-- - .... Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. EDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT HIPPLER Astronauts Must Help Place 'Space Race' in Perspective Despite their noble accomplishment in space, the astronauts are neglecting their real duty to the people of the world if they can a° i _.:Kr 1ti L J/ M 1 ' u .. . 1." '. ' e d jA A' /: T1A ',. : 4+, {.f' ^ r r, i '',ffTl. .r r1(;,y , r d ; ;' y n:.r ' . r " / At /d LETTERS: Class Cancellation: Perverted Values G , ; ; ' " t j" rN L ,F":.. . 'P 4 9,- . ..- 'if "- I. 'r 91 'f contribute only scientific data. "WE WHO STAND a better chance of going to Viet Nam than to the moon nvite you to a teach-in on the Union teps," read the flyer being distributed resterday morning all over campus. To a non-follower of the teach-in move- nent, it may seem that the effectiveness >f such meetings, if they were ever really ffective, has disappeared. No significant hanges have been made in our foreign )olicy as a result of this movement, no >ne seems to have benefitted from the nany weeks of work and the many dol- ars' worth of promotion which has been listributed. The real "purpose" of the teach-ins has ecome rather blurred in many of our rilnds, if it was ever clear. The question s posed as to whether many intelligent >rofessors and scholars are wasting valu- ,ble time in a project which has no mean- ng and no future. Now that they have expressed them- elves before the whole nation in Wash- agton last month, why do they continue o hold debates and rallies and refuse to .ccept the way things are??? Yesterday's teach-in was held in pro- est of the celebration in honor of our nost recent national heroes, the astro- lauts. rHERE WERE MANY there protesting the protest. "Why- shouldn't these rave, highly-qualified men receive the lory they deserve after .such an ex- loit,?" several critics exclaimed. "Why houldn't we express the pride we feel in he achievements of our nation in space?" "Pride in our nation?" came the reply. How can we be proud of our nation when our whole cherished system is in the rocess of being destroyed? "There is a gruesome, horrifying trage- y occurring in Viet Nam because of our .ation, and we refuse to accept the blame :r the decisions which are responsible for his crime. The government is not repre- enting us in this war, and we refuse to upport it. How can we feel pride, how an we feel anything but the deepest re- Iorse that this government "of the peo- le" is no longer of the people? Supposed- r we are fighting in Viet Nam to pre- Z. 14 'V., A vent the spread of Communism and the defeat of the democratic process. Yet by the same act, we are defeating our own cause, for in misrepresenting the people of our country, the government is deny- ing the very right we are fighting and killing to preserve. This is no cause for celebration." But why must we associate this with the coming of the astronauts? This event only serves to symbolize many faults which we cannot accept. The race for space is itself part of our Cold War ef- forts to "beat the Russians" and main- tain our "supremacy" for the protection of the free world. As members of a generation destined to explore beyond the earth's surface, we do not deny the value of scientific re- search. But our government is using the space race literally as a promotions gim- mick. IN OUR DESIRE to promote a feeling of brotherhood and united world efforts in the striving to understand the uni- verse, we would not have these efforts used to further the growth of a more deadly and horrifying nuclear shadow of fear and dread that already hangs over all the earth. As one speaker so beautifully expressed it yesterday, if the astronauts did not re- turn from their flight with a better un- derstanding and appreciation for man-, kind, then the achievement, magnificent as it may seem, was something to regard with shame, not pride, something to re- gret as a furtherance of the animosities which continue to haunt the consciences of peace-loving people. IF THEY DID RETURN with a better, purer image of the purpose of man- kind, it is their responsibility to do every- thing in their power to express this force- fully and repeatedly to the people of the nation, and the world. Any less than this makes of the entire space accomplishment merely a sham, a meaningless continuation of our misguid- ed efforts to impress the rest of the world with our power. -CAROL MEAD Ae9 / Opp WIN/ .I'+:.. ¢ X G; ... y. y { "/ FOREhCAT: CONTINufE RAINY SEASON IS THERE AN ANSWER? Problems in Being President 'U' is Neglecting the Arts: Washington Must Take Initiative The universioies ought to be a major force for encouraging the arts, as they have been in science. They are, however, neglect- ing one of their major roles. [HE ARTS are a live issue in Washing- ton this summer. Last Monday the White House held the first of what is ex- )ected to become an annual White House ?rts Festival. The Festival, which lasted welve hours, featured exhibitions of art, culpture, -movies, plays, and readings of iterary works, and was attended by 100 ;uests, including creative and perform- ng artists, patrons of the arts and critics. The Festival is the first project re- plting from the establishment of the president's advisory council on arts which vas created last April. The second and nost significant project this council is. ushing is the National Foundation on he Arts and Humanities, which will prob- bly be passed by both houses in Con- ress this fall. The enactment of this bill into law will e the climax of the arts council's efforts. 'he Foundation which it will create has ;reat significance for the University ommunity. 'UDITH WARREN ..........................Co-Editor OBERT HiPPLER ......................... Co-Editor DWARD HERSTEIN ................... Sports Editor By JAMES RESTON WASHINGTON - P r e s i d e n t Johnson seems a little solemn these days, but neither falling governments in Saigon, nor squab- bling politicians in the Dominican Republic, nor complaining critics in Washington and the other al- lied capitals have persuaded him that his policy is wrong in the Caribbean or Southeast Asia. He does not say it is a good policy. He does not even claim it is succeeding. He merely thinks it is better than all those other policies and invites anybody who wants to play President to come up' with a better one. As he sees it, there are now four groups of critics on Viet Nam. There are "the bombers" who want toahit all military targets anywhere in North Viet Nam and some who even want to hit them in Communist China, too, if neces- sary. He's against them. AT THE OTHER extreme are those who want to get out. He is against them, too. Then in the middle there are those who really want to give up and get out but don't quite admit it, and they are what he calls the "Yes but, or New York Times school," which partly approves of what he's doing but criticizes him all the time anyway. Then finally there are those who merely want us to stop the bombing and, as he puts it, "squat down and hunker up" in Viet Nam. He thinks this would con- sign Americans to picking up the dead. SO HE HAS chosen to follow what he calls the policy of "maxi- mum effectiveness and minimum risk." of applying limited pressure from the air, a roving defense of key areas in South Viet Nam on the ground, and constant probing for a negotiated settlement. He does not expect this to work for a while. His hope is that this holding action will withstand the Viet Cong attacks during the mon- soon season until October, and that the Communists will finally realize America is not going to withdraw, and then agree to ne- gotiate. His fear is that the summer battle will get so severe that the U.S. command will have to use much more power to survive, and thus risk a wider and perhaps even an uncontrollable conflict. THE OUTLOOK, therefore, is New 13A .? WHEN A UNION official criti- cizes the federal government, and when a labor paper publishes that criticism, that's news! In Little Rock, a 24-week train- ing program has been set up with for a constantly increased U.S. the Southeast Asia resolution ground force in Viet Nam this passed by the Congress last Au- summer. Of the 51,000 American gust. He carries this around in his military and naval personnel there pocket wherever he goes, and reads now, only 12,000 are regarded here it to anybody who has forgotten as fighting units and the other its terms. 39,000 are put in the category It says that "the Congress ap- of services and supply. proves and supports the deter- This is felt at the Pentagon to mination of the President, as be just large enough to risk a commander-in-chief, to take all spectacular attack. by the Viet necessary measures to repel any Cong but not large enough to beat armed attack against the forces it back if it comes, so the force of the United States, and to pre- will undoubtedly be reinforced in vent further aggression." It adds that "The U.S. regards teE HAD a special report writ- as vitalto its national interests ten last week on what he calls; and to world peace the mainten- "the different tracks I've gone ance of international peace and down" (now numbering 13) seek- security in Southeast Asia," and ing peace, but so far nothing from it authorizes the use of force "as the other side but a demand for the President determines," for a humiliating withdrawal of this purpose. American forces._ If all this is profoundly dis- MOREOVER it states that the appointing to the President, he Congress may terminate this au- gives no sign of being depressed thority to the President any time or emotional about it. His critics it likes merely by passing another irritate him mainly because he concurrent resolution, so the Pres- feels they prefer to deal with what ident assumes that the Congress might have been rather than with will act rather than merely talk what is in Viet Nam. if it really feels the facts in Viet He thinks he's a pretty good Nam justify a different policy. cowboy, but he doesn't see how Sure it's an awkward and dan- he can rope the Communists into gerous situation, he says, but what peace talks or the South Viet- would you do? What are your namese into organizing a stable specific proposals to deal with government or talking to the Viet the facts as they are? And what Cong. would be the consequences of your proposals in the rest of Asia and MEANWHILE, he proposes to the world? go on carrying out the terms of Copyright, 1965, The New York Times 'SYLVIA': Don't Change Plots, .In Mid=Screen. it the State Theatre e tain nearly as well. " YLVIA" is the story of a wom- Baker and Maharis are no ac- an with the ast of a rosti- tors, but their cinematic weak- tute and the future of a Junior nesses do not ruin the movie be- Legue sondathe, aulorelywoJn rcause they are both nice to look League socialite, a lovely woman at and this movie is not a "real- who comes out of years of forced istic" movie, despite the brutally depravity somehow sweet and un- factual revelations about Sylvia's broken, because it seems, her past. wrongs are not sins. - RBR OR To the Editor: IT IS "IMPROPER," the Uni- versity's President, the Gover- nor and the Legislature told us last March, for a faculty member to call off his classes because he is disturbed at what our govern- ment's policies are doing to hu- man beings in Viet Nam. It is perfectly proper, we learn- ed yesterday, for the University's President to call off that faculty member's classes because the Uni- versity's President, the Governor and the Legislature havea golden chance to get some free nation- wide advertising for themselves. YESTERDAY was a memorable day. -Kenneth Winter, '66 To the Editor: WISH somebody would please explain to me how this univer- sity can justify cancelling classes so that students and faculty can attend a convocation honoring two astronauts, while considering it immoral for its faculty to can- cel classes in order to conduct extra-curricular debates on Amer- ican foreign policy. Does President Harlan Hatcher really ,believe students will learn more listening to the cliche-ridden speeches of the convocation than they would in class? Would President Hatcher work as zealously to contact the Regents when they are not in session in order to get a University book- store approved, or to support anti- discrimination legislation in Ann Arbor as he did to get a new degree created for McDivitt and White to receive? I do not doubt that the Univer- sity will gain much favorable pub- licity from the convocation. Per- haps the state Legislature will be so impressed as to meet our bud- getary requests. STILL ONE would hope that the University would be a bit more concerned with an education for its students and encouraging meaningful participation in at- tempts to correct this society's ills and somewhat less concerned with joining the ballyhoo over the astronauts. -J. Alan Winter, Instructor, Sociology Dept. Tuition Hike ROBERT JOHNSTON in his edi- tonial of June 9 well describes the University as an elite institu- tion and then proposes a beauti- ful plan for keeping it that way. He is quite right in saying that the University's tightening admis- sions standards favors the middle class, although it need not be as high a stratum as indicated in the editorial. Increasing tuition-not even considering Johnston's dras- tic plan-tightens the squeeze on lower groups further. Nor is there enough scholar- ship money to go around if many more of those who were academ- ically qualified, but differred ap- plying because of the University's cost, actually did apply. FURTHER, the University, as a publicly supported institution, has a commitment to provide an op- portunity for an education for the children of the citizenry whose taxes pay for it. State and fed- eral funds account for approxi- mately 60 per cent of the Uni- versity's income-$82 million in fiscal 1963-64. Even with increased scholarship and other financial help, the high tuition that Johnston proposes wouldhdeny the University to all but the national elite. There is now an accelerating extension of college-needed skills and motiva- tion down the educational sys- tem. Major colleges-including the University-are recruiting among deprived youths for students. The War on Poverty is providing edu- cational services and motivations that willsproduce added potential college students among low income groups. A PUBLICLY-OWNED Univer- sity would turn its back on the citizenry that supports it through state and federal taxes if it raised a stiffer financial barrier to the harsh academic one that already exists. A publicly-supported University cannot abandon democracy and egalitarian efforts outside its walls any more than it can afford to inside. In America's increasingly complex and technological society, it is necessary to find and train the best minds-no matter where they are located. From an academic standpoint, this is not an impossible task. From early reports the University's Economic Opportunity Program has not had "considerable trouble" in keeping its participants in school." AT THE END of the first se- mester the program reported a flunk-out rate only slightly higher than that of freshmen as a whole. If the second semester brought a drastic change, it has not yet been reported. So academic standards can re- main while academic barriers fall by recruitment, disseminating in- formation about the University among lower class and lower middle class high'' schools, anti- poverty programs in these schools and remedial pre-enrollment courses. But what can be done to minimize financial barriers? -Free tuition, under the non- class discriminatory conditions de- scribed above, would be the ideal answer. But the University is too expensive and neither the state nor the federal government will provide adequateafunds for its im- portant, essential teaching func- tion. -Progressive tuition is another ideal solution and perhaps more democratic, in light of the Univer- sity's costs, than free tuition. But progressive tuition is difficult, if not impossible to enforce. What about students Who are paying their own way entirely, for ex- ample? SO THE UNIVERSITY is stuck with the present system. But several reforms can be made. First, it should pour more fed- eral anid endowment money into teaching-particularly undergrad- uate teaching-rather than foist- ing these added costs upon the student. The University's research and public service functions can take care of themselves finan- cially; in fact they are quite prosperous. Secondly, it should be Univer- sity policy to match-dollar for dollar - in potential scholarship funds every dollar exacted out o, students by a tuition increase. Funds for lower and lower middle class students who cannot afford the University should be increased, as shouldsUniversity efforts to lower the cost of living for all its students. A TUITION BOOST is inevit- able as John Meredith amply points out on the front page of the same paper. The University has gone three years without a tuition increase-the longest per- iod since the current cycle of rapid growth and financial squeeze tui- tion hikes began in the mid 1950's. The real question facing the Uni- versity is whether the- tuition hike will be carried out in a democratic or elitist framework. -Philip Sutin, Grad Citzenship OFTENTIMES the citing of one good example is more effective than thousands of words of ar- gument or admonition. Today's example: The decision of four major steel producers in the Chicago area to spend $50 million for equipment to end air pollution at their plants. THIS IS JUST ONE instance of the good citizenship displayed by American industry. Countless oth- er projects are constantly under way as industry seeks to help as- sure the nation of pure air. --National Association of Manufacturers 40, w THIS FOUNDATION, which would be endowed with $20 million, would make it possible for students in all fields of arts and humanities to study full-time on grants similar to those given by the Na- tional Science Foundation. It would fa- cilitate more independent research in these fields and would make possible all sorts of expansion and experimentation in a wide variety of fields, which have previously been treated as financial step- children. The latest developments in Ann Arbor, however, point up the absurd imbalance in emphasis between science and the arts which still exists here. We have paid more than adequate homage to our locally-edu- cated science gods yet there has been no public discussion of this pending Arts Foundation which has more revolution- ary implications for the University's ac- tivities. In fact, several department heads and a wide variety of faculty members admit- ted apologetically that they were "unfor- tunately not informed." This was not the case when the Peace Corps was in its planning stages, five years ago. Students and faculty members from this University were engaged in lively debate over the project months before it actually existed; faculty mem- * But the movie fails as really good entertainment, because of an inexcusable reversal in plot- a lack of what English majors call "artistic Integrity" as the writer switches from a good story to a trite cliche with a noticeable clashing of gears. Half of the plot is good. A gentlemanly private detective (George Maharis) is hired by Syl- via's rich fiance (Peter Lawford) to find out where Sylvia (Carroll Baker) came from. Maharis begins a calmly enter- taining trek through the socially leprous past of the blonde and now-wealthy Sylvia who raises prize winning roses and writes poetry. Finally, Maharis is faced with the choice of telling Law- UN SHOULD PLAY ROLE: Unilateral Action Must Cease TWO HIGHLY combustible dan- ger zones flared into open con- flict-Viet Nam and the Domini- can Republic. The United States has declared that both situations represent threats to the peace. The United Nations, which was created to keep the peace, has had no role in either Viet Nam or the Dominican Republic. The U.S. had opposed such a UN role, despite U.S. commitments to the UN as The U.S. not only spurned the good offices of the UN in Viet Nam but one of its State Depart- ment officials publicly criticized the UN Secretary General, who was performing his clear duty- to use the UN to the fullest to prevent threats to the peace from developing into major war. IN THE CASE of the Domini- can Republic, the U.S. intervened the UN must stay out of the West- ern Hemisphere? If this is not our intention how do we propose to reassure the world on this point? And if we interpret the section of the Char- ter referring to regional arrange- ments as authorization for mili- tary intervention, then what is there to prevent the entire world from being fenced off into regional military spheres, with large na-