Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIvErs2TY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "T Pi " " STUDENT PUBLICATIONs BLDG., ANN A&B6R, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 USNSA IN PERSI A . "Of Course I Know - It's Mrs. Roosevelt" irials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staf writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. DAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1962. NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID MARCUS .a t ,/ .. ' The S1GCCaies . . 7 t v { itz, 3 a American Stud 'ents Trail Other Lands Politically By GLORIA BOWLES There is no way of getting out o1 "E DEARTH of qualified candidates in this. fall's election indicates again Student Gov- nment Council's failure to stimulate the stu,- nt body toward a meaningful definition of udent government and of the relationship of udents and their government to the Univer- by's various channels of authority.' Every student should be critically examining d re-examining the ideas which are the basis University operations and which influence e educational environment. In this process, e student must be guaranteed free inquiry td investigation. He bears the responsibility express his opinion on topics of concern students and to insist on maintenance of nilar rights for all students. TUDENT GOVERNMENT provides students with the means of channeling their ideas d educational aims into specific and con- 'uctive programs. SC therefore must stand r and strive to attain thoughtful student par- ipation in the formation of University policy both academic and student affairs. SGC must use all its resources to guarantee idents an opportunity to maximize their edu- tional growth within the University. This means'Insistence on the students' rights hear all speakers who interest them and to press their opinions through publications or litical action. A Council candidate ought to nand a Student Bill of Rights and Responsi- ities and have reflected upon some of the cifics., "C SHOULD REALIZE that a student's edu- cation suffers when he is prevented from as- elating with other students of differing back- unds and beliefs. This fact, plus a clear mandate from the Re- its to. end discrimination in the University, Mes SGOC. both the right and the responsibility eliminate as quickly as possible racial and igous discrimination in fraternities and rorities. Council candidates should have a clear un- rtanding of the evolution of this problem at e University and should stand for the elim- tion of all discrimination. MBE1S OP SOC should have a compre- hensive understanding of the structure of e University--one which acknowledges that e campus.is more than the Office of Student fairs, and that the problems of the OSA are fated to more general problems which exist widely diverse areas of the University. [he- student government candidates- should 4ize that students everywhere face the chal- ge of academic freedom and the struggle for I status in a "community of scholars." ['he Council, therefore, should work for the Ifare of all students if those at this particular Iversity are to benefit fully. This means that C must be aware of the problems of students other institutions and express its reaction specific policies and practices as an attempt h to influence action and to arouse discus- Acceptance of this position also logically de- nds continued membership in the United tes National Student Association as a means affecting national, and international issues evant to higher education, bolstering stu- t government here and on other campuses I working for improvement of the education American students. N EVALUATION of this year's SGC candi- dates must Include both the individual's ion of the Student Government Council and capacity to translate ideas into specific and crete action. ifter an open house, personal interviews and ,mination of the platforms of the 13 candi- es, we find four whose conceptions of stu- it government include advocacy of greater dent responsibility, assured student rights, I an understanding of the Council's relation the academic program. n order of the consistency of thought, logical 'lopment of ideas and apparent ability to n their conceptions into effective programs,. y are: tOBERT ROSS, one of the best informed I most intelligent students ever to have ved the Council, is a militant advocate of dent rights and extended student responsi- ty. He bases his stands on a general theory democracy and views University problems aspects of larger, more general concerns. bough Council members long ago stopped ening to his often long and involuted argu- its, they usually vote for the amendments offers to make liberal motions more palat- e and conservative ones more intelligent. toss' ability to think clearly and logically, lingness to work, hard for the Council and ailiarity with the University's formal and >rmal structures demand his re-election as s his vigorous and far reaching image of the ction of student government. ~ARY GILBAR articulates well the relation- P of national and international issues to her education, but does not present a specific a of the position of SOC in University life. offers a broad interpretation of the role of udent and the necessity of certain freedom fulfillment of that role. His knowledge of University is more' extensive than that of t of the candidates, but he has offered no inal ideas or issues. about what to do with them. He demonstrates an ability and a desire, once a point has been raised, to study it. REGINA ROSENFIELD typifies the female candidate Voice runs every semester. She utters, and undoubtedly believes, fine statements about the aims of the Council, the rights of students, the necessity of ending discrimination-with little qualification and less apparent thought. Her knowledge of the Office of Student Af- fairs is mediocre and she knows almost nothing about the Council. (She blames SGC conserva- tives for forcing postponement of hearings on sororities over liberal protests when, In fact, the action was unanimous.) She might effect some advancement in women's rights and the lot of the international student on the campus. Her debate would be ineffective, but her vote would aid the Council. THE NINE remaining candidates offer a philosophy of SOC which differs remarkably from those outlined above. As a group they have a slower, more cautious approach to issues, one which doubts the competency and maturity of students and shies away from increasing the decision making power of students. They draw a sharper line between classes and extra-cur- ricular activities and see the latter as largely unconnected with an educative process. They put emphasis on the administrative rather than the legislative aspect of student government. Of these, four have the capability or poten- tial of becoming adequate Council members who will work to make SOC an active rather than inactive organization and will best artic- ulate their particular viewpoint. They are: STEVEN STOCKMEYER takes a tough line on USNSA, does not believe in the existence of a national community of students and advo- cates a "responsible" and "moderate" approach to student freedoms. His deprecating and con- descending attitude toward students hinders any major immediate attempts to increase au- thority. He does not conceive of the doctrine of in loco parentis as a cause of the inability of students to develop niore responsibility. Stockmeyer is extremely well informed about the campus, especially about non-academic concerns, isan articulate and forceful spokes-' man for his position and able politician. He is willing to work hard for Council as ong as his duties do not interfere with obligations to outside political parties (witness his abandou"- ing the role of chairman of SGC's delegation to the USNSA Congress to work for Romney). The other candidates affirming the views Stockmeyer holds are far outdistanced by his knowledge and abilities. RUSSELL EPKER is a frank representative of the fraternity system, though his platform tries to appeal to everyone on the question of membership selection. Under questioning, he admits his belief that fraternities ought to be able to- discriminate on racial and religious grounds if the local chapter wants to, and that the Regents' bylaw forbidding such discrimina- tion was probably a mistake. He discusses issues intelligently and has framed criteria around which to judge the im- portance of motions. Given some time on Council to pick up knowledge about the Uni- versity, he would become one of the most ef- fective spokesmen for this group's viewpoints. THOMAS BROWN awoke this fall and began writing motions for the Council. Last year, he did little but keep SGC's financial position clear (on which he did a fine job) and co- authored a study of the Hare System. Brown emphasizes the "reality" of issues, placing less emphasis on statements of ideals than on "responsible cooperation" and com- promise with the political situation. He would see the Council offer more information and more services to students and 'continue the. study of the judiciary structure. His stands on issues are consistently conser- vative and although he participates in debate, he seldom raises new points. He would put in time working on the administration of SGC. CHARLES BARNELL has put some serious thought into SGC, but has one of the nost lim- ited visions of student government offered by the candidates. He would have SGC stick to a very narrow interpretation of. "student con- cerns" and would consolidate the small power Council has already rather than try to extend it into other areas of the University. In his view, SGC is permanently bound to a subservient- superior relationship with the administration. His stand on membership selection indicates a break with dominant conservative trends in that he feels the University has a legal and moral obligation to end discrimination. He also breaks with this bloc by opposing SGC partici- pation in the OSA advisory committee. .UNFORTUNATELY, every SGC election seems to draw out a few candidates who have no clear ideas of the Council's role, or are too in- competent to implement any image of student government into effective programs. This fall there are five: BRUCE HOPKINS has borrowed every one of his ideas from other candidates and has little knowledge to support any of his stands. THOMAS SWANEY has no consistent pro- gram or philosophy to offer the campus. He proposes an unrealistic and ill-thought out idea to get students to hire and fire professors. . FRANK STROTHER believes a strong Coun- eni mmhp m,. wilmlinitiat li'idslinn n rovie 'V hum it I.M. AL Dyawn on the occasion. o Mrs. Roosevelt's 70th birthday, October 1, 1954 UNDERSCORE: Common Market and the Dream UNEXPECTEDLY, the generally apathetic University campus has been roused from its political slumber these last few days, as the campaign on the USNSA ref- erendum reaches furor propor- tions. It is good to see the University waking up, if only for a few days prior to Wednesday's election; it is gratifying to hear so many stu- dents talking about the issues, and so many of them anxious to be informed. To the BOO contin- gent, conducting an admirable and very professional campaign goes much of the credit for mak- ing students aware of the com- ing vote. This BOO group, generally in- cluding students of conservative orientation, and the liberals, rea- lize that the USNSA vote is the most important this campus has seen in recent years. On its result hinges the whole tenor and tone of University student government. We are, In essence, voting on a question of fundamental philos- ophy. This is then, the most basic and fervent of issues: a no vote will take the University out of the United States National Stu- dent Association. A no vote will deprive the representatives of this university of a forum for expres- sion of student opinion. And a no vote, most importantly, will represent a renunciation by the UUniversity student of his re- sponsibility in national and in- ternational affairs. *4' * EXCEPT FOR NSA, founded in 1947, the Peace Corps, the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Com- mittee and a sprinkling of other groups, American students should hang their heads in shame at their political inactivity. A cul- ture which generally denounces all politics as "dirty" is perhaps to be blamed. But, at any rate, we run a poor political pace com- pared to students in Europe and Latin America. In England, the majority of the Ban the Bombers who march- ed on the Monday after Easter of last year, and who cheered Bert- rand Russell during speeches at Green Park all afternoon were young people. The 55 mile hike from Alder- maston to London on .a rainy April weekend was made y by stu- dents between the ages of 18 and 25, earnest, and sincerely afraid of nuclear war. They were also amazingly articulate and well- niformed. The activities of Austian stu- dents are less well known in the United States. Yet, a post-war legislative act gave student un- ions there enormous powers, and large material resources. Austrian students, working through three student political parties, are very powerful. In Vienna, the student president of the largest party told of their group's recent action in ousting a university official after an investi- gation of the mishandling of his post. However, the student presi- dent stressed the enormous re- sponsibility such powers entailed, and the necessity of the con- scientious and prudent dispensa- tion of those powers. .* * * . IN FRANCE, where a prolonged Algerian conflict carried many young men off to Africa, students are politically informed and vi- tally interested. Algeria and American foreign policy are major topics of conversation in the Parisian cafes where students gather. of the Sorbonne at noontime, without being bombarded by stu- dent pamphlets trumpeting the cause of the socialists, the radi- cals, or the extreme right;a "manifestation" (demonstration) occurred at least thrice weekly last year. Latin American students are probably the most politicallypow- erful in the world; in most coun- tries they rank in importance af- ter the army. The first important student conference was held in Montevideo as early as 1908, and was primarily concerned with the reform of higher education. Today there is little difference between student and national pol- 'itics. Aspirations to political posts seek appointment to prestige uni- versity posts to make themselves known, and student political lead- ers, after experience at the uni- versity, generally move into na- tional politics. Venezuela's Betan- court is an example of student political leader turned national political leader. * * * AMERICAN STUDENTS need not go as far as Latin Americans, in using campus politics as a steppingstone to national leader- ship. However, we can no longer close our eyes to the expanding role of the American student in a shrinking world. We have the advantages no Latin or European nation can boast, both in our material wealth and in campus freedom. We need not be so afraid of the closing of a university, or expulsion after expression of political views, as is often the case in Latin Amer- ica. But, until now, American stu- dents have abdicated their ie- sponsibilty. We have, until now, proved ourselves capable only of making decisions about women's hours and their chaperones, and caught up with the every da, and the, immediate we have sel- dom looked beyond the university. Can we not see those enormous problems looming before us in the nation and the world? Do we not have enough social vision to rec- ognize that the problems of dis- crimination in our own nation, and, our ,inage abroad, are the most important issues? IT IS NOT a question of ne- glecting present day needs, and of facing problems that affet us more directly on the campus. But neither should it be a question of refusing to be concerned with the broader and more basic issues of the nation and the world. Americans, on whose shoulders rests the burden of leading the world, cannot sud4enly begin exercising this heavy responsibi- ity. We do not suddenly become informed, interested, and capable. Oen the contrary, we need to start on the student level. A chance to find our way, to develop a philos- ophy, and to articulate it should not be missed. The United States National Stu- dent Association gives American students a much-needed forum: it is the only student group in the nation which approaches the ef- fectiveness and legitimacy of Lat- in American and European stu- dent groups. - Young Americans, including Michigan students, often lameit their lack of power. But a no vote on the USNSA referenidum will help us mount that spiraling staircase, higher and higher up. Into the Ivory Tower of student apathy and obliviousness and ep- resent a refusal to consider the most pressing question of our generation. 'By PHILIP SUTIN WHEN NOT cheering about about Mississippi or frighten- ed by Cuba many people ponder the effects of the Common Market and some dream of a united West, embracing both sides of the North Atlantic. The initial success' of the Common Market and growing disillusionment with the United Nations have combined to encourage this hope.j, The partial economic unifica- tion of six Western European states and the resultant flowering of prosperity have made the Com- mon Market the core of the West- ern European unification dream. Many nations are clamoring to 'LONE CAT': Streng.th, Dignity HE FOLK MUSIC of Jesse Ful- ler is never pretty in the con- ventional sense of the word. It is a music that is too harsh and angular, too intense and driving ever to be labeled pretty. In spite of this, or perhaps be- cause of this, Jesse Fuller is one of the most truly powerful and im- pressive figures on the American folk music scene today. Jesse Fuller is one of the few folk singers alive today in the direct tradition of the Southern' Negro street singer. He is probably the greatest of his genre. GREATNESS IS an elusive qual- ity. It is easy to talk of Jesse Ful- ler in terms of his instrumental technique, his ethnic singing style, and the scores of other criteria that folklorists and eth- nomusicologists love to indulge in. But this is.a stilted way to ap- proach the music of Jesse Fuller. It is music-and a man-that has its base in human experience: pain, joy, hard work, and the sheer exuberance of life. This is all stated with a lucidity and directness that speaks of power. Jesse Fuller is indeed the "Lone Cat." His music and stage pres- ence are products of a fast dying era. He is reminiscent of the street minstrels of the 'South. He tells jokes, of another day, in which he is the butt of the joke. He makes it clear that he is before the audience to entertain them, not to expound on the esoteria of folk music. He is an unassuming person who enjoys himself and infects others with this enjoyment. * * * WHILE HIS actions and atti- tudes on the stage might seem obsequious if he were a young contemporary on the folk music or jazz scene, on Jesse they some- how fit naturally. He is more of a man for them. In spite of every- thing he carries himself with' a dignity that is unbelievable. He Join the bandwagon and the market nations may soon be forced to draw a line. * * * MOST VISIONARIES see West- ern unity following in EEC's foot- steps. The Common Market ap- pears to have proved the axiom, political unity follows economic unity. Within the EEC, Germany and France have patched up long, bitter quarrels and are co-operat- ing to extend their economic in- terests. Such diverse nations as Italy and Holland are working together for the market's good. The Com- mon Market nations in concert have made political decisions on labor and trade policies and have accepted political decisions of the super-national EEC. All these actions are token steps toward eventual unity, the vision- aries prophesize. * * * SECOND motivating force be- hind the Western unionists is the decline and fall of the Western hegemony at the United Nations. For the first dozen years, the West. especially the United States, ran the world organization pretty much to suit itself. However, by 1960 the drive for independence reached its peak, and the UN doubled in member- ship between 1955 and 1962 with most new members comning from neutralist, non-Western and form- er colonial African and Asia. These nations, Jealous of their newly-won independence, are not amenable to Western or Soviet domination and- tend to act as an amorphous buffer between the. two great blocs. Taking dictates from neither side, the neutral, newly independent nations are shaping the United Nations in their own image. AN INSISTANT conviction that the West is losing the cold war lurks as a sub-conscious factor in the minds of Western union- ists. They see the Communists as a monolithic bloc, attaining vic- tory after victory against the di- vided West. United in ideology and purpose, the visionaries claim, the Com- munists are successfully wooing the neutralist, underdeveloped na- tions away from the West and eventually into their arms., The visionaries vary in their ideas for achieving Western unity. To most, Western unityF means' Atlantic union. However, many vaguely suggest that this unity embraces s u c h non - Atlantic countries as Japan and the Phil- ippines., NOR IS the form of unity de- terminite. Prof. Robert Strausz- Hupe, director of the University of Pennsylvania's Foreign Policy Research Institute and one of the Western unionists most articulate spokesman, wisely suggested that union must be achieved a step at a time. Each small concept' must be created and institutional- ized and in time unity will de- velop, he argues. The Atlantic Unionists envision for a "constitutional convention" in 1964.. Herbert Hoover last summer voiced the aspiraticns of the grander and more paniched theor- ists who urge a "union of the free." This vague organization would embrace all anti-Commun- ist states 'and would function sep- arately and in place of the United Nations which they think is "soft on Communism." * * * HOWEVER, in' their' vague dreaming the Western unionists fail to see major stumbling blocs to unity. Symptomatically, there is neither a clear approach nor, a clear concensus on the form of Western union. Federation seems. the most popular, yet its extent and scope remain undefined. Centuries of conflicting and in- dependent culture remain the. strongest block to Western unifi- cation.. No country is willing to modify and standardize its iinsti- tutions, nor are these enough all- Western institutions to replace national ones. Even with Western nations, di- verse' cultures have refused to unify and form a cohesive nation. French and British Canadians have lived in strained co-existence for almost 100 years. The Flem- mings and the Walloons of Bel- gium have almost ripped this Common Market nation to shreads with internal riots about political, cultural and social rights and status. * * * FEW EXCLUSIVELY Western institutions exist. The Common Market is the strongest, its satel- lite agencies are next and NATO is always considered in constant difficulty. Few such institutions exist outside the political and eco- nomic fields. Further, nationalistic education- al systems, especially in the mon- olingual United States and in Canada have- created provincial outlooks. Only now, a series of "Atlantic colleges" are being es- tablished in Europe and the Unit-! ed States. These institutions plan to establish a stringent multi-lin- gual, multi-cultural curriculum to create scholars well versed and conditioned to Western unity. Such colleges would train the tech- nicians, of the united West. It is in the area of education and other areas of social contact that the Western unionists ought to work. The schools, colleges and universities must be encouraged to teach a Western, rather than a nationalistic outlook if any sort of unity is to succeed. Increased cultural and economic contact must be encouraged so that thej Western populace becomes accus- tomed to thinking of the West as, one people. * * *, THE GROWTH of African and Asian nations, the threat of nuc- lear war and the increasing com- plexity of Western civilization is inevitably forcing Western unity. The unionist groups are providing a valuable service to this trend as the voice in wilderness holding up the light of the promised land. CO-ED HOUSING: New* Dimenso inLiving By ELLEN SILVERMAN WHAT D 0 E S co-educational housing offer for the student is the question which has been analyzed the most in the past months while decisions were being made. The answer is not simple; for each student the opportunity to live in a co-ed unit offers unique conditions. But by and large the, effect should be a positive one for any student who moved. Special Assistant to the Vice- President Elizabeth Davenport, after returning from a conference on co-ed housing, remarked that she felt the greatest advantage in such living arrangements was the opportunity for the sharing of ideas.1 * * * CO-ED HOUSING places "men and women in a natural atmos- phere. It is deeper than a mere dating relationship. Students learn to work with people instead of stereotypes in such a situation. "The living unit brings much the same as a community or pro- fessional relationship," she noted. Mrs. Davenport also commented that within the structure of a co- ed residence, ideas can be ex- changed without the stigma of a TO MANY students, cored hous- ing is synonimous with dating. The opportunity to meet more students of the opposite sex is not only appealing but might even lure some males to live on the Hill. Students, in a poll conducted by Interquadrangle Council, indicat- ed that they felt co-ed housing would have a more positive than negative effect on their living ar- rangements next fall. Whichever way the student is affected it is most likely that the possibilities of new relationships will be opened. CO-ED HOUSING is a new breakthrough in policy; the seg- regation of men and women arbi- trarily is slowing breaking down. The artificiality of the Hill hope- fully will be removed. And the effect will probably be good. Although most students won't publicly admit it, they would be happy to have more in- teraction with the opposite sex. To many, it is limiting to work with the other sex only four or five times a year and have no other outlet for strictly informal gathering. Co-ed housing provides these op- portunities for such informal meeting. Women and men are not -nnn n+ toithe Aamand ann