Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 "Shh -- If He Saw Me, It Would Only Confuse Him" When Opinions Are Free 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. AY, APRIL 13, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDY DONER Challenge' at Michigan: Awareness and Action "As UNIVERSITY students we are concerned with understanding the world in which we live. Yet we find that our environment is nar- rowing and fragmenting our awareness of the contemporary challenges," a. group of inter- ested students concluded last year. Concerned with this splintering and lack of modern sensitivity to the world's challenges, last spring a group of Yale University students set up a program designed to answer the challenge presented by the modern changing world. Since then, this program has spread ,olumbia, Smith, Antioch and Michigan. Volumbia, Smith, Antioch and Michigan. Five students who attended the "Challenge" colloquium in March are attempting to set up such a program on the Michigan campus. It will be directed toward presenting all aspects of contemporary concerns such as the effec- tiveness of Democracy, or the threat of the nuclear age. During this program, three objec- tives will be maintained: to present the topic so that it is meaningful in terms of student experience, to stress its importance for stu- dents in the world scene so that they will not remain neutral, and to force the listener to make a clear commitment as to where he stands will be the basic objectives. "And committment means action," Al Haber, '60, points out. EACH SEMESTER will be dedicated toward coordinating all campus efforts to consider- ation of a specific challenge. Departmental speakers might give their approach to the topic, outside speakers might be brought in, housing unit seminars might reach individu- als. In this way, a general awareness of the topic could pervade the campus. The challenge program would have to be a campus-wide movement of independent stu- dents. As one advocate put it, "we are looking for people, not organizations." Such a program should not get bogged down in organizational rivalries or become stereotyped by one spon- soring organization. "Such a program requires the combined efforts of all the resources of the University, and transcends narrow ideological or organizational limits," a Yale participant reports. WHY ADD THIS, another program among many, to the already overcrowded activity schedule? Because this program can coordi- nate the splintered efforts of many depart- ments and organizations. The world horizon has expanded to such a great degree that it has become imperative to specialize in order to become adequately informed about any- thing. "Challenge" could draw together the resources of various cultural and academic activities on campus and concentrate them on a vital topic, thus building the splinters into a complete frame containing the active opin- ions of students. Challenge could, if rightly supervised, com- bat student apathy by offering worthwhile outlets for intellectual energy. It could both awaken students by presenting the problems clearly and arm them for action by forcing them to take a stand on the issues which will affect their future. The presence of such a program on campus would keep present organizations on their toes, hopefully eliminating "mickey mouse" activities by pressure of more powerful and comprehensive projects. CHALLENGE is not radical, conservative, Re- publican, Democrat or Socialist. It is. a program designed to inform and aid the stu- dent in comprehending the challenges of his environment. Challenge only asks that the student take a stand on vital issues. To that end the pro- gram will attempt to present the full spectrum of opinion to facilitate informed commitments, It is thus beneficial to all existing worthwhile programs every student reached will be poten- tial workers in already existing organizations. As the Yale report states, "We are challenged by the immense and complex problems of today's world. American young people need and demand a positive, thoughtful examina- tion of the paths to the future. Challenge is a program that will forcefully explore these dramatic contemporary challenges.' --CAROLINE DOW ..I e F . VJ t~: / - - r W.A £ 4*r'4TvJ DISCRIMINATION: Haber-Mller Motion Offers New Solution By JAMES SEDER Daily Staff Writer ON can't escape the impression that the prestige of Student Goy- ernment Council and progress in the fight against fraternity and sorority discrimination are still tangled up in the Sigma Kappa chaos. Many people have deducted from the Sigma Kappa affair that SGC is a powerless, meaningless organization. Others have concluded that the situation forclosed all hope of moderate action in the area of discrimination leaving as the only alternative a fullfledged crusade. Neither of these viewpoints is particularly valid. In 1949 the Committee on Student Affairs adopted a resolution refusing "to recognize any organization which prohibits membership 4 i WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Make Haste-Locall7 LIKE EVERY generation of students, this one seems finally to have found a cause. Others have contended with everything from prohibi- tion to war; ours is discrimination. This interest serves a dual purpose. It may result in some concrete progress in eliminating discrimination which would outweigh all the theorizing ever done on the subject in a class- room or a student mind. It may also serve as a powerful remedy for that trite catch-phrase but all too grim reality, student apathy. ALL OF THIS is undeniably good. But as this interest gains momentum it might be wise to watch the boundaries students cross. Picket stores that practice discrimination, Eliminate the discrimination clauses cherished by some campus groups. But think twice about a seemingly minor mction like dashing off a telegram to a south- ern governor, Here students are involving hemselves in somebody else's cause, and the esults may not be desirable, Actually it isn't so much somebody else's ause as it is a different, and probably more im- >ortant phase of the same one. Discrimination s especially the South's problem. They have a 'eal job on their hands, while ours, though mportant, is more of a mopping-up operation y comparison. And in accomplishing our part of the purpose it isn't fair to jeopardize the success, of others. THE SIT-INS in the South know what they have to do, and that they have to do it by themselves. They're approaching discrimina- tion in each town as a local problem, because a lot of local victories add up to county- and eventually to state-wide success. They realize that they have to do it alone. They are discouraging any open assistance from the NAACP, regarded by many Southern- ers as a "New York organization," or from CORE. And so, as one Michigan student re- cently returned from meetings in the South and sit-ins has discovered, they're not too happy about northern universities bringing pressure to bear on, for example, the governor of Alabama. T HIS ISN'T because they're stubbornly self- sufficient, but because such actions stiffen opposition to their cause rather than causing It to diminish. Sending telegrams may get our student government organization a mention in Time, and may be well-intentioned, but it also makes the sit-in's job that much tougher., And this should be the primary consideration. We're supposed to be working with them, not against them. -ANITA PETROSHUS a A f # I Z t k C heCi WA S H I N G T ON-Republican leaders don't want the Demo- crats to know it, but thy are quietly checking of five Demo- cratic Senators who have invest- ments in TV stations. Their sec- ret strategy is to retaliate against the Democrats in case the latter really go to town with their "Free- dom of Information Watchdog Committee" appointed by Sen. Warren Magnuson last fall but never actually implemnted. The five Senators the Republi- cans are checking are: Lyndon Johnson, Tex., Magnuson, Wash., Kerr, Okla., Anderson, N. Mex., and O'Mahoney, Wyo. Except for Kerr, who with his family is quite a group TV owner, and Johnson, whose wife owns parts of four stations, the other Senators hold small interests each in one station. All this is a matter of public rec- ord. It has never been secret However, ever since Magnuson appointed Sens. Ralph Yarbor- ough, Texas, and Gale McGee, Wyoming, on a watchdog com- mittee, along with GOP Sen. Hmlh Scott of Philadelphia, the Repub- licans have been trying to side- track their work. Though the three men were ap- pointed in September, not a single dollar has been allocated to the committee and not one staff mem- ber appointed. Six months have passed and not a single piece of work has been undertaken. * * * MAGNUSON'S STRATEGY in appointing the watchdog commit- tee was first, the fact that cong- ress last year modified the equal- time provision requiring radio and TV stations to give equal time to all candidates; second, the fact that in election years the big ad- vertisers and Madison Avenue ad agencies have relinquished time in the final weeks of the cam- paign to their favored candidate. And past records show that Madi- son Avenue has always leaned heavily toward the Republicans. In fact, the Democratic Nation- al Committee was only able to find one Madison Avenue ad agency in 1956 that would con- sent to handle its account-even though the work meant a sizable chunk of revenue for the agency accepting the account. THE LATE FRANKLIN Roose- velt used to delight in what he called "pulling a rabbit out of the hat." This was how he described a surprise move in international or domestic relations. President Eisenhower is now planning to pull a rabbit out of the hat to pave the way for a successful summit conference. He will send Charles Bohlen, ex-am- bassador to Russia, back to Mos- cow to try to work out a special understanding with Khrushchev regarding both Berlin and disarm- ament, This became known as the Western Foreign Ministers began meeting in Washington, still di- vided over Berlin, but with the problem uupermost of welding a united front regarding Berlin prior to the summit conference, Their split is between the French, Germans and Italians on one side who want to stand firm on Ber- lin; and the British, who want to compromise, on the other. * * * HITHERTO, EISENHOWER has been standing more or less mid- way between. However, he now plans to have Chip Bohlen, who speaks Russian perfectly and is well-known and respected inside the Kremlin, talky turkey to the Russians. His message is going to be this: unless Khrushchev stops making threats regarding Berlin, the United States will agree to no disarmament. Behind this is the State Depart- ment belief that Xhrushchev ur- gently wants disarmament in order to concentrate on Russia's civilian economy and is willing to" pay a price for it. That price, the State Department hopes, will be to quit demanding the free city of Berlin. (Copyright 1960, by the Bell Syndicate) Democratic TV Interest By DREW PEARSON in the organization because of race, religion, or cplor." SINCE TILS time student gov- ernment has twice attempted to enact some measure which would end discrimination in fraternities and sororities on campus previous to the ruling. The first attempt was vetoed by President Alexander Ruthven, the second by President Harlan Hatcher. Both men indi- cated that the proposed measures were too coercive. The Sigma Kappa situation demonstrated that the 1949 res- olution has several faults. The resolution provides no iron-clad bar to the recognition of groups which do, in fact, discriminate and its provides no mechanism for dealing with situations arising from this. But perhaps the most serious defect of the resolution is that it is deceptive: it looks as if it were the first step along the road to complete non-discrimina- tion. But the past decade has not shown that such a ruling en- courages actual integration. As a result a new approach is vitally necessary. The Miller- Haber proposal currently before SGC offers this new approach. There were a few minor prob- lems with this plan, but they seem to have been ironed-out in the revised proposal which Al Haber, Jim Martens and John Feldkamp will present to the Council to- night. * * * PAST EXPERIENCE has clearly "shown that a committee must be set up to work in this area. Cer- tainly the most effective way of ending fraternity and sorority discrimination - and perhaps the only way short of time clauses- is to provide some mechanism for bringing constant pressure to bear on both local and national offi- cers. Such a committee should be a tri-partite group composed of stu- dents, administrators, and mem- bers of the faculty. This arrange- ment has met with some criticism from both students and faculty members who feel that the com- mittee should be exclusively com- posed of students. But there are many reasons it is essential to have a tri-partite group: 1) This is a University-wide problem, not exclusively a student problem. 2) The committee will desper- ately need continuity and exper- ience. Since students are transi- tory, it is manditory to have non- students on the committee, 3) The group, to function ef- fectively, will need to establish rapport with national fraternity and sorority officials. This rapport will be easier to accomplish if the officials feel that they are dealing with a peer group. * * * THE KEY to the success of the group is its approach. It must concern itself with making pro- gress, not with being punitive. The group will have to work diligently with national and locel fraternity and sorority leaders over a long period of time to be successful. Progress will often be slow and it will rarely be dramatic, but pro- gress can be made and it will be made so long as the various fra- ternities and sororities work with the committee in good faith. To insure that these groups do so some power is necessary to insure cooperation of reluctant groups. Fortunately, there is a legitimate power available. Any discriminating group re- fusing to show good faith clearly forfeits the right to be recognized by the University. If such a fail- ure should arise, no one would be . likely to dispute SGC's responsibil- ity to withdraw recognition from the group, If, as it is reasonable to assume, competent people are appointed to the committee and it receives the backing of the University com- munity, its creation will contribute toward ending discrimination in students groups and will go far toward restoring prestige to SGC. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin Is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Mihigan for which The Michigan Dailyassumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1960 VOL. LXX, NO. 140 General Notices President and Mrs. Hatcher will hold open house for students at their home Wed., April 13 from 4 to 6 p.m. Undergraduate Women Students now on campus who do not have a housing commitment for the fall semester, 1960, may apply for housing at the Office of the Dean of Women, S.A.B., beginning Wed., April 13. In addition, League House applications are asked to apply House applicants are asked to apply on Wed., April 13. Fulbright Awards for University Lec- turing and Advanced Research have been announced for 1961-62 in Austral- ia, New Zealand, the countries of South and Southeast Asia, and Latin America. Those applying must be U.S. citizens; for lecturing, must have et least one year of college or university teaching experience; and for research, a doctoral degree at the time of application, or recognized professional standing. Ap- plication forms may be obtained from the Conference Board of Associated Re- search Councils, Committee of Inter- national Exchange of Persons, 2101 Con- stitution Avenue, Washington 25, D.C. Deadline for filing, an application for these countries is April 25, 1960. Further Information may be obtained at the Fellowship Office in the Graduate School. The University of Michigan Maching Band will be one of the featured march- ing units in the Michigras parade on FrI., April 22. William D. Revelli, con-. ductor of bands and George Cavender would like all members of the marching band who are not merbers of thesym- phony and Wolverine bands to -report to Harris Hall before Friday of this week (April 15) to sign up for the parade and to make arrangements to be Issued uniforms, music and instru- ments. Tomorrow at 4:15 p.m., the Depart. ment of Speech will present a double- bill of original one-acts. The Good Cross, a passion-play by Donna Eichen- laub, and The Window by Shannon King will be presented in Trueblood Aud., Frieze Building. No admission will be charged. International Student and Family Ex- change have moved to new quarters at the Madelon Pound House (basement)' 1024 Hill St. (Corner of E. University). Open Wednesday nights 7:30 - 9 p.m., Thursday mornings 9:30 - 11 a.m. Top- coats and sweaters for menand iwomen . Inf ants equipment. and :clothing and children's clothing. These are available for all Foreign Students and Families needing the above items. University of Michigan Graduates Screening Examinations in French and German: All graduate students desiring to fulfill their foreign language require- ments by passing the written examina- tion given by Prof. Lewis (formerly given by Prof. Hootkin) must first pass an obective screen examination. The objective examinations will be given four times each semester (i.e., Sept- ember, October, November, December, February, March, April, and May) and once during the Summer Session, in July. Students who fail the objective examination may repeat it but not at consecutive administrations of the test (e.g., September and October) except when the two administrations are sep- arated by more than 35 days (e.g., Dec- ember adFebruary). There will be two more administra- tions of the objective examinations in French and :German during the cur- rent semester. The first will be on Thurs., April 21, in Aud. B, 7:00 to 9:00, p.m. The last will be on Fri., May 6 in Aud. C, 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. Within 48 hours after the evaminations the names of students who have passedwill be posted on the Bulletin Board outside the office of Prof. Lewis, the Examiner in Foreign Languages, Room 3028 Rack- ham Building. Students desiring to fulfill the Grad- uate School's requirement in French and Germati are alerted to an alternate path. A grade of B or better in French 12 and German 12 will satisfy the for- eign language requirement. A grade of B or better yin French 11 and German 11 is the equivalent of having passed the objective screening examination. Lectures University Lecture in Journaism, Wed., April 13. Irving Diliard, editor- ial writer for the St. Louis Post-Dis- patch, will speak at 3 p.m. at Rackham Amphitheatre. Speech Assembly: Edward Stasheff, Prof. of Speech, to present a program entitled, New Stages for Old, on Wed., April 13 in Rackham Lecture Hall at 4:00 p.m. Open to the Public. Lecture: J. J. Sweeney, Director, Gug- genheim Museum, New York, will speak on "Guggenheim Museum and Collec- tion" on Wed., April 13 at 4 p.m. in the Architecture Aud. Guest Lecturer: Jack Bornoff win give a lecture entitled "Survey of the Con- temporary Music Scene" on Thurs., April 14, at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. A. 4 '4 IMPACT OF AID: Indian Progress Today rM INTERPRETING THE NEWQ: Asso FE South take on s5 .ght. Not so mu inister was lay have be ause of ing hite popula estry, The Englis ng record c n racial att gpartheid, ha ity toward t 3ART of th minority st en emphasi ligion. Tha Anrrio 'k, JL JUL JLJ I I JLJ TV sJ j Violence Begets Violence By J. M. ROBERTS speaking reaction in South Africa and the at- ciated Press News Analyst titude adopted in Britain, which formerly ruled African conflict now begins to the country. ome of the aspects of a three-way There was a boycott movement against South African goods in Britain long before the ch because the Afrikaner Prime recent violent outbreaks. There have been shot by an Englishman, which bitter expressions in Parliament against Ap- en just a happenstance, but be- artheid, and suggestions that South Africa rained differences between the should be ousted from the British Common- tions of Dutch and English an- wealth of Nations..1 There has been a suspicion ever since the h-speaking population, despite a nationalists rose to power in 1948 that Afri- )f solidarity with the Afrikaners kaner policies would eventually take South itudes prior to the extremes of Africa out of the Commonwealth. s begun to display greater liber - he Negroes. SINCE the recent crisis, there has been a growing speculation that the Afrikaners is is due to politics, where the are pushing their country toward a terrible tatus of the English-speaking has destiny of civil conflict and ultimate dissolu- zed since 1948, and part due to tion. British moderates are meeting the suggestion -for outlawrv nf South Africa with th rnntn- (EDITOR'S NOTE: Me Purmalis Is a University student, currently studying in New Delhi on a Stu- dent (overnmen tCouncil exchange scholarship. Ier 'letter discussing the current situation in India is written from there. By ILZE PURMALIS N A RECENT editorial titled "Mr. K's New Line" published in Michigan Daily, Max Lerner focused on two questions which might well be topics of Congres- sional discussion on foreign aid in the near future. To put it bluntly, they are: Is Russia beating us in India? Should we step up the propoganda value of our aid to India? When these questions will come up, it may be that in result it will no more be a matter of Russia beating us because we already will have defeated ourselves by both evaluating and directing our own methods and aims only on the basis of what Russia is doing. It is discouraging that the trend started by Sputnik is still con- tinuing and seems to be gaining momentum. In all areas our ini- tiative, drive, and even goals are more and more routed toward a single track labeled "beat Rus- sia." If that is our major source of motivation as a people, then on that same single track we shall coast to oblivion. To say the least, this is an un- imaginative and even negative tween India and the United States were strained, a condition due a great deal to our attitude in ex- tending aid to India. Those were the days when we felt that anyone not committed for us is against us. Since then our frame of mind has changed; the spirit behind our aid has not been an attempt to get India on our side any more but to help India in its tremendous effort of eco- nomic and social development. Asma result, our relations, based on mutual confidence and co- operation, are unprecedently good. Yet the trend can be reversed as quickly as we revert to our old policy even though it would be in a new perspective. As any other country, India has a national pride and sensitivity-surprisingly tem- perate for a nation so recently independent, nevertheless, it is there. * * * BASICALLY, it all comes down to the question: what are we try- ing to achieve in India? As it is now, India is an independent dem-' ocratic republics It is not relevant whether it is pro-American or not, what is of import to the present day as well as the future world is the often repeated querry whether a nation facing economic and so- cial problems of the magnitude found in India can solve them within the framework of demo- Pemv Ti iQ heonnd the imanina,- food, clothing and shelter. As a result, when the people in general cast their votes, they are not vot- ing ;or Russian steel mills nor for any American projects, they are voting for bread. * * *9 IN THE PAST American aid in India through our government as well as agencies such as the Ford Foundation has been very widely dispersed on a large variety of pro- jects. Because of this, some of them are said to have been in- effective in the long range. This has led to a concentration of aid on fewer areas for more in- tensive work. Exemplifying this trend, the Ford Foundation pro- gram is now focusing on only three projects:' development of ferti- lizers as one of the keys to the food problem, family planning education, and development of educational T.V. for use in class- rooms. The form which United States government aid will take in the future is still unknown. No doubt, areas of action should be carefully chosen according to how vital they are for the whole program of In- dia's development. Often the great- est needs do not offer scope for spectacular, concrete results in fulfillment; they are the unobtru- sive yet absolutely necessary back- ground work for the success of the whole. This is the area in which ,I LETTERS to the EDITOR Crummy Exteriors . . To the Editor: CERTAINLY WELCOMED Dr. Hall's letter commenting on the so-called "beatniks" on this campus. Just to look at their crummy exteriors makes one want