*law Si gau &iI Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opiions A F 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID DUBOFF . ::: . 1 l- 7.W INN7W College Politics: A Look at the Field Military Aid Program: Scratching the Wrong Backs THE RECENT COUP in Greece was car- ried out with weapons supplied by the United States to our NATO ally as part of the Military Assistance Profram (MAP). As usual America is a trifle disturbed at the good uses staunch allies have for her anti-Communist weapons. One saddened American official said, although belated- ly, "We don't like the idea of U.S. tanks pointing their guns at people on the streets." But American guns will continue to menace people in the streets in the name of rightist dictatorships as long as we play arsenal to the world through MAP and related activities. In addition to the $900 million of weapons MAP distributes on five continents yearly, the Pentagon peddles about $1.5 billion themselves and serves, as super-salesman for American private enterprise whose cash registers click to the tune of about a billion dol- lars of annual weapons sales. The reason for the United States' amaz- ing generosity is our tenacious belief, de- spite continual evidence to the contrary, that enough weapons will maintain the status quo anywhere in the world. And in our continual quest for security against the spectre of an international Commu- nist conspiracy, We have blinded ourselves to the deleterious effects of misapplied military aid. OUR WEAPONS have helped to support and maintain numerous dictators - Sygman Rhee, Trujillo, Diem. The U.S. military aid mission to Cuba, which prop- ped up tyrant Batista, became one of the prime targets for popular hostility after Castro ascended to power. Yet the military dangers of military aid are 'still present, even when the re- cipient country's form of government is not autocratic. As in Greece, a long-time influx of modern weapons merely serves to strengthen the position of the mili- tary. And when a coup does occur, Ameri- can weapons provide it with the latest and fanciest military equipment. The dangers of military aid to a country with- out a tradition of stable and popular gov- ernment is illustrated in the fact that of the last five military juntas in Africa, four had been recepients of American military aid. The worldwide proliferation of Ameri- can arms also has dangerous repercus- sions in the area of international rela- tions. The presence of modern military supplies refocus existing conflicts on a Mirror, Mirror THANK HEAVENS everything is just hunky-dory at the old 'U.' All along we had believed that protests and dissension on this campus were sym- tomatic of a general feeling of malaise among students. This, according to the "Michigan Alumnus," is not the case. If the purpose of the University's monthly magazine for graduates is to reassure its subscribers that students to- day are basically the same pleasant, pass- ive pupils they've been in the past, the military solution. A prime example of this was last year's three month border war between India and Pakistan which was fought largely with American-sup- plied weapons. The Kashmir dispute had existed since 1948, but a military solution was not resorted to until both sides had received extensive American aid - with explicit instructions that this aid was to be used solely against Red China. An- other illustration was the 1965 near-war between Greece and Turkey over Cyprus. IN ADDITION, military aid to specific countries tends to undermine region- al balances of power and feed localized arms races. In 1965 we supplied 100 Pat- ton tanks to Israel, upsetting the precar- ious equilibrium in the Middle East, and forcing us to supply Jordan with the same number of tanks last year. Ditto for Pakistan and India. Military aid was one of the key fac- tors which led to our present massive commitment to the government of South Vietnam. Dean Rusk piously announced during a speech in Las Vegas on Febru- ary 16, 1966, "We are committed to assist South Vietnam to resist aggression by the aid approved by bipartisan majorities of Congress over a period of 12 years." Our present commitment of 40,000 troops to Thailand is just another example of how American military aid leads to great- er and greater American involvement. THIS INVOLVEMENT is the result of the strategic ineffectiveness of American military aid. Fifty thousand American soldiers still protecting South Korea after 15 years of massive military assistance, indicate that such aid does not lead to military self-sufficiency. Whenever an autocratic and reactionary regime is challenged by popular revolution, modern weaponry is not sufficient to turn the tide. As possible alternatives, America must either accept an alteration in the favorable status quo, or must personally intervene with American troops. The lat- ter is what has happened in Thailand, Korea, and, of course, Vietnam, and this has been disastrously wrong. America must abandon her parochial and stereotyped approach to internation- al affairs. We must accept the reality of popular revolution. Abandoning the Mili- tary Assistance Program and massive arms sales abroad is a necessary prerequi- site. -WALTER SHAPIRO an theWall .. . opening editorial in this month's issue has scored a resounding triumph. In his aptly titled introductory col- umn, "A Moment for Michigan," editor- in-chief Robert G. Forman writes: "At the Honors Convocation (held in Hill Auditorium) were assembled the top scholars attending the Uni- versity-the young men and ladies who had excelled in the classroom. They looked like the kid next door or. across the street. I couldn't see a beatnik in the place." FURTHERMORE, he states that the pres- ident of the Graduate Student Coun- cil and those who attended the recent Honors Convocation are "the real rep- resentatives of the students on this cam- pus. It's been that way for 150 years." We wonder where Forman was when many of these "representatives" sat-in at the administration building in November. Or how he explains the high number of honors-activists. In fact, in "Class Notes" -a section of his magazine-the noted alumnus for 1964 is Michael Zweig, "au- thor" and past Voice chairman. Though Forman's insights may pacify those alumni worried about the presence of vociferous bearded young men at their alma mater, his comments are nonethe- less unrealistic and inappropriate. For- man has undertaken an impossible task in his attempt to portray the typical stu- dent here; the diversity of interests, ac- tivities and personalities cannot be com- mingled in a brief profile. I 'I .1 2 o t~ MA ' .': k t"Sfl$. '? V 67 1 !I n 'I M KEEP~tr Gx VALUES LAP1.s" Letters to the Editor By DAVID R. SEGAL Daily Guest Writer Student politics represents one of the major channels of recruit- ment into the world of adult poli- tics. There is a strong indication that high school politicians be- come college politicians, and that college politicians remain active in politics after graduation. The type of politics practiced at universities is shaped largely by external issues. In the 1930's, there were economic pressures, but the '50's was an issueless decade. The Young Democrats and Young Republicans were still there but there was not the same kind of political involvement as was fostered during the Depression. At any given time the degree of political activity is determined by the need for involvement. This need once again arose in the '60's -nuclear war, foreign relations, civil rights when students felt they wanted a voice in these poli- tical spheres. Whether or not they actually do, poses another ques- tion. In thertraditional sociological sense, there are two different ori- entations of student politicians, which Robert Morton calls the "lo- cals" and the "cosmopolitans." The cosmopolitans are concerned with general national and intrnation- al issues; they involve themselves in organizations like Young Dems, Young Republicans and Voice. Largely becauseof these widened interests, they are the ones who go on to become professional poli- ticians. The locals are very poli- tical but at the same time oper- ate within the context of the cam- pus. The Voice people are really con- cerned with the values in the so- ciety as a whole. The University is seen as an institution interact- ing with that society. On the oth- er hand, there are the student government people who are more concerned with the internal func- tioning of the University as an academic community. THIS typology, however, cannot This typology, however, cannot . be applied completely because of the increasing sophistication of college student government lead- ers, who are aware of the impli- cations of student life to what is going on in the outside world. The student politicians of the right also do not fit the typology. Their traditionalist view of edu- cation prevents them from be- coming actively involved with either the University politics of the locals or the social concerns of the cosmopolitans. The student of the right is going to school to learn, and to get a Job. He thereby improves both himself and the economy-insuring himself a place in Heaven. The student of the right is holding onto the Univer- sity's last piece of the Protestant Ethic. This is not to say that the right-wing students do not have political concerns. They do, but they are too busy to be political activists: whensa member of Young Americans for Freedom was asked why he was not out counter- picketing pickets at a hearing of the House Un-American Activities Committee in Chicago, he replied: "I'm keeping my country strong by going to classes the way stu- dents are supposed to." People become involved in poli- tics because they feel a need to control their environment. They must al -o feel that they can be felt and heard politically. The spe- cific motivation, however, is de- pendent upon the students' area of involvement. THE Young Dems, for example, take the long range view of their role in politics. In fact, some sig- nificant minority of them are probably thinking of political ca- reers within the two-party struc- ture. The Voice people are much more interested in attacking problems in the social structure which they thing need correction in the near future. In terms of political ca- reers. they are much less career- oriented toward politics than the Young Demis. If the student government peo- ple were to be put on a continuum. they would fit between Voice and the Young Dems. The important thing here is not the area but the level of political involvement. It takes a much greater commitment to be really active in student gov- ernment than it does to join the Young Dems. The greater involve- ment of the student government people obviously indicates that they are looking for more short- term payoffs than are the Young Dems. The skills learned by the stu- dent government people will more likely lead to success in bi-parti- san politics than the skills learn- ed by Voice members. Agitation, which is essentially what groups like Voice strive for, does not pro- vide the skills for the launching of a successful political career. Huey Long did it, but not many people can. IT IS difficult to predict the po- litical future of the Voice peo- ple. Perhaps they will turn out like the "flaming radicals" of the '30's, peope like Seymour Martin Lipset and Daniel Bell who, while they have certainly moved across the political spectrum, are still ac- tive in politics. They still give advice to government and it is not always the advice government wants to hear. One definite way of looking at the future of the Voice people is to expect them to go out and be active, but be active on the obverse side of the political structure. I think s large part of the future political variance will be explain- ed by how successful they be- come-whether they find a nice middle-class niche for themselves in the system. Now this does not mean that they are going to do wha. we call "selling-out," what- ever that means. It probably means representing their own n- terests. There are, in fact, people who were, "flaming, radicals" in the '30's who have since gotten to be fairly well-to-do and who are still involved in politics. They are not quite as liberal as they see themselves as being, they give 'a lot ofm oney to liberal causes and are active in the Democratic rather than the Republican Party, which is something. The same thing may happen to the Voice people. The problem with carrying this analogy is that we don't really know what hap- pened to the radicals of the '30's who didn't make good. Nobody knows who they are and we don't really know what their politics are. David R. Segal is an assist- ant professor of sociology at the University. ', * Kudos Kudos to Roger Rapoport for his sensible and impassioned plea against Johnson's war. And, of course, most intelligent criticism or graphic protest brings about an ever increasing cry of disloyalty or even treason (Wal- lace). Last evening on the tube I watched a holier-than-thou con- gressman from Tennessee describe his attempts to introduce legisla- tion that would impose a $10,000 fine and a year's incarceration up- on any person who publicly dese- crates the flag. This unquestion- ably defensive gesture recalls the political philosophy of the six- teenth century Frenchman Jean Bodin. In defining the concept of national sovereignty, Bodin set forth a theoretical justification - "supreme power of the state over citizens and subjects, unrestrain- ed by law"-from which modern governments derive theirefficacy. But Bodin did not concern him- self with the moral problems that inevitably arise-when such a prem- ise is in fact implemented: does the responsible citizen abdicate his own personal moral values when they are in conflict with those of a higher legal order, the state? The question is unresolved. IT SEEMS evident that the spate of protests across this country is indicative not of disloyalty but of a consciousness of something intrinsically out of tune within the government itself. In the eyes of Mr. Rapoport and other intelligent protesters, this administration is embarked on a misguided course in its ef- forts torsecure those unalienable rights for its citizens. And in the words of Jefferson, "whenever any form of govern- ment becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or (I'm afraid to say) to abolish it." -Barret W. Kalellis, '68M War Poem The following poem was for- warded to The Daily by Dr. Allan Rhodes of the chemistry department at Cleveland State University. Although perhaps the literary value of the work is debatable, it is an eloquent expression of the writer Briggs' sentiment on the war in Viet- nam.-Ed. WHY SHOULD you worry or give a damn About what happens in Viet- nam? Why is it any of your concern If men and women and children burn? Only a pacifist. saint or fool Believes in stuff like the Golden Rule ... You know the answer - you know it well-- "This is a war and war is hell!" YES, WAR is hell for the men that fight, Pawns on a chessboard, brown and white: War is death in a sea of mud To the sound of bullets and stench of blood: War is madness told as the truth, Torturing women and crippling youth-.. . But you know the answer--you know it well- "This is a war and war is hell!" TRY TO PROJECT what your thoughts would be If you left your home as a refugee: Try to imagine the sense of fear When the napalm scatters and flames appear ... What kind of feelings would it inspire If you watched a child with its flesh on fire? Could you find words for the pilots above Who boast about morals and Christian love? WAR IS A gamble played with Fate Where the stakes are high and the hour is late: War is the writing seen on the wall Which threatens to come and engulf us all.. . It's time to worry and time to care, It's time to pity and time to sharey; It's time to consider the Human Race And see ourselves in the other man's place. -Richard I. Briggs *' * *' Come Ye to the Fair I am Speaking Of the DELETED.. *. 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 summer session. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Michigan. 423 Maynard St., Ann Arbor. Michigan, 48104. Sumner Editorial Staff LAURENCE MEDOW .................... Co-Editor STEPHEN FIRSHEIN...................Co-Editor MARK LEVIN .......... Summer Supplement Editor NIGHT EDITORS David Duboff, Aviva Kempner, Patricia O'Donohue, Jennifer Rhea, Walter Shapiro. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS Marcie Abramson. Rob Beattie. Jill Crabtree. Shirley R. M. LANDSMAN Expo '67 opened last week to large crowds but not unreasonably long lines. In the now common mood of international exhibitions -something of a cross between a Barnum and Bailey Circus and a U.N. General Assembly meeting- the people were herded through intricate mazes and up and down stairs and escalators, by polite French- and English - speaking guides. The variety of the fair is im- pressive; besides the displays from many countries of each' continent, there are a number of commer- cially sponsored pavilions and major-theme exhibit halls. The first group affords the visitor a look at what each country values as the most important part of its culture: England emphasized its intellectual heritage, the U.S. had its Hollywood, Russia its heavy industry, and Czechoslovakia its socialism. Many verged upon mundaneness, but the few well- executed exhibits could justify the entire trip to the fair for any visitor. The most valuable sight often appear in some unexpected places. The entire U.S. pavilion couldn't match a small side feature of the U.S. effort, a short 20-minute movie of children's games. With delicacy, precision, and insight, this exquisite work captured the beauty of kids playing at their everyday games of hopscotch. England's great men of letters in the arts and sciences impresses the visitor both as to its presentation and its message. Part of the Is- raeli effort, a pavilion devoted solely to Judaism, had a similar effect; the art was pleasing and the message well said. Neither was over-bearing or gawkish, but was done with exquisite taste which achieved a balance between artistic display and significant subject matter. The Czechoslovakian exhibit ranks as one of the most beautiful, both in over-all design and in the specific display. The Cuban dis- play, employing many techniques of modern art and advertising, will undoubtedly be distasteful to most Americans because of its emphasis on revolution. The Australian pavilion, though more in the mun- dane tradition, was highlighted by informed and attractive guides and a large second floor which, with its tall, thin dark green chairs against a light carpet, re- sembled uncannily the meeting of the Ents in Tolkien's "Return of the King." ..NEEDLESS TO SAY, there are some pitfalls to be avoided. The most glaring was the building labeled "Sermons de la Science." Many an unsuspecting visitor, ex- pecting to hear perhaps some con- cise lecture on chemistry or the atom, is given instead Newton's "clockwork theory" proof of the evisteeo fac t a nreme ator. featured an Estonian music troupe which made the mistake of trying to beat the west at its own game -pop music. Russia, the land of the Tschaikovsky International Competition and Bolshoi Ballet, should try and show its own genius. Even an authentic ethnic folk group would have been prefer- able to their near abortive attempt at Western-style music. Despite numerous run-of-the- mill type displays of economic de- velopment and industrial achieve- ment, the physical display of the fair is impressive. The architecture is daring, the pavilions show many a touch of genius in their depar- ture from the norm, and the visit- or is left with pleasant thoughts, of man's creativeness and capabil- ity in controlling and out-doing nature. BUT THE GREATEST resource of Expo '67, the single aspect which could make the fair great independent of its physical plant, is completely ignored by almost every visitor. This untapped asset, what is in fact the essence of any such international meeting, is the staf of guides employed by each of the different pavilions. While some nations, including Russia, staffed their buildings with Canadians or unprepared na- tionals, others, including Australia, Czechoslovakia, Cuba, Tanzania, the European Community, and Finland, brought their own na- tionals and trained them as repre- senta1>iec tn ornea s Lrii and By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - When the Pentagon censors get out their red ink, almost anything can hap- pen. For example: 'Adm. David L. McDonald : DELETED. Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss): What was that? McDonald: DELETED." Stennis is chairman of the Senate Military Preparedness sub- committee, McDonald is chief of naval operations. Their myster- ious exchange, and a dozen more, appear in heavily censored testi- mony made public Wednesday. Another bit of repartee: Sten- nis: "You plowed under the DE- LETED mighty quickly there with one sentence." "McDonald: Mr. Chairman, they are plowing DELETED under quicker than I can, I regret to say." AT TIMES, the censors seem to have a mischievious wit. "I don't think we need to be looking into this at all if we just say DE- LETED," they have Stennis de- claring. McDonald's rebuttal: "DELET- ED." Closed congressional testimony by Pentagon witnesses is screen- ed by censors for information that touches on military secrets. The 4 4 SEN. JOHN STENNIS quoted Wednesday in Washington as saying.. "Greene: Well, I would DELET- ED. "Thurmond: You what? "Greene: DELETED." SEN. STUART Symington (D- lffr +r-tnnk 1th dllfion hbusinessc to 0