Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MIcH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Trutb Will Prevai" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. NSA CONGRESS: De lega tes: Duty, Delinquency HURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: RONALD WILTON r Romney Power Play: No Place in Polities THE REPUBLICAN Party's fresh new image appears to be nothing more than a carbon copy of the Democratic Party's old faithful. Republican gubernatorial nominee George Romney has now been campaigning for many months - time enough, it would seem, for' his political character to come clear. It has.. Romney, a Republican Johnny-come-lately, has purported to be free of the domination of both big business and big labor. In fact, he is purported to be free of all outside influences, and will provide government only for "the citizens." ' Yet, his program, such as it can be dis- cerned, seems about as original as a new Volks- wagen. In fact, one can recall most of it as having emanated from incumbent Gov. Swain- son and his predecessor, G. Mennen Williams, long before Romney rambled onto the politi- cal scene. TAKE THE income tax; Romney claims that his Citizens for Michigan advocated the idea way back in 1960. But it can be recalled that Democratic proposed income tax bills pre-date Romney's proposal by at least two years. During the infamous cash crisis in 1959, Gov. Williams, a Democrat, proposed such a levy. Prior to that, income tax bills kicked around in Sen. Geerlings' taxation committee for a good many years. Romney's proposal is made all the more in- famous by his lack of participation, when the income tax faced the State Senate last spring. He claims now that the proposal did not meet his requirements for adequate fiscal reform, but it can also be recalled that moderate Republi- Challenge. IF YOU ARE a left-winger who thinks the House Committee on Un-American Activities has no business prying into your personal be- liefs, you get years in prison; but if you are a steel company who thinks Congress has no right to check its records, you go scot free. This is the paradox between the fate of the dissenting liberal and the rich steel company when they defy Congress.'One gets ground into the earth; the other is praised for its defiance. Last week, the Senate Judiciary Committee refused to recommend action against nine top steel executives and four steel companies when they refused to reveal confidential cost infor- mation needed in a subcommittee study of pos- sible administered pricing by the steel industry. Their refusal comes despite subcommittee as- surance that the figures will be kept secret. Instead committee members praised the steel executive for keeping mum, saying that the disclosure of information would result in ad- vantages to competitors. THIS SORT of justice has marked the current session of Congress. Special interest groups have reaped the legislative spoils while the av- erage citizen has lost ground. In large measure the New Frontier was designed to eliminate the inequities, yet in the current session of Congress, special interest favoritism has grown worse. Tax reform programs designed to' close tax loopholes were perverted by the Senate to cre- ate new gaps aiding special interest groups. Congress,- with hardly a dissent, gave away space communications to the already over- grown private communications industry. Meanwhile, Congress killed medical care for the aged, meaningful farm legislation, a de- partment of urban affairs for the problem- beset city dwellers and a host of other welfare measures that never saw the light of day in committee. PRESIDENT Kennedy's task in the fall elec- tion has been made clear by this and other incidents. If the New Frontier is to have any neaning, then efforts to remove anti-Frontier Congressmen must be made. These legislators, members of both parties, have had the neces- sary strength all session Ito frustrate Kennedy domestic legislation. This is the challenge of the 1962 election campaign-it's time to "get the country moving again" with more pro-public members of Con- gress. Otherwise ,the spectacle of special in- terest favoritism - like the support for de- fiant steel companies - will continue and grow. --P. SUTIN 0 t Da Editorial Staff MICHAEL OLINICK, Editor JUDITH OPPENHEIM MICHAEL HARRAH Editorial Director City Editor JUDITH BLEIER ............... Associate City Editor FRED RUSSELL KRAMER .. Assoc. Editorial Director CYNTHIA NEU.......... ...... Co-Magazine Editor HARRY PERLSTADT ............Co-Magazine Editor CAROLINE DOW...............Personnel Director TOM WEB BER................. .. ..Sports Editor DAVE ANDREWS...........Associate Sports Editor JAN WINKLEMAN..........Associate Sports Editor Business Staff cans were whistling a different tune on the Senate floor. Sen. Stanley G. Thayer of Ann Arbor even boasted on the Senate floor that "George Rom- ney called me to congratulate me on my work in behalf of this tax." ROMNEY also calls for a bureau of commerce, to lure industry to the state. He seems to forget that his own party has consistently re- jected the plan as proposed by Swainson. He also proposes a job retraining program, which is already in operation. He also pirated Gov. Swainson's suggestion to appropriate large sums of money to advertise Michigan. And last but not least, Romney claimed that if Republicans retained admitted Bircher Rich- ard Durant in Detroit's 14th District GOP or- ganization, "they will repudiate me." Durant was elected. Therefore Romney must have been repudiated. But according to George it was but "an act of duplicity." THIS ALL points to the conclusion that Rom- ney really hasn't the backing of his own party. Clearly he was foisted upon the GOP rank-and-file by the few kingmakers who dom- inate the Republican State Central Committee. His programs certainly do not represent the feelings of the majority of Republicans in Michigan. A case in point: At the state convention in August, Romney loudly denounced the name- less extremist organizations which "have at- tached themselves to the Republican Party." He was audibly booed by many delegates, their voices rising over and above the Romney cabal which had been packed into the hall to demon- strate in his behalf. While the dissenting delegates did not ap- prove of the John. Birch Society in all cases, they were reluctant to go on record as re- pudiating anything with which they had no visible connection. It was simply bad politics to alienate potential votes by connecting the party in the public mind with the Birch Society. In a country where there are only two ma- jor political parties, the delegates were loathe to cut anyone off from free political expression. ROMNEY'S insecurity as party leader is vivid- ly illustrated by his call for legislation al- lowing a state political leader to remove such local party people as might not concur with the state position. This would make Romney the unchallengeable dictator of a Republican Party which heretofore embraced comfortably many divergent trains of political thought, and open the way for political tyranny. Romney's call for leadership is embarrassing- ly contradicted by his own position within his party and his own actions. Leadership, he says, is 99 per cent preparation meeting opportunity. The opportunity was there last spring when the income tax was under consideration. Where was the preparation. The opportunity still remains, for the Re- publican-dominated Legislature is still in ses- sion. Why doesn't Romney get after them to pass his program? It is both shoddy and sad that Romney offers as an excuse that "I cannot do, as a private citizen what my opponent could not do as governor." If he truly Is the leader of the Re- publican Party, why doesn't he prove it? BUT THERE is one aspect of George Romney which is really frightening. At moments, he can bear all the earmarks of a tyrant. At the state convention, he suppressed an attempt by the Fourth Congressional District to include an amendment in the GOP platform. It would have demanded a referendum before the state could levy any income tax upon the people. And while this proposal might not necessarily weaken Romney's position, it apparently would compromise it, for he refused even to let the matter be introduced from the floor. What does he fear? Is he afraid the proposal would have passed? The only conclusion can be that Romney will not stand for any dis- obedience to George Romney. He wants to run the Republican Party and the State of Michigan as he may have run American Motors - with an iron hand. But the difference is that the Republicans and Michigan citizens do not work for George Rom- ney. He works for them. In a corporation one can cite a unified goal for diverse groups - profit; but rio such unified goal exists for Michigan-except in platitudes. He cannot crush anyone simply because he stands in his way. Real and basic differences exist among dissident state political groups, and they must all be respected, not obliterated. ROMNEY'S call for unity - like that which he achieved at American Motors - is false and superficial when applied to Michigan. Here there is no ultimate goal as tangible and simple as profit. Neither Romney nor anyone else has the right to channel Michigan's citizens toward any single objective to the exclusion of all oth- ers. He cannot forget the basic political rights of the constitution, which predicate the exist- ence of freedom upon the right to dissent. If George Romney's pattern of leadership within the Republican Party can be used as a -n wa hp- P. - 4 - P. rnt-,4 m_ 1-. h (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the sec- ond of two articles analyzing the 25th National Student Congress and the work of its delegates.) By MICHAEL 'OLINICK Editor THE SAME factors which keep Student Government Council from achieving significant gains on the home front affected Coun- cil members' work at the 15th Na- tional Student Congress held at the Ohio State University last month. Fortified by a sympathetic poli- tical atmosphere and unhampered by the obligations of the curricu- lum, the liberal bloc delegates em- braced late night caucuses and plenary floor strategems, running off into a dozen different direc- tions at the same time. SGC liber- als, serving as NSA delegates, did manage to get some basic legisla- tion passed, but much of it was hastily written and confusedly worded - the main problem with most of NSA legislation and much of SGC's. Council conservatives-or 'mod- erates' as they prefer to be smeared-never achieved real en- thusiasm about the Congress and its doings, mainly because they spent so little time in Columbus. The chunks of time they allotted to the Congress were bifurcated between the plenary floor and the North Heidelberg Inn. * * * - A SMALL attempt to unite con- servative and moderate bedfellows into a discussion and action group petered out when the ugly head of John Birch reared itself. Council Chairman Steve Stockmeyer and Michigan Union President Robert Finke were leaders in the estab- lishment of the Conservative Con- ference, but dropped out when more extreme right wing views threatened to snuff out the candle of their views. The withdrawal from the con- servative group came over a mix- up of whether or not some extreme literature would be distributed against the wishes of the more moderate members. Finke tried to forge a coalition of Big Ten student body presidents (principally with OSU's president) but met with only minor success. *~ * * AS A MEMBER of the National Student Association, SGC repre- sents 26,000 enrollees and was thus entitled to send eight delegates and eight alternates to the con- gress. A number of official and un- official observers tagged along, boosting the total number of Uni- versity students to about two dozen, as many as any other col- lege present. Stockmeyer, august leader of the delegation, found his outside poli- tical demands more important than his duties as a representative of University students. He left in the middle of the Congress to play with Romney at the GOP conven- tion, returned to Columbus and then ducked back into Detroit for a campaign foray while the Con- gress was conducting crucial busi- ness. The Council's number two man, Executive Vic'e-President Richard G'Sell was sailing with the Navy while other delegates attended seminars to inform themselves on the background of major issues and participated in legislative committee sessions in which the actual resolutions were framed. He arrived in the nick of time for the final plenary sessions where he cast his vote with gay abandon. The Navy unfortunately did not tell G'Sell in May that he might be on the seas in late August. * * * ADMINISTRATIVE Vice-Presi- dent Kenneth Miller had not shaken all his sophomoric values before the start of the Congress. At times too frivolous and humor- ous to be a good delegate, Miller observed well and was full of many questions and concerns about the legislation, and should make an excellent delegate at the 16th Con- gress if he attends. C o u n c i 1 Treasurer Thomas Brown did a more competent job getting money for the delegates to go to the Congress than in get- ting himself there. Tied up with a summer job, Brown managed to attend only half the Congress. He arrived late and left early. When he went home the final time, Brown left a list behind him of how he wanted his vote cast on the first thirty or so items of policy up for decision by the con- gress. Most of these resolutions had not been mimeographed for general distribution and Brown's yes or no indications could only have been based on the titles of the motions, not their content. He also indicated his preference for officer elections. * * * BROWN'S delegate card fell to alternate delegate Margaret Skiles, president of the Women's League who found herself in disagreement with many of Brown's suggested votes. The delegation reached an informal consensus based on a rul- ing by NSA National Affairs Vice- President Paul Potter that Brown was entitled to cast hishvote only if he were present and aware of the resolutions and the debate they provoked; he could not bind an al- ternate to vote in any particular way. Miss Skiles' decision to cast the vote as she saw fit broke the Uni- versity's four-to-four deadlock. The SGC delegation had been carefully selected to insure that the left-right split that dominates the "Wednesday night fights" would continue 210 miles south. With officers Stockmeyer, G'Sell and Brown, Finke rounded out the list of moderate delegates. He at- tended all the plenary sessions, quietly casting his votes on all the major items of business. Finke ex- pressed his opposition to most of the legislation to the other dele- gates seated at his table, but chose not to participate in plenary floor debate or take a serious hand in resolution writing. Finke (the only ex-officio SGC member appointed as a full dele- gate) expressed his philosophy in seminars and subcommittees and, seriously undertook to investigate the credentials and ideas of some of the officer candidates. He agreed 'in principle' to most of the resolutions and basic policy dec- larations, but found minor points or phrasing of certain paragraphs just too upsetting to give final sup- through the vote. *k *M * ABRAMS authored an omnibus bill on civil rights in the north, contributed to a resolution on the role of the federal government in civil rights and took part in the debate on the constitutionality of a mandate on the House Commit- tee on Un-American Activities. His general effectiveness as dele- gate was weakened by a lack of* tactful debating. Many who op- posed his views were grated by Abrahms' method of argument and 'dismissed him without care- ful consideration of his words. Mary Beth Norton was one of the delegation's stars. An alternate who found herself casting votes whenever Jeffrey or Ross were ab- sent, she chose to limit her scope and concentrate her resources. A significant contributor to the framing of a long-needed basic policy declaration on substantive and procedural due process on the campus, Miss Norton guided this bit of legislation through subcom- mittee, committee and plenary de- 0 0 o x.ci 0g. 0 0' C 0I c CD 0 n 0 *;1 cD Stockmeyer Y N N N N IN G'Sell Y N N N N N N Miller NI A Y Y A Y Y Brown N A N A f Ross N Y Y Y Jeffrey Y Y Y Y Y Finke Y N N N N Ab N Abrams N Y Y Y Y Y Y McMillan Y* N$ Norton No) Y()I Yt Yt Olinick Yt Skiles I II Y* jY* C 0' H CD ci, Key: Y-Yes N-No A-Absent *-Voted for Brown f-Voted for Ross O-Voted for Jeffrey Ab-Abstain $-Voted for Stckmyr bate to a highly successful con- clusion. Considering her lack of NSA experience, this was quite an accomplishment. * * * PANHELLENIC Associa- tion President Ann McMillan skipped a weekend of the Congress to attend the Republican state con- vention in Michigan. She played a generally passive role at the Congress, although she did exam- ine the literature and opinions of several groups and participated in a rather drab discussion of fra- ternities, sororities and in loco parentis. Interfraternity Council presi- dent John Meyerholz, another al- ternate, left the Congress about midway through the program. Miss Skiles faced a rather tough moral question when Brown left the Congress with instructions for her to vote in certain ways on sev- eral resolutions. Challenged by this problem and other ticklish questions of academic freedom and paternalism, Miss S k i1 e s should come back to Council meet- ings this fall with a more sdphis- ticated and independent approach to issues. * * * DAILY EDITOR Michael Olin- ick did not campaign actively for any issue except the violations of the student press issue which was referred to the.NEC by a handful of delegates present on the floor at the time. During the elections he held Brown's card but did not follow Brown's specific recommen- dations for officers. Olinick was active in sub-committee, but most- ly he sat and absorbed all. But then Olinick had helped re- vamp the Student Editorial Affairs Conference into the new Student Press Association and was a force behind the creation of the colle- giate press service. He also served on a panel which debated the stu- dent government-student news- paper issue and made more ene- mies in one hour than anyone at the Congress. Non-Council m e m b e r s who served as alternates Include d Frank Heselton, the new NSA co- ordinator, Ralph Kaplan, chairman of SGC's Committee on the Uni- versity and William Gleason, a former SGC member and now on the Council's NSA committee. * * * HESELTON concentrated his main efforts on the NSA Coordina- tors Conference which preceded the actual congress. He compiled the voting record printed here and was alert for any suggestions on how to implement NSA programs in Ann Arbor. Author of a resolution on "cam- pus values" which was defeated on the plenary floor, Kaplan also was concerned with a resolution on education courses for non-educa- tion majors. Serving as an observer, Gleason disappeared midway through the Congress. AS MEMBERS of the two con- flicting Council blocs, delegates from the University performed with sickening consistency. The voting record on seven major pieces of legislation considered by the Congress reveals this horror graphically. S t o k m e y e r, G'Sell, Brown, Finke and Miss McMillan recorded nothing but Nay votes except for a motion which challenged the con- stitutionality of a program man- date related to the House Commit- tee on Un-American Activities. Delegates were asked, "Do you be- lieve that the proposed mandate is unconstitutional" on the basis of Article X of NSA's constitution. Article X states that "No body acting on behalf of USNSA shall participate in sectarian religious activities or partisan political ac- tivities; they shall not take part in activity which doesnot affect stu- dents in their role as students. No substantial part of the activities of the national and regional bodies of USNSA shall be devoted to car- rying on propaganda or otherwise attempting to influence legisla- tion." TIS constitutional question was settled three years ago in a marathon 12-hour debate on whether or not the 13th NSC should adopt anmotion on nuclear disarmament. It was hammered shut at the 1960 Congress on the question of NSA support for the Southern sit-ins and the passage of a basic policy declaration on "The Student and the Total Com- munity." The conservatives rised it again several times during the Congress, but were soundly re- pulsed each time. The constitutionality of the HUAC mandate was upheld, al- though the petition idea was scrapped for fear that it would not be successful and thus injure NSA's prestige. The only break in consistency came when Finke abstained on the nuclear testing motion which con- demned all nations which have ex- ploded or contemplate testing of nuclear weapon devices. He said he agreed "in principle" with the resolution, but felt that NSA had no business taking formal action on such a subject. Ross, Miss Jeffrey, Abrams, Miss Norton, Miss Skiles and Olinick also voted a straight ticket. In other votes not presented here, the consistency continued ex- cept on one or two constitutional amendments. BRIEFLY the issugs reported in the voting record are these: Constitutionality of HUAC Man- date - this was an additioi to NSA's resolution calling for the abolition of HUAC. It asked that the national staff initiate a peti- tion to Congress embodying the gist of the NSA resolution. Due Process - A basic policy declaration (standing and funda- mental policy needing two-thirds vote for adoption or alteration) outlining minimum guarantees for justice in student disciplinary cases. Higher Education and the Cold War - a basic policy declaration decrying the functional link be- tween East-West tensions and their debilitating effect on univer- ca ml C 0. p Through Student Values," this proposed Basic Policy Declaration failed toachieve the necessary two-thirds vote on the plenary floor. It stressed the notion that the academic program must de- velop the civic responsibility as an "intellectual proposition." Nuclear Testing - Condemned tests by Russia, the United States and other powers. Cunningham Amendment-This motion called for the defeat of an amendment to the Postal Revision Act of 1961 which would prohibit the dissemination of mail matter classified as Communist political propaganda. * * * COUNCIL members failed at the start to realize the responsibilities of assuming delegate status to the Congress. They should have pledged in the spring that as a start they would attend the whole Congress or accepted a post as al- ternate or observer. Several Coun- cil members were willing to give up summer employment to attend the sessions at Ohio State. There were alternates in attend- ance who lost money to attend the Congress but who gained added knowledge through the seminars and committee sessions which would have made them more in- telligent voters. Those with less experience could have selected one or more issues or aspects of the association for concentrated study and work as Miss Norton did. Too many dis- played the apathetic approach which characterizes their work for SGC. DELEGATES should have spent the time in Columbus as full par- ticipants in Congress activities: observing, thinking, criticizing, proposing ideas. They should be ready to bring back to this campus what they learned at the Congress; make rele- vant to constituents here the ac- tivities of NSA and translate is- sues and concerns into concrete programs for the Council to con- sider. What one can realistically ex- pect from the Council members can be guaged from their perform- ance with NSA. The ones with a firm conviction in student govern- ment will be active in framing legislation and earnest in debate and study. They suffer a serious lack, however. They're not a ma- jority. PREVIEW: Zola's Gervaise' THE CINEMA Guild probably won't show a finer movie this year than the one playing tonight and tomorrow night, Emile Zola's "Gervaise." Adapted from Zola's "The Dram Shop," and winner of various international film prizes, it is most deserving of praise for the acting of Maria Schell. Rene Clement directs a superb cast in- cluding Francois Perier and Ar- mand Mestral. In this chronicle of a Parisian girl's life, Miss Schell falls from a lover, to a husband, to a remote love, and finally to sunken despair. Her Gervaise grows older, broken, and finally becomes oblivious to the world and the first chance to begin a life free from a haunting past. Symbolically, her smile, so free and bright, leaves her at the end along with her will to survive. "GERVAISE" is something like a concerto, Miss Schell the soloist, always being heard, and Clement the conductor of the orchestra giving her a background to play against. At Gervaise's birthday party, Clement's fine work is most fully evident. Those of the laboring class are in wonderful contrast to a little better off and thus hautier couple, who sit in quiet deference as the birthday goose is brought in to a chorus of ooohs and ahhhs. And Gervaise glows so, that her smile seems to wind entirely around her face. A brilliant scene brought off by Clement is the washing-house scene at the beginning of the movie. The women, true to their universal nature, gather and gos- sip, wash and talk. They step over a river of soapy water as daintily as possible in their long dresses. They scrub their clothes in many aisles, lined up like so many pigs at their feeding but continually raising their heads, questioning and listening. * * * WHEN Gervaise finds out that her love has left her for a woman across the street, she attacks the closest thing to this woman's life, her sister. Buckets of water fly, and the viewer can't decide wheth- er to cry for Gervaise or laugh at the ludicrous way the women fight and sprawl in the soapy water and "School Days, School Days Dear Old White Mob Rule Days' I -J - r(Kt