Seventy-Third Year EDrrED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Wh ere OpinionsArr STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth 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. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: RONALD WILTON "Uh Huh - Listen -- Yeah, Too Bad -- Listen - Let Me Tell You What Happened To Me, Krishna --" POLITICS IN PERSPECTIVE: Romney's Personality Sweeps Michigan I I Graduate Language Courses Require Re-Evaluation 101 0 t - LAST SPRING the academic departments and schools throughout the University were unanimous in voicing support for the graduate school's language requirement, which stipulates that each doctoral degree candidate must pos- sess a reading knowledge of two foreign lan- guages, preferably French and German. The support came in response to a question- naire distributed at that time by the Graduate school executive board, which had been pon- dering financial and staffing problems that forved severe restrictions in enrollment in the special language service courses for graduate students-French and German 111 and 112. During the intervening period neither de- partmental backing nor money and staff troubles have departed. There's little possibility that the requirement will be revised in any startling fashion, and prospects for arranging more money to free faculty men to teach the service courses are equally miniscule. SO WE HAVE the same old issues and the same old problems. The same old justifica- tions for the requirement, however, might have to be revised in the future. Professors and administrators have always upheld the requirement on purely scholastic grounds. The feeling is simply that any PhD graduate worthy of the title should be able to undestand his speciality in at least two other languages, not only for practical neces- sity, but also for the sake of learning itself. In the next five of 10 years, though, most of the pragmatic underpinnings for the require- ment will fall away; for if pertinent foreign documents are of any substantial length, it will be cheaper to get them translated by means of a machine. Students won't have to depend on University language course training when they can keep abreast of the latest develop- ments abroad in their field much more easily and quickly through mechanical aids. Also, the increase in the number of lan- guages in which advances will be coming Russian, for example) and the overall increase in the amount of new developments abroad will render a reading knowledge of only two lan- guages both insufficient and needlessly time- comsuming - especially in more technical fields. THE "OFFICIAL" intellectual Justification will then have to be stretched, or current language policies revised to re-cohere theory and practice. There will be at least four trouble spots: 1) The University uses the same academic Support IN ITS DOGGED effort for survival, the Unit- ed States National Student Association glee- fully welcomes support from any quarter, but the laurels from Rev. Martin Luther King should be especially welcome. The powerful and respected leader said, in answer to a question asked Monday night at Hill Aud., that "it would be very unfortunate for the University to disaffiliate from USNSA," adding that "it has done many significant things particularly in the area of civil rights." He believes it important for students to face their responsibilities as citizens of the world. Disagreeing with University President Harlan Hatcher's state of the University address in October, he said that "students have a respon- sibility to participate in the student movement." As King sees it, there are two accordant pur- poses of education: to give students critical faculties and to humanize the individual so he develops a sense of values. "While riding the bus in the South is not the olny way to become educated, it is part of the solution. Also, it would make it clear that the students of this generation are not apa- thetic and unconcerned," he said. OPPONENTS of USNSA are often the same people who are opposed to involvement of Student Government Council in off-campus issues. They forcibly stress that the role of the student is on campus, that the student is one phase of a person while the citizen is another. In essence, they believe the student, and the student's representative body should keep his sights fixed on the Ann Arbor city limits-or Lansing at the farthest. King sees the scope of education as being broader than this, as in- cluding a concern with peoples and activities throughout the nation and world. An argument against USNSA is that it is concerned with areas in which it should not dabble, namely politics. The anti-USNSAers feel the USNSA Congress had no right to express a concern with the sit-in movement, because this was being bipartisan and students at US- NSA should be students-and not political be- ings. We the students, or even we, some of the stu- dents who are represented some of the time by USNSA, should not fail to express our con- cern with an opinion of the world through a potentially powerful and effective voice. It would indeed be unfortunate if we were to lmit n-. ,-nf .nA ovi nf n.. +io mitt TT justification to cover a two-language require- ment for doctoral and some master's degree) candidates and the one-language standard for literary college undergraduates. While this difficulty can be partially solved by the claim that graduate students somehow need a greater range of language facility, nevertheless there are problems when the undergrad becomes a graduate student and suddenly has to pick up another language. Someday entrance requirements will be stiffened so that incoming freshmen will have to possess a complete knowledge of one foreign language. Until that time, there will continue to be a very clumsy disparity between language training requirements at the undergraduate and graduate levels. 2) The same academic justification also covers the needs of every type of student. Its practical application suffers, however. For in- stance, the University says that an engineer or a scientist must for purely intellectual rea- sons acquire the use of two languages, and yet any opportunities to pursue these skills are almost non-existant at the undergraduate level in colleges outside the LSA. If only a purely scholarly justification is to be used, then equal opportunities (or requirements) should be maintained in each of the schools and departments. 3) The graduate student language standard provides only for a reading knowledge of a foreign language; yet if the justification for this is primarily intellectual, then why isn't a complete knowledge (including writing and oral facility) required? Administrators reply that no one is stopping graduate students from obtaining' these other language skills as well, but this seems to miss the point: the Univer- sity, after all, does see value in "stopping" graduate students from not having a reading knowledge by requiring them to have one. 4) The future undoubtedly will see a great speeding up of degree programs as the Uni- versity, futilely perhaps, attempts to keep pace with the almost overwhelming demands for professional and specialized manpower. If this is the case, then programs such as learning a language will have to be cut out or stream- lined, for while much of the reading the stu- dents do in preparation for the special lan- guage examinations is done in their own field, nevertheless the time and effort needed to grasp the essentials of grammar and vocabulary detract from research and the thesis. IN ADDITION, much of the training in pro- viding graduate students reading knowledge facility is done through the special service courses. Whether the University will continue to be able to offer these courses is problema- tical financially, especially since this knowledge can be acquired outside the classroom, al- though with considerably more difficulty and less polish. All these aspects should be given serious consideration by University policy-makers. Ad- mittedly, the problem is a complex one, and is aided not a whit by bureaucracy: the lan- guage departments control the service courses the graduate school executive board controls the degree program language requirements and the executive committees of the various schools and colleges control undergraduate distribution requirements. Out of this maze somehow will have to come either a re-defined justification for language requirements or revisions in current foreign language policies, or both. -GERALD STORCH Exeunt POLITICAL LIFE bid farewell yesterday to its one-time golden boy, Richard M. Nixon. Mr. Nixon could have gone quietly-nobody likes to beat a broken man-but instead he grabbed a large handful of sour grapes and flung them at the American press, The ex-politician had a simple answer ready to explain his overwhelming defeat in Cali- fornia:newspaper reporters painted his gold heart black. "You won't have Nixon to kick around much longer," the defeated candidate told his press conference. According to the Associated Press, Nixon spent much time condemning his news cover- age but made few specific charges. He didn't, for instance, attempt to deny Drew Pearson's scorching commentary on his habitual practice of associating all his op- ponents with Communism, Pearson was par- ticularly hard on Nixon's campaign manager, Murray Chotiner. The columnist successfully alledged that both men were associated with gangster elements across the country . CONCERNING Communism, however, "Brown is pink" labels were distributed by various.. Republican campaign offices in California, as was a leaflet asserting Brown had Communist ties. Nixon. was "horrified" and disclaimed any knowledge of these incidents. But the same tactics typified every one of his California campaigns-he never professed to know who started the rumors that his nnnnnents wee 4 s'~,- -~t~ 4-JA+~ kJ~t~s .l LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Disdains MSU Speaker Ban To the Editor: AS A STUDENT at Michigan State University and a fre- quent reader I feel obligated to point out to your reading au- dience the current sorry state of civil liberties and student-admix}- istration relations here at the uni- versity. Because so many students and faculty were enraged last spring at the arbitrary andunwarranted banning of a 'speaker from this, supposedly an institution commit- ted to free thought and inquiry, the administration recently ap- pointed a student-faculty speaker committee to decide who would not be allowed to speak here. Apparently they hoped to shift some of the heat they received at the last banningdonto the backs of the students and faculty by mak- ing them participate in he re- stricting and censoring process. * * * THE DULY elected president of our student government rightly refused to serve on any such cen- sorship committee. He and several other student leaders challenged the right of the university to so limit free speech, both by making public statements and by spon- soring a meeting at which unclear- ed speakers appeared. Now the administration is tak- ing its revenge. Enraged at this justified questioning of authority, the administration has forced the resignation of Robert Howard, president of the student govern- ment, and also forced the resigna- tion of several other organization leaders, placing them all on the strictest probation, the next step to expulsion. * * * THIS IS A vicious and unjusti- fied action against students whose only fault is that they were ques- tioning the apparent contention of the university administration that the Bill of Rights does not apply here. I hope interested readers will appeal to Michigan State Univer- sity president John Hannah and Dean of Students John Fuzak as well as other administration lead- ers to reconsider this hasty and unwarranted action in favor of a more rational approach. -Raymond B. Pratt Embarrassed .. . To the Editor: I WOULD like to write a few words in answer to the critic published Tuesday by Michael Hy- man on the cinema of the new wave from Italy and France. Let me say I feel embarrassed for the writer of this article. I am tired of listening to people saying that what they don't understand in art, which is always the avant-garde, is a fraud and a joke, What about the quarrels over abstract - expressionist painting? Also this finding of filth every- where is sickening. This cat is not hip. He does not know that art goes further always\than what you most important contemporary French writers, Robe-Grillet, and it seems sort of inadequate, to say the least, and not to the honor of the Americans, that he should be treated so depricatingly. -Suzanne Meloche Annihilation .. . To the Editor: AFTER READING The Daily's comments on the Cuban crisis, as well as certain student reac- tions, I feel compelled to present the feelings of University of Flor- ida students ofthe past week. We in Florida, which is now an armed camp, took a different view of the chilling situation than most people. There were no anti- blockade demonstrations, or fer- vent opposition to President Ken- nedy's action. We watched Army convoys roll southward as we walked to class. There was, though, a dreaded anticipation of what might have come-we are only 350 miles from Cuba. While Michigan, California, and Harvard students were hoot- ing and tossing eggs at one an- other, Florida students were quietly reading civil defense in- structions, stocking up 'on food, and making plans to grab a blan- ket if the word came. We in Florida are keenly aware of what national security is and tend to forget idealism when we are five minutes from annihila- tion. --Jack Horan Managing Editor, U. of Fa. Aligatr (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of two articles analyzing Tuesday's elections.) By DAVID MARCUS THE VOTERS of Michigan have picked George Romney. But they have not picked the Republican Party. The defeat of every one of Romney's running mates shows that the people of Michigan have chosen a personal- ity, a personal approach rather than a political philosophy. Romney won because he was able to forge a coalition of out- state Republicans and independent or normally Democratic voters in Wayne County. This, combined with an astute approach to the art of campaigning, brought Rom- ney victory. * * s VICTORY, however, is only the beginning. Romney is in an ex- tremely difficult political situation. As governor, he will be surrounded by men who oppose him. As gov- ernor, he must assume not only the responsibilities of Michigan's chief executive, but must also be- come the leader of his party. At the same time, he must rnot alie- nate the urban-rural coalition which elected him. The Democrats in the adminis- trative board will be the most im- mediate stumbling block. Romney is in the embarrassing position of having a member of the opposi- tion take over his job every time he leaves the state.dHe will also most likely be at odds with At- torney General Frank Kelly whose views on the responsibilities of the attorney general almost cer- tainly differ radically from Rom- ney's. But the most embarrassing fac- tor in the administrative board will be James A. Hare as secre- tary of state. Of course Hare has done an excellent job over the years which even the Republican Detroit News will admit, but the secretary of state's office is the major source of patronage in the state government. *w* * THEREFORE, Romney will not have a free hand in distributing patronage, which in many politi- cal situations is a potent weapon for the executive. Probably, he will reach some compromise with Hare over the distribution of jobs just as he will probably reach some compromise with Lt. Gov. T. John Lesinski over what Lesinski will do when he is acting governor. There is almost no prospect of a settlement with Kelley. Thus partisanship will pene- trate into the executive offices for the next few years and present an irritating but not fatal prob- lem. A more important aspect of Romney's situation is his dualis- tic position. Unquestionably, the governor must be the leader of his party. Romney, on the other hand, has called for an end to partisan squabbling and a unified approach to state problems. * * * THIS CONFLICT of roles will present itself in many ways, es- pecially in the case of fiscal re- form. Many of those bitterly op- posed to an income tax, even as an integral part of a general over- haul of state taxation, have re- turned to the Legislature. In or- der to pass his program, Romney will have to make some open ap- peals to the members of the op- position. If the Democrats agree to back his proposals, it may well hurt his position among the more conservative members of his own party. On the other hand, if he does not form a coalition with the Democrats, he will probably not be able to pass many of his pro- grams. If he is unable to get a constructive program through the Legislature, he will lose the sup- port of Wayne County Democrats. It is possible that he will be able to get some programs through the Legislature. The ultra-con- servative leadership has been very disorganized especially through the defeat of Senators Carlton Morris and Charles Feenstra and the withdrawal of Sen. Lynn O. Fran- cis from the Senate. The real trick will be to get the programs through without alienating large segments of his own party. * * * ANOTHER PROBLEM Romney faces is that he may have height- ened partisanship instead of al- leviating it. Democrats are still smarting from his many charges about union domination of the Democratic party. Romney's pro- lific abuse and sarcasm toward Gov. John B. Swainson and the Democratic party have not helped either, not to mention his remark about now Congressman-at-large Neil Staebler's "Americanism." Democrats could take their re- venge by blind opposition and a determination to wreck any pos- sibility of his re-election or any consideration of Romney as a possible GOP presidential candi- date in 1964. It remains to be seen what Romney will do to handle or avoid these difficulties. They are, of course, exactly the things against which he campaigned. But to say they will not occur is to either contend that the compro- mises were the best that could be made under the circumstances or that Romney was inexperienced in the ways of politics. Certainly, he will have to make a different kind of compromise as governor than he made at either con-con or as President of Ameri- can Motors. Con-con was dominat- ed by conservative Republicans. Romney's major difficulty was to compromise GOP factions. As American Motors president, he had much greater authority than any governor has in dealing with in- dividuals who stubbornly opposed him. Neither of these techniques can be wholly successful in deal- ing with the Legislature. MOST DIFFICULT of all, Rm- ney will have to do something to realize his ideal of individual citizen participation in politics. It is an interesting and laudable principle, but it is rather obscure as to how specifically it can be implemented. Perhaps he intends to accom- plish such individual interest through the structure of his bwn party by attempting to exclude the interests of large groups in favor of the interests of individ- uals. But agin, the precise methods involved are rather obscure. Much lies before Romney as governor. There is no sense in re- viving all the objections brought up against him during the cam- paign. The people have made their choice. What remains to be seen is whether George Romney can make the transition from an ap- pealing image to a political lead- er of substance, and whether he can breath life into the Republican party. LIPPMANN: The Great Shake- Up By WALTER LIPPMANN WE APPEAR to have come to one of those moments in his- tory *when the state of things, which for good or evil, was fairly steady, is suddenly shaken up. No one can now see better than dimly what will be the new. shape of things in the two major crises we now face. As for Cuba, though the full agreement about verification of the removal of the strategic weap- ons is still to be worked out, there is no doubt that the United States has the upper hand in this part of the world. For if Castro at- tempts to frustrate the imple- mentation of the Kennedy- Khrushchev agreement, he will lay himself open to heavy penal- ties from a tightened blockade. The Soviet Union cannot now protect him in his recalcitrance. Castro has been deprived of the military protection of the Soviet Union, and if he is to replace it with some guarantee besides the promise of the United States not to invade him, his best course is to invite the Organization of American States to make Cuba a neutralized island which will con- centrate its attention on its own internal development. * * * WHAT IS HAPPENING in Cuba is having far reaching effects not only in Latin America but, al- most certainly, in Africa and the Middle East and Asia. By. con- junction with the Chinese invasion of India, the effects of the Cuban affair are compounded. Both in Cuba and in India the Soviet Union has had to water down or write off the promises of support which it had made. India's foreign policy under Ne- hru has, as he himself has con- fessed, been based on an illusion. But what was the illusion? Not that the Chinese were too timid to hurt India: Red China has been nibbling at the Indian frontier for five years. The Indian illusion was that the Soviet Union was the par- amount power in the Communist orbit and that it would and could prevent China from committing a serious aggression against India. * * *. NOT BEING myself a Kremlin- ologist, I do not know what will be the effect of the two great crisis on the internal situation of the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union finds itself contained and blocked in both di- rections. In the . West, towards Europe and the Americas, the nuclear balance of power is against her, and her two attempts to close the gap-by resuming testing and by planting first-strike missiles in Cuba-have failed. In the East, Red China is con- solidating control of the Tibetan plateau which threatens Soviet Siberia. * * * THE CRUCIAL QUESTION is, it seems to me, whether the Krem- lin will take a short or a long view of the situation. On a short view, the Kremlin will pretend that there is no sig- nificant change inside and out- side the Communist world, and LIGHT (HEARTED) OPERA: G&S Princess Ida'. Successful Obscurity THE GILBERT AND SULLIVAN SOCIETY has dusted off one of G&S' more obscure light operas, "Princess Ida," with a great deal of polish. Threatened with oblivion earlier this year, the Society has re- bounded with a lively performance that ranks among the bestathey have done in recent history. "Ida," the story of the defeat of a hundred women, imbued with feminine supremacy, by six "lowly men," was not one of Gilbert and Sullivan's more successful offerings when first produced. But last night, the operetta was performed with the gusto of "Pinafore" or "The Mikado." WITH THE INTRODUCTION of a new musical director, Rosella Duerksen, and a new dramatics director, Gershom Clark Morningstar, the Society avoided its old pitfalls. Gone was the orchestra which drowned out the chorus; gone was the chorus which could not be under- stood. Instead, the show, for the most part, was lively and enjoyable, a feat none too simple with "Princess Ida." EASILY THE MOST DELIGHTFUL portrayals were turned in by Prince Hilarion (Henry Naasko), and his two cohorts, Cyril (Hendrik Broekman) and Florian (Dick Hazzard). Their capacity for humor is great, each unique in its own way, demonstrated by their performance mid-way through the second act, when they disguise themselves as "girl graduates" and crash Princess Ida's ladies' seminary. Purple gowns trailing in the breeze, they clowned their way from flamenco dancers to a bergomask. Broekman, however, outshined his co-stars, first with a brief hip-swinging sequence and later getting drunk on the luncheon wine, revealing the masquerade. Morningstar, as King Gama, Ida's father, was delightfully dis- agreeable, slithering from pillar to post, leaving a trail of insults in his wake. Dispatched by Ida to break Hilarion's marriage contract, Gama despaired when imprisoned "with kindness" by King Hildebrand (Paul Vanderkoy), Hilarion's father. * * 4. * IDA (NANCY HALL) turned in an adequate performance. Her role did not offer a wide range of possibilities for interpretation, a fault typical of G&S leading ladies. Her voice, however, was clear and resonant, and her stern portrayal gave credence to her part. Vanderkoy, on the other hand, left something -to be desired. To be certain, he is an excellent singer. But his portrayal was stiff and arti- ficial, and he alone could not be understood past the middle of the main floor. Somehow, he did not convey a convincing image of a monarch, largely due to the fact that acting seemed totally foreign to him. (He plopped when he should have jumped.) In addition, the second act drags in spots, inching along to a