Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSTY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PuBuCATIONS "Where Opinions Are Fe STUDENT PmuiCATIONs 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. TODAY AND TOMORROW: Extremist Goldwater: .Far from Nominated :URSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP SUTIN A Newspaper's Ideal: News of Importance 'H OSE WHO ARE CHARGED with directing The Daily's news pages are from time to time greeted by disgruntled folk who believe that this newspaper is treating them unfairly in 'placement and emphasis of their particular event. An Interfraternity Council official last spring requested that The Daily print only favorable news stories about fraternities. Spring Weekend directors last year demanded that The Daily devote more pictures and more space to their gala, with the anguished com- ment that the newspaper would "ruin" them financially if more publicity wasn't extended. A University vice-president suggested an article on Mrs. Haber's reaction when Prof. William Haber was appointed dean of the literary college last spring. Just a week ago, a person in Friends of SNCC called up to urge, somewhat arrogantly, The Daily rush a photographer over to the front of the Union to snap 30 students in the excit- ing act of boarding the bus to Washington for the freedom march. HE TASK of The Daily, I feel, is to dis- seminate interestingly and completely the most important academic and political events in the University and outside world. Blessed with financial independence and relative prosperity, and having the most eru- dite readership this side of The New York Times, The Daily is able to print what it feels like without having to appeal to sixth-grade tastes and minds. It concentrates on the things that will have a lasting impact upon the studentand his edu- cation; it clings to developments from the Regents, faculty and student politics and shuns campus dances and "human interest" features. In addition, -the paper tries to record the University as it really is. If a given event of importance, factually and impartially reported, will tarnish the University's image or make someone look foolish, it is printed nevertheless. Ot N NATIONAL and international news cover- age, The Daily emphasizes policy decisions and governmental strife while downplaying automobile crashes and movie stars. Last summer, for example, there was abso- lutely no mention in The Daily about the death of President Kennedy's baby. If there had been, it would have been a brief one-inch notice. On the other hand, a nation-wide train strike or the nuclear test ban treaty are stress- ed highly. DECIDING WHERE to put a story is a func- tion-of how much news is occurring on a given day. On some issues, stories are em- phasized that wouldn't be on other days when there are more important things happening. Judging which story is the most important of the day involves a number of value judg, ments. Briefly, here's how the process worked on three articles of recent years. TUIT30N HIKE-In spring of 1962 the Re- gents reluctantly decided a stiff increase in tuition was needed to raise $1.5 million in sorely-needed revenues. Since this event obviously affected each Uni- versity student and in the future might affect the type and number of students to seek ad- mission, it was given the largest play possible. USNSA BOOKSTORE-In last Friday's Daily was an article about the opening of a new, non-profit bookstore in Ann Arbor. Such a venture could alter students' buying habits and lower prices in private bookstores. On the other hand, the new store could very easily be patronized by only a few students and fold after a semester or two. Hence, this story was given important but not overwhelming play. SPRING WEEKEND-This semi-annual ex- travaganza occupies the interest of a large number of students. However, it has no bearing on curricular programs or academic life, except to keep people from studying for three days. Addition- ally, it affects students for only that short period. (A tuition boost, in contrast, has a significant long-range impact.) The University would continue to operate in the same way it always has if there were no Spring Weekend. Therefore, at the expense of irritating the Weekend denizens, The Daily put its news coverage here low on page one. THIS NEWSPAPER'S EMPHASIS on serious news leads to three problems. First, of course, is dullness. Second, some political groups on campus which are well-covered apparently have come to believe that anything they do is of crucial significance. The editors spend a considerable amount of time telling Voice, Friends of SNCC and other such organizations that The Daily is independent of them as well as the Young Americans for Freedom. The third problem is that the paper has neither the time nor the space to cover every- thing on campus that it would like to. Aside from advancing campus events, covering im- portant lectures and having reporters badger deans, vice-presidents and large student or- ganizations, there are some areas-mostly in the graduate and professional levels-which by sheer necessity are covered quite incompletely. N ADDITION to the above problems, The Daily staff, being human beings, each year commits an assortment of errors of commission and omission in news articles. The number is small, however, and every effort is made to prevent them. The major internal control device is a critic sheet-a 1000-word pungent commentary each day by the city editors on the quality of the morning's edition. This device also attempts to improve writing, headlines and make-up by pointing out inadequacies and suggesting im- provements. There will also be other endeavors and new ideas by the editors to better The Daily. IN CIRCULATION and typography, The Daily rivals many a professional newspaper. In staff and finances, it is the envy of virtually every other college journal. As for coverage, even those who don't like The Daily will attest that it does a decent job of capsuling the critical University and inter- national events. In adition, the paper often broadens its news pages by getting first-hand out-of-town cover- age. This summer, for example, three Daily reporters travelled to Albany, Ga., to report on the segregationist idiocies there. BY ITS POLICY of stressing news of import- ance and ignoring trivia, The Daily has come to be regarded as the best student news- paper in the country. By continuing this em- phasis, I believe that The Daily will retain its position of leadership. -GERALD STORCH City Editor SUMMER IN NEW YORK: Salt on a City's Wounds (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of a two part series concerning last summer's surge for civil rights in New York City.) By ROBERT GRODY OPEN ANY cheap novel set in New York City, especially New York in the summer, and you find yourself almost overwhelmed by a parade of bitter, incisive and usually trite metaphors. The city becomes a restless giant, a 'steam- ing jungle," whose creatures, crazed by the heat and their own unfulfilled desires, stalk the land in search of violent and apalling satisfaction. While a string of glamorously arranged words doesn't seem to de- serve much attention, these par- ticular words do become significant when one realizes that they are alarmingly accurate. You will not surprise many New Yorkers if you tell them that the city is a hell- hole in the summer. Those who can afford it get out-they spend eight weeks at a hotel in the mountains or take a seaside bun- galow in R ockaway Beach-leav- ing the steaming jungle to the tourists and the slum kids who Bever seemed to make it to the Fresh Air Camps. The canyons formed by the tow- ering concrete seem to fill with a heavy, sticky, dirty mist that transforms the wilting city into an enormous, nearly unbearable steam bath. Tension is high; col- lars are saturated with sweat; traffic noise increases. And into this great tense oven are dumped nearly a million idle school chil- dren. The city officials know that such a situation can breed only trouble. The problem is not a new one; it has been around for many summers past. BUT THIS YEAR there was yet another ingredient tossed into the boiling kettle, and it made the broth quite a bit spicier: the long- suppressed, and now nationally exploding, surge of energy for civil rights. Ever since World War II authors and newspapermen have been not- ing the "Revolution of Rising Ex- pectations" in the underdeveloped nations. The old white colonial powers slowly rescinded, giving Black Africa and Yellow Asia measures of self-government and self-respect. Everyone now speaks of the new era in world affairs: the Age of Independence. Yet no one seemed to notice that Black America was still in chains. The great colonial powers, Great Britain, France, the Nether- lands and Belgium, were ending or being forced to end their domina- tion of nonwhites. But puny colon- ial powers like Mississippi, Ala- bama and Arkansas were still in complete control of people who had every right to be free. IN THE PAST Negroes received little support or recognition in the battle for civil liberties. Demon- strations in schools, bus stations, lunch counters and the famous Freedom Rides were regarded by the general public as acts of "civil disobedience." Americans were too busy with the world situation, the Soviet Union and the rise of na- couraged to fight harder. Even politicians are being forced at least to recognize the problem of dis- crimination if not to do something about it. Some people were even conjecturing that we were seeing the results of some gigantic plot, formulated by joint efforts of the NAACP and the Communist Party. The American people are finally seeing or being forced to see that there are Revolutions of Rising Expectations in South East Brook- lyn as well as South East Asia. THE PERSONALITY of the civil rights struggle in New York City this summer was unique in a num- ber of ways. Certain outside fac- tors, especially the migration of Puerto Ricans, have been making possible the formation of an un- usually large Negro middle class in New York. Migrations of Negroes from the South to New York have been discouraged by the influx of Puerto Ricans, who work for lower wages and take up most of the un- skilled jobs. Consequently, Negro neighbor- hoods are relatively stable, popu- lated mostly by high school edu- cated, second and third generation New Yorkers, many of whom are civil servants or hold other white- collar jobs. The Negro middle class in New York provides a large, powerful and sympathetic audience for demonstrations. Newspapers must give complete coverage to all racial issues in order to retain their Negro subscribers. * * * THE VERY SIZE and scope of the city has given the civil rights movement opportunity to expand into many areas: housing, educa- tion, employment, politics; and to be expressed in various media, from the militant CORE pickets at the White Castle stands to the wave of sweeping reforms care- fully enunciated by state and city officials. And a third factor is the city itself-the steaming jungle with its short tempers and bored kids. Summer unemployment was at an unprecedented high in New York. It was practically impossible for a youngster of 14-17 to land a sum- mer job. The city's youthful labor force spent the summer on the sidewalks looking for something exciting to do. Nowhere in the United States are Negroes so successful and in- fluential as in New York; and at no time in the city's history as this summer was there so large a store of restless, youthful energy looking for an excuse to explode. By WALTER LIPPMANN THERE ARE reasons for think- ing that, in spite of his rating in the polls, Senator Goldwater is still a very long way from the Presidential nomination. His spectacular spurt occurred recently when Governor Rocke- feller's remarriage seemed to re- move the leading contender. It is probable that the senator has been the beneficiary of the old rule of politics that you can't beat a horse with no horse. If there is no other horse, ex- cept a lame horse, Senator Gold- water might get the nomination by a default. But he is not likely to get it by default. For the moderate Republicans, who compromise the big majorities that elected Eisenhower, are not likely to hand over the party to an extremist. They would probably lose not only the election itself, but also their own position in the party. THE CAUTIOUS thing to say would be, of course, that anything can happen and that, . given enough troubles at home and abroad, anybody could be elected. But more and more it looks to me that Senator Goldwater's rec- ord on public questions will not stand the kind of full public ex- posure that takes place in a nom- inating campaign. For the Goldwater philosophy is radically opposed to the central tradition of the Republican party and is wholly alien to the moder- ate and conservative character of the American party system. The core of his philosophy is opposition to the federal govern- ment as a guarantor of personal liberty and as protector of the national welfare. To the senator, the federal gov- ernment is a kind of foreign power which must be reduced and dis- trusted. Senator Goldwater re- gards himself as a Republican. But to be the kind of a Republican he professes to be, he must dis- avow and disown the whole heri- tage of Hamilton, Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt, For Hamilton was the principal founder of the federal union. Lin- coln was the preserver of the fe'1- eral union. And Theodore Roose- velt was the first President to see that the United States would be involved as a world power and that the federal government would have to become the regulator of an industrial society. These men, the greatest of the Republicans, stood for a strong and evolving federal power, not for a loose and impotent confeder- ation of states. They stood for one nation under a federal govern- ment which served its vital in- terests. SENATOR GOLDWATER would leave the racial problems to te individual states, the federal gov- ernment to cease all intervention. He would repeal the progressive income tax, a measur so extreme that it would dismantle the na- tional defense and de roy the credit of the United States. He would repeal the welfare measures as fast as he could, thus opening the country to vast misery and vast disor'ier. He wuld seiP TVA. In foreign affairs,-he would cut loose from our allie, and he would then challenge the S.Viet Union aggressively. These are some of the ci~ings he says he would do. In fact, if by some quirk of fate he were nom- inated and elected, he could do almost none of the things he says he would do. For they are not a pogram of government that can oe enacted by Congress and administered by the executive branch. They are a vast confusion, and they are a recipe for panic. SENATOR GOLDWATER is a more serious threat to the Repub- lican Party than he is to the Dem- ocratic. For the odds are heavy that President Kennedy would de- feat him, especially after Senator Goldwater's radically reactionary views have been explained to the voters. But the Republican Party would be a shambles after a Goldwar nomination. The party of Lincoln would have become the rallying point of the racists. The party of Hamilton would have become the Anti-Federal Party. The party of Theodore Roosevelt woudi have become the Anti-Progressive. Sec- tional and Anti-National Party. It would then take some inge- nuity to write statements su- porting a Goldwater nomination for men like Eisenhower, Nixon, Rockefeller, Scranton, Thruston Morton, John Sherman Cooper, Keating and Javits. It does not seem likely ti at these eminent Republicans will let themselves get into such a pre- dicament. (c) 1963, The washington Post Co. MICHIGAN: Great Adventure YOU ARE the German High Command during the latter days of World War II. You have a problem. In fact you have several hundred problems, each of them an officer in the Allied forces, each of them your prisoner, each of them sworn to escape. You are.a little tired of rounding up each individual when he suc- ceeds and so you get smart and construct ,an escape-proof prison, transfering all the troublemakers from their scattered positions into this one well watched prison camp, You cleverly call this "putting all your rotten eggs into one basket" And thus begins the Golden Egg of adventure movies, "The Great Escape." Now showing at the Michigan Theatre, "The Great Es- cape" is among the very finest of that special American movie genre, the adventure story. The photo- graphy and direction are keyed to excitement and thrills while never losing sight of the pathos of war. * * * "THE GREAT ESCAPE" is not, however, just another war picture in which thegood guys win. Com- parison to that other classic es- cape movie, "Stalag 17," revals the glaring chasm between the two in their approach. "Stalag 17" ended with good o1' Bill Holden happily on his way to freedom. But not so with "The Great Escape." The courage of the prisoners in "Stalag 17" seems like that of boy scouts compared to that of the group in "The Special Camp." The acting is generally excellent with a cast oftall your favorite war movie bit actors included. Steve McQueen isagreat. He finally gets to ride his motorcycle and every minute of it seems worthwhile. James Garner often seems like the kindly doctor who married Doris Day, but there is enough of Mav- erick left to him to carry his role successfully. Richard Attenborough is as cold and British as ever and for once it seems to fit perfectly. "THE GREAT ESCAPE" was based on an' actual incident in which 76 men escaped and, by official German records, kept close to half a million Axis soldiers di- verted from the efforts of war. The film remains admirably faith- ful to the facts and this obviously adds to its polish and success. Yet as a tribute to those hun- dreds of Allied prisoners of war war who lost their lives attempting to continue to combat the enemy, it still seems slightly like a high school pageant. It is too glossy, too glorified, too pat really to show the horror and tension that exists as a commonday companion to the wartime soldier. BUT "THE GREAT ESCAPE" is a great film in its own right. It thrills, excites and amuses without sacrificing itself to a happy end- ing. "The Great Escape" is a great adventure. -Hugh Holland I r A t AT CINEMA GUILD: 'Falcon' Move s Fast English 123 Worthless MOST FRESHMEN begin classes with at least a vague hope of finding intellectual ex- hilaration at the University. Then they take Freshman English. English 123 and, to a lesser extent, English 124 are aimed at what Prof. Warner G. Rice, head of the department, calls "the semi-liter- ate students." The English department is not the instrument of student extermination by failure here as it is at other state universities. Therefore, the staff, rather than searching for flunk-outs, must try to elevate the semi-liter- .ates to a minimum writing competency. Though this may well be a worthwhile task, is the sac- rifice the "literates" must pay justified. MANY OF THESE so-called literates are ill- motivated in the 123 classroom. They are required to take the course from sincere though inexperienced teaching fellows who, for the most part, repeat high school exercises. The atmosphere is certainly hostile to creativity. Can the students of lesser proficiency raise their writing ability appreciably in the fresh- man course? Undoubtedly writing practice en- ables them to improve slightly but it is rather late for the basics to be taught. Besides often being a bore, freshman Eng- lish is also a financial drain which burgeons t tiitit4 6 it with the enrollment. Though the cost per stu- dent is relatively inexpensive, in the total it is a major expenditure. When money is squeezed like rare perfume from the Legislature so much should not be spent on freshman English as it now exists. THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT is more acute- ly aware of the shortcomings of the 123 course than anyone. A Freshman English Com- mittee studied the situation and submitted a report recently which contained several sugges- tions. Some short range actions it proposed included using an English proficiency exam- ination, exemptions from English 124 for all students who get A's and B's, and concurrent exemption from 123 into 124 for students who score high on entrance tests and the proposed proficiency exam. These suggestions would sift out many of the better writers but would not provide a full solution. Perhaps the best remedy would be abolition of the course as it now stands after a transi- tional curtailment using the alternatives men- tioned above. Other departments of the Uni- versity could then assume the burden of in- corporating extensive writing into their intro- ductory courses. If students elect a particular course, they most likely have at least a kernel of interest in that discipline. This seed could be nourished by an instructor in that specific f4-1 _.e,- - avk- nif niiA gl,_ mY_ _ _ hi FILMS SUCH AS "8%" which demand serious consideration are extremely rare; the majority are intended to be nothing more than distraction for the mass au- dience. Nevertheless, there are to be found many cinematic dia- monds in the rough. "The Maltese Falcon," at the Cinema Guild to- night and tomorrow, is a gem. This film has no serious pre- tensions whatsoever, and one must abandon all elevated criteria in order to enjoy it. The plot, the characters and the dialogue are all silly, but that's the point. This is a slick, fast-paced action film, and, considered as such, is thoroughly delightful. THE PROTAGONIST is Sam Spade, the creation of Dasniell Hammet, played by Humphrey Bo- gart at his tough, cynical best. The lines he speaks are in the terse post-Hemingway style. Spade to his secretary: "Listen precious ... Miles has been shot . . . yea, dead." Does the murder of his partner fill him with a sense of loss? "Move his desk outta here and take his name off the door." Bogart dominates throughout and he is great; always tough, al- ways cynical, always moving. He laughs contemptuously in the face of the villains and talks tough to, the law, never at loss for a fast quip or a quick punch. The plot is complicated, but al- ways fast-paced, this being the major virtue of the film. Two men are murdered in the first five min- utes, bizarre characters come and go (the "Fat Man" and "Mr. Cairo," played by Sydney Green- street and Peter Lorre), and it is the search for a priceless gold ed graphically. Before Archer is murdered, he stands on a misty street; a gun darts in from the left, fires and withdraws. Cut. All in a matter of seconds; never a wasted moment. -Sam Walker Leadership W HAT ARE the responsibilities of Negro leadership? Certainly the first is to keep pressing for first-class citizenship status-an inevitable goal of those who accept the values of this na- tion. Another responsibility of Negro leadership is to encourage and as- sist Negroes to prepare for the op- portunities that are now and will be opened to them. The ultimate responsibilities of Negro leadership, however, are to show results and maintain a fol- lowing. This means that it can- not be so "responsible" that it forgets the trials and tribulations of others who are less fortunate or less recognized than itself. It can- not stress progress-the emphasis which is so palatable to the major- ity group-without, at the same time, delineating the unsolved business of democracy. .. .But Negro leadership must also face up to the deficiencies which plague the Negro commun- ity, and it must take effective action to deal with resulting prob- lems. While, of course, crime, pov- erty, illegitimacy and hoplelessness can all be explained, in large measure, in terms of the Negro's "And When Do You ANTL I.$t& epUCATIN, AI- 4A' . I F' ~gf, /11