Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSiTY OF MCH1GAM UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS re Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 ruth Will Prevail" 'itorials printed in The Michigan Daily exfpress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in al reprints. FEIFFER Y. DECEMBER 10.21963 NIGHT EDITOR: MARILYN KORAL New President May Stir Liberal Activities [ATTo 000 1 120 O00)CHMf- A1A", WN60 WHAT TfW~1 M5' A 59AME Too WfJfVp- *7~0 B~uRAl fE'6 f'ROH(f5 7O EACH OW-R. IW rA r u IWJKEM METOO, T MAK' AML Mt4 PR6.56or7 (3w, & r A MV~J .,. ? , ,. } COE 1w 15 C"65 WAR- i - 16C 115 b "' 6IE. our C~1UJ&1?JccMui PAREWJS 1w~ Sf'JcX 11JMK{ A6AIST EACH4 PAJMA. I cR, f. FRO4M A WRC-AETROUGHO N 00. TeLC-151iO0-.v OOT Get Mr1 tiA . THE DEATH of President John F. Ken-- nedy grieves the nation but it has cre- ated exciting possibilities for the liberal position in American politics. Lyndon B. Johnson in the presidency may prove to be the vital stimulus needed to focus the nation's attention on its own prob- lems. Kennedy offered the nation a varied and progressive bracket of programs. However, he was unable to communicate to the nation the immediate importance of these programs. Kennedy was unable to create a national will. MHERE ARE A NUMBER of reasons for this. Kennedy offered too. many pro- grams at once and thus was not able to put sufficient political pressure behind any single one. Apart from Kennedy's proliferation of the congressional agenda, the radical nature of any one of his pro- grams strained the possibilities of Its passage. A conservative can munch on progress, not gulp it. In addressing himself to the public -he was never able to get across the content of his programs. America was charmed by Kennedy's personality, but not by his ideas. Thus the nation has witnessed the defeat of Medi- care, tremendous damage to foreign aid, the ;cancellation of tax reforms, and the. postponement of civil rights and tax-cut legislation. IT IS CONCEIVABLE that some of these measures would have been passed un- der Kennedy in the coming year. How- ever, with Johnson at the helm there is much greater,, hope for their passage. Johnson stands closer to the mainstream of America's political and public desires. If predictions on the basis of past per-' formance are possible Johnson will no doubt narrow the focus of programs of- fered to Congress. Johnson will maintain an interest in foreign aid although he has never shown the keenness in this area that Kennedy felt. Johnson has indicated that he is not happy with the tremendous defense bur- den the United States is bearing in Western Europe. He will remain firm in the cold war but the image he will pro- ject in this area will not be as soft as Kennedy's. Johnson's philosophy leans to- ward a stress on the ultimate incompat- ibility of ends rather than toward the compromising nature of Kennedy's last year (i.e., wheat trade, suggestion of a joint space mission, immediate resump- tion of cultural exchange after Prof. Frederick C. Barghoorn of Yale was re- JOHNSON WILL TURN the political fo- cus in on the United States, a direction that will be well received if one can inter- pret the recent blow to foreign ai4as an expression of congressional hostility to- ward Kennedy's crusading desire to re- make the world. Johnson will turn the focus in on the United States at a time when it is most needed. The campaign for civil rights is tum- bling. Johnson, brings a demonstrated concern in this area. This concern is tem- pered by the wisdom of Johnson's south- ern experience which has taught him that racism is A deeply ingrained phenomena. Transformation of the southern view de- mands an approach more measured than the South has seen until now. If any words are going to get through to a Southern racial bigot, these words of caution and concern from a fellow south- erner surely will. They come from a re- cent speech of Johnson's. "To ask for patience from the Negro is to ask him to give more of what he has already given enough. But to fail to ask of him-and of all Americans- perserverance with the processes of a free and responsible society would be to fail to ask what the national inter- est requires of all its citizens." The passage of the pending civil rights bill depends ultimately upon the same moderate southerners' votes that are an- tagonized by the government's deficit spending. Johnson has indicated in the past that he favors more closely balanced books. THERE ARE TWO additional qualifica- tions Johnson possesses. He has been intimately associated with the forces un- derlying Congress since 1937 when he en- tered the House of Representatives. His accumulated experience combined with that of Speaker of the House John W. McCormack's will certainly be useful in getting enacted into law the programs that are placed on the congressional agenda. Finally, Johnson commands an effec- tive approach. He does not have Kenne- dy's image. The public will be more likely to hear the words coming from his dou- ble-chinned face. Johnson has a person- ality which is more familiar to the Ameri- can people, a personality which the pub- lic is more capable of understanding than Kennedy's was. LYNDON JOHNSON may not become a great president, but he will come much closer to spearheading great'national leg- islation than John F. Kennedy did. -WILLIAM CUMMINGS voT fSJT CT PamU j OUR FAULT ) W2 . ~IMVGl-& 1t4~? 4. 0 b 0,/ 5TU I AT "r 6 JIM U-fq, IAE 1MtC,) - SA CIILPS5 1H'i oEMS1 6UWt1 AT C# It57'MA$ . >i '64 ELECTIONS: Johnson Holds Decisive Edge, BY ROBERT HIPPLER THE TRAGEDY of President John F. Kennedy's assassina- tion probably will not affect the overall results of the 1964 elec- tions as much as many people seem to think. The chances are that President Lyndon B. John- son will be nominated and re- elected and that the Democrats will maintain their present bal- ance of power. There are several reasons for this. Very importantly, the assas- sination has cast a pall in the minds of many over the leading Republican Presidential contender, conservative Sen. Barry Goldwater. Despite the fact that the prime suspect in Kennedy's murder is a declared Communist sympathizer, the fact remains that the Presi- dent was killed in Dallas - the strongest citadel of the conser- vative movement in this country. It is in that city that the money behind the right wing - money such as that of oil hiililonaire H. L. Hunt- is concentrated. It is there, too, that the backbone of far right sentiment is located. Evidence of this sentiment was the harsh treatment Adlai Stevenson, American ambassador to the United Nations, received in Dallas one month before the assassina- tion. All this will be enough to crip- ple seriously what chances Gold- water had of obtaining the Repub- lican nomination, or if he is nom- inated, what hopes he had of win- ning the election. IN- ADDITION, each of the other leading Republican con- tenders for the Presidential nom- ination-Nelson A. Rockefeller and Richard M. Nixon-has made him- self unpalatable to a large section of the citizenry. Rockefeller's divorce and re- marriage have for obvious reasons alienated a large segment of the electorate including many house- wives. Nixon's public image-liked by some, hated by others-has made him disliked by many in the large section of the electorate which focuses on the candidates' personal attributes rather than on the issues. These factors-each of the ma- jor opponents hobbled by grave liabilities - will cause serious struggles within the Republican party and, particularly, at the LETTERS to the EDITOR 1 DON'T BELIEVE I have re- cently read a display of min- imum intelligence quite as sad as was Miss Gail 'Evans' editorial, "The Age of Efficiency." Certainly we are at an institution where higher learning is not prospering, if an associate city editor of the student newspaper can blatantly criticize the hand that feeds the institution for demanding effi- ciency of operation./ Supposedly, the goal of this University is to educate its stu- dents in literature, science and the arts; but I do not consider it too much to ask of the state Legis- lature that it try to instill, in the students and administration the meaning of the value of a dollar. * * * IN FACT, this University should now be more, not less, concerned with the aptness of spending money for services which do not directly relate to the advancement of higher education itself. And, in fact, the facilities of the Union, League, Health Service, Fresh Air Camp and the new alumni camp do fall into the category of ex- penditures superfluous to actual acquisition of a higher education. In these days when we are con- stantly reminded that universi- ties will soon be flooded with more students who will need a "basic" education, it is high time that intelligent and well-educated people should begin to demand more education and fewer fringe benefits.,from their institutions of higher learning. -Joy C. Sinelser, '64 nominating convention. Such in- fighting will further weaken the, Republican position, 1* * * IN THIS light, an important in- gredient of President Johnson's strength is that he will with no difficulty obtain the Democratic nomination. Johnson was. the most powerful and effective ma- jority leader in the history of the Senate. As a natural leader com- parable in charismatic and intel- lectual ability to the late Presi- dent, Johnson will solidify the ranks of his party behind ,him. in addition to his natural leadership qualities, Johnson has in his favor the fact that he is President. Every word spoken in public by the President of the United States receives blanket TV, radio and newspaper coverage, while the statements of a presidential hopefulare often ignored or given, token attention. TRUE, MANY Northern Demo- cratic liberals are wary of John- son because his overall Congress record was more conservative than that of Kennedy. But the fact re- mains that Johnson backed Ken- nedy's program in all its aspects, including the all-important civil rights issues. It has been said that, conservative Southerners will re- sent Johnson as they did Kennedy because of the Kennedy Adminis- tration's civil rights stand. How- ever, an overbearing fact -is that' Texas is the Presid'ent's home base, and that Texas is part of the South. Area loyalties such as this are a dominant factor in national elections. Speculating cautiously on the, form and results of next fall's Presidential campaign, the Repub- licans, with their three major contenders hampered by major liabilities, will most likely be torn by debilitating intra-party strug- gle. On the other hand, the lead- ership of President Johnson will . most likely overcome any inner struggles the Democrats may en- counter. As a result of this con- trast of party unity against intra- party strife, the Democrats will probably carry the election. SERMON IN REVIEW: The Real Savior And the Student LAST SUNDAY as I went to the Campus Chapel. (of the Christian Reformed Church), I wondered if Mr. Donald Postema, the pastor, would preach as well as he had when I heard him the Sunday between the assassination and the funeral of President Kennedy. That quiet morning, as he himself observed, people had come to church because, having discovered the Inadequacy of merely human and mortal perspectives for facing that death, they had nowhere else to go. People attended worship to find the perspectivesof eternity. Responsive to their needs and faithful to his Calvinist heritage, Mr. Postema spoke of the God who inhabits eternity, who abides when all things are shaken and fall, and who leads those within transitory existence to participate in a glory that endures unendingly. That quiet morning he did not disappoint us but spoke of our condition. MR. POSTEMA. did not do so well last Sunday; his sermon was better made but less satisfactory. The careful craftsmanlike construction of the sermon was con- spicuous in several ways. After stating the hypothesis that in a wold of uncertainty mankind has always wanted a savior to make existence secure, Mr. Postema opened his theme of saviors and the Savior by quoting speeches of the three wise men in "He Who Should Come," a play by Dorthy Sayers. Almost, at the end of the sermon, he closed his theme by again quoting from the same play. The quotations at beginning and end illustrated the 'two stages of argument. At the same time they gave the sermon a composure or equilibrium of symmetry. The play title also supplied Mr. Postema with both his sermon title and the insistent refrain of the second division. Mr. Postema devoted most of the time to the first division of the sermon in which he presented a whole range of pseudo-deliverers. Each elaborated example (Hercules, Alexander the Great, technology, education or wisdom) stood not only for itself but also for its type (god, man, thing, idea or system or cause), and, by way of contrast, It prepared for its antithesis, the authentic Redeemer (Jesus). False saviors cannot bestow, create, or evoke power enabling us to love. THE SECOND, and concluding, division of the sermon was both brief and clear because, according to Mr. Postema, the authentic Redeemer was the opposite of the bogus saviors. Repeating the clause of the play title, "He who should come," reviewing and advancing at once, Mr. Postema went down the list of pseudo-savious: he who should come was not man made God but God become man; he who should come was not jerrybuilder of cold-war peace among those who fear mutual annihilation but establisher of peac and goodwill-toward-men in the hearts of men. Neatly arranged, such rhetorical economy had a maximum logical and emotional impact. Yet the sermon was not addressed to the needs of the worshipers, who, at the Chapel, are almost altogether University students. Perhaps all of us are given to idolatry; but those who come to the Chapel have no doubt already discovered the unreliability of natural and historical forces as saviors-otherwise we would not have come. Our question was not "What claimant to being savior is the authentic Redeemer?" but "What is the relation between theRedeemer and such finite powers as influence and shape our lives?" For example, we know technology cannot forgive sin or enable us to love. But it touches our lives intimately and, upon occasion, heavily. Persons in the midst of four or eight years of service to knowledge and a few days before our first trimester exams, we have found out that educa- tion is not divine and that knowledge cannot save us. * * * * BUT WE ARE vocationally given to being students. Does the birth of the Redeemer have anything to do with education and technology? Does his power and concern extend beyond the privacy of the sin- absolved, love-quickened heart? Is he omnipotent over subjectivity but impotent amid education and technology Is he deeply interested in our "attitudes" but indifferent to atomic bombs and automation? Is he Savior of individual persons but not of whole societies? Most in the congregation last Sunday acknowledged Jesus as Redeemer. But we did not know whether or not he is irrelevant to much of our education-oriented, technology-dominated lives. And we weren't told. -Tony Stoneburner RECONSIDERATION: Presidential Succession I * THE LIAISON: The Seeds of Doubt i ti K _ ' i Gerald Storeh, City Editor THOUGHT-STIRRING remarks by pro- fessors on student culture seem to come out with the apprpximate frequency of Haley's Comet so it is refreshing to say the least to read the comments of one Mulford Q. Sibley, a political science professor at the University of Minnesota. He wrote a letter to the Minnesota Daily this week urging, in effect, that students need a good kick in the posterior. "If we don't sow seeds of doubt and implant subversive thoughts in college, when and where in Heaven's name (if there be a Heaven) will they be implant- ed?" Prof. Sibley dared to ask. "Personal- ly, I should like to see on the campus one or two Communist professors, a student Communist club, a chapter of the Ameri- can Association for the Advancement of Atheism, a society for the promotion of free love, a League for Overthrow of Gov- ernment by Jeffersonian Violence (LOG- J V) , an anti-automation league, and per- haps a nudist club," he continued. MYSELF TEND TO THINK that Ann Arbor's weather rules out the last sug- gestion for this campus, and I must con- fess to never having heard of LOGJV. However, the spirit of Prof. Sibley's let- ter is what counts. We can take a look at our own Univer- sity and find few signs of anybody trying to poke at student 'minds with unortho- dox, radical, even weird ideas. Two stu- dent groups used to do this: Voice and YT..I.2. kr,,,N nfl . .a . rn.,v. ,1v, v1 flY1 + C and Ross Barnett this fall, a Communist last spring and that's about it. An enor- mous disparity exists between the as- pects of our lives which need reexamina- tion and the range and number of cam- pus lectures and programs which at- tempt to provoke such reexamination. As additions to the list of Prof. Sibley, I would make the following suggestions for speakers whose topics might sprout "seeds of doubt" in students at this Uni- versity: -An advocate of dope addiction. --An advocate of homosexuality. -An anarchist. -A Mennonite. -An advocate of bigamy. -A Nazi or an anti-Semite. -A publisher of some sort of hate lit- erature. THERE IS LITTLE DOUBT that there would be a great turnout for these speakers, as people who tried to hear Malcolm X or Barnett can testify. The biggest problem, undoubtedly, would be that most students would show up just for the experience of seeing something strange. I had a more serious intent in mind. It is very important that people constantly examine their own basic assumptions and habits of living--and even laugh at them- selves occasionally. It is very easy to settle down into how you live your life, and as this continues even harder to LITTLE TIME should be lost in substitutin some more satis- factoryjmod of establishing the succession to the Presidency than the unfortunate order that Con- gress established in 1947. Under this act, if there is no vice- president at the time the President dies, the speaker of the House becomes President; the president pro tempore of the Senate is next in line. Following these, the suc- cession is as follows: secretary of state, secretary of defense, at- torney general, postmaster general, stituencies that elect them can be, and often are, narrow and un- representative. Moreover, either might well be of different party and hence quite out of sympathy with ,the deceased President's pol- icies and program. * * * THERE IS NO easy or entirely satisfactory solution to the prob- lem (the alternatives were ex- plored during the hearings on the 1947 act), but the present arrange- ment is not desirable and should be changed. An order of succes- .j ~ ~ I !#J~~Y ~i~k~J'~ '.IfS'~M'~~' ".v'4'A~2V I Wil ., I RENVk. -A