, ; f "That Hound Is Howling Again" 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 ,:. hen Opinions Are Free rruth ~W1 Prevail" c -, ,,,, ". . ' , 4 - . <;.;l A +'M t h3l S' -KA'TtC N ''"' tip- __ DREW PEARSON Zhukov Takes Holiday, Prepares for Summit MOST SIGNIFICANT, unnoticed development prior to the summit conference is a quiet "holiday trip" by Yuri Zhukov, Soviet min- ister of culture, to Washington. Zhukov flew over from Moscow as the guest of Robert Dowling, the theatrical producer, who has arranged various exchanges of Ameri- can-Russian entertainment. The trip was unofficial and few people knew he was here. What makes the trip important however is that Soviet Premier Nikita Khru- shchev seldom makek a move involving the United States without con- Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AY, MAY 4, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP SHERMAN Rulimg Faces Bias In Clauses, Attitudes THE ELIMINATION of unfair criteria for membership selection in student organi- zations is a two-sided objective. First, it preserves the right of each individ- ual seeking to join an organization to be judged as an individual. Second, and more important, the organization is guaranteed the right to select other members without outside pressures, and this is equally an individual right. These two distinct interpretations of free- dom can and do conflict even though the direction and end they work toward is the same, and no workable approach to the prob- lem of legislating non-discrimination can fail to take them both into consideration. They essentially represent the liberal and conserva- tive positions on membership criteria, and both are valid. IN CONSIDERING a non-discrimination reg- ulation, Student Government Council has failed to clarify the all-important point that they are not working to eliminate discrimina- tion per se. After all, the fundamental assump- tion of any student group is discrimination on some basis, if only that of the degree to which its members are interested in its purposes. If anything, the Council is attempting to safe- guard for the individual his right to discrim- inate-or be discriminated against-on indi- vidual bases. Student Government Council has realized' that taking out bias clauses does not ensure non-discrimination. When secret membership selection prevails in many fraternities it is not possible to determine on what bases actives decide whom to bid. Nor would it be desirable to determine these criteria, since the principle of non - discrimination reserves privacy of choice to the individual. BY TAKING a bias clause out of a fraternity constitution, one assures that the national organization cannot commit the local to a policy local members do not believe in. It may still choose members on any basis it wishes, and it is free to discriminate on a local basis, if elimination of the bias clause is the end of legislation on the problem. SGC cannot require each fraternity to pledge a Negro or Jew to prove its broadmindedness- as radicals believe it would. A motion one SGC member originally con- sidered bringing to the Council would have required each local chapter of a national or- ganization to submit a letter twice a year endorsing a policy statement of non-bias. But, it was argued, suppose the fraternity submitted the letter and then discriminated? Could SGC try them for perjury? THE CHIEF single value of the non-discrim- ination motion coming before SGC tonight for a final vote is, that it is open-ended. It does not stop where the appearance of bias is stopped. With the committee of seven estab- lished to hear evidence-in the absence or, presence of a bias clause in the fraternity con- stitution-work on the problem is certain to continue beyond surface regularity among constitutions. The conservative, "educational" approach and the liberal "legislative" approach to elimi- nating bias have a common failing. Both seek to change an atavistic, untenable attitude and neither provides a means for gaining any more insight into it. Understanding of the delicate nature of the problem shows a necessity for investigation, consideration and constructive handling of individual cases as they come up. STUDENT Government Council has grown up a great deal since they tried to set precedent by legislating Sigma Kappa out of existence. A workable, feasible plan for handling such cases is set up in the continuing committee composed of faculty, administration and students; if the Council acts responsibly in finding the best of all possible membership for this committee, its recommendations will be trusted. The Council will not stand alone in deciding whether an organization has violated recog- nition standards, and these standards will be clearer than they have ever been. The new regulation will require non-discrim- ination in all recognized student organizations -not merely those recognized in the last decade-and the committee will be implement- ing a policy that applies to all. T HE COUNCIL will further not stand alone in deciding whether any given organization violates the standards of the regulation. Be- sides the committee recommendation, a con- sidered evaluation of more evidence than the Council could possibly accumulate, there is the indirect support implicit in the Regents' No- vember Bylaw, which the proposed regulation implements. The Council's work thus far on the non- discrimination motion has been realistic, re- sponsible and far-reaching. If the motion is passed tonight, every member of the Council will have reason to respect and support the decision as exemplary of the kind of work a student government can and should do. -JEAN SPENCER r . .m p's ~r._,_T..,,.,,_.__ '. M # c{ w.'+' 7 .', y .z ,."f2 f,. x1 Y.7 F s -'in X 4 f >' j ' ' {: '. .; - L 4 .. I wgoVW*J o- . MENTAL MALNUTRITION: Mass Media Corrode Youth suiting Zhukov. When he toured the USA last September, Zhukov was his shadow So it's believed Zhukov came here to put together some final reports for Mr. K. before the sum- mit. WHILE IN WASHINGTON Zhukov dropped in to see ;U.S. information chief George Allen, complained that the Voice of America was violating the spirit of Camp David which forbids U.S -USSR blasts at each other. Because of the Camp David spirit, Moscow has quit jamming the Voice of America. "I hope," hinted Zhukov, "that we can continue that way." - Zhukov also discussed plans for the United States to send three exhibits to Moscow this summer on plastics, transportation, and medicine. Russia in turn will send three exhibits to the United States on health of the people, children's art, and children's books. AT 923 Eleventh Street in Wash- ington there is an office flaunting a large banner "Morse for President". It's the headquar- ters of the hardest working, hard- est hitting member of the Senate, Wayne Morse of Oregan, in his bid yesterday for District of Co- lumbia delegates for President. The amazing thing about Morse's campaign for delegates in. the District of, Columbia is the fact that a senator from distant Oregon would have the courage to stake his popularity in a primary campaign in blase, usually bored Washington. * * * THIS, HOWEVER, is one of the. things you have to understand about Wayne Morse. He will rush into battles where angels fear to tread. There is no senate fight too tough, too discouraging, or too hopeless for Morse. If he 'thinks he's right, he'll do battle. The fighting he has done for the District of Columbia has paid no dividends as far as Oregon voters are concerned. As punish- ment for opposing Eisenhower when Morse was a Republican, he was relegated to the Senate siber- ia-the D.C. committee. Most sen- ators get off soon as possible. But Morse stayed on-and worked. He has become an expert on the Dist- rict of Columbia-its slums, its courts, its policemen, its water, its Potomac River pollution. So yesterday he ran for Presi- dential delegates in the District . to see whether his work will pay off. MORE THAN ONE Republican is moaning privately over Ike's refusal to reappoint William Connole of Connecticut, champion of the consumer, to the Federal Power Commission. Only a short time ago Vice- President Richard Nixon began planning with Connecticut Re- publicans on strategy to recapture the state. He wanted to draft the best possible candidates to run for Congress, to thus counter-act the Democratic sweep which at the last election found only one Republican left - Sen. Prescott Bush. But now the state of Connecti- cut, a heavy consumer, is up in arms over the White House re- buff to Commissioner Connole who tried to keep gas prices down and is getting fired for doing so. (Copyright 1960, by the Bell Syndicate) Vengeance Done INTERPRETING: U.S. Po licy Misse'sIo(t By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press News Analyst A (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following statement by Caryl Chessman originally was made in 1955, when his execution seemed imminent. It was prepared during a series of interviews at San Quentin Pris- on, where the convict-author was finally executed. Monday. Last January, Chessman and Managing Editor George Flowers of the Long Beach Inde- pendent revised the statement slightly, to conform with the evisting situation. The Independent published the copyrighted story Monday.) LONG BEACH (A) - These words are not intended to be published unless the state of California has finally taken its vengeance upon me. That, you see, is Just what capital punish- ment is. Now that the state has had its vengeance, I should like to ask the world to consider what has been gained. I know that there are many who say that the presence of Caryl Chessman upon this earth is a menace to society. But Society has had many other opportunities to keep Caryl Chessman from its midst. In fact, for nearly 12 ,years, it was able to keep this poor human, Caryl Chessman, from intruding upon anyone's property or privacy. Capital punishment, it is said, is applicable to those who cannot be rehabilitated. Yet the Caryl Chessman who came to Death Row so long ago, and the Caryl Chessman who was poisoned by gas fumes, were quite different persons. I FEEL that I had a useful life ahead of me, had the state been interested in justice, instead of vengeance. Perhaps my books were not masterpieces of literature, but they were readable and printable, and possibly offered some contribution to human thought. There might have been more and better books. Editorial Staff THOMAS TURNER, Editor PHILIP POWERROBERT JUNKER Editorial Director City Editor JIM B"NAGH......................,!Sports Editor PETER DAWSON ............ Associate City Editor CHARLES KOZOLL .............. trrsonnel Director JOAN KAATZ .......... Magazine Editor BARTON HUTHWAITU .. Associate Editorial Director FRED KATZ ................ Associate Sports Editor You have asked me if I am sorry, and I tell you I am. I am sorry for a childhood that was wasted. It seems irony that most of my child- hood was spent in institutions that were de- signed to correct my ways and mend my manners. They failed to do that and, I am sorry. I failed to respond to that treatment. Yet it seems to me that someone could have pene- trated to me, someone could have reached me when I was only a perplexed and befuddled boy. That is the time to stop crime, to rehabili- tate. Boys can be reached and changed, and that is a job society must accomplish. Now I am gone. Whatever use I might have been to society is canceled by an act of vengeance. CAPITAL PUNISHMENT is not a penalty. Many times, in these last few years, I have realized it might be a blessing to end this tor- mented struggle and this inhuman harassment. I have seen the poor, the friendless, the mentally ill, led to the chamber of execution. I have felt that society has each time, shirked its responsibility. These were the mistakes of civilization. Instead of correcting mistakes, so- ciety erases them. Out of sight, out of mind. You ask me if I have a confession to make. I have not. In my lifetime I was guilty of many crimes, but not these for which my life was taken. You ask me about a future life. I believe there is none. Caryl Chessman has gone to oblivion, so that society can forget one sorry lifetime. New Books at the Library Wilson, Tuzo J. - One Chinese Moon; N.Y., Hill & Wang, 1959. Catton, Bruce-Grant Moves South; Boston, Little, Brown & Co., 1960. Eden, Anthony-Full Circle: The Memoirs of Anthony Eden; Boston, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1960. Epstein, Seymour - Pillar of Salt; NY, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1960. Ewen, David-The' World of Jerome Kern; NY, Henry Holt & Co., 1960 Frank, Martin M.-Diary of a D.A.; NY, Henry Holt & Co., 1960. Furnas, J. C.-The Road to Harpers Ferry; By MICHAEL OLINICK Daily Staff Writer TO ALLAN KELLER, assistant city editor of the New York World-Telegram and Sun, the Soviet Union poses a very real and frightening menace to our future generations. "After having heard Khrushchev and Mikoyan outlining their plans, I know that if they get their way, my grandchildren will have to wear Russian dog collars," he predicted to high school represen- tatives at the University-sponsored Michigan Interscholastic Press As- sociation Conference. Of course, this is a frightening conjecture, and it is meant to be that way. The effect of this image is, moreover, multiplied court- lessly when we view the irony of our own precipitation of this fate. Keller sees that his comrades in journalism, radio, television, movies, and book publishing are aiding the Russian quest for domi- nation by softening our mental arsenals. * * * "WE IN THE FIELD of mass communication are helping to tan the leather and fashion the buc- kles for those dog collars when we use television to carry nothing but gunshots and hoofbeats into 80 million homes, when we turn out books on beatnik philosophy and newspapers devoted to little more than gang wars, divorce trials, and certain dimensions of Hollywood starlets. "Never say there are no more frontiers as long as greedy pub- lishers fill the racks with filth and obscene magazines that corrode and eat the moral fiber of our young people." The nation's youth, teenagers so vulnerable because their opin- ions are yet unformed and so potentially strong because of their numbers, health, and standard of living, are barraged constantly with a stream of pulpy tripe de- signed to sell a particular pro- duct: and that product is seldom educational stimulus to the in- tellect. * * * MASS MEDIA have been nan- dIed in such a crass, materialistic, selfish manner that instructioaal communication has degenerated to a point which Keller rightly calls "mass nalnutrition of the mind." The main fare of the nation's most powerful means of communi- cation, television and the daily newspapers, is pre-digested, un- imaginative material which may entertain, amuse, and delight the audience, but never stimulate, provoke, or educate. Instead of a "velvet knife" which penetrates the mind and encourages, even through irrita- tion, thoughtful analyses, the vari- ous media point out a soft, com- forting froth of cushioning buffers between the mind and the world. * *' * WHILE IT IS certainly true that this esca~rintion cannot iteveryna tor who suggests that certain topics may be studied from avail- able college texts or "If you look back a few years, in high school books." It is seen in residence halls where students stage destructive demonstrations and riots about the selection of a television west- ern over a hockey game or about a pair of creased trousers, but are aware of undergraduate attempts to erase the stigmas of discrimi- nation and who sit idly by when an organ of their opinions and ideas is removed from campus. IT IS SEEN in the mere audi- ence of seven who went to discuss with one of our leading scholars the nature and effect of Foreign Policy on Europeans, contrasted to the numbers who overflow a room to hear James R. Hoffa, a union leader who has wrought un- told damage to labor's position in this country. It can be seen almost every- where you look, in the classrooms, homes, and working places you visit. Most times you don't even have to look-the intellectual de- generation will come right up to you and display its ignorant and self-satisfied face. The control of mass malnutri- tion rests in the hands of men who could, if they forsook the lure of a few dollars, cultivate the full potential of our communica- tion media and make them instru- ments for directing man's thought to a better and more rewarding future. If they refuse to do this, and we idly acquiece in their actions, maybe we deserve the fate of that dog collar. Even that's more hon- est than the shackles of an ado- lescent communication world. ONE WEAKNESS of the United States In negotiations at the summit is its lack of maneuver- ability. A recent statement by President Dwight D. Eisenhower suggests that perhaps the United States has been missing the boat at top- level big-power meetings. The President's idea that Vice- President Richard M. Nixon might in some circumstances sit in for him at the summit .has opened this line of speculation. If both Nixon and a ranking Democrat had been sitting in, for example, on the Khrushchev- Eisenhower talks last September, or had been assigned to the Paris summit meeting opening May 16, considerable weight might have been added to American positions and proposals. ** * FOR EXAMPLE, there might be more force behind the President's offer of a 'moratorium on nuclear tests. Eisenhower, as he pointed out, could not commit his tuc- cessor to the moratorium, and that meant a cessation only until the end of this year. Khrushchev thus could say this was not enough, -too short a period for such a pledge. Had plans been made for the presence of both Nixon and a top-ranking Democrat at the sum- mit, however, it would suggest that any commitments made by the United States would be hon- ored after Eisenhower's retire- ment. A suggestion of continuity in United States diplomacy could provide more room for American and Western maneuvering. Given the suggestion of continuity in such bargaining, the United States might be in a much better posi- tion to challenge the Communists, whose own continuity in power seems to be assured for a long DAILY OFFICIAL The Daily official Bulletin is official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi torial responsibility. Notices should be set in TYPEWRITrzN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily lue at 2:00 p.m. Friday. WEDNESDAY, MAY,3. 1960 VOL. LXX, No. 158 General Notices Change in date of May Regents' Meet- ing: The date of the May meeting of the Regents has been changed from May 26, 27 and 28 to May 20. Co- rnunications for consideration atthis meeting must be in the President's hands not later than May 10. There has been a change of date for the sociology Department's Faculty- PhD., M.A. student meeting, originally set for May 6. The new date is now Fri., May 20, in the west Conference Room, Rackham Building, 3:0-5:00 p.m. University of Michigan Graduate Screening Examinations inFrench and German: All graduate students desiring to fulfill their foreign language re- quirement by passing the written ex- amination given by Prof. Lewis (for- Imerly given by Prof. Hootkins) must first pass an objective screening exam- ination. The objective examinations will be given four times each semester (i.e., September, October, November. December, February, March, April, and May) and once during the Summer Session, in July. Students who fal the objective examination may repeat it, but not at consecutive administrations of the test (e.g., September and Octob- er) except when "the, two administra- tions are separated by more than 3. days (e.g., December and February). "There will be one more administra- tion of the objective examination in French and German during this sem- ester. It will be on Fri., May 6, in Aud. C, at 3:00 p.m. until 5:00 p.m. within 48 hours after the examination the names of students who have passed will be posted on the Bulletin Board -outside the office of Prof. Lewis,' the Examiner in Foreign 'Languages, Room 3028 Rackham Building. Students de- siringv to fulfill the Graduate School's requirement in French and German are alerted to an aternatenpath.A glade of B or better in French, 12 and Ger- man 12 will satisfy the foreign language requirement. A grade of B or better in French 11 and German 11 is the equiv- alent of having passed the objective screening examination. Persons who are interested in usher- ing for the e e cummings Lecture in H111 Aud. Mon., May 9 will find a list for you to sign, at the Undergraduate I LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Reader Suggests New. Disciplinary A ction To the Editor: I WAS alarmed by your front page editorial concerned with the dismissal of two students in- volved in the most recent demon- stration, in particular, your criti- cism of Dean Rea. This kind of rash action on your part, by focusing attention on the machinations of the administra- tion, has a deleterious effect on the administrators' morale and on the good order of the student body. Certainly such an idealistic and ill-advised protest indicates your lack of maturity and your unworldliness. I suggest that in the future you ,show more enthusiasm and sup- port for administration policies and actions since they are de- signed to help students avoid the pains usually associated with growing up. You might start by devoting an entire issue of The Daily to the subject of 3tudent order with suggestions for its maintenance and improvement. And I would like to '.ontribute a suggestion of my own. That is, the administration might have less trouble with, student discipline if they made it part of the entrance requirement that all incoming male freshmen be eunuchs. .-Gregory W. Dexter, '62 Need Out-of-Staters ... To the Editors:- ' WOULD like to express my support as a faculty member for your editorial on the im- portance of maintaining the tra- ditional ratio of one-third out-of- state students in University ad- missinns nnlirv. to weaken the University's com- petitive position in attracting and holding outstanding teachers. In the next few years, the threat to the cosmopolitan nature of the University will be great. It is vital to. the future of the University that this threat be resisted vigor- ously. -Prof. Robert 0. Blood, Jr. a 11 Senior Blues I