Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN - UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinn reFee, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Truth Will Prevail Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDA'5, AUGUST 8, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID KNOKE U h I: Master of Practicality LT±L. 1 THE LEGITIMAC over the Univei riouncement of a n rent for marr unquestionable. T however, may be j' The students liv housing are signir ng not to pay the weren't warned it, By waiting unt the rent hike, tl Office gave resid for married studer to accept the high give the . Univers :reak a housing cc lents were willing' at .the end of Sep doubtful that they ng arrangements time. Still, maintena sharply recently,A ive to continue Building and gro nany cases, been can be put off no l But the Univers had knowledge of. since last semester The late, date of ion cannot be use ng Office's tardy ncreases since U: are required by M self supporting. Many married st ers have objecte [hey suspect thet o lay aside mone: er to be built it they want faciliti and a nursery, b ley don't want hey will not be a ion't want it ba ents. The commu uspect, was foist( esidents with litti [HE IDEA THA for a low priori ype is a bit of a lent Advisory Con ,ided three or fo community center io suggestions to t ap so it has rema consideration. This year's Inc 962, will probably else. If there is a ommitted- to a co other specific re Money above the WVI nl1KV I P us Married Students on the Spot' "Y of student complaint and interest on bonds will be put into a rsity's poorly-timed an- pool to be used for unspecified residence $10 per month increase hall expansion. ied-student housing is Married students' suspicion that the he rent increase itself, community center was developed with ustified. little consultation with the people con- ving in married student cerned is justified, however. The student ng a petition threaten- voice in the rent hike was the Student e increase because they Advisory Committee on Housing which was coming. was largely unaware of the decreased in- M1 Aug. 1 to announce terest in a community center over the he University Housing last few years. The committee to a large ents of the apartments extent approved the rent increase with- its almost no choice but out considering possible alternatives, such er rent. Residents must as checking out the efficiency of present ity 30 days notice to maintenance on North Campus. ontract and even if stu- Lack of communication between stu- to break their contracts dents in North Campus apartments for tember, it is extremely married students and the Student Hous- y could make other liv- ing Advisory Committee has not been en- in Ann Arbor at that tirely the fault of the committee. Participation of the married students nce costs have risen in housing office decisions has generally making it more expen- not been good. The Student Advisory the present upkeep. Committee on Housing has also been unds repairs have, in hampered by the fact that the decision postponed until they to raise rents was made during the sum- onger. mer when attendance was at best spor- sity Housing Office has adic-frequently no graduate students these growing expenses were present. r. f the state's appropria- THE FEEBLENESS of the official stu- ed to explain the Hous- dent voice leaves little choice for the announcement of rent married students but to threaten. The niversity housing units prognosis for a successful rent strike is ichigan state law to be not good, however. Ludent.apartment dwrel- aAttempts to threaten the Regents with a public scandal have failed in the past d to the rent increase. largely because of the Regents' uncanny extra rent is being used capacity in finding a way to avoid any y for a community cen- clear-cut yes or no decisions. n three or four years. eS for more study areas Residents of Northwood and University ut for the most par Terrace have been quick to sign a peti- tpa forhemsthpa tion circulated by Graduate Assembly to pay for something saying they are "prepared" to withhold' dY enough to increase the difference between the old rent and nity center idea, many the new rent. When it comes to facing ed upon North Campus legal squabbles and possible eviction, it is d uonNorthnCamp doubtful that all 900 residents of married .e consultation, student apartments will be willing to T the rent increase is risk withholding rent. ty capital outlay of this Married students have a difficult fi- red herring. The stu- nancial situation and any rent increase nmittee on Housing de- is a hardship. But paying $125 per month ur years ago that the -the new rate-for a two bedroom apart- r was a good idea and ment, is still inexpensive by Ann Arbor the contrary have come standards.. The University's late an- ined an area of prime nouncement of the increase, however, compounds the financial strain. A stu- rease, the first since dent rental strike,.even if it is futile, is cover repairs and little the only response students can make in ny money left it is not the face of the University's traditional mmunity center or any summer announcement policy and inflex- sidence hall projects. ible contracts structure. cost of maintenance --LUCY KENNEDY By PAUL WINSTON Daily Guest Writer MANY CONTEND that U Thant's decision. preceding the recent Middle East crisis, to with- draw the United Nations conting- ent from the area was weak and unwise - because: first, Thant bowed to Nasser's demand that UNEF be removed, without con- sulting the General Assembly, the body which, formally at least, cre- ated that emergency force; and second, the withdrawal allowed and encouraged active hostilities to occur. In other words, people argue that it would have been desirable that UNEF had remain- ed, and therefore that Thant's ac- tion was weak and unwise. (And the weakness evidenced by Thant in this example is but a single manifestation of a general tend- ency toward timidity which char- acterizes all of his actions and attitudes.) I would accuse those who so condemn the secretary-general, for they are obviously ignorant of the limitations international political relations place upon the ability of the secretary-general to do what he might deem desirable or, good. I suggest that Thant, in the present difficulty and in previous crises, has acted wisely and has learned much from the experi- ences of his two predecessors: in essence, he has done what he could do-and to do more would certainly have been destructive of his effectiveness as an interna- tional civil servant, of his own of- fice, and, in an important sense, of the United Nations itself. REFERENCE has already been made to the notion of capability- specifically to'the fact that Thant is able to do only certain things, given the nature of international realities. The UN too, and related- ly, is limited in its ability to un- dertake programsinu rthe peace- keeping area particularly. The UN is simply not a collective security organization. Its framers realized that the conditions essential to the formation of such an orga- nization were lacking in the world -that is, a world of nations able and willing to ally against an ag- gressor state did not exist; con- sequently, the preponderance nec- essary to deter or suppress ag- gression also did not exist - as nations, for many reasons, did not see it to be in their best in- terests to promise to forget alli- ances and other commitments (and hatreds), and to join with their brother states to smash ag- gression (which might be commit- ted by a friend, or perhaps even themselves). Hence the adoption of the veto, provision by the framers. This charter clause provides that no actions shall be taken by the UN without approval by (or the ac- quiesence) of the great powers- for, as the framers felt, were UN machinery allowed to proceed against the interests of a major power in a particular area, wars would be made not less, but more likely. Collective security measures, then, against great powers were seen in 1946 to be undesirable. With the failure, in 1946-49, of the Security Council's Military Staff Committee to agree upon troop and armament assessments among the member states, collective se- curity against minor states was made impossible also. Despite the Uniting for Peace Resolution in the early fifties, whereby the Gen- eral Assembly, in which the veto could not be used, would initiate security operations, as well as the Korean affair, able to be un- dertaken only because the Soviet Union had absented itself from the Council, it was apparent that new security procedures w e r e needed. THE QUESTION asked by Sec- retary-General Dag Hammarskjold in the middle-fifties was: what is the UN able to do?rThe relevant considerations were apparent: nothing can be accomplished in the peacekeeping sphere without great power unanimity, so agree- ment among, the powerful states must, in all crises-, be sought. But even if agreement is achieved, the distrust East and West have for each other destroys the willing- ness of one to allow the other to enter'a troubled area as part of a peace-keeping body. Hammarskjold felt that the pres- ence of American and Soviet troops in the Middle East in 1956 might have precipitated a con- frontation between the cold war combatants, which would have ex- panded the Suez crisis into a ma- jor conflict. He then proposed that the major powers remain out of At that same time, however, the Hungarian revolts occurred. The Soviet Union refused tb allow the United Nations to intervene. The UN subsequently, did not involve itself in this crisis. THE LESSON hopefully gained from the experience of UNEF U Thant at the Honors Convocation this area until the disputants had been calmed, principally through the interposition of UN troops. The Soviet Union and the United States, fearing confrontation and desiring to end the hostilities, acquiesced to Hammarskjold's plan, which he called "preventive diplomacy." Letters to the Editor True Blue-Print Isn't it time for a bit of honesty concerning our yearly street ex- travaganzas? Back in 1928, the Sheriff's De- partment raided a secret meeting of top level American Communists at Bridgman, Michigan. What we are witnessing today is the frui- tion of the Communist blue-print which was confiscated bypthe sheriff's men in 1928. A program of racial strife for the United States, as written by a Moscow representative named Jo- seph Pogany (alias John Pepper, John Schwartz, John Swift, etc.) providese a few interesting quotes: "Within the Negro population of the United States, the Negro work- ing class is destined to be the vanguard of all liberation move- ments and may become the van- guard of the liberation movement of the Negro peasant masses on an international scale . . . . The Workers (Communist) Party of America, in its fight against im- perialism, must recognize clearly the tremendous revolutionary pos- sibilities of the liberation move- ment of the Negro people. First of all, we must consider the com- pact Negro farming masses of the 'black belt' as the potential basis for a national liberation move- ment has tremendous revolution-' ary potentialities -. - THE COMMUNIST must parti- cipate in all national liberation movements of the Negroes which have a real mass character . . . The next and most important task of the party in this respect is the selection and education or a cadre of Negro Communist workers ... One aim and purpose of the work among the Negroes in the U.S.A. should be to organize them as the champions of the Negroes all over the world, against imperialism. A strong Negro movement in the U.S.A. will be able to influence and direct the Negro movement in all those parts of the world where the Negroes are oppressed by the imperialist powers." Isn't it clear what is really meant by those so-called civil rights leaders who demand a com- plete "restructuring" of ourna- tion, socially, politically (!) and economically, or they will burn this country to the ground? -John Cole Communist Threat On July 12, 1967, President Johnsonresponded to the con- tinuing request of Congress, in ef- fect since 1959, for a proclamation designating the third week in July as "Captive Nations Week." In his proclamation, Mr. John- son stated that "Whereas freedom and justice are basic human rights to which all men are entitled ... Whereas these inalienable rights have been circumscribed or denied in many areas of the world, and Whereas the U.S. . .. has had an abiding commitment to the prin- ciples of national independence and human freedom," . . . etc., etc., and on and on into an in- finity of mundane mediocrity. Rep. John M. Ashbrook (R- Ohio) has remarked that a com- parison of the Public Law and Mr. Johnson's proclamation reflects "the deterioration of our foreign A Man for all Treasons ;IR THOMAS ALI sits in court facing the Draft Board, with Public Opinion ehind him and the Boxing Board in the ings. Draft Board: -We ask you merely to bey the draft and serve your country. Sir Thomas: I will serve my country 'here it does not conflict with my duty > Allah. Public Opinion: He's a bloody boxer, rnd now he's trying to pass himself off as minister. Draft Board: You must obey the law. Sir Thomas: You cannot ask me to kill. 'here is a higher law.... Draft Board: You must not break our *W. Sir Thomas: Who made the law? Draft Board: Your elected representa- ves. Sir Thomas: I didn't elect them. Where' come from my people are only just get- ing the vote. Draft Board: You are bringing in red errings. The issue is simply whether ou are breaking the law pertaining to. illitary service or not. Public Opinion: My boy had to go. It's hose Black Muslims that have affected is mind. The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and olegiate Press Service. Sir Thomas: If I had say in the law then I would obey it provided it did not ask me to go against the will of Allah. Draft Board: Then you will allow your- self to be inducted into the armed serv- ices? Sir Thomas: I must repeat: my first allegiance is to my God. You ask me to go far away to fight against men with whom I have no quarrel. But my life be- longs to my God and, I cannot throw it away for human beings who wish to play political games with it. Public Opinion: He's a dirty traitor. He won't fight for his country. Did you hear what he said about the enemy? He's a coward. He's made his millions out of this country and now he wants to get out of fighting for it. Boxing Board: We strip him of his world heavyweight boxing crown. Boxers may be gangsters sometimes, or thugs, or killers, but they are never unpatriotic. Sir Thomas: It is said what doth it profit a man if he gain the whole world and suffer the loss of his own soul, and you do it merely for the world heavy- weight crown. Draft Board: Take him away. Public Opinion 1: How would we raise an army if everybody acted that way? Public Opinion 2: He suffered for his beliefs. Public Opinion 1: Now you're talking Mr^ n's-iiats WAVY^V.^ V k a 4 +% ^ - 13 policy regarding the Communist worldwide threat and the con- tinuing success of the policy of coexistence with the greatest evil yet visited upon mankind." THE CONGRESS, in 1959, talk- ed of such things as: "The en- slavement of a substantial part of the world's population by Com- munist imperialism . . . aggressive policies of Russian communism... which poses a direct threat to the security of the U.S., and of all free peoples of the-,world," . . . etc. In his address, of course, Mr. Johnson neither mentions Rus- sian imperialism nor any threat to the security of the U.S. Any mention of those unmentionable items -might sabotage Mr. John- son's political bridge-building to the very ones who were the cause of the, initiation of "Captive Na- tions Week." This year's procla- mation is a direct affront to those nations which are still captive as well as all freedom-loving persons across the world." -Donald E. Van Curler Old Age Recently some letter writers have brought both historians and legal statutes, with a judicial deci- sion, to support the corporate ac- tuality of the existence of the University since 1817. It is now appropriate to dissent on two counts in behalf of the Muse of History. , One well known historianof this State, in differing from the official position on the Sesqui- centennial foundation, points out that the conception of the Univer- sity of Michigan (Catholepiste- miad) was one of central control under two "didactors" administra- tor-teachers). This was similar to the University established by the French Emperor Napoleon, and embraced the entire field of ed- ucation in Michigan Territory, al- though a primary school and academy were the immediate re- sult. ALSO A WIDELY distinguished author of books on Detroit and Michigan informs us that for more than a century after its presumed "rebirth" in Ann Arbor (by the 1837 statute) thetUniversityde- nied any identity with Judge Woodward's 1817 Catholepiste- miad. Professor Slosson once remarked that the Weimar (German) Re- public had experienced all the diseases children are subjected to. In the same vein the critics of the Univrsitc an accuse it of evel- and Hungary in 1956 is that great power agreement is possible in a limited sense (it is not, of course, in the sense that collective security requires), and that without it the UN is necessarily powerless, and essentially inoperative. Given this fact, the secretary- general has as his major task the creation of agreement among the major powers. The success of this task is fundamental to an influ- ential UN. Trygve Lie, the organization's first secretary-general, failed en- tirely in attaining accord between East and West, and his han- dling of the Korean crisis alien- ated the Soviet Union to such an extent that his influence in the UN, and that body's effectiveness in other areas, became negligible. Lie was forced to retire, and the Soviet Union determined that nev- er again would a Westward-lean- ing diplomat become secretary- general. HAMMARSKJOLD succeeded to the office. His Suez campaign and his agreement to refrain from intervening in Hungary in 1956 pleased the Soviets as well as the United States. But in 1960 the Congo crisis developed, andHam- marskfold was faced with a ma- jor dilemma. Apparently he had no intention of separating his resolve to ex- pedite the expulsion of the Belgian mercenaries and former' colonial officials from the area from his resolve to establish domestic or- der there, feeling that chaos and violence would result if the poli- tical vacuum in the Congo was left unfilled by the UN. But he knew the Soviet Union would veto any such domestic tampering in the newly-independent state, fear- ing the establishment of an or- der not benevolently disposed to the Communist power. Hence, Hammarskjold, in his resolution to the Security Council, mentioned only his intention to expel the Belgians, and the So- viet Union voted in favor. UNOC, the UN peacekeeping contingent, was installed, the Belgians remov- ed, and Hammarskjold began to play with the Congo's distraught domestic political situation. Of course the Soviets felt de- ceived and demanded what amounted to a retroactive veto, particularly in its proposal for three secretaries-general, repre- senting the three blocs (East, West and Neutral), each withea veto over day-to-day affairs: the so- called troika proposal. This failed, so the Soviets then refused to pay their peacekeeping assessments, and refused further support to any of Hammarskjold's programs. His effectiveness was gone, and his office stood in peril of destruc- tion; the UN had come to a halt over the financial crisis caused by the Soviets' refusal to pay their share, and the secretary-general's death at about this time was the only way to dispel the bitterness and to allow the UN to resume functioning. INCREDIBLY, a successor, U Thant, was agreed upon and it was clear to him that to antag- onize the Soviet Union would be involved in the persons of Indo- nesia, which wanted the area, the Netherlands, which wished to keep it as a final reminder of her once powerful colonial empire, and al- so in the persons of the Soviet Union and the United States, which backed different sides, was solved through compromise. But the Vietnamese war has been left alone by Thant, at least directly. His intervention would surely antagonize one great pow- er or the other so Thant has at- tempted to work behind the scenes - hoping, thereby, to achieve agreement between America and the Soviet Union-and agreement. here, is essential to peace in that area. Active UN participation in Southeast Asia would destroy that organization, the war in Vietnam being tloe very major crisis that it is: a direct confrontation be- tween East and West. Finally, let us turn to the re- cent Middle East battle. From the onset of the tension, some days before Thant's decision to withdraw UNEF, it was apparent that the Soviet Union was strong- ly aligned with; the Arab, states, by supplying arms and other aid to them, and in publicly announc- ing her support of most Arab de- mands. Thant was convinced that to re- sist Nasser's order that the UN force be removed would antagon- ize the Soviet Union, and that this hostility thus generated would make it impossible for the UN to work for a pacific resolution o the several points of contention arhong the parties to the dispute. WAR ERUPTED first, though, and halted the attempts at peace- ful settlement being conducted by the UN. But, as wars never re- solve anything, settlement at- tempts have resumed, and con- tinue today, and these attempts are the only observable avenue to a resolution of the hatreds in the Middle East. Such resolution will certainly be impossible without the participation of the Soviets. Had the UN antagonized the Soviets seriously during the' last two months it is questionable whether they would have been willing to so :participate. They were antagonized during the Con- go affair and have refused to help resolve the problem there that is still simmering. Without their help there can be no resolution. U Thant, in all cases, has been not weak but wise. WEAKNESS and wisdom here are not equivalent terms and should not be confused. Each has a relatively closed set of defining criteria, and when one assigns to any particular bit of behavior the label weak or unwise, if he has observed and interpreted the context within which thebehavior occurred accurately and objective- ly, then he is certain he means weak, not strong, and unwise, not wise. It also follows that the be- havior is, in fact, weak and un- wise-if, and this is essential, the second requirement has been ful- filled: not only must he know the meaningshof weakness and wsdom; but he must also have a knowledge of the circumstances of that behavior-again, the con- text within which it takes place. Without this knowledge, and it must be thorough and objectively gained, his affixation of labels is senseless. For example, Falstaff, in Shake- speare's Henry IV, Part I, declares: "discretion is the better part of valor." He has termed his reluc- tance (refusal) to arm himself and wage war for his king against certain domestic insurgents as dis- crete or wise. Agreement or dis- agreement with Falstaff based upon only the above information with which to formulate a judg- ment would be nonsensical and useless. Yet some would say: it is good that one help the king against those who preach disor- der and actively attempt to in- stitute it, and therefore, Falstaff's refusal to lend aid to his king is weak-the result of cowardice. Those who would so contend are half-wits, for they know only half the relevant information, namely, the meanings of the words, weak- ness and strength. They are ig- norant of the context of Fal- staff's words-which, if studied, suggests that his "discretion" might be seen to be wisdom after all, or at least to be cowardly. OF COURSE, there is the prob- lem of determining in precise terms the meanings of accurate and objective-with reference to the observations made of certain actions. Might not two reasonable, intelligent, and objective men, who are capable of accurate physical observations, reach different judg- ments about the same act? Yes- though the fault, or the explana- tion, lies with the men involved. Perhaps one is less objective than the other; or one has less knowl- edge of the context than the oth- er. Complete knowledge of, any situation is obviously impossible. Complete separation of one's pre- dispositions and prejudices from his nhervntinn and interpretation I Y I 4 4 : " _ tai , . T ' ' ;_ . 2 (7(7(7 r . , 1. l 1 i 't. i5:_:..' _ >-,_ t^ I