ri irrrr i r mee ir.r wu,. r ir ri a r i W _i . r z. aloe icl~igau &Daily FEIFFER Seventy-SixthYear EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSrr IOF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD mI CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinions Are Free, Truth WM Pnvaal 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MIcH. NEws PHONE: 764-0552 r Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. YOUR MOO r, ? WW {TE /d FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: WALTER SHAPIRO Middle East Truce: Preconditions for Lasting Peace W~tO APE SThOMG OF CivIL- [ 6S- £WAL 0& I DUTRM AT THIS MOMENT the war in the Mid- dle East appears to be over. But none of the causes behind the swiftly concluded conflict have been re- solved and unless meaningful action is taken in the coming months, a renewal of hostilities will almost certainly recur with the possibility of even more serious consequences. The responsibility for establishing a lasting peace falls on the shoulders of not only the parties immediately involv- ed but the world's great powers. To cool off the Middle East boiling pot certain prerequisites are in order: -Recognition by the Arab states of the legality of the state of Israel and its territorial boundaries. At this late date, 19 years after the creation of the tiny nation, the Arabs must realize the futil- ity and absurdity of their quest to throw the Jews into the sea. Israel obviously disagrees, as do all the Western powers. Instead of turning their attention toward jihads, the Arab nations should concen- trate on the internal problems of their own countries. Egypt, on the bring of economic chaos before the war, has un- doubtedly aggravated her condition. --All parties must negotiate seriously about the absorption of the large num- bers of mistreated Palestinian refugees who have been placed on Israel's border as an excuse for provocation against Is- rael. It is obvious that a prone state such as Israel with its limited land area and weak economy, cannot take in the millions of refugees without collapsing. It should also be considered that many refugees do not want to go to Israel to live. Many have requested to journey to Cairo or to Aswan and build their homes there. -Free passage on the Gulf of Aqaba and the Suez Canal must be secured for Israel. All of southern Israel is largely a desert region can never hope to be devel- oped if Israel does not have an outlet to the sea and markets of the East. The Arabs must realize' that future threats of blockades will be met with military ef- forts similar to the 1967 War. --Israel herself must withdraw from the Sinai Peninsula, which it has no right to hold. But without assurances of the great powers that it can use the two vital water- ways, it will never withdraw. -A treaty covering all these points must be negotiated directly between the belligerents. Egyptians can no longer re- fuse to sit down at the conference table, since their capital city is in grave danger and their armies are almost totally de- molished. The perpetual state of war of the last 20 years must end. --The nations, notably the U.S. and Soviet Union, who have supplied all the munitions for this conflict must use all their influence to get the parties to talk. If the Big Four (including France) stop supplying arms the threat of future wars will abate. The possibility of a Third World War became painfully evident in the past three days. The use of that Dr. Strangelove-like "hotline" between Moscow and Washington only emphasizes the gravity of the situation and its po- tential for escalation. With Israel operating two nuclear reac- tors and the Communist Chinese so ready to supply the Egyptians with atomic weapons, disaster is inevitable if the con- flict is allowed to continue until another blow-up occurs. HISTORY HAS an uncanny way of trag- ically repeating itself. The world can scarcely afford another rerun. -MARK LEVIN --STEPHEN FIRSHEIN YOU PA(VE TO THE WITA -I Vl~TMAU- ' - . .r, ti ti =-. E, SUT W44OC THAT AT - A T(NE t)NAT LOAMT"? /H 4 Letters to the Editor Capturing aw International Law I should like to comment on the body of varied views on the un- fortunatevsituation in the Near East. The charges and counter- charges flung about in the UN, in the newspapers, at the so- called "teach-ins," all have some truth in them, no doubt. To ap- peal to history, however, is to appeal to a body of conflicting and confusing facts and causes. What should be obvious to the rational observer is that if the United, Nations, international law and international peace are to be preserved (or, perhaps, estab-w lished), the nations of the UN must respect one anothers' ter- ritorial and maritime rights. COLONIALISM and imperialism are favorite epithets used by Arab supporters, and there is little doubt that these policies are evils, given today's moral attitudes. But to call Israel an illegal instru- mentality of colonial imperialism because it was created out of a colonial area by Great Britain and the UN is patently unfair. Most of Asia and Africa were colonies of Western European powers and the present states were established by those powers -with or without the UN. Are all these nations to be considered illegitimate? How far back in his- tory must we go to decide where boundaries are legitimately drawn? To the crusades? To Mohammed? To Rome? And let it not be for- gotten that the countries (specif- ically the USSR) who so loudly decry colonialism were themselves without colonies in the last cen- tury not because of lack of will, but because of lack of strength. Both Arabs and Israelis have committed aggressive acts. To find peace in the area, both sides must make concessions. But the pre- requisite to all of this is the sim- ple acknowledgement by the Arab nations that Israel does, and has a right to, exist. Without this acknowledgement, no peace can be achieved. And without peace and cooperation, the teeming pop- ulations of the Arab world will continue to face economic disas- ter and standards of living among the lowest in the world, despite having the world's richest re- source in vast oceans beneath their lands. --Joel Hencken, '69 Debate Follower I have been following with in- terest the debate between Mary Roth and Linda Diller on the is- sue of supporting our boys in Viet- nam. Mary Roth's position seems to me the most logical and hu- mane. I believe the best support for our boys is to bring them All letters must be typed, double-spaced and should be no longer than 300 words. All let- ters are subject to editing; those over 300 words will gen- erally be shortened. No unsign- ed letters will be printed. home now and prevent further tragic loss of young lives. It is unfortunate that the ad- ministration has chosen to seek support for its bad policies in Asia by linking dissent with a lack of patriotism. I believe it is more patriotic to work to end this tragic waste of lives than to blindly follow the government's policy of escalation and the send- ing of more troops. Even now Gen- eral Westmoreland is asking for 250,000 more men. (U.S. News and World Report-June 12.) Every new commitment of troops on our side is matched by more soldiers on the other side-and with no end in sight! THE DETROIT Free Press, June 7, carried an article entitled "Viet War Benefits Economies of Asia." Businessmen in Southeast Asia will likely profit by $2 billion in 1967 according to this report. So while American boys die in battle in far-off jungles to sup- port the corrupt, military dictator- ship of Premier Ky, war indus- tries profit. The wealthy business- men of Saigon, Thailand, Japan, et al, profit while the peasants of Vietnam are either killed or put in detention camps (pacification camps is the polite term, of course). It is cruel and tragic that the lives of young Americans are be- ing sacrificed. We should bring them home now-and stop this massacre before it escalates be- yond control! -Virginia Anderson By BILL MAULDIN JERUSALEM (Delayed by cen- sor and in transmission)-I ar- rived in Jerusalem just in time Tuesday to hurry ahead and watch the Israeli army take the highly strategic town of Latrun from Jordanian forces. Latrun is on the Jordanian side if the border and we had reached it by walking right through the border. The taking of Latrun pinched off a deep Arab salient into Is- rael where the Jews lost 500 in 1948. In that war it was an Arab stronghold on the road which runs from the coast to Jerusalem. It lies in the Judaen hills about 15 miles northwest of Jerusalem. In that earlier war, the blowing up of a pumping station cut the water supply to Jerusalem. AS I ARRIVED on Tuesday, one of the soldiers told me, "This will cut down the driving time be- tween Jerusalem and Tel Aviv to 45 minutes." "What if President Johnson asks you to give it back?" I asked him. "No comment," he said, leaning on his automatic rifle and star- ing at me with a poker face, more evidence that they know how to put on a good show for kibitzers. A short while later in Jerusa- lem the censor looked up from copy and asked: "Are you sure French Hill has fallen?" "It sure has," said a voice over my shoulder. I turned and it was Joe Alex Morris of the Los Angeles Times Times whose dispatches from Jor- dan are also appearing in The Sun-Times. "How did you get into Jerusa- lem?" I asked. "I just walked through the lines and across the border," he said. I DROVE UP to Jerusalem Tues- day morning with about the same ease. I was with Shelby Scates of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and along the way we saw Is- raeli Mirage jets working over Jordanian positions where the bor- der runs alongside the road for some distance. When I returned to Jerusalem, artillery and small-arms fire was still harassing some parts of this city. But the worst was over and at noon our time on Tuesday, a few people weretalready venturing out to inspect their riddled cars and broken windows. The damage to buildings is gen- erally light on this side, but the Jordanian part of the city two blocks away is in shambles. Hussein's legionnaires still have plenty of weapons and ammuni- tion, judging from the noise com- ing in the window. Most of the fire is now being frantically direct- ed against Israeli attackers who a short while ago needed only to take the area called French Hill to complete the conquest of this historic city. Scates and I had. driven, to Jerusalem after a fairly suspense- ful night in the blackout listen- ing to one air raid alert. after an- other. Most turned out to be false alarms. I COULDN'T HELP comparing the dilemma of the man at the siren switch with that of the Mid- western weather bureau forecast- er in the tornado season. - Too many alarms and people begin to ignore him; two few alarms and people get hurt. Arab forces did drop some ar- tillery around Tel Aviv airport shortly after dark. But at 8 p.m. I got the garage man at the Dan Hotel to slap some black paint over the headlights of my rental car so I could drive a United Nations representative to the air- port to catch his official flight. (Commercial flights were sus- pended.) A few hours later somebody in the hotel lobby caught an Arab propaganda broadcast which said: "What will you do now, Jews, since Tel Aviv and Haifa are in flames and your army is fleeing?" You could actually hear people laughing up and down the back streets as other radios picked up the same broadcast. S..What About the U.S.? THE SYRIAN AMBASSADOR to the United States predicted Wednesday night that the U.S. would be the "biggest loser" in the wake of the Middle East war. His prediction will probably come true. In an effort to cushion any loss in the international arena, President Johnson has set up a special committee of the National Security Council to "coordinate U.S. efforts to achieve peace in the Middle East." Johnson said he was taking this action because "the continuing crisis and the effort to help build a new peace will re- quire ,the most careful coordination of the work of our government." IT IS EXTREMELY likely that the com- mittee cannot avert a political faux pas for a number of reasons: ! First, it is ironic : and even hypo- critical that a nation which is current- ly waging war in Vietnam should shoulder the responsibility of "creating a new peace." We are currently fighting two wars; one is a military conflict, the other is diplomatic. And it is highly un- likely that warring nations in the Middle East would be amenable to peace sound- ings by another nation itself at war. W, The severing of diplomatic relations with Washington by the Arab nations should have made it plain to the State Department that we are not wanted in the Middle East. If those nations do not welcome our embassies, they are not like- ly to receive members of a special com- mittee with open arms. The U.S. faces bitterness and hostility from Arab nations rich in oil and con- trolling strategic waterways. The Arabs have chosen to believe that the U.S. helped the Israelis to defeat the Arab troops. " But it is not only the alleged U.S. support of Israel which provoked Arab hostility; it is the familiar U.S. image of supporting the status quo. And it is high- ly probable that when Johnson's special committee attempts to restore peace it will attempt to restore a state of affairs highly beneficial to its own national in- terests. The water passages in the Middle East have been important to the U.S. for transporting goods to Vietnam. While the U.S. has a fairly large supply of oil, it is still dependent on the Middle East in this respect. While the U.S. was never, in technical terms, a colonial power in the Middle East, most Arab nations regard it as a rep- resentative of colonialism-one which al- lows it to use resources for its own ends. AS LONG AS two-thirds of the world remains underdeveloped, and there- fore advocates of overthrowing the stat- us quo, the U.S. will continue to be "the loser" in any war, whether it be in Viet- nam or the Middle East. Our military machine may be the most impressive assemblage of its kind. How- ever, our diplomatic machinery is in bad need of a complete overhaul. And spe- cial committees will not do the job. --PAT O'DONOHUE mm ninRRY GOLDWAaTERr Crisis in the Middle East is a reflection of two factors: 1-The continued plans for con- quest by the Communist leader- ship. 2-The continued failure to face up to that fact by the free world's leadership. No matter how pressing or dis- astrous the tactical development in the Israeli-Arab confrontation may seem, the real confrontation, the one that counts in the long run, is the one with Communism. The Communist thrust in the Middle East has been developing for years. The Soviet Union has given Egypt 550 modern jet war- craft, while Syria has received 60. More than 1000 modern Soviet tanks-along with Soviet techni- cians to help maintain them - have been given to the socialist regime of Gamal Abdel Nasser. EQUALLY important, Communist subversive and guerrilla forces have been slicing away at politi- cal stability in Somaliland and Eritrea. Communists have mount- ed a major effort to prepare for the British withdrawal from the air and naval base at Aden, sched- uled for no later than the end of next year. From Aden; should it fall to native forces controlled by Nas- ser and thus sympathetic to the Soviets, and should they-as would be likely--give the Soviets the right to use Aden, Soviet sea and airpower would be given a direct extension into the Indian Ocean. Ultimately, it is quite obvious, the Soviets want to control the entire land bridge to North Africa, as well as the shipping lanes of Distorted Education ... BUT THE DEMANDS upon the uni- versity educational system and the expectations of it are built on false prem- ises, sustained by flatulent representa- tions, directed to ignoble ends, which, for- tunately, no educational system can achieve. In far less than 75 years it will be- come clear that the system cannot de- liver the goods expected of it. As a cer- tain disillusionment about power sets in, it extends to those institutions which end of education is bound to appear. As nothing is more certain than that the Americans of the future must be citizens of the world and that the great univer- sities of the future must be world uni- versities, chauvinism in the schools and the enslavement of the universities to the military, to the CIA, to "mission- oriented" governmental agencies, or to any nationalistic programs whatever must begin to seem distasteful even to ordinary readers of ordinary newspa- "Look At All The Research We Have To Do" 0{ $o D I /t ---- -.- P 111 the Suez Canal and Red Sea sys- tems. Rep. Daniel J. Flood (D-Pa) has summed it up this way: "If So- viet power succeeds in taking Eri- trea and Aden in addition to its plans for the Suez Canal, it will be in a position to infiltrate and take over Ethiopia and the re- public of the Sudan.. In the event of war between the Soviets and the United States or any other free nation, the Suez Canal un- doubtedly would be operated as a Soviet waterway sealed off to the transit of all Western vessels of commerce or war." PARADOXICALLY, those who scoff at such notions of local blockading in time of war also are the first to say that in any war we should do everything pos- sible to keep action at the most local level possible. The Soviets still use the port of Haiphong, freely and safely, despite the fact of a major war raging. By the same ground rules it could use the Suez, exclusively, even while some other war raged about that area. So long as every aggression of Communism can depend upon the West reacting with eyes resolute- ly blinded to the aggression, treat- ing every crisis as some sort of isolated phenomenon, aggression will pay. The Arab confidence in clos- ing off the Gulf of Aqaba, may in some small part be due to the unconcerned free world attitude toward the virtual Soviet block- ade against free world shipping in the Gulf of Finland. Even though the area is an in- ternational waterway, the Soviets tightly control it. And in that control it sets a nice precedent for similar waterway control throughout any parts of the world on which Communism may be 41 The Parker Wit The following selections, re- printed from The New York Times, are from the anthology of Dorothy Parker's poems, es- says, book reviews and short stories. Miss Parker, a noted wit and author, died Wednesday: A girl's best friend is hermutter. * * * The only thing I ever learned (in school) that did me any good in after life was that if you spit on a pencil eraser, it will erase ink. Brevity is the soul of lingerie -as the Petticoat said to the Chemise. It's a terrible thing to say, but I can't think of good women writers. Of course, calling them women writers is their ruin; they begin to think of themselves that way. Miss Fannie Hurst writes, and she writes and she writes. Nor do her works end with their appear- ance in print between handsome covers. They live again in motion pictures, and not only once - her "Back Street," I believe, is now on its third round. California is nothing but mon- ey and what pictures did you do, and Hollywood is a desert, a ghost Broke my brittle heart in two; And that was very bad. Love is for unlucky folk, Love is but a curse. Once there was a heart I broke; And that, I think, is worse. * * * DE PROFUNDIS Oh, is it, then, Utopian To hope that I may meet a man Who'll not relate, in accents suave, The tales of girls he used to have? THE FLAW IN PAGANISM Drink and dance and laugh and die, Love, the reeling midnight through, For tomorrow we shall die! (But, alas, we never do.) Men don't like nobility in wom- en. Not any men. I suppose it is because the men like to have the copyrights on nobility-if there is going to be anything like that in a relationship. Salary is no object; I want only enough to keep body and soul apart. I