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. Thi smust be noted in all reprints. Majority Of One 'MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE' Laurence Harvey Film Excellent TUESDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: RONALD WILTON How To Play SGC, s The Game, of Party Politics STUDENT GOVERNMENT Council is a fun game, that is, as long as you play by the rules. Every Wednesday night all 18 players gather around a big table in the Student Activities Building and with broad smiles an- nounce the start of the Wednesday night fights. They sit on comfortable cushioned chairs, dress up in jackets and ties or skirts, and pretend they are doing important things. During meetings they alternately listen to what is going on, look at their watches, and pass notes to each other. Note passing re- leives much of the boredom, which builds up rather rapidly at meetings. Because decisions are made outside of meet- ings, boredom is inevitable.. . On some questions the conservative major- ity decides what SGC will do, and the liberal minority tries to frustrate it, or even to do the : opposite. On other questions the path of action is so obvious that both sides, after the traditional plethora of haggling, decide what they could have decided to do without any debate. Members' opinions do not change by what they hear at meetings, for their opinions are set by the block they belong to. Debate is completely useless, except that it looks nice to observers, gives everyone practice in par- liamentary procedure, and fools assorted people into believing in the democratic pro- cess. STEVEN STOCKMEYER is the dealer at the moment. He uses a marked deck, but this is not grounds for condemnation, because everyone else would too if he were the dealer. It's part of the game, one of the unwritten rules which, as we all learn sooner or later, are much more important than the written ones. Notice please that the game is played in the Student Activities Building. You learned in kindergarten that student activities was a fancy label for play-games. This is not meant to imply that SGC is exactly like hopskotch. It isn't. SGC is almost big-time. SGC is much too sophisticated a game to be played by third graders. It takes skill, a certain degree of a certain type of intelligence, a spirit of adventure, a drive for power, a desire for fame or infamy), and the ability to take what you give out without flinching, just in case it comes flying back in your face. UNFORTUNATELY for Dealer Stockmeyer, it came flying back in his face, through no fault of his own, for he was playing the game. It was the other side, the liberal, that forget the rules. In the true gamey spirit, Stockmeyer showed his ability for taking it without flinching. He passed the strength-of- character-and-nerves test admirably, and when he becomes Governor of Michigan a while from now, he will be well prepared with an excellent background. What happened, what did Stockmeyer do, so that it all came flying back at him? No- thing that Machiavelli, Boss Tweed, Napoleon, Caesar, Huey Long, and every efficient poli- tical boss known to history would object to. Others would object, but they are the old fashioned idealists, the puritans, the moralists, who never act realistically. They are the ones who have yet to throw ethics out the window. Stockmeyer played the game. He made a deal, and didn't keep it. Under the agreement, the liberals would allow him to be re-elected president, when they were in a position to stalemate the election, if he would allow a liberal to be elected treasurer (banker) and so place a liberal on the executive committee (one dealer, two assistants and one banker. The liberals fulfilled their part, Stockmeyer did not. (It's all in the rules.) THE LIBERALS, consternation abounding, forgot the rules, and remembered ethics. They began talking, and explained the whole mess in public. This perhaps was the only way they could get back at Stockmeyer, but the air-the-dirty-linen-in-public approach has al- ways been frowned upon in political circles. Maybe in an unexplained idealistic moment, the liberals expected something to result from exposure of the truth. It hasn't yet. But there is no reason why it shouldn't. It's about time for the student body to express itself. Finally there are concrete facts that show all who take the trouble to look that some- thing should be done. What has just hap- pened should not be given the opportunity of happening again, even if it means tossing all 18 players out of the SAB, closing their game ,room, and setting up a new student government. T CAN BE DONE. SGC Is one of the least representative college governments, and this is its main failing, the reason it becomes a game. SGC members feel little contact with their constituents, and indeed, hardly know who their constituents are. No one runs for SGC on programs or qualifications especially. You join one of the two blocks, adopt its aims, and let the candidates do the rest. What with the marvelous Hare system, the voter is seldom even sure whom he voted for. Students have successfully protested gov, ernments on other campuses. Currently, at the University of Chic4o, a newly formed political party is threattn- ing to oust the one in power. The latter aent a message to Kennedy protesting his adion on Cuba without first polling student :ody sentiment. It turned out that the students were in favor of Kennedy's action. For this, and this alone, a new party may control the student government shortly. And eve if it does not, the students have exercises their privilege and indeed, obligation, and the student government has learned a valuable lesson. Currently, at the University of Pennsylvania, one Otto Schmick won a majority of votes for President of the freshman class. Otio doesn't exist; he was a protest vote over poor election procedures, which do not allow students to get to know the candidates. In the men's stu- dent government elections, several anarchist parties have been formed in attempts at abolishing the government, which they main- tain is nothing more than a spokesman for the dean. Something similar should happen here. We need that something badly, a voice from the students, so that student government, if no- thing more, will no longer be a private game, and SGC members will no longer feel that too few students give a damn about what they do to behave as they should. But hope- fully, a protest would accomplish much more, and establish something approaching demo- cratic representative government on this cam- pus. -RICHARD SIMON _ - t r CND ' ' r C .;. y x ! r st f ry : e , S J :j x f. s. ^- a s - ,a asr yaw. © qez -nom / (' "IF YOU were a paid Soviet agent, you couldn't be doing anything worse for this country than what you are doing now," Senator Thomas Jordan (James Gregory) tells Mrs. Johnny Iselin (Angela Lansbury), the wife of a McCarthy-type Senator and who is the Lady Macbeth behind her husbands political career. Senator Jordan is not as far from the truth as he thinks, and he is soon found with a bullet through the side of his head. "The Manchurian Candidate," a quite faithful adaptation of Rich- ard Condon's novel of four years ago, is the story of Raymond Shaw (Laurence Harvey), a Medal of Honor winner who returns from Korea as a hero. He has been cited for bravery, for leading his men behind enemy lines and cap- turing a group of enemy soldiers. This, of course, is not the truth. He has been brainwashed by the Red Chinese, made into an assas- sin who will operate on two trigger mechanisms which the scientists from the Pavlov Institute in Mos- cow have taught him; "How about passing the time by playing a game of solitaire?" and then once the red queen comes up, he is ready for instructions. It takes a while before we discover what his mission is, why they have done this to him. * * * CAPTAIN Ben Marco (Frank Sinatra) does the discovering. They were both on that mission, which they were all brainwashed to forget. But Marco finds his way through the maze of Shaw's step- father-"I have here in my hand the names of 207 card-carrying . '-and his mother, who is pushing her husband for the Pres- idential nomination, and most of all, why she is pushing him and what part her son plays in the whole game, until the final scene at the Convention at Madison Square Garden, and a very inter- esting twist ending. To tell any more would be to ruin the enjoyment. John Frank- enheimer's direction has moulded a fine film which I recommend without reservation, and there are few of those. -Steven Hendel "I JOHNSON TRUMPS: Little Symphony LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Pakistanis Break Promise To the Editor: AT THIS TIME when the In- dian and Pakistani leaders have decided to negotiate the out- standing disputes between the two countries, it pains me to write this rejoinder to Mr. Faruqa's letter published last Wednesday. He talks of Kashmir and the Indian promise of plebiscite made in the United Nations but forgets the Pakistani promise made in the same august body vis withdrawal of all troops from the now illegally occupied part of Kashmir. He for- istani promise was a prerequisite gets that fulfillment of the Pak- to the fulfillment of the Indian promise. He talks about Sheikh Abdullah but forgets the score of Pakistani leaders rotting in jails under the marshal law regulations. Not only has the Kashmir government charged Sheikh Abdullah before the regular courts but also he has been given the freedom to pre- pare his defense in consultation with lawyers of his own choice. In fact he is being defended by a British lawyer of international re- pute. HOW CAN he talk of elections when his own country has not held a single election on the basis of adult universal franchise? At least there were elections (he calls them mock) in Kashmir. -Krishan K. Gakhar, Grad Friends . . To the Editor: ON HALLOWEEN two signs haning from a post at 1416 Hill Street disappeared. The signs read as follows: "Ann Arbor Meet- ing for Worship, Sunday 11 a.m. Visitors welcome." These signs were made a few years ago at considerable cost in time and effort by volunteers in our group. We hope it will not be necessary for us to make new signs, for we feel there are many other worthwhile ways of using our time and energy. Once before, a few years ago and also on Halloween, our signs disappeared. A letter similar to this was written to The Daily, and soon afterward our signs re- appeared in this rightful place. We hope history will repeat itself. -E. Wendell Hewson Chairman, Property Committee Ann Arbor Friends Meeting Commonplace.«.. To the Editor: MICHAEL ZWEIG'S editorial "The Extraordiiary Common- place" makes one mistake concern- ing the editorializing of Southern college newspapers. During the Ole Miss incident, few of the col- lege newspapers in the South were derelict in their duty. The excep- tions are found in the small state and private schools that rarely editorialize about anything.- Newspapers at Tulane, Emory, Georgia Tech, University of Texas, Vanderbilt, Rice, South Carolina, LSU, LSUNO, Davidson, North Carolina, Miami, FSU and Uni- versity of Florida carried editorial comment of one sort or another as soon after the riots as publica- tion schedules permitted. Melvin Meyer was by no means the only college editor to be threatened or attacked for the edi- torial stands taken by a college paper. The Hullabaloo has been under continual attack since the early part of the school year by various extreme rightist groups. Luckily, the attacks have never reached the vicious proportions that Meyer has experienced. * * * FOR THE MOST PART, the Tu- lane administration has with- stood demands that I be ex- pelled, ignored assertions that the paper is "Communist infiltrated," and halted illegitimate complaints. I feel that most Southern papers are equally as fortunate. Freedom of the Southern Collegiate press is not all that it should be. Per- haps it does not even approach the freedom enjoyed by The Daily. But I believe that Zweig should have his facts straight. The present atmosphere lends itself to an easy indictment of anything Southern. The South is definitely behind in many areas. But in this particular instance, Zweig was mistaken when he said "most Southern college newspapers were. editorially silent" on the Ole Miss incident. Zweig even for- got the courageous endeavors of Sidna Brower, editor of the Ole Miss Mississippian who still has not heard the last of the vicious and often obscene attacks for the editorial stands that the Missis- sippian has taken. -Dean M. Gottehrer Editor, Tulane Hullabaloo SNCC ... To the Editor: THE ARTICLE, of December 9, on Friends of SNCC's Saturday drive throughout the Ann Arbor community, misrepresented the aim of the drive. The focus of the drive is two-fold: one, to keep the voter registration project in Mississippi alive and two, to keep the "Mississippi Freedom Fight- ers," that are now starving be- cause they tried to register to vote, alive. It is our belief that anyone who is suffering like the 22,000 people in Laflore, Missis- sippi, for the right to vote, is a Freedom Fighter. There are starving people all over the world; we did not chose to aid Laflore, Mississippi solely on this basis, although it is a sufficient reason for anyone to receive aid. Rather we chose to aid these people, because of our firm belief that it is through such communi- ties and through such projects that our democracy will become a living reality, not just on parch- ment, but in practice. It is im- portant to us, to SNCC, and most of all to the people in Laflore, that this project, with this goal, continue. ANN ARBOR Friends of SNCC will carry on a campus drive dur- ing this week. The drives for Mississippi are not taking place on a nationwide level. To date, there are drives only in Chicago, Detroit and Ann Arbor. To all those who have helped, and who will help-Thank You. -Helen Jacobson Administrative Vice-Chairman Ann Arbor Friends of SNCC R ACKHAM Auditorium was only about half full Sunday after- noon. Thor Johnson responded to en- thusiastic applause at the end of his program by leading the Chi- cago Little Symphony in the "Sleighride" dance, K. 605, by Mo- zart. It is a light work, a not-too- well-known work, and a thorough- ly charming work. Thor Johnson usually appears in Ann Arbor in the shadow of Eu- gene Ormandy. He is, like the opening bid of one no trump, clearly defined, adequately versa- tile, and strictly limited. * * * AS WITH the bid, his limita- tions are part of his potential assets. He has a good sense of or- chestral color and the general ver- tical balance of music, but in the horizontal dimension he is less apt. Though his phrases are sufficient- ly defined, the acompanying fig- ures plod lifelessly. Though he balances gross rhy- thm changes between sections, the minor variations which give indi- viduality to a performance are missing. In short, his performances are just performances; they are not Thor Johnson performances. These qualifications restrict him to the old warhorse department in direct competition with strong- er personalities, but for unusual works or familiar works in unus- ual settings they are advantages. * * * OF THE latter category is Hay- dyn's Symphony 83, the opening work. It is revealed as a beauti- fully constructed work, with the long first movement development section, characteristic of late Haydn, which presaged the future enlargement of symphonic form. The ensemble of 20 players played superbly in this work and through- out the afternoon. Handel's Concerto in B flat major for harp displayed the incredible talents of Lise Nadeau. She has great dexterity, fine control of dynamics and damping, and a good variety of tone. Unfortunately, the work is rather weak. One would tend to conclude from this work that a harp con- certo is impossible, but Mozart did it. But then, Mozart wrote a bassoon concerto, two even. But then, Mozart was Mozart. * * * MOST INTERESTING work on the first half of the program was the Fantasy, Chorale, and Fugue by Wallace Berry, currently of the local Music School. Most acces- sible of the three movements is the first. It can be described as four minutes preparation for a single note. It begins with a purr- ing dissonance w h ich echoes through the registers and colors of the ensemble. The successive appearances are thinner and clear- er with growing interstices of sil- ence, one of which precedes the final sound a long, pure flute note. Never has a single note sounded so satisfying, so complete. It is a close without equal: outstanding for its daring simplicity; stunning in its impact. * * * THERE IS not space to, discuss in detail the second half of the program, which consisted of pieces by Eichner, second rate Haydn; Graener, second rate Brahms; and Tircuit, second rate. It is a pity for the ensemble and soloists played well, I think. The concluding Mozart encore, short and light, outshone all three. -J. Philip Benkard JONES: Society F I PROPERLY discern the dis- tinctive way in which a univer- sity best serves society, the cru- cial self-denying ordinance be- comes this: The University should not identify itself in aim or as- piration with any outside group or institution, be it business, la- bor, social interest or government. To use an older figure drawn from the days when the church was looked to for the kind of higher criticism now owed to society by the university, there is need for something like "a wall of separa- tion" between the university and the states. When the state affords financial assistance to the univer- sity, as it will and must on an in creasing scale, that aid must be given for the right reasons, not because the university can furnish short-run dividends by way of technical devices or weapons, or propaganda, but because unbiased and uncompromising cirticism is indispensable to the health of a society. Critical appraisal of pub- lic policy can only be shortsighted and superficial when pure knowl- edge lags. * ** CONCEIVABLY this should cause us to have some second thoughts .about a phenomenon in which university administrators and professors are likely to take considerable pride, the increasing use of university faculties as man- power tools for high public office . . . A university's only sufficient reason for making its professors available for public service is that they will return better equipped for effective teaching and imag- inative scholarship. -Harry W. Jones Professor of Jurisprudence Columbia University Law School The Lurking Dragon AS OF THE MOMENT, it appears that a nuclear test ban treaty will not be signed at Geneva. The 17 nation disarmament con- ference has told the United Nations that "it has proved not possible to reach agreement on the cessation of nuclear tests in the brief period of two weeks since the resumption of negotiations," even though there remains hope for progress after the conference's year-end recess. But suppose-just suppose-that somehow dif- ferences were reconciled, a plan emenable to both sides proposed and accepted, and nuclear tests were halted forever. Suppose disarmament were even started. With the horrible nuclear sword of Damocles removed, the world would be looking forward to everlasting peace for the first time in decades. A villain would still be lurking in the back- ground, though. According to the best intel- ligence reports available, the starving people df Red China may have their very own atomic bomb within the next two years. Terror would be on the prowl again in the form of a red dragon. The long dreamed of peace would be in jeopardy even before it had really begun. Editorial Staff EVEN IF a test ban were not negotiated, even if tensions ran still higher, even if the world situation deteriorated beyond imagina- tion, a bomb in the hands of the red dragon would serve only as a catalyst in provoking world events. With Red China excluded from the United Nations, its affiliated agencies, the Geneva disarmament conference and at the same time stalking the Indian tiger, there is no leash on this dragon. There is no communication between it and the outside world. Its 700 million people, a quarter of the world's population, are isolated from the rest of the people on this planet and especially those in this country. CHINA HAS SAID that in a nuclear war, she could afford to lose up to 200 million of her population and still come out of the halocaust without irreperable damage. She has no feelings of Khrushchevian "peaceful co-existence" to say the least. 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