.' ,u flr~ian Ball Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS June 21: Apology to Carl Cohen, et al Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the inidividual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: SUSAN SCHNEPP The New Asian Union: Security from Within By LEONARD PRATT Circulation Manager QUIT. Moreover, I confess and apolo- gize to the campus at large. Ever since the end of May it has been I who managed, to the degree that is possible, the Daily's circulation department. It was my boys that, with the precision of a brain surgeon and the grace of a Sherman tank, lofted your paper through the second-floor window at 7 a.m.-or at noon. And it was I who, with the best intentions in the world, told you that I would leave the boys a note and tell them not to do it again. WHAT YOU probably didn't know was that the circulation manager has about as much con- trol over his paper boys as Snoopy has over the Red Baron. "But if the circulation manager has about as much control over his paper boys as Snoopy has over the Red Baron," you rightfully ask, "what's the sense of having one?" The only reason The Daily has a circulation manager, as far as I've been able to figure out is, quite frankly, educational. Except for bartending, there is certainly no profession better situated to study human nature than The Daily's circulation manager. So in addition to quitting, con- fessing and apologizing, I'd hon- estly like to thank you all for letting me get to know you. YOU'RE DIVIDED into four basic groups. First are the Good Guys, consisting largely of profes- sional and non-professional phil- osophers and secretaries. Notables among this category are Carl Coh- en (first winner of The Award, see below) and the secretaries at -the second-floor information desk in the Administration Bldg., the information desk at the University Hospital and a secretary some- where within the Administrative Services Bldg. Other Good Guys are those who have had this sort of job before, All can be recognized by their gentle tones and their use of many indefinite word forms like "if," "when," "might," "could" or "stu- pid." Many Good Guys eventually be- come eligible for The Award. We figured that if someone wanted The Daily enough to complain five times without cancelling his sub- scription he deserved some rec- ognition. So we gave him a free subscription; thus The Award. THEN THERE are the Bad Guys. Bad Guys have two techniques for trying to get a Daily delivered to them. The first is the "just got out of bed" approach, known also as the "I'm normally a nice guy, but God fm I mad at you" tech- nique. Their hope is certainly to coerce these idiots at The Daily into delivering the paper while not leaving the impression that they are any worse than the next guy. It doesn't work. A second major Bad Guy tech- nique is to try and frighten the circulation manager into seeing that they get a paper. Usually this pitch runs "If you don't de- liver a paper here tomorrow morn- ing I'll cancel my subscription!" It doesn't work either. , -There is one way to assauge the feelings of both Good and Bad Guys. That is to knock 50 cents or so off their bill. It is in- credible, just incredible, to hear how happy a student paying $1500 a year of his father's $13,000-a- year income becomes when you tell him you'll charge him 50 cents less for his Daily. THIRD ON MY list of Daily- subscriber-types are the Hurt Guys. They are hurting because they the not receiving a Daily and feel somehow slighted; I think they are genuinely worried that the paper doesn't love them. Look here, Hurt Guys: The Daily doesn't love anyone. I've been working here three and one- half years and it only likes me. Stick with it, though, and maybe it will begin to nod its cupola as you walk past. FOURTH and last are the Per- fectionists. This is the sort of subscriber who tells us when he gets too many papers or gets them when he hasn't ordered them. Please don't misunderstand, Per- fectionists; I'm really glad you care enough to ask us not to send the very best. The problem is that there's no Awardhwe can give you for your thoughtfulness but sending -you more papers than you've ordered or a paper when you ,haven't or- dered it at all. What can you do for a lady who calls to inform you that she got six Dailies this morning but has no subscription?. Also on the Perfection list are those who are having their papers mailed to them and who write to complain that their name is spelled wrong. Although I suppose Steve Muchnick, alias Stee Much- nich, alias Steve Muchnich could have a legitimate complaint.. . SO, SUBSCRIBERS, I just want to tell you that I love you all. I will personally testify to your worth as human beings, individ- ually and collectively, whenever you like. There's even a little bit of nostalgia involved in leaving you. Drop into my life again sometime. AS SOMEONE recently remarked, when the political situation in Viet Nam is bad the administration points to the mili- tary success; and when the military situ- ation is bleak, the political progress in Saigon is hailed with each peaceful, pass- ing coup. This formula has been working quite well until recently, when everything seems hopeless. The PR men for the government are now pointing to a few strategic Asian countries and their current attempt to form a solid power bloc. The administra- tion is quick to point out that this un- precedented cooperation has taken place while the United States was defending democracy in Viet Nam. Those in the higher echelons are of the opinion that it was this staunch presence in the midst of their rice paddies which gave the Asians their courage and perception. IT SHOTLD BE pointed out that the union was proposed in spite of the war In Viet Nam. The nations involved, Thai- land, Japan, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singa- pore and the Philippines have reached the pragmatic age. They are growing rapidly, but not fast enough to please all of the populace, and the economies move in spurts. Alone the nations can do very little and the newly-developed feelings of nationalism are ruffled at the onrush of foreign aid. Industrialization is the creed of all un- derdeveloped countries; it is the ticket to world success. But the process of indus- trialization in the wake of the progress of the Western world would require large capital investments and technical knowl- edge. Only Japan, among the nations currently seeking each other out, has shown significant advances along the technological path. The others, after the reign of the "go it alone" philosophy, have found that with independence comes the realization that one is still dependent; dependent on the resources of others to accomplish the goal of industrialization. THE ASIAN MOVE toward cooperation is to be applauded for its pragmatic realism in the face of East-West ideologi- cal clashes. The informal union should do a great deal to further the develop- ment of Asian resources and power. And, the fact is that neither the West nor the Communists played a large role in the Asian move toward increased co- operation. In fact, the union was most likely conceived as a means of protecting the Asian sphere from foreign interven- tion into problems which are rightfully regarded as Asian problems to be solved by the Asians themselves. Other countries may alleviate the pres- ent difficulties now facing the underde- veloped countries but true strength must come from within. The Asians themselves have recognized this, and their current meetings indicate that they are now ready to draw up the master plan for a multi-lateral co-prosperity sphere. WHILE THE U.S. is making an abortive attempt to bring democracy, freedom and prosperity to the South Vietnamese the rest of the Asian world is building security from within. It's a shame that the South Vietnamese weren't represented at the Asian meeting. But then, Uncle Sam is there to make their decisions for them. Who needs oth- ers with a Sugar Daddy like that? -PAT O'DONOHUE 4 IS U: The Irony of Operation Upgrade 4 By ROGER RAPOPORT EAST LANSING, Mich.-Doug- las Lackey graduated "with highest honors" from Michigan State University a few days ago, a year ahead of time, but he wasn't in the football stadium here to receive his degree. Instead the thin, brown-haired student was outside walking a picket line. He and others were protesting the Johnson Viet Nam policy and the presence at the commencement of Vice-President Humphrey. EMBARRASSINGLY enough, the university itself enticed him to come to Michigan State three years ago. Like many other col- leges and universities across the land, Michigan State has been in the midst of Operation Upgrade, wooing top students in an ef- fort to enrich the intellectual at- mosphere. But in many cases, they are getting perhaps more than they bargained for-the brightest stu- dents often turn out to be the radicals and "trouble makers." CONSIDER the situation at Michigan State. In 1963 it start- ed its ambitious program to at- tract scholars and help further shed its agricultural-college im- age. But it went further than most universities. Instead of counting on money from Sears, Roebuck and Co., IBM and other companies that bank- roll National Merit Scholars, Mich- igan State itself started dishing out its own National Merit schol- arships. To make sure it got plen- ty of winners, it began actively recruiting all high school seniors who reached the semi-finals of the National Merit competition. Soon the campus was flooded with National Merit Scholars. Michigan State now boasts that its roster of 560 (of which 425 are financed by the university) far exceeds any other campus. Sec- ond-ranked Harvard has 405. The University rates its recruit- ing program a big success. yet lately, amidst the glee over all the brains attracted to East Lansing, there have been signs that such scholars are not always tranquil bookworms. A NUMBER of radical and dis- sident groups have cropped up, and almost all of them were or- ganized by National Merit Schol- ars. One of the ringleaders is Mr. Lackey, who also received a Wood- row Wilson grant. Item: National Merit Scholars formed a free-swinging weekly newspaper, called "The Paper." It regularly criticizes the universi- ty administration and came out with a particularly ribald issue recently when 8000 parents were in town for parent's weekend. Yet it purports to aid Michigan State's intellectual growth by "reporting and commenting on the universi- ty experience and encouraging others to do so." Item: Enraged because dormi- tory self-service laundry prices were raised 15 cents above the going rate off-campus, a Merit Scholar organized a protest group called SCUM (Student Committee to Understand Machines). Its slo- gan: "SCUM is stronger than dirt." Item: When Ramparts, a "new left" maagzine, was preparing to expose Michigan State's involve- ment with the CIA through its sponsorship of a Viet Nam proj- ect, several National Merit Schol- ars did research at $3 an hour. Even as University President John Hannah was defending Michigan State's position in the affair at a televised press conference, the Stu- dents for a Democratic Society - spearheaded by National Merit Scholars-was busy picketing. "We are not so good at learning but we're great at coup d'etats," jeer- ed one National Merit Scholar. SOME OF THIS activity, of course, can be written off as good- natured fun-amusing but nettling to any university administrator. But considering Michigan State went out and solicited its brain- children-turned-hell-raisers, Mr. Hannah and his associates are faced with a delicate situation. One worry: Michigan State may be subsidizing its own transforma- tion into one administrators call "the next Berkeley"-a reference to the University of California where student unrest produced havoc, and a black-eye for admin- istrators. Indeed, one of Mr. Hannah's fa- vorite speech topics is a warning that some of the activist student groups forming on many campuses may have Communist links. But there is a dilemma. Too hard a crackdown could backfire, creating big black headlines of an- other sort. Michigan State hews a cautious course, somewhere be- tween no action and a get-tough policy. JOHN FUZAK, vice-president for students, hired a graduate stu- dent this year, "to keep track of these kids," after he received many complaints. "They tell me to 'sus- pend 'em, kick them out, they're a bunch of kooks'." But Mr. Fuzak is quick to ex- plain that his new employe is no spy. "We're just trying to get some knowledge about them to find out if they have some legitimate com- plaints." Michigan State is hardly blind to the ironic situation its Merit Scholars recruiting has produced. But it mainly blames the students, not the program. "THERE IS NO simple answer to the problem of student discon- tent," says the university's 1965 annual report. "It must be rec- ognized that many bright stu- dents-and we continue to at- tract our full share of them-be- come disillusioned because their developed expectations have not been satisfied and they blame 'the University,' not themselves, for their disappointment." Others on campus, however, think the backfire in the end may cause some healthy changes. "The average kid gripes, but the National Merit Scholar type seems to go out and do something about his gripes," says Edward Graham, a humanities professor. Adds Louis Berman, advisor to the campus daily, "Let's face it. This was an extra-conservative campus until the National Merit Scholars came. These kids are disturbing a lot of people who need disturbing." Many professors think the Na- tional Merit Scholars' unrest re- flects disenchantment with class- room challenge here. "It's easier to improve recruiting than it is teaching," says Maurice Crane, another humanities professor. "We have special problems of bigness here and we hope the National Merit Scholars will continue to act as a leavening agent and help us out." WHETHER the Merit Scholars at Michigan State become a cat- alyst for better education or bad publicity remains to be seen. Some campus observers believe a set of faculty recommendations that would put more responsibil- ity in students' hands might help ease the pressure if adopted. But the ironic situation in East Lans- ing points up a dilemma confront- ing a growing number of quality- minded universities these days. (Reprinted from the wall st. Journal) 4 Equality: When Chance Replaces Discrimination DISCRIMINATION IS PASSE, and it is about time education realized it. Anti- discrimination forces are descending on education, and if education does not move fast, it will find itself removed from the decision making process in its own insti- tutions.' Education is like most other fields, re- senting the intrusion of outside forces into its daily affairs but still subject to the pressures of these outside forces. From sputniks to Viet Nam, from civil rights to the war on poverty, the out- side world has illuminated and forced rec- ognition of many of education's internal problems-such as discrimination. A CASE IN POINT is the effect of the civil rights movement on college ad- missions. Civil rights workers have brought about the increased desire for fairer means of determining who gets in to college, with less emphasis on mone- tary solvency, and an end to the socio- economic discrimination of the present method. This has led "white" universities to bend over backwards seeking Negro stu- dents, and has even led Negro schools to seek white students to make up for the loss of Negroes with the ability to pay who went to white universities. Such ac- tivities merely heighten discrimination. WHAT IS NEEDED is a system that does away with discrimination, one that does away with emotional and rational factors-chance. Each high school stu- dent wishing to go to college could, com- pletely by chance, be given a number from one to one million. He could then apply to whichever college he likes. Admissions officials could choose those students with the lowest numbers to fill their classes. Since this selection process could take a very short time, it would al- low for nearly immediate notification and response dates, to aid in the filling of all the college places throughout the nation. More selective schools could re- quire a certain minimum test score for applicants. All students would then be guaranteed money from the federal gov- ernment, if they needed it to go to college. FROM THE HUBBUB about Viet Nam comes another case, the recent stir about the college's issuance of transcripts be accessible for national service only in case of emergencies, and then by lot- tery only. Colleges will then be freer to study the elimination of grades without this outside influence, and even make grading other than on a pass-fail basis voluntary. PEOPLE WILL CALL the system anar- chy. Those in charge will smile secret- ly for they know it as controlled anarchy. People will curse a system that lets other people out of duties because of sim- ple luck. Those in charge will sigh and wonder how people can curse one system's chance without reason when they cursed another system's discrimination with rea- son. -MICHAEL HEFFER Health? THERE ARE WASTES of time and there are wastes of time. But then there are also insults. Like the orientation movie entitled "Circle of Health" which opens multifarious wonderful doors to our in- coming freshmen-the doors of the Uni- versity Health Service. Young freshman Johnny Applepie (played by Brandon De Wilde) arrives at the big "U" and his dorm (South Quad, of course-why don't they ever show any- one arriving at East?) with his family (played by Jane Wyman, Wally Cox and the Lennon sisters). As he moves in they are all smiles. Later, on his very own, Johnny swims in a pool (not the Union-and he jumps in holding his nose). Johnny walks around campus in the beautiful Ann Arbor weather which is always sunny and leafy. BUT ALAS AND ALACK, after studying ever so hard and dutifully while pic- tures of Mom and Dad watch on, young John is stricken with a virus. "This," the narrator says, "is John's first sickness away from home." John's roommate (played by Trueblood Doright) sees his agony (John is in bed with the covers pulled up around his neck and an expres- sion of pain on his face-I was certainly convinced that it was John's first sick- ness away from home) and maternally in- sists he go to that mother-surrogate for sick young boys, HEALTH SERVICE. For a Really Big Show- Contact NASA By WALLACE IMMEN MILLIONS OF television viewers followed every step of the re- cent Gemini 9 space mission, will- Ing to watch breathlessly for hours to view a momentary trail of smoke in living color. The plan- ners of America's space program should ponder this fact carefully the next time the space budget is criticized as a tax burden. THERE IS an aura about our space efforts which is now being readily exploited by the mass media. Television, especially, takes full advantage of the high viewer appeal of space ventures by pre- senting live coverage sponsored by well-healed corporations. For all the benefits television receives, it pays nothing for access to the government space facilities and such shows present no great pro- duction problems. Where else may main characters be found at no expense who are dying to explain detailed blue- prints of guidance systems while seated in a mock capsule set with a backdrop of equipment worth billions? These conditions make the launchings quite profitable for the networks, promoting the es- tablishment of such "gimmicks," as NBC's "Space Central," an ex- pensive permanent installation on the Cape for producing several telethons a month. On all channels, however, glow- ing commentators can command a large home audience as they read off acceleration speeds and fuel pressures, display do-it-yourself missiles and sprout the many cliches of astronautics. AND SO continually our space efforts have become theatrical ventures while security measures are quickly relaxed. All this sug- gests that if private firms can make profits from the excitement generated by a capsule orbiting the Earth, perhaps part of the $3.3 billion annual cost of space exploration could be defrayed if the government would employ a good talent scout or public rela- tions man to head the space pro- gram. The first order of business would be to establish a competitive bid system to each mission. Thistac- tic, extremely profitable for pro- moters of spectaculars such as the World Series or the Olympic Games would be equally success- ful for the space program. The rights may be coupled with a promise of more showmanship at the Cape, such as painting the spacecraft for color television. THE NUMBER of imaginative promotions which could be initiat- ed once such showmanship is es- tablished is stunning. These are a few examples which may well be seen in the near future: 1) Rather than leave the many tourists who come miles to sit on the beaches with binoculars to watch the flights, a moveable grandstand should be placed in front of the launching pad and a sign reading "See All The Action -$2.00" placed on the highway. Ground personnel nmay be pressed into service as hot dog vendors. 2) That is only a start. Surely large corporations could be in- duced to sponsor space ventures. The vehicles would reflect the sponsor's image and bear the names of Union Carbide or U.S. Steel rather than Gemini. Only a tiny portion of the huge profits being reported by any of various companies could finance part of a space vehicle and result in very effective promotions. 3) A NATIONAL space sweep- stakes before every firing would offer valuable prizes to the ticket holders who come closest to guess- ing the exact distance from the primary recovery craft the capsule will land-with a special bonus for a bulls-eye. Our propensity for gambling sends millions of dollars to Ireland each year to support their hospitals, there is no reason why this money shouldn't be kept in America to capitalize on the "buy American" appeal to support our astronauts. 4) Space shots could be made community affairs. It may not raise more money, but people may be more willing to part with some of their tax money if they could see what they bought. Taxpayers could agree to pay a reduced federal income tax and place the remainder into a central fund. When this fund becomes large enough, it would be used to fi- nance a space craft and the city would be its namesake. A group from the community would chris- ten it and "The City of Ann Arbor" would be a source of civic pride for years to come. 5) STIMULATING the patriotic nature could also help raise money. People who donate a cer- tain sum of money would receive a bumper sticker proclaiming "I'm helping overcome Communist dom- ination of space." Large scale phil- antropy could be rewarded by a "patriot of space" medal. 6) Finally, the government could issue space bonds, guaranteeing the holder the right to a plot of land on the moon. Their novelty value would make them popular before man lands there, and when we actually have settled on the lunar surface they would induce many to move from the over- crowded Earth. OF COURSE, these measures are still in the future and would stir a great deal of debate as to their feasibility. However, face- tious these proposals may sound, they are typical of what will even- tually have to be done in order to support the financing and popu- larity of our ambitious space pro- gram. The government has already allowed science to assume a side- show aspect and it is only a matter of time before it takes advantage of the profit potential. There will be those who will argue that such behavior will pro- stitute the importance of safety and technological excellence and reduce space ventures to farcical theatrics. They must remember, though, that any costly and in- volved undertaking demands sac- rifice. In this case the cost to science is dear. But it must come to this and sooner or later, it will. It is known as progress. A -4 The Press and the Courts "And Some Day They Might Even Extend The Idea To Our Own Little Planet" By NEAL BRUSS T IS ALMOST crisis time for newspapers because their func- tion and ability to responsibly document crime are being dis- puted. Statistics of some crimes are not being printed. Judges have ruled that due process for some recent criminal cases has been disrupted by newspaper publicity. The conviction of the Ohio doc- tor now in prison for murdering his wife was invalidated by the Supreme Court recently. A ma- jority ruling concluded that the trial was twisted by "inherently prejudicial publicity." Ohio prose- cutors have scheduled a second trial. An, extremely able Detroit jurist postponed the bribery and con- spiracy trial of the Boys from themselves. Detroit police officials have been sluggish to initiate their own investigation. The scandal comes at a special time for Detroit, close to major elections. If investigations are de- layed long enough, it will lose its meaning, which is considerable in a city that has boasted of police virtually free from vice for years. Both unfortunate events are be- ing blamed on newspaper activi- ties. IN THE MEANTIME, the Re- corder's Court bullpen swells with unnamed desperate men who await trial for unpublished crimes in astounding number. When a Recorder's judge is overwhelmed by the number of cases in a day's docket, the news- papers may be excused for print- ing the fact. But newspapers do by the guy who pulls a gun on the store owner and that committed by the businessman who uses money the wrong way, can be written and published in good taste by newspapermen. It is most important that these crimes be printed, for they are touchstones for something very wrong with the way booming cities are shaping up and money is being distri- buted. The collage of crime points to cruel and pitiful conditions in the big cities, the way the poor are living regardless of their civil rights, and the way some others are living beyond their personal liberties. This is where the indig- nancy should be, against the con- ditions that drive the thug to shoot the bartender and the en- trepreneur to conspire to bribe. But there can be no public in- dignation if the facts never reach