"How do you spell Czechoslovakia?" amNKEMEMURRAY KEMPTONnmwm mm Elie ics Dan aily Seventy-seven years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under authority of Board in Control of Student Publications 420 Maynard St., Arin Arbor; Mich. News Phone: 764-0552,' I , Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, JULY 31,1968 NIGHT EDITOR: HENRY GRIX m6, F Message fromi thePope: Surely not 'ife' V Richard Nixons POPE PAUL'S encyclical on "artificial" birth control was entitled "Of Human Life." The title is, perhaps, significant in more ways than he intended. The Pope contends in the, encyclical that it is immoral and, indeed, sinful to use artificial -methods of birth control. He even hints that the "natural" or rhythm method, approved by the Church in 1930, is not altogether free fron taint. This teaching (and it is a teaching - the Pope did not issue his letter "from the chair of Peter" which would have made it, according to the Church, infal- lible and would have bound all Catholics to it on penalty of mortal sin) was not at all unexpected - even in light of the recommendations of the Ecumenical Council that the Church's stand on birth control be liberalized. The Pope justifies his letter on moral rather than scriptural grounds. Use of artificial birth control, he argues, would cheapen the union of marriage - would encourage the spread of the idea that sex is for pleasure rather than procrea- tion and lead to adultery, a mortal sin. Thus, artificial birth control is a tempta- tion to the user. THIS PART of the Pope's letter is a hard one to defend. The distinction here between "artificial" means of birth con- trol and the approved rhythm method is tenuous at best. For the Pope encourages research into "natural" birth control to increase its admittedly uncerain effec- tiveness. It would seem to follow that if research were to uncover a truly safe means of "natural" birth control, the fears of the Pope would be applicable to it as well as to the "artificial" methods. The temptation comes from the method's being safe - whatever the method used. A man or woman who is tempted to in- fidelity by the pill would be tempted just as surely by effective rhythm. The whole argument seems to rest on the use of fear as a means of avoiding temptation to sin. The pronouncement, coning as it does in the wake of a liberal (Ecumenical Council that stressed the moral responsibility of the individual for his own salvation, seems an unnecessary counter-reform in its return to the use of fear tactics to justify a still uncerain teaching. THE POPE must also be aware of the grave implications his pronouncement has in terms of population pressure and world poverty. All over the world, children are starv- ing because their parents did not prac- tice birth control - whether out of pov- erty, ignorance, morality or fear - and cannot afford to feed them. The sugges- tion of one Spanish Cardinal that em- ployers raise the salaries of workers with large families sounds alarmingly like Marie Antoinette calling "Let them eat cake." It was Thomas Malthus who first painted the bleak picture of what will happen if population growth is not checked soon. Mass starvation and an in- ability of all the world's resources to even marginally support all its people is not a pretty picture. Perhaps the Pope should have considered more seriously the long- range effects of his pronouncement. He has solved the dilemma of temptation now or death tomorrow by banning to- day's temptation.. When the tomorrow of Malthus arrives, the Pope might reconsider the titling of his encyclical - perhaps "life" was the wrong word. -JOHN GRAY t 4 r c 196& Tbo V and Tribune gat. homework sUDDENLY and sadly, because his hectic gallantry is so engaging, we know that Gov. Rockefeller has failed to stop Mr. Nixon. We knew it last Wednesday when Sen. Thurston Morton, the Governor's Washington campaign manager, announced with gratifica- tion that half the Texas delegation would withhold its votes from Nixon and give them to Gov. Reagan. This desperate dependence on Reagan gives the game away. Mr. Nixon need only sit and wait. Reagan is clearly in business for himself. He is one of those accidents of politics who begins to mistake his accident for destiny. A long time ago, Rockefeller might have set Reagan's wandering fancy on the Vice Presidency. It is too late for a maneuver that deli- cate; Reagan has been permitted to daydream too long; he now thinks of himself as a Presidential candidate. He might get the votes of a hundred Southern delegates offended by Nixon's practical disposition. He cannot get any more than that; the figure is at once too low to set him in real motion as a candidate and enough to scare back to Nixon too many moderates now tempted by Rockefeller. IF ROCKEFELLER'S vote and Reagan's together are enough to stop Nixon on the first ballot, Rockefeller has bought time and very little else. Rockefeller is just not a compromise nominee. His one hope has been to persuade the delegates that he is a stronger national candidate than Nixon. But the polls suggest that Reagan would be a far weaker candidate than Nixon. Thus when Sen. Morton reports a large Texas defection to Reagan, he is offering a reason not why Rockefeller should take heart but why he should despair. A delegate who switches from Nixon to Reagan puts his principles; depresping as they are, above his desire to win an election. Reagan then, if he wished, could not deliver these delegates to Rockefeller. Their own inclinations' and Nixon's cunningly devised blocks make that trip inconceivable. Nixon has the support of Barry Goldwater, of Sen. Dirksen, who nominated Goldwater in 1964, and of Sen. John Tower, the steward of what remains of the Goldwater spirit in the Congress. All have larger authority with the faithful than Rea- gan; and the little house they have built on the road is the place any lonely Reagan delegate will stop and stay, long before he gets to Rockefeller. And then everytime the Rockefeller people suggest that Reagan is a formidable contender, they cannot escape alarming those practical spirits like Gov. Rhodes of Ohio who doubt that Nixon is as strong a potential candidate as Rockefeller. Rhodes knows that the only chance of a real disaster in Ohio would be for the Republicans to nominate Ronald Reagan; if he had the faintest suspicion that a convention exhausted by the deadlock which is Rockefeller's only chance might turn to Reagan, he would clutch desperately at Nixon instead. OF COURSE, Nixon knows ways to lose unimagined by ordinary reason; but, he shows no signs of that weakness now; he has never seemed so comfortable with himself. The danger of blunder would seem in fact to lie all on the side of his rivals, on panic by Reagan leaners at the thought of Rockefeller or panic by Rockefeller leaners at the thought of Reagan. He said the fratricidal divisions of his party have worked perfectly in his cause. Be a delegate a liberal in Rockefeller's camp or a conservative in Reagan's, once he heads for an exit there is no road for him that does not lead to Nixon. Nixon deserves this prize if nothing else within the gift of Ameri- cans. He knows his party, as Reagan does not bother or Rockefeller condescend to. The Republican Party is a branch of studies neglected by every scholar except Richard Nixon. Now we shall again have a chance to know whether he has mastered the mystery of America. SLetters0 to theEdtor BNB WS AA3 'gJ,.S/G -TME41. . iBb124 a Eugene's lusyshow I James M. Hare's' politics of power "HUMPHREY UNITY" claimed two vic- tims last week when Secretary of State James M. Hare fired two close as- sistants who refused to support the Vice President in his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination. Hare's justification of the decision on the grounds that his position is "both partisan and elective" does not make the action any less obnoxious. Hometown APPROXIMATELY two years ago, Ann Arbor was one of five cities in the nation being considered as the site for the world's largest atomic reactor. After considerable efforts to land this giant defense installation, sure to provide jobs and other economic benefits to the com- munity, Ann Arbor's p.r. men failed, and the contract was granted to Weston, Ill. Now, it seems, Weston has reaped an- other benefit in addition to the 6000 jobs that the government promised: To make way for the giant installation, the New York Times said, the city literally had to vote itself out of existence. When Weston was picked, it was sad that Ann Arbor wasn't named as the site. Now that this added feature has become clear, I feel even worse. It would have been the best thing to ever happen to this town. -DANIEL OKRENT Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St.. Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. The Daily is a member of the Associated Press, the College Press Service, and Liberation News Service. Summer subscription rate: $2.50ier term by car- rier ($3.00 by mail); $4.50 for entire summer, ($5.00 by mail).r Fall and winter subscription rate: $4.50 per term by carrier ($5 by mail); $8.00 for regular academic° school year ($9 by mall). Summer Editorial Staff DANIEL OKRENT....... .............Co-Editor URBAN LEHNER.................. ..Co-Editor As chief of the largest patronage con- cern in the state, Hare holds the threat of compulsory unemployment over the heads of very many appointees, ranging from fee branch managers to deputy sec- retaries. The position, needless to say, has tremendous political influence. THE OFFICE and its director offer a sad commentary on the Democratic party and the American political system in general. - Hare's action, described by Ann Arbor city councilman and national convention delegate Leroy Cappaert as "repulsive," leaves little doubt that the Humphrey people demand unity in Chicago at any cost - even the political purge of "mav- erick" McCarthyites. The dismissal of Hare's assistants raises serious question as to the sincerity of the claim by Humphrey supporters that they seek an open convention. The release of unit rule delegates seems farcical when other party members are forcibly coerced into supporting the candidate. Furthermore, at this late stage in the campaign, nearly all the convention dele- gates having been chosen, there is little the two minor political appointees could have done to affect its outcome. THEREFORE, it appears, Hare's action, was nothing more than vindictive punishment for failure to obey the politi- cal dictates of one's boss. The )entire situation closely parallels the continued obsequious conduct of can- didate Humphrey, who himself feels ob- ligated to support lame-duck Lyndon on the war, the Kerner Report, or any of the other important issues of the day. It is apparently the philosophy of Humphrey and his political hacks that absolute obedience is owed political bosses by their underlings. They neither prevented Hare from firing the two men, nor criticized him after the act. IRONICALLY, Hare has only hurt the Humphrey campaign by adding to the alienation of the McCarthy Democrats. And this might well destroy the party's n'tl t n c in.m i-1. nha11mn(T PianrA By WALTER SHAPIRO Associate Editorial Director BASEBALL and politics are kin- dred activities, the two na- tional pastimes with the longest playing seasons. That's why it was so fitting that what was intended to be a massive delegate-intimidating ral- ly for Senator Eugene McCarthy was held in Tiger Stadium last Saturday night. What the rally suffered from was the boredom of the intensely serious. Maybe that's what's wrong with politics as well. Today too many Americans really believe that the election of Eugene Mc- Carthy would make life particu- larly different. Instead politics and baseball should be cherished because they provide the best larger than life drama we've got. Baseball, with its elaborate bat- ting and slugging averages, poli- tics with its many polls and in- volved vote totals, are both de- signed to appeal to the statis- tically oriented, those quixotic few who demand some small de- gree of predictability from this chaotic world. While it is the bane of many sensitive baseball fans that only politics is bathed with that special aura of public service and good citizenship, the slow pace of the entertainment in Tiger Stadium brought to mind some other, less obvious, differences between these two crucial spectator sports. This season, the Tigers' long and dreary record of unfulfilled p- tential makes them sentimental favorites to capture their first pennant in 23 years. But senti- mental favorites or not, the Ti- gers know they have t win the flag themselves on th playing field. EUGENE McCARTHY, on the other hand, is basing his faint hopes of winning the Democratic nomination primarily on the emo- tional impact of his being the underdog, another sentimental fa- vorite. The McCarthy strategy is predi- cated on the politicians becoming so bored with the impending nom- ination of Vice President Humph- rey that it will affect their po- litical judgement. And as a result they will regard the nomination of the anti-war crusader, from Minnesota as the only way to in- ject suspense into the drab pro- ceedings in Chicago and restore the interest of the fans in the game. Since the Minnesota Senator's only chance of nomination lies in the implicit dreariness of a Humphrey campaign, it is ironic and somewhat paradoxical that the McCarthy campaign contin- ues to be so unbearably dull. Beginning with the relatively disappointing turnout, the entire Tiger Stadium rally was an utter fiasco. There was something total- ly pathetic about the "Warren Loves McCarthy" sign taped to the upper right field stands, when no one from Warren or anywhere else was sitting any closer than 200 yards away. AFTER TWO AND adhalf hous of droning speeches and inept en- tertainment, the greyishncandi- date whom everyone had been waiting for finally arrived. And the climax of the evening was reached seconds before he even began to speak. As McCarthy stepped to the microphone, the whole stadium fnoused on the anguish of the lo- ored balloons sailing every which way into the lights of Tiger Sta- dium, there were instead four bunches of 20 balloons each which drifted futilely out of the stadium, and presumably landed somewhere in the nearby ghetto. THE McCARTHY SPEECH was billed as a major policy address on the "urba-n crisis," but the multi-colored balloons in batches of 20 represented just about the most concrete thing McCarthy had to offer the ghetto. 'By now few expect great speeches from McCarthy, but these steadily declining expecta- tions still don't excuse his pen- chant for saying almost nothing worthy of remembering. THE BULK OF the short speech was devoted to constantly reiter- ating that the war in Vietnam is bad and how moral the candidate was to pursue his self-interest when he made his ostensibly dar- ing gamble last November. As near as one could tell from the limp prose, the McCarthy for-, mula for the ghettbs is ending the war, promising a few more houses than LBJ, hinting at a guaran- issues which generated his un- likely campaign in the first place. Judging from events like the Detroit rally, the McCarthy cam- paign represents the embarrass- ingly pathetic denouement of the ineffectual history of pure and un- sullified American liberalism. It is significant exactly who McCarthy attracted to Tiger Sta- dium for his major policy address on urban affairs-98 per cent of the audience were upper middle class whites who converged on the ball park from tree-shaded sub- urbs and well-manicured campus enclaves. It was a shirt-sleeve crowd - the young reflecting the casual- ness of the times, the old almost in homage to the ball park itself. And in a way, the presence of all of them in Tiger Stadium on the edge of the ghetto was almost de- meaning. Almost a denial of ev- erything they are fighting for. IN A WAY-perhaps a cruel way-the whole McCarthy candi- dacy can be regarded as a desper- ate effort by the affluent to make politics safe for the Upper Middle Class. The whole McCarthy campaign has been a high-minded attempt to purge from the political process the smell of sweat mixed with acid cigar smoke, to end the meaningless hand-grabbing and back-slapping of whistle stops. The goal has been to campaign without special appeals to the provincial, to ethnic and racial groups and to replace this kind of old-fashidned politics with something better, som e th in g cleaner, something higher. All this would be fine except that what emerged as the new politics has really been the poli- tics of sterility, the politics of an airplane restroom.- By not making appeals to pe- cific groups, McCarthy has con- veniently managed to all but ig- nore the problems of specific groups. Not only can't McCarthy talk to the black community, he can't even reach leftish whites who feel concerned about the black community. ONE IS REMINDED of that epic remark that McCarthy made while campaigning in Oregon. "All the educated seem to be for me and the uneducated for Ken- nedy." No one but the most myopic Democrat could honestly be of- fended by this kind of remark. For whether we admit it or not, underneath most of us are elit- ists, believers in the elite of the college educated. But the whole problem is that this year the elites, the best- educated, have shown the exec- rable political judgement. Even to someone congenitally anti-Kennedy, the late Senator is beginning to become sorely missed. His assassination taught some about the dangers of using poli- tics as an emotional release. For Kennedy did not deserve all the vituperation he received from many on the political left. For while there /was much that was contrived and much that was shallow in his campaign, at least his whole appeal was not predi- cated on an intellectual sterility of the most perverse sort. BUT WITH THE dead - espe- cially the tragically dead - there are no ways in which these errors of emotionally based judgement Mr. Entertainer teed annual income, and suggest- ing a wisp of black control over some Federal funds. Even the faithful will generally acknowledge McCarthy's weakness on domestic matters,but to them his courageous and principled stand on Vietnam excuses all. However, it is ironic that even this single issue, Vietnam, has all but faded from the public con- sciousness ever since Bland Gene began his much-vaunted crusade. For the anguish of the liberals over Vietnam has been trans- formed into their agonizing over the nomination of Hubert Humph- rey. There is a definite parallel here to the recent events which shat- tered France. There the universi- ties and the factories ground to a halt as first the students and then the workers demanded control over their own lives. And due to the inadequacy and the irrele- vance of the political left in France, the students looked to di- rect action and not the political process as the arena in which to make their demands felt. After some indecision, the wily Charles de 1Gaulle responded by calling a general election which pitted the impotent parties of the left against the previously unre- sponsive Gaullist government. In an election where the inter- ests of the students and the work- ers were almost totally unrepre- sented. de Gaulle won a mandate Fees The following letter is a copy of a communication sent to President Fleming; the Univer- sity Regents; Ernest Zimmer-. man, Chairman of the Fee Committee; and Don E. Beach, Director of Registration. To the Editor: THIS LETTER is written in protest of the gross inequity inherent in the University fee as- sessment schedule used for the Spring-Summer, Spring and Sum- mer Half-terms, effective August, 1967. I am a Michigan resident and an undergraduate student in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts. Due to the necessity of my taking courses in all three of. the summer terms, I am being as- sessed a full term minimum fee of $30.00 and two half-term mini- mum fees of $18.00 each, in ad- dition to $18.00 per credit hour. This means that I am paying $210.00 rather than $174.00 for eight credit hours. I have been told that is re- quired because the fee chart is oriented toward simplified book- keeping! The phrase "minimum fee" is not appropriate because this is not merely the minimum amount acceptable to the University. It is a base fee which all students. must pay in addition to the per credit hour assessment. The Di- rector of Registration has ex- plained the fee to me as a type of service charge for the educa- tional facilities of the University which are placed at the student's disposal for a term. FEW STUDENTS would argue against the relevance of this. "service charge." Hiowever, all should question the reasoning be- hind the assessment. of 'a $30.00' base fee for the Winter and Fall terms, and a $66.00 base fee for the Spring-Summer term. (This assumes the student elects courses in each' of the three summer terms. If the student should elect courses in the Spring-Summer term and the Spring or the Sum- mer Half-term, the fee becomes $48.00. If courses are elected only in the Spring-Summer term, the fee remains $30.00.) Rather than charge this fee on a -per credit hour basis, it is applied against the first credit hour elected (i.e., the first credit hour in a full term costs $48.00, while the first credit hour in a half-term cost $36.00-this is indicative of the graduate student elects eight hours in the Spring-Summer term, he pays $174.00 If he car- ries the same number of hours, but elects four hours in the Spring-Summer term and two hours in each of the half-terms, he pays $210.00. Choosing an- other combination, a student may take five hours in a half-term and pay $105.00, or five hours in the Spring-Summer term and pay $120.00. Speaking in terms rela- tibe to the fee schedule, the Uni- versity is favored in the first in- stance, while the student is favor- ed in the second. NUMEROUS 'SUCH combina- tions can be t found in the fee schedule, as many students have discovered. The problem is greatly increased for the inon-resident graduate student, whose losses. can reach several hundred dollars. (This is well illustrated by the various combinations in which a non-resident graduate can elect to take four hours credit in a given summer.) Though I am not directly concerned with the plight of the graduate non-Michigan student, it is the same mechanism within the fee schedule which causes' the ineqUity. The all-Uni- versity tuition rates may be equal- ized from the institutional stand- point by groups such as the res- ident nurses ;paying' only $55.00 per term regardless of credit hours elected; however, the injustice, to the (students who are over-paying is more than I care to bear with- out complaint. I hope that in bringing this problem to your attention, some corrective action , can soon be initiated. -Linda Carter, '69 Creatures To the Editor: PERMIT me to mention the fol- lowing errors of fact which ap- peared in The Daily' July 30 in an article by Nadine Cohodas re- garding the filn "Flaming Crea- tures." First, Hebert Cohen is not the faculty supervisor of the Cinema Guild. He is an employe of the Guild and holds the position of Assistant Manager. Second, at no time did the U.S. Supreme Court rule upon the ob- scenity of "Flaming Creatures." The Court did grant a motion to dismiss and did 'deny an appeal as moot in a case involving "Flam- ing Creatures" (Jacobs, et al v. N.Y.-388 US 431). The effect of this was no more than to let a 'I 4 .1 I U