Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICTCGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD TN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS .. t .W. 4............,.. .r .. ... . a . r. ; .", *c.* - .............*..r::. . . . . . .,,.,.****'*V1r.. .,....". . . .. . .,A; . . V.,Sr ... {i.:........ . S . W.VWS S% W%.".":V~ THlE VIEW FROM HERE Weathering a Storm BY ROBERT KLIVANS SL.......vk..... . . . . . . . . . . .'S..........'..... .r'.S................S... .S:.}r......'};f.; .......7......:....... _- - ~ . - te i~kaeFe, Trut pn l Ar 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. NEWS PHoNE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the invidual opnions of staff writers or the editors. This must be nofed in all reprints. TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID KNOKEI I A New Foreign Policy Needs The Call of the Liberals THE HIDDEN MACHINATIONS behind the Great Trimester Conspiracy have been cast into the fore- ground once again this Spring. Only calloused, anti- nature, anti-student administrators could have plotted a school calendar which diabolically correlates the last two weeks of classes with the first two weeks of Spring. It happens every year. Students find themselves eight weeks behind, burdened with papers, preparing for Finals, and suddenly the thermometer climbs, the sun comes out and the grass turns green. It is too hot to stay in the Library, too pleasant on the Diag, and too tempting to avoid the ice cream cones. MOST OTHEE SCHOOLS give their students an opportunity to adjust to the weather, and to- work off their spring fever. But at the University, Mother of Trimesters, the frustrated student can only glare from his desk in his scholarly tomb and speculate on what fresh air might smell like and how sunshine feels. And yet there is certainly method in the Trimester madness. For as confidential material just released to the Daily has indicated, the new calendar was deliber- ately established following the discovery of the famous Lauderdale Law of Student Behavior by a joint team from the Sociology and Psychology Depts. The Lauderdale Law predicts that student activism or discontent is directly proportional to the temperature. Without excessive sanctions, the corollary reads, the simplest grievance can be elevated to riot proporties with the proper temperature. UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATORS have shrewdly applied this law by permitting only the last two weeks of the calendar to fall with in the "student boiling point" (S.B.P.) range. With the immense academic pressure upon the average student, discontent has a hard time rising to the surface. Any interruption of study habits in the home stretch would mean academic suicide. Ever since the discovery of the Lauderdale Law, and the subsequent enactment of the Trimester, adminis- trators have been relaxing with the confident assump- tion that "it can't happen here." (Berkeley's average winter temperature is about 25 degrees above Ann Ar- bor's). They are smiting with the knowledge that more support can still be drummed up for a party on a humid fall evening than for a protest against the most heinous crimes. Events at the University of Pittsburgh last week underscore the Lauderdale Law. "Pitt" is also on the trimester (their finals end a week before ours), but the students there fount time to react to the beautiful spring weather. 2,500 undergraduates converted the urban cam- pus into a riot area within minutes, spewing water baloons, toilet paper, furniture, telephone books and other incidentals onto the street. Chancellor David Kurtzman noted thar "the motivation was understand- able" and blamed the disaster on the pressure of finals coming up with in two weeks and the balmy weather. THE PARALLELS with this University are striking. For if anything cut down last semester's movement in its prime, it was the combination of a quick end to tri- mester and the winter snows which chilled even the hottest activist What the social scientists who inhabit the Uni- versiyt's laboratories will discover next remains unknown. Perhaps it is a cure for student apathy or even a potion to liberalize anyone over 30. Yet as long as Ann Arbor remains frigid, the Lauderdale Law predicts no trouble at the University. Sleep tight, administrators. 'a i T HE RALLY held Saturday at City Hall in support of the Spring Mobilization to End the War in Vietnam was exactly what it was billed to be-a uniting of groups whose only common denominator was the ending of the war. That this was so was obvious from the range of comments-from a minister asking for an end to the war on the basis of moral- ity to a Trotskyite demanding not only that, but a complete reformation of the social structure. The view that demands the most at- tention, however, is in the middle of this range, best expressed by Bert Gars- kof of Citizens for New Politics. Garskof's view was that our present foreign policy is, determined, by politicians and the "American corporate conspiracy" which have been able to maintain that policy by "duping the public into thinking that their interest is ours." This view is not new, but its signifi- cance is gaining as the liberal communi- ty continues to have less and less to say about our foreign policy. By trying to work within the system liberals have been lulled into an acceptance of Amer- ican imperialists. As James Gerassi of Ramparts warned, "the United States policy of imperialism is no accident. It is a consistent policy in our attempt to dominate the world." THE DEGRE E to which the U.S. does in fact dominate parts of the world is not realized by most Americans. A young Venezuelan revolutionary said, "your, operations control not only Latin Amer- ica's raw materials but also our mar- kets and military, too. Our oligarchies are partners with your trusts, our gov- ernments foster your interests, and our military defends your assets." It is not only the presence of American interests that blights many foreign countries, but also the fact that any attempt at re- form brings with it the immediate threat of intervention by a foreign army - the United States Marines. The U.S. has been actively involved in the suppression of revolts in Peru and Colombia, unpubl;- cized here, using tactics learned in the war in Vietnam. This intervention in the internal af- fairs of, foreign countries solely for the protection of U.S. business interests has been the cause of continuing retardation of social reform in those countries and the resultant bitterness against the U.S. THE MAJOR ARGUMENT of the con- servatives since World War II which has forced the liberals into retreat has been the doctrine of anti-Communism. However, with the disintegration of the organizational unity of the Communist world, this argument is no longer valid. Because of the ideological split between Russia and China, revolutionary move- ments have a maneuverability and free- dom of action which allows them to use the Soviet Union and China for their own ends instead of being used by them. Rev- olutionary leaders such as Ho Chi Minh, despite, the title of "Communist," are no longer the puppets of any united interna- tional movement, but can, as Ho has, play both ends against the middle to achieve their goals as nationalist leaders. The independence of leftist leaders now allows the U.S. to deal with them with more flexibility. We need no k(nger fear their rise to power as a sign of anti- Americanism, but can in fact work with them both for their own good and for ours in the creation of strong atd inde- pendent members of the world commu- nity. The U.S. need no tonger be namp- ered by the procrustean bed of anti-Com- munism which had bcn imposed upon it by the Cold War. THE PLEAS of today's freer liberals, however, may be lost in the rhetoric that now controls American press and thought. Foreign radicals seem to think so. As one Venezuelan youth said, "we may lose support from the American radi- cal movement. We know now that Amer- ican radicals are never going to fight our revolutions for us, they can't." It is that last "they can't" that should raise the ire of every American libral and radical to not only a protest, but act. With the defection of the major sources of power in the Democratic Par- ty, the liberal camp is left seriously weak- ened. The only alternative, and an appeal- ling one, is the creation of a third politi- cal force, independent of the two present political parties. Such a move, combined with a strengthening of the ties between liberals and radicals across national boundaries, is almost necessary if a re- vival of powerful liberalism is to come about. The alternative of violent revolt is unfeasible because of the tremendous physical power that can be wielded pres- ently by the forces on power, but massive acts of non-violent protest could have their effect on the power structure. HOW STRONG can such a movement be- come? The grass roots of American liberalism lie in suburban lawns, and it is these suburbs who have spawned the present generation of politically apathet- ic college students. The present policy thrives on apathy in this country be- cause of our ignorance of political reali- ties in the rest of the world. The problem then before the movement is to edu- cate, because in education will come poli- tical awareness and political activity. The position of the U.S. today is v ny similar to that of Metternich's Austria in 1815. The continuation of our present policy will relegate the United States to the backwaters of history. The warning is there. it must be heeded.j -RON LANDSMAN I 10 Letters: A Councilman's Criticisms To the Editor: YOUR RECENT ACCOUNT of the proceedings surrounding Council deliberations on the 26 story building was the most de- ceiving piece of journalism to ap- pear in the Daily recently. It is undoubtedly rivaled by your earlier efforts to crucify Eugene Power, one of the most capable Regents ever to serve this University, and certainly exemplifies why your ap- pointment as Editor met with such deserved resistance. I feel com- pelled to set the record straight regarding a number of facts, some of which you chose to omit and others of which you deliberately distortedor falsified for the sake of sensationalism. One, The matter was taken, up with the unanimous consent of Council as required by Council Rules. The implication that it was acomplished by a "Republican majority" over the, objections of the "outraged" Democrats is total- ly false. Two, The insinuation that Mr. Kleinpell "obviously chose that Monday when three top City of- ficials were out of town' is in- tentionally misleading. Actually, Mr. Martin was in town (not vaca- tioning as stated) and Mr. Lar- com was expected back (as stated elsewhere in your story). The de- veloper had in fact been asking for action by Council well in ad- vance of this Monday. Three, You failed to note as Mr. Larcum, City Administrator, had told you the night before your article appeared that the City had no legal basis for detaining the developer on grounds of height, as we were in fact doing. Four, You failed to state that the developer was in fact in strict compliance with our zoning ordi- nance as it had existed for several years. He had been issued a "Zoning Compliance Permit" w'ell in advance of any Council action on the height question which ex- plicitly stated his proposed use of the land was consistent with the City zoning ordinance. He pro- ceeded in good faith to make later financial commitments with that assurance from the City. A height limitation did not exist then, nor does it exist tpday. Republicans and Democrats all agreed height was not the proper basis for con- trolling development. h Five, Council's action that eve- ning supported by six Republicans and one Democrat (not seven Re- publicans as erroneously reported) authorized the Building Depart- men to issue a building permit if and only if the project met all other City requirments. It ex- empted only height, not density or size of the building as implied in your article, Six, The developer was legally obligated to provide no parking by City standards (since changed). Both the Maynard House and Uni- versity Towers were erected with- out providing any parking. Mr. Larcom's negotiation with Towne Realty for the Forest Street car- port was an entirely separate busi- ness transaction between the City and Towne Realty and took place after the building was erected. Council's action in no way pre- cluded similar negotiations be- tween the City and the developer in this instance. IT IS IMPOSSIBLE to set the record straight in the space al- lotted to letters. However, I feel you own an apology to the Repub- lican Party, to the Councilmen (including Councilman Curry) and principals involved, to the Uni- versity (and in particular to your newspaper) and to the gullible Mr. Carleton Wells and others who still believe what they read under your byline. Ethics should require that your corroborate your facts before proceeding with a cruci- fixion such as you undertook in this article. Use of the pen as a sword with "freedom of the press" as a shield is a practice which can be dangerous when exploited by immature or unethical jour- nalists. -Richard E. Balzhiser Republican Councilman Fifth Ward EDITORS NOTE: The, Daily regrets the error pointed out in charge five. It was corrected in a story Saturday. Also the issue raised in charge one was clarified Saturday to correct possible mis- understanding. Councilman Balzhiser's other charges are inaccurate. 0 1) The Daily did not crucify Eugene Power. He resigned of his own choosing because of a business committment to Xerox Corp. after Michigan Attorney General Frank Kelley verified a Daily story and, declared Mr. Power in "substan- tial conflict of interest." 0 2) Charge two overlooks the fact that City Administrator Guy C. Larcom Jr. told Balzhiser and his fellow councilmen in a Sept. 2, 1965 confidential memo (pub- lished in the Daily last Wednes- day) that the "The City Admin- istrator, City Attorney, and Plan- ning Director who have been ac- tive in this matter, were not at the meeting when the matter was brought up on the floor. In the case of the Planning Director, it would have been possible to attend if this matter had been scheduled." 03) Charges three and fou'r omit the fact that Mr. Larcum said in his memo "With council backing the administration would have continued to negotiate for at least some reasonable provisions regarding parking, density and height. It is my firm belief that the size and density of the build- ing could be reduced and some parking required'. ." 0 4.)Charge six omits the fact that Larcom said in his memo that "The 75 (parking) spaces to be provided under a loose legal ar- rangement by the developer at some distance from the site do not compare favorably with the 499 spaces secured by the city ad- ministration from Towne Realty (University Towers), after Towne Realty's building was under con- struction." As Mr. Larcom put it in his memo "Throughout his negoti- atione, Mr. Kleinpell and his or- ganization (William St. Com- pany) have gone directly to Coun- cil on the assumption that the political approach was best for his purposes and has assumed no necessity of dealing directly on a cooperative basis with the admin- istration. As stated above, this has not been the procedure in the past, when Council has relied upon the administration to achieve the best possible agreement . Councilman Balzhiser's difficul- ty in setting the "record straight" is understandable. Ex-Officio To the Editor: I FEEL the students on this cam- pus should be fully aware of the consequences of the SGC mo- tion to allow non-students to com- prise up torone-half of the mem- bership of recognized campus or- ganizations. I have always seen volunteer student organizations as a vehicle to differentiate and broaden oneself within the large, indifferent structure of the uni- versity. If our campus clubs and societies are taken over by non- student professionals; a large de- gree of the student's ability to ad- vance, mature, and formulate pol- icy within their organizations will be lost. As student influence with- in the group declines, participation will as well. I think everyone realizes that the only organization that' will benefit from the new ruling is Voice-SDS. Other political organ- izations (Young Dems and Col- lege Republicans) cannot get non- student members recognized by their respective statewide organ- izations. IHA, IFC, and Pan-Hel- lenic have similar institutional re- straints on non-student member- ship. --Robert M. Smart, '69 LSA -0 I 4 I v:v::;:..i;::::::"}}iX?4i:}};.;.;}.; .......:° ....:.......::{:;;AS"".::vlw;::...«::+>:;;.....A::::." ...n r:.. r.,} ;;. .. V: Aq.!N A": !r:l: A". "f ':. J.S A:^: J::1: 5WJ:..e.:": IVNJ:"J .tV ""k+.""""r ...... ..... .............".. 5. ........ .. ..n,.... .. yJ .... .... .. .. .... n. .......... .. :.. 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Y...L.....,"......." k.5 r.::?".. n............"........".,.1.... A.57.. A.. n."..?...r."}i.4n5u. hrvv,,'? k :'7ii :; ::: ::({ S":i;v{ 1 4, The 'Seve-ra-I Faces o .f The Discriminating Greek COLUMBIA'BEAT the University to the punch on ending draft ranking. Will other universities now be the first to suc- cessfully outlaw Greek discrimination? While Interfraternity Council and Pan- hellenic Association here were among- the nation's first to set up membership com- mittees to combat the problem, other schools such as Wisconsin, Oregon State and Colorado among others have now far outstripped up in the actual eliminatit n of 4iserip'ination. At the University, an alumni of the national fraternity can still decide - at least on paper-who is acceptable as 'i member of some fraternities here. This right is guaranteed them by their na- tional constitutions, and is a tool which can be used to discriminate against mem- bers of a minority group. Similarly many sororities here still require alumni rec- ommendations, a practice which can be used in a discriminatory manner. *a * ALTHOUGH IFC and Panhel have suc- ceeded in eliminating "WASP" clauses among local chapters, few houses have shown a willingness to accept minority group members. While at Cornell Univer- sity the IFC president has sponsored a drive to both persuade Negroes to rush "white" houses and get the houses them- selves to accept them on an equal basis. Here IFC and Panhel officers plan noth- ing of the kind, in fact they assert that such a program is not the answer to the discrimination problem. The Greek system can do much to coun- ter the bad publicity encountered by te Defense Department's claim that the Uni- versity is a school for "rich, white stu- dents." They must fight national orga- nizations particularly resistant to change. However a substantial Greek system such as the University's could pose enough of a threat to the nationals to force them to react. The final responsibility for discrimina- tion lies with each individual in the sys- tem. In the end, through the unanimous consent system used in rush, each active has the power to decide whether or not there will be a member of a minority in ]-t hmic-a T+ thou Aa +w- tho a +at a By MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH WASHINGTON Apparently there are many Robert Ken- nedys. There is the gum-chewing Ro- bert Kennedy, changing his shirt for the third time in aday as he takes a phone call before going over from his office to the Sen- ate floor. There is the cigar-smoking Ro- bert Kennedy who grants his last. of nearly half-dozen interviews one day as, sipping a scotch-and- water, he prepares to go out for the evening. A Kennedy secretary, inspecting the floor plan for the new Ken- nedy office (Kennedy gets a big- ger suite as he slowly climbs the seniority ladder of the Senate) sighs, "I'll be right next to his door when he leaves for the floor." Lyndon Johnson, on the other hand, snappishly calls him "that boy. WHILE KENNEDY IS contro- versial, much of his activities are relatively unknown. Although he 'is billed as a strident critic of the Administration's Viet Nam policy, he said in his most recent speech (March 2) on Viet Nam that the President is "entitled to our hope- ful sympathy, our understanding, andour support in theasearch for peace," and added that "the is- sue is how we can best support the goal which President Johnson has proclaimed of a middle road be- tween withdrawal and ever-wid- ening war." Indeed, Kennedy twice held up delivery of this speech - which called for a halt in our bombings of the North--at the request of the Administration. And, Kennedy has been telling friends, he doesn't want to visit Viet Nam because "I don't want (Defense Secretary) McNamara or (Ambassador-at-Large) Harri- man, told Bobby that peace ex- plorations were underway and that a speech from him on stop- ping the bombings would be 'most inopportune' at that point. "So he held off," the source said. "On the basis of his conver- sations with the Administration, he slipped and told that Oxford gathering that the next several weeks would be 'crucial' for peace,' which was an awfully stupid thing to do." Kennedy made the remark that he took the President's re- marks to mean that if he, Ken- nedy, called for a halt in the bombing, it would encourage Ha- noi, and so Kennedy would have the 'blood of American boys' on his hands," Kennedy's friend said." "The President seemed to be implying, Kennedy said, that he would publicly say just that when' the opportunity came. "The distrust between them is so total that I can understand how the misunderstanding could have arisen. But Bobbyr interpreted op . ¢ . . ,ti 1 ,. / .+ f r Y t ((/ # i 55 t : fSF(] i,/ey S Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.) asked him to defer the speech again, the source went on. (In an interview with The New York Times of Feb. 18 Kennedy had said he was planning a major statement on Viet Nam, adding that he had reservations about the effectiveness of our bombing.) "His speech would have come right during the debate on Joe Clark's resolution," the source ex- plained. (On Feb. 24 Sen. Joseph Clark (D-Pa.) had offered a rider to an appropriations bill stipula- ting that no part of the money in the bill should be spent to in- crease U.S. troop strength in Viet Nam to over 500,000 unless the President asked Congress to de- clare war.) According to the source, "Mans- field told the Senator that his speech would be highly embarrass- ing, coming as it would during the Clark debate, and asked him to put it off." Kennedy did, the Clark rider lost, and Kennedy finally . made his speech on March 2-long after the chance for any political or diplomatic impact had slipped by. (Kennedy may have some rea- son to believe Johnson did, indeed, deliver a threat about a proposed Kennedy stop - the - bombing speech. Last Friday. in honoring Specialist Daniel Fernandez, who posthumously received the Medal of Honor, Johnson said that "the question that haunts me today" was whether the grenade which killed Fernandez had come into South Viet Nam during "our long- est pause in bombing of the North." (And, Johnson went on, "Those who are urging an unconditional cessation of the bombing should ask themselves: 'What are the "All the adjectives the liberals like to stick on him now-'ruth- less,' 'nasty' and so on-got started then," one reporter who covered the hearings recalls. "One day after the hearings I was riding to his office with him and some of his staff," the report- er goes on. "He asked me what I thought of the hearings, and I thought he wanted to know-so I told him. "I said I thought he was baiting and abusing the witnesses. Ken- nedy didn't have much of a reac- tion until we got up to his office. Then he turned to me, and said, 'Am I through with you now?' as if he meant forever." But they're still on good terms, the reporter adds. OCCASIONALLY, Kennedy can be cuttingly ironic - as when, having dodged a reporter for most of an afternoon, he gave the news- man an interview while taking the four-minute walk from his office to the Senate floor and then turn- ed to ask, "Does that take care of your problems?" But increasingly the sarcasm simply becomes the peculiar kind of mocking-often self-mocking- Kennedy wit. KENNEDY JESTS about his feud with Johnson : "We talked about the dangers of escalation, the possibilities of a truce and negotiations-and then we decided to talk about Viet Nam." And he is fond of saying that he favors lowering the voting age to 18. "In fact, I think it should be lowered to 12," he adds. (He was reportedly delighted by a straw popularity poll of Califor- nia students which showed him outpolling President Johnson five- ) w 2 - .. 'I'a6 :.. a "- .,,.Y,,, _, Lesson in democracy N(. 2: The right to dissent to a meeting of the Oxford Union the President's remarks as a