THE MICHIGAN DAILY sian Peasants: HungerNot Ideology Ma or Crime Rises 10 Per C EDITOR'S NOTE: When Western rillzation rose, Asia already was dent. Today the burden of un- rpromising centuriesrhas brought illions to the hopeless conclu- in that there is no tomorrow. >t with any hope or promise. And their agony there is an anger. inrad Fink, Associated Press bu- au chief in New Delhi, summarizes e substance of that agony and By CONRAD FINK Associated Press Writer NEW DELHI--Pai Chong-Rok, a 24-year-old South Korean farm- er, summed up Asia's agony one Protestors Obtain Lots, Moratorium (Continued from Page 1) working day. Today, they will park in the regular lots, free of charge, The protestors backed up their demands with several claims: --They said that since there is much more open space on North Campus, there is no need to build the expensive parking structures that have been constructed else- where. -They pointed out that the student population on North Cam- pus is ;much :smaller, both abso- lutely and proportionately, than that on Central Campus. Since students are those who created most University traffic congestion problems, North Campus non-stu- dent personnel should not pay the fees, they said. -They said that the parking lots on North Campus had been built by Phoenix Project funds as free employe parking lots, and that an institution should not tax its own employees for parking in their own parking lot. University officials replied that the plans for North and Central Campus are not identical. They adder that some parking controls were needed on North Campus. They also observed that the Cen- tral Campus plan "has worked well," despite initial protests. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- ity of ,Michigan for ?which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial regponsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publica- tion, and by 2 p.m. Friday for Satur- day and Sunday. FRIDAY, JULY 24 Da Calendar University ;Crest Club-Tiger-Yankee doubleheader: Leave Michigan League south entrance, 5:45 p.m. Doctoral Examination for Fredric Nel- son Bailey, Electrical E gineering; thes- is: "Stability of Interconnected Sys- tems," Fri., 3035 East Engineering Bldg., t 11 am Co-Chairmen, A. B. Macnee and K. B. Irani. SLeadership Development Project - United 'States Assistant Commissioner for Vocational and Technical Educa- tion ,Dr. Walter Arnold will speak on "Need for Leadership on National Lev- el-Results of Recent Legislation" in Boom 2014, University School, 9 a.m. Astronomical Colloquium: Fri., July 24, 4 p.m., .Room 807, Physics-Astronomy BRg. Helene. R. Bickel will speak' on lected H iI Regions in the Magel- lanic Clouds," and John H. Dickel will speak on "Microwave Observations ,of Venus'and' Jupiter." For Other Events of the Day see the Across Campus listings elsewhere on this page. (General Notices French and German Screening Exams: * The screening exams in Fr ncb and Ger- man for Doctoral candidates will be ad- ministered on Thurs., July 30 from 7-9 p.m. in Aud. B, Angell Hall. Doctoral candidates must pass the screening examination before taking the written test in French Or German,: unless they have received B or better in French Ill or German 111. Those who fail the examination may take it again when the test is administered in September. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Graduate Outing Club, Swimming, July 26, 1:45 p.m., Rackham, Huron St. entrance. I DIAL 662-62641 cold November day in the squalid village of Myung Dong. "I don't know what we'll do," he said, and he wept in his despair. Pai, like millions of Asians, walks with the burdens of cen- turies on his shoulders. Both he and his land are worn out. His children are sick. Moneylenders have mortgaged his soul, as they did his father's. The Same And Pai wept because he could not look forward to anything bet- ter, only more of the same.. "Nonsense"-it was a gay young American tourist, safe in the com- fortably plush lobby of Tokyo's Imperial Hotel. "Nonsense, they have never known anything else exists. They are really quite hap- But "they" do know. And "they" are not happy. Blood, Sweat, Tears All across Asia-in the barren hills of Korea, the jungles of Viet Nam, the plains of India--this is what it's all about. This is what is behind the bloodshed, turmoil and agony of Asia. Pai Chong-Rok and millions like him know that other people in )ther lands get a day's pay for a day's work, don't have to sellj themselves to moneylenders and can look forward to being sur- rounded by healthy children in old age. And "they"--all the Pai Chong- Roks--are out to get theirs. Democracy? Communism? East- West power balance? Who Understands? You tramp many dusty miles through India's villages or wade a lot of :rice paddies in Viet Nam before finding anyone who really understands what those words mean. But you don't travel far before finding someone who can describe with shattering simplicity what hunger pains feel like. Or what it is to see a child die of smallpox or cholera or malaria - diseases all but wiped out in more pros- perous areas of the world. And, if you linger a while, you find just below the surface a boil- ing anger. Chinese Do If the Chinese Communists and their comrades in Viet Nam, Ko- rea and Laos miscalculate on any- thing else, they understand com- pletely this anger. They are busy building empires on it. I listened one rainy night in a battered, shell-torn village in South Viet Nam as an army ma- jor translated instructions from Ho Chi Minh's red regime in the north to Communist Viet Cong guerrillas fighting in the south. The instructions were taken from a guerrilla's body. Speak softly to the people, the instructions said, "promise them rice, land and freedom from co- lonialists. The people are the sea in which you, the guerrillas, will swim." There had been no men in that village when government troops stormed in with their American advisers. "They've all joined the Viet Cong," the major said apologet- ically. Handsome America All is not that dark, of course. America, with its power, hope and way of life, has won brave men to its cause. One day in the sweltering jun- gle of Viet Nam's Thanhi Phu Peninsula, I watched little Viet- namese troopers, hardly taller than the U.S.-made M1 rifles they car- ried, jump from behind protective dikes andcharge head on into deadly guerrilla fire. No one gave the command be- cause cautious mcn were seeking cover that day. But the little troop- ers-those who still lived-charg- ed on. A nation could not hope for braver allies. Solid Forces And no nation could send bet- ter men to this far-off part of the world than America has. GREENWOOD, JACKSON, BROOKLYN La, Riots Mark Race Front (Continued from Page 1), the free exercise of his right to full and equal enjoyment . . . of a motion picture house." The maximum penalty provided by the new civil rights law for such violations is a fine of up to $5000 and imprisonment of up to 10 years. In Jacksonville, a federal court ruled that two St. Augustine res- taurants must serve Negroes as required by the civil rights law. Threats from Whites The court issued temporary in- junctions, effective in 30 days. The extra time is to allow for something to be done about white segregationists, who, according to testimony, have threatened busi- nesses that accept Negroes. This reiterated the action Wed- nesday in Atlanta. The defendants in yesterday's case testified that they refused service to Negroes out of fear of violence from a white group. VIOLENCE But the two peaceful moves in the South were more than co-ii pensated for by the disorder spreading through Brooklyn in the sixth day of rioting since the shooting of a Harlem youth Sat- urday. Yesterday's events brought the toll to one man dead by gunfire; 140, including 48 policemen, in- jured; 478 arrests and 673 proper- ties damaged. While Negro youths rages, through Brooklyn yelling and smashing store windows, N' s-) leaders made public two basic de- mands: --Establishment of an impar- tial n'n-police board to review complaints of police brutality. Fatal Shooting of police Lt.Thomas R. Giil gan, whose gunshot sparked the pro- tests that ended in riutirg in Harlem over the weekend and in Brooklyn this weekend. Gilligan said he was irving to break up a neighborhood dispute and fired because the boy, James Powell, came at him with a knife. James Farmer, national director of the Congress of Rascial Equal- ity, said the Negro demand for an independent review board is "the crux of the matter." Brush-Off He and other Negro leaders joined in ignoring a blueprint for improving conditions announced Wednesday by Mayor Wagner. Wagner's program includes stepped-up efforts to improve There was red-haired, energetic Lt. Col. Frank B. Clay, son of the famous Gen. Lucius D. Clay, who while advising South Viet Nam's 7th Division argued for social and economic reforms to consolidate the army's gains against the guer- rillas. "The military is only a small part of it," he said over and over. "If you can't win the support of the people you can't win the war." S First Fight There was young Capt. Jerry Scott of Ada, Okla., who came down off a hill in Korea at dawn, flushed with excitement because he had seen combat for the first time - against a North Korean raiding party. "It was a helluva fight," Scott said. The Clays, Scotts and Vietna- mese troopers, brave as they are, don't hold the key to victory ir, Asia, however. The combat sol- diers themselves say the key is held only by farsighted national leaders who understand the ap- peal the Communists have and why they have it. South Viet Nam's President Diem didn't understand or, at least, couldn't convince his own soldiers that he did, so last year he died in a revolution. Red Solutions But those who understand are trying desperately to beat the Communists to the punch, try- ing to quell the anger in their own people before the Reds ar- rive to sell their "solutions" to all problems. India's leaders, among others, have heard the call for jobs, rice and security. Supported by mas- sive U.S. aid, they're trying to an- swer. Do they have time? No one knows. Even Nehru, adored by the mass- es, could not produce results fast enough. He lived to see 10,000 demonstrators march on parlia- ment and shout "Nehru get out.' South Korea's President Chung Lee Park, who seized power three years ago, has been in trouble from the beginning, always a half step behind the people's desires for increased political liberty and economic well-being. They want it now-now, not later. The signs that time is short worry Asia's non-Communist lead- ers. They feel compelled to pro- duce and produce quickly. And in their rush, some make mis- takes. Plans Go Astray United States aid officials in South Korea despair to see how neatly planned economic plans go wrong when there is a stampede for quick results, for something flashy to buy time. American economic experts in India measure the effect of mas- sive U.S. aid in almost infinitesi- mal terms-terms that would make hard-headed bankers blanch. So much must be spent just to feed people. "What's the percentage in all this?" an American is likely to ask. On the surface, Asia's agony is the huge powers pushing and tugging across Asia. This has been going on for centuries. But now there is a difference -Pai Chong-Rok and the other ragged, hungry millions. "They" are determined to get theirs. AN NAACP representative was forced into his car last night when he tried to urge Negro' youths in Brooklyn to cease their protesting and go home. He was hooted and booed by 'the youths. Rioting in 'Brooklyn and Harlem streets entered its fifth day yesterday following a lem youth aturday. slum conditions, the addition of Negroes to the police force, re- straints upon police power and re- view of police tactics. Wagner stopped short, however, of setting up the kind of review Across Campus policeman's srooting of a Har- board the Negroes have demand- ed. Rev. Richard A. Hildebrand, president of the New York Chap- of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo- ple, said the mayor "seemed more interested in protecting citizens coming from outside New York than citizens in Harlem being bru- talized by police and endangered by live bullets." .. ----t The Center' Fish"; Audio-Visual Education will preview "The Golden and "Legend of Johnny Everyone Welcome! Appleseed" at 1:30 p.m. today in the Multipurpose Rm. of the UGLI. Buster Keaton... Cinema Guild will present Bus- ter Keaton in "The General"; Charlie Chaplin in "Caught in the Rain"; Edgar Kennedy in "A Pair of Tights"; and Mac Sennett's "Lizzies of the Field" at 7 and 9 p.m. today in the Architecture Aud. Double Stars .. . Prof. William Calder from An- ness Scott College, Decatur, Ga., will explain "What We Learn from Double Stars" at 8:30 p.m. today in Aud. D. BAHA'I WORLD FAITH STUDENT MEETING Friday night, July 24 8 *M 310 E. WILLIAM UNIVERSITY PLAYERS (Dept. of Speech) Next Week, Wed.-Sat. A THURBER CARNIVAL 8;00 P.M.-Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Proudly Presents Tonight THE GENERAL with Buster Keaton CAUGHT IN THE RAIN with Charlie Chaplin Plan Now To Seer- The Opera Department, School of Music in ArTh I i Mal w