of world relations. Her army was of secondary im- portance. Now it will be built up so India can maintain her major power status and non-alignment on the battlefield. She won't have to join an alliance for safety's sake. * * * INDIA'S PRESENT diplomatic stance is a rather simple out- growth of past policies. Prime Minister Jawaharlal Ne- hru insisted all along that nation- alism rather than Communism made China a troublemaker. This view still stands. It's China be- hind India's sharp distinction be- tween China and the Soviet Un- ion, which is Communist too, but also benevolent and seemingly in- clined to peace. The distinction is incidentally carried into domestic policy. The so-called "pro-China" wing of the Indian Communist party has been locked up under the Defence of India Act while "pro-Russian" Communists have been left free. For a while, it looked as if Russia would play a devil's role too, but she changed her early pro-Chinese tune to a more neu- tral one, in the circumstances eminently satisfactory to Indian ears. She has kept up aid and arms deliveries, and Nehru stoutly maintains her promised MiG 19's will soon arrive for use in train- ing Indian pilots to later fly In- dian built MiG's. Continued Soviet benevolence means more an Indian non- alignment-friendship and aid from, but not alliance with both the world's main power blocs- can remain viable and profitable. SOVIET POLICY, however, is affected by a number of factors completely beyond India's control, and Indian policy could collapse because of these. India's friendly posture toward, the Soviets is an effort to do as much as can be done to keep things the way they are. It's why Nehru has been a bit restrained in his thanks towards the, West and why he makes so much of Soviet acquiescence to the Western arms flow. F t ' -- c..' Zn.tWt LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: QaSrcRi cu (The West is not unhappy about this. As long as Russia doesnt send the most modern weapons to China, India's defensive tas is easier. As long as Russia helps India to develop, the West has less to do.) (Western acquiescence in In- dian non-alignment, like Russia's, is also partially dependent on out- side factors. But, not conditioned by obligations to Communist China, the West's attitude is markedly more stable.) * * * MANY EXPERTS argue it was the Russians who forced China into the weird "unilateral" cease- fire which India has also observed. They point to the circumstances of the Chinese announcement and Russia's good reasons for so doing -a desire to relax international tension to facilitate her internal progress and an attempt to main- tain carefully built-up credit in the non-aligned, non-Communst world. Both policies are viewed in light of stated Sino-Soviet ideo- logical differences, which incident- ally gives Indian policy increasing credibility. Other possible reasons for the cease-fire: 1) China decided she simply couldn't afford further involve- ment, especially with the Western powers evidently prepared to back India to the hilt. 2) China accomplished her ob- jectives of dealing a prestige-fatal set-back to India and ganing a gambit in NEFA to trade for stra- tegic territories she prizes in La- dakh. 3) China found India's united response totally unexpected and equally disturbing. She expected to hit a weak, divided country, ripe for plucking. * * * WHATEVER the reasons, and the above aren't completely satis- factory, it is clear it was not the Indian Army. The Chinese were held off in Ladakh, it is true, but in NEFA they grabbed (and re- tain) the initiative. India is taking advantage of the lull to begin her five year build- up to meet the Chinese with equal force. Right now, China says she's willing to talk. Though definitely not prepared to talk on China's present terms, India has no choice but tacitly to acquiesce in the lull and seek what she can. The lead- ership is willing to admit to an "honorable settlement." In the background of the pres- ent dickering, which includes dis- cussion of the six neutral nations' so-far confidential propo.sals is the opinion the fighting in the north is finished for good. Per- haps years of talk are ahead, but that's all. Time and Mao Tse-tung will have the final say. IN THE MEANTIME, India is having another go with that tra- ditional bete noire, Pakistan. The United States and Great Britain apparently dragooned the powers into the present ministerial level talks. Though Pakistan an- nounced a border settlement with China the day before the Rawal- pindi talks began, the conference proceded relatively well. The ministers agreed to tone down mutually-opposed propa- ganda (and The Sunday Standaid took this cue to cancel the second of a two-part editorial series on Kashmir: "In view of the decision . to create an atmosphere of friendliness between the two coun- tries," the newspaper said, we are withholding publication ..." Pakistanis claimed a further success because the talks were confined to exchange of views on Kashmir. This is the major mutual problem, and the Pakistanis say it must be settled before there can be any marked improvement in relations. The Indians main- tain a Kashmir settlement, if any, can come only after good feelings have been built up through solu- tion of some of the many minor issues. * * * THE WESTERN powers want the warring daughters of the Raj to come together for a simple reason: they're tired of aiding India while she arms against Paki- stan and Pakistan while she arms against India. Besidestdirecting Western aid, in effect, toward more substantive purposes, an ag- reement would facilitate a strong- er sub-continental defense. Kashmir is the principal issue, as it has been since 1947. Besides the emotion it creates on both sides, the Berlin problem almost pales to insignificance. In India, the border question is Mao-come-lately. It's almost as easy to get into an argument about Kashmir as about Krishna Menon. ("Kashmir is part of In- dia. Period. Paragraph.") India says she would like a rapproachment with Pakistan, but won't give up Kashmir as the price of Western aid. However,, the only settlement Pakistan would accept would necessarily cost India something. Pakistan isn't interested in bailing India out. She's still more worried about fancied Indian territorial ambi- tions than China. India maintains Pakistan is us- ing the Chinese cr~iito"black- while the southern ones seem to have picked Britain. The United States denies it ti exerting pressure, says aid will come irrespective of any settle- ment on Kashmir or anything else. And despite a U. S. Informa- tion Service release that ern at best be described as stupid, she has proposed no terms. (The USIS document, apparently the result of a. Washington press briefing, mentioned a plan proposed "in some circles" to give Pakistan ac- cess to an independent ale of Kashmir. It mentioned Pakisans "legal" ties with Kashmir; a prime Indian contention is the absolue lack of legality in "Pak's argu- ment.) BUT if it is not exerting "pres- sure," American officials, notably Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern ' Affairs W. Averill Harriman, have openly stressed the desirability of a settlement. They are now arguing more with reference to the immediate need for some rapprochment caused by the Chinese attack than to other, notably longer-term, reasons. The situation is probably simi- lar to many instances in the past when U. S. officials have said to India in effect: "Look, we're giving you this aid, no strings attached. But we do have these suggestionskabut how to use it, and we'd like you to examine them. We'll give you the aid in any case, if we can, but if you do these things you'll certainly make our job easier in justifying the aid to Congress and the American public." These aren't strictly strings. But, arising from American do- mestic realities, they necessarily carry much weight. A Kashmir settlement and eas- ed relations with Pakistan would undoubtedly "make the job easier." * * * THIS PLAY is being reinforced by the uncertainty over the actual amount of Western aid. Canadian Prime Minister John Diefenbaker recently divulged further "emer- gency" aid would total about $120 million, divided evenly between U. S. and the Commonwealth. Although U. S. officials say any more military aid will notsmerely be deducted from economic help, the long-term picture remains un- clear. India has reportedly re- quested a cool $1 billion, not un- reasonable given the Job to be done. There's no question the West could afford this. But ability to pay has never been the West's problem. It's willingness to pay. President John . Kennedy wants to cut taxes, so in order t placate Congressional conserva- tives, he's putting a lid on ex- penditures. The balance of py- ments problem is still very much alive, and in today's beady-eyed Washington it'll be tough to jus- tify new foreign commitments. This sharpens the cutting edge of U. S. "suggestions" to India and the result so far has been misunderstanding. It's an old story, but it may be only the preface and not the con- clusion of a new book. LIPPMANN: Tax Emphasis By WALTER LIPPMANN TAX REDUCTION first became a big public issue after the break in the stock market last May. At that time, the indicators which economists use to make their predictions were pointing downward. To avert the threatened reces- sion, a quick tax cut was much talked about. But while the Presi- dent was interested, he found that, last summer, Congress would not vote a tax cut before it ad- journed. At about the same time, the statistical indicators began to be less gloomy. As it turned out, though business is not booming, it has been not too bad, and the threat of a recession this winter has evaporated. The effects of this experience are to be seen in the President's message on the State of the Union. Whereas, last summer, he decided against a quick tax cut because Congress would not vote it, now he is making tax reduction and tax reform the paramount busi- ness before Congress. The signifi- cant fact about all this is that, though the pressing reasons ad- vanced last summer for a tax cut do not at present exist, the Presi- dent has committed himself more deeply than ever to tax reduction and tax reform. * * * THIS EVOLUTION in the phil- osophy of the tax proposals is highly significant and also, it seems to me, constructive and sound. The problem that has to be solved is not how to prime the pump when the business cycle turns downward, but how to cure what has come to be a chronic sluggishness in the American 'innnmv whiich lnrives t h A To the Editor: MY RESIGNATION as East Quadrangle representative to the IQC Rules and Regulations Committee was instigated by the committee's vote to keep its legis- lation recommendations on the distribution of literature secret until IQC could pass on those recommendations. In the first place, the rules committee, as a legislative com- mittee of a nominally democratic organization, is wholly without statutory authority to make its proceedings secret. Second, the vote for secrecy was not passed by the "majority of the members" required for committee action. Third, one of the members of the simple majority that passed the secrecy rule may not have been, as was asserted, a member legally elected by his quadrangle coun- cil. Fourth, the secrecy rule was devised at the end of the meeting after the minority indicated it would offer a presentation to op- pose the committee's majority rec- ommendations. Neither I nor an- other member would likely have participated at all on the com- mittee if we had known before- hand that the committee's pro- posals would be kept secret from constituents and that we would be denied an opportunity effec- tively to mobilize opinion to oppose the unwise recommendations. * * * IQC AND its Rules committee i _.ral _"v _ _tnnr , c A o The vote to enforce secrecy on the committee's legislation is es- pecially ludicrous when one re- calls that this committee was created in response to demands that arbitrary and discriminatory censorship of political literature be prevented in the future and that free interchange of political ideas and criticisms be established in the quadrangles. Also ludicrous -in light of the committee's pur- pose-is the content of its recom- mendations. Nowhere does its leg- islation recognize that the right to voice criticisms of IQC and quad- rangle governments does not de- pend on the suffrance of the or- ganization being criticized. In- stead, the committee legislation would vest these organizations with complete control over all literature distributions without re- quiring that political literature coming within this sweeping juris- diction be treated without dis- crimination motivated to keep quadrangle constituents from see- ing criticisms of their governing organizations. It is sad that an organization such as .IQC, which could do so much good, is controlled by a tight, self-perpetuating oligarchy that has no commitment to dem- ocratic values and which (probably correctly) has so little confidence in its own actions that it will not permit criticism of them. I did not. When he complained that I should have then made out the check for five dollars and five cents so that he could keep his change, I asked if he had enough change to return $4.95 and to cover the day's business, which he did. He then snapped, "You know this is just a service we provide for students. We don't have to do it." This comment startled me. May- be I am just a foolish idealist. But I always thought the Michigan Union existed to serve Michigan students. Is the comment by this hautily condescending cashier rep- resentative of the Union's atti- tude? This is a question all Michi- gan students might do well to ponder. What does the Michigan Union do for University student::? It is true they do bring a few well known speakers to campus. They do have a few social events throughout the year and carry out some services for international students. But is our Union the focal point of student activity as other unions are on very many other campuses throughout the country? Could those services now pro- vided by the Michigan Union be taken care of just as well, if not better, by other student groups? Are Union affairs as well pub- licized as those of other organiza- tions on campus? What sort of in- fluence does the Union have on th nnnami cni n inini -i