Seventy-Fifth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IPA CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS : .. ere Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN AtBo, 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. ATURDAY, JULY 3,1965 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN MEREDITH Actors Audience Deserve New Theatre THROUGH TE E DILIGENCE and high artistic ability of the organizers of the Professional Theatre Program, a land- mark in the American theatre has been set at the University. A unique relationship between the As- sociation of Producing Artists (APA), per- haps this country's best repertory theatre group, and the University has brought the --Punishment Flts Crime? AMERICA'S NEWEST choice in Viet Nam-General Ky--is reported by this nation's press to have begun to bolster his image. First, he stopped wearing gay- ly-colored scarves. Now we learn, he is not satisfied with a "dignified" look; but wants to give an "honest" image. He has threatened to personally shoot any mem- ber of hais governmnt found engaging in corrupt practices. What ill does this latest decree bode toward us? Suppose for one minute, that that old image-maker, Lyndon B. Johnson, tried to go him one better: shoot anyone who was accused of corruption? ASHINGTON WOULD BE the scene of wholesale slaughter as official after official trooped into the newly- created "Red Room" of the White House, bravely refused a copy of the New York. Times as blindfold, and shouted "Viva Billie Sol Estes, Bobby Baker, Sargent Shriver. . ." before silenced by the thun- der of LBJ's old coon gun., -GEORGE ABBOT WHITE JUDITH WARREN .... ..... ........... Co-Editor ROBERT HIPPLER ........................ Co-Editor EDWARD HERSTEIN ....... ........ Sports Editor JUDITH FIELDS ................... Business Manager JEFFREY LEEDS .............. Supplement Manager NIGHT EDITORS: Michael Badamo, John Meredith, Robert Moore, Barbara Seyfried, Bruce Wasserstein. The Daily IS a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate Press Service. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use of ali news dispatches dfedited to it or atbermise credited to the newspaper. All rights of re-publication of all other matters here are also reserved. Subscription rates: $4 for lIlA and B ($4.50 by mail); $2 for IIIA or B ($2,50 by mail). Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich. Pu6lished daily Tuesday thraugh Saturday morning.. APA to this campus every year since 1962, and with it some of the most dazzling theatre to be seen anywhere: In the agreement with the APA, the University agreed to subsidize the cost of production and to supply a theatre, while the repertory group through fel- lowship grants gives studentactorsa chance to appear in professional produc- tions. THE SEASONS since 1962 have provided such variety of classic and modern drama that even the most sophisticated theatre-goer could wish for. The com- pany's Shakespearean productions have included the delicately beautiful "Mid- summer Night's Dream" and the contro- versial "Much Ado About Nothing," which provoked one of the best artistic argu- ments on this campus in many years. The APA, a young enthusiastic group of actors, has also presented American and world premieres of plays such as "We, Comrades Three," "Judith," and "War and Peace." The play that many agree is their best achievement was last season's production of "Man and Super- man," done with all the precision and sophistication necessary for a brilliant production of Shaw. However, one drawback has unfortu- nately overshadowed the APA's residence at the University. That is the striking need, not only for the APA, but for all campus productions, ?for a suitable thea- tre. The two facilities for drama, True- blood Auditorium and Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, lack the size and equipment necessary to do justice to the quality of the work presented. IT IS NOT UNREASONABLE to ask that the University appropriate, or try to raise, the $3 or $4 million needed to build such a theatre. The capacity envisioned would seat approximately 1000 people, and would include provisions for a stage with or without the procenium arch. Constructed this way; with the proper equipment, the new theatre could be used for many musicals as well as dramatic events, and could be the location of the touring productions that come to Ann Arbor each year. rFO ALLEVIATE the inadequacy of the present theatres, and to honor the excellence of the dramatic groups and their sponsors on this campus, the finest gesture that the University could make would be to have a new theatre for the 1966-67.season. . --CHARLOTTE A. WOLTER AFRO-ASIAN: New- By LEONARD PRATT LAST SUNDAY President Su- karno of Indonesia, President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt and Premier Cou En-lai of Communist China met in Cairo for talks "of the highest importance;" the three met again on Tuesday, this time with their foreign ministers in attendance. That these three met for talks may indicate the creation of an important new axis of power in the Afro-Asian world, regardless of the immediate re- sults of the meetings themselves. All three have important cur- rent problems involved somehow with loss of international pres- tige and influence. Nasser's prob- lems are concerned with the al- most complete disintegration of inter-Arab relations. The Arab bloc's fragmentation began in 1961 with Syria's seces- sion from the United Arab Re- public. More recently, Israeli re- lations have been the cause of a further breakdown. AS OF TWO months ago, Mo- rocco, Libyaand Tunisia split themselves from the bloc, defend- ing Tunisian President Habib Bourguiba's suggestion of nego- tiation with Israel; Na ser has piqued Syria by his refusal to supply jets to attack Israel and has also hurt Lebanon and Syria by refusing to back their diversion projects aimed at Israel's Negev desert pipeline. All this to say nothing of Nasser's feud with Saudi Arabia in Yemen and South Arabia. Now, after his loss of what may have been his closest ally, Algeria's Ahmed Ben Bella, Nasser finds himself with only Iraq and the Yemen republicans backing him. N'asser himself best summed up his current situation in a speech, to a Palestinian congress at the end of May when he said, "The atmosphere today seems gloomy. Everyone of us feels these days that the strength of Arab action has relented." Axis Formed This is precisely what has hap- pened. Nasser's foreign policy has "slowed down;" the catch-words, the dramtic proclamations of unity and purpose aren't working any more. Something must be found to take their place lest Nasser's in- ternational reputation come to be based on his domestic perform- ance, certainly a condition he would avoid if possible. SUKARNO TOO has his big problems. His first is embodied in the widely-accepted rumor that, had the Algiers conference not been postponed, Malaysia would have been invited to attend. Such a situation would have been an international calamity for Sukarno who has threatened to crush Malaysia and who has gone to a great deal of trouble trying to line up enough votes to keep Malaysia out of Algiers. His second problem is one of maintaining power. For Sukarno is not a dictator, he does not have a despotic machine of his own to use as he wishes. He rules Indo- nesia by virtue of his popular ap- peal and his ability to play off his supporters against one another. He must retain the favor of these supporters, such as the army and the Communist party, or eventu- ally lose his influence. Thus far it has been possible for him to maintain his support by a gradual break with the West and by nationalization of Western industry in Indonesia. But Su- karno can't break relations off any farther than they are now and there is very little foreign in- dustry in Indonesia left to na- tionalize. In effect, he has run out of things to do. SO SUKARNO'S problem boils down to finding another area of wide popular interest, then using that area to maintain his power and advance what altruistic mo- tives he may have. To fail hi this search is, for him, to fall from power. from Failures AHMED BEN BELLA PRESIDENT NASSER PRESIDENT SUKARNO China, of course, suffered the greatest defeats at Algiers. The defeats came in two series, the first fought over the postpone- ment of the conference, which the Chinese opposed. Chinese opposi- tion ran head-on into unexpected- ly strong resistence from a power- ful moderate group including Ceylon, the Philippines, India, Japan and Thailand. Chinese delegates were expecting opposition from these nations, but when the opposition was coupled with completely unexpected Afri- can resistence, evidently stemming from many African governments' resentment of recent Chinese name-calling, it became impossible to overcome. THE SECOND Chinese defeat came in their failure to accom- plish blaming the postponement of the conference on "imperialist intrigues." This wording was re- moved from the postponement announcement by efforts of the moderate group. These failures would be striking and important enough by them- selves. But' in addition, as in Ma- laysia's case, it was becoming in- creasingly obvious that the Chi- nese were failing in their drive to keep the Russians out of the con- ference. The Chinese have thus suffered a triple defeat at the hands of the people that they came to organ- ize and impress; a greater setback to Chinese nationalism is difficult to imagine. If this setback is to be offset, rapid Chinese action 'is to be expected. ALL THREE nations have thus suffered recent glaring defeats internationally. Their problems are to a degree held in common, a similarity that helps to explain the somewhat strange bedfel- lows that met in Cairo on Sunday. What degree the results of the conferences will reach is difficult to say, but the kind of results is quite plain. The West may now very likely expect a strengthening of the ties between China, Indo- nesia and the remains of the United Arab Republic.sAs men- tioned before, the degree of strengthening -- w h e r e in the range from friendship to treaty it will fall-is difficult to fore- tell. But common problems have been recognized and a community of interest has been established. Fulfillment of this interest, to one degree or another, is thl par- tial answer to many of the prob- lems. It would provide Nasser with Chinese backing, thus ensuring his foreign policy of the militancy and vitality it has recently lacked. Sukarno, with greater Chinese backing, would be all but guar- anteed that he holds his position for life; it would ensure him the support of his nation's Communist party and weaken the threat his army poses. BUT THE Chinese would be the big winners from such a develop- ment. For China, establishment of "spheres of influence" in Egypt and Indonesia would be a break- out from the containment in which she has been held for so long. It would be the direct control of a base from which both Africa and the Near East could be reach- ed. And it would be the neutrali- zation of a great obstacle to China's eventual proposed control of Southeast Asia-Indonesia. How the West might react to the development of a "detente" between these three powers, an alliance linking two of the world's greatest trouble spots, Southeast Asia and the Near East, depends entirely on the degree to which this alliance is made formal and is given effective military and po- litical powers. Even on the sur- face, grave threats to thehWest's position in Israel and Viet Nam- Laos-Thailand are obvious. The potential linking of these areas in a grand axis of ast West strain,,from Egypt, thrd gh the Indian sib-continent to Indo- nesia, is difficult to envision po- litically in the near future, but as a pattern for development it is turning out to be a more valid one. SUCH A linkage is not 'some- thing for the West to worry about; but neither is it something that should be forgotten. power. INCREASE: Roots of Tuition in State By BRUCE WASSERSTEIN First of a series THE TUITION HIKE of $100 for out-of-state students and $50 for Michigan residents which will be announced next week by the Regents is a reflection of the fatal flaws of our public educa- tional system. Assuming that the means for collecting revenue in the state are progressive, the best way to in- sure "equal opportunity" in the educational system is to support education as' much as possible through state funds rather than gathering money through tuition. The basic problem in Michigan is that the state's method of ac- cumulating money is not through such progressive measures as in- come taxes, but rather through regressive means-sales and ex- cise taxes. Thus, not only does the flat rate tuition payment in university systems violate the un- derlying principles of public edu- cation, but the state appropria- tions allocated to colleges are also regressive and self defeating in origin. Although public institutions in other states charge tuition, the money appropriated by the state governments is, at least generally progressive in origin. Thus, rather than being an in- tegral part of the concept of "equal opportunity for all," Mich- igan universities preserve the status quo and limit the social mobility of the economically un- derprivileged. Of course, the transformation of public education from a door to equal opportunities for people of equal capabilities to a vehicle of perpetuating the plutocratic hierarchy does not start at the university level. Yet the trend established as early as pre- elementary school continues until students reach college age. However, the discrimination in- volved at the college level is more subtle than at the elementary school level where certain cities carefully separate the Negro dis- tricts from the white. Higher, public education's filter is the ability to pay; race, creed and color allegedly do not enter the picture. Financial discrimination in the state universities in Michigan is actually a result of the utter fail- ure of both major political parties in the state Legislature, to ac- complish much of anything-ex- cept occupying seats. Historically both parties rep- resent interest groups-the Demo- crats are controlled by the unions and the Republicans by the auto- mobile manufacturers. Both con- tinually complain about each other's incompetence but neither has demonstrated any ability to lead. For' example, the periodic fi- nancial crisis experienced in the state which result in lower aid to the public universities and higher tuition, are caused by Michigan's weak and regressive fiscal struc- ture. Both Democrats and Re- publicans admit this but are un- willing to do anything about it. Rather they delight in embarras- sing each other by refusing to pass each other's measures. This game of "hanky panky" has been going on since the 1930's and education, the state as a fiscal entity, and the people have suf- fered. During his term of office, Gov- erner George Romney has claimed that he wants to overhaul the fiscal structure of the state, and the Democrats as usual are screaming "reform, reform." But when Romney asked- the Demo- crats to make a concrete propos- al this session, they merely ask- ed him to make a concrete pro- posal. Nothing got accomplished. Michigan's Legislature is living in the world of Adam Smith, and the cause of education is suffering. and vitality it has recently lacked. should be forgotten. WORLD POLICEMAN: U.S. Acts Caused UN Failure rl A iE a 113 a1 .> ,'-a By M. S. ARNONI The Minority of One THE DECLINE of- the United Nations did not begin at the 19th General Assembly, at which it has reached a new low, putting the Assembly itself somewhere between life and death. Its decisive stage began as many as 15 years ago, when the United States maneuvered the interna- tional organization into serving as an instrument of its partisan pursuits in Korea. Ever since, the sole value the U.S. has in fact attached to the UN lay in its ability to have it do its own bid- ding. It has been obvious, for ex- ample, that the effectiveness of the UN required the inclusion in it of that government which ac- tually governed China;bbut the U.S. has throughout been an- tagonistic toward this condition of .the UN's survival. THE U.S. GOVERNMENT has similarly ignored the interests of world 'peace in the Congo, sabo- taging and perverting UN initia- tive in that country until their fruit was of a kind nowhere iden- tifiable in the promises of the UN Charter. The most hopeful prospect of the UN lay in the growth of its membership. The more universal it was becoming, the greater seemed the chance that it would be able to reconcile conflicts of interest. As the number of newly in- dependent member-states grew, ever more objective majority votes could emerge, cushioning relations between potential belligerents. BUT LEAST OF ALL was the U.S. willing to consider the UN even as a beginning of an inter- national parliament or executive; for the governing of the world, it thought itself amply qualified. U.S. and UN-Master and Servant? I I 'PUSSYCAT': In-Group1ovie* A Qualified Riot "WHAT'S NEW PUSSYCAT" is an in-group movie about a riot, that is a qualified riot. This new breed of movie, the in-group movie, centers itself about several stars (and their established character techniques). In this case Woody Allen, his war on modern psychiatry and his crusade for. "equal sex for shot men with glasses." Also Peter Sellers, Clouseau-eted in Goon gear, long hair and Lord Fauntleroy suits. Making the slightest movement a part of his total effect, Sellers again is a comic genius. There's Peter O'Toole, one of the most versatile and brilliant of screen actors, with his shy boy-next-door grin and haunting eyes in a Cary Grant-like role in which he out-Grants Grant. THERE IS wild, rock-oriented music. There is nostalgic allegiance to the grand slanstick chases of vestervear There i sedoubl entendre THE MANY small votes it for- feited were traded for one overall veto over the UN's ability to en- force coexistence in the world. A nation whose military forces were spread over almost all the con- tinents, oceans, seas and airspaces was bound to view force as a peril to its interests. To put the no-longer automa- tically controllable UN in its "pro- per" place, the U.S. delegation caused the General Assembly to usurp powers specifically dele- gated to the Security Council, and to actually use the so-usurped powers in the Congo; and then it insisted that the whole world, in- cluding Russia and France, pay the cost of the unconstitutional UN execution of partisan U.S. policies. The gimmick having worked, in that the UN has been effectively "neutralized," the U.S. could now proceed to inheriting world functions without too much dis- guise. APPOINTING ITSELF the tion of American States an obe- dient to itself military force equipped with "laws" and arms to intervene at will in any Latin- American country. UN Secretary-General U Thant clearly discerned the dangers in- herent in this development not only to the UN but also to the peace in various regions and the world over. There is a' great difference be- tween that world authority which 20 years ago nations believed to be setting up at San Francisco, and that world authority which the U.S. tries to impose. No pur- poses could be at greater var- iance, the hope of peace being replaced by the agonies of re- gions being turned into America's battlefields. America's global ambitions have thrown the whole world into dis- array, depriving mankind of the promise of the UN. Controlled by its northern member, it nonethe- less seemed to provide some po- tential curtailment of the US. J ' .''' tN '4 . Z