I Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS The Path to German Reunification Where Opinions Are Free. 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, 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. URSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: BRUCE WASSERSTEIN The New YorK World's Fair: Suessful Portrayal of Life N O ONE can doubt that there are coming important changes in the structure of the Western Alliance. But serious examination of the changes has not yet begun because neither in West Germany nor in this country is there a consensus about what to do. Thus, Chancellor Ludwig Erhard has not yet found a way to recon- cile the factions out of which he must fashion his government, and the divisive issue among these factions is West German foreign policy-toward Eastern Europe, the Soviet Union, France and the United States. In Washington, the administration is divided within itself, divided basically over bow to deal with the conflicting views of the West Germans. The initiative and the prepon- derant influence in the work of reforming and renovating the' Western Alliance has fallen by de- fault into the hands of Gen: Charles de Gaulle. For Britain is unable for the time being to play a leading role in the world. and the United States is prevented by the controversies in Bonn and in this country from taking a clear stand. But this is not an impos- sible thing to do, and as compared with many tragic issues elsewhere in the world it is not even an ex- ceedingly difficult thing to do. IT WOULD BE a good begin- ning if Washington ceased to treat the modernizationand re- form of NATO as an attack on the alliance and as a manifesta- tion of Gen. de Gaulle's personal ambitions and prejudices. The NATO treaty and the military establishment constructed upon it were put together half a genera- tion ago, and the international situation of 1965 is obviously very different from what it was in 1949., Much has happened since then. Notably, there has been the great schism in the Communist world and the Soviet-American detente which followed the nuclear con- frontation of 1962. We ought to be the first, not the reluctant last, to be arguing for the modernization of NATO, and we should be thinking about how to do this, not about how, to Today Tomiorrow By WALTER LIPPMAnA stand off Gen. de Gaulle. A clear change of posture on our part would do much to clear the air and also to help the -West Ger- mans make up their minds. IN THE NEXT installment of clarification must come tPe aban- donment of the misconception that there exists a choice for Germany between defiance and reconcilia- tion in Eastern Europe. There is a faction in Germany, which has its counterpart in Washington, which nurses the illusion that the Soviet Union can be forced be- hind its own frontiers and that East Germany can then be united with West Germany-all this to be done by a special German-Ameri- can military combination. Probably very few Germans, even among those who give lip service to this notion, really be- lieve in the idea. More likely. they harbor the idea that by being joined to us in some special re- lationship, including some kind of nuclear relationship, the West Germans will have something to trade off when they sit down to bargain with the Soviet Union. On our;side, our German policy has become a mixture of anti- German prejudice and of appease- ment. That military absurdity, the multilateral mixed-manned nu- clear force of surface ships, was conceived in distrust of the Ger- mans with the intention of fool- ing them. Its basic assumption is that the Germans will follow an- other Hitler unless the present-day Germans are given the illusion that they, too, are a first-class, that is to say a nuclear, power. IN THE INTERESTS of the hy- giene of German-American rela- tions, we should give up the idea of deceiving the Germans and of appeasing them lest they do the horrible things we impute to them. The honest and healthy basis of German-American relations is mutual candor. Such candor re- quires us to recognize that a na- tion which is partitioned must have no access to nuclear weapons. Its vital interest is reunification which must be achieved by recon- ciliation with its former enemies, most particularly those to. the East. Reunification cannot be achiev- ed by any kind of German nuclear threat, either real or fictitious. It can be achieved only by the Pres- ident's policy of building bridges, and, therefore," it is Incumbent upon the Germans to stop com- plaining and wondering about every bridge we try to build. THE GERMANS will find, as we, too, shall find, that, as Ger- many and America seek the solu- tion of the problems of cecurlty and reunification in an increased agreement with the Soviet Union, Gaullist France will not be our enemy and our Inveterate oppon- ent. We shall then all be realigned together. (c) 1965, The Washington PosttGCo. 4 DESPITE THE STATEMENTS of over- picky. critics-ranging .from "superfi- ciality personified" to "nothing more than 64 acres worth of advertising-the World's Fair was a success. However, the theme of the Fair instead of being "Peace Through Understand- ing," should have been the much more appropriate title of the awardlwinning film presented at the Johnson's Wax ex- hibit, "To Be Alive."' The World's Fair exemplified more than anythifg else, what it means "to be alive." It was a tremendous monument to man's beliefs, his artistic creations, and the progress which has marked his evo- lution through the ages. The human ele- ment which was emphasized in the film' is not lost sight of, as one remembers that man's hopes for a better world made the exhibits at the Fair possible. THOSE WHO CRITICIZED the Fair as not being culturally or intellectually stimulating were closing their eyes to. some of the best exhibits there. Michel- angelo's "Pieta" was brought thousands of miles to be on display at the Vatican Pavilion and just about every country pavilion, particularly those of Spain and Mexico, had' an impressive section devoted to its cultural products. Several religious groups had pavilions, ranging from Billy Graham to The Prot- estant-Orthodox Center with its famous film, "The Parable. For those who were interested, the Fair offered many exhibits exemplifying the hostory of man's more intellectual and cultural accomplish- ments. Much of the Fair radiated man's prog- ress through industry and science. Hun-' dreds of people at a time looked into the future, were exposed to the intracacies of a scientific computer; or rode through the history of communications. All of these industrial exhibits were free, and most showed creativity and orig- inality in their production, making them informative and amusing at the same time. The history of electrical progress was presented in a revolving theatre while a ride on a "magic skyway" showed the world of the future. Nowhere else on earth could one be ex- posed to such a diversity of informative and entertaining exhibits. THE FINISHING TOUCHES of Walt Dis- ney made the Fair a haven for chil- dren or anyone young at heart. Whether one was taking a magical boat ride through our "Small World," staring at a caveman, or watching a realistic looking dummy move and speak, Disney's influ- ence made man's tremendous progress seem even more remarkable. True, the lines were long arid the prices of many of the restaurants were high, but these complaints are overshad- owed when one remembers that favorite exhibit, -or the beauty of the Unisphere at night, surrounded by fountains and lights. A sense of unreality, as though one were taking a trip through Fantasyland, pervaded a visit to the Fair. It is easy to forget that everything depicted at the Fair was very much a part of reality; very much a part of our present or not-too- far-away future. Monorails, trips to other planets, and elaborate systems of irrigation do not seem that remote when we remember that the color televisions which amazed every- one at the last World's Fair are now a common household item. THIS THEN was the greatest contribu- tion of the World's Fair. It assembled within its limits man's accomplishments in a variety of fields of endeavor. No wonder it seemed unreal! The results of man's enterprise squeezed into 646 acres is enough to make anyone disbelieve he's in a world of reality. The World's Fair, with its glimpses into the past, its exhibits of the present, and. its promises and predictions of the future truly showed what it's like "to be alive." -RUTH FEUERSTEIN j State Aid to Church Schools-Justified? WRAND Volunteer Day: An Opportunity To Learn THE WRAND Volunteer Day this Satur- day is the work; of a few interested students to offer participants a first hand knowledge of the demonstration project in the War on Poverty being conducted in the old Willow Run area near here. There are many- questions about WRAND-The Willow Run Association for Neighborhood Developnent - Which arise almost automatically. Does the area deserve the grant? Is the area impov- erished? If so, in what way? Is WRAND administering the grant properly. What are WRAND's shortconings and assets? How long will it take it to achieve what it wants to accomplish? All these questions deserve different answers - personal answers arrived at after seeing the area, the people and the activities of WRAND first hand. WRAND IS ADMINISTERING, with the help from the University, a federal grant from the Office of Economic Op- portunity. The controversy over WRAND has ac- celerated to phenomenal heights over the past year, and has received substantial attention in the New York Times, the De- troit News, the Detroit Free Press, as well as many other large publications, reaching as far as the Russian newspa- per Izvestia. Stories have run on the Associated Press and the United Press Internation- Editorial Staff ROBERT JOHNSTON, Editor LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM JEFFREY GOODMAN Managing Editor Editorial Director JUDITH FIELDS................Personnel Director LAUREN BAHR .......... Associate Managing Editor JUDITH WARREN........Assistant Managing Editor ROBERT HIPPLER ...... Associate Editorial Director GAIL BLUMBE"G................Magazine Editor VTOY R AFF I . ..:.........ActingrSnorts Editor. al. And the issues are the same - the worth of the demonstration project ad- ministred by WRAND, the possibility of success, the future of the War on Pov- erty itself. To tackle these questions, one must have a working knowledge of what WRAND is aiming for, that is to remedy social immobility-not economic poverty. One must have a comprehension 'of the struggles that have evolved within WRAND itself, as well as its battles with opponents who believe that the federal grant, the aims and administration of WRAND are wrong. THESE ISSUES will be discussed by workers in the project at a seminar Saturday morning, launching the Volun- teer Day. In the course of the day, par- ticipants will\have a chance to work in the WRAND community center, as well as in the' community itself, with the op- portunity to structure their own opinions and gather their own observations. The Volunteer Day will be held at the WRAND community Center. Buses will leave the -rnion at 8 a.m. Saturday morn- ing and return at 5 in the afternoon. A one-hour seminar will be held in the com- munity center as soon as the bus arrives; participants will then be encouraged to do handiwork in the center or survey- discussion work in the community. Although the issues of the WRAND con- troversy have been written on and aired on the news media already, the Volunteer Day has a definite value. This is that the issues cannot easily by camouflaged, warped or subjected to erroneous inter- pretation-when people observe them for themselves. The interesting fact is that WRAND is not far from here-only about eight miles, in Ypsilanti and Superior Townships. The controversy surrounding it is great and far reaching, encompassing questions on To the Editor:' W' HILE I AGREE with the gen- eral thesis of Ruth Feuer- stein's editorial on "Aid to Church Schools," and commend her ob- vious attempt to be fair minded, I feel that several of her argu- ments are based on assumptions which are factually misleading. She states: "Often In a paro- chial school, church doctrines are emphasized in subjects which should be given more secularized treatment - specifically, English and history. Students in many cases do not fully receive the more well-rounded elucation of- fered in a school which is not re- ligiously oriented." Unfortunately many other fac- tors enter into the problem than are included in this statement. To begin with, Miss Feuerstein says by implication that the teaching of English and history in the public school system tends toward "objectivity," whereas in the paro- chial schools it does not. It would be lovely if things were that simple. But the very fact that she implies so casually that the teach- ing of history in the public school system is "objective," is a com- mentary on the uncritical atmos- phere engendered by a monolithic public school system. The truth is that history as taught in the public school sys tem tends to beuslanted towards the traditional Ango-Saxon Pro- testant interpretation of the Ren- aissance and Reformation period, and to the extent that it is a less conscious and explicit bias I feel it is more dangerous than the bias to be found in Catholic, schools. 'Yet Catholic tax money helps pay for this public school teaching. FURTHERMORE, Miss Feuer- stein has ignored in her argu- ment the fact that church doc- trines comprise part of the sub- ject matter of both history and literature. Isn't it just as "subjective" to underplay, ignore. skirt around and sometimes to misinterpret and ridicule religious doctrines in the teaching of these disciplines, as it is to "overemphasize" them? (What, anyway, is one's criterion for deciding what does and what does not constitute "overempha- sis?") Mary McCarthy, who attended parochial school as a child, has praised Catholic education for this very "overemphasis." She says: "Having to learn a little theology as an adult in order to understand a poem of Donne or Crashaw is like being taught the Bible as Great Literature in a college hu- manities course, it does not stick to the ribs. Yet most students in America have no other recourse than to take these vitamin in- jections to make good their cul- tural deficiency. If you were born and brought up a Catholic, you have absorbed a great deal cf world history and the history of ideas before you are twelve, and it is like learning a language early, the effect is indelible. Nobody else in America, no other group, is in this fortunate position." WE OUGHT to recognize the fact that 'there is no rigid line dividing the "secular" from the "sacred." No matter how "secular- ized" the teaching of history is, it will nevertheless betray some sort of cultural bias; there is no such thing as "neutral" history. Since this is so, people ought to be allowed to choose their own "bias." The problems of good ver- sus bad education is dependent on many factors, but I really do not feel that the teaching of re- ligious matter per see has a casual relationship to bad education. -Helen Ratner, Grad Vietnamese War diction is coming true today in our own country. It is not just the fact that the anti-war demon- strators were not afforded ade- quate police protection during the demonstrations on Friday; it is not just that those who commit- ted civil disobedience were not released on the bail that had been posted for them until after a pro- test rally in front of the jail was moved to campus; it is not just that the Ann Arbor citizenry dem- onstrated an intolerance of dis- agreement which was reminiscent of Southern segregationist mobs; it is not just that students are. be- ing threatened with the draft be- cause they dared to protest the administration's policies; it is not just that the press has been shamefacedly lying and misrepre- senting both what is happening in Viet Nam and what has been hap- pening here in regard to protests;, it is not any one of these things, nor any one of the innumerable cases of despotism that I could cite; it is all of these taken to- gether. , In the course of some remarks I made to the anti-war demon- strators last Saturday evening, I said that the growth of a war psy- chology in this country does not yet justify the cry of "fascism." But I would ask all those in this community who pride themselves on their:, intellectual abilities, re- gardless of their political persua- sions, to carefully consider the following question. HAD YOU OCCUPIED a posi- tion comparable to the one you now hold, but the time were changed to 1929 and the place to Germany, just when, if ever, would you have decided that it was time for you to actively oppose your government? It is easy for us to sit here in our comfort and condemn the German intellectuals who did nothing to oppose the rise of Hitler (I do not mean to {imply that all German intellectuals did this-I am only talking of the ones who remained silent and in- active). But when does it become obvious that your own govern- ment, yea even the majority of your fellow countrymen, have taken an absolutely unjustifiable stand which must be opposed by any who value their roles as moral agents? Again let me emphasize that I am not talking about the U.S. actions in Viet Nam, but rather about the frightening destruction of freedom that the war seems to be causing here. I am not claiming that we have already come to the point which justifies revolution, or even anything at all beyond a continued public insistence on civil liberties for all. But I do think that the situa- tion is deteriorating at a suffi- ciently fast pace to require that we all at least begin thinking about what we will do "if," and' about just what circumstances would be absolutely intolerable.. It can happen here, and I fear that if people are drafted into the army merely for opposing our for- eign policy, then it has already started to happen. --Lawrence Caroline, Department of Philosophy To the Editor: THE CONTINUING protests over U.S. involvement in Viet Nam have come to resemble noth- ing so much asan old-fashioned revival with nihilistic overtones, a cacophony of unimaginative epi- thets and tiresome tirades de- signed to purge devils, scourge sin and quiet consciences. As such, they are calculated to inflame pas- sions rather than to sponsor' ser- ious dialogue. Consider the recent Daily edi- torial by Douglass Chapman as a case in point. To charge the John- son administration with "gross hypocrisy" in its Viet Nam policy, as is the eminent journalist's dis- position, is simply to indulge in gross nonsense. To speak of the "federal government's irrational- ity" on the subject is to belie one's 'own. To label U.S. actions as "butchery" -is to invite a punch in the nose, not a calm and closely' reasoned verbal rejoinder. The same may be said 'of the fishbowl and Diag demonstrations. How, after all, does one discuss dispassionately in the face of signs declaring him to be supporting "murderers" and "war, crimes?" In addition to their poor taste, such signs are palpably provoca- tive. The resulting impulse is not to think or to talk; it is to fight. Furthermore, those who would tease elephants ought to antici- pate a stampede.' THEN, TOO, contrary to their insistances, the protesters' move- ment is characterized not by an affluence of alternatives, but by a programmatic poverty. Stripped of their sophomoric . sound-and-, fury, the alternatives advanced sum to one: namely, "get out." Though attractive for its simpli-, city and parsimony, it fails ut- terly to grasp the realities of do- mestic as well as of international politics. It reflects nothing so much as the shallowness of thought endemic to the move- ment, a fact which largely ex- plains the ineptness of its opposi- tion. The recent campus conference on Viet Nam exemplifies this fact. For the most part, the alternatives it espoused were as trite as old college yells, as predictable as a soap opera. It is doubtful that good inten- tiops, high hopes, and hard la- bors could have spawned more negligible results. The shiniest wrappings are not going to boom the sales of an empty package. Whether or not there is a legal or moral justification for our pres- ence in Viet Nam, the fact re- mains: we are there. Realism be- gins at that point. Meaningful. alternatives are founded upon that fact. If the protest movement is to become anything more than a refuge T for the politically disaf- fected, it must begin .there also. FINALLY, the protesters' ful- minations about brotherly love and human compassion would ring more true if these estimable patriots evinced a greater charity for our own policy makers. All civilized men, which presumably includes Lyndon Johnson, are against killing. None in Wash- ington can be, comfortable with the status quo; all seek an honor- able solution. - What purpose is served by cast- ing the administration as popu- lated by villains, as motivated by hypocrisy and as rampant with, immorality? An enthusiastic hos- tility- is the recourse of those without reason. I hold no brief for a realism of acquiesance or for a morality of obeisance to Washington. I seek neither to praise nor to bury Lyn- don Johnson. I confess my appre- hension and concern over our policies and I welcome dissent. My objection is that the protest move- ment's dissent is not regenerative in spirit but destructive. It _s not opening minds to alternatives; it is closing them. It is not moving us closer to peace; it is feeding the "war psychology" it purports to despise. And, it is doing these things because it is intellectually fatuous and tactically foolish. It ought to be seen as such. -Jerome M. Mileur, Grad -Res ponsibility To the Editor: I REMEMBER that, about the middle of September, there was a lot of talk about exercising free- dom with responsibility. I don't remember the exact cause-some- thing aboutan ugly sign in the Fishbowl, I think. It doesn't real- ly matter, though, because the im- portant thing is that people brave- ly wrote and said beautiful things about discretion, good taste, keep-, ing rules, responsibility, and other great stuff like that. I remember thinking (all warm and runny in- side) that, here in Ann Arbor, freedom was in .good hands. Then came the Homecoming Parade and the mobbing of the anti-Viet Nam War float. Funny thing about,that. The people who had been saying things about re- sponsibility didn't try to stop the mob. They didn't call in the police. They didn't even shout, "Responsibility!" And the next day they didn't say that the mob was made up of outside agitators, or that the mobbing was awful, or that it was a mistake. They didn't say anything at all-in print. And the people I talked with, all good law-and-order people, thought the whole "affair" was humorous and that "anyway, it serves those peaceniks right." WHAT I WANT to know is this: Does "exercising freedom with re- sponsibility" mean (among other things) protecting 'people's free speech, even when what they say is ignorant, unpleasant, or just not nice? Or does responsibility mean not hurting people with whom you disagree? Or does re- sponsibility simply mean looking out for your own views, rputa tion, and neck? -Michael Davis, Grad *1 1* f Those Tricky French Communists 4 A NDERS ASKELOF (pronounc- ed Askeleuv) and I bummed around Paris for a week this past summer. Andy and I met in the train station, shared a room in the Mont Matre area and saw the sights together. t Like typical tourists we devoted one afternoon to sitting on the banks of the Seine, drinking wine and eating bread and cheese. It was almost as they say it Is in the books except the Seine looked polluted, Andy wasn't a beautiful French girl and it was sort of a cloudy day. Yet, after we finished our first bottle and had opened the second, we both agreed it couldn't be much better. But suddenly it got better. What appeared to be an authentic French girl walked past us and I whipped out my trusty Brownie camera and began filming her. She got very angry and came over swearing (I think) at us in French. Yup! We guessed right-she was French, for sure. ,With our pigeon-French and her pigeon-English, we all soon be- came. friends. And, since we were friends, Andy and I asked her to show us around on Bastille Day, their version of the Fourth of July. We had heard of the wild So What? by sarasohn authentic French meal that I had hoped to have. Then she warned us-her folks were Communists. It certainly would be interesting, I thought. The next day, I met the whole family which consisted of the two parents, four brothers, three sis- ters and one uncle. The entire group lived in half of an old, run- down quonset hut with four rooms --kitchen, living-dining room. and two bedrooms. We had a dinner called pot pourri-the American potluck-which was simple yet de- licious, plus the usual abundance of wine and' gigantic French breads. After dinner we argued about politics, naturally. The mother pointed at the television set which someone was watching and sneer- ingly said the one English word she knew, "Capitalist." She was referring to the W network. The family hated capitalism and the American government, which they continually read about in L'- didn't distribute the income he received to others-as she believed a good Communist should do. They all were impressed with my $18 camera and asked if I could send them one if they sent me the money when I returned to the United States. The!next morning, I went to the offices of L'Humanite. I was sur- prized to see a comic book stand in the 'main lobby, selling Ameri- can comic books translated into French. I figured it must be pro- paganda, yet couldn't, discover what had been changed in the stories. They had such characters as Donald Duck, Tom Sawyer, Bugs Bunny and Davey Crockett. WHAT HAD they done to dis-, tort Walt Disney's version of Da- vey Crockett to turn it into pro- paganda? The receptionist turned a few of the pages, pointed to the bad guys-the fur merchants who stole from the Indians-and said, "Rotten capitalists!" They didn't' have to change anything, it seem- ed. So when the House Un-Ameri- can Activities ; Committee Is fin- ished with Students for a Demo- cratic Society and calls in Walt Disney, you'll understand why. HUAC is only doing its duty pro- tecting us from the subversive elements in the U.S. Scus Corner: Joy's of A pathy I OFTEN sit beside my record player and stare at the refrig- erator door for hours on end. During these pleasureful periods of serene unconcern, a deep' and warming love of total apathy wells up in my uncommitted and un- cover him with the sweat of their own squalidly personal convictions. THERE IS IN apathy an ele- ment of almost poetic bliss. I would like to share that bliss with others whose lives have so far