Waterfront Fog Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "Where Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * 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 all reprints. SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: PETER STEINBERGER WALTER LIPPMANN: American Policy In Berlin SINCE VIENNA there have been many statements about Berlin from both sides of the Iron Curtain. They are significant for what they do say. They are no less significant for what they do not say. Each side has said what is the vital interest which it will fight for rather than surrender. The West has made it unmistakably clear that it will fight for, rather than surrender, the freedom of West Berlin and freedom of access to West Berlin. The Soviet government has made it very clear that it will sign a peace treaty with East Germany and it argues from it all the legal consequences. But the West has not said it will refuse to discuss the guarantees of the The Soviet Plot And U.S. Social Problems WELL, I guess a few of us can heave a deep them are, they de sigh of relief and get a good night's sleep weaknesses: inability now that Brig. Gen. T. B. Birdsong has in- faults and an improp formed us that the Freedom Rides were "di- of Communist action. rected, inspired and planned by known Com- By blaming some munists." movement for protest For a while it looked as though there might cal, social or econon really be something wrong in American so- that no honest, de ciety, an inequality which demanded protests share these protests: and public attention and, above all, change. or unfair about what But now that we realize that the deft hands there should be, the s of the Soviet Plotters controlled the whole without agitation or affair, we can dismiss the purpose of the Freedom Riders as un-American, the problem THE INVALIDITY they sought to solve as non-existent and seen by reference the harrasment, beating and jailings they re- American- history. Th ceived as well-deserved. in Southern society ( Another American institution-segregation not change significa and the denial of basic human rights-will Only as reforms were( be defended and preserved because its op- as militant non-viol ponents have been labeled Communists. sit-in, stand-in andf of the inequalities rec WE HAVE ALREADY seen this principle in The actions and d as the Congress of Ra operation in the case of the House Un- ost of the Freedom American Activities Committee. Though -HUAC mot of the reledo continues to violate the provisions of the that our theoretical b Constitution regarding freedom of speech and hide gross inequalities association and the right to a just trial, Con- gress continues-to suport it by an overwhelm- CORE, of course, ha ing majority. Communist party. It voted to the legitimat This can be attributed to the committee's is wrong with at leas highly efffective campaign to discredit its L opponents. The committee believes-and has Let us suppose, hot convinced most others-that the campaign to dom Rides were spa reform or abolish it are machinations of the ommunist. Does th international Communist conspiracy. are ? dpr After large numbers of college students fuere tcourse not. demonstrated at the HUAC hearings in San f protest merly Francisco, the committee helped sponsor a not ultimately commi 45-minute motion picture--the controversial of our theoretical, a "Operation Abolition"-which underhandedly ofcabeliefs.ro wmm tries to show that Communists dominated and iabees. manipulated the students. WE MUST RECOG mands for Consti T IS NOT too difficult to foresee a similar seek to defend and g film "documenting" the Communist in- may be interestingt fluence on the Freedom Riders: well known Communists mixed u Red agents boarding buses (it doesn't matter civil liberties, but soa where they are going), shifty-eyed students of all political leaning with criminal records (truancy from school) The Freedom Rider sitting at a lunch counter, loyal Americans drawing attention tot beating the Communist and Communist dupes tention to the problem with fists and pipes. The film will no doubt do not ask us to appr( carry the name of a patriotic group, the voice to dedicate ourselves of a charming young man and the support and others of major of millions. well being. Ridiculous as highway patrolman Birdsong's This is where our p charges and possible attempts to popularize D ormitory L*iin monstrate two essential to admit our society has er conception of the value e subversive, treasonous ting aspects of our politi- rMic character, we claim dicated American could there is nothing wrong is going on here and, if ituation will correct itself public concern. of this position can be e to the last century of he position of the Negro as but one example) did ntly from 1850 to 1950. ordered by the courts and ent resistors evolved. the freedom rides, were any tified. demands of such groups acial Equality (which led Rides) take the appear- ecause they demonstrate beliefs in equalitarianism s. as no connection with the is an organization de- e cause of righting what t one part of society. wever, that all the Free- nsored and directed by is meanhthat the rides blem which ,isn't really There is no gain in re- denying the valicity of because their source is tted to the continuation well as practical, poli- -NIZE the validity of 'de- tutional rights and must uarantee these rights. It to note that there are p in the campaigns for are a lot of other people s and backgrounds. s are not concerned with theihselves, but only at- n of discrimination. They ove their biographies, but to solving this problem concern to our ethical roper concern should lie. -MICHAEL OLINICK SHORTAGE, CROWDING: Hawaiian Land Problems By PAT GOLDEN Associate City Editor Special To The Daily HONOLULU - Poor land use caused by vast private hold- ings is a major problem for the state of Hawaii, Prof. John Stark- er of the University of Hawaii said recently. Before its colonization period in the nineteenth century, Hawaii was owned entirely by its royal family. Western missionaries then brought in the concept of land, ownership and bought up huge tracts of land. "There's a saying around here that the missionaries came to do good and did well," Prbf. Starker, who also appears on radio and television daily as a news analyst, commented. These holdings are now family estates, and the families refuse to sell any acreage. A second kind of private holding is the huge territory owned by the United States armednservices. Much, of this is no longer used at all, but the government will not give it up. The lack of land available for use creates unneces- sary shortages of food, jobs and living space. Although Hawaiian land is high- ly productive, 30 per cent of the state's food must be imported from the mainland.Feed corn does not grow well, so beef is imported from the mainland along with lamb. "If we stopped raising so much sugar cane-which takes 18 to 24 months to grow-we could get five crops a year out of this land," Prof. Starker said. He hopes more land can be converted to small truck farms, which will supply more of the islands' food needs. "Right now we're using most of our land to produce exports so we can import food that could easily be grown on the islands. We could grow enough to supply ourselves and still export." * * * - FARM LABORERS in Hawaii receive more than double the pay that mainland laborers earn. Con- sequently cane and pineapple plantation owners are rapidly mechanizing their farms to over- come high overhead. Prof. Stark- er claims that diverting much of the low-profit cane land into need- ed vegetables would also create a greater demand for labor. The land in estates severely limits available building proper- ty in Hawaii resulting in extreme- ly high real estate prices. Honolulu is one of the few ci- ties in the world where land is sold by the square foot instead of the front-foot. Valuable land, near Waikiki Beach, for instance, sells at $60 per square foot. Most homes are built on leased land belonging to the estates. Land developers, too, lease prop- erty for house building. Advertising Freedom "-. -AND how to advertise free- freedom? Well, some may say there is the obvious freedom of the American bargain base- ment-the freedom to choose what money will not always buy in the Soviet Union. Recent visitors to Russia say this is something that Soviet tourists in America could understand. Soviet tourist offi- cials seem to think they would also appreciate the officient ho- tels and the 'speedy, silent ele- vators. "But all such things are only material by-products of the Amer- ican dream." Cannot the real- the moral-revolution of one peo- ple be explained to another rev- olutionary people in terms more discriminating and eloquent than these? "Little by little perhaps, in shared responses to natural gran- deur, to art, to music. And to ideas, when these can be savored in the environment that helped give them birth and was in turn changed by them. In such unad- vertised, unexpected disclosures, the story will at last be told across political curtains and chasms of national experience. Meanwhile a word about elevators may do no harm." -Christian Science Monitor Henry Kaiser is presently drain- ing a lake on Oaku for a housing development, but even for a proj- ect of this size land is leased from an estate. * * * PROF. STARKER noted that one solution to the housing prob- lem is to build man-made islands near the Hawaiian group. One is now in the planning stage. "Hawaii is a pioneer in state planning. We now have a 20-year master plan, which is really look- ing to the future." Statehood also offers help in the land problem. As a terri- tory, Hawaii did not have a voice in the administration of military units in the area. Now its con- gressmen can improve matters. "When we were a territory the Army wouldn't buy any local pro- duce. They shipped it all over from the mainland. We grow the best lettuce you can buy, but the Army insisted on shipping lettuce in refrigerated boats and planes. "When we received our state- hood, our senators spoke up and now they're buying local produce for the Army." He hopes Hawaiian congressmen can induce the government to re- lease some -of its land holdings for more profitable use. Prof. Starker sees breaking the wills of the old estates as the basic solution to the land prob- lem, however. The issue has gone to court several years in the past with little success. The court fights will continue until the es- tate lands are freed for public use, he claims. War? "NO RIGHT-MINDED American wants to see this country en- gaged in a full-scale war, but when our enemy is determined and com- mitted to world domination, when each month brings a new crisis and a new expansion of the Com- munist empire, it becomes obvious that unless we are ready to stand firm and to take the risk of war, we have no alternative but ulti- mate surrender." -Sen. Barry Goldwater freedom of West Berlin. And the Soviet government has not said that it will support the East Ger- man government in a blockade or in the occupation of West Berlin. Thus far, both sides have been both firm and cautious, vehement that they will not surrender their vital interests and careful not to close the doors to negotiations. The doors would be closed if Khrushchev declared that the Al- lies must evacuate West Berlin. The doors would be closed if we refused to discuss West Berlin. But these doors, which are the critical ones, have not been clos- ed. That is what, Mayor Willy Brandt of West Berlin seems to have meant when he said the other day that the situation is very dangerous but that it may not be as dramatic as some sup- pose. * * * THE BASIC AMERICAN posi- tion has always been that the problem of Berlin can be solved definitively only if the West Ger- mans are reunited and the whole of Berlin becomes the capital of Germany. But, unhappily, there is no vis- ible chance of reuniting the two Germanys. They have been divid- ed for fifteen years, and in that time almost allof Europe on both sides of the Iron Curtain has ac- quired vested .interests which op- pose the reunion of Germany. There are, of course, the Soviet Union and all its satellites, es- pecially Poland and Czechoslova- kia, which would regard one Ger- many of 80 million people, armed by and allied with the United States, as a mortal danger. But they are not alone. The truth is that France and Britain are de- cided as a matter of undeclared national policy to prevent the uni- fication of the two Germanys. The flourishing idea of "European unity" hashas one of its cardinal purposes that cementing of West Germany into Western Europe in order to obviate the danger of an independent, united, armed and venturesome Germany. * * * BECAUSE the Soviet Union will not permit the reunification of Germany, because it has in this unavowed support of almost all of Western Europe, including a very large section of Western Germans, there is no prospect of solving the Berlin problem accord- ing to the classic American form- ula. This is the setting in which the problem of West Berlin is posed today. There are some who say that there would be no problem if Khrushchev had not deliberately and unnecessarily created one. I am afraid they' have not fully understood the problem. For while the Communists do not like the status quo 'in Berlin-showplace, propaganda, espionage and es- cape hatch-the West also has a good deal to worry about. It would be a wiser policy, it seems to me, to recognize the fact that for the indefinite future the two Germanys will not "reunite, and to insist as a matter of posi- tive Western policy, not as a shamefaced concession to the So- viets, our new guarantees to meet this new situation, guarantees un- der which West Berlin can live confidently and in freedom until the day, now so remote, when it will again be the capital of Ger- many. I am convinced that the failure by the President to take such a positive line will mean that he has surrendered the initiative in Ger- man affairs to Khrushchev. (c) 1961 New York Herald Tribune, Inc. RED CHINA: Laos Hope By CARL HARTMAN Associated Press News Analyst HIGHLY PLACED AMERICAN officials hope the ideological clash between the Soviet Union and Red China may save Laos from being sucked in to the Com- munist sphere - at least for a while. Under the surface, and some- times above it, the two biggest Communist powers jockey for posi- tion. Red China wants more in- fluence in Communist bloc coun- cils. It might be strengthened if Communism took over Laos en- tirely. These American sources say Moscow would not take kindly to such expansion of Chinese in- fluence in Southeast Asia. A big push by pro-Communist troops in Laos was halted by a cease-fire May 3, though there have been many violations. For the moment, the Laotian adminis- trative and royal capitals-Vien- tiane and Luang Prabang - are no longer threatened. * * * THE CEASE-FIRE, both the Soviet Union and Red China join- ed western and neutral powers at the conference in Geneva. All the participants say ,they want to help make Laos neutral. Although each has different ideas about why and how this should be done, optimists see some chance they will agree to do it. The Russians have taken the lead in supporting the pro-Com- munists rebels in Laos, though China is much closer to the scene. Russian planes have run an airlift to the fighting fronts. Possibily the Russians are try- ing to buy influence within the Communist bloc as a whole. In the same way, Red China has been using special economic aid to for- tify its influence far from home in Albania. S* * * MOSCOW SEMS in no great hurry to communize Laos. Several reasons have been suggested. The Russians are said to want to avoid: 1) A spectacular success in an area more vital to China than to Russia, and thus prevent Chinese expansion. 2) Trouble in Southeast Asia while concentrating on Berlin. 3) Frightening other Asian countries, particularly India, in- to closer cooperation with the West. 4) Unnecessary effort, on the assumption that Laos is bound to go Communist anyhow sometime, THE REASONING as to Red China is this: If the Peiping regime is to push forward in Southeast Asia, a prime aim will be to get the 300 Ameri- can military advisers out of Laos. As long as the Americans are there, Washington will take a lively interest in the country. The easiest way to get rid of them is to take up the United States of- fer to withdraw if Laos is made neutral. The Chinese Communists are also looking for international re- spectability and diplomac:c recog- nition by as many non-Communist countries as possible. They rarely get a chance to attend an inter- national conference with the United States and other western nations. Relatively, this has put them on their good behavior. 4 THE UNIVERSITY'S PLANS to construct an 11-building co-op project might work out very well if they could be run in a manner more adult than most of the present Univer- sity housing. There are two main reasons sophomores storm out of the dorms into sororities, co-ps and Cambridge Hall in numbers as vast as will be permitted. One reason is to be with friends in other places, (sororities or Martha Cook for ex- ample). The other is twofold: to cut down expenses and to be able to breathe freely. It is obvious that you save money living in a co-op. You get a little more freedom, but not enough more. Restrictions on personal. freedom may be necessary to the freshman woman in the dormitory system. Her mother wants to know that she is being fed three square (if starchy) meals per day, reporting on her destination before leaving the building for an evening and being shut safely indoors at 11 p.m. every night. AFTER THE FRESHMAN YEAR, however, these precautions are not only unnecessary but an insult to the girl's intelligence, in- tegrity and maturity. By the time she is 18 or 19 years old she can be expected to decide for herself what time she wants to come in, when and 'what she wants to eat and where she wants to go. As long as she is obeying University rules and passing her courses her living habits are no concern of anyone but herself. With the present residence hall structure, it is impossible to allow sophomore, junior and senior women the freedom denied freshmen. If doors must be locked by 12 p.m. upper- C; r . rigl Editorial Staff MICHAEL BURNS ............ ..........Co-Editor SUSAN FARRELL..........................Co-Editor :DAVE KIMBALL ....................... Sports Editor RUTH EVENHUIS.....................Night Editor MTC-AINIT OT .TNT .....__Niht ditn.r classmen must be in by 12 p.m. regardless of whatever they may have to do. The rules that all men must be out of the building at 11 p.m. must be adhered to by upperclassmen as well as freshmen. They must join the crowd clinging to one another on front porches to prolong their goodnights while an army of counselors, resident advisors and house mothers man their stations, ready their clipboards and synchronize their watches for the countdown. In the interests of inculcating good manners in freshmen women (who have all presumably grown up totally without the guiding hand of socially acceptable parents) upperclassmen- who know the rules of dress but choose to ignore them in favor of comfort and under the assumption that in a country where one is guaranteed unconditional freedom to think and speak as one pleases, one is also free to dress as one pleases-must join in the nui- sance of parading down to sitdown dinners behind the housemother three times a week correctly dressed in all ways including stock- ings and "dressy flats" on Sundays. MAYBE A YEAR of this sort of nonsense is healthy for freshmen. One can stand al- most anything if one knows it will all be over at the end of a year. But there is no need to make upperclassmen go through the same rigamarole. Most people don't like to study in school clothes and it is a horrible waste of time to have to change every time you want to eat. It is annoying to have to pay for meals you miss unavoidably if you want to work on any sort of student activity or project on campus. It is the duty of the University to see that students live under conditions that allow them to study and live under the schedule that best fits their needs. This means giving them the freedom to come and go as they please. If the new co-op project and other to follow are set up intelligently they could be a great service. If the girls are given keys and allowed to stay out as late as they choose, if they are given common kitchen facilities but allowed tn nok for themselve s-and if thav raun- . I 41 Al ' i I FEIFFER Inh A RAu AtAKU16 tOATC10& SOV~AK 1V. 1 T-(H &w q (How",# V6R twCeK' fg1 CST A A tOO2FAMOUS TH OUO6IAM tOHO COM65 0N k~ 6AUJW AMOAq;: °-fle 0R OF FOR T.ROv&C 1 NO SPIRITUIAL VAL.U6I" AFTFR 1THAT TAMSQ6 TO6 AL-5rAR Tfi6L166T' A WOW FAMOUS 'INWS OPH6C' WHO COWCS OM £CtAUr OF OUR TROV% C JS NO 5THIcAC. 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