I S ~~tyThird Year EDITED AND MANAGD c BSTUDEN $ OF THE U VEIsrryOF MICMGAW UNDER AUTORiTY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where pinions A"O STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth WI. Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in at; reprints. THE YEAR IN REVIEW: DAY, DECEMBER 13, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: H. NEIL BERKSON A Foreast of Doom For Kelley's Rights Ruling ATTY. GEN. FRANK J. KELLEY has on occasion noted that not one of his $'more than two hundred rulings" has been changed by the courts. However, on his Oct. 3 opinion on the new Civil Rights Commission, he may be in for a first. At that time he ruled that the new commission, the first one ever created under a Michigan constitution, would vir- tually pre-empt every local civil rights commission. Eut many people feel Kelley is wrong. Qver the last two months there have been numerous statements and complaints lodged against the ruling. Sen. Stanley G. Thayer (R-Anni Arbor) commented re- cently that "the ruling may be challenged right here in Ann Arbor." AMONG THE MANY complaints issued is one by the Detroit branch of the American Civil Liberties Union which rather accurately sums up all the others. It presents four points where Kelley is wrong: -His ruling makes no reference to the Constitutional Convention but if it did there would be no support from Con-Con proceedings. The ACLU report states that it was the direct intention of Con-Con not to pre-empt local units. -The attorney general does not con- sider Section 34, Article VII of the Con- stitution which says "the provisions of this constitution and the law concerning counties, townships, cities, and villages shall be liberally construed in their favor." -The court cases upon which his rul- ing is based are either obsolete or not pertaining to this case. -The Civil Rights Commission would be the only agency in the state controlling the field of civil rights. If it chose not to take action in some local civil rights is- sue, there would be no local commission which could step in to regulate specific local problems. The report concludes by saying the local units could provide added insurance for civil rights. As CIVIL RIGHTS begins changing from an issue to recognize to one to do some- thing about, there are going to be more questions such as the one Kelley's ruling has raised: where should the power be vested and who should decide how to ad- minister it? These questions are for the people of Michigan to answer. If the people of this state want a strong civil rights commis- sion on the state level but also want strong local units, they must act to do something about Kelley's ruling. If in fact it is upheld, which many think unlikely, then the people of Michigan, whether they have a statewide CRC or not, have no local power to administer civil rights. After the new constitution is effected, it remains for the courts to decide the constitutionality of Kelley's ruling. If the number of people against it is any indica- tion of the courts' final decision, then Kelley will have his first ruling changed. -JOHN WEILER Award to Carson Merited N GIVING this year's National Audubon Society medal to novelist Rachel Car- son-the first time in the organization's history that the medal has been given to a woman-,the society has bestowed its highest honor for conservation achieve- ments upon the best available recipient. Probably not since the early days of the national conservation movement in this country has any one person so aroused, so angered, and so inflamed a large segment of the population over a subject in which the average man-on-the-street generally has no interest: the perils posed by an indiscriminate use of pesticides. In her book, "The Silent Spring," she called for more judicious handling of all such toxic chemicals. THE AUDUBON SOCIETY citation point- ed out this fact with clarity, praising her book as one that had "alerted and aroused the public about needless and dangerous pollution of the natural en- vironment." Such a statement has the ring of ac- curacy, whether each separate statistic quoted in the book is fully documented. For an end to "needless and dangerous chemical pollution of the natural environ- ment," and not the use of any and all pes- ticides, is what Miss Carson called for in "Silent Spring." Her sentiments are shar- ed not only by the majority of conserva- tionists in this country but even by a number of clear-thinking pesticide spe-, cialists. Miss Carson's work has borne fruit al- ready, with intensified public support for her views strongly in evidence. Hopefully the Audubon Society medal is not the last honor that will accrue to this crusader for conservation. For in the end it is Rachel Carson who has shown what perils may lie ahead for this country and its natural resources if further action is not taken, and for making the facts known in a manner readily understood by scientist and layman alike. -STEVEN HALLER By PHILIP SUTIN National Concerns Editor NINETEEN SIXTY-THREE was a year of change-often violent change. It was a year of 11 coups d'etat and two major assassina- tions. It began with de Gaulle's jarring rejection of Britain's en- trance into the Common Market and closes with Lyndon B. John- son aggressively taking over as head of state. In this year, the worldwide struggle of the Negro for a bet- ter place in society was brought home to comfortable, smug Ameri- cans. It was also the year that the United States signed a major trea- ty with the Russians-the first one in eight years-and, at least for the moment, atmospheric nu- clear testing has been curbed. This year of change dealt large- ly with old problems, some of them urgent and pressing, which cried for solution. But the events of the year have left them largely unan- swered. * * * THE UNITED STATES ends the year with a new administration and soul searching on why such violence happens as would kill a President or four children in a Birmingham church. Continuity, not change, is John- son's watchword. But he is an ag- gressive, dynamic personality who will certainly work change on Washington. In his first days in office he has prodded Congress harder than Kennedy did to get the administration's legislative program moving. He has also made unpopular and major deci- cions In efforts to trim the fed- eral budget for next year. Johnson could have easily stalled without much criticism in the first weeks of his administra- tion. But feeling the stresses of a rapidly changing world, he has taken strong action immediately. Johnson has all the marks of a strong President, but 1963 will only see the faintest glimmer of the character of his administra- tion. The biggest problems facing Johnson and the nation - civil rights-became much more acute during 1963. Negro efforts through mass demonstrations have what has often been called "revolution- ary" implications. The Rev. Martin Luther King has escalated the level and effec- tiveness of Negro protests through mass demonstrations. Birmingham will be long marked as a major turning point in the civil rights movement as King-led mass dem- onstrations so disrupted a city CINEMA GUILD.: 'M agician': Its Vices INGMAR BERGMAN is an exas- perating film maker. His vir- tues-willingness to deal with serious subjects and ability to create powerful visual images- often become his vices. The specific vice which threat- ens to mar "The Magician," show- ing tomorrow and Sunday at Cin- ema Guild, is excessive intellec- tuality. Bergman is dealing too self-consciously with Important Themes such as illusion and real- ity, good and evil, the existence of God. The film as an art form rests upon an immediately felt visual experience. Themes and ideas should flow spontaneously from the images presented, but they must always be secondary. When they become primary, when the characters begin to talk about them with sophomoric profundity, the magic spell of the cinema is broken. In "The Magician," Bergman eventually manages to control his vices and the final reel constitutes a magnificent evocation of horror and humor. THE STORY falls into three parts. In the lengthy initial sec- tion which constitutes the rising action, a fraudulant magic troupe is forced to perform for a skep- tical, bourgeois audience. Berg- man's control is weakest in this section. There is a good deal of irrelevant material and an excess of intellectuality. The characters are constantly waxing profound with aphroisms such as "God is ilent, men babble"; and "Men who speak the truth are branded liars." It is hard to escape the idea that Bergman is Saything Something Important about Great Philosophical Questions. The ap- proach is simply too heavy-handed and it never convinces. To alleviate the oppressive ser- iousness of this section, Bergman tries his hand at ribald humor. This was a mistake, for the man is simply too cold and intense to create the illusion of passionate vivacity. * * * AS THE FILM moves toward its climax in the second section, Berg- man is in his element. Here, intel- lectual pretensions are cast aside and the emphasis is solely on the that its barriers against the Ne- gro began to crumble. A behind the scenes truce in Birmingham was shattered in September as Alabama Gov. George Wallace interfered with the integration of three local schools. Still unidentified bombers THE NON-VIOLENT REVOLUTION-Summer 1963 saw many incidents of protest such as this one in Birmingham, Ala., where Police Commissioner Bull Connor directs the arrest of Negro demonstrators. dynamited a Negro church, killing four children and bringing more horror and shock to that city. The Negroes used non-violent mass tactics. But often they were violently met as when a sniper killed Mississippi NAACP leader Medgar Evers. * * * ~ THE NORTH, long smug that civil rights was a Southern issue, found that integration demands are national in scope. New York, Chicago, Detroit, and Los Angeles are just a few of the major cities hit by non-violent demonstrations and sharp demands for improving the Negroes' housing and employ- ment opportunities. The mass demonstration phase of the civil rights struggle cul- minated in a peaceful March on Washington in August by nearly a quarter million Negroes and white supporters. Attention now has turned to civil rights legislation before Congress. In June, Kenne- dy added a strong series of new proposals to the mild civil rights program. The House Judiciary Com'mittee: took five months to consider the legislation and a sub- committee drafted a strong meas- ure, containing federal protection of equal rights, equal access to public accommodations and new federal powers to intervene in civ- il rights cases. But, it was felt that this bill would never pass even the House, and Kennedy in his last days in oifice managed to get a milder one through the judiciary com- mittee and to the rules committee where it how sits. The Kennedy administration strove to bottle up the civil rights movement, putting out fires of protest before they became dan- gerous. It tried to soothe Negro frustrations, intensified by the partial successes of mass demon- strations, but not work any radi- cal change that would cost the administration its white support. It tried to keep both the peace and political favor. MEANWHILE, Congress has re- fused to budge. The major Ken- nedy legislative proposals have not moved much further than cal year 1964--now six months old--have not yet passed, leaving the government to limp for six months without a clear flowing of revenue. Civil rights riveted American attention at home while the Unit- ed States and Russia moved to- ward an international dotante. But meanwhile, explosive events were occurring in the underdeveloped nations and in Western Europe that could soon shatter the big power calm. AFTER THE BACKDOWN in Cuba, Russia found itself facing a two-front attack. The militant Communist Chinese took advan- tage of the failure of Khrush- chev's Cuban gambit to launch vitriolic attacks on the Soviet leadership and to enter into full- fledged competition for Commu- nist supremacy. The result has been a wide split in the interna- tional Communist movement and Soviet approaches for calm with the West. Russian ambitions for 1963 were further curbed by a disastrous wheat harvest, forcing Russia and the Communist bloc to buy wheat from the West. This caused a se- vere dislocation of Communist hard currency resources and fin- ally a readjustment of Soviet al- locatibns to provide more food and consumer goods. The "spirit of Moscow" that the Communists see reigning since the test ban treaty last August has been punctuated, however, by two incidents: one, the incident on the autobahn connecting West Germany and Berlin and the oth- er, the arrest and subsequent re- lease under pressure of Yale Prof. Frederick Barghoorn. There was more politics than action in Cuba. Congressmen de- manded sterner United States measures against the Castro re- gime, but hostile co-existence was the policy. For his part, Castro limited him- self to harangues against the United States and some subver- sion in other Latin nations. In October, hurricane Flora dallied four days over Cuba, devastating the island, crimping Castro and the committee stage. Only men- tal health and some education measures have passed. But civil rights, the tax cut (passed by the House), Medicare and other key items lay in committees of one house or the other. Most the appropriations of fis- his hard-pressed Russian backers further. * * * MILITARY DICTATORS made progress against democracy in Latin America as many began to write the United State's Alliance for Progress off as too little, too late. The governments of Guatemala, Ecuador, the Dominican Republic and Honduras were toppled by their armed forces. The Dominican coup was particularly tragic since Juan Bosch's freely-elected gov- ernment was in power only a few months. In Syria and Iraq, coups chang- ed the governments. In January and February, the Ba'ath party seized both governments, raising brief hopes for their merger with the United Arab Republic and some regional stability. But the Ba'athists did not want the UAR's Abdel Gamal Nasser as the strong man and backed out. Then in November, Iraqi Ba'- athists fought among themselves for an entire week as governments changed daily. Finally, the more militant Gen. Abdel Salem Aref came out on top. But the links forged by Iraq and Syria this year, while strained, did not snap. * * * . THE UNITED STATES is still deep in the mire of South Viet Nam although the hated and ruthless Diem regime has been tossed out. Catholic President Ngo Dinh Diem, his brother Ngo Dinh Nhu and his acid-tongued wife launched a crackdown against the Buddhist majority of that coun- try that lost him favor in the world and among his United States supporters. Buddhist monks burn- ed themselves to death in the streets of Saigon and students and teachers struck against the repres- sive measures. In August, the gov- the bitter Algeria-Morocco border war. The continent also united to force United Nations sanctions on the Union of South Africa and Portugal, the major anti-African powers left on the continent. * * * MEANWHILE, the stable West was undergoing a change of lead. ership, although largely an un- planned one. The old leaders, born in the last quarter of the 19th century, are being replaced with leaders of this century. The Christian Democrats final- ly got Chancellor Konrad Ae- nauer to retire last year and in October, he fulfilled his promise, Economics Minister Ludwig Er- hard, credited with that nation's "economic miracle," took his place. Three days later, illness forced out the much embattled Harold Macmillan in Britain. Macmillan, his party losing elections and rocked by sex and secuity scan- dals, was succeeded by his personal choice, Foreign Minister Lord Home, a peer unpopular with many elements in his party. Home shed his title, was elected to Com- mons and began working on changing his image of an an- chronism in egalitarian Britain. In Italy Aldo Moro fashioned an "opening to the left" with the Socialists and Christian Demo- crats in hopes of maintaining a stable government. THIS NEW LEADERSHIP now faces a new crisis in Europe. France has demanded that the Common Market set an agricul- tural policy, something it has fail- ed to do in its six year history, or it will back out. The imperious French president, Charles de Gaulle, first blocked British entry into the market, then spent the rest of the year accentuating Franco-American differences. Now he is threatening the market, a key to Western European integra- tion. Bringing more coherence to Western Europe will be one of the major problems in the coming year -not only because France is ob- stinate, but also because alliance problems have been too long put off. The Vatican, which often moves slower than a turtle, has under- gone rapid change. Pope John XXIII's Ecumenical Council-the first since 1870-has been carried on by his successor, Pope Paul VI. He not only continued the coun- cil's work, but also envigorated it. The Pope has sided with the pro- gressive wing of the church, re- sulting in major changes in liturgy and doctrines. FEW SURE THINGS ca be said about the coming year, butsome general trends may be'spotted he United States, barring an unex- pected foreign crisis, will be more concerned with domestic than for- eign affairs. The November presi- dential elections, the pressing civil rights problem and Johnson's own inclinations point that way. There is much to be done here. The justified Negro demand for his rights must be met. Vital do- mestic programs for medical care for the aged, education, reducing taxes and mitigating the impact of automation must be adopted. Abroad, the new leadership of the United States and Western E- rope must fashion new policies to meet inter-alliance bickering and to take best advantage of the Sino-Soviet split and internal Russian weakness. New peace proposals to the Rus- sians are opportune and now be- ing discussed. In a changing world, a temporary d6tante may be all too short. Nineteen sixty-three was a year of dramatic events and change. Nineteen sixty-four should not be much different. 1~ p 1. r -A Time of Violent Changes 4 0 LUDWIG ERHARD ... new leaders in Europe ernment raided Buddhist pagodas, beat up monks and jailed their leaders. With almost overt United States prompting, the military overthrew Diem, murdering him and his pow- erful brother. But the Viet Cong continually attacked Viet Nam while this sec- ond war was going on. American soldiers, assisting anti-guerrilla forces, were being killed in in- creasing numbers. The war has not subsided, but American offi- cials, reassessing the situation, are pulling some troops home. * * * INDEPENDENCE, development and unity are the themes of Afri-, ca. The independent African states have formed the Organiza- tion for African Unity, a group similar to the Organization of American States, designed to keep the peace and promote con- tinent-wide unity. The OAU passed its first crucial test when it arranged a truce in 4 THE LIAISON: Life with Lei David Marcus, Editorial V MOST OF THE PROBLEMS of the new calendar can be easily settled within the next few years. Teachers will adjust their methods to the shorter semester. Students will become accustomed to the idea that the trimester schedule affords fewer lulls and that they must start work- ing when the semester starts. Yet the new calendar has one major disadvantage: it allows no opportunity for leisure. I think both student and faculty member need an opportunity to pause, collect their thoughts and organize the experiences of a semester. Some adjust- ment will have to be made in the fall Editorial Staff RONALD WILTON, Editor DAVID MARCUS GERALD STORCH Editorial Director City Editor BARBARA LAZARUS............Personnel Director PHILIP SUTIN.............National Concerns Editor GAIL EVANS.................Associate City Editor MARJORIE BRAHMS .... Associate Editorial Director GLORIA SOWLES............... .. Magazine Editor IMALINDA BERRY ............... Contributing Editor DAVE GOOD........... ,... ,........ Sports Editor JIM BERGER..............Associate Sports Editor MIKE BLOCK ................. Associate Sports Editor BOB ZWINCK............,Contributing Sports Editor NIGHT EDITORS: H. Neil Berkson, Steven Haller, Edward erstein,MarilyngKoral, Louise Lind, An- drew Orlin. Michael sattinger, Kennett Winter. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Mary Lou Butcher, John Bryant. Robert Grody. Laurence Kirshbaum, s Ssure Director semester s can escape academic w 3 , *}l o that students and teachers from the tension of constant work' THE STORY OF KREBIOZEN: cWonder Drug' Proved Useless THERE ARE NUMEROUS alternatives that could be put into practice. The simplest would be to extend Thanksgiving vacation to a full week. Or perhaps the University could simply carve out the last week of October and send the stu- dents home. Or there could be a week or two reading period before exams which- although by no means a vacation-would at least give students an opportunity to catch up on all the little things they ought to have done. Of course, any of these alternatives in- herently means a little less time spent in the classroom. But lafter all, the idea of spending a certain amount of time in the classroom is no more than an academic dogma and is in itself of dubious value. I do not mean to say that class time is worthless; but the difference between one or two weeks of class more or less seems to me hard to measure. And even if these few days of class did make a significant difference, this difference-whatever it might be-has to be balanced against the advantages of allowing the student some additional free time to read and think. A FIFTEEN WEEK semester-the length (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the final part of a two-part series deal- ing with the controversial cancer drug Kreblozen. The more recent developments in the drug's history, including the research that exposed it as worthless, are discussed.) By STEVEN HALLER WITH THREE separate agencies -.the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, the Food and Drug Administration and the National Cancer Institute-plus the majority of the doctors of the country engaged in finding out the truth about Krebiozen, it would seem that Dr. Andrew C. Ivy and Dr. Stevan Durovic would have been worried. Yet all indica- tions are that they were only de- fiant about what they considered an impingement on their rights. But the worst was yet to come for the Illinois doctors. It came in the form of a report by the FDA that the so-called "wonder drug" was not a cancer cure-all after all, but merely a common amino acid called creatine, available from the meat in one's daily diet. This sub- stance, a common constituent of blood, is found in all vertebrae ada. wam.-a nrpspean in in treating cancer if used in such small doses, he added. THE FOUNDERS of the Krebio- zen Research Institute were as voluble as before when news of the FDA findings was announced. Dr. Duroyic's general attitude that he was being "framed" by the gov- ernment did not change; and Dr. Ivy termed the findings "ridic- ulous." He added, "They are ap- parently willing to do anything to get out of performing clinical tests of Krebiozen . . . We have been trying to get such a test- using Krebiozen on cancer patients -from the National Cancer In- stitute for 10 years, and we still haven't got it." He went on to claim that crea- tine and Krebiozen were two dif- ferent chemicals, noting that "one sure way of distinguishing the two is that Krebiozen is soluble in mineral oil, while creatine is not." He added that neither creatine nor Krebiozen were amino acids after all. Yet what the Illinois doc- tors had given the FDA to analyze was clearly creatine, and creatine is clearly an amino acid as far as many scientists are concerned. ported, a month later, Drs. Ivy and Durovic must have wished they had not attracted such pub- licity to the institute. The com- mittee of 24 experts reported unanimously that the drug was not in any way effective as a treatment for cancer. The institute's director, Dr. Ken- neth Endicott, released a state- ment noting that there was "no justification" for the clinical trial requested by Drs. Ivy and Durovic, and "from a scientific standpoint we regard the case closed." As might have been expected from Drs. Ivy and Durovic, they now proceeded to lambaste the very institute whose findings they were so ready to accept before. "The verdict was reached in a se- cret proceeding that should not be allowed in the government of the United States. The opinions of committees have been notoriously wrong throughout scientific his- tory," Dr. Ivy declared. * * * THAT THE JUDGMENT of these two doctors might be better than the collective decision of 24 cancer experts no doubt came as a shock to the National Cancer who had received other treatment while they were taking Krebiozen, 50 who had no diagnostic evidence of cancer to begin with, 49 who had no residual cancer at the time they began to use the drug and 16 whose data was inadequate for miscellaneous reasons. Of the 288 cases that were con- sidered at length, 273 showed no significant reduction in the size of the cancer. Dr. Endicott attribut- ed two of the remaining 15 cases to the natural ability of the body to destroy tumorous growths. The rest were easily dismissed on other valid grounds. One person had a type of cancer that gets smaller when no treatment is applied, an- other had a cancer that had shrunk at the primary site but was spreading elsewhere, and so on. * * * "IT IS THE OPINION of the committee that the nature, degree and number of effects noted are what one might expect in any large random sample of cancer patients," Dr. Endicott concluded. That the drug serves no useful purpose was one thing. That it could in fact be harmful was an- other. A cancer-stricken Illinois 4 4