Smxy-Thiird Year EDITED AND MANAGED BT STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS where Opinions A rFree 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 al: reprints. TODAY AND TOMORROW: A New Turn in Human Affairs AY, NOVEMBER 21, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL SATTINGER .. ... OSA Shows Inconsistency In Oxford's Vacation Rules UNIVERSITY Housing Director Eugene, Haun has decided to close the apart- ments in Oxford Project over Thanksgiv- ing vacation, and a similar decision will likely apply for the Christmas break. Why did the University Housing Office poll the Oxford women on whether they wanted their hall opened during the va- cation and then ignored their wishes? Approximately one-fifth of Oxford apartment residents said they definitely planned to remain in Ann Arbor for the, Thanksgiving break. It was then an- nounced that the house would be closed anyway. In response to this action, a group of women in the apartments drew up a pe- tition requesting that their unit remain open. The main reasons given for wanting to stay were academic pressures due to the lack of Christmas vacation before finals and financial strains of travel expense. 1fHE MOST DISTURBING aspect of this policy is that it violates precepts es- sential to Oxford's success. Apartment living was designed to give women stu- dents tle opportunity to live as young adults in a responsible and generally autonomous fashion. To most students an apartment is a home in the way a quadrangle or dormitory cannot be: ob- viously a rather restrictive hotel is not the same as your own apartment. The students involved have largely ful- filled their end of the bargain in the "We'll give you freedom if you, give us responsibility" deal consistently doled out by Office of Student Affairs'spokesmen. Closing the apartments at every vacation, however short, will cause these people many difficulties. The constricted semester forced by tri- mester was not the students' fault, as they had no say in its implementation. Similar- ly, the tuition raise this year amounts to an added $150 yearly for the out-state upperclassmen - again another decision he had not part in making, but which will likely result in decreasing the num- ber of airplane tickets he can buy every year. THOSE PETITIONING were told by the graduate house directors that two rea- sons forced the closing. First, the night watchmen could not be employed, thus lessening security for the, women. The watchman unlocks the out- side doors for women who stay out beyond their curfew and would otherwise have no way of getting in the locked buildings. Secondly, key permission could not be extended over the period because senior keys were given with the understanding that they would be forfeited during times when school is not in session. Last, there would be no apartment house directors available for the four-day period. The reasons are anemic and easily re- futable. They are based on a lack of trust in students and an expectation that they will not be responsible. OSA is thus reneg- ing in what is clearly its promise to Ox- ford residents. IF A WOMAN were to stay out late, a graduate student - the apartments have many of them-who planned to be up late studying could be enrusted to let late-comers in, take their names and the amount of late minutes they have.- There is nothing radical about this ar- rangement because the night watchman regularly employed doesn't check the identification of women who come in late. Thus, with either a watchman or a graduate student, Oxford operates on an honors system. SECOND, THE CLAUSE forbidding pos- session of senior keys during vacations was intended to avoid loss of keys result- ing from residents leaving them home or misplacing them on trips. But if keys were in use by residents on campus during the vacation break, there certainly would be no more chance of lost keys than dur- ing the school year. As to the necessity for an interim house director in the apartments, regular, school year counseling by the graduate couples is virtually nil. Many of the women are in graduate school themselves and as ma- ture as the resident counselors; all stu- dents are upperclassmen. There is no reason why a graduate student can't act as interim house director. This is done at every vacation in all of the Inter-Cooperative Council houses, which are University approved and open to sophomores. AN INCONSISTENCY in OSA policy is evident: ICC houses, which have neither night watchmen nor regular house directors during interim periods, are open during vacations but this privilege is withheld from Oxford women. Haun should leave Oxford apartments open for those who won't be going home, or explain why he is sanctioning a clear double standard-as evidenced by the privileges extended to ICC women but de- nied University apartment people. -MARILYN KORAL, (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of three columns in which Walter Lippmann will review his six-week trip through Europe.) By WALTER LIPPMANN N THE PAST few weeks I have had a number of interesting talks with men on both sides of the iron curtain. I have been in Rome, Paris and London, in Bud- apett and Warsaw. I was inter- ested, of course, in East-West re- lations and primarily in a better understanding of the present phase of the cold war. Perhaps I should begin by ad- mitting that like almost all trav- elers abroad I found much to con- firm what I had thought before I started. In my case, t was that while the conflict between East and West will not be settled in our time, there has recently been, nevertheless, a new turn in hu- man affairs which is changing radically the conditions of that conflict. * * * THE TURN has been brought about, in the main, by the fact that the advent of the new gen- eration coincides with the general revulsion against thermonuclear war; the turn coincides, also, with a wide recognition that not only for the advanced economies, but for the underdeveloped ones ; as well, traditional Marxism, tradi- tional conservatism and tradi- tional progressivisim are all out- of-date. They are no longer ade- quate to point the way or suffi- ciently relevant to explain what is happening. As a result, I may say in pass- ing, much American political talk seems curiously bypassed, indeed provincial, when it is read in Eu- rope today. And therefore, while Europeans still pay close atten- tion to what the United States government does with its enor- mous power, they are no longer closely interested in our advice and our "leadership." * * * EARLY IN MY TRIP I asked a leading Catholic thinker, who is in Rome for the Vatican Council, why the Church with its irrecon- cilable opposition to Communism was nevertheless promoting ar- rangements and accommodations with the Communist governments of Eastern Europe. His first answer was that in its pastoral function the Church could not cut itself off from the faith- ful no matter where they lived. Then he went on to say that the closer the human intercourse with the western world, the better for the people in the Communist states.. The West, he said, has every interest in opening up trade, cultural exchanges and travel. They let light and air into the closed societies. I then asked, but are you not concerned that, vice-versa, as western influence increases with contact so will the influence of Communism increase in contact with the masses of the people in the West? "That is a risk," he said. "The answer to it is that the West will become less vulnerable insofar as it learns to strengthen its own be- liefs by renewal, reform and mod- ernization. There is," he said, "no alternative to this. If the West does not make the effort, its or- der will break down regardless of Communist influence. Here he was speaking, I think, the sovereign truth which is at the heart of things. LATER, after I had been to Bu- dapest, where I saw Kadar and others, and to Warsaw, where I saw Gomulka and others, I went on to Paris. A French friend, whom I have known many years, was interested, but not surprised, when I told him that in Poland the official attitude, though formally pro-So- viet, was very tender about China. According to Mr. Gomulka, the Soviet difficulties with China are due entirely to the United States, which, by isolating and boycotting China, has driven the Chinese to 'nuclear weapons. When my wife asked why the Soviet Union didn't supply the weapons to China, Mr. Gomulka replied that the Soviet Union was too much attached to peace to disseminate nuclear bombs! The United States, he insisted dogmat- ically, had produced the rift be- tween Peking and Moscow which, did' nobody any good except the' enemies of Communism, and par- ticularly the United States. What I made out of this weird hodgepodge was that Poland was attempting to mediate in the quar- rel, and that among other things the Poles want to preserve the in- fluence of China, not only for Communist reasons, but for Polish reasons. For Mr. Gomulka himself is both a hard-shelled Communist and a passionate Pole: as such, he is forced to rely on Russia against Germany. * * THE FRENCHMAN9 agreed and then went on to say that the current Marxist leaders are con- fused in their thinking and have indeed lost their way. They revert easily to the older patterns of Eu- ropean power politics. The reason they have lost their way is that the, Marxist ideology is glaringly unsuited to the nuclear age. Until the Russians had really learned about nuclear weapons by making them and testing them, they had continued to believe, as Stalin believed, in the orthodox Marxist view of war: there can be no war between Communist states; wars always begin in the rivalry of capitalist states; the class struggle in capitalistic states causes war which will destroy cap- italism and will usher in the tri- umph of Communism. But in the 1950's Khrushchev and his colleagues came to realize that in a nuclear war both sides would be irreparably injured, that there would be no real victors and that therefore in a third world war there would be no Stalins to occupy the ruins of a Hitler em-I pire. So, nuclear war had to be avoided. Peace, or at least non- war, had become necessary and unavoidable, and in this realiza- tion the old foundations of Marx- ism were destroyed. * * * THE EFFECT of the nuclear situation has been to begin dis- solving the cement which holds together the Communist bloc. This does not mean that Poland, Hun- gary and the others are about to jump the fence. There are no signs of war. But it does mean that the power of Moscow over the satellites is declining, because the discipline of war-hot or cold-is wearing off. Because almost everyone thinks that we are no longer on the brink of nuclear war, the authority of the big nuclear powers to coerce their allies has greatly diminished. For this reason, the govern- ments of Poland and Hungary, and I should think of the other. eastern states -as well, feel less constrained to take orders from the imperial center in Moscow. But at the same time, because they are less dependent on Mos- cow, they cannot use Moscow as an alibi for their own failures. They must pay for their own mis- takes. THEY HAVE, therefore, to win the support of their own people. That they are trying to do this is evident in their economic policy, where capital investment no long- er has the ruthless priority over private consumption which it had in Stalin's day. It appears also in the relations of eastern Com- munist governments with the Church. For they dare not offend too much the mass of the people. Thus the discipline of the cold war, the tension caused by the fear of war, is relaxed, relaxed in every village, and the Communist governments are aware of it. (C) 1963, The Washington Post Co. "Traitor S" 'a --r 1x +iI:: THE MIKADO': Another Hit For G&S. THE GILBERT and Sullivan Society last night successfully opened the most successful of all the Gilbert and Sullivan light operas-with a cast of thousands.' (And that's no small feat in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.) The Mikado, or The Town of Titipu, is characterized by the, typical G&S dichotomy of humor complementing romance, and the cast on stage last night brought it off well. IT GOES without saying, how- ever, that one member of the cast stole the show. Haughtily gracing the stage as Pooh-Bah, the Lord High Everything Else,' James W. Brown drew special applause on numerous occasions- applause for everything from un- folding his fan to delivering a four-word line. This in itself, coming from an opening night G&S audience, demonstrates better than count- less words that Brown is indeed a true master of the Savoy art. JOHN ALLEN, in a garrish yellow outfit, bounced through a really clever and different por- trayal of Ko-Ko, the Lord High Executioner. His characterization, and in particular his gestures and movements, made his presence on' stage generally delightful, espe- cially in the interplays between Ko-Ko and Pooh-Bah. The two complemented each other well. As Katisha, the incredibly ugly lady in the Mikado's entourage, Lois Alt presented a really inter- esting performance. She did a very expert job of vilifying Kati- sha and at the same time mak- ing her a believeable character. This made her transition from the portrayal of the jilted lover to therromantic biddy a smooth one. * *4 * THE ROMANTIC parts, on the other hand, left something to be desired. Henry Naasko (Nanki- Poo) has a beautiful tenor voice, but he still can't dance and his characterization seemed rarely integrated with that of the rest of the cast. Dolores Noeske (Yum- ODDS AGAINST HIM: I*xon in '64?A SureBurial ICIT YSCOPE: Aty. Gen. Kelley's Absurdity I WITH HIS HAT IN HAND, Attorney General Frank Kelley visited Ann Ar- bor Democrats Tuesday and tried to rec- oncile them to his ruling pre-empting lo- cal civil rights ordinances. There is sig- nificant doubt whether the attorney gen- eral succeeded in his attempt. Judging from the make-up of the Ann Arbor Democratic organization, members left the meeting with a bitter after-taste. After all, these were the people most re- sponsible for getting a fair housing ordi- nance through City Council. Kelley made many attempts to point out the advantages of throwing the whole matter of civil rights legislation and en- forcement onto the state's shoulders. He failed in every attempt. PROBABLY the greatest absurdity Kel- ley presented was what he thought was lis strongest point:. his optimistic feeling about the Legislature appropriating suf- ficient funds to the eight-man bipartisan civil rights commission which Kelley for- sees as "handling all cases which may arise." He is drastically wrong on two counts. The Legislature will definitely not appro- priate sufficient funds to the commission., and the commission will not be able to handle all civil rights cases which may arise. BOTH HOUSES of the Legislature are dominated by Republicans-many of which are of the rural mossback gender- who have publicly voiced their dissent on this subject. Such stalwarts as Rep. Lloyd Gibbs (R-Portland) have made state- ments such as "the whole matter of civil rights has been taken completely out of the Legislature's hands and placed in a body which serves the governor's pleas- ure." Gibbs, influential chairman of the House State Affairs Committee, hastened to add that "the commission can tell Michigan citizens what to do with their property. The only way we can make de- cisions on civil rights more effective is to make it subject to the will of the peo- ple and amend the proposal which creat- ed the powers of the commission." This would necessitate amending the new con- stitution which takes effect Jan. 1. Surely Kelley doesn't believe any effec- tive implementing legislation or appro- priations will come from legislators with such views. AS TO THE POSSIBILITY of the com- mission handling all cases which may arise, Kelley is again dreaming. Such a situation would require a vast set-up of investigative and policing staffs. This would require more than the "sufficient" funds Kelley forsees the Legislature ap- propriating. Even if the commission did receive such funds, its power to act would only be made through enabling legislation -which would never come. KELLEY'S VISIT here only whetted the appetites of local Democrats who By ROBERT SELWA RICHARD NIXON in 1964? A stride toward defeat. To fill the gap in the Republi- can party resulting from the di- vergent pulls of liberal Nelson Rockefeller and conservative Barry Goldwater, many politicians are considering Nixon as the presi- dential nominee. And Nixon has encouraged this kind of considera- tion by giving speeches and call- ing press conferences. Those who hope that Nixon will get the nomination and win the '64 election do not realize the great, odds they face. History indicates that a man in Nixon's position has less than half a chance of getting renominated and hardly any chance at all of winning. * * * IN THE CONTEST for president between two major party can- didates, the loser is forever denied the chance of becoming President. Apparently citizens like to vote for winners and hesitate to vote for losers. Psychologists would call it the bandwagon effect; politi- cians would note the factor of experience and lack thereof; and voters maybe would like to hear a new voice and some new themes.. Whatever the reasons, in presiden- tial races the maxim seldom fails to apply: once a loser, always a loser. Nixon was the loser in 1960; even if President Kennedy were not popular and the Kennedy campaign forces not shrewd, and even if many Americans did not justifiably hold a strong dislike for Nixon, he would still be weak. Now a two-time loser as a result of the governorship race in 1962, he is in the losing presidential candidate's traditional ditch. .THERE HAVE BEEN 35 presi- dential elections since indirect popular election of the president began in 1824. In only three cases did a previously defeated can- didate win the presidency. In one of these three cases, the previous- ly defeated candidate had already served as president and was run- ning a second time for his second term when he won. So actually only twice have men in Nixon's situation become president. Andrew Jackson was one of the two successes when he won in 1828 following defeat in 1824. Ac- tually he should have won in beat Van Buren in 1840 in both votes. NOW LOOK at the failures: Some 17 major party candidates lost and were never renominated. Two candidates-Thomas Dewey and Adlai Stevenson-lost, were renominated and lost again. Two candidates-!William Jen- nings Bryan and Henry Clay- lost in all three attempts that, each made. Thus the historical odds are 17 out of 31 that Nixon will not be, renominated and 5 out of 6 that, if nominated, he will lose again. Unless there is a twist of history, the real question about Nixon in 1964 will be which cate- gory for him-that of those who lost and were never renominated? Or the category of those given the dubious honor of becoming the losing candidate more than once? * * * IF CURRENT SPECULATION turns out correctly, if Nixon emerges the nominee as the re- sult of a stalemate between Gold- water-and Rockefeller forces, then the latter category would fit. The nation would see another Bryanish "boy wonder" going down to re- sounding defeat. It would be another political burial for a politician who, as far as elective office is concerned, is already a few feet under. Yum) presented a pleasant por- trayal, but did not lend any par- ticular spirit to the production. Only Susan Morris as Pitti-Sing carried off her part with gaiety and relish. And this brings us to the title role. As the Mikado, Sidney Straight lent the experience of his years and presented a some- what cloudy suggestion of his role. It was not clear whether the Mikado was supposed to be a nice old man, sort of a pleasant ty- rant, br whether he was supposed to be a straight man for Katisha, or just what. One cannot be certain whether the chorus or the orchestra made a weak start, but the two certainly were not together at the outset. They overture was a bit funereal and more suggestive of gay Wag- ner than Gilbert and Sullivan. A faster tempo was clearly in order, even though the particular ar- rangement of the' music was unique and clever. THE CHORUS, as a result, was forced, in the opening number, to do standing battle with the or- chestra,;which obviously had=a several hundred measure head- start. However, the Gentlemen of Japan, resplendant in kimono and and occasional beard, quickly joined forces with the principals f or an ultimately pleasing per- formance. The women's chorus, which entered later, added well to the over-all effect. To director Gershom Clark Morningstar go plaudits for his refreshing choreography, especial- ly by the women's chorus, and for his excellent placement of stage business on the part of the var- ious members of the cast. Of spe- cial note here was the trio be- tween Ko-Ko, Pooh-Bah and Pish-Tush (Franklin Spotts), as they described an execution, with all attendant gestures. Several members of the cast will alternate on successive nights but their replacements promise to be just as enjoyable. -Michael Harrah James P. Stark9 STATE: A Good' Bad Movie THERE ARE times when a bad picture can give a great deal more pleasure than a good picture. "The Wheeler Dealers," now showing at the State Theatre is the perfect example. Not a clever, well written comedy, "The Wheeler Dealers" lacks sophistication and purpose, yet the movie is still delightful. HOW? BECAUSE every one of your favorite character actors is there and has his chance. The re- sult is zany fun. Phil Harris waves his hand during a message and his jet flies to New York, Louis Nye rides a trycicle over a canvas to introduce motion into his art, Jim Backus whacks Lee Remik on the back and exclaims "that's my boy." All of this and much more. Meanwhile the whole imaglna- tive collection of crazy sidemen (Chill Wills and PatHarrington, Jr. to name more) are controlled by the excellent acting of James "Maverick" Garner. Garner's in- nocent smirk and his bewildered frown in "Wheeler Dealers" help establish him securely as one of America's finest film comedians. EVEN LEE Remick comes through with a decent perform- ance providing one of themovie s funniest moments in how to really mfl',kaDa mar0tini "He Says That After The Bloodletting He Can Bring Us Peace" 1 't,. -~ a"4 ~ 4W hft% +, m J 3.'~ V f 11