& t Bail Seve,.ty-Tbird Year EDNTED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY o BARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATONS "where Opinions Are e STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE No 2-3241 Truth Will Preval Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. "Dear Nikita - It Was Interesting To See Your Test-Ban Treaty, Which You Can Put Away In The Same Place You Keep Your Missiles" CITYSCOPE: The Weak State Of ..Fair Housing URDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1963 ACTING NIGHT EDITOR: LOUISE LIND I; I Morse'sP i Wallace's Privacy HE NAME-CALLING controversy between Alabama Gov. George Wallace and Sen. ayne Morse (D-Ore), while being a little en- htening and ludicrous, also reveals an ex- ?mely serious breach in the American citizen's ht to privacy. Morse revealed Thursday that allace, while an Air Force sergeant in World ar II, developed a tension-caused psycho- urosis and receives a 10 per cent disability yment monthly from the Veterans Adminis- tion. Morse got this choice bit of information from e Veterans Administration. A VA spokesman lained that its records are closed to the neral public, but are open to the veteran's ctor, family, legal agencies or an investigat- member of Congress. [his last classification of access leaves a wide mning for snooping Congressmen, bent on de- oying the reputation of their opponents. rse apparently has used this loophole to Youths its fullest advantage although it is not clear what the Oregon senator is investigating. MEDICAL RECORDS, especially psychological records, are generally considered private. Generally, they are not even seen by the pa- tient himself. The first two of the VA's per- missible viewers maintain the privacy of these records and allow the proper personnel to use them when necessary. The third group-legal agencies-is more questionable. While some, such as courts pre- preparing to sentence a criminal or to commit a mentally ill individual to a state hospital, have a proper use for these records, other agencies do not. Investigating Congressmen have no business looking at records. Probably, they were allowed to see the record so that they could aid con- stituents dealing with VA, but apparently the agency has not used even limited discretion in letting the lawmakers see the records. WHAT GOOD does an individual record do in lawmaking? Laws deal with general sub- jects, the records deal, with individuals. Since Congressional investigations are supposed to be concerned with legislation, these individual rec- ords have nothing to do with their work. Being a public official does not cause one's medical record to be public. A public official should be judged on what he does in his offices, not in his private life. His official position considerably reduces his private life and makes many activities, usually private, public, but this does not extend to his health unless his health prevents him from fulfilling the duties of his office. Whether Wallace is neurotic or not i not the concern of the voter. His actions as gov- ernor of Alabama are the citizen's concern and if his neurosis does not affect them, it is unimportant. If his illness does, then his ac- tions speak for his removal. [HOPEFULLY, this incident will cause the VA to change its unfortunate policy. Snooping congressmen can do hardly anything good for the health of veterans. PHILIP SUTIN National Concerns Editor By WILLIAM BENOIT MRS. LAURI TALAYCO, Human Relations Coordinator for the Human Relations Commission, re- signed her post at last week's City Council meeting charging, on two points, that the HRC is ineffective. First, she maintains that com- plaints of discrimination are im- properly handled. The HRC has little punitive power, and it is reluctant to use what it has. The HRC's power to hold public hear- ings in cases of discrimination is a measure that members of the commission seem to have forgotten. exists. Second, Mrs. Talayco charges the HRC with lacking a program. More specifically, the commission is in the dark over what the coun- cil expects of it, and fails to make use of the talents of its members. * * * TO AN EXTENT, this second charge is valid. Communication between the commission and coun- cil is weak, often almost non- existent. This problem was the sub- ject of a recent commission meet- ing, Mrs. Talayco points out. However, it is good that Ann Arbor has a Human Relations Commission-in the same way that it is good that the city has a fair- housing ordinance. For the most part agencies and individuals out- side the council who have taken an interest in Ann Arbor's struggle for a fair housing ordinance are against passage of what has been termed a "weak, watered-down ordinance." At least two council members have voiced 'sympathy for Mrs. Talayco's action. Others inthe 11 man council are probably privately understanding of the resignation. Almost to a man the council was willing to praise Mrs. Talayco for her work on the HRC. An important member of the HRC believesthe ordinance in its present form will fail, but has strong hope that a more complete form will be passed before Christ- mas. The council indicated desire to negotiate with leaders of the movement for a better ordinance when Fourth Ward Councilman Wendall Hulcher moved for a meeting with these leaders to be held before a final vote on the or- dinance was taken. * * * AFTER HAVING PASSED Hul- cher's motion unanimously, it is hoped that the council will demon- strate sincere intention of working for the best fair housing ordinance possible. It must be clear to the councilmen that sit-ins and dem- onstrations against the present weak ordinance will not stop until a satisfactory piece of legislation is passed. CINEMA GUILD: 13ermaw Dreams PROSPERO SAID IT in Shake- speare's "The Tempest": "We ,are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life is rounded with a sleep." This perhaps is the main vision behind Ingmar Berg- man's 1958 film "Wild Straw- berries," the Saturday and Sunday feature at the Cinema Guild. An old doctor (well acted by Victor Siostrom) is invited to re- ceive recognition, at a college, for the humanitarian services he has given others during his lifetime. The actual ceremony, however, is only an interlude if compared to what comes before it, and after. * * * RIDING TO the college with his daughter-in-law, the old man lapses into thoughts and dreams of his youth, of his brothers and sisters, and of the girl he almost married. These many dreams are provok- ed and sustained by incidents along the road: twice they take on passengers; most importantly, they pay a short visit to his boyhood home. Here, I think, the film welcomes comparison with a well-known type of adventure story, namely one that follows a theme of "in- trigue on a moving train" or "drama and humor on a cross- country bus." Route 66 stuff, if you will, but handsomely done by Bergman in that each episode on the highway is tied to the next by virtue of its effect on the old man's reveries. Indeed, without this excellent thread the entire picture would separate into num- erous isolated patches of unrelated cinema. The old doctor accepts the award of recognition, whereupon the story becomes more domestic in flavor, as he tries to ease the strained relation between his son and hiss daughter-in-law. THE FILM, for definite reasons, did not evoke in me a feeling among other film critics. Perhaps commensurate with its reputation I wasn't in the mood; equally per- haps, I cannot be expected to ap- preciate the fears of old age. But I think the most plausible reason is this: the film concentrates. on thoughts more than actions. And thoughts, while nolt necessarily un- cinematic, are difficult things"to put before a camera lens. They flirt, but sometimes you can't, touch them. The radius of Bergman's reach is admirable, but his actual grasp is ten a cold withdrawal from perfGction. -Gary 'T. Robinson p I, A r f °i t MOST COLLEGE STUDENTS are upholding the grand old tradition of "good clean fun" as they recently proved again at Seaside, Oregon, and the Newport Jazz Festival. Young men and women in their early twen- ties tore up Seaside, littering its beach with beer cans and rioting wildly in the streets. In a fit of unusual passion and energy they ripped up a twenty-foot lifeguard tower and carried it through the town's streets. Riot police and a harassed town council attempted to negotiate with the students whose money was all too nice, but whose manners, they felt, left some- thing to be desired. THE RITE of spring usually held in Fort Lauderdale or Datoria Beach now seems to have been joined by end of summer festivities on both coasts and more collegiate "horsing" around. There seems to be little reason why Seaside should be so upset, since each spring the Tribe of Michigamua does exactly the same thing and with University sanction to boot. -B. LAZARUS TODAY AND TOMORROW: The War in Viet Namt , An Impractical Senator SEN. BARRY GOLDWATER'S STAND Thurs- day against the present terms of the test ban treaty constitutes one of the first con- crete issues he will be judged on both at the, Republican Presidential Nomination Conven- tion and, possibly, at the polls next November. By calling for the removal of Soviet weapons and men from Cuba asia prerequisite for ratify- ing the treaty, Goldwater demonstrated cour- age. Although the Cuba situation has resulted in a lingering uneasiness, the popularity of the treaty is formidable to any of its opponents. Yet when political stakes are as high for the test ban's opponents as they are for Goldwater, courage approaches foolhardiness. SENATE Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of Montana argued in Senate debate that Goldwater's qualification "would require nego- tiations not only with the Soviet Union but with over $0 other nations." Mansfield also predicted that about half the world would then demand reservations of one kind or another, and "we wil be back, where we started from." Whether or not this is true, Goldwater cer- tainly appears to be acting out of conviction rather than political motive. However incon- ceivable such action may seem for the veteran politician, how could his motives be otherwise? PUBLIC RESPONSE to the treaty, which has poured into Washington both for senators and President Kennedy, has overwhelmingly favored the test ban.I In addition, Senate testimony has lent scientific validity to important contentions of the treaty. After Dean Rusk initialed the treaty, it was predicted that President Kennedy would have a tough battle on his hands to in- sure its passage. However, judging from sena- torial polls, its passage now appears certain. Thus it is doubtful that political advantage will accrue from Goldwater's demand. But his reservation is more than politically impractical. He is not merely lessening the chances of his success at the polls. GOLDWATER WILL probably emerge as one of the last of a fading clan-an American Revolutionary. He has, however, amended slightly a famous slogan of the American Revo- lution: "Give me liberty or give me death." Goldwater's version must be, "Give me my ideology all over the world or give the world Editorial Staff RONALD WILTON, Editor death." Thus his political tactics bear con- siderable resemblance to those of Red Chinese Premier Mao Tse Tung.: THAT THIS VIEW, and Goldwater's quarrel with the nuclear test ban, have achieved a measure of impracticality on the American political scene brings faint hope that world peace may not, be as impossible, as Edward Teller would have us believe. -MARILYN KORAL Manipulation THE FREE PRESS in America is in large part a myth. What is published in a newspaper rests as much or more upon the whim of its publisher as on the newsworthiness or even truth of a given news item. To a great extent, this is to be expected. A publisher runs a newspaper not only to make money, but also to express his views. He is able to do this not only on the editorial page but, more dangerously, on the news pages as well. He plays up information he favors, withholds that which he disfavors, and distorts any and all of it to put his views in the best possible light. Anyone who doubts this might compare a typicl day's edition of The New York Times with that of The Chicago Tribune. IN THE EVERYDAY world of American free enterprise, such moves would be not only unabashedly accepted, but even expected. How- ever, a newspaper is more than a business. In its role in American democracy, it is a vital public service, essential to the success of the system. An informed citizenry is a prime re- quisite of our form of government, and this is why a free, uncensored press is a necessity. But clearly there must be more than this. A case in point is coverage in the Sept. 4 Detroit Free Press of the return of a Michigan girl from a summer in Cuba. Was there, anywhere within that fairly long column of print, any mention of her impressions of the Cuban standard of living, of her saying that there was a colony of 300 American technicians on the island, of her favorable impression of the Cuban government? There was not. Such views, whether accurate or not, do not appear to be popular with the publisher of The Free Press. So instead of reading of what was at least a very skillful propaganda job by Cuba, we are told of Cas- tro's skill at the ping pong table and that the State Department failed to carry out its threat By WALTER LIPPMANN IN HIS television interview with Walter Cronkite, President Ken- nedy said, so at least it sounded, that South Viet Nam can win the war if the Saigon government re- forms. It must recapture the pop- ular support which it has lost in the past two months by "changes in policy and perhaps with, per- sonnel." This amounted to telling Diem to disentangle himself from the clutches of his family. It is hard to believe the Presi- dent really thinks this will or can be done, or that he thinks that if it were done, South Viet Nam could proceed to win the war. For the objective of the military operation which we are support"- ing is not to win the guerrilla war, but to contain it. This is not because President Kennedy and President Eisen- hower have not wanted to win, but because it is for all practical purposes impossible to win a guer- rilla war if there is a privileged sanctuary behind the guerrillas fighters. THIS PROPOSITION was dem- onstrated in another big guerrilla war in which we have intervened. That was the war in Greece. That war was won by the non-Com- munist Greeks, but-and the but is crucial-only after Tito closed the Yugoslav frontier against the Communist Greeks. When the guerrilla fighters could not longer retire into Yugoslavia to be re- equipped and rested, they were de- feated. It is reasonably certain that the Communist guerrillas, the Viet Cong, cannot be defeated in South Viet Nam as long as they have an open line to North Viet Nam. The key question about winning the war is whether the Viet Cong can be cut off from its base of supplies in the north. If it cannot be, a military solution is most improb- ble. We can be sure that it is quite beyond the capacity of Diem's government, or of any other Sai- gon government, to cut the supply lines to the north. If we decided on a military solution, we should have to operate directly against North Viet Nam, presumably by occupying its capital of Hanoi in order to cut the supply lines to the guerrillas. But we should have to expect and be prepared for a Red Chinese retort in the form of invasions anywhere along the frontier of what used to be called Indo-China. For us, this would almost cer- tainly mean a war of the type and on the scale of the Korean war. If we then escalated the war by using nuclear weapons, nobody can predict the end of it all. THE PRICE of a military vic- tory in the Vietnamese war is higher than American vital in- terests can justify. The Chinese, of course, know this and fortunate- ly they know, too, that the price of a military victory for them is prohibitive. Speaking for ourselves, we have made it manifest that Indo-China THE FOG AROUND US: Carson's Book May Be a Catalyst Our intervention in Indo-China is to prevent Red China from ab- sorbing the great natural resources of Southeast Asia. In this we'are not alone. This is also the interest of Britain and of Australia and of the Commonwealth. ;It is, as General de Gaulle has just reminded us, an interest of France that the countries of Indo- China should be independent and unconquered. It is a vital interest of India, which would be dan- gerously out-flanked if Red China swept down through Burma and Indo-China to Singapore. Last but not least, it is a very great interest of the Soviet Union to limit the expansion of Red China during its present aggressive phase. ASSUMING' that4 no dramatic collapse of the present position in Saigon is imminent, we shall have time to begin talking about these larger considerations. (c) 1963, The Washington Post Co. 1 1 By STEVEN HALLER UIPTON SINCLAIR jolted a com- placent nation in 1906 with his expose ofethe meat-packing in- dustry, "The Jungle," and ulti- mately aided in the passage of legislation to rectify the injustices brought out in the novel. Now, 57 years later, an ever- growing segment of the population is once again being aroused to concern-and even indignation- by a controversial account of the uses and misuses to which insec- ticides are being put in this coun- try. LETTERS' to the EDITOR To the Editor: HERE'S A FUNNY coincidence: Lloyd Graff ("English 123 Worthless") offers as his own pro- posal the "abolition" of Freshman English and suggests that "other departments of the University could then assume the burden of incorporating extensive writing in- to their introductory courses." The same proposal, in virtually the same language, can be found in an article by Prof. Warner Rice, head of the English department, entitled "A Proposal for the Aboli- tion of Freshman English, as It is Now Commonly Taught, from the College Curriculum." ("College English," April, 1960) Graff seems unaware that an- other of his recommendations (a proficiency exam for exempting students from the Freshman Eng- lish requirement) has already been in effect for about five years. The CEEB Advanced Placement Exam- ination in English may be taken by any prospective freshman; if he does well he will be granted not only exemption but credit for the course. ONE FINAL NOTE to former Freshman English students who may have found the course diffi- cult and now feel slighted by what appears to be a sneer from the department chairman himself. Graff says "English 123 and, to a lesser extent, English 124, are aimed at what Prof. Warner G. The book, "The Silent Spring," is the most recent work of Ra- chel Carson, a professional biolo- gist who was catapulted to prom- inence from an obscure position in the United States Fish and Wild- life Service with her award- winning book, "The Sea Around Us," in 1951. Now she has turned her attention to "the fog around us," a phrase which might apply equally well to the mist of chemi- cal poisons which daily enshrouds our countryside or to the fog of controversy which has begun to envelop scientists and laymen alike where this vital issue is con- cerned. IT WAS THIS BOOK which made such chemicals as mala- thion, dieldrin, chlordane and lin- dane household words and ex- panded the fight against frivolous application of toxic chemicals be- yond the usual number of con- servation groups and bird- watchers' societies. It was this book which United States Supreme Court Justice Wil- liam 0. Douglas termed "the most important chronicle of this cen- tury for the human race." And now it appears that history will repeat itself, and it will be this book which will bring about need- ed legislation to keep a large portion of our nation's landscape from turning brown and withering away. This latest development in the conservationists' effort has as yet, unfortunately, brought .forth as little fruit of any worth as the sun - drenched - and parathion- drenched-orchards which dot the countryside. However, the issue is being discussed by a Senate sub- committee; and passage of new legislation in this area has been urged by several experts in the field, as well as one layman of major importance, President John F. Kennedy. IN A REPORT issued by his Science Advisory Committee, the President called for "a buttressing of federal laws on pesticides, in- cluding those laws that control their marketing, as well as new steps by federal agencies respon- sible for control of pesticide use." The report called these agencies' work "inadequate" and noted that approximately 150 persons are killed by the misuse of these wildlife, our agriculture industry and even ourselves, in addition to the pests for which the poisons are actually intended. Nor need one look very far for examples of this hazard, either. There is the case of more than 60 fruit pickers in the Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys of Cali- fornia who became violently ill from inhaling parathion or ab- sorbing it through the skin. Or one might point to the case of an eight year old Washington, D.C., girl who died under circum- stances "implicating" a lindane vaporizer as the fatal instrument. It is not illogical to assume that such examples of human, misery as these might arouse those indi- viduals who do not care about the immense numbers of birds and other "dumb animals" who have met death at the hands of these same chemicals. * * * THE conservationists have only, begun to fight; with ever-increas- ing support from legislators and the general public, it appears that they are not alone in their struggle against eventual eradication and inundation. It is to be hoped that Miss Carson's book will serve as a "reverse catalyst" to show down the rate of chemical reactions in our fields and forests. Ro bot? THE UNDERLYING basis of a free political system and* a free economy is moral. Unless, man is inwardly free-able to distinguish between good and evl, right and wrong, capable of making intel- ligent and prudent decisions in his own interest on his own account- the whole fabric of free institu- tion rests on a foundation of sand. This concept of the self-reliant individual, able within reasonable limitations to shape his swn des- tiny, with the choice between suc- cess and failure mainly in his own hands, has been under heavy at- tack from many ;modern theorists. They would substitute for the self-reliant individual who helps himself the image of a!semi-robot who must be helped and guided in every step he takes by the state and its proliferating welfare agen- cies. -William Henry Chamberlain in The Freeman #, "Bad News, Chief-Education Is Breaking Out In Another Area" 1 f I 44C,..r. w AALArAI ppMlr t I ,Mrs .,.., ,4 4 r 11 -amh. I