'1 Seventy-Fifth Year Errn AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PuBuCATIONS Each Time I Chanced To See Franklin D. The University's Summer: Crisis and Change by H. Neil Berkson 1" s Are Fe, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ABoR, MCi. Prevai NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 rials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. JGUST 28, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: KENNETH WINTER A Fight illegal Fee Increase Wit Dor RetSrk G THE SUMMER, with most stu- safely out of town, the admin- i-or more specifically, Vice-Pres- r Business and Finance Wilbur pont and his associates-raised e hall room-and-board fees by used the traditional maneuver of he release of unpleasant news so e possibility of an effective pro- I be minimized. But two mo'e tricks marked the enactment of ticular price increase. the new charges were implement- rooming contracts already had ined for the fall. A student is y his contract-he pays $50 if he t-but the obligation isn't mutual. c, the new rates were enacted 11- Regents' Bylaw 30.02 quite un- tily states that residence hall e "subject to the approval of the f Governors." The governors, how- ver even voted on-let alone ap- -the changes. EOPLE responsible for this shady ess have resorted to a customary- te effective-device: set a policy m clam up and lay low while e protests it. Soon everyone will bout it, and the policy will have an accepted part of the status onventional channels of protest an dent this wall of silence. Angry )ns can be "taken under advise- rerbal protests can be politely ac- ged and then forgotten, commit- be ignored. 's only one way to deal with the. trative cold shoulder-as the em- of North Campus demonstrated Imer. Fed up with the futility of olite verbal complaints over new fees, they simply drove some 200 ,o a landscaped field and parked iere for nearly a month. Faced' s, administrators could no longer, ly, by and wait for the storm to r. Clearly, the storm was there to Iorth Campus parking protestors t they wanted. ESIDENCE HALLS case, an even clear-cut instance of administra- .rpation, calls for the same sort a. Specifically, it calls for a two- ack. the Board of Governors must re- be a docile, ex-post-facto rubber- stamp for the administrators who tried to bypass it. It must reject their polite and reasonable importunings and flatly re- fuse to approve thefee increases. Second,'Inter-Quadrangle Council and Assembly Association must organize a rent strike. This they would do by publi- cizing throughout the residence halls just how the charges were increased, why the procedure was Illegal and why, therefore, the increase is not binding on student residents. It must spell out explicitly, for each kind of room, just what residents will be asked to pay and just how much they actually should pay. By intensive organization clear down to the corridor- representative level, these groups could elicit an overwhelming number of refusals to cough up that extra $34. NUMBERS ARE ESSENTIAL. The indi- vidual student is easy prey. The ad- ministration can simply withhold his credits, and he will have to spend well over $34 to get a court to force the Uni- versity to release his transcript. ;Not only' is a mass withholding, of hundreds or thousands ofn transcripts less likely, but the expenses of a test case could be borne by the IQC and Assembly treasuries or by modest contributions from the protes- tors. The net saving would still be tremen- dous. If IQC and.Assembly prefer to concern themselves with parliamentary procedure and Christmas dances, perhaps some quadrangle council will be more interest- ed in serving its constituents. If not, an ad hoc group' of students could organize the operation. Whoever initiates it, the rent strike must continue until the increase is re- scinded. This is not an unreasonable de- mand. There are numerous corners which; could be cut in residence halls operations., In the men's halls, at least, firing all the housemothers-most of whom are des- pised by students-would be a step ahead which would save at least $34 per resi- dent. Or the featherbedding maids who periodically barge into rooms could be eliminated. Such a rent strike is not certain to succeed. But given the tactics of the ad- ministration, it appears to be the only alternative to total submission. When the University refuses to play by its own rules, there is no reason why its students should follow them, either. -KENNETH WINTER Managing Editor PERHAPS AS A PREFACE to year-round operation, Ann Arbor's usually quiet summer was highly event- ful. Stories ranged from the University's continuing saga of business office crises to the city's unwitting flirtation with the Birch Society. But the big news came from the upper administration where two vice- presidencies were filled, another vacated, and the un- expected death of William K. McInally created an opening on the Board of'Regents. Regent McInally was primarily a businessman, and as such he was deeply interested in financing a college education for those who otherwise couldn't afford it. In 1962 he became the University's representative and later vice-chairman on the Michigan Higher Education . Assistance Authority, a nonprofit agency able to provide up to $400 in low-interest student loans. The MHEAA was established in 1960, but it did very little until McInally became a member. Since Octo- ; ber, 1962, well over 1000 students have received nearly $1 million in loans. THE UNIVERSITY'S public relations chief, Michael Radock, moved a step up the ladder this summer, from director of to vice-president for University rela- tions. This sets no precedent: his predecessor, Llye Nelson, had a vice-presidential appointment when he left the University in 1961. Radock has had his detractors at the University, and some were surprised at his new title. His coordination of "Operation Michigan," a massive public relations. effort which sends the University's top officials around the state and brings important alumni, legislators and businessmen to campus for a 24-hour look at the world of education, was a strong factor in the promotion. USSPA RESOLUTIONS: Moreover, the new vice-president is working on a major fund drive which the University may run in conjunction with its upcoming sesquicentennial. * * RALPH SAWYER'S RETIREMENT as vice-president for research became effective in July with the naming" of botanist A. Geoffrey Norman to succeed him. The 69- year-old Sawyer will remain for another month or so as dean of the graduate school; by that time the Regents should also have a replacement there. Sawyer's list of credits qualifies him for Who's Who in Who's Who. He has produced more than 70 technical articles concerning his scientific work in optical physics. He is currently chairman of the governing board of the American Institute of Physics and past president of the Optical Society of America. He was civilian technical director of the 1945-46 Bikini Atoll atomic bomb project and has served on numerous government and military agencies. AFTER JOINING the faculty as a physics instructor in 1919, Sawyer went right up through the ranks. In addition to his other jobs, he was the first director of the University's Phoenix Memorial Project.1 As research vice-president, Sawyer has coordinated millions, of dollars ($40 million last year) worth of research projects. At a time when the research and teaching functions of higher education are in growing. conflict, Sawyer has worked closely with Vice-Presidents Niehuss and Heyns to keep tensions within bounds here. He has been an outstanding representative for the University in Washington, where he has been called upon to testify before congressional committees countless times. Sawyer's 45 years at the University have been marked by one accomplishment after another. His talents will be missed. *' * * CONFIRMING RUMORS which had been, circulating for more than a year, Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis resigned some three weeks lago. Lewis' ten years as the University's first OSA vice- piesident have been stormy. -He is tired of controversy and has wanted to return to teaching for some time. "This is a job for a younger man," he told a Daily reporter last year. The vice-presidency for student affairs is a ready target for both disgruntled students and faculty because it represents the most peripheral area of University concerns. While Lewis has deserved criticism in many instances, he has not deserved the sporadic personal attacks leveled at him in this newspaper and elsewhere. Until 1961 Lewis had to suffer responsibility for the 19th century ideas of a practically autonomous Dean of Women's office. Moreover, he rarely had the support he needed from the Regents and President Hatcher. SINCE THE RESIGNATION of Dean of Women Deborah Bacon, the OSA has improved significantly. While all is not perfect, student restrictions are few, and those who still beat the in loco parentis. issue act as if Lewis were running some Southern women's junior college instead of one of the most regulation-free uni- versities in the country. This issue, drawn all out of perspective, has cam- ouflaged Lewis' major weakness-an inability to articu- late the relationship between curricular and extra- curricular life. Nevertheless, Lewis has given OSA a semblance of structure absent when he took over in 1954. Perhaps this will leave his successor free to move into other areas. 'A ; Student Editors Make Poor Legislators By KENNETH WINTER Managing Editor and DEBORAH BEATTIE Associate Editorial Director MINNEAPOLIS - T h e United States Student Press Associa- tion spent most of its recent sum- mer congress demanding freedom of the student press. But the reso- lutions it approved-and the way in which it approved them-leave considerable doubt that the dele- gates understand or deserve the "freedom and responsibility" they advocate. The resolutions were purely ad- visory declarations, aimed at con- vincing the public that free ex- pression should reign in the stu- dent press. In particular, they are intended to convince a tradition- ally hostile segment of the public: college administrators. These resolutions, having no legally binding authority, must stand or fall on their power to persuade such people. Most of the resolutions fall. * * * THE GROUNDWORK for USSPA's "freedom and responsi-' bility" stand was laid when the association passed its new "Code of Ethics." This code (half of which, incidentally, isn't a code of ethics at all but a set of unilateral demands) forms the logical basis from which the more specific dec- larations supposedly are deduced. From its first premise, the Code is a flabby foundation. The first premise reads: Freedom of expression and debate by means of a free and vigorous student press is essen- tial to the effectiveness of an- educational community in a democratic society. This is a tenable proposition, but it is by no means self-evident. For example, one who believes the purpose of education to be pro- fessional training or religious in- doctrination-as do many of the administrators who will receive this document, - will deny the proposition. From this piece of self-evi- dence, USSPA leaps to an even broader conclusion: The student press must be free of all forms of external in- terference designed to regulate its content. The delegates passed this sec- tion without asking such basic questions as: 1) Does this neces- sarily follow from the first state- ment? 2) If not, what does just- ify such a demand?- and 3) Do' we really mean "all forms of ex- ternal interference"? THIS FAILURE to step outside the values and perspectives of student journalism and consider such questions seriously was the fatal flaw 'in USSPA's legislative procedure. It seemed to result from two characteristics of the four-day congress. First, there was an unhealthy unanimity of opinion. "Freedom and responsibility of the student press" was the uncontestable vir- tue. (Speakers against motions advocating it felt obliged to pre- face their remarks with a dis- 9laimer such as "Not that I don't favor student press freedom, but . ") College administrators, on the other hand, were at best po- tential tyrants. Suggestions that a university official might do right or have rights got nowhere. Seconds the assembly-line way in which resolutions were passed not only left little time for chal- lenges to the sacred cows noted above but did not even permit the delegates to weed out the un- ideological mistakes in their reso- lutions. (In the Code of Ethics, essentially the same point appears twice on the same page. No one noticed.) Legislative sessions fol- lowed so closely on the heels of. drafting committee meetings that scarcely any of the delegates had read-let alone studied-the mo- tions they were voting on. There was adequate time for the quicker readers to spot and amend details of the motions, and intelligent de- bate and revision sometimes took place on substantive issues. But neither the clock nor the delegates were in a mood for radical chal- leriges to the committees' resolu- tions. THUS IT ISN'T surprising that, having scrutinized some hastily- selected trees, the congress barely glanced at the forest. No attempt was made to legislate all the sepa- rate motions into a logically co- herent whole. Much of the legislation shows it. In a resolution censuring Oakland University for firing its student editor, the following statement was declared as a principle of USSPA: The student editor's obliga- tion to be responsible is based on his freedom to present all issues of fact and opinion to the public for critical examination. Prior- censorship renders mean- ingless the question of respon- sibility. In other words, unless an editor: has total freedom, he has no re- sponsibility: Not only is this a rather remarkable assertion in it- self, it effectively repeals over, half of the Code of Ethics-in fact, all of the Code of Ethics which is, really a code of ethics-the part which outlines student editors' re- sponsibilities. The assertion makes responsible conduct on the part of a student editor obligatory only when that editor has complete freedom - a blessing enjoyed by only ,the tiniest fraction of the nation's college editors. The rest, if we are to take USSPA seriously, are ethically free to" employ per- sonal bias, character assassina- tion, misrepresentation and the host of other devices which the Code of Ethics would otherwise have forbidden to them. The Oakland resolution, though generally a sound one, also mani- fests the- "student press, si; ad- ministrator, no!" perspective men- tioned earlier. The resolution uses the word "censure" to describe its attitude toward the adminis- trator in the case, Oakland Chan- cellor Durward B. Varner. But the delegates . couldn't bring themselves to use even the words "irresponsible" in describing the actions of the fired editor, Wolf Metzger. A clause using that word was deleted, even though provi- sions in the good old Code of Ethics would have justified such a charge. THERE SEEM TO BE three stages in the maturation of a student newspaper. In the first stage, the paper is still thoroughly seduced by the glad hand of the administrations' and feels that those in charge can do no wrong. In the second, a reaction to the first, the administration is seen as a sinister conspiracy, and can do no good. In the third stage comes the mature, if difficult, understanding that administrators have some legitimate concerns and some illegitimate ones and are sometimes right and sometimes wrong. USSPA seems to be still in the second stage of maturation. As a result, the congress failed to face the central dilemma of those who advocate student press freedom. On the one hand, they want some continuing institution -- a college or an independent board-to establish the newspaper, to take the legal responsibility for it, see that buildings, offices and other details. of its operation are maintained, and sometimes even subsidize it. On the other hand, they want the colleges and boards to relinquish all control of the papers to a student staff. Thus while the student staff expresses itself with impunity, the institu- tion is left helplessly holding the legal and financial bag. This, in rather oversimplified terms, is the dilemma which USSPA ignored almost completely. * * * IT VENTURED to the brink a few times, but invariably backed away. In a resolution on (you guessed it) "freedom of the stu- dent press," it came the closest: The necessary correlative of freedom is responsibility, but it must be recognized that there is no structure which can elim- inate the possibility of an ir- responsible editor. Suppression of the newspaper is no solution to the problem; internal control must not be arbitrarily abridged from outside,; Which leaves the question: what is the solution to the problem? The resolution doesn't say. It drops the issue right there. Another resolution which stum- bled toward the brink was con- cerned with, of- all things, "the role of the ,printer." The concern here was that print shops, par- ticularly commercial firms doing student-publications work, had al- tered copy or allowed adminis- trators to do so without the stu- dent editors' permission..The res- olution explained, in irrefutable terms, why the printer has no right to change copy: Unlike the publisher, the printer is not legally responsi- ble for the ideas, opinions or facts presented in any newspa- per it prints. And therefore: USSPA believes that no print shop should change' or delete newspaper copy in any way without the expressed consent of the editor-in-chief.' A printer isn't responsible, so he doesn't have a right to change anything. So far, so good. But why not complete the reasoning? A publisher is responsible, so .he does have a right to change things. AT THIS POINT, the delegates not only backed away from the brink but simultaneously executed an about-face. Not only doesn't the publisher-if he's a college of- ficial-have a right to change copy, he doesn't even have a right to see it. And not only that, the printer is supposed to be the one who prevents the publisher. from seeing it! US SPA believes that printers should not divulge the content of a newspaper to anyone with- out the expressed'consent of they editor-in-chief. Again, anything is justified which will preserve the absolute control of the student editor. It latei becamp eclear that "anything" included outright lies. Explicitly listed as a "fact" in a resolution on "uninterrupted access to news sources by the student press" was this proposition: The student press has made a conscientious effort to oper- ate under the Canons of Jour- nalism of the American Society of Newspaper Editors and the; Code of Ethics of the United States Student Press Association for the best 'inttrest of the aca- demic community. Most of the deleg'ates in the room had never read the ASNE Canons. The fration of the stu- dent press which pretends to fol- low USSPA's Code (which has been in existence for one year) is about one-tenth. Even within that one-tenth, allegiance to the Code frequently is something less than zealous. And all written documents aside, it is clear that many a student editor falls far short of being "conscientious" in carrying out his duties. The chairman of the commit- tee which drafted this classic ,ex- plained that the ASNE phrase was thrown into the "fact" section "to give it an air of respectability." BUT IT WAS another delegate who gave the most convincing ar- gument in favor of falsehood. And in doing so,; he inadvertently sum- med up,USSPA's whole pariamen- tary effort. "If we delete this section," he declared, "we will be going against everything we have done in the past three days." '' Fair Housing: Second Chance MAY 27, Municipal Court Judge icis O'Brien ruled Ann Arbor's using Ordinance unconstitutional. so on the grounds that it deprived, zens and courts of Ann Arbor of il procedures guaranteed to them. of this decision will begin on Sep- 14 when Circuit Court -Judge t. Breakey Jr. accepts briefs in an f this decision. >f the utmost importance to citi- the state of Michigan that Judge base his decision on the more nt of the two issues involved in a as Judge O'Brien did not. Judge held that the procedures of the ce forced an alleged violator to hate himself, that the ordinance' ed judicial authority to a non- body and that the ordinance pro- interferred with the original jur-' a reserved to the courts. H. NEIL BERKSON, Editor H WINTER EDWARD HERSTEIN ing Editor Editorial Director RTZMAN...............Personnel Director SATTINOER .... Associate Managing Editor .NYAssistant Managing Editor' BEATTIE ...... Associate Editorial Director IND ........Assistant Editorial Director in / Charge of the Magazine ,LARD...........Sports Editor LAND .............Associate Sports Editor NER ..............Associate Sports Editor TOWLE.........Contributing Sports Editor Business Staff VATHON R. WHITE, Business Manager PEL .............Associate Business Manager LDSTEIN............... Finance Manager JOHNSTON ............Personnel Manager PAUKER.............Advertising Manager T HESE ARE WHAT are known as pro- cedural issues. They have to do with the functioning of the Fair Housing Or- dinance, with the legality of the way in, which the ordinance is organized. And yet these issues were neither the issues on which Judge O'Brien was briefed nor, the very vital issues on which the civil' rights movement in Michigan depends. What everyone awaiting Judge O'Brien's decision was interested in were the ques- tions of whether the existence of the state Civil Rights Commission automatic- ally pre-empts civil rights enforcements in Michigan, and whether local civil rights commissions could co-exist with it. Legally it is perfectly acceptable if, somewhat unexpected, when a judge hands down a decision on other grounds than those on which he was briefed. Briefs act as aids to the judge, not as boundries for his work. But Judge O'Brien's decision, while very proper on a legal basis, was not justly considered from the standpoint of the people of the state of Michigan. For what they wanted to know and, because of the nature of Judge O'Brien's decision, what they still want to know, is what the nature of fu- ture civil rights laws in Michigan will be. BUT THOUGH NO ONE can attack a refusal to rule on this issue from a legal standpoint, a judge has both le- gal' and social responsibility. Judge O'Brien upheld his responsibility to the law. But in failing to rule on the prime issue in question, he left Michigan with no answer to a question which deserves the strongest of answers. To that extent he FEIFFER 6 IR GIULP, YOU P5CRI8E YOUR SQ F A5 A TYPICAL. MEMER OF A TYPICAL COMMUNITY? OWNeR, HAR VMKER, FATHE5R OF T74RE6, CL~EAN I m TNOT I sv L)X STANV- I 6lR, TH5 5ME7COURT ALL OFC MES 5OBSCENITY ASP TIM. TM4T WHICH4 AROU555 PRURIENT INTER5T l ACCORDPING TO COMP4Lt4- T ITY STANDARDS. NAVE T YOU READ THESC r0000? l H'AVE YUMe T4 Nor TO / SARXWEC ITY5~ FRURIMT tNT ,ST? ThANK FATE 4R OF TMREFOR' OXR com- v!OWNC,. VRltENCE. SIR? W r 1 5T M viS! CR1) , Ie~ LJCAL RUt2I,-z, d1JA 4f BTX)ANPSid YOU MO OR N5ceN'rRDLI FINDi fL/'~Afev A(NV IN T7W 5TIFET AND? WATCH P'PLIE ONE: F