Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MTCTGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Hungary: It's Been[ Ten ns Are Free,420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. 1Prevail 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. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1966_ NIGHT EDITOR: SUSAN SCHNEPP Proposed Cycle Ordinance: Amendments Are in Order MOTORCYCLES in Ann Arbor will soon be under the regulation of a new ordi- nance.. The need for such a law is evident, as the number of cycles has been increasing each year, but the City Council should deliberate carefully before it approves the ordinance as it has been presented. The ordinance contains many unneces- sary stipulations that will needlessly lim- it the motorcyclist, and in one case, Ann Arbor traffic. FIRST SUCH provision requires both the cyclist and his passenger to wear a helmet and safety goggles. Al- though it would be best that these safety measures be left to the option of the in- dividual, the cyclist will eventually have to have a helmet anyway, because, the state law requiring them goes into ef- fect in April. The state law, however, says nothing about the rider, and* neither should the Ann Arbor ordinance. For, in effect, it calls for the purchase of a second helmet (and goggles), which seems unreason- able, except for the gentlemen who sell them. THE OTHER ALTERNATIVE, since you won't want to refuse your roommate, or your blond classmate a ride, would be to take the chance that a policeman won't catch you. A tight turn around the corner at State and Hill, a left on Thay- er, should shake most any cop, but it may bring on more serious consequences. The state law doesn't mention "safety glasses." The proposed Ann Arbor ordi- nance does, but leaves the term vague and the determination of it up to the po- lice, who are busy enough already. ANN ARBOR ALSO wants to stop the practice of passing stopped cars along the curb. This bothers motorists, as they are stuck and can't move, but isn't the safety hazard some would make it. It should be noted that the motorcycle gets away from the intersection quickly; he doesn't have to stand around increas- ing traffic congestion. The cyclist bought his vehicle for con- venience and speed. A car will get you there, but not as easily or quickly. Making it illegal for cycles to move up slowly to the head of traffic would be a waste of time for motorists and cyclists alike. MOST OF THE OTHER provisions in the ordinance - especially the provision prohibiting passing between lanes-make good sense, and should be approved. -ROBERT BENDELOW By NEAL H. BRUSS TODAY SHOULD BE a national holiday in Hungary. Exactly 10 years ago, papers mistakenly pub- licized that the Hungarian peo- ple had won their week-old revo- lution against Soviet domination. "Most of the Russian troops cleared out of Budapest yester- day," a Daily bulletin reported. "Bombardment threats by the Hungarian Air Force spurred the Soviet retreat. Through the lit- tered streets . . . tank column clanked from the battlefields of a Red cause that was lost. They left their dead and wounded be- hind." TWO WEEKS LATER, however. Russian tanks were back in Bu- dapest and rebel escape routes to Austria were closed. Three weeks later, able-bodied Hungarians were deported to labor camps in Russia. A month later, the Hungarian labor strike was ended, and the Soviet army units in Hungary began a dragnet for rebel leaders. IN HUNGARY today, there can be no national holiday. In West- ern Europe and the Americas, where Hungarian revolutionaries fled in the last daysof October, 1956, there can be no joy for a free Hungarian government - it lasted less than a month. But the Hungarian Revolution, despite its violent demise, was characterized by e n e r g e t i c, thoughtful and spontaneous activ- ity. It was a vicious affair, but even during its most turbid blood- baths, it was directed by a liberal philosophy that has endured the chaos and death. The whole affair began as a student protest. According to Hungarian Radio, "At the stu- dent's meetings held in the uni- versities of Budapest . . . it was decided that the young people should arrange a silent demonstra- tion on the afternoon of 23rd October to expressetheir deep sympathy and agreement with events in Poland. "~The young people concerned passed a resolution pledging them- selves not to permit any sort of provocation or anarchistic mani- festation and to make sure that this demonstration of sympathy would take place in a spirit on socialist democracy, order and dis- cipline." IT WAS TO BE a demonstration in support of a new Polish Com- munist regime, which Russian government agents had tried to overthrow. One student, Laszlo Berke, kept a diary of the revolution. Of the march to the Parliament, Berke wrote, "We started out with 12,- 000-but our parade grew longer and longer as we moved along .. . Bythe time we reached St. Mar- garet Bridge, there were anywhere from 50,000 to 80,000 people with us." The "silent demonstration" was never staged. The protestors de- manded an appearance by former Premier Imre Nagy, premier of Hungary, when Stalin died in 1953. Nagy, known for "Titoist tenden- cies," das deposed by Matya Ra- kosi, the "little Stalin" of Hun- gary. NAGY APPEARED before the crowd on the balcony of the Hun- garian parliament. Berke remark- ed, "Those of us in the front row noticed something strange as Nagy spoke. During his speech Nagy bent backward several times, and at one point we distinctly heard a voice behind him say, "Stick to your paper. "Those of us who heard the background prodding shouted out, "Leave Nagy alone up there on he balcony!" But they answered us simply by taking Nagy from the balcony. THE DEMONSTRATION be- came a march on the buildings husing Radio Budapest. It was here that the bloodless revolution became a bloody revolution. The delegation that had enter- ed the radio station to request the broadcasting of its "16 points" -From Life Magazine, by Michael Rougler "rIhe memory of the Freedom Fighter endures . . was arrested by political policemen who were guarding the building. The crowd demanded their re- lease and tried to storm the doors. At first the policemen tried to drive the demonstrators back with tear gas. Then they opened fire, killing one demonstrator and wounding several others. Among the "16 points" resolved that day were the expulsion. of Ra- kosi, revision of the Soviet sec- ond Five-Year Plan, publication of foreign trade agreements, plans for Hungarian uranium mining and other government decisions; and several revisions of political decisions. BY THE END of the night, riot- ing was a reality in Budapest. Hungarian troops had declared al- legiance to the demonstrators; aSo- viet bookstores and monuments were wrecked. On October 24, the revolution shifted from an ideological con- flict to a military and political battle. On that day 10,000 Soviet In Budapest, a child and a wom- man were the only persons to es- cape a rebel siege of secret police headquarters. At least 10 of the "Avos" secret police were machine gunned as they attempted to leave the building. FOR SEVERAL DAYS, rebels battled Soviets in the streets and hurled Molotov cocktails at their tanks. Soviets refused to leave the city until the rebels lay down their arms. On October 30, the Hungarian air force threatened to bomb So- viet tanks unless they evacuated Budapest within 12 hours. Street fighting continued. Josef Cardi- nal Mindszenti, arrested in 1949 for treason, was liberated, By the end of the day, Soviet tanks with- draw. On October 31, rebels began or- ganizing democratic political par- ties. NOVEMBER, 1956 was the turn- ing point of the Hungarian Revo- the Soviet Union's Security Po- lice, Gen. Ivan Serov, assume control of Budapest. On November 23, a Life maga- zine writer reported, "Ex-Premier Nagy leaves the Yugoslav embas- sy under a Communist-issued safe conduct and disappears. He is be- lieved kidnaped by the Soviets." By November 26, nearly 80,000 refugees were reported to have entered Austria. The worker's strike ended on November 27 and Soviet authori- ties began their crush of the last rebel units. THE SUDDEN shift from nego- tiation to repression by the So- viets in Hungary has been at- tributed to two developments in worid affairs. Nikita Khrushchev, then first secretary- of the So~viet Commu- nist party and major advocate of the Soviet Union liberalization pol- icy, appeared to have been over- ruled by the Stalinist wing of Years people and government of Hun- gary. "I MET TODAY," Eisenhower continued . . . "to discuss the ways and means available to the Unit- ed States which would result in: "1. Withdrawal of Soviet troops from Hungary, "2. Achieve for Hungary its own right of self determination in the choice of its government. "I have sent an urgent mes- sage to Premier Bulganin on these points." This was the extent of apparent official American efforts. And the United Nations? On November 4, the Soviet Union vetoed a United States reso- lution for Security Council cen- sure of the Russian military activ- ity. Ambassador Lodge moved for an emergency session of the Gen- eral Assembly, already in per- manent special session over the Suez crisis. At this time, Nagy's last ap- peal for UN intervention was monitored on Hungarian Radio. * * * THE REVOLUTION'S lockstep to tragedy may have been set by international conditions. But the failure of the rebels did not distort their impact on the world commu- nity. It is the memory of the Hun- garian Freedom Fighter that en- dures beyond the ends and means of the revolution. The Soviet conception, from its news agency ten years ago: "un- derground reactionary organiza- tions attempted to start a counter- revolutionary revolt against the people's regime in Budapest. "This enemy, adventure had ob- viously been in preparation for some time. The forces of foreign reaction have been systematically inciting anti-den'ocratic elements for action against the lawful au- thority." THE VIEW of the Hungarian Chief of Staff on the same day: "At this moment the whole Hungarian nation has risen against Soviet domination . We were unprepared for such an im- mense and violent reaction, and that is why we must move quickly to preserve the successes of the initial revolution events. "The most faithful allies of the Army are the students, the work- ers in the city, and the peasants in the country. TALES OF BRUTALITY often overshadow the revolution, but the haunting figure is the Freedom Fighter, the student who fought Soviet tank troopers in Budapest Streets, the one- who pushed for democratic reforms before the violence stai'ted. The freedom fighter never de- nied his socialist philosophy. But he could not tolerate the denial of freedom in his country because of a Soviet concept of interna- tional socialism. THE HUNGARIAN freedom Fighter was hunted in November, 1956. He may have been "dis- patched" by secret police. He ma have escaped through Austria to the West. He often lives very close to here. He was TIME Magazine's Man of the Year in January, 1957. It was his actions that led Sartre to withdraw from the Communist party, that led eight Nobel prize winners to protest to the Soviet government, that led to the resig- nation of a quarter of the editorial staff of the London Daily Worker. IN OCTOBER OF 1956, the Re- volutionary Committee of Hun- garian 'Intellectuals demanded withdrawl of Soviet troops, gen- eral and secret elections, new trade agreements, actual socializa- tion of plants and mines, salary raises, unionization, free agricul- ture, compensation to peasants whose land was collectivised, free- dof of the press, and a national holiday in October commemora- ting "our nation's uprising against oppression." It's been ten years. 4 V Live and in Color THE UNITED STATES government has succeeded in placing a new communi- cations satellite in orbit, making possible the live broadcast of the war in Viet Nam. It is our hope that the national com- mercial establishment will not ignore this call to duty. In the past, television networks have graciously donated prime slices of pro- grammable time to the coverage of the war. As the American troops grapple up and over a contested hill, they are like- ly to uncover only Eric Sevareid and the entire CBS mobile unit on the other side. BUT EVEN SUCH "in-depth" coverage pfales in the comparative possibility of live action. The intimacy, the richness of detail which- we have so grievously missed, is at last available. However, massive broadcasting is an expensive procedure, and even the Hercu- lean efforts of the television industry to bear the costs are not enough. The bur- den must now be shared with another Titan. And here we place the name of that famous safety razor company in nomi- nation. Who but the giant of televised sport could handle such a spectacle? LET US IMAGINE the grandeur of the scene. The whistle blows and a Sun- day afternoon is suddenly alive with her- oic runs, brisk tackles and the screams of the spectators. Mel Allen and Tom Harmon, Red Barber and Dizzy Dean- all the greats are there - making the portable press boxes vibrate with breath- less accounts of team strategy. And, when a particularly fine play is made, there is an instant replay of the moment as it was seen by an NBC re- mote camera right on the field. "Just so you fans don't miss a thing." DURING A BRIEF half-time show, the Union City, Iowa, High School band will play as the marching antics of the Red Guard thrill an audience the world over. The live broadcast of such an interna- tional upheaval will vastly increase the opportunities for worldwide cultural ex- change. Drum majors everywhere will achieve new dimensions in racial and po- litical toleration. We firmly believe that a "live broad- cast" policy is the most advanced theory yet put forward by the U.S. for the ami- cable end of the Asian war. Whatever antimosities are aroused by various as- pects of American society, the entire world loves a ball game. Moreover, as a republic, we obey the rules of good sportsmanship more strict- ly than those of humane warfare. We might napalm, but we wouldn't be caught dead throwing a bean ball. FINALLY, there is the FCC regulation requiring a television blackout for 50 miles around the site of the "big game." If the government dispenses with only, this single regulation, the whole of Viet Nam situation would be solved. For who would go to the war if they could stay home and watch it on their television sets? -LIZ WISSMAN ":.v :::::.:".::.v. I t :':'%>$i }:"i'raa%}i}}'ri $:{%i}iaii>:%5}:-}:Lai-:{v:%:C%7i%: i'r}}::% ii'": ......... ......:."rtv...,:.....,..,.... ............................. iTf aL{{:?:{ii}:%ii ik3{1!:C1 TwV Views of the Revolution The Soviet Press said: "Underground reactionary organizations attempted to start a counter-revolutionary revolt against the people's regime in Budapest . . . . The forces of foreign reaction have bee;-+ systematically inciting anti-democratic elements." A Hungarian General said: ". At this moment the whole Hungarian nation has risen against Soviet domination. We were unprepared for such an immense and violent reaction . . . The most faithful allies of the Army are the students, the workers in the city, and the peasants in the country. I" ... .. ......................v. r........ ... . ................. .............. ..:::::.... ,.; ...: ....: r: ::.": '..:.:....":v:"a.Y' ". x r : i.;. V.n>.. .:: ..' .::::t:::. J...... ::... ::1.L .:l. .. ":: "" :tM ::'5: : ... ...:.: '1 : ..5.": .: ....... ... .........1 ...... . .l....". ... . . ''' tank troops drove into Budapest to support the secret police; the Hungarian army supplied weapons to patriot fighters. Imre Nagy be- came premier, and the rebel army demanded that Soviet troops leave the city.d By October 26, the battle spread to rural Hungary. On October 27, Nagy shuffled his cabinet, but the move did not inspire rebel confi- dence in the Nagy regime. Soviet troops and Hungarian secret police who were trapped in the country were often brutally killed by patriots who felt their deaths were long overdue. The pa- triots cited Soviet and secret po- lice terrorism to justify their own murders. In Maygrovar, a small town near the Austrian border, Hungarian patriots trampled five secret po- lice to death following a machine gun massacre of 85 patriots who marched on police headquarters. lution. The largest Soviet tank model was dispatched to Hungary, and Russian troops were reinforc- ed. Nagy declared Hungary a neu- tral nation and appealed to the United Nations for protection. On November 3, Maj. Gen. Paul Maleter, rebel leader and new Hungarian defense minister, ne- gotiated with Soviet Gen. Malinin for the withdrawal of Soviet troops. On November 4, Soviet tanks en-, tered Budapest. Cardinal Minds- zenty sought asylum in the Amer- ican legation, Nagy in the Yugo- slavian embassy. ON NOVEMBER 7, the last Free Radio station went off the air. The major refugee rush to Aus- tria began. By November 18, it was report- ed that 10,000 Hungarians had been deported to Russia. November 22 saw the head of the party, headed by Vyacheslav Molotov. In addition, recent British and French attacks on Egypt during the Suez crisis provided a timely justification for military repres- sion. COULD THE WESTERN pow- ers have aided the Hungarian reb- els? According to the New York Times, "High level informants were inclined to view that the ways and means the United States would use to influence events in Hungary would be largely confin- ed to world opinion." On Nov. 4, President Eisenhower released the following statement: "I feel that Western opinion, which was so uplifted only a few days ago by the news that the So- viet Union intended to withdraw its forces from Hungary, has now suffered corresponding shock and dismay at the Soviet attack on the * SGC Fulfills Its Role THE STUDENT Government Council is to be heartily commended for its role in arranging the open discussion last Wednesday between Marvin Esch, Elise Boulding and Weston Vivian, the three congressional candidates from the second district. As Mike Koeneke, '67, council member and moderator for the discussion put it, the purpose of the forum was to "inform registered students and all others inter- ested in the issues, be they campus wide, national or international." Judging by the turnout there are a substantial number of people who are so interested. THE SUCCESS of the discussion, how- ever, only highlights SGC's, potential as educational as well as a leadership organization. It is SGC's responsibility to inform the student body on issues that are timely and pertinent to it. The congressional election, the draft referendum and the statewide referendum on the 18-year-old Acting through its several committees, SGC has organized the open discussion, a voter registration drive and a draft teach-in to be held today. The informa- tion is being made available, it is now up to the student to take advantage of it. SGC HAS SHOWN that it can effective- ly inform the students, it is now up to the students to express their opinions and take part in the discussion. -REGINA ROGOFF Some Day... PEKING ANNOUNCES that she has suc- cessfully tested a guided missile con- taining a nuclear warhead. Ho Chi Minh hails the test as "a great contribution to the revolutionary strug- gle of the people of Viet Nam." De Gaulle insists that the United States should get out of Viet Nam because he finds "this deadly enterprise" "absolutely detest- able" for "a little people to be bombard- Letters: Daily's Film Review Policy To the Editor: IN THE LAST week, the Daily has established a questionable policy with regard to film reviews. As we understand it, this policy maintains 1) that members of Cinema Guild or persons associ- ated with any of the accredited film-showing organizations are considered unsuitable as review- ers; and 2) that sophisticated cri- ticism has no place in a newspaper of large circulation, ie, The Daily. THE EDITORS seem to believe that the policy which restricts re- viewing to persons who have no affiliation with film groups or film societies will prevent biased reviewing, and that the policy I -, ~ :,~,, .:kf ment of the film either as art or as "entertainment" to warrant "daily news" style reporting. WE SUGGEST THAT, first of all, it is natural that a person in- terested in films would seek others interested in film; thus, you have film societies. Why penalize this interest? Secondly, revie.wers who happen to be members of the Cinema Guild board(SGC) are not trying to push CG's films at the expense of other films being shown in Ann Arbor-either by student groups or by the commercial theaters. WE ARE interested in all films and believe that almost all films- whether "first run" or "classics"- -Andrew Lugg, Grad. -Hubert Cohen, instructor Dept. of English College of Engineering No Dilemma To the Editor: MARSHALL SAHLINS, in a let- ter to the Ann Arbor News on October 27, stated that sup- porters of the peace candidate are being asked to vote for Weston Vivian as a choice between the lesser of disasters. I think that I can speak for all of Congressman Vivian's adher- ents when I say that we have never considered him to be a disaster whatever. I SHARE in the feeling that the Viet Nam war has been a wasteful venture that has sacri- is unworthy of a free and humane people. This feeling has been expressed by many of us in dozens of differ- ent ways-all of them bette: than a deliberate attempt to defeat a man who has served the district and the country well. An air pollution sample taken in New York indicated that if a child played in a particular play- ground on 23rd St. for-eight con- secutive hours he would suffer permanent brain damage caused by the carbon monoxide in the area. VIVIAN has introduced a num- ber of bills designed to protect bystanders against what is cer- tain destruction due to thought- 1Acn-i -ar pi r -nat v.Th hll date as a matter of conscience. The point is badly taken. --Peg Kay First-Aid To the Editor: THE MOSHER HALL incident and the related letter of Mr. Craig Shniderman point out one of the major weaknesses in the residence hall counselling pro- gram. Neither house directors nor counsellors are given any first aid instruction before they begin their jobs. As a consequence, they cannot deal with emergencies such as severe cuts, comas or even back injuries TWO YEARS AGO, when I was a counsellor, a girl in the dorm fal thah n nntp Las inow, * IV