Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Optional Counseling: Aiding Idealism Where Opinions Are Free, Truth Will Prevail 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. 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. SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: PAT O'DONOHUE i Learn To Play GO- 'China Will Rise Again' WHILE U.S. Government officials call bombings of North Vietnam "stra- tegic," Sinoists are lolling lazily in their chairs, with omniscient smiles, waiting. For they know America is only deluding itself and, pushing the inevitable Chi- nese takeover to a more rapid conclusion. Mao's confidence will prove better founded than Lyndon's, and "China Will Rise Again," but not in the way that Ma- dame Chaing Kai-Shek envisioned. The dynastic cycle is rapidly approach- ing its apogee, and this time Chinese leaders will take in not only the Steppes, nor even be content with Southeast Asia -they'll have the world. NOT FOR LONG, maybe, but in such a burst of heat and light that it will compensate for the short duration of the flame. Better to have the bomb admini- ster the coup d'grace than a successor pull a coup d'etat. Better to have half a swastika than a whole-the meteoric glory of, the yang will reign supreme for a moment, then disappear just as spectacularly, without the decadence and dishonor of the yin. HOW FALLACIOUS to suppose the Chi- nese will dismantle their plans out of a fear of consequences from a nuclear war! For a long time, they have been prepared for, hoped for, the chaos and confusion of spirit with all the elements :f the cosmos. Listen to the bones of Taoist philoso-' pher Chiuang Tzu: . .. "'I am a wave!/ In the River of Darkness and Light. Reaven is my bed and earth my cushion. / The thunder and lightning are my drum and fan, / The sun and moon my candle and my torch, / The Milky Way my moat, the stars my jewels. / With Nature am I conjoined...'" SPECIAL REPORTS have it that Mao will soon submit his hsi, or war procla- mation to Lyndon. As historians tell us, "City walls of 10,000 chih (50 miles) have crumbled under the weight of a hsi. And, according to Analects 24/12/19: "The grasses incline under the strength of the wind of proclamation.'% After scuttling many drafts, word is that the hsi, in final form is very near "ompletion. However, either out of a bene- volent gesture in the name of fair play or an adventurous desire to prolong the game a little longer, Mao, before sending the portentuous document, is rumored to have said he plans to send Lyndon a gift-a GO board, complete with black and white stones. -SHIRLEY ROSICK Not e-You9 "pEACE IS MORE within our reach than at any time in this century," Lyndon Johnson said in Omaha on Thurs- day. And it is too. It is in Eastern Europe. It is in Africa. In a way it is even closer in China and the Far East than at any other time in this century. Closer than at any other time-except in Viet Nam. There it is more within your reach, President Johnson-and farther from ours. -LEONARD PRATT Co-Editor EVER HAVE this happen? You have just begun to get down to work after the first four weeks of a semester. Suddenly a letter arrives announcing the beginning of pre-classification for the next semester. Already? Well, all right, you think. I'll get around to it soon. One week later you are stand- ing in a snail-paced line in Angel Hall waiting to get an appoint- ment with your counselor so he can sign his name to whatever course schedule you have chosen. In the rush it may have been cho- sen at whim with a few consider- ations for distribution require- ments and those of your major. THE FRIENDLY secretary near the door smilingly informs you that the first time you can get an appointment with your counselor is late next month, when all the courses you wanted to take 'will, undoubtedly, be closed. To further add to your woes, the meeting with your counselor is hardly adequate. After discussing your language requirement and the courses you will take for your major, little else is said. You know that there are perhaps ten peo- ple waiting outside to see the counselor with more appearing each minute. You would like to tell your counselor about your new interest in mass communications, history, or chemistry, and to ask him about changing or incorpor- ating these studies into your ma- jor, but the worriedtfurrow in his brow tells you that it may be time to leave. Maybe next semester there will be time ... BUT YOU PROBABLY never had this happen to you. After receiving the announce- ment of pre-classification you pick up the necessary forms in Angel Hall, chose your course elections, sign the cards yourself, hand the forms to a secretary and leave. That's all. If you have a problem or an idea concerning your academic standing, course elections, chang- es in major, etc., an appointment with the counselor can be arrang- ed. This appointment, however, is not mandatory. It is solely to help you with a specific problem or simply to have a talk with your counselor. Impossible? Not exactly. T H E OPTIONAL Counseling Program was initiated this spring just to make this kind of contact between student and counselor possible. The program has been under consideration for a number of years. According to James Shaw, chairman of the Junior-Senior counselors, those involved in the planning were worried that it would appear that they "didn't care" about the students, that they were "taking a laissez-faire atti- tude toward counseling." Others. feared that no counseling at all would take place, and felt they were doing a good job of counsel- ing under the old system. Nevertheless, a faculty commit- tee began to seriously study the proposal. Later this group was joined by several students - two of them from the literary college steering committee, (Paradoxi- cally, some of the students accep- ted the proposal very cautiously, perhaps fearful of mistakes in distribution and major require- ments). The Associates by carney and wolter THE BASIC objectives of the program are to free counseling meetings from the card-signing rut into which they have fallen and to place the emphasis on the discussion (lengthy if necessary) of substantive issues. As described in the announce- ment sent to second-semester so- phomores last spring (who will be the first group to test the pro- gram): "Under the terms of this pro- gram, selected students may sign their own election, cards for two of their last four semesters in the College. Normally, a stu- dent following the Optional Program will hold a thorough discussion with his counsellor when he begins his concentra- tion (i.e. while pre-classifying as a second-semester sopho- more) and when he, leaves it (i.e. while pre-classifying for a Senior-year semester) ." More important than the con- venience both for the student and the counselor that this system provides, is the change in the na- ture of the counseling session. This will not change the total amount of time spent in counselling, but rather, as the announcement sug- gests: "Since a student will consult his advisor only when he has significant issues to discuss; his advisor will be free to discuss those issues more fully. In short, the Program is designed to improve both the nature and quality of academic counseling by giving qualified students greater freedom and responsi- bility in designing and carrying out their educational programs." SHAW EMPHASIZED that ano- ther qualitative advantage to the change was the nature of the ad- vice the faculty members would be asked to give. He pointed out that, while giving advice on spe- cific courses is difficult unless one has actually taught or taken the courses, the faculty is eminently qualified to advise the student on problems with his general aca- demic goals and his progress to- ward them. He added that one reason that counseling has lately degenerated in the eyes of the students is that the faculty counselors have been asked to give advice in areas where they are not qualified-such as individual course content and qua-; lity. DESPITE THE encouraging setup of the program and the care taken in its development, the responseto the announcement mailed out this spring was any- thing but enthusiastic: of 2,777 second-semester sophomoresin the literary college at the time, only 46 elected to participate. The meagre response, however, cannot be considered indicative of strong aversion, on the part of the students. The fact of the mat- ter is that the Program was not passed until just after pre-classi- fication had begun last semester. Therefore, there was little ad- vance publicity to encourage stu- dents to participate. Those students who were infor- med of the new Program were, in all likelihood, worried that they would lose contact with their counselor or that they would somehow miss required courses through the Optional Counseling Program. In addition, force of habit, i.e., the custom of seeing the counselor once a semester, may have discouraged some. BUT IT MUST be emphasized that no amount of favorable pub- licity and information will make this program work if students are not willing to make their own contribution. This means that they will have to have enough commitment to the idealism of the Program to take the plunge and participate in it. This involves an assumption of responsibility on the part of the student. Not only must he try to continue to see his counselor- for the more in-depth discussions that the Program calls for, but he must also contribute his ideas and opin- ions 'to the effort to improve the whole concept of counseling. The counselors have to know how their new plan is working, and they have an excellent vehicle for com- munication of the students' ideas in the literary college steering committee. THE OPTIONAL Counseling Program is only one of several very idealistic programs develop- ed in the past year that need the participation of students in order to succeed-hot the least of these being the new vice-presidential advisory committees. . Some have criticized the ad- ministration in the past for its lack of an inovative spirit. If the idealism shown in their willing- ness to try these programs can be matched by an equally ideal- istic response from the student, this University will have taken a long step toward becoming a truly dynamic academic community. 4 r 4- American Naivete-DeGaulle to Gandhi Old Skeletons In Detroit Closets By WILLIAM MYERS Collegiate Press Service AMERICAN REACTIONS to events of "un-American" na- ture are peculiarly naive. It would seem that politically and even ar- tistically we must forever pose as honest, truthful youngsters con- templating with astonishment a world that is jaded, opportunistic, and evil. We do not understand DeGaulle, as we did not understand Nehru. And, as long as we have to live with the problems of the cold war, we still do not understand the Soviet Union, particularly in the case of its policies. And, ultima- tely, do not understand ourselves. LAST FEBRUARY, two Soviet writers, Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuli Daniel, were convicted of having published "anti-Soviet" novels and stories abroad under pseudo- nyms. Sinyavsky was sentenced to seven years at hard labor and Daniel to five. It is not, despite the fuss that has been made about it, an extraordinary case. In fact, I am surprised it has received as much notice as it has except that the works of these writers have been made available to the Eng- lish-speaking public. Reaction to the conviction and sentencing has been wholly unpre- dictable. The major Communist parties outside the U.S.S.R. con- demned the writers' trial as more harmful to International Com- munism than their writings. This is true; it is analogous to the fact that in the United States, instant popularity is guaranteed any book that is banned in Bos- ton. THE AMERICAN reaction was, well, typical of our naivete in mat- ters of this nature. (I am not convinced that it is genuine, ex- cept in the case of a few artists.) We sent a letter of protest, or, rather, some writers and thinkers did. There were 18 of them and they asked Mr. Kosygin to re- lease the two imprisoned writers. A few months later some students in Greenwich, Conn., sent a simi- lar letter to Kosygin. The letter writers used phrases like "harsh sentences," and "to seek justice" and "languishing in prison." (Is it really true that all prisoners "languish"?) I distrust big words, and fre- quently even medium-sized words. And I must confess I do not understand why we must react with such pious, shocked surprise to Soviet censorship. Is it because this nation above all others has occupied our national conscious- ness in recent years as the anti- pathy of our supposed ideals? Is it because we wear the white hats and they wear the black hats? I CONTEND that this case is pale compared to the practice of censorship in other countries, not- ably the Republic of South Afri- ca. In the last year or so we have finally gotten around to making a fuss about this country, through the United Nations. But there was not much noise made here when Helen Joseph, a South African writer, was sentenced as a result of her writing to five years house arrest in 1962 and fled the coun- try. Or when similar strictures were placed upon Alan Paton, who has achieved immense popularity in the United States. This is only one example of f o r e i g n suppression of free speech, which happens to come to mind because it represents one of the more radical instances. Equil- ly horrifying, however, is Alan Ginzburg's account in Fact Mag- azine (certainly it is biased) of his trial and conviction by a Federal Judge in Philadelphia for dissem- ination of pornography through the mails. We are not shocked at this "outrage" because the prev- alent attitude toward Ginzburg is that he is a depraved nut who got what was coming to him. I contend that free speech is free speech and suppression is sup- pression, no matter where prac- ticed or by whom. Ginzburg is in precisely the same position as Sin- yavsky and Daniel, and our pious pronouncements about justice in the Soviet Union are ludicrous. I WOULD LIKE to say that ulti- mately the art of literature will be unaffected by the censors. I would like to say that writers are as perennial as the grass, that for each writer who is silenced anoth- er will spring up in his place to continue telling stories about the world that he sees. I would like to say, really, that governments do not matter to art. But we make them matter, and in making them matter we make it that much harder for writing as a craft and art to be peren- nial; we make the censors impor- tant. This is unfortunate because there will always be people who do not understand the fundamen- tal fact about a book; if it of- fends, you can close it and re- fuse to read further. A person who claims to have been corrupt- ed or offended by a piece of writ- ing admits implicitly that he was corrupted because he wanted to be corrupted. WE GIVE CREDENCE to these people and place them in our government and on our commit- tees and believe in them. And then we are shocked when it happens in the Soviet Union, (Myers is a staff writer for the University of Denver Clarion.) vpl IE DOOR TO Detroit's closet of skele- tons is rattling again. Whether or not someone ventures to open it or merely ignores it is up to the citizens of Detroit and the Board of Education's treatment of the facts presented them by a special team investigating the student unrest six weeks ago at Northern High School. The chief causes of the unrest, the team reports, were an unsympathetic principal and attitude and loyalty divisions within Happy Birthday IT'S ANOTHER July 4th weekend, Ameri- ca. Happy Birthday. Once upon a romanticized time, about when you decided to have a birthday, America, little pessimistic people ran about saying you were premature, and would never have another birthday. Now these same people still run around telling you the next glorious Fourth will find you a colony again, or in some equally tragic fate. Politierans aside, these seem to be the only people who have any more of that old-college-football-game- spirit that carried us through so many wars, but doesn't seem to be carrying us through this one. NOW A GREAT many of us still respect you, America, and the principles you stand for, and most of us are capable of turning into bloodthirsty Yankees when the occasion arises. But we also feel there are more important ways than flag-wa~v- ing to be patriotic. If we wanted to re- treat somewhere we would leave you. We are staying to fight for you. And what should be fought at the mo- ment is the drifting of American policy down the battleground path, drifting there because we have a feeling we ought to spread our way of life around the globe because we think it is best. IT MAY BE like July Fourth on the high- ways. Statisticians say that people who have made definite vacation plans have the least chance of being killed on the roads this weekend. Those who have made no plans, and will seek entertainment be- causse they feel they ought to spend a the faculty. They made the recommen- dation that the school's principal, Arthur T. Carty, be removed and a new principal named within two weeks. THE REPORT by the team, a committee of the City Wide Commission for High School Studies, was presented to the Board on June 21. Since then there has been no official mention of it. Although the Board has taken no stand collectively, various members have placed the nam- ing of a new principal out of their hands, calling it an administrative matter. To this, committee chairman Charles Wells has replied that he does not expect overwhelming community support, "but the board does have a responsibility to respond to them." The board must take positive action on this matter soon so that it can be settled and preparations made for the coming fall sessions. Detroit's citizens can help in the speedy resolution of this by making their views known-writing the members of the board and sending letters to the editor of their own area newspapers. Pushing the problem back into a dark corner can only breed more hatred and rebellion; it must be dealt with in the open with frankness and objectivity. THE STUDENTS have made the first move to help themselves. Now it is in the citizens' hands. -MARY V. WOLTER Appreciation INTO THE MIDST of often-sterile urban renewal architecture has come the simple splendor of the Detroit Institute of Arts new South Wing. The building is as exciting as the masterpieces which hang on its walls, and visitors to the mu- seum may now have difficulty in deciding which-the building or the painting-has assumed the role of complementing the tther. Unfortunately Detroit's architectural triumph has not been recognized with the enthusi.sm it deserves. The harmony achieved between the edifice and its con- tents is unrivaled in the Midwest, perhaps the countrv. Those who have called the More Escalation with Less Imagination EDITOR'S NOTE: Although depots away from the obvious oil this column was written before targets. the announcement of the bomb- The remarkable fact is that ings of Hanoi and Haiphong, it Hanoi is acting as though it is was obviously meant to fore- ready to discount the punishment shadow the bombing, and makes we inflict and to carry on with some highly valuable comment the war. This cannot mean that on their implications. Hanoi underestimates the des- .-c.w. tructive power of our bombers. It cannot mean that Hanoi thinks THE QUESTION of whether or President Johnson is not ruthless not to escalate the bombing in enough to use the bombers or North Viet Nam has not yet, so that he will be deterred by the we have just been told, been def- opposition to the war in the initely answered, But it is most United States. probable that additional bombing THE FACT of the matter is that will take place. the North Vietnamese, who have There is good reason to suppose been on the receiving end of our that the North Vietnamese expect bombing campaign, seem to think a much heavier bombardment less of the effectiveness of air- against Hanoi and Haiphong and power than we do. Nearly a year have been preparing for it by and a half ago we started bombing evacuating civilians, dispersing the supply lines in North Viet factories and establishing fuel Nam. We believed that we could The Vietnam Game r ty Today and 11110 T y omorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN stop the infiltration of North Viet- namese troops and supplies into South Viet Nam. Now we are being told that we did not stop the supplies, in fact, that the flow of men and materials has doubled since we started to interdict it. Airpower has not been able to interdict the supply routes in Viet Nam as it was unable to interdict them in Korea more than 10 years ago. So now the wishful thinkers are telling us, or at least are telling themselves, that the way to inter- dict the North Vietnamese troops and supplies is to knock out the oil and storage tanks and the harbor of Haiphong. The theory is that without this oil the trucks cannot move into South Viet Nam. It seems reasonably evident that the North Vietnamese have already discounted this escalation of the war. Thus, they have not folded up when the President threatened it. IT IS, HOWEVER, most prob- able that the threat will be carried out. On the one hand, the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the opinion polls agree. On the other hand, Secretary of State Dean Rusk is adamantly opposed to any of the measures-such as those proposed by UN Secretary General U Thant -to make the situation negotiable. Why, then, is the President still hesitating? Presumably because he cause wider bombing will not only leave us isolated in the world, but because it can easily land us in a very dangerous dispute with countries, such as the Soviet Union, which send ships to Hai- phong. * * * DURING JUNE, Rusk has been to Europe and to Australia looking after our alliances. In the case of NATO he was confronted with the fact that Europe today has outlived the NATO of some 20 years ago and is ready for, in fact is demanding, great changes in the purposes, the plans and the objectives of the alliances. In the case of SEATO, the al- liance in Southeast Asia, the dom- inant fact is that the United States is fighting a very consider- able war with no help from Paki- stan and France, with only token help from the British members and the Philippines and with the growing involvement of Thailand. While NATO and SEATO are very different, one thing is com- mon to them. While both are de- fensive alliances against a Com- munist great power, either or both of them would be a catastrophic failure if they did not prevent a great .war. THE PREVENTION of a great war can only be accomplished by a thaw in the cold war and even- tual conciliation, such as has been under way in Europe since the nuclear test ban treaty and is now proceeding under the powerful im- pulse given to it by Gen. Charles de Gaulle. Asking ourselves how a similar thaw might become possible in the Far East, we should, I think, note two controlling elements as we have seen them in our European hand, a strategic balance of power has not yet been reached. For while the United States has vir- tually absolute nuclear superiority over China, the effectiveness of this superiority is neutralized by the Soviet-Chinese alliance which is presumably alive. In this state of nuclear neutralization, the manpower of China available for guerrilla fighting is a potent and unsettling factor. FURTHERMORE, as compared with the situation which has de- veloped in Europe in the past four or five years, there is as yet no important Asian power capable of taking the lead, as has Gaullist France, in breaking up the pattern of the cold war. In this respect the most hopeful development is Asia for a long time is the emergence of Japan as a power, as we saw in the recent Asian conference in Korea. Al- though nothing was entirely clear or very definite, it was apparent that, in emerging as a great power in Asia, Japan will assume a role not unlike that of Gaullist France toward the Soviet Union of media- tor with Red China. IN THE WHOLE vast process of change in Europe and the Far East, Secretary Rusk has chosen to identify the United States with nonbelief in the changes. He has abandoned the initiative in open- ing ways to the future and seems so concerned with the risks of change, which, of course, exist, that how patly he has been able to stand has become the measure of his diplomatict success. The moral assurance which en- velops the American standpattism is impressive. Never a word of doubt is offered in official quar- I