FLickigwn Bailj Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ",Where Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: SUSAN' FARRELL RIGHT WING SURGE: Kirk:Scholar of Conservatism . University Autonomy Threatened by Legislature EVERY YEAR it comes closer. Last year, an attempt by the Legislature to limit out-of- state enrollment failed by only ten votes. This year, an appropriations amendment which would cut the University's out-of-state enroll- ment by more than half barely failed passin the House. The prospects for next year appear incredibly grim. At this point, the constitutionality of a legis- latively enforced quota is very much in ques- tion. The University's constitutional status precludes legislative riders to any appropriation bill which would "take. from the Board of Regents any substantial part of the Board's discretionary power over the operation or edu- cational policy of the University." But a constitutional convention is coming this summer, and the threat of changing the University's legal autonomy looms in the distance., If the University's policies can be directed by the Legislature, an out-of-state student quota is almost sure to be adopted sometime in the next few years. THlELEGISLATORS seem to have fixed on the out-of-state student limit as the answer to a number of educational woes. Faced with the prospect of huge numbers of Michigan high school graduates beating at the doors of the universities, faced with administrators screaming about the obviously inadequate ap- propriations, legislators have latched onto limi- tation as a means of solving problems which limitation cannot solve, The legislators, aware of both the increasing need and the increasing cost of quantity edu- cation, are looking to the quota as an easy way out. It is hard to agree that it is. The financial problem is a strange one. Nobody seems quite able to determine just how much money a cut in out-of-state students would gain-or lose. Certain legislators say that the educate-our-own policy will save the state money in the long run. Others point out that the out-of-state stu- dent's $750 per year tuition more than pays for the cost of his education, and that the Univer- sity actually makes a profit from tuition in the first few years. But financial advantage or no, they all seem to feel that limitation is both necessary and in the best interest of the youth of Michigan. It is appalling to see how completely they agree- Democrat and Republican, liberal and conserva- tive-that limitation is in order. Conflicts seem to be centering only on matters of form of nance and legality. IpHIS IS A SHORT-SIGHTED WAY to run an educational system. What none of the legislators seem to realize-or at least none of them admit-is that by imposing a limit on the number of out-of-state students the University can accept, they are striking at the roots of everything that makes this University an outstanding institution. The University of Michigan is almost alone as a state-supported institution which can be called "great." It is one of a tiny elite which set the standards and lead the country in higher education. This position is not accidental. The Univer- sity has a national reputation for excellence because it is a truly national institution. Ohio State, Illinois, and Indiana have all attempted to give quantity education, no doubt in the sincerest effort to educate the youth of their respective states. But they have watered down their education, narrowed their outlook, and, to a certain extent, closed out the world in this effort. Perhaps everyone who wants one, gets a four-year; moderately' priced education. But it is also a mediocre education. THIS MUST NOT HAPPEN HERE. The Uni- versity has spent almost 150 years building up quality education-quality education in part based on the principle that a cosmopolitan at- mosphere and wide-open approach to learning will produce the best scholars for Michigan and for the countary. The University has great strength because its roots are everywhere. To cut off its national and international roots is to forceably relegate it to the status of a provin- cial college. To limit the out-of-state enroll- ment is the flrst step towards debasing a great university into a merely adequate institution. Michigan must hang on to the cosmopolitan nature of its universities, or close itself off from the world, and give up its claim to educa- tional excellence. --FAITH WEINSTEIN (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the final article in a two-part analysis of the two exponents of liberalism and conservatism in America who recently participated in a debate sponsored by Challenge. Today's installment on Russell Kirk follows yesterday's profile of his opponent, Sen. Hubert Humphrey.) By GLORIA BOWLES Daily Staff Writer WHEN THE New York Times featured an article by the politicians' spokesman for con- servatism, Sen. Barry Goldwater, the scholars' spokesman, Russell Kirk, was recognized, too. Goldwater and the Times con- sidered Kirk prominent enough to picture beside John Adams and John C. Calhoun, among America's most eloquent conservatives. Kirk, a pudgy, bespectacled traveler, lecturer and author, who was born only fifteen miles from Ann Arbor in Plymuoth, and now makes his home in Mecosta, is with the exception of Goldwater, probably the greatest influence on modern American conservatism. HIS IS A more indirect-and and less publicized role. Kirk's influence on Goldwater's "Con- science of a Conservative" through his own books-"The Conservative Mind" and "A Woman's Guide to Conservatism" is not to be dis- counted, nor is his regular cor- respondence with the Senator from Arizona. Like Goldwater, Kirk sees a de- cline in American liberalism and an upsurge of conservative in- terest, especially on America's campuses. Conservatism, as Kirk sees it, is more than Lincoln's definition of a "preference for the old and tried over the new and untried, and more than Ambrose Bierce's characterization of a liberal as one who "only wants to replace old evils with new ones." KIRK, in a more elaborate def- inition of the political philosophy which he espouses, traces con- servative political .thought to Ed- 'mund'Burke and his French dis- ciples who wanted to preserve the best of the old to be combined with the best of the new. Conservatism, says Kirk, is not an ideology, but rather a general mode of thought, having four important elements: 1) A respect for what Burke calls "the wisdom of our ances- tors." We are draws standing up- on their shoulders and unless we recognize the autonomy of past generations, say conservatives, we may fall into the ditch of un- reason. Tradition, custom, a belief in the wisdom of the species and what Chestertoncalled "the demo- cracy of the. dead" are all part and parcel of the conservative mode of thought. 2) Alteration and improvement are not identical. Progress may be toward the edge of a cliff. This idea is summed up in a favorite conservative phrase: "When it is not necessary to change, then it is necessary not to change." So- ciety is a delicate fabric, explained Kirk, and if we bring in new evils we may pull out athread." 3) Conservative thought is strongly affected by Christian doctrine. Most conservatives, but not all of them, says Kirk, believe in a providential order. It is pre- sumptuous of us, reason conser- vatives, to try to alter'the whole nature of society and to act as independent beings rather than as part of a mortal essence. Besides, man by nature is corrupt and the power of society is not great enough to entirely control that corruption. 4)rA characteristic conservative trait is pessimism about the li- berial's hope for Utopia and his seeking for perfect justice. Jus- tice is to each his own, says Kirk, and it is never easily attained. The best we can hope for is a tolerable balance of order, justice and freedom; the conservative is most concerned with the first. LIBERALS TALK about ridding the world of poverty, ignorance and war. But conservatives, on the other hand, assert that un- happiness and discontent are gen- eral to man and that as soon as one rids society of certain evils, new problems arise to take their place. Man is not an angel and society is not perfect. Kirk adds that if human nature were trans- figured, as some liberals would have it, then humans would not be human any more. Tf we didn't have problems, says Kirk, we'd be miscontent and bored and then we'd try to establish inequality all over again. * * * "I'VE BEEN SURPRISED at the growing conservative vigor," says Kirk, who in "The Conservative Mind" only a few short years ago expressed a concern for the decline of conservatism. His index to conservatism comes in part with the number of speak- ing invitations he receives. Such invitations, primarily from stu- dents, have risen rapidly in re- cent months which "should in- dicate there is something going on." He sees the new movement mani- fested in campus groups like Young Americans for Freedom and in a tendency toward in- creasing conservatism among Young Republican clubs. He also notes an interesting shift to the right among students who are Catholic, a minority im- migrant group with aglong re- cord of liberal leanings at the polls. Kirk explains that a dread of Communism, new-found pros- perity and a love for tradition has resulted in a Catholic move to- ward conservatism. KIRK HAS WATCHED the Goldwater rise with a great deal of interest. He greets the Senator as "America's first spokesman for conservativism in some years, and the first successful conservative leader in Many." Goldwater, say Kirk, has more appeal and more support than Robert Taft ever had, and he shows some of the qualities of the great British con- servative Disraeli. Goldwater's Jewish origin, his flair and color and his Imagin-' ation support the comparison. He, is a man of action and reflection who is giving to American con- servatism, the same kind of leader- ship that Disraeli gave to the British says Kirk. With Goldwater as its impetus, "things are now shifting." There is a switch in politicians vocabu- lary from language of liberalism to that of conservatism. Richard Nixon was "proud" to call him- self a conservative and Democrats like Hubert, Humphrey of Min- nesota avoid being called liberals. * s s MANY AMERICANS are now, experiencing a conservative ten- dency, arising in reaction to the follies and, disasters- of our sage, much as the French and the So- viets revolted to problems of their time. People are facing the problem of a new society, We are no longer able to isolate ourselves, but must take' a much broader view of the destiny of nations. The conser- vative movement is responding to the needs of the age and Gold- water, as its leader, senses that need." The present day revival of con- servatives differs from the short lived neo-conservatism of former, times, says Kirk. This is a legacy from the New Deal days. There is a continuity in the movement and its organizers. People who used to just call themselves conservatives are now becoming, conservatives in their actions. S* * KIRK ALSO NOTES a second difference in today's conserva- tism, as seen in Goldwater's speeches and writing. He predicts the eventual merging of the best of liberal and conservative philos- ophies. "The conservative movement,"' concludes Russell Kirk, "is not press-manufactureed. In fact, it is quite possible that Goldwater may obtain the Republican Presi- dential nomination in 1964. He is a more serious contender than the press has thought." And according to Kirk, the con- servative movement in America will provide more opposition than liberals have heretofore reckoned. MAY FESTIVAL: Wagner, Nilsson- Brilliant Opening THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA last night opened the sixty-eighth May Festival with what was certainly a highlight of the musical season in Ann Arbor this year. Under maestro Ormandy, the all-Wagner program served as ample proof of the validity of the group's annual visits. The program opened with the Overture to Die Meistersinger, and demonstrated above all that this strong section has no equal as far as richness and quantity of sound are concerned, at least in this country. SOPRANO BIRGIT NILSSON joined the orchestra in Elsa's Traume, from Lohengrin. Her crystal-clear voice rose above the sometimes thick orchestration throughout the eve- ning, and never was there the slightest trace of forcing or harsh- ness. That she is the foremost Wagnerian soprano in this country today is hardly questionable. Per- haps more important than any other factor, one gets the feeling that Miss Nilsson is a fine, sensi- tive artist who enjoys bringing her voice to the public. FOLLOWING intermission, the orchestra pl a; e d two excerpts from Gotterdammerung, Sieg- fried's Death and Funeral March. These selections reflected a good deal more rehearsal preparation than has been the case on some occasions in the past. Nowhere in the concert was there stronger evidence of the fact that here in this country we enjoy the finest woodwind and brass playing to be found anywhere in the world. * * * THE PROGRAM concluded with Brunnhilde's Immolation and the closing scene from Gotterdammer- ung. Balance was quite well con- trolled, letting the voice be heard without losing the dynamic char- acter of the orchestra. A voice like Miss Nilsson's helps a good deal in this respect. This is one of the finest opening concerts to be heard by this re- viewer at any May Festival, and certainly foretells of fine things to come the rest of the week, with the exception, of course, of the Choral Union. -John M. Christie AT THE STATE: It's 'Work'- e . Literally, PARAMOUNT PICTURES has had seven years of good luck. For that is the length of time they have held a contract for the pro- fessional services of one Miss Shirley MacClaine. In that time she has risen from an unknown to become one of the hottest box office and critically acclaimed actresses in Hollywood. But, alas, poor. Paramount-its contract expires this year. What will they do! What they are doing is trying to make hay while the sun still shines by rushing as many Mac- Claine pictures through the mill as possible before the contract ex- pires. * * * "ALL in a Night's Work," Sup- posedly the title of the MacClane opus currently in residence at the State Theatre is actually, I fear, a reference to the amount of time it took to concoct the script. A number of, writers are given credit for what appears on the screen, and it is not hard to ima- gine what inspired these men to such artistic heights. It is a rather idiotic comedy, fraught with complications, In- rnuendoes and entendres. Miss Mac- Claine works for a publishing company. Her earring is found on the floor of her boss's hotel room and he is found smiling, but dead (of a heart attack). The business passes to the old man's only heir, playboy Dean Martin. The hotel house dectective finds the earring, brings it to the new boss and tells him to beware of blackmail. Then with Martin and his board of directors as the sleuths and Miss MacClaieas the suspected blackmailer, the fun begins. THERE'S only one trouble--it really isn't fun. It's cliche-ridden inocuous and fairly stupid. Yes it was a long night's work for the writers and it must have been a desperate one too, for how else could so many old lines and situations return to haunt the viewers? It must have also been a long night for actor Martin, judging from the pained expression he wears throughout. But thank goodness for Shirley MacClaine-- she can help pull off anything, or so it seems now. There are a few good lines and some good character acting, but the general tone is one of strife; actors versus script. And no won- der, for the screenplay is written by three men and is based on a play and a story by two other people-with that many cooks its no surprise that things are slightly chaotic. -Harold Applebaum LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: The Function of a Newspaper TODAY AND TOMORROW The Reappraisal By WALTER LIPPMANN EVEN WI A CEASE-FIRE in Laos, our prospects in Indo-China are bleak. The best we can hope for now is that Prince Sou- vanna Phouma, whose fall we engineered, will return to power, presiding over a quasi-neu- tralist government. This government will be more heavily mortgaged to the Communists than was his first government. In Laos, the State Department gambled and lost on the policy that a pro-American government based on the American military presence could be pushed right up against Communist China and Communist Vietminh. In South Vietnam, which adjoins Laos, the government which we brought into power and which we support, is in great peril. It still holds the cities but it has -all but lost control of the countryside to the Communist guerrillas. Why is our friend and client, Ngo Dinh Diem, losing this civil war? Stewart Alsop, writing on Wednesday, has supplied the answer. Cit- ing Mao-Tse-tung on guerrilla warfare, Mr. Al- sop points out that guerrillas must have sup- port from without-in this case from Commu- nist Vietminh. Also, the great majority must be convinced that the guerrillas will win. But first of all, the guerrillas must have popular support within the country. Now the truth is, as so many correspondents have reported, that our man is extremely un- popular, his government being both reactionary and corrupt. It follows that if we are going to build up a resistance to the Communists, we cannot do it by dropping in our paratroopers and expecting them to win a guerrilla war. We shall have first of all to reform drastically the Vietnamese government which we support. For unless we can support a popular government, we are certain to lose in Vietnam. WITH VARIATIONS, conditions in Laos and South Vietnam exist elsewhere, and un- less this situation can .be explained to our people, the President faces a series of inglori- ous and unpopular rearguard actions. Here he can find the first answer to the famous ques- tion in his inaugural address of what we can do for our country. What we can do for our country is first of all to give up being too proud to go through that truly agonizing re- appraisal which is needed so that we can see the.realities. This country has never yet had a leader who has dared to explain candidly the consequences Soviet Union with military bases extending from Japan and South Korea through Southeast and South Asia to the Middle East. We were strong enough to order the Red Army out of northern Iran, which is on the Soviet frontier. We were able to thwart the blockade of West Berlin by an airlift; These things were possi- ble because we had military supremacy. WHEN THE SOVIET UNION became a nu- clear power, when our supremacy was re- duced to parity, the wiser men of the West, those with long memories and long experience and long heads, realized that military outposts could not be maintained on the frontiers of the Communist world. Just as Cuba is not now, and will never be allowed to become, a Soviet military outpost, so in reverse forperipheral positions like. Laos, South Vietnam, Quemoy and Matsu, and some others. The change. in the world balance of power demanded a change in our policy. It demanded that we scrap the policy of American satellite states and promote instead a policy of neutral- ism for the weak and vulnerable peripheral states. That is the best, indeed that is the only, hope of their not being engulfed by Commu- nism. In some measure, the Kennedy adminis- tration has recognized this truth-for example in accepting the idea of neutral Laos. But the President has never explained it to the coun- try, and therefore he has no reliable public opinion on which to lean. Furthermore, there are strong bureaucratic interests in the State Department, the CIA, and the Pentagon which are as opposed to a change of policy by Presi- dent Kennedy as were the French generals in Algeria to a change by Gen. de Gaulle. UNTIL THE COUNTRY understands that the basic conception of our policy has to be changed, Mr. Kennedy will be a harried man. He will have a series of crises in which he has to be on the defensive and'always trying to see how little he can lose. Moreover, the ener- gies of the country and his energies will be dispersed, and the attention of the country and his attention will be distracted from the great tasks. In Asia the great task is to consolidate the key countries which are India, Pakistan, and Japan. In Latin America the future will be deter- mined in the key countries-not in Cuba but in Brazil, the Argentine, Chile, Venezuela, and To the Editor: AT WEDNESDAY'S MEETING of S.G.C. James Yost, "62, ex- pressed "grave concern over the apparent trend towards irrespon- sibility in news reporting and editorial comment in the Daily." THE FIRST CHARGE is that of "irresponsible" reporting of the news. We da not accept the idea that a newspaper is obligated to print all facts regardless of the effect of their publication. It is appropriate to expect a newspaper to exercise good judgement con- cerning what it prints. Yet con- sider the only example offered of poor judgement on the part of the Daily: the Scheub report. Is seems to us treat this is an ex- the Daily has an obligation to print. Why shouldn't the parents- of incoming freshmen be 'nformed about the quality of the quads? We believe it the duty of the Daily to print all facts, praise- worthy or blameworthy, within the limits of good judgement, relevant to the University community. If this example is representative of the sort of facts Mr. Yost would have the Daily judge unfit to print and if the Daily were to concur in' this judgement then the Daily would indeed be irre- sponsible. THE SECOND CHARGE is that of "irresponsible" editorializing-- irresponsible in the sense that edi- torials have not been "calm, fair and intelligent." Granted, Daily editorials are not always dispas- sionately stated. But we must dis- agree with the claim that Daily editorials are generally unintelli- gent. As for fairness, when is an editorial unfair? An editorial is by its nature a statement of opinion. An editorialist is unfair whenhe seeks o -persuade his readers to his opinion by deliber- ately omitting or distorting facts he knows to be relevant to the issue. The Daily makes its editorial position clear and we believe it makes it within the bounds of fairness. The only other basis for Mr. Yost viewing Daily editorials as unfair is that they express opinion differing from his own. We can only conclude that Mr. Yost needs to inform himself on the legitimate functions of a news- paper. -James Hudson, Grad -Philo Washburn, Grad -Wallace H. Wilson, Grad -Henry Finney, Grad Eley's Stands... To the Editor: IN RESPONSE to the editorial on the local Democratic Par- ty in the May 3 issue of the Daily, we suggest that the writer inform That time he was supported by two Republicans, but the motion passed over his dissent. * " s COUNCILMAN ELEY is a mem- ber of a responsible opposition party; he is not a self-appointed obstructionist. In order to assure division in the Council, should he have voted against his own mo- tion, approved by the Republicans, to urge the Legislature to provide an adequate budget for the Uni- versity? We think not. The writer also apparently in- tended to imply that Mrs. Doro- thee S. Pealy, chairman of the Washtenaw County Constitutional Convention Committee, had said she wanted people to vote Repub- lican. THE NEWS on April 27 report- ed the real position of Washtenaw County Democrats. Mrs. Pealy's committee. has been instructed to draw up a platform that Demo- cratic candidates will be asked to support, and to recommend to the County Committee preferred can- didates among the Democrats who may run in the primary. The News quoted her as follows:. "Democrats recognize their ob- ligation to nominate and support the best possible candidates for these important posts." Neither her position nor that of' the County Committee has chang- ed. Mrs. Pealy reiterated that po- sition at the Citizenship Clearing House Party Day meeting on the campus last week. FINALLY, if the writer can see no ideological difference between Democrats and Republicans, he might examine the columns of the News of a few months ago, in which the local Democrotic and Republican platforms were sum- marized. Councilman Eley has been in of- fice for only a month, but he has supported the Democratic platform on which he ran, and he will con- tinue to support it. So will the Democratic Party of Ann Arbor and Washtenaw County. -Dean W.. Coston, Chairman, Democratic Party of Washte- naw County -Gerhard L. Weinberg, Chairman, Democratic Party of Ann Arbor (Letters to the Editor should be limitedeto 300 words,typewritten and double spaced. The Daily re- serves the right to edit or withhold any letter. Only signed letters will be printed.) "It's So Good To Get Away from the World Like This" Burry. Cwl~dwcater f / !I 7: XlI '1G3 '[: -Y1i+i ' ° .- ". .: Ili