Seventy-Second Year EDITED AND MANAGED -BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 'UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS here Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR? MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. "Let's Have More BIGGER-THAN-EVER Golden Eggs!" EUROPEAN DATELINE: French Pessimisutc On New Negotiations Y. DECEMBER 8, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDITH OPPENHEIM City Taxes for Michigan: Excising the Detroit Cancer FAKER OF THE HOUSE Don R. Pears R-Buchanan) has proposed the state re- its financial aid to cities in exchange granting those cities a certain amount of ng autonomy. This marks the most sen- approach yet to Michigan's money prob- r some years the 81 outstate counties se beyond the 'Detroit area) have been ng out more than their share of the taxes eal with the growing costs of urbanization cities. (For instance, outstate employers paid a one per cent emergency Detr6it nployment compensation assessment for five years.) it now the tax figures have just about hed the. saturation point. Some outstate nesses and citizens in the outstate coun- now refuse to pay any more money. If are burdened with one more tax, they as they have threatened, move out. id they're not kidding. 'Thon THE PROBLEM in Michigan is a cancer. It must be removed or it will eventually be, the destruction of a once-great state. That cancer is Detroit. Since the post-war production boom slacked off, Detroit has faced an ever-increasing prob- lem of unemployment and growing urbaniza- tion. The residents of Wayne County, under the existing city and state tax structures, have been getting more money than they have been paying. The balance, getting larger every year, has been made up with tax monies outstate. At first t ere was an objection to this. The outstate taxpayers did not begrudge a little money to help tide Detroit over a temporary problem. But that problem never went away; it just got worse. Today it curtails the expansion of our colleges and universities; it hampers proper functioning of the mental health program; it adds increasing and burdensome taxes to the entire state. IT JUST isn't fair. ' Just what could be done to solve this issue is a ,matter of great disagreement. The out- staters say Detroit has made no attempt to clean house, but Detroit retorts it is doing its best. Probably the only way ever to find out who's right is to test it. Cut Detroit loose and force her to 'raise her own money. It will either raise its or eliminate the need, you can be sure of that. WHICHEVER the result, Michigan stands to gain by it. Perhaps if the state used the new-found surplus money education, the Uni- versity could resist the exodus of faculty members, or build a new and adequate music or achitecture school, or update many anti- quated facilities at University Hospital. Perhaps the mental health patients would at last receive proper care. Perhaps-well, per- haps many things. At any rate, Pears pro- posal deserves a try. The welfare of the entire state has too long been subordinated to the special interest of a very small, self-centered area. -MICHAEL HARRAH By GLORIA BOWLES Daily Correspondent PARIS - The contradictory re- ports reaching New York and Paris on the De-Gaulle-Macmillan talks at Birch Grove recently may be explained, in part, by the use of two different "reliable sources." But the contradiction also seems to underline a basic difference in American-European attitudes to- ward negotiations with the Rus- sians on the Berlin question. From London, Drew Middleton cabled to the "New York Times" on November 27 that the De Gaulle-Macmillan talks "restored harmony to British and French policies on Berlin." He added that the two leaders seemed agreed on the advisability of negotiation, but, aside from this general accord, there was no decision on the exact form such negotiations should take. * * * "LE FIGARO'" in Paris head- lined "Negative result of French- British talks .. . General De Gaulle stands firm ... the moment has not come for negotiations with Moscow on Berlin." Roger Massip, 'Le F'garo's Brit- ish correspondent, wrote on No- vember 27 that "the talks would render no result." He added that it was "in vain that Macmillan and Lord Home insisted on a number of signs that appeared to them relatively encouraging" for Rus- sian willingness to engage in ser-, ious, give-and-take negotiation., However, reported "Le Figaro," the General insisted he could say little before seeing Konrad Ade- nauer of Germany (who was slat- ed to arrive in Paris this week if his illness doesn't keep him bed- ridden). This attitude on the part of "Le Grand Charlie," had Brit- ons believing that the talks at Birch Grove would have been much more satisfying if they'had taken place eight days later. Massip's sources al~so noted that if Ad- nauer seemed to be taking a more flexible attitude since his talks with Kennedy, De Gaulle seemed to be all the more inflexible. * * * SUCH A MARKED difference in reporting may well reflect what seems to be a marked difference' in attitudes among Americans, who seem often to find the op- timistic, the bright side, in a given political situation and Euro-. peans who, generally speaking, can see little hope for solution of the world's political problems. How can one account for Euro- pean pessimism? Geography plays a role-gigantic Russia is only a slight missile's throw from France and Germany. Too, unlike many Americans, war on their own soil has sobered Europeans, made them more fearful of con- flict, and more prone to war scares. BUT THERE IS another-and more important-side to this pes- simism and general hopelessness 'where world peace and the suc- cess of negotiation is concerned. The French, for one, are encum- PIONEERED BY Southern Senators and a bearded fellow from Cuba. The Talkathon raze is fast becoming a collegiate fad of gold- ish-swallowing magnitude. Creative minds are ,lready at work devising new 'thons, and ager masochists are lining up to follow and bey the 'thon theme thinkers' thoughts. We will soon be confronted with a striking anorama: every able-bodied youth in America; a a conscientious effort to waste more time han his neighbor, compulsively and con- inuously talking, walking, eating. drinking, moking, crying, giggling, scratching, sleeping, .riving, necking, screaming, fighting sitting, wearing, breathing, perspiring, reading, steal- ng, or spitting. The Communists will then Ind it a simple matter to walk in and take ver. Has the Un-American Activities Committee eard about this? -K. WINTER U.S. STRATEGY: Major Crisis in Vietnam SGC SdstesRsosblt T IS IRONIC that on the same night over in-the SAB, the SGC is discussing the mat-' er of giving more authority to these respon- ble students," an observer said at the panty aid Wednesday night. However, the Student Government Council ever got to asking, the administration for' tore power. In a show of irresponsibility al- lost as bad as that of the raiders, the ouncil did not consider Daily Editor John oberts' and Brian Glick's motion on student uthority. Instead they spent four hours de- ating, often in nonsensical'terms, a motion set deadlines for., membership statements i fraternities and sororities. This farcical debate ended at 2:15 a.m. It as apparent that the Council would not be any condition to. consider Roberts' and' lick's motion and that a delay would render ae Imotion meaningless. Ignoring the sponsors' arnings that the OSA study committee would ave written the first draft of its report before 1e Council would have another opportunity to insider their proposal, SGC peevishly waved, aside and adjourned. FHE LAST FIVE MINUTES of debate were quite revealing-symbolic of the'irrespon- ble and petty tone of the whole meeting. Why should we debate this . . when we robably know what the outcome would be," ouncil President Richard Nohl snapped. In a .nilar manner Union President Paul Carder, eclared that he saw no reason why a special ssion was needed and that indeed the only sult of such a sesion would be a "slipshod" ib. It was to no avail that Administrative Vice- resident Robert Ross correctly noted that its motion is probably the most important ie SGC has ever considered. Roberts reminded the Council that it had passed in September a strong resolution demanding a role in setting OSA policy and that the Council had to recognize its responsibilities.{ Women's League President Bea Nemlaha then moved for a suspension of parliamentary procedure so that the members could speak freely across the table. The object was to come up with a suitable time for a special session to consider the one motion alone. But John Martin, SGC executive vice-president, who was chairing the meeting, refused to suspend proceedures until a. flood of amendments sug- gesting times became unmanagable. Realizing his mistake, he suspended the rules. In the dicussion that followed, the general attitude of most Council members seemed to be that Friday and Sunday afternoons were too sacred to spend on a motion which would radically change the nature of student govern- ment on this campus. Thus when the matter came to a roll call vote, it was defeated 8-5. ROBERT'S AND GLICK'S MOTION would, greatly increase the Council's power and responsibility. But for some strange reason most members of the Council do not seem ready to accept either. SGC had before it the long - standing anti-discr i mination motion which is a first step toward enforcing the Regent's anti-discrimination Bylaw 2.14. This measure is very important and should have been passed long ago; but irresponsible pro- crastination and indecisiveness delayed con- sideration of this motion until the last two meetings. However, the Council failed to deliberate it with the intelligence the motion warranted. The four hour debate on the fraternity-sorority membership statement had more than its share of ludicrous and disgusting moments. In this manner the Council hashed and rehashed-touching the same issues over and over again. Finally, by some miracle, the Council actually passed a motion. Never mind that the motion means nothing-they passed it after two meetings and nine hours of deliberations, and this is a thing to cheer about. COUNCIL ACTIONS Wednesday night in- dicate certain members are unwilling to undertake the great responsibilities to the student community entailed in Roberts-Glick motion. Their pettiness marks many of them as minor bureaucrats, not as the broad minded student leaders needed to effect such a viable government. Major policy decisions require more competent members than most of those presently sitting on the Concil. By JAMES NICHOLS Daily Staff Writer THE RECENT RASH of shout- 4 ing, shooting and wall-building in Berlin during the past few months has partly obscured the less spectacular but equally dan- gerous conflict in the jungles of Vietnam. But in Washington this struggle and its importance have not been forgotten. President Kennedy re- cently sent Gen. Maxwell Taylor to Vietnam to study conditions and submit a report on which fu- ture United States policy will be based. Contents of Gen. Taylor's report have not been officially an- nounced, but the actions taken since then may indicate what is to come. Vietnam came into existence fol- lowing eight years of -war between the Viet Minh, who were the Com- munist-led nationalists and sol- diers of France with their puppet government in Saigon under Bao Dai. The Communists have follow- ed a pattern very similar to that of the Red Chinese in their Civil War. ** * IN BOTH CASES the Com- munists have preferred hit-and- guerrilla tactics and .bloody raids on individual villages to open mass warfare. In both cases these meth- ods have succeeded in neutralizing the numerical superiority of their enemies. In both of these Asian conflicts the Communists .have been successful in recruiting not only dogmatic Marxists, but many of the Nationalists, poor peasants hoping for agrarian reform, and educated people who oppose cor- ruption and Western Imperialism. In China, the Red-led forces were almost completely successful. President Kennedy and his ad- visers are determined to prevent the completion of the analogy in Vietnam. THE GENEVA agreement which was supposed to end the fighting in Vietnam left that country divid- ed roughly in half along the 17th parallel, as Korea is now divided along the 38th. The same "Viet- nam" has two different meanings on opposite sides of this line. There are two governments; reasonably free South Vietnam, under Presi- dent Ngo Dinh Diem, with its capital at Saigon; and the Demo- cratic Republic of Vietnam, under firm Commun'ist control, with its capital at Hanoi. The 1954 agreement at Geneva provided for an election which would have reunited the country. But conditions in the North made a free election unlikely, and South Vietnam's President Diem, whose delegation had refused to sign the Geneva declaration, did not per- mit the vote to be held. Today the. divided country is the the secene of almost daily clashes between Diem's army and forces of the northern Viet Cong. The rebels, many operating from Communist-held villages in neigh- boring Laos, continue to make the area an important trouble psot, especially dangerous in these days of long-range missiles and. short- AMERICAN STRATEGY is re- portedly developing along three major lines. The South Vietnamese army is to be trained, increased and possibly reorganized. It is to be supplied with more potent weapons, which the Communist guerrillas do not have. Finally, consideration will probably be given to increased efforts to sub- stitute more capable local gov- ernment, in an attempt to bring wavering villagers, back to our side. President Kennedy is trying to avoid using American forces against the attackers. And Presi- dent Diem does not seem overly enthusiastic about the pressure the United States would apply on him to reform his, government if we did send troops to fight for it. The fear in Washington may be partly inspired by the unpopular- ity of the Saigon government with the Vietnamese. American demands for reform in Saigon have not been gratefully: received. The press in "free" Viet- nam is wholly censored by the government. Diem's government is vigorously applying itself to stamping out all opposition, Com- munist or not. Instead of the in- spiring leader the Saigon Viet- namese vitally need, Diem has proven to be jealous, incompetent and thoroughly unpopular. Again one is struck with the, similarities between this situation and the one preceeding the fall of Chinese' Nationalist leader Chiang Kai- shek/ * * * WHETHER the tide of Com- munism can be checked in South- east Asia may well depend on the outcome of the Vietnam struggle. The outcome, in turn, may well' depend on the domestic successes of Diem's anti-Communist regime, and these successes undoubtably depend on the far-reaching re- forms proposed by Washington and so far violently resisted by Presi- dent Diem. bered by tremendous internal problems. They cannot, for ex- ample, see their way out of the Algerian war. To ask political optimism of the French, therefore, is to ask a lot. It is also to ask a lot when one demands faith in nego- tiatipns of a population which waited patiently for a settlement of the Algerian problem by that means, and was finally warned to take up arms at the city hall if Algerian parachutists bombarded Paris one night last spring. The Algerian problem at home seems to the French far from solution: "I think it's the duty of my son to go to the army, a Parisian mother told me, "but when it all seems so useles . .. Parisians haven't an answer - many of them call for the ouster of De Gaulle, generally unpopular in the capital, but they have no ideas fot an alternative govern- ment. The weight anid heartache of their problems at home render the French cautious in the matter of East-West talks. GERMANS MAY appear slightly more enthusiastic for negotiation. But they are not without fears. They are, first, afraid of Western concessions and Soviet gains. Moreover, they are afraid of the complete failure of such talks. Harrassed by the threats over Berlin, Germans were all the more sobered by the building of the wall between the two Berlins. Constant Soviet threats have embittered the population: since they can see little ground for agreement, Germans look upon negotiations-and world peace in general-with a great deal of pes- simism ad hopelessness. Their own past war history and the shame that accompanys it does not help brighten the picture. ON THE 'OTHER HAND, ac- cording to the way many Fenh and German observers tell it, Britons are a little too anxious to negotiate. An united Western stand on the question "to negotiate or not to negotiate" is, obviously, impera- tive. If Drew Middleton's reliable source is correct, we are closer to that accord. 1But if "Le Figaro" and Robert Massip have provided a more cor- rect report, we have, as usual, to contend with the "black sheep" member of the alliance, General De Gaulle and his France. AL YOUNG: Fruitfull Pilg rimsAge VACATIONING from a pilgrim- age in San Francisco, Al Young visits Ann Arbor with fresh ma- terial and style. He has added to his already large range of songs and moods fresh and topical music such as Malvina Reynolds' "The Rand Corporation" and Betty Sander's "Talking Unamerican Blues," Both of these he handled with an irony As always, Young's selection was rich with a variety of countries and themes. He shifted from the delicacy of the English ballad Who Killed Cock Robin" to the raucous French drinking song "Sur La Route. OF AL the traditions Young handles, however, his blues re- main the best. He performs them with a sense of the history of suffering thateproduced them - and a bitterness and intimacy that make them his own. "Rocks and Gravel" and Leadbelly's "Bour- geois Blues" were especially well- done. Not a member of the sing-along tradition, Young has achieved greater control both of himself as a performer and of his au- dience. Although he will never be known for his voice alone, it is smoother and time has given it richness and depth. HIS SENSITIVITY to the au- dience has increased since the days he perched on a stool in the Promethean Cafe, but it is only a greater technical ability to handle his listeners. He remains aloof and cool, Perry Lederman, a self-styled "folk instrumentalist" who threat- ens to be number one guitarist in the country, brought the evening to a sizzling finish. --Susan Steinberg DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (continued from'Page 2) DEC. 12-(a.m.)-- General Analine & Film Corp., Ansco & Ozalid Divs.-BS, MS & Prof.; ChE. TIvao.MR- . TW gO. '-...a..... nt tr-M a.. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: MUG Clientele Screened? To the Editor: WAS WONDERING what is the standard for deciding which persons you required to present student I.D.'s to enjoy the com- forts of the MUG? I watched as a women with a badge saying "Mrs. Cavanaugh" made her rounds of the various booths and tables one night recently and was somewhat confused as to the modus operandis She did not ask the boys in the booth in front of me whether they had I.D.'s, nor did she ask the. girl sharing my booth (who, by the way. attends Cleary College), though she did make a point of asking the four Negro boys in the booth behind me whether they were students at the University. When she found they were not, she regretfully informed them that she was afraid she would have to ask them to leave. This duty fulfilled, she walked to the other end of the MUG passing by the three white boys in the very next booth-one of whom is a high school senior and the other two Ann Arbor High '61 graduates presently working, and not attending the U. of M. in any capacity. -Karen Carey, '65 ,joke?.. To the Editor: SURELY MR. OSTLING was jok- ing when he wrote of changing our present system of floor coun- selors. These boys are necessary, to the well rounded growth of the freshman men that enter this in- stitution. Many floor counselors have cars and this is 'certainly a boon to those of us forced to live in dorms. Their chauffering serves as a means of transportation to rival honesty. What is more, I see him as a man capable of deciding right and wrong. Even if he is nearly illiterate and unable to read the house codes that deter- mine what is right and wrong in the dormitory he is still willing to judge. While my knowledge of this in- stitution's floor counselors has fortunately been restricted I still must opose Mr. Ostling's idea of changing the floor counselor pro- gram. That is, I oppose it unless he wants our older advisers, i.e. our floor counselors to help the freshmenbecome men. -Peter Goodstein Housemothers. . To the Editor: PERHAPS THE TIME has come, for someone to know just what one of "the women" think. Your article "Women's Halls Need Phi- losophy" stated that our house- mothers are enigmas . . "a symbol of antiquated ,gentility." This as- sumption is too much.. It is often said that a college student, in his deliberate four year (more or less) academic search for truth, is sheltered from the real world. We are a society of university students, and many of us feel the artificiality of our environment in terms of a larger society. Therefore, I, for one, feel that my relationship with a house- mother is a welcome and prudent addition to my student's world. She is not a rule, or all rules, but she is a very real, capable person with whom I live here at the Uni- versity. She may not be of my generation, but this fact cannot hold back my ideas; neither can my ideas and actions deny the fact that other generations exist. * * * devote attention to student af- fairs above and beyond the extent which even the officers of their dormitories imagine. And, believe it or not; they are not all frustrat- ed, didactic finishing-school teach- ers. In fact, they can be sympa- thetic listeners, enthusiastic per- sonal counselors and interesting. people-on their own time--if we let them. -Lynne Holton, '64N Emergency... To the Editor: AT A LECTURE in the Union Dec. 5th, one of the people who was attending had an epi- leptic seizure. He was carried out into the hall, and a member of the Political Science Department (which was sponsoring the lec- ture) went to call a doctor. What ensued was indeed disgraceful. The man called the Student Health Service, since he natural- ly presumed that the epileptic was a student. However, no one pres- ent knew whether or not he was a student, and the man on the phone did not know the sick per- son's name. As a result; he was kept on the phone for more than ten minutes before he even got to speak to a doctor. ALTHOUGH it is true that the Health Service is only for stu- dents, that is no reason for what happened. It could not be deter- mined whether or not he was a student, and it was imperative that a doctor be contacted. Even if the Health Service was not the proper place to call for an emer- gency case (although it seems to me to be the place, assuming the person is a student, as was thought in this cas) give the ,* THE LAST few years, perceptive Americans have noted a frightening tendency on the rt of some of their fellow citizens. This evil practice can best be described as e-stringing-together-of-words-by -means- of - 'phens. Is is frightening in its implications. In the old days, all we had to contend with s plain old Communists. Then it was anti- immunists, then anti-anti-Communists, and ,-... . OUT THE EXAMPLE that may well have dangerous soco-politico-economic conse- ences for the future is the Soviet practive including in the designation of its dogma e name of every man influential in shaping