Sventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSrrY 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. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: GAIL EVANS State Speaker Policy: Clarity and Uniformity THE LONG-AWAITED uniform speaker policy for all state-supported colleges and universi- ties has been proposed. There is no longer any excuse for "interim" rules on outside speakers. Each school must follow the lead set by the Michigan Coordinat- ing Council for Public Higher Education Tues- day and incorporate the suggested policy in their speaker bylaws. The University was the vanguard institution in formation of the newly proposed policy. Michigan State University and Wayne State University both adopted temporary speaker pol- icies with the intent to revise the rules after the Coordinating Council announced a suggest- ed state-wide policy. The other seven state-sup- ported colleges have articulated no definite speaker policy. ALTHOUOH the Coordinating Council's policy is closely patterned after the new Univer- sity speaker bylaw, the Regents must also take note of the stylistic clarifications embodied in the Coordinating Council's report. Much of the controversy over the University's speaker policy has arisen because of ambiguous wording. The proposed policy would encourage a spirit of free inquiry with a minimum of restraints. It is designed to provide opportunity for open expression of opinion subject to critical evalua- tion. Similar to the University policy there will be no restriction of speakers because of back- ground and there will be no screening com- mittee to pre-censor lectures. WSU's vote to adopt the Coordinating Coun- cil's report is highly significant in that it may indicate a complete reversal of Wayne's interim policy. WSU President Clarence Hilberry said earlier this fall when WSU adopted a policy banning all Communist speakers that Wayne would reconsider its speaker rule as soon as the Coordinating Council made a recommendation for a unified policy on outside speakers. A T PRESENT WSU has pledged compliance with the resolution passed by the state Leg- islature which states that "the appearance of Communist speakers at state-supported univer- sitieS . . . is contrary to public policy of the state of Michigan." Any speaker whose "background provides proof that his appearance would be in conflict with the concurrent resolution" of the Legisla- ture is prohibited under WSU's policy. The fact that the Wayne contingent at the Coordinating Council-President Hilberry and WSU Governors Benjamin D. Burdick and Leonard Woodcock-voted in favor of the Co- ordinating Council's policy may indicate that Wayne will soon change its present speaker rule and adopt a more liberal one. SU PRESIDENT John A. Hannah and Trus- tee Russell H. Seibert's backing of the Co- ordinating Council's proposed policy is also significant. If MSU adopts the new speaker rule, it will abolish the reluctant and ineffective speaker screening committee. MSU's present speaker policy is unclear and the proposal came in the knick of time to give the trustees a concrete program to work on. The members of the screening committee have asked that the committee be dissolved. The committee expressed reluctance to prior censorship of speakers and asked that a new University Forum Committee be established to advise groups on the speaker policy but not to clear speakers. So far the trustees have taken no action on the request. Now, the report should eliminate the need for any form of speaker com- mittee. THE ADOPTION of the report at the Co- ordinating Council meeting was an impor- tant step forward for the smaller state-support- ed colleges. They too need a definite policy on outside speakers. Although the test cases of the extent of academic freedom usually take place at the larger colleges and universities, the need for a spirit of free inquiry is just as im- portant at the small school. Certainly, the unanimously adopted report of- fers a plan for the most liberal and intelligent speaker rule in the state. Each of the 10 state- supported schools can gain academically from the adoption of the proposed speaker policy. The Coordinating Council has served a useful purpose by acting as a sounding board for a state-wide viewpoint on a progressive policy. With the assurance of support from the large universities, the smaller schools need not fear legislative retribution. A uniform speaker policy will be a pillar of strength against the Legisla- ture's stand on Communist speakers. Whether a uniform policy will ever become a reality will depend partly on the effectiveness of the pres- entation by the members of the Coordinating Council. Although the state-wide adoption of the rec- ommended speaker policy is of primary import- ance, the rule is not the final answer to the needs of universities and colleges. A true "spirit of free inquiry" is not accomplished by a regu- lation which would forbid public advocacy of civil disobedience and forceful overthrow of the government without first applying the "clear and present danger" test. It was clearly explained that the speaker policy in no way denies the speaker the right to discuss the desirability of changing the existing rules of the university, the laws of Michigan or even the form of state or federal government. Prof. Samuel Estep of the Law School told the Coordinating Council that there are adequate legitimate means for change with- out resorting to illicit processes, such as know- ingly violating regulations. HE FALLACY of this line of reasoning on the universitylevel becomes clear when one examines the means for students to implemen change in the university, where change usually results from illegal violation of rules demon- strating that a regulation is unenforceable or occasionally by legal means when the adminis- tration deigns to listen to students in an ad- visory capacity. There is always a thin line between "discuss- ing the desirability of change" and advocating that the audience take action to implement the change. Often this line cannot and should not be drawn. Advocacy of the forceful, unlawful overthrow of the government should not be restricted in a university community of the educated elite un- less such advocacy actually impairs the safety of society or the government. The "clear and present danger" test should be the guiding prin- ciple. Certainly, no university or college regula- tion need reinforce the existing laws limiting certain speeches and speakers. Civil laws and civil authorities are well able to handle any violent results from a public gathering in school facilities even as big as the University stadium. Universities, the state and federal govern- ment all suffer from what James Thurber calls "a false sense of insecurity"; and a deplor- able lack of faith in the democratic system. Nevertheless, the proposed state-wide speaker policy contains the most intelligent approach to the problem of outside speakers yet formu- lated. Hopefully before the academic year is over Michigan will be the first state to have a uniform speaker policy at state-supported col- leges and universities. -GAIL EVANS . At" w ., ' _. " .5.. way. Her uncle's fanatic passion resemblance to her aunt prove fatal. He persuades her to dress in her aunt's wedding dress, then drugs her and attempts to rape her. HIS SENSE of shame prevents him at the last minute; but when she awakes he lies and tells her she is dishonored and unfit to be a nun, so. she will have to stay with him. In disgust and fear she runs from him; despairingly, he kills himself. Returning to see him hanged with a child's jump rope, Viridiana feels her first failure: she has not been a good niece. Feeling responsible for her uncle's death, she decides that she can do the best penitence by remaining in the world. She col- lects all the local beggars in the house, to make them "feel a little human warmth and love." Meanwhile, her uncle's son Jorge has moved into the house and at- tempts to seduce Viridiana. Escap- ing impurity once more, she ig- nores him. Meanwhile, the beggars gather for an orgy in the "rich house." They eat, make love and dance grotesquely to the tune of the "Hallelujah Chorus" (in English) from Handel's "Messiah." Drunk, one of them rapes Viridiana and attempts to murder Jorge when the pair discover the orgy. Her last attempt at sainthood foiled, Viridiana decides to find her place as Jorge's mistress. But even this retreat is not to be given gracefully. THE MOVIE is extremely well conceived and acted. The religious and erotic symbolism is dizzying -the crown of thorns with which Viridiana masochistically punishes ' herself; the ashes of "repentance and death" she puts in her uncle's bed during a sleepwalking scene; the crucifix-knife used by one of the beggars. "Viridiana" does not make 'La Dolce Vita' "look like a "family picnic," as the advertising claims. But it is an extremly worthwhile and thoughtful excursion into Spanish religious life, in false and! real piety, in love and passion, and in the kind of national portrayal apt to make a dictator nervous enough to ban it in its own country. --Ruth Hetmanski for his dead wife and Viridiana's CONSTANTINE: Monotony A bounds "CONSTANTINE and the Cross" is one of the worst movies one can ever have the misfortune of seeing. It could be described as a series of battles with love scenes and other traumatic experiences sprin- kled sparingly throughout to give the outward appearance of variety. The producer must have had the same thing in mind when he in- terspersed these sickening scenes as the audiences does when fin- ished seeing the movie--it was monotonous. * * * NOT ONLY was the plot monot- onous-one battle after another, with the "good guys" always win- ning-but the music was monoton- ous and the acting was monoton- ous. Cornell Wilde did a lousy job with a lousy role. Belinda Lee, Constantine's ever-faithful wife Fausta, did a lousy job. The pro- ducer did a lousy job. The music was lousy. As a matter of fact, the entire debacle was monotonously lous y.-r As if this weren't enough, the thing wasn't even original. It was an attempted reproduction of such successful films as "El Cid" and "Ben Hur"-and a sorry attempt it was. THE MOVIE begins badly, gets progressively worse, and ends ab- solutely abominably. How anybody in his right mind could produce such an atrocious piece of trash and have the auda- city to expect anything but nega- tive reactions is-beyond me. My advice to all of those unsus- pecting idealists who are consid- ering going to see this asinine production with the idea of seeing a great spectacular is--don't. Save yourself the money and the time. Unless, of course, you want to get a couple of hours sleep. -Daniel Shafer ;I 'VIRIDIANA' Erotic Symbolism well Conceived "VIRIDIANA" is the absorbing story of a girl who tries to be saint and falls, a girl whose decline from novice nun to mistress is the tragic failure of a life looking for a purpose. Viridiana (Silvia Pinal) is a young novice whose mother superior urges her to take a trip to the home of her uncle and benefactor (Fer- nando Rey) to say one last affectionate farewell to the world before taking her vows. Protesting that she does not want to see the world again, Viridiana goes only from a sense of duty to be a good niece. But Viridiana's stay in the country does not turn out quite that 4 DER SPIEGEL' AFTERMATH: Adenauer Faces Difficulties By MALINDA BERRY THE WEST GERMAN govern- ment crisis which began its fo- ment when the police seized the offices of the weekly news maga- zine "Der Spiegel," last month, is still in a state of limbo. The surprise victory of Defense Minister Franz Josef Strauss in the Bavarian elections earlier this week, has forced Chancellor Kon- rad Adenauer into making a deci- sion concerning the political future of Strauss. However, President Heinrich Luebke, who must ap- prove any Cabinet change, will be out of the country on an Asian tour until Wednesday. Adenauer has a few more breather days. Strauss was the central pivot in the Spiegel affair in which the magazine editors were arrested on the suspicion of treason and brib- ery. For years "Der Spiegel" has been the chief critic of the govern- ment. Adenauer himself has many times felt the sting. But Strauss has been the chief recipient of its criticism. STRAUSS, once indicated as Adenauer's successor, has seen his political potentials fade under con- tinued attack from the weekly. It has charged that the minister is not only incompetent but also re- sponsible for lucrative contracts being directed towards friends and relatives. About six weeks ago the maga- zine published an indictment of the West German Army, which in- directly hit at Strauss. Three weeks later the police were active, routing Spiegel reporters out of bed and arresting the publisher. In the storm of public and poli- tical protest which followed, from the Social Democrats, the Trade Unions, various student and jour- nalistic associations and numerous private persons, all 20 members of Adenauer's coalition Cabinet re- LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: A bstract Criticism The Extraordinary Commonplace AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES do not display the academic freedom which they might, and most of them are plagued by speaker bans and newspaper censorship which contra- dict the very basis of education. But the worst type of pressure against free expression is community-imposed fear. Speaker bans can be violated. Censorship can be agitated against. But to overcome fear -to overcome community pressure which gen- erates it-is a most difficult thing to do. The University of Alabama doesn't impose censorship on its weekly student newspaper, the Alabama Crimson Light. But Tuscaloosa, Ala., is a segregated city, and Alabama citizens react Business Staff LEE SCLAR, Business Manager SUE FOOTE....................Finance Manager RUTH STEPHENSON.............. Accounts Manager SUE TURNER ..........Associate Business Manager THOMAS BENNETT ............. Advertising Manager Editorial Staff MICHAEL OLINICK, Editor JUDITH OPPENHEIM MICHAEL HARRAH Editorial Director City Editor JUDITH BLEIER...............Associate City Editor V13. rnTr UI.T....rV in AXXVgI*n A ~... .J.... i+^A f lir4 n with fury to expressions for integration of the Negro. WHILE JAMES MEREDITH was being en- rolled at Ole Miss, most Southern college newspapers were editorially silent. But at least one spoke out, and did so forcefully and gen- uinely-the Alabama Crimson Light. Editor Melvin Meyer wrote in support of Meredith, in support of integration, and argued against all the arguments of the segregationists. He did so in a state where people. are being shot and lynched for supporting integration. He did it at a segregated university. Meyer comes from rural Mississippi, which makes the episode all the more unusual. For this show of honesty, Meyer received threats of violence from the Ku Klux Klan and the Klan burned a few crosses in front of his fraternity. Meyer wrote more editorials support- ing integration, not only in Mississippi but also in Alabama and at the university. When the threats got more serious, the uni- versity offered Meyer police protection, which he accepted. But the university did not escape threats, pressure, and demands for silencing the paper. THE ACTION of the University of Alabama in affording its editor needed police protection, and its refusal to act to silence the paper, are To the Editor: JAMES GINDIN is a real wit. His critique on the new "Gen- eration" is quite amusing, espe- cially when he jumps into the realm of the visual arts. Admit- tedly, he knows that Hogarth's name is William but this hardly qualifies him to judge the visual aspects of the issue. Perhaps he bases his qualification on feelings of culturaluniversality (a damn- able aspect which pervades through the numerous "culturet- tes" around this university) but he states "I am in' no position to make any judgement on Mr. James' score." Why not the ears along with the eyes and mouth? If he was not attempting to be facetious, I beg that he accepts my most humble apologies for the foregoing remarks. When the staff asked to present my building, the article was born in an attempt to convey the concept of a building- a most abstract thing. I believe that there is a definite lack of communication in this area for few people can accurately read a plan. But evidently I failed for what he says hardly coincides with the way I see the building. A topographical error(s) excus- ably accounts for his seeing only seven classrooms instead of the actual 24, but he completely over- looks their immediate relationship to the information materials cen- ter (Ann Arbor school system's term) the most unique and impor- tant aspect of the design. This relationship permits greater ac- cessability for the use of educa- tional materials. The arrangement permits individual and various group size study areas. Spacious and airy are hardly the adjectives to use in describing this inner- directed building. * * * ADMITTEDLY, architecture cannot replace great teachers such as Prof Hedrich of the engineering school or Prof. Hicks in the math design and communicate-yet evi- dently failed to convey. -Paul C. Lin, '63A&D Wraps .. To the Editor: INDEED, Prof. Gindin, the draw- ings were heavily concerned with clothes. A nude child from one period is for all intents and purposes as good as another. The clothes make the (Victorian) child. --Michael Wentworth, Grad Infanticide.. To the Editor: THE TRIAL of Suzanne Vande- put on charges of infanticide involves issues more critical than the possibility of improper court procedure, the danger of some- thing less than impeccable juris- prudence. The concept of human dignity that is inherently involved transcends the question of judical conduct. The sacredness of human life, states Judith Oppenheim, the author of the editorial "Thalido- mide," is not to be jeopardized whenever difficult situations arise. Yet, if the incidence of thousands of deformed babies is not defined as "difficult" it is hard to see what would meet the author's qualifi- cation. Does the unspeakable hor- ror posed by the prospect that nuclear testing has already de- formed unborn generations qual- ify as a difficult situation? The facts of the case support the mother's contention that the child would have been better off dead. Are we then to stand by acquies- cing to a fate the responsibility for which we must fear. * * * THALIDOMIDE, as a product of the human mind, must be dealt with by mankind. We can not shirk our responsibility for its invention and spread merely by piously proclaiming the sacredness of human life. Man has often signed. Fifteen of the ministers were from the Chancellor's own Christian Democratic Party; the other five were Free Democrats. The five junior partners in the Adenauer coalition handed in their resignations, that forced the dissolution of the cabinet and the resignation of Adenauer's own ministers-including Strauss. This technically leaves the country without a government until Lueb- ke's return. It was felt that unless Strauss's party won overwhelmingly in the Bavarian elections, his name would be omitted from the rejuggled Cabinet list, to appease the Free Democrats. Now that Strauss has won, the question remains-will Adenauer try to buck the Free Democrats or will he give in and form the new government free from "personal liability?" * * * ADENAUER'S QUANDRY cen- ters around the fact that he needs the Free Democrats' 67 votes in the Bundestag, however, he also needs the 50 votes from the Chris- tian Social Union of Bavaria, whose chairman is none other than Strauss. If Strauss should refuse to with- draw, Adenauer could be faced with a crisis involving not only the cabinet, but perhaps even the chancellorship itself. This has been further compli- cated by the fact that the Chan- cellor's own party has given him notice that it wants him to retire in mid-1963. In a caucus on Tues- day, the joint executive and par- liamentary groups of the Chris- tian Democrats and the Christian Social Union also authorized Ade- nauer to open negotiations with both the Free Democrats and the opposition Social Democrats for the new government. With the problem of how to get rid of Strauss or placate the oppo- sition is coupled the question of whether Adenauer could survive drawn-out negitiations on a new government. He does have a few days grace until Luebke returns- then the vital decisions must be made. Farewells AS HE STORMED off the poli- cal stage, the former Vice- President Richard Nixon, told the press of his "wish that you had given my opponent the same going over that you gave me . . . I leave you gentlemen now and you will now write it. You will interpret it. That's your right. But as I leave you I want you to know-just think how much you're going to be missing. You don't have Nixon to kick around any more, because gentlemen, this is my last press conference . .. Consider Sir Winston Churchill's farewell after his dismissal by the British electorate in 1945: "The decision of the British people has been recorded in the votes count- ed today. I have therefore laid down the charge which was placed upon me in darker times. "Immense responsibilities abroad and at home fall upon the 'DEATH OF A SALESMAN': Masterful Interpretation ADAPTATION of a drama from the stage to the screen is at best a precarious matter. In entails not only a change in medium but an entire change in emphasis, from the auditory stress of the play, a vehicle of language, to the visual one of the cinema, a conveyance of action. It dictates the preservation of the basic underlying concept of the drama while joining it with different means of production. Hopefully, the new end result is as good as or better than the original. * * * TOO OFTEN in this process of adaptation, movie producers be- come unduly involved with those problems unique to the cinema and, deterred by technical in- accuracies and erroneous inter- pretations, fall far short of a true representation of the original con- cept contained in the drama of the stage production. However, the Stanley Kramer cinema version of "Death of a Salesman," currently playing at the Cinema Guild, skillfully es- caped this common error and rendered a true and accurate rep- resentation of Arthur Miller's play. Probably most outstanding in Kramer's interpretation of the drama is his casting of roles. Fredric March "becomes" Willie Loman, the exhausted, destitute salesman, and his every word G nd movement groan with a fearful weariness. His wife Linda (Mildred Dunnock) reflects his utter f.a- tigue, and only her eyes, big in a sunken face, hint of the dreams she once shared with Willie. Willie's sons (Kevin McCarthy and Cameron Mitchell) are power- :ful young men who, apropos of the Adonic roles they play, portray their characters masterfully. * * * VERY EFFECTIVE in its use is the musical score which not only sets the mood but also identifies the character of Willie by a par- ticularly plaintive flute theme. Special note should be made of the sets which, freed from the confined quarters of the stage, grant a greater fluidity to the drama, particularly those episodes which take place only in Willie's imagination. Yet somehow the Kramer pro- duction falls down a bit with a flat, slightly unimaginative camera that only occasionally recognizes its potential as an interpretative device. * * * THE TEMPO too is somewhat burdened by an excessive' repeti- tion of lines and key phrases. These were added to the script by the Hollywood screen-writers, who, no doubt, did not quite trust the audience to get the message the first time around. More per- ceptive cutting on the part of the film editor would have greatly im- proved the faltering tempo. However, Kramer's adaptation of "Salesman" to the screen is, on the whole, a valid one and, as Willie Loman himself would say, a "most remarkable thing." -Louise Lind 'WOLGOMOT MAGAZINE': Issue Offers Relief "BURNING DECK" is a collec- tion of poetry, reviews, coin- munications, and squibs, all of which contain the charming hu- mor, irreverence, and astuteness one expects from people connected with the Wolgomot society. The editors of this magizine are James Camp, D. C. Hope and Bernard Waldrop, all members of the Wolgomot society. But the magazine itself is not part of the Wnromot nsoietv.Btnatirall it parison that allows then reader to 'see for himself and become dis- satisfied for himself. This mood is apparent in the first poem, "Extreme Unction" by Dallas Wiebe. "We jump our in- struments to space/ to throng His valut/ to spy our stainless host,! With herds of whining scrap./ We pitch around our flank/ flocks of whizzing junk." and this is only part of the picture of life he