Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Wan ted: Protection r-, _ -- . ,a Where Opinios Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the inidividual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: MARTHA WOLFGANG The USNSA Report: Bringing the Town to the Gown ALIENATION is becoming passe. The new trend is toward "involve- ment-in university affairs, the com- munity, and national and international issues. The traditional idea of the university as a "community within the community," a place where students are sheltered in an ivory tower world for four years to be- come educated and to learn about the world, is out of focus with what this new breed of student is searching for in a university. In effect, what today's university is facing is the students pounding on the door of the ivory tower. They want to get out, play an active role in the world, in a word, to become "involved." But the university is having a difficult time loos- ening its hold on students and revising traditional concepts of education and the role of students. NATIONAL Student Association, a national union of students and stu- dent governments representing about 350 colleges and universities, recently issued a report in which it recommended that credit should be offered for off-campus experiences in such things as hospitals, the Peace Corps, the civil rights move- ment or the antipoverty program. With this idea in mind, San Francisco State College student government has ini.. tiated a Community Involvement Proj- ect (CIP) which has offered an opportuni- ty for over 600 students to become in- volved in off-campus activity. Through the project, students have or- ganized tenant unions in housing proj- ects, worked on a community planning project, and provided youth counseling and recreation for children in the city's slum areas. The more than 300 tutors in- volved in the Tutorial Program devote four hours a week tutoring culturally de- prived youngsters. A few faculty members have reacted to these student efforts by setting up com- munity involvement classes to provide the students with the "tools to solve the problems of society." One philosophy pro- fessor set up "The City and the College: Their Culture," a course in which the stu- dents work on projects to determine the college's relationship to its surrounding community. Editorial Staff CLARENCE FANTO...................Co-Editor CHARLOTTE WOLTER ................... Co-Editor UT WILKINSON..................ports Editor BETSY COHN ................ Supplement Manager IGET EDITORS: Meredith Eiker, Michael Heffer Shirley Rosick, Susan Schnepp, Martha Wolfgang. Business Staff SUSAN PERLSTADT .... ... Business Manager LEONARD PRATT............Circulation Manager JEANNE ROSINSKI.:........... Advertsing Manager RANDY RISSMAN...........Supplement Manager The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to the newspaper. All rights of re-publication of all other matters here are also reserved. Subscription rate: $4.50 semester by carrier ($5 by mail); $8 two semesters by carrier ($9 by mail). The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate Press Service. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich , Published daly Tuesday through Saturday morning. THE SF STATE program is one attempt to get at an answer to the question that has been plaguing the alienated col- lege student for years: "How do you ra- tionalize the irrelevancy between what you learn in the classroom with what you learn in real life?" Community involvement is providing the students with opportunities to relate classroom knowledge directly to the out- side world and to make the community itself a classroom. They are discovering important roles they can play in society even while students, rather than feeling alienated and apart from the real world. BUT IN THEIR enthusiasm to become involved in community affairs stu- dents have not forgotten the university. Quite the contrary. Students are more concerned than ever about the role and meaning of the university both for stu- dents and the rest of society, and like- wise are eager to become more involved in the university at all levels. In the same report, NSA recommended that "students should be more responsibly involved in the management of college affairs, such as in helping to identify ef- fective teachers and rewarding them with tenure." Not only in rewarding teachers, but in all areas and at all levels, from depart- mental to administrative, students are demanding a more important voice in the decision-making processes of the uni- versity. HERE THE UNIVERSITY has taken an important first step in more intimate- ly involving students through the propos- ed Student Advisory Board System. The proposal, which has already won the ap- proval of President Hatcher and other top administrators, would involve stu- dents in an advisory capacity to the presi- dent and vice-presidents in discussing and working out problems facing students and the University. Student leaders feel there is no reason why the administration, faculty and stu- dents should not work together in equally important roles in the management of the University. But the student clamor for involve- ment is just beginning to be heard by the universities. At SF State administrators are reluctant to give wholehearted en- couragement to CIP, saying that "until the regulations set up by the State of California are changed, the prime duty of the college is to provide higher education in the classroom." Here, setting up student advisory boards is a slow process, with many questions and doubts lurking in the background. NEVERTHELESS, the long-alienated stu- dent is emerging from the dormitory and the library and moving into the community and knocking on administra- tors' doors. It is time now for the univer- sities to act-to reevaluate themselves and the roles they have assigned to stu- dents. Students are changing, so must the university. THE CASE of Annette Buchan- an, is really the problem of the press in general. Miss Buchanan is being charged with contempt of court for refusing to reveal the names of students using mari- juana, whom she interviewed for an article about drugs on campus published in the University of Washington Daily Emerald. The publication of the article it seems, had the unhappy circum- stance of coinciding with the be- ginning of a grand jury investiga- tion into the use of drugs on campus. Seemingly more anxious to convict rather than investigate, the grand jury went after what they obviously felt was the most vulnerable source of information -a student. But, Annette Buchanan was not as vulnerable as they thought. Not only did she refuse to reveal her sources of information, but she has begun a crucial test of the right of the press to protection of its confidential sources and the reporters who obtain information from them. AT THIS POINT, protection of the press laws have been passed in only a few states. Washington is not one of them; nor is Michi- gan for that matter. In most of these states, however, the laws are incomplete, providing only partial protection of the press or providing it with important ex- ceptions. Even in states with protection of the press laws, officials have been known to use information gathered by reporters as grounds for prosecution. During the Watts riots last year, an enterprising CBS camera crew interviewed a young man who had participated in the riots. Keeping the camera turned away from the young man's face to conceal his identity, the reporters got him to describe his part in the looting and burning of the past few days. Although California has a pro- tection of the press law, attempts were made by law officials to force the reporters to identify the man that they had interviewed. When this failed, they used voice prints and other identifying marks, such as a ring, in an at- tempt to identify the man. ANNETTE BUCHANAN'S case is less complicated. In a state with no protection of the press law, the grand jury clearly has the right to prosecute her for not revealing the names of the stu- dents. But her position as a stu- dent editor does pose some prob- lems in the case. The grand jury seems to regard her as more vulnerable. She on the other hand, was using the customary sanctuary of the univer- sity to investigate and express an opinion not held by the society at large. In prosecuting her, the grand jury, in a sense, is choosing not to respect this fundamental right of academic inquiry-free- dom from repression because the ideas it espouses are not popular with the general public. VERY OFTEN campus news- papers, this one included, are forums for discussions of highly controversial subjects such as the The Associates by carney and wolter use of marijuana, the pill, etc. If this forum is closed, through legal processes,misuse of the informa- tion disclosed, or the threat of either, the campus has lost one of the better aspects of the aca- demic tradition. Fortunately for Miss Buchanan, the college administration has de- clared itself solidly behind her in her refusal to reveal the names of the students involved, as, I believe, would be most university administrations. But without the protection of the law, little that the administration does will be able to stop her prosecution. THE CASE of the CBS reporters in Watts is potentially a greater problem for a court to decide. California does have a protection of the press law of some sort, therefore, the reporter himself was not prosecuted for failing to iden- tify the man interviewed. The question here is not neces- sarilly whether or not the informa- tion gathered by the press is used by law officials, but whether or not it is used with the consent of the newsmen involved. Unfortunately, the legal protec- tion available even to thercom- mercial press is, at best, ill- defined. Marie Torre, TV critic for the New York Herald-Tribune in the early 1960s, was jailed for for the refusing to reveal the source of a rumor about CBS programming policy-a rumor which, ironically, turned out to be true several years later. Miss Torre lost a valuable posi- tion with one of the nation's lead- ing newspapers, but, more impor- tant. her case set a dangerous precedent-a newsman's right to protect the identity of his sources was deemed less important than. the satisfaction of a top corpora- tion's ire against a prematurely revealed secret. AN ATMOSPHERE potentially detrimental to freedom of ex- pression in the mass media has been created in this country. Ar- thur Sylvester, assistant secretary of defense for public affairs, was quoted recently defending the "in- herent right of the government to lie." Newsmen asked him about the credibility of American officials on Viet Nam war reports. "Look, if you think any Ameri- can official is going to tell the truth, then you're stupid. Did you hear that? Stupid." Sylvester thus expressed the increasing prevalent attitude within the U.S. govern- ment today that it is the pa- triotic duty of the press to dis- seminate only information that makes the United States look good. President Johnson came close to advocating this viewpoint recent- ly when he urged citizens to "put away the childish, divisive things" and unite for the greater glory of Uncle Sam. THE RECENT Supreme Court ruling ordering a new trial for Press Cleveland physician Dr. Samuel Sheppard on the grounds that he had received an unfair "trial by press"-a justified ruling because of the hullabaloo in the Cleveland papers, which for all practical pur- poses condemned Sheppard even before the trial-also helps create an atmosphere of doubt and un- certainty around First Amendment guarantees of freedom of the press. The Annette Buchanan case and the CBS-TV-Watts incident are additional symptoms of a trend which must be nipped in the bud. During periods of wartime - and let's not kid anyone that the U.S. is fighting a major war with all the attendant home-front impli- cations--one of the first casual- ties is press freedom. During the world wars, govern- ment controls in the form of gen- eralized guidelines were imposed, and the system worked well. News- papers and radio stations did not reveal strategic troop movements or other vital security informa- tion, but remained free to criti- cize aspects of the government's war policies. BUT NOW, even the right and the obligation of a responsible press to search for alternative, better government policies is in danger of being squelched by offi- cials such as Arthur Sylvester and the Eugene, Ore., circuit judge. The nation should pause and take notice. If 'the basic free- doms for which it is fighting a distant jungle war are in danger of being eroded on the home front-then what is the justifica- tioh for fighting even one more battle? F Clarence Darrow: A Sense of History The Story of My Life, by Clar- ence Darrow, c. 1932, Chas. Scribner's Sons, 460 pages. By NEAL BRUSS CLARENCE DARROW'S book on his life and things he thought about is the old wine of current liberal legal-minded thought. So much of what challenged Darrow has been recognized, fac- ed, and combatted in the last several years that it would ap- pear thatthe renowned Ameri- can lawyer had a special sense of history. DARROW, who constantly pick- ed up grave and difficult legal cases because their defendants were judged guilty by public opin- ion before they came to court, would rejoice at last week's Su- preme Court decision throwing out an Ohio murder trial be- cause of oppressive publicity. Darrow, who repeatedly took on the seemingly hopeless cases of penniless workmen accused of major crimes and handicapped by inadequate representation, would hail the Gideon and Escobedo de- antee equal legal representation cisions which have begun to guar- to the poverty-stricken. Darrow, who attempted to com- bat the global power of religious dogmatists more concerned with "Rock of Ages than ages of rocks" in the Scopes evolution trial, would rejoice at finding public prayer excluded from public schools. Darrow, who indignantly sailed to Europe when Prohibition was legislated with the Volstead Act, would have been restored when Prohibition was repealed. PART OF THE man's sense of history resulted in his frequent- ly becoming involved in complex cases, winning those cases, and building momentum enough to make a life out of it. Along the way, it appears, Darrow was able to work with the right people- men like John Altgeld and Frank Murphy, men who would be ac- credited with a similar sense of history. The cynicism Darrow tended to develop at every lash of public opinion against a fellow was mel- lowed by a rural sensitivity. YET, HE ASSAILED the trite homilies of the American Way. He knew that the will of the people could never be the will of any real God because people were twisted and their judgments were frequently wrong. An agnostic, he inquired what that God was. He decided he could not believe in a god who would order a nomad people to stone their fellows for misde- meanors. The author of several books on the prison system, he was cha- grined by men's self-continuing tendency to add to lists of crimes and to punish for offenses. He believed there was something wrong in calling men criminals and punishing them for so-called crimes. And he grimly believed that thousands of Americans were verg- ing on insane fanaticism, waiting for the trumpet of some sick cause to sound and mobilize them into reckless action. DARROW WAS the son of a crackerbarrel agnostic, the only one in his community. He at- tended the University Law School. He set up a law practice in Chicago. He got a break dabbling in politics. He became Chicago counsel and an attorney for the railroads during the years before the Haymarket riot. He defended Loeb and Leo- pold, some Italian socialists, Dr. Sweet of Detroit, and bands of anarchists. Some of his cases last- ed for over two years. A few nearly strained him to death. He tried to retire several times. But people kept calling on him for help before a jury. None of his clients were exe- cuted. HE FEARED orators, but en- joyed public speaking more than writing, and, consequently, spent the years after retirement trav- eling to public meetings where he spoke on criminal law and public punishment. But he aged and felt his mind and energy subsiding, and the speeches ceased. His autobiography was written in Europe while Prohibition was reigning absurd in America. It is an organized but relaxed book, written under a cloud of immi- nent death. DARROW WAS the hunchback of his own languor. In his busiest days, he feared that he was zooming to destruction. He blamed the whole thing - his life, the world's life-on the non-commit- tal accidents of genes flung to- gether on the gaming table. Regardless of the monograph on the folly of believing in an afterlife he wedged into his auto- biography, Darrow uittered at every mention of the death com- ing to his he could not ignore. Significantly the only speech he included in the autobiography way the one delivered at John Alt- geld's funeral. HIS SPEECHES to juries are neither included nor described. But "The Story of My Life" tells about the cases, men, and ideas Clarence Darrow thought were important, And this is important because Darrow was attending to things of consequence years before their time. 4- * Conversation with a University President -SUSAN SCHNEPP _ _ __ -.. I 5' \ i *A 1 1S i23 4 / R 4 . , yy ', yyk yl 1 Y S C G t By MIKE DITKOWSKY I SPOKE TO the president of Wayne State University last night. I was apprehensive about making the call. It was 11:45 and Mr. Keast would probably be evasive,eas all college presidents are. When he found out that the Daily was calling he would prob- ably be evasive and nasty. A story was being written about Keast's policy statement announc- ing that Wayne State University would discontinue to compute class standings for the Selective Service System. There was some question about Wayne State's po- sition on sending transcripts to draft boards, and it was felt that Keast was the man who could answer the question. I STARTED to explain to Mr. Keast that the Daily had reached a snag on the policy statement he had just made. He answered that it was perfectly reasonable, ad- ministrators and college presidents sometimes reached snags also. I was very relieved to hear a pleas- ant and reassuring voice. He asked me where I had read his statements and I told him in the Free Press. Later he offered to send copies of his eight-page policy statement to the Daily offices. I thought I was getting a nibble so I very carefully phrased a few questions that would lead up to a statement on WSU's position on sending transcripts to draft boards. The bait wasn't necessary. Mr. Keast was ready to talk and he sounded like a man with firm conviction and feeling. HE SAID that WSU has always had a policy of sending tran- scripts only upon request of the students. He felt that the current crisis, calling for a re-examination of the draft system, was due to the draft board's new insistance that good standing is not enough standing by six percentage points. He feels that this system is hurt- ing higher education in that it attempts to dictate false and harmful educational standards that rub against the grain of a proper educational experience. He also feels that he must be fair to those students who did not have to take the test because they had high enough class standing and thus will hold the new system until the next quarter is over. Yet, he sounded like a man who felt very deeply about a situation that was detrimental to the university and everybody concerned. He sounded like a man who was ready to do something. I told him that his remarks as a university president were both refreshing and important. I said that I agreed with him 100 per cent. He said, "I knew you would." I HAD BEEN talking to Presi- dent Keast for over 20 minutes. No evasiveness, no nastiness, no annoyance, as a matter of fact firm conviction and feeling. On my next question I was ready for the evasiveness that necessarily follows when admin- istrators, even like President Keast, are asked a question of this nature. I stated that as it now stands, Wayne State University does not plan to send out class rankings. Yet, given the autonomy of the draft boards all they have to do is request the grades from the student. If the student doesn't comply he is breaking a federal law and, as Arthur Holmes, direc- tor of Michigan's Selective Service puts it, "We'll have ourselves a soldier." As far as class ranking is concerned, all the draft board Experience has to do is to get the grades, because grades will still be given. and then set up a new criteria circumventing class ranks. PRESENTING this to Keast I then stated, "Isn't it now obvious, in view of what we have just talked about, that the fundamen- tal evil and base of most educa- tional problems, amongnwhich the Selective Service is only one, is the fact that universities and col- leges give grades in the first place?" Keast's reply was, "Yes!" This was an unusual experience for me. I did not expect to get direct and what I thought were honest answers from a university president to questions that most administrators wish to avoid. And this raises the final issue. The president or Dean of a university or college is character- isticly a person who deals with compromise and mediation. Some believe that they are in a tenuous situation and feel that it is their job to placate both students and regents, the result being nothing. Recent statements that have been made by university presidents and deans such as Harlan Hatcher, Dean Monro of Harvard, and now Keast seem to indicate otherwise. It would be in the tradition of American university presidents to go along with the evils they state the draft boards are doing. Noth- ing direct lappens anyway. The students will continue to be draft- ed on the basis of grades and as far as some college presidents are concerned, no harm done. REVIEW: The Leather Boys' I FEEL OTHERWISE. I believe that President Hatcher will hon- estly try to follow up his state- ments and I was convinced that President Keast will. They have to. A recognition of what a gross evil the Selective Service represents to schools will be a start toward a betterment of both systems. There is an alternative to the current status of the Selective Service System. I believe that men like Keast have made this recog- nition and are beginning to realize the importance of their positions as catalysts for educational reform and not as mediators of a dan- gerous status quo. What would Paul Goodman say if I told him that one of my new heros was a university president? I By ANDREW LUGG SINCE HAROLD PINTER and Arnold Wesker, "the kitchen sink" has been a forceful symbol in British drama. When English film directors discovered that there were other actors besides Peter Sellers, they, too, started to pre- sent the "ordinary working man." This was nothing new. Since 1942, the Italian neo-realists have had the working man as their hero. The "Free Cinema" as it is called, is different. The directors have adopted a stance of neutral- ity. They are not committed to highlighting social change. There are no value judgments, no poli- tical overtones. Rather, the em- phasis is on a story and the abundant humor of these films ("The Girl with Green Eyes," "A Taste of Honey," "Room at the Top," etc.) derives from situa- "The Leather Boys" is a sen- timental, humorous, all-British story of the "trials and tribula- tions" of newly-weds. Reggie (Co- lin Campbell) and Dot (Rita Tushingham) from Clapham, one of the earthiest, friendliest, dirt- iest suburbs of London, burst in- to married life with the cus- tomary white wedding; bus to the reception for "beer and skit- ties"; and the not so customary honeymoon trip by motorcycle. At Bognor Regis, which is to the British working class what Niagara Falls is to the American middle class, Reggie and Dot dis- cover that all is not well. Back home the "True Romance" maga- zine philosophy of Dot conflicts with Reggie's passion for the Ace Cafe - the Mecca for London's "Leather Boys," with their motor- cycles and talk of "ton-up" (100 Reggie's indecision is resolved when he finally realizes that Pete is a homosexual (only in films are characters this slow in pick- ing out the queer. British naivete only goes so far!). This is too much for Reggie. We are left with him returning to Clapham and, presumably, to Dot. THE FILM is beautifully made. The whole rhythm and tone of the film (except for the last half hour, which might have been more drastically edited) follow the nu- ances of Reggie's dilemma. Fast cutting for the bachelor-gay is followed by a much more intense interleafing of images when the dilemma becomes, in Reggie's eyes, tragic. Rita Tushingham's performance, as always, was fine but I was even more impressed with the act- 4 e E J M , S ,'. : -' , p . I I I , 14M