Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN When Opinions AD Fr UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Win 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. 'NESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: ANDREW HAWLEY Raul Castro's Political Agility Approaches Test "Well, What Do You Think?" - (I r' STANLEY QUART Cool, Graceful Concert On Hot Summer Night THE STANLEY QUARTET defied the weather last night, play under string-killing conditions that made the brilliance of tLi performance all the more remarkable. Remarkable, too, was the quality of their ensemble which in very short time- since the beginning of summer school has impro enormously. The opening work, Quartet in D major, Op. 64, No. 5, by Hay was an effective antidote to the heat. The wonderfully open, a counterpoint of the first movement gives an impression of weightli ness which is wholly delightful-an ideal blend of the -intriguingE i: I r " F YOU THINK I'm a radical, wait till you see my little brother." So said Fidel of Raul Castro not long ago, and it looks as if the pub- lie is finally going to see Castro the younger in full political action, now that Castro the elder has been mysteriously whisked away from his Cuban podium. Fidel's system of exhorting the Cubans to fanatically support his cause, while Raul courts Moscow and his administration establishes worthy economic and social reforms, has worked admirably. If his tactics have been somewhat radical, Castro's accomplishments are evidently doing the Cuban economy more than a little good. Honest Abe Gains A Vote A FRIEND OF MINE, upon hearing the broadcast of the first few sessions of the Republican convention, suddenly remarked: "That does it! I'm converted. I'll vote for Lin- coln." This curious Republican devotion to Lincoln is not merely accidental. True enough, Lincoln was nominated in Chicago just a hundred years ago. And this fortuitous anniversary has come at a crucial time, for it offers an oppor- tunity for the orators to point with a large helping of pride to the most recent Republi- can ex-President who seems to enjoy anything approaching universal respect. Looking to the past is ahdangerous practice. It might be noted that whenever the country required a good-natured, ineffectual President the Republicans had the man; but whenever a decisive figure was needed, the Democrats won. But this may be a coincidence, and cer- tainly cannot be verified. Arguments of this sort are as meaningless as the observation, often made by opportunists, that "three times Democratic Presidents have led us into war." INORTUNATELY, with the difference be- tween the parties at the vanishing point, more and more of this type of nonsense will be brought forth during the next few months. But it's all in fun, and no one will be seriously annoyed except, maybe, political scientists whor try to pretend that the whole affair has some scientific basis. --DAVD KESSEL MAX L E R N E R y The Struggl 'TITH Nixon's eloquent and ambivalent ac- ceptance speech, the Presidential conven- tions are over. Given all their antics, tribal ituals and semi-hokum, they raise serious questions as to whether this is the best way to choose the two men from whom American voters will elect a leader for the world demo- cratic bloc. Kennedy and Nixon are not the two ablest men in the American nation al- though they may well be the two young men with the greatest will to win and the greatest knack for political victory. Each has a talent for organization. Each has an animal political cunning. Each has a ca- pacity to work hard, a touch of command which may yet develop into the mastery needed for great political leadership. Each has at least the beginnings of a political style which makes him know when to advance or retreat. Each has a feline instinct for the jugular in the lethal political combat which is now about to begin. OTH PARTIES rejected their best leader- ship for different reasons. The Democrats rejected Stevenson because they tried twice to win with him and he failed to deliver exactly what the politician tribe most respects-the knockout punch. Remember that campaigns and elections are a kind of open war game in a democracy as compared with the lethal secret struggle for power by the method of purge, exile and liqui- dation which Communists carry on. Remember also that conventions and campaigns are not somply a competition of ideas, in which the man with the best ideas wins. The Republicans rejected Rockefeller as everyone knew they would, not because he would have been too high a price to pay. Stevenson, at least, had Eugene McCarthy to plead for him: "Do not reject this man." Rocke- feller never got close enough to finding some- one who would make that plea for him. He finally settled for the platform victory, just as Nixon settled for a surrender to him on. the %. trot* U *441 ( RDINARY CITIZENS seem fairly content with the course of his administration, with with Russia that will eventually lead, he hopes, the jails turned schools and the tourist hotels turned hospitals. And, according to a New York Times correspondent, the country's intellectuals are not too worried about things. They even admit to liking communism-in the abstract- but vehemently declare that Castro is most certainly not selling the nation to the Kremlin. Fidel has, in fact, learned to walk the cold war tightrope with agility. The United States can cut its Cuban sugar quota and express its aversion to Fidel and crew. Castro-this one Raul-has made economic and trade agree- ments with Russia that will eventually lead, he hopes, to a more diverse economic base for the small island, a stronger economy. Fidel can give a come-hither look to the Soviet Union as Raul cements the Cuba-strengthening agree- ments. and still manage to keep his distance with a "wait, we'll call when we need you." BUT NOW FIDEL, being only human, has pre- sumably run out of steam. No more violent speeches, the doctors say. And curiously enough, Fidel has just slipped away from public life -without naming a substitute head of state. Everybody, naturally, is expecting Raul to step in, but the delay-and the switch in leadership, itself-can be dangerous to the still fledgling state. One might, in passing speculate that the de- lay could be a symptom of a power' struggle shaping up. Or it might just be that Fidel is too sick-or thinks himself not sick enough- to name anyone. Presuming that Raul does take over, with his "more radical than thou" label, one can only optimistically hope that his radical fervor is paired with something of his brother's political agility. Raul's brand of radicalism might prove to be just a little too blatant for the Cubans to swal- low, his personal magnetism a little too little to persuade anyone that his intentions are for the good of the country, and his sense of balance a little too crude to stay on the Fidel tightrope. And if he falls, the odds are it won't be on the United States' side. Castro the younger, though, seems to be about to try his hand at the international political game. All right. Fidel, we've waited. Now we'll watch. Just how radical is your little brother, and what will he do with your revolution? -KATHLEEN MOORE l / %:7 I the pleasing. The Stanley sailed through the work with deceptively easy-going grace. Canin played the slow movement rather soloistically, perhaps enough so to fAaw- an otherwise elegant performance. The tempo of the last movement was exhilar- ating, to say the least. ON FIRST HEARING, my im-; pressions of the Quartet. No. 3 by Paul Cooper are somewhat impre- cise. It is, on the whole, a quiet work, avoiding rhetorical gesture. It is also a pleasingly succinct work, played virtually without pause, in which the proportions have been carefully thought out." The discretion with which the major climax of the- work is ap-, proached and left behind is ad-, mirable. I liked best the quiet close-knit counterpoint character- istic of the slow sections. The adagio ending was most effective. The primary interest in this work lies not in extraordinary thematic material, nor in virtuoso instrumentation, but in the formal relations between the various- parts, which means that the Quar- tet would certainly bear repeated hearings. * * * , BEETHOVEN'S Quartet in C major, Op. 59, No. 3, which ended- the program, received a rather dispassionate reading, well-con- trolled and precise. Intonation be- gan to be a real problem this far along in the evening, but other- wise the performance went with- out a hitch. In connection with the last' movement-a perpetual velocity of the same hair-raising tempo as the last movement of the Haydn Quartet, but about three times as long-that is saying quite a good deal. That the Stanley Quartet played as well as they did in spite of the short time they have been to- gether, and in spite of the heat, is a tribute to their artistry. --David Sutherland, INTERPRETING Communistss Confused By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press Foreign News Analyst THE COMMUNISTS are offering something almost every day in their attempt to hold attention in the cold war. Catch a spy. Propose a world- wide summit. conference with dis- armament at the top of the agenda after walking out at *Geneva when the allies were preparing to offer a new plan. Propose a- nuclear- free zone in Asia after having got- ten nowhere with a nuclear-free zone, for Europe. Stalin's "Stock- holm Appeal" for peace on Soviet terms having failed, launch a new one. beginning.with an antiatomic congress in .Tokyo. In some ways the Reds seem to be afraid they have carried the tough line too far. The American threat to answer their Insults with a stepped-up military program may have gotten across. Moscow doesn't want to go too far. So now they're mixing in some cold water with the hot. Going back to the peace and coexistence offens- ive.- IN SOME WAYS they seem to be trying to confuse the free world, *still threatening war on the one hand and talking of peace on the other. Trying to ride two horses. Not quite ready to give up belligerence while already shift- ing back to. the softer line which has been Khrushchev's main one. I4 there is confusion, however, it is among the Communists, where it is likely to ,show any day with new outbreak' of ideological dis- putes. ( a6 O -t U 'JA S W&T0A PP T c. 3 WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Radical Doctrine of Sacrifice pmwxmmwwmwjw AMMA A head platform in order to wear the necessary gar- ment of liberalism for the campaign. Rockefeller, convinced that the Eisenhower Administration has not met the crisis of the age, may have thought he could play in 1960 the role Franklin Roosevelt played in 1932. He failed to count on two differences in the his- torical situations-one, that the Eisenhower failure is not as dramatic as Hoover's was; the second, that in Hoover's day the Republicans had only Hoover to succeed himself, while to- day they have Nixon as a possible receiver -in bankruptcy. Thus, when Rockefeller made a bid for a new deal in foreign policy comparable to Roosevelt's in economics, his own party rejected it. They had already available someone clever enough (as Nixon's acceptance speech shows) to make the old deal seem new enough-or perhaps a new deal seem old enough-to get by. WITH LODGE as his partner, Nixon will clearly gear the campaign to the theme of their experience in foreign policy, and taunt Kennedy with the charge of inexperience. But will it work? The decade of the 1950's was the missile decade, and the Eisenhower Administration was in power eight years of that decade. If you are talking of weapons you have to talk about the weapons race, in which the weight of expert opinion puts the Russians ahead. . The same danger applies in diplomacy. Re- peatedly the convention orators stressed that Nixon had for eight years been an intimate and integral partner in the great foreign policy de- cisions. But this argument is a double-edged sword. If Nixon had a major hand in the decis- ions then he must also bear at least partial re- sponsibility for them. Can he afford to? In any balance sheet of the Eisenhower- Dulles-Nixon policies there are disastrous items along with the ones the orators stressed. There was a major shifting of the balance of military' power to Russia. There were a series of Russian victories in the propaganda war. There was the Russian military and economic penetration of the Middle East. There were the U-2, the fail- ure of the summit, the fiasco of the Japanese trip. There was the Russian threat to the Carib- bean. There was the loss of American world standing which the American people are aware WASHINGTON - Listening to Vice - President Nixon spell- bind his GOP cohorts at Chicago, I came to the conclusion that un- derneath the bombast and the politics, the whoopla and the ora- tory, there are significant similar- ities - plus some contrasts-be- tween the two Republican and Democratic candidates. One is a young man of a reli- gious faith which in its form of worship traditionally goes in for pomp and circumstances, whose members have become the great- est in number and the most power- ful of any church in the world. The other is a young man of a religious faith which emphasizes simplicity, whose meeting-houses are barren benches, usually with- out priests or preachers, and whose members are small in number throughout the world. * *." BOTH RELIGIONS teach sacri- fice, though the members of both practice that teaching indiffer- ently. Both young men, in their acceptance speeches have also preached sacrifice, and one of them came close to sacrificing his life for his country, later lay on his sickbed for a year, again close to the supreme sacrifice. Perhaps in those long months he may have experienced the same introspec- tion which changed the life of an- other rich young man named Roosevelt a generation before. This may turn out to be the basic difference between these two young men. Otherwise, both are opportunists. Both know what they want and drive toward it with relentless, sometimes ruthless determination. Both are excellent organizers. Both think ahead, solve problems be- fore they get slapped in the face with them-as an older executive has been slapped so many times in the past eight years. * * * BUT THE GREATEST denomi- nator they have in common is youth. This is still a young coun- try. Compared to Europe and Asia we're still in our swaddling clothes. And we were founded by young men. True, we have been governed recently by old men and our ideals have become old and static. But the young men who had the courage to sign the Declaration of Independence averaged only 442 years while those who signed the Constitution averaged 45. (Nixon's and Kennedy's average age is also 45.) These young men not only pio- neered a wilderness, they pio- neered an idea. They didn't preach sacrifice as much as they practiced it. They were the Bolshevists of their day, hated by the crowned heads of Europe because they preached Democracy and a repub- lican form of government. The crowned heads even sent an expeditionary force under Emper- or Maximilian during our Civil War to stamp out the danger of Democracy just as we sent an ex- peditionary force to Murmansk during the Bolshevik revolution to stamp out the danger of Commu- nism. e * * THE CROWNED HEADS of Eu- By DREW PEARSON We have great investments around the world, and another country is preaching revolution to undermine them. Our chief weapon of defense has been money, not ideas or sacrifice. We have poured foreign aid into nations threatened by revolution, and in some cases Russia has matched that money, so that the nation which can cause the most, trouble gets the most money. THlE YOUNG MEN who had the daring to found this nation would not have done it that way. In the first place they didn't have the money. Second they would have put more reliance on sacrifice. That is what struck me about the acceptance speeches of both the young men we have picked to compete for the Presidency. Both preach sacrifice, both preach ideas and ideals. Carrying them out may be something else, but giving them the benefit of the doubt, let's see what they preach. Probably the cheering GOP del- egates didn't realize how radical a doctrine Nixon extounded. Cer- tainly the Goldwaterites would have been horrified if they had understood. But here is what their candidate for President said: "Let us welcome that challenge ... the challenge presented by the revolution of peaceful peoples' as- pirations in South America, in Asia, in Africa. We can't fail to assist them in finding a way to progress with freedom." * * * THIS IS EXACTLY what Sena- tor Kennedy said in an earlier speech in the Senate regarding which Congressman Judd of Min-. freedom in Algeria - a speech nesota, the GOP keynote speaker, tauntingly threw in his face three nights earlier. Nixon continued: "Our answer to the threat of the Communist revolution is renewed devotion to the great ideals of the American revolution.' NOW THAT the confetti is being swept up, the loudspeakers are mute, the baby elephant that begged for peanuts in front of the convention has gone back to hay, and the badges, the banners and bizarre pageantry which goes into the picking of Presidents is no more, we can summarize the two most important things that stood out from this convention: (1) The long-time split between the conservatives and liberals in- side the Republican party is just as deep as ever. (2) Richard Nixon rode those two divergent liberal and conser- vative elephants with great dex- terity. AGAINST INDEPENDENCE: South Aricansa Negroes Not Read By PETER STUART special to The Daily ENGLAND-African Negroes are still largely uncivilized people ' an "have a long way to gd" before they will be capable of governin their own continent." That is the firm opinion expressed by a group c white South African citizens interviewed recently during their travel in Great Britain. "African natives or Negroes are still living in the Middle Ages," on( 20-year-old member of the group explained. "We hire many of them t work our farm, but except for a few families who have lived with u; for generations, they work for maybe 30 days and then run off t waste all their earnings in just one day." The young man, having completed his education, is now helping hi father operate the family's 4,000 acre farm, one-half of which is-gray HARD ON REPORTERS, TOO: Nixon Plans WORK Campaign By ARTHUR EDSON Associated tress correspondent VICE-PRESIDENT Richard M. Nixon said one word the other. day-and it was the most forebod- ing word any candidate ever hurled at a group of weary newsmen. The word looks simle enough, but when Nixon said, "nothing," a conclusive shudder went through at least one newsman. Meaning me. It came in reply to a question at Nixon's news conference. "What have you planned to do about getting rest in this cam- paign?" he was asked. "Nothing," Nixon said. "There Just isn't any time between now and Nuvember for a vacation." ~* * WELL, WE should have guessed it, Nixon ht'ir-elf had hinted earlier DAILY OFFIC* The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. two days preced- ing publication. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1960 VOL. LXX, NO 315 General Notices what to look fot ward to. Or rath- er what not to look forward to. He had said that right off there wall be a mess of conferences. And when .he came to what might have been a plum, he dashed hopes com- pletely. Nixon said he's going to Hawaii -and just so that no one would get ideas about grass skirts and lolling about on the beach, he em- phasized: "To campaign." As soon as Congress comes back to work, each weekend he will be dashing about spreading the GOP word. SINCE SEN. JOHN F. KENNE- DY of Massachusetts, the Demo- cratic nominee, has said he will put on an equally hard, not-a-mo- ment's-to-be-lost campaign, this looks like an exhausting late sum- mer and autumn. terial are due in the office of the Grad- uate School not later than 4:00 p.m., Fri., Aug. 19. Foreign Film: The film "Flamenco", featuring the Spanish 'ballet, will be shown Wed., Aug. 3 at 7 p.m. in the multi-purpose room of the Undergradu- ate Library. One showing only. Admis- sion 50c. Theatre Patrons holding tickets for performances of Mozart's opera, "Don Giovanni," please note that in order Traditionally, newsmen don't discuss the perils of their trade. They say how hard the candi- sates work, how they think noth- ing of making five or six speeches a ray - and flying, all over the landscape to do it. But trying to keep up with these converts to perpetual motion can be exhausting, too. And anyone who travels with a candidate for just a few days is likely to reach the point where he has to look at his schedule to remember what town he's in. Surprisingly, Nixon thought of our plight.. "I just hope you haven't lost any more sleep than I have," he said as he began his news conference. "If you have, you're practically dead." * * * WELL, NIXON LOOKED 'tired, but far from dead. As he fielded the questions, there was time to look over two members of his official family who were sit- ting on the Platform. The Vice - Presidential choice, Henry Cabot Lodge, stared into space, not like a man lost in thought but like a mai too worn out to do anything but sit. Herbert G. Klein, Nixon's press secretary, tried manfully to smoth- er a yawn-it's not good politics to yawn when the boss is talking- but he couldn't make it. * * * A CHECK WITH NEWSMEN nearby disclosed very few likely vineyards. Both he and his father proud that their farm wasone of the. first royal plots granted in South Africa, and that their fam- ily has lived there since 1609- before, the Mayflower sailed to America. * * * WHITE SOUTH AFRICANS, al- though outnumbered eight to one by black-skinned natives and brown-skinned mulattoes, consider that they have become well-estab- lished and will remain so. They have restricted Negroes heavily, confining them as well as other racial groups, such as Ori- entals and Malayans) to certain living areas in towns and limiting their participation in the govern- ment. Negroes are allowed to vote in elections, but must elect a white person to represent them. Yet despite their domineering position as virtual overlords, white South Africans feel that the Ne- gro population is definitely "mak- ing some progress." * * * EXAMPLES OF THE progress being made would be seen in new Negro leaders like Mboya, Bandu and Nkrumah, who -are "more ad- vanced than the rest," the whites pointed out hesitatingly. "You 4n Britain and-America see the best Negroes,". one of the group; added, "because the most advanced ones leave Africa to come to your countries." Negroes in. South Africa, how- ever,. have not advanced to the point where there is any notice. able agitation among them for self -rule, IN FACT, CONTRARY to what many outside observers believe, nC sort of Negro unrest was respon- sible for the recent attempted as-