Page'Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, April 3, 1968 Pa Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY - __ _ - _.. ! f - . f... - f -t POLITICAL DISSENT: Worldwide Student Protest Explodes McCarthy's Campaigning Style: Free and Easy, Like Adlai's 4 Collegiate Press Service Although students throughout many parts of the world have been a powerful political force for generations, the worldwide stu- dent movement has been rapidly gaining momentum since the be- ginning of the year. Within recent weeks, students have played significant roles in the political developments of many countries, including Czech- oslovakia, Poland, Spain, Egypt, Italy, and Japan. In many other countries, students are beginning to realize their potential power and are demanding radical polit- ical and education reforms. Students throughout the world are not unified with a common goal and strategy. Generally speaking, however, students are demanding - and frequently re- ceiving - more freedom from their government, more respon- sibility in decision-making, and a reformed educational curriculum that is relevant to the new social issues in the world. Students in many countries also are demon- strating against the war in Viet- nam, stressing their desire for lasting peace in the future. Anti- American sentiment has reached new dimensions in many student circles. Although the worldwide student movement seems to be gaining momentum, protest politics in Europe, Asia, and elsewhere is not a new phenomenon. Students, for example, were largely respon- sible for the overthrowof ex-Pres- ident Sukarno in Indonesia, and students played a major role in the overthrow of the Syngman Rhee government in South Korea. In the United States, however, students are just beginning to de- mand educational reform and Presidential candidates, for the first time, are making a major appeal for student support. But American students still have not come of age when compared to students in some other countries, as developments within the past few months make clear. Czech Students In Czechoslovakia, student pro- tests against educational and po- litical repression have been large- ly responsible for changes in the leadership of the Communist Party there. The new leaders are trying to combine socialism and freedom with the "widest possible democratization." Brutal police suppression of a student demonstration last Octo- ber discredit the old-guard Com- munists, and the Party leaership was taken over by liberals in January. Now, students are in the forefront of the movement to end all abuses of power, such as phony trials, and to work for a more humane and democratic regime. Independent student organizations have been formed at the Univer- sity of Prague and elsewhere within the last few weeks to press freedom. When the old-guard for the students' demands for leaders were in power, student groups were carefully controlled. Even though students'in Czech- oslovakia have a new climate of freedom, they still are keeping a close eye on the new government in case there are attempts to re- instate some of the restrictions on, them. Polish Protests In Poland, students throughout the country have been involved in massive demonstrations against government censorship, police bru- tality, and the lack of free speech. Polish officials have threatened -the students with severe punish- ment and have made every effort to put down the student protests. Polish students have clashed with police on several occasions, and have held unauthorized meetings and sit-ins. Last week, some 2,000 Warsaw University students held an unauthorized meeting to de- mand the reinstatement of six humanities professors who were dismissed because of their liberal view. Students began demonstrating after the expulsion from Warsaw University of two students who took part in a protest against the closing by government censors of "Dziady," a 19th century classic of the Polish theater which is critical of Czarist rule in Poland. Many analysts think the wave of student demonstrations is being used to intensify a major power struggle within the Communist party leadership. The outcome is still far from clear. Clash in Spain In Spain, the government last week ordered the University of Madrid closed indefinitely after a clash between students and po- lice. Spanish students have been demanding educational reform and more freedom. Students became fed up with the official govern- ment student association and formed the Democratic Union of Spanish Students (DUSS). The Spanish government cannot afford to let students succeed in their efforts to break loose from government control, because then it would be extremely difficult for the state to deny the same right to workers. Students and police MILWAUKEE, Wis. (A") - The never had so much national at- pertinent quotations from the have been clashing in Spain for benevolent spirit of the late Adlai tention before and he is basking classics. poetry or prose, that seem several years, but tensions now ' E. Stevenson must be hovering and expanding in it. to fit the occasion. seem to be getting worse. delightedly over the campaigning But there is nearly always on In a recent speech, McCarthy The University of Madrid was iof Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy (D- McCarthy's countenance the same took note of criticisms that his closed last week to stop a student I Minn) for the Democratic presi- wry smile of secret amusement campaign organization was made protest against American bases in dential nomination. that Stevenson used to wear. The up largely of college amateurs and Spain and the war in Vietnam. Like Stevenson, whom he ad- faintly arched eyebrow hints at lacked professional direction at Threaten Nasser ,mired greatly. McCarthy is im- the inward wonderment that a the top. In recentweeksEgparting a freshness of wit and man should be required to go "We may not be well organized In redents weeksEgypt's 150,- good humor to the ordinarily dull through all the campaign antics at the top." he said. "but we are 000 students have been posing a grind of grubbing for votes. to make himself a contender for the best organized at the bottom serious threat to President Gamal There is one difference. Steven- the world's highest elective office, that this country has ever seen." Abdel Nasser's control of the son, twice his party's presidential If it had been left to Stevenson Tk onFne government. The most widespreadnoi ahry prsdn If h b e t en Take Down Fences rn n e t red nominee, loathed primaries. He -and if it were left to McCarthy He announced, with tongue in rioting in a decade recently forced complainedsthat all of the chores -there would be calm, serious dis- cheek, that if elected he would the closing of Egyptian univer- of making set speeches, ploughing cussion of the issues. And cut outtaedw thfncsrodth sities, although they are now back through crowds grasping every the monkeyshines. White House. These well patroled in session. hand in sight and attending cock- Perhaps he doesn't do it as well barriers guard the President from Student demonstrators have tail parties for local political big- as Stevenson, who was an inde- ai-ietnamu nd therden- been calling for democracy, free- wigs didn't give a man time to fatigable polisher of phrases, atra-itnam and other demon- dom of the press, and abolition of think. but McCarthy is adept at spicing McCarthy poked at his chief the Egyptian National Assembly McCarthy, on the other hand, his informal talks with little jokes opponent, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and the Arab Socialist Union. seems to take all of this tradi- on himself. He also has the same (D-N.Y) for setting up so many Students also have protested the tional campaigning in stride. He tendency as Stevenson to use campaign committees. He was es- "sen verdsand sentences pecially resentful, he intimated, passed on four air force generhals e that one Kennedy committee had charged with crucial responsibility ,tbeen set up to deal with the Irish. for Egypt'ssdefeat last June in the La os t s Ky"I had really thought that we war with Israel had made it-I didn't know that Now that the universities are we were still considered a special back in session, more riots may V7 e I'e ot ie ito ns class in America." he said. occur. But there are reports that offMcCarthy announced that to President Nasser may revamp his offset the proliferation of Ken- Cabinet, br'inging in 14 civilians,T nedy committees, "We are setting as a concession to student de- By 11'ILLIAM L. RYAN accused of abandoning support of nedycommitteen"Weiredet mands up a subcommittee on retired left VIENTIANE, Laos ( P - Ulti- aComniLas'chusenihbro hand pitchers from the Three I University students throughout mately, some highly qualified ob- Ch Laos'huge neighbor on agu e Italy have been demonstrating for servers here say, Laos may provide the north, appears to want gen- If tL ngs keep on the way they new teaching methods and more tekyt prahn ete eral chaos. I hnske ntewyte the ey o aproahinga stt.are going, he said, th~ere soon student control of the universities.mninnegbrVeta. The North Vietnamese do not wol'aet easbomte Rival political groups recently en- seem to be as extreme as the Chi-foeahprnintecury gaged in a violent clash at the Prince S o u v a n n a Phouma, nese, but at the same time reflect for each person in the country. prime minister of the neutralist Itlieti University of Rome, and several m suspicion of Soviet intentions Intelligentsia hundred students were arrested government of Laos, insists the particularly because of a Soviet In the course of the speech, by police. war in Laos will end when the implication that Moscow still re- primarily devoted to civil rights. The students may be accom- war in Vietnam ends. spects the Geneva accords on Lao- McCaithy managed to work in plishing something, however. In A possible wedge for opening tian neutrality and the role of the references to Caduc, the ancient early March, the coalition govern- up a stalemate on negotiations in three-nation control commission poet, and Chesterton, the English ment proposed new legislation in Vietnam exists in the Laos frame- made up of members from Po- essayist. the Chamber of Deputy which goes work and the potential of the In- land. India and Canada. This was hardly par for the a long way to meet student de- ternational Control Commission, After the North Vietnamese en- course, however, since many of mands. The bill provides for the which is supposed to stand guard circled the provincial capital of his speeches go much further in adoption of new teaching methods over it. Like every thing else in Saravane in the south and bomb- establishing McCarthy as an un- and the participation of students j the area of Indochina, the picture arded it, the Canadian and In- reformed member of the intelli- in the various faculty councils, is extremely complicated. dian members decided to go there, gentsia - a standing avoided by In Chile, students recently end- There is general agreement the Poles dissenting. most politicians on the make. A- 'h"f.YYM"r Y.". Y"N .44" Yh: .Y . ff "h'" ""T' .f rL.K'. .lr.. , K4,....,.,.4"1 :................v: h. n..4,4......::x. rr:"."..Y:i. aCr."S..l..n.. . . .. ... ..... ...... .. 1.. ...... .C. .... ?... ........ . DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ...... . .......... The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to. Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only, Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3 Day Calendar Industrial Application of Radioiso- tWpes and Nuclear Radiation - Regis- tration, White Aud., Cooley Bldg., 8:00. a.m. Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- intar-"Management of Managers No. 55": North Campus Commons, 8:15 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Twentieth Annual Real Estate Clinic -Registration, Lobby, Rackham Bldg., 8:30 a.m. Statistics Seminar - Prof. Z. Govin- darajulu, Univ. of Kentucky, will speak on "Sequential Rank Tests," in 3201 A. H. at 4:00 p.m. Center for Russian and East Euro- pean Studies and Dept. of Philosophy Lecture -- Prof. Veljko Korac, Univer- sity of Belgrade, "Marx's Philosophy Today," Aud. C, Angell Hall, 4:10 p.m. Botany Seminar: Dr. Elso S. Barg- hoorn, Harvard University will speak on "Paleobiology of the Precambrian" Wed., April 3, at 4:15 p.m., 182 Physics- Astronomy Bldg. University Players Department, of Speech - Sophocles' "Antigone," True- blood Aud., 8:00 p.m. Professional Theatre Program - Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream", Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, 8:30 p.m. School of Music - All Bartok Pro- gram - DMA Piano Series: School of Music Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m. General Notices Summer Jobs in Washington, D.C.: All students who hope or plan to work in Washington this summer shquld attend an informational meet- ing Wed., April 3, at 4:00 p.m. in the Multipurpose Rm. of the Undergradu- ate Library. Topics to be discussed will be: Job opportunities, housing, sem- inars, and social events for the summer. The Computing Center announces an Introductory short course on the PIL Language. This is a highly interactive conversational language, primarily for use with teletype and similar termin- als for the MTS System. No previous experience necessary. April 4, 2-5 p.m., Rm. 311, W. E. Inquiries may be di- rected to Prof. Frank Westervelt. Phi Beta Kappa Annual Dinner - Speaker: Dr. Robert H. Baker, Dean of the Graduate Schools, Northwestern University, Thurs., April 4, Mich. Un- ion,' 7:00 p.m. Reservations should be made with the Secretary, Hazel M. Losh, by Thurs. morning. Student Accounts: Your attention is called to the following rules passed by the Regents on Feb. 28, 1936: "Stu- dents shall pay all accounts due the University not later than the last day of classes of each semester or summer session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are subject to this regulation: however, student loans not yet due are exempt. Any unuaid ac- counts at the close of business on the last day of classes will be reported to the Cashier of the University and "(a) All academic credits will be withheld, the grades for the semester or summer session just completed will not be released, andno transcript of credits will be issued. "(b) All students owing such ac- counts will not be allowed to register in any subsequent semester or summer session until payment has been made." SC The approval of the following stu- dent events becomes effective after the publication of this notice. All publicity for these events must be withheld until the approval has be- come effective. Approval request forms for student sponsored events are available in rooms 1001 and 1546 of the Student Activities Building. Student Aid to Ypsi State, Hospital- Bucket Drive, April 3, 9-5, Diag, Fish- bowl, UGLI. India Student's Association - Hindu Movie, April 6, 7:30 p.m., Nat. SciH Aud. Tutorial & Cultural Relations Project -Bucket Drive, April 8, 8-5, Campus. Voice-SDS - Repeat of Felix Greene Film, April 7, 7 & 9 p.m., Aud. A, An- gel Hall. Doctoral Examinations Morton Paul Birnbaum, Psychology, Dissertation: "Anxiety and Moral Judg- ment in Early Adolescence," on Wed., April 3 at 10 a.m., in Rm. 2035 Angell Hall. Chairman: J. Veroff. Elizabeth Ligon, Psychology, Disser- tation: "The Effects of Similarity on Very-Short-Term Memory Under Con- ditions of Maximal Information Pro- cessing Demands," on Wed., April 3 at 10 a.m. in Rm. 107 Perry. Chairman: A. W. Melton. K. Kamalakar Rao, Mechanical Engi- neering, Dissertation: "Numerical An- alysis of Laminary Boundary Layer Equations for Flow over Yawed Wings," on Wed., April 3 at 1 p.m. in Rm. 2048 E. Engrg. Co-Chairmen: A. G. Hansen and T. Y. Na. John Kenneth Shultis, Nuclear Sci- ence, Dissertation: "Half-Space Multi- group Transport Theory in Plane Ge- ometry," on Wed., April 3 at 1 p.m. in Auto Lab Conference Rm. Chairman: P. F. Zweifel. Beverly Lee Driver, Conservation and Environmental Health Sciences, Dis- sertation: "Some Relationships between Regional Economic Growth and an Uniform Water Quality Standard: the Miami River Basin, Ohio; A Case Study," on Wed., April 3 at 2 p.m. in Rm. 3008 School of Public Health. Chairman: R. A. Deininger. James Edgar Weiss, Medical Care Or- ganization, Dissertation: "The Effect of Medical Centers on the Distribution of Physicians in the United States," on1 Wed., April 3 at 3 p.m. in Rm. 2009 School of Public Health. Chairman: B. J. Darsky. Thomas Otto Mottl, Electrical Engi- neering, Dissertation: "The Three-Di- mensional Phased Array: Physical Re- alizability and Directive Properties," on Wed., April 3, 3 p.m., in Rm. 3076 E. Engrg. Chairman: C. T. Tai. David Angus Sutherlandi, Music Dis- sertation: "Francesco de Layolle (1492- 1540): Life and Secular Works," on Wed., April 3 at 4:15 p.m. in School of Music Seminar Rm. Chairman: G. E. Watkins. Helen Elizabeth Ullrich, Linguistics, Dissertation: "Clause Structure of Northern Havyaka Kannada(Dravid- Ian): A Tagmemic Analysis," on Wed., April 3 at 7:30 p.m. in ftm. 210 Gunn Bldg. Chairman: O. L. Chavarria-; Aguilar. BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS 3200 SAB GENERAL DIVISION ANNOUNCEMENT: Peace Corps Week, through April 5: Rm. 3524 S.A.B. Center, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. No appts. necessary. Speakers available, call General Division, Bureau of Appts. for arrangements, 764-7460. ORGANIZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student orga- nizations only. Forms are available in room 1011 SAB. George Reisman, Assoc. Prof. of Economics, St. John's University, will speak' on "Capitalism: The Political Economy of Reason" at 7:30 p.m.. Thurs., April 4, in Aud. C of Angell Hall. Sponsored by Libertarian League -Ayn Rand Society, which has a table in the fishbowl this week. Southern Asia Club: Bag lunch, Fri., April 5, at noon in the Commons Rm. of Lane Hall. Mr. Allan Guskin of the Dept. of Psychology and ISR will speak on "The Assimilation of Chinese Stu- dents in Thai Society." ' * * * UM Amateur Radio Club meeting, Wed., April 3, 7 p.m., Rm. 2080 E. En- gineering Bldg. Speaker, Ralph P. Thetreau W8FX, April Section Com- munications manager. * * * UM Rifle Club, shooting, instruction, equipment supplied, every Wed., 7-9 p.m., ROTC Range. * UM Scottish Country Dance Society meeting every Wed., 8:00-10:30 p.m., Women's Athletic Bldg. Beginners wel- come. Instruction given. * * * Lutheran Student Chapel - Hill at Forest Ave., Lenten Service, April 3 at 7:15 p.m. "A Lawyer Interprets Christian Faith" - Prof. Paul Kauper, UM Law Faculty. * * * Physical Therapy Club, final meet- ing: Dr. Leonard F. Bender will speak about bracing, 3rd floor Conference Rm., University Hospital, 7:30 p.m., April 3. Applications for Next FSEE Examina- tion (Federal Service Entrance Exam- ination) are due April 10, available at Gen. Division, 3200 S.A.B., Bureau of Appts. The test will be given in May. Current Positions received by Gen-1 eral Division, call 164-7460 for further information:' Local. Organization - Secretary to3 Professor of Internal Medicine, highly responsible and interesting position, general secretarial duties, and admin- istrative functions, degreenpreferred, knowl. of typing, shorthand, med. ter- minology, acetg. and business machines ed' a 145-day student strike pro- among most diplomats in Vietine Utah Civil Service - Forester two testing the government's refusal that neither the Russians nor the grades, 4 yr, degree in forestry or nat'l to introduce education reforms. Americans want to see the Lao res. mgmt. areas and min. 1 yr. exper., The strike ended after the gov- Americans want to see the Lao- or grad, study without exper. ernment made some concessions. tian and Vietnamese situations Chas. Pfizer & Co., Inc., Groton, In Santa Domingo, a student or- develop into a confrontation in- Conn. - Process Development Chemist,omn, MS in Organ. Chem. with Anal. Chem. ganization held a demonstration volving the enormous military bckrnd, 0-5 yrs. exper. in February for larger student potentials of the United StatesE and WDeparte ndit HeaER ucation Subsidies. Police moved in, and one and the Soviet Union. Lansing, Mich. - Auditing careers with student was killed in a gunfight. The Russians here have a di- many agencies outlined in booklet, Protests against the Vietnam lemma. Laos illuminates the dif- training opportunities leading to many war are common. Thousands of ferences in the Communist world. locationsandnvariety of jobs. Basically students recently held a massive The Russians seemingly want to study in acctg. anti-war demonstration in Lon- avoid the confrontation, but at Ohio National Life Insurance Com- don. the same time do not want to bej pany, Cincinnati, Ohio - Programmer . Analyst, 1-3 yrs. exper. Corporate Atty. some exper. Syst. Methods Analyst. 2-3 yrs. in insurance syst. Work measure- ment,pref. exper. and degree in acctg., Indust. mgmt. Internal Auditor, be- ginning position. Continental Can Company, Inc.. pr N.Y.C. - Industrial Relations Trainee positions, open to new grads or former grads of School of Journalism, leads to training supervisor and relations super- visory positions in divisional and cor- porate offices. The North Vietnamese attacks seemed to dismay the Russians because of the clear evidence of overt aggression. Nevertheless, the Polish Com- munist member of the commis- sion denounced the other two for deciding to go to Saravane, claim- ing such a trip was illegal be- cause the Neo Lao Hak Xat, the Pathet Lao political organization, had not given its permission. They denounced the trip saying it was part of a plot to justify imperial- ist intervention in Laos. l aetl e IN4NTADS i i967 Olds, SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE, 212 S.A.B., Lower Level Interview April 5: Good Humor Company, Detroit and other locations, work outdoors, make good money, men and women. Appli- cations and details at S.P.S. aoing in tmis 1968 Olds advertisement? 0 in case you shave It's making the point that you can own an Oldsmobile. If not a new one, then certainly a used one. - Like the nifty 1967 Olds 4-4-2 you see here. Or a sporty used of other brands on their Value-Rated used car lot. And should you decide on one of them instead . . well, at least we'll know you picked a good place to do it. it li~ 'II I. MICHIGANENSIAN SELLING NOW! DIAG-ENG. ARCH DISTRIBUTION Drive a youngmobile from Oldsmobile. (New or used, its a fun car to own.) BRITISH STERLING So fine a gift, it's even sold in jewelry stores. Afta~r nv 4 |MI