Seventy-Fifth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSIY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS OSA REFORMS, CIVIL RIGHTS: The Best Days of 'U'Student Activism Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD $T., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail 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. FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: W. REXFORD BENOIT No-Travel Ostrich Poliey' Solves No Problems THE STATE DEPARTMENT'S "ostrich policy," the policy of asking its citi- zens to ignore the existence of inconven- iently-placed Communist governments, won another victory Monday when the Supreme Court ruled that the secretary of state may refuse to grant passports for travel to Cuba. The move was worse than pointless. It was a significant affront to the rights of U.S. citizens. At first glance, one would think that the right to travel would be as elemen- tary as the right vote; evidently it is as elementary as the right to vote in Ala- bama. For the State Department has previously restricted travel to China, Spain and the Iron Curtain countries be- cause of "foreign policy considerations affecting all citizens," as Chief Justice Earl Warren said in his ruling. IT IS DIFFICULT to see what possible bearing travel to Cuba would have on American disapproval of Cuba. Granted, it further isolates Cuba politically. But how overemphasized can political isola- tion get? Breaking of all diplomatic re- lations and most economic ones would seem to convey the point sufficiently. Would allowing travel to Cuba expand Cuban Communism any faster? It cer- tainly would not make an American Communist any more Communist. On the contrary, the many failures of Cas- tro's government' might help make the administration position all the clearer to the country. When the American government wel- comes comparison of its success with Rus- sian progress in so many fields, indeed, permits travel to Russia, it is difficult to see how comparison with as backward a Communist nation as Cuba could hurt it at all. THE ARGUMENT that travel is not permitted because the U.S. govern- ment could not ensure the safety of its citizens in Cuba is similarly refuted by past history. Travel was permitted to Hungary during the uprising there and certainly this was no less dangerous than Cuban travel might be. And on the other hand, as the New York Times recently pointed out. the United States is missing a valuable chance in Cuba to see just how a Com- munist takeover works. American sociol- ogists, economists and political scientists should be swarming over the country finding out everything there is to know about how a Communist government, suddenly imposed on a nation, operates. We evidently cannot prevent the events in Cuba from taking place; we might as well learn something from them. The entire matter is an excellent par- allel to the government's behavior re- garding Communist China. AMERICA IS MISSING too many excel- lent opportunities to study and influ- ence Communist nations simply because of an absurd policy of controlled ignor- ance. The policy has no practical re- sults and many practical disadvantages. It should be abandoned as soon as possi- ble. -LEONARD PRATT EDITOR'S NOTE: In today's ar- ticle, the third of a series, Philip Sutin, Grad, continues to trace the course of student activism on this campus since 1960. By PHILIP SUTIN THE SPRING of 1961 developed into the greatest semester for the student activists. The Office of Student Affairs was under at- tack on a number of fronts - chiefly the conduct of the dean of women's office and quadrangle, living conditions. The House Un- American Activities Committee film "Operation Abolition" be- came a major issue. Civil rights wasstill important as the Ann Arbor Direct Action Committee picketed Kresge's Detroit head- quarters several times and Voice held its food drive for the vic- tims of discrimination in Fayette. The most significant activity, however, was behind the scenes. The Daily senior editors and sev- eral members of SGC's Human Relations Board asked the Senate Advisory Committee on Univer- sity Affairs' Student Relations Committee to investigate the Of- fice of Student Affairs. The editors brought complaints of insensitive counseling and of racial discrimination practices by the dean of women's office and other charges that the OSA was acting contrary to general Uni- versity policy. During the three-month inves- tigation, the nine-member facul- ty committee met four times with complaining students ,and twice each with Vice-President for Stu- dent Affairs-JamesA.nLewis and Dean of Women Deborah Bacon. The group also consulted with the OSA staff.. NEITHER the full report of the committee nor its supporting doc- uments have ever been made pub- lic because the committee felt that they contained potentially libelous material. With the help of the students who first had appealed to it for help, the Student Relations Com- mittee, sympathetic to the stu- dents, next conducted a careful study of the OSA which was ap- proved by its parent, the Senate Advisory Committee on Univer- sity Affairs, by the OSA and by the rest of the administration. The document has probably been thus far the most effective result of student political action in the 1960's. The report called for fixed OSA responsibility, an educational phi- losophy to guide office policy, re- assignment of personnel, a griev- ance mechanism for students and a positive anti-discrimination pro- gram. The document had greater im- pact because of changes outside the student sphere. Several lib- eral Regents-notably Eugene B. Power, Mrs. Irene Murphy and, in 1961, Alan Sorenson-had been elected. These Democrats had a greater concern for students' wel- fare than the Republicans they replaced. WITHIN THE OSA itself, there was some feeling that a major overhaul was needed. The dean of men and dean of women's of- fices were pulling apart. The men's office was following essen- tially a counseling policy with very mild control over male stu- dents. The, women's office was "empire building" with Miss Ba- con playing to the hilt her as- signed role of protector of Uni- versity women. The office was schizophrenic and could formulate no overall policy or lines of responsibility. Then another factor entered which put added pressure on the OSA. A report by a former resi- dent advisor in the residence halls had lain for nearly a year on the desk of assistant dean for men John Hale. East Quadrangle resi- dent advisor Herbert C. Sigman. finally brought a copy to the Daily, which duly published it. The report by former Strauss House resident advisor Harold Schaub was based on a survey of 181 residents. He warned that the quadrangles had drifted away from the educational orientation of the Michigan House Plan, that administrators were too far re- moved from the quads to make meaningful policies and that the quads were an unpleasant place to live. ADMINISTRATORS attacked the report for alleged faulty sur- veying procedures. Interquadrangle Council, led by Thomas Moch, first set up a com- mittee to study the report, then requested a student-faculty-ad- ministration conference to evalu- ate the quads. The Daily senior editors backed the report with a front-page edi- torial and called for "fast and full action." The conference was held in mid- April. Consensus recommendations called for rewriting the Michigan House Plan, elimination of floor counselors and more liberal rules for women in the quads. A MONTH LATER, Hale an- nounced his intention to rewrite the house plan "largely because of outdated language and means of expression." The plan was never rewritten. The project laid on Hale's desk for a year and a half and was abandoned when Hale left for the University of Delaware. The OSA has abandoned efforts to rewrite the plan, choosing to allow 1 to evolve through such projects as the pilot project and the residential college. SGC considered, but took no stand that spring on non-academ- ic evaluations in residence halls, the so-called "pink slips." The issue developed out of an earlier controversy over chemistry de- partment forms which asked pro- fessors to rate their students' loy- alty. Council condemned them and the chemistry department later agreed to drop the forms if stu- dents did not subsequently ask for a recommendation from fac- ulty members. Against the backdrop of affili- ate bias cases elsewhere involving Alpha Tau Omega, Phi Delta The- ta and Beta Theta Pi and the dropping of all fraternities at Williams College, SGC continued its work of implementing its ear- lier decision to collect statements of non-discrimination from Uni- versity affiliates. The Daily kept the issue prom- inent by gaudy publicity of in- cidents at other campuses. These articles pointed out, at least by inference, that charges of dis- criminatory practices had been made against national fraterni- ties with chapters at Michigan. IN JANUARY, council sent a letter to affiliates requesting the membership statements. No fur- ther collection action was taken that spring, making it the last for two years in which the mem- bership question was not domi- nant. The semester saw most active student interest in national and THE OCCUPANTS of the Student Activities Building came under criticism as student activism had its greatest semester in 1961. In today's article- Philip Sutin students were engaged in. world affairs. The campus not only awoke to local issues, but al so to those beyond the campus. Civil rights was important; so was the Peace Corps. But the House Un-American Activities Committee and its film, "Opera- tion Abolition," caused the most concern. HUAC San Francisco investiga- tions in May, 1960, were disrupted by three days of student-disturb- ances. The committee subpoenaed newsreel film of the demonstra- tion and made a movie which pictured the student demonstra- tors as "dupes" of wily Communist agitators. HAYDEN and SGC member Rog- er Seasonwein presented a motion for SGC condemnation of the film as a distortion. The controversial film was shown to council which a week later condemned it. The film was widely debated on campus. Voice campaigned against it with several programs and a petition drive in the Fishbowl. The Cinema Guild was to show the movie, but a calendaring mud- dle canceled it. Council sought commentary with the film and only a single showing. Cinema Guild wanted to show it twice without discussion.fThe movie showing time conflicted with a Political Issues Club movie. However, campus groups, such as Guild House, showed the mo- vie to packed audiences. THE HUAC controversy climax- ed with a debate between Fulton Lewis III, the film's technical di- rector, and Seasonwein. The Daily devoted-much atten- tion to the House committee. Twice it gave over the right side of its editorial page to HUAC critics and rebuttals from chair- man Francis E. Walter. Council was increasingly aske4 to take stands on off-campus is- describes the gamut of activities sues, forcing its members to take positions on important questions of the day. The more conservative members were reluctant to take stands, partiallW ,"ecause they did not share the ideology of the ac- tivists, partially because tby questioned the importance and usefulness of SGC action. However, council did support the sit-ins and freedom rides and did condemn "Operation Abolition" al- though after some delay beyond the constitutionally required time. ONE PROTEST did not receive warm encouragement. Following the murder of Congo Premier Pa- tric Lumumba in February,1961, 13 African students and Ameri- can sympathizers marched from the Diag to downtown Ann Arbor. International Center Director James Davisesought to deter the protestors, fearing, that the gov- ernment would cancel their stu- dent visas, as it had threatened to do to some San Francisco anti- HUAC demonstrators. "A demonstration smacks of mob action and gives a bad im- pression. It is aimed at getting publicity and this publicity is us- ually unfavorable. I was glad, how- ever, to see that there were no specific anti-United Nations or anti-United States posters permit- ted in this protest," Davis said. This attitude reflected more than just the special concern for the welfare of foreign students. Many average students held this position and scorned the activist movement. It was against this sort of inertia that the activist movement worked. VOICE undertook the first of several reorganizations as the end of its first year approached. A more informal structure was de- vised to replace the standard standing committee setup. Com- mittees were to be established on an ad hoc basis, hopefully draw- ing interested persons into the or- ganization. This structure was designed to meet Voice's basic long-term prob- m--it can only do one thing at a time. Voice's membership tended to be stable and its leadership held in few hands. However, Voice's in- terests, both as a campus political party and a student group were broad. Its schemes were grand. But Voice lacked the people and time to carry them all out. Voice would fix its energies on one project, then shift to another. While one endeavor held the cen- ter stage, all others languished. Thus, Voice did little in campus affairs while conducting the Fay- ette food drive. At other times, campus elections-a fixed respon- sibility-drew Voice's total atten- tion. "Campaigns always gutted the organization. The active people were always tired and behind in their work," one member explain- ed. The new system did not work very well. THE CONTINUING increase in liberal activity during this period was accompanied by and gave im- petus to the revival of conserva- tive student groups. Young Amer- icans for Freedom, a rightist stu- dent group formed in the summer of 1960, established a campus chanter that fall. YAF was never a viable cam- pus group. Itheard a few speak- ers, but its main event was char- tering buses to Michigan State University so members and in- terested students could hear Ari- zona Sen. Barry Goldwater. The Young Republicans, how- ever, were growing into a major campus force. Steven Stockmeyer began his work of raising the or- ganization to both local and state- wide importance. The club was al- ways stronger than the Young Democrats, having more programs and putting on a more aggressive campaign. The YR's took an active interest in campus affairs rather than an occasional one like the Democrats. Its programs created leadersawho would later run and lead SGC. AT THE OTHER extreme, the Democratic Socialists also had a good year, sponsoring a lecture se- ries and becominginvolved in the defense of Fidel Castro. Student activism was at Its height, and the results of student efforts and enthusiasm would be reaped in coming semesters in the form of changes in University in- stitutions and policies-the resig- nation of the dean of women, the restructuring of the OSA, changes in the student judiciary system, and the shelving of thoughts of a quarter system in favor of tri- mester. A U.S. Plays into Castro's Hands I AT A HASTILY CALLED press confer- ence last week President Johnson an- nounced that U.S. Marines had landed in the Dominican Republic to protect the lives of American citizens and other for- eign nationals caught in that nation's bloody civil war. It soon became evident, however, that the protection of American citizens was not the only and perhaps not the primary reason for the U.S. invasion which land- ed 14,000 Marines on the small island. THE PRESIDENT in a subsequent state- ment on the crisis proved this to be true'by asserting that people trained out- side the Dominican Republic had taken advantage of a "popular democratic movement for social justice" in order to impose their will on the Caribbean na- tion. This was an obvious reference to Communist conspirators. Concern for truth rather than propa- ganda reveals that the President accur- ately described his own government's ac- tion in the Dominican crisis and not that of "Communist conspirators. For U.S. Marines and other U.S. mili- tary personnel are normally trained out- side the Dominican Republic. There are no Russian, Chinese or Cuban military personnel on the island-only 14,000 U.S. Marines. The rebel forces appear to have over- whelming popular support - enough so that the regular army troops could not maintain their power without U.S. assist- ance. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich. Published daily Tuesday through Saturday morning. THE U.S. HAS PUBLICLY announced that the revolt "forced" it into a la- mentable alliance with right-wing mili- tary leaders who are a legacy of the Trujillo dictatorship. The Johnson admin- istration has admitted that U.S. troops may have to remain in the Dominican Republic for some time until the political question is settled. The rebels have consistently pledged themselves to support the return of Juan Bosch to thepresidency of the country, once victory is achieved. Bosch was the victor in the 1963 election, the first demo- cratic election in Dominican history. The spoilers of democracy in the Do- minican Republic-those who overthrew the elected government of Bosch when it was. only eight months old-are now our allies; we are now there helping them at their invitation. When the "crisis" is over, the island, without protest from the United States, will settle down under the grip of a new group of anti-democratic generals. THE U.S., in intervening, has played in- to the hands of the pro-Castro Domin- icans by verifying Castro's predictions that the "Colossus of the North" will con- tinue to stifle any popular movement for social reform in the underdeveloped world. The rather small Castroite following is sure to grow daily as the Dominican peo- ple experience the continuing insult of military occupation. U.S. intervention has increased the likelihood of an eventual Castro-style takeover. -DAVID C. ARONER TOMORROW-:The University prepares f'r trimester-and stu- dent activism begins to run into difficulties with leadership, ideology and organization. AMERICA'S EMPIRE-BUILDING: The Revolt i*n Santo Domingo: The First of Two Articles By STEPHEN BERKOWITZ and JEFFREY GOODMAN THE UNITED STATES seems determined to conduct its for- eign policy in such a way as to embroil its people in an endless host of armed clashes, neo- colonial wars and nuclear con- frontations. In Viet Nam, in the Dominican Republic, in the Congo-through- out the underdeveloped world- the U.S. has taken up the white man's burden which, only recently, has begun to slip from the shoul- ders of the nations of Old Europe. With troops no less than with dollars and rhetoric, we are seek- ing to remake the world in our own image. THE SITUATION in which we are involved in the Dominican Republic is only the latest in a series of incidents which, taken together, seem to describe a pic- ture of a foreign policy-in-embryo that is pleasing to neither one's nose nor his intellect. In Africa, in Asia, in Latin America-in all the parts of the world in which the specter of revolution rises forcefully from among the people, the U.S. has chosen to retreat into the com- fortable strategic constructs and the outrageous moral platitudes of the 19th century. Our present role in the Domin- ican Republic is not new. THE EARLY history of the Dominican Republic is a contin- uous chronicle of invasions, in- terventions and revolts. During the 19th century, North American involvement in Latin America was almost entirely con- fined to the diplomatic sphere al- though events in the United States (our civil war for instance) were not without their economic and political effect on the character of events in that area. With the beginning of the 20th century, however, North Ameri- can investors began to look to the Dominican Republic - and much of the rest of Latin Amer- icd-as a fruitful area of interest. INITIALLY, U.S. involvemen4 in Latin America was economic-it centered about the interests of our investors. As time went on, however, our approach became more direct. It was during this "second period" that the character of U.S. self the task of directing "politi- cal growth" of the Dominican Re- public. In 1916 United States marines landed in Santo Domingo, grad- ually taking over the rest of the country. Their ostensible aim was to protect the country against foreign intervention and to se. cure "democracy" for its people. By 1924, however, U.S. interest in the area and our perceived ability to implement these "aims" had paled considerably. Both in the Dominican Republic and at home the realization grew that the Dominicans neither desired nor had much profited from U.S.'s "parental" concern. IN 1930, an American-organized "police force" proved the crucial element in the political ascent of Rafael L. Trujillo Molina, the man who was to govern the country as dictator until 1961. The Trujillo era was as flam- boyant and superficial as the lead- 4r for whom it was named. In the way of many Latin American dictators, Trujillo had a flare for public works. whatnot. But real reform in the country's economy was far afield. Though its balance of payments improved somewhat during this period of time, much of the country's wealth passed over into the hands of the FEIFFERI WRY 'MUST' ITf60 ON~, $60?ALL THf5 ' I6HthJ; AU 11115 ISVOLENC6? BE, FACTORIES. AW' TI4EPFI 4. 6 A TOWN H RE AW M' 8EL CtOP- OLY( AL ' I-AgC'lI ,or vn cl t/ G AWM' fl4 6 eL~ CA CHURCH, AW' THERE'LL BE A COO AW TKR U 6C LAW )- 'REAL' FANTASY: 'Satan Bug' Fails to Examine True Evil At the State Theatre AN ATOMIC WEAPON may be the clumsiest and least efficient means of killing yet devised. Biological and chemical warfare research have provided man with greatly improved means to death. The ultimate chemical weapon-and, as the ads announce, "the ultimate evil"-is unveiled with supposed drama as the "satan bug" in the movie of the same name. It is a self-perpetuating poison capable of exterminating mankind if warmed and left to be blown in the wind. The idea of a "satan bug" as a chemical is fantasy, but the idea of a laboratory grown virus being used to exterminate continents has been haunting the aware for years. THIS FILM, which is concerned with a contemporary evil, could have ranked with such films as "On the Beach." Unfortunately, it is so poorly done that it has the aura of merely another science fiction feature. The nlot in which flasks nf the "ratan hb-" are stolen anuseA .4 4 I I