Sg AI1Ifgal Daily -~ Sev enty-Third Year EAITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN --UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are Free Truth WiI' Prea" eSTUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICI., PHONE NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT MOORE Civil Rights Movement Must Shift Emphasis Civil rights workers in the South this summer must shift their focus and concentrate on educating Negro voters so that they can vote intelligently, not simply as tools of a political party. TODAY AND TOMORROW: Aid Must Be Better Allocated THE PRIMARY OBJECTIVE in the civil rights movement today is the ballot. The voting-rights law, recently passed and signed into law by the President, has given legal federal backing to the Negro's quest for the vote. But what good will it do? The Southern Negro (also applicable in the North) is, for the most part, unedu- cated and uninformed. He, like all too many Americans, is simply not qualified to cast a knowledgeable ballot. Already Poth major political parties are starting their ,propaganda mills churning in an effort to sway the as yet unregistered Negro bloc in the South into their camp. Tactics will undoubtedly be emotional with almost total disregard for facts. The uneducated Southern Ne- gro will be bandied back and forth be- tween the parties and American politics will achieve a new low for moral degen- eracy. The Negro wishes to be recognized as a human being but such crass buying and selling of Negro votes would be nearly as bad as the actual buying and selling of their bodies. THE FAULT LIES not with the law but in the civil rights groups who, this summer, plan to spend enormous amounts of money to boost Negro voting rolls. If plans are successful civil rights lead- ers would have an effective club to use against the established system. They would have a more direct control over the new block of voters. This puts the leaders in a position of greater power. There is no way to foretell how and if they will use it. In many small Southern towns, such as Selma, Alabama, the Negro population is nearly or more than half the total population of the town. The effect upon such towns of Negroes voting at nearly fully force could prove disastrous. A cen- tury of intolerance and resentment on both sides of the color line could provide the fuel to allow the racial discrimina- tion issue to burst into an open and violent flame. The Negro, determined to win his long battle for equality, and the white, fearful of losing his position in the community, might clash openly at the polls at elec- tion time. CIVIL RIGHTS in the South is a deli- cate matter and should not be han- did with boxing gloves. The civil rights worker is encouraged to move even faster in light of past successes but past vic- tories do not insure future success. The path for optimum success and min- imum failure should be carefully thought out and not rashly blundered into. The emphasis of the civil rights move- ment should now be placed on educatioh rather than the acquisition of the vote for the ballot is meaningless unless it is backed by education and knowledge of candidates and issues. The money which is now being devoted to a voter registration drive should be di- verted to educational purposes. The civil rights lobbies in Washington would find thei'r time better spent if their energies were concentrated in badgering Congress for additional funds for Negro education rather than the futile drive to oust Mis-, sissippi Democrats from Congress for being illegally elected. A DRIVE for better education would not be as sensational or as headline grab- bing but would prove much more bene- ficial to Negroes in the long run. If Southerners are not allowed to di- gest the still relatively new civil rights -movement, all the gains made in behalf of Negroes will perhaps be negated. -MICHAEL BADAMO By WALTER LIPPMANN WHETHER we are dealing with Viet Nam, the Dominican Re- public or with the foreign aid program in general, there is one common problem which is crucial and central for all the many things we are undertaking. It is hard to find governments that we can support which are reasonably honest, efficient and progressive and are trusted Dy their own people. We are learning in Viet Nam how difficult it is to defend a country in which there is no gov- ernment which can rally its own people. WE ARE LEARNING in the Dominican Republic what happens when there is no recognizable le- gitimate government to receive our military backing and our eco- nomic help. The same difficulty is at the root of the disappointment, which is so great in this country today, at the results of the foreign aid programs, We are, to be sure, much more vividly conscious of spectacular incidents like the burning of a library than we are of the quiet successes. Nonetheless, there are disap- pointments, so many of them that the Senate has now voted another installment of foreign aid with the proviso that there is to be a radical re-examination of the whole policy within the next two years. WITHOUT attempting to guess what conclusions will be reached in these two years, it is. already quite evident that trouble arises when aid is funneled through corrupt, reactionary or highly in- competent governments. It is not easy to find enough good governments in all the emerging and underdeveloped countries, and, if we are philo- sophical about it, we must not be surprised at the difficulty of find- ing them. The condition is baffling, but that is a concomitant of inexperi- ence and backwardness. MOREOVER, American officials who have to administer the pro- grams are frequently in a quan- dary. As a general rule, the most im- peccably anti-Communist govern- ments are more often than not reactionary, stupid and corrupt- as, for example, the Batista gov- ernment in pre-Castro Cuba or the Trujillo government in the Do- minican Republic. On the other hand, the more progressively minded parties or factions include almost inevitably not only the left but the Com- munists on the left of the left. IT TAKES a -lot, more acumen and political courage for an Amer- ican official to back a progressive faction than it does for him to embrace a rightist faction. This dilemma donfronts us con- tinually in our role as champion of the free world in Asia, Latin America and Africa. Nevertheless, in the task of con- taining the expansion of Com- munism there is no substitute for the building up of strong and vi- able states which command the respect of the mass of their people. THE PRESIDENT, of course. knows this and has frequently said it. But the tragedy of our entanglement in Viet Nam is that we find ourselves fighting what is in fact an American rear guard action to stave off the collapse and defeat of the Saigon govern- ment. In this cramped position there is little opening or opportunity for us to use our power and our re- sources constructively in South- east Asia. We may leave itto the historians to say how and why we are paint- ed into a corner. Our task is to bring up our resources to power and wealth, which are intact, in order to cut down our unavoidable losses to the lowest possible cost in lives and in influence. IN OUR PREDICAMENT it is a disservice, I think, to inflate and emotionalize the stakes in Viet Nam to make it appear that the whole future of America and of the western world in Asia and the Pacific is going to be fought out and decided in the Vietnamese jungle It is not going to be decided there, and it is not going to be decided in any other single place. Thus, for example, we must prepare our minds even now for the possibility that Britain will not be able to carry much longer the whole burden of her respon- sibilities from Aden and the Per- sian Gulf through the Indian Ocean to Singapore. There looms ahead of us the prospect of having enormous new responsibilities thrust upon us, re- sponsibilities which do not begin and will not end with our en- tanglement in Saigon. THAT IS WHY, though we can- not and must not scuttle and run, we must use our resources and our wits to avoid becoming bogged down in a large land war on the Asian mainland. (c)1965, The washington Post Co. Wear i n Viet Nam Makes The News -Daily-Thomas R. Copi Teach-In-Was It A Harangue? Teach-In Proponents Have Their Say. Affluence Produces U.S. Apathy LIVING IN THE UNITED STATES today, one has the sensation of living in an era in which history is being made. I mean this statement not in the sense that one conventionally uses it-"These are the times that try men's souls . ..- but in a less commonplace and perhaps, more meaningful one. For I believe the U.S. today is embark- ink upon a new course in its history and as such we are entering into that sphere of scholarship which we have known only secondarily until now. We are entering into a period in our history which will be remembered by historians three or four generations from now as one in which we, consciously or inadvertantly, cast aside our finest values. REFER TO THE SORT of history that William Shirer wrote about in the "Rise and Fall of the Third Reich": the his- tory of a society which is unable to ad- just itself to the pressures being put upon it by an expansion of the democratic eth- ic and which is retreating into authori- tarianism, It would have seemed inconceivable (or at least almost so) to most Americans a few short months ago, that anything like "Seven Days in May" could really take place. But it is. I mean this, of course, not in the literal sense that we face the imminent pros- pect of a military takeover. This seems remote. More generally, however, we must now come to grips with the subtler point of the film: with the infusion of anti-intel- lectual and traditional military values (obedience, stoicism, psychological sub- servience) into our traditional culture JUDITH WARREN........................ Co-Editor ROBERT HIPPLER.................. Co-Editor EDWARD HERSTEIN................... Sports Editor JUDITH FIELDS...................Business Manager pattern-with the denudation of the ethic of democracy. DEMOCRACY WORKS WELL when dis- sent remains part of a society not simply as a formal opportunity, but as a viable and habitual aspect of the think- ing people of that society. This is becoming increasingly less true in the U.S. In the first instance America today is a comfortable place to be. The greater diffusion of the wealth among some of the groups which comprise the society has led to an increasing unwillingness to en- gage in activity which in any way, shape or form presents a threat or potential threat to this affluence. Michael Harrington and others have told us that this "included" group is not nearly so large as might be imagined, but still this statement is true of a signifi- cant and strategic portion of our culture. OF COURSE this statement is more de- scriptive of the social psychology of some groups in the U.S. than it is of oth- ers. But the fact remains that the people most integrated into our society-those who are businessmen, who are people of middle age, who are white-are the peo- ple that hold the potential balance of power. The others, the "marginal people" -youth, Negroes, lower class people-are the people most likely to be effected by the drastic actions which our government now contemplates. Thus the submissiveness of the com- placent majority-the gray flannel mil- lions tamed by the McCarthy era-be- comes a sort of fratriticide. Today's apa- thetic clubwomen are tomorrow's gold star mothers. THE WAR the Johnson administration is launching in Viet Nam is one which fits well into the middle class pattern of life in the U.S.: it is subtle, it is being run for "us" by the experts, and, we are To the Editor: IN THURSDAY'S Daily there was quite an array of letters con- demning the teach-in which took place prior to and during the en- trance of the astronauts into the Union. I think the purpose of this teach-in was misunderstood by some of these critics. It was not a "blockade" in any sense, and neither was it a "haranguing" demonstration, unless all speeches with feeling and conviction be- hind them are harangues. If the convocation had been simply a ceremony honoring two mhen, many of the criticisms of the teach-in would perhaps be valid. BUT THE CONVOCATION for McDivitt and White was not simply such a ceremony. It was essentially a pro-government cele- bration. The flags, the telegram from President Johnson with the inevitable word "peaceful" in it, White's statement that "America was the victor"-these and other aspects of the celebration make this clear. The teach-in questioned these statements and presumptions. It questioned whether America was in fact "the victor," if the vast sums of money used in the space program were worth this final all- American moment, this final "vic- tory" (Over whom? Must all things result in "victory?"). It questioned especially the dis- crepancy between the glowing tri- butes, President Johnson's con- cern with ". . . the exploration of space for the benefit of all man- kind," and his willingness to spread death among the people of Viet Nam. THE VIETNAMESE at the mo- ment are unable to see the ex- ploration of space as beneficial. They are concerned with more basic problems: food, clothing, life itself. The American people, too, can- not count the Gemini flight as the greatest of benefits. After the brief fanfare is over, what signi- ficance and importance will the flight have, in comparison with the ever-present problem of peace in this world? Who were the astronauts of last year and the year before? Can their names be remembered? Have their achievements helped to create a better world? Is it, in fact, true, as President Hatcher said at the convocation, that "man's only key to his future is represented by space?" THESE ARE the kinds of ques- tions posed by the teach-in. Per- haps it appeared a kill-joy to many people, an annoyance in the day's festivities, the vented spleen of a few sour grapes. It was not. The participants had no inten- tion of disrupting the ceremonies. In these areas, our government is failing to do its job, and those participating in the teach-in re- fused to let this fact be obscured by the noise, the flag waving, the pseudo-doctoral degrees changing hands, and the like. WHAT MATTER all this when our country is an aggressor? -Cory Mullen, '66 To the Editor: WE ARE TOLD that there is a chance that there are think- ing, reasoning beings on other planets and solar systems. We are asked why we chose to cry our outrage at the Viet Nam atrocity on the occasion of the astronauts' honorary "day." The situation here on earth is bad enough. But can men of good will remain silent when there is a chance that Lyndon Johnson's government will mutilate the whole universe? DO YOU WANT to go to Mars to defend the "free world" against Communist aggression from North Zprigb? --Peter A. DiLorenzi, Jr. '64 To the Editor: O NE OF the letter-writers who attacked the teach-in on the Union steps Tuesday said the pro- testors made him feel "ashamed." Perhaps it might be suggested to him and to those who agree with him that this was precisely the purpose of those staging; the teach-in. Each of the speakers at the teach-in is an American, and each would like to be as proud of that factbas the letter-writers pretend to be. But they find it impossible to hail our nation for this endeavor, while tragic and immoral acts are being perpetrated by the same government at many spots on this earth. AS THE "teach-inners" pointed out, most of us will not have the good fortune of Lt. Cols. Mc- Divitt and White. It is our fate to live out our days on earth; many of us may be sent to Viet Nam to help our government "safeguard democracy." It is for this reason that some of feel shame. It is for this reason that we feel it our duty not to celebrate while so many are dying. It is for this reason thattsome of our teachers feel bound to teach, even when the University has cancelled classes. If Tuesday's teach-in "revolted" some, then I can only wonder what they feel when they read the reports coming from Viet Nam. ALL THREE of the letters in The Daily criticize the teach-in By ROGER RAPOPORT SAIGON-Fighting 60 miles north of here cost Americans their worst battle loss of the war. -Associated Press, June 11 SAIGON - Military chiefs seized power in South Viet Nam today after serving notice on civilian leaders that they no longer had confidence in the politicians of this embattled nation. -United Press International, June 11 THE WAR in Viet Nam is not going well. However, informed sources in Washington indicate that President Johnson is plan- ning key personnel changes and new offensive strategy to reverse the trend of late. He plans to get tough and win peace through strength. You can look forward to reading dispatchs like these in the near future. WASHINGTON -Barry Gold- water flew here today for top- level talks with President Johnson and the National Security Coun- cil. The ambassador to South Viet Nam came to give a firsthand report on his nuclear defoliation campaign, that has been called the key factor in recent U.S. vic- tories in Viet Nam. NEW YORK-Before national television cameras last night, President Johnson told the Na- tional Convention of American Chimney Sweeps that he is open to unconditional peace negotia- tions over Viet Nam. In this, his ninth televised peace offer, Pres- ident Johnson said, "I have said it before, and I will say it again -we want peace in Viet Nam at any cost. HANOI-American forces scor- ed a major victory yesterday kill- ink 5,700 Viet Cong in the latest assault only six miles from the heart of this city. Only 300 Ameri- can troops and 146 advisors in South Viet Nam were killed in the heavy fighting, that was led by U.S. Army General Edmund E. Walker. ANN ARBOR--The 14th in a series of debates on U.S. policy in Viet Nam was held here last night with Presidential Advisor McGeorge lBundy facing Univer- sity of Chicago Professor Hans Morgenthau. The question was, "Resolved that Communists start- ed the teach-in movement." TAIWON - Nationalist Premier Chaing Kai Shek announced to- day that he is committing his entire armed forces to the Ameri- can effort in Viet Nam. Nation- alist China joins Spain which sent 95,000 troops Monday as the sec- ond nation this week to be allied with the U.S. forces in South Viet Nam. DA NANG-320 U.S. jets suc- cessfully completed bombing raids on defense plants, railroads and bridges 75 miles south of Canton yesterday. According to state de- partment spokesmen this latest peace offensive was designed on the premise that if China felt a little pressure from the U.S. bombers , they would withdraw their support of Viet Cong guer- rillas in South Viet Nam and' open the way to a negotiated settlement. However, Chinese of- ficials refused to recognize a U.S. peace offer until the U.S. grants recognition of China. SAIGON-The last 8,000 Bud- dhist monks arrested Monday were cremated here this morning.. The monks were extecuted after stag- ing a four-day hunger strike in protest of government national- ization of their pagodas. South Viet Nam Premier Madame Ngo Dingh Nhu was present through- out the executions and told news- men afterward," I am the state. Cinderella's Marvelous; 'Flash' Holds His Own $ MI it the state Theatre WHAT CAN WE say about Cinderella? We can't really describe the plot, since you all know it. We can't commend the actors for their fine performances -there aren't any actors. We can't compliment the camera crew for its fine work, since the movie is a cartoon feature. All we can do, then, is simply say "thank you" to Walt Disney for bringing this marvelous, time- less fairy tale to the screen once again. And just in case you who have already seen Cinderella think that it's just for little children, you're wrong. Go again-you'll be sur- prised how much you've forgotten, and how much the film still holds for you. A suggestion, however, is in order. For the added comfort and convenience of viewers over the age of ten, go to the late show and avoid the mob of kids. For even though everyone is familiar with the story, it is still more en- joyable to watch it unfold on the screen instead of having to listen to a miniature chorus in the background telling each other what is going to happen next. FOR THOSE of you who go to the movies only to see the main feature (and possibly the car- toon), avoiding all featurettes, travelogues and, newsreels, change your plans for this one. The other half of this program, "Flash the Teenage Otter," isn't as silly as it sounds. To begin with, Flash is not a teenager. This in itself should bring into the fold all those who the bottom of a mill pond to the inside of a beaver lodge (which Flash appropriates for the win- ter), Disney's cameramen lead you through their lenses into the world of Flash the otter-and it's a trip worth taking. -THOMAS R. COPI -CAROL MEAD One Film Mana ges To Redeem Five At the Cinema Guild THE NEXT TIME your mother makes a nasty crack about the Frug ask her what she did at the two and a half cents-a-dance dance halls in 1926. That's the best part of the six C[ know the ad says five) comedy classics being offered this weekend at Cinema Guild. "The Nickelhopper," a silent starring Mabel Normand, shows that a paternity suit could be slapped on the Charleston for fathering the jerk. Paddy (Miss Normand) is a virtuous girl who works in a dance hall by night and scrubs floors by day to support herself, her slaving mother, young brother and lazy slob of a father. Sounds like a tear- jerker doesn't it. BUT WAIT! With no respect for continuity or theme, Paddy turns out to have a lot of moxie. After 15 minutes of slamming swinging doors in the face of policemen, she and her newly-met suitor take the plunge. She's one of those "girls you just know life would never be dull with." As a brief side attraction, Boris Karloff (that's right, Boris Karloff) does a glorified walk-on as-what else-the heavy. Unfortunately the other five films in the grouping aren't nearly as much fun. They tend to drag a bit. It's obviously pretty hard to write good comic dialogue (four of the remaining five are talkies). For example, W. C. Fields in "The Golf Specialist," just grinds a routine right down to the nitty gritty. Ten minutes fighting sticky flvnonr nv, uter c -- j, ag-til nl, ihsc haAhat aA ,-.a ai, is Ia 0q