Seventy-Third Year ELITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLIcATIONs "Where Opinions Are FeSTUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail"aa Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID MARCUS Let's Get A Lock For This Thing VISITOR'S VIEW: Greece Joins EEC, Fights Serious Poverty I Gov. John B. Swainson Displays Leadership MICHIGAN VOTERS have been bombarded by, slogans. They are being told "it's time for a change, end partisan bickering" and "let's have leadership in Lansing." In fact, Republican criticism of Gov. John B. Swainson has reached a point where an uninformed or particularly gullible voter might wonder wheth- er Michigan has had a governor for the past two years. But all this is merely partisan sloganeering. Michigan has had leadership for the past two years. Swainson has done well in his responsibilities both as governor of Michigan and head of the Democratic party. THE RECORD is quite clear. Swainson, and his predecessor G. Mennen Williams, have both consistently proposed clearly reasoned, necessary and feasible programs for Michigan. For example, in an address to the Legisla- ture last January, Swainson outlined an 11 point fiscal reform proposal. GOP moderates and George Romney's campaign organization have since said that it does not meet their requirements for fiscal reform. But at the time, the governor's proposal, with only slight revision, did impress enough Republican mod- erate Senators to fight for it. In this last Legislature, Michigan came closer to much needed tax relief for business than at any time in the last ten years. Or take the governor's program for economic growth. In another address to the Legislature, he proposed a 14 point program. Among his plans, was one which would have given the University's Institute of Science and Tech- nology an additional $529,000 for research. 'Of course, Swainson's plan got nowhere. In fact, when a Republican committee proposed the same added appropriation for IST, the Legislature again took no action. ONE CAN go on and on. Swainson has pro- posed comprehensive programs in the field of education, conservation, civil rights and un- employment compensation, all areas of vital importance. All of them have been scuttled by the reactionary bloc which still dominates the Legislature. At this point, Republicans contend that a Republican governor would be in a much better position to bargain with a Republican Legisla- ture. George Romney, they claim, can break the stalemate in Lansing. But George Romney does not have super- natural powers. He has never stated specifically how he intends to deal with the ultra- conservative Republican bloc. He talks a good deal about "unity" and "leadership"; but it is impossible to know what he means by them. The GOP presents him as a man of respon- sibility and ability who will institute "gov- ernment by individual citizen participation" rather than by big labor or big industry. THIS APPEAL is vague and avoids the facts. The programs he is proposing are almost exactly the same as Swainson's. They are the same programs members of his own party have consistently opposed. The evidence of Romney's insecure position within his own party is obvious. He could not convince it to repudiate the John Birch So- ciety. The selection of his running mates makes Romney's position even more untenable. For example, Clarence Reid, Republican candidate for lieutenant governor, has come out pub- licly in opposition to the income tax, one of the key provisions in Romney's fiscal reform pro- gram. Romney is also running on a strong civil rights platform. He has said unequivocally that he supports 'Rule Nine, a controversal ad- ministrative ruling which forbids realtors from discriminating in the sale or renting of pro- perty. Yet his running mate for secretary of state, Norman Stockmeyer, will only say that he favors Rule Nine "in principle" and that it is "a complex issue" which most people don't really understand. This is the team that wants to lead Michigan to unity. If Romney and his associates are elected, one factor they have forgotten to mention is the political debt they will owe to conservative out-state Republicans. They talk about ending partisan political squabbling, but they forget to mention that they too will have their political debts to settle. They will have to achieve harmony in their own party before they can pretend to do anything for the state. THE MOST serious charge Romney has made against Swainson is that the Democratic party is dominated by big unions. The GOP, he also admits, has too much of a bias toward big business but Republicanism can become the citizen's party. This view ignores some of the fundamental realities of politics. Large organizations do, after all, represent people. Furthermore, they have political aims as well as economic ones. There is nothing to be ashamed of in the alliance of the AFL-CIO and the Democratic party. If the union did not participate in son vetoed it. If the unions had failed to lobby, they certainly would have been negligent. THERE IS NOTHING evil or Machiavellian In the unions' objectives. They have always come out clearly and openly with their pro- grams. It is certainly no more onerous that Henry Ford II, who has called for an end to par- tisan squabbling and backs Romney, admitting recently that his company lobbied against fiscal reform last spring. Romney, like any political leader, is going to have to acknowledge his al- liances and give their demands at least some consideration. Who knows what he will do when he must choose between Mr. Ford's sup- port or the income tax? OBVIOUSLY, the Democratic party has its faults. Swainson's fiscal reform program is only a compromise package. It is based on a number of studies, including Romney's Citizens for Michigan Program. It is probably the only plan which comes anywhere near providing both adequate tax relief for business and added revenue for the state's growing needs. What's more, when it was time to stand up and be counted, when it was time to show who really had the leadership in his own party, Swainson managed to deliver the votes of every one of the ten Demcratic Senators. He even managed to convince enough Republicans to make fiscal reform a real possibility. He failed by only one vote. But George Romney did nothing. He was right across the street serving as vice-president of the Constitutional Convention. He says that he could not do as a private citizen what the governor could not do as governor. But at the same time, he tells us that participation in public affairs is an obligation that comes only after a man's obligations to his religion and his family. And what was Romney doing at con-con? He says he was making dissident groups work to- gether. His major feat was the apportionment compromise in the new constitution. Of course what he fails to mention was the compromise was between Republican factions. He claims that the new Senate apportionment is based 80 per cent on population with a 20 per cent consideration given to area. However, the small- est district is only one fifth the size of the largest which leads one to believe that the consideration was 80 per cent area and 20 per cent population in some cases. LOOKING BACK at the Swainson adminis- tration, one finds that the governor has consistantly been in opposition to the conserva- tive GOP. But Swainson, unlike Romney, has and can openly fight obstructionism. Swainson and Romney have both deplored the fact that most of the state-supported col- leges and universities have had to raise tuition. But it was the GOP, and specifically Sens. Elmer R. Porter (R-Blissfield) and Carlton Morris (R-Kalamazoo) who said last spring that colleges and universities would only get more money if they matched it with a tuition boost. Similarly, when Detroit passed an income tax to alleviate an impending financial crisis, Republican and Democratic legislators alike passed a bill that would forbid a city to tax non-residents. Swainson, though his action was politically unpopular in an election year, vetoed the bill. Romney, when asked what he would do if he were governor, only answered that a Detroit income tax would not have been necessary. It is possible to go on and on, to find point after point where Swainson has been the target of unwarranted and illogical criticism. But what comes through is a clear picture of one side of his administration: he has offered leadership that has impressed even some of the more reasonable members of the Republican party. THIS LEADERSHIP has not been the flashy, showy kind where the objective is to impress an image in the public-mind. It has been aimed at overcoming resistance to programs. It has been a commitment to issues. The Republican party has offered only slo- gans. Even if George Romney were to win on Tuesday, he would owe a debt to the out- state conservative Republicans who voted for him, the same people who have bitterly op- posed both Romney's and Swainson's pro- grams. Swainson and the Democratic party are not worried about something as amorphous and ob- viously unachievable as unity. There are in- dividuals in this state and in this state's Legis- lature who are, by principle, diametrically opposed to fiscal reform, larger University ap- propriations, extended mental health programs and a reorganized state executive branch. THE APPEAL for these projects must be made to those whose minds are open, who are willing to think about more than their own home district and getting reelected. This is By GLORIA BOWLES AS THE CLOCK struck midnight Wednesday night, the golden coach of the Common Market let in another member: the poor Cin- derella of an island, Greece. The news of the associate mem- bership is good news, for as is plain to any visitor to Greece, here is a land of economic discontent. Two million of the eight and a half million people are either un- employed or underemployed; pri- vation is acute, particularly in the rural areas which contain 60 per cent of the population. The per capita income of the country as a whole is $280 a year, and only $175 in the agricultural districts. Greece lives on tobacco, dried fruit, marble, emery, olive oil, sponges and an increasingbnum- ber of tourists. She will benefit at once from all the privileges ac- corded full members of the Euro- pean Economic Community, and have a 50 per cent tariff cut on tobacco and raisins. Also, to augment the current measures of the Greek govern- ment, which is encouraging Greek manufacturers to adjust their nar- row outlooks and think in terms of exports, and not just in terms of consumption in their own coun- try, the Common Market's Euro- pean Investment Bank will grant a $125 million low cost long term loan. THE GOVERNMENT, in joining the economic community, hopes to establish better relations be- tween Greek and foreign indus,ry. but also make Europeans sit up and recognize the possibilities ef a nation that is the springboard for economic and commercial pen- etration in the Middle East and Africa.- Perhaps this cheering fact of entry will help to give the Greeks a new economic lease on life. Any visitor to the country cannot help but be disturbed, and appalled by the poverty that abounds in this once greatest of all nations. The poverty is most striking on the Greek islands. I lived for two weeks on Kea, not far from the mainland, little-known, and cho- sen precisely for its anonymity. Here we ate entire meals-fish, potatoes, salad, a desert and hor- rible Greek wine-for 35 cents. In a small village on Kea, we rented two of the rooms of a three- bedroom, one-kitchen upstairs flat, for $1.80 a night. When a fourth guest came, the owners of the small apartment, the Greek and his wife who sold sweets in the shop downstairs, gave up their bedroom and moved out to the small outdoor porch. * * * THE PEOPLE of Kea were simple folk, fishermen and small tradesmen, very curious about the five young English-speaking people on the island who did nothing but swim, sun, sleep, read and eat. When it came time to decide on one of the five or six restaurants that lined the main (and only) street of the village we had to patronize each in its turn to pre- vent dark looks the next day. However, we sometimes turned around and walked out of a res- taurant after seeing the kitchen. One goes to the islands expecting to find men lazy, and uneducated, and one leaves with the same im- pression, though not knowing where to place the blame. The island was lovely, but Athens called. We remember the words of Edith Hamilton in "The Greek Way to Western Civiliza- tion"': "For a hundred years Athens was a city where the great spiri- tual forces that war in men's minds flowed along together in peace; law and freedom, truth and religion, beauty and goodness, the objective and the subjective- there was a truce to their eternal welfare, and the result was the balance and clarity, the harmony and completeness the word Greek has , come to stand for . ..in all Greek art there is an absence of struggle, a reconciling power, something of calm and serenity, the world has yet to see again ... WE SAW IT again, as we mounted the hill to thenAcropolis, and as we tried to revive, for a few moments in that hot white sun of an Athenian morning, the glorious days in the age of Per- icles, when art and thinking and Democracy knew their ultimate expression. Later; at the sound and light show at the Acropolis, and at an open air concert with the Greek National Orchestra in the amphitheatre, and the lights of the city beyond, one feels for the slightest moment the revival of the spirit of Homer, Sophocles, Euripides, and Aeschylus. But on the descent the illusion is destroyed, and one is plunged into the hot, modern city of Athens, little more than a village of the Turkish type at the con- clusion of the Greek War of In- dependence in 1833. The town was laid out by a German architect with a French name, Schaubert. The new Athens lacks a soul, and individuality. Her largest structure is the Hotel Grande Bretagne, where John Gunter said he met three ex-prime minis- ters in one afternoon, but didn't meet the present Government leader Konstantinos Karamanlis, called exceptional by one Greek politician only because "he's the best prime minister Greece nas had since the days of Lord Byron." * * * THE NEW ATHENS is square, and would be cold if the weather weren't so hot. Her streets are not narrow and winding, but paved and dirty. She shuts up very day from noon until five o'clock, be- cause of the unbearable heat; ar- riving tourists think the town has been evacuated. These tourists, armed with maps marked in Eng- lish are even more confused by street signs in Greek symbols. Downtown Athens is bustling and prosperous and architecturally American, but the hidden back streets quickly reveal her real poverty, characteristic of the big city as of other parts of the main- land, and the islands. The land of "Never on Sunday" represents a civilization that, cer- tainly, "the world has yet to see again." We go to Athens, not ad- mitting we expect to find the Athens of centuries ago, bi4 imagining it that way, and hoping a little just the same! But, like Lord Byron, we see that is only the blue, unchanging Aegean that is the same (Thy shores are empires, changed in all save thee/Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage, what are they? /Thy waters wasted them while they were free. We look to the sea for a con- nection with the past, and now, less esthetically, we look to the sea, and its possibility for trade and transport and a better life for the Greeks. We are hopeful now, with this news of economic cooperation, for it is a fact that a man, once materially content, is able better to appreciate the beauty of life and perhaps, rein- carnate a part of the greatness that was the Greek civilization. 4 I1 I 4 I SIDELINE ON SGC: Council Denies S haul Publicity I By GAIL EVANS STUDENT Government Council Wednesday night invited Den- nis Shaul, United States National Student Association president to speak to the student body before the Nov. 14 referendum. SGC should be commended for attempting to bring the chief executive of the organization un- der question to the campus. If he accepts the invitation to speak, Shaul will provide the cam- pus with first hand information about what USNSA is doing lo- cally, nationally and internation- ally. The students must know what they are voting for or against in order to make the democratic system meaningful. * * BUT COUNCIL only went half- way in its invitation. SGC would TODAY AND TOMORROW: Decision on Berlin By WALTER LIPPMANN HE AMERICAN decision to act in Berlin without unanimous agreement by all the Allies, pro- vided West Germany cooperates, could be highly important. There is some doubt about it because of the interview given on Tuesday to a German newspaper by the Defense Minister, Franz Joseph Strauss. The full text is not avail- able as I write, but Herr Strauss appears to say that Germany will hold back unless all the occupy- ing powers plus NATO have first committed themselves in a con- flict. This uncertainty will have to be cleared up if the commit- ment on Berlin is to be fully activated. Probably it will be cleared up. But, as important as this would be, it would not be enough. Stand- ing firm in a showdown will not solve the Berlin problem, which is how to guarantee a good life of democratic freedom to half a city over a hundred miles deep in- side the Communist world. Yet there is not now a true political understanding about the future of Berlin and of Germany between Bonn and Washington. We must hope the basis of such an understanding can be laid down d u r i n g Chancellor Adenauer's coming visit to Washington and that the understanding can be worked out while he is still the German Chancellor. THE PARAMOUNT practical issue upon which significant ne- gotiations depend and around which they will revolve is the de- gree of recognition which the Western allies will accord to the East German state. Western with- drawal from Berlin is not, as we have allrsaid again and again, a negotiable question. But the de- gree of recognition of and the kind of relationship with East Germany are eminently negotiable ques- tions. Thus, commercial surface traffic with West Berlin has for years been regulated 'by a Bonn-Pan- kow trade agreement and has been administered by East German of- ficials. It is sheer nonsense, there- fore, to talk as if there has been or could be such a thing as abso- lute non-recognition. The practi- cal question is how much more recognition and of what kind there irsto d hp a state, and that no country any- where in the world (except the Soviet Union itself) may have an ambassador in Bonn if it also sends an ambassador to Pankow. The official view of reunification is that East Germany is to be giv- en the chance to vote itself out of the Communist orbit and out of the Soviet alliance in order to join West Germany and the Western Alliance. This is, and always has been, a pipe dream, and nobody who has ever been to Germany or has studied the German question be- lieves that there is anything in it. The world is rent by a momentous power struggle between the Soviet Union and the West, and it is in- conceivable that the Soviet Union will, while it has the power to prevent it, agree to a united Ger- many of 70 million people within the NATO alliance. * * * INDEED, the official view of re- unification is so patently impos- sible that, when it is put forward by responsible statesmen, it arouses suspicions. To proopse re- unification on what are known to be impossible terms is in fact not to propose reunification at all. And in truth, Dr. Adenauer's great friend, Gen. de Gaulle, is not in favor of German reunifica- tion and avoided the discussion of it during his recent tour of Ger- many. The British government is, to put it mildly, reluctant to see Germany reunited. The Low Coun- tries do not want reunification, and it would be difficult to say with much certainty that Dr. Adenauer, who is an anti-Prussian from the Rhineland, has any burn- ing desire to be reunited with the Prussians and the Saxons. It can surely be said that the official formula of reunification by plebiscite is an obstacle to the reunification of Germany, not a method of achieving it. That may be one of the reasons why so many people who do not want a big Ger- many pay lip service to it. YET, despite the unavowed but very general objections to German reunification, I for one believe that the two Germanys must be and should be reunited. How? Once we fix it in our minds that the two Germanys cannot be reunited by Soviet surrender, the only conceiv- not appropriate any funds to ad- vertise the date, time or place of Shaul's talk. The motion, intro- duced by Howard Abrams, asked that in addition to Council's in- vitation, up to $50 be appropriated to pay for publicity expenses. The attempts to allocate funds were voted down by the anti- USNSA faction on Council. The reason offered for not spending SGC funds was that in effect such an appropriation would be subsidizing the new 'organiza- tion "Friends of USNSO." The BOOers (Better Off Out members of Council) thought it was suf- ficient that they had made the effort to invite Shaul. Council should advertise the talk. Since Council decided not to consider the question of con- tinued participation in the asso- ciation itself and to allow the Is- sue to be referred to the cam- pus, SGC as a body should not enter the fray. Council should only act as a referee between the two opposing factions in order to make sure the students will understand what they are voting for. Individual Council members are free to take whatever position they choose. * * * BOTH FACTIONS have argued that the campus is not aware of what USNSA does. One side uses this point as a reason to with- draw from the association. Coun- cil as a body should not allow a lack of knowledge to be justifica- tion for a "no" vote. Students should not vote against USNSA be- cause they have no knowledge or information about the association. If they choose to vote "no," they should place theirvote be- cause the campus gains no ben- efits from the association or be- cause the student disagrees with the principles of the organization or some other sound reason. If Shaul comes to the campus and his attempted justification of the organization is found to be inadequate for this campus, stu- dents still will vote against USNSA. Surely, Council has more faith in students than to believe that they would be irrationally swayed by in- valid arguments. * * * .. IF COUNCIL has this faith in the student (its members being themselves students) then with a clear conscience it can appro- priate money to inform students of the place and time of Shaul's speech. Some members have argued that Shaul's presence itself provides "Friends of USNSA" with a sig- nificant advantage. This argu- ment can be countered from an- other angle. Who but the president of USNSA is in a "prestige" posi- tion to hold his own against an- other "prestige" officer - SGC president Steven Stockmeyer - who is vigorously campaigning for the University to get out of US- NSA. Students will listen to Stock- meyer because, as he himself states in his platform, who should UNDER THE WALL: 'Escape' Limps Along "ESCAPE from East Berlin" has the title of a Grade D thriller; that's too bad, because the makers of this motion picture have made a Grade B thriller. Limping along like a lame step- sister to "The Diary of Anne Frank," "Escape" has found a good story about the infamous "wall," but can't figure out how to come to grips with the charac- ters that are trying to defy it. "Anne Frank" told the story of a group of Jews trapped by a political and military system. These people had no chance of escaping and the movie relied on revealing the characters of the people to make a meaningful picture. * * * BUT, HERE, a tunnel alone that is being used to defy the Wall is felt to be adequate mate- rial for, a story. By no means is this so. Don Murray, who plays the head of the operations, has to be convinced that an escape can be accom- plished. Once this is done, the movie forgets about his doubts and concentrates on the digging. Christine Kaufmann, who is the schoolgirl-runaway from-home be- causenI-want-to-get-across type, has no chance to develop her characterization. There is little sweat and strain. All problems are solved like a miracle. How to drill through a brick wall so that the Vopos won't hear the noise? Simple. It just seems that the uncle practices with his band everyday with raucous marches. Therefore, the racket of the music (?) will drown out the former noise without the least suspicion being arisen. How to get the dirt from the tunnel out of the way? Easy. The neighbor has a baby carriage that is the perfect vehicle for the job. How to tell West Berlin that they're coming over and to be prepared? Why, little junior's toy airplanes will easily fly over the Wall to deliver the message. As for historical accuracy, "Es- cape" is closer to fiction than reality. West Berliners helped by digging a separate shaft to meet the incoming East Berlin tunnel. Nowhere is this mentioned. The whole process of digging took months, not days as the movie made it seem. And the length of the tunnel was 400 feet, much longer than the movie made it look. These problems may have been forgotten for dramatic rea- sons, but this is no excuse to ad- vertise the story as true and authentic. * * *