Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNVERSITY OF MICHIGAN re UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH, * Phone NO 2-3241 ted in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. STATE LEGISLATURES: Rural Districts Overrepresented Anatomy of .4 ML l1 Dissects Prsnlte Y 21, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP SHERMAN ... v: ._...... _;W .._ * Libraries Dispense Knowledge forSome rI TERAL LIBRARY is closed to high- tudents. The Undergraduate Library them only for school projects and esentation of a note from the high cipal. And the Regents recent action Ical of a widespread disease. Know- longer free. e the intellectual heritage of man- out the free creation and examina- nted materials, knowledge, thought tally hope must go underground, to by word of mouth'until dissatisfac- to revolution. ily the present move is not cor- Justifiable. The maintenance of a ;ts money, and the University 11-< re set up for the University. It Is y rationalizable if, as some assert, I students, en masse, continually 'ary facilities. The Fifth [IVERSITY, where empirical modes .ght are supposed to be encouraged, em that residenece hall authorities expected to have a certain open- s. However, when, in connection with East Quad fire, several bottles, out- eled as containing alcoholic beve- e found in a' suspect's room, this iquiry deserted them as they seized hers, oblivious to their owner's pro- they only contained a carbonated ue course of events-more than 24, -the bottles were opened and, to of various witch hunters and as-' ers, they were found to hold only r of definitely nonalcoholic ' sub- ngratulations for practicing what is --D. MARCUS' BUT CLOSING A library system to anyone who cannot find equal facilities elsewhere is at least disheartening. And what has hap- pened here is happening elsewhere, even in the greatest library in the ,country. The Library of Congress has closed its doors to high-school students, and served notice on others that they are there only by privelege, not by right. The basic effect of this kind of move is to force high-school students, who are the major, group discriminated against, to rely 'n their school and community libi'aries for anything they wish to learn. And school and community libraries are notoriously afraid of stocking up on anything that might, create controversy N WHAT PUBLIC library system (outside of the largest metropolitan ones such as New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and Washington) could anyone find copies of The Communist Manifesto, Lenin's writings, American socialist publications, and either White Citizens' Coun- cil documents or NAACP pamphlets, which- ever was out of favor with the regional and political affiliations of the community? And there is also the fact that many tech- nical and scholarly publications are available only in university libaries and the Library of Congress. Why should these be denied to high- school students? The moves today are partly.economic, partly to prevent high-school students from hinder- ing others use of facilities by their own row- diness and misuse. But what is the next step? CERTAINLY NO MOUNTAIN can be made out of the molehill of the University's action. But it is tiny speck's of dust or other irritants which, placed in the right solution, start the growth of immense crystals. Today, this - tomorrow, an Index Un- Americanus? Who knows? But the road to book burning is downhill and easy to walk once it is chosen.B --ROBERT FARRELL (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first article in a two-part analysis of unequal ;representation in the U.S. House of Representatives and the state legislatures.) By HARVEY MOLOTCH Daily staff writer WHEN CONSIDERING THE fantastic overrepresentation enjoyed by rural interests in the majority of American state legis- latures, H. L. Mencken made this surmnary of the situation in his native Maryland. "the yokels hang on because old apportionments give them unfair advantages. The vote of a malar- ious peasant on the lower Eastern Shore counts as much as the votes of twelve Baltimoreans. But that can't last. It is not only unjust and undemocratic; it is absurd." Thus, Sunday's New York Times quotes the colorful social critic to dramatize the fact the today the phenomenon of the rural gerry- mander "is more widespread and extreme than ever before." ** * THE TERM "gerrymander" ta- ken in its strict definition refers to misshapen district lines, drawn in a manner to secure as many "safe" districts as possible for the party in control. In a more gen- eral sense, the concept also in- cludes the deliberate maintenance of districts tremendously unequal in population. In most states, the problem evolves from the shift of popula- tion from urban to rural areas with no commensurate redistrict- ing taking place. And since any changes in representation must usually be originated in the state legislatures, it is unlikely that rural interests will ever approve a plan which takes away part of their power. IN MICHIGAN, the dynamic growth of the southern industrial areas, as contrasted with the dimishing population of the north- ern country, has produced a dra- matic example of this phenome- non.Previous to 1952, a state law required that the legislature re- district itself every ten years. But as could have been expected, the rural-dominated lawmaking group refused to acquiesce to the state constitution, thus insuring their permanent superiority over urban interests. Finally in 1952, electorial pres- sure forced a constitutional amendment which supposedly in augurated a "balanced legislature." Relatively fair representation was guaranteed for the House of Re- presentatives by retaing the "every ten year" clause and adding a pro-. vision which granted the State Board of Canvassers to carry out redistricting in the case of Legis- lative inaction. But for the Senate, the amend- ment permanently froze all dis- tricts with no allowance made for future population shifts. Thus, the Michigan constitution now insures that the Senator from Oakland County will always represent 13 times as many people as those represented by the Senator from the north's most underpopulated district. *, * THE ONLY "BALANCE" which resulted frdm the 1952 amendment was the establishment of a moder- ately equitable system of repre- sentation in the House and the creation of a permanent undemo- cratic rural-dominated scheme for the Senate. And since the Michiganrural vote supports the Republican Party and exhibits strong currents of conservatism, it is the right- wing GOP which gains most from the inequality. This pattern repeats itself ac- ross the country. Of all the states, only Wisconsin and Massachusetts have secured a semblance of equal representation in their legislatures. In Maryland, where little has changed since Mencken's day, a Senator from the Eastern Shore represents 15,317T voters while one from Baltimore County represents 490,201. Seven other states -- Georgia, Florida, Delaware, Con- necticut, Rhode Island, New Jer- sey, and California, also have problems more acute than Michi- gan's. A* * h REPEATED ATTEMPTS have been made through the ^ourts to force redistricting upon the state. But in the 1948 Supreme Court case of Calgrove vs. Green, the nation's' highest tribunal ruled that it had no jurisdiction over the matter. It was not until November of last year that the Supreme Court agreed to look into the :efusal of the Tennessee legislature to re- apportion seats in that state's lawmaking body since 1901. August Svcholle, president of the Michi- gan AFL-CIO, had requested that the court consider his "friend of TO THE EDITOR: Ex-Phi Delts Charge Past Bias Intention TODAY AND TOMORROW. SGold andthe Dollar To the Editor: IN THE Michigan Daily of Feb- ruary 16, on page one was car- ried an interview with the presi- dent of the Michigan chapter of Phi Delta Theta which contained statements that are absolutely false. In that interview it was said that the "Aryan" clause of Phi Delt was replaced by one that re- quired only that a pledge be "so- cially acceptable," and the con- clusion drawn from this was that "Phi Delt did not have a bias clause in its constitution." Th.t is untrue. In the minutes of the con- vention which adopted that amendment of language, it is spe- cifically stated that no change in admission policy of the fraternity, was made. The term "socially ac- ceptable" was defined to exclude ,Negroes, Orientals, and Jews. IF THE MICHIGAN Chapter is unclear on this matter, they should consult the official minues of that convention. If anyone else would like to make certain what we have said, they should write the National Headquarteirs in Ox- ford, Ohio.If they find the answer evasive, they should try the chap- ter at the University of Mississippi. We were members of the Swarthmore College chapter of Phi Delta Theta when it withdrew from that national fraternity after many years of opposition to the discriminatory admissions pol- cies of Phi Delta Theta. Our pur- pose in writing this letter is not to continue our chapter's opposi- tion to these discriminatory poli- cies. If any justification for it is necessary, it is, as the Phi Delts say "truth for its own sake." -Steve Agard, Grad -Joe Baker, Law o"Dave Klingener Grad. R.I.P. ..- To the Editor: to the spirit of Patrice Lumumba, may it ever carry on; leading as in the past, one-third of a not-yet people, divided among themselves may his soul rest in peace disembodied, done in, to death beaten, but not bowed; and now reviled- denied even the very rites of burial Patrice Lumumba has passed on-his family remains Let us offer to them the sympathy of our heats, the support of our hands; with the hope, that he and all others shall not have died in vain. -Name withheld Absurd . To the Editor: I SHOULD LIKE to comment briefly on the preposterous state- ments by Prof. Bennett Weaver quoted in Time for Feb. 10. For the benefit of those who have not seen the article in question, Prof. the court" brief (amicus curiae) which backs up the critics of the Tennessee legislature with cor- responding Michigan data. The Supreme Court could easily reverse its 1948 decision' using either the "due process of law" or "equal protection under the law" clause of the 14th amendment as a basis for federal jurisdiction. If the court so rules, almost every state legislature in the country will undergo a major shift in the direc- tion of equitable representation and added strength for the Demo- cratic party. "An Anatomy of Leadership" By Eugene E. Jennings. 256 pp. New York: Harper & Brothers. INDIVIDUAL QUEST FOR POWER has always been one of the funda- mental laws of society. Our society, by its extensive organization and sheer mass, stifles the individual development that is requisite for the handling of power. This prevents potential leaders capable of in- novative efforts from rising to'positions of power. Among the relatively scattered critics of this situation, few have provided substantial definition of men or means by which this may be' remedied. William H. Whyte, Jr. told us how to cheat on personality tests. David Riesman told us we can be autonomous men; "take it or leave it" characters. Jacques Barzun would like an aristocracy of acad- Weaver asserts that the sort of people who join the campus chap- ter of a fledgling right-wing or- ganization called the Young Americans for Freedom are those who are "inclined to be sensibly clean people, not liberal and dirty people." As a moderate liberal who con- siders himself both sensible and clean, I feel called upon to protest. The sort of perfervid hysteria demonstrated by Prof. Weaver in these remarks violates the essence of any true conservatism and is unbecoming a man presumably dedicated to the life of the in- tellect. 'It is perhaps worthy of note that the more genuine con- servatives with whom I am ac- quainted decline to have anything to do with YOF. No doubt the leadership being given the group helps to account for this fact. -James P. Young, Grad. Slaves-.. To the Editor: PHILIP SHERMAN'S editorial "Management Rights and Un- employment" contains arguments based on misconceptions of capi- talism. When he states that "a company like Ford cannot simply treat labor as a commodity," Mr. Sherman seems not to be aware that the only status that working men and women have, under cap- italismisthat ofpcmmodities. The moment that principles are introduced which remove workers from their commodity or wage slave status that moment marks the end of capitalism. If the mem- bers of the working class reorga- nize society on the basis of social ownership of the instruments and means of production, carry on pro- duction for use, and introduce a new form of government ;based on industrial constituencie, genuine socialism will have been establish- ed' and the commodity status of workers will have been ended. If, on the other hand, production and distribution are regimented by a welfare state or by collusion of "benevolent" capitalists, industrial feudalism will have replaced cap- italism and workers will have be- come slaves to an industrial olig- archy. MR. SHERMAN refers to "the social responsibilities of the large corporation." A corporation has no such responsibilities and exercises none. Profit sharing plans, pen- sions, and other sops-to workers are not given because of social responsibility but to keep workers from kicking over the traces and upsetting the capitalist apple cart. Henry Ford's $5.00 minimun wage has been proved too often to be both a farce and a benefit to the Ford Motor Company in its com- petitive race with other manufac- turers to require further argu- ment. Reforms can not save capitalism nor provide lasting benefits to workers. Genuine socialism, alone, as advocated by the Socialist La- bor Party can put an end to the commodity status of the worker, provide abundant living for all with no boom and bust cycles, and establish a foundation ofyin- ternational cooperation and last- ing peace. -Ralph W. Muncy emicians. One widely read woman, Ayn Rand, ignored by critics through one best-seller and dis- missed after her second, has made a good case for individual strength, though she forgets that society can not be just a collection of strong-men. * * * NOW EUGENE Jennings, in his "An Anatomy of Leadership," makes a contribution that at least faces the problem that has been well diagnosed but remains un- solved. He defines, with remark- able specificity, the superior man needed so desperately to resist over-organization. The core of the book is his defi- nition of the types of power seek- ers: supermen, heroes, and princes. "The great men who rule are rule breakers and value creators are poetically referred to as supermen; the men dedicated to great and noble causes are called heroes; and the men motivated principally to dominate others are called princes." The Prince, according to Jen- nings, is machiavellian, and mas- ters the rules of the power game. The historical examples Jennings gives are Alexander and Julius Caesar; some modern examples being Hitler, Roosevelt, and Castro in the political field; Fisk, Ford and Rockefeller in the industrial area. The concept of the Hero is trac- ed down from Carlyle to Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. Jennings' own opinion is that heroes are men possessed by a sense of mission to which they dedicate their total selves. He says there are three types: the "Great Beginner," as exampled by Roosevelt (he was both Prince and Hero); the "Intui- tionist, as exampled by De Gaulle; and the risk taker. JENNINGS EXAMINES the idea of ' the Superman briefly; then he gives his own version of to- day's supermen, which may be more accurately called superior men, or even free men. Where Riesman left off with inner and other-directed Jennings adds the "self -directed" man. "His first duty is to respect himself. His conscience is rela- tively autonomous. His duty is 1I will,' which is a sign of his su- perior inner powers. He wills himself to success. He is acord- ingly careless of popular approval and sympathy, and personal hurt, and is proud though not vain. "OUR SUPERIOR man's great- est struggle is against the annihi- lation of his privacy. Where the typical executive has somehow managed to persuade himse}f that he is too busy to think, to read, to look back and forward, the superior man places a high, value upon thought." Well, this is a summary of Jen- nings' discussion of the superior man which comes just past the halfway mark of the book, There is in the remaining pages a dis- cussion of the testing efforts by sociologists to discover the real traits of leadership which, in Jen- nings' opinion, failed completely. Jennings' discussions of the many modern types are somewhat anti-climactical. The structural weakness does not necessarily diminish the value of the content. Riesman, after all, in "The Lonely Crowd," said all that was most significant in fifty pages. And if Jennings arrives at a sociological definition of an Ayn Rand character, the sale of Rand's books, at least among the youngr. er people, would indicate that it is not a mere curiosity. -Thomas Brien DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN' (Continued from Page 2) General Electric Co. Company-wide, including Det., Holland, & Edmore plants. Mfg BS-MS: A, Chi, B. E,lB ME. Met. BS: E Math, EM, E Physics, Mat'Is & S. MS: Instru & Nuclear ;; Constr.. Prod., Mfg., Engrg., Mat'is. Mgmt.; Quality Control Engrg.; Mg. supv. Tech. Mktg. BS-MS: EE .BS: ChE, 1 Physics, IE, ME & Mct. Sales, Appli- cation & service Engrg.-(B3oth 'Tng Programs &Specific postionsare avail- able). Eng. & St. BS, MS & Prof.: A, BE & ME, Cht & Met. B-MS: EM, Mat'ls. MS -Prof.: Instru., Nuclear. B: B Math, B Physics & Scence. Prof. 'Applied Mech. Des., R&D, Both Trng. programs & specific positions are available. qThe First National City Bank of New York -BS-MSN E & BRDPro. ,Ap- plication of Electronic Computer in- stallations. IBM 'Corp. Labs, Plants & Branch Of- f ices .Al Degrees: AE, CE, CE, B, EM, IE, Instru., ME & Met. Prof. Applied Mech. BS.: E Math, E Physics, S. BS- MS: Materials, Meterology. Des., R&D, sales & Prod. FEB. 22-24 General Dynamics Corp. Convair Div. Calif., Texas. All Degrees: A, E, EM, -ME,' Met. BS: B Physics & science M- PhD: PE, Instru. & Nuclear. BS-MS Materials.gDes., R&D, Engrg. test & Field Engrg SuMmer Placement SUMMER PLACEMENT INTERVIEW: FEB. 21, 22- Camp Conestaga, Mich. cam>-Stetlh- an Baumann interviewing men& wom- en forpositions, as counselors today & tomorrow at Summer Placement Serv- ice. Also seeking a nurse. For further information go to Sum- mer Placement Service,I D$ 518 AB. Open every afternoon from 1:00 to 4:55 and, Friday all day. Personnel Requests Guardian Life Insurance Co. of Amer- ica, NYC-Junior Investment Analyst in Securities Investment Dept. June " grad-preferably Econ.-wling to pur- sue grad. work at night. Minnesota lb Ontario Paper Co., M - neapolis-Industria Technical Service Engrg, for INSULITE, bldg. materials div. of Co. M.E., Arh. B. or Cdeim 11.1 with 3 yrs.eper. In sales orainfac- tor y operations. Armstrong Cprk Co., Lancaster, Pa. -Designer-Decorator TRAINEE. Recent ,WOMAN grad, with degree in Fine Arts r Design Interiors).; Dearborn uCivilService,Mlrch.-Curator of Museum Exhibits. College grad. 'in Art History American History or re- lated field. Welcraft Products Co., Inc., New car- lise atd echnical Slesman. B.S E.E. or related' field to sell to mfgers. of home appliances. Please contact Bureau of Appt,., 4021 Admnn.B Est. 3371 for further in- formation. ParPTimie Employment The following part-time jobs are available. Applications can be made In the: Non-Academic Personnel Office, ' 1020 Admin. Bldg., Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Employers resrous of hiring part- time or temporary employees huld contact Jack Lardie,' at NO 3-1511 ext. 2939. Students desiring miellaneosob should consult the bulletin board i Room 1020, daily. MALE 9-Psychological subjects (Tuesday afternoon, February 20). I-Paper delivery-man (morning pa- per, must have ar). 2-Experienced camera repairmen (mn. 20 hours per week).' 45-Psychological aubjects two 1% hour periods, total time. - 1-Arts and crafts supervisor (Friday evenings 7-10 p.m.). FEMALE 1I-Psychological subjects (21 or over, for drug experiments). 1-Room and board in exchange for babysitting. 1m-Typist for Persian and/or Arai, must bercapable of proofreading and corrections. 1-Arts and crafts supervisor (Friday evenings 7-10 p.m.).r. I-Full1-time typist fortwo weeks. 0 Py AWITER LIPPMANN E THE GOLD speculators have for the ne being been discouraged by the firm and declarations to defend the dollar, ident from the President's message that is on the surface and not in the sub-. of the problem. problem has been posed for eleven years, 950, and it will take some years to solve ce, 1950 we have run an average net in our international transactions of two billions a year. Over the whole this has amounted to'a deficit of twenty- lions. In foreign capital investment, in y expenditures abroad, and in foreign ic aid, we have paid out about twenty- ions more than we earned in the world. ng this we provided the reserves on the post-war monetary system of the onomies rests. ng most of these years, for all practical s in all of them until 1958, the foreignL a held the dollars were satisfied to hold ' them, and not to cash them into gold, had every right to do. But in the past ears not only have our deficits sharply ed, but our creditors have been de- and economie'aid, or by instituting exchange controls. But such a revolutionary policy would be impossible in the world as it is today. The Administration 'has taken a firm decision that it will defend the convertibility of the dollar at thirty-five dollars an ounce for gold, that' it will maintain, ansi probably even enlarge,' our foreign economic aid, and that it will not resort to ,the restrictionist measures which weaker countries without our banking respon- sibilities use when they have an international deficit. This decision to stand upon an expansionist or liberal foreign policy has with it a corollary -which is indicated but not spelled out in the President's, message-that the liberal policy requires international cooperation among the advanced industrial countries. Alone and by ourselves we cannot maintain a liberal econom- ic foreign policy if the countries which are now running a surplus in their balance of payments as against our deficit, do not co- coperate. The surplus countries are Japan,. Italy, the Netherlands, and above all West Germany. gold. MAND FOR gold signified tha ikers, corporations, and priva d come to think that it was to move their funds out o ates and that it might be saf r were saying that the UnitedI go on forever, or much longer ,lance of payments deficit of Ilion dollars a year. it. And that is why the Admin ow attacking the problem o a wide array of measures. Thel ssages contain proposals to p short term interest rates for bile avoiding a rise in long tes for American public and p t. 'Trh range of these measure 'ar reaching plans, which wil ealize, to improve the comp ' American industry. SIC PREMISE of the Administ is that underlying the specu away from,, and for the m the dollar, there is a basic d hout effective measures to redi ge around two billions or m basic deficit cannot be dealt speculative, by psychological xi , warnings, and the like, or ev interest rates. ,i' deficit arises out of our ov licy-out of our military expend .t of our desire to encourage A n investment, out of economic1 )untries. rJHERE IS NO question of our asking them to help us. The very suggestion is odious in t for- view of the fact. that the United States is in- te in- comparaby the richest country in the world.' more The American case is simply this. Beginning f the with the Marshall Plan, this country, which{ 'er. In then had an enormous surplus, has deliberately States and as a matter of national and international run- policy run a deficit in order to overcome the three dollar shortage abroad. This policy made pos- sible the recovery of Japan and Western iistra- Europe., f the Now the time has come when continuing Presi- American deficits are not only not needed but rovide a positive danger to the stability of the inter- r for- national monetary system. What is needed now term is that the surplus countries, foremost among rivate them West Germany, take measures of their es ex- own to bring the international balance of pay- l take nients into equilibrium. Once the Senate has etitive approved United States membersip in the Or- ganization for Economic Cooperation and Development, we should, as the President in- ration dicates in his message, argue for a new prin- lative ciple. oment In the OECD, and privately, 'we shall be deficit persuading the West Germans that, having uce it, acquired, a very large surplus, they have an ore a international duty to behave like a responsible with, creditor country. neans, Little of their surplus is now used for for- !en by eign aid or investment abroad. The West Ger- man interest rates, which attract the gold, are ver-all among the highest in Western Europe. The itures West German wage rates, in relation to their meri- productivity, make them over-competitive in aid to the international export markets. Further- more, their foreign assistance is being given + FEIFFER EV(~ OP6 l WA - 9CM106I' 916E~R JOI 0fl WH (1W I STYK VP A 66T A M6ru ^- CO VWFATIOP) WLJPUR D 60 50M6 6vK lvJo TH{6 I tIVTiG l exf PEAt Rtx1. - TO146.IIH6 ~ 105T FOR AEAL~N0~J 06 COUPLE OF f M)i6c Vi~los AMM05PO '"' !l ~AS IIJ a HR APPv 1 I-5N\ ~ 1RlbdI ff 7 MRI)KTN6 HOW C(f AR AULyO IF AIL.OF. W6 Tiflub L~ i T Vxa Atf cr Iq HN MACH6,PO 96WOZ ~A ) 1iN6. r le tq ,-. , f AM U{ gOg A COMEL- OF OMB .t tO0 JCR LOf 10 T ... W'e %rugMom 56 A WOVL. A CxOULP~'r lHC~6ZA ~~r a I rwv I