"Wait for Your Leaders, Dammit" Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG.@ ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 hen Opinions Are Free 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. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Cub an Land Valuations, Court Criticism Rise By DREW PEARSON UBA'S SUPREME COURT, last remaining independent agency in the government structure, may soon be purged or even liquidated entirely~ The reason: two recent decisions have raised valuations on ex- propriated lands which the agrarian reform institute (INRA) expected to acquire for a song. Since these decisions, Antonio Nunez Jimminez, INRA's pro-Com- munist boss, has sharply criticized the court on a nationwide TV panel show and warned that "nobody can be allowed to set up roadblocks in the revolution's path." His right-hand man, Waldo Medina-an openly avowed Red-went 3AY, APRIL 26, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP SHERMAN African Nationalists Face Opportunistic Minority 'HE CRY FOlR AFRICAN self-government is causing the British and the world to re- nsider the place of the African in world fairs, British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan sted Africa two months ago. At Salisbury, uthern Rhodesia, he said that the Central rican Federation would not be granted minion status until both Africans and Euro- ans expressed their support for "a full and dependent federation." He later added that e federation would remain under British otection until capable of expressing its poli- al views. 7ENNETH KAUNDA, president of the United National Independence Party in Northern hodesia pointed out that Northern Rhodesia as a British protectorate. The word protec- rate presupposes something, but "don't ask e what," he remarked. Kaunda further asserted that the Africans Northern Rhodesia are ready for self-gov- nment now. He was careful to point out that e Africans do not want to replace the gov- nment, but only attain self government. If e African ever achieves self-rule, he said, will not degrade or subjugate the white ttlers as the whites have subjugated the fricans. "HE AFRICANS fear white domination. The. .settlers have devised a voting system hereby thepoliticalvoice of the Africans is eatly diminished. There is a property or age requirement for voting in Rhodesia. iose who meet these requirements are regu- r voters, Those who earn less or own less property it have some education becoine special voters. hree special votes are equal to one regular )te. In this way the white minority is able hold power. The white settlers- were also able to form the Central African Federation. Last year full scale riots broke out in Rhodesia and Nyasa- land when the Federation was put into effect. KAUNDA'S party, which stresses non-vio- lence, opposed the governmental plan from its formation in the early fifties. He looks forward to the day when the self-ruled Afri- cans will form a Pan-African Union. Portugal's two colonies, Angola and Mozam- bique, have been relatively free of the African nationalism which is prevalent in other Africar states. The Portugese have made these over- seas provinces and hold firm control over them. But the African nationalism is bound to seep into these states and they could become future trouble spots. Kaunda could not walk into Northern Rho- desia tomorrow morning and form an effective African government. Of course Kaunda can look to Ghana and say that Ghana became self-governing and is faring quite well under African leadership. The white minority in Rho- desia, however, is larger and more powerful than that of Ghana. THE WHITE problem in Rhodesia would be more acute. But Kaunda cannot take the first real step. The white settlers of Africa! must realize that they are not a minority which is ruling as a Utopian elite but a minor- ity which has taken advantage of the situation. They must recognize the growing stature ofI the African's political voice and place it on anI equal basis with their own political opinions. The political equality of the Africans and their eventual self-government should come within the next ten years and bring the African to his rightful place among the nations of the world.I -HARRY PERLSTADT I even further. Speaking to peasants Province, Medina attacked several magistrates by name, charged that Court President (chief justice) Emilio Menendez had "enriched himself illegally and ought to have all his property confiscated." * * * MENENDEZ, one of the coun- try's most respected men, is con- vinced that he and at least a majority of other judges will be fired before long, so the court is working overtime to rule on ap- peals from owners of property seized by the Castro regime. ,None of these cases involves a challenge of expropriations-only of INRA's value estimates, which average around. 15 per cent of what the owners figure their lands are worth. Speculation is lively in Havana about the fate of the supreme court as an institution. It is known' that Nunez Jimenez, Medina, and some others in high posts want toi see it abolished altogether. * * * THEY ARGUE that such a tri- bunal, even if reliable yes-men , were named to it, delays the work of the revolution and thus "helps the enemies of Cuba." Incidentally, Americans whose property has been taken over have a hard time finding com- petent assessors willing to put a fair figure on it. Jack Everhardt, a resident of Cuba for 41 years and a big land- owner in Pinar del Rio Province, had everything seized by INRA. INRA wanted to pay him $230,000 for property and installations he3 valued at $1,400,000. Everhardt went to six profes- sional assessors, one after another. Five of them turned him down fiat. The sixth said:J "Look, my friend, after a while there won't be any private prop- erty left to assess. The only job I'll be able to get then will be with INRA or the agriculture de-; partment.I "Now, can you afford to pay me enough to make it worth my while, to give you an honest assessment= and run the risk of being black- listed?" Everhardt did. For triple the normal fee, he got a valuation of; $960,000 and has appealed to the supreme court on the basis of that figure. (Copyright 1960, by the Bell Syndicate) on a farm cooperative in Oriente DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily'Official Bulletin Is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. TUPSDAY, APRIL26, 1960 VOL. LXX, NO. 151 General Notices Doctoral Foreign Language Examina- tions: The last doctoral foreign lan- guage! reading examinations for the' Horace H. Rekham School of Graduate Studies for the current semester will be given on Thurs., June 2. Since fa- cilities for giving the doctoral foreign language examinations are limited, stu- dents wishing to be examined this se- mester after May 15 are advised to make an appointment with the Graduate For- eign Language Examiner, 3028 Rackham Bldg., at the earliest possible time. "Reducing Supreme Court Power" will be the topic for a public inter- collegiate debate on Tues., April 26, at 7:30 p.m. in The Rackham Ampitheater.. The debate wil feature women debate teams from the University of Wiscon- sin' and the University of Michigan. Phi Beta Kappa: Annual Meeting Wed., April 27, Room 411 Mason Hall, 4:15 p.m. Election of new members and officers. open to all members. International Student and Family Exchange have moved to new quarters at the Madelon Pound House (Base- ment) 1024 Hill Street. Open Thursday mornings each week, 9:30-11:00 a.m. Topcoats and sweaters for men and women. Infants equipment and cloth- ing and children's ,clothing.; These are available for all Foreign Students and Families needing the above items. Ushering: Sign-up sheets, for people who wish to usher for the next De- partment of Speech Playbill production are on the bulletin board outside room 1502 Frieze Building. Box Office open. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. to- day, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, to sell tickets for Look Homeward, Angel. Performances Wednesday through Sat- urday 8:00 p.m. Tickets $1.50, 1.10, 75c. Agenda STUDENT GOVERNMENT COUNCIL April 27, 1960 7:30 pa. Council Room Constituents' Time 9:00 (Continued on Page 5) I ITALIAN CRISIS: A Complex of Paradoxes AX I ERNER: Chou s Invitation NEW DELHI--If the meeting of Chou En-lat and Nehru were not in itself dramatic enough the unexpected entrance of Krishna Menon has made it so. Menon is one of those men feted by history, circumstance and char- acter to be a member of every melee. Doubtless there are innocent reasons for Chou's invitation to him to call. After all, Chou knew him at other times, in other climes, under more favoring skies. Moreover, since Chou is seeing the Home Minister, then why not the Defense Minister, with whom he might consult on how to keep the border from be- coming too "alive." The tr'ouble with this reasoning is that the question of who shall negotiate what, with whom, is for ,the Indians to decide, not the Chinese. Had Nehru wanted Menon on his negotiating team he would have chosen him. His reasons for not doing so must have seemed adequate to him. RIGHTLY OR WRONGLY, Menon has be- come a symbol of India's old 'soft line' diplomacy toward China, and any settlement to which he was a party would be suspect to a large segment of Indian opinion. If we assume that Chou did not invite Menon merely for a social cup of tea, their two-hour con- versation must have involved something more serious and substantive. What was Chou aiming at? We may never know. But if he wished deliberately to needle Nehru for having left Menon off the formal negotiating group, thus raising an issue that Nehru would prefer unraised, he could not have spread confusion in the Indian ranks more effectively. HENCE IT WOULD be a mistake for Indian or American opinion to make too much of the Menon incident, unless it has traceable consequences. Where the issue of aggression is so clear it is better to hold to the issue and not be deflected. Chou's entire tactic since his arrival has been diversionary. In his banquet speech he spoke of the "fascist" forces being revived in the world-an echo of Khrushchev's propaganda line during his stay in France. But the only fascist experi- ences that India has recently encountered have Editorial Staff THOMAS TURNER, Editor PHILIP POWER ROBERT JUNKER Editorial Director City Editor JIM BENAGH ...................Sports Editor PETER DAWSON .............Associate City Editor CHARLES KOZOLL .......... . rsonnel Director JOAN KAATZ .... Magazine Editor BARTON HUTHWAITE .. Associate Editorial Director FRED KATZ ....«. .... Associate Sports Editor DAVE LYON.................Associate Sports Editor JO HARDEE ................ . Contributing Editor Rusine sSafft been the aggressions at Longju and Ladakh and the genocide in Tibet. As for Chou's celebration of the links be- tween China and India as Asian nations and revolutionary ones, Indian opinion will know how to answer. Asian nations should behave in a more neighborly fashion than China has done. And Nehru's earlier observation still has point: "Across the Chinese-Indian border two revolutions confront each - other." They are two different revolutions, not the same one. N THE RANKINGS of current Chinese Com- munist leadership, published in scholarly journals, Chou En-lai is usually ranked fourth. He is not the top policy maker. Mao and Liu have sent their No. 4 man to New Delhi with two others to flank and sup- port him. They may improvise the tactics but the strategy was laid down before they left Peking, by others more powerful than they. By contrast, India is a democracy. How deeply so is attested by the iron mood of the Indian people in the face of Chou's visit, and by Nehru's response to that mood. Unlike Chou, Nehru is undeniably and completely No. 1' in his government and can speak for it and the nation, But this does not mean that he spins policy out of his innards. Democracy involves a great and continuing creative dialogue between lead- ers and people, between elite and demos. It is part of Chou's education that he has come to India at this crisis of its history and can wit- ness how a seemingly slumbering people can awaken to its dangers and its strength, and communicate its strength to its leaders. As I watched Nehru restlessly moving among the spectators at the airport before Chou's plane arrived I could not help feeling that he was gathering strength from them for the long ordeal ahead. The Chinese Communists have a different conception. For them the people are so much raw material to be instructed, corrected, re- construgted, hammered into the right social forms. But Chou En-lai's education may profit from the experience. PERHAPS NEHRU has also derived some education from recent events. In a long, brilliant, tumultuous career, this may be his most dangerous hour and may prove his finest. But his new firmness, which he has expressed in every recent speech including those ad- dressed directly to Chou, which took courage to make, is a back-to-the-wall firmness. By making vague bilateral settlements with' Indonesia, Burma and Nepal, Chou has tried to isolate India and compel Nehru to accept the status quo plus a boundary commission, which is the formula he has used elsewhere. One may guess that Nehru understood the full force of the Chinese intentions only when Prime Minister Koirala came back to Nepal from Peking and revealed the Chinese claim on Mt. Everest. However loftily Nehru may dismiss the idea of pacts with other countries, (EDITOR'S NOTE: Premier Fer- nando Tambroni's minority Christ- ian Democratic cabinet resigned April 11 after nearly half of its 22 members had threatened to quit due to Tambroni's reliance on Neo-Fascist support in Parliament. The Tambroni cabinet, in office I days, had been approved April 8 in the Chamber of Deputies by a 30- 293 vote, with the support of 1 Christian Democrats, 24 Neo-Fasc- Ists, four Independent Monarchists and one Monarchist, Communists, Socialists and most Monarchist- and other rightists bad refused their support despite Tambronis warn- ing that Italy risked being without a cabinet during the May ~ast- West summit meeting. Tambroni, who remained as caretaker premier after his ministers resigned, desig- nated Amintore Fanfani as premier- elect. Norma Sue Wolfe is a Daily staff writer studying in Europe this semester.) By NORMA SUE WOLFE Special to The Daily ROME, APRIL 12--Italy's nine- week-old governmental crisis consists of a maddening maze of political paradoxes. The rat-race began February 24 with the resignation of Premier Antonio Segni. Formerly, the Lib- eral Party, as well as the Republi- cans and Democratic - Socialists, had often collaborated with Seg- ni's Christian-Democrats. But the Liberals added insult to injury by withdrawing' support from Segni, who had been trying unsuccessfully to find a central coalition party formula. And with- out waiting for parliamentary ap- proval, Segni quit. The ex-premier's untimely move touched off a chain-reaction of explosions. Liberals, Communists, and Social - Democrats screamed that the Christian - Democratic Party has created an artificial crisis: the former allies were link- ed in protest against this country's dominant party.. THERE WAS NO opportunity for the Christian - Democrats to retort. They were looking for a solution to their own puzzle-in- ternal dissension. The right, left, and center mem- bers of the party realized that with no Liberal, Communist, or Social - Democratic support, they had only the Fascist Party and a handful of independents to turn to. Without their votes of confi- dence, a new government would never survive. This new government came March 25 In the form of one Fer- nando Tambroni, a 58-year-old lawyer who served as budget min- ister in Segni's second govern- ment. Tambroni is considered left- of-center, but still a moderate Christian-Democrat. However, his further left assoc- iates were not completely "with" him. They balked at accepting the Fascist backing necessary for a victorious vote of confidence. In fact, they instructed Tam- broni to publicly reject Fascist votes even if it meant the resig- nation of his own government. Browun Hits ITOn ,t S THE RIGHTISTS in the party opposed a left-slanted government that would count on left-approved Democratic-Socialist support. And meanwhile, all the parlia- mentary parties from left to right were yelling that the Christian- Democrats were only dodging their responsibilities because of internal division. In 'the midst of all this was Premier Tambroni, whose stopgap "business" government had been organized for three main pur- poses: , 1) To end the 32-day record crisis in Italy. 2) To keep Italy functioning financially by passing the 1960-61 budget, which needed approval by the end of March. 3) To preserve this country's prestige' abroad and thus gain a chance for representation in cur- rent and future international con- ferences on peace and arms con- trol. But the crisis was not relieved It deepened. ITALY'S LARGEST P A R T Y falls short of a parliamentary ma- jority. In order to firmly establish his "business" government, Tam- broni first had to win a vote of confidence, He was trapped in a crossfire- the need to accept anticipated Fascist support and the possibility of a split in his own party if he did. Even if Tambroni managed somehow to win without the Fas- cists, he would still have a gov- ernment without a parliamentary majority, filling in only until some better solution could be found. "Confidence Day" (April 8) was a victory for Tambroni's govern- ment. It was endorsed by a scanty three-vote plurality in the Cham- ber of Deputies (lower house). But the victory was sealed with what has been called "the kiss of death." Two hundred seventy-two votes had come from the Christ- ian-Democrats, four from inde- pendents, and the other 24 from Fascists. TAMBRONI HAD asserted he wanted the votes of those who agreed with him. His government, he said, could make "no political selections." A gross generalization at best. Within an hour after the vote, Giulio Pastore, a leader of the Christian-Democratic left wing, announced his resignation as min- ister for southern Italy. Nullo Biaggi, undersecretary for industry, quit. Two other cabinet ministers walked out. And five of the re- maining 18 ministers sent Tam- broni letters demanding immed- iate assembly of the cabinet. If the central directorate of the Christian - Democrats failed to back Tambroni, his "business" government would go bankrupt. If party leadership supported him, wholesale resignations by cabinet members could also bring the gov- ernment tumbling down. The meeting lasted two and a half hours. Then instead of head- ing towards the convened Senate to open the debate prior to the One, a "business" government will probably gain the same un- welcome support as before-Fas- cist backing. On the other hand, there is not enough agreement in parliament to establish a "politi- cal," full-scale government. Two, Italy's efforts to maintain national respect are more than balanced by her internal crisis. Three, it has been rumored that President Giovanni Gronchi may call for new national elections. But his Christian - Democratic party is already divided and an election could mean heavy losses. When Gronchi first asked Tam- broni to form his own government, the latter told newsmen: "Well, here we go again. I wonder which of us has the toughest job to per- form." Obviously Gronchi. He's kept busy wandering through the maze looking for a running mate. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Moral Views Confuse Koch Issue To the Editor: STUDENT Government Council's recent failure to uphold aca- demic freedom in the case of Prof. .Koch spotlights a grave and gen- eral danger to freedom of speech in the United States. Unfortu- nately, the real issue is becoming confused with side issues as argu- ments rage about the morality of Prof. Koch's views. Whether or not one agrees with him is completely irrelevant to the basic problem that the individual's right to, express himself in this society is being stifled. It is clear that the civil liberties of Prof. Koch and others are being vio- lated if one judges by the tradi- tional American concept of free- dom of speech, which includes the right to criticize social stand- ards and stops only at the possi- bility of infringing upon the rights of another individual. ,' * * THE IRONY of the whole situ- ation is that attempts to censure people for expressing unpopular views actually-only aggravate the situation they are designed to control. For example, if the Presi- dent of the 'University of Illinois had let the matter pass, one letter advocating "immorality" would have appeared in an obscure col- lege publication. Now the letter or commentaries on it have prob- ably been published in hundreds of newspapers throughout the country. that the idea contains some truth. Otherwise, why not simply show people where the error lies? In the long run, the most effective way to combat untruth is with the truth itself, not with persecution. History has shown this many times. THE FRIGHTENING part of the --hole situation is that pres- sures, both the official and the more subtle' and insidious social ones, discourage people from pub- licly expressing views on anything. Educators have noted this and condemned our "Silent Genera- tion." Also, when one tri an idea, it is a ta Lightly Turning A Young Man's .. ew+""Mf tlJF r" :x i .. es to suppress Yet when someone such as Prof. cit admission Koch has the courage to stand up Fa cy against social pressure and say, si FaJCy "I believe this," he is immedi- ately censured, often by these very same educators. Apparently the "Silent Generation" is ex- pected to be articulate about the old ideas and silent about new ones. -Stephen K. Parrott, '61 Breaks Tradition . To the Editor: IT IS A PLEASURE to see that j the University is attempting to maintain its high standards by constructing additional facilities for the students. However, I'm concerned over its latest project, the addition to the East Medical Building. Although great skill has been demonstrated by tucking this substantial struc- ture into an area hardly thought large enough for twelve parked cars, there is lacking the usual variety in design, a tradition in campus construction, True the ratio of red brick to white concrete facing bears little if any relation to that of the par- ent building. Nevertheless, the brick is almost the same color, and i i R %(." r /' .. 'i