Seventy-Third Year EarED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERsTfrY OF M CHTGAN °_ UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTOL of STUDENT PUBLICATIN- . Oi STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN AwBoR, MicH., PHoNE NO 2-241 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. SDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: GERALD STORCH FEIFFER COTICAL- OF V15 $Rit4KV IT' 15 POT T/f 5 6105 THT 1I MPOMPTU S(Mi T15iS P$AM. fATK~t if 1THO CoMPWFX 4ArrOf'JSgtW OFTHC A H69CES. 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It is even expected hat the law will be lenient under extreme cir- Lmstances-that, in short, the violation of the iw was justified on a higher basis and that he violator should not be punished. That, igher basis is justice; laws are made to secure and their violation is condoned when they ave failed to do so. ° An individual always has the prerogative of ot obeying the law. If it is assumed that the emonstrators were trying to act in the interest I justice, it must be determined if a violation f the law permits this interest to be realized. ;UCH ACTIONS could pose a threat to the social order. If everyone felt that he should iolate the law whenever greater justice would esult, then there would be chaos and social pheaval. This is a valid point; however there s a reason why it is not very important. This reason is that it is foolish to suppose hat everyone will violate the law when justice tight call for it. The possible legal punishment lone is a strong deterrent. Then there is the pinion of neighbors who might not agree with he reasoning that sometimes calls for break- zg the law. There is also the consideration that iost people would probably not break the law nless they were quite, quite sure that justice mld be best served in that way. T IS POSSIBLE to argue that to violate any law is to deny the "legitimacy" of the gov- .nment. Hopefully such a phrase could be efined to mean denying the right of the gov- rnment to miake laws controlling the individ- al. But such a denial is not necessarily implied i the actions of the demonstrators. In the last analysis; obeying a law is always matter of expediency. An example was cited irlier of violating a law because it was in-, cpedient to follow it at a particular time. ases where. this is so are quite numerous for ost people. Yet few would say that to violate law on occasion, at times when one felt that istice was better served through the violation, ould be to deny the legitimacy of the gov- rnment. The very fact that the courts often treat such violations with understanding and leniency further re-enforces this point. IT IS ALSO POSSIBLE that, on the whole, it is far better to have people always obey the law than to have them continually deciding whether or not they should. However it must be kept in mind that in the Ann Arbor case the demonstrators were convinced that they were acting in the interest of justice. While no doubt this judgement is somewhat subjective, there is no reason why these people should assume otherwise just because to pursue their course of action required a violation of the law. Keeping in mind the reasons for not violating the law, it can be seen that none are of a moral nature. There is no reason of this sort to stop the demonstrators from taking such an alternative. TH E QUESTION REMAINS of how a jury should react to such a demonstration. Even when it sees that justice was better served by violating a law, it cannot easily condone the action. To do so would have two undersirable consequences. It would encourage further viola- tions on what could well be less just grounds. But, more importantly, it would place in the hands of a jury a decision that it would find very difficult to make. A jury would have to decide if an action, though it violated the law, was in the spirit of the law-that is to say, whether it was a just action. Undoubtedly local juries in Alabama could consider the killing of a Negro girl down there just, if they were to look at it with no consideration of the law. Therefore, though it is unfortunate, it is probably necessary that, juries place the law above the justice of an action except in the most extreme of cases. rTm E IMPLICATION that follows for those who wish to serve justice is clear. They must try not to get caught, or they must be so sure that a great deal more justice will come from conspicuously violating the law that it is worth getting caught and punished, The Ann Arbor sit-in demonstrators must expect to be punished. In the greatest interests of justice, they should be. But this is not to say that their breaking of the loitering law was not justified. They had no moral reason not to. Perhaps not even time will tell if justice did, give them a reason. -EDWARD HERSTEIN MAKE W MO13WS1ME W51t IMPORTM)T $tAV% OF T96IR PFIZ OMJ1 ti VoE.MEIJT Ii)LTH IT, CgKT MAK'F$ 1re tJEt MOE IMPO0JALJT WEAV5F1E HEPCI6MJ TO A5$OCAW106 Wir CROIOKS 6 our, ER 186 IJF(0SAROUND HSF 15 A SOCIAU CHAA16u- 1'UFRFOWF Viff N'AM 1,5S ImpoprTW86I3 CfROMKIT6 SAL{S 50, NOT A IJ'f vSI AM SAL{S 0. CROOJKITr KMOW S. rRUT t OK(TC. rrs . wry t t0AU FACOf TVT465 6 0th S I 66V V5 MRITS, 5 'CAM) M6T MW(P BUT F6L THAT A I1CF66k M0 UWIMPtROE WVAUTrq oF OtliR. CROuJKItre, PRJ1AFPI 1 fII6 ailste FATHER Ra&.. gfVjtA NN~ li 6RIMRKL(15W 0HYRE AMP tr fq SON -- CACH OW5RVI!J6 Map AFFAIRS B it Hs OLOIJ t.16T AjUP 6Arkt16 A t~t RKMO(W56 OF Ills PL*CE 10 THAr lWWAS 1I TIS61iOJ ASO1 OW63~. MT W- ARK 6TR~aR 65RRP. IPTfO 100jJ - IT Is OM~ 0AL t q d Ilk A; FISCAL REFORM PLAN: Double Tax or obeak CAMPUS: Short Subject Steals the Show (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the seventh in a series of articles in- vestigating Gov. George Romney's proposed fiscal reform program.) By STEVEN HALLER rJfHE NINTH specific legislation included in Gov. George Rom- ney's 12-part plan concerns the tax on intangibles-stocks, bonds and bank accounts. Romney calls for repeal of this levy, saying that "under a tax structure geared to personal and corporate income taxes, the in- tangibles tax represents double taxation on businesses and in- dividuals, and thus would be un- fair." The same tax is also levied on banks, but the governor plans to replace the tax here with a 5.5 per cent levy on bank income. Noting that the move will result in a $35 million loss to the state, Romney explains that this amount will be made up elsewhere. "This," he adds, "is tax justice." * * * THE ISSUE of whether or not the intangibles tax does indeed constitute a form of double taxa- tion is not a clear-cut matter. Romney is basing his proposal on the general conception that the stockholders of a corporation are the corporation. This can be said because they have the right to vote and are liable for the debts of the com- pany, proponents of repeal of the intangibles tax point out. Since the corporation would already be taxed on its profits under Rom- ney's proposed corporate income tax, these individuals say, taxing dividends from the stocks and bonds is taxing the same source twice. Those who are against repealing the tax, however, call this line of reasoning "legal doubletalk," say- ing that the stockholders can only lose the amount originally invested. If the corporation makes money, so dd the stockholders. But if the corporation loses money, the stock- holders, rather than being liable for the company's debts, only lose money in the sense that they are not getting any returns on their investment. Since the corporation and the stockholders are separate entities, those interested in re- taining the intangibles tax argue that the levy is not a double, tax. *. * * THE IDEA of an intangibles tax as a source of income originally arose to equalize the tax burden being shouldered by those who chose to put their money into property instead of securities. Since these, persons faced a pro- perty tax on their investment; buying securities was an easy way to avoid taxation until legislators conceived the intangibles tax. As it is, most people do not worry greatly over paying out quite a bit through the intangibles tax. Persons who do not have many securities often neglect the tax on them entirely and it is collected from their estate upon their death. Legally, collecting the tax apparently raises problems which are best solved by simply allowing the holders of securities to let the tax slide. Furthermore, many stockhold- ers hold stock in corporations which are out-of-state firms and pay no corporate tax to Michigan. For such people, the "double taxa- tion" argument only holds in a peripheral sense as it is applied to the state level, although it is true at the federal level. Slack T HE BEST HOPE of balancing the federal budget, it seems to me, is a combination of two poli- cies-a tax cut to stimulate the growth of taxable income, and a tremendous effort to control the rise in expenditures. Of course, this would mean some temporary increase in the deficit until the ef- fects of the tax cut and the econ- omy drive took hold. It would therefore involve some risk of re- newed inflation. At the moment, however, in- flation is not a pressing problem and strong inflationary pressures are not likely to develop until we take up the slack in the economy. -Henry Ford II THE PROPOSED 5.5 per cent tax on financial institutions will probably bring in less than the amount now obtained from the tax paid by the bank on checking accounts and savings accounts, which also fall under the heading of intangibles. One should also considerrthat an individual is generally rather well off before the intangibles tax cuts into his pocketbook to any great extent. The taxpayer is exempted from the first $50 of taxation on income he receives from securities. At the current rate of about two per cent, this means that he will not be paying a tax on the income until it reaches $2500; and he will have had to invest about $50,000 to realize such a return. If one assumes that repeal of the intangibles tax will remove the threat of double taxation from all who hold securities, this cannot be considered strictly accurate at the state level as long as some persons do not pay taxes on income from out-of-state businesses and others do not pay at all while they are alive. * * * IN ADDITION, since those that pay a large amount in intangibles taxes are those who have enough funds to pay for a large number of securities, repeal of the intangibles tax would spell a boon to many wealthy people, banks and in- surance companies. Romney has announced a sys- tem of statewide income taxes as an integral part of his program. If these are passed by the Legis- lature, the governor's purported avoidance of "double taxation" will go up in smoke while the taxpayers shell out on a state income tax, a federal income tax and (possibly) income taxes di- vided between his place of employ- ment and his home city. Under such circumstances, the. "double taxation" concept falls a bit flat. Yet it undoubtedly will still swing enough weight to pro- voke some controversy in the up- coming legislative session , as to just how much "tax, justice" re- pealing. the intangibles tax will result in. TPHE SHORT SUBJECT upstages the main feature at the Campus Theatre this week. "Lord of the Flies," from William Golding's novel, is intrinsically a bore and particularly anti-climactic following Alan Resnais' documentary "Night and Fog." The latte film is a study of the German concentration camps. Other documentaries have been done before utilizing the same ghastly newsreel footage, but this is a documentary with a difference. The difference is that Resnais is an artist rather than a journalist, and the results are clearly evident in the film's cinematic technique and moral viewpoint. Previous documentaries have not handled the subject adequately, for the unrelieved horror of the Nazi nightmare merely numbs the audience. Repeated scenes of bulldozers moving piles of bodies, of mountains of human hair, of half-dead survivors are too much for human sensibilities. Retreat into insensitivity is the only way to cope with such horrors. Furthermore, these films have lacked moral view- point, their aim being to present "just the facts." Resnais' handling of the subject is, brilliant. The newsreel footage is jarringly offset by pastoral scenes of the camps taken 15 years later. Overgrown with weeds, the camps have an air of rustic innocence about them. By contrasting scenes of unparalleled inhumanity with scenes of picture-postcard serenity, Resnais effectively engages human feeling. TO THE CREDIT of all concerned, the essence of William Gold- ing's novel has been left intact. Unfortunately, this does not atone for Peter Brook's incredibly inept direction. Where the novel was tight and fast-paced, the film is loose, episodic and slow. The novel terrified because the school boys were completely believable; the film bores because the characters are mechanical and' lifeless. Finally, in place of subtle foreshadowing, there are clumsy prophetic utterances. We cannot identify with the characters for they are not real, and we cannot be engaged by the suspense for there is none. The whole point of the story is negated. The boys, all amateur actors, who constitute the cast either froze in front of the camera as a result of underdirection or were so over- directed that they lost all their spontaneity. And spontaneity is what they lack most of all. They explore their island like jaded tourists rather than exhuberant school boys. Their dialogue is stilted, re- sembling high school valedictorian addresses. Director Peter Brook, with pretensions toward "art," has made a fetish of shooting into the sun, a device which results in dark silhouettes against a bright sky. Unfortunately, it expresses nothing and is nothing more than a clever gimmick. There are only two scenes in the entire picture which come alive. In one, Piggy the intellectual occupies the youngest boys with a pedantic description of his home town's origin and for a moment there is a flash of wit. In tlie other, the boys plunging rapidly into savagery stage a war dance that generates terror. -Sam Walker PREVIEW. Sandor and the Music ! TIE LIAISON Barb~ara Lazarus, Personnel Director .A t ' .. f _ [HE UNIVERSITY and other large institu- tions of higher learning are facing prob- ms of a growing impersonalization in dealing ith students and perhaps even a decline in the rerall quality of their educational offerings. hese problems, serious in themselves, have isen. from the increase in applicants and e lack of space available to handle them. Most of this influx has -come from the irge of war babies, who are now graduating om high school. But there are other factors s well. High schools seem to have come alive 1 the last ten years, stressing college educa- on and beefing up programs to prepare stu- mts for higher education, college testing and ivanced placement. Many high schools are scouraging dropouts and urging young people ithout financial means to seek scholarships r college. High schools, although they are growing in ze, have stressed more personalized attention, nd the entering freshman is often disillusion- i by its absence when he first enters a uni- ersity. FINANCIAL SQUEEZE, especially in state- supported schools, has prevented extensive cpansion to meet this push, and the result more crowded classrooms and a decline in ze general quality of education. The vast surge students has lead to treatment of students ot as individuals, but as a mass of tuition- aying entities. It has also led to over-crowded ormitories, mammoth lectures and schemes r television learning which all tend to en- ance the students's feeling that he is basically aimportant in the scheme of the university. One solution to this dilemma for over- owded universities is the trimester, which as been adopted-perhaps overenthusiastically -by several universities, including the Uni- ersities of Florida and Pittsburgh. The Uni- rsity has also decided to plan eventually for trimester system and has initiated a similar ilendaring this year. But it is very probable iat the trimester will only enhance an in- itution's massiveness.{ By having three full semesters operating iroughout the year, more students can enroll s freshmen. It also allows students to com- .ete their college education in three years, by t . 41 I going to school year-round. It eases the burden on classrooms, dormitories and professors. BUT THE TRIMESTER also has inherent dis- advantages. One of the main effects at Florida is that students feel extremely rushed and overloaded in the shorter semester. Assign- ments and exams are pushed up to meet the quicker pace, and students find themselves doing poorer work in their courses. They also find that their vacation is much shorter during' the summer, cutting into the "traditional" sum- mer job period. Extra-curricular activities (which may be considered completely unnecessary by some) have been hit with fewer freshmen turnouts and a general lack of interest on campus. This phenomena has also begun to hit the Univer- sity activities this fall. Professors at Florida have found it difficult to complete course materials in. the alloted time and often have to "pile it on" in the closing weeks of the semes- ter. The problem of commercialized or institu- tionalized education is not completely over- come, since in the end more students are ad- mittedband personal attention is still hard to come by. IT IS TRUE that universities are faced with the dilemma that they must accept more students and financial pressures do not allow an ideal answer. One thing that must be done is for high schools to encourage, students to apply to smaller institutions which are con- stantly improving to meet new demands, there- by stemming the pressures of larger institutions. Government support, although a touchy question, might be used to build entirely new universities, rather than merely expanding existing dormitories or building capacities. It is interesting that the United States 'has never had a national university, which at this point doesn't seem that far fetched an idea. A solution similar to the University's pro- posed residential college is another way to keep personalization and to meet growing ad- missions problems. Expansion of junior col- leges into four-year institutions could also take up some slack. THE TRIMESTER is by no means the best means of fighting educational commercial- ization. And from the difficulty the University has had in getting more funds to institute it, "Somehow, This "Iaipaign uUSe Do snt Have The Old Zing" .y{ tPR11'A C .- 0"rLET MOSS JAOS OIT OF .. GYORGY SANDOR, eminent concert pianist and faculty member in the music school, will perform in a. solo recital tonight at Hill Aud. In an interview, San- dor discussed several interesting aspects about his concert selec- tions. Two Bach organ works tran- scribed for the piano will open the concert. The first is a chorale prelude arranged for the piano by Busoni and the second, a Bartok arrangement of the Sixth Organ Sonata. Sandor explained that there are two approaches in transcribing Bach works. One school regards only the notes written by the mas- ter and adds the appropriate cou- plings (extra octaves) as they would have been added by Bach in performance on his instru- ments. The less conservative Busoni- Liszt tradition takes 'more liber- ties by filling out the sonorities with addition tones to expand the sound and enrich the color. Bar- tok is in this last tradition: he fills in the voice parts to achieve a volume and color not emulating but paralleling that of the organ. This treatment incidentally makes for some tricky passages where jumps must be dealt with. Also in the first part of the pro- gram is the Haydn Sonata in E Minor and the Liszt Sonata in B Chopin group including three Ma- zurkas, the Andante Spianato and the Polonaise Opus 22. Four twen- tieth century works comprise the rest of the program. The first is an early work of Szymanowski, reminiscent of early Scriabin in being romantic and lyric. Szymanowski is a Polish composer who died in 1939 and who in Sandor's estimation will ultimately be acknowledged as one of the greats of the century. A Bartok Etude, written in 1918, is in a particularly "daring and sophisticated" idiom when seen in its historical perspective, Sandor noted. It contains motor rhythms and a melody whose tones are. scattered over many octaves. The final two works are by Debussy and Scriabin. DISCUSSING the wide repre- sentation of styles and periods of music in his program, Sandor ex- plained that the content of his concerts depends upon the famil- iarity of the audience to him. Since he has performed in Ann Arbor only twice before and only with an orchestra, he feels that the public will be able to receive him more fairly if he presents a variety of music. To be considered a Bach expert or a Beethoven interpreter is good and useful to a point, he said, but on