P t.. 1 . p Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS AFTER NEHRU: Internal Disarray Challenges India I F-W; = : - ',WM "Where Opinions Are Pree STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDC., ANN ARBOR, Micyt., PHONE NO 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, JUNE 23, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM Republican Unconvietion: Sell-Out of History UNACCUSTOMED as they are to public reversals-which is evidently not very unaccustomed-the Republicans seem doomed to play out their presidential nominations farce straight through their July 13 convention and the November elections with nary a deviation from its high-comedy script. No one, not even Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater himself, thought that the re- actionary faction could pull the ultimate coup in California earlier this month. But a coup there was, nor would more astute social scientists say it was all that un- expected. Victor by a hair was silver-slip- pery-tongued Goldie, all the while and to this very day still proclaiming that it really wasn't true, that he really doesn't have the nomination in the bag. (The As- sociated Press now gives him 694 dele- gate votes, 39 more than he needs for a first-ballot victory.) Perhaps in the first few days after the fateful primary Goldie's modesty was well-founded. More likely, though, things were really uncertain for only a few hours-until even more modest Nelson A. Rockie decided that he had held his fin- ger in the dike hole long enough and abandoned a good three-fourths of Old Grand Party to death by 'Water. Did he figure that three-fourths wasn't such a substantial majority after all? Did he think he would have less of a chance of retaining his governorship if he continued fighting Barry to the end and lost than if he threw in the towel after California? Did he really think that soft Willie Scranton of Pennsylvania or novice George Romney could stop the steamroller? Was there NOTHING to be gained by, keeping up-or beginning anew -the battle? WHATEVER THEIR CAMPAIGN and fund-raising-dinner rhetoric, these Republicans can hardly be called vigor- ous and courageous. They do not-if, in- deed, members of either party ever do-- hold principle above party. And the silliest of all the ironies is that by placing .surface party unity and individual re-election above serving the vast majority of GOP voters with a sensi- ble candidate, by waiting until Goldie had charged to within two inches of their faces before opening fire with Wil- lie Scranton, the Republicans are all but doomed to have one of their most meager slates of elected officials in history. Who will elect all those senators, governors and representatives from a party led by Barry Goldwater? Not that Goldie is anything like a bloodthirsty trooper-to-the-death. He can't afford half that much courage. Could he have racked up his potential convention victory by proclaiming the principles he really believes? His only hope for the nomination it seems, and his only hope in the final race, has been com- promise, ambiguity and ,retreat. And -whether, if elected in November, he keeps retreating for popularity's sake or re- turns to his lone outpost, the country will be in a sorry state. BUT NOT TOO MUCH sorrier than if one of the other GOP unlikelies got in. Second only to Rockie, who it seems be- trayed a moral obligation to continue fighting, Willie Scranton's behavior is the classic study in political unconvic- tion. His internal dialogue a few weeks ago as he desperately tried to decide if he was good enough for the presidency probably ran something like this: Editorial Staff KENNETH WINTER...................... Co-Editor EDWARD HERSTEIN.................... Co-Editor MARY LOU BUTCHER.. . . . ........ Associate Editor CHARLES TOWLE.....................Sports Editor JEFFREY GOODMAN ...................Night Editor ROBERT HIPPLER................. .... Night Editor LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM...............Night Editor Rusiness Staff "Hmm, Ike is interested in a stop- Goldwater movement. Maybe I wouldn't make such a terrible president after all. Mainly, there aren't many other choices. Better have a speech-writer get up some- thing that'll make the press think I'm good and hot. "Oops. The Gettysburg Castle has put out the no-go flag. Couldn't beat off all those countryside robbers alone without help from the feudal Grandaddy. Maybe I wouldn't make such a hot president after all. "Hem. Haw. Um. Ah. "On millionth thought, maybe it might be fun. That underling thinks I can make it. By Abraham, I'll do it. Maybe I wouldn't make such a terrible president after all." MOST LIKELY SCRANTON was inspir- ed-or re-inspired, or re-re-inspired- by the rousing verbal cannonade deliv- ered to a convocation of state governors a few days before. The barrage came from none other than G. W. Romney. Somebody has to stop Barry, he said. Barry'll ruin us. We've got to muster all our forces. Who wants to volunteer? Hem. Haw. Um. Ah. The only thing that distinguishes the whole absurd affair from Chamberlain's impotent appeasement of Hitler is that the Allied GOP's-even if they should ever get allied-will lose the war. But the final joke is always saved for last. Knowing deep down that the mo- tions they're going through probably won't even stop angry television viewers from complaining to the networks about a dull coronation in San Francisco, the Republican kingmakers are already pig- eonholed into firing their ultimate bomb: the smokiest black cigars in the smallest convention rooms, somehow to get Gol- die to run on a "mainstream" platform. THUS GOLDIE won't be Goldie and the issues that really exist will vanish be- hind a silver cloud of campaign finery. And of course Goldie, if elected, will stick to that platform immovably, never listening to his 19th century conscience, forgetting all his beliefs, and everything will be just hunky-dory. After all, presi- dents are only mouthpieces for platforms anyway. And so the Republicans are turning their leadership as disloyal opposition for the next four years over to a man few of them would vote for if there were an- other choice. You'd think a party that leans so heavily on history would read some of it. -JEFFREY GOODMAN Sex Surveys ABOUT A MONTH AGO, Oakland Uni- versity Chancellor Durward B. Varner fired the student editor of that school's campus paper. The editor, Wolf Metzger, had taken a survey of the sexual activi- ties of Oakland's resident students and had ignored Varner's request to suppress the survey results and even the fact that the survey had been taken. The chancellor defended his action by pointing to the public-relations disaster the publication of the results would have precipitated. "If the phony results were tabulated, it would be damaging to the character of every girl on the campus." Some observers suggested that Varner 's fears were groundless and that with an exaggerated concern for public relations, the chancellor had "pushed the panic button." But Varner dismissed such as- sertions. After all, who should be in a better position to predict public reaction than a mature, experienced, responsible administrator? ABOUT THREE WEEKS AGO, the stu- dent editors of the Collegiate, the Grand Rapids Junior College campus paper, also took a survey-a survey which nn a a-atlnt nv P hl eiaatino- seal- Editor's Note The following is the first of two articles analyzing the political situation in India f l- lowing the death of the late Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. V. A. Pal Panandiker, a research assistant at the institute of Public Administration during 1960-62, earn- ed a master's degree in public ad- ministration in 1961 and his doc- torate in 1962. He also served as president of the Indian Student As- sociation during 1960-61. By V. A. PAI PANANDIKER Daily Guest Writer O CA-With the death of Prime .)Minister Nehru, as President Radhakrishnan has remarked, an epoch has come to an end. For nearly half a century the Mahat- ma and this "Jewel of India" be- tween them provided the virtually unquestioned leadership to the Indian nation. Nehru was really more than an epoch; he was a phenomenon. That he was the Prime Minister of India was merely incidental for the power he wielded over the nation outstrippedalldthe power that any other ruler of India has had or is likely to wield. But while the prime minister's death was a calamity, it was an inevitable calamity. In fact those who were knowledgeable about the true state of Nehru's health have been fully aware ever since his illness in 1960 that he was holding to it by a thin edge. And ever since Bhuvaneshwar the crisis of national leadership was expected any moment. Perhaps it came only a little too early on May 27, 1964. Now that the moments of na- tional grief have been replaced by sober thoughts all the questions about the fate of the country after Mr. Nehru have come back with a vengeance. And these questions look menacingly real and frighten- ing both in the international and national spheres. ABOVE ALL was the tremen- dous international stature of Prime Minister Nehru partly aris- ing out of the near-absolute authority he wielded over the In- dian nation, partly because of the factth thhefheld the reins of this country far longer than the head of any powerful country in the world. In other words Prime Minister Nehru as an international force had to be reckoned with in the settlement of every major inter- national issue. This also gave the prime minister a relatively easier time in handling issues affecting India. In this entire process, how- ever, he began to exert his in- fluence in far greater proportion than warranted by India's inter- nal strength. The implications of this phe- nomenon for his successor, Lal Bahadur Shastri, are quite clear. Not only will he suffer by com- parison with Mr. Nehru but he will also lack the various powerful forces supporting Mr. Nehru. For one thing the successor is not likely to obtain the massive popu- lar support that Mr. Nehru enjoyed; he may not even enjoy the strong support of the Congress Party; and finally, being a novice his international stature will be necessarily small. IN REAL TERMS the lesser in- ternational status of the new prime minister will mean that the status of the country will also be cut down to its size. The influence India will henceforth wield will be more closer to its internal eco- nomic and military strength. This necessarily implies that India's Sposition on international issues affecting it such as Kashmir will be weaker. But essentially, India's real problems will be at home because in the ultimate analysis a coun- try's strength comes from its in- ternal conditions. At the moment India's internal conditions are in a disarray. Communal disharmony, low rate of economic growth and an unsettled Kashmir issue are sapping the nation's vitality. In the result, a certain amount of confusion in India's economic and political affairs appears in- evitable and imminent. IN RETROSPECT Nehru was at once India's strength as well as weakness. So long as he lived that nation enjoyed an international status and influence far beyond what its internal resources com- manded. To that extent Mr. Nehru was India's tower of power. But a nation which is so de- pendent upon an individual, how- soever great he may be, faces, upon his loss, a national crisis far greater than merely governmental. Such indeed has been India's greatest weakness. As great a pol- icy maker and statesman as Nehru was, his skills as a leader and ad- ministrator are far lessened by the fact that after his departure the nation cannot rest assured either of a set of able successors or of the governmental machinery. In prospect India today is much better psychologically prepared for this crisis than ever. The Congress Party has had enough time to reconcile itself with this situation. The moderates in Congress led by Mr. Shastri and Mrs. Indira Gandhi are still in substantive control of the Party. International opinion, especially of the two major powers, is largely favour- able to India. It is true that there will not be another Jawaharlal Nehru for several years to come. But one may ask whether one is needed. Mr. Nehru was a product of a mas- sive societal crisis in India; he was an epoch-maker. The epoch is made; what is needed now is a set of men and women to trans- late it in terms of programs for the betterment of the nation. In- dia's crisis is real but if she can- not face it today she never will. TOMORROW: Prospects for the Shastri government '' GUAK VMM ,A15 -98DT, fVT f T' O OT R 5)tUAL OOST" ' LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Oakland Story Facts Called 'Inaccurate' To the Editor: I WRITE this letter in unsolicited behalf of my good friend, Loren B. Pope. On Oct. 1, 1963, Mr. Pope left the employ of Oakland University, where he had served as assistant to the chancellor. Three weeks after, he took a posi- tion with the Educational Re- search Council of Greater Cleve- land. To the best of my knowledge, he has not returned to Rochester or the Oakland area since. He has been in communication with neither the chancellor nor any other official of the university, and in very sporadic communica- tion with a very few students. However, on May 5, The Daily carried two statements credited to Mr. Pope which he could not have authored. The statements were embedded in a story about the firing of Oakland Observer Editor, Wolf Metzger, by Chan- cellor Varner. Mr. Pope was quoted as having said: "Basically, the reason for the action was that Varner panicked." Any statement of what "basically" occurred could only be made by someone who was at Oakland at the time of the incident. Therefore, I sug- gest that the author of the story check his notes and discover what Mr. Pope really said, since I am convinced that he would never have pretended himself an expert on a situation from which he was so distant. IN AN INDIRECT quote later in the same story, Mr. Pope is credited with having asserted that Oakland's enrollment is'declining. The facts are that since 1959, our enrollment has increased from 570 /to 1498, with a steady annual in- crement of over 200 students. Why should he tell The Daily that en- rollment is declining, when he knows better? Again, I ask that the story's author check his notes, for the statements attributed to Mr. Pope, which are, respectively, specious and inaccurate, are a mark against Mr. Pope. --Daniel Polsby Oakland University Rochester, Mich. Interviewed in Cleveland two weeks ago, Pope acknowledged the accuracy of The Daily's story and of the remarks attributed to him. The one mistake in the story-for, which we apologize to him-was in calling Pope a former education writer for the New York Times. His position with the Times was educa- tion editor. --K. Winter Civil Rights To the Editor: ISSISSIPPI IS preparing for a summer invasion of college- age civil rights workers-and not by stock piling "mint julep mak- ins." This army will face well trained and equipped local police forces and a battery of recently passed state laws designed to dis- courage assembly for almost any- thing except church picnics. This invasion, we feel, is an unfortun- ately necessary thing. It has been firmly documented that the deep South's conser- vative white power structure is moved only by direct action. Like- wise, the great mass of white "moderates" acts positively only when faced with well organized pressure. Hence, there is real need for the temporary leadership and aid that sensible college students can give, But although their work may help secure some of the more basic civil rights for Negroes, temporary workers do little toward actually solving the area's racial problems. Consequently, we also hope that following this summer of our idealism, this army will be fol- lowed by a force dedicated to the long task of remolding a way of life. This force must consist of people who will live and work in the state, and who will not slip into the easy hypocrisy which characterizes 99 per cent of the newcomers. There is no place in Mississippi for missionaries. There is a place for Americans who simply want to help other Americans, not just Negroes. The ability to be tolerant of intolerance and yet retain one's sense of purpose is perhaps the key to effectiveness in this work. THERE ARE PLENTY of inhs in Mississippi for educated people; to settle an the lack of personnel to fill them you Ann Ar is one of the state's major prob- we extend# lems. Never has there been a better yourself un opportunity for progressive forces Mions. from outside to become effectively -Robert Fa established. -Rima Nic We invite this summer's forces Leland. M 'THOMASINA' Disney Paints As One Big Can, d stay awhile. And to bor armchair idealists the invitation to test der battlefield condi- rmer, NR '53, '58, '61 kell Farmer, '57 ississippi Life dy Bar At the Michigan Theatre WALT DISNEY is a lie. With "The Three Lives of Thomasina" he has again dipped into that cauldron of common goo he uses to disguise his adventures in the world of business as adventures in the world of child enlighten- ment. , From the physical presence of Disneyland to the visual and aural presence of "Fantasia," "Snow White" and the sundry other eye-appealing cartoons, true-life adventures, fact-turned-to-legend comedy-dramas, Disney and his cohorts have been palming off on the parents of the world for a generation a false, pretetious candy bar that drips in sucrose and tears. * * * HE LAYS OUT the facts of life before children as though they are all part of a game-consisting of laughter interspersed with tears, with the mental processes held down to the lowest common demon- inator and the so-called spiritual ones pushed up into a heaven-sent gold-spangled goodness that all people instinctively possess, except, of course, the cold, black villain. This is how the ages have always held the common man in subjugation and Disney has dared not to be different. In "Thomasina," Disney uses every ploy used in previous stories, to the detriment of the sane and to the glee of unwary children and ignorant parents. Children bound throughout the film with cute, clear faces; cute, clear lines meant to be funny; cute, troubled parents meant to be straightened out in the course of events and, naturally, cute, constant pets. DISNEY BOWS DOWN, once in a while, to the fact that death must come, but happiness can't be far behind. Goodness counts all badness eventually falls, and the "happily ever after" theme is quick on the characters' heels. Beyond this, "Thomasina" suffers from several technical faults. The sound stage was left only briefly to make certain scenes not otherwise possible indoors. An artificial flavor is thus endgendere6. beyond what faults have been made by the scriptwriter, the director and other "talents" involved in the production. --Michael Juliar 1111:AWA.:9 1AJLWA.L 1 AULlN 11 VI Jvua All FEIFFER A 'W 5VK.R tirK DANCE T IZE THE RKSTWs5 Nit tor' TO ESCAPE. FROMA 6ORWM" rZ FROM RESF'Nt- 8(41Y- ; . Ff-- iLz FROM COOL FROM AUt THE N- / QVATE A TA4 V6IRI' T0 LIFT ONESELF oOU 41 -7 Mflrryvri AND NF HAVE TO~' ...., . . 'V 46mr,