4r, mlrigatt PaxN 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. SGC Must Act Without Faculty on Bias Y. DECEMBER 2. 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP SUTIN Co-ops Require Responsibility, Allow the Right to Mature HIS WEEKEND Inter-Cooperative Council delegates from campuses all over the mid- west met at the University for a conference on the meaning and problems of the cooperative movement. A vital part of that cooperative movement is flourishing on the University campus today: cooperative housing. The coops are in a unique position at an institution such as Michigan. Here the student body is anxiously pressing for long-withheld civil and personal freedoms. The Office of Student Affairs is lamely trying to keep a semblance of peace with the stu- dents .through testy evasiveness, thereby not displeasing the all-important alumni and legis- lative factions. At this time the cooperative housing units stand in stark, but silent tran- scendence testifying to the worth of student responsibility and privilege. Cooperative living is not for children. When responsibility of sharing the work required to a student contracts to join ICC, he accepts the maintain his house and the responsibility of participating in what is probably closer to a "town hail" democracy than anything that exists today in the United States. ESSENTIALLY, this means that the student has an opportunity to act upon his en- vironment, to shape it to a large extent. The majority of the decisions concerning his resi- dence are made by himself and his fellow coopers within a small, independently-oriented democratic structure. The student is thus free from the most en- cumbersome clamps of "the system"; yet, the challenging responsibility of creating a new "system" based on democracy whereby he may coexist with his fellows remains. This probably represents a greater clamp, but perhaps the only one leading to true self-freedom and maturity. The cooperative situation presupposes that a student is a responsible human being, or cap- able of becoming one, providing that he is given favorable opportunities through which he may develop. Thus, a significant degree of self- government is not a privilege, but a right to be insured young men and women who consider their maturing process not confined narrowly to scholarship alone, but extensive to the total of their experience. THIS CREDO underlying student c operative residences has startling ramific tions for the University campus. The undergraduate coops are likely the most spiritually and in- tellectually committed, the most scholastically serious and actually self-sufficient of all or- ganized housing groups. In short, the aware autonomous citizen-of independent thought and spirit, yet able to live responsibily and effectively with others- is being created here. These are the kind of persons who strikingly symbolize the worth of democratic society and lend direction to its finest efforts. Consideration of the sorts of behavior elicited by dormitory living in contrast to the coopera- tive situation poses some interesting ideas. The student is part of a huge, quite depersonalized system. Although representative structures feebly operate, legitimacy is nearly non-existent because of an authoritarian bureaucracy at the head of all residence hall operations. THE RESIDENCE HALL students' immediate guide and counselor is a sixty-ish woman. Although dress and conduct rules may be decided upon within a limited scope, they are proclaimed uniform. The hours are severly inflexible; an altera- tion of ten minutes subjects a young woman to "trial" (where she is unentitled to due process granted any American citizen, young or old), that will invariably punish her with Queens College WHETHER it's just sour grapes or a legiti- mate case of religious discrimination at Queens College in New York still remains to be proven. Two associate professors there, charging that they were denied promotions to full professorships last year because they are Roman Catholics, are preparing to present their case in a jury trial. Professors Josef V. Lombardo and Joseph P. Mullally have had a long history, beginning with a 1958 investigation, of hanging their dirty wash out in public. In that year the Board of Higher Education investigated the bias charges and reported it could find no evidence of discrimination. Subsequently, the State Commission Against Discrimination (now the State Commission for Human Rights) took up the investigation and in 1960 issued findings of "resistance to em- ployment and promotion of Catholics." However, the Board of Higher Education denied SCAD jurisdiction in educational ad- ministration, a decision upheld by the State Supreme Court and again by the Appellate Division. a form of "social probation." However, the most disturbing of any residence hall specifica- tion which impugns the students' maturity is the lack of requirement of responsibility. The dormitories perpetuate dangerous, false ideas about the nature of freedom and bond- age. There are more girls sneaking in back doors because of arbitrary specifications whicl do nothing toward instilling a sense of reasoned judgement and self-knowledge in young women. Housemothers are largely aware of the circum- stances and do nothing. What can they do? Place padlocks on every window and door in the building? The ultimate failure of this sys- tem only reflects its inherent inability to evoke honest and truly responsible behavior. COOPERATIVES INVOLVE the individual personally in a highly legitimate virtually un-bureaucratized structure. The students' resident guide is a much respected, responsible and often confided-in senior or graduate stu- dent. There is no attempt to perpetrate uniformity in dress or thought. Although operating form- ally within conduct rules applicable to all undergraduates, the cooperative residence allows for flexibility and a far greater emphasis on trust than is ever granted in the huge dormitory complex. There are never intimida- tions nor unfair "trials" depriving a student of the legitimate right to represent himself fairly. Most important though, an under-graduate coop cannot exist without genuine responsible acts and cooperation on the part of residents. A student is thus placed in a miniature, largely self-governing society where he will be expected to assume graduated amounts of the respon- sibilities of young adulthood. In turn, he will never be denied certain inalienable civil liber- ties, and he will be regarded with increasing trust and confidence by thoose who are in a position to guide his behavior. There is no sounder way, psychologically or pragmatically, to insure the kind of mature judgement that the important people in OSA are constantly reiterating as necessary for mnore student rights. THE RUB IS that the self-responsibility ap- parently necessary for the granting of rights to student citizens will not one day miracu- lously appearbout of thin air. This sort of be- havior must be nrtured and developed in an atmosphere which allows the student genuine opportunities to act responsibly. And, the existence of these opportunities is always neces- sary before maturity can possibly exist. There- fore, the present circumstance is simply a circular dilemma. Fortunately, there is a ray of light which may hold great possible promise. Presently in the planning stage is the Oxford Road Project, to house over 400 undergraduate women. Donita Plue, a past president of Stockwell Hall, along with her Assembly com- mittee, will be to a great extent responsible for the kind of residence Oxford Project will be- come. Hopefully, Miss Plue and her committee will take into consideration the residential elements which lead to maturing student behavior. In doing so, the committee will not only be ac- complishing a great advantage for the growth of present students, but can set a precedent which will even more decisively point to the value of student opportunities for responsibility. TOWARDS THIS EFFORT the student coops have been pioneers. The delegates to the midwest conference held here this weekend, as well as the campus group, deserve our com- mendation. The work that they are doing merits serious consideration by every member of a university community. -MARILYN KORAL 'robe Unjustified The case raises the interesting questions of ;college autonomy and professorial responsi- bility. The professors, backed by Justice Lupiano, are overriding the proper channels of academic promotions, namely the college itself, and bringing their case to a jury. The decision, normally made by college officials, is taken out of their hands. The precedent set in this case is dangerous indeed. WHILE THIS CASE is special by nature of its charges of anti-Catholic discrimination, there is no real justification for bringing it to the courts. Proper channels of investigation such as the Board of Higher Education would be a far superior method of probing the charges, since it is within academic agencies that academic decisions should be settled. Furthermore, it would allow the college to keep the final say-so on what should be done, or undone, as the professors wish. The school, not the court, is best qualified to judge who should be promoted and until the discrimina- tion charges have been proven, rather than alleged, there is indeed a weak case against By MICHAEL OLINICK Editor THE UNIVERSITY Senate's Stu- dent Relations Committee, which includes among its member- ship some of the more astute pro- fessorial politicos, is displaying a rather unpolitical stand towards Student Government Council's Committee on Membership in Stu- dent Organizations: they want out. The SGC committee has a make- up of four students and three per- sons from the faculty and admin- istration, including at least one faculty man and one administra- tor. The SRC is supposed to nom- inate a panel of five professors. The Vice-President for Student Affairs is to nominate a panel of five administrators. From both of these the Council makes final se- lections. The SRC balked at naming fac- ulty members to such a commit- tee when it was created three years ago, expressing a feeling that the problem of discrimination in stu- dent organizations was a problem of student government and that authority for students to work in this area had been clearly grant- ed to student government by the Regents. ** * THE SRC has gone along with SGC and nominated faculty for the committee every year. Its mem- bers continually asked Council to drop the requirement for faculty members and strongly urged stu- dent government members to take the initiative in ending discrimi- nation and to make it a cam- paign run by students. The SRC is also disappointed with the little progress that has been made and feels that withdrawal may prompt some stronger action. Faculty should never have been on the original committee on mem- bership and there is no reason to continue their membership any longer. The liberal element of SGC which proposed the committee in 1960 agreed with the SRC and the original motion called for an all student committee. Council mod- erates, then as now, took a dim view of handing responsibility over to students and, citing the tran- sient nature of the student, de- manded temperate adult counsel on the committee. The committee's general func- tion is to formulate policies in the furtherance of SGC's regulation demanding that student organiza- tions elect members on the basis of personal merit and not race, color, religion, creed, nationality or ancestry and to make recom- mendations to SGC in aid of such purposes and policies. * * * AFTER SGC treasurer Thomas Brown's motion attempting to lim- it the range of the committee fail- ed, the specific functions of the committee look like this: -"To receive written and sign- ed complaints of violation of this regulation; -"To investigate any written clauses in an organization's con- stitution, regulations or other of- ficial documents governing mem- bership selection which are direct- ly discriminatory; and -"To initiate investigation and inquiry of any given organization as to possible violation. However, no investigation shall be initiated unless the reasons for investigating that particular organization are clearly stated, deemed worthy of investigation and adopted by the committee. THE ORIGINAL "M i c h i g a n plan" to end discrimination in fra- ternities and sororities which call- ed for a deadline on all bias claus- es was slapped down by outgoing University President Alexander Ruthven and by incoming Univer- sity President Harlan Hatcher a decade ago. Though this approach has since been adopted at other universities, students here have re- sorted to an individualistic ap- proach, working and counseling one group at a time. Progress in ridding this campus of prejudicial selection practices has been too slow because of the Council's group-by-group leaning over backwards to be cooperative attitude. Other colleges which have set a deadline for all student or- ganizations have done more in shorter time than SGC. While the problems of fraternity and sorority discrimination ought to be settled by student govern- ment, leaving this issue only to those students now in power in the SAB will only decelerate an al- ready crawling movement. THE FACULTY represented on the SRC and those they have se- lected for the committee on mem- bership are more anxious to rid the campus of bias than the ma- jority of the members of SGC: they favor stronger measures tak- en more quickly. The faculty mem- bers have served no spur the com- mittee and the Council. * * * THERE ARE THREE different sets of reasons why SGC members are arguing to ask faculty mem- bers to retain their seats on the committee on membership: 1) One school, headed by Coun- cil President Steven Stockmeyer and Michigan Union President Robert Finke, say they believe that Administrative Vice-President Ken Miller, would argue that faculty and students alike share responsi- bility for the academic atmosphere on the campus and must work to- gether to improve it. The existence of bias in a fraternity impairs the intellectual climate and student and professor are equally to blame if it continues. 3) The third school, expounded by Council member Robert Ross, puts an emphasis on the political consequences which withdrawal of faculty will mean for student work in discrimination. He argues, quite correctly, that student organizations unwilling to " Yo u Sorta Have To Learn To Live with 'Em" abide by SGC's regulation or its demand for membership state- ments will use the withdrawal as an arguing point that council is inconsistent in its approach and cannot make up its own mind about how it really wants to deal with the groups. ** * THOSE STUDENTS who would be motivated by the move toward more action are already willing to take a stronger position than has heretofore been displayed. They don't need "a kick in the pants." Whatever statement the com- mittee gives that it is supporting student government by leaving the area of discrimination entirely up to SGC, will be misinterpreted to be a vote of no confidence in the students. There are those on SGC who op- pose almost any attempt to rid fraternities of racial and religious membership practices. Many still believe that the fraternity is a private group, that the University has no right to tell it how to run its affairs and that, in the last analysis, people have a right to select their friends on whatever criteria they want; discrimination is not bad. The Regents bylaw outlawing it on the campus was probably a mistake. IF THE SRC refuses to nomin- ate faculty members for the Com- mittee on Membership, one very likely consequence is that Coun- cil will reconstruct the committee and in the reorganization rob it of whatever powers it needs to com- bat effectively discrimination in student organizations. There is a good chance that as presently constituted, a majority of SGC would vote that investiga- tion of student organizations shall stop as soon as all written dis- criminatory clauses are removed or waivers guaranteeing local autonomy are issued. Such an outcome is unlikely, however, and should not force the SRC to abandon what is a morally right decision. There is strong community pressure toward re- moving all discrimination and SGC must respond to this. The Regents' bylaw is binding on all administrative officers and there is a good question of wheth- er University Vice-PresidentJames A. Lewis must take action to end discrimination in student groups if the Council fails to. The Vice- President no doubt would put in- formal pressure on the Council to move forward in this area, since he is reluctant to subvert publicly the power SGC has. a * THE RECALCITRANT sorori- ties would look upon any action taken by the Council or related group as food for critical com- ments and would continue to op- pose antidiscriminatory measures even if the faculty increased its membership on the committee. Their contemplated reaction to the SRC's move should not be a fac- tor in the SRC's decision. Inthe long run, the cause of student government will best be served if it alone handles the prob- lem of discrimination in student organizations. This issue lies in a domain which ought to be only the province of students, just as other issues ought to be handled by fac- ulty alone. As the SRC has pointed out, re- fusal to nominate full members to the committee does not mean that the faculty could not serve to aid student efforts. Prof. Cutler, the SRC chairman, has suggested that faculty members could be called upon for advice at various stages of the committee's work and, more importantly, that the SRC or the faculty Senate could issue reso- lutions of support for SGC action. THE QUESTION is: does the short run danger outweigh the long run good? Perhaps the SRC could best aid the Council by waiting until the five sororities submit their statements before pulling out of the committee. The faculty group, however, never wanted to be on the committee in the first place and grows more restive every day under the obli- gation to nominate"members. Those who fear ' the conse- quences of the faculty's with- drawing triggering a weakening of efforts to end discrimination tend to exaggerate the ill effects. If an SGC elected by the stu- dents refuses to act militantly against racial and religious bias, then this is the price one has to pay for giving students power. An administrator disposed toward lib- eralism could move a lot faster and be a lot stronger acting as an autocrat, but that is not the type of university best suited to free and democratic pursuit of learning. It's time the faculty ended its illegitimate role on the Commit- tee on Membership and let stu- dent government stand or fall on its own on the problem of dis- crimination. UNDERSCORE: Neutrality No Longer. Viable By MALINDA BERRY HE EVER-TENUOUS policy of neutrality has suffered a fatal blow by the Sino-Indian conflict. India, the world's largest "neu- tral" country, is the central pivot in the whole precarious structure of the neutral and uncommitted East. Any actions they take in the political arena will affect the des- tiny of the 450 million non-Chi- nese Asiatics living in the lands contiguous to India. Whichever direction India takes politically will inevitably become the fate of her neighbors. Neutralism has always been a dubious policy contingent upon ,he position of the "neutral" in world affairs. Neutrality is often lauded the loudest when a policy of vac- cilation is the most advantageous. This is not to indicate that the often sincere attempts to remain unaligned for moral reasons are entirely contingent upon expedi- ency. Still the angry reaction on the part of the Indian people con- demning Prime Minister Nehru's pressures to "negotiate" with the Chinese, indicates neutrality is most attractive when it doesn't in- terfere with national status. AT NEHRU'S proposal to start talks, one member of the Indian parliament shouted, "At the cost of our prestige?" Nehru has always tied his policy of nonalignment to the Gandhian policy, lifted from the level of the isolation of the United States dur- ing the 1930's onto a philosophical plane. Neutrality in its ideal form is a head-in-the-sand concept based upon the neutral's desire to have policy as usual as if no war existed at all. This is an untenable position in the modern world. Every act taken by a nation must necessar- ily help one side while it injures the other. All trade and transportation af- fect all other nations in a definite way. * * *' DUE TO THE GROWTH of in- terdependence between nations, t e c h n i c a 1 developments, and changes in the methods of war- fare, the laws of neutrality are out of date. At the end of World War I neutrality was left in a it does little good to proclaim an edict of neutrality and expect it to be honored by belligerent nations. * * * THE ORIGINAL concept of neu- trality is impossible to maintain now. What it has been reduced to is the "neutralism" of India - which is simply a protection against going into a war for any issues except those in which the nation is directly and vitally con- cerned. And when the nation is vi- tally affected, motions for truce "in the interest of world peace," (a favorite Indian slogan) are re- jected. The country for whom the Sino- Indian conflicts has become the most embarrassing is Russia-and they have fallen back on a neutral stand. It owes support to both countries and will find itself really in the middle as soon as it chooses sides absolutely. Right now Russia is maintaining an attitude of pre-Indian "neu- tralism." THE OTHER nonaligned na- tions are also caught up in a quandry: here's India, the leader of the neutral bloc, engaged in a denifite partisan struggle. The other noncommitted nations have for the most part remained em- barrassingly silent. A government controlled newspaper in Ghana dismissed the war as "an ordinary border dispute." Even the ordinarily outspoken and vociferous President Sukarno of Indonesia has remained silent. However, India can probably ex- pect some support from the un- committed bloc-which apparent- ly isn't above giving support so long as it is to a fellow neutral. THE UNITED Arab Republic's Gamal Abdel Nasser, who had been equivocal during the early weeks of the invasion, is now trying to line up support against China. Nasser has invited India to buy surplus weapons from the UAR, and is now seeking further aid for India from Morocco, Ghana, Al- geria, Guinea, Mali, and Cambodia. The African nations have pro- fessed shock at the Chinese at- tack. Some indicated that there would be a sharp reappraisal of the merits of non-alignment. Oth- THE CONCEPT of -neutrality has been defeated. With the tem- porary, uneasy truce India is put in the position of being the coun- try to start the fighting over again. She will appear to be the aggres- sor, if she should decide that the Chinese terms are unacceptable. When the leader of the neutral- ist bloc is defeated and humiliat- ed in the eyes of the smaller and understandably nervous southeast Asian countries, perhaps they will realize that the morally founded idea of neutrality deserves deep and intensive re-examination. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Masquerading Pakistan To the Editor: EVEN IN an era of much shift- ing politics as ours, the sudden change in the attitude and stand of Pakistan over Communism passes the understanding of all reasonable men.A For many years Pakistan had been a member and chpmpion of the Central Treaty Organization and the South East Asia Treaty Organization-both treaty organ- izations are committed to fight Communism in their respective geographic regions. In this rela- tionship as an ally and as a nation strongly pledged to combat Com- munism, Pakistan was receiving for many years massive military and economic aid from the United States. Now it seems th.t Pakistan had all along been only playing an artful game of masquerade. At present the U.S. and Britain are providing India with military aid over the Chinese conflict. It is understandable that Pakistan may be fearful that India may use these arms against her. To quell this fear any anti-Communist na- tion in its proper political and' ideological balance will attempt to seek a non-aggression pact with India, backed by necessary guar- antees from the U.S. and Britain. But instead, Pakistan seeks a non- aggression pact with Red China. President Ayub Khan of Pakistan went so far as to tell the Pakistan National Assembly that India is a had for many years now sought the company and aid of the U.S., not because she felt with the anti- Communistic ideology of the U.S., but masquerading under an anti- Communistic veil she was merely using the U.S. in her rivalry against India. And disappointed and insulted indeed feels the hoodwinked man the moment he realizes that the female did not really feel with him and his ideol- ogy but rather merely used him to fight her jilted battle against someone else, so America feels now towards Pakistan. -Thomas S. David, Grad Dishonesty .,. To the Editor: W E OBJECT to the advertise- ment for the motion picture "Viridiana" which has been ap- pearing in your newspaper for the past several days, because of its dishonesty. The disguising of the phrase, ". . . Makes the orgy in 'La Dolce Vita' look like a family picnic," by referring more em- phatically to praises of the pic- ture's greatness is an obvious at- tempt to veil in respectability an invitation to depravity. We do not object to advertise- ments of sex. We would not care if Aunt Molly advertised her brothel provided she did not rep- resent her advertisement as an in- vitation to a tea house. Our ob-