Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Katzenbach Is After the Communists Where Opinions Are Free. 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN AEBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail 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. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: LEONARD PRATT Vote Yes-Ann Arbor Needs A Housing Commission O THE VOTERS of Ann Arbor: Vote "yes" today to establish an Ann Arbor housing commission. The commission will investigate and carry out projects to provide needed housing for low-income residents of Ann Arbor. It will not create "high-rise ghet- toes"' but will establish small two- or three-unit complexes to house the under- privileged, the elderly and the profes- sional married student alike. Vote yes because a sufficient need has been indicated for a body with broad powers to investigate and finance low- cost housing projects in Ann Arbor. UP TO THIS TIME, that task has been put upon charitable and welfare orga- nizations. These agencies have been un- able to handle the problem. Their re- sources are too few, their powers too lim- ited. There are many cases of families in Ann Arbor who are unable to obtain ade- quate housing, even when they are will- ing to put 50 per cent of their income to- ward housing. (The federal government states that a wage-earner should not have to pay more than 20.8 per cent.) They have been ,sold housing which does not meet with state health or build- ing code requirements. There are families in Ann Arbor today living on dirt floors, sharing kitchen facilities by cooking in shifts, sleeping in kitchens, using the cor- ner gas station for lavatory needs. Private enterprise has not taken care of the need. In a town with as much of a shortage of student housing as Ann Arbor has, one cannot expect builders to enter the field of low-cost, low-profit housing. The major focus of building in Ann Arbor is the construction of high-rent apartments aimed at the student demand-not at the needs of low-income families. This trend is growing, not subsiding. VOTE YES because the ordinance pass- ed by Ann Arbor City Council to es- tablish a housing commission is a sound one. It provides the commission with the autonomy necessary to operate outside of politics and to undertake more than the present piecemeal attempts to solve the problem. At the same time, the commission is not given a blank check. Every project it undertakes, every loan, purchase and contract it undertakes MUST be approv- ed by the council. VOTE YES because the cost to you is minimal. The commission is indeed self-supporting. Only administration costs will affect the taxpayer, and these may well be equalized by the savings to the city in the area of such welfare services as continual health inspection, condem- nation and eviction notices. For those houses lost-to the city's tax roll, the commission will be required to make payments to the city in lieu of tax- es. VOTE YES because the commission will provide for the needs of Ann Arbor residents, not the needs of outsiders, as implied by those who oppose the com- mission. Although the commission will establish the residence requirement it- self, the attitudes of the council mem- bers make it clear that this requirement will be at least one yar. The opponents of the commission have based their campaign against the com- mission on an appeal to the fear of a, "socialized," federally-controlled setup which would be out of the control of city officials. They call for a door-to-door survey be- fore the commission is set up to deter- mine the extent of the low-cost housing need exactly. It would be putting too much faith in the commission, they say, to let it take this survey once it was established. The cost of such a survey, however, has been estimated at $50,000, and if the survey were taken by the commission, all of this cost would be defrayed by- federal funds, as is required by law. AT THE SAME TIME, the commission's opponents have appealed to the voters' fear of tax increase. Yet the city admin- istrator has assured council that any cost beyond that paid by the federal gov- ernment will be minimal-that the com- mission could even save the city money in the long run. Opponents have appealed to the fear of the "blank check" commission, attack- ing the language of the law. Again, both the city administrator and the city attor- ney have said that the control of the commission by council is adequate and considerable. It is important to note that you, the voter, will always be in control of the commission because you are in control of the council. No project will ever be im- proved by council which you cannot over- rule if necessary. Many projects, in fact, might well be eliminated earlier by the commission it- self, since, according to Mayor Wendell Hulcher, it will be made up of a cross section of those in the community who deal with varied aspects of housing con- struction-not just members of interest groups who have worked for low-cost housing in the past. VOTE YES, therefore, to support the overwhelming majority of your elected representatives (8 of 11) and to estab- lish a self-supporting, controlable hous- ing commission which will eliminate the lack of low-cost housing in Ann Arbor to- day. -ROBERT CARNEY ATTORNEY-GENERAL Nicholas deB. Katzenbach may be good at anti-trust enforcement, but un- less he revises some of his atti- tudes toward the student move- ment, the Justice Department is going to start looking a little like the Birmingham Police De- partment. It is not clear yet whether the newly-launched "investigation" of Students for a Democratic Society is for real or just a political move designed to quell quarrelous con- gressmen, but two things point to the first interpretation. First, Katzenbach took a decid- edly antagonistic view of any sort of student demonstration in a speech before the American Coun- cil on Education a week and a half ago. He spoke of "diffusion of goals," "pallid, vaguely-expressed griev- ances," and a student attitude of "coercion" rather than "persua- sion." In defending this stance, Katzenbach presented legalistic rationalizations very similar to those offered by the white segre- gationist seven years ago and ac- cepted then all over the country. The second reason for thinking the SDS "investigation" is no poli- tical ruse is administration con- cern over Viet Nam demonstra- tions, particularly when questions of draft-dodging are involved. SDS is prominent in these activities. President Johnson typically co- opts any program of social dis- content, but he is in no position, or at least thinks he isn't, to do so with the Viet Nam protest movement. So instead he gets mad and starts seeing red. HE SHOULD KNOW better; all that can come of a real investi- gation is trouble. Suppose the House Un-Ameri- can Activities Committee should come to Ann Arbor, where SDS originated and many of its ac- tivities are still centered? HUAC's holier-than-thou attitude would quickly inflame the campus. Its long nose would unearth socialism, Communism, marijua- na, "anti-U.S. imperialism" slo- ganeering and sex, all of which its muddled thinking would equate with Communism and hence with evil, which, of course, must be rooted out and destroyed. More important are the effects this sort of a campaign would have on the SDS organization. It would quickly become preoccu- pied with its own anti-HUAC cam- paign, and cries of "civil liberties!" would rent the air. And the more relevant aims of SDS, its abiding concern for the human, moral issues of Viet Nam and of mental and financial pov- erty in America would quickly take second place to irrelevant antics in the streets. THIS IS ALL doubly unfortu- nate in view of the productive if always tenuous relationship that a few parts of the Washington Es- tablishment have worked out with the student movement generally and SDS in particular. The Peace Corps actively en- courages the sit-in, demonstrator and activist types to join and ap- ply some of their energies to so- cial development overseas. The Office of Economic Oppor- What Did the To the Editor: TOM MAYER unwittingly ar- ticulated the basic fallacy of the anti-Viet Nam War movement in a phrase which he attempted to foist off upon listeners to his little speech on the Diag Friday afternoon when he said: "Do you believe in the ideals upon which our country was founded, or in the present bureaucracy?" This type phrase-commonly known as a complex-question log- ical fallacy - employed by all rabble rousers who feel confident that their audience is too ignorant to ferret out faulty logic, assumes that a definite answer has already been given to a prior question that has not even been asked. By answering this question, one, in effect, has acknowledged that our government does not follow our ideals and is acting solely for its own welfare. This is surely a cheap trick to support a view point which is the latest status symbol of the self- appointed "intelligentsia," but perhaps it does serve to clarify the issue. SINCE I AM in a fraternity, shave and don't own any old lumberjack boots, I must somehow have missed the sweeping take- over of our government by senile but avaricious dirty old men who, it seems, have callously tossed away our ideals, made wartfor fun, like (nay, go out of their way) to have our boys killed and have completely lost sight of the simple solutions which are "in- tuitively" obvious to "every" stu- dent. However, I am fortunate to have access to several local foreign- affairs experts who have a mono- poly on the "true" facts; they are cleve;ly disguished, of course, as a chemistry instructor, a sociology instructor and a "playwright." These experts, who can define patriotism at the drop of a hel- met as "being fooled by the gov- ernment," are the only sane ones, the only ones who are able to discern the obvious answers, the only ones who can give me nice simple answers concerning ideals and my government. THIS IS GOOD, for I am simple. Generally speaking, I lack all in- tellectual status because I 1) can- not figure out what would work- ably replace The Establishment, be it University or federal; 2) tend to believe that Chinese Commun- ism is vicious and inhumane (not good for anybody, you might say) and must not exist unchecked; 3) have never tried "pot" (I'll stick to alcohol, thank you) and 4) think, in light of all the evi- dence, that our government is do- ing precisely what it must do in Viet Nam. I long to enter the Magic Circle of the Informed Intellects, but I am too shallow to pass the en- trance test: an original thesis of 250,000 words or more published in Generation on why my govern- ment is a clique of dolts. So I must remain outside the "in group" of the era and wear my patriotism (oh, that nasty, nasty word) as a badge of scorn to those who see wanton desertion of ideal and reason through eyes too clouded with their own im- portance as a "humanitarian fre" +o one near the mark onf ours is a living constitutional ideal which must be- applied to the times and the knowledge that, in any field, it is only the fool who gives simple answers. -Laurence H. Kallen, '66 A Defense To the Editor: TO ALL YOU loyal, upstanding, patriotic, American citizens who took it upon yourselves to uphold our infallible American stand on Viet Nam, I heartily commend you; Uncle Sam would also, no doubt, be extremely proud of your subtle manner of trying to solve his problems. After all, throwing eggs, ripping down protest signs, roughing up demonstrators, etc., are all very rational and sound solutions to all of our nation's problems. No, I don't commend you-I damn you in all your self-pro- claimed self righteousness! Your actions with regard to the- anti- Viet Nam war float in the home- coming parade were despicable. YOU MAY ALL go home slap- ping yourselves on the back and saying, "We sure showed those damn Communists," but you have taken only one more step in staining our American image. I am an American, and I am proud- of it; yet I must say that you were, wrong in your actions. I know it is terribly naive to speak of such things as "freedom" and "democracy"-these terms are much too idealistic to be true- but nevertheless we all must admit that the United States does keep up a rather reputable facade of "democracy" (no sarcasm intend- ed). Now, going on the premise that the United States is a nation of some political and ethical repute, I thus find it difficult to see how this type of "patriotism" fits into our scheme of things. The right to be heard, the right of protest, is an inherent part of our na- tional heritage. But throwing eggs and trying to silence others, which Michigan MAD By ROBERT JOHNSTON tunity has recognized the SDS for- mula for really getting at poverty, a transfer of power to the poor through a decentralized organiza- tion process that avoids the pres- ent centers of welfare control, as a valid one worth trying. THERE IS THEN, as might be expected, a great deal of man- power and idea exchange be- tween these two organizations. OEO has been known to quietly sanction such activities for Job Corps workers as the organiza- tion of rent strikes, to give an- other example. Should the investigation show any signs at all of getting up a head of steam, it would clearly be in order for University admin- istrators to take action, public or private, to head off any effects it might have here. Nothing could be more debilli- tating to a spirit of free and healthy inquiry and discussion than a pall of secret snooping. What students do here - their University records, their thoughts, their activities, are their concern and theirs alone, and the Univer- sity should make this abundantly clear. Unless there are clear and pres- ent dangers of armed revolt (there aren't, needless to say), the FBI and the Secret Service have no jet Nam is what our homecoming "patriots" were trying to do-this is ridicu- lous! ARE YOU PEOPLE not denying the protestors those very rights which you claim to uphold (i.e. freedom, democracy)? Thus, are you not blatant hyocrites? By denying them their rights you are making a sham of the ethical and philosophical basis of the United States-and herein you must be condemned, for how can you claim to theoretically uphold that which, in fact, you do not? The Viet Nan protestors have the right to be heard, and they have the right to say what they damn well please! Now whether or not you accept this is another thing. Similarly, the anti-protest- ers (i.e. "patriots") also have the right to proclaim the virtues of their cause. Again, you may accept it or you may not. Our nation is one of the few nations in the world where this sort of thing can be done. You who are quick to cry out "Communist," remember one thing-by denying them their rights to demonstrate peacefully, you are no better than those real Communists whom you so ardently decry. ONE MORE THING for all you "patriots"-why must you assume that "we" (i.e., the United States) are always right?yWhy do "we" as a nation always act first and apologize later? Any of you who think the United States is 100 per cent right-well, I oity you and your dogmatic naivete. Similarly, to you who protest -can you keep on generalizing to such a point that the U.S. must naturally be equated with the term "war crimes," "brutality" and "great power chauvinism?" I think not. There is definitely room for argument on both sides, but why not keep it clean? It isn't very pleasant to see someone smattered with eggs and roughed up merely because he is standing up for something that he believes in. -Michael Gow, '66 business near a university campus. ONE CAN'T HELP but notice the similarity of this pattern to others in the civil rights move- ment. Students started it with the invention of the sit-in in the, late '50's. As the NAACP picked it up and students spread it across the. South there were charges of anti-Americanism, Communism, immorality and all the rest. Now the NAACP is considered practically right-wing. A few years later, in the very early '60's, the Student Non-Viol- ent Coordinating Committee, com- posed almost exclusively of stu- dents, began to make itself felt in the area of voter registration in the South and used the demon- stration tactics more liberally than the NAACP had. The charges and counter-charg- es were all the same. Now SNCC is becoming respect- able. It received a birthday cita- tion from Vice-President for Stu- dent Affairs Richard Cutler last summer, and is very cautious about getting itself associated with the Viet Nam protestors. Now we have the SDS'ers, who want to attack both poverty and the war in Viet Nam. And here are Katzenbach and Mayor Daley with the standard list of "con- cerns" and charges. THERE IS QUITE an article in the current Business Week en- titled "From Now to 1980: Amaz- ing Growth." McGraw-Hill fore- casters predict, probably accur- ately, a leap in the gross na- tional product to $1.2 trillion by 1980. There will be less work, more productivity, higher earnings, and a drastic slimming of the ranks of the poor (who, with their new- ly-acquired wealth, will provide a principal impetus for industrial growth). This is a quantity of affluence that must surely presage the mi- lenium, but, of course, it doesn't. For it is the quality of life that counts, both national and inter- national. It is a question of values, and of ideals. SDS, for all of its Port Huron Statement eloquence, stops short of any answers, but at least addresses itself to the question. "In suggesting social goals and values, therefore, we are aware of entering a sphere of some disre- pute. Perhaps matured by thedpast, we have no sure formulas, no closed theories-but that does not mean values are beyond discus- sion and tentative determination." Kingman Brewster, president of Yale University, echoed these sen- timents in a speech at the same conference at which Katzenbach spoke. "We have a responsibility not to let the sword of our own conviction fall to the ground. The quest of the young for a more satisfactory purpose is our quest too. "Our world and our country as well as all of us individually are in quest of ourselves." KATZENBACH is only about five years behind. Weekend' Mean? The Deep End To the Editor: F THE Viet Nam Day Commit- tee prides itself in its claims to have such wide support within the academic community here at the University, then it's about time it begins to act with a little more responsibility and ration- ality. When the teach-in movement began back in March, it was laud- ed by proponents as well as critics of American policy for at least providing an open forum for an intellectual interchange of ideas and viewpoints on the situation in Viet Nam. A good deal of light was thrown on the subject by looking at it from the different viewpoints of the various social disciplines. Those in the faculty who or- ganized the teach in and partici- pated in it added much to the credibility of the event. It success- fully brought many to do some thinking that they otherwise would not have done, THIS WAS the espoused goal of the teach in-to get people to do some thinking about American policy instead of blindly and un- - Letters - LET US REITERATE what should be evident; we are always interestedein your com- ments, as letters to the editor, on current news items, Daily articles and editorials and topics of general interest. If in recent weeks we have not print- ed as many letters as we have. received, this is only because the availability of space on the. page and the length of letters must, unfortunately, be con- sidired. We also take our Judg- ment of the general quality of the letter into account. For this reason, your chances of being printed are considerably improved if your letter is limit- ed to 300 words. And please type if you can. But do write. 4 4 critically following it. But perhaps the ultimate purpose was to get people to actually change their opinions on Viet Nam. This was not a success, and having thus failed to change opinions in a rational manner, the teach ins became more emotional and mili- tant. When astronauts McDivitt and White came to the University last summer to be honored for their accomplishments, they found their passage into the Union blocked by a "teach in" on the front steps of the Union, a "teach in" not to stimulate intelligent thinking and debate but one whose main pur- pose was to deride the United States government. The Viet Nam Day Committee has carried this trend even fur- ther. Their recent activities have centered around not rational dis- cussion but -emotionalism- and smear tactics. They have gone so far off the deep end as to claim that American actions are actually approaching "genocide in "Viet Nam! NOW, IT HAPPENS to be my sincere belief that the organizers of the Viet Nam Day Committee's activities are basically intelligent people who do read the news- papers (at least they quote them a good deal). This being the case, I find it difficult to comprehend how they can be so one sided in their approach to the question. Hoven't they read the New York Times and seen the answers to their charges? How can they pos- sibly not be aware of the fact that the United States is giving large scale aid to refugees, that the United States uses harmless tear gas instead of bullets to find the guerrillas that are hiding be- hind the skirts of the women and children in the villages, that the United States is seeking to min- imize civilian casualties in its air strikes by warning the villagers beforehand, that the United States has not dropped a single bomb on the population centers of Hanoi and Haiphong. THIS BRINGS OUT the simple, sad fact of the movement: the protestors see only what they want to see and read only what they want to read. No longer are they taking a rational look at both sides; they are Irresponsibly try- ing to draw attention to their side with unfounded charges and mas- sive publicity stunts. The Ann Arbor movement is no longer interested in throwing light on the subject as much as it is interested in generating heat. In- stead of talking about foreign policy, it seems the movement is beginning to feed on itself, each demonstration having to be bigger and louder than the previous. IT IS SAD indeed that the movement has degenerated from its original worthy aims, heartily endorsed by the academic com- munity, into what is now little .more than a massive public circus. -Michael D. Jakesy, '67 Saluting the Flag To the Editor: HAS IT NOW become un- American or Communistic to salute the flag of the United 4 * i A Civil Liberties Crackdown? THE''RE EVERYWHERE. Under manhole covers, behind cur- tains, between the cracks on the floor, behind every door. Those dirty Commies have infested our society. They seem to swarm on the scene like locusts. McCarthy saw them when he could not get Schine a commission in the Army. They were at Berkeley. And now they're subverting our national policy in Viet Nam. WHO ARE THE LATEST Commies ac- cording to the Justice Department? They are the members of the Students for a Democratic Society and other orga- nizations which dare protest the war in Viet Nam. As the attorney general of the United States, Nicholas Katzenbach, said last weekend to the New York Times, the danger of these groups is "that the dem- onstrations might be misunderstood abroad, particularly in Peking and Ha- noi." This, of course, would be terrible, according to Katzenbach, because an "overwhelming majority of the American people .stand with President Johnson's policy in Viet Nam." their influence on other students. It is a tactic that has worked in the past, and the administration hopes it will work again. It is absurd to charge that SDS -- a group whose prime goal, a decentralized democracy, is the very antithesis of the totalitarianism inherent in the Commu- nist state - is severely infiltrated with Communists. One may disagree with SDS's policies, but one should also under- stand the po'ssible ramifications of muf- fling these voices of" dissent to achieve a stronger national consensus. LOOKING AT another situation in our history during which civil liberties were violated, one realizes how danger- ous the current situation is. For example, although we still remem- ber the atrocities which were committed by the Nazis during World War II and think it could never happen in America, several hundred thousand American citi- zens of Japanese descent were put into concentration camps during the war. Realizing the possible repercussions of the current situation, members of the academic community should unite into 'Must Turn About . 1 EDITOR'S NOTE: In my ca- WE GATHER to memorialize pacity as editorial director, I the dead, Vietnamese and Ameri- take the liberty here to reprint can, of that stupid, senseless, im- the remarks of Rev. Robert moral conflict in which we are Hauert at Saturday'svmemorial now engaged. And I speak to mem- service to honor all those who oralize the passing of someone's have died in Viet Nam. I God and human values once hon- thought the remarks were espe- oured. cially moving and want to Whose values are honoured by share them with those who did an economy that grows fat and not attend the service. fights wars with money stamped -J.G. "In God We Trust" while waving a flag and reciting a creed "One By REV. ROBERT HAUERT Nation under God?" We seem no more to honour the ADDRESS myself to an au- God of Abraham, Isaac and Ja- dience much wider than those cob. gathered at this memorial service, We seem no more to honour the so I hope the word gets around. g r e a t Protestant Confessions I address myself to all who which at one time were formative somehow find themselves at home for this country. in this land; to the many thou- We seem no more to honour the sands who return to this place ancient Catholic Creed of a Pope for a Homecoming Weekend; to who came before the community the parents who, with hope and of nations and asked for peace in perhaps some frustration, send this world. their sons and daughters off to school; to all students and par- WE SEEM more and more to +1) ,. .A, - .. -AIIo move towards the god and values ciety can say: "It is not wrong to kill a Com- munist." "Itnis not wrong to kill or at- tack anyone seeking human rights and freedom for others." "Justice is served by continuing the senseless destruction of a country and the needless killing of a people." WE MUST turn about. We must turn this land about. Despite the article of the na-. tional faith acted out in corpora- tion executive offices during the week or on the gridiron on Satur- day or in Viet Nam-thah you must win, and win big, no matter what the cost in human values- we must see that it does still matter how you play the game. In these times of nuclear weapons and a mentality of unconditional surrender, we must see that the idea of a just war is no longer tenable. We must turn about and see I I