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 T'ee STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Will P revail"' Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TODAY AND TOMORROW: Government Must Aid Birmingham Negroes WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: GERALD STORCH Romney for President? Only He's Uninterested JUDGING BY the amount of newsprint and attention devoted to the matter in recent days, every person of any stature in the Republican Party is in favor of nominating Gov. George Romney to oppose President John F. Kennedy in the 1964 presidential election; everyone, that is, except Romney himself. Just why so many people should be so whole- heartedly in support of a candidate as reluc- tant as Romney is hard to say. Perhaps they feel (and with some justification) that even a reluctant candidate is better than one who wouldn't stand much chance of obtaining the party's support. This is the case with the other candidates who have been proposed thus far. That any candidate the GOP comes up with might stand a chance of beating Ken- nedy in 1964, however, is remote. Jpp UNTIL fairly recently, the man who stood the greatest chance in capturing a majority of GOP supporters next fall has undoubtedly been New York's Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. Indeed, many pundits still con- sider him a frontrunner in the race. But his recent divorce and subsequent marriage to a divorcee cannot be passed over lightly. Ac- cording to a recent survey of top party officials, Brotherhood THE INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL plan to provide 28 foreign students with room, board and social privileges in fraternities will be beneficial to all concerned. There has long been the problem of foreign students at the University becoming isolated from the rest of the campus. They tend to group together in apartments and do not really get to know the rest of the University community. Often they perceive an attitude of coolness and hostility which they remember long after returning to their native countries. With this new program, the fraternity system is taking a positive step toward alleviating this problem. Fraternities, because of their close, small group living and participation in all campus activities, are uniquely well suited for bringing the foreign students out of isolation and into the mainstream of campus life. pE IOREIGN STUDENTS, on their part, will bring new ideas to the fraternity system. Usually they represent the top intellects of their respective countries, and their contribu- tions to the fraternity system will be consider- able. But the most important potentiality of the program is that it could do a great deal to bring about a better understanding between American and foreign students. Despite all the recent furor about anti-discrimination legisla- tion and regulations, the fact remains that prejudice is a personal thing. In its simplest terms it is a deep unreasoning fear of people whose color, customs or religion seem strange. Such prejudice can never be legislated away. Prejudice will diminish only when intelligent members of different races and religions are brought together under controled conditions where they can east, work and relax together. It is then that they really begin to know and understand each other. Under these conditions, the conditions of the IFC program, prejudice will gradually be re- placed not merely by tolerance but by true brotherhood. The fraternity system has designed a very commendable program. -M. MAAS Rockefeller sentiment in the East has "dimin- ished terrifically" since his trip to and from the altar; and the predominantly Roman Catholic voting populations of those areas which express this view are not likely to change their minds too readily. Another stumbling block to Rockefeller's chances is the recent scandal over New York's liquor commission; several officials of that body were fired for refusing to testify before a grand jury on graft in New York. Although the governor was not personally involved, the fact that his name was linked with the matter will not help his chances. SEN. BARRY GOLDWATER of Arizona is hardly the ideal candidate to represent the GOP, being ultra-conservative. That support which he might get will come mainly from those people eager to give a conservative the chance to show what a man holding suchj views can do against a Democratic candidate. The generally held opinion is that Goldwater will sweep the South and West; indeed there seems to be a concerted "draft Goldwater" effort in these areas.-But Goldwater .has as yet withheld open approval for such a move- ment and denies that he is a candidate, al- though perhaps not to the extent Romney has. For those who find Goldwater too conserva- tive and Rockefeller too liberal, there is always the middle of the road. There are a few in- teresting possibilities. There is Sen. Thruston Morton of Kentucky, whom party officials in at least three states regard as a potential dark horse. There is Gov. William E. Scranton of Pennsylvania, who does not seem at all in- terested in the idea. There are any number of other individuals whom one person or an- other has suggested as a nominee-everyone from Gov. James Rhodes of Ohio to evengelist Billy Graham. Bnt mainly, there is Gov. Romney. FOR HIS OWN PART, Romney has done little to indicate he wishes the nomination. Even if he were out to become the next presi- dent, there still would remain two well-nigh insurmountable barriers. The first of these, and the one which GOP leaders should keep fore- most in their minds, is the exceedingly slim chance Romney or any other Republican can- didate would hale against President Kennedy, who undoubtedly will run for re-election. But the major reason why rumors of Rom- ney's being presidential timber are absurd is that he owes a far greater debt to the people who elected him Governor of Michigan. Nobody will deny that Gov. Romney's practical exper- ience in the area of politics is not the most abundant and being defeated by President Kennedy would not help his future chances any. It is far better that Romney stay in Lansing and solve the many problems at home than taking an ill-fated crack at the presidency and possibly ruining his political career. Another factor in Romney's reluctance to accept the GOP nomination at this time is the current hope that Detroit will be the site of the upcoming GOP national convention. Tra- ditionally, the convention is not held in the home state of a potential candidate. Romney does not wish to endanger the chances of such an event by throwing his hat in the ring now. Romney has done everything possible to avoid becoming the GOP's Judas goat in 1964, and there is no reason to suspect that his refusal is anything less than sincere. The political bigwigs of the Grand Old Party would do well to take note of this and waste no more time making overtures to a man who has nothing to gain and everything to lose by accepting their offer. -STEVEN HALLER l -r WHO) ME ? LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: A Victim of McC arthyism +E ' tqb3 1 , cii oea S'Ua~tt\ 4A*~S To the Editor: UNFORTUNATELY the press. coverage concerning the indict- ment of the members of the Young Socialist Alliance at Indi- ana University has not been as full as should be to present a better picture of the assault on civil li- berties at IU. The three YSA members were being persecuted by Monroe Coun- ty Prosecutor Thomas Hoadley un- der Indiana's 1951 anti-Communist Act. This law, a residue from the McCarthy period and similar to the Pennsylvania law declared un- constitutional by the United States Supreme Court, forbids an organi- zation to "engage in or advocate, abet, advise, or teach activities intended to overthrow, destroy, or alter, or to assist in the overthrow, destruction or alteration of the constitutional form of government of ... the state of Indiana by rev- olution, force, or violence." The act further declares it Indiana state policy "to exterminate Com- munism and Communists and any or all teachings of the same. Hoadley called upon IU to out- CINEMA GUILD: Shorn Shawi King's Success Unclear THE SPIRIT of Christ walked the streets of Birmingham yesterday as the Rev. Martin Luther King toured Negro neighborhoods preaching non-violence and collecting pocket knives. His audience appeared to heed his words and the non-violent attitude of recent demonstrations seems to be maintained. Sunday night the relatively peaceful nature of the protests broke down just as it appeared to have won the day. Friday Rev. King and Birmingham businessmen agreed on a four- point program ending the city's rigid segrega- tion. While it was not the total integration the demonstrators called for, it was a significant first step. However,+ the home of Rev. King's brother, the Rev. A. D. King, and one of the integra- tionists' headquarters were bombed. Patience was shattered and violence ensued, bringing federal troops to the edge of Birmingham. Thus went Rev. King's mission of non- violence. Hopefully, it will draw off the ten- sions that wracked the city over the weekend. The non-violent approach has succeeded so far. A race riot now would eliminate most of the current gains. DT PWERE massremonnstration tactics the: ports that the "Senior Citizens," a Chamber of Commerce committee, had been working behind the scenes to 'desegregate slowly the city. They had already planned to upgrade Negro workers in their stores and pushed the moderate administration of Albert Boutwell. The group worked hard to install the mayor- council system to replace the moribund three- man commission system, then to place the proper moderate leadership in it. But the white group did not talk with the Negro community, ' the Journal reports. The "Senior Citizens" were tightly secret. Execu- tives of Birmingham's two daily papers were on the committee and kept this news out of their papers. The committee also assiduously kept out of the political limelight. So this communications breakdown occurred. It was aggravated by the failure of Rev. King and his Southern Christian Leadership Con- ference to feel out white attitudes before they started their demonstrations. CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE is not enough. It has to be flexible and have a shrewd political leadership. Once the demonstrations got under- way, Rev. King displayed talented leadership but his timing seems as much determined by s i 1 t t C E C 8 Y k C e e r. x s F v s t: F s: E IMAGINE JULIUS CAESAR as a combination of Socrates, H. L. Mencken and George Washington. Then imagine Cleopatra as a San- dra Dee-with-Brains and you have George Bernard Shaw's "Caesar and Cleopatra" as it is appearing today through Saturday at the Cinema Guild. Shaw had his own unique meth- od of interpreting the past and he was never hindered in his brilliant handling of historical themes by such things as facts. Shaw didn't have to be: if things didn't hap- pen exactly the way he wrote them, it was only because he wasn't around at the time to see them done properly. Gabriel Pascal, however, goes Shaw one step further. Where Shaw changed history to suit his plays, Pascal changes Shaw to suit his movie. One slight little differ- ence; Shaw was a genius and Pas- cal isn't. * * * SHAW CONCEIVED his Caesar as a middle-aged man, wise and humanitarian in a day when great battle leaders were characterized by their cruelty and strength. Shaw makes Caesar the first pre- Christian Christian. Pascal follow- ed this concept of Caesar to an extent in this direction. He simply neglected to retain the great war- rior that both history and Shaw saw in Caesar. By casting Claude Rains in the title role, Pascal per- verts and misrepresents Shaw and simultaneously weakens the en- tire movie. Cleopatra is also mishandled by Pascal in a manner that would shock Marc Antony, Plutarch, Shakespeare, Shaw and Richard Burton. Vivian Leigh couldn't se- law YSA and admitted that while the law "may be unconstitutional . .. in the meantime it is a valid law, making illegal an 'organiza- tion declared legal by the univer- sity. Obviously Hoadley has no use for such "formalities" or "lux- uries" as due process of law. To him, it was not necessary for an organization to be tried and con- victed of violating a law before he could label it illegal. Hoadley feels little responsibil- ity to IU, which did not legalize YSA by permitting it to use cam- pus facilities as other youth groups do. The university hit Hoadley with criticism for not having con- sulted them before making his absurd charges of YSA subversion. While Hoadley did, as The Daily reported, state that he was reluc- tant to prosecute and that he "would have preferred that the school handle this affair," he stat- ed in a radio interview that IU-- whose appropriations come before the state Legislature at this time -could have saved\itself embar- rassment by dropping its recogni- tion of YSA on his word that it was subversive. * * * IU REFUSAL to ignore due process confirmed in Hoadley's mind an opinion shared by Tom Houston, a member of IU's Young Americans for Freedom, that IU is "in the vanguard" of institutions giving "the green light" to "ex- treme left-wing organizations" to use the campuses "as bases to un- dermine traditional American in- stitutions." IU, he states, is guilty of giving "Communists" free ac- cess to the campuses by its rec- ognition of a Fair Play for Cuba group, Young People's Socialist League, Student Peace Union and YSA. IU Prof. Norwood R. Hanson de- clared in a letter: "Every member of the university, faculty and stu- dent body ought to wake up to what is happening. If we cannot have a reparation of ideas from local politics, if we cannot allow student discussion groups to dis- cuss what they please.., then we are really on our way to Munich." Support for YSA was not only limited to elements from the uni- versity. Senator David Rogers, Bloomington C i t y Democratic chairman, said in the state Gen- eral Assembly that Hoadley's at- tempt to ban YSA was "ridicul- ous." Further, in the Bloomington Star-Courier, R. P. Stein, United States district attorney for the Indiana Federal Courts, pointed out that the 1951 anti-Communist Act was probably unconstitutional but that it remained on the books because it had never been tested. Nonetheless, Hoadley pushes on. HOADLEY ENVISIONS himself the '60's McCarthy who will save this country from those groups who preach and work for integra- tion, peace and a better society. His indictment of YSA is a typi- cal tactic used by the ultra-right to intimidate and smash the spirit of free thinking. It, Hoadley and the forces he represents must be fought and defeated on every lev- el in the United States. This coun- try and the security of the world changes in Joint Judic constitu- tions, and as far as I know, neither has acted on the proposals now before them. And under the present constitu- tion, Joint Judic is specifically charged wth the regulation of men's honoraries and their tap-, ping procedures. Joint Judic has never taken this extremely spe- cific charge much to heart, how- ever, so it was to be expected that it would again disregard its duties, even in the face of Greene House's demand that they be performed. It might be interesting if The Daily would find out who inherits the legislative power Joint Judic now holds in this area if and when its new constitution is approved and let its readers know. --Robert L. Farrell, '63 Machinery . . To the Editor: IT IS HIGHLY disdainful that the educational machinery of the University cannot be halted for even one lecture period in re- spect for the passing .of one of its professors. Prof. Hugh Z. Norton of the speech department was taken ill by a stroke Sunday night. He died shortly before his scheduled class at 2:00 p.m. Monday. My class- mates and myself were under- standably stunned by the an- nouncement. But that shock was not as difficult to accept as the educational perseverance of the speech department in holding Prof.,. Norton's class that very afternoon. I don't think that the admini- stration would have reprimanded anyone had the class been can- celled -- although nothing must stand in the University's way, not even the memory of one professor. I don't want to hear about the size of thet University and the problems it creates for the "educa- tional process", or that there is little tirne left to cover the ma- terial of our Speech 231 class. One class hour in respect for Prof. Norton was all I expected. Was that asking too much? --James M. Wechsler, '63 By WALTER LIPPMANN ONCE AGAIN the federal gov- ernment is being compelled to intervene forcibly in the struggle over the rights of Negroes. As in Little Rock and in the University of Mississippi, and now in Birm- ingham, the controlling fact which has led to the federal intervention is the open defiance of the federal law by state governments. In Birmingham, a moderate and modest accommodation was arriv- ed at by Asst. Atty. Gei. Burke Marshall's successful mediation between the Negro leaders and the leading members of the white community. But the accommoda- tion was denounced by the city of- ficials who are still in office and received no support from the gov- ernor. These authorities are mor- ally responsible for therbombings which then led to the rioting. There is no hope that reason and sanity and good will can pre- vail as long as the constituted authorities are opposed to accom- modation. * ** * SO THE NATION is defied by a state government attempting to nullify the federal law. The Unit- ed States government cannot sub- mit to nullification in Alabama. Even if , the federal government were unprincipled enough to be willing to look the other way, the mounting desperation of the Ne- gro people, so brilliantly reported by Robert S. Bird in the New York Herald Tribune, would make it impossible. The mentality of this generation of Negroes is far re- moved from that of their ances- tors, and they are shedding very rapidly the docility of the slave mentality. We must have no illusions that the Negro protest will subside even though the disorders In Birm- ingham are overcome. There are very difficult issues ,ahead in Ala- bama. In the coming months there is almost certain to be a con- frontation between the state gov- ernment of Alabama and the fed- eral government over desegrega- tion in the university. Probably before the opening of the univer- sity in June, the federal district court will hand down an order to admit to the Huntsville branch of the university two : Negro em- ployees of the Marshall Space Center. One of the Negroes is a mathematician and the other is an electronics engineer. The Huntsville branch of the university was set up in order to enable the employees of the space center to continue their education. That is not all. There will prob- ably soon be a federal court order to admit a Negro to the university in Tuscaloosa and also a court order to desegregate the Birming- ham public schools. ALL THIS makes not only a big bag of problems but also a dis- orderly one. In a state like Ala- bama, it is unreasonable to begin the desegregation of the public schools and of the university at the same time. The enforcement of the . law of the Constitution against segregation in public edu- cation requires a plan, a program and priorities. The hodge-podge in Alabama is due to the fact that Sellout. THE ENTIRE purpose of exter- nalizing the Communist danger is to draw the attention of the American people away from the fact that the greatest Communiz- ing force in the world today is not the Soviet Union with its over- publicized missiles and rockets, but the, United States government. Ex- cept for the conquest of Eastern Europe, which was done with our approval and cooperation, the Communists have not conquered one single square inch of territory by pure military, invasion. The po- litical conquest is first made by the state department-either in the forth of a sellout, a betrayal or a coalition government. The Soviets enter the picture sonly to consolidate the political takeover. -American Opinion the enforcement of the law is not proceeding according to a national plan but has been left almost entirely to litigation initiated by the Negro organizations. Gov. George Romney told us recently that "the big issue today is whether excess concentration of federal power and sovereignty is going to destroy state, local and individual freedom and respi- sibility." That is indeed a wor'i- some issue. But Gov. Romney ought now to apply his theory to the facts in Alabama and say what the federal ;government should do when the federal law is openly defied by a state govern- ment. He will be compelled to say, I think, that, as the ultimate re- sponsibility for law and order within the union Is in the federal government, it 'has a duty to use its rhoral influence and its ma- terial power, which are very con- siderable, to promote gradual and peaceable achievement of equal rights in public places and in pub- licelife. This is a solemn national com- mitment from which it is impos- sible to turn away. (C)1963, The Washington Post Co BIAS: Meyerholz States Stan EDITOR'S NOTE: This is an ex- cerpt from an editorial in Micigan Fraternities Report by John Meyer- holz, former lnterfraternity .Council president.) By JOHN MEYERHOLZ "AT THE PRESENT time Stu- dent Government Council has the power to recognize and with- draw recognition from student or- ganizations on the University cam- pus . . . At this point, there is definite legal question as to whether or not the Regents have delegated power for SGC to work in this area; and there also seems to be a very basic. philosophical problem as to whether or not this area is the proper concern of a body such as SGC. It will become necessary for the Regents and the .administration to clarify this en- tire area both as to the legal problem and as to the broader problem, that' of SGC working further in this area. The problem is not an easy one to solve once the legal difficulties are resolved.; SGC demands, on the one hand, that it be given full authority over the area of fra- ternity and sorority bias. Many of the fraternity and sorority under- graduates and alumni, on the other hand, believe that their problems should be resolved by a more responsible group than SGC. Based on my experience as both a member of SGC and president of Interfraternity Council, I see a very definite need to remove this area from SGC and create a more responsible body to work with the Greek organization on this prob- lem. There are several immediate reasons why SGC has not demon- strated to the campus its ability to operate in this area. Its struc- ture lacks continuity from year to year. There is a complete turn- over of ex-officios every spring and an almost complete turnover of the other Council positions in a year's time. This necessitates an entire reindoctrination of the Council each year as to the nature of this problem . . . While this rapid change in thought may be understood to reflect correctly the changing nature of the student body, it hardly leaves the frater- nities and sororities with any idea of the long range goals of SGC. ' m* * * THERE IS a real lack of con- certed direction in the goals of SGC in this area. SGC has never made it clear as to the entire methodology and ultimate goal that it is operating under . . . In- formation has been demanded by SGC and then after it was receiv- ed, standards have been set up to judge the adequacy of the in- formation. The Committee on Membership in Student Organiza- tions has always felt insecure when working with a group because SGC has failed to indicate clearly its position in this area SGC lacks qualified and respon- sible members to work in this area. In the first place, I have a feeling that some of its mem- bers are more interested in elimi- nating fraternities and sororities than in solving their problems. It would appear to me that these members cannot give adequate at- tention and concern to the prob- lems when their goal seems not to be a solution but elimination. To further demonstrate its irrespon- sible nature, SGC members are proceeding with the Harris Re- port without a clear indication of Regental backing. ... To point out the problem is one thing and to find a solution to it is another. IFC is going to have to take a stronger position in this area than it did under my "Onward And Upward, But Not Too Far" A FP r, z ff.- -..-