w WArtga Bal Seventy-Fif tlbYear EDrrED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNITERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Is U.S. War in Asia Treason? s ,. : Where Opinions Are Free, '420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBO, MICH. Truth Will Prevail NEWS PHom : 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SUNDAY, 14 MARCH 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: SCOTT BLECH WANTED: SGC Election Reforms To the Editor: TWO UNIVERSITY s t u d e n t s have s u g g e s t e d collecting money for medical supplies for Vietnamese victims of United States bombings is treason. It is clear from American reports that U.S. policies in Viet Nam have re- sulted in death and injury to tens of thousands of Vietnamese (most- ly civilians). We have supplied support for regimes whose oppression of the people is at-least as great as that in any Communist nation, includ- ing Hungary in 1956. We must face the fact that the people of Viet Nam have decided that Com- munism is better than the rule of the U.S. and its puppets. I would say that the only trea- son in this case is sending Ameri- can dollars and American boys to fight against the people of another nation fighting for its freedom. Granted it may not be freedom as we know it; still it is what they want and the people must be heard. -Stanley Nadel, '66 The Internationale To the Editor: IN ADDITION to the usual im- maculate dress of our intellec- tuals, a new adornment has ap- peared: a button which solemnly pronounces "End the War in Viet Nam." Yes, what a marvelous idea. Let us turn all of Southeast Asia over to the Communist terrorists. Let us run with our tails between our legs from this crisis, which de- mands something of America that has been lacking for years-guts. Let us pit on the graves of the hundreds of U.S. dead. Let us bask in the light of knowing that we have compro- mised our republican beliefs in order to appease the most disgust- ing tyranny on earth. Let us cele- brate United Nations Day instead of the 4th of July. Better yet, let us raise our voices to the strains of the Internationale rather than to the Star Spangled Banner. -David H. Rogers, '68E LAST WEEK, ccmic strips were out; in- stead, everyone was reading about the SGC election. Featuring an elections di- rector who did not know how many people should have been elected and an error of 150 votes, the incident should have been produced as a slap-stick comedy. When questioned the Tuesday follow- ing the election about the number of peo- ple supposedly elected Monday, the elec- tions director turned to other people in the SGC office and asked, "How many think seven were elected? Eight? Anyone for nine?" He finally estimated nine stu- dents were elected, but to make sure he said one had to speak to Sherry Miller, chairman of the SGC Credentials Com- mittee. Meanwhile, Miss Miller's committee was having fun on its own: The GROUP can- didates were disqualified Saturday, rein- stated Sunday, brought up for disqualifi- cation again Monday and acquitted Tues- day. AND THE FUN was just starting. Sherry Miller's credentials committee also rec- ommended that the votes be recounted. After the retabulation, SGC came to the revelation that a slight error had occur- red-the adding machine allegedly made a 150 vote error-and the list of elected candidates was altered. Forgetting about the rather dubious legitimacy of blaming the adding machines for such an error, the incident further projected SGC's im- age of incompetence. Last week's election was not unique; rather, it was run in the SGC tradition. There is, however, a debate over which SGC election has been bungled the most. Among the leading contenders for this distinction was the election in which 4000 ballots were stolen the night before the voting. HOW CAN STUDENTS expect SGC to argue housing with landlords and mo- vie prices with Butterfield executives when it can't even run a student election? No one does or should have any respect for an organization which is the laugh- ing stock of the campus. The new Council membei's should im- mediately set out to polish SGC's tarnish- ed image by improving the elections pro- edures while the issue is still warm. Missionaries WE CAN WIN THE WAR in Viet Nam given more firepower, the Army chief of staff tells us. We can win the war on poverty given enough money, President Johnson tells us. In both victories, so the story goes, we will be doing something to save civilization. . So with the white missionaries who colonized Africa and Asia in the last cen- tury. By extending western ideas, they felt, we would erect a barrier to the hordes of the jungles. Now we would bar ourselves against the hordes of Communism and the hordes of unemployed youths in our streets. Yet nowhere in this great missionary zeal which pervades our policies is there care for the hordes themselves, for how they would live in the ways that will satisfy them. Always we seek to impress upon them, whether they like it or not, our ful- fillments, our way of life. Basic to this missionary spirit is the belief that others are not equal to us, A cting Editorial Staff ROBERT JOHNSTON, Editor LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM JEFFREY GOODMAN Managing Editor Editorial Director JUDITH WARREN Personnel Director THOMAS WEINBERG ............. ...Sports Editor LAUREN BAHR ............ Associaae Managing Editor SCOTT BLECH ,.......... Assistant Managing Editor ROBERT HIPPLER ...... Associate Editorial Director GAIL BLUMBERG ........... . Magazine Editor LLOYD GRAFF .............. Associate Sports Editor JAMES KESON .................. Chief Photographer NIGHT EDITORS: David Block, John Bryant, Michael Juliar, Leonard Pratt. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: William Benoit, Bruce Bigelow, Michael Dean. John Meredith, Peter Sara- sohn, Barbara Seyfried, Bruce Wasserstein. A cting Businss Staf f CY WELLMAN, Business Manager ALAN GLUECKMAN ............ Advertising Manager JOYCE FEINBERG ................ Finance Manager JUDITH FIELDS ................ Personnel Manager SUSAN CRAWFORD ......Associate Business Manager TTTTIP MfAN~rVRA Ai* A.. T,.a. R~~yr Fo,',, Rle Conflicting election rules of the dif- ferent campus organizations should be made uniform by an SGC task force. This coordination would prevent the recur- rence of events such as IQC charging in this election that GROUP had violated IQC election rules while GROUP claimed their campaigning procedures were legal under SGC rules. Once a coordinated set of rules is drawn up, the task force should make sure they are well-defined to avoid future misunderstandings. Another needed reform would be equalizing campaigning privileges of groups and individual candidates. The issue, although touching a tender spot for the GROUP candidates, is important if the individual candidate is to have a chance in elections. Without any spe- cial privileges favoring a slate of can- didates, slates already enjoy a consider- able, although fair, advantage by being able to pool their financial resources, sup- porters and campaigning abilities. When; however, a group of candidates is granted the right to use a vehicle of communication such as the Fishbowl and the bulletin boards regulated by Alpha Phi Omega, while the individual candi- date doesn't have such an advantage, the individual is unfairly outshadowed and stifled. THE SGC TASK FORCE should also in- vestigate the possibility of using Uni- versity computers in tabulating election results. On a campus which boasts the Survey Research Center and other out- standing programming facilities, the present inaccurate counting system is a shocking anachronism. SGC's faults do not lie in its constitu- tion; rather, they are caused by incom- petent and apathetic members who per- petuate bungling and inaccurate proced- ures. The key to improvement can be found only if the new members take themselves and the organization serious- ly. IF THIS COUNCIL does not make re- forms, it, like its predecessors, will wallow in the mire of failure. The notor- iously bungled elections process is the place to start innovating. -BRUCE WASSERSTEIN 'ontrversy To the Editor: PERHAPS MY controversy with Walter Broad has reached the point of diminishing returns in reader interest, so I will merely make two brief historical points and then withdraw from the dis- cussion, thanking him for his in- teresting contributions, and hop- ing much that third parties will take up the cudgels. First, it is a rather crude gen- eralization to accuse the abolition- ists (who were a small, though honorable minority even in the North) of having caused the Civil War. The Lincoln government, at the time of the secession, had gone no farther than to propose to check the spread of slavery, by keeping it out of the territories. Second, the League was handi- capped from the start by the re- fusal of the United States to have anything to do with it, and also by the failure of Britain and France to use the League to check Axis aggression. If we, even then the most powerful nation in the world, had joined the League, and if we and other peace-loving countries had made vigorous use of its machinery, the history of the 1930's would have certainly been very different. -Preston Slosson Professor Emeritus of History FILM FESTIVAL: Display of Promising Talent in Movie Making At the Cinema Guild ALTHOUGH NONE of the films offered at the Ann Arbor Film Festival's seven o'clock showing last night could be called a com- plete film experience, several of them displayed promising film-making talent, and three provided genuine viewer involvement. Robert Feldman's "Chaos" was the most tightly constructed of the nine films. Feldman's economical editing creates an exciting visual embodiment of his title as he pieces together shots of cars on express- ways. The sudden ending, with its abrupt shot of a broken window and brief survey of an auto junkyard, displays Feldman's control over his subject matter. The film is satisfactorily complete, and-one hopes that Feldman will soon turn his talents to more ambitious attempts. "HOW TO FOLD A FLAG" by Jon Bowie and William Livingston, another brief visual essay, has a cohesive sequence of shots, but the co-producers leave their ambiguous material without a pointed meaning. In his collage of magazine cut-outs called "The Great Brain Robbery," Charles Plymell has a degree of success. The 'visual com- position is lively and amusing at times, although it is hampered by the excessive speed of the presentation. THE FIRST FILM of the evening, "In Memory of Seymour Turner" by Richard Reitzes, provides immediate viewer involvement through its interesting opposition of sound and visual presentation. Shots of a graveyard familiar to users of the Arb are set off against a sound track from an amusement park side show. "L'Histiore Du. Soldat" by George Manupelli is the most ambitious film of the group. In the role of the soldier, Bernard Waldrop turns in an excellent performance. But Manupelli fails to unify his admittedly diverse materials completely, and the audience must be satisfied with the abundance of "black" humor which the film provides. --Lee Carl Bromberg HOW TO STAY SANE: Culling the Week's Nonsense -Daily-Thomas R. Copi The Development Council concert featured clarinetist Pete Foun- tain, winner of the 1965 Playboy poll as jazz's finest clarinetist. Fountain, left, communes with vibraharpist Godfrey Hirsh, right above. The jazz sextet combined Dixieland and standards in a concert last night in Hill Aud. DIXIELAND, STANDARDS: Fountain Sextet Gives Disappointing Program At Hill Auditorium WHAT STARTED OUT to be a tribute to Benny Goodman turned into an uncreative beginning to the Creative Arts Festival as clarinetist Pete Fountain and his Louisiana Sextet performed at Hill Auditorium last night. The concert began with a slick, up-tempoed "Way Down Yonder in New Orleans," followed by the ballad "Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans," and "Lady Be Good," in 1937 Goodman Sextet style. With vibres, guitar and rhythm section, the instrumenta- tion and the arrangements recalled those thrilling days of yester- year's swing era. HOWEVER, THE NOTION that the audience was to hear a tight- knit, purposeful sextet performance was soon dispelled as the group plunged into the ever populars "Hello Dolly," complete with circus ending. The listeners, who seemed to be dominated by the hardware- store set, called for an encore and Fountain generously obliged. As the first set drew to a close, that gray haze which invariably seems to envelop the scene of a dull concert started drifting in. People started looking at their watches, whispering and thinking about the basketball game, as it became apparent that nothing earth shaking was going to happen. THE SECOND SET started out again in Goodman fashion with "Memories of You" and "Indiana," but another myth was shattered as that old senior prom feeling set in with "Stranger on the Shore," complete with annoying vibrato. Some clever clowning by vibrist Godfrey Hirsh entertained the crowd while "Our Golden Wedding Day" rumbled on. Unfortunately, his clowning continued as guitarist Paul Guma produced the evening's only worthwhile moment in a moving solo introduction to "Autumn Leaves." Fountain had been precise, cute and, for some, entertaining, but he was also uninventive, ostentatious and distasteful. The whole concert brought forth images of those treasured evenings, with that giant among giants in the musical world, Lawrence Welk. --David R. Berson By ROGER RAPOPORT, O 'E OF THE trials of modern civilization is learning to take the world's crises with a grain of salt. If you are one of the many people on the verge of insanity because of the consistently de- pressing tone of the world's news, tranquilize your emotions with the "Nonsense of the Week in Re- view." DAWN FRASER, the 27-year- old Olympic swimming champion who lost her amateur status for too many beer parties, has a new book out called, "Confessions of an Olympic Champion." She writes, "Sex is a popular diversion in the Olympic commun- ity. While some can be affected badly (in their competition) others appear to thrive on inter- course." BERKELEY'S J O H N Thomp- son, leader of the "Filthy Speech Movement," livened up a rather placid campus last week. After his arrest for an obscene speech to 1500 Berkeley students, Thomp- son went off to Santa Rosa jail. Released on bond, he justified his filthy speech by saying, "We are all a result of the sex act. If we are allowed to do it, why aren't we allowed to say it?" WITH UNIVERSITY of Cali- fornia President Clark (multiver- sity) Kerr and Berkeley Chancel- lor Martin Meyerson looking ear- lier in the week like they would re- sign, former Chancellor Edmund Strong revealed in William Know- land's Oakland Tribune that he was forced to resign in January. At the time, the California re- gents had said Strong was leaving for 'health reasons." Anyway, Strong is going to try a comeback, especially now that it's unlikely he'll be kicked up- stairs. He will be teaching at Ber- keley next fall. The course? Phi- losophy, naturally. MICHIGAN'S Superintendent of Public Instruction Lynn Bartlett has sided with Gov. George Rom- ney against appropriating the University $300,000 for teachers' salaries so that 128 freshman can go to school in Flint next fall. This week Bartlett proved he's not so frugal after all: In the budget request for his education office was a supplemental item for $200,000. The money, as Sen. Garland Lane of Flint explained, will go "for buying new rugs and things like that." * * * THIS WEEK Fred Godshalk of the Educational Testing Service explained how the only non-ma- chine-graded College Board Tests -the English composition tests- are scored. It doesn't matter so much what the essays say, just how they say it, he said. We ask the graders (185 for 68,000 essays) not to be influenced by spelling or pro- fanity. The graders read 50 essays an hour: "Our ultimate and para- mount goal is to see every kid get a fair break," Godshalk added. * * * INTEREST IN forming a citi- zens' committee to abolish porno- graphic magazine sales in local stores was expressed this week by Mrs. Rosemary Bailey in a letter to the Huron Valley Advertiser. Mrs. Bailey is worried because she realizes "how close the magazines are to the campus of the Univer- sity." Students interested in these magazines can contact Mrs. Bailey at 663-2919. and Tyrants that somehow it is our duty to instruct them in the glories of middle-class Amer- ica. So in Asia we are blind to, the fact that those backward peasants Py and large do not want us there, that they do not want anyone but themselves to fight on their land-including the Chinese. We deny that it is possible for uneducated, yellow-skinned men to know what they want. AND WE ARE CONVINCED that every- one in the slums really wants to be middle class, to have automobiles and tel- evisions, to come back to plush rugs after a day operating useless machines pro- ducing useless goods. We assume our standards of happiness are ultimate, our definitions of propriety and morality ir- reproachable, our art ageless and our wisdom immutable. We teach these thoughts in our schools and make our doles dependent on peoples' action ac- cording to them. Unfortunately, the Vietnamese may in- deed want us to defend their democracy by ravaging the land and manipulating politics. The poor may indeed want to be middle class. All this inflates our egos even further, for we assume this is nat- ural. We do not see how we have always planted those attitudes which will make people want us, instead of stimulating creative thought and dialogue. We do not see that in our propaganda overseas and our media at home we are brainwashers. If most of our dependents are now incapable really of thinking for them- selves, it is because they are too used to others thinking for them and threaten- ing them when they conceive of some- thing unorthodox. And so it would take many chaotic generations to reverse what we have been doing so well for centuries. Chaotic-but at some time beginnings FILM FESTIVAL: 'In green' Paints Misty Images of Childhood At the Cinema Guild THE MOST ATTRACTIVE FILM at Friday's Ann Arbor Film Festival was Nathaniel Dorsky's "Ingreen." Against a background of Oriental music, drastically and ominously slowed down, Dorsky presented striking images. The bulk of these images appeared through grass and shadows in finely-toned color. It is, of course, somewhat risky to attempt a full interpretation of a symbolic film, but I saw it as a remembrance of childhood, through the mist of memory. Throughout "Ingreen," the music constrasted effectively with the action. The threatening drone of the soundtrack played against bright scenes of play and fields. Towards the end, the visual context came increasingly closer to the Japanese musical background. "GEORG" by Stanton Kaye was a monument of turgidity. There is no pleasure and little art in watching a man bury his wife and child for five minutes, especially after having seen his brother explode. The narrative was morbid and naive simultaneously, and the quasi- documentary style of the film was unconvincing. "It's Not Just You, Murray," from New York University, was a refreshing spoof of many things. Gangsters, Italian Mamas and even Fellini's "8%" took a ribbing. The film, heartily received by the audience, was not completely consistent in imagination, but at least it was funny. BEN VAN METER'S "The Poon-Tang Trilogy" was intermittently funny, two-thirds outrageous and one part incongruous. You had to see it to believe it. "They Who Touch" by Jerrold Pell presented a boy and girl's hands. Supposedly significant and symbolic, it remained lukewarm. The final feature, "The Night John Was Late Getting Home," was almost as short as its title is long. -Mark Slobin The Week in Review Resignations, Tenure, Dorms Arouse Student Ire By MICHAEL SATTINGER Associate Managing Editor and JEFFREY GOODMAN Acting Editorial Director PREVIOUSLY CALM, rational differences of opinion on aca- demic matters forced their way into the headlines last week as issues of tenure, discipline and discussion turned into brittle bones of contention. At Yale University, a 79-hour continuous protest demonstration by about60 studentsfailed to se- cure tenure for Prof. Richard J. Bernstein of Yale's philosophy de- partment. Yale President Kingman Brewster, Jr., wouldn't overrule the tenure committee's original decision not to give him tenure, and the philosophy department- more chance. The tenure com- mittee, which originally denied his request for advancement, will re- view his case again. ON THE WEST COAST, a po- tentially much more explosive sit- uation seemed to have been avert- ed last night as University of California President Clark Kerr and Berkeley Chancellor Martin Meyerson agreed not to resign their posts. In their reluctance to discipline a "filthy speech" off- shoot of last fall's Free Speech Movement, the two had run into somewhat stodgy regents and leg- islators who think there is entirely too much anarchy on the Berkeley campus. The pathetic aspect of the whole But in a way, Kerr and Meyer- son are just as responsible for the near-eruption. They should not, perhaps, have been afraid to assert their authority to maintain a minimum level of decency on the campus. Unrestrained political activity has many philosophical and practical justifications, but it is hard to justify purposeless pre- sentations of four-letter words. ON THIS CAMPUS, meanwhile, the Office of Student Affairs is preparing for next fall's housing squeeze and rising dormitory costs. Monday, students began a peti- tion-protest when they saw an announcement in East Quadrangle that 178 rooms beyond those con- verted this fall will contain an extra man come August. Most any more amenable to pickets, slogans and signatures. More effective, however, might be whatever protests arise in re- action to official portents of a hike in dormitory fees. The por- tent came from Vice-President for Student Affairs Richard L.Cutler. A rise in fees would be the second in as many years; an extra $34 was added to housing bills in an OSA move last summer. ** * ONE WAY of easing enrollment pressures is building branch in- stitutions, and the week brought at least. tacit support of the Uni- versity's plans to enlarge its Flint campus. Preliminary information from one subcommittee of Gov. George Romney's "Blue Ribbon" Committee on Higher diucation issue has had-and should have- a good deal of thought and debate. IT'S ALWAYS heartening to see national and international situa- tions and events bring forth a re- action on this campus, distant as it is from the source of the prob- lems. Thus the local march by 400 demonstrators protesting civil rights events in Selma and the demand by quadrangle residents that Inter-Quadrangle Council support a protest against South Africa's recial policies are good signs. In addition, a group of radical students and professors are plan- ning to walk out of their classes later in the month to protest United States actions in Viet Nam. Perhaps naively, the group is hop-