Seventy-T bird Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSrrY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinions Are Fle STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PO-toNE NO 2-3241 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. KENNEDY TRIP: Mauldi EDITOR'S NOTE: Neither the barnstroming political campaign nor the military juggernaut is a new experience to Bill Mauldin. The distinguished cartoonist - commen- tator has endured the confusion and vividly captured the color of both for 20 years. Here the two-time Pulitzer Prize winner records his impressions of the 1963 Kennedy blitzkrieg. By BILL MAULDIN WHEN JFK TOOK his jet-pro- pelled tour of Europe a couple weeks ago, I went along in a chartered Pan-American 707, with a hundred or so other members of the press. Most are on regular assignment to Washington and the White House, and are the ones you see asking the President questions on TV press conferences. They are Views Second Battle of Europe )NESDAY, JULY 17. 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: JEAN TENANDER Men Must Follow Children In Albany Movement THERE ARE TWO WAYS in which children can be reared. They can be taught to accept life as it comes, ood or badI. Or they can be taught to, attempt o change what is evil in life. Two children in Albany, Georgia are being rought up in this latter manner. If the major- ty of the Negro population in this town is in- ctive, at least two children are showing how ach individual can attempt to change what s wrong and unjust in this world. The two children are those of the vice-presi- .ent of the Albany Movement, Slater King. ast week they were arrested for trying to reak the white man's rule in this town. Two Sunday's ago they were arrested, along ith their father for trying to integrate the 'ift Park swimming pool which had reportedly een previously sold to one of the town's realthier citizens,a man by the name of James tray. VR. GRAY, it seemsg was not satisfied in owning Albany's only daily newspaper, tele- ision station and radio station. In an attempt o diversify his holdings, he thought it a good lea to buy the swimming pool from the city, ut his daughter to work selling tickets and ontinue segregationist practices. While this was all happening, two Negro bildren were being taught what equality and reedom meant. They were being taught by an ble teacher, their father, that freedom is pur- hased at the heavy price of arrest and jail. 'hese two children, before reaching the age of ,dulthood, have a criminal record. They were rrested; but according to "Southern chival- r" were released soon after. In a protest demonstration, the next day, a umber of other persons were arrested and auled off to jail. The Rev. Samuel Wells, the only minister ctive in the struggle for equal rights in Al- bany, was, in the usual police method, dragged, and arrested in violation of the laws of the sovereign state of Georgia. He, too, believes strongly enough in the two great documents that this country is founded upon to take the consequences of police beatings and prison. IF THE NEGRO in Albany, Georgia wishes to let the women and children fight, that is his own business. For the women and children are the people, with few exceptions, who 'ac- tively back the Albany Movement in its fight for equality. Rev. Wells, the Kings, and Charles Sherrod are the leading, and nearly the only active Albany males in the movement. The active Negro families are led by the women. Let Chief Laurie Prichett's white police force fingerprint and give these children a police number. Let these children and others like them wear these numbers and ink smudges with pride. They have obtained them in a righteous cause. And let the men in Albany, Georgia look to these children and be shamed by them. They are willing to fight and the men, no matter what the price, should be will- ing to join in. Let the middle class ministers of this city who fear the loss of their middle class salaries and position learn a lesson from a minister who fights for what is right. Let these God fearing, money and position fearing, men sacrifice their materialistic possessions for something which. is of greater value. Instead of looking to their position and their nice homes let them look into the book which they supposedly preach from. This fight needs the support of more than the women and children. It needs the support of the men and the people, in the, more prominent places in the Negro community. Being devoutly religious, let them heed the good book which says, "And a child shall lead them ."AANDREW ORLIN closed ranks bumper-to-bumper to freeze them out. German word for City Hall is rathaus. Their idea, not mine. Every rathaus has a golden book f o r distinguished autographs. President Kennedy went into Co- logne's rathaus at 10:55, emerged at 11:25 to greet crowds of Ger- many's oldest city in name of USA's oldest city, of which he claimed to be native. Reporter asked Pierre Salinger, standing near press group, if JFK was really from St. Augustine, Fla. Salinger said spell it Boston. JFK and hosts attended mass in Cologne's cathedral. Huge crowds outside, badly handled by local police, who knocked women and children about freely and cringed before any adult males who looked faintly official. Situa- tion got so wild for a while that people inside church couldn't get out. During afternoon chiefs of state made big medicine behind closed doors, while we milled around press center in govern- ment building. Two main ques- tions of day: "What's this trip all about?" and "What does de Gaulle think of it?" Never did learn an- swers. * * * MONDAY: Quiet day, with more private talks among leaders. Op- portunity for press to wash out socks and write reflective-type prose while they dried. I drew two cartoons, neither remotely con- nected with trip. TUESDAY: Busy day. Press boarded 8:30 a.m. train for scenic ride along Rhine to U. S. Army base at Hanau. Reviewed 15,000 troops with rockets, tanks, mus- kets. Entire area raked and mani- cured for JFK's benefit, but some- body forgot to sweep ramp, so, Presidential helicopter arrival blew dust all over honor guard. Not a dry eye in bunch. At 10:30 a.m. JFK addressed troops. I quote one line: " . . . Stretching all around the globe there are Americans on duty who help maintain the freedom of dozens of countries who may now be engulfed if it were not for this long, thin line which occupies such a, position of responsibility guarding so many gates where the enemy campfires in some cases can be seen from the top of the wall." Took troops' minds off ach- ing feet. President' lunched at enlisted men's mess. Number of officers decided to do likewise. Press cen- ter set up in helicopter hanger. All hands banged out stories, got them on wires, then trudged half- mile cross base for quick bite. Halfway through bite, press ad- vised run get gear and luggage from hangar, because buses will pick them up here. Fifteen minutes later, plans reversed again. This was army, all right. 2:15 p.m.-Motorcade to Frank- furt. Large, friendly crowds along way. Stop at rathaus. President went inside to sign golden book. Took 40 minutes this time. Tre- mendous press of people outside. Women jammed against barri- cades began fainting like flies. JFK emerged, made speech, then walked hundred yards or so be- tween police lines to historic church, for major policy speech. Crowds now several hundred thousand, surged against barri- cades for glimpse of visitor, squashing more people and fright- ening many members of press, in- cluding this one, out of wits. * * * SOME DESPERATE souls took refuge by going inside church for speech. I climbed up side of war memorial (didn't notice what war) and watched medics cart off cas- ualties. Crowd roared with laugh- ter at sight of plump old lady un- conscious on stretcher with large, flowered handbag balanced, quiv- ering, on her protruding abdomen. Great sense of humor. 5:30 p.m.-After speech press battled way through mob to rat- haus basement communications center, quickly wrote stories about major policy speech, got them on wires, then fought way to buses, which shot off through crowd like juggernauts, headed for Weis- baden. JFK beat us by helicopter, so am unable to report any hanky- panky with rathaus and golden book in this city. WEDNESDAY: Buses to Wies- baden airport, where our 707 wait- ed with ministering angels. Land- ed before President in Berlin at Tegel Airport, only: jet-size strip in city,} which happens to be in French zone. JFK was giving de Gaulle bad time on this trip, so' we found our Gallic hosts await- ing Air Force One with four how- itzers, exactly 21 rounds of am- munition, an honor guard, and not much enthusiasm. JFK landed, the motorcade formed, and we were off. Something like 2 million cheer- ing West Berliners along the way. Happy crowd, with grinning cops -not like Rhineland police. To Congress Hall for speech to trade unions. Brandenburg Gate for pic- tures. East Berliners had put up propaganda signs at last minute so they's be in pictures, too. Clever devils. Same thing at Checkpoint Charlie. * * * NOW TO Berlin rathaus. After business with golden book, JFK faced great throng (1000 first-aid cases, from crushing) and made now-famous "I am a Berliner" speech. "Hell, I thought he said he was *from St. Augustine," I heard reporter remark in rathaus basement press room, where every- body banging out stories while watching speech on closed-circuit TV to keep from getting stomped to death outside. Motorcade to Free University. Major speech. Press wrote about this one on typewriters in laps as press buses roared across Berlin with motorcycle escort to airport. We had to beat JFK to Dublin. We did. Atmosphere more tranquil in Ireland. At airport found Eamon De Valera and welcoming party rehearsing on strip of carpet to ramp. Some 300 sturdy troops drawn up, with artillery. When Air Force One arrived, I lost count of rounds fired in salute, but could have sworn they kept gaily on until they ran out of ammuni- tion. DeValera made very touch- ing speech, President responded, we were off in motorcade to Dub- lih. Fine broth of a crowd. Back to Gresham hotel. Irish Airlines hav- ing party. Press cleaned up last 'of Berlin stories, wrote new ones about Dublin, and stumbled off to bed. Long day. THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SAT- URDAY: Kennedy covered Ireland like the dew, flitting hither and yon by chopper, while press chas- ed him by bus. Unfair contest.. "How can he stand the pressure?" a local lady asked about JFK. "Madam, he's got somebody else doing his laundry," she was told. * * * SUNDAY: JFK conferred with' Macmillan near Brighton, Eng- land. Considerable interest by London press, and every man who could be spared from, Profumo case dispatched to Brighton. Burn- ing question of day: when Ken- nedy arrived 45 minutes late for Macmillan's airport reception, had Mac known JFK would be tardy, or had he been kept cooling his heels? With issue unresolved, we boarded buses for Gatwick airport and 707 for Rome. Much thought- ful.prose typed enroute. MONDAY: Rome paid little at- tention to JFK. Even messed up Presidential motorcade, cutting in and out to pass with little cars and sputtering scooters. Nothing personal: just Romans getting home after weekend in country. Besides, they'd just crowned a Pope, and had had enough pomp and ceremony for the week. TUESDAY: Two hundred mem- bers of local and foreign press herded to Vatican early in morn- ing, kept in Clementine Room with closed windows for several hours under menacing glares of Swiss guards with halberds. Pierre Sal- inger seen taking approving notes on this method of handling re- porters. Vigil finally rewarded by eight-second glimpse of JFK cross- ing room enroute to audience with Pope. Another perspiring hour, then His Holiness made an ap- pearance at opposite end of room from where press expected him. Frantic scramble in his direction, with TV cameras toppling and lights falling. Pope radiated good- humored serenity, made quiet little one-minute speech which ended before hubbub died, blessed crowd, exited. Back to hotel to get off stories about historic meeting, then press plane to Naples, where President scheduled to make major speech at NATO base. Naples more than made up for Rome's apathy. Hard to tell if they loved JFK for himself or just felt like having a ball, but he got roaring welcome entering city and tumultous farewell on way out. President Kennedy and President Segni went through formal good- by ceremonies at airport and blast- ed off for home, our man in his Boeing and Segni in his Convair. Press facilities provided in airport lobby for sending off stories about all this. Then we were off into setting sun, too. Midnight fuel stop at Shannon. Press advised that duty-free liquor store open for business. Clerks in- side, having heard hundred Ameri- can newspapermen aboard jet, rubbed hands in an ticipation. Amazing number of us slept right through opportunity. (c) 1963, Publishers Newspaper Syndicate BILL MAULDIN ... battle of Europe TODAY AND TOMORROW: Rear GuardAction, THE TESTIMONY of Governor Ross Barnett of Mississippi before the Senate Commerce Committee, like a good caricature, reveals by its exaggeration and distortion the inner fal- lacy of the irreconcilable opposition to civil rights legislation. The governor's theory is that the Kennedy brothers, acting under im- pulsion from Moscow, have stirred up the Negro demonstrators. If instead the Kennedys would order the Negroes to desist, to shut up and be quiet, there would be no problem of civil rights, the racial conflict would dis- appear and the civilization of the white man would be preserved. Stripped of the nonsense about Moscow, which only the lunatic fringe believes, there is a substantial minority in the country, per- haps even more than a minority in the deep south, who believe what Governor Barnett believes. That is to say they believe that the Kennedys are encouraging the demonstrations and that they could, if they wanted to, call off the demonstrations. This is what the most important southern leader, Sen. Richard Rus- sell of Georgia, believes. It is by way of being a national calamity, that Senator Russell is using his great author- ity to prevent any important and responsible, southern politician from taking a constructive and 'leading part in the solution of this na- tional problem. To say that the problem would not exist if President Kennedy lectured the Negro leaders about law and order is for a, man like Senator Russell to hug a fatal illu- sion. The fatal illusion is to believe that the Negroes have no grievances which they can- not be forced to put up with as long as it suits the white majority not to redress the grievances., THE FUNDAMENTAL and controlling fact of the matter is that there is a new genera- tion of Negroes who will not put up with their ancient grievances. President Kennedy did not invent these new Negroes, and he does not now incite them. On the contrary, as the record shows, he intended to do nothing sub- stantial by legislation in this session of Con- gress. He was forced by the Negro demonstra- tions in the spring to take charge of a menac- ing situation. The President's assumption of leadership was not, as Governor Barnett and even Senator Russel seem to think, a case of meddling with a situation which would best be left alone. Ihe situation cannot be left alone. The Negroes will not subside. Their demonstrations, which will intensify and expand, will incite counter- lemonstrations by white people. All this, while it does not threaten the overthrow of the republic, does threaten the peace and order of American life. Confronted with this national trouble, it is the duty of the national government to seize rhe situation firmly and energetically and, by insisting that evil be righted and that justice be done, to uphold law and order. Law and Valter Lippmann sanction of custom, often creates new problems. These new problems cannot always be clearly foreseen, and it is therefore of crucial im- portance that all the responsible southern white leaders should not disqualify themselves by diehard opposition. These white leaders are. needed to play a constructive part in the future. Senator Russell is a key man here. For there are good reasons to think that if he decided to turn away from irreconcilable opposition toward the willingness to help solve the prob- lem, there would be other political leaders in the south who would follow suit. Reading the record, it is evident that Senator Russell is not really a diehard, even though he talks like one. Six years ago, in the summer of 1957, there was an Eisenhower civil rights program. It dealt chiefly with Negro voting and school desegregation. It did not include, as the 1963 civil rights bill does, a section on public accommodations. IT IS INTERESTING to note that in 1957 Senator Russell was just as vehement about school desegregation as he is today about motels and lunch counters. The 1957 bill "could result in;placing many southern com- munities under martial law if they should fail to submit to what they, regard as the destruc- tion of their society ... Now Senator Russell is reported to be pre- pared, though of course he does not like it,, to swallow legislation which will enable the attorney general to act for the United States in desegregating schools. The monstrous dan- ger to him, and the one which would destroy society, is now the desegregation of motels and lunch counters. On the record, Senator Russell is, I submit, not a diehard for an ultimate principle. He is rather a man fighting rear-guard action to delay, as long as he can, the inevitable righting of an ancient, and no longer defensible, wrong. Senator Russell is capable of doing better than that. (c) 1963, The Washington Post Co. Exeeption MOST AMERICANS are not active in civic affairs. But Democratic National Commit- teewoman Mildred Jeffrey and her daughter, former Student Government Council member Sharon Jeffrey, '63, are exceptions to the rule. While Sharon was spending a night in a Baltimore jail as a result of demonstrating against segregation, Mrs. Jeffrey was attending a convention of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in Chicago. Mrs. Jeffrey returned to Detroit in time to take part in a civil rights demonstration there, while Sharon returned to her work for the Northern Student Movement. Mrs. Jeffrey told the demonstrators how happy she was to witness these protests against n- iniu+panti hP n te r with pnie that veterans of these trips, most of them having roamed the world with Kennedy and Eisenhower, many with Truman, and some with Roosevelt. I thought I was a pretty sea- soned traveler, myself, with my dog-eared suitcase and. my rare collectionbof drip-dry shirts, but I came back humbled and ex- hausted, feeling something like a character from an Oz book who had ridden a cyclone to the Land of the Munchkins. The only way I can recount the 13-day journey without writing a book is to pre- sent my notes, more or less as I scribbled them along the way. FRIDAY: Reported at Andrews Air Force Base, Washington, for non-stop flight to Dublin, Ire- land. Our 707 parked next to JFKs two 707s. Was told Presi- dents traveling abroad these days take spae. jet in case first one develops hiccups. Ike did it, too, so no partisan nonsense about economy 'from GOP press. With the sun barely up, was handed glass of spiked tomato juice upon boarding by one of half-dozen lovely Pan-Am stew- ardesses. Was told girls regard this choice assignment. No diap- 'ers. Six hours to Dublin, plus six- hour time difference. Checked into Gresham Hotel, where Irish In- ternational Airlines gave a press party. Was handed glass of spiked orange juice by one of their hos- tesses, ho then confided that she belonged to a militant anti- drinking - and -smoking society and would rather cope with in- fants aloft than to be doing this. SATURDAY: Early - morning buses fanned out from Gresham in all directions over Irish coun- tryside, loaded with newsmen seeking nostalgic background ma- terial for JFK visit next week. (President himself leaving Wash- ington tonight, with Bonn, Ger- many, first stop.) As day wore on, roads got narrower, springs stiffer, engines hotter, tempers shorter. Rest and refreshment f a- cilities s p a r s e, communication with populace not always wholly rewarding. Reporter made unne- cessary crack about quality of local highways; bus driver re- sponded with observation that it took St. Patrick to run the snakes out of Eire and Kennedy to bring them back. Late in afternoon, buses strag- gled in, one by one, to ramp of 707, where stewardesses waited with soothing medicines and rad- iant smiles. Two-hour flight to Bonn, typewriters clacking here and there throughout plane, as background material on Emerald Isle took form. * * * SUNDAY: Press a r r i v e d at Bonn-Cologne airport hour earlier than JFK's scheduled 9:50 land- ing. Route lined with German soldiers. Roadside bushes patrolled by German cops with German shepherd dogs., President's plane (called Air Force One) landed eight minutes early. Pilot knocked this off by taxiing up very slowly, so that bands blared and cannon roared 21-gun salute on schedule. Artil- lery looked and sounded like 88's. Speeches. Motorcade to Cologne. Makeup of motorcade standard throughout trip: first motorcycles, then camera truck, open presiden- fin nn . .nr7 :rr nA non 'Mof~rn ALBANY MOVEMENT: SNCC Workers Dispell Negro Image (Fifth'in a seven part series) By ROBERT ELLERY IN AN ABYSS dropping far be- low the cliffs of myth and reality dwells the image of the American Negro. Not long ago, some forward looking college stu- dents scaled the walls of those cliffs to find for. themselves the eroded ledge of reality; and while, their climbing ability might not have been professional, they suc- ceeded in dissapating that image by truly seeing the Negro-not on the streets of a white shopping district, but in the Negro's own territory, his neighborhoods, his slums, and his home. These persons established the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, dedicated to further- ing the cause of racial equality, LETTERS to the EDITOR To the Editor: MR. HYMAN'S editorial of July 11, "Negroes Need Achieve- ment to Become Integrated" is based on a misunderstanding of the current struggle for civil rights. No one (would maintain that equality is a panacea for the Negro, but to imply that it may in any way be justifiably withheld because the Negro has not "achieved" is a poor attitude on the part of one who evidently, enjoys these rights. As a citizen the Negro has a right to equal opportunity, and it is proper that he enjoy this right -not as Mr. Hyman so blandly suggests "given voluntarily by the whites, in return for achievements which all men can admire"-but by virtue of the law. It is for this that citizens of Ann Arbor are currently striving, in the form of a fair housing ordinance, con- trary to Mr. Hyman's assertion that "the current civil rights fur- or , . . has no stated, clear ob- jectives." Mr. Hyman's quasi-philosophi- cal questioning of' the goals of the current Negro struggle lead me to ask him: How much "achievement" does the Negro need before his kindly white brethren enthusiastically bestow upon him the gift of equal rights? What kind of achievements most appeal to you? Did you leave any- thing out of your helpful cata- One chapter of the committee, whose members are drawn fromt both races, campaigns in Albany, Georgia. While the whites of Albany pre- fer to think that SNCC perpetrat- ed its heretofore unpublicized ra- cial problem, the truth is that the young organization was a late- comer, and instead of igniting the fire for integration, merely sup- plied extra, but vital, fuel to the already existent Albany Move- ment, founded by the Negroes. * * * ICONOCLASM pertaining to false images is only part of the work done by this band of crusad- ing agitators, and the word is used advisedly, who strive for gaining not merely sympathetic, but active support in their cru- sade. They are agitators because they stir up trouble - whether the trouble is needless or not is a point of vital controversy in the Deep South today. In the words of SNCC leader Charles Sherrod, "We've got this city UPSET!" * * * WHILE SNCC willingly subor- dinates -itself to the Negro- directed movement, the two work jointly to precipitate demonstra-' tions ranging from lunch counter sit-ins to mass marches. There are no Albany whites in SNCC,' understandably so, and many of the white members come from well-to-do families _in the northeast United States. "Snicks," as they are called (and this word has a peculiarly beligerent pro- nounciation when uttered by Al- bany whites) are there for any- thing but glory. There is no long- er muchlmartyrdom involved in being Jailed. Most of them live with Negro families in the area, and the transition from middle class split level to South Side slum can at best be termed "an experience." The greater part of the days ac- tivities are consumed in canvass- ing the Negro community, an- nouncing mass meetings to be held in nearby churches or reporting latest encounters with the not-so- enlightened Albany police force. ONE OF THE greatest enemies in Albany is despair-despair when SNCC starts comparing the num- ber of persons who joined a dem- onstration to the number that pay reverent lip service to the move- ment when met by canvassers. Sooner or later the organizers fall into the sliding, slow pace of the town and learn to count pro- gress by the number of families community is fprolific, both in spirit and in body. Should the aged crawling being suddenly be, crushed beneath the wheels of a patrol car or paddy wagon, the progeny are not far behind to continue the tedious trek across the too broad highway of bias and segregation. NOT ALL the bumps and jagged edges on this highway are results, of the white folks' vehicle, how- ever-SNCC workers are pushing doggedly against crevices within the confines of Harlem (the Negro section) as well. Admittedly, the SNCC worker is probably safer in the Negro sec- tion than in any other part of this divided city. An intricate tele- phone and word-of-mouth com- munications network in the area keeps him under constant benevo- lent surveillance. All too often, however, participation in the movement goes no farther than phone calls among some families. reportedly divided in their views Just as the Negro ministers are reportedly divided in their views of the movement, the Negro com- munity itself is divided on an in- tra-class basis. Often the middle class Negro, although he in no way compares with his white counterpart, does feel that he has gained something over his neigh- bors, and hesitates to relinquish it by going to jail. * * * SNCC HAS its own problems. Despite the fact nearly every one of its nearly 30 members has beeni jailed at one time or another --often on trumped-up charges of vagrancy-and despite their living in extremely trying circumstances, the unity one would expect to find is somehow missing. A creeping pessemism gradually takes hold of some members who despair of ever reaching their goals in the trudge for integration either by their own merits or by those of Harlem. Organization of the group appears looser than would be ex- pected, and conflicting reports from various members are not in- frequent. More important, there are, at present, too many white members working in Albany for the organ- ization to be as efficient as .pos- sible in dealing with Negroes. This is readily acknowledged by "snicks" of both races. There are more'whites than Negroes at pres- ent. The Student Non-violent Co- ordinating Committee is certainly not THE answer to the Negro's problem in Albany or anywhere else. But it is doubtful whether there really is one answer. Despite its faults it provides ample proof that whites and Negroes can live together in harmony-often more harmony than is found in many all-white or all-Negro neighbor- hoods. While many cannot condone the purpose of SNCC, one is forced to admit that, objectively speaking, it serves to curb what could easily become full-scale violence. "It's Not Only The Committee Room-The Whole Country Is Being Packed With Those Damned American Civil-Righters" r-# kI ~-- _ 4 I