Elsmtlgatt atey Seventy-FifthYear Eirr - AD MANAG" BY STUDENTS OF THE UN-VEfSITY OF MICIGAN U1NDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD TN CONTROL of STUDENT PUBLTCATIONS 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN A iou, MICH. NEWS PHOrE: 764-0552 nui i'w rials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. .. .... r f y, DAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: KENNETH WINTER The Dorm Rent Hike: A Hard Second Look Each Time I Chanced To See Franklin D. The University Calendar: Something is Left Out by H. Neil Berkson THE UNIVERSITY CALENDAR seems to have no be- and everything will be fine. The answers flowed forth won't have to worry about judging people or people ginning, no end. The first week blends into the almost as if there were no more questions. But there are. judging us. second much as August becomes September. Students, seond much ashgs bec etebe. tdents AS EDUCATION here becomes more and more pres- IF THE UNIVERSITY has any responsibility, it is are Registered. Freshmen are Oriented. Now the Educa- tional Process takes over, ready to struggle for men's sure-packed, the beauty of the University lies in the to expose this rat-race psychology to its students. In minds in the midst of too many students, too few fa- fact that it is still a place to reflect, still a place to use this context, the most important verb in the English cilities and a strangely mixed atmosphere of deep fears one's mind. The University's only premise is that all language is "relax." Number two might be "think." and deadening apathy which would seem to erode premises must be questioned in order to come to some At a time when we desperately need to regain some any value in education, sense of identity, and a university is one of the few Students moved in and out of Hill Auditorium all. m places that can provide that sense, this university seems last week, but the balconies had a faintly hollow ring. ships in society, hell-bent on putting its students in an institutional strait Many welcomes, Much advice. We do not treat you as The trouble with schedules is that they Impose con- jacket. Already too many students merely suffer a four numbers,- the University repeated again and again- formity, denying the basic individuality of each student. or five or six year ritual. Values remain unquestioned usually right before the recital of some staggering We all have our own complex problems, and we must out of a reverence for the life-pattern. statistic. be able to solve them at our own pace. THIS FAITH creates the most mechanical type of SOMETHING WASN'T SAID to freshmen. They got There is nothing wrong, and much that is right, existence. The bounds of reality grow narrower and list of "dos" and don't" calculated to hasten them with deviating from accepted norms, which, after all, nu.Ower. The lines of communication between men are through the University toward that extra $100,000 per have no meaning in the context of a given individual, cut ur range of experiences becomes smaller, as more lifetime that makes them prime targets for life insurance The important thing is not to be. frightened by failure, and more events are foreign to our comprehension. companies. They heard of their triple "A" rating, their to realize that failure is not a static condition which Barbarity in Mississippi, death in Dallas, sickness in 90 per cent chance to stay here, the added competition defines one's worth throughout a lifetime. This terrible S anc co all have tremendous repercussions, yet they'll be facing. fear of mistakes draws people into a closer and closer a- The University was presented as if a degree were conformity-if everyone does the same things in the The University left much unsaid last week. Let's part of some ordained life-pattern. Stay on schedule same way from the same frame of reference, then we hope it isn't silent for the rest of the year. 1 t lI T FRIDAY, this writer advocated a ent strike by students living in Uni- ty residence halls. The purpose of a strike would be to fight an in- se in room-and-board charges enact- i a manner which clearly violates a nts' bylaw. e strategy of the strike would be to riize residents to refuse unanimously at least in overwhelming numbers- Ly the additional $34 which the Uni- ty will try to get out of them this If the University tried to withhold transcripts of all the non-payers oh it always does in individual cases might inot do en masse), they could their funds, take the whole matter curt, and get the court to fore'the ersity to release the credits. This, I confident, a court would do in the of the illegal way in which the dorm ike was implemented. ras wrong. E-='RESIDENT for Business and Fi- ante Wilbur K. Pierpont is empower- y bylaw 30.02 to set the rates "sub- to the approval of the Board of Gov- rs." He never sought or received approval of this faculty-student . ut he did get the Regents to >ve implicitly the rate increase by ing their approval of the 1964-65 et. And since the Regents write the os, the Regents apparently are le- free to ignore them. us it appears that the room-and- i increase was not illegal. This seems the case, not because the method of iactment didn't violate the Regents' is-there clearly was a violation- because the Regents' bylaws aren't r laws at all. When the Regents, or one acting with their consent, e to ignore the rules the bylaws out, those affected by such actions no legal recourse.- SIDER WHAT, from the student's rspective, this means. It has always clear that to come and to remain "Christianilty a n HE BIBLE (John 8:7) we read of a man whose activities were contrary epted norms of her society and who have been stoned to death had not held back the crown and in- , He that is without sin among et him first cast a stone at her." Yet ns that some Christians never learn. it is over 19 centuries later, and we ill stunned by stories of malicious or being perpetrated by supposedly Christian people upon a miscreant er of their society. Only now it is the place is Baltimore, and the eant is Mrs. Madalyn Murray. Murray, lest there still be some Lo not know her name, may quite ly be our nation's most vehement t, a distinction which she seems to von pretty much by default. In 1960, tdifference to religion turned to a hat more militant attitude when n ran up against a brick wall trying id participation in what were then itory religious exercises in his1 . When the school superintendent ed Mrs. Murray that her son could excused while the rest of the class ed a five-minute Scripture reading1 ord's Prayer recitation-or, to put e bluntly, when Mrs. Murray was ed that her son's inalienable right dom from (as opposed to of) reli- ould not be honored-she took the to the Supreme Court. Through tions, the now-famous Murray vs. t decision separating religion, and pools was handed down.-s 4W APPEARS that many good istians were reluctant to abide by uling. Whether they realized the# H. NEIL BERKSON. Editor TH WINTER - EDWARD ERSTEIN ging Editor Editorial Director IRTZMAN ...........Personnel Directort L SATTINGER .... Associate Managing Editor |NNY ............ Assistant Managing Editor H BEATTIE.......Associate Editorial Director C LIND ......Assistant Editorial Director int Charge of the Magazine at the University a student must abide by rules set down by the Regents. But the dorm fee increase shows that the Re- gents' bylaw set no limits on what these rules can be. Unhampered by their .by- laws, the Regents can make any absurd demand a condition of attendance at the University-so long as that demand vio- lates no state or national law. In short, a University student must live, not under a government of laws, but under a govern- ment of men. This is not to say that the Regents have made tyrannical use of their poten- tially tyrannical powers they obviously have not. The point is that their powers sometimes are misused. If this were a government of laws, the objects of this misuse could rectify it through legal means. In a government of men, the only way to rectify a misuse of power-if argument and debate fail-is to muster even more power against it. THIS - albeit by a circuitous route - brings us back to the rent strike. The legal question in no way makes any less outrageous the way in which the fee hike was enacted. But the fact that the strike must be a power play rather than a legal maneuver does call for more radi- cal tactics: residents must neglect to pay, not merely the extra $34, but all their residence halls fees. This would quickly create a financial crisis - one which would have to be resolved by nego- tiation with the strike's leaders long be- fore the threat of withheld transcripts' could take effect. Such a strike, obviously, is a radical ac- tion, and one which may seem out of proportion to the injustice it protests. But small injustices are the blocks from which larger ones are built-and at some point men must draw a line and declare that one particular small injustice will not be tolerated. Perhaps this is the place to draw that line. -KENNETH WINTER Managing Editor dA rs Murray validity of the Court's decision is ques-. tionable how many of them began to re- instate the practice of religious educa- tion where it should have been all along -in the church and the home-is some- thing else again. The fact remains that Mrs. Murray and her family were imme- diately subjected to a barrage of crank calls and poison-pen letters-and all in the name of Jesus Christ. But one need not be surprised at the content of the letters and phone calls;- this was predictable enough. There were the usual number of misguided souls equating atheism and Communism, in spite of Mrs. Murray's statements de- nouncing Communism as "a bunch of baloney." There were the usual number of threats that Jesus Christ would "fix her" for all the nasty things she said. And, since. some good souls apparently realized that Mrs. Murray would not be particularly worried by threats from someone she considered nonexistent, ac- tual incidents of violence were carried out against her, her family and her property. At present Mrs. Murray is carrying on her fight from a Hawaii refuge, claiming that she feared for her life if she re- mained in Baltimore. ONE 'COULD ARGUE ad nauseam whether or not the Supreme Court should have delivered a ruling prohibiting mandatory (and only mandatory, all emotionalism notwithstanding) observ- ance of religious exercises in public. schools. In similar fashion one could ar- gue on and on whether or not any other given action of Mrs. Murray's is a good one. But the fact remains that there are far too many so-called Christians who are a disgrace to their religion as well as to society as a whole; and these persons are making their religion look bad and Mrs. Murray's cause look better with every move they make. It has become increasingly evident that a significant percentage of the peo- ple who call themselves Christians in this country have no more business walking the streets than they feel an atheist like -7 t p TODAY AND TOMORROW: Increasing Strength and Decreasing Power a r'r Y.. 7' ~I1, ~1 { s'4~ y C;& y C.S'i c- s Su h;lvVAe~g 'AND NOW WOULV YOU hr(RIE YOUR NOMf( OLICY Y) f. GOWATM?" - j By WALTER LIPPMANN THERE HAS BEEN some com- plaint from,. the Goldwater camp about the secretary of state and the secretary of i defense speaking out on the campaign is- sues. According to tradition they ought, it is said, to stand apart from the party conflict. There has indeed .been such a tradition. But it has been based on another tradition, which/ is that politics stops at the water's edge and that on the main lines of foreign policy and national de- fense the two parties are agreed. Since the convention at the Cow Palace, the Republican Party has been challenging the basic prin- ciples and objectives of American foreign and defense policy. -That being the case, the responsible - Cabinet officers have not only the right, but the duty, to explain and defend the policies of which they have the most detailed knowledge and for which, next to the Presi-. dent, they have the highest re- sponsibility.- FOR WORKING journalists, whose first concern is to find out what is going on, -these days are Slike trying to.read and understand a very difficult book in the midst of a crowd of people blowing horns and bangingon'tin pans. But we must try. What, for example, are we to make of the fact that with our present military power, which Secretary ofiDefense McNamara has been describing, we are not "winning" the war in South Viet Nam, we are in such trouble over Cyprus, we face the prospect of more trouble in the Congo, British Guiana is. a worry and Castro does not go away? The Goldwater answer to these questions is that all these troubles are being promoted and controlled from Moscow and Peking, and the troubles would cease if we had a President who had the nefve to use our immense nuclear power to command Moscow and Peking to cease and desist. - THIS SOUNDS simple and# - gutsy. But if the Communists did not cease and desist, the Hold- water strategy would force us to choose between admitting that we had been bluffing and accepting a war in which 100 million Ameri- cans, might be burned up. Either way, it would not be much of a victory, and the simple solu- tion, which has such incalculable risks, is really no solution at all.- The question remains: why, with all our military power, can we not make the outer world behave as we think it should? It throws, light on this question, I believe, to notice that the second superpower, namely the Soviet Union with its formidable nuclear arsenal and its immense army, is also finding that it cannot make all its wishes pre- vail. The latest evidence of this is that the' Soviet Union, which stretches across Northern Asia to the Pacific, finds itself blackballed as a member - of the Afro-Asian group of Communist parties. This is as if the United States were ex- cluded from the organization of American States. ", * * IF WE LOOK around some more, we see that the other great powers -Britain, France, Italy, Germany and Japan-are also finding that their military superiority is ob- vious. The advanced nations of the world seem 'to be in the grip of a paradox: though their military power increases, their political power in large areas of the world diminishes. This paradox can, I believe, be explained. While the great powers have been making themselves in- finitely stronger, the weak peoples have invented and are perfecting a method of warfare which en- ables them to elude and circum- vent 'thegreat warfare of the great powers. The weapons of the weak may be the nonviolent civil disobedience as Gandhi used it in India, or it may be violent as Mao practiced it in China and as General Giap now practices it in Indo-China. The point is that modern weapons, convet ional or nuclear, cannot find targets to hit which will de- feat the guerrilla warfare of the weak. THE ONLY WAY to defeat the guerrilla is to put much larger numbers of men on/the ground, in the jungles and in' the swamps, on the plains and in the moun- tains. As against Africans and Asians, white men cannot win such wars. Whatis more, white men, including the Russians, will not mobilize the large enough masses of men required for this kind of warfare. The experience of the British and the French, the Belgains and the Dutch is that guerilla warfare in Africa and Asia can have no victorious mili- tary solution. The plain fact is that the sup- pression of guerrilla warfare is primarily and predominantly a job for the infantry and not for the airmen. The essence of Gold- water's military strategy is the illusion of a major general in the Air Force that wars can be won by bombing, that the short and simple way to victory is not through the mud and the jungle, but by air. The Navy and the Army do not share this illusion. (c) 1964, The Washington Post Co. 4 ~1 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: USSPA's Legislative Errors To the Editor: T HE TROUBLE with legislation of the recently - completed United States. Student Press As- sociation congress is its superficial nature. Kenneth Winter and De- borah Beattie in their scathing account of the proceedings there have mislaid the emphasis on the causes of USSPA's errors. As Winter and Miss Beattie amply point out,. the legislaticin was not well thought through. All delegates had essentially the same set of assumptions and the same goals. They were ill-prepared to deal with such complex matters as a code of ethics in five days and were rush when they did. Thus the delegates chose pious plati- tudes and ignored sticky ques- tions. The Code of Ethics-was the most important document the conven- tion produced. At the same time, its history and wording is sym- bolic of the problems of USSPA's other legislation. *, * * THE PROBLEM with the Code of Ethics is that it is superficial. A code of ethics has to rise above the practical matter of being en- forcable. It has to set a standard to which the student editor, the university administration and the general public can aspire, even if it is partially unreachable now. The professional press recog- nizes this problem. The American Society of Newspaper Editors in its Canons of Journalism-the basic code of ethics for the press, professional and student alike- declares: Lacking authority to enforce the student press. It must con- vince the student press, univer- sity administrators and the gen- eral public to adhere to it. The first' task calls for setting high-minded goals. The second demands that practical realities. be understood. By failing to de- lineate precisely the first, the US- SPA code runs into to trouble try- ing to do the second. To impress university admin- istrators and the general public, the code must account for their interests. It must build in stan- dards that protect their legitimate concern about responsibility, fair play and extensive coverage so that they will be. mollified when the code demando hands off the student press' operations. BUT THE CODE is cliche-ridden and papers over some basic ques- tions. The second paragraph of the freedoms section reads: "The stu- dent press must be free of all forms of external interference de- signed to regulate its content." This statement would be clear .if the .student newspaper took full legal, financial and public-opinion responsibility for what it does. But it does not. The average college or university is the paper's publisher and guardian and is often con- sidered by the public to reflect the viewpoint of the university. Furthermore, there are two forms of the student press where external regulation is implicit. One' is papers at religious colleges and universities where participation on such a university-sponsored pub- encourage more freedom of ex- pression in them. THIS SECTION of the code,-to- gether with the sections stating that a student press provides free- dom of expression and debate which is essential to a healthy academic community, should also incorporate a statement declaring that a student paper is useful only when responsible to the commun- ity and to itself. Once responsibility is declared, the prerequisites to an effective, free student press should be stated. The code goes over them in sum- mary fashion-too brief for use in later judgments. The borrowed Canadian University Press Code, while w.ordy, was explicit on: pos- sible infringements of freedom and made a much better instrument.to judge violations. * . ON THE WHOLE, the student press' responsibilities are well de- fined. But its injunction to re- port news is weak. The code de- clares: "It is the role of the stu- dent press to report the news and provide an outlet for campus opinion and creative effort." The Canons of Journalism says it much better and should I'have been adapted for the student press: The primary function of newspapers is to communicate to the human race what its mem- bers do, feel and think. Journal- ism, therefore, demands of its practicianers the widest range of intelligence, of knowledge, and of ,experience, as well as natural Plain Of jr Jars AA , . 2sf