Seventy-Tbird 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. NDAY, MAY 5,.1963 ACTING NIGHT EDITOR: KENNETH WINTER Catholic Solution Can Only Buy, Time TIERE ARE PLENTY of ways for Americans to avoid facing the seriousness of the popu- lation explosion and the pressing need for birth control. In his Friday night Newman Club talk on "The Catholic Solution to the Popula- tion Explosion," Rt. Rev. Msgr. John T. Brad- ley used most of them. There was much truth in the things he said. The recognition that "if present trends con- tinue, we shall soon have a density problem," his assertion that there is no single, simple solution to it, and his plea for action based on human dignity are well commendable. But as Msgr. Bradley moved closer to spe- cifics, his "Catholic solution" emerged for what it was: a short-sighted, ultimately cruel pro- gram designed to fit the Church's birth-control dogma but contradictory-in the long run-to the principle of human dignity. Adjustment rTHE LATEST VOGUE in weapons in the battle for racial equality, is the super-sym- pathetic demonstration. It often uses students, women and most recently children to arouse the emotions of the public in support of the cause. Such an incident occurred Friday in Birmingham, Ala., where police employed dogs and high-pressure, fire hoses to suppress dem- onstrators, injuring at least five people. Often, these demonstrations gain conces- sions in the battle for equality under law as in the Florida and Georgia sit-ins. But when these demonstrations result in violence and injury, especially to children, the weapon, regardless of its seeming efficacy, must not be employed. FIRST, in such a situation the demonstration is no longer effective. If one considers the long run repercussions of the Birmingham dem- onstration, it will be seen that no true racial equality can ever be reached by such a method. Violence does not. breed brotherhood. The ill feeling produced by this incident can do noth- ing but aggravate the present situation and greatly hinder any future progress. Second, physical harm to six year old chil- dren who are not even partially able to com- prehend the cause cannot be condoned. Six year old children are meant for dolls, cowboy hats and baseball games, not for anti-segrega- tion marches. In -order to obtain true racial equality, the Negro must be able to look beyond his present goal of equality under the law. Any racial har- mony that is to come about in this country will be the result of a social adjustment and not a legal one. The Negro today suffers from a repu- tation that has been built by prejudiced and ignorant people. According to this reputation he is dirty, Ignorant and lazy, with no con- cept of law and order. The social adjustment will be reached only when this false reputation is destroyed and Negroes are seen as individ- uals. Violence in demonstrations does not aid in the formation of social adjustment. Although the Birmingham method is some- times effective in obtaining short range goals of equality under law, it does little to aid the long run efforts toward true racial equality. --ROBERT GRODY MSGR. BRADLEY suggested voluntary mi- gration to the world's still-empty areas as one course of action. There are many ob- stacles to this. How do we induce people to leave their homeland voluntarily, especially when the societies who need emigration are generally the most conservative, tradition- bound cultures? Most of these people have neither the money nor the experience nor the propensity to move permanently over long dis- tances. How do we lower immigration restric- tions in the receiving nations? What of the problems of assimilation where the migrants arrive? But most important is the fact that migra- tion, even if it works as a very short-run safety valve, will allow the "sending" nations to grow faster, soon reaching and surpassing their pre- migration population levels; while the "receiv- ing" nations will soon face their own population problems. SIMILAR REMARKS apply to Msgr. Bradley's advocacy of various means of increasing food production and availability, and of various ways by which the "have" nations can share their wealth with the "have-nots." Aside from the numerous technical and even more impor- tant the social barriers to the implementation of these humanitarian, suggestions, the same final difficulty remains: they will intensify, not solve, the population problem. United States aid money pouring into the underdeveloped nations has brought some improvement in some places, but its major effect has been to keep more people alive to bear more starving chil- dren. THE BASIC POINT is this: these and most of Msgr. Bradley's other suggestions are wor- thy proposals despite their problems. But even if all of them could be implemented, the best they can do is to postpone the day when man is left with only two alternatives: lower the birth rate, or see starvation, pestilence and war dis- astrously raise the death rate, bringing misery and oppression on an unprecedented scale. * Msgr. Bradley's proposals should be tried. But they should not be tried as ends in them- selves, but as devices to buy time. Fertility research is needed, and attitudes- including those of the Roman Catholic Church --must and will eventually change. But this will take considerable time. The stopgap measures should be used to hold off the most serious consequences of the population explosion while the work is done to make bith control a reality around the world. Birth control, as Msgr. Bradley points out, is not a panacea for the world's ills. Aside from the many obstacles to putting it into practice- and the Church is not the only one-there will be many new problems even after its use be- comes virtually universal. But the seeds of these problems were sown long ago, when man first began to control his environment and prolong his life. Unless the Church is ready to propose that man abandon this "death control," one of civilization's most basic accomplishments, it must acknowledge that birth control is necessary to counteract it. For the sake of future generations, who must bear the burden of our mistakes, we can only hope that this acknowledgement will come in time. -KENNETH WINTER "Ugh -- It Sounds Like That Dnmn Cavalry Again" - -. 'k- ' .** "" yR--h ByROAD1ITO,,cin dio 7, : 3t 4 * 2 7 - A FAC E IN T H ECROWD :. By RONALD WILTON, Acting Editor UNDERSCORE: Apres Qoi. .? CAMPUS POLITICS: Censoring News Creates Distrust TT IS MIDNIGHT Wednesday night and Student Government Council is in session. A janitor walks into the Council Room and asks if the body has a permit to stay later. Invariably the answer is no; the room's lights flicker off and on in a gentle hint; the mem- bers quickly wrap up their busi- ness and go home. The midnight adjournment time is not forced by the University-- late permissions are available whenever Council wants them. It's just that the agenda is usually -tructured so that the number of items under discussion and the ime allotted for their consideration neatly add up to a midnight ad- journment time. This incident sums up the dif- ferences between today's Council and those of the past. As a fresh- man and sophomore I remember going to meetings where two or three in the morning was the expected adjournment time. De- bate continued through the eve- ning and was followed respect- fully and attentively. Council work was not unpleasant business; it was something in which members were vitally interested. This atti- tude is what has changed, and the attitude has affected- the issues and dynamism of the group. * * * THE WORDS that many Coun- cil members like to use to describe the present body are "moderate" and "consensus." For the first time in a long while, certain Council members say, there is no liberal- conservative split. This, they claim, has hurt Council in the past. The factionalism and personal animns- ities built up by past splits are ills many present Council mem- bers are anxious to avoid. They take great pleasure in proclaim- ing their success. Although I have only been on Council for two weeks the attitude is already slightly disconcerting. Moderation and consensus are not cure-alls for the problems Council faced in the past. The argument that they are now is based on a superficial analysis of the present situation. Of the two catch words con- sensus is the more popular. It is true that Council has been operat- ing recently without deep factional splits; the possibilities for con- tinued agreement on all issues are not very great. By and large the areas in which SGC has been deal- ing recently are not the issues that cause ideological splits. For ex- ample, nearly all students can agree on that student-faculty gov- ernment is desirable. Similarly the idea of direct election of the stu- dent body president can be sup- ported both by liberals and con- servatives. The direct election idea is so new that neither side has a stake in the process which would cause it to oppose the plan for political reasons. * * * HOWEVER before the next elections, roll around SGC will probably be considering questions which I am sure cannot be de- cided by consensus. Such an issue is student control over student rules and regulations. This issue invni a m a1dnmont.1 imnninme. ment it a split on the bias ques- tion is almost inevitable. Ideolog- ical differences between Council members are as deep as they al- ways have been; the reason for the present consensus is that these differences have not been touched by present issues. The splits are bound to come. When they do they will be de- cried as unfortunate, partisan, selfish and all kinds of derogatory adjectives will be applied to-them. Yet when the splits come they will be good. They will mean that Council is finally interested in the end product of strong issues rather than in reaching a bland agreement for the sake of consen- sus. Because consensus will be un- likely, a wider range of issues and solutions will be presented. This variety will stimulate students to view their concerns in wider dind different contexts t h a n they presently do. TO A LARGE degree the pres- ent stress on consensus stems from a desire on the part of many Council members to appear mod- erate. The moderation in turn ap- pears to stem from a basic fear; a fear of alienating the adminis- tration in general and Vice-Presi- dent for Student Affairs James A. Lewis in particular. When a liberal proposes a mo- tion to a moderate, the latter will often reply, "I agree with you in principle but it would be imprac- tical to implement and would only get the administration mad at us. Let's not do it or at least let's settle for something less." This something less is usually a string of amendments which emasculates the proposal out of any recogniz- able shape. The basic issue here is whether Council's duty is to placate ad- ministrators or to seek to improve the student's position in the com- munity, which right now is not commensurate with his ability. The proposition that students should have the right to set their own rules is something that stu- dents should favor whether they are liberal, conservative or mod- erate. The real split here is be- tween those people who believe that both they and students, as a whole are responsible to handle their own affairs and those who take a dimmer view of student capabilities. IF A PROPOSED motion is faced with administrative disap- proval the answer is not to give up and refuse to act. Rather the motion should be passed and then SGC should go through the avail- able official and unofficial chan- nels for political action on campus to get the motion adopted by the community. This means rounding up allies and putting pressure where pressure will work; we must conduct strong political lobbying campaigns. It may mean an ex- tended period of hard work on the part of students but the results could be well worth it. Barring resignations, Council is now set the way it is until next fall's elections. For the past few months, while student organiza- tions were appointing new ex- officios of unknown political lean- ings the Council was "moderate" and "coisensus" oriented. Now with the probability of such issues as bias in affiliated units and a student bill of rights coming be- fore Council, these catch-words will probably fall by the wayside. If Council reorients its thinking toward ideological differences, it will enjoy an exciting and possibly eventful year. By BURTON MICHAELS A TENDENCY remains among many campus organizations to withhold information about their actions, a practice which harms the organizations involved, their constituents and the news media which should report these actions. Organizations withhold infor- mation in one of two ways: either they close their deliberations to the public and release what in- formation they wish, or they open deliberations on the condition that only what they allow be publicized. The former method is, of course, worse. Whether or not an inter- ested party publicizes the infor- mation learned in closed sessions, he finds such information essen- tial to an understanding of what is happening. A simple release presents only final settlements; if it does mention rationale, it men- tions only one side, that which justifies the final conclusion. Without the rationale behind it, an action is open to misunder- standing. * * * EXECUTIVE committee meet- ings of Inter-Fraternity Council, closed last spring, offer a prime example. Very little news emanat- ing from IFC finds its way to the average fraternity man or to the campus at large. Neither the Michigan Fraternities Report, an official IFC publication, nor The Daily reports much of the ration- ale behind IFC actions, which are thus open to misinterpretation. The result is that the executive council presents an image to the fraternity man of administration tools who act as spies and issue edicts. To the non-affiliate they appear as vested reactionaries drinking Lowenbrau and plotting evil. A true understanding of the rationale behind IFC actions, a presentation of both sides and of the compromises reached, would destroy these false images. A case in point is executive council's recent judicial action in which some houses were fined for initiating men with grades below 2.0. To the fraternity man vitally interested in the freedom of his house, the action may have seem- ed unjustly harsh. To an non- affiliated Daily reporter the action seemed mild as to justify license. Were the judicial actions open to interested parties, the true ration- ale behind them would have been understood and possibly incorrect speculation would have been pre- vented. THE OTHER form of withhold- ing information - opening meet- ings but allowing only selected information to be publicized - is often justifiable. Considerations of personalities is one type of delib- eration which is the business of nobody but the organization. But when a deliberation affectsanyone outside the organization, it should be publicized. Too often such in- formation is withheld; organiza- tions censor arbitrarily and thus deny their constituents knowledge of and hence influence in deci- sion-making. STATE: A Glorious Catalogue IF "COME FLY WITH ME" were assigned for an English course it would be called a college outline of cliches, definitive edition. From that fate at least, it is fairly safe. There are undoubtedly many for whom this title, "Come Fly With Me," rings a clannish bell of nostalgia, Sinatra-type. However, the producer was admirably true to his scholarly purpose of cata- loguing and therefore the title song is sung by none other than Frankie Avalon, who lacks a lot in the way of nostalgia. For nostalgia, one is given such stars as Karl Malden, Lois Nettle- ton, and Hugh "Wyatt Earp" O'Brian. * * * IN KEEPING with the foreign movie fad, this film was made in England and uses such exotic lo- cales as Paris and Vienna (you were told it was the definitive out- line of cliches). Its use of these lo- cales would put Hans Christian Andersen to shame as a teller of fairy tales. Belief in their very existence is permanently suspend- ed, two whole cities wiped off the face of reality forever. To add interest this catalog is put into fiction form and follows the adventures of three steward- esses (a pretty, naive child, an older, slightly homely and bitter woman ,and a cynical lover of money in men) as they cross the paths of a Texas millionaire, a jet Jockey with a girl in every port, and a moneyless Austrian Baron with heart and hair of gold but forced by royal poverty to smuggle diamonds. Shuffle these six into three couples and add sugar, and incipient orange blossoms and the love of children of all nationalities and lo, you have a movie. * * * ACTUALLY the movie is very interesting. Somehow into this The Union-League Study Com- mittee, studying the Union-League merger, typifies this form of n:ews suppression. The committee's re- fusal to allow publication of its deliberations may stem from a fear that the information will be pub- licized inaccurately. -However, since those who would publicize such information check back with their sources for accuracy, this fear is totally unjustified and is only offered as a weak rationaliza- tion. The committee's censorship may be motivated by a fear that its actions, made public, would arouse disapproval. But this is what the committee should welcome - a. chance to gauge the acceptability of its work before its recommenda- tions are put into effect. It is unspeakably unethical for the committee to withhold informa- tion from those it should be serv- ing in order to push through pos- sibly unpopular proposals. If its actions, made public before put into effect were to win approval, the committee might feel more confident in acting as it has. Much of the secrecy surround- ing campus organizations stems from days when the campus was a political hotbed. If the secrecy re- mains, so may the mistrust which makescooperationhdifficult.Co- operation among the new staffs of campus organizations is worth at least a try-and the place to start is a re-examination of un- necessary secrecy. CITYS COPE: CYCPWorthw hile Wating By WILLIAM BENOIT TIE UNIVERSITY'S recommen- datioon fair huigwr worth the wait. Although University President Harlan Hatcher was the target of much abuse during the original fair housing crisis in February, he weathered them well and directed three intelligent and informed men to prepare a report deserv- ing the most serious consideration from City Council. It is impossible for ten council members who are compelled by the nature of their jobs to be busy with Many laws and to be recep- tive to the complaints and wishes of many people to know much about one subject. WITH A CRISIS in bus service and a full schedule preparing next year's city budget, councilmen will not know all the pertinent facts of fair housing unless they learn them from a comprehensive report like President Hatcher's. , The councilmen will discover a number of flaws in their ordinance if they study the report. * * * THE BASIC FLAW is that the definition of housing unit is not inclusive as it covers only multiple dwellings of five or more units and publicly assisted housing. Three other cities with fair housing or- dinances, Pittsburgh, Toledo and New York City, all offer broader coverage. Also, there are a number of le- gal loopholes by which landlord could escape the coverage of the ordinance. For instance, discrimi- nation is prohibited in the selling of five or more adjoining lots un- der one ownership. But a landlord could evade this clause by offer- ing the same number of lots in groups of four. Two prominent and valuable features of the other three cities' ordinances are not covered in the Ann Arbor document. There is no provision regarding discriminatory practices in advertising housing nor is there one preventing or punishing aiding discrimination. THE ORDINANCE does provide excellent procedures for handling violations. First there is an attempt at conciliation to be conducted by the Human Relations Commission. If this attempt fails, the city at- torney is empowered to seek an injunction that would prevent sale of the housing in question until the dispute can be settled in court. The penalty for a violation can be a fine up to $100, jail up to 90 days, or both. The ordinance now lies dead, probably until fall, in the Fair Housing Committee. This provides an excellent opportunity for the members of council to study and learn ways of improving it before final passage. President Hatcher's report could be a springboard for improvement. UntruWth The crowd is untruth. Hence none'has more contempt for what it is to be a man than they who make it their profession to lead the crowd. . . There must be hundreds at the least. And when there are thousands, he defers to the crowd, bowing and scraping LUDWIG ERHARD, Germany's economics minister, had a long wait but the waiting culminated in a recent promise by the Chris- tian Democrats that they will make him Chan- cellor Konrad Adenauer's successor upon Ade- nauer's retirement next fall. Trying to stall the inevitable, Adenauer urged the party not to name his new successor so long before his retirement. Nonetheless, the Christian Democratic Union Party went ahead with its ratification of Er- hard as successor, much to Adenauer's dismay. While he pledged to instruct and aid Erhard, he made it known that he thought the decision was a poor choice.. BEHIND ADENAUER'S stalling and hedging lies the resentment which he feels toward the party he has led for 14 years but which is now rejecting him. The Chancellor's authori- tarian ways have been the bulwark of party strength for so long that he cannot easily step down. Since the establishment of the German Fed- eral Republic in 1949, Adenauer through his guiding genius has united both party and coun- try. Moreover, he has radically altered Germany's foreign policy, wiping out the strong national- istic views of the country and inspiring pro- Western; pro-European sentiments. p E TENACITY and supreme self-confidence with which the Chancellor has wrought these changes are still evident in his desire to "hang on" to his post. Even now, he seriously doubts that Germany knowledge that Erhard, so different in tempera- ment and outlook, is expected to stray from the Chancellor's policies. Whereas Adenauer has been stern and immovable, the economics min- ister prefers to avoid a struggle whenever pos- sible. Why has the CDU felt it necessary to oust Adenauer? Primarily, the party has had to face up to the fact that there is a demand for a change. Moreover, with the 1965 parliamen- tary elections to consider and the loss of strength in the 1961 elections, CDU officials have had to prepare for the party's future. WITH ERHARD in the driver's seat, the party hopes to achieve many goals which it has been unable to reach in the past. Among these is a desire to form a coalition government between the CDU and the Social Democrats (Germany's second strongest par- ty), a union which Adenauer has opposed. Such a coalition could serve not only to break the conservative immobility plaguing the govern- ment but also to resolve the lack of confidence in the Federal Republic. Underlying this move is the decline in the CDU-Free Democrat coali- tion which has ruled since 1961 and is no longer a stable government. The end of the "Adenauer Era" may also lead to a new mobility in Germany's domestic policy, which the Chancellor tends to overlook while focusing on foreign affairs. THE CRUCIAL QUESTION which the world is asking is whether Germany can bear the switch from a stern, almost dictatorial leader to a man who professes "confidence in, the To The Editor To the Editor: I WISH to give an account of an accident that took place around 11:15 last Friday night at the East Quadrangle. Ken Holgenson received a punc- ture head wound from a protrud- ing metal object in a door way in the basement of the East Quad. He immediately came up stairs to the south desk holding his laundry bag against the side of his head to stop the flow of blood which by this time covered the entire left side of his face and asked for help. I was talking with the night watchman, who was on duty at the south desk, when Ken asked for help. Immediately, I gave first aid to Ken as I had learned in Scouts by applying pressure to the side head arteries and had John Paton, who was there at the time, get some cold wet towels from the adjacent cafeteria which he did immediately. I asked the night watchman to call for an ambu- lance or scout car. The night wathman reiued and called a BY THIS TIME, we had stopped and coagulated the blood from the wound. Still applying the pres- sure points we got out to the street where John Paton tried to flag down a car and another student called for a cab. The cab arrived quickly. He got us to the University Hospital where the wound was cleaned and stitches taken. One hour later I arrived back at the Quad, where I was repri- manded by the same night watch- man for taking the situation into by own hands, which I as a "Quaddie" had no right to do. AS FAR as Ken Holgenson is concerned, he is lucky. However, if he had not been conscious and not been able to climb up the stairs, he might have bled to death in the basement of the East Quadrangle. Or he could have lost much more blood if when he came to the desk no one was around to administer first aid while the right procedural chain I