i O a t D ally Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS The City is People' Where Opinions Are Pree, Truth Will Prevail 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. s JESDAY, MAY 16, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: AVIVA KEMPNER { Kirk's Crime Crusade: Disneyland Comes to Florida FHE NON-CONTROVERSIAL issue is the bedrock of American politics. Guber- atorial elections provide vivid exam- les of the precept that a successful cam- aign requires continual stress of a po- ent theme guaranteed to antagonize no ne. The classic example of this genre is be Ribicoff - Connecticut's former Traffic-Safety Governor." Claude Kirk became Florida's first Re- ublicar governor sin'e Reconstruction hrough the use of a similar strategy. He on by promising the voters a "crusade gainst crime." And who could be in avor of crime? Once elected the crusading conseva- ve announced the battleplans for his ar on crime. The businessman-turned- overnor was going to fight crime the merican way--with private investigators nanced by private enterprise. For Kirk new that the police were merely another nwarranted usurpation of individual ihi- ative by the public sector. And Kirk ppointed his good friend George R. Vackenhut to head what some unrepetent )llectivists deemed "Kirk's private, ar- ay." Wackenhut had the background ecessary to direct such a massive opera- .on; after all, he had parlayed his vast xperience with the FBI (he was a physi- al education instructor) - into the third ,rgest private detective business in the ountry. His agency proudly collected a igantic slew of dossiers on subversives, itellectuals, and other "pinkos." FTER FOUR MONTHS of operation the crusades results are strikingly unim- ressive. The most notorious success of he campaign has been the indictment of county superintendent of schools on the barge that he had purchased a washer- ryer with school funds. It was more than oincidental that the superintendent was lso a Democratic member of the Uni- ersity of Florida Board of Regents whose lbsequent firing moved the body more i line with Kirk's conservative leanings. urthermore, Florida's Democratic secre- ary of state recently charged that he and ther state officials were being constant-' y followed by Kirk's gumshoes. The climax of the governor's private rime campaign came when he was forced ) ruefully announce that the total con- ributions received from private sources amounted to a little over $8000-enough to carry on the glorious fight for a'week, or so. THE FAILURE of Kirk's ballyhooed crime crusade is merely another symp- tom of America's schizophrenic attitude toward crime. On one hand crime is vig- orously opposed by all good citigens. De- troit Councilwoman Mary Beck is trying to get the recall of Mayor Jerry Cavanagh because he is "coddling criminals"; George Wallace's national appeal is bas- ed, in part, on similar cries. As a fearless battler against crime, J. Edgar Hoover became a sacrosanct American institu- tion. Even Bobby Kennedy got his legal experience and his first best-seller from his no-holds-barred fight against Jimmy Hoffa for Senator McClelland in the late '50's. All the frightened and detailed ex- poses on organized crime and that cur- rent favorite, the Cosa Nostra, ignore one salient fact: organized crime is the larg- est American consumer industry, with $50 billion a year in business. It provides Americans with goods and services they cannot get elsewhere--gambling, prostitu- tion and narcotics. Our peculiar native custom of declaring illegal many popular pleasures tempts us to partake of "for- bidden fruit," and has resulted in orga- nized crime's virtual monopoly on vice. Yet all local, state and national crime commissions have been too entranced with wiretapping and other toys to notice the ultimate weapon against organized crime: the legalization of vice. AS WE ALL KNOW, "crime in the streets" is a byproduct of slums, infer- ior education and a hopeless future. Yet the same people who are urging that the government stop muzzling the local po- lice, are those same people who decry any action to alleviate the conditions of the poor and the despairing. The collapse of Kirk's anti-crime cir- cus graphically illustrates the pathetic inadequacy of mis-aimed attacks on the symptoms of crime. Until America drops her mask of pseudo-naivete and realist- ically faces the causes of crime, "crime in the streets" will remain a powerful political platitude and a totally insoluble problem. --WALTER SHAPIRO nt"n ^ . 1K;)'(x; :L .' AI , se . l, y', .: . p J; ". ; . 'IF ) 13F.CcME A bcV~2 MU~f 1 &: t16 CA-LA . UMT S~ 6IVE VI' BATH)N&~" the crystal paI ace CIA:* The Super Duper This is the final part of the prepared comments of Lewis Mumford, 71, given before Sen. Ribicoff's subcommittee on urb- an affairs. Mumford has been for years the country's foremost expert on technology and urban problems. The first section dealt with the growth of centralized, dehu- manized institutions, "megama- chines," in all phases of society -industry ,politics, the military and cities. The "megalopolis" as Mumford terms the modern city, has not done justice to the com- plex and varied needs of human life, because these needs cannot be mechanized and automated. The point I am now making challenges, I regret to say, not only some of the published views of your chairman, but probably the views of the rest of this com- mittee. You accept, I take it, the current American faith in the nec- essity for an expanding, machine- centered economy, as if this were one of the great laws of nature, or if not, then America's happiest contribution to human prosperity and freedom. I wish you were right. But do you seriously believe that a housing industry based, as Senator Ribicoff has put it, on "the technology of megalopolis" will be any more regardful of hu- man needs and human satisfac- tions, or any more eager to over- come the distortions and perver- sions of a power-obsessed, ma- chine - driven, money - oriented economy? If so, you are ignoring the very factors that have mock- ed and ruined so many of our previous efforts at urban improve- ment. This expanding economy, for all its suffocating abundance of machine-made goods and gadg- ets, has resulted in a dismally con- tracted life, lived for the most part confined toa car or a televi- sion set; a life so empty of vivid firsthand experience that it might as well be lived in a space capsule, traveling from nowhere to no- where at supersonic speeds. Space capsules-yes, stationary space capsules-that is what most of our new buildings are, and our prefabricated foods taste increas- ingly like those supplied in tubes to astronauts; while in our urban planning schools I have encount- ered ominous designs for whole cities to be built underground, or underwater, so that their in- habitants may live and die with- out ever coming into contact with the living environment, which has been essential to the human race for organic health, psychological stability and cultural growth for at least 500,000 years. And in boasting of the fact that automa- tion will soon be able to do away with all serious and humanly re- warding work, manual or mental, we are threatening to remove per- haps the most essential historic invention for preserving mental balance and furthering the arts of life. These are all danger sig- nals. Is it not time to give them heed? NOW YOUR chairman, in his able speech last January, attempt- ed to bring together what seems to me, if I may speak frankly, two altogether incompatible, in fact downright antagonistic, proposals: On one hand for restoring neigh- borhoods as the basic human en- vironment. on the other for ap- plying to housing what he called, quite properly, the technology of megalopolis. Senator Ribicoff wise- ly recognized the need to respect the small unit, the neighborhood, in order to promote these qualities we associate, at least as an ideal, with the small town-meaning, I take it, a place where everyone has an identifiable face and is a recognizable and responsible per- son-not just a Social Security number, a draft card number, or a combination of digits on a com- puter. As to neighborhoods, I am en- tirely on his side. I have not spent part of my life in a small- country community, and another part in a planned neighborhood unit, Sunnyside Gardens, Long Is- land, without learning to appre- ciate these intimate small-town virtues. And I believe the greatest defect of the United States Con- stitution was its original failure, LEWIS MUMFORD By DAVID KNOKE L'Affaire CIA is still very much with us. Almost by coincidence last week, two articles appeared, written by figures involved in the 17-year long secret funding of edu- cational, labor, cultural and stu- dent groups. In Saturday Evening Post's "Speaking Out," Thomas Braden, trustee of California State Col- leges and candidate forclieutenant governor, penned his account of the CIA's good works. Braden's view of the CIA opera- tions is wonderfully naive. He was apparently instrumental in per- suading former CIA director Allen Dulles to "take on the Russians by penetrating a battery of inter- national fronts." Secrecy was necessary because "does anyone really think con- gressmen would foster a foreign tour by an artist who has had left-wing connections?" And besides, the venture harmed no one but the Russians: "Surely it is not 'disgraceful' to ask some- body whether he learned anything while he was abroad that might help his country. "Surely it is not 'immoral' to make certain that your country's supplies intended for delivery to friends are not burned, stolen or dumped into the sea." And, as the Russians started first, we must be devious in the name of democracy. It matters not that all totalitarian regimes have lied and denied from the shadows that they were pulling strings. FORTUNATELY for his argu- ment, Braden conveniently over- looks the not-quite-so-nice devices of the CIA used to "win the alli- ance of most of the world." For example, the collecting of foreign student activists' names by NSA officers who coincidentally found their draft deferments and national headquarters'trent mys- teriously arranged for them. For example, the publication of certain books by Praeger Publish- ing Company which Frederick Praeger claims were accepted sole- ly on the basis of their "academ- ic quality and truth." For example, the placement of an agent as an editor of the maga- zine "Encounter." According to Braden, "The agents could not only propose anti-Communist pro- grams to the official leaders of the organizations" but they could also suggest ways to "solve the inevitable budgetary problems." Among which was the salary of critic Dwight Macdonald. Writing in his regular Esquire column, Macdonald confesses that he was unwitting and "unwittily" the recipient of CIA monies via the Kaplan Fund for almost a year during 1956-57. Macdonald says several inci- dents made him suspicious-pass- ing words in a New York Times article on the CIA, a rejection of an anti-American piece of jour- nalism by "Encounter" after he had left the post. But he never followed up his suspicions; "I also feel very angry I had to learn the truth nine years after from the papers." LIKE BRADEN, he views the funding as not wrong per se, but finds the way it was done repug- nant. Having been the dupe in- stead of the duper, Macdonald resents the secrecy, regardless of A any controls (which he claims were never applied): "Had 'Encounter' been openly financed by the CIA or the State Department, I would have had no moral objection to working or writing for it-provided, of course, the editors really did have a free hand." ". ..Secrecy in such matters is corrupting in itself, regardless of the practical success of the oper- ation, because it means there can be no control or criticism of the unknown scurce of money so that the recipient is responsible for policies that may be shaped by forces of which he is not even aware." Macdonald's reaction is like that of a man who, betrayed by his best friend, finds' himself pro- fessing the latter's innocent in- tentions. To employ secrecy and devious- ness in the name of sanctiong de- mocracy is to turn means into ends and to utilize tactics similar to those of the very adversary that good Americans like Braden find so detestable. 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 thei process. The analogy is even more apt today. despite the example of the New England township and the town meeting, to make this democratic local unit the basic cell of our whole system of government. For democracy, in any active sense, begins and ends in comunities small einough for their members to meet face to face. But if your purpose is to do urban planning and renewal on the basis of neighborhoods and balanced urban communities, you would, I submit, be deceiving your- selves if you imagined that a vast contribution by the federal government-$50 billion over 10 years has been suggested-could possibly achieve the happy results you hope for ... BUT NOTE-this method can be applied only to those struc- tures or machine assemblages that can be designed without the faint- est regard for the human factor, and without any feedback from the human reaction. This patent- ly leaves out the neighborhood and the city. Unless human needs and human interactions and hu- man responses are the first con- sideration, the city, in any valid human sense, cannot be said to exist, for, as Sophocles long ago said, "The city is people." Accordingly, I beg you to look a little more closely at what such a huge supply of capital, with such large prospective profits, would do. Not merely would it skyrocket already inflated land values so that a disproportionate amount would go to the property owners and real estate specula- tors; but even worse-it would invite ever greater megamachines to invade the building industry. With $50 billion as bait, a new kind of aerospace industry would move in, with all its typical para- phernalia of scientific research and engineering design. At that moment your plans for creating humanly satisfactory neighbor- hoods would go up in smoke. "GENERAL Space-Housing, Inc." will solve your housing problem, swiftly and efficiently, though not painlessly, by following its own typical method, derived from the ancient pyramid builders: Elimi- nate the human factor by enforc- ing conformity and destroying choice. Once started, such a scientif- ically ordered housing industry, commanding virtually unlimited capital at national expense, and providing, as in the Pentagon's favored industries, indecently large salaries and exorbitant profits for private _nvestors, would be geared for further expansion. And it would achieve this expansion, not only by designing units prefabri- cated for early obsolescence, but likewise by wiping out, as danger- ous rivals, those parts of the rur- al or urban environment that were built on a more human plan. Remember that you cannot overcome the metropolitan con- gestion of the last century, or the cataclysmic disintegration of urb- an life during the last 30 years, by instituting a crash program. You are much more likely to pro- duce more lethal congestion, more rapid disintegration, ending in a greater crash. The time for action on a massive scale has not yet come. But the time for fresh thinking on this whole' subject is long overdue. 3 -0 Crumbling Alliance FOR YEARS, critics of the American two-party system have singled out the Republican-southern Democratic coali- tion as an example of the lack of signifi- cant ideological difference between the parties. Political labels have never stood in the way of political expedience, and this con- servative partnership served to bog down and defeat many liberal programs that threatened to expand the ambit of the federal government's authority. Now, once again, it appears that political expedience dictates the dissolution of the alliance, and the Southern Democrats are being ousted from the Republican camp. IN A SPEECH last week House Minority Leader Gerald Ford of Michigan said that he does not intend to renew the coalition which the leaders of the two factions have utilized todefeat adminis- tration measures. Ford claims that work- ing with the southern Democrats hurts the chances of Republicans running in the South. Ford's strategy is to force the south- erners to go along with administration measures that would hurt their chances back home. This policy is obviously ori- ented at preserving the party interest rather than the public welfare. When the Republicans were weak, they needed Southern Democratic support to block administration measures. Now it appears that the -Republicans could win a majority of the House seats in '68, but only by stealing them from the southern Democrats. IN OUR POLITICAL system, in which the party leaders look out for their own interests rather than those of their con- stituents, it doesn't matter much whether the grouping is along policy or party lines. And the voters lose out either way. -DAVID DUBOFF I, Today and Tomorrow ... By Walter Lippmann -- Rusk and Organized Peace Candidate Ky PREMIER NGUYEN CAO KY has sur- prised practically no one with his de- cision to seek the presidency of South Vietnam in the September elections. He has also surprised practically no- body with the chaser-a veiled threat to "respond militarily" if a civilian with whom he disagrees is elected instead. "If he is a Communist or if he is a neutralist, I am going to fight him militarily," he promised. Furthermore, in a bit of twisted logic, he justified his intervention by not- ing that "In any democratic country you have the right to disagree with the views of others." since there are no civilian candidates who are given a Chinaman's chance of de- feating a military candidate-whether it be Ky or General Thieu, who looms as a possible substitute. The only serious civil- ian contender appears to be Dr. Dan who has built up a reputation as a courageous anti-Communist. But he is given little hope of defeating the junta at the polls. Moreover, the United States, which rec- ognizes the political acumen of Marshal Ky, can be expected to provide necessary support. Perhaps the assistance won't be direct - e.g., suppression of opposition parties, or direct endorsement-but Pres- -rnf: Tnhcnnwil nnr+mhtlpnl hc npc WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Dean Rusk said the other day that "A central problem of our nation , . . must be to pursue an organized peace - a lasting peace, a world in which disputes are settled by peaceful means..." There is no doubt about that. What we are arguing about is whether the policy we are now pursuing, the policy of which Secretary Rusk is a principal arch- itect and the principal spokes- man, is in fact directed toward an organized peace in the world. Secretary Rusk's main reason for saying that our war policy is directed toward world peace is that we have signed alliances with 40 nations pledging our support against aggression. "The integrity of these alli- ances is n t the heart of the main- tenance of peace." And these alli- ances will have lost their integrity, In this, the fourth war fought by Americans in this century, the United States is either at odds with or at least isolated from all the great international organiza- tions of peace-with the United Nations, with the Holy See, vir- tually all the Protestant and Jew- ish churches and with all the great powers of the world. Our only fighting allies come from client states and, in token numbers, from two British coun- tries cast adrift in the Pacific by the dissolution of the British Em- pire. How does Secretary Rusk per- suade himself that as he stands apart from all the great military and spiritual powers of the earth he is engaged in organizing a last- ing peace? Apparently he has sat- isfied himself on this point by telling himself that if only Hanoi knuckles under now all our 40 allies will have been made confi- come inconceivable that the Unit- ed States would or could mount another intervention like that in Vietnam somewhere else in the world. Far from proving that our al- lies can count on our willingness to die for the integrity of the al- liances, the Johnson-Rusk inter- vention is demonstrating that if the alliances entail such wars as this one they are worthless, if they are not dangerous, to all concerned-including the ally who is to be saved. Far from our being in pursuit of an organized peace, we are in the way of demonstrating with blood and fire that the postwar mania for making alliances was, if not mere diplomatic hot air, a booby trap SECRETARY RUSK'S trouble is that he has confused the idea "We'll Teach You Patriotism And Respect For The Law" \HELL /'C I S roRK I vq ! c INA :r