Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNrVERSIrY 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 Truth Will Prevail"a, a Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: MALINDA BERRY "Fellow In Mississippi Is Determined To Enroll Here - Shall We Let Him In?" UNITED NATIONS UNIVERSITY: ACWR Sees UNESCO As Locus of Activity State of the 'U': A Lack of Vision FACULTY MEN claim you can tell a lot {about a university by examining its presi- dent. In Ann Arbor the state of the University and the image of its president were on view together Monday night: Harlan Hatcher told his faculty about the status of this institution of higher learning. The speech contained inadequate and po- tentially menacing definitions and analyses of the University's current position, the concept of academic freedom and the proper role of students. The University begins its 145th year, the president said, "in a little better position to do our work." The deans report enthusiasm and high morale. This is for good reason: students are being taxed an extra $2 million this year just to improve morale. Faculty pay raises were awarded over the summer on a merit basis. Those whose pay- checks would have faired better under an across-the-board hike either left the campus or resigned themselves to another year of waiting. The University administration, however, is laboring under a misconception about faculty morale-you can not simply buy it through higher salaries. When no raises come, the fact professors do not exit in masses is not at- tributable to what the administration terms "loyalty" to the University. The faculty does not feel any particular loyalty to the University,' but remains for a variety of other reasons: inertia, lighter class loads, friendship in the community, and the feeling that all universities would be as disillusioning as this one for a professor seeking a community of scholars. IN HIS PUBLIC ADDRESSES, the president seems overly impressed and unduly enamored of numbers. During the past two years, he has often spoken of the fact that the University's budget had passed the $100 million mark, as if this were some indication of institutional greatness. Perhaps this statistical materialistic approach is indicative of the administration's value system of ranking universities. This year, numbers came into play again, this time in a discussion of University size. Current student enrollment is 26,078, a record high. In response to a request by the Senate Ad- visory Committee, President Hatcher discussed the University's basic policy on size: we will continue "to grow steadily, in a controlled manner so that there will be no decrement in the quality of the University's efforts." A fine-sounding statement, even though it does not reveal who made this decision or that there are those in the University who believe that it is already too big. Nor does it cover up the criticism that the University has suf- fered a decline in quality during the past few years as the stack of class election cards has grown. MANY ADVANCES in University quality have been made. Several new area studies pro- grams and centers have been established (though 'largely by federal research dollars which Hatcher would rather not have to accept.). Congratulations are always in order for the University's pioneer work in communi- cations science and conflict resolution, its support of the top rated Survey Research Center and its construction of the Under- graduate Library. Overall, however, the University is slipping. The University of 'California at Berkeley has surpassed us as the nation's leading state tax-supported institution of higher education. Many programs, which demanded expansion, stagnated under austerity budgets. Actual cut- backs also make up a significent part of the picture. Graduate reading courses in foreign languages, for example, have been slashed and the libraries have not been able to purchase enough new books to keep pace with increased student demands and with the huge number of advances in all disciplines. Perhaps the prime example of how the Uni- versity has sacrificed quality for quantity is the literary college's decision to alter distribu- tion requirements beginning this fall. Mathe- matics courses no longer count toward the ful- fillment of any distribution requirement, mak- ing the math department the only one to attain this dubious honor. The faculty of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts took this action, not so much because they believed that mathematics had no role to play in a liberal education, but because the enrollment in mathematics courses had far outpassed the growth in the number of in- structors. Some way had to be found to dis- courage students from electing math courses. NO MATTER what the quality, the institu- tion's size is another problem. At least one University psychologist has discovered that the "bigness" of the University is responsible for the most serious morale problem among stu- dents. Communication within the faculty and student communities and between them has degenerated to a mediocre level and com- tors with the result that too many all- University policies are based on administrative feasibility and not educational value. What is the overall result of all these quan- titaive advances and qualitative retreats? The president began his address by stressing that the society of the United States has reached an unprecedented level of abundance and worldly goods, but that one of the "major paradoxes of our time" is the failure of abun- dance to produce "happiness and satisfaction of the spirit." Despite the attempts of the state legislators, the University-with its $100 million budget and 26,000 students-is re- ceiving some share of the general affluence. Does this paradox of society exist on this campus? Presiden1t Hatcher presented to the faculty no analysis of the degree of happiness and satisfaction of spirit University students and teachers are feeling. His remarks indicate that he believes that the abundance of the University has not yielded a very happy or satisfied student or professor and with this I agree. In many ways, the student and his teacher are less satisfied. While able to spot the problem, the president made no attempt to offer an answer to the paradox. IN THE SECOND major part of his speech, Hatcher discussed freedom and the need to honor the University as a place of independent inquiry. In glowing prose, he asserted that the University must be "a bright and shining symbol and example of the freedom of the mind and spirit to pursue knowledge and understanding and wisdom . . ." Yet, under his presidency, this university has displayed an often-tarnished symbol. The University dismissed academically qual- ified professors because they' refused to co- operate with House Committee on Un-American Activities investigations, precipitating a cen- sure from the American Association of Uni- versity Professors. The University's response to the loyalty oath and disclaimer affidavit of the National Defense Education Act came too late and was too timid. The University's efforts to combat discrimination in employment, hous- ing and scholarships have been marked by a minimum of vigor and militancy. In his speech, the president claimed that "the press must be free for reporting and editorial comment" although he has made no attempt to increase the freedom of The Daily and indeed opposes moves to remove the restrictions on its editorial comment. "Freedom is preserved not only by philo- sophical discussions but by the constant exercise of it," the president says he believes, but he defends a speaker policy more restrictive than the freedom of speech guarantee of the First Amendment. Hatcher, who personally opposed allowing Carl Braden and Frank Wil- kinson to speak on campus, now is disheartened by those who interpret the proposed Regents' bylaw as an obstruction to free inquiry. Hatcher asserted "the positive responsibility of the University in the complete intellectual growth of students." But he failed to inform the faculty about what has been happening with the Office of Student Affairs and how this fits into the satisfaction of the spirit and total development of University students. THE PRESIDENT'S CONCEPT of complete intellectual growth is, I think, narrower than the one held by most students. Speaking about the recent political actions of students, Hatcher seemed to display a genuine sym- pathy with students yearning to participate in the community and with their depression over the "troublesome sorrows" of our day. He urged students, however, to remain in the class- room until they received some career training and to forget about the protest rally, picket line and freedom ride. This aspect of the president's talk angered many students and for good reason. It prob- ably deserves little comment or rebutal but for the fact that it displays some of the at- titudes which are keeping the University from achieving greatness. President Hatcher displayed an essentially pessimistic and deterministic attitude toward the role of the individual in social change. We have, he asserted, a "changing world society whose movement is shaped and governed by its own process of growth," perhaps implying that individuals, especially students, can not in- fluence this process and ought not even to try until some magic date when education pre- sumably ends and we are prepared to enter the world. PERHAPS the president would extend this theory to cover the University, viewing it as an organism evolving under its own laws and processes of growth which individuals are powerless to change. This could explain his own lack of dynamic leadership in the office of president. The University can not be measured in terms of dollars or student population if one wants to gain an index of quality and worth. Nor should yardsticks be applied to any dimension -- 4U T « ..... .. . -l L .... . . a ._ i - (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the sec- ond of three articles on the United Nations University.) By MICHAEL ZWEIG AFTER ACHIEVING a rather specific notion of the concept of the United Nations University, the Association for Commitment to World Responsibility (ACWR) decided last semester that the time had come to explore possible av- enues of establishing the UNU. Establishment would come in two large stages. First a very com- plete and exhaustive study would have to be made considering the feasibility and desirability of the university. That would include lo- cation, finance, language, cur- riculum, faculty and student se- lection as well as a study of social and cultural conflicts which might arise. STEMMING FROM these stu- dies, a final plan of the university, in all detail, would be drafted for debate and eventual adoption. On the basis of the adopted plan of action, actual establishment and operation would follow. ACWR is presently working to persuade UNESCO to conduct a study of theuuniversity in all its aspects. If such a study is to be undertaken, it must be authorized' by the UNESCO General Con- ference, the overall policy deciding body of UNESCO, comparable in function to the United Nations General Assembly. OVER THE SUMMER, ACWR representatives in Washington, New York, and Paris tried to de- velop a network of support for the study, and worked to find a specific delegate to the UNESCO, General Conference who would be willing to sponsor the formal mo- tion asking UNESCO to undertake the study. Again the problem of finance worked against the study. ACWR was told that UNESCO's budget is already overworked and that in- dependent sources of finance for the study would have to be. found. However, ACWR was promised by a national delegate to the General Conference that he would make the motion if ACWR could assure supporting finances. Work on that specific need is presently under- way. It is quite likely that a UNESCO affiliate organization such as the International Association of Uni- versities would be charged with a large portion of the study, and that some parts would be done by various organizations the world over. When those studies are com- pleted, they revert back to the UNESCO Secretariat, where they are analyzed and synthesized into a comprehensive report. * , * THERE ARE other channels than UNESCO through which ACWR could work for establish- ment of the university. But the preparatory studies would have to be made by or directly through that organization so that the final choice of agent depends not only on its relevance to international education, but also its facilities for study, and the international prestige which that study would carry. Since UNESCO is not only the most relevant, but also the most prestigious of institutions concern- ed with education, it was chosen. The United Nations University project is now at a sufficient stage of articulate expression that it has at least partially been in- jected into the proper channels for its eventual fruition. The project is known and re- spected among UNESCO officials. It now awaits financial backing to allow it to make still further strides. * * * LET US not forget that a sig- nificant amount of work on this project to date has been done by students at the University, working in their spare time. They have discussed the ideas thoroughly and have written books about it. Those books are among the most ad- vanced studies and proposals for a UNU that have been made. This project symbolizes the pos- sibilities which are open to stu- dents to effect change. The work of gathering support, of approach- ing UNESCO, was done by stu- dents. They simply had an idea, thought about it, articulated it, felt it, wrote about it, and then had courage enough to go. to the proper channels to get something done. We are all students. We do not control the channels of progress. But as thinking citizens of a world community, we have the possibil- ity-to inject ideas into those chan- nels. In fact we have the urgent responsibility. TOMORROW: What remains to be done. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Asks Revolutionary Discussion To the Editor: SEVERAL COMMENTS should be made on Bob Selwa's excellent article Thursday re the Regent's bylaw on speakers. First, the by- law, for all its new fangled word- ing is still meant to keep Com- munists off the campus, or at least to keep the legislature happy that the Regents want to keep Com- munists off the campus. A student or professor can, I would guess, advocate almost anything provided his manner is non-newsworthy, his arguments reasoned and his politics or past free of any red tinge. The present language is an offensive disguise for the bylaw's real intent. Second, Selwa notes that the by- law, in affirming that in America we have peaceful democratic means of change, prohibits ad- vocacy either of action counter to the laws or of violent means of governmental or other change. Punishment is to be imposed on an organization if it allows speak- ers to so advocate. Selwa's basic points in response-that the threat of punishment is but another form of prior censorship, that restric- tion of free expression is incom- patible with thedemocratic ideal, that civil strife is a product not of ideas but of social conditions and that it is prevented, not by supressing ideas, but by remedy- ing social evil-are important but I think conventional expressions of liberalism. They miss more basic matters at issue. The problem with this sort of bylaw is that it regulates things people generally don't want to do anyhow. The basis of protest should, it would seem, be a com- mitment to exercise the liberty de- manded: Is it worth the time and attention of serious students to confront the idea of violence as a means of social change? Is it worth the bother to consider civil disobedience as a possible response to perceived injustice? Are alternative means of social organization important enough to merit our academic time? * * * THE REGENTS say these mat- ters should not be the concern of the University or its students Whether they are supposed to be 'uegitimate or unimportant or both- is not clear. It is clear, though, that a judgement is being made which seeks to exclude a range of ideas from our consideration. The absolutist position - that there should be no authority that can censor ideas-holds, and thus re- gental authority should be chal- langed. But, beyond that, are these ideas of some particular impor- tance? I think they are; and thus I think opposition to the bylaw should involve more than the usual, too oftenshollow, protest of civil libertarians. To recall . . . "governments are instituted among men drawing their just powers from the con- sent of the governed, that when- ever any form of government be- enmpfi dP.,w 3.-dutipoftes nse ment is integral to that sover- eignty. Violence is to avoided if "peace- ful, democratic means of change -are available." I certainly hold this as a value. But, whether in any specific case such means are available and effective, this is a legitimate, always open question -hardly to be settled for all by regental decree. What if such means are not available? The foundation of democratic order is in a continually renewed consensus on these questions: that the government serves the people and that there are effective demo- cratic means of change. The pro- cess of renewing consensus (al- ways referring to the extreme case when the consensus would not exist) serves to redefine the goals of the society and the rules of conflict resolution. To the extent that the system is taken as a given, that the social contract is not kept current, provincial interest comes to overshadow conscious- ness of social responsibility. I think a relationship exists between the incredible apathy, and even an- tipathy of the American popula- tion to politics and the universal outlawing of any views that would fundamentally threaten the es- tablished order ofthings. * * * - WELL, MAYBE SO, but are we now at a time in history where it is somehow important for in- tellectuals to be concerned with matters of violence and action out- side the law? I believe we are: 1) Violence is the prevailing means of social change around the world. Revolutionary movements are the training ground for the leadership of almost all the, newer nations. Are their attitudes per- tinent to the education of our own citizens? Can these attitudes be understood if we bar the oppor- tunity for their expression? 2) Constitutional democracy ex- ists in few places in the world. Forms of authoritarian and elite rule are far more common in deal- ing with problems of development and large scale organization. Do these forms have no relavance to our own society? Can we under- stand them if we proscribe their advocates? 3) The policy of national gov- ernment is viewed by some as mov- ing us toward final war. What kind of democratic recourse exists to avoid imminent catastrophy? Do the bomb and the war lords of the pentagon constitute a tyr- anny comparable to that of King George and the English parliment? 4) Many people in the South appear oppressed by authoritarian rule of state and local govern- ments. Is "armed self-reliance" or the treat of violence a legitimate means to secure one's rights? Do the Negro people considering this question have nothing to say in a university? 5) In most of our cities juvenile gangs establish an ethic involving violence and life outside the law. Is the operating code of these people-many of them our peers-- ,.cn_ _ +2 a . _ o o m vn inr matters are either settled questions or unimportant for American so- ciety, or for students at the Uni- versity. Perhaps the ultimate chal- lenge facing democratic man is to find non-violent and effective means of handling conflict. We. would seem sorely hampered in this if the rules prohibited our grappling with violence and attack on the law as living phenomena in the world and in our own country. As a last point,. I don't believe that there is any distinction be- tween consideration or discussion and advocacy. The academic bell jar will hardly contain matters of partisan controversy. To express an idea, however neutrally, is to run the risk that someone may believe it and may wish to con- vince others of it and hence to urge action on its basis. There should be no fear of this possibil- ity. When one organizes action counter to the law, then he should be subject to the law. When he expresses opinion, then he should be subject only to the response of other men, holding perhaps other opinion. The wrangle about the bylaw, in the context of this argument then, should focus on whether it interferes with discussion of un- portance to scholars and citizens. If it does, then it should be op- posed and thenbestsopposition is to pursue that discussion with renewed forthrightness and vigor. -Al Haber, Grad Theatre .. . To the Editor: WAS in the Wednesday night audience of the APA "School for Scandal," so I read the Daily today (Thursday) with great in- terest. The critic, Jack O'Brien, saluted the production with the evaluation such once -in-my-life- time theatre in Ann Arbor de- served. But what was eating Miss Mar- garie Brahms, the young lady on your "culture beat," when the tapped out that scrambled "edi- torial?" If see reads the New York Times, then she surely must have en- countered the names of this il- lustrious theatre company count- less times, as I certainly have! And why such a sour-note send- off for such a radiant premiere? I'll bet few Broadway producers could afford thecast we are being given for this first festival. I GATHER they work in Ann Arbor for peanuts compared with the commercial fees they get in television, films and theatre ane are passing up to be here with us Instead of being all-out in ap- preciation of the spirit whieb brought such a wonderful en- semble to enliven and thrill our heretofore flat dramatic scene, Brahms chose to excercize a cur- ious kind of "You don't impress me, I'm patronizing the whole affair" style. I'm afraid our new APA Company will think Brahms MICHIGAN'S PRESS The Campaign 'Truth' By PHILIP SUTIN TIHINGS are not always as they seem in newspapers-especially during election campaigns. Michigan politics and newspapers are no exception to this rule. Newspapers, under the influence of their biases, often bend stories to favor their candidates and hopefuls sometimes contribute to the distortion by issuing misleading news releases as Republican Congress- man-at-large candidate Alvin Bentley did during his recent stay in Ann Arbor. The Detroit papers have been notoriously pro-Romney. This trait was, evident long before the campaign when both papers boomed Romney with feature stories and long interviews to the point of recounting his prayerful medita- tion the night before he made the decision to run. THE DEMOCRATS in mid-July caught the Detroit News distort- ing a column of Washington-based columnist Marquis Childs to favor Romney. Writing on the GOP hopeful's candidates, Childs de- scribes the negative effects of Romney's constitutional conven- tion deal with the conservatives and of the American Motors clos- ing of the Hudson plant in De- troit. Both were deleted.-by the News to make Romney look, from Washington, like a fair-haired hero who will save not only Michi- gan, but-in 1964-the United States as well. The Detroit Free Press fell into this trap recently when it wrote into a story of the Bentley- Staebler-Muncy discussion parts of a Bentley ,press release. The lead of the release said Bentley "charged his Democratic opponent with having a 'do- nothing policy on Cuba that is replete with indecision and vacilla- tion'." The release creates the impres- sion that Bentley resolutely de- manded that the United States protect its interests, aggressively assert the Monroe Doctrine and do something belligerent, like block- ade Cuba, to stop Castro. S* * * THE TROUBLE with this beau- tiful picture is that it is not true. Bentley's stand before the League of Women Voters is a moderate one. He never accused Staebler of anything. He did not say a single line directly quoted in the news release. Thus the press unwittingly fool- ed the public. Many papers that could not send a reporter to cover the debate were dependent on the news release. They pictured an aggressive Bentley while before the League of Women Voters he was mn -iruf IBorge Orgy. EVERYONE HAS SEEN Victor Borge perform, or at least seen someone do an imitation of him. Last night he drew a crowd bigger than I've seen on this campus-- bigger than Eleanor Roosevelt's or Carl Sandburg's, and at three times the price. Why is Borge so universally funny? Without drawing up some theory of comedy or other, it is pretty clear that his main asset is his ability to play with the Eng- lish language, letting his audience have impossibility as reality. And he plays with his music In the same way. For instance, he can say, "I always save burnt matches they prevent forest fires.", making it all right to forget caus- ality, or, after playing a Strauss waltz with terrible dissonances just where you love 'em, \he can check them against the music, and sure enough ... He is not above puns (a lady told him that to get from down- town to Hill Auditorium he would have to ,pass Huron) nor below the subtlest impossibilities (four stage hands take his curtain calls for him-he has produced the kind of cast you'd love to applaud for but can't because there's only one performer). HE IS AT his finest when he ad libs to insult jokers in the audience combining a great night- club technique with sheer vaud- ville. He is at his worst when he joins Leonid Hambro to do a "serious" number, without clown- ing; you know, the one just to show that he really can play: it is a foul travesty on Chopin and others, but, still no worse than Lawrence Welk gets away with every week.