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 2-3 241 Trutt! WfillPreval": Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual opinions of staf writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID MARCUS Modern Church Should Result Frmcum enical Council Conscience (if A Conservative : E U.5"SupR M Cou T ScNaa , ,N EG t"it t+ tZul!NG s oT r . t ,w of , ,. lp a . r ,M~ j-9 / Q . ; - = : Oti. - i r.. ,rte: r - P y Y ..,; Y , "" G i THIRD PRODUCTION: With Good Old Comed IF GEORGE M. COHAN wasn't the most profound playwright in American theatre, he was undoubtedly one of its finest entertainers. And a play by an entertainer rather than a playwright can be a dangerous thing if it falls into the wrong hands. But fortunately for the late Mr. Cohan, and Ann Arbor theatre-goers as well, about a dozen and a half of the rightest hands possible are tickling the ribs of Cohan's "The Tavern," a melo-dramatic, pseudo-satiric farce in Lydia Mendelssohn this week. Flawless timing, slapstick antics, and several rather dusty lines are flung around the stage with slap and polish that makes this 1920 vehicle play like the wind, even in spots where it seems a bit winded. But where Cohan has weathered the years badly in a few comic lines, ALMOST ALL phases of life these days are soon after the beginning of the Co either the first, biggest, longest, oldest or 2600 bishops and cardinals voiced an best that have ever been. This holds true even to this parochial tendency. \ for the Cathloic Church's Second Ecumenical The Pope heeded the opinions expr Vatican Council. virtually changed the constituency oft An Ecumenical Council is a meeting of the bers of the commissions, to be m bishops and major prelates of the whole Ro- national and representative of the man Catholic Church. This current council is Church. only the 21st in the 2000 year history of the Catholic Church. It is called by a Pope for NOW INSTEAD OF the academic the purpose of discussing and acting on mat- sterile outlook which comes fr ters of concern to the entire Church. representatives of the Curia, an em In the past such Councils have been called being placed on the opinions and w to deal with a specific problem or heresy, a the pastorally active bishops andp fact which sets this Council apart from its hasrequired no small sacrifice on th predecessors immediately, since there is no these prelates to give up the adminis current dispute or particular abuse which would their home dioceses to come to Ron necessitate a calling of the Bishops. Still, their active participation offe hope that the grass roots aspect of th ROPE JOHN XXIII had a much more positive will come to the fore in discussions; reason. He is aiming to modernize the scholarly will be left where it belong Church, to re-examine some of the positions library. In a Council called to re and doctrines "to give the Church the pos- Church better to fit into a world w sibility to contribute more efficaciously to the tional boundaries and sentiments ar solution of the problems of the modern age." becoming obsolete, it was absolutely i The Pope, when he decided to convene the that the gathering express the sentim Council, was concerned with the adaptation of concerns of representatives from all ecclesiastical institutions to modern needs. the world. This does not mean simply the "liberaliza- Another distinctive feature of this tion" of some of the traditional rules. He has which again stresses its forward loo started with a more basic consideration-the the Pope asked heads of all Cathol character of the Council. in the world, the faculties of leading universities and theological centers, an THINKING OF the need to renovate and to individuals to send to Rome theirs adapt the interior life of the Church, he for a possible agenda. decided that the Council would have a moreT pastoral character than the doctrinal attitude THE FINAL list of subjects to b of the preceding ones. This means an un- arose from the concern of those acti precedented break from the domination by the life of the Church. Also, much atte Roman Curia, the hierarchy and decision- paid to public opinion in official an making bodies. circles concerning the needs of the C The Curia is that facet of the Church which this moment in world hitory. Public has always done the "desk" jobs from inside were also used to sound out the view Rome proper. These officials of the Church clergy and laity in dioceses and count carry no, difference in rank from that of pas- phases of work of the Council have toral priests and bishops, but they have had termined by that aspect of the Chu considerable influence. There is no doubt that has its finger on the proverbial pulE the Italian segment of the Church has run it modern world-not those operatingf in the past. Pope John has taken a mammoth confines of the Roman Curia. The tr step towards the de-centralization of Church ists have lost this round to the innov authority solely by increasing the numbers of The modern trend which demands pastoral bishops attending the Council. of efficiency from any convened body Only some 38 per cent of the representatives likely not be realized in Rome. W will be from Europe, with 31.5 per cent from expect drastic changes-even in tho North and South America, 10 per cent from changeable in the Church-to come e Africa and 20.5 per cent from Asia and Oceania. from the Council. They will be deal Earlier Councils seldom represented little more subjects which have caused contro than the area in which they were held. The the entire 2,000 in some cases. delegation of United States bishops is the The 14 basic commissions will be d second largest, outnumbered only by the these subjects: theological questions, Italians. and diocesan government, disciplinea and laity, religious order, discipline BUT THIS is only numerical, and thus a sacraments, sacred liturgy, semina superficial majority. How the influence, universities, oriental Churches, Cath( which will be running the discussions, has been sions, lay apostolate, ceremonial pre divided is the real story-and it is here that information media, union of all Christ Pope John shows his willingness to brush aside administrative secretariats. precedent and traditions when he feels they T are outdated. T IS IMPOSSIBLE to predict wheth In June 1960 a Central Preparatory Com- can or will be taken in these ar mission and 14 specialized commissions were agenda is not unchangeable; and p established to deal with the specific cate- can and have been broken-as is seer gories of questions confronting the Council. first move of the Council to moderniz Heading these Commissions were for the most nationalize, and decentralize the Churc part representatives of the Roman Curia. changes it appears can be made witho This stress would have indicated a greater to the basic structure-on the contr concern for doctrinal issues and ecclesiastical may be a much needed spurt of ene procedures than for problems of the pastoral new vitality into the lifestream of the administration and lay expression. However, -MALINDA B Cornell Suspension Unjustified uncil, the opposition essed and. the men- re inter- universal and often om those nphasis is )rkings of priests. It he part of tration of ie. rs a solid he Church ; and the s-in the ovate the where na- re rapidly imperative rents and parts of Council, k, is that c dioceses Catholic nd private ggestions e treated ve in the ntion was d private hurch at inquiries s of both tries. The been de- urch that se of the from the aditional- vators. miracles will most e cannot se things ach week ing with versy for iscussing bishops of clergy e of the ries and oliC mis- paration, ians and er action yeas-the recedents ni by this e, inter- h. These ut harm ary, this ergy and, Church. ERRY, l E s . t ' i i _ e° s., 'cr .s. ..s NEW BYLAW ON SPEAKERS: Policy Re eain~sRestrictive he remains a marvelously gifted craftsman of the elements of both farce and satire. * 4' * ELLIS RABB as director and the Vagabond, leads a uniformly worthy cast through a night of mingled hysteria and hysterics.,.He reads every line like a travesty on Christopher Fry interpreted by a parody on Young Abe Lincoln,, singing, dancing, strutting, and at one point, launching a prolong- ed aside at the audience which makes the first rows squirm. Rosemary Harris flits and twit- ters around the stage, lisping out an ingenue which must set silent -movie stars spinning in their chairsat Elizabeth Arden's. At one point she flutters hysterically so close to the roaring open fire that she is endangered of cremat- ing herself, but it does nothing to quell her spirits. * * * IT IS USELESS to pretend that everyone on stage is slightly in- sane. The actors play together with such intense belief, that the spectator is constantly suspicious that he is the one who is beig persecuted. Rabb as the director has second-guessed Cohan at every step of the way, and builds climax upon climax with arec'sion which leaves the audience very little time to catch a breath between belly- laughs. At the risk of taking any- one too seriously, the APA takes no one seriously, and the result is the kind of humor for humor's sake that is sadly absent in the Amer;- an theatre today. AS FOR the. occasional .lapses in sustained humor, it might be speculated that with George M. Cohan on stage in this play, as he was in the Twenties, the entire work may have benefited so from his presence as to off-set any discrepancies in dramatic-satiric writing, but it is hard to imagine any play receiving a more hilarious production from a group of plsy- ers than the APA is giving "The Tavern." Those who constantly complain that humio "ain't what it used to be." will be delighted to learn that for one weei in Ann Arbor, at least, it is. --Jack lG. O'Brien REVIEW: Bombshell Old Comedy "BOMBSHELL" starring Jean Harlow is an example of what the ravages of time can do to Hollywood comedies. The story of Lola Burns, fa- mous Hollywood star and heroine of our picture, is basically a good one. It was the antecedent of a modern movie type-witness "Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?" and multi others. But "Bombshell" had it first; and, were it not for its manner of comedy now outdated and its generally-disdained style of slapstick then popular, had it best. * * * LOLA BURNS is beset by head- line-hungry newspapermen and liquor-hungry relatives; they try to run her life for their own. gain. A Lola trying to be her "own simple self" and in so doing play- ing the role for herself, produce the comedy. A few times the pic- ture comes close to being tragi- comedy as Lola's attempts to adopt a baby are foiled by a pub- licity 'stunt concocted by her "friend" the publicity man. * * * BUT IN the main, the picture is indeed, as the schedule an- nounces, a comedy. The gags are outworn, many of them too ob- vious for modern audiences; and the more serious scenes risk corni- ness. * * SOME OF the expressions used in the movie have a certain aura of charm - "Gosh!" say the char- acters when they are mad, tired and surprised. "Ain't that a load of oysters?" asks Lola plaintively. "Bombshell" is what people laughed and cried at in the Thir- ties. For many, this is the only op- portunity to see the famed Jean Harlow, toast of Hollywood in her day. It's not my idea of sophisti- cated comedy, but it's worth it just to see her. --Ruth IHetmanski By ROBERT SELWA DESPITE a letter of vigorous protest by twenty student lead- ers, the Regents included restric- tive clauses in the bylaw on speak- er policy that they passed yester- day. So that there shall be no doubt about what the letter and this edi- torial refer to, here are the exact clauses: "The speaker must not advocate or urge the audience to take ac- tion which is prohibited by the rules of the University or which is illegal under federal or state law. Advocating or urging the modification of the government of the United States or of the State of Michigan by violence, r sabo- tage is specifically prohibited. It is the responsibility of the student organization to inform speakers of these prohibitions .. . "Any student organization vio- lating the provisions of this bylaw is subject to the procedures and penalties applicable to students and student o~ganizations that violate other University rules." * * * THE LETTER that the twenty student leaders sent to the Re- gents protests these restrictions. The protest was not prepared by a few radical fanatics; signing the letter were respected leaders of many different organizations, in- dicating widespreadand thought- ful opposition. Those who signed the letter were: Margaret Skiles, president of the Women's League; Robert Ross, chairman of Voice Political party; Mary Beth Norton, presi- dent of Women's Assembly Asso- ciation; Michael Olinick, editor of The Daily - all Student Govern- ment Council members; Kenneth Miller, Sharon Jeffrey and Howard Abrams, also SGC members; Mal Warwick, chairman of the Young Democratic Club; Ralph Kaplan, chairman of SGC's Com- mittee on the University; Eleanor Winn, chairman of SGC's Inter- national Relations Board; Herbert Heidenreich, chairman of SGC's HumanyRelations Board; Jesse McCorry, former chairman of SGC's Committee on Membership in Student Organizations; Douglas Peacock, chairman of the Special Projects committee of the Union; Ruth Galanter, mem- ber and former chairman of the Literary College Steering Commit- tee; Paul Potter, former National Affairs Vice-President of the Unit- ed States National Student Asso- ciation; Thomas Hayden, presi- dent of Students for a Democratic Society and former Daily editor; Joan Schloeslinger, vice-president of the Association for Commit- ment to World Responsibility; Mi- chael Seliger, personnel chairman of Inter-Cooperative Council; Ronald Newman, C h alle ng e spokesman; and Judith Oppen- heim, Daily editorial director. THE LETTER, about 900 words long, makes three main points: First, rather than abolish prior censorship, the new bylaw places the responsibility for prior censor- ship upon the organizations them- selves. "To ask student organiza- tions to practice prior censorship is to ask them to develop habits of thought and behavior which are directly contrary to a potentially rich American tradition of free- dom of speech." Second, rather than "liberaliz- ing" the old bylaw by deleting the vague phrase "accepted code of have the University exercise po- lice powers over speech which par- allel and even exceed those of the federal, state and municipal au- thorities. "Should not a University be especially jealous of those free- doms which enrich and develop the intellect? Is not controversy and the presentation of conflict .essential to growth, respon- sibility and mature citizenship?" These are good arguments. The first two were made previously on this editorial page. The third bears examination: THE University is a constitu- tionally independent and generally free institution. It should be the most free of all institutions in this democratic republic because it needs the maximum of flexibility examining all findings, policies and philosophies. The University should be a lead- er. The students' letter stresses this. The Regents were being lead- ers when they decided to revise the old bylaw on speakers. The University was acting as a leader when it permitted Carl Braden and Frank Wilkinson to speak here a day after they were banned from Wayne State University and at the same time that Michigan State University wasbanning a Communist from speaking on campus there. University President Harlan Hatcher was a leader then, too; he refused to give in to pressures to prevent Braden and Wilkinson from speaking here, a day after the president of Wayne State Uni- versity banned them from that campus, and at the same time that the president of Michigan State University was going along with a ban of a Communist from that campus. * * * UNFORTUNATELY the Presi- dent and a majority of the Re- gents have compromised their leadership. President Hatcher in his own speeches continually de- fends a spirit of free inquiry for the University, but at the same time he has been defending the new policy with. its continued - and added - restrictions. This is in sharp contrast with President Marion Burton's vigorous cam- paign for a freer speaker policy in the early 1920's, a campaign in opposition to the Regents' restric- tions on free inquiry. Those who defend the new speaker policy assert that it is a "liberalization." This is a difficult matter to judge; and the same can be said of the two previous major OBSERVERS from states where violence and disorder mark the race relations front try to tell us we cannot maintain an island of law and order within the Mag- nolia State. We not only think we can, but we pointedly and sincerely are dedicated to trying. Gov. Barnett is leading the state in this en- deavor, and the state is unified behind him in this crusade as sel- dom it has been united in any cause. * * * What you are seeing today is a gigantic profile in courage. This profile follows the boundary lines of the state of Mississippi in every respect. (Ta Nuwcalcnr ,a, a Nv revisions. This year's revision is similar to the past revisions in that it subtracts one restriction and adds a new one. Let's examine this matter: * * * THE University's first speaker policy was in effect from 1913 to 1920 and prohibited all partisan speeches, and the Regents inter- preted "partisan" loosely enough to prevent former United States President William Howard Taft from discussing the League of Na- tions when he spoke here. The 1920 revision in speaker policy consisted of changing the full ban on partisanship to a par- tial ban: private organizations such as the Young Republicans could have partisan speakers at closed meetings. But at the same time the Regents added the ban on advocacy of violent overthrow of the government. This provision has been used ever since to keep Communists from speaking on campus. The 1949 revision erased alto- gether the ban on partisanship. But it added the silly but menac- ing ban on speeches that would advocate violation "of our funda- mental code of morals." THIS year's revision - so far- strikes out this phrase, transfers the responsibility of precensorship from the University to the spon- soring organization (under threat of punishment, including non- recognition), and adds a ban on advocacy of action "prohibited by the rules of the University ord. illegal under federal or state law" If the scope of inquiry and dis- cussion has been widened in this year's revision - as it was some- what in the previous two revisions -it has not been widened much. In fact, some speeches permitted before may be punishable now, such as speeches advising students (in the words of the letter) "to oppose, in the form of civil dis- obedience, manifestations of rac- ism." The letter asks: "Would you (the Regents) not admit that it is part of the legiti- mate and in fact desirable contro- versy of intellectual life if we wer to debate among ourselves the prudence of boycotting the student judiciary system unless certain re- forms are made in that system?" Regent Power said last week that there has to be some respon- sibility and that the new bylaw places it on the sponsoring organi- zation. However, the responsibility for an idea should rest with the person presenting the idea. In a democratic republic each citizen holds his individual fellow citizens accountable for what they say; otherwise how could Congression- al representation and libel laws be effective? Another example: The Daily has all editorials signed; the opinions expressed are those of the writer. * * * THE University's speaker policy should be based on the University's obligation to be a free forum for ideas. The University should foster a spirit of free inquiry. Agreement is so substantial on this that the new bylaw states these two points. But at the same time the bylaw violates them by placing a perim- eter on the scope of ideas that a speaker can advocate. The spirit of free inquiry, of the expression of all viewpoints, no matter how hateful or odious, of the open-mindedness to hear all sides, no matter how controversial, 9a, cg nanernc tha ,nnr TTnirvovt LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Our Football Failure THE SUSPENSION of a graduate student from Cornell University once more raises the question of student conduct in relation to a university's concept of correct student action. In this case, it is not so much a question of whether the student's'or the university's prin- ciples of morality are valid, but whether the student was fully aware of the implications of his actions and knew what his punishment would be. The Cornell graduate student unfor- tunately did not know and he was suspended. The student was found to be living with a woman in his apartment. The woman was not a Cornell student. On the basis of a faculty .committee recommendation he was suspended from the university for conduct not complying with the student code. But the student code does not specifically outlaw living with a woman. The code is not clear as to whether or not' it even deals with graduate students at all. In fact, the student was suspended for not complying with univer- sity policy, a vague statement which could mean almost anything. T HE STUDENT in this case is to be pitied; he could not know whether.the code applied to him, he could not know that he would be suspended. His education is interrupted and partially lost by the suspension. This is a situation which points to the neces- sity of clarification in what a university ex- pects from its students. If a student knows Cornell is not an isolated case. At the Uni- versity the policy includes the concept of con- duct unbecoming a student. What this means is never clearly defined in written form. Here again, a student can act and not truly know what will follow from his actions. AT CORNELL, the student government is now working to perfect a new student code which will hopefully clarify the position of a student regarding his actions. This code will need the approval of the faculty. While it is doubtful that the faculty will approve it, the whole series of actions which have precipitated the. formu- lation indicate a trend. Students everywhere are now anxiously considering vague phrases which can condemn their actions without clearly defining what it is that has been done wrong. "Conduct unbecoming a student" and other phrases such as this necessarily -imply an ar- bitrary policy which can be administered by whoever is conducting an inquiry into student conduct. While it is relatively easy to condemn an individual for stealing a car since this is a blatant transgression of a law known to all, it is not easy to decide a case involving student conduct since there is no law which is specific enough to be broken literally. Therefore the interpretation of the policy becomes the de- ciding factor. jNCIDENTS at Cornell have hastened action To The Editor: I SAW it all happen on the floor of the Spartan stadium Satur- day afternoon, 28-0. We have apparently reached our nadir of collegiate' football so the only question to be answered now is, "where do we go from here?" It all started with Bennie's refusal to recruit good football players and is now ending with Dr. Hatch- er and his educators reigning su- preme so that Bump and his splendid coaching staff find it im- possible to get the nucleus of a good ball club in school and keep them there. What does this leave in the way of possibilities? There are only one of three things we can do! First, we can deemphasize football. and schedule Yale and Harvard with the idea of taking more of a licking for the next five or six years as the schedules for this period are already contracted. Needless to say the basketball, track and swimming teams will not have money to travel or equip themselves but let the educators take care of such trivial pecuniary matters.. With seven home football games the gross income is about $3,500,- 000, if the stadium is filled, and with the recent outputs and the way things are going they won't be able to fill the Slippery Rock bowl. Shall we let the taxpayers take care of it? * * * THE SECOND thing we can do is try to continue as we are with a fine gang of fellows on the foot- ball team 'who are taking a beat- ing in a losing cause. This is not a fault or theirs or of Bump's.. Everyone suffers including the team, the excellent coaching staff and the alumni. I wish it were possible for Hatcher and his edu- cators to be lined up on the turf Saturday at Lafayette and pay for their perfidy. It is too bad they cannot take the physical ani mental whipping and not the team and coaching staff. The third and only answer is to I understand Hatcher still has Ohio State banners in the kids rooms so we might try to find if he is wearing Scarlet and Gray or Maize and Blue. Frankly, I think we need a Micigan alumnus as our leader like Alex 'Ihat, or let's go the way of te University of Chicago and forget the whole bit. Can't anyone do afiytbing? -Thomas S. Dornan '50 T*hanks * To the Editor: S FEATURE EDITOR of the on again off again Clamor, I feel compelled to offer thanks for your concern. Your articles serve to provide the information and support we should have had from our own local daily. Those of us involved in protest here at Flint Community Junior College are beginning to question whether education here is not the very rotten core of which you write, after seeing the displays of indecision and vascillation here by various student government of- ficials and students generally. We are summarily .concluding that this demonstration or lack thereof is a logical conclusion to 14 years of conditioning (i.e. edu- cation) by the Flint public school system. When there exists a frightening continuity of policy from kindergarten through the second year of college, perhaps we should not be .surprised at a lack of concern. No third grader would ever question the principal's right to a paddle and far too many J C students docially accept the dean's possession of a honed axe. A few of us have wondered whether FJC students deserve a College Clamor. The issue is not one of worthiness; instead it is one of the right (earned or not) to freedom of the press. --Chris Decker, Feature Editor, Flint Community Junior College