_ Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS July 21: Being Our Keeper's Brother -. ..:;. ere Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MiCH, Truth Will Prevail NEWSYADOTAN7R4R0552 NEws PHbNr.- 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. 'THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: MERELITH EIKER a Another Day, Another Dollar By LEONARD PRATT Co-Editor THERE ARE A lot of universities that don't know when they're well off. Evidently Michigan has its share. Western Michigan University, in ,Kalamazoo, enrolled itself in this league over the weekend when it refused to renew the contract of a Jesuit theologian who had been teaching an experimental religion course there since 1962. TALKING WITH Fr. John Hard- on, it's not hard to see how a university - especially WMU, which for a long time now has had the potential for repeating the worst academic errors of Mich- igan State University-would find it difficult to live with him. The man has more degrees than the back room of a police station. He has been attending colleges for longer than some University stu- dents have been alive. This being so, he, like most scholars, is not one to suffer fools gladly. His particular approach to theology is also one that could easily prove difficult for a public university to accept. Teaching "on my own terms," as he warned WMU officials he would, Hardon stressed that the values inherent in particular religions-Protestant and Jewish as well as Catholic- were of particular importance to today's students. UNFORTUNATELY this smack- ed a little too much of the Church in state for WMU officials. "(Hardon) seems to feel that doc- trine can be taught in a state university in the same way as in a Catholic or other religious school where indoctrination is taken for granted," said Prof. Cornelius Loew, chairman of WMU's religion department. It's easy to see how the two wouldn't mix. It's also easy to wish they had been able to. If there is one area in which a university education could be im- mediately relevant to modern life, it is the theological. Spiritual con- cerns are, in far from traditional ways, to be sure, among the most overriding for modern students. They are made that important simply because, for most students, they don't exist. The study of so- ciology and anthropology tends to shine a light on religion that's so strong it evaporates. IT'S ALMOST possible to for- mulate a law of spiritual supply and demand. With the destruction of traditional reliigon-that con- nected with the family, organized worship and social bonds-the de- mand for something meaningful to replace it has grown beyond the capacity of the society to do so. This should not be taken too literally. In other words no one should suggest that it leads to inflation of spiritual goods-that drug usage or Modesty Blaise are attempts to satisfy the needs that a loss of religious sensibilities in a society create. They are at- tempts to satisfy needs that would exist religion or no, needs that have existed for a long time in industrial societies. In fact there is little to fill the gap which religion's absence leaves in modern life. Maybe that's inevitable. Perhaps religious needs have been outgrown by civiliza- tion, or rather "postcivilization." THE TRAGEDY of that is that religious practice is falling to the wayside without so much as a second glance from either society at large or church officials. Both are more than content to let it slide along just as it has done for the last several decades. Yet is it possible that there is something there to be lost? Per- haps, just perhaps. Today the human race is closer to both annihilation and immor- tality than it has ever been before. We are close to being creators ourselves, both of protoplasm and of actual intelligence. The seas may soon become our servants and the moon our steppingstone. Then again, France exploded its second atomic bomb Tuesday and was ever so proud of the fact that they had' done it from an airplane rather than from the top of a tower. More masculine, no doubt. GIVEN ALL that,, it's too bad religion isn't getting its chance to keep up with it all, to show whether or not it has a place albeit a changed one-in the new scheme of things. Maybe it does, maybe it doesn't. But if it does, and is allowed to lose all signifi- cance despite its present active form, we will have missed a good deal. The intimate examination of the religious experience and its func- tion thus must be in the province of the modern university. The en- tire area deserves the fullest in- quiry possible. That's why Hardon's firing is unfortunate. It stifles one of the few attempts to create that sort of inqury. IF THE UNIVERSITY'S short a man in the fall, Hardon wouldn't be a bad investment. RESIDENTS-at least some of them-re- fer to the city as "the Best Location in the Nation," and perhaps at one time it was. Perhaps at one time the Lake Erie shoreline along which Cleveland is sit- uated was free from pollution; perhaps awhile back suburbs were not threatened by extended expressways; and perhaps once upon a time the Hough area was a peaceful, thriving residential neighbor- hood. Like everything else, time changes the character of a city - forces modernism into antiquity, chips paint, and plays havoc with long-range planning. Conti- nuity is difficult to maintain-political machines and mayors do not always com- plement one another. Cleveland is no different from Chica- go, Los Angeles, or New York. Its popula- tion may be smaller-its ghettoes not as extensive-and it may take its residents just a little longer to react, but essen- tially the racial problems facing Cleveland this summer are the same as those facing other American cities. YESTERDAY Bertram E. Gardner, exec- utive director of the Cleveland Com- munity Relations Board, partially excused the city's current riots and devastating racial disturbances with the comment, "Those people who demonstrate in ;Hough can't handle their emotions as some of the others do." And the natural reaction to his statement is of course, "Why?" Why can't the Negroes who live be- tween East 70th and East 90th Streets, between Superior and Chester, handle their emotions? Is it because they're Ne- groes? Or maybe it's because it's sum- mer and most of the homes in the Hough area lack air-conditioning ... Contrary to what Mr. Gardner may be- lieve, most of the people in the Hough district actually do have a vast amount of control over their emotions-a control which borders all too closely on utter frustration and complacency. Those "demonstrators" that he describes are the area's youths who have not yet abandon- ed the hope that perhaps there is an active way of coping with the slums and deprivation left in the wake of city rush- ing to break out of its original bounds. UNLIKE THEIR PARENTS who have given up on the city-planners and ur- ban renewal enthusiasts, the Negro youth of Cleveland, like the Negro youth of Harlem, Watts, and Chicago, see no rea- son for respecting the valueless property which surrounds them. If homes are destroyed perhaps the city will let new office buildings and high- rise apartments (for which there are few occupants and little need) wait and build' the desperately needed low-rent housing instead. Perhaps Erieview, Cleveland's spectacular downtown urban renewal project, will come uptown. The majority of Hough residents have not been participating in the rioting of the past three days. Rather, they are sitting at home, suffering in silence as they've done for over a generation. To many of them things are not really so bad -at least no worse than they've been for years. THESE PEOPLE have learned to handle their emotions-to realize the futility of hoping for action and change that will include them. And this is the tragedy of Cleveland's Hough area-of Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York. For these people there seems to be no middle ground between violence and to- tal inaction, no rational, moderate base for building and progressing. They see only the extremes-the extreme poverty of the Hough district and, uptown just a little way, the extreme wealth of Shaker Heights. Flareups such as those seen in cities in the past weeks will continue . . . perhaps if we wait long enough the people will burn down all of the nation's slums. Per- haps the Negroes are right-there may be nothing worth saving in their neighbor- hoods ... NOTHING, THAT IS, except the spirit of the people themselves. -MEREDITH EIKER SpareNot That Axe THERE IS A TREE lying broken on State Street, and it sticks part way out into the street where the car it landed on had been parked. The car is gone now; I don't know how the owner moved it. There is another tree farther down State Street, and it threatens to enlarge its angle to the ground and land on top of the house it once graced. By the Fuller Street bridge there are several broken trees lying in the river, All these trees lost their lives in the storm last week, remembered now by these monuments to the triumph of nature over man. Nature chose to take away these lives, and unless man decides to remove the bodies nature will do it her own way -by rotting them away. DEAR ANYONE in the Ann Arbor city government who will listen: I know you are out there, and I'm sure you tried to be inside during the storm. But the thunder and lightning have pass- ed, and it's really about time you came out of the city hall or wherever you hide, and cleaned up this mess. Otherwise, the next time it storms, rot- ting trees will float down State Street, and rotting trees will float down the mud- dy Huron as testimony to your civic pride. -MICHAEL HEFFER 4 The Methods of Psychological Warfare By ROBERT TUCKMAN Associated Press Staff Writer NHA TRANG, South Viet Nam (J)-"We don't use guns against the enemy in this outfit," the operations officer observed with a smile. "We just throw papers at them and shout at them." "Sometimes it works," said Lt. Col. Joseph Baier of McDonald, Pa. "We're getting better at it all the time." Baier's unit, the U.S. 5th Air Commando Squadron, devotes it- self entirely to psychological war- fare, known as psywar but called counter-insurgency warfare here. Its mission is to persuade the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese. soldier to give thenselves up with- out a fight. Its principal weapons are leaflets and loudspeakers. THE SQUADRON, commanded by Lt. Col. Clyde C. Angley, uses four C47 twin-engine cargo planes and 16 of the new U10 light air- craft. This is a two-seat plane with a three-blade propeller and a high, long wing. It can take off and land in 300 feet. It has a loudspeaker amplifying system built in on one side. The squadron is based in this central coastal city, but also oper- ates out of Da Nang in the north, Pleiku in the Central Highlands and Bien Hoa near Saigon, The squadron arrived last No- vember and its planes, armed only with leaflets and tape recordings, have been hit 51 times. It has not lost any planes but two of its fliers have been wounded. During its first month here, the squadron flew only 74 paper-and- shout sorties over enemy lines. Since then the missions have built up each month and totaled 1,173 sorties in June, when it dropped 130 million leaflets and spent 575 hours in loudspeaker appeals. HOW EFFECTIVE is this pro- paganda effort. The 5th Squadron has no big claims. But it can reasonably share part of the credit for the increas- ing number of Communists giving up the fight. Some of these carry surrender leaflets. Last November, the squadron's first month of operation, 1,500 came over from the Communist side. The figure has risen to about 2,300 per month. Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of U.S. forces in Viet 'Nam, has ordered his field com- manders to step up their psycho- logical effort. The 5th Air Commando Squa- dron sends up UlOs in the midst of combat operations. It took part, for example, in operation Nathan Hale during which U.S. paratroop- ers, air cavalrymen and Marines engaged a North Vietnamese regi- ment of army regulars in a jungled mountain area. The U10 planes followed closely after American air strikes and artillery barrages hit the entrenched North Vietnamese. CAPT. DONALD WAKEFIELD, from Waco, Texas, put in as many as four flights a day over enemy positions. In these flights of an hour to two hours each, he dropped surrender leaflets and swooped low to broadcast recorded appeals for the Communists to give up. One tape recording thatdWake- field played had been made by a North Vietnamese lieutenant, a company commander who surren- dered during the fighting and co- operated with his U.S. captors. Wakefield, 31, is supposed to average 40 hours a month of paper-and-shout flying over the enemy. He invariably flies twice that much and in one peak month exceeded 100 hours. He has been shot at a dozen times. Usually, he takes an Army psychological warfare officer with him to drop the leaflets while he flies the U10 and plays recordings. His broadcasts can be heard from 7,000 feet, but Wakefield usually drops to 2,000-3,000 to give the enemy a "maximum blast." THE U10 MEN make low-level flights over enemy positions at night to play what Wakefield calls "real scary music." "We play a lot of eerie, spooky noises," Wakefield remarked. "Even if they don't surrender, it keeps them up all night. And it makes them unhappy at the same time." Another broadcast uses voices of a Vietnamese child and mother, introduced with funeral music. It goes like this: Child: "Mummy. Where is daddy?" Mother: "Do not ask me, dar- ling. I'm worried to death." Child: "But I miss daddy. He is away so long a time. Daddy. Come back with me and mother. Daddy." Another U10 mission involves dropping leaflets for several days prior to B52 bomber raids. These leaflets urge civilians to leave the target area before the bombers arrive. Still another mission involves leaflets urging villagers to turn in Viet Cong guerrillas who may be in their areas. These leaflets offer rewards for information. IRVING E. RANTANEN, 46, of Washington, D.C., civilian psy- war advisor to the U.S. 1st Ca- valry, Airmobile Division, sees "evidence that the Viet Cong are losing their popular support." "If they lose that," Rantanen added, "they are through. In other words, they now have to take the food and other things that they got willingly before." A major theme of the leaflets is that the Viet Cong are losing. One leaflet, in Vietnamese, reads: "The Viet Cong and their clique cannot stay forever in this portion of land. They have to face the heavy fire power of the allied forces. In addition, the Viet Nam armed forces have planes, modern artillery and other weapons. These forces will continue until the vic- tory will be ours and the defeat will be the Viet Cong." Other leaflets are straightfor- ward "safe-conduct passes." They offer soldiers good treatment if they present themselves to allied forces. These passes, printed in Viet- namese, English and Chinese, re- produce in color the flags of South Viet Nam and the countries with troops here-The United States, Australia, New Zealand and South Korea. Other leaflets offer rewards for Communist soldiers to bring in weapons. The biggest offer is 20,- 000 Vietnamese piasters-$250- for a 75-millimeter recoilless rifle. DURING A RECENT battle along the Cambodian border, American and North Vietnamese troops played a small game of bombarding each other with sur- render leaflets. At night, the North Vietnamese put up leaflets in English reading: "Why should you die in South Viet Nam? "Demand your repatriation! Re- fuse to fight! "When attacked, preserve your lives= by crossing over to the side of the liberation army, or by of- fering no resistance and surren- dering!" The following day, American soldiers-units of the 3rd Cavalry, 25th Infantry Division-removed the Communist leaflets and posted their own. NO ONE surrendered on either side-but one North Vietnamese soldier who was captured had a surrender leaflet. ,k' REVIEW: *1 Harold Pinter 's 'The Birthday Party' By FRITZ LYON H AROLD PINTER'S "The Birth- day Party," in performance this week at the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre, is so unconven- tional that members of the au- dience expecting more traditional fare may be impressed more by what was missing on the stage than by what was there. Pinter has created a unique, unusual style, similar to the absurdists. but with its own distinctive char- acteristics. The structure of the play is in- tentionally abstract and am- biguous: the audience is deprived of any perspective or frame of reference. The characters do not reveal who they are or why they act-we merely see what they do. All of the remaining elements are removed in order to draw focus to the action. Meanwhile, the traditional play- goer is expecting symbolic signi- ficance, some eventual definition of the problem, and a logical and satisfying conclusion at the end. When these elements fail to ap- pear, he either condemns the play as senseless or worries about how much he didn't understand. THE ESSENTIAL ELEMENT is not the meaning, but the char- acters themselves. As Pinter him- self says: "All I try to do is de- scribe some particular thing, a particular occurrence in a par- ticular context. The meaning is there for the particular characters as they cope with the situation." The particular situation in this case is the brainwashing-assassi- nation of a young man (Stanley) by two organization thugs (Gold- berg and McCann) in a boarding house owned by an older couple (Petey and Meg) where Stanley lives. While Petey, Meg, and Lulu (the local sexpot) watch on, Gold- berg and McCann systematically drive Stanley out of his mind, a rather gruesome sort of killing, However, these gruesome as- pects are balanced by Pinter's ab- surdly humorous dialogue, natur- alistic in structure, though almost poetic in its rhythm and repeti- tion, The conversations range from The Regent Race; Someone Has To Run the trivial to the farcial in the THERE WILL BE ONE vacant seat on the Board of Regents in the fall, pos- sibly two if Regent Murphy decides not to run for reelection. We are obviously in need of a regent or two. But where are we going to find one? At the moment, the Republican party is not offering any of its more illustrious members for the post. In fact, one offi- cial appeared more or less unconcerned with the whole matter. His response to the question of who they were going to put up for the post was "Oh yes, we Editorial Staff LEONARD PRATT ........................ Co-Editor CHARLOTTE WOLTER .................... Co-Editor BUD WILKINSON ...................Sports Editor BETSY COHN .. ... ..... . Supplement Manager NIGHT EDITORS: Meredith Elker, Michael Heffer, Shirley Rosick, Pat O'Donohue, Carole Kaplan. Business Staff have to supply two people for that don't we?" THEY CERTAINLY DO, and the same number applies to the Democratic camp as well. The Democrats do have more possibilities, five according to one official, but only one has definitely com- mitted himself to an actual campaign. This is a very important period for the University, and it needs a dedicated, in- terested board. The best possible candi- dates must be found for this year's elec- tion. -PAT O'DONOHUE Another Cross THE SENATE Foreign Relations Com- mittee had its way yesterday with the administration's foreign aid requests. They managed to force an annual review of all aid projects instead of allowing projects to be planned over a longer-in this case a two-year-period. Long-range planning is clearly to the good. Yet it also probably would provide -2 l ',N T~ various twists and weaves of Lewis-Carrollian illogic. There is no profound philosophy, no subtle symbolism, no elusive allegory behind the play. It does not concern the Crucifixion or the fall of Western Civilization. "The Birthday Party" is about six char- acters in a kind of funny night- mare. THE UNIVERSITY Player's production is even and consistent in style, concept and performance, with few execptions. As usual, the final product is the result of the efforts of several individuals. Fred Coffin (Goldberg) is the most outstanding member of the The Ver Member ofI (Sung to the tune of: "I Am the Very Model of a Model Major General" by Gilbert and Sullivan.) I am the very model of a member of the faculty Because I'm simply overcome with sentiments of loyalty, I daily think of reasons why I'm glad to be American, And thank the Lord I've always been a registered Republican. The thoughts I think are only thought approved by my community. I pledge allegiance to the flag at every opportunity. I haven't had a thing to do with Communist conspirators, And neither have my relatives, decendants or progenitors. I try to keep away from propositions controversial; I've no opinions social, politic or commercial. And so you see that I must be, cast. Goldberg's sudden changes of mood, his constant contradictions, his buffoonish lecturing are all consolidated into one character, not an easy trick. Stanley, the victim, is portray- ed by aMrk Metcalf. The contrasts between the innane clod and the tormented zombie who cannot speak are extremely effective. Betsy Wernette (Meg) is almost too deliberate with her voice, but her characterization of the slight- ly incestuous, slightly feeble old bag is excellent. Dave Holquist (Petey) inter- prets his roe well, though he sometimes becomes mechanical and lacks a variety of inflection, y Model the Faculty Unsullied by the taint of any doctrinaire rigidity. I teach the Darwin theory with valuation critical, Uninfluenced by dogmatists religious or political. I understand the economic forces that have made us great; The system of free enterprise I do not underestimate. I'm well equipped objectively to point out flaws in Marxist thought, Because I've never read his work and rest assured that 1 will not. I freely follow truth in ways which I am sure will satisfy, The Board of Regents, William Hearst, and Hoover of the FBI. So you see that I must be, with sentiments of loyalty, The very perfect model of a member of the faculty. CHORUS U' 22 i&A\r t N' \' SUSAN PERLSTADT ..............Business JEANNE ROSINSKI............Advertising STEVEN ENSLEY..............Circulation Manager Manager Manager 71 I IL "..- 'PIj I