Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail NEWS PHONE:, 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: LUCY KENNEDY Hubert Humphrey Meets The 'Bogeyman Syndrome' WITH A SOMBER and almost menacing glint in his eyes, Vice-President Hu- bert Horatio Humphrey warned an as- senblage of 25,000 Polish-Americans Sunday in Doylesville, Pa., that "the threat to world peace is militant, ag- gressive Asian Communism with its head- quarters in Peking, China." The Vice President's latest anti-Com- munist manifesto is far more than just another dreary chapter in that ever- continuing story of Lyndon Johnson's transformation of "a fiery liberal spirit" into a ghostly echo of John Foster Dulles. Rather the Humphrey diatribe, fol- lowing on the heels of "old China hand" Dean Rusk's slightly more subdued den- unciation of the "yellow peril" on Thurs- day, indicates that the Administration, after reading the latest polls, has dipped into its ideological grab-bag and emerged with a revised version of its politically most persuasive rationale for our in- volvement in Vietnam. Humphrey's contention, couched in ritualistic Cold War rhetoric, and typical Midwestern piety that "the aggression of North Vietnam is, but the most current and immediate action of militant Asian Communism" probably is also at the root of the messianic zeal with whic the Administration pursues its holy war in Vietnam. FOR THE ADMINISTRATION and the easily aroused American people have reacted predicatably to the prolonged, and hopefully perpetual, thaw in the Cold War by turning their combative atten- tions Eastward at precisely the moment that previously ignored "Red" China has come of nuclear age. For example, the recent decision to construct a $5 billion "thin" anti-ballistic missile defense system can be seen as the opening stage of, a new not-so Cold War with China, as well as an unearned subsidy for our far from needy defense industries. Our preoccupation with "militant, agressive Asian Communistn" is quite understandable, for as any fan of Fu Manchu movies will testify, fanatical Orientals make the best kind of enemies. With Japanese newsmen now denied ac- cess to "wall newspapers," the Chinese will only become more inscrutable, and thus more menacing, as our blow-by-bloog descriptions of the trials and tribulations of "The Great Cultural Revolution" cease. To a large degree the Administration's portrayl of China as an aggressive power has and will become a self-fulfilling prophesy. FOR IF OUR policymakers take as a political postulate that China is our major enemy, any action which our government takes against her, even a war like Vietnam, could be sincerely jus- tified as defensive, or piously described as "resisting aggression." Conversely our "defensive actions" would be interpreted by China as aggres- sive or an indication that the United States is still committeed "to winning back the Mainland." Thus our actions would provoke a defensive responsive from China, which, to America would ap- pear to be aggresive, thereby justifying our policymakers' faith in China as our pre-eminent enemy, beginning the same insane spiral once again. The situation is further aggravated by our vigilant, efforts to create a casual nexus between Chinese words and rela- tively indiginous revolutionary move- ments. At least, when the Rissian Cold War was in its heyday, we could always point to specific Communist deeds to justify our response. In the case of China we have replied to their bombastic, and ideologically satisfying, propaganda with visible, tangible, provocative deeds. POTENTIALLY FAR more devastating than the iVetnam War, are the mental shackles of the Johnson Administration which have prevented it from perceiving, let alone applying, the lessons of the Cold War and the subsequent d'entente with the Soviet Union to our relations with China. For the "bogeyman syndrome," through which the Admistration has substituted "militant, aggressive Asian Communism" for the "international Communist con- spiracy" of the Eisenhower era, can only lead to a decade of renewed talk of nu- clear holocaust, the renewed stench of nuclear testing, and renewed game of nu- clear brinksmanship played for ever- higher stakes. -WALTER SHAPIRO f THE VIEW FROM HERE An Obituary: In Loco Parentis ... BY ROBERT KLIVANS ANN ARBOR, MICH.-In Loco Parentis, that ancient Wrote Martin Meyerson, who became temporary EXACTLY WHAT happened next is difficult to dis- administrative alibi for keeping pupils in place, chancellor of Berkeley after the 1965 protests: "As Edgar cern. SGC delegated the authority to determine hours (a died here today following an extended illness. In Loco's Friendenberg points out in 'Coming of Age in America,' right it never really had) to individual residence hall age was unknown. parents respond to children as persons, and institutions units. IHA tried to keep the right for itself, but the An autopsy was in progress this morning, but Uni- do not. Even though parents may believe their families Board of Governors of the Residence Halls told IHA it versity sources attributed In Loco's demise to a pro- are governered by rules, they are in fact governed by a couldn't do that since it wouldn't give up the authority. longed student assault combined with administrative process of mutual accommodation. Institutions can What all these foolish student organizations were confusion and old age. rarely respond sensitively to individual needs but can doing, In Loco's pals argued, was building castles in Long a boon to administrators and a bane to stu- only apply general regulations as impartially as possible." the sky. But what In Loco's lackies didn't realize was dents, In Loco Parentis had been suffering greatly that students were living in these castles, oblivious to over the past few years. Its Latin name had been rudely WITH THE ATTACK increased from all sides, it administrative reprimands. And thus, as freshman mistranslated to become "crazy like parents" and poor became apparent that In Loco's life could be measured women went ahead and made their own hours and men Loco became the rallying cry for student activists and in terms of months rather than years. decided to abolish peevish dorm dress regulations, In demonstrations across the countryALoco's oldest friends sat by-dazed by the confusion and . As the intensity of student commitment heightened uncertain of their next step. inAthe middle 60's. In Loconbecame a hunted criminal. In Loco Parentis was officially pronounced dead last IN LOCO PARENTIS'was born simultaneously with With the rollicking confusion of of Mack Sennet movie, night following a head count in women's dorms that the University, an ingenious substitution for rules of student government leaders took potshots at In Loco, revealed 45 per cent of the freshman women out after the home. During its early years it was rather incon- with occasional near-hits and, frequent ricochets that midnight. Simultaneously in West Quad, men were en- spicuous and harmless. The late education writer, David ended in frustration. tertaining the opposite sex in their rooms under a new, Boroff, noted that in the 1920's American colleges did The truly fatal wound was administered in the Spring self-determined policy. not undertake such a professional fostering of the In of 1967, when the University's Student Government Loco Parentis role. He explained that students' "infantil- Council appointed new members to Joint Judiciary AMONG THE SURVIVORS, In Loco leaves the im- ism wasn't sponsored by the administration, which these Council, the students' supreme court. A majority of the potent Residence Hall Board of Governors, the ineffec- days lays down the ground rules and acts as umpirefieVc-rsdnfoStetAfasndheup- for the nursery games." new judges pledged to convict only students who violated tive Vice-President for Student Affairs, and the unpre- student-made regulations. In the fall, two landmark dictable Board of Regents. In recent years, the assault on In Loco Parentis was Funeral services will be held tomorrow at Burton escalated sharply. While students protested arbitrary decisions were handed down acquitting students of Tower. Friends may visit the bereaved at the Adminis- regulations on dress, behavior, and curfews, even highly- crimes against administration-made rules. In Loco tration Building and the Student Activities Building placed educators suggested the execution of In Loco. Parentis was listed in poor condition. between 9 and 5 on weekdays. Letters: Reflections on Mendel's 'Reflecting To the Editor: ly educated to the end that the day to day is the only way to Evangelism? of selfstyled revolutionaries, dis- THE SCIENCE of society re- working class industrial army achieve a sane and peaceful so- dained by Prof. Mendel, may well quires more careful and recis which capitalism has trained will ciety in 20th century America. To the Editor: be necessary for such organiza- use of uiresmore language rfulthanadthat em-e accomplish a real revolution, the Learned discourses, strikes, ral- PROF. MENDEL, in his analysis tion. ployed by Professor Mendel (Re- socialist reconstruction of society lies, street marches, protest meet- of current social revolutions I agree, however, with Prof. flecting on Two Revolutions - by which poverty will be ended ings and political protest which ignored much of what these rev- Mandel in his doubts about the Michigan Daily, October 14, 1967). and self-respect and mutual es- do not impart this information lutions have in common as re- conception of where the reform is There is nothing revolutionary in teem will replace self-deception are of no avail against the eco- form movements. One can conceive leading, if anywhere. Will there rebellious protests against the im- and general distrust. Uderstand- nomic and political dominance of of all of these revolutions as con- simply be a balance of power, of morality and the improverishment ing by the working class major- the American plutocratic capital- cerned with one basic problem: the questionable morality and stabil- for which capitalism is respon- ity of its constitutional right and ist oligarchy. unjust domination of minorities ity, like the one that exists now sible. of its industrial might when or- by an apparent majority, which between labor and management? As a matter of record, there has ganized as it now functions from -Ralph Muncy, '23 either is itself manipulated by in- Or is there some better, yet re- been a long history of protest terest groups or simply construes alistic solution? I feel that the against the effects of capitalism, its powers too broadly. university community in particular These protests have not only pro- Seen from this point of view, has a responsibility to clarify the longed capitalism with its de- the uprising of black people and image of the end result. It must manding consequences but they their helpers is again a system consider all possibilities, including also have turned (middle class which effectively denies them the changes in our basic assumptions petty capitalists and members of rights that others have. These about government. the working class from the revolu- rights are denied them by a major- -Jonathan Baron, Grad. tionary program of scientific soc- ity which is at least unresponsive ialism which could have ended the to their plight. fears, frustrations, poverty and The peace movement may be Manhood. war against which the protests seen as objecting to the forcing of To the Editor: SStudents for a Democratic So-individuals (many of whom cannot EOOTBALL coach Dennis Fitz- ciety and Citizens for New Politics even vote) to risk their lives, gerald (Daily, Oct. 14, P. 9) are repeating the tactics (and s whether through the threat of is quoted as saying, "We don't areis) reeain the tnactiss(and total war or through the draft, in have to get our players up to this anti s) of the anarcSts, the spite of the firm belief of these one. Most of them consider it a Socialist Party and the trade tindividuals that war is unneces- test of their manhood to play in union movement which enabled sary, that policies are possible that the game." I would suggest to Mr. capitalist reaction to gain an ever don ot require any risk of life- Fitzgerald that if any of his greater stranglehold on American i k such as the fostering of interna- charges still question their man- society. Eugene V. Debs, Earl N tional interdependence, hood after being exposed in a Browder and Norman Thomas ad- .43The hippies are concerned- locker room then the procedure vocated 'action now" to ameliorate whether by choice or not-with the of the Olympics Committee should the dehumanizing and improver- suppression, in part by law, of be followed. An anatomical ex- ishing consequences of capitalism. what they see as at least a harm- amination followed by a chrome- Their actions produced reaction less style of life. somal examination would, I think, which extended the life of poverty- be far more reassuring than an breeding - warbreeding capitalism WHEN A MINORITY is deprived athletic event. thereby further dehumanizing and M .' . 7hX'of its rights, it has no means of . impoverishing Americans. \ democratic action except persua- sion. As persuasion becomes futile, would hope that no one is dis- IN THE MEANTIME, the So- ,"a minority will organize and apply appointed by the result. cialist Labor Party has consistent- Nothing Suceedts Like Failure pressure. The "evangelist musings" -R. E. Nicholls, Grad ..............................................a..? ... ........................................... . ... .. . . . . .. . . ... . wf FP~'"r. 1 . . rr J r . Y . r~. ','~r ' ~ ,, I I Fan Mail From the CIA LAWMAKERS SPEAKING out against the Administration's Vietnam policies these days often get back more press clippings than they bargained for, thanks to the Central Intelligence Agency. Sen. Clifford P. Case (R-N.J.), for ev- ample, shortly after criticizing the John- son Administration's conduct of the war, received a batch of teletype copy from the CIA showing how much hay the Com- mmunist press made out of his remarks. The CIA runs what a spokesman there called a "courtesy clipping service, not a lobbying operation," to keep lawmakers posted on what the Communist press says about them. The teletype transcripts are accom- The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate Press Service. Fall and winter subscription rate: $4.50 per term by carrier ($5 by mail); $8.00 for regular academic school year ($9 by mail). Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Editorial Staff ROGER RAPOPORT, Editor MEREDITH EIKER, Managing Editor MICHAEL HEFFER ROBERT KLIVANS City Editor Editorial Director SUSAN ELAN.............Associate Managing Editor STEPHEN FIRSHEIN......Associate Managing Editor LAURENCE MEDOW ...... Associate Managing Editor JOHN LOTTIER........Associate Editorial Director RONALD KLEMPNER .... Associate Editorial Director SUSAN SCHNEPP ................ Personnel Directoi NEIL SHISTER........... ... .Magazine Editor CAROLE KAPLA1 ........Associate Magazine Editor LISSA MATROSS ...................... Arts Editor ANDY SACKS..................... Photo Editor ROI3ERT SHEFFIELD. ...........Lab Chief NIGHT EDITORS: W. Rexford Beniot, Neal Bruss, Wallace Immen, David Knoke, Mark Levin, Patricia O'Donohue, Daniel Okrent, Steve wildstrom. Sports Staff panied by covering notes saying the CIA believed the translation "might be of in- terest." A CIA SPOKESMAN said there are no specific rules for this service of several years standing, adding that some law- makers request it while other cases the agency's legislative liason officers de- cide on their own who should get it. A member of Case's staff, when quer- ied, could not recall requesting the tran- slations or receiving them before the Senator made his recent series of speeches challenging Vietnam war policy. Checks of the offices of such other war critics as Sens. Joseph S. Clark (D- Pa.), J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark.) and George McGovern (D-S.D.) disclosed that they also have received the CIA service. But so have such proponents of heav- ier bombing of North iVetnam as Sens. Stuart Symington (D-Mo.) and John Stennis (D-Miss.). One of the Senate's earliest doves, Sen. John Sherman Cooper (R-Ky), said he could not recall getting any CIA copies of whatever the Communists might have said about his opposition to bombing North Vietnam. "I'VE HAD THIS position forever," he said of his bombing stand. He added that reprints of foreign radio braodcast would not change it as the Administration well knows from direct talks with him. Stennis - among the Senate's hawk- iest - assailed his dovish colleagues yes- terday. He said the Vietnam war debate "which is running now largely on the Senate floor, unfortunately, is definitely an aid and encouragement to the enemy . They'll hold out all the longer and Nigeria: A State of Kaleidoscopic Disarray By URBAN LEHNER AS IT BECOMES increasingly apparent that the central gov- ernment of war-torn Nigeria is gaining ascendancy over the se- ceding provinces of Biafra and Benin, a faint glimmer of hope for the infant African nation begins to shine. What has given Nigeria's woes a nightmarish quality is the fact that during the five-year period of its independence, Nigeria seem- ed to be making such remarkable headway. Rich in tin, cocoa, and oil, with a railroad network in- herited from the British, a bur- geoning private industrial system, and an entrepreneurial class to manage it, the Federal Republic was on the verge of solving its economic problems. By 1966, it had reversed its chronic balance of payments deficit and negotiated a highly favorable agreement with the European Economic Commu- nity. But by 1966 the social and po- litical problems that were clamor- ing for solution had plunged the republic into the cycle of confu- sion in which it has been mired ever since. Pluralistic Nigeria lack- ed the political mechanisms to resolve the dilemmas of an es- sentially heterogenous society. BECAUSE IT WAS adminis- tratively convenient great Britain had ruled the North, the West, and the East, as a unit. But unity was strictly an administrative myth. The Negroid Ibo and Yoruba tribesmen of East and West were economically-motivated, "modern" people; the Sudanic Hausa-Fulani of the North had maintained their To make matters worse, the political partieswere regional- much to the detriment of national integration. The North, with 30 million people the (combined pop- ulations of East and West is only 22 million), dominated the federal government. Furthermore, corruption riddled the government of the Western segment of the federation. After a 1962 unsuccesful coup attempt, a splinter group identified with the federal coalition took office in the West with only shaky popular sup- port. The faction of the young rebels who hadn't been purged during the coup-reprisals became more and more dissatisfied. But the young rebels, and the non-rebel who was to inherit their rnante after the aborative coup of Jan. 15, 1966, Major General Johnson T. U. Aguiyi-Ironsi were all Ibos. The rebels had murdered many of the prominent federal and district officials but not the Ibo Eastern prime minister. Un- happy with the arrangements, the Hausa between May and October massacred over 10,000 Ibos living in the North, and destroyed in- estimable Ibo property. More than 1 million Ibos fled back to the East. As a backdrop to the massacres, a series of coups and minor revolts had catapulted Lieutenant Colonel Yakubu "Jack" Gowon to the fore- front. A Northerner and a nation- alist, Gowon became head of the new Military Confederation of Ni- geria with a wise and generous program to "bind up the nation's wounds." BUT BY NOW the wounds were A4 0, Nigeria army soldiers on patrol in Biafra new unity might be achieved. But by May 30. of this year that pos- sibility had at least temporarily disappeared when the East de- clared itself seceded from the con- federation and proclaimed itself the independent state of Biafra. Since then, civil war has been raging with renewed vigor and in- substantial results. But just two require the power of a strong cen- tral government. IT WAS RACIAL hatred which at least in part undermined Nige- rian unity in Jan. 1966 and the brutal slaughter of Ibos has only added kindling to the smoldering racial fires. Nevertheless, the seemingly rational argument that mands the existence of a national government. The West was un- able to solve its problems of polit- ical corruptions to appease the disident young rebels in 1962 and 1964, but a federal government with equal representation for each of the areas might have been. Without it, none of the new "na- tions" are likely to be well-gov- 4