* r )Stiian &dtJJy Seminy-Third Year ~ ErrED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS Of THE UNIVERSIY OF MCHTGAx UNDER AUtHORTY OF BOARD N CONTROi OF SUDENT PU ric&m'Ns n Are F" STUDENT PIUBUCATIONS BwG., ANN ARBO, MscH., PHONE No 2-3241 'Wed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. TIA, must be noted in all reprints. 'OUTCONSERVATIVE': Republican Problems In Segregationist South "where Q Truth Editor DECEMBER 6, 1962. NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP SUTIN OSA Evaluation: Time To Start Again AT ONE POINT in its discussion of student affairs philosophy the Reed report of the Office of. Student Affairs Study committee makes the following statement concerning the student: "he is actively encouraged to question, to accept nothing submissively and uncritic-' ally." Yet the Reed report seems to have disregard- ed completely its own advice, for nowhere in the report is there a discussion of the most fundamental question. regarding the OSA: whether there should be an OSA in the first place.. Although the concerns and responsibilities of the OSA have never been explicitly spelled out by the Regents, the Reed report notes that, "When it was propdsed in 1954, that the Re- gents create the office of vice-president for student affairs, it was stated that he should have responsibility for the coordination and development of this whole area of the non- academic aspects of student life and Univer- sity relationships." When the position was created the Daily editor of that year viewed it as a means of getting rid of student-administration tension and as a channel through which student prob- lems and ideas could more easily reach the higher administration and the Regents. University President Harlan H. Hatcher said that the vice-president's job would be "the coordination and development of nonacademic aspects of student life." However there is no bylaw. or note in the Regents minutes specifi- cally deliniating the role and duties of the vice-president. He has been given veto power over the ac- tions of Student Government Council, and he has come to have the principal position in rec- ' ommnending and imlementing rules and regula- tions governing student organization, discipline and general campus life. TIS POWERof the vice-president's has come under criticism from many sources. The criticism is based on the concept of a University which holds that this is a place where each student is to be allowed the maximum intellectual growth according to his potential. This is in opposition to the concept which .sees the university as a service organ- ization where the emphasis is on the classroom where the student memorizes the facts which will help him to be useful to society later on in life., This latter view is ivory towerish because it does not relate what is learned to the student's present life and development. Knowledge is all life and experience and thus the intellectual maturation of the student takes place both in and out of the classroom; and the more ex- tensive his experiences the more he will ma- ture. Thus it follows that the educational process is best served by allowing the student self- responsibility commerisurate with his ability to handle it. A STUDENT at a University with a reputa- tion that this one enjoys is obviously con- sidered by society to be near the peak of intellectual and personal maturity when com- pared to others in his age group. Yet consider the situation of our peers who are not at a university. Many of them are independent, some of them are married. Such choices as driving, hours, and places to live are all decisions reserved for them; they set their own way of life and society lets them do it. Yet at the University, where one is suppos- sedly getting training for future life, participa- tion in the decision making process that de- termines how a student will live is extremely limited. Yet students' are the ones in whom society is placing its greatest trust for the future. (If you see a paradox in this you are right.) HE REED committee recognized this when it said that the student "should be expected to participate fully in decisions affecting his welfare. He should help to formulate, uphold, and enforce the rules by which he is to live in the University community. He should work with faculty and administration for the broad welfare of the University tempering his self- interest to the common good." It asserted that without such freedom and responsibility the student cannot grow. This should have led to the recommendation that responsibility for the formulation and implementation of student regulations should be vested in a student government which was responsible directly to the Regents. Since this would have been designed primarily as a legislative body, an all-university student cal- andering body should have been established to take care of administrative work connected with student concerns. UNFORTUNATELY the Reed committee did not see such a structure as the logical development of its thesis, and neither did vice-president Lewis. If they had, it is safe to assume that the OSA might now look very, different. enlarged to conform to the concept described above. However there is no reason that all these services have to be limited to students- faculty and administrators if desired could benefit too. Therefore once the OSA lost its control of student rules and regulations its name -should be changed to the Office of University Services. HOW WOULD this affect the existing struc- ture? It would most seriously alter the office of student organizations and activities. Since most of the work concerning these would be done by the student government and calen- daring committees all that would really be needed would be one or two liason people who would keep the administration informed on what the organizations were doing but who would have no power to legislate or veto because the students would be responsible only to the Regents. These liason people could also act as the go between for the University and the city of Ann Arbor in any civic cases that involve the city, students or faculty. THIE OFFICE for financial aids 'would also be altered. University scholarships and loan funds can be divided into two categories- those restricted to students of a particular school or college and those covering the Uni- versity as a whole. It might be a wise move to transfer the administration of the restricted scholarships to their various schools and de- partments. This would probably impose an increased administrative burden on the af- fected units but this would probably be com- pensated for by allowing a more intensive appraisal of the applicnts. The office for housing would remain pretty much the same. There would be a director and administrative assistants who would handle housing applications and possibly be in charge of hiring people for the dorms and quads with students participating in the decisions. There should also be a person concerned with off- campus housing, mainly in the area of dis- crimination. The office could also help faculty and other administrators who might have housing problems. The office of the coordinator of counseling would remain similar to its present set-up. Right now the OSA serves as a sort of liason and clearing house for all types of counseling which individually are handled by the con- cerned departments and orga'nizations. Thus, for example, academic counseling is handled by various schools and colleges, aptitude testing is handled by the Division of Evaluations and Examinations and psychiatric counseling by mental hygiene. The counseling coordinator acts as a clearinghouse and information bureau for whichever division requests aid., THE WHOLE office would be presided over by a vice-president for university services, or perhaps under another title, depending on the structure as authorized by the Regents. The heads of the various offices would. be directly responsible to the vice-president. The mandate for the office would concern itself with the administration of those services which the University almost by definition has to provide. TO SOME the whole idea of this revision may seem superfluous. After all the OSA has almost completed a major revision and this is not even giving it a chance to work. The OSA has recently been minutely scrutiniz- ed by both the faculty's student relations com- mittee and the Reed committee. The examination was fine, the implementa- tion was not. Admittedly the structural morass was cleared up and lines of authority straight- ened. However in terms of doing something about the lack of student responsibility the new oragnization merely plays lip service to all the fine sounding phrases in the philosophy section of the Reed report. The advisory committee to the vice-president may look like an increase in student participa- tion but this is negated by the weakness and ineffectualness of the committee itself. For example it is the vice-president and not the committee who will determine whether the committee is to be covered by the Daily or not, and the committee does not vote, it only advises. What also has not changed is the basic attitude held by the administration and the Regents that the University must be parent as well as teacher to the sojourning student. WITH THE EXCEPTION of the filling of the new director of housing position and the clearing up of some minor lines of author- ity within one or two departments of the office, the OSA has ended its transition. The cry will go up that major liberalization and reform has taken place and that anybody who is not pleased is either an extremist or a troublemaker. But the above proposals are neither. They are made with the recognition that the OSA is not an organization that can By ELLEN SILVERMAN THE CHANCES for revival of a two-party system in the South have been predicted in repeated elections where seemingly "out-of- nowhere" Republicans gain large voter support from a usually Democratic electorate. Much of the same type of po- litical prophesying has been done in reference to the recent elec- tions when veteran Democrat Sen- ator Lister Hill narrowly missed being defeated by an ulra-conser- vative Republican James Martin. Martin typifies the new Repub- lican of the South for his segrega- tionist, anti-Washington policies, which were even more extreme than Hill's. The Southern Repub- lican appeals to the same voters that the ,Democrat does, only he seems to give the electorate more of the same, "a little bit louder and a little bit worse.' * * * THE PROSPECTS of a revival of the party in the South have worried some of the more liberal Northern Republicans who fear that a stand like the party is tak- ing in the South will injure party hopes for gaining large Negro and liberal votes in the North. The Republicans have decided to forego the traditional Lincoln- ian Republicianism which encom- passed conservative economic pol- icies while stressing the import- ance of civil rights. Instead, the party leaders in the South have dropped the civil rights plea en- tirely from the platform and at- tempt to "outconservative" the Democrats. Many of the problems of the Democratic party stem from this same type of division; while the Northern members of the party agitateforsocial welfare laws the Southerners insist on economy in government spending, little or no social legislation and absolutely no civil rights. * * * THE Republican party may soon find itself caught in the same dilemma. The image of the party has slowly been changing and the more liberal members have been nominated more prom- inently for party leadership or presidential nomination, The Democratic party in the meantime has begun to appeal to the Negro and labor vote through- out the country. It is fairly clear that the party will not stop at ap- pealing only in the North but will soon turn to the South. Attorney General Robert Kennedy's action in the University of Mississippi case emphasizes that the leader- ship of the party at the moment it not willing to submerge its aims for the benefit of the Southern wing.' Consequently, for the Democrats it seems as if the emphasis will decidedly tend toward' appealing to the Negro vote and this ulti- mately will prove significant in the South when the Negro vote becomes important. If through re- apportionment within the South- ern states, and recent Supreme Court decisions seem to be push- ing this forward, the Negro ur- ban vote does become more im- portant, the Republicans could only lose by the new, conservative approach. IN THE short run, however, the Republican party can pull more votes from the Democrats in a contest of conservatives. But once the entire South is given the fran- chise, and this includes the Negro vote, Republicans will probably lose. The results of one election can- not predict results for the future; in both 1910 and 1928 large seg- ments of the South went Republi- can and then, too, political pre- dictors claimed that a chink had been made in the iron of the Solid South. In both cases the pundits proved wrong. * * * BUT if the 1962 election trends will hold the future of party poli- tics, the South is at least chang- ing. Republican inroads could de- velop into large trends which will swing some of the usually assured Democratic votes away from the party. Yet in 1960 these trends were not seen. And it may be even more possible that they will not again emerge in 1964 since a presidential election is vastly different from Congressional contests. The chances of Republicans se- curing the nomination for a con- servative candidate is improbable and prospects for securing it for a segregationist are even dimmer. The Republican leadership, as' mentioned before, is now held by more liberal Republicans and the only possible conservative candi- date would be Goldwater, who does not have segregationist leanings. * * *' THE segregationist wing may even hurt the Republican party more than help it, for liberal Northerners will have the same hard time justifying stands taken by their brethern in the South that Democrats have today. And in the process of building up a party based on segregation in the South, Republicans lose some Northern Yvotes. Of course the future alone holds the answers 'to the problems of both parties but if the trends con- tinue there can be no other result than a split within the Republican party similar to that in the Demo- cratic party today while the Dem- ocrats will find themselves pushed more and more to the left. NOW more than ever Southern Democrats, too, are moderating their views and even are found voting for administration meas- ures. These trends plus the move of the Republicans toward the right make it clear that a change is in the making. If the Democrats con- tinue on their present course and the Republicans do the same, the country may soon see a change of roles for the parties and a conse- quent number of new problems for both. SECURITY CLEARANCES: Dangerous Practices-Lurk By PHILIP SUTIN W HILE the federal security system has functioned smooth- ly at the University, several theoretical dangers lurk. In the seven-year tenure of the current University SecurityiOf- ficer, Joseph J. Keeley, no hitches have developed. Approximately 200 clearances a year go through his office exactly 37 days after ap- plication. There are no complaints and no one objects-just like clockwork. Despite the silence of applicants and officials there are problems with the security system. The Uni- versity Research Security Office tried to draw interest to this prob- lem with an essay contest in 1956. However, none of the en- gineer-contestants came up with anything significant, Keeley re- calls. ** * THE CLEARANCE system is an incentive to political silence and to apoliticalness, both on the par- tisan and ideological level. Ques- tions on the "certificate of non- affiliation with certain organiza- tions" tend to make potential scientists shy away from any kind of political organization-especial- ly if it is outside the majority view. The form asks two things, basically. One is whether the ap- plicant at one time or another was ever connected with any or- ganization aimed at overthrowing or changing the government by unconstitutional means. The sec- ond and more famous, asks wheth- er the applicant' was ever af- filiated with the Communist Party, the Nazis, the Ku Klux Klan and about 300 other-mostly innocuous sounding-organizations. It probes deeper than just mem- bership. It wants to know if the applicant had anything, but the most casual connection with these forbidden organizations. It asks if the person ever distributed litera- ture or contributed articles for their publications. * * * ANSWERING YES to any of these questions wil not negate clearances. However, it will make the applicant's chances less sure. He will have to explain these satis- factorily and be subject to more intense, investigation than some- one who has never been involved with these organizations. Such specific requirements- coupled with the request on the "personnel security questionnaire" for a listing of membership in all organizations except labor unions ON SMOKING: Federal Action Needed By ROBERT SELWA AN IMPORTANT official who smokes about a package of cigarettes a day commented this week on the relationship between government and smokers. He is Anthony Celebregge, Secretary (for the betterment) of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare, but his com- ments will do little to advance the cause of health. A panel of 10 scientists was set up recently by the Public Health Service this fall to study the dan- gers of smoking and to formulate "recommendations for action." Celebrezze said this week that even if the committee finds smok- ing harmful, the Government should not tell people to give up cigarettes. "I firmly believe that it is not the proper role of the Federal Government to tell citi- zens to stop smoking" whatever the scientists conclude, he declar- ed. "You can kill yourself by over- eating, overdrinking and other overindulgences," he continued. "Prohibition did not work. And we don't prevent the sale of rat poison, although it can kill hu- mans." * *' * ASIDE FROM the matter that prohibition was an irrational law rather than a logical recommenda- tion as Celebrezze could make, there are other things wrong with his position. That the government does not prevent the sale of rat poison although it can kill humans, is right. Rat poison is intended for rats and used primarily and law- fully on them. unlawfully on hu- take poison. And the government agency most concerned with the nation's health, and thus most obliged to do as much 'as possible to promote it, is the department that Celebrezze heads. THE GOVERNMENT in fact should alreadybe trying to do something about the dangers of smoking because the Government has already taken a position on these dangers. Three years ago the surgeon general, then Dr. Le- roy Burney, said the government's position was that the evidence im- plicated smoking as "the principal etiological (causative) factor in the increased incidence of lung cancer." According to The New York Times that position still stands and few scientists contend that any new evidence will reverse it. Chances are that the panel will come up with evidence that will reinforce and that can broaden the Government's position. If and when that occurs, the Government in general and the department of HEW in particular should press full force for the eradication of smoking, even if this means a drop in revenue from the heavily- taxed tobacco industry. Already some Congresmen have been demanding a Government education campaign to inform citizens, particularily young people, of the danger of smoking. Some wanted cigarette packs labeled with a danger sign; this could prove fruitful. A death's skull would be appropriate. IT IS significant that these de- -cause potential researchers in sensitive areas to think twice be- fore Joining. What are the chances that this organization may 10 or 20 years from now be included on the at- torney general's blacklist? The ap- plicant= probably has seen such cases as that of Prof. J. Robert Oppenheimer who was denied clearance essential to his work because of his former association with left-wing causes. Further, the defense department shows its distrust of college and university personnel when it re- quires from the university any evidencer"derrogatory or other- wise" from its personnel files that would be of aid to military author- ities. This information is not re- quested from private contractors doing similar defense work. * *' * FORTUNATELY, the University ignores this regulation. Its secur- ity procedures are centralized and fair. The University Research Security Office is the only agency that deals in security matters and it asks for nothing beyond the re- quired forms. It does not seek ap- plicant's academic records which might contain derogatory, but ir- relevant information, saying that these are only useful for hiring purposes and the office has no- thing to do with that. The Office of Academic Affairs is Involved inthis matter so the results of clearance applications are forwarded to it. Nothnig dam- aging has happened as no one in recent years has been denied clear- ance. But a denial would certainly result in at least a loss of status within the University. Are these stringent procedures reallynecessary? If someone is a spy, the past is irrelevant. His present contacts are the important ones that should be investigated. Digging up the past seems a super- flous pasttime designed for char- acter assassination. THUS a series of potential pit- falls face the student hoping to work on classified projects. An easy escape has been staying out of politics and asking no ques- tions. Thus few scientists or science students are found among campus political activists. The security clearance system also hinders the flow of informa- tion. Keeley minimized this, saying the military has expanded research opportunities and that classified information is too specialized for general research use. However, there is classified in- formation that may be of value in unclassified projects. For ex- ample, the Acoustics and Seismic Laboratory is -doing secret re- search on the difference between conventional explosive and earth- quake caused shock waves and underground nuclear blast-caused shock waves. This material has turned up information on the earth's mantle and the laboratory will put this to use in the inter- national Upper Mantle Project. However, how much of this is classified and unavailable links in the geologists study? RESEARCHERS only get clear- ances on' their "need to know" the AT LYDIA MENDELSSOHN: Carmen worth Seeing F YOU HAVE TICKETS for the music school's production of "Car- men" later this week, you may be able to sell them at a slight profit as the remaining performances at Lydia Mendelssohn are sold out; but I do not particularly recommend it. The opening last night had its ups and downs and can best be described as adequate in sum. The music remains well worth an evening and hearing it with an English libretto adds immeasurably to one's comprehension. Some of the flaws were beyond the control of the performers. I met a mathematician during intermission who explained the logic to me. One can hardly do with less than one trombone. To balance this takes at least a dozen strings and other instruments. The required chor- us of about 20 leads to an impossi- ble traffic jam on the miniscule stage at Lydia Mendelssohn. Be- sides, the soloists, as soon as they step back behind the proscenium become audibly lost in an anechoic limbo. ' , , , BUT FAR WORSE was Jane Pie- per's cold, which nearly finished here off before Don Jose could. This was a pity for in the first act, while still strong-voiced, she revealed a vocal quality of rich- ness and suavity unaccompanied by the clouded diction which so often mars a luscious voice. It is also unusual to see a Car- men who is non-vocally luscious. I was astounded when D. J. refused to go to the mountains with her. But that was Larry Jarvis's only serious mistake. It took him a while to get on the road, but after the first act he came through strong, clear, and dramatic until the end. DAVID SMALLEY'S Escamillo was the weak spot among the prin- cipals. One can scarcely imagine a less enthusiastic reading of the Toreador song than his. Elizabeth Olsen's Micaela was of mixed worth. Her voice is clear, seems much larger than she, and is mu- sically well controlled. But it is, marred by poor diction at frequent intervals. But an opera is not all sound. CINEMA GUILD: Big Picture, FineActing THEY MUST have run out of reels when they produced "The Big Picture." Kxing Vidor made a movie over three hours long about Americans in World War I with' everything thrown in-romance, action, humor and pathos. But the thing that makes this movie of the twenties so good is its acting. It may be silly for the first 15 minutes or so, but that's the fault of the scriptwriter. Things begin to move along when Jim Apperson (John Gilbert) en- lists in the army. From that point to the two hour mark, you won- der if there really is a war on. You find out quickly enough in this, the best part of the picture. The cinematographer sees his chance to work artistically and movingly with war and its rav- ages. And in the most moving scene ow the picture-like a pause in hell-we see Jim occupy the same foxhole with a dying soldier. Both are frightened by the battle. The dying man asks for a little mercy. ** *