Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNrvERSrrY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the, editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: MALINDA BERRY Cuba. and the M onroe Doctrine "Another Historic First!" Oh Goodness, Oh Gracious, THERE IS a concerted tradition of "gracious nails and your clothes all deserve attention living" which has begun to pervade every before you ever go to the dining room ... facet of life in women's residence halls, from for dinners you owe yourself the relaxation habits of personal cleanliness to enforced pro- which comes from a bath or shower ..." priety at mass bread breaking. "The singing of grace is always much The tradition evidently is the University's more sincere and reverent if it is preceded way of endorsing and encouraging midwestern, and followed by a moment of absolute middle class standards-of social excellence and silence. The head of the dining room will acceptability, and it marks one of the more give the signal for starting grace by bowing obnoxious aspects of manditory group living, her head." One particularly repulsive syndrome of "gra- (Subtitled: 'Passing and Serving Food') cious living" is the sit-down meal, a charming "For the most part, the easiest way to ceremony initiated in women' residence halls pass a dish is to accept it in your right durimny t eateofDenofnsWrosenDebrhl hand, transfer it to your left, help your- during the term of Dean of Women Deborahsef n astedshaogt orrgt Bacon, which occurs -thrice weekly on the Hill self, and pass the dish along to your right and with even greater frequency in other Uni- "People who have 'been around' like al- andrithevn gmreer fmost all sorts of food-they have cultivated a cosmopolitan taste. Don't miss the oppor- HE SIT-DOWN is a formal meal during tunity to cultivate your sense of taste along H , with your other educational activities. which food is served to each woman by a . And remember how you are going to waitress. In return for this service, and to feel about a 'man who is hard to cook for' show appreciation for the theoretically im- proved quality of food, each dineress is expected because he doesn't like any of your favor- to look and act a little more lady-like than she ites. The enjoyment of the meal for a whole normally might atable may be spoiled by one girl who 'doesn't like' this or that. Silence is golden." About a year ago a Markley housemother (Subtitled: 'Silverware') defended the sit-downs by saying that through Betsy Barbour Silverware is fairly simple these gracious meals girls who come from rural to use-you can't go very far wrong with areas (where the livin' is ofttimes easy and, it. evidently from the University's point of view, ,In general, for conveying food to the pretty slovenly) to acquire all the skills of mouth, the fork or spoon isheldllightly their urban sisters-skills which are, in effect, quite necessary for bagging the right kind of with the thumb and first two fingers-- man and being, for him, the most functional of prongs (or bowl) up. "Watch your little finger when you all possible wives. handle glass, cup, or plate. Don't let it get The way in which the sit-down is carried out byitself in an affected pose ..." out is left pretty much to the discretion of the os i ted pos') housemother of each dormitory. Last year at (Subtitled: Napkins') Markley an attempt was made to have the "Unfold your napkin to one-half its size as soon as you are seated . .. Don't forget sit-downs become ,a means to an international to use it during the meal as nothing can education, so that when "German" food (veal tract f ur dignity mo d aa cutlet mit sauerkraut) was served, the wait- detract from your dgty more devastat- resses wore Iederhosen or other folksy outfits. ingly than a crumb on your chin." (Subtitled: 'Posture and Conversation') The dormitory also piped into its dining rooms "Know your Time, Life, New Yorkers, a recording of a chorus of German men singing Harpers, and the New York Times Book stein songs. A similarly terrifying episode oc- Review section . .. or at least know some- curred when "Italian" food was listed on the thing about them ... The excuse that you menu. have 'no time to read' doesn't help you learn the art of table conversation. NOW, AT BETSY BARBOUR House, the wait- and that art is one of the most valuable resses' dress remains quite new-world, re- things you can acquire in college." gardless of the origins of the main course. But The booklet ends here. the sit-down itself is carried to something of an extreme: it happens seven times a weekTHE BOOK ITSELF is a disgusting attempt come rain or shine, flood or famine,1 to exert pressure on the women to conform Concerned that the Barbourites might go -to be silent if they don't like something, to through 300 days of sit-downs and still remain accept standard mores and ethics and a way of boorish, an anonymous author has made avail- life which is vapid and shallow and as much able to them a concise booklet containing like everyone else's as possible-without ever everything a modern Michigan female ought questioning any part of the conformity. to know about mealtime, with the exception of And the women of Barbour, despite a few the actual preparation thereof. who chuckled or scowled at the idea, have The booklet is entitled "Betsy Barbour Dining taken the booklet and the idea behind it seri- Customs," and is so incredibly pompous, so ously. It is a thoroughly shaking experience to typical of everything which is wrong with the attend a sit-down in Barbour and note the attitude of residence hall personnel that no actions of the women-those who have ac- commentary is necessary-the booklet speaks cepted this incredible set of rules-as they make well for itself. an effort to keep their little fingers from pop- ping up, as they discuss the latest issue of "MEAL TIME in the Residence Halls is about "Look" or "Mademoiselle" or the "New York the best time of the day," it begins. "The Times Book Review Section." Their nails are service is simple, yet dignified and the food is filed, their hair combed, they are fresh out of excellent," Thus, the style and pace of the bro- a pre-dinner tub. In a word, they are immacu- chure: late in body, mind and spirit, ready to eat (Subtitled: whatever is put before them with a grace it Personal Appearance at Mealtime') sure as hell does not deserve. "Your face, your hair, your hands, your -DENISE WACKER The Real Trouble with Red China ; . .r .= .' By ROBERT SELWA THERE IS hypocrisy in the pres- ent American interpretation and application of the Monroe Doctrine. The hypocrisy is the re- sult of contradiction and omission. The omission is most glaring in Time magazine's cover story on the Monroe Doctrine. But narrow-sightedness about the Monroe Doctrine is not pecu- liar to Time magazine; it has also been evident in the nation's cap- ital. Time magazine and Capitol Hill quote and argue these lines of the Monroe Doctrine: "THE OCCASION has been judged proper for asserting, as a principle in which the rights and interests of the United States are involved, that the American con- tinents, by the free and indepen- dent condition which they have assumed and maintain, are hence- forth not to be considered as sub- jects for future colonization by any European powers." Since the po- litical system of European coun- tries is "essentially different" from that of America, "we should con- sider any attempt, on their part to extend their system to any portion of this hemisphere as dan- gerous to our peace and safety." What this part of the Monroe Doctrine says in short is, "Euro- pean countries-keep out of the Americas." What Time magaine and Con- gressmen have overlooked is the following part of the Monroe Doc- trine: * * * "OUR POLICY in regard to Europe, which was adopted at an early stage of the wars which have so long agitated that quarter of the globe, nevertheless remains the same, which is, not to interfere in the internal concerns of any of its powers, to consider the govern- ment de facto as the legitimate government for us; to cultivate friendly relations with it; and to preserve those relations by a frank, firm and manly policy, meeting in all instances the just claims of every power, submitting to in- juries from none." What this part of the Monroe Doctrine says in short is, "And while you are keeping out of the Americas, we'll stay out of Eur- ope." Have we kept out of Europe? Do not our military bases "interfere in the internal concerns of any of its powers?" And what is the purpose of. the Kennedy Adminis- tration's trade pill, but to achieve closer economic integration with the European Economic Commun- ity? And how about the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, our military alliance with several European countries? And according to the More Doctrine, the United States shall "consider the government de facto as the legitimate government for us." Is this what we are doing with East Germany and Com- munist China? *' * * THE POINT IS that the "keep out of Europe" part of the Mon- roe Doctrine is in direct con- tradiction to many important United States policies today. Arid it is no wonder: when the Monroe Doctrine was announced in 1823, the Uninted States was a develop- ing neutralist country using isola. tionism as a protection for its growth. Today the United States as the leader of the Western world can no longer afford to be isola- tionist; we are internationalist by necessity as well as by choice. But the hypocrisy remains: we are internationalist towaid the rest of the world but we expect the rest of the world to be isola- tionist toward the Americas; we reiterate one part of the Monroe Doctrine and repudiate the other. If we are to be faithful to the Monroe Doctrine, we should stay out of Europe as well as try to have European (and Asiatic) countries (such as Russia) stay out of the Americas. If our de- fense is that Europe wants us there and that European countries want our military forces to be based there, how then could we justify interfering with Cuba's re- quests for"Russian military forces? For the United States to block Russian shipments to Cuba would be to invite the Russians justifi- ably to block American shipments to Europe. Either way it would be an act of war; and if military aid is itself an act of war, then both sides have already been provoking each other aggressively. * * * THE MONROE DOCTRINE may have been intended to prevent ag- gression, but it has been used as an umbrella for aggression. Wit- ness the United States military and economic aggressions in La- tin America at the end of the last century and throughout much of this century. So much of the hate Latin Americans have for us is the result of our activities, especially by President Teddy Roosevelt, under the Monroe Doc- trine. It is no wonder that a recent book by a LatinAmei',an about us deals with "The Shark and the Sardines." Today, many Congressmen, such as Senator Barry Goldwater would have us be militarily aggressive again in Latin America in the name of the Monroe Doctrine. But we could make no greater error in Latin America than to unleash our vast military power upon a weak little nation like Cuba. * * * WHAT WOULD RESULT? All the old and bitter anti-Yankee emotions would arise again-the emotions that only a few Years ago caused the vice-president of the United States to be greeted with stones and spit. These emotions could cause the failure of the fra- gile Alliance for Progress. And if we inxaded Cuba and overthrew Castro and killed people, in the name of the Monroe Doctrine or in the name of our security, what would we nave? We would have to set up a regime or a government, and no matter how democratic or how popular it were, insurgency would iemain, and rebels would gather guns for new rebellions, and we would have to keep suppressing dissidents and fighting new Castros and new popular leaders. It is necessary that we refrain from using military aggression. And it is necessary that we aban- don the Monroe Doctrine because it is antidated and isolationst and because it tends to prompt rash unilateral, aggressive action. Our emphasis should not be on the Monroe Doctrine but on col- lective hemisphere defense like that which the Organization of American States can provide. The Communists continually ac- cuse of us being imperialistic. These accusations would have been true a half century ago. They have not been true in recent times: President Truman halted General MacArthur's offense in Northern Korea; President Kennedy cancel- led United States air participation in the invasion of Cuba by anti- Castro Cubans last year. The Truman-Kennedy doctrine is the better doctrine: the only war we shall fight shall be defensive. .4 4 4 I I Cuban Policy Muddled By PHILIP SUTIN and GLORIA BOWLES THE UNITED States reached a new peak of hysteria this week when the Senate coupled a declara- tion of hostility against Cuba with a request by President John F. Kennedy to call up 150,000 re- serves if necessary. The declaration asserted this country's determination "to pre- vent by whatever means may be necessary, including the use of arms, the Marxist-Leninist re- gime in Cuba from extending by force or threat of force its aggres- sive or subversive activities to any part of this hemisphere." The document drew two policy lines for the United States to fol- low. One is to prevent the threat of Cuba endangering the security of this country. The other bids the United States to work with other hemisphere nations to end this threat. * * * ' THIS declaration is milder than the many proposals advanced by American political leaders. In the past week ill-considered sugges- tions which could lead the United States to war have been proposed by a number of politicians. Among them was Senator George A. Smathers (D-Fla.), who asked for an inter-American mili- tary alliance to crush "Commun- ist" Cuba, and recognition for a Cuban government-in-exile. Former Vice-President Richard M. Nixon, running for governor in California, pledged his support to a quarantine of Cuba to halt the flow of Soviet arms by blockade of the island. He also asked for a commitment by United States al- lies that their ships would not be used for Soviet shipments. * * * SMATHERS, in his hysteria, has forgotten the fact that inter- American alliances already do ex- ist. His proposal for recognition of a Cuban government-in-exile is unfeasible; the advantages of such recognition are not clear at this point, nor is it possible to recog- nize all groups claiming legitimacy, all of them with different political orientations ranging from moder- ate left to extreme right. Both the Smathers and Nixon statementsare examples of hastily contrived political pronounce- ments. A naval blockade, in in- ternational law, is an act of war, and supposes that the blockading nation is ready to make good the blockade if it is challenged by the ships of any nation. If this tactic is to succeed, the U.S. would have to use force not only against Cuban shipping, but also those of its NATO allies, and the Soviet bloc. To convey its aid to Cuba, the Russians have char- tered British, Norwegian and Greek ships. Any action against this shipping would create crises and tensions far more dangerous than thevcurrentiCuban situation. Any overt action against Cuba either by the United States or ref- .-.-- -.-. regain the sympathies of many of its former supporters who are sus- picious of the "Colossus of the North." The United States' worth- while projects like the Peace Corps and the Alliance for Progress would be negated by a reaction more bitter than the outcry against last year's ill-fated Bay of Pigs invasion. Like the Cuban crisis of the 1890's that culminated in the Spanish-American war, the cur- rent hysteria is the result of in- complete and faulty information. Diplomatic and cultural relations with Cuba have been cut for al- most two years. The American news media are severely limited in Cuba and rely for much of their news on television broadcasts mon- itored in Key West, Fla., dispatches from reporters of two or three "sensationalist" London papers, and news releases by Cuban refu- gee groups. Travel by Americans to Cuba has been greatly reduced and the public cannot benefit from eye- witness reports about the country. At the same time the govern- ment has not divulged the infor- mation gained by its intelligence sources which is the basis for the current watch-and-wait policy. * * * AS A RESULT, a number of American politicians, notably Sen. Kenneth Keating (R-NY), have spread exaggerated claims about the strength and scope of Soviet operations in Cuba. Keating and others do not have reliable sources of information. One source is reports of refugee groups like the Cuban Student Di- rectorate who dedicated their en- tire Aug. 24 news release to the landings because "the landings of Russian troops and heavy arma- ment on Cuban soil, and the pres- ence there of an International Bri- gade implies extra-continental in- tervention. In that issue the directorate de- tails its claims that the Russians have landed at least 7600 soldiers and heavy equipment in the month previous to the report. It also as- serts that heavy equipment and missiles have also been imported. THE ACCURACY of such groups is dubious in view of their bias and Tactics Q. How do the Communists work? A. A Communist group at Ohio college tried very hard to bring into itsaranks a young Phi Beta Kappa and an officer of the Stu- dent Council. W h e n ideological arguments failed, he was invited to a house off the campus where drinks were served lavishly. He was then told he could bring a girl to the house any time he wanted to, provided he joined the group. If he didn't know any girls without bourgeois ideas of moral- if am r. , nilfihpi,,rnr,,npri+in nn the resultant human tendency' to exaggerate information that will help their cause. Other factors enter into the cur- rent hysteria. Many of the most vehement critics of "administra- tion in action" have been politi- cians runnnig for election this year. In a stiff election fight an appeal to Americanism will garner many votes. The situation is further compli- cated by the cries of those who want to return to the status quo of the Batista regime where Amer- ican economic interests ruled and milked the island. Smathers, long an opponent of Castro and his re- forms, is leading the fight for an- other Cuban invasion. * ,* * MOST Americans fail to see the defensive nature of the Soviet commitment and the geograph- ically untenable position of the Russians. The sketchy intelligence reports released by the United States indicate that the bulk of Soviet equipment is of a defen- sive nature and designed to quell the hotbed of discontent inside Cuba and' to shore up the Cuban economy. These Soviet soldiers seem to function in fashion similar to the United States military "advisors" in South Viet Nam. They may lead and direct, but they do not fuel large scale offensive undertakings. In the same way the Soviets may have committed themselves to a similar sort of endless and costly entanglement. The Russian forces in Cuba do help to deter American invasion. There is not a clear-cut question of superiority or inferiority, but a question of the amount of damage the Cubans could inflict on the invading force. Soviet assistance raises the price of an invasion. The Cubans are genuinely afraid of invasion. They are simply buying insurance. * * * THE United States is faced with a number of alternative courses of action. It could act with overt belligerence, but the costs and risks are too great. A blockade of arms shipments from Cuba to other Latin Ameri- can nations might be instituted with the aid of a naval patrol, and the support of these nations. This watch could be placed in a general framework of arms con- trol in Latin America where arms smuggling contributes to disorders and revolts, notably in the back- lands of Columbia. This concerted hemispheric action could possibly ensure Latin American peace that would endure long after the Cas- tro threat disappears. The days the United States could unilaterally enforce the Monroe Doctrine, add corollaries sanctioning U.S. intervention in Latin American affairs and by it- self keep foreign influences and power out of the hemisphere have long since ended. Effective actionn aeainst the TIE TROUBLE with Red China is that we keep getting soft about the whole thing. It- takes a lot of convincing to keep Americans re- minded that the People's Republic of China does not exist. It takes a lot of convincing, because it looks pretty real to the naked eye. Another variable that clouds the issue is Gen- eralissimo Chiang Kai-chek, who unfortunately is a most disagreeable messiah with a rather discouraging record. And so the talk is beginning to crop up again: Red China has 650 million of-the earth's people. Why doesn't the United States recog- nize this, and why aren't these people repre- sented in the United Nations? THE ANSWERS, of course, are simple, but they keep getting obliterated. The United States can't recognize anything which isn't there, and all those people are already repre- sented in the UN. We cannot forget the history of the Commu- nist takeover in China. As the forties drew to a close, Chiang had been doing a sloppy job of running the Chinese nation. To be sure, he was far more concerned with the welfare of the Chiang family than with the Chinese people, and as a result things were going fairly badly. The Communists seized upon this opportuni- ty and routed Chiang's forces to the island of ',. . eft Formosa, setting themselves up in power. But the Chinese people were never consulted in the matter, and they have not been consulted to this day. BECAUSE AMERICA is a democratic nation, we cannot recognize any undemocratic as- sumption of power, for to do so would be to dis- card the sacred principles of our own republic. (Granted we have done so in the past, but that does not mean we should continue a bad prac- tice.) Since the Chinese people have not been given the opportunity to choose between Chiang and the Communists, we are left with no choice but to ignore the existence of the Communist regime. To overlook the Communists, however, does not mean we are overlooking the Chinese. Their legally chosen ruler today, as it was fifteen years ago, is still Chiang Kai-shek, and when he speaks, he speaks for all China. This will continue to be true until the Chinese have a fair chance to express themselves otherwise. Thus, to grant any recognition to the Reds would be to give them the respectability they so badly need. Consequently, the United States does indeed recognize the legal government of China, and the United Nations, as a league dedicated to peaceful settlement of disputes, would betray itself by allowing an unabashed aggressor na- tion to sit among its members. THUS, WE MUST REMEMBER, when tending to become maudlin about those 650,000,000 Chinesp nennle. that the United Natinns and the AT THE CAMPUS: Visconti Rocco': Too Much Realism? ROCCO AND HIS BROTHERS is a story of a peasant family that migrates to the big city from the primitive, poverty-stricken south of Italy. The first hour of Visconti's three hour epic is nothing short of superb. Here the tone is set: one of heightened realism in which performance and camerawork are emotionally and dramatically inten- sified, while the aim remains fundamentally naturalistic. Here are the warmth, dignity, and hellishness of a large family living together, uni- fied by the vigorous pathos of Katina Paxinou's mother, and all set against a bustling yet depressing city background. Visconti has an unerring eye for the right mood, and the narrative construction is masterly in the way it works the threads of its characters personal stories into the almost imperceptible ground- work of an epic. The real and romantic, the profane and demonic combine; and the firmly established characters and their relationships promise legitimate dramatic explosions. But they fail to become more than just promises, for the simi$e reason that Visconti's heightened realism overreaches itself. The film never actually loses its grip on one, never falters in its fascinating tech- nical command; the disorder lies elsewhere. Brilliance mingles with sensationalism, refinement with crudity, until the whole thing begins to look and sound like some enormous compendium of human emotions. Sacrifice begets self-sacrifice, and monologues about the future and the family's lost happiness are uttered in portentous close-ups. Nino Rota's score lets up for barely a moment. CHRONOLOGICALLY, the film's deterioration can be traced to the moment when Rocco is brought to the foreground. Alain Delon's in- terpretation is not convincing: a dreamy-eyed mediator, all silent suf- fering, guilt complexes, and Ganymedean charm. His potentiality as a boxer is highly doubtful and his reaction to the rape (to break off with Nadia) lacks motivation; unless Visconti sees Rocco as a kind of Dostoievskian character, another Prince Mysh- kin returning good for evil. But Visconti is not Dostoievsky. And when the floodlights of the boxing ring are ceremoniously lit un as if to