"I'm Over-Insured Already!" t! 11rMtr tta BaOtt Seventy-First Yea EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 'Where Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS 'truth Wil Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MicH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Dail y ex press the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This mus t be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, AUGUST 5, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: RUTH EVENUIS Wewburgh Manager Attenpts 'Thouwjht Control' "We're working on thought control latest additions to its welfare department is right now. We feel the greatest barrier to a former deputy sheriff who was a military reducing cases is the thought barrier; that police officer. The present acting welfare is, most of those, involved in social work commissioner-named last week-is a former are not aware of where they're going to physical training instructor. end up in the long run. 'For an answer to the former, we must return "The general direction of this is rather to Mitchell's words: "Social workers feel a socialistic." responsibility to the people. We feel the people -Joseph Mitchell have a responsibility to society." City Manager What Mitchell is trying to say here is clear. Newburgh, New York He accepts only half of the old Socialist dic- THE LATEST MOVE out of Newburgh is that tum. "From each according to his ability" is peculiar agent of the Orwellian mind which what Mitchell believes. The social workers, he frightens and chills all us good, free thinking says, accept the second half: "To each accord- Americans: thought control. ing to his need." And he does not. Mitchell's plan, however, does not involve gleaming probes sunk deep into the brain HIS WORDING of the statement, however, through which electronic impulses direct our betrays an ill-conceived and inconsistent thought and action. His process is a more concept of society. What is a society? There subtle one, less apparent and more, innocent seems no way of defining this generic term to the public eye-and thus more dangerous. without stating that it is basically a group of The newest Newburgh scheme involves re- individuals. To have a responsibility to society placement of present welfare personnel by means to have responsibility to an aggregation those who are "philosophically attuned to our of individuals. feelings," Mitchell explains. No one will be To bear the obligation of maintaining a fired, so public alarm won't be raised. "But healthy society, for example, one has to insure there will be attrition." that ,the individuals, as individuals, do not starve and are properly clothed and housed. MITCHELL CON 'ESSES that he has fore- This means a responsibility to those who need saken the idea of reorienting professional food, clothes and shelter. case workers. He tried for six months and If you have a responsibility to a group, you failed. So his solution, now, is to get people who obviously must have a responsibility to each think as he does. unit that, in sum, makes up the group. The first thing Mitchell will try is to re- verse the trend away from hiring degree-hold- HIS ANALYSIS, which Mitchell would have ing caseworkers: This will be done, he says, to concede, means each individual is re- to insure a reduction in the city's welfare nrlnsible for each other individual. If we take rolls. this ecuation, and accept Mitchell's (that the Why this particular aversion to those who individual has resnonsibility for the society)- have gone to college and specifically studied vwhich is sunrin un one side of the euation both the theoretical and practical aspects of -we are entitled to sum up the other side. social work, those who are, in, a sense, "guar- '0h111 the statements that society has resoonsi- anteed" to possess a certain level of intelli- bhuit. to the individual and that the individual gence, those who have had expert instruction? 1 ,'ren'nrihiity to society are the same If Mitebll cannot acrent the outcome of his AS MITCHELL ANSWERS THIS, he claims Painintions he mast rlepct them. And if he the "college trained social worker has been does reect then, he is left with a siet in exposed to the whole equalitarian concept "hlip ansh individual is deditead to himself which is being taught in the social schools." Pl n* and h'ava no renonihilitu to anvone. His objection, then, to the people now in- else,. Tf this is true. how cn Tfithll ask his valved in administering the welfare program rip.'r e}r ndit1Ancu to # o'ent the laws ad seems to be an objection to the "equalitarian rules he siiedels in mkino? How can the concept." But 'sucha concept is the basis of --P fzrnrtion? our nation-or so our Declaration of Inde- , Une'r 'ploeh cireninmt oras it is elsr that itt pendence, Constitution and political philosoph- ^nnt. Tf Mitchell n, tc his itv to function ers tell us. Just what is there in this concept 1'1 olnt7-, he had bffar revie his thounht which repels Mitchell and what kind of people and nrpq ntion and not tr to srround him- can he find as allies? self with associats nipe thinking is as For an answer to the latter question, we warped and muddled as his own. must observe his actions. One of Newburgh's -MICHAEL OLINICR Bourguiba Seeks Leadership HABIB BOURGIBA has struck quickly and In so doing, Bourgiba has conveniently ral- at the right time, not only to regain Bizerte lied the rest of the Middle East to his cause. from the French but also to enhance his The pseudo-dictator of Tunisia has en- prestige and power among the Middle Eastern hanced his prestige in this impotant sector of nations. the world, and may mean to use it to another It is obvious that Bourgiba is making very end: the union of Tunisia and Free Algeria, little effort to gain Bizerte by true democratic which he hopes will occur eventually. processes, but there is another issue at stake that warrants such procedure. 11F BOURGIBA becomes impatient with the Bourgiba has long awaited the chance to France-Algeria negotiations, he may again prove himself -as strong and capable a leader resort to questionable procedures to gain his as perhaps the UAR's Nasser, or Tito of Yugo- ends. He could seek a mutual defense pact with slavia, and is taking advantage of the world Algeria against France. situation at present to advance these goals. Such personal-power struggle brushfires in Arab states, touched off by their emerging in- HE HAS MANAGED so far to bring France dependence, may burst into a full-scale con- and Charles de Gaulle into negotiation and flagration. has also succeeded in creating an extremely And while Habib Bourgiba is playing with awkward situation for the United States in fire, the whole cold-war arsenal may explode. the United Nations. -EARL POLE Nation Wastes Human Resources TALKS TO FANFANI: KhFo e " s 1^ INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Bite Disappearing From Soviet Bark By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THE SOVIET UNION has backed down from its most dangerous demands regarding Berlin. There are indications that the Kennedy policy is working and will continue to work if there is no flinching. The oft-repeated demand that the Western powers get out of Berlin is missing from Nikita Khrushchev's latest contribution to the furor he began nearly three years ago. It wasn't going to happen and it isn't going to happen. Khrushchev still insists that he will sign a treaty with the East German puppets giving them, in theory, _A 4 j I By PRESTON GLOVER Associated Press News Analyst MOSCOW (P) - In hard talks Thursday and softer messages published yesterday, Premier Ni- kita Khrushchev sought to im- press the West with an idea that any attempt to force the issue on Berlin would likely lead to a shoot- ing war. Further details of the Soviet premier's talk with Premier Amin- tore Fanfani of Italy came out during the day, and the reports were grim and foreboding. Evidently he told the Italian premier without mincing words that, if the Allies tried an airlift into Berlin as part of the current dispute, the planes would be shot down and the shooting would de- velop quickly into nuclear war. There would be no air bridge such as that which in 1948-49 saved West Berlin from capitulat- ing to a Russian blockade. ** * * AT THE SAME TIME Khrush- chev made it plain that he is pre- pared to negotiate. But neither in his talks with Fanfani nor in the reply messages to the Western powers did he indicate he was will- ing to settle on any terms but his own. Discussion of Ke nedy came up Thursday while Khrushchev was outlining his reaction to the Unit- ed States position on Germany. He told Fanfani, the informant said, that he was angered by the recent speech by the President and would reply to it in a speech soon. No date was set, but it is expected next week. After expressing- anger about what he considered the excessive belligerence of Kennedy's speech, Khrushchev observed (the spokes- man said), that he agreed more nearly with the positions taken by Senators Fulbright and Mansfield of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Both senators have taken positions apparently deem- ed less positive than Kennedy's. * * * YET later in his talks, Khrush- chev indicated he felt that Ful- bright and Mansfield represented about 80 per cent of Kennedy's position. Then why not approach the ne- gotiations with that in mind, Fan- fani suggested. It was then that Khrushchev insisted that Kenne- dy was more complex than the late Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. He added that in the United States everybody shouts and the man who shouts loudest wins. Kennedy, he reportedly told Fan- fani, then listens to the loudest. He told Fanfani that the se- curity of Berlin can be covered by agreements. If it wants to re- main a capitalistic city, he said, it can-but not on the basis of oc- cupation rights. These are the rights which the Allies insist re- main valid. Khrushchev said that, under a new status agreement, Allied troops could be left in West Berlin, together with Russian troops and troops of. the United Nations. Abruptly changing the subject at, one point, the informant re- lated, Khrushchev told Fanfani that such countries as Italy, with bases for American rockets, would be "our hostages." This descrip- tion also fitted England. * * * HE BLUNTLY TOLD Fanfani that, if the subject of German reunification or self-determina- tion through elections was brought up, Russia would walk out of the conference. The Allies have insist- ed that a peace treaty must be based on reunification through su- pervised elections. Khrushchev said he would not go for that but would consider some form of fed- eration as a negotiable subject. Then, coldly, he asked Fanfani if he was not afraid that, if Ger- many were reunited, he might find Chancellor Adenauer or one of his successors sitting at this same table in the Kremlin "talk- ing to us." He suggested that the German and Russian economies were com- plementary. He said Russia had large bodies of raw materials and in turn needed German machin- ery. control of Western access to Ber- lin. But that has never been in itself the dangerous point. The Communists could make such a transfer of control dan- gerous by the methods followed in attempts to apply it. The Soviet attitude of today suggests strongly that such attempts will not be permitted to involve a risk of war. The Kennedy policy of beefing up the Western military posture to convince the Reds they cannot push the Allies out of Berlin is designed to eliminate just that risk. CURRENT EMPHASIS is thus returned to a situation nottso greatly different, and not much more fraught with physical dan- ger, than the one which preceded the Geneva conference of 1955. The chief remaining danger, and at the moment not a seem- ingly great one, is that something will happen to Allied unity in the face of pressure, resulting in nego- tiated agreements weakening the Western position in B e rlin. Khrushchev is asking the British, the great temporizers, to make their own suggestions with just this purpose in mind. This didn't happen after Com- munist attempts to blockade Ber- lin and Vienna in 1948. THE SOVIET GOVERNMENT has just announced an ambitious new domestic development pro- gram, with the simultaneous ad- mission that it can be achieved only through a period of peace. To risk the hope of that achieve- ment on adventures which, even if successful, would not guarantee the world victory of Communism, would be for the Moscow rulers to risk their entire hold on the Soviet people and on, the Com- munist world movement and even their very lives. Containment, when vigorous enough, still works - at least for a time. D issolutliont "THE COMMUNITY is already in the process of dissolution where each man begins to eye his neighbor as a possible enemy, where nonconformity with the ac- cepted creed, political as well as religious, is a mark of disaffec- tion; where denunciation without specification or backing takes the place of evidence; where ortho- doxy chokes the freedom of dis- sent; where faith in the eventual supremacy of reason has become so timid that we dare not enter our convictions in the open lists, to win or lose . .." -Justice Learned Hand By JOHN GRIFFIN Associated Press News Analyst JUONG PHI, South Viet Nam OP) -South Viet Nam's strategical- ly placed racial minorities are be- ing courted, cajoled and carefully watched by both sides in this na- tion's civil war with Communist rebels. A look at the map shows the reason. About a quarter-million, primi- tive tribesmen live in the vast mountain and upland region in the inland center of South Viet Nam. This is the area near the southern end of Laos which has been increasingly used as a high- way for infiltration by the Com- munists from North Viet Nam. *; * * THE COMMUNIST rebels have been actively courting the moun- tain tribes. And they have also been working hard-with some striking results-here far to the south close to the Cambodian bor- der. The government is moving to counter this. Some 400,000 persons of Cam- bodian origin, a group with a dif- ferent language and different customs than Vietnamese, live near here and elsewhere in the far south. This particular region shows the Communist Viet Cong, using agents of Cambodian an- cestry, have in the past made mil- itary and political headway. It is called That Son (Seven Mountains) and is named for a series of steep wooded hills that rise to 700 feet abruptly from the surrounding rice fields. * * * THE BORDER with neutralist Cambodia is only a few miles away, and military authorities say the Viet Cong use it as a sanctu- ary to avoid government troops. Until recently the Viet Cong had effective, control over many villages, such as this one at the base of the seven mountains. Troops could come in, but when they left the Viet Cong came back. Politically, the Viet Cong plays, on the Cambodian minorities" complaints about neglect and bad treatment from Vietnamese au- thorities. Its success at using this, plus firm persuasion, was demon- strated several months ago when several hundred persons from this area fled across the' border ask- ing protection from Cambodia. A ; VIETNAM: Racial Problems ,J' 4 I PAWN IN COLD WAR: Mongolia Re-Enters Historical Stream THE NATIONAL EDUCATION ASSOCIA- tion, through its Michigan office, has just released a statement noting the rise in high school dropouts. These are young people of 16 and 17 years who do not complete their sec- ondary education after they have reached the minimum age requirement. Approximately one million boys and girls are in this category now and within ten years the number will rise to 7.5 million. The situation is definitely one to cause concern and cries out for remedy. The NEA states the problem, then lists the reasons that are generally known - lack of ability, desire for money in industry, lack of familial guidance, marriage. Nothing original or perceptive appears in. the document; it merely repeats those facts which are common knowledge. As a reme'dy the educators suggest, in essence, working with school authorities in solving the problem. Support for remedial reading and adult education courses are also among their, suggested concrete solutions for the problem. These ideas should not be dis- missed with a casual "I know that" attitude; they may help. preparatory work. These solutions are offered and their validity appears sound. However the real loss to society from high school dropouts is overlooked by the release - that is, the loss of those who are capable of doing high school work, who are above-average, in intelligence and who still drop out. The problem of stimulation - stimulation through more than just a raising of academic stan- dards -- is raised. From all the studies, surveys and analyses of the dropout dilemma the NEA must have some ideas on the sugject, some means to attempt a remedy. This is the gravest problem in terms of natural resource waste, whether it be on the college or high school level. It. is an area which needs expert study, if such study has not been undertaken or has proven inconclu- sive. THE PROBLEM of wasted talent has been particularly stressed on the college level. It is time some attention was drawn to the waste in high schools, instead of concentrating all efforts at the more advanced level. The situation is complex and it should not By TOM HENSHAW Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer A DESOLATE, backward land that once ruled most of the known world is returning to the mainstream of history as a stra- tegic pawn in the Cold War. It's called the Mongolian Peo- ple's Republic or Outer Mongolia. The Red-ruled land, with its 620,000 square miles and nearly a million people, sprawls over mountain, desert and high pasture squarely between the two Com- munist monoliths, China and the Soviet Union (see map). Mongolia,ruled for centuries by the Chinese, became the Soviet's oldest satellite in the early 1920s. It's a point of potential friction between Moscow and Peiping. There are indications that the United States is seeking to exploit the sore point by considering rec- ognition of the Mongolian govern- ment over the vehement objection of Nationalist China. Recently, the Soviets used Mon- golia to snub their Chinese ally. Mikhail Suslov, a secretary of the Soviet party, headed a Russian delegation to the 14th anniversary celebration of the Mongolian par- ty. Not a single Russian went to the Chinese party's 40th observ- ance. ZHAMSARAUFIN Sambu, leader of Mongolia, has announced sup- port of peaceful co-existence with the West, a position the Red Chinese claim is untenable. The Mongolians also have just sided with Russia in its documental de- tains of India and along the rivers of south China. His descendants-Marco Polo's Kublai Khan was one-were em- perors of China and India; they dominated the Middle East and. fossils, including dinosaur eggs laid by monster reptiles millions of years ago. With the exception of Ulan Ba- tor, Outer Mongolia has changed little since the days of Ghengis munists have made great efforts to lift Outer Mongolia into the 20th Century. * * * SOVIET architecture and motor vehicles dominate the capital, Ulan and isolation makes industry im- practical. Outer Monoglia may be rich in mineral deposits but as yet only coal and gold mines have been developed, although there have