"We Must Join To Avenge Our Dear Friend, Lumumba" Ghe MIcga B ill Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN n Opinions Are Pres UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ith WIlU I'r~vil STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. DAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: FAITH WEINSTEIN Fear of Control Obstructs Kennedy Education Aid Plant ONCE: Festival of Prem t To Present New Music THIS WEEKEND AND next, an unusual event is taking place in Ann Arbor. A group of native Michigan composers who have received training at the University School of Music have succeeded in planning and implementing a festival of contemporary music. The series of four programs, entitled ONCE-A Festival of Musical Premieres, will include, in addition to the young Americans, works by well established avant- garde European composers. ALTHOUGH THE LAST few years have brought a welcome rise IESIDENT John F. Kennedy's $5.7 billion aid to education program, espoused in his i to Congress Monday for federal action, n example of the vigorous action he prom- i during the campaign. The great need for reased education at our primary .and sec- ary levels is imperative. Many of our states e overtaxed facilities, antiquated buildings fixtures, and out-dated texts. Teacher sal- s in a number of school districts are so poor to compare unfavorably with unskilled 'ker wages. t oome of these problems are due to the unwill- ness of local citizens to vote tax increases provide an adequate education for youth. In er communities, taxation has been imple- nted extensively, but the necessities are too at for the localities to meet alone. Help from er sources is needed. n order to aid these communities, it is neces- y to offer federal supplements. States are r, doing what they can to assist school pro- .ms. What is needed is a program that can istribute monies to those areas that are most need. The scope of the federal government's ation power would appear to make it the ural agency toward which to turn. ENNEDY'S MESSAGE was political in two respects: use of federal funds to church ools was denied because the President said s unconstitutional. He also avoided stating ether monies would be withheld from segre- ed schools, leaving any clarification on the ject to an administration -spokesman. The. Y commitment on the issue was the state- at that monies could not be used to support rate schools in the states. [owever, due to the inclusion of the pro- ons for paying teacher salaries with fed- I funds, Kennedy has alienated powerful, igressional forces. The fear of federal con- of education, of its entry into a field for- ly reserved for the states, is a hurdle which President's proposals must clear if they are become law. egardless of the reasons for opposing fed- 1 intervention, be they ideological or based other less philosophical objections, the ar- nent must be overcome, or the Kennedy gram will go the way of every other bill ich has proposed federal aid to education. EE REAL OBJECTION even among Demo- crats (including House Speaker Sam Ray- n) is the provision which would use federal ds to pay teachers salaries. This seems to. >1y a stronger control of curricula and teach- philosophy than aid for construction of ssrooms. The amount of the federal grants Lch will be used for salaries is up to the cretion of the state receiving the funds, ich would seem to offset any serious whole- e federal control. And Kennedy has stipulat- that states must maintain a reasonable con- )ution to education in order to receive na- ial aid. Still the shibboleth that federal aid means rigid federal control scares many Congressmen. The establishment of a national education standard which states receiving aid must meet would seem to be a part of the President's pro- posals, but this does not appear to be rigid control of educational material.' HOWEVER, THE REAL threat to federal con- trol of education has come about through intimidation of teachers and suppression of aca- demic freedom by localized organizations and from the congressional investigating commit- tees which sent McCarthy to his zenith. The influence of a national administrator of funds could not be a more serious threat to education than these menaces. The local groups, such as teacher and ad- ministrator organizations, influence curricula and methods. The influence of the National Education Association has very strong unoffi- cial ties with the Department of Health, Edu- cation and Welfare, but is already making its influence felt in a more direct way through its teacher members. Patriotic organizations have had much to do with censorship of public school material and deciding what should be taught. These groups influence education at the state and local levels also.- AwQd in the number of "contemporary" adventuresome. Social inertia and political organization make it dif- ficult to instigate anything which is without precedent. This is especially true in the field of art, where personalities and emotions are deeply involved. Thus, when an attempt at dis- playing innovative art is made, there are almost inevitable con- cessions to famous names, to local or personal interests. (It seems that there must be an excuse or a justification for such risky en- terprise.) * * * THIS IS, OF course, true of the present endeavor, but for several reasons the effect is not as serious as it often is. In the .first place, the music written by the Michi- gan composers is truly contempor- ary. Because of this fact, the ori- ginal tenor of the whole under- taking has been preserved. Inappropriate works have not been included just because they : are_ local products. Neither have, less interesting or timid works of the well known progressive com- posers been admitted. S * * * PERHAPS MOST IMPORTANT is the fact that, to some degree, the community is involved. The acceptance of any new approach to or in art eventually becomes a public concern. The basic problem is unfamiliarity and the best solu- tion is personal involvement. Management, publicity, financial' support, the use- of space for re- hearsal and performance, as well as the performers and composers themselves are largely products of ,the Ann Arbor community. There have been many dona- tions-of time,; talent, and equip- ment. New are has become, at least .momentarily, a community con- cern, and this fact is cause for excitement. --Roger Reynolds THE FACT IS that these organizations, al- though formidable when judged by national strength, operate even more powerfully on the local level. If anything, the federal adminis- tration of funds might tend to equalize many of the pressure groups operating in the United States which try to determine educational poli- cies in the nation's school districts. Local organizations that do not exist-'on a national scale will continue to influence edu- cation regardless of federal aid. Some of the most ridiculous and severe restrictions have come from these groups. It is this which the country must fear. FEDERAL CONTROL of education came about in a more effective and severe 'way when McCarthy's committee was stifling aca- demic thought and placing a fear in the minds of teachers. This censorship was a thousand times stronger than a federal aid administrator's could be. And this national in- hibition was not even remotely connected with federal aid to education. Congressmen would do well to remember that it was one of their own colleagues, rather than a federal adminis- trator, who only recently caused a conformity in education that the nation has not yet for- gotten. The school system needs a cure and Dr. Kennedy has prescribed the remedy. If the fear that the medicine will be too strong for the patient is still present in the mind of Con- gress, it had better take another look-a good look-at the symptoms. -MICHAEL BURNS TIME RACE: World War May Beat Progress' )M OTHER CAMPUSES: C ensored for HUA C Opinion, v EDITORIAL COLUMN written for the Daily Texan by Chandler Davidson, Uni- ity of Texas philosophy student, has been sored by Harrell E. Lee, editorial advisor for as Student Publications. avidson, a regular columnist for the Texan, icized in his usual polemical style the un- erican Activities Committee proposed in the as House. o Eichmann, Daily Texan editor, told the erver the column had been censored "on grounds that it ,was both an unnecessary sonal attack and that the subject had not ni discussed in our news columns. There are ways of sayiig something the way ndler said them without being so inflamma-, ," Miss Eichmann said. HEN AN ARTICLE is censored, an appeal may be made to the board of Texas Stu- t Publications. Miss Eichmann said she and 'idson discussed an appeal. "We thought it >ably wouldn't do any good," she said. "I no possibility whatever for success. It's a ,ter of fighting your fights (before the rd) on the things that count." ee said the column "was considered to be unduly violent personal attack on certain nbers of the legislature." The student pub- tions handbook, he said, "has certain pro- ons that when controversial matters are dis- sed dealing, with government they should centrate on issues rather than personali- avidson, in a letter to the Texan letters imn, said "the blame . . . is not upon Jo imann. It rests entirely with Mr. Lee." Most he deficiencies of "supposedly liberal col- newspapers," he wrote, "could be overcome ve had fewer censors whose main concern ot to offend anyone, anytime, anywhere." KCERPTS from the censored column follow: the majority of the legislators, the bill never gained support, and, in fact, never got onto the floor-which was probably just what its spon- sors had intended: they could return to the home-folks parading as Defenders of True Re- ligion Against Atheistic College Professors and Other Subversives. Reps. W. H. Miller and Don Garrison want a Texas Un-American Activities Committee. , , , Miller, his spear sharpened and his horse poised, has chosen for his windmill that target the very mention of which strikes fears into the hearts of all good reactionaries-the sub- versive. Says Miller: "If we have a man on the capi- tol steps calling for the overthrow of the gov- ernment, that's an overt act and easy to con- trol. But do we have laws controlling the pro- fessor of philosophy who might be teaching treason and sedition covertly?" PERFECT STRATEGY! Not only has he chos- en Subversion for his witch hunt, but he has chosen the most dangerous, insidious; wiley subversive of all: the professor of philosophy. AND OF COURSE it is well known (ask the Austin Anti-Communist League) that our churches are infiltrated by Communists, Intel- lectuals, and Agitators From The North--the Rev. Criswell's congregation in Dallas being ex- cepted. Miller, Garrison, & Co. could have a fine time insuring that American sermons were preached and un-American sermons burned From there they could purge all wrong think- ing universities of Left Wing teachers, burn Left Wing literature, take down statues of Left Wing statesmen, and remove all Left Wing mottoes from the buildings (the one over the entrance to UT's Main Building, for exam- ple) .. . But alas! This is daydreaming. I don't think By JAMES RICHMAN Daily Guest Writer MET A young Russian in Yalta. He was married and would soon be a father. He was a doctor and spoke with pride of his home, and family. He spoke about World War II, of how, with his mother and sister he had left his father and Yalta, of how they shelled and strafed the train that was taking them to safety in the Eist. He spoke of how they returned to Yalta at the war's end and lived on dog meat and chocolate bars. I thought about my World War II. I though about John Wayne and Randolph Scott, and how they Won the war for us every Saturday afternoon after the car- toon show. For me the war had meant sav- ing tinfoil, a sharp decline in the quality of bubble gun, and school drives. We talked about the next war. He had served his term in the army and didn't like "playing at the game of war." He asked about the U-2 and I asked about the Russian subs off Long Island. Then we asked for something to drink. * * I MET A beatnik in Prague. He idolized Ernest Hemingway and had grown a beard in flattering imitation.. His uncle lived in Ari- zona ... he was wearing levis... a gift from America. "Someday I will go to Arizona and live on a ranch," he confided. Yet now, he was afraid to go to the American Embassy to seek the address of Hemingway's publisher. * * * I MET A grandmother on the train from Stuttgart to Prague. She was a Sudaten German, and is now a Czech national. She had just returned from seeing her son's families for the first time in seven years. She was old and tired and admitted she was going back be- cause it was the only home she had ever known. She would prob- ably never see her grandchildren again. "Did the Americans really want peace?" she asked. * * * I MET AN AGING prostitute turned secretary in Frankfurt. She had lost her husband in the War. He was a former SS officer and was killed by the Czechs at the war's end. "You Americans are all alike, and you talk and you talk. And your soldiers get drunk and think they own the world. But there was a time when we talked even ldud- er, and times were good then, and will you buy me a drink?" I MET FOUR North Koreans on the train from Warsaw to Moscow. They had finished their studies in Warsaw and were now travel- ling home. We swapped cigarettes and stumbled through Rushing- type conversation in a horrible mixture of German, Russian, and gestures. Had the Korean war gone on we would have been swapping bullets. They would have been "gooks" and I a "yankee invader." * * * WE ARE MODERN men, we are thousands of years out of the trees: We have the ability to throw our "stones" at the moon, nrA h~r^A NT-hn."nu ' a To the Editor: IT IS EXTREMELY regrettable that the murder of Lumumba has been exploited by the Soviet 'Union and her sympathizers to attack the United Nations and Secretary General Hammerskjold in particular. The accusations against the Secretary General are not only without any base, but they actually rest on allegations which are the precise opposite of the facts. Far from having been opposed to Lumumba, the United Nations operated in the Congo and the ac- tivities of Hammerskjold himself always favored Lumumba. For ex- ample the UN authorities in the Congo never recognized Colonel Mobutu and his High Commission- ers as the, legitimate government of the Congo although President Kasavubu had appointed them. * * * HAMMERSKJOLD'S personal representative in the Congo, Ra- jeshwar Dayal of India, has con- sistently been charged with pro- Lumumba bias, and President Kasavubu requested some time ago that Secretary General Hammer- skiold recall him. This Hammer- skjold refused to do. While Mobutu's forces had had orders to arrest Lumumba for many months, he lived in his villa ni Leopoldville protected by United Nations soldiers who prevented any attempt by Congolese soldiers to carry out Mobutu's orders. His subsequent capture is due only to the fact that he escaped from his Leopoldville villa in .order to join his followers in Stanleyville. THE ENTIRE HISTORY of the UN Congo operation shows a con- sistent bias in favor of Lumumba. The Soviet attempt to convince the world that black is white is in her typical Orwellian tradition, but it should not fool anyone who is familiar with the facts. The pur- pose of the Soviet tactics is ob- viously to make the United Nations Secretariat a tool of Moscow - and ILumumba's murder is as good an issue as any other to use as a lever for achieving this goal. -Ernest G. Fontheim Associate Research Physicist Radiation' Laboratory of the University of Michigan Sorry State.. . To the Editor: LOVE, SO-CALLED, is at a very low mark of quality on the campus of the University of Mich- igan. Any observer, who is still sensitive to the true, the beautiful and the good, and who has stood in front of the girls' dormitories at night when the p-nclin hnou could hardly be called love. Those involved do not even say they love each other: they do not know how for they do not actually feel genuine love for each other. They are putting in time-acting auto- matically; following drives, not human sentiment. They are just downright out of context. LOVE, TRUE LOVE is some- thing much sweeter, much more tender. Love in youth is the wish to share with another what are perhaps the most exquisite human emotions, in an atmosphere of re- spect and control, of concern fro the other nerson's dignity. True love does not look for the cheap hit and run thrill; trite love does not corner and pressure, does not use, does not think of one's own egoistic self first ,and foremost. True love is, in a word, sweet and tender.., always, no matter how short or how long the acquaint- ance. The practice of the type of love found on this campus is attribut- able in the author's mind tq four main factors: a) ignorance and laziness on the part of; boys, b) going steady, c) settling for less by girls, d) absence of teaching of time-proven moral principles in school. * C * SEXUAL URGES HAVE come to boys, but they have never under- stood their true meaning. Never have they organized them or humanized them like they have the other forces they experience. In this connection they have not gone to the trouble of under- standing the psychological and emotional make-up of girls. Lack- ing control, lacking knowledge of girls as. they truly are, their ap- proach to feminine companionship is possessive, animalistic. The "primitive stuff" is not really, in the well-nigh totality of cases, what girls want. They would much prefer respectful, yet how sweet and tender, affection. Yet, because the primitive stuff, in too many cases, is all that the boys seem' capable of offering, they settle for it. If only they could stop and take time to rediscover them- selves emotionally, rediscover the power of the old slap in the face. If the boys whose company they keep cannot be simply sweet and tender, then they are not worth the trouble. In "going steady" appears the notorious safety complex. Girl and boy hang on to each other for dear life in order to be always set and ready to go to various social functions, particularly in order not to be alone when the week--end rolls around. This going steady- under the nresent circumstannes havedbeen told what to do with the drives that were assailing us,, told their real purpose, their hu- man significance, it was in school. Home influence has to be excep- tionally strong to tackle the job alone. The schools have cheated us. They have given us courses in art appreciation and a hundred other things, but never any course in these important formative years in appreciation of clean and moral living ad the rules to follow to secure it. Here again there is a right answer, and a wrong one. Traditional morality is based on knowledge of the true nature of man. In.conclusion there is a special and correct context for passion. In the wrong context passion cheapens, makes you -feel "all empty iiside," gives no joy. On the contrary affection freshens, heartens, enriches, gives lasting joy. Our is a time and. context for affection, the finer art of love. Away now with the inconsider- ate and selfish in love. Forward with the sweet and tender and profoundly human. There is so much to be gained. -Name withheld Fraternities .. To the Editor: THE ISSUE OF fraternity dis- crimination recently brought to the fore by current events in the state of California brings many to ,the defense of the bias clause. One of their main arguments holds that the forced disposal of the bias clause from certain fraternity, and sorority charters or constitu- tions infringes on an organiza- tion's right to select its member- ship. The question is not "whether or not a fraternity or any other or- ganization has the right to choose its membership by its own stan- dards." This right it undeniably has. The basic question is "whether or not a bias clause of the sort found in the ATO or Sigma Nu charters abridges the right of any individual to choose for himself." The individual is discriminated against in the sense that his field of choice is clearly restricted un- der conditions which he cannot change-- that being race or color. A fraternity or sorority can still exercise its freedom of choice in selecting members without a bias clause, simply by lack of support for an individual seeking mem- bership. However, some indivi- duals seeking membership cannot exercise their complementary free- dom of selection if an organiza- tion's charter or constitution con- tainns discriminatory provisions haps God and our own technology will beat them to it, for, if nuclear- armed push buttons are left in the hands of man this is to be the end result. It seems as though our scientific aptitude is always a few thousands years ahead of our common sense. At least that's how long it usually takes for man- kind to find the cure for his self- created disease. Have we now reached perfection. Do we at last have a "new improved, instant" killer? LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Lumumba Murder Exploied by Reds. festivals, few have really been DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is a off icial publication of The Univer- sity Of Michigan for which The: Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administratidn Building, before 2 p.m. two days preceding publication. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23 General Notices Regents' Meeting: Fri., March 17. Com- munications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than March .' Student Leadership Exchange fellow- ship applications are now available at the Scholarship -Office,2011 Student Activities Building. The application period will be from Feb 21 :through Sr pM. March 6. This fellowship includes all expenses, except travel, for a year's study at University College, University of London. Scholarship and; leadership are the main criteria for receiving the fellowship. The recipient must meet all requirements for admission to the University College, University of Ln- don. Leadership in student activities will include active participation in any recognized extra-curricular activity.A superior academic performane is also essential as this would indicate ability to cprry on study at the University College in London. F Ben and Lucile Braun Scholarship ap- pication forms are now avalabe at the' Sholarship office, 2011 Student Activities Bldg. Undergraduate students with an average of "B" or better and financial need are eligible to apply. Those students completirwg a General Undergraduate Scholarship application ilwill be considered for this scholarship and others of the same type. These awards will be announced later nthe, spring and will take affectwth the fal semester. Agnes de Mile to Speak Monday Night. Agnes de Mille, noted choreog- rapher and author, w111 be presented Monday 8:30 p.m. in HillAd Ticketsx.; are on sale today, tomorrow and Mon- day at Vhe Aud. box office. Students are offered a special reduced rate on all tickets. Buton Holmes Travelogue "Englar" " tonight;. The new color motion patie "England, Roundabout London" Will be shown tonight 8:30 p.m. in Hill Aud. as the first; of the series of Thursday. night travelogues presented by the Uni- versity Platform Attractions. Robert Mallett will narrate. Tickets are on sale today 10 a.m.-8:30.m. in the Auditorium boxoffice. Season tickets for the complete series may be pur- chased through tonight,. Events Friday Faculty Recital: Millard Cate, tenor, and Eugene Bossart, pianist, will pre- sent a recital On Fri., Feb, 24 at 8:30 p.m. in Aud. A. ' Psychology Colloquium: Prof. Norman Guttman, Department of Psychology, Duke University, will discuss "Stimulus Generalization and the Definition' of Behavior" on Fri., Feb. 24 at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. B. Placement Notices Beginning with Tues., Feb. 28, the fol. lowing schools will have representatives at. the Bureau torinterview for the . 1961-1962 school year. TUES., FEB. 28- Battle Creek, Mch.-Elem.; Jr. HS Eng./SS, Gen. St.; Jr. or Sr. HS Math, Eng., Set., Home Ec., Id. Arts, BUS:. Ed., Girls PE, Library; Spec. Ed.; Sp. Corr., Ment. Ret., Deaf, Blind, Ocup, Therapy, Sl. Diag. Humbolt, Calif,.(Humbolt St. Col.)- Bus. Law, Eng./Journ., Geol./Earth Sci Psych., Women's PE, Physics, Zool, Muskegon, Mich.-Elem.; Spec. Ed. (All Types);' Reading Specialit, HS..- Eng., Math.g, Royal Oak, Mch.-Elem., Vocal Mus.; Spec. Educ. Ment. Ret., Sp. Corr.; S Eng., Hist., Soc. Stud., Math, Sol. WED., MARCH 1- St. Louis, Mo. (La Due, Schools) -- Elem.; Jr. HS Lang, Arts/ss, Nat. Sci./Math, Phys. Sll. Pre., Span., Home e., Library, Conserv., Art, Music, PE/ Swim. Coach; HS Eng., re.,, Span., Math; Elem. & Jr. HS Phys. Educ. Toledo, O.-All Elem. & Secondary ex- cept Men's , Spe. Ed.: Deaf, Speech Therapist, Slow: Learner. THURS., MARCH 2-- Carmichael, Calif. (San Juan Unif. Sel. Dist.)-AAl Fields. Crystal Falls, Mich.-Elem. (K-6); Jr. HS Eng./Speech, Soc. Stud.; Camp Per- sonnet. FRI., MARCH 3-- Berkeley, Calif.-Elem., Jr. HS Bus. Ed., Eng., Eng./Soc. Stud., Home Ec., Math, Math/Sci., Math/Ind. Arts, Span./ Pre., voc. *us./SS, Rem, Read.; ES Bus. Ed,, Eng., Math, Metal Shop, Life Sci., Boys PE/Coach Football, Soc. Stud., Span., Stagecraft. La Grange Park, III.-Elem.; Spec. Ed. Phys Hdcp., r. Ment. Hdcp., Multi. Hdap., Sp. Corr., Soc. Worker; Lang. Arts,.. Soc. Stud., Math, Sci., Library, Art.,PE Home Ec., Ind. Arts; Elem. Music. San Jose, Calif.-Elementary (K-6). Stockton, Calif. (Lincoln $ch.) - Elem. (K-6); Music (K-8) Band, Strings, Choir; HS Ind. Arts, Girls PE, Eng., Math, Soc. Stud., Caen. Sci., Physics, Russian, Boys PE Head Football Coach, Football Coach/other teaching field. The Independent Schools Association will hold a meeting at the School of Education n Wed., March 1, at 7:30 p.m. Anyone interested in teaching in private schools in the Detroit area should attend. For any additional information and appointments contact the' Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. INTERVIEWS; BUREAU OF APPOINT-