Thursday, March 24, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 20, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Cubans By BILL FREELAND College Press Service "On this anniversary," he began, "our celebration is characterized by simplicity." He was speaking to 800,000 Cubans gathered in Ha- vana's giant plaza. It was Jan. 2, the tenth anniversary of the Rev- olution. True to his word, there had been no military parades and almost no ceremony and Fidel (nobody calls him Castro) would be the only speaker. "We decided not to. use up one' single gallon of fuel or stay away frornwork one minute longer than necessary," he told his audience. . With that short explanation he was ready, by the beginning of his second paragraph, to come to the point . of \ his remarks: "Today marks the beginning of another year of great effort," he said. Thus for the next two hours the anni- versary was all but forgotten in a discussion of tractors and fer- tilizers, of the surly zebu cows and the coming cane harvest-subjects of 'overwhelming importance for a nation where now farmers, not guerrillas, are making the revolu- tion. Program Information 2-6264 gma or I in '69: FIDEL'S 'DECISIVE EFFORT' 'A better life tha Cubans will always applaud deeply committed to making their were about 7,500 schools, now there Fidel, but on this occasion, the country work. are nearly 15,000. cheers came mixed with a certain As for the political system, I What those figures do not tell sense of distraction. It was a found its operation at times per- is who is going to school. Before sobering speech for a people stand- plexing. At one point I was ordered the Revolution, schools were open ing at a critical point in their to leave the country after I was only to' those who could afford history. The year ahead would suspected of holding views hostile to attend, while today every child probably be more important than to the Revolution. I came away is required to have 13 years of any in the past, the second decade convinced, however, that I had education. Nor do those figures in- of the Revolution more crucial witnessed the most promising so- lude the masses of adults who than its first, cial experiment in Latin America are now required to have a mini- Fidel spoke to those feelings in today. mum of six years of education- his closing words: "What remains The accomplishments were just some of whom are involved in- to be done," he said, "is to name too clearly evident: every Cuban crash programs in which they this year." He listened for a mo- now had adequate food, shelter actually spend more time studying ment to suggestions shouted at and clothes, and every child had than they do working. him from the crowd. "If you the opportunity for an education. But the decisive area of Cuba's agree," he said at last, "we shall That is a statement that can be planning program is in agricul- baptize this year, 1969, the year of made nowhere else in Latin Amer- ture. It is here that the country the Decisive Effort." ica and almost nowhere else in the must succeed if Cuba is to de- That was my introduction to entire "developing". world. . velop the economic base' needed Cuba. For the next five weeks I It is certainly an experiment to provide all the other services. would tour the countryside a n d Next year, according to Fidel, travel freely about Havana and that has the endorsement of the Cuba's annual agricultural produc- neighboring villlages, finally piec-mhsajority of Cubans. Seduced by tion will double what it was when ing together enough college Spen- tescientic mehod, nd om- he took over in 1959. That statis- ish to converse with the scores of mitted to comprehnsive national tic is even more surprising when Cubans anxious to speak with planning, they have been taken you consider the obstacles of poor Cubansy anxioussctoaspeakitwith "nortamericanos." over by utter fascination with the planning early in the regime that During my the ~possibilities of their own future. hdt-b vroe During my visit I found the Ssbiie fsecsFd u had to--e overcome. Cuban people optimistic, if some- begins talking about Socialism af-h d In the early 1960s, the planners times overworked; disarmingly rte he has run out of statistics. The made the mistake of neglecting non-political in the, mass, but reason seem clear: statistics tll agriculture in favor of a crash in- a story the people can understand. dustrializa'tion program. That at- stFROM RUSSIAo ry phaseoof duad tempt flopped and, in 1965, t h e FI government called for a m a j o r WITH LOVE" tion, the statistics, when compared shift in the economy based on a .. of1, 510, 9:20 I with 1959 when the revolutionists!- _____ n their parents massive redevelopment of the su- be developing. From my conv gar industry, backed by similar tions with numerous Cubans,Y strides in citrus fruit, tobacco, and ever, the adults find these chi cattle production. es much harder to accept than But sugar cane, which now pro- children. One middle-aged vides 85% of Cuba's total ex- told me: "I love the revolt ports, is a crop which requires at and all, but if I have the chan least two years of cultivation be- pick up something a littlee fore it can be harvested. So the now and then, I'd be a foo benefits of much of the work of to do it." the past four years are just now When you speak with s beginning to be realized. children, however, particular "We Are not saying that Cubans the rural boarding schools, are the best workers or that any- are studying in schools, we one knows more than anyone clothes and eating food all else," Fidel says with unexpected vided for them by the governn modesty. "We have had the good They have almost no contact fortune of certain factors coincid- money for they have no needt ing at the same time: the concept When they finally do go toa of agrarian reform, the mass ap- they will be paid, but on a plication of technology and above very similar to their friends, all, a people carrying out t h i s if they don't do the same ki program in a tropical climate." work What the Cuban experiment is attempting to demonstrate is that They will almost certainly a society formerly composed of a joy a better standard of i mass of peasants ruled by a wela- than their parents did. Per thy elite can be transformed into they will be unaware of it ( a society with real quality based still being very isolated from on Socialist principles of collective de influence), but they wi effort and collective responsibil- living in a world quite diff ity. Indeed, they claim that such from anyone else in this he a society can revolutionize t h e phere. If they are not "newr individual as well - the ideal re- presented by their concept of the they will almost certainly be "new man." "different" men from those w At least that is what seems to used to seeing. ersa- how- hang- n the man ution ce to extra i not chool ly in they aring pro- ment. with of it. work, scale even ind of y en- lyving Cuba out- Ill be erent emis- men" very e are ' F WATCH FOR "THE SERGEANT" i E "THUNDERBALL" at 2:55, 7:05 DON'T MISS EVEN I MIN. OF THIFATION! 'f took over, seem to have doubled: -Before' the Revolution there 1 were about 800,000 students in B ritl ain s public schools; now there are 1.7{ million. I-Ten years ago those students were being taught by about 20,000, rc while today there are nearly 60,000 teachers. -Before the Revolution there LLANTRISANT, Wales W) - ---- "Fort Knox has got nothing on University of Michigan our place,".said the Welsh farmer. He was looking across the val- DA NCE ley at Britain's new $16.8-mil- lion Royal Mint now nearing CC Rcompletion in remote hill country DANCE STUDIO north of the Welsh capital of DANCE R-GMSTU MCardiff. BARBOUR4-GYMNASIUM "It looks like it will stand a Fri., March 21--8 P.M. nuclear attack," the man said. Sat., Mar. 22-2:30 P.M., 8 P.M. Sun., March 23-2:30 P.M. . The low, single-story buildings Eves.-.00rc2 Min ee$1 .50 of brownish concrete do have an Eves-$200 Mtines--1.5 impregnable look. There are few Tickets at Barbour Gym 1-4 P.M. windows and the slab-like walls' or Reserve by Mail: Mr. Ada mson, give a bunker appearance. Barbour Gym, U.M. The first task of the new mint royal Mint geared to new decimal coinage will be to produce Britain's new decimal coinage-an estimated 6,000 million coins. Prime Minister Harold Wilson's government is shifting the Mint from London to Wales because the old plant is too small. The existing Mint has stood near the -Tower of London since 1811 and before that was operated for some 500 years inside the tower walls. "The current Mintand its ma- chinery were designed for a far smaller turnover," said a Mint of- ficial. "The present coinage won't go out of use until 1971 onwards. On D-day itself-Feb. 15, 1971- we shall have to have an enorm- ous stockpile of decimal coins." A work force of 400 will start on producing the decimal coins at the new Mint. Another 1,300 men will arrive at Llantrisant when the move from Tower Hill is completed by 1973. The switch is being done over a number of years to avoid disruption of pro- duction. As well as producing Britain's money the Royal Mint is the world's largest exporter of ,oins. Last year it sent overseas 930 million coins out of a total of 1,365 million produced. The coin- age was minted for British Com'- monwealth countries, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominica, Ethiopia, Iceland, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Panama, Philippines, Somalia and. Venezuela. Work at the Mint has trebled since 1955 and annual overseas earnings now-stand at $16.8 mil- Pion., the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service JAMES EARL RAY plans to seek a hearing to review his guilty plea in the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. A Memphis newspaper reported Ray wants to withdraw the guilty plea and stand trial as previously planned. Trial Judge W. Preston Battle,,Jr., confirmed yesterday that Ray had written him from the Tennessee State Peni- tentiary in Nashville to inform him of the decision to seek a hearing. Ray also wrote he had fired his lawyer, Percy Fore- man. Ray, who had been scheduled to stand trial April 7, switched plans and pleaded guilty to the crime on March 10. In a pre-arranged deal he received a 99-year sentence. " 0 * DEFENSE SECRETARY MELVIN LAIRD said yester- day American military commanders in Vietnam think there can be no reduction of American troops in South Vietnam until all North Vietnamese are withdrawn. In testimony before the Senate Armed Services Commit tee, Laird declined to say whether he agreed with that assess- ment. He later told reporters, "I don't think there is a possi- bility for any troop withdrawals in any significant numbers today." SECRET NEGOTIATIONS have b e e n going on for some time between the U.S. and Vietnam at a site other than Paris, authoritative sources revealed yesterday. The ,reported contact site is Vientiane, Laos, where the negotiations that started the Paris peace conference were held last April. The U.S. ambassador to Laos, William H. Sul- livan, has been recalled along with Ellsworth Bunker, ambas- sador to South Vietnam, to Washington for consultations this weekend. The subjects of the talks are reportedly troop withdraw- als and prisoner exchanges. AMERICAN AIRLINES employees accepted a n e w contract offer and ended their three week strike yester- day. An American Airlines spokesman said full flight opera- tions would resume at 8 a.m. today. The contract agreement, signed by Transportation Work- ers Union, provides wage increases of 25.5 percent over a 26.- month period. THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES passed a $12 billion increase in the national debt ceiling yesterday by a vote of 313-93. The approval followed a plea by President Nixon that the measure be promptly approved. Nixon wrote Speaker John W. McCormick (D-Mass.) that passage of the increase was "of the highest importance." THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT asked t h e Supreme Court to modify a wiretapping decision that could allow criminal defendants to see bugging files related to exter- nal security. In a plea entered by Solicitor General Erwin N. Griswold, the government asked the Supreme Court to exempt national security cases from a March 10 ruling which requires the gov- ernment to show eavesdropping transcripts to defendants. * 0 * A BRITISH MILITARY FORCE invaded t h e small Carribean island of Anguilla yesterday, putting an end to a three year revolt there. About 135 paratroopers, marines and Scotland Yard po- lice landed at dawn from helicopters and warships and took control of the island in a bloodless operation. More troops are scheduled to follow. celebrates spring with DAVIDACKL ES Electra Recording Artist FRI. f1ee'2as SAT. 8:00 P.Mv. ADMISSION$17 SUN. ($1.25 after 2nd set)! ,,,) 11 i If , ; ;. ;; r : GENERATION Presents The EAST BOUND MOUND IN A ROCK CONCERT FAITEBUtY f2Ot I Thurs., March 20 8:00 P.M. Also Appearing Are Finalist In the SPRING HEAT Competition ADMISSION-$1.50 at door .:ps .vr .c; . ..r.: v!":a.S m.r vra.w:,~c :a aag A CIIII Thursday and Friday General Della Rovere directed by ROBERTO ROSSELLINI, 1959 M , r;r n ti I I