Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN _ UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Wher Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Trutb Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. "Best Little Old Tool On The Market" 'LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Requests Vigil SFor Fair Housing. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: GERALD STORCH i.... Conservation Hopes Lost In Congress Wilderness ON TUESDAY of last week the long-delayed, much-discussed Wilderness Bill (HR 776) finally reached the floor of the House of Rep- resentatives and died there. The Wilderness Bill, designed to protect wil- derness areas from being ravaged by mining, petroleum, lumber, and other concerns, stirred up a great deal of controversy between these interests and the conservation leaders who fought so strenuously for its passage. The sad fact of the matter, however, is that by allow- ing the bill to die, its supporters may well have done more good than harm for the cause of conservation in the long run. To understand this seemingly heretic pro- nouncement from one who has always been in favor of any effective means of conserving our nation's resources, it is necessary to review the events leading up to Tuesday's action in the House. HE WILDERNESS Bill was introduced in the Senate on Jan. 5, 1961 by Clinton P. Anderson (D-N.M.). As set forth in the bill itself (S 174), its aim was "to establish a Na- tional Wilderness Preservation System for the permanent good of the whole people, and for other purposes." In effect, it was an act which would protect over six million acres of wilder- ness (defined in the act partially as "an 6rea where the earth and its community are un- trammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain") against the many concerns which might otherwise despoil and destroy it. The bill would recognize as part of this sys- tem areas which are already reserved, without alteration of their purpose or administration. Further acts of Congress could add more acre- age to the system - acreage which might oth- erwise be taken over by other interests. As such, the bill passed the Senate by a vote of 78-8, despite, objections by Barry Goldwater (R- Ariz.), J. J. Hickey (D-Wyo.) and others. IF THIS same measure had then gone to the House, no problem would have arisen for those who favored its passage. But politics is rarely that simple. The House had its own The Crowd OVERCROWDED classrooms are becoming a deplorable reality in American education, But even more deplorable is a class that can't take all the students signed up for it. History 561, "The Emergence of Modern America," is a good example of the problem facing educators and legislators. It was sched- uled to meet and has been meeting in room 2235 of Angell Hall. The room is large but not large enough, and even with every seat filled' it has been necessary for nearly two dozen students to stand or sit on the floor. This makes note-taking hard at best and impossible at worst, and hinders the education process in other ways too. The instructor, Prof. Sidney Fine, has tried to get a larger place for the class to meet, but no such place is available. As a result, he has had to °ask auditors, special students and a sophomore to drop the class. He regrets having to do this, and the students who will not be able to attend his lectures regret missing them. THE MOST immediate solution would be to schedule history 561 in a larger room - perhaps one of the auditoriums - next year. But this won't solve the long range problem of increasing overcrowding, for if history 561 is given a larger room next year, some other large class may be denied it. Overcrowding should not be solved by a stricter limitation on enrollment in the Univer- sity or its classes, because then more students would be denied a good education. Dividing advanced classes into sections would not solve the problem of space. The best answer lies in further expansion of University facilities, and this can be made possible only with more money - from stu- dents, from alumni and other contributors, and from the state Legislature. -ROBERT SELWA bill, which had been introduced by John P. Saylor (R-Pa.). This bill was not dissimilar to the Senate bill, and conservationists gener- ally favored both measures. In the House, however, the Saylor bill was referred to the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, headed by Wayne Aspinall (D-Col.), and then to a public subcommittee headed by Gracie Pfost (D-Ida.), on which Aspinall also served. Here it was as brutally mutilated as any bill could be. The subcommittee saw fit to strike out most of Saylor's bill (in fact, every word following the enacting clause) and ring in a "substi- tute proposal" of their own, in which any re- semblance to the original legislation was pure- ly coincidental. WHETHER IT was "purely coincidental" as well that the majority of the members of the subcommittee were from western states where most of the wilderness acreage would be located remains to be seen. At any rate, the members of the subcommittee put their heads together and came up with nothing less than the. very sort of "crippling amendment" warned against and feared by the sponsors of the original Senate bill. AS FINALLY brought to the floor of tIe House, the bill would have hampered desig- nation not only of future additions to the system, but even of areas now treated as wil- derness. Whereas the original idea had been to preserve wilderness areas forever, the cur- rent act, if passed, would have required these areas to run a gauntlet of opponents every 25 years. This idea was the brainchild of oppon- ents to wilderness legislation. This part of the Aspinall-Pfost measure is only one indica- tion that said bill served the interests of lumber and mining interests more than conservation. The end result is that when the bill finally drawn up by the sub-committee came to the floor of the House as HR 776, it had become practically an anti-wilderness bill rather than a wilderness bill. So conservation-minded con- gressmen had two choices open to them. They could vote against Aspinall's legislation as it stood (for the interior committee had asked to bring the bill to the floor of the House under suspension of rules, thus preventing any amendments from restoring the bill to its for- mer value.) Or they could vote for the Wilder- ness Bill and cause the conservation program actually to suffer an eventual setback. As it turned out, the congressmen were saved the problem of resolving this dichotomy; for Aspinall, saying he was "not inclined to get the bill involved in ... emotionalism," appar- ently decided to let the entire matter drop - until next year and a new session of Congress. At that time, Aspinall forecast, a bill similar to HR 776 would be adopted by the House. WHAT DOES this all mean to us who are interested in saving a small part of our wilderness areas for future generations? Ob- viously, the most important direct result of Tuesday's session is that we still do not have the legislation we need to protect our van- ishing wilderness. But it also means that even if the bill comes up again a year from now, and even if the House passes it, the cause of conservation will be no better off - in fact, it will undoubtedly be worse off - than it is now, unless some- thing is done. This "something" should take the form of the following plan of action: REWRITE HR 776 to serve the needs of con- servation, not those of opposing interests sudh as mining and lumbering industries. Revise the House subcommittee so that it is no longer stacked in favor of western states whose representatives (Aspinall, et al) appar- ently feel a greater duty to their constituents than to the cause at hand.) Unless drastic steps are taken before Aspinall and company bring their ersatz wilderness bill to the floor of the House again, we may awaken to find our national heritage dwindling steadily instead of growing as a result of the passage of biased and unfair legislation. -STEVEN HALLER UNDERSCORE: The Press Roadblock By PHILIP SUTIN ONE OF THE maior stumbling blocks to a rational, effective United States foreign policy is the American press. Still largely shackled by provincialism, Amer- ican newspapers, the wire services that feed them and news maga- zines have provided the American public a sensational, narrow and often biased view of world events. This roadblock has rarely been more visible than in recent weeks when the American printed media have been trumpeting the Berlin and Cuban crises. They have lift- ed them out of context, created, in part, a fear hysteria and have made sane foreign policy difficult. Most segments of the American press played the recent Berlin riot and wall incidents without really evaluating them. Few news media reflected upon the nature of the rioters. Did these people represent the sentiment of Berlin or were they hooligans looking for a way to vent their energy? Would the world be driven into severe crisis on account of several hundred demonstrators - a small part of the Berlin population-who stoned Soviet buses and yelled cat-calls at the wall. The Nation, among sev- eral magazines raised these sorts of questions; Inez Robb stated strong reservations, declaring "I do not want to go to war over the Russian war memorial." * * * HOWEVER, the immediate crisis over Berlin has passed, and a more immediate one, centered on near- by Cuba, has taken its place. As Cuba is closer to home, the Amer- ican coverage has been more in- tense and hysterical. The press has been helped in this venture by headline-hunting senators and, inadvertantly, Pres- ident John F. Kennedy, who asked for stand-by authority to call up 150,000 reservists and extend the. tour of duty for servicemen with vital skills. Fueled by Kennedy's request, several senators, notably Senators Kenneth Keating (R-NY) and George Smathers (D-Fla), have sought to dramatize the situation. The wire services faithfully re- ported them and in fact gave them more than the usual amount of attention. Newspapers, looking for the startling, played up these charges. The American people have been whipped into a frenzy and the Kennedy Administration has tried to apply the brakes, but only partially succeeded. * * * THE NEWS magazines have supplemented the "newspapers by making cases for invading Cuba. Time Magazine ran a cover story on the Monroe Doctrine, neglecting to mention its double-edged ef- fects. United States News and World Consistenllcy Report ran a blueprint for war, entitled "To Win in Cuba-Why It's a Major Job Now" by Gen. Max. S. Johnson (ret.) In detail he describes the need for six infantry divisions, a naval blockade, a reserve callup and un- friendly world opinion. He esti- mates that the job would take from three weeks to three months but does not predict casualties. It all looks like a lark and a large segment of the public is clamor- ing for this kind of action. * * * ALL THIS makes the adminis- tration's task more difficult. Amer- ican hysteria narrows the amount of alternative courses of action available to the President and State Department. The adminis- tration has difficulty defeating rash proposals such as the pro- posed amendment to the Cuba declaration which would forbid American aid to any nation whose ships the Russians had chartered to ferry their supplies to Cuba. Therpress-stirred hysteria makes it difficult to maintain the pa- tience necessary to implement the watchful-waiting the Kennedy Ad- ministration deems necessary to keep the United States out of trouble in Cuba. The press has come a long way since the first Cuban crisis in 1898. No longer do American pa- pers present the most lurid stories and pictures about alleged atroci- ties. The time has passed when newspapers beat the drums for war. * * * BUT THE press is far from so- phisticated about foreign affairs. It relies on American wire-serv- ices which still like to tag world leaders pro-U.S. or anti-U.S. when no black or white designation is possible. The services play up the sensation event, like the Berlins wall incidents, rather than present thoughtful interpretives. Most AP commentaries are very shallow and fail to consider all the factors or ramifications. Few papers avail themselves of' the sophisticated foreign services such as Reuters, a British news service, long reporting the news for a world-conscious people, the New York Times Service, provid- ing the most complete foreign cov- erage, or the Chicago Daily News service which has a long-standing reputation of excellence. ** * THE PRESS has made progress and will continue to do so as this age becomes more and more com- plex. Editors realize that sex and scandal no longer suffice as news fare and have put increasing em- phasis on national and interna- tional events. This trend is recog- nized in the schools and depart- ments of journalism which are setting stiffer educational re- quirements for their students and seeking to make a profession out of journalism. The time lag between today's journalism student and the need for serious, sober coverage of na- tional and international news still exists. As long as it functions and sensational reporting results in mass hysteria, effective United States foreign policy will be ex- tremely difficult. To the Editor: WHETHER the reader is a long- time resident or a new ar- rival in Ann Arbor, at some time he has to consider the choices of housing open to him. Then he be- comes aware how much depends on housing: privacy, safe play for children, school opportunities, the sense of decency that comes from clean, attractive surroundings. The Ann Arbor Area Fair Hous- ing Association, a voluntary group of citizens, concerns itself contin- uously with racial discrimination in housing, and on the basis of our experience we know that housing opportunities are unequal in Ann Arbor. We believe there are builders, realtors, and private owners who would like to sell and rent on a fair, open occupancy basis. But these people need the protection of the law just as others need a law to set a just standard of behavior under which to operate. "* r THE CITY Council of Ann Ar- bor is now considering such a fair housing law. A working meeting with the Human Relations Com- mission will be held on Monday evening. The Fair Housing Asso- ciation will hold a vigil that even- ing, a "Stand for Fair Housing Legislation," beginning at 7:00 p.m. at City Hall. We wish to ex- press our support of and concern for the fair housing legislation they will be considering. People who wish to join in some simple act for fair housing, who wish to join the vigil and give visible support to their convic- tions, are invited to call the Ann Arbor Area Fair Housing Associa- tion at NO 5-3445 or NO 2-6378. New students are welcome, too. You will be living in Ann Arbor for most of the next half-decade. You are part of this community; its problems will touch you, and you might help in their solution. -LaMar Miller, Chairman Ann Arbor Area Fair Housing Association Romney .. To the Editor: I AM A firm believer in editorial freedom. While I seldom agree with Daily editorials, I usually have no complaint other than a difference of opinion. However, there are two members of The Daily staff who are in the habit of writing misinformed, mis- leading, and just plain stupid edi- torials. These two are Mike Har- rah and Dave Marcus. If one is familiar with their political view- points, he surely finds them to be strange bedfellows. However, the boys decided to start the year off on the right track by co-authoring the editor- ial, "Romney Power Play,"- and in so-doing, disgraced The Daily with .the lowest possible journalistic tactics. * * * FIRST, Mike Harrah Is a Re- publican and to the best of my knowledge, he has always been one. However, Mike is a rural Re- publican, often referredrto asa "Neanderthal." In other words, Mike probably would like to see the repeal of the 16th Amendment to the Constitution, the repeal of the Sherman and NLRB Acts; etc. to infinity. For years, Mike and his neighbors ran the Republican par- ty in Michigan. For years, the Re- publican Party has lost elections. Now the Party has an outstand- ing candidate. But, he is from Detroit!! (One of them big city swindlers') And, he is not a reac- tionary!! In other words, when Romney wins in November, Mike and his "Neanderthals" will no longer hold Republican leadership, not because they are not wanted, but because they refuse to realize the simplest of political facts. Mike Harrah is the city editor of this newspaper. He has used this position to write an obnoxious editorial filled with falsehoods and misinterpretations. He has at- tempted to mislead the reader into believing that Republicans are not for Romney, when the fact is that Mr. Harrah has a personal grudge to bear. He is entitled to his opin- ions, but he should not be allowed to lower the standards of the Daily with his personal grudges. This is the lowest form of journalism. * * * SECONDLY, there is the fact that Dave Marcus co-authored this editorial. Dave is a Democrat, and his readers are well aware of it. Yet Mr. Marcus stoops to Harrah's standards, the standards of a turncoat. It is bad enough to read Dave's own editorials. Finally, I find it unnecessary to defend George Romney. His char- acter is the finest and his sincer- ity the deepest. He is a proven leader in business and government. He is against the Birch society and he is not afraid to make his opinion known. Regardless of the outcome of the election, Mr. Har- rah and his friends will no longer have much to say in Republican policy in Michigan. Perhaps, he will restrain himself in The Daily. Let us hope for both. Vunt Reuhlians Club Justify their petty, partisan, and usually unsupportable views. A good example appeared in Tuesday's Daily in an editorial purportedly presented to "analyze" the activities of the University's delegates to the 15th National Stu- dent Association. Let's look at a few samples: Michael Olinick says that SGC Conservatives never achieved "en- thusiasm" about the Congress be- cause they spent so little time in Columbus. Obviously he is assum- ing that anybody that attended the entire two-week indoctrination session would become enthusiastic. We would submit that one day would be enough for anyone, ex- cept those weak-minded individ- uals who sit back and enjoy hear- ing their views constantly rein- forced, to sum up the whole pre- staged affair as worthless. Olinick goes on to berate SGC President Steven Stockmeyer and other dele- gates for being irresponsible in that they missed parts of the Con- gress. While Olinick takes great pains in praising himself and Frank Heselton for their work in pre-Congress meetings, he fails to point out Stockmeyer's leadership role and contributions to the Stu- dent Body President's Conference which took place before The Daily's monitoring committee ar- rived on the scene. Most of the delegates who left early or arrived late found their other commit- ments much more valuable to the University than playing around at NSA. THE ARTICLE attributes an al- leged abortive attempt at forging a coalition of Big Ten presidents to Bob Finke. The facts are that Finke never assumed this role, mainly because the group was al- ready formed and had met several times long before Finke arrived in Columbus and besides the group was successful. Evidently Olinick himself was not as observant as he expected his fellow delegates to be.t Olinick praises delegate Ken Miller for being concerned about legislation. The only concern Mil- ler showed was when he offered an amendment to a resolution. Miller later admitted that this material was prepared for him by someone else. Obviously Olinick's omniscieit judgement of Miller should have been very high be- cause he seemed most susceptible to the indoctrination and thus was enthusiastic about the Con- gress. Olinick's own analysis of him- self as a delegate is very thought- p r o v o k i n g. In part he says . mostly he sat and absorbed all." We seem to remember him doing quite a bit of sitting, but as to the absorbing he must be referring to the blond member of The Daily delegation that was constantly hanging on him during most of the sessions. * ** WE ARE NOT sure as to the reason for the initial omission of any analysis of delegates Ross and Jeffrey. However, the truth is, the Michigan delegation saw very little of Bob Ross during the Congress. He found it more important to deal for the power elite in the old smoke-filled-room tradition than to honor the Michigan delegation with his presence and counsel. Many times he faied to designate an alternate to cast his vote dur- ing the "crucial" sessions. As far as representing Michigan's 26,000 students is concerned, he might as well have disappeared like Bill Gleason. Bob Finke also reports that once again a Union president has had the honor of being misquoted and having his words twisted in The Daily. This time it concerned his stand at NSA on Nuclear Testing. Olinick seemed very proud of his little voting chart. However, like the rest of his copy, this too was filled with errors. TOM BROWN seems to remem- ber Margaret Skiles agreeing to cast his vote according to his wishes. Obviously swayed by the opinion and presence of an NSA officer and pressure from the Lib- eral delegates, Miss Skiles changed her mind without the courtesy of notifying Brown or abstaining from the vote. It seems that a staff continually expounding that students are re- sponsible, should consider prac- ticing some responsibility in their own back yard. However, to safe- guard the old campus tradition of Daily irresponsibility, this would be asking too much. Could it be that the Board in Control of Student Publications did not go far enough? -Steve Stockmeyer, '63 -Richard G'sell, '63 -Robert Finke, '63 -John Meyerholz, '63 -Tom Brown,-'63 Haste "HE instability of our laws is really an immense evil. I A I d AN AMERICAN MYTH: Michigan World Debut I On My Honor THE BOY Scouts of America, often referred to as "the patriotic training ground" and beloved of the American Legion, are now be- ing required to take a loyalty oath. San Francisco Boy Scouts are required to sign a loyalty oath in order to work as volun- teer orderlies in a mass polio innoculation next Sunday. The program, part of a civil defense exercise, comes under the California Editorial Staff MICHAEL OLINICK, Editor JUDITH OPPENHEIM MICHAEL HARRAH Editorial Director City Editor CAROLINE DOW............... Personnel Director *lT flfl fLT 1 TFlfl A ......,..riaf u.. B'A44iinr Levering Act which requires defense employees -to attest to their loyalty by signing an oath. This act is not only an insult to the organ- ization of the Boy Scouts, (which is organized to encourage citizenship), it is also redundant. THE BOY SCOUT oath reads "On my honor- I will do my best to do my duty. to God and my country, to help other people at all times, to keep myself physically strong, mentally awake and morally straight." Does this imply that the Boy Scout is "pre- pared" to sabotage the country's defense sys- tem? (Admittedly, he knows morse code and might send secret messages.) However, he has already pledged his allegiance to his coun- try. It is ridiculous to ask a Boy Scout if he is THIS SHOWING of "No Man Is an Island" is no less than the Michigan world premiere showing. Read the marquee. It's true. What it translates as, is that the world premiere was in Detroit Thursday night and the movie has been re- leased only to Michigan theatres so far. So much for the gala event. The movie opens with the same lines quoted in "For Whom the Bell Tolls" by Hemingway who got them from John Donne. Only this movie leaves out the part about the bells. The quote is issued forth while Jeffrey Hunter sits on a mountain in Guam. You'll recognize the shot from hundreds of American war movies. From the quote the movie goes on in a thoroughly predictable manner to restate and reaffirm a whole series of old and honored cliches. * * * THOSE OF you who missed last week's issue of G. I. Joe Comics or Jeffrey Hunter's last war movie (or maybe you just forgot to read "Battle Cry") need no longer fret down pat. He's chicken and gets killed when he tries to surrender. * * * MAYBE YOU prefer the native turncoat who helps the Japanese, or the little old lady who changes the name of her bar from "Little Chicago" to "Little Tokyo" but still swears like a loyal American. And of course there is a beautiful native girl for the hero to fall in love with. Like all the recent war movies this is based on a "true" story. This time it's the true story of George Tweed, USN, stationed on Guam December 7. You guess which year. The movie was written, directed and produced by John Monks Jr. and Richard Goldstone. The brightest thing that can be seen in the entire movie is the color photography. S* THE REST of it is rather dull and flat. Not only is it predictable but it is also a somewhat simple- minded parroting in plot, lines, direction, and acting. What more is there left to say? Right now this and John Glenn