Setenly-Sixth Your EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OT THF UNIVFRSITY OT MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORTTY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF Sl UJLNT PUBLICATIONS IBM and Rush- What Could Happen? Where Opinl t Pn ura i Ar420 MAYNARD ST.. ANN APBOR, M i.t Nws PhONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Dail ex press The individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This us/ be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: CHARLOTTE A. WOLTER Lal Bahadurr Shatri. In Metnoriami HE WAS A MUCH SHORTER man tralism and her responsibilities in the than his famous predecessor; he Third World. He broke with dignity and seemed feeble, excessively polite and grace the crisis in his country's a4ri- meek in appearance compared to other culture even when the U.S., demon- Indian leaders and, indeed, to world strating its discontent with his inde- leaders such as those he encountered pendent views on the crisis in Viet in Tashkent. His 110-pound, 5'2" figure Nam, but its food-relief plans on a did not seem to point towards a life of monthly basis and postponed his plan- effective public service. ned visit-which will now never occur. Thus, the impression came and per- He withstood the persuasive appeals sisted for some time that Lal Bahadur of advisors and refused to permit de- Shastri was ineffectual, excessively velopment of an atomic bomb even timid and scarcely equal to the famous while his borders were constantly un- example set by Jawaharlal Nehru, der pressure. And while he, as did his whom he succeeded in 1964 as Indian adversary, made war over Kashmir, he premier. And as Shastri began to con- concluded an agreement to reestablish tinue after Nehru, difficult enough in peace there only hours before he died. Itself, India had to face grave interna- Today most Americans ask more tional and agricultural challenges whether his successor will be able to which further shook his tormented establish the just and lasting peace country. Shastri died seeking. But in honoring But despite such nearly unbearable the memory of Lal Bahadur Shastri pressures, Shastri displayed remark- one turns to the past, to the words of able grace, and emerged as a courage- another great Indian whose words have ous and capable leader in his own great meaning today: right in a country full of misery and a world full of peril. "HOW HAVE WE PLAYED our part One finds some indication of the in this brief interlude that draws quality of the man not only in his re- to a close? I do not know. Others of a cent public pronouncements-instrue- later age will judge. By what standards tive though they be-but also in an act do we measure success or failure? That which took place nearly a decade ago, too I do not know. We can make no when he resigned 1s post as minister complaint that life has treated us of railways in Nehru's cabinet because harshly, for ours has been a willing his conscience made him feel morally choice, and perhaps life has not been responsible for a rail tragedy in which so bad to us after all. For only those over 150 passengers died. can sense life who stand often on the verge of it, only those whose lives are HE DISPLAYED the same sense of not governed by the fear of death. In moral responsibility in his actions spite of alj the mistakes that we n.t;ht after he became premier. He refused have made, we have saved ourselves to join in an alliance with the United from triviality and an inner shame and States - despite increasing intimi- cowardice. That, for our individual dation by the Chinese-because he be- selves, has been some achievement." lieved it would compromise India's neu- -MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH UMSEU Must Be Bargaining Agent By NEIL SHISTER IT'S THAT TIME of the year again when, with the regularity and steadfastness of purpose of o many lemmings, most of the freshmen girls at the University uive up half their waking hours and commit most of their emo- tions to going "Greek." This past weekend they were out in full force, looking like so many misplaced o r i e n t a t i o n groups, marching in the sub- freezing weather to spend their forty minutes graciously smiling and being smiled at throughout each of the 23 gleaming sorority houses at the University. All in all, it makes an interesting pic- ture, if it does indeed tend to train the social atmosphere of the campus during this first month. With all the enthusiasm in the world, however, and all the de- sire, warmth and ability to smoke an infinite number of cigarettes, there are some girls who are just not going to make DG's or Kappas, no matter how much everybody seemed to like them at the houses which didn't invite them back. Following in the line of the immortal raconteur of American society as well as University sorority life, my dear mentor Peter R. Sarasohn, let me recount an interesting event which happened just this weer to a couple of slightly misplaced girls from In- dianapolis. ONE OF THIE GIRLS, a rather attractive half blonde named Sarah fmost of her friends call her Jo-Jo, but she thought that this might be a little bold for the first days of rush) whose mother was a Theta during her hey-day as the reigning queen at the Uni- versity of Calgery in Canada (for any Thetas who don't yet know about that chapter, take heart- it's a comer). The truth is that Sarah was 4a genuine belle of her class, given the rush by half the guys at school, and genuinely en- joying her notoriety and suffering through that period every attrac- tive freshman undergoes when she learns the joys and evils of hard liquor. Sarah went into rush with all the confidence in the world-not only was she a legacy, but also lovely in her own right, witty, intelligent and well dressed. Another girl from her home- town, however, did not have quite the same outlook as Sarah. This girl was a bit too shy to really make it, yet her hunger for status was as great as the most social of her friends. Thus she paid her money and got her rush card. Ellen was the kind of girl who you could talk to for an hour and a half and then not remem- ber her name when you said goodby-she had that kind of look about her that you instinctively feel sorry for, except invariably you forget who she was before you could feel enough sympathy to go out of your way for her. But there she was, in there slugging with the best of them, hopeful that maybe she might hit a hot streak and come out of the whole thing with a pin for the collar of hor coat. Bu funny things happen at the University. in part because the University is so big nobody knows who anybody else really is and in part because the University is a naturally funny place if your sense of humor is sufficiently mis- directed. Ellen and Jo-Jo not only came from the same city, but also had the same last name. This in itself isn't catastrophic, except that somewhere lurking about the Univrsity is a perverted math major who is responsible for pro- gramming the IBM cards with which the girls get informed about their relative worth on the social market. Seems as if this guy was not overly hot for sorority girls and also that he had a feeling of immense power and went wild with his card punch. When he saw the results coming back for Jo-Jo (who was being lured not, only by the big three, but also the lesser five as well as everybody else on campus) and then saw poor Ellen's desirability (a couple of the co-ops kind of liked her when she wandered in by mistake, also she was big with the House- mothers Association, but even the worst of the sororities were giving her only a passing glance>. his sense of compassion was aroused. BOOM, QUICK as a flash his punch was playing the role of social equilizer, the great god everybody waits for but never seems to find. Through the blips and quirks of his machine he did it, passing it off as a justifiable mistake, Ellen became a heroine to the girls on her floor on the dorm, being asked back to every house that everybody wanted (as Jo-Jo, poor elegant Jo-Jo now well as those two co-ops), and has no recourse but to secretly curse all the sorority girls on the street and try to find a good roommate for a double next year in Stockwell. War Hits Close to Home in Columbus, Ga. By STEVE WILDSTROM COLUMBUS, Ga., is a city of taabout 125,000 inthe west cen- tral part of the state. It appears to be a prosperous town, with a much higher percentage of $50,000 homes than one would except in a city of its size, and it boasts two daily newspapers, although both are under the same owner- ship. Columbus is the site of the headquarters and main plants of the Royal Crown Cola Co., Tom Houston Peanuts and several tex- tile mills which provide jobs for the city. Located on the Chatta- hoochee River, newly made navig- able from the Gulf of Mexico to Columbus, the city is proud of its newly, although as yet quiet, port facilities. The town is fairly typi- cal of the growing industrial "New South." But there is another side to Columbus. The city feels the ef- fects of the war in Viet Nam per- haps harder than any other town in the country. Located just to the south of Columbus is Fort Benning, Amer- ica's largest military establish- ment. The fort is the home of the United States Infantry Corps and contains the infantry school and the special forces school. Until recently, it also housed the First Cavalry Division, now stationed in Viet Nam. THE ABSENCE of the First Cavalry is striking at Fort Ben- ning. In the area of the fort pre- viously occupied by the division, long rows of garage stalls stand empty. Barracks are half deserted. The area looks like a sort of mili- tary ghost town. The loss of the First Division has h~urt Columbu"ndtiilmcally. The division is largely composed of career soldiers and many of their wives and families lived in town. When the unit was shipped out, many of the dependents left to live elsewhere. Others remain, waiting and hoping. According to a local real estate agent, at this time last year, there were virtually no rental units available in the city. Families were housed in motels for as much as six weeks awaiting completion of homes. Currently there are over 1500 units for rent with few takers. Most of the vacancies are in the Fort Benning area, where attractive buildings stand at less than 50 per cent occupancy. The presence of the military es- tablishment deeply affects Colum- bus. About every tenth man in downtown Columbus is in uniform. Fort Benning "passes" on car bumpers are almost as prevelant as E-stickers in Ann Arbor. Some stores on Broadway, the main business thoroughfare, have signs in front offering easy terms to servicemen. THE BASIC ATTITUDE of the town towards the war is one of "We have to support the boys over there." At Fort Benning, many of the barracks have print- ed signs saying "Win in Viet Nam" posted over the doors. A Christmas display in front of a chapel reads "Peace on Earth ... With Honor." Both daily papers give heavy treatment to the war-in Colum- bus, the activities of the First Cavalry are local news. At least half of the front page is daily devoted to news from Viet Nam. "The Columbus Ledger" is prob- ably the only paper of its size em- ploying even a part-time Viet Nam correspondent. Editorially, both papers take a "hard line" on the war-opposing negotiations, branding the com- munists untrustworthy and unfit to negotiate with. The 30-hour Christmas truce was attacked as foolish, and the proposed New Year's truce hotly opposed. Despite all of this editorial vitu- p ration and the superficial signs of public support, one gets the impression that beneath it all. the citizens of Columbus would just as soon see the war end to- morrow. PUBLIC PASSIONS are quickly learned and even more quickly forgotten. The prewar fear of Communism was drowned out at the end of World War II by a national chorus of "Bring the boys home." The stalemated, incon- clusive settlement of the Korean conflict did not raise great na- tional indignation, although only a few short years earlier, Presi- dent Truman's recall of Gen. Mac- Arthur caused a furor, An end to the war in Viet Nam would likely meet with similar reaction, even in Columbus. Meanwhile, the city watches the war with great. in- terest. The most frightening thing to an Army wife remains a West- ern Union man. Misinformed U.S. Aided Castro sRevolt EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a series of five articles which I did while ins iami over Christmas. 'They are a series of interviews with Cuban refugees, concerning their attitude toward, the United States, Americans, the present situation in Cuba and their predictions for fu- ture developments. These articles also discuss the present situation in Miami. By BETSY COHN HE OTTAWA CITIZEN," Fri- day. Dec. 26, 1958: "'Rebel Leader, Fidel Cagtro's insurrection in Cuba was definitely communist inspired.' Senator Jose Gonzales Buente, said during a press con- ference at the Buban Embassy. 'Rebel barracks captured by gov- ernment troops invariably con- tained communist literature and much of this literature referred to Chinese Communist Movement M.. oscow radio frequently gives reports of the rebel chieftain's activities while ignoring the gov- ernment side of the issue.' . . . Senator Buente was eager to take the opportunity to try and cor- rect some of the misconceptions which Americans and Canadians had gained of the Cuban Revolt. TE UNIVERSITY has long been in a position of patriarchal authority over both its student and non-academic em- ployes. This may be changed with the up- coming efforts of several adult unions to seek representation of University em- ployes under a provision in the Hutchin- son Act. The University of Michigan Stu- dent Economic Union has long shown in- terest in seeking recognition as a bar- gaining agent before the University for students employed by the University. The difference between adult employes whose occupation is wrapped up in their relationship with the University and stu- dents whose services to the. University are transient and seemingly of minor im- portance is one of degree and not kind. One situation for which there is a defi- nite need for responsible organized repre- sentation of student economic grievance is the unsettled sit-down dinner contro- versy which came to a head at Stockwell Hall last semester. Sit-down dinners are meals at which student waitresses serve their seated fel- low-students, rather than cafeteria style. The popularity of= Sunday noon sit-downs is great with many of the residents of Stockwell but the dinners are a cause of Something Most Be Done AFTER REPEATED INCIDENTS of egg throwing, water bomb dropping and firecracker hurling from the heights of University Towers, it has become appar- ent that some form of regulation is, needed to control "Sniper Heights" and similar high rise developments. Since tall apartment houses seem to be the wave of the future in Ann Arbor, it would seem that the problem of stu- dents dropping dangerous projectiles will increase in the future. Presently it is practically impossible to reprehend a person who throws a water bomb at some pedestrian from the six- teenth story of University Towers be- cause of legal restrictions on entering apartments without a search warrant. A POSTTE SOTTTTON is for citv unrest among the girls who must spend additional time serving and clearing the tables. WHILE THE NUMBER of sit-downs at other dormitories was decreased - Mosher and Jordan voted to retain only one per month-a plurality of the girls at Stockwell, in an opinion vote, favored re- ducing the sit-downs from four to two- per-month. Nothing has yet been done. A committee of girls chosen to repre- sent the fifty-odd student kitchen work- ers at Stockwell have had their request for fewer mandatory sit-downs met with non-committal promises for future in- vestigation and consideration which have not materialized. The tactics of the resi- dence halls' administrative chain is ig- noring those who cannot effectively deal with the Establishment seem to have worked well in this instance in discour- aging the girls and 3making future efforts appear barren of fulfillment, One can sympathize and agree-with the administrators' philosophy of 'sit-down dinners as signal efforts to keep creep- ing impersonalization out of undergrad- uate life and prevent Stockwell from be- coming "a hotel and not a residence hall." Certainly sit-downs with their pleasant, relaxed atmosphere are conducive to gen- teel manners and civilized dining. But at what cost to the individuals who for economic necessity have no choice but to work under conditions for which they are tacitly denied effective channels for redress of their grievances! Administrators for all their talk of breed- ing and socially refined conduct are not practicing what they preach. THE SPIRIT of fairplay and rational considerations which they hope the residents will pick up from the sit-downs has apparently not rubbed off in their uncooperative dealings with the kitchen staff. The fact that the individuals protest- ing their treatment will shortly leave the residence hall and the affair might die a natural death (if it hasn't from apathy already) is no reason to suppose that if the situation is not remedied now, the administrators will not be encouraged to use such tactics on other occasions. It is an unfortunate state of affairs 'Far from spearheading a "popu- lar" movement, Castro's activities stemmed from a personal desire for power and an insatiable per- sonal ambition,' the senator -aid ... According to the senator. the rebel leader had been a trouble maker ever since his student days. His answer to the government's promise that it would make any sacrifice to bring about peace had been that there could be no solu- tion accept by war and bloodshed." Fivetdays later, the senator's predictions had proved corr'ect and Fidel Castro took power over Cuba. Seven years later, Senator Buente snow Mr. Jose Gonzales Buente, resident of Miami, Flor- ida), recalls wa'nings given as early as 1953 to the Mexican, Nicaraguan, Panama and United States governments concerning Castro's affiliations with Com- munism. U.S. Ambassador to Cuba Earl Smith had met withPresi- dent Eisenhower as well as John F. Dulles to discuss the situation. However. "both were too involved with international affairs to give the problem much attention," the ex-senator- said. Prior to Castro's take over, the island was given little concern by the U.S., except as an attractive vacation spot. and an important trade outlet for sugar. According to an high ex-official of the Cu- ban government (who wishes to remain anonymous), "Many Amer- icans were also misinformed about Cuba at this time and were living under the misconception that Cuba was an improverished and underdeveloped country. On the contrary, the living conditions of Cubans before Castro were among the cleanest, most comfortable and of the highest standards of any country in this hemisphere." OTHER AMERICANS, such as Herbert Matthews of the "New York Times," were misinformed and deceived about the aims of Fidel Castro and as early as 1957 editorials in favor of Castro's policy began to appear in nation- wide newspapers. Raoul Menocal, presently a banker in Miami; formerly Mayor of Havanna, Minister of Com- nierce, Senator, and member of the House of Representatives; spoke of the psychological effects on the Cubans of the misinforma- tion held by Americans before 1948. "Cubans have always been tied to American opinion," he said. "In the minds of Cubans, when Americans made good statements about Castro, Cubans respected this. As Americans tended toward Castro, so did Cubans who even- tually began to give Castro finan- cial aid and moral support. Al- though there were Americans who were correctly informed about Castro's Communist affiliations, they either wished to ignore it or did not want to become involved. Now Cuba has become a world proolem linked to all international problems . .. while Cuba is under Castro there can be no consolida- tion." Letters:* Smugness? IDEL CASTRO Misinformed Americans left a blatant mark again in April, 1961 with the Bay of Pigs invasion. According to Theodore Sorenson, President Kennedy was misin- formed by Allen Dulles and the CIA about American strategy in Cuba; as a result, the promise of American support to the Cuban forces was unfulfilled and the Cubans were defeated. "This," said Menocal, "was the Cubans' last chance to free the island by them- selves; next time, they will have to have the help of Americans." $ To the Editor: THE DAILY is to be commended for having tried for so long to give its readers commentary and criticism on films playing in AnnArbor. But not until it began publishing the reviews of Paul Sawyer did it reallyenrich the movie-going experience of the readers. Where the writer's pieces tended to detract from (or even spoil) the film-viewing experience of the reader, Mr.aSawyer's definitely adds to that experience. His thoughtful, insightful article on Chaplin's "City Lights" brilliantly set the work of Chaplin in the context of the total experience of the country and culture that pro- duced it. Rather than stumbling in attempts to raise himself to the level of the work being comment- ed upon-which happens to many reviewers faced with a truly ar- tistic work-this reviewer wisely chose to fulfill his responsibilities to the public by sketching, in profound terms, a meaningful setting for Chaplin's gem. This particular reader (and I suspect most others) gained from that choice, in both understanding Chaplin's art in general, and in appreciating the experience of this film. -Paul Bernstein, '66 Sports To the Editor: LLOYD GRAFF, "T a k i n g a Swipe at Big Ten Smugness" in Thursday's Daily, made some rather u n g e n e r o u s comments about the Big Ten's nonconfer- collegiate athletics. It is disap- pointing to hear Micihgan's pro- posal to make Big Ten athletic scholarships contingent on finan- cial need voted down 9-1 every year. The chant, "We're number one!" (not emanating from Tus- caloosa). can be translated: "We have the best football team em- ployed by any college in the country." However, the financial situation is no more disgraceful than the athletic grading system. The Big Ten is about average in borth de- partmentV. Other conferences have much higher limits on athletic scholarships, while even theefIvy L e a g u e competes fiercely for promising athletes. A student with good scholastic qualifications may find a good recommendation from his football coach more helpful in getting into Dartmouth than one from his principal, A school doesn't have to give athletic grades to be accused of it. "Big Time" athletics condemns by as- sociation. "DOC" LOSH's A-B-C curve may not exist, but a suprising number of people have heard of it and are willing to believe it with- out asking questions. State's play- e'sare said to be able to do any- thing with a football but auto- graph it. A final condemnation of "Big Time" athletics is that it creates a warped sense of values. The pressure on schools to win usually results in a hunt for a coach who will produce a winning team, even though he may be a Woody Hayes or a Bear Bryant. The loss of a big game may be more detrimental \1+ 4y1 od gA~t 6ALORO ,I i '7 FF rrz F - s Li I lw W-impolm;, T- Arjpjm T lI r . . , . . .r,- a 1!. -1 b tO 1 1I X x