Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNTVERSTY O MIteGmAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBITCATIONS Whee Oiw A 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MIcH. NEWs PHONE: 764-0552 the crystal palace ..-. - ----... f + -.. ._._...._ f ,be, , ' t - e . Buddhist Peace Plea Falls on Deaf Ears Editorials Printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. .i'1 >41'u .., TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID DUBOFF Middle East Aftermath: Israeli Intransigence V u **; t 4 y l .: q , 1( '4 'I A SENSELESS. and unnecessary war has ended in the Middle East. It was a meaningless conflict, for even Israel's massive victory brought with it little glimmer of an eventual settlement. In the heady euphoria of victory, Is- rael seems adamant in demanding the retention of a strategic portion of its re- cent conquests. Control of the Gulf of Aqaba, and the west bank of the Jordan River provide only an illusory sense of military security. David Ben Gurian, former prime min- ister, once said that Israel could win two wars, perhaps three, but no more; last week marked the third. Israeli in- transigence, backed by its dominant mil- itary position, would probably keep for it temporarily the territory taken. But it would make a fourth Arab-Israeli war inevitable. For Israel to expand her borders with- out suitable compensation would merely be a modern version of the Treaty of Versailles. Such action would greatly ac- centuate the deep Arab passions over an unredeemed homeland. A settlement en- visioned by Eshkol would leave the enor- mous problems of over a million displaced Arab refugees unsolved. In fact, such an agreement would aggravate the present morass by almost doubling the number. of refugees. ISRAEL'S RECENT military mastery can- not hide the vulnerability of the tiny country. Surrounded by Arabs and out- numbered, Israel cannot always expect to be saved by enemy factionalism and their own superior strategy. Israel's population centers are acutely vulnerable to air at- tack, and future wars may bring attacks by nuclear weapons. No matter how many victories Israel wins, it can be totally destroyed by one defeat. The saddest commentary on Middle Eastern tensions is the political history of Israel. Twenty years of military readi- ness has grotesquely distorted the dreams of Israel's founders. A people persecuted by centuries of religious intolerance have mimicked their tormenters by creating a sort df militaristic Orthodox Jewish the- ocracy. A prime example of the fruits of a generation of mutual hate is provided by Israel's unenlightened treatment of their tiny Arab minority. The only way in which Israel can create a secure future is through a comprehen- sive peace settlement in the Middle East. While the chances of such a settlement are admittedly small, Israeli intransigence will totally annihilate any hope for a just and lasting peace. -WALTER SHAPIRO '4a ..' s. +-'+ 1967. Te kaup +.'ee 4tih MLfn 7A95. 0016 Letters to the Editor . The Oil Situation DO THE ARAB NATIONS really think that stopping oil shipments to the United States and the United Kingdom would create any significant drawbacks on the oil market for the Westerners. The United States could care less about the Arabian oil while the United King- dom reacted with more optimism than expected. According to the latest figures, the United States gets less than five per cent of its oil supplies from the Middle East and North African nations. In quantity terms this amounts to roughly, 300,000 barrels out of a total of 9,823,000 barrels which the United States consumes per day at the present. U.S. government offi- cials comment that above-ground inven- tories of crude oil in this country, which were considered more than adequate prior to the Middle East crisis, totals nearly 300 million barrels, which include a suf- ficient amount in reserve. In addition, the nation's two largest oil-producing states, Texas and Louisiana, have informed government officials that each state could, if called upon, increase its oil output by 50 per cent, a total in- crease of almost 21/2 million barrels per day. .THE UNITED KINGDOM and other Eu- ropean nations, which depended on Arabian oil for over 85 per cent of their imports in 1956, currently receive only 55 per cent. They have looked elsewhere for their needs and have found more attrac- tive markets in other parts of the world, including the Western Hemisphere, to suffice their needs. The United Kingdom had been, up to now, buying a large percentage of its oil from Nigeria, but extreme political ten- sion there and the rebellion of the east- ern region makes the country unattrac- tive as a major fall-back supplier at the present. Nonetheless, the UK has almost a three- month supply of oil-more than enough to face a short range blockade of the Middle East oil. Had the embargo per- sisted, Britain could easily have found ether sources to quench its thirst. pARADOXICALLY, the Middle East cris- is could stimulate many American oil companies to increase drillings - which have stagnated for 11 years. With Ameri- can firms unable to make use of the rich Arabian oil fields, our economy could definitely be given a boost by a hike in domestic oil production. Profits of pro- ducers might also rise, particularly if the United States is called upon to supply Western Europe with oil that originally came from the Middle East. But what would happen in the mean- time in these Arab states if they sudden- ly lost most of their buyers? They cer- tainly wouldn't look towards the Soviet Union because the Russians, after taking up some of the slack in world markets when Syria reduced its 'output last year, have steadily been making gains in sell- ing its own oil reserves. What then would they want with the Arabian oil? Would the Arab states try the industrial power of the Far East, namely Japan? They could but it is unlikely that the Arab states could rely solely on the Japanese for business transactions. At the present, Japan receives about 90 per cent of her crude oil from the Middle East, and a 10 per cent increase would hardly satisfy the concerned Arabs. What then did the Arab nations feel would come out of their declaration of the oil blockade? As our economy and that of the United Kingdom is based on a multi-product market, many of the Arab states rely almost exclusively on their oil exports for foreign exchange and cap- ital. Once this source from the Western nations is cut off, only disaster seems in sight. Since the economy of most of these Arab states is poor at the present, further setbacks may dig too deep a trough for a future economic upswing to occur. IF ANYONE should worry about the oil, it should be the Arabs-on how to get rid of it. It certainly wouldn't be detri- mental to either the United States or the United Kingdom. And if the Arab nations were originally convinced that this block- ade would bleed the "imperialist pawers" into economic calamity, they've got an- other thought coming. As Arthur J. Schaffer, manager of the petroleum de- partment of R. W. Pressprich & Co., said about the Arab move, "There isn't a chance in a million that the free world could be brought to its knees by an oil embargo." -JACOB SLABIAK Holy Cause? The Daily's editorial pro-Zion- ist stand is its right. I do not object to a paper taking a stand. but I do object tothe reasons it gives for it. So far I have read in The Daily some quite blatant Holy Cause propaganda, based on emotional, nationalistic-patriotic assumptions. Walter Shapiro's enlightened idea that "No rhetoric can in the final analysis mask the maniacal depravity which ,is war," is giv- en a "but if" qualification for Israel, which provides "all the requisite makings of a real mili- tary crusade." Mr. Shapiro is ob- viously saying that if this were. not true, Israel's war would be a holy one. However, if the state- ment were not true, any war could be a holy one if it is named as such. Little ref erences-"the Israeli army-300,000 of the best fighters in the world"-parallel the Asso- ciated Press techniques, even to using quotes to give the impres- sion that a word means other than it does-"Zionists." THE REPRINT of Barbara Tuch- man's. letter to the Washington Post was the final straw. She is simply calling for the Crusades to be fought again. If I am going to be convinced that Israel has a right to exist on land rightfully belonging to others, it will not be because "Israel represents the land and the nation which were the source of the Judaeo-Christian tradition to which we and the oth- er Western nations belong and which, presumably, we uphold." That is a big "presumably" and reflects the height, not only of hypocrisy in assuming Jews are somehow divinely suited to the land, but of pure patriotic drivel, a la LBJ, as well. I am interested to know that we all "turn our faces in the grave" toward Israel. but hardly see this as relevant to wars in the twentieth century The Daily's resurrection of the word "patriot," which it has not, I think, used previously in refer- ence to the Cuban and Vietena- mese revolutions, is a key to this policy. If you wish to create the impression that the Israelis de- serve our sympathies, as I agree the Vietnamese who resist the U.S. do, you might reviewsyour reasons. No one is going to be convinced in the name of flags, emotional sentiment appealing to chosen races and religions, or Holy Dest- iny. -Mary S. Roth On Barbarism Sunday evening some local rep- resentatives of Students for a Democratic Society disrupted a meeting being held at Ann Arbor High School to help raise funds for medicine, bandages and blood for Israel. They consisted of a group of four, one, the president of the group, a somewhat slender dark haired child dressed up in glasses, another a tall brownish fuzzy haired individual attired in a green T-shirt, which somewhat covered the overhang of a fat, flatulent gut, and the third a bony girl named Susan, the fourth sufficiently without note as to prohibit remenbrance. Hearsay has it that the presi- dent of the group asked the girl, concerning the husband of a married couple seated in front of them, "Is this the man I'm going to accuse of raping you?" to The wife also yelled, "How dare you insult Prof. Kaplan like this." The willful proponents of free speech without regard to the rights of others (perhaps a paperback copy of J. S. Mill's "On Liberty" would be a useful gift) temporar- ily quit and decamped to anoth- er part of the aidience. WHEN PROF. KAPLAN had concluded his moving address deal- ing-with human decency and mor- ality, Mr. IL Khadduri, president of the Organization of Arab Stu- dents, leapt from his seat in the audience beside Ann Arbor's mayor (who had indicated to the audi- ence and to Mr. Khadduri that he would be willing, in the in- terests of humanitarian principles, to bless a similar meeting of the Arabs if they chose to marshal one) on to the stage to give a few impromptu prepared remarks. Hearsay has it that Mi. Khadduri violated a tacit agreement to fore- bear, but perhaps the heat and humidity of the auditorium, re- establishing fond memories of home, so moved him as to break the bonds of restraint. (Here again perhaps an inexpensive gift of Mill's "On Liberty" would be in order.) The local lights of SDS again leapt to the breaking glint of public display of contempt (con- temptible display?) with brackish croaks of "let him speak." Prof. Kaplan replied, "You would de- stroy so of ten in the name of peace." A demonstration of public rights was evinced which evicted the lo- cal representatives of SDS into an open discussion with a local representative of Ann Arbor's fin- est, but their purpose was accom- plished, to disrupt the free and lawful assembly of their fellow citizens. Whether unknown stran- gers on a foeign shore die in- directly through their actions need not concern them, unless the shore happens to be the Pacific rather than the Mediterranean. I wish to protest publicly the barbarism of these individuals in their cal- lous disregard of the rights of others, and to wonder openly if they wear green shirts because they are too poor to afford brown. -J. David Chananie Arub Request I, an Arab student, tried to speak sensibly for a few minutes at the Israeli rally Sunday at the Ann Arbor High School. I was refused that opportunity in a very un- peaceful like manner. The spon- sor of the affair even refused to look over and to read beforehand what I had to say. I ask, are these the actions of peace and understanding that we .constantly hear from Israel and the American senators and UN delegates. For how can sympathy and tolerance that leads to un- derstanding and peace be achiev- ed if each side only say that they are completely right, it is the other who is completely wrong? I thought that this was one of the few countries in the world where, through free speech. an at- tempt of understanding between people can be achieved. Enforced attitudes, such as those exhibit- ed Sunday, lead only to hate and violence. This is not the American way of freedom and peace, is it? Here is what I wanted to say: "I don't want to disrupt this rally. I only want to make the Americans aware of what they are about to do. You are going to the West who inhumanly perse- cuted the Jews and forced us to carry the burden of their tor- mented conscience. I am only ask- ing you to realize where the blame belongs .We would not have liked this problem if we could have helped it. It was forced down our throats and it deeply hurt us. We might be underdeveloped, we might have more ignorance and disease than you do, but we are also human beings like you who don't like to be mistreated and wronged. The horrible thing about this is that you have not been allowed to hear our cries.of agony and pain by the Zionists in this country. "They have persuaded you through your senators and the mass communication media to overlook our rights, to regard us as established enemies of yours. But we are not an enemy of the American people. We have not hurt you. We are being hurt by your biased and unjust foreign policy and your military aid, Where is the commitment of four U.S. Presidents to safeguard the territorial integrity of all the Middle Eastern states, and to stop military aggression by anybody there? This is not the American way of, justice, and it certainly will not lead to peace. Do you want to support that? "You are only asked to be just and to uphold. your cherished prin- ciples. This can only be done by understanding both sides of this terribly complex problem andbe- lieve me, you don't know our side, the other side of the coin. So hold on to your money until you are sure of what you are doing, before hurting other people un- justly who are your friends but who might later explode in your faces for these actions . ." -Imad Khadduri President of the Organization of Arab Students, the University of Michigan 'Faith is lead' The following letter was sent to John M. Bailey, chairman of the Democratic National Com- mittee: You ask whether or not I will back my political beliefs with money and I answer that I've long been convinced that "Faith without works is dead." However, I no longer have an ounce of faith in the administra- tion of the greatest gun-toter in the history of Texas. As far as I'm concerned Lyndon Johnson has got to go and I don't care where as long as it is soon enough to deliver us from the threat of nuclear war which he apparently doesn't mind risking. SINCE YOU ARE an earnest man endeavoring to do -a good job, I just thought you should know that I know that I have a lot of company and that this is going to make your job very dif- ficult. Every dime I can invest in political effort will be spent in the noble cause of defeating this administration. As I see it, we have sunk to the moral level of the unlamented Adolph Hitler and are ourselves guilty of the unprovoked aggres- sion which our governmental spokesmen attribute to North Viet- nam. In one respect we may even have sunk lower because while Hitler first gassed his victims we burn them alive. By DAVID KNOKE A peace movement in S'outh Vietnam involving hundreds, per- haps thousands, of that nation's intellectual elite has been brutally crushed in the last several months by the Ky regime, with almost no notice in the American press. Alfred Hassler, executive sece- tary of the Fellowship of Recon- ciliation, an international pacifist ore'anization. was in Ann Arbor last weekend and recounted his most recent trip to South Vitnam and its tragic outcome. Hsler' sooke with the weariness of a man who has seen too much of the world's cruelty and knows that when good actions are min- ine, words cannot make up for this lack. With the aid of letters of rec- ommendation from a remarkable Buddhist monk, Thich Nhat Hanh, Hassler was able to gain the con- fidence of dozens of Buddhist leaders who had long feared to talk with Westerners aboutrtheir hopes for ending the war. THE PEOPLE of South Viet- nar, contends Hassler, are being driven into the arms of the Com- munists because they have no al- ternative but to support the Unit- ed States, "and this they will not do." He brought back a letter from the Buddhist leader Thich Tr Quang warning. "The more the war goes on, the stronger Com- munism becomes, the more Amer- icans be colonialists, the more our people are destroyed." Yet a third alternative to either continuing the devastating war, or to waiting for the U.S. to yield on conditions for negotiations was slowing gathering around the Uni- fied Buddhist Church and South Vietnamese university leadership. The peace proponents were ask- ing only for a chance to establish a non-Ky, non-Communist govern- ment to negotiate with the Viet Cong for an end to the war and withdrawal of U.S. troops. The chance was utterly destroyed by a, crackdown by the Ky govern-, ment to whom "neutralism," "pac- ifism" and "Communism" are synonymous. Hassler also broughtdback a letter from some 70 students and professors in the five universities of South Vietnam. They plead with the Americans to free them from the bonds of war and the Ky government, They declare that "Americansshould not believe they are protecting South Vieenamese from Communism. Most of us be- lieve the United States only wants to control our country in order to prepare for war with China. The present government of South Viet- nam is not our government and does not represent our people. If we were free to vote freely, this government would not last one day." ON THE LAST night of his stay in Saigon two months ago, Hass- ler met in secret with represen- tatives of the student movement in his room in a Buddhist board- ing house: "They had been talking of a new demonstration. They had been suppressed in Danang and Hue last year and they were very bit- ter about it, because they had ben suppressed not really by the Ky forces but by the United States without which the Ky forces can- not move. "Now they were impatient, des- pairing and they wanted to move again. They had decided they would have a major demonstration at the University of Hue and at that point many of them would immolate themselves as a last means to expressing their despair. "I talked them out of it, maybe because I'm a Westerner and de- stroying yourself is suicide and suicide is the sign of a cowardly and deranged personality, which is not the case with Buddhism. "I talked them out of it. I said they were needed in the new society coming, Their strength, their ability was needed; they would do more for peace by stay- ing alive than by burning them- selves to death. I told them there were other ways of communicating with the American people. We worked out together a letter they would write signed by their' leading people and addressed to the American student leaders who had protested the war to President Johnson. I said such a letter, stating their feelings as they are, representing a non-Com- munist movement in South Viet- nam. would surely make the Amer- ican press and make an impact on American society." HASSLER brought back the let- ter with the signatures, but prom- ised not to make the names pub- lic, which would have meant im- mediate arrest and imprisonment. Two people insisted their names be public when the letter appear- ed: Miss Cao Ngoc Phuong, a professor of botany at Saigon University. and Phuong Lui Tai, student body president at Dalat University, but then hiding from the police. They insisted on having their names revealed despite the imme- diate danger to their lives. "If we are to see the kind of society we do want, some of us have to be prepared to speak on equal terms with the=Communsts and if we are not prepared to go to jail now, we will not be pre- pared to talk on even terms with anyone," they explained. Hassler held a press conference at the Hotel Commodore. Nobody came.NThe lettermwas taken to The New York Times and the wire services, but not a word has appeared today in the U.S. press, except for a paid ad in the Times and stories in some of the small, radical magazines, The European papers, however, reprinted the letter and carried news stories on it. Cao Ngoc Phuong, the pretty botanist, has been arrested. Since then, over 200 additional names that were being sent to Hassler have ap- parently been intercepted; all of the signatories have been arrest- ed and imprisoned. Yet none of this appeared in the American press, although all of the material was given to it. THEdLETTER was sent to the hundred student leaders and not a single reply was received. Hass- ler met some of them in person, pointing out that these were their opposite numbers in South Viet- nam. They wanted to send a letter of thanks back to the Viet- namese through Hassler, "if they would be given no publicity, be- cause, they said, if there was any publicity,. the credibility of their moderate position would be de- stroyed." On May 16, Thau Ti Mai, one of the young women who signed the letter, burned herself to death. The funeral procession was over five miles long. She left behind a poem written the night before her immo tion. I join my hands and kneel down. I accept this utmost pain in my body In the hope that the words of my heart be heard: Please stop it, my fellow men. More than 20 years elapsed, More than 20 years of bloodshed. Do not exterminate my people. Do not exterminate my people. I join my hands and kneel down to pray. "ONE OF THE more shameful aspects of our involvement in the war," says Hassler, "has been the deprecation of the Vietnamese people as somehow inferior or criminal. We must not underesti- mate them. There is great power and depth of spiritual commit- ment available if we would give it only the slightest chance to ex- press itself." ,o, 4 i 4 a1 fl *1 The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate Press Service. Summer subscription rate: $2.00 per term by carrier ($2.50 by mail); $4.00 for entire summer ($4.50 by mail). Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Second.class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Summer Business Staff- "This Time, How About a Solid Foundation?" 196 ( -~ zc -'- 9/ CORRECTION A N EDITORIAL published in this