11j idAiiugau f aily Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN - UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Vhere Opinions Are Free . STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MIcH., PHONE NO 2-3 241 Truth W1ll Prevail"s Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. 0SDAY, JUNE 15, 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: BRUCE WASSERSTEIN Will Lindsay Really Be Independent? 0 Some Second Thoughts As The Astronauts Comne Home 'HE MANNER in which a society copes with violence-or the threat of viol- ce-is, in large measure, its defining iaracteristic. In part, this follows from the fact that e think of a society in terms of an ab- ence of violence: in a "cohesive" and ntegrated" social system, violence is Ished to the perimeter. All the various rms, values or what have you, which 'e an integral part of that society's Iy of thinking of itself, tend to insure .e continuation of the condition of non- olence-and an elaborate judicial ap- ratus seeks to provide an institution for gitimate coercion to cope with nci-n nts which run counter to those explicit arms we call law. Vet, serious conflicts can and do oc- r within the framework of even the ost integrated social patterns. If this dissent, per se, is institution- ized--that is to say, allowed to oper- e within a restricted context short of direct resort to violence-we say that e society in question has developed a orm of non-intervention or toleration. 'HIS "INSTITUTIONALIZATION of non-violent dissent" is the mark of so- eties we call (or those we ought to call) ee. Social or governmental systems which not permit this dissent we call (or ight to call) "un,-free" Internationally, we speak of a society being either "peaceful" or "not peace- Johnson Policies: ontradictions AST MONDAY, President Lyndon B. Johnson vetoed a bill providing for ood relief in the Pacific Northwest. This tion and his announced reasons for king it provide a perfect illustration of e grievous ills of the current adminis- ation. Johnson vetoed the bill because it con- ined a provision stating that certain ojects could be carried out only with t approval of the Public Works Com- ittees of the House and Senate. A Johnson spokesman later noted that 'his practice is ... violative of the letter id the spirit of the constitutional re- tirement for the separation of powers . The responsibility of Congress is to ake the laws, not say how they will be ,rried out." 'HIS SUDDENLY STRICT interpreta- tion of the Constitution comes at a range time. For within the last few onths the Johnson administration has, effect, declared war on an Asian state th only contemptuous and belated ges- res to account for Congress' rightful nstitutional power in the matter. In a shockingly short space of time, hnson has vastly increased American anpower in South.Viet Nam, initiated imbing attacks on a foreign country- >rth Viet Nam and, last Tuesday, given e official go-ahead for U.S. troop action rectly against the Viet Cong. The combination of these recent moves Johnson's railing against congressional abs for power while at the same time aking no allowances for any meaning- 1 congressional debate on America's ost hotly-contested field of activity to- ,y-shows a frighteningly paranoid be- .vior on his part. On the one hand, he defends his actions th' excessive and misleading comments ce, "Protecting 4merican citizens was per cent of the reason we went into the )minican Republic." While on the other nd he rebuffs unseen foes by vague and werfully-phrased condemnations such "(the bill) seriously violates the spirit the division of power between the exec- ive and legislative branches." 'HE ENTIRE SITUATION was beauti- fully summed up in one of Johnson's cent television appearances in which he cmmented on the homily "I'd rather be ght than be President." "Well," Johnson- awled, "I must try to be both." ful." By this we mean that it (1) obeys or (2) disregards the international norms of non-violence. In terms of its foreign policy the Unit- ed States today-and this statement by no means necessitates the reading of more than a small selection from the rest of the world's press-fits into the latter category. World opinion is all but unanimous in its condemnation of our actions in Viet Nam, Santo Domingo and elsewhere. IF WE ARE TO MEASURE the United States in terms of these two criteria, what can we say about its mode of coping with violence generally? In the first instance, the citizens of the United States enjoy a wide latitude of personal freedom-normatively at least. The United States, then, we might be tempted to call "free." The institutional processes of this country, at least (and with certain flagrant exceptions, the South for instance) allow this violence to direct itself into non-violent channels. Internationally, however, we do not subscribe to the same norms: we are "not peaceful." THIS CONDITION - the discontinuity seen here, I would suggest, reflects an imminent breakdown in the mechanisms of peaceful dissent within the United States. Violence tends to be a zero-sum com- modity: when societies are heavily po- liced internally-that is to say, when they do not permit dissent-their citizens eith- er revolt or externalize this violence. The present administration has adopt- ed as its policy the dimunition of dissent within American society. This is what Secretary Rusk aims at when he calls American intellectuals "rresponsible" or what ever. This is the source of Presi- dent Johnson's "concern" when college students stage demonstrations. In essence, this is what the administra- tion aims at in a "voting rights" bill or a "war on poverty": not the solution of these problems per se-for both measures are clearly inadequate to the task they set out for themselves-but the elimination of the most "visible" sources or expres- sion of this dissent. BUT WHAT HAPPENS to the dissent which cannot be coped with so easily? What happened to the sources of dis- content, for instance, in pre-war Ger- many? They get directed externally: to- wards some group or society seen as being "outside" the society itself." The "consensus" suggested by the John- son administration is a false consensus. As such, it does not cope with "dissent" in the most meaningful way-but ex- ternalizes it-seeks to cause it to dissi- pate. Thus as the stringency of the par- ameters of this consensus become clearer -and the potential sources of discontent grow-the necessity for (1) internal po- licing, that is more un-freedom to main- tain this sense of consensus and (2) an increasing externalization of violence grows apace. These two dimensions are intimately related: the amount of external violence displayed by a society is a direct function of the stringency of the conditions which frugtrate internal dissent. j WOULD LIE to suggest, then, what has developed in the United States, is a sort of "Stalinism"-we are faced with a situation in which those who lead our government are employing a host of de- vices in order to maintain a false con- sensus and, as a consequence, are be- ing drawn irreversibly into opportunities for external violence. This process, the externalization of dis- sent, is, of course, by no means new. It is as old as government itself. The Roman masses, bribed by bread and circuses-- by partial fulfillment of their needs and harmless entertainment-supported a se- ries of petty tyrants. The people of the United States today have their wars on poverty and their "space victories." As we celebrate the return to Ann Ar- bor of James McDivitt and Edward White today, however, let us not forget that behind the facade of human progress- -Associated Press Indian Refugees Flee the Conflict in the Rann of Cutch Pakis tan Risks Peace in Ctch By SHREESH JUYAL IN SUCCESSION to frequent clashes on the borders of India and Pakistan during the past decade, a serious conflict took place in the Rann of Cutch in April. This was more serious than earlier skirmishes and than those in recent years at the Kashmir cease-fire line and along the As- sam state (India)-East Pakistan border. The serious outbreaks accurred during the period of April 5-12 and 20-27 in the Rann of Cutch in Gujrat state of India along the Arabian Sea coast. Both In- dia and Pakistan used artillery and tanks. The Rann of Cutch is a great marsh area mostly uninhabited and periodically submerged by the Arabian Sea. It has never been demarkated in its frontiers since the partition of India long before the conflict. Pakistan had built a road on Indian land around Kanjarkot and occupied 13,000 square yards of territory between the road and the line demarkat- ing Indian, territory. INDIAN External Affairs Min- ister Sardar Swarn Singh told Parliament April 15 that Paki- stani troops had occupied Ding and Kanjarkot. two posts inside Indian territory in the Rann of Cutch and the Pakistani army had been mobilized. Pakistan too charged India of having mobilized its army and moved it into the area. Indian Primd Minister Lal Ba- hadur Shastri said April 25 that Pakistan had "created a very serious situation" and the recent talks between Pakistani President and Chinese Communist leaders could have "strengthened Pakistan for these ventures." Shastri assert- ed that "India must resist and must stop these moves." Pakistani President Mohammad Ayub Khan warned in nationwide broadcast May 1 that "general and total war" would result if India committed "further aggres- sion." ALTHOUGH there is now cease- fire in the area with two posts still under Pakistani occupation, the tension is undoubtedly high and Indian and Pakistani troops face each other along a 50-mile front in the northern part of the Rann of Kutch. What is more revealing and makes this eruption distinctive is confirmation of the evidence that Pakistan used American arms in the Rann of Cutch and that these moves of Pakistan against India give rise to view that there is a Sino-Pak'collusion. Selig S. Harrison of Washington Post says, "The United States has given Pakistan $1.2 billion of mili- tary aid since 1954 for the osten- sible purpose of deterring Com- munist aggression. But on April 26, India produced evidence es- tablished to the satisfaction of the U.S. representatives that Paki- stan had deployed Patton tanks in the Cutch combat areas. The correspondent further reveals that 'Pakistan held back on permitting U.S. inspectors to go to the front line areas on its side of the line until May 7. Authoritative sources state that Major General Robert Ruhlen, head of United States Military Advisory Group in Paki- stan, found Patton tanks and other U.S. equipment in rear areas within Pakistani territory. It is understood that in forward areas where combat has occurred he found tank tracks." THE EVIDENCE of Sino-Pak collusion behind recent Pakistani moves against India has been viewed by foreign press not only a danger to India but also for non- aligned and peace-loving nations in the area. Dr. J. Meyer, foreign editor of Bund of Switzerland says that China is interested in the Indo- Pakistan dispute over Kashmir becoming worse and leaving either participant weakened. "Le Croix" of France believes that Indians rightly feel that the Cutch affair could be a pretext for other at- tacks elsewhere and other ag- gessions may be by the Chinese. Friends of India and Pakistan are not only deeply concerned about deteriorating relations of these two neighbors, they are also much worried about the growing Chinese tactics to weaken Paki- stan ultimately under the garb of friendship. Let it not be for- gotten that China betrayed Indian friendship and committed naked aggression in 1962 on its territory, which she has continued to com- mit still today. ONE, THEREFORE, would very sincerely desire that Pakistan should be prepared to solve the issue through peaceful means rather than resorting to force. The same attitude should be re- alized by India. Mutual friendship is the greatest need for the two neighbors and they must not spare any efforts in achieving this ob- jective in their own interest. For much progress and prosperity can be attained if they live in peace and thus contribute to world peace -the goal all cherish today. By BRUCE WASSERSTEIN Second-of Two Articles IS HE OR ISN'T HE? Is John Lindsay a Republican or is he an independent liberal? The problem with answering this question is that Lindsay's con- ception of Republicanism is dif- ferent from that of everybody else in the party with the exception of Jake Javits. Believing that he is a member of the party of Lin- coln, Lindsay tends to be more lib- eral than many Democrats. As a matter of fact, the Times conjectured last year that if Lind- say switched his party label his political philosophy would not have to change and he would be one of the most influential peo- ple in the House. However, Lindsay will run into trouble in the mayoralty sweep- stakes running as a liberal Demo- crat in Republican clothing. Be- cause of the nature of New York's electorate-three registered Dem- ocratic voters for every registered Republican voter-a Republican candidate must get a sizable chunk of the ordinarily Demo- cratic votes to win a city wide election. ALTHOUGH similar voter reg- istration figures were prevalent when Lindsay ran for Congress in New York's Silk Stocking district, the national viewpoints of most of his Republican and Democratic constituents were not that di- vergent. Thus Lindsay could cap- ture the bulk of the Republican votes and a good many Democrat- ic ones by advocating liberal an- swers to policy questions. On a citywide basis, however, Lindsay will find that it is very hard to please the Democrats without alienating the Republi- cans. For example, one can take the controversial school redistrict- ing issue. Most Republicans and many Democrats are opposed to having their children attend anything but local schools. Although they rationalize their viewpoint by say- ing that they do not want to trav- el, this is actually unmitigated rot. The real reason for advocating lo- cal schools is that they reflect the constituency of the neighborhood. Therefore if one lives in a nice middle class white area, one's children will now go to a nice "middle class white school. ON THE OTHER hand, civil rights leaders point out that if one lives in a Negro slum, the school one goes to is a reflection of that inferior environment. Not- ing the inequitable distribution of races in the school system ,- for example 98 per cent Negro at one school and 80 per cent white at another-these leaders urge that the city inaugurate a thorough school integration plan. Of course, the white middle class is opposed to such a scheme. If Lindsay supports the inte- gration plans he stands to alien- ate his Republican base while on the other hand by opposing it he will lose the support of civil rights leaders. Bob Wagner's solution to such problems was to refer them to committees which either never re- ported or never did anything once they made their reports. THE SPECIFIC ISSUE of edu- cation is now boiling, however, and Calvin Gross who came to New York with the reputation of being a whiz kid as an education- al administrator was forced out of his position as school superin- tendent after pressure from civil rights groups who were impatient with his crawling integration plans. Other controversial issues such as property and sales taxes, the civilian police review board are also coming to a head. It is easy for any candidate to promise that if he wins there will be less crime on the streets, a pettier city and so forth. The real issues are sticky wickets, however, which candi- dates always try to sidestep. Candidate Lindsay will discover that his latent supporters will want to know his positions and he will have to choose which ele- ment of New York's divergent population is the king he wants to capture and which pawn he will have to alienate to win the prize. CURRENTLY Lindsay is work- ing on the supposition that the Republicans are in his pocket be- cause they have no one else to turn to, and his task to capture a sizable heap of ordinarily Dero- cratic voters. A fusion ticket such as the one once headed by La- Guardia seems to be Lindsay's solution and already people are calling him another Fiorello. The problemwith this analogy is that Fiorello was fighting against a corrupt system of en- trenched bosses while Lindsay was originally fighting against the honest but ineffective regime of Wagner. The issues are not those of corruption but those of finan- cial and civil rights policy. Lindsay claims that one should not hold his Republicanism against him. Yet he counts among his supporters both the relatively con- servative WASPS of the city and the big money men. SEEING as he cannot alienate these people, one becomes a bit cynical about Lindsay's poten- tial as a true independent. Fur- thermore one doubts the advis- ability of electing a mayor who will spend most of his time run- ning for the presidency. He may claim he is not a Republican now but you can bet that in 1968 he will know which party he is in. 4 IN PARENTHESIS: BOOK REVIEWS BY GEORGE A. WHITE EDITOR'S NOTE: George Abbott White, a graduate of the English Honors Program and past editor of Generation Magazine, will review books for The Daily weekly start- ing today. Letters from Mississippi. Edit- ed by Elizabeth Sutherland. Mc- (Graw-Hill, $4.98. T HE LET'TER, like the journal, has almost become a forgotten literary form in the 20th century. Not that we have not had them, and had them at the height of their form-but too often we have had them written and read not for their virtues, but rather, for their vices. We do not, it seems, read the letters of F. Scott Fitz- gerald in the same frame of mind as say, those of John Keats. And except for the brilliant and mov- ing letter of Martin Luther King from the Birmingham Jail, the variety of purposes that the letter may serve have hardly been touch- ed upon. The letter has uses other than 4 those of revealing the man and the intimacies about him; it can reveal an age and its turmoil as well. When written and read in this light, the vices-specificity, immediacy, intimacy-become vir- tues. The collection of letters in this book, selected and edited with skill and sensitivity, do not issue from the hands of artists and craftsmen as those of Jonathan Edwards, Franklin, Adams; of ages past. They are from SNCC volun- teers in Mississippi. Some suffer from disconnected narrative, dis- jointed syntax, subjects too in- timate in reference to be read out of a far larger context. Yet taken as a whole (and they read as one piece), this book succeeds as no other-save Robert Penn War- ren's Who Speaks for the Negro? -in giving 3 impact, the precise sense of place and people; de- lineating the personalities, the conflicts, the failures and small triumphs. What is imprintedni the reader's mind at end, is noth- ing less than what it meant-a plenthora of experiences--to be in Mississippi for SNCC last sum- mer. IT OPENS with letters from the "training center" in Oxford, Ohio, records the brutal role-playing (re-enacting situations of danger), the ambiguities of purpose, the anticipations and the fears.;One letter spotlights the conflict be- tween "recruit" (white college stu- dent for the summer) and "vet- eran" (Negro youth with less edu- cation, less Middleclassness); an- other the resentment of Negro leadership, of having to "prove" oneself. And even before they leave for Mississippi there is the fore- boding of the terror ahead: three students - Andrew Goodman, James Chaney, Michael Schwer- ner-are missing. So many aspects of the multi- purposed Negro Revolution are captured: the vitalizing aspect of the "New Christianity" (in Diet- rich Bonhoeffer's words: "mien for others"), the attack upon a national sickness, the Word made viable through commitment, the Negro as the "new being."sThese early letters suggest what is later confirmed, that the motives be- hind this revolution. are not only abstract idealism. And each re- flects self-knowledge, maturity. They know the reasons: personal salvation, "belonging," self-fulfill- ment, achievement of some kind of manhood. One writes: Concerning the "practicality" of such a venture: nothing could be more "lucrative," "pro- fitable," than teaching in Mis- sissippi this summer. I want to fulfill myself, not to prove my- self. I do not want to spend my life in the pursuit and enjoy- ment of comfort and security . . Their arrival in the "Magnolia State" dispels misconceptions; confronts the image with reality: - . . to see the place in the real is so different from seeing down psychological'reasons for your personal problems. When I see these simple people living lives of relative inner peace, love, honor, courage and humor, I lose patience with people who sit and ponder their belly but- tons... Religion looses its , "Organiza- tion Man" overcoat. The Volun- teers meet people for whom, in spite of everything, faith is vital and viable: tiny, 75-year-old "Mr. Magoo's" who are "tough, still working and willing to undergo danger. (Danger being of course, the attempt to register to vote.)' He spends nearly all his spare time reading the Bible and like many of the people here, he takes its teachings to heart. The faith of these people here is amazing and not a dead form like in most Northern churches." What emerges from the Volun- teer letters is a similar endurance and a similar faith. For without some sort of faith, survival it is clear, is impossible. It is not just the constant fear of bombings, knifings, beatings. These, one could condition against. But it is the knowledge that the entire fab- ric of civilization is rent in Mis-; sissippi; that what passes for law is nothing but White Man's ca- price. The "system" in Mississippi attempts to be total and nearly succeeds. The sensation of frus- tration is massive: We read of Negroes who are fired from 20- year jobs at whim; Negroes who are kept in debt a year, each year, through White manipulation; of crooked banks, plantation owners, storekeepers, sheriffs, judges. An entire society conspires. The SNCC Volunteer is. left shattered, amazed at the Negro's endurance : attack- at-will in the middle of town at noon, ticket after ticket for run- ning non-existent stopsigns, speeding tickets when a car is not moving, jay-walking tickets, ticket tickets. down back roads. One worker writes in desperation The man who beat me is free. He paid a $25 fine. He is a friend of the judge's, of the police and a member of the Citizen's Council. He is free; he is angry. He knows that he can get away with worse. The FBY would not arrest him .. . I have no local protection. I have -no federal protection . The late American poet Theo- dore Roethke wrote: What do they tell us sound and silence? We have heard the sound of these letters; what of the silence? One letter hints at the dark, un- spoken side: We had a problem with a man and some of his friends who took it upon himself to protect us from the white men who visited us yesterday. He came over at night with his friends and brought along a machine gun and ammunition ... For what happens when non- violence becomes nonpractical; when this nation becomes dulled to the agonies? When it takes just too long for the New York- Times to react to a girl's crushed face, too long to condemn and the at- tracities continue? When it takes too long for the Justice Depart- ment to protect a SNCC office? When it takes too long for a Ne- gro with a PhD ;to register? The Negro tires of waiting; tires of enduring the White Man's Guilt. His truly saintly patience wears thin. These letters add up to this lone question: How long 0 Lord? How long! Prejudiced? WE TRY not be prejudiced against the administration's liberalized immigration law. But a The Other Ascent Into The Unknown . l k l R4t M v 5 I