Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN _ . UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 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. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: MALINDA BERRY dlief'' / y-> 1?r ir k rMFY ~i~ t1 i y n w ,w,6,' ry * 1 r 'Ad.rFk+"f ยข' y i, r' _ _ ^' r1 .h J I , ,'',. S" 'i n SIDELINE ON SGC: Fair Housing Needed For 'U Community 9 Y'] Man's Dignity Transcends Political Ideology RATIONALITY and objectivity are the great gods of our supposedly logical age. Nothing is presumed to be more devastating to an argu- ment than the charge that it is emotional particularly in the field of politics. The field of politics itself, in our "age of crisis, tension and decision," is presumed to be the overwhelming human issue. Ideology is supposed to stand first in all men's minds, whether communist or democratic. Men are expected to live and die by the words of the Declaration of Independence or the Communist Manifesto. Both of these presumptions are not only totally false in the understanding of human beings, but also unjust and dangerous, when a nuclear bomb can annihilate all that men stand for in the name of the narrow concepts of political ideology. T WOULD seem that a satisfactory social aggregate, such as a state, should be based upon principles which accurately reflect the nature of human individuals. A democratic state, particularly, should be willing to admit an honest assessment of human values, and the priorities with which individuals hold those values. The intellectual revolution initiated by the growth of psychology as a science may be simply stated in the rather alarming fact that man is not very often a rational creature. Hence, any realistic appraisal of man cannot either assume that he is or, even advocate that he should be. To believe in the basic goodness of man is to declare the positive worth of his irrational moments. On the other hand, to condemn ir- rationality is to believe in a kind of "original sin" as cruelly dogmatic as that of the Catholic Church. HATEVER state demands rationality of its citizens is necessarily repressive in the morality of consenting citizens, if not by force -of law at least by the more subtle, but equally powerful force of social judgment. The modern states of all nations are based upon major .philosophical premises, at least ostensibly. The rights and duties of individual men are then prescribed by logical derivation from these premises, and enacted into law. It is at this point that the great error is made, for If men are not always rational, then they cannot be expected always to act in accordance with rationally derived rules. To demand that they must is to demand something contrary to human nature. The social judgment, then, which demands rationality, is always suppressive. The state per se, however, which acts overtly only through law, cannot properly be called re- pressive except of those whom it jails for the presumed purpose of social welfare. Rather, the rationally constituted state is simply nar- row-minded in its one-sided concept of man. IT WOULD be foolish to attempt to estimate that proportion of human thought and action which is irrationally based, but if psychology is even approaching the truth, that proportion is high. The rationality of the state, therefore, is not only irrelevant in application to a con- siderable part of human nature, but is also unlikely to be of any great concern to that part of human nature. If we further sub- Mrs. Roosevelt HE DEATH of Eleanor Roosevelt leaves a national legacy which is yet to be reckoned. The controversy that has surrounded her per- sonality and ideas for so long will eventually be resolved in the history of the United States and of the world, as will innumerable other controversies. Whatever was to be said about her dedica- tion to mankind, she has already said. The Roosevelt tradition speaks for itself in the dialogue of America, and this is the most that she and her husband would have wished. Eleanor Roosevelt was a single human being among billions, and it may be that her realiza- tion of this fact, and her consequent concern with those billions remains her most profound insight into the progress of mankind. Her epitaph is not one of words, but exists in the life of every individual on earth. The importance of her life is that she knew that they are infinitely more important than she was herself. This is all we need to remem- ber, to remember her. -M. MacNEAL Editorial Staff MICHAEL OLINICK, Editor JUDITH OPPENHEIM MICHAEL HARRAHR Editorial Director City Editor CAROLINE DOW................. Personnel Director JUDITH BLEIER................ Associate City Editor FRED RUSSELL KRAMER .. Assoc. EditorialtDirector CYNTHIA NEU.................. Co-Magazine Editor HARRY PERLSTADT ............ Co-Magazine Editor . divide the rational part of the mind into all its various and sundry concerns, whether ex- pressed or unexpressed, it is evident that the political state is of relatively minor importance It merely generates a high volume of noise, essentially because of its efficient degree of organization. This is perfectly evident on the personal level, if the question is honestly approached. Even in wartime, how much time does the individual spend think (not acting, for action can be compelled) about national ideology? What actually are the most intense human concerns? Are they ont usually those personal and emotional concerns of self, loved ones, and immediate practical problems? THE HISTORICAL approach is also neces- sary. The bulk of human greatness has somehow survived every form of political or- ganization that has ever existed. Every period of human history has had its art, its literature, its music, its religious or philosophical mys- tique, and its innumerable, unrecorded individ- ual dramas. No state has ever been able to prevent all individuals from thinking, however dark their thoughts. No state has ever been able to pre- vent individuals from feeling, however painful those feelings. And if thought and feeling com- prise the human mind, then no state has ever been able fully to repress the humantmind. The state is simply too limited in its relevance. If God does not exist, th n mankind is man's own end. In a meaningless universe, the high- est act of courage, and an irrational act, at that, is for man to proclaim meaning. This achievement belongs largely to the individual, for it is ultimately he who must decide what his meaning shall be. What his meaning is, then, cannot be determined by any other stand- ard except his own complete system of value priorities as revealed not in his words, but in his thoughts and emotions, for society too often orders our words. THE RATIONAL state cannot express human nature, and certainly cannot express the individual. At best, it can allow the individual to seek expression for himself to a limited extent. And, most important of all, though it can make his thoughts bitter, it cannot pre- vent him from thinking. The human totality of thought and feeling is infinitely broader, deeper and more varied than are the philosophical concepts of the state. Human meaning exists, by individual decree, above and beyond any political state- ment of meaning. It is for just these reasons that the possession of nuclear weapons by political states is so hideously unjust. There is only one prerequisite to the in- dividual declaration of meaning, and that is life itself. Life, then, encompasses meaning and is necessary for meaning. But, as we have seen, the state, and the state's ideology, is only a very limited facet of that meaning. Nuclear weapons contain within them the possibility of an absolute end to human life, and hence to human meaning. And the ugly fact is that one narrow concept, that of ideology, now has the capacity to eliminate all concepts forever. A PARTICULAR ideology at a particular time quite simply is not worth it. However degraded the human condition may be, history teaches us that so long as men live, their descendents may reaffirm human dignity. How- ever strong hatred may be, the stories of Auschwitz teach us that as long as men live, some men can still feel and express love in the midst of complete brutality. Through all the ugliness of history, man has retained his songs, his poetry, his wonder at the sight of a child, and his ability to utter, even though sometimes under his breath, the word freedom. These are not limited by time, unless human' life is limited by time. The ideology of freedom, plus all the vast remained of mankind's great- est rationalities and irrationalities, is certainly worth more than the ideology of freedom alone. The Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights are only scraps of paper. Neither is, an end in itself, but a means to human expres-; sion of human greatness in all its many as-7 pects. Their words are but an infinitesimal proportion of mankind's great words, and it is their purpose that human thought and emotion continue beyond them. The human race got a lucky break in Cuba, and those who disapproved of Kennedy's action when he undertook it, among them myself, must admit that the cause of peace is better off today than it was a month ago. But it was1 only a lucky break. We cannot trust luck, forK it proves nothing.- IN BERLIN a wall stands which is a blatant denial of the dignity and worth of human t beings. It is such a denial, but not so great1 a denial as missile bases in Turkey.C In Yugoslavia, Milovan Djilas alternates the publication of anti-Communist books with r prison terms. His persecution is a threat to thet concept of human liberty, but not so great a threat as Kennedy's vow to use nuclear weaponsr to defend Allied rights in Germany.C In China, families are separated to dedicate t all the moe arPprof thir+ hr., ave, +hir By GAIL EVANS STUDENT Government Council unanimously passed its strong- est motion of the s e m e s t e r Wednesday night - the motion calling for a fair housing ordinance in Ann Arbor. Council has done a real and meaningful service for the entire student body by expressing its opinion on the need for effective means to eliminate discriminatory housing in the city. The motion, introduced by Sharon Jeffrey, states that there are more than 1,800 students, pro- fessors, medical residents, re- searchers and visiting scholars from foreign lands living in Ann Arbor. MORE THAN half of these visi- tors are non-white and there are over 200 Negro tsudents enrolled in the University. The motion also cites two stu- dies of housing discrimination. Both the one conducted by the SGC Human Relations Board and the Human Relations Commission which reported its findings last April, revealed that serious dis- crimination in housing exists in Ann Arbor. Certainly the fact that there is discrimination in housing cannot be denied after the extensive study conducted by the Ann Arbor com- mission and the public hearing by the commission held last June. At the hearings the life and work department of the Council of Churches explained the exist- ing discrimination in the city as stemming from "fears on the part of developers of economic loss re- sulting from being the only busi- ness to accept non-whites." The department favored city fair hous- ing legislation to; alleviate this fear of economic reprisals. THE NATIONAL Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo- ple, called for legislation because the voluntary activity in Ann Ar- bor "to alleviate inequality in housing has been effective only in abouth30 per cent of the cases brought to the voluntary agency. "Voluntary, educational work pro- ceeds most successfully when backed by legislation," the asso- ciation maintained. James M. Davis, director of the International Center at the Uni- versity, said at the hearing that "until the Center can be assured that foreign students will receive the same consideration as any others," the Center has to "cush- ion" the non-white foreign stu- dent from "the discrimination that exists in Ann Arbor." He emphasized that "many peo- ple in foreign lands hear about America from Ann Arbor's for- eign students and thus the dis- crimination problem has interna- tional implications." IN VIEW of these findings, SGC was more than justified in taking a stand on housing discrimina- tion-an off-campus issue with significant campus implications. SGC recommended that any fair housing ordinance passed by the City Council include publically as- sisted housing, multiple rental units of four or more apartments or rooms, lots and houses in de- velopments, lending institutions, and licensed real estate dealers. The motion also urged newspapers to print a summary of any fair housing ordinance in the advertis- ing section. Council was not naive enough to believe that a mere policy state- ment by the city would be suffi- cient to eliminate entrenched dis- criminatory practices. The motion also called for inclusion of a strong effective enforcement agency with power to make. immediate inves- tigation of any complaints within a given time, to subpoena wit- nesses and records and to file suit if good indications of discrimina- tion are found. SGC IS SENDING copies of the motion to the Ann Arbor Fair Housing Legislation Committee of the City Council which is prepar- ing an ordinance for the City Council's consideration, and to the mayor and each City Council me ber. What will be the effect of SGC's motion? Will the city pay any at- tention to an expression of stu- dent opinion? Well, Prof. Lynn W. Eley, associate director of the Ex- tension Service and City Council member from the First Ward be- lieves it will "havexnfluence on the Council as do all expressions of opinion from community organ- izations." Prof. Eley maintains that "stu- dents themselves and particularly those of minority and foreign na- tionality backgrounds are in a position to know the problems of discrimination in Ann Arbor." He said that "I am pleased with this expression of concern from SGC, representing the general stu- dent body of the University. As a member of the Council's special committee on fair housing legis- lation I welcome this clear-cut resolution." SGC unanimously passed the Jeffrey motion. Conservatives and liberals joined forces' to take this strong stand on an off-campus is- sue. Perhaps SGC candidates who are against student expression on issues where there cn be no guar- antee of the result of the expres- sion should note this motion and the people who supported it. EhA FRG T. \ WE'LL 'PcK UP '(TSE' . VV t .'*4JL"} .. ft,::.:.':' s ' LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Ask Representatlive USNSA To the Editors: W E WOULD like to congratulate Robert Finke for giving what we feel is the first reasonable ex- planation for BOO. Unfortunately no article appeared beside it giving the other side of the story. As Mr. Finke states, USNSA has seemingly become a student pressure group instead of an informative body on student government problems. We do not see any pressing need for a national organization dealing with specific campus problems which could not be dealt with by informal contact between interest- ed parties; i.e. we don't under- stand how the original USNSA was of much benefit to most campus student government bodies. We believe it would be more beneficial to form an organization which functions as a pressure group per se. A majority of the undergraduate students on any given college campus are not old enough to vote and cannot, there- fore, directly make their views known by electing those people who best represent their ideas. SINCE NATIONAL decisions af- fect students to as great an ex- tent' as they affect other citizens, and since students are generally mature enough and well enough informedtouhave opinionsnuntil such time as the question of vot- ing age has been resolved there should be some organ to convey student opinions. As of now, stu- dents can only organize them- selves in temporary groups and, for instance, demonstrate or sign petitions in order to make them- selves heard. How many thous- ands of college students are there in the United States? Why not form a permanent organization to represent the student. USNSA has tried to do this, and in doing so has left its original purpose to drift in the wind. Our one objection is that USNSA does not represent all students as it should. We would like to see each campus take regular polls of opin- ion on issues as they arise and not leave such policy-making to the USNSA representative. These opinions could then be consolidat- ed into one, if overwhelming, or more if not so overwhelming. A consensus of each opinion voiced by a single, large, permanent, rep- resentative student organization would have considerably more per- suasion and meaning. Whether or not USNSA can do this is up to its members. -Marie DougLs, '164 -Judith Kett, '64 CO-EDUCATIONAL LIVING: 'U' Offers Diversity By ELLEN SILVERMAN WITH A LOOK to the future, Office of Student Affairs ad- ministrators have finally begun to fulfill the ideal of "choice" hous- ing with the advent of co-educa- tional living. "Choice" housing gives the stu- dent the choice not only of where he is to live; but one of types of accommodations. It is not simply a matter of allowing students to choose from South or West Quad- rangles but also from small apart- ments, large dormitories or co-ed housing. This is a concept that few uni- versities and colleges across the nation utilize. Now, the trend seems to be toward co-ed housing, and colleges are plunging in "whole hog" and converting all available facilities. OTHER SCHOOLS are still not convinced about the advantages of the program and consequently are either not converting at all or very few units are being made ready for use. Where money is available and the spirit prevails, new buildings are constructed to house enormous numbers of men and women. Case Hall at Michigan State University, Noyer Hall at Ball State Teachers College and the unnamed "New Dorm" at the University of Chi- cago are all examples of the mod- ern architectural structures which are arising from the ground to house a large minority of the pop- ulation. The University however, seems not to be pushing the program to one extreme or the other. And in the last analysis this is probably the best approach, for it implies just wouldn't be suited for it, need it or want it," she said. Vice-President for Student Af- fairs James A. Lewis reported to the Regents that the aim of the OSA is to provide all types of accommodations for students and allow a choice for them. When co- ed housing and the Oxford Roa project are complete, the wider range of selection will have been achieved. Surveys have been taken among the students and it has been found that while freshmen and sopho- mores are enthused about poss ble co-ed units, juniors and seniors, especially women are less so. In the case of upperclass women, they seem' to desire small, apart- ment-type units more than co-ed housing. All of these factors point to the whole crux of the choice philos- ophy. Students are not the same and consequently cannot be ex- pected to enjoy the same facilities and living arrangements. Whereas some women like living in Mary Markley, their next-door neigh- bors are better off at Betsy Bar- bour. UP UNTIL this time, students were usually hemmed in by the sharply restrictive type of Uni- versity housing. One had his choice of large, massive, institu- tional housing or small, more homey, often cramped housing. But with the beginning of the Oxford Road project and the co- ed housing study committee re- port, things are gradually chang- ing. With these two housing units completed, students will finally have the beginning of a choice. Students will not have to be forced, as' in other institutions, Clarification . . To the Editor: SEVERAL CHARGES have been levied at me personally, both by The Daily and by students speaking for continued affiliation with the USNSA, which are untrue and need clarification. It has been charged that I have hidden USNSA materials from Student Government Council. The truth is that every letter and bit of information that I have re- ceived from USNSA has been brought to the council's attention. Some in fact have been read com- pletely and others passed around the table for individual inspection by council members. Either the proponents of USNSA have found the projects and pro- grams which they now support unworthyhofhconsideration or they missed that part of the meeting. The Committee on USNSA which is composed of a majority of pro- USNSA students also receives copies of these materials as does Robert Ross, who is a member of the USNSA National Executive Committee. IT HAS BEEN charged that I ignored numerous pleas for ad- vice from the USNSA national office last spring, The truth is that no such pleas were received by my office. It has been charged that I was offered a committee chairmanship for the summer's USNSA Congress and refused to serve because of my opposition to USNSA. The truth is that I was asked to be an assistant to the chairman of a committee. I declined to partici- pate because I was not well- versed on the discussion topic, was not given enough time to prepare, and because the nature of my summer employment might require my leaving the Congress atmany time. No mention has been made of the fact that I served as a discussion leader for ;he Student Body Presidents Conference. In addition, I accepted an in- vitation to serve on a panel with the understanding I would be con- tacted upon my arrival as to the final details. However, once my position favoring reform of the as- sociation was known, I was never again contacted. *A * * ' IT HAS BEEN charged that I missed large portions of the Con- gress. The truth is that I was absent four days because I was called back to work. No mention is made of the fact that I arrived four days before other delegates from Michigan or that I missed only the most insignificant part of the Congress. Certain elements on this cam- pus, including The Daily, have attacked former SGC presidents and myself for being bland and undynamic in that we have not taken strong stands. I have taken a very firm stand favoring with- drawal from USNSA and am at- tempting to lead the council and the campus in this Direction It becomes clear now that it's not with taste and discretion, with a wit, theatrical logic, and an eye to That they had to do without their sets, and dance on a floor as un- suitable as it was dangerous, is a problem that sooner or later will have to be faced by the University Musical Society if they intend to continue with a program of full scale productions. * * * IN ANY CASE, after an eve- ning of squeaking slippers and nervous footing a good temporary floor would seem more in the na- ture of a necessity than a courtesy to future dance companies. The program opened with "One in Five." It is light and not with- out wit in its Marcel Marceau spoofs of classical set pieces, but its sting was diffused in a more or less sloppy performance. Balanchine's "Concerto Baroc- co" set the pace for the evening. It was for the most part taunt and precise, and the dancing of Galina Samtsova and David Adams was in all ways admirable. "L I L A C GARDEN" suffered from not having its lilacs, but the strange, wistful quality that has made it practically a classic permiated its better moments. And quality of another kind. marked the second Tudor work of the evening, the tremendously funny "Judgment of Paris." Its only flaw lies in its length, for if Juno and Venus do not fail to please, Minerva is too much of a good thing.I The high point of the evening was Frederick Ashton's early di- vertissement "Les Rendez-Vous." Written for the Sadler's Wells when it was at much the same stage of its development, it fitted like a glove. Impressive if not par- ticularly difficult, it ended the evening with a suitable set of fire- works. And fireworks were provided, for a change, by the orchestra, which was much, much better CANADIAN BALLET: Competent Dedication THE NATIONAL Ballet of Canada is one of the youngest of dance companies, and in the decade of its existence has covered a tremendous amount of ground, both mentally and physically. Its dancers are all of a certain quality of competence, and dedication and inspiration go a long way in compensating for technical per- fection and genius. The program yesterday evening in Hill Auditorium was chosen vnice variation of sentiment and the strong points of the company. SIMPLE LIFE : 'Gigot':0 A 'Schiep' "GIGOT", the current feature at the Michigan Theatre, is the story of a Parisian vagrant, a man who makes his home in a miserable little cellar and is employed as a janitor at a small pensione. As played by Jackie Gleason, he is a mute who has a series of al- most Chaplinesque adventures. Gigot is the fall-guy, the epi- tome of the man who is perpetual- ly and irrevocably one-down, the "schlep" supreme. His character is almost an extension of the Poor Soul role which Gleason plays on television. Little children run up to him and pin a horse's tail made of straw on him; the local barflies fill him up with bourbon and Per- nod, and he subsequently plays the clown, to the amusement of them all. GIGOT is a simple character, and he takes life simply. He is the Pied Piper of Paris; little children and dogs follow him around. He finds meaning to his life (or does he?) when he "adopts"ha little girl and her sluttish mother off the streets. He dotes on the little girl, he tries to amuse her with his antics, with his dumb gestures reminis- cent of "Away we go!" on tele- vision. Gigot's feelings and emotions are extremely simplistic, and for this he suffers. There is satire in the film, on French bureaucracy