Ghe Athtpat Ba l Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNNVERSTrY OF MICHIGAN hen Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Pr " 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. I "Who Has Who in the Bag?" AT THE CAMPUS: Blood, Bus Dominate In Amateurish Illage FTER MANY current documentary films on Africa, the only thing unique about "The Sorcerers' Village" is the translation of the native chants into English. The rendering of daily events into song is singularly literal. At one point, litter-bearers toting the exploration party openly compose a ditty describing the meal they will make of their employers. The translations emphasize the proximity of the natives to nature, and to their ritual systems exercised to exert influence over forces beyond their physical coitrol. Nevertheless, it's hard to believe that DAY, JUNE 28, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: ANDREW HAWLEY li Motive for Legion Award Refusal Commendable the African Negroes dance all the time. sing and NOW THAT the dust kicked up by Stephen Bayne's dramatic rejection of an American Legion citizenship award has begun to settle a little, a closer inspection of his action and its motivations appears to be in order to deter- mine whether he is really a "spunky non-con- formist" as he has been called, or simply an immature exhibitionist. The answer is probably neither. When the 17-year-old senior from Westbury High on Long Island heard himself announced as the award winner he astounded the audience by jumping up and shouting: "Wait! I refuse to accept an award from an organization I can't respect." He thereby launched a controversy which will probably not be entirely forgotten until long after he leaves for Harvard in the fall. Hurt Dignity SAN FRANCISCO (P) - Hundreds of angry California Legionnaires manhandled four youths picketing the state American Legion convention Saturday. Most of the 2,000 delegates swarmed out of the auditorium and surrounded the quar- tet. The youths carried signs reading, "Don't resurrect McCarthyism," "Legionnaires, why must you kill the U.N.?" and "We must keep our civil liberties." The signs were torn from the youths and destroyed. Some delegates shouted, "Go back to Rus- sia," "Theye're Communists," "Kill them," and "Get them. Later when the Legion delegates recon- vened, they were reprimanded by their state commander, Sidney L. Gelber of Hollywood. He said that when he made a loudspeaker announcement about the pickets outside he admonished delegates "to act with dignity." "Apparently some of you did not," Gelber said. "When you push someone down the -street, that's just what they want." A DIGNIFIED announcement, Mrs. Gel- ber. Now, tell us, what did you expect your delegates' reaction to be? -K.M. HIS REFUSAL of the award is in itself highly commendable, certainly. It is always satis- fying to see a young person place personal con- viction above personal glory and stand up for his own ideals. In this case it is particularly refreshing to observe a protest against the reac- tionary, often narrow-minded practices of the American Legion if, indeed, this is what Ste- phen's protest was.- But any ideal, however noble, can lose much if not all of its value when it is tactlessly and gracelessly defended. This is what seems to have happened in Ste- phen's case. The boy disrupted the proceedings of an official school function, publicly em- barrassed the administration and faculty who had done nothing to earn such a discomfiture, and was needlessly rude to a man who had come in all good faith to offer him an award. WAS ALL THIS necessary in order for Ste- phen to defend his principles? Probably not. There are conflicting reports on whether he was expecting the honor from the Legion. But whether he was confident of receiving it or not he must have realized that the,award was to be presented and that he .was a likely recipient. If his only concern had been maintaining his self-respect, he could have told his principal his feelings before the awards were presented. Instead, he chose to make a public declara- tion of his beliefs in a way which almost justi- fied his principal's condemnation and the Le- gion's wrathful prophecy that he had made "a lifetime mistake" which would "plague him." Even then, Stephen could have emerged vic- torious if he had made a quiet, intelligent state- ment of his objections to accepting the award. But he didn't. As Life Magazine put it, he "kept unhappily to his home, offering no explana- tion." This silence after his unexpected out- burst only served to strengthen the impression that he had behaved hastily and, far worse, that he was ashamed of his action. THE ONLY PURELY commendable deeds of the whole incident were the refusals of two of Stephen's classmates to accept other honors which had been originally intended for him. It is too bad that Stephen's rashness spoiled what might otherwise have been a well-deserved eye-opener for the American Legion. His mo- tive was praiseworthy; it is to be hoped that his ideas, if not his actions, will set a precedent. -JUDITH OPPENHEIM ', . W;' 1 .Y,'. 7 -. r- t "r s ;. ; ^ ON OFTEN THE native spectators appear unconcerned even in the dangerous parts of the ritual cere- mony. Perhaps they share a com- mon sentiment with Christian churchgoers; they have seen it too often to expect anything to hav- pen. But it isn't all song and dance. One tribe has a rule that young boys must kill one of their parents before entering manhood. An idea not utterly without merit, though no explanations were given about what happens to a third son. As an amateur undertaking, this film would rate slightly better than slides during an evening with the relatives. Only one white couple appear in the movie, and from the excessive nfimber of shots displaying mammary glands of varying sizes, it's obvious hubby did most of the photography work. * * * A NUMBER of scenes are vague- ly obscene and somewhat unc-nn- fortable. Biting a poisonous snake's head in the ecstacy of the dance is not artistic by Western stand- ards regardless of the skill and daring.. The blood sacrifices of one tribe were nothing more than sloppy. And throughout, the director Cap- tain Davis showed an aggravating tendency to focus on bugs, reptiles and other minutiae that seemed designed to make the audience squirm. Maybe it is expecting too much. for explorers recording life in the back regions of the Ivory Coast to apply great measures of deli- cacy. Even so, the efforts of Wat Disney in this area come to mind. He took technical liberties to produce an artistic effect, sucn as speeding up the montage to show a plant growing up through the soil. It is this artistry and delicacy that is completely absent in "The Sorcerers' Village." -Thomas Brien -It- L C>A ' t 4 sp. y.SH"N.6'Cvaj P.S, WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: U. SEworld Position Slipping :A By DREW PEARSON MAX LER NER Native Nazi HISTORY IS always incredible, and the pres- ent no less so than the past. Who would have thought it possible that anyone would be mad enough, after the Hitlers and Streichers and Eichmanns, to found an "American Nazi Party" and to avow the aim of sending "Jewish Communists" to the gas chambers? Or that such a man could until recently have held a commission as commander in the United States Naval Reserve? Or that the question of grant- ing him a public permit to hold a meeting in a public place, for spreading his doctrine, should be evoking so much debate? This could happen only in a democratic so- ciety like the American. It is at once the weak- ness and strength of Aemrice, that it lays itself open to such divisive movements and that it overcomes them not by force or repression but by the method of freedom. America has had to face problems like that of the Rockwell lunacy time after time. What gives added point to the current episode is that it comes so soon after the Eichmann cap- ture, while the world is still in recoil from the millions of mur'ers he committed. Just at this moment a man comes forward for whom Eichmann is obviously a figure not of horror but of heroism, and offers in effect to carry on the work Eichmann left unfinished. He offers moreover to invade New York City, which for the Nazi lunatic fringe has been known as the "Jewish City," and to make his speech at Union Square, associated for years with Communist headquarters and Communist soapbox speeches. His purpose in using these symbols ought to be clear enough. I DON'T SEE HOW anyone could have hoped that his challenge would go unnoticed. I think the Jewish war veterans and other or- ganizations made the wrong decision in raising a clamor about Rockwell, and I think Mayor Wagner could have solved his difficult problem more imaginatively than he did when he banned the meeting because of its potential threat to public order. But it is hard to criticize unless you have a better answer. I must add here that even the Supreme Court has not given a clear lead on the question of what a city can do about these vestpocket fuehrers who use the streets and public places to stir the animal hatreds in men and incite them to strife and death. In the famous Ter- miniello case, in 1949, the Supreme Court ruled that even where there had been a local breach case, the same court upheld a Rochester arrest and conviction of a street speaker on the ground that he was inciting to riot and that the police have the duty to prevent a riot. The late Justice Robert Jackson, who presided at the Nuremberg trials of the Nazi leaders and was a realist about Nazi hate peddlers, often pointed out that you cannot have free speech as an absolute in a city like New York. He described it as a "frightening aggregation" of people, where "all races and nationalities and all sorts and conditions -of men walk, linger and mingle," and where racial and religious hatreds are like dynamite charges which can be set off with explosive destructiveness. The Supreme Court is still torn by these two opposing trends -of putting freedom of speech first or putting the protection of people first. MY OWN FEELING is that we cannot choose clearly between them unless we answer two basic questions. How do nations die? How do men achieve a life of reason? If you believe that nations die by internal discord, then by all means clamp down upon the Rockwells and their maggoty doctrines. But if you think that nations like America have done remarkably well in achieving a mingling of races and religions, and that the real danger they face is from a closure of ideas, then it is best to stick by freedom of speech even when risky. My reading of German history is that Hitler- ism triumphed in Germany partly because the Germans had no strong tradition of civil lib- erties and the rights of minorities. A people that neglects civil liberties is bound to neglect the rights of minorities. A people that believes deeply in the first is bound to believe deeply in the other. The American civil liberties tradition is strong. Let us keep it strong, as a better protection against native Nazis than any police clubs could be. AS FOR THE OTHER question-how do men achieve the life of reason?-I think they do it only by practicing it actively. It would be better to let Rockwell hold his meeting, with police there to keep violence from erupting. But it would be a good idea to have a joint con- demnation of Rockwell's doctrines published before the meeting, coming from every religious and civic group, every racial and class stratum of the city. Thrp arP PPdnqof heaA ~antcaviln in Pat-, WASHINGTON - President Dwight D. Eisenhower is shortly reporting to the nation on his trip to the Far East. If it is like his report after the summit failure and after our set- back from the Russian Sputnik, this telecast is likely to be what Gov. Nelson Rockefeller described as evasion of strong action by the use of "strong slogans." . . . the technique of "answering great questions of the future with worn answers from the past." It is not pleasant to criticize Lhe President of the United States. However, as Gov. R o c k e f e 1 e r blunty stated, the time for pussy- footinig in sizing up our position as a nation is gone. And as the President reports to the nation, the fact is that the nation he ad- dresses has suffered more diplo- matic defeats, more political set- backs, greater loss of prestige than during any period in the last century. IN THIS HEMISPHERE, we find Commusnism almost taking over a key island only 90 miles from our shores. We have experi- enced humiliating riots in the Panama Canal, the American flag spat upon, and ex-president Ri- cardo Arias defeated for presi- dent because he was a good friend of the United States. In this hemisphere, we have el- so seen a recent election in Ecua- dor where an outstandiing states- man, ex-president Galo Plaza, ed- ucated at the University of Mary- land, was defeated for president. largely because he too was friend- ly with the United States. * . * IN AFRICA we have seen Rus- sia building the Aswan Dam, a projesct considerably bigger than our biggest dam, Grand Coulee, and doing a very efficient io o it in an area which controls the gateway between Europe and Asia, where Anglo-Saxon prestige once was supreme. In Asia we find revolts in South Korea and Turkey have cut the political ground out from under leaders on which we bet our mon- ey, our prestige and our military might. In Europe, we find our allies backing us publicly but warning as privately that we have got to mend our blundering ways. Qnly last week we found our ambassa- dor for disarmament, Frederick .aton, former director of Monsanto Chemical, scurrying home from Geneva because of a French and British warning to revise our arms stand or lose their support. Finally, and perhaps most im- portant, we have lost the effect- iveness of the chain of bases e - tending around Russia, from West Germany to Japan. * ,* * CHIEF PURPOSE of these bases has long been observation. They are outmoded for conventional military retaliation. But they were extremely important for U-2 sry flights. Now these flights are banned. In fact it's the height of irony that Prsident Garcia of the Phil- However, national power and prestige doesn't coast downhill ov- ernight. It erodes gradually, and a great many bungles went Into the present accelerated slide which has gained such momentum since the U-2 incident. Part of the blame, howeve,' must go to Democratic leaders who wrapped the protective flag of bi- partisanship around Eisenhower every time he came home from a defeat or let a crisis flare up to embarrass the nation. the caption "Rally the people of Harrlem to buy from Negro-owned liquor stores" a list of all "Har- lem Negro-owned package liquor stores." THE SECRET testimony which caused the House Agriculture Committee to reverse itself re- garding the Cuban sugar quota was a statement by Secretary of State Christian Herter that Fidel Castro and his brother, Raul, "are so close to it (Communism) you can't tell the difference." Shortly Defore this revelation, congressmen sparred with the Secretary of State as to whether you could measure pro-Commun- ism by the ton. House Democrats were furious over a charge by Rep. William E. Miller of New York, chairman of the GOP congressional committee, that they were pro-Castro because they refused to give Eisenhower the power to fix sugar quotas. "SOME OF OUR Republican friends," objected Chairman Har- old Cooley of North Carolina, "are saying that the Democrats are soft on Communism because we dan't want to make a martyr out of Castro by cutbacks at this time in Cuba's sugar quota. Do you wish to repudiate that ridiculous accusation?" UNREST IN CUBA: New Pa tys Manifesto Challenges Castro Rule "I do not wish to impugn the motives of any members of Con- gress," replied Herter. "The Republicans are for a three - million - ton quota from Cuba," broke in Mississippi's Tom Abernethy. "At what tonnage do you become soft on Communism?" "Something like that can't be related to tonnage," Herter hedged. (Copyright 1960, by the Bell Syndicate) INTERPRETING: Talks End In Cynicism, By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THE GENEVA disarmament con- ference has ended where it, began-in cynicism.d It convened last March as a concession to that branch of world thought which contends that the big powers must keep trying to compromise their differences re- gardless of the realities of the moment. Both sides expected . to make some cold war profits out of it. The West thought it might be possible to put some disarmament questions in such shape that they could be submitted to a summit conference. No real hope of agree- ment was entertained, but as long as such issues could be kept under discussion at such a level, it might have served to prevent or delay a crisis over other points of con- filct, such as Berlin. * * * THE SOVIETS thought there was propaganda hay to be made among the less powerful nations, as well as an opportunity of divid- ing the Allies, among whom Bri- tain was known to be most amen- able to compromise. In the background, as always, was a situation in which there was no yielding whatever on major points of conflict-a situation in which retaliatory power was the only real deterrent to war. With the West about to come up with a codification of its uro- posals in a new propaganda at- tempt, the Soviet Union decided to divert the whole thing into its current effort to blacken the character of the United States. * * * THE CHIEF result is to further narrow the bottleneck through which, since the Khrushchev- Eisenhower split, communication between East and West is being kept alive. It is a setback to the whole "keep trying" school. Pressure will develop in Wash- ington now to have the United States retaliate by breaking off negotiations over a nuclear testng ban which have been going around in circles at Geneva for nearly two years. The net effect of these negotia- tions has been to put the United States under a testing moratorium, * * * BOTH SIDES accepted this so- called temporary moratorium as a stop to world fright over fall- out, and would be embarrassed to have to break it. But the United States needs to test, and there is some fear that the Communists- perhaps through Red China-are evading or will attempt to evade the ban. And speaking of Red China, the mere thought of what the Com- munists may eventually be able to do from that base is sufficient commentary on the lack of reality attending any disarnament dis- cussions these days. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN, 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 351 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. two days preced- ing publication. TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 1960 VOL. LXX, No. 68 General Notices University of Michigan G r a d u a t e Screening Examinations In French And German: All graduate students desiring to fulfill their foreign language re- quirement by passing the written ex- amination given by Prof. Lewis (for- merly given by Prof. Hootkins) must pass an objective screening examina- tion. The next administration of the objective screening examination will be on Wed. June 29, from 7 p.m. until 9 p.m, in Auid. C, Angell Hall. Within 48 hours after the examination the names of the students wno have passed will be posted on the Bulletin Board outside the office of Prof. Lewis,- Ex- aminer in Foreign Languages, Room 3028, Rackham Bldg. Students desiring to fulfill the Graduate School's re- quirement in French and German are alerted to an alternate path. A grade of B or better in French 42 and Ger- man 12 will satisfy the foreign lan- guage requirement. A grade of B o1 better in French 11 and German 11 is the equivalent of having, passed the objective screening examination." Classical Studies Coffee Hour: Tues., June 28, Kelsey Museum of Archaeolo- By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press News Analyst THE LATEST batch of exiles from Cuba report Fidel Castro's massive popular support to be dwindling rapidly and that only naked force can keep the young man with the beard in control of the island. If Castro had kept the promise -he made when he drove Batista's dictatorship out of Havana, Cu- bans would be voting this month in free elections. Castro promised to hold elec- tions within 18 months of .the New Year's Day, 1959, revolution- ary victory. Today, any Cuban suggesting an election risks going to jail as a traitor to that same revolution. A NEW organization, therefore, shrewdly chose this month to pose what seems a potent challenge to the Castro regime. The sponsors of the Democratic Revolutionary Front (DFR) at present are in Mexico, the place from which Castro launched his ultimately Mystery Australian Tag Team successful revolt against Fulgencio Batista. The new organization appears to have much more cause to hone for success than Castro had in his early plotter days. The DFR evidently intends to drench the island with its newly adopted manifesto. It will have a wide audience in a country where support of the new leader, by the most accurate reckoning avail- able, has dropped drastically. * * * . THE MANIFESTO lists Castro's abuses, the wreckage of the econ- omy, the regimentation of work- ers and farmers, the partnership with Communism, the broken promises. It pledges retention of the idea- while discarding the totalitarian methods-of land reform in Cuba. It will have no part of anything smacking of the defunct, corrupt Batista dictatorship. Both these planks are of extreme importance to anyone seeking Cuban popular support. The DFR lineup is a powerful one. Its leader is Manuel A. (Tony) Varona, leader of the Au- tentico (authentic revolutionary) party, once Cuba's biggest. He was prime minister under President Carlos Prio Socarras, who was overthrown in the Batista coup of 1952. WHILE THE Prio Socarras re- gime had a reputation for cor- ruption involving theft of millions from Cuba's treasury, Varona was. known as an honest man. Under his direction the Autentico Party gave important support to the Castro rebellion against Batista. When the revolution triumphed, Varona was to have been the Au- tentico candidate for president in those elections which never ma- terialized. Another strong personality in the DFR lineup is Aureliano San- chez Arango, former Havana Uni- versity professor and leader of the Triple A rebel organization which helped Castro to victory. once a Communist, Sanchez Ar- ango now is a militant opponent of Communism. Three other men signed the manifesto: Manuel Artime Buesa, representing the Cuban movement for recovery of the revolution and a Castro lieutenant during the 4. I 4 AI ;; 4 ff t . .ti i 1 'C +-51 1 14'1G ' r J