" Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN n-UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Whee Opinions AreFee, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: AVIVA KEMPNER K M _ .nm"""a A..A Ift . 6 - a the crystal palace Russell Tribunal: A Moral Reckoning ! Johnson's Dirty War UNITED PRESS International's respect- In view of the desertions and diss ed White House correspondent Merri- within the President's camp it isn man Smith lashed out the other day to understand why young men acr against outspoken critics of President country are fleeing to Canada, m Johnson. In a speech Smith said Johnson graduate schools and struggling t has become the target of a widespread draft physicals so they can avoid villification that could "tear down public trip to Johnson's circus of hor confidence" and lead to a state of chaos. Vietnam. After all they are only Smith criticized stores that sell licefse different from the President's you plates "associating the President with in-law who is now residing comf barnyard filth" and peace demonstrators in a new $70,D0O house in sunny Au that "openly and plainly challenge the As long as this country's polic President's normalcy. like a cross between the Chicago'] He said that if the groups are "suc- editorial page and the John Birch cessful" they could lead us to a "rudder- Blue Book the President is going less society of irresponsibility to the plenty of flak. group, amorality for the further erosion As it has been pointed out aga of the family unit, and finally the confu- again the Vietnamese war is fun sion of anarchy." tally a civil war between the Vie "It is open to legitimate public debate" and the Republic of South Vietna whether the nation's leaders "are em- Viet Cong attacks began only af barked on a wrong course," he said, but dictatorial South Vietnamese gove "under our system they cannot be dump- decided, with U.S. backing, toc ed overboard." scheduled elections in 1956 that h Smith is tangling up his premises. No promised in the 1954 Geneva con one is dumping the nation's leadership The elections were cancelled bec overboard. The administration has dived even President Eisenhower admi into the soup head first and the sane ele- the time, the South Vietnamese kn ments in this country are trying desper- couldn't win. ately to fish it out before they pull the It is true that North Vietnam i whole ship down with them. substantial aid to the Viet Cong. B IT IS NO ACCIDENT that Lyndon John- large extent the North Vietnames son stands an excellent chance of go- has been largely in response to U. ing down as the most unpopular president tary escalation in Vietnam. It is n in American history. By plunging the ing to say we are fighting agains country into a war of lunacy he has in- munist aggression, since we bro vied vicious criticism. There are people that aggression ourselves with o in this country who find it hard to ac- military efforts. cept the deaths of thousands of Ameri- can young men because the nation's lead- THE GLUM PROSPECT is thatt ers think war is the way to peace. may actually turn its illusion o The critics have plenty of company ternational, Peking-based, Com when they question the motives of a man conspiracy into reality by continue who was elected on a peace platform in lation. Just as the U.S. bombing 1964 and then jumped into a senseless North Vietnam's military units i: war. Senate Majority Leader Mansfield, war, the U.S. may force China i Foreign Relations Committee Chairman war. Then the President woul Fulbright, Senators Kennedy, Percy, Hat- around and accuse the Chinese of field, McGovern, Gruening, Morse, the sion (as he did with North Vietna head of the World Council of Churches, launch an attack on the Chinese the secretary-general of the United Na- land. Since the Chinese have un tions, Cassius Clay, Paul Newman, Har- manpower, a protracted battle cos lan Hatcher, John Lindsay-the list is lives of many more American me endless-have all openly questioned the result. President's conduct of the war. Is it any wonder that young pe It is getting to the point where the sounding off so vehemently a only encouragement the President can get President who is provoking s is an occasional phone call from Barry fighting that could ultimately co Goldwater out in Phoenix who thinks of them their lives? Johnson is doing a fine job with the war. Merriman Smith is incorrect w Even the President's top advisors have thinks the President's critics will bowed out in the midst of the fighting. an "erosion of the family uni Jack Valenti is now screening dirty pic- President himself is doing t tures in Hollywood and Bill Moyers is prompting a war that is costing t publishing a daily newspaper on Long Is of thousands of sons, fathers ai land. bands. HE FACT IS that Johnson has gone so It is said the President often h far out that even his secretary of de- culty going to sleep at night bec " a ttta vnhssceayo e the war. And well he should. By c fense (secretary of war?) now finds him- the waruA h. ell he shol Byc self a dove. Robert McNamara opposed the ing o pursue his suicidal polcy recent bombing of MIG bases in Northonad Vietnam for fear that it could eventually y pages. lead to a war with China. Johnson bombed -ROGER'RAP' anyway. Editor Preserving Demorae in Asia .&VJ _ ----- sension 't hard oss the lobbing o flunk a free rors in a little ng son- ortably stin. y reads Tribune Society to take in and damen- t Cong im. The ter the rnment call off ad been vention. ause, as tted at ew they s giving 3ut to a e effort S. mili- aislead- ft Com- ight on ur own the U.S. f an in- amunist ad esca- forced nto the nto the d turn aggres- m) and main- ilimited ting the n could ople are bout a enseless st many hen he induce t." The iat, by he lives nd hus- as diffi- ause of ontinu- in Viet- ling the OPORT 9, TeRgse nd Tribune Syndicate "Just who the hell WAS Presi dent in 1954 . . .?" Letters to te Editor By DAVID KNOKE The International War Crimes Tribunal, sponsored by British philosopher-pacifist Bertrand Rus- sell, quietly opened hearings in Stockholm, Sweden, last week. Since its inception a year ago, the tribunal has been assailed by both critics and supporters of the American intervention in Vietnam. Anti-war groups called the ven- ture "irresponsible," cited the ob- vious Marxist-leanings of the 15- member tribunal and the failure of the group to investigate atroci- ties by National Liberation Front and the North Vietnamese troops. A hawkish analyst for the New York Times, Bernard Levin, per- formed a hatchet job on the Rus- sell group, alleging that Russell had lost his mind and was being manipulated by dissident Ameri- can expatriates. The conclusions at which the tribunal will arrive are foregone. President Johnson, Secretaries McNamara and Rusk will be in- dicted in absentia for crimes against humanity that will include illegal intervention in a civil war and the use of genocidal weapons against civilians. But, as the tri- bunal statement of purpose ac- knowledges, its findings can have no conceivable effect upon the persons it indicts: "We command no state power; we do not represent the strong; we control no armies or treasur- ies. We act out of the deepest mor- al concern and depend upon the conscience of ordinary people throughout the world for the real support ... Recognizing their own limita- tions, why does this assemb,',ge of angered intellectuals persist with their investigations in the face of ridicule and scorn? Whatever pub- licity they receive is certain to he more adverse than beneficent; at best they will reinforce the anti- war groups' convictions, PART of the answer seems to lie in the composition of persons sitting on the tribunal. Jean-Paul Sartre, the French existentialist philosopher, chairs the tribunal. He has broken a public silence for the first time since he spoke out against the French atrocities in Algeria. American pacifist David Dellinger once defied a State De-' partment ban to travel to Castro's Cuba. Vladimir Dedijer has been a persistent critic of statist tactics in his native Yugoslavia And Lord Russell, too old to travel to Sweden, is financinig the venture with royalties from his autobiography detailing nearly a century of moral courage as a pro- ponent of minority opinions. For these individuals not to go ahead, even under adverse condi- tions would be, in Sartre'shwords, "to keep bad faith with one- self." To act may well be futile, but to Use futility as an excuse for not speaking out against abom- nities is to deny the existential freedom of choice that each man must make when faced with acqul.- esence or opposition to injustice. LORD RUSSELL has not grown senile: the vigorous rationality of his arguments are avoidable only at the cost of self-deception. And this scares critics with less moral courage and makes Russell the fo- cus of irrelevant attacks. His insistence on moral absolutes is the answer to critics who see him as one-sided in his condem- nation of the U.S. and not the NLF terrorism. Those who excuse U.S. atrocities because the NLF does likewiseoverlook the moral attrition such explaining-away had upon the alleged righteous- ness of America's purposes. The tribunal spent several months of preparation in travel- ing to North Vietnam to assess the effects of American bombings; in retaining "witnesses" to testify at the hearings; and in inviting Messrs. Johnson, Rusk and McNa- mara to appear in their own de- fense (declined of course). The revelations that are due to come out of the hearings in the next several weeks should overwhelmingly indicate that American policy is a direct affront to human dignity and everything this great nation was founded to preserve. ONLY THROUGH discovery by tribunal investigators that cluster bomb units (CBU's) had been ex- tensively dropped over the North, did the world have concrete evi- dence that anti-personnel weap- ons were being employed. CBU's-obscenely called "pine- apples" or "guavas" by the men that use them-spray thousands of quarter-inch pellents over a large area. Tribunal witness Dr. Jean-Pierre Vigier of the Univer- sity of Paris said the pellets do little damage to concrete or steel but are devastating to the human body. Prof. J. B. Neilands of the bio- chemistry department of the Uni- versity of California, cited a March 15 speech by President Johnson saying "it is our policy to bomb military targets only." On the same day in Viettri near Hanoi, said Neilands, he visited a village that had been bombed by anti- personnel weapons; he listed sev- en case histories of victims he saw. The Crystal Palace housed what Victorian England believ- ed to be the epitome of scien- tific and technological advance- ment in the Exhibition of 1851. In 1864. Fyodor Dostoyevski wrote "Notes from Underground" in which the Crystal Palace be- came a symbol for all the forces that promote "rationality" and material progress as the path to salvation but destroy the in- tegrity and the freedom of the individual in the process. The analogy is even more apt today. 4 0 The Sweet Censor We would like to warn people interested in seeing Fellini's "La Dolce Vita" now showing at the Fifth Forum, that the movie has been severely cut and abridged. Though the distributors fraud- ulently advertise it as "uncut," and "uncensored," many of the more serious and intelligent scenes have been omitted. The movie has been rigorously "censored," and scenes that have nothing to do with sex are left out. Lieutenant Staudenmeier's "thermometer of society" has most accurately gaug- ed the nature of commercial in- terests in sex in the cinema. All that remain are scenes that send the mercu y up: the movie is a chaotic series of spicy events in the Italian equivalent of Holly- wood circles BY ADVERTISING it as "un- tut" and "uncensored" in the Fifth Forum lobby, the ,company responsible is intentionally de- ceiving the public. For this rea- son, and because the result is designed to titillate people with clean all-American minds, we urge everyone to stay away. If ted- ium in Ann Arbor-since there's nothing else to see-becomes too pressing, at least get your money back on the way out. If inspired to take stronger measures, try a citizens arre4 of the projection- ist and the candy-girl for show- ing an obscene movie. And don't forget to confiscate the reel - and the candy girl-as evidence at the trial. -Dominick Grundy, Grad -John Potter, Grad Crime It seems desirable to review a serious on-campus crime: on South State Street, in early spring, a coed was abducted and raped by a four-man group. Apprehension seemed remote, so a letterto the editor appeared April 5. An inter- esting time-correlation then oc- curred, in that, about five days later, one of that group was ar- rested on an Ann Arbor street. Just previous to this crime, the same group had purposely bump- ed into a rear of a car in Ypsi- lanti and when the lady driver got out to inspect the damage to her car, she too was abducted and raped by the men. It is quite obvious that still greater pressure should be exerted on the police to catch "the three rapists still at large. An "Anti-Crime Resolution" submitted to the Ann Arbor City Council still has not received prop- er attention. Much greater pres- sure on the City Council to act regarding anti-crime proposals is surely indicated. -Lewis C. Ernst Ugliness About a month ago you publish- ed a very good letter outlining the reasons why anyone concern- ed about the aesthetic aspects of this institution should be alarmed by plans for the proposed gradu- ate library. The readers, with whom I agree, pointed out that the planned building as depicted in an architect's rendering print- ed by The Daily was ugly and cheap in appearance, and quite possibly out of proportion to its setting. Confident that the aforemen- tioned letter would bring forth a controversy, and ultimately a de- fense of this building, I scanned your pages anxiously for weeks. To date no one has appeared in print to declare an interest one way or the other in this impend- ing eyesore. I AM SHOCKED. Are the mem- bers of this community so inured to campus ugliness that they feel they deserve nob etter? Is 10 stor- ies of glass and brick stripes Mich- igan's answer to Harvard's new Holyhoke Center, or Chicago's new Civic Center-designed by a mem- ber of the Michigan faculty? As a layman I am ever ready to be convinced that there are virtues in a structure which I cannot per- ceive, but in the case of the grad- uate library the architect has gone to unwanted lengths to conceal whatever merits his edif ace has. MAY WE HEAR more on this subject? -Matthew P. McCauley, '67L Poetic Justice AN ODE TO THE KITCHEN As soon as the time to sup draws nigh, Our hearts are wont to heave a sigh For in the Bowl's of our kitchen, Rise smells to start our innards bitchin ! 'Tis slop that Brandwyine would spit on,I Yet we must smile and stuff it down. We have no grudge against good meat, But rubber soles are not a treat. We hate to eat your sloppy joes. They look as if unearthed with hoes. The sandwiches that you call Ruben, Should not be fed to Fidel the Cuban. The beans and chicken taste so icky, That stomachs throw them back up quickly. The grand old eggplant sickly green, Seems fit for those with ruptured spleens. We leave our table then with groans, Go up and give the mess to John -Kathy Kalls 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. A' The New Diplomacy .._,,. ... AT LARGE .By NEIL SHISTER : High Above Cayuga's Waters, 'HEY (OUR TROOPS) know that they are helping to stop the spread of Communism in Southeast Asia and to give the people of South Vietnam a freedom of choice." -Gen. Westmoreland at the Waldorf, April 24 "ALL MEDIA are controlled or, heavily censored. Radio and TV belong to the government .... The gaps in the front pages of- Saigon's newspapers are con- stant and sometimes laughable .... The Saigon Guardian, an English language paper, was closed four months ago by The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate Press Service Summer subscription rate: $2.00 per term by car- rier; ($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 junta order. Its editor. Ton That Thien, who writes frequently for the London Economist and the Manchester Guardian, was director of public relations at one time in the Diem government. He finds it difficult to understand the U.S. atti- tude toward press repression in Saigon. 'We only had 7000 circulation,' he told me. 'We were the only paper even slightly critical of Ky and the generals'." -Hunton Downs, assistant to the editor of the Honolulu Advertiser, for Saigon April 14. -FROM I. F. STONE'S WEEKLY May 1, 1967 ITHACA, N.Y.-Kim Dubin is an effervescent Cornell freshman who is learning to be a painter and believes half-seriously that "the Communists hang out at 107 Dryden Street." But, then again, a lot of other students here share this feeling. It turns out that 107 Dryden, located in the two block "college town" which borders one side of the campus, houses "The Office." Rather than the headquarters for the local Communist cell, it is the operation center for "the flower- powered peace creeps" as they are sometimes irreverently called high above Lake Cayuga's waters. The Office is furnished quite haphazardly in SDS modern. The front room sports a large banner waving the word LOVE, and near it on the wall is a picture of some feeding hogs being told "to fatten up, so Lyndon can send you off to slaughter." There is a smaller room in the back, where a beard- ed graduate student (reputed to have never received' any other mark than "A"), turns out anti- war monographs on a combination printing press-mimeograph ma- BUT IT ISN'T. A member of the Student Exec- utive Board (roughly comparable to SGC at the University) com- plains bitterly of the "mass apa- thy" pervading the school in the absence of "even a moderate stu- dent power philosophy." As dramatic testimony to his observation is the special runoff election soon to be held for the head of student government. It features as one of its two con- testants a wealthy, avowed con- servative (who won a plurality but not the required majority in the original election), advocating, as his main platform plank, the abo- lition of student government. Al- though everyone treats him light- ly, they stillvote for him. This ambivalence at Cornell, quite similar to that at the Uni- versity, reveals the schizophrenia which seems one of the distinct characteristics of the current crop of college students. There is a local, articulate political periphery but the majority of the genera- tion is apolitical and largely un- concerned. As is often the case, adhering to the "work-ethic" which defines education like any other job. The monetary temper of our generation, distraught by the pros- pect of having to go to war, is misleading. Belief in its inher- ent radicalism is unfounded. Its flavor is distinctly conservative, although this is more of a social than a political nature. The "success motif" seems the dominant one in force, at least among those at the better schools, and "dropping out" of the system is more talked-about than believed in or carried out. ONE FEELS this very strongly at a place like Cornell. Even with all its magnificent Gothic build- ings and waterfalls and suspension bridges, the most important place on the campus is the library. And, as one student puts it, "There's not much time to do anything else but study." Which brings everything back to Kim Dubin, aspirant painter. Her instincts are good ones, her sense of humanity genuine and her art not bad. By ROBERT JOHNSTON Collegiate Press Service PRINCETON, N.J.-When Ernst Winter returned to Vienna seven years ago after 20 years in the United States, his first problem was to find a place to live, no mean feat for a man who needed housing not only for his wife (one of the von Trapp daughters, im- mortalized in "The Sound of Mu- sic") but for five children and 10,000 books. Characteristically, he soon arranged for a loan from an international service organization to buy a handsome chateau on the edge of town. This left him free to tackle his second problem, his new ap- pointment to the Vienna Diplo- matic Academy, which consisted of 55-60 students drawn from all over Europe and housed in an- other chateau in the center of the city. Winter soon decided that, Amer- ican cold feet to the contrary notwithstanding, a rigidly parti- tioned Europe was an anachron- ism that would sooner or later be discarded. Now, half his Acade- my's graduates go to work on the problems of European integration from within the numerous and rapidly expanding international organizations in Europe; the rest tackle the same problems from within the individual countries' diplomatic corps. VISITING Princeton University recently on the last leg of a four- week trip through the United States, Winter described the Dip- lomatic Academy's program as "a little more rigorous" than higher education in America and con- trasted this country's alienated youth with the vigor, enthusiasm and optimism of students in Eu- rope. Europeans are beginning to see themselves as a new international entity, he said; nationalities are cacies of hundreds of years of diplomatic history. HIS EDUCATION philosophy isn't exactly conventional, either. "We don't have any permanent faculty at the Academy," Win- ter explained. "Everything is de- cided by the students. Twice a year they meet for a week to de- cide what they need to be study- ing. They are very future-orient- ed and cry to think of what skills and training will be valuable to them 10 years from now." By then, he said, a new Europe, in- terdependent from London to Moscow, will be well-advanced, and they are very excited about this prospect. And a rigorous two-year pro- gram it is. One suspects that the graduates are much like Winter himself-at home in any environ- ment, from the stuffiest diplomatic chancellories with the most ex- acting standards of bearing and behavior to the intellectualism of the university ivory tower. Even so, Winter wondered at the single-mindedness of the peo- ple he had recently met at a famous West Coast research cen- ter. "They just don't know how to live!" he exclaimed. He him- self seemed at all times finely- tuned both to the nuances of the good life as only the European elite can live it and to the emerg- ing intellectual methods and in- sights of the rapidly developing social sciences. NOTING THAT about half of the Academy's graduates go into the various European diplomatic corps, Winter quickly added that these corps are very different from the U.S. State Department. "The State Department is still do- mestically oriented," he maintain- ed. The European corps are "way ahead of it" in their internation- al orientation, working on the in- tegration of Europe across old bar- riers of distrust and red tape. Just Suppose. . . AN INTRIGUING THOUGHT: Suppose that Attorney Jim Garrison's assassi- nation probe in New Orleans results in the conviction of one or several conspira- tors. And, furthermore, suppose that the case is appealed, and eventually reaches the Supreme Court. Chief Justice Earl Warren. whose name precedes the official I