clip idrigat D x Sevew~y-rhird Yar EiTED AN MANAGED sT STuDENTS OF THE UNmvEiST 'o MICWGAN . ND AUThORITY OF BOARD N CONTROL OF STUDENT PUILKCATIONs Pvil re M STUDENT NP CATONS BLDG., ANN ARBOn, Mc., PHoNE wo 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in at; reprints. TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT HIPPLER Communist Hostility: A 'Mirror Image' WE ARE BASICALLY GOOD. Therefore stead of "subversion"-but, according to everything we do-even when it ap- observers with experience on both sides pears evil-is basically good. of the mirror, their views are just as deep- They are basically bad. Therefore ly and sincerely held-and not neces- everything they do-even when It. ap- sarily more irrational - than those of pears good-is basically evil. Westerners. When the West spies on Russia, it's Cuban Premier Fidel Castro's latest commendable; our missile bases which statements provide a great opportunity border on the Soviet Union, though only for the "mirror image" to swing into ac- of military value if we strike first, never- tion again. For example: theless are "defensive"-because the Com- Castro says: We'll stop supporting Lat- munists, as the evil ones, are inherently ni American revolutions if you'll stop the aggressors. When they use concilia- trying to overthrow us. The "mirror im- tory language, they're only trying to age" replies: Don't make a deal with the "soften us up"; when it is backed by con- devil. As soon as we take the pressure crete offers, such offers are "propaganda off him, he'll go wild in Latin America. ploys." Besides, what we're trying to do in Cuba (as distinguished from what he's try- TrHEINTERESTING THING about this ing to do in Latin America) isn't subver- attitude, as many writers have ob- sion. It's liberation. served, is that it cuts both ways: citizens and leaders in Communist countries view CASTRO SAYS: Let's sit down and talk matters from a perspective that is a things over. The "mirror image" re- "mirror image" of our perspective. To plies: replies: Talk, ha! We'll come to the them, everything the West does is in- table ready for earnest negotiations, and herently evil, and all Communist moves Castro will reject all our realistic propos- are ultimately good. The epithets used als. Then he'll submit a pile of impossible may be different-"Wall Street" instead demands, call us insincere when we reject of "the Kremlin" and "colonialism" in- them and cash in on the propaganda. The only way talking with Communists can produce agreement is for us to make Priva e sil s unreasonable (translation: any) conces- sions. Castro says: Let's trade. The "mirror J SAT DOWN in the Union's Faculty Club image" replies: What? And give aid and yesterday while Hobart Taylor was comfort to the enemy? If he wants to talking to some professors during a per- trade, it must be because his economy is iod unofficially designated for interview- collapsing and his people are starving. If ing. a few Communists starve, so much the When I began taking notes he suddenly 'better. The good Cubans won't mind turned and asked, "Ah, just what is this starving a bit if it will help frustrate for?" I told him I was just a reporter. Castro. "Well, you know," he said, "I didn't And so on. think this was going to be an interview." The gist of the rest of the put-down was ANOTHER IMPORTANT feature of the that there are some things he would say "mirror image" is that it is self-rein- to those gentlemen that he just wouldn't forcing. They make an apparently friend- say to the general public. ly gesture, but we interpret it as hostile. Our reaction, therefore, is hostile. In the EVIDENTLY FACULTY members aren't face of hostility, it's both psychologically general public. Or the government is and politically difficult to be anything afraid of the press or of students. Or, but hostile. So-no matter what the in- which is closer to the government's gen- tentions of their original "friendly" eral attitude, there. are just some things move-their second move is almost sure people ought to know about and some to be genuinely hostile. We respond in things they have no right knowing about, kind, and the pattern of mutual hatred even if the government does represent is firmly established. them. And sure enough, the "mirror image" After all, the government is never continues to operate - on our side, at quite sure whether it believes what it's least. Yesterday we declared that these saying or not. issues "are not negotiable." J. GOODMAN It is too early to see what this will do to Castro's conciliatory tone. But we The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and needn't be too surprised-and we have collegiate Press Service. no business being self-righteous-if he The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the b use of all news dispatches credited t or otherwise begins making fiery anti - American credited to the newspaper. All rigts of re-publication speeches again. of all other matters here are also reserved. Publtshed daily 'uesday thremgh saturday mnrning. -KENNETH WINTER Summer subscription rates $2 by carrier, $2.o by mail. Co-Editor Second class postage paid at Aim Arbor, Mob-. IN, _ l (7 } 7 '. :Y l k a t {{ ji i i r ASIA 1 , FEIFFERI IONO UA T L WO U~tKALL05 CAL L1W NC H- f l lCtOCK Ili S.LM. C5EI Se4O FAT, 6 P Ttkl INEOMF td)4f OF MAKIVJA Tom WAHW) OUTSIL2CTHERE 21 ACK 0' W 'CAR-ARMS 0i' 60E5' A CAR HON- WLU GS M WE6® $t;"P-ATA-E6PCOUUP'T VCWVIJT HOWA L01 rOI) A'A1o~txJ' af F W6 60! 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" l-0K OUT 4-~ (,ATCRIES A6 A 171 WTkK Cot-I $S' WC ATL6- W T7 hm ~oe 60 HVR'&) AR? 3tWtORt~J Alpo WIICMfNO- t15M t2RoIS CC OFF K SASS, SOME SAC<71TfM6, SLIM, toeCU V IT M6I NEXTOC EUROPEAN COMMENTARY French Olympic Preparation FROM RAGS TO RICHES 'Unsinkable Molly' Flounders on Screen By ERIC KELLER Daily Correspondent BILTHOVEN, Holland-As the Olympic Games in Toyko are drawing near, top athletes in all countriesare preparing themselves for the competition. With every nation, the methods and spirit in- volved vary, in the West even more so than in the East; some countries are rather casually at work, while others are takingmore care than ever. France, in particular, is expend- ing great efforts in preparation for the tournament. In the past few Olympic meets, the French have made a rather poor showing. Rome, four years ago, was termed "a national disaster" by President Charles de Gaulle; only five med- als, none of which were golden, went to France. Apparently, that record was too much for the French to swallow, and a sports offensive was begun which is not equalled in any way by any other Western nation. During the past four years, na- tional assistance to sport clubs, as compared to the four years preceding Rome, was tripled. MOREOVER, a national sports program was started in the French armed forces. Top athletes who "would normally be drafted for 18 months of military service, now have a chance to take part in the endeavor. Centered in the city of Joinville at the outskirts of Paris, the program offers just four months of basic military training, with the remaining 14 TODAY AND TOMORROW Lodge as Ambassador Shows Diplomatic Skill By WALTER LIPPMANN IN ONE RESPECT at least Henry Cabot Lodge seems to have lost touch out there in Saigon with what is being thought and said here at home. When he asked President Kennedy for a difficult, not a plush, diplomatic assign- ment abroad and was offered South Viet Nam, he accepted it, believing that he was to be the ambassador of the United States. He must be astonished to find on his return that in the eyes of some of his fellow Republicans he has not been the American ambas- sador. He has been the Johnson ambassador, and the very idea of his being a faithful public servant without regard to party is dis- missed by Sen. Barry Goldwater as incredible and hypocritical. Yet, what he has shown him- self to be on his return to this country is exactly that, the faith- ful public servant who has had no ulterior purpose in serving the American government in its most difficult, dangerous and uncom- fortable foreign embassy. It would be a bad day for the republic if his breed of public man were to disappear. NO ONE who knows the meticu- lous care which President Johnson has listened to him can suppose that Mr. Lodge has been nursing some great grievance and resent- ment with which he would stoke up the fires of the election cam- paign. His long interview with the formidable New York Times staff shows him to be a prudent diplo- mat and a skilled and discriminat- ing reporter. He believes in the policy which he and his successor, Gen. Max- well Taylor, have been conduct- ing, and, as a good diplomat, he avoided in speculating on what the future will bring-be it an escalation of the war or an escala- tion of the search for a political solution. What Mr. Lodge had to say about the nature of the war was highly informative as to the re- lations between political and mili- tary measures and also as to the degree and the kind of interven- tion carried out by North Viet Nam. But what he refrained from talking about was no less impres- sive. There he was the true dip- lomat. For he did not say that we would, and he did not say that war specifically and only under exactly defined circumstances. The series of vague threats have, I realize, been intended to warn Ho Chi Minh and Mao Tse-Tung that we shall not be pushed out of Indo China without using our full power, not merely our con- tigent in South Viet Nam, to pre- vent it. We have wanted to make sure that the Chinese and the North Viet Namese did not act as if we would never fight. Such a warning was useful. But it should have been delivered privately through diplomatic chan- nels. It would have been at least as credible, and even more cred- ible if it were carefully spelled out. Furthermore, it would not have compelled the adversary to make public counter threats and so give the impression that a war of words was on. MR. LODGE SAYS that he does not see how a campaign issue can be made out of Southeast Asia. He must have meant that no rational issue could be raised by the Re- publican Party. For, theoretically, there are two possible issues that can be raised. One would be to insist that Southeast Asia is not a vital American interest and that, as Sen. Wayne Morse proposes, we should withdraw. The Republican Party will cer- tainly not take that line. The other issue would be to argue that the war can be won by threaten- ing and if necessary using nuclear weapons. Not even Senator Gold- water will dare to campaign on that issue. There remains then only the present policy of re- enforcing the resistance, building up the American military presence in the region and waiting for de- velopments which will permit a successful political solution. S 4 SOME RECENT intelligence es- timates, if we can believe them, indicate that Red China may not be able or willing to risk a military showdown over the conquest of Southeast Asia. We must be care- ful, however, to discount care- fully all reports that tell us what we wish to hear, that our ad- versary is weak. He may in fact be wreak. But the Chinese are a quarter of the human race, and they are brave. Horcover, we must avoid the extreme of wishful thinking, which is to believe that a war between China and the United States the Soviet Union would be neutral or on our side. months devoted to sports dis- cipline. Six hundred places are present- ly open at Joinville, with an ad- ditional 400 soon to be available. Of the present openings, 200 places go to light athletics, 100 to swimming, with skiing, basketball and rowing each getting 50. Box- ing has 30 places while cyclism has 20. But regardless of the type of sport, all interns have to go through a three-step training course consisting of overall muscle training, increased conditioning and perseverance, and optimum coordination of the first two steps. * *. * JOINVILLE has a subsidiary in Chamonix in the French Alps for winter sports; and all the French- men who presently excel in winter sports have partaken in the Join- ville program. Among Joinville's several suc- cesses thus far, most of them were unexpected. The European swim- ming championship in Leipzig in 1962, the light athletics chain- pionships in Belgrade, Paris and New York last year and this year are witnesses to this development. Hence, the United States and other traditionally athletic nations have already felt the impact of this new sports offensive. In To- kyo, then, a great French come- back appears likely. *. * * IN WOMEN'S SPORTS, how- ever, the U.S. still has an edge over France. Joinville includes training for men only, so women must complete their training in the "traditional way." The sports offensive is obviously designed to promote the glory of France; but despite its obvious success, much criticism has been levelled at the Joinville program. This program, is, in fact, Just a hair's breadth removed from pro- fessionalism. Members of the Com- munist bloc were the pacemakers in this development, with France merely following suit. If this trend continues, soon the question of Olympic success no longer will lie in the hands of the individual, but in the hands of the legislators who appropriate the funds for national sports ef- forts. OTHER critical considerations concern the psychic stresses of people who are so exclusively trained for sports. No mental di- versification is offered to the sports soldiers; depressions, or closemindedness often result. Thus, the old principle of a sound mind in a sound body seems about to be shelved. At any rate, it is obvious that such prepara- tions for the Olympic Games is not in the traditional Olympic spirit. At the State Theatre 'THE Unsinkable Molly Brown" is a True Confessions maga- zine story come to life, and for those who enjoy that sort of thing it may not be too bad. Debbie Reynolds is hillbilly Molly who leaves her home in backwoods Colorado to reach the top-which to her includes being a high society socialite in Denver and being able to read and write. Her plan is to marry a millionaire; after the money, the rest will come naturally. Unfortunately, she falls in love with an easy-going miner named John J. Brown. When he learns what will please her, though, he works hard and builds a nice cabin, which is enough to make Molly consent to marrying him. He follows this up by selling a silver mine he discovered for $300,000. * * 4. UNFORTUNATELY, Molly hides the money in a stove where her new husband promptly acciden- tally burns it. A few moments later he tosses a pick over his shoulder and the rocks it loosens reveal a huge gold deposit. The Browns then move to Den- ver. Unfortunately, their fun- loving, informal, folksy, friendly, warm, human ways make them thoroughly unpopular with their neighbors. A friendly priest hap- pens along, however, to explain that they are unpopular because they too closely resemble the not- too-distant past of their fellow socialites. He suggests they take a trip to Europe. They do. Unfortunately, Mr. Brown hates high society, and even culture, and he longs to get back to his good old home town of Leadville. Molly is getting what she thinks she wants, so after they go back home and are again mistreated by Denver society, they split up. 4* * a MOLLY GOES BACK to Europe where she discovers she doesn't find happiness in being "Queen of the World," while John J. finds he can't be happy without Molly back home in Leadville. So Molly comes home on of all ships the Titantic, which gives her an op- portunity to prove herself both unsinkable and a heroine. She re- unites with her loved one in Den- ver and they appear destined to live happily ever after-whether in Leadville or Denver remains unresolvable and unresolved. Some people may find humor in the way that snobbish high society gets its due comeupence at the hands of Molly. Probably more will be annoyed with the stereotyped and even despicable characters that are Mr. and Mrs. Brown. THE SCENERY is beautiful in the clean, glass-enclosed Holly- wood sense. There are only aboit three songs, all of which are all right, but one of which is sung four times. Both Debbie Reynolds and Harve Presnell (John Brown) display good vocal ability. In fact the musical numbers at the be- ginning are a tremendous relief from the Beverly Hillbillies' "Granny" manner that Miss Reyn- olds displays as a poor little coun- try girl during portions of the first half of the film. The opening scenes are the most entertaining, with things going progressively downhill from there. A low point is reached when Mol- lie single-handedly saves a life- boat full of scared passengers after the Titanic hits an iceburg. It may go down in movie history as one of the more unbelievable scenes of all time. Most musicals haven't travelled the route from Broadway to Holly- wood successfully. This one, not that great on Broadway to begin with, didn't have a chance. -Edward Herstein AID CUBA? U.S. 'National Interest' Allows Sympathy Only THE UNITED States Depart- ment of Commerce has refused to let the Emergency Committee for Disaster Relief to Cuba send 3500 pounds of powdered milk to the Hospital Nacional in Havana for children who had no milk A WAY TO GO Spoof Sparkles Sporadically THERE USED to be (and still may exist) penny gum machines that had intermixed with the bubble gum all sorts of prizes. The only problem was that it took an awful lot of pennies and a great deal of unwanted gum before you actually got the prizes you wanted. "What A Way To Go" offers the same frustrating experience. Basically, "What A Way To Go" is a spoof on movies in general with certain types occasionally singled out. Shirley Maclaine is the poor little hick-town girl who only wants to live in love. However she seems cursed with a "Midas" touch and a succession of husbands make fan- tastic fortunes for her and then die. The general idea of the takeoff is evident from the moment Shir- ley's mother issues her opinion of a neighbor girl: "I hate her guts". This same comment is also evidence of the heavy-handedness that nervades the film and eventually ruins it. after Hurricane Flora ravaged the east coast Cuban cattle country last October. Although President John F. Kennedy favored shipment of food to Cuba "for humanitarian rea- sons"-that was on February 4, 1962-his Secretary of Commerce decided that the powdered milk shipment would not be "in the national interest." (Does any loyal American need any other reason than that?) The secretary, whose name is Luther H. Hodges, is right. LET THE children of Cuba have milk and they will live to grow up. If they live to grow up, they may grow up to be Communists. Keep them from getting milk and they will die, and we'll have that many fewer Communists to contend with. And their grief- stricken parents will overthrow Castro. It's as simple as that. * « s WHEN THE five-day hurricane struck, Ambassador (Adlai) Stev- enson expressed in the United Na-