Pk Seventy-Fifth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDEN"T"S OF THE UNIVLRSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OP BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Michigan MAD Trigon: Ins and Outs By Robert Johnston THAT SECOND STEP: U.S. Asian Intervention Is Approaching a Crisis e opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, Mici-. uth Will Prevail NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This juust be noted in all reprints. SUNDAY, 4 APRIL 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM which Candidate for Mayor Is Best for Ann Arbor? Hulcher LITTLE ABOUT the present mayoralty campaign excites Ann Arbor voters. As they wander to the polls tomorrow, they may question why there is an elec- tion, what it is about, and even who is running. Various groups have asked questions of Mrs. Eunice Burns, the Democratic candidate and Wendell Hulcher, the Re- publican candidate. Usually the candi- dates have faced small audiences, the size of which indicates apathy. The answers they have presented may be the reason for this. The two candi- dates show little difference in positions or policies. They show differences in means and differences in some values- and members of each party will quickly emphasize that timid assertion. Even so, in homogeneous Ann Arbor, the end prod- ucts the vying candidates advocate are far more alike than they are different. BOTH CANDIDATES want to increase business and help Ann Arbor to grow. Both candidates have council records showing they support the Human Rela- tions Commission and a full time direc- tor for it. And both candidates have gone on record favoring low cost hous- ing and fair housing. Wendell Hulcher introduced the proposal which became Ann Arbor's Fair Housing Ordinance. Mrs. Burns opposed it originally, saying it was too narrow. She has since advo- vated amending it to broaden its scope, despite the fact that it is presently blocked in the courts. Hulcher has ad- vocated making the civil rights provisions of the new state constitution a part of city law. The answers show the voter little con- fusing differences in positions and poli- cies. The question before the Monday voters, then, is who can lead Ann Arbor better during the next two years. IF THERE ARE ANY valid evidences of leadership, Wendell Hulcher has a number of them. As an airman and then an officer in the Air Force during World War II he piloted a bomber over Europe and the Pacific. He picked up four air medals and a Distinguished Flying Cross; at least some of those could not be acci- dents. Nor is an MA in business admin- istration from Harvard to be called hap- penstance. His executive post at Ford Motor Com- pany adds another dimension to Hulch- er's training for mayor of a city that needs to keep on growing and is getting more complex every day. Like Mrs. Burns, Hulcher has served well on the city council from 1960 to 1964. Hulcher has been a teacher-in industry-as Mrs. Burns has in schools. BUT HERE THE LEADERSHIP similari- ties end. Hulcher's record is one that should make Ann Arbor proud to elect him as mayor. -CAL SKINNER, JR. Acting Editorial Staff ROBERT JOHNSTON, Editor LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM JEFFREY GOODMAN Managing Editor Editorial Director JUDITH WARREN...............PersonneltDirector TJOMAS WENBERQ ................. Sports Editor LAUREN BAHR .........Associate Managing Editor SCOTT BLECH.............Assistant Managing Editor ROBERT HIPPLER......Associate Editorial Director GAIL BLUMBERG ................ Magaine Editor LLOYD ORAF.............Associate Sports Editor JAMES KEBON ................. Chief Photographer NIGHT EDITORS: W Rexford Benoit, David Block, John Bryant, Michael Juliar, Leonard Pratt. SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: Robert Carney, James LaSovage, Gilbert Samberg, James Tindall, Charles Vetzner, Bud Wilkinson. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Bruce Bigelow, Sue Collins, Michael Dean, John Meredith. Peter Sara- sol'n, Barbara Seyfried, Bruce Wasserstein. Acting Business Staff CY WELLMAN, Business Manager ALAN GLrJECKMAN...........Advertising Manager JOYCE FEINBERG................ Finance Manager JUDITH FIELDS ............... Personnel Manager SUSAN CRAWFORD......Associate Business Manager JUNIOR MANAGERS; Ann Jean Berger, Harry Bloch, Madeline Gonaky, Jeffrey Leeds. Gail Levin, Susan Perlstadt, Vi Ptasnik, Jean Rothbaum, Jill Tozer. John Weiler. A aiMAV'r'.Tr.MANJAfn'7. Ann ' D...,41,' ad. vn1..n- Burns THE MAYOR of Ann Arbor has many jobs-some official, some ceremonial, and some routine-but the most impor- tant job the mayor has is that of leader- ship. And although all forms of leadership experience provide valuable background for anyone hoping to become Ann Arbor's mapor, the most important leadership experiences-the ones to be given the closest consideration when choosing the leader of the community, are those gained in the context of the community itself. There is only one candidate for mayor who has displayed a capacity to lead and to cooperate with all of Ann Arbor's community organizations-Eunice Burns. MRS. BURNS HAS MADE her leadership ability very much felt in her work with parent-teacher groups, the Human Relations Commission, and the Demo- cratic Party, whose members she leads on City Council. It is important that Ann Arbor's may- or have the quality of leadership in deed as well as in word, if the city is to be led in the right direction in the future; for Ann Arbor is growing rapidly, and a city that grows rapidly is one that changes rapidly. Wendell Hulcher, who is opposing Mrs. Burns in the mayoral election, proposed to a meeting of the Young Republicans recently that relations between the Uni- versity and the city could be improved by the creation of a student advisory board that would meet periodically with the mayor. Although this solution may seem well and good at first, a closer look, the kind of closer look that Mrs. Burns! takes at all issues facing the city, shows the serious flaw in this plan. AS HAS BEEN SHOWN in part by Stu- dent Government Council's inability to represent the students, it would be nearly impossible to form a group that could express to the city the views of the student body at large. Mrs. Burns feels that the students should rather express their needs to the city through a politi- cal party, or, if they feel that this meth- od is not effective, through ad-hoc stu- dent groups. Mrs. Burns' stand on Ann Arbor's Fair Housing Ordinance-misrepresented in last year's city council campaign-is still not clear to many citizens who don't fol- low city government very closely. Mrs. Burns did vote against the ordinance, but only after fighting for months to have a more realistic, stronger ordinance passed. She explained her vote against the ordi- nance by saying that a weak ordinance would hurt the chances for real fair housing in Ann Arbor, because once hav- ing passed a fair housing ordinance, city council would not be likely to consider the question again for quite a while, even though the fair housing ordinance passed might make few substantive steps to- ward the real fair housing conditions, Mrs. Burns would like to see in Ann Ar- bor. Hulcher, on the other hand, who played1 a key role in the passage of the present ordinance, feels that it is as strong, or nearly as strong, as it needs to be. MRS. BURNS' IDEAS about fair hous- ing in Ann Arbor, her close work with Ann Arbor organizations concerned with community betterment, and the judicious nature with which she views the com- munity's problems and its future all com- bine to make her the better qualified candidate for the position of mayor of Ann Arbor. -THOMAS R. COPI Oh, Basil SEN. BASIL BROWN (D-Highland-Park), with 20 traffic violations and four ac- . -ents, holds the dubious distinction of having the worst driving record in the Legislature. This well-publicized fact has brought forth some interesting action on the hart of the senator. PROBLEMS OF discrimination in the Greek system at the University have caused more than a little heat over the last 20 years. Between now and Thursday, when Fraternity Presidents Assembly will vote once more on the Trigon case, the heat, coming from many directions, may become unbear- able. There are now two issues in the field, and, unfortunately, capitulation on one will mean capitulation on both, setting things back about 10 years and setting the stage for what could be a head-on confrontation of ir- resistible forces. Local Greeks, their nationals and any of several elements within or closely con- nected to the University might be involved. The first issue is discrimination within University - recognized or- ganizations. The second is local chapters' autonomy from their national governing groups. It is clear that discrimination cannot be condoned within the University. This appears to be a generally - approved maxim, and one that FPA is willing to accept and enforce within the fraterni- ties. However, the fraternity presi- dents (and the sorority presidents, when that issue comes up again) are in line for a lot of high-pow- ered pressure from their nationals to preserve the status quo. After the close vote on Trigon discrim- Iination last week, the exertions of the nationals to preserve and pro- tect their prerogatives, through the local presidents, will be re- doubled. ON THAT basis a close study of last week's vote is somewhat frightening. First, the margin for Iconviction of Trigon was only two votes. Second, five houses did not vote. Together, these facts mean that there is plenty of room for both FPA and national maneuver- ing (call it politicking, pressure, threats or whatever). Whether or not the fraternity presidents can withstand this pressure and establish clearly their right to police the fraternity system as a part of the University is the heart of the problem right now. If this can't be done, if the whole issue is allowed to jump the track and get out of FPA, then new elements may be introduced which could be really explosive. The Legislature, for instance, could decide to take an interest in the situation. It might ask ques- tions on why a Christian fraternity cannot discriminate against, say, atheists. This misses the point, of course, since the University is not (nor should it be) allowed to con- done or affiliate itself with any organizations which openly avow discrimination in any way. THERE IS, of course, the ques- tion of how much discrimination goes on under the table. This can- not really be pinned down/and no- body really expects that it can be. But the discriminatory regulations can be, and this is the proper function of internal Greek polic- ing, at least for now. However, local Greeks have, in many cases, progressed much far- ther towards a non-discriminatory stand both d' jure and de facto. If this constructive attitude is continually and forcibly beaten back in either sororities or fra- ternities by national pressures, there has got to be a confronta- tion at some point. If the Trigon vote is reversed Thursday, the confrontation is going to be un- comfortably close at hand and un- der circumstances that could prove disastrous for both the Greeks and the University. IN THE long run, the frater- nity-sorority system will probably have to be pushed off-campus or radically restructured. To borrow a quote from my predecessor, the system might, in fact, be "in- herently discriminatory and in- herently antithetical to the goals of a university." But the system can evolve and change over time as the University has done, and it must certainly be allowed to do so according to its honest apprai- sal of- the situation in which it finds itself and the dictates of its collective conscience. IT IS INTERESTING and per- haps significant that the city elections have become so irrele- vant to University life. The main deduction one can make is that city government is no longer enough of a threat to anything the University wants to do or wants to get done for anyone here to worry too much about who, of those available, becomes mayor. In fact, University-city govern- ment ties have come to be pretty extensive, and in some cases Uni- versity people are city govern- ment. It shouldn't be any other way, for Ann Arbor is the Univer- sity. While the University hasn't really taken advantage yet of this superior position it has built up for itself, more controversial prob- lems than have been dealt with in the past can be expected to come to the fore. When enough outside money is drawn in for apartments and other area building, the old lines of authority and control will fin- ally fall apart, and the University will be in a position to press for positive action to ease the plight of the students in their economic relationships with the city's com- mercial life. Subtle changes in University- student-city relationships can be expected to bear not-so-subtle fruit sometime soon. THE PERENNIAL bookstore has been the subject of a good many inches of type in The Daily the last couple days. Harvey Was- serman's articles provide a lot for those who complain continual- ly about the situation to worry over. The most severe obstacle to get- ting a working co-operative under way with new book offerings is apparently the necessity of find- ing working capital. If this could be done, the administration and Regents might be moved to re- consider their stand banning a new-book cooperative on Univer- sity property. WHERE IS $100,000 for high- risk investment to be found? Per- haps a group of student organiza- tions could start saving some money with this goal in mind. In any case, the money would have to come from within the student community. It's worth thinking about. With 30,000 students here, chances are good that something can be worked out. By MICHAEL BADAMO 7E NEVER 'learn. The U.S. has many years of military history for guidance and some of its own citizens have lived through four wars. It still doesn't learn anything. What does it do when Robert McNamara says "the choice is not simply whether to continue our efforts to keep South Viet Nam free and independent but, rather, whether to continue expansion in Asia"? What does it do when Sen. Thomas Dodd says, "Whether we decide to abandon Southeast Asia or try to draw another line out- side Viet Nam, the loss of Viet Nam will result in a dozen Viet Nams in different parts of the world. If we cannot cope with this type of warfare in Viet Nam, the Chinese Communists will be en- couraged in the belief that we cannot cope with it anywhere else"? THE U.S. JUST sort of sits back andsays "go to it boys, give 'em hell." Does it try to examine the evidence at hand and figure out some reason why U.S. soldiers are in Asia bombing schools and churches and coconut trees and an occasional (if they're lucky) guerrilla? Why bother? They know what they're doing. They can handle it. Unfortunately they can't handle it. The U.S. spends billions of dol- lars on "that dirty war" and what does it get? A few rifles, a couple of machine guns and a few pea- sants who don't know anything-- but who will say almost anything to keep from being struck with a rifle butt. Why is the U.S. there? What good is it doing? THE ROOTS of the Vietnamese problem go back to 1954, before the Indo-Chinese peninsula was split into the warring factions which compose it today. In 1954, after the Viet Minh under Eo Chi Minh had killed 400,000 Frenchmen, a number of countries determined it was time Indo-China was given its inde- pendence. They held a convention in Geneva. In the case of Viet Nam, theydecided to partition the country near the 17th parallel and reunify it later on. The French were to retain con- trol of the South; Ho Chi Minh and his Communists got the North, with the stipulation that free all-Viet Nam elections would be held in 1956. The United States didn't sign the treaty, but Presi- dent Eisenhower did say that the United States would at least not undermine it. DEAR JOHN: Can't You Be Like We Tere? iding proportion of American made weapons captured as oppos- ed to those produced by the Com- munists. Over a recent three-year period, for every Communist-made weap- on captured by government forces 75 American weapons were re- captured. From this evidence it would seem that instead of the Communists supplying the Viet Cong, it is the United States which helps keep them fighting. In addi- tion to the above figures for every 75 weapons recaptured from the Viet Cong, more than 100 are lost to them. Because North Vietnamese are captured in the South the United States government feels justified in its charge of conspiracy. It would be fare more significant, however, if Chinese or Russian soldiers were captured in aiding the Viet Cong. None have turned up. U.S. MILITARY tactics in Viet Nam seem no longer aimed at simply controlling the Viet Cong but rather are aimed directly at Hanoi and Peking. General Max- well Taylor seems to be taking the same position General Douglas MacArthur took during the Ko- rean War-a position of the in- evitability of a full-scale war with China. President Johnson recog- nizes the inadvisability of such an action and prefers, at least in public, expanding the war only in a limited effort to gain a favor- able bargaining position. While official U.S. and South Vietnamese government organs play up the atrocities committed by the Viet Cong they neglect to mention the atrocities committed in the name of the United States. While the use of non-lethal gas on the Viet Cong may not figure significantly in casualty rates, the international implications a r e mammoth. The United States' use of gas as a tactical military weapon is in direct violation of the World War I Geneva conven- tion, which prohibited the use of chemical warfare in any form. Vice-President Hubert Humphry's recent statement justifying the United States' use of gas on the grounds of atrocities committed by the Viet Cong does nothing to vindicate U.S. violations of the convention's aims. The United States' use of na- palm, schrapnel bombs and satu- ration bombing of large areas shows U.S. determination to ex- terminate the Viet Cong at the expense of great numbers of inno- cent Vietnamese peasants who happen to get in the way. UNITED STATES intervention in Viet Nam is rapidly approach ing a crisis point. Before long it will be necessary for the U.S. to decide where its true obligations lie. Should it continue its policies of aggression and eventually in- volve itself in a massive war with China, the results of which are dubious? Or should the U.S. with- draw its military support of the crumbling South Vietnamese gov- ernment and let Viet Nam deter- mine its own fate? As Mephistopheles s a i d to Faust: "At the first step you are free, at the second you are a slave." Direct A ction WE ARE NOT civilized enough to meet an issue before it be- comes acute. We were not intelli gent enough to free the slaves peacefully-we are not intelligent enough today to meet the indus- trial problem before it develops a crisis. This is the hard truth of the matter. And that is why no honest stu- dent of politics can plead that social movements should confine themselves to argument and de- bate, abandoning the militancy of the strike, the insurrection, the strategy of social conflict. Those who deplore the use of force in the labor struggle should ask themselves whether the ruling classes of a country could be de- pended upon to inaugurate a pro- gram of reconstruction which would abolish the barbarism which prevails in industry. * * * DOES ANYONE seriously be- lieve that the business leaders, the makers of opinion and the politicians will, on their own in- itiative, bring social questions to solution? If they do it will be for the first time in history. The trivial plans they are introducing today . . . are on their own ad- mission an attempt to quiet the rest and ward off the menace of socialism. NO, PATERNALISM is not de- pendable, granting that it is de- sirable. It will do very little more than it feels compelled to do. Those who today bear the brunt of our evils dare not throw them- :: By ROGER RAPOPORT DEAR JOHN,' I saw a picture in this morn- ing's paper - of you standing on an Alabama picket line. I want you to know that your mother and I are furious. We gave you a hundred dollars and the Mustang to go to Fort Lauderdale. So what do you do- you spend your spring vacation agitating in Alabama. Are you trying to change the world or something. I know you've been cooped up in the dorm all winter studying your courses and you had to blow off steam somehow. That's why I was happy to give you the car to go south when you asked. But I thought you were going to Fort Lauderdale to booze it up and chase some girls around like any normal college man. BUT NO not you. You had to get involved with all those social- ists and beatnicks. You have no business trying to tell those people how to run their state. How would you like it if a bunch of kids from the University of Alabama came up North and told you how to run things in our state. What's gotten into you any- way? Mother and I have always seen that you were well fed and clothed, and we've let you have almost anything you needed. So why do you have to try and make trouble for us. I mean you could get arrested down there. Thatwouldn't look very good on your school record. WE SENT you to school to learn about society, not to try and change it. Sure we hoped you would learn about integration. But we didn't want you to actually become involved. How could you risk your entire future. You should be thinking about getting a good job with IBM, finding a nice girl and settling down in a nice little ranch house in Southfield, Skokie, Scars- dale or Shaker Heights. But no not you, you had to go down there and try to antagonize the police. You had hatma Gandhi. I simply fail to care if only 1 per Negroes in some obs County can't vote.Z trying to do, make -u that you were never Negro cleaning lady DON'T YOU SEE like you are the cat trouble in Alabama, left well enough would be peaceful. You see, son, you wrapped up in the w~ to understand. Thes move slowly. You ca world overnight. Al going to Alabama the townspeople. SO TAKE my adv car, drive on down1 and forget about th movement. Let the tion take care of t after all we haven'tc to play Ma- LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Gargoyle: The Worst Eve SO WHAT did the U.S. do? In see why you 1955, without being asked, it pres- cent of the sured the French into giving over cure Alabama all responsibilities in the South to What are you the United States. Contrary to zp forthe fact the Geneva agreement the U.S. r nice to our approved the shutdown of trade ? between North and South and further signed the SEATO defense E that people agreement with the South-also use of all the contrary to the agreement. aIf you just In 1956, when all-Viet Nam elec- alone things tions were to be held, Ngo Dinh Diem, the U.S. puppet, refused to are simply too hold elections. He claimed that vhole situation the Communists would not con- se things must duct a fair election in the North. n't change the His charges were completely un- 1 you do by substantiated and his unpopular- is antagonize ity grew. Also in that year, Diem held a mock referendum to decide the question of permanent separa- ice, get in thetion. Only 15 per cent of the to Lauderdale South's population was permitted ie civil rights to vote. older genera- It is evident that the govern- hese things- ment the United States is sup-' done so badly. porting in South Viet Nam is not Love, Dad representative of the people of South Viet Nam; its decisions do not in any way reflect the will of the South Vietnamese. * * * U.S. POLICIES in Southeast Asia reston two mistaken assumps . # tions. The first is the idea that North and South Viet Nam are two separate countries, split apart nor magazine, for all time. The second is that heir life that the whole war in South Viet Nam is. Then may- is engineered and directed by in Gargoyle, China. Both assumptions are sim- udents of the ply contrary to fact. gan," will be- The territory known as Viet Nam is a unified ethnic entity. Viet Nam and other ethnic units el Ault, '68E were part of what was known as --- - Indo-China under the French. In 1954 it was decided to give the various ethnic units their inde- pendence. The situation in Viet Nam was I1 Is tricky, because although most of the country was pro-Communist there was a large anti-Communist faction in the South centered around the French-speaking elite in Saigon. Ho Chi Minh was given control of the North and the French were to retain supervision the National in the South. rps' coordina- The terms of the Geneva agree- atterning and ment - the last legal settlement applying to Viet Nam-arranged for only a temporary division. The included on country was to be re-unified in not interest- 1956-and might have been, had he ballet not Diem blocked free elections. ** * k To the Editor: ERTAIN STUDENTS of the S Universityhave again express- ed their infinite talents in creat- ing that paragon of trash, Gar- goyle. Page after page we are treated to the hogwash of col- legiate "humorists." The April Fool's issue marks a new level of the filth and degrading debauch- ery that comes from the "modern" collegiate literary machine. The miasma of muck, smut, and libidinal vomit that flows from the pens of the pseudo-artists of college is insulting to the real artists who strive to be as good as, if not better than their an- cestors such as Rabelais, or Swift or Twain or even Thurber, to name only a few. It is time-a time long overdue-to throw deep into the garbage disposal the mor- bid "intellects" who dream of masquerading as (sic) phallic symbols. and good humor we can be proud of. And it is high time these idola- ters of muck and smut take a long, hard look at themselves and their "accomplishments." I HOPE the students of the Uni- versity will take action and write a real campus hum setting ideals in tt will help them do thi be the inscription "Published by the st University of Michig come truth. Or is it? -L. Micha 'SERENADE' BEST: National Ballet F Short of Potenti At Hill Auditorium GEORGE BALANCHINE'S "Serenade" highlighted -t Ballet of Canada's program last night. After the Cor tion smoothed out, Balanchine's delightful geometric pa subtly unclassical movements were clearly visible. The dances from the second act of "The Nutcracker the program were a mistake. They are choreographically ing enough to justify being done out of the context of th