Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED DY' STUDENTS ov THE UNmvERSITY OF MICHGAN CUNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are Fe STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Wil Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. Y, JULY 18, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: H. NEIL BERKSON MRA Makes Noise But Goals Are Elusive MORAL RE-ARMAMENT has struck again. It took a full page of advertising space in newspapers all over the nation Tuesday for a "Quiz for All." There were 250 possible points, and MRA evaluated the scoring thus: "If your score is 180 or above you are, whether you know it or not, part of the Moral Re-Armament of America and the world. "If your score is between 100 and 180 you are, whether you know it or not, a security risk and liable to be used by the type of mnen who subvert and pervert the nation. "If your score is below 100 you are part of the decadence in this nation or America's conscious enemy." My score was minus 35. UPON READING this quiz one has many things to say about MRA. Questions such as "Which do you feel is more important to defend, a free press or free love?" indicate an incredible naivite. "Which will help America's economy most?" asks the quiz. Choices are: a) less work for higher wages; b) abolish profit and increase wages; c) abolish wages and increase profit; d) ban strike; e) encourage unofficial stop- pages; f) more welfare and less work; g) a fair day's work for a fair -day's pay." This kind of oversimplification is typical of MRA. But there's more than that behind MRA. It is an organization dedicated to removing Communists, atheists, socialists and those who fail the '"Quiz for All" from government. All those who are not for MRA are against it and thus are agents in the world-wide jungle rot of Communism. It is for apple pie, motherhood, country and against sin, bad men and immorality. W HO SUPPORTS MRA? Somebody very wealthy. Its headquarters are on posh Mackinac Island where the land costs plenty, It maintains new luxurious quarters for all members and all those who care to become members. These may come to MRA any time and stay at the hotel free of charge. But there are no locks on the rooms, because everyone there believes in the absolute love, absolute purity and absolute honesty that is the byword of MRA. Anyone who has seen the MRA plays, per- forned on television about five years ago and many times privately, also has something to say about the esthetic taste of MRA. They are little lessons in morality, where one character who is a member of MRA shows the others the method of sitting down with a blank piece of paper till a thought comes to you and then writing it down. If everyone solved his prob- lems this way, the world would become bright, shining and brotherly loving before all the pencils were lifted from the pages. Once in a while MRA used to run into the problem of conflicting thoughts of the mem- bers. In that case, Frank Buckman, the found- er of MRA, generally could be counted on to produce the best thought and settle the dispute. But he died about a year ago and I don't know who has the best ouija board on.Mack- inac now. MRA NEVER TELLS US Just exactly how a better world will come about, nor does it tell us at all what it plans to do. It only says it wants to "see America governed by men governed by God." We do know that "MRA is not, was not and will not be pacifist." We are told it is "the greatest battle of all time where men have sweated in peace and bled in war, and are ready to do the same again if necessary,, to see God restored to leadership in this and every country." One wonders if MRA is recom- mending a kind of world-wide Crusade. One wonders, too, if any 20th century man can believe that is the key to bettering the world. But one can't accuse MRA of anything specific since it is very careful to avoid any specific issues. What, then, is MRA? With no stated goals, ideals or plans of action but the vague "ab- solutes" it is either an incredibly complicated political intrigue or a mindless paranoia. It not only demands membership, it informs us that we are already members. It is pseudo- religious, calling opposition "atheistic" and equating atheism with evil and Communism. It would be just one more witch-hunting group except for the strange atmosphere, not of hysterical rantings, but calm and childlike nonsense which pervades it. I don't think anybody quite knows yet what MRA is after but I'm inclined to hope it doesn't get it, for it bodes no good. -RUTH HETMANSKI "Oh, Sorry -- We Thought It Was A Goldwater Rally" KLMIY gyg CIVIL RIGHTS TESTIMONY- * Two Sies of truggl Ba eLRuhIltra e ) IX ALBANY MOVEMENT: Police Scrutinize City Activity Unburdened HE WORK of the United States Supreme Court is quite streiuous. Justices put in long hours preparing, researching and writing decisions. Along with all this work usually comes some acclaim and loads of criticism. For a long time various ultra groups have been calling for, the impeachment of the pres- ent "nine old men." Out of the recent school prayer cases came another such call for im- peachment. However, because of Justice Potter Stewart's dissent, he was omitted from the petition call- ing for impeachment. Justice Stewart's life must have surely been lightened by these glad tidings. -A. 0. The Single Crises GRADUATES of the class of '63 have lived- from cradle to commencement-through a nearly unbroken string of crises. At the same time they have seen a world, a nation and a'University go through changes so profound that the future will never be quite able to recapture the ways of the past. Little wonder that the graduates will 'be looking out on life this summer with the feel- ing they may not be able to survive or serve in a world of chaos. And little wonder that so- ciety places such high hopes with them. THE CLASS OF '63 was born in a year of in- ternational conflict, and before its members were a year old the United States was fighting in World War Two. Since then, the news has been a litany of crisis: Greece, Turkey, Indo- nesia, Korea, Berlin, Hungary, Viet Nam, Al- geria, Cuba ... Yet the tension of these places, and the depth of the American involvement in them, sometimes seemed overshadowed by a period of incredible material prosperity. This class may perhaps remember wartime rationing, and Ko- rean War price ceilings . . . but it has never known want. The mood of the nation, the mood which has shaped this class more than all it has learned and seen, is a mood of complacency and contentment. As the class of '63 grew to political maturity, there was no sharp outcry to disturb the prosperity of the Eisenhower years, and still there is no sense of national challenge and purpose.. Editorial Staff RONALI i WILTON ........................ Co-Editor PHILIP SUTIN ............................Co-Editor DAVE GOOD ........................ Co-Sports Editor CHARLES TOWLE ................. Co-Spnrts Editor RUTH HETMANSI....................Night Editor JEAN TENANDER..................... Night Editor THE GRADUATES who left this institution Saturday, and all the thousands of mem- bers of the class of '63 who graduated in hun- dreds of ceremonies, and heard hundreds of admonishing commencement addresses, will be accepted without much of a ripple by our so- ciety. That is because this class is so similar to the other classes, and so similar to its society .. . born in a period of distant crisis and surround- ed by complacency and comfort, this class cannot help but hope that the crisis will al- ways be faraway, and the home will always be secure. There is only one question. Do we, in our contentment, fail to see the single crisis which could destroy us? The crisis of a society which may have gone too far already in its happy drift away from the relevant challenge and task of our day? -THE DAILY ILLINI Good Thingf THE ACTION came fast, ending in military triumph. Ecuador's president, Carlos Arose- mena, was removed and exiled at'the whim of the Army. Replaced by a four-man junta, the "hard-drinking" former president went the way of many South American heads of state who cease to please those persons who actually control their countries-the men in uniform. Neither Mr. Arosemena's personal vices nor his leadership abilities are important now. What is significant is that this case provides more proof for the axiom of South American factional politics-military power is supreme. A clear comparison can be made between this form of government and the "veritable rep- resentative" system which we enjoy in the United States. WHILE WE OFTEN DISAGREE with the de- cision-makers, there are methods, short of impeachment, of influencing their policies. The By ELLEN SHUBART Daily Correspondent WASHINGTON-The opposition to the administration's civil rights bill got a chance to testi- fy last week before the Senate Commerce Committee and the re- sult was a not too surprising but frightening array of charges and name calling. Mississippi's, Democratic gover- nor, Ross' Barnett, took the stand to tell the committee why he was opposed to the administration's controversial title II sction of the civil rights bill, which seeks to prohibit discrimination in public accommodations which "substan- tially" affect interstate commerce. Instead of'presenting a logical ar- gument Barnett charged that the successful integration of O' Miss last fall and the present Negro demonstrations in support of inte- gration were Communist inspired. The governor, who is under a contempt of court charge now for standing in the way of James Meredith, the University of Mis- sissippi's first Negro student, also saw fit to call the Rev. Martin Luther King a Communist. Aside from the fact that King's political affiliations have nothing to do with the bill under perusal by the committee, Barnett had .no evi- dence to back up his charges oth- er than a photograph which he claimed showed King in a train- ing camp which the state of Ten- nessee has closed down because of subversive activities. * * * WHEN SENATORS on the com- mittee questioned Barnett about his information he reported that he had gotten the photograph from the Georgia department of public' instruction, certainly an odd place from which to get a picture taken in Tennessee pre- sumably for purposes of that state. Barnett also reported that he did not check his facts nor ask for in- formation from FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover. Barnett's testimony followed that of Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Rusk had taken the stand to tell the committee of the diplo- matic considerations of the bill. He cited repeated incidents where Negro ambassadors had been re- fused service in restaurants and hotels in the South. This, Rusk said, was in violation of interna- tional agreements which guaran- tee the maintenance of dignity of foreign ambassadors in host coun- tries. Rusk emphasized that his tes- timony was for the edification of the committee members and was not meant to be a basis for pass- age of the act; he firmly believes that the bill should be passed for Americans, he reiterated, but sec- ondarily because it will increase the prestige of the country. IT IS INCONSISTENT that this nation proclaims liberty as its guiding principle, he noted, and yet refuses to serve some of its citizens in restaurants. As Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy did, Rusk ran into Sen. Strom Thurmond (D-SC). Thur- mond noted that Rusk had stat- ed, in a prepared statement he read to the committee, that one of the basic lines of Communist propaganda is that Congressional inaction on the civil rights issue is tacit support of the "racists." Thurmond demanded to know "the statement ought to be requir- ed reading for all Americans." The standing room only crowd was also impressed by the secre- tary of state. At the end of the hearing, and in defiance of Sen- ate rules, they gave Rusk a long ovation. Thurmond, as he demanded that order be restored, charged that "as usual" the audience was filled with "civil rightists and left-wingers" who supported an unconstitution- al bill. THE TWO WITNESSES brought before the committee indicate much. That Rusk came before the committee certainly shows the Kennedy administration's desire to seedthe bill passed-and soon. Rusk does not frequently appear before a committee which is not directly involved with foreign pol- icy. Barnett's testimony, too, is in- dicative; this time of the South- ern line which will be -heard again and again. The Southerners seem to choose to ignore or dismiss the. Negro demonstrations as Commu- nist inspired. They then can at- tack the civil rights bill on the ground that it is not needed; as Thurmond put it, the Negro has made enormous progress in the last 100 years and we need only wait for the rest to come. What both Thurmond and Bar- nett seem unable to realize is the growing militancy in the Negro movement and the. impatience with waiting. While the Negroes cannot hope to change the atti- tudes of whites like Thurmond and Barnett, they do aim at get- ting their rights and then by ac- tions showing that they are, in- deed, the equals of fellow citizens. The actions of Negroes and so- called liberal whites show that they will continue to demonstrate until the Negroes get their rights. In order to avoid more demonstra- tions and possible violence the time has come for a so far do- nothing Congress to act. Whether it will act in time or not remains to be seen. (Sixth in a seven part series) By ANDREW ORLIN A KANSAS law professor is ar- rested and handcuffed for a broken car muffler. Walking .down the street to speak to people, a student is hauled off to jail for vagrancy. No police dogs or electric prod- ding rods are in evidence in the city of Albany. Georgia, but police activity is awe inspiring, if not brutally frightening. For the people involved in the Albany Movement there is no law and no justice aild the above events are common occurrences. Police, brutality is the norm and being carried by the limbs with- out being bounced several times off the sidewalk is the unexpected. ** * POLICE CHIEF Laurie Prichett presides over this seemingly calm Southern city of 56,000 in a seem- ingly righteous manner. His men cover the town wearing white shirts, white crash helmets and dark blue pants. Prichett, a tall heavy-set Southern gentlemanly type occasionally dons his own personal gold battle helmet, which hides his curly blond hair. From hisair conditioned office in city hall, he sends out his men to scour the city for crime. In- variably they turn up a number of loiterers, trespassers, vagrants (with I.D. and money) and per- sons with broken mufflers. With almost the same invariable con- sistency, these offenders just hap- pen to be Negroes or persons working with the Albany Move- ment. IN ADDITION to the city police, the Dougherty County Sheriff's department' maintains an office and a county jail in Albany. The deputies working out of this office are charged with maintain- ing peace outside the city limits. And if ChiefhPrichett's force is frightening, the men who.work out of this department are ter- rifying. "Niggah" plus a long string of obscenities comprise about the total vocabulary of some of these men. They are strong-armed men who interpret their mandate as letting them use whatever low methods they desire. Across the parking lot from the sheriffs office stands a barbed-wire fence which surrounds the county jail. Treatment here, as well as in the city jail, does not always meet the requirements established by the United States Constitution and the laws of Georgia. * * * STUDENT Non-Violent Coor- dinating Committee field secre- taries, especially the =white stu- dents, do not find jail ,amusing. Outside of the usual reasons, Al- bany has a few of its own. Those arrested reported that the cells were packed to double and triple their normal capacity. What is even worse, these per. sons tell of beatings by fellow prisoners at the instigation of the police. One worker, Robert Cover, a Princeton student from Brookline, Mass. was arrested with two other white "SNCC" workers for il- legally distributing Albany Move- ment literature. Cover, plus Ralph Allen of Melrose, Mass. and Peter Titleman of New York have been convicted of "distributing hand- bills without a permit." * * * ALTHOUGH all three are now out of jail on appeal bonds, they shared a work gang cell while in prison, with three soldiers and three civilians. Allen was badly beaten and one C. B. KING, the only Negro lawyer in Albany, noted that once jailed, the people are not allowed to make "their one phone call" for days on end. He added that those arrested were not "stopped" from making calls, but for one reason or another phones. "weren't available." Prichett calls these charges along with all charges of police brutality "faceless." Indeed, there seems to be a humanitarian streak in this of- ficial. When SNCC members were fasting, he urged them to eat and even went so far as to bring them portions of lemon pie. Prichett and his police force are very polite and gracious to whites, even northerners, who are not in- volved in the "Movement." THE WHITE SECTION of town is calm and peaceful and pedes- trians walk the sunny downtown' areas with apparent peace and security. Once in the Negro district, how- ever, the, picture changes. Police patrol cars roam the street keep- ing tabs. on leading "movement families" and SNCC workers. ROBERT COVER . Judoed There is constant fear of being arrested for "loitering" or "va- grancy." The police have the power and, in Albany, there is no appeal. * * * THE FBI maintains a perman- ent office in Albany. Both officers are local residents. Through these two men Wash- ington receives most, if not all, of its information concerning events occurring in Albany. For the people working for the movement there is no law, civil liberties or personal security. They claim their phones are tappi d and people sending letters North num- ber them to know whether they get through. If Nort*ern police do not always follow the letter of the law, they in no way compare to the high standards of the police forces in Albany, Georgia. SHAW PLAY: A ndrocles Srightly (EDITOR'S NOTE: The writer of this review is a June graduate of the University and a former re- viewer for The Daily. He is cur- rently reviewing for.. the Detroit Free Press.) " NDROCLES and the Lion" may have been intended by Shaw to be a barbed attack on religion, but in the sprightly hands of the University Players (and without the Shaw Preface) it pro- vides a merry evening of watching the innocent difficulties of being a Christian, in ancient Rome. T'here are an amazing number of fine local actors playing small roles to delightful perfection un- der the direction of Professor Clar- ibel Baird. Season ticket holders will enjoy spotting the leads from other productions mar ching around as slaves singing "Onward Christian Soldiers." * * * RODERICK BLADEL gently simpers his way through the title role with such understandable meekness that the audience feels