Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHmAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevai" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must ba noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, MARCH 2, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: BARBARA LAZARUS "Who Said Anything About Driving Out Castro? We're Talking About Kennedy" 'MY INDIANA HOME': Subversive Plot Foiled Again The Government Never Lies It Just 'Fibs'About News MANY METAPHORES have been made about the chameleon that changes its color to defend itself, and even more has been written on the man who does one wrong thing and is drawn into a web of deception to conceal it. In essence, the whole literature of America has been a moral judgement on the necessity for honesty and truth. Recently, the film "Billy Budd" reiterated the necessity of following the rules in spite of the immediate conse- quences. IN VIEW of the fact that the whole fabric of American society has been built on the assumption that the means determines the ends, the recent actions of the Kennedy Ad- ministration are totally inexcusable. The "re-arrangement" of the news in the Cuban and Vietnam affairs and the general attitude that the American public is not to be trusted with information indicates a basic breakdown of the very society they are attempt- ing to protect. Malcolm Kilduff, assistant to Pierre Salinger, told a group of assembled editors at the Over- seas Press Club conference last weekend that national security was more important than the truth and that the administration could con- tinue to restrict information affecting national security. HE THEN went on to say that the Kennedy Administration had never "manipulated" the news and would never do so. In the same five minutes he admitted that they had "fibbed a little" in the midst of the Cuban furor. The fourth stand he made was that they would evade questions when the truth in that area would "hurt" national security. In a course of a 20 minute speech he took four different stands on the release policy on security information-each wrong ... although some more wrong than others. Let us put the news handling in context. In a world under the damoclesian sword of the "20-minute-death," open exchange of in- formation and the establishment of trust is all-important among and within nations. Two wrongs do not make a right, although the Soviets do it, the censoring of information does not add to international trust. Nor does it help national morale and trust when the public realizes that it is being spoon-fed measured information on question on national policy. THE FIRST general policy stated that even- ing was that national security was more important than the truth. What "nation" is this security attempting to protect that the most sacred pillar must be torn down to save it? What price is "victory" or "continued security" if that province protected is exactly like the "enemy?" A more detailed consideration of ethics comes with examination of Kilduff's second and third claims about policy. The second claim was that the administration had never manipulated the news. This is glorious if pos- sible. However, upon further questioning it became clear that they had never perma- nently manipulated the news. In other words they had the decency not blatantly to falsify history, for that attribute can only be one of a totalitarian regime. The third claim shows the absolute hypocrisy of the second. Although the administration never manipulates the news, Kilduff admitted it does "fib" a little on major crises or when the correct news is not "helpful to the cause." The measure of a man used to be that of honesty and the ability to do the job. I am one of those anacronistic idealists who be- lieve that a job is not done well unless it is blessed with the truth. And of course, there is an itsy-bitsy nagging question: What is the difference between fibbing and lying? The fourth claim is that the administra- tion would evade questions that would involve an area of touchy security. This stand was taken after much questioning from the as- sembled college editors and seems to be a good synthesis of the others. It is also an indication of a tightrope that might con- ceivably be walked. T HERE IS a possibility that national security can be compatible with the truth and the free desimination of information. It involves a higher degree of trust however. The newspapers must be given the opportunity to censor the majority of information that comes into the hands of the administration, that includes CIA reports. On questions of vital security, of which there; might be one or two a year, the administration might refuse to release any information at all. This is far preferable to lying to the public or "manipulating" the news. The problem of newspapers censoring them- selves is a great one. That newspapers must be given the information to fulfill their func- tion in society as the eyes and ears of the public is not to be questioned. A vital part of this function is the continuation of free competition among newspapers and news agen- cies. This competition insures that no vested or unhealthy interest can muffle news by control of newspapers. The question is, how can the press be trust- ed to censor itself on questions of public secur- ity under the pressures of competition? The answer lies in the delegation of the powers of the press on vital matters to an impartial elected board of free newsmen. This board would be elected for a three-year term by the news agencies of the nation. These men, freed from any affiliation with their individual agencies for that period, would see all news and decide, in conference with the administration, what should legitimately be held back. This would serve a dual purpose, it would allow the administration to release more information and be constantly under the sur- veilance of the free press, and it would solve the problem of the pressure of competition for the story of individual newspapers. THAT THE ADMINISTRATION is now com- pletely in the wrong to continually hide and distort news for "security's" sake is self- evident. They are setting an example and liv- ing by a creed that could lead us right up to the back door of a police state. That the administration does this out of fear and an unbearable feeling of immediate responsibility for the nation's welfare, is to be understood. The press of the United States should extend to them a bridge of trust before they "wade too deep." -CAROLINE DOW Personnel Director > F = :. : - :z :- : :: ', . t ' ~ ' __ _ . - ta T - 1* 1 ; : ' ~;,, . Cod , " " ,r. . -" s 11963 : °f:. . : .. !n.... .. . t « '.,. : a. ,r ° p KENNEDY AND BETANCOURT: A Real Alliance for Progress Rush Is Over, Life Isn't By ROBERT SELWA WASHINGTON has changed. ed LatindAmerican dictators us- ed to find a welcome mat and a medal of honor awaiting them in the United States Capitol. Now it is a Latin American democrat who is welcomed and honored. This was illustrated this past week when Romulo Betancourt, the president of Venezuela, came to our country. Betancourt is ex- pected to become the first elected civilian president in Venezuela's history of dictatorships and civil wars to serve out his term. His rule has been the longest demo- cratic rule that Venezuela has ex- perienced. It was fitting that this and Betancourt's other achieve- ments were honored by the United States last week. President John F. Kennedy abandoned the formal language that usually surrounds a reception and that is often so hollow. In- stead, Kennedy spoke extemporan- eously, straightforwardly. "You represent all we admire in a poli- tical leader," Kennedy told Betan- court. "You are a symbol of what we wish for our country and our sister republics of the hemisphere. It is no accident that you and your country have been marked number one in their (Communist) efforts to eliminate you and what you stand for and the progress that you represent." Kennedy, Dan Kurzman of The Washington Post noted, offered compliments "which observers could not recall having ever been equalled in White House verbal extravagance." Betancourt, ob- viously moved, replied that Ven- ezuela stands with the United States in joint dedication to West- ern democratic ideals. * * * BETANCOURT'S REPLY was true in respect to his government and to the party he leads, Accion Democratica. For years AD 4nd Betancourt have been fighting for the welfare of the great masses of Venezuela. They have organ- ized the oil workers, improv:ed their standards, recognized their unions and given them collective bargaining rights. Betancourt and AD have promoted the desperately needed land reform, giving count- less peasants a piece of land they can call their own. Betancourt and AD have been building schools for children and have been providing adult educa- tion for grownups, most of whom can neither read nor write. The government has eradicated ma- laria, which used to hit one out of every five Venezuelans every year, and the result is that life expectancy has increased from 45 years in the 1940's to 64 years to- day, Betancourt and AD have been developing the economy of Ven- ezuela through the building of highways and railroads, the con- structing of airports, the enlarg- ing of the merchant marine, the their esteem for each other so high. * * * THIS HAS NOT always been the case in Betancourt-United States relations. Betancourt has been in power since 1958, Ken- nedy since 1961. Previous to Bet- ancourt was one of Venezuela's worst dictators, Marcos Perez Jimenez; before the Kennedy Ad- ministration was an administra- tion that didn't care much about the welfare of Latin America- the administration of Dwight Eisenhower. Jimenez deposed the young democratic government of Ven- ezuela in 1948, ruled for a decade. In 1952 he permitted an election, saw that he was losing, imposed a tight censorship on the election returns, ordered that the counting of the ballots be stopped, and an- nounced his own victory. His re- gime was as thoroughly despotic and brutal as any that Venezuela has ever suffered. It included the use of torture and assassination at a concentration camp, the abolition of labor unions, the re- moval of independent-minded teachers from the schools, the tossing in jail or exiling of edi- tors, the barring from the mails of critical foreign journals, and the closing of the universities. * * * JIMENEZ was given an en- thusiastic welcome in Washington. Eisenhower conferred upon him the Legion of Merit. When Jim- enez was finally ejected by a popular rebellion in 1958, the United States permitted him to settle in Miami. While Jimenez was in power, Betancourt was in exile in Puerto Rico. The government of Puerto Rico was requested by an official. of the Eisenhower Administration to get Betancourt out of that United States territory because his presence was embarrassing. Betancourt departed. iHis return to the United States last week was in the Kennedy Administration's atmosphere of friendship and concern for the welfare of Venezuela. But most important, it was an atmosphere of trying to help the peoples of. the Amercias. The masses of Ven- ezuela have long lived in oppres- sion and poverty; working to- gether, the governments of Ven- ezuela and the United States can remedy this. In 1958 Vice-President Richard Nixon was stoned and spit upon in Caracas. The hate toward the United States resulting from the Eisenhower Administration's pol- icies toward Latin America, can change to affection if Betancourt and Kennedy are successful. Ven- ezuela is one of the best hopes of Latin America because of an eco- nomic base that is much better than those of the other "republics" south of the border. The Alliance For Progress is one of the best hopes for improving United States-Latin American relations, since it strikes at the real needs of the masses. Venezuela has a dreary past and United States policy has a dreary past; but now there are signs of the beginning of a bright future. Washington's welcome for Betan- court was one of these signs. By JEAN TENANDER WORRIED MONROE County Prosecutor, Thomas A. Hoad- iey, seems to be a trifle undecided on the charges to use against In- diana University's Young Socialist Alliance. He has tried several on for size in the past two weeks, but rumor has it that he has still failed to find a perfect fit. It all began last October when a group of 15 students at Indiana staged a demonstration in pro- test of Kennedy's action in Cuba. Actually there were 315 students involved in the protest but that may not count because the extra 300 students weren't protesting the same thing that the original 15 were protesting. The 300 students were protesting against the 15 students protesting against Ken- nedy. Only they protested by hit- ting and kicking the 15 students protesting against Kennedy (which isn't really a very nice way to protest) and then Hoadley pro- tested too-also against the 15 students protesting against Ken- nedy. Hoadey was upset because he thought the students demonstrat- ing against Kennedy were organiz- ed as "a deliberate provocation to incite to riot." He was also upset because some of the demonstra- tors were YSA members. As a matter of fact he was probably more upset bythis than by any- thing else, but he hadn't been elected county prosecutor yet and he couldn't do very much except sputter. NOBODY LISTENED to Hoad- ley's sputtering except a few YSA members who detected a man dedicated to completing what he had begun as the future county prosecutor. (YSA didn't happen to be the group that organized the demonstratoin, by the way, but that is obviously irrelevant.) Because they had been listening with half an ear to the rumblings from Monroe County, the prose- cutor's rapier-like move on Feb. 18 (Hoadley was elected' in Jan- uary) did not come as too much of a surprise to YSA members. It did come as a surprise to the university, the administration and the campus. Feb. 18 was the day Hoadley ac- cused YSA of being a subversive organization dedicated to the vio- lent overthrow of the United States government. He also asked the university to withdraw its recognition of the group on the grounds that it was in violation of the State Anti-Subversive Act of 1951. Threats that the October demonstration could be defined as a case of "unlawful assembly" had not worked very well. This seemed a magnificent alternative. / * * * UNFORTUNATELY, things did not work out as smoothly as they should have. Richard Stein, U.S. attorney at Indianapolis, kept say- ing things like "the Indiana Anti- State Subversive Act 1951 may be un-constitutional." Apparently an annoying 1958 Supreme Court de- cision had declared a similar sta- tute in Pennsylvania un-constitu- tional on the basis that sedition and subversion are essentially the province of the federal govern- ment. Hoadley pulled himself together, however, and said in reply: "Stein has no business telling the state of Indiana whether a criminal statute is constitutional or un- constitutional. I'm inclined to test it, even if it must go through the Supreme Court." But other busybodies - the speaker of theIndiana Civil Lib- erties Union, the secretary of.aca- demic affairs at the university, the head of the university NAACP chapter, for example-kept point- ing out that the act might very well be un-constitutional. * * * SECTION 105204 says: "It shall be unlawful to be a member of the Communist Party or any party, group or organization which advocates in any manner the over- throw, destruction, or alteration of the constitutional form of gov- ernment of the United States or of the state of Indiana or any political sub-division thereof, by revolution, force, violence, sedi- tion, or which engages in any un- American activities." There is no indication anywhere in the act of what an "un-Ameri- can activity" is. The broadness of the language and of the listed prescriptions make the constitu- tional guarantees of freedom of speech, press, and assembly a mockery. But it is on the statute books and that's a pretty good justification in anyone's language for its application. Right? * * * MORE MEDDLERS tried to cloud the issue by indicating a belief that the status of campus organizations should be exclusively within the jurisdiction of the uni- versity. If the university is to be considered an independent organ- ization it should be treated as such. Action by concerned county prosecutors in areas where the university is theoretically auton- omous. not only undermine this autonomy but set precedents for believe in the violent overthrow of the government. According to YSA membership, the only sense in which they are revolutionary is in that they seek economic and social change but they do not seek this through revolution or violence. They do, however, agree with the works of Marx, Lenin, and Trot- sky and this is probably where Hoadley got confused. It's happen- ed to others. Therefore, even though he had the administration's pledge to co- operate with an investigation of the situation by the state attorney general, Hoadley was still not in the position he wanted to be in. All these petty little contradictions kept popping to destroy his at- tempt to protect the Indiana cam- pus from subversion. Being of un- daunted courage he tried one more time. HOADLEY HAD discovered, or thought he had discovered, that YSA "admitted" being the youth group of the Socialist Worker Party. And since the SWP is on the Attorney General's list of sub- versive organizations, YSA would definitely have to go. Once again YSA members mess- ed things up by pointing out~ that they were not the youth movement of the SWP. Paulanne Groninger, a YSA member, said YSA was pro- grammatically and organization- ally independent and has no con- nections with the SWP whatso- ever. Although the Young Social- ist, the national YSA newspaper, said in May of 1960 that support- ers of the Young Socialists have come into basic political solidarity, on the principles of revolutionary socialism with the SWP," Miss Goninger said this referred to ideas and not party discipline. The revised statement of pur- pose on file at the university says: "The Indiana University YSA will not be a disciplined body as the National YSA is to some degree." HOADLEY SEEMS to have jumped the -gun. He was so wor- ried about the possibility that there might indeed be Commun- ism on the campus that he didn't bother to consult the university before he informed the press of his fears. The first the administration heard of the situation came from the morning newspapers. Strange that Hoadley couldn't have taken the trouble to call and tell In- diana about his efforts to purge the campus of its undesirable ele- ments. Maybe he was afraid the university might succeed in prov- ing he was wrong before he had a chance to make his debut as a Communist exterminator. Now he doesn't have to worry because no- body ever backs down after ac- cusing somebody of being un- American. That would be un- American. The problem is that somebody has got to teach Hoadley what being an American is. 'SUMMERSKIN': Interesting monotony T HE EXCITEMENT and traumas of sorority rush are finally over, leaving the disap- pointed and ecstatic, the rejected and the accepted. Each year fresmmen women and many upperclassmen place themselves in the hectic rat race voluntarily and are offered, like a piece of candy, the sorority-the sup- posedly ultimate achievement of the Michigan woman. Yet this piece of candy, which becomes so habit-forming and enticing to those who stick it out through final deserts, is often cruelly yanked away from many of them. Those who are fortunate enough to pledge, who have made no enemies during rush and have handled themselves well in the brief "rush-type" con- versations, get the chance to see that sorority is not the ultmate. It is composed of normal human beings, having no more or less human kindness or outstanding qualities than anyone else. EACH YEAR many top "rave" women come through rush and choose not to pledge any house. For them the choice is between Martha Cook, a co-op or even a dormitory and the sorority. They are, perhaps, afraid or unwill- ing to place their emotions on the line and feel that sorority will bind, rather than enhance their individuality and talent. These women will be an addition to the living unit they have chosen and will realize the very potentiality that was recognized by the sorority women judging them during rush. These women ul- timately did not preference and may doubt their decision at first, but later will never question it. Perhaps as time goes on, more and more of these women will drop rush alto- - -4-t - .. # , ..te+- +, e. 1 -..ms 4,-r es~ r members which sustains itself for one month. It makes the faces of members glow when the door springs open, and rushees anxiously pour in. It forces rushees to try to banish nervous- ness and longing from their faces. Rush forces many fine women to become so wrapped up in the whole situation that their entire lives and thoughts center on sorority and sorority alone. NOW THAT the whole fiasco is over and life is returning to normal, these women must reorient their lives to the values that were im- portant to them before rush and are still im- portant. They must remember that they came to the University for an education, to live and work with people in a dormitory or in some extra-curricular activity. They must remember that they were judged not by adults or persons in a position of authority, but by their own peers, who can and very often do make mistakes and misjudg- ments. They must not 'condemn themselves and try to change who or what they are just because they were turned down by "the sys- tem." In a sense the person who did not pledge should not dwell on the fact the decision was made against her, and should try to realize her potentials in re-enforcing lasting and not transcient values. Rush is over, but life is not, and this should always be remembered by those who did not pledge. The lucky few who pledged should realize just how fortunate they are to have been chosen. Numerically the odds are very small that the many who began will have a happy completion to their trial. They will find that sorority is not all that rush made it appear and may even feel a sense of depression, ques- I LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: ISA Action Interim To the Editor: THE NEWS as printed in Thurs- day's Daily about the "election" of Isaac Adalemo, '64, to "ISA Post" (the office was not speci- fied) needs some clarification. I would like to inform you that the International Students As- sociation does not hold its annual elections until late in the Spring Semester. The president of the ISA elected in a general election last spring and whose term does not end until the end of this semes- ter resigned at the beginning of the semester for personal reasons. Since the vice-president, who normally would have taken over the presidency, has transferred to another school, he also had to resign from his post. Unfortun- ately the present constitution does not provide for the filling of either or both positions under such un- usual circumstances. IN ITS MEETING of February 21, the executive committee of the ISA discussed the situation and vice-president respectively until the next general elections. -Ramez Ibrahim, Grad ISA Executive Secretary Motives . To the Editor: AM FRANKLY puzzled by the exact motives which prompted Paul A. Hudon (Low-Simmer, Wednesday) to become the self- anointed Sarah Gibson Blanding of Michigan men. Although as a woman, I laud his sentiments, I question just who are the "we" who have chosen the "soaring" ap- proach to sex, and also if the "placid lake, the breathtaking mountain range, . . et al" don't suggest a cross between a Salem cigarette and the Grand Canon Suite. Perhaps Mr. Hudon is mak- ing this voluntary confessional preparatory to giving up sex for Lent. -Barbara Strauss, '66 Unf air:. To the Editor: T HE OLD MAN with the dark crusty skin grimaced at the girl on the beach. "It's the time of year now when your dark summer- skih begins to peel off. But you're not like the rest of us. You're white." This image brings into sharp focus the allegory that Leopold Torre Nilsson presents in his movie playing at the Cinema Guild to- night and tomorrow night, "Sum- merskin." "Summerskin" is an allegory of a man dying of an incurable dis- ease and seemingly being cured by his love for a morally corrupt but sensitive young girl. She, in her lazy degradation, seems to be cured of her moral disease by the man's love for her. But she re- treats from him in shock when he discovers he is cured and wants her to marry him. In parallel to the physically sick man and the morally sick girl is the society in which they live with rich ease. There can be no reconciliation between the girl and man, and neither can there be with any similar elements of their society. * * * THE SUMMERSKIN of exper- ience shows lilly white on her body. She. can't shed the exper- ience of the season as~ the old man sheds his summerskin in the autumn, and neither can she give herself to the experience. Not un- til the very end of the movie do her feelings well up in the form of tears and this is the first drop of real emotion that Nilsson al- lows on the screen. Working very methodically-at times even a feverishly slow pace -Nilsson attempts to show the moral degradation of upper class Argentine society. The most strik- ing way he does this is with the absolute dryness of his direction and script. The cinematography is clear and unexciting. The acting is the same. In fact, everything about the movie is boring and listless / 4