ITM Ull rtrgattBably Seventy-Third Year EDTED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS SWhere OPInI ns Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDC., ANN ARBOR, MIcI-., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth WnillPrevail' Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in a reprints. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: MARILYN KORAL An Alternative in Viet Nam: uniting North and South OVER THE PAST MONTHS, as United If the United States allows Khanh to States operations in Viet Nam have pursue such policies, with their already met with continual failure, our allies enumerated effects, all it can do is sit on have become increasingly dissatisfied its haunches and hope for still another with our policy there. shift in power so the harmful prohibitive The South is not winning the war, and restrictions will be again lifted. If the is not even being governed democratical- United States does nothing, or if nothing ly. It has become increasingly apparent happens, the undercurrent will again gain that if the United States continues to strength, and the present cycle of failure follow present policy, it will continue to will continue. pour its men and money down a giant rat-hole AN ALTERNATIVE to this frustrating The solution to the Viet Nam question cycle is the neutralization of both is neutralization. There are two main rea- North and South Viet Nam, as proposed sons for this: first, our present policy is by Gen. Charles de Gaulle doomed to a cycle of failure; second, We must face reality. All of North Viet there is a successful historical precedent Nam and half of South Viet Nam are to- for neutralization. day under Communist control. The small sector controlled by the West is not dem- FIRST LET US TAKE a look at the his- ocratically governed. tory of present United States policy. In addition, the United States is fight- There was one basic reason why the gov- ing an expensive, distracting, wasteful ernment of Ngo Dinh Diem was over- war with no end in sight. And the Khanh thrown four months ago-it had put government will probably become more senseless restrictions on freedom of opin- unpopular as time goes on. Eventually, ion as well as on the recreational and in my opinion, it will face general rebel- social privileges of the citizenry. The net hil-. result of these restrictions was the crea- If we unite Viet Nam under a neutral- tion of an undercurrent of bitterness in ist government, this government ideally the population, should be democratic. But this probably is not possible. If we cannot establish To this undercurrent gravitated any democracy in the small part of Viet Nam and all opposition to the Diem govern- democ nthe ,mhll arthopetoNam ment. Buddhists, impatient because of we now control, how can we hope to do it token government infringements on top for the whole country? of eneral restrictions rallied to the un What we must aim for is that the gov- of geerre s lme'tits, ralietothepu ernment, democratic or not, have the con- dercurrent. Communists, seeing the pos- fidence and support of the people. If this sibilities involved, backed the Buddhists o.eceaisurlzed .a. e.le.se il in addition to stirring up their usual in- objective is reazed, a large step will ternl crses.have been taken to restore unity to the temnal crises. uny. More and more people-those who country. thought the government was not strictTHERE IS HISTORICAL precedent for enough, those who personally disliked the -t eseHIStriCa precedentafr Vietnamese neutralization. As Walter Diems, those who were just looking for Lippmann has pointed out, both Finland something to do-began to rally to this and Yugoslavia at the end of World War common undercurrent. The situation was II were in serious danger of outside Com- in the process of snowballing geometrical- munist domination. The West then back- ly when a military coup-led by Gen. ed independent, nonaligned governments Duong Van Minh-saved the situation. in both countries. There are few observ- The coup was not the result of the ers who doubt that both Finland and thundering undercurrent of opposition, Yugoslavia are today substantially inde- but an effort to eliminate it. It prevented pendent in determining their own domes- what probably would have shortly occur- tic and foreign policy. red-a general rebellion. This rebellion, There is another parallel between Fin- though it would have drawn its main land, Yugoslavia and Viet Nam. All three strength from the undercurrent, would countries have seaports that put them in have shoved power directly into the hands vital contact with the mainstream of of the Communists because they were the world trade. They need not depend on most organized and purposeful of the the Communists for their subsistence. andercurrent forces. Then, a month ago, a shake-up occur- NEUTRALIZATION, c o n s i d e r i n g the red in the junta governing the country. prospects of our present policy and the A new strong man, Maj. Gen. Nguyen successful history of similar moves, and, Khanh, emerged. He vowed to outlaw and it must be added, a most courageous move persecute not only the Communists but in that direction by Gen. de Gaulle, seems also the "traitors who advocate neutral- a good alternative to our current frus- ism." From all that is known at this trating methods. More likely than ever, point, it seems that Khanh's policies are it is an answer to the dilemma we face in geing to bear a horrible resemblance to Viet Nam. the Diems'. ROBERT HIPPLER TODAY AND TOMORROW: {APolitical Soluton? by Walter Lippmann DROP POWER PRETENSIONS: Rebuilding the Foundations of SGC By PHILIP SUTIN National Concerns Editor STUDENT Government Council's drift has come to an end. The lack of ideas and action that has typified SGC in recent months, rotting Council's last facade of re- spectability, has shaken the or- ganization's foundations. For the last two years, Council has been a single-issue body - membership selection; now that this issue has been settled for the moment, it is finding difficulties generating new ones. Further, the liberal renaissance is over and the intelligent, intense students that once stirred SGC are devoting themselves to other pursuits. Council is faced with other problems. The trimester and aca- demic pressures are driving stu- dents, at least temporarily, away from all student activities and re- cent elections have resulted in the seating of unqualified candidates on Council. Lastly, the Office of Student Affairs has hedged SGC action every time it attempts any- thing controversial. THE EVENTS of the past two weeks have broughtathese dilem- mas to the point at which the need for reform is apparent. Re- lations between SGC and The Daily have reached a low point, so that The Daily editor has all but renounced his Council seat. Also, Council has rescinded the peti- tioning rule, requiring all candi- dates to obtain 250 signatures on a petition. This has sparked, the formation of an "anarchist" party, plotting to abolish SGC. Both of these developments are well deserved. In its petition ac- tion, Council took a disdainful view of the electorate in which The Daily editor did not wish to participate. Consequently, SGC has lost its most powerful poten- tial friend and whatever favorable bias The Daily editor has had to- ward SGC as an institution has been lost. Moreover, Daily editor- ial writers have defended SGC as an institution long after the aver- age student has written it off as a waste of time. The "anarchist" party is an- other symptom of SGC's low sta- tus. Its leadership is composed of some of the most intelligent and capable students on campus who, furthermore, have a record of in- volvement in student activities. If anything, Council sorely needs these students as supporters, not as opposition. Clearly, time has run out on one of the most stable student governments in the country. SGC has operated under essentially the same plan since 1954-nearly 10 years, a remarkable record for a student political organization. It evolved out of 30 years of insta- bility and is the most comprehen- sive student government ever on campus. * * * BUT SGC has not lived up to its promise. While it has Regental recognition-a prestige no other council ever had-it does not have power. Under its Plan, SGC, "in accordance with Regental policy," has three clear powers: -Calendaring; -Control over student organi- zation, including recognition, rules of eligibility beyond University regulations, review of constitu- tions and co-ordination of various groups; -Student opinion, Council be- ing recognized as the "official liaison" between students and University policy makers. For various reasons, SGC has never effectively sed these three powers. Calendaring is basically a mechanical function which isbe- ing transferred to the Central Cal- endaring Committee-essentially a secretary in the OSA. But Council has always been at its worst when trying to adjudi- cate calendaring disputes. It would spend hours of silly and pointless debate on an event, usu- ally to the detriment of the cam- pus cultural groups and in favor of the powerful affiliate system. SGC has less control over stu- dent organizations than the clear language of its Plan indicates. The administration has continually stymied SGC attempts to exercise its power in enforcing anti-dis- crimmnatory membership selection policies. SGC's unwillingness to take strong, decisive action itself has compounded the situation. Now membership regulation is largely out of student hands and in a legalistic mire. TIMIDITY and disinterest have also weakened SGC's control over its third power. SGC gave up its chance to influence the vital Reed Report on reforming the OSA when it defeated, two years ago, the Glick-Roberts motion which boldly outlined reforms in stu- dent rules and regulations. Later it passed many of that motion's points in its comments after the Reed Report had been issued. Now, it seeks to obtain the rule- making powers implicit in the stronger and better thought-out Glick-Roberts motion. Council has taken no definitive stand on the vitally important tri- mester calendar and is only now moving into student lobbying in Lansing. Because of its lack of power over students' non-academic lives, Student Government Council is a misnomer. Its current sterility merely emphasizes the gap be- tween myth and reality. This gap is now too large to be ignored. Council must be reformed to fit current realities. As long as the Regents retain ultimaie responsibility over non- academic affairs, student govern- ment cannot effectively rule over it. Because of the natural parti- sanship in elected bodies such as the Regents and SGC, it is impos- sible to delegate power meaning- fully from one elected body to an- other, especially with different constituencies. Delegation would mean abrogation of power; it is difficult to fix responsibility and to get decisive action. Cities with recreation and similar commis- sions have long known this maxim. Since calendaring and control over students' non-academic lives are out of its grasp, SGC is left with the student opinion function. The seating of students on eight Senate Advisory Committees for University Affairs has provided an opportunity for effective student action here. Students have moved closer to University decision-mak- ing in many areas and can use these committees as devices to make student opinion felt. Even if students are not direct- ly seated on the committees, they can present papers and make their position known to the committees. The continued, close contact, es- pecially when undertaken by sen- sitive, intelligent students, can build considerable influence. These parallel committees can form the basis of a new student government. This new council could be composed of the 16 mem- bers on the eight current parallel committees and a chairman who hopefully would sit on SACUA. One of the two students on each SACUA committee would be elect- ed in the spring, the other in the fall. Candidates would run for specific committee seats, thus fo- cusing issues and raising the level of the campaign above generali- ties. The chairman would be elected in the spring for a year term. His position both as chairman and as a SACUA committee member could make him the most import- ant and influential student leader on campus. THIS council would meet once a week to consider the progress of its members' work on the SACUA groups, plan lobbying programs in other areas and to develop policy statements. The new student council would retain appointive control over SGC's present related boards, but would largely abandon Council's elaborate committee system. Ad hoc committees could be formed whenever research or staff work is needed. A separate interviewing and nominating committee or a special council committee would screen for related board and regulatory committee appointments. This would be the only council respon- sibility to these organizations. Also, the council would maintain its power to appoint students to University-run committees. The University would accrue a minor benefit from this new struc- ture as the 50 cent tuition subsidy to SGC could be halved and the $5,000 savings used to finance some visiting lecturers or scholar- ships each year. * * * BECAUSE of its less elaborate and more realistic organization, the new council could draw inter- ested and concerned students. A campaign would be focused on the important University issues con-, cerning students which these SACUA committees consider. Its lobbying role could be extended to areas beyond the committees themselves. This sort of council would not be "Mickey Mouse." Its members would face the important issues of concern to students-student af- fairs, trimester, educational qual- ity and research. *t* * e AT THE last Regents meeting, Vice-President for Student Af- fairs James A. Lewis indicated the possibility of a study comnmission to review SGC's nine-year exist- ence. The events since that meet- ing clearly indicate the need for one. If the commission is to do a thorough and objective study it should reflect opinions of the en- tire campus community, not just Council and the OSA. SGC should take steps now to establish such a group, consisting of three under- graduate and two graduate stu- dents, elected in the comhing all- campus election, the chairman of the SACUA student relations com- mittee and a representative from the USA. The committee could re- port next September. This group would be representa- tive of the University community, keeping special status quo inter- ests to a minimum. The campaign for these positions, moreover, would stimulate campus thinking on the nature and performance of student government and help to revitalize this now-moribund in- stitution. SGC is clearly in a state of de- cline. A thorough-going study committee is only the first step to reform, for a radical change is needed. ( LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Negro History Week Sidesteps Issue, -f A WHAT KIND OF WORLD?: 'Practical Men' Fail On Education To the Editor: T HE University once again is bringing out its decaying skele- tons of civil rights to wave in the faces of the slave-mentality Ne- groes and their good white friends. Negro puppets are being strung to dance to the dehumanizing tunes that Ol' Massa lets them hear for one week out of every year-Ne- gro History Week. The first tune on the agenda was "How Far the Promised Land." We are not taken in by this legal beat; we are not look- ing for the promised land that gave its justice to Emmett Till and Medgar Evers or to four little girls who went to church to pray and never came back. Another of- fering is the movie "The High Wall." While the Ann Arbor Ne- gro is kept behind the high walls of this ghettoed town, the Univer- sity and itq representatives watch on film what they don't dare to see existing all around them on the campus. What is the meaning of this? * * * IF NEGRO history were pre- sented accurately In the class- rooms of the University, if the southern-style University Senate would institute an interdepart- mental program designed to pro- mote an understanding of the na- tion's major problem, there would be no need to haul out the house Negroes and the Aunt Beulahs to celebrate the non-existent lib- erality of the "good white power structure." In reality, talking to the Unk- versity about civil rights is like talking integration to a lynch mob. Like the March on Washing- ton, Negro History Week is con- trolled 'by people who know little about what it really means to be black in America. This is an obvious attempt to make the Negro think that "free- dom" c3n be obtained by begging By ROBERT HUTCHINS WHEN THE Americans landed in Italy, Mussolini exclaimed, "History has seized us by the throat." Actually, of course, he had seized the Italians by the throat, for his own folly had led to the events of which he was complain- ing. A dictator has no excuse for blaming large, impersonal forces for the disasters that overtake him. But how about the people of a big, democratic nation, with many complicated problems, foreign and domestic? Can they blame his- tory? Can they avoid responsibil- ity for their own fate? I believe not. If they have failed to think or to try to understand what is going to happen, they deserve whatever befalls them. IN THE United States we have been rich and powerful because of our great natural resources and our isolation. We have tended to suppose that our riches and power would continue, simply because we have always had them. We have imagined that we didn't need to think. "Practical" men would solve any practical problems that arose. It has been observed many times that "practical" men are those who practice the errorsrof their forefathers. People who live their lives with- out theory may be good mechanics or technicians. They are poor guides. The reason is simple: they don't understand what they are doing. * * * THE "practical" men have brought us to a bad pass in edu- cation. A rich, powerful, ignorant nation is a danger to itself and a menace to the world. Yet we have been content to re- gard education as thehresponsibil- ity of 50 states, which have dele- gated their duties to 40,000 local school boards. The result is that we are the only country in the West without an educational sys- tem. We have a lot of schools, but no national policy, or national plan, or national thought in re- gard to them. When President Johnson con- gratulated Congress on its noble support of education, it should have blushed with embarrassment. The only basis of congratulation was that the 88th Congress had done more for education than most of its 'predecessors: they had were not in school. In 1960 more than eight per cent of the popu- lation 25 years of age or older had not gone beyond the fifth grade. Forty per cent had not gone be- yond the eighth grade. Only half had finished high school. This is the heart of the educa- tional problem. Primary and sec- ondary education is where the numbers are. It is where the prep- aration for higher education goes on. We have not solved the problem of supplying the quantity of edu- cation we require. We have not even faced the problem of quality. We cannot blame history for what happens to us so long as we ignore the most obvious, elemen- tary requirement of self-preser- vation; the development of the thinking power of the nation. Copyright, 1964, Los Angeles Times and compromising with 01' Massa. "You shut your eyes, your ears, your mouth; you kill your spirit. You have drunk the potion of love thy oppressor and have forsaken All people." -Charles Thomas, Jr. Dick Sleet SGC... To the Editor: THE WAY things are shaping up now it looks as though the main issue in this coming spring Student Government Council elec- tion is going to be SGC itself. Nothing could be more welcoming to crass demagoguery. Although SGC's role on campus, its respon- sibility and structure, all definite- ly need renovating, none of this will be accomplished by rehashing the need for it. Such changes will only folow from constiuctive proposals in the areas SGC ought to be concerned with as the advocate of the sta- dent's interests, areas in which the administradikn and the faculty have already been probing and planning Revamping the SGC Plan or electing responsible members means nothing as long as candi- dates for SGC have to "think up" issues. -Sarah Mahler, '67 CINEMA GUILD:- Outdated 'Secrets' KNVES, wives and fertility god- desses go wild in Pabst's "Se- crets of a Soul," at the Cinema Guild tonight and tomorrow. The 45 minute silent film is an unsophisticated portrayal of a man with a knife phobia. The movie might have been a startling revelation of man's unconscious when Freud was just coming into his own. But now that Sigmund is a permanent campus fixture, it proves to be only an incomplete and uncomprehensive picture of a sick man afraid of knives. The movie was handicapped by undeveloped film techniques. Many silent movies seem to last forever, unhampered by lack of sound. "Secrets of a Soul" isn't one of these. It deals with a dif- ficult and complex subject which cannot be successfully and com- pletely communicated without sound. EVENTS in the movie happen much too quickly and the element of time is not well handled. The film shoots by at such an acceler- ated rate that the audience never has a chance to digest and savor what has happened. "I am afraid I cannot touch a knife," says our complex hero. And in mental distress Martin runs out of the house and his "mind turns to his mother" Well, there you have it. It's an Oedipal Complex and Martin wants to go back to the womb. But it's not his mother after all, as we are directly and straight-forwardly told five min- utes later. It's his cousin Ehric. AS WE are familiar with the Freudian point of view and used to modern film techniques, it is difficult to analyze this movie fairly today. When I place myself back in the first audience that must have seen "Secrets of a Soul," however, I can see myself LAST WEEK, in an article about South- east Asia, I referred to Finland, and in two sloppily-written sentences I seem- ed to be describing Finland as a country which was a Communist satellite. I did not mean to say that. For I know perfectly well that Finland is a liberal democratic society, neutral in its foreign relations and autonomous in its internal affairs. THE POINT of bringing Finland into a discussion of Southeast Asia was to point out that a country on the border of a big Communist state need not inevitably lose its national independence. I was talk- ing about what might possibly happen in North Viet Nam which is, as Finland is to Russia, the next-door neighbor of Red China. The independence of Finland is not ab- solute: Finland, for example, may not join NATO. Finland, nonetheless, is dem- ocratically governed and maintains the civil liberties of a free society. I think it important not to close our minds to the idea that North Viet Nam might be in- duced to adopt a position of neutrality which was accepted by Peking as Finland's similar contact exists in Southeast Asia because Hanoi, the capital of North Viet Nam, is a seaport. This possibility is rein- forced by the historic Vietnamese fears of China. There are, I submit, compelling rea- sons why we must open our minds to the possibilities of a political solution in Southeast Asia. The civil war in South Viet Nam is going badly for our side- more badly than the American public has been allowed to know, more badly than Secretary Rusk's recent remarks would lead one to think. I was, I must admit, startled the other day at being told in official quarters that if we fail in the at- tempt to win the war, as we might, we would be defeated and would have to withdraw our troops. The current policy of the United States -in which the alternatives are military victory or military defeat-is catastroph- ic. I consider this a policy which com- bines a reckless gamble with defeatism. I do not think that we should consider withdrawing our troops until a tolerable solution has been worked out for South- east Asia. ufI ~ r * AC T ,' F 1 ~*9 1 ~ t ~t aw J ]tx d I