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.0 Phone NO 2-3241 Vic tory from Summit Ruins? .- when 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. .Y, MAY 17, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP SHERMAN Negro Participation A Stride Toward Integration TODAY IS THE SIXTH anniversary of the United States Supreme Court's decision which ordered school integration. This is a good time to look at not only the progress made in the southern schools but the advancements made in this University. Segregation in student activities has recently been made illegal by SGC. Yet is there really integration? No one knows. NOT ENOUGH Negroes have joined student activities to make a true estimate of the relationship between the white and Negro stu- dents on campus. Negroes give various reasons for this low rate of participation. Greater 'interest in se-' curing civil rights is the chief reason they don't devote more time to activities. Fear of humili- ation in the event of not being accepted is another reason. Yet participation is the only real way to achieve both interaction between members of the two races and a feeling of enjoyment AS OTHERS SEE IT: and ease which comes with the recognition of one another as individuals. THE GOAL of participation in activities is and should remain service to the com- munity. This means, that Negroes not only have the duty of furthering the acceptance of members of their race as individuals; they must demonstrate their acceptance of the responsibilities as participants as well. The University provides the opportunity to apply- the knowledge they have gained and to acquire experience in community leadership which will hopefully extend to their activities in later community life. White students for their part should encour- age Negroes to participate, for integration is as much if not more a responsibility of the white student. This is the kind of participation which the newly formed University chapter of the NAACP should take the lead in encouraging. -LORA KRAPOHL By BARTON HUTHWAITE Associate Editorial Director and RICHARD MINTZ Daily Guest Writer PREMIER Nikita Khrushchev's abrupt "about face" at the summit conference yesterday has left diplomatic observers in a quandary. Khrushchev, the man of reason, suddenly has become a man of non-reason appealing to God and destroying the supposedly well- planned Soviet peace offensive of recent months. The summit conference was an idealtool in the hands of the Russians. The U2 spying incident' bolstered Soviet claims that the United States was actually the aggressor in the Cold War. Ameri- ca's lofty moral stand in the cur- rent propaganda battle for the support of the uncommitted states was righteously denounced by Russia. # * PRESIDENT EISENHOWER'S statement that the spy flights were part of a planned United States intelligence program shat- tered the impression of America's hesitancey to act in. an immoral manner. , The United States was entirely at the mercy of the Soviet propa- gandists at the summit confer- ence. But suddenly Premier Khru- shchev abandoned this advantage to return to the old Soviet "hard" approach. President Eisenhower then pledged no more spy missions over Russia and offered a conciliatory parry to Khrushchev's "hard" stand. It seems the usually rational Soviet leader has thrown a ripe propaganda plum into the laps of the State Department. What the State Department does with this unexpected and undeserved propa- ganda opportunity is still to be awaited. THE STATE DEPARTMENT will undoubtedly look to the basic reasons for Khrushchev's sudden change. Prior to the U2 incident, the Soviets had taken a very "soft" approach to the problem of East- West cooperation. Then, suddenly, an American plane is downed over Russian territory and their peace offensive undergoes a radical change. It would be naive for anyone to "It's Not Quite tIe Way We Visualized It, But-" think Khrushchev and his advis- ors did not know of the intelli- gence flights. The United States had been conducting them for some ten years and the highly efficient Russian secret service certainly had some information about them. * * * THE QUESTION REMAINING is: who didn't know about the flights? The Soviet people were probably unaware their sovereign air space was being violated. And' Russia's allies were probably not fully informed as to the extent of her vulnerability. The Kremlin would certainly be hesitant to inform her allies of her military weakness, fearing a rift in the supposedly strong So- viet Bloc. And here is probably the reason for Khrushchev's irrational be- havior of yesterday morning. The Soviet premier, according to dip- lomatic sources, has been under fire from several "foes" during recent weeks for his overly con- ciliatory attitude. BUT JUST WHO these "foe of Khrushchev are is uncertain. Red China may feel that Russia's dependence on a moral cover is not going-to hide the inadequacies of her military defense. The recent U2 incident may*'have proved to Red China that the Russians do not have the military capabilities to down even a United States flight across her own territory, let alone the Red Chinese mainland. The conflicting data on the downing of the U2 implies that perhaps the airplane might not have been shot down by the So= viets after all. The "wonderful new weapon" of Khrushchev's may not exist. IfKhrushchev has submitted to pressure outside the Kremlin, cer- tain preconceptions as. to the strength of the Kremlin within the Soviet bloc need to be seriously re-examined. Perhaps the Krem- lin isn't as secure as previously "supposed. Or was the Premier's shatter- ing outburst merely a symptom of early morning indigestion? THE SEEMINGLY irrational move of the Soviets holds serious implications. The threat of total nuclear war has largely been re- duced due to the assumption that the Russians have acted rationally and will continue to act rationally in the conduct of. their foreign aff airs. The spectre of an unstable, ir- rational, unpredictable enemy may again haunt the State Depart- ment.' These are the problems the United States will have to wrestle with in the coming days. One thing is certain. The breakdown of ithe summit conference has un- tied the propaganda hands of the United States. From the debacle of the summit conference, the State Department may yet salvage a diplomatic vic- tory and regain some of the pres- tige lost with the capture of the U2. It certainly needs a diplomatic success badly. MERRY-GO-ROUND: ROTC Ques tions Persist THE ROTC issue refuses to die. From the efficiency of mt number of letters we receive each day it cannot be force would seem evident that the typical MSU stu- see an institut dent hasn't given up his plea for the abolish- benefits. This s ment of the compulsory aspect of the program. known in our p Add to this the recent censure given Presi- 3. Why is c dent Hannah by local AAUP chapters and the emphasized at MSU Teachers Union and you have a good intelligent thou sample of the discontent prevalent on some grow to its full parts of this campus. incongruity? 4. Why were WE OURSELVES can never be reconciled to not educators, the Board of Trustees' decision until they which, by itss v have satisfactorily answered the following that it is in the questions: 1. Why has the Board stubbornly continued TRUE, the St to cloud the issue by stating that the com- Board the le pulsory program is essential to our defense? sity. But doesn Figures have proved that the small decrease a responsible ri in officers that would result from a voluntary sions to the pr( program is not sufficient to warrant the atten- case, the facult3 tion the Board has seen fit to heap upon it. 5. Why has 2. Why have they refused to recognize the low morale that is evidenced in MSU's present creep into the basic compulsory plan. largest universit All these que. SURELY, they must realize that by eliminat- before we evers ing the "deadwood" a voluntary program- pulsory ROTC. Would evolve that would realize a much greater MAX Indi Explosion anpower and. endeavor. Morale ed upon an individual. He must ion's worth to realize its full ort of realization is almost un- resent basic program. ompulsory ROTC's "discipline" a supposed haven for free and ught? How can our university est intellectually amid such an six men, who admit they are allowed to decide this matter; ery existence attests to the fact realm of academic affairs? ate Constitution has given the egal right to govern, the univer- 't this legal right also include ight to delegate academic deci- oper academic persons-in this y? , the Board allowed politics to running of the nation's eighth y? stions will have to be answered swallow this bitter pill of com- -MICHIGAN STATE NEWS F .,; p;'; 'gyp' Congress INTEGRATED HOUSING: Deerfield Attacks Civil Rights Effort, munassa ,. , .. .k . . , i.:.: r.... NEW DELHI-The population explosion pre- sents a different picture in New Delhi from the one it presents in New York. Since the birth control problem flared up as a political issue in America in relation to foreign aid and Catholic dogma, I can report that in India it is not a political nor religious problem but one of tech- nology, administration, and communication. 'his is a fancy way of saying that India is wrestling with the questions of what methods of control to use, how to organize their spread, and how to get the people-especially the village people-to know about them. WHEN MARGARET Sanger wrote in a New York Times letter that, "Six times the In- dian government officials suggested to our country that aid from us would be most wel- come" in their birth control program, I put the factual question directly here in New Delhi. The American Embassy denies it flatly and so does the Indian Ministry of Health. What makes one further skeptical of Miss Sanger's statement is the fact that the Indian hurdle on population control is not one of fun~ds. The Indian government is generous enough in its budget allotment for family plan- ning. There are more funds now than can be used in the present scope of government action and the allocation in the third five year plan will be even higher. What the Indian government could use now is not funds but technical help. We send over technicians in every other field-agricul- ture, steel production, hydroelectric dams, small business, town planning-but we don't dare send advisers to help the Indian government surmount the huge technical and organiza- tional problems of population control. This kind of aid, rather than direct funds, is what I take to be the intent of the now famous recommendation in the Draper Report for birth control aid when requested. When Senator Kennedy says he would meet the prob- lem by increasing our other economic aid to India it is a neat end-run but fails to meet the issue of the taboo on this form of official Kaur, who never had her heart in the urgency of the task and even now as an MP sees no "tangible results" for generations. In the past two years the director of family planning in the new ministry, Colonel B. L. Raina, has shown commitment to his task. Yet the actual results in checking the birth rate are thus far non-existent. What blocks the effort? There are three major hurdles in any program of population control-motivation, valid knowledge, and the presence of feasible and available methods. THE LEAST, SERIOUS of these three in India is the problem of motivation. I have read summaries of the studies made in India- 15 thus far-on the attitudes of the Indian people toward family planning. There is wide agreement among them that most Indians, women and men alike, react favorably to fam- ily limitation. There are few blocks on religion, dogma or caste that stand insurmountably in the way. True, sons are highly valued and parents will go on having children until they get sons. True also, there is a difference of attitude between educated and uneducated and between city and village folk. But that is a matter of knowledge, not motivation. On the question of feasible methods, Indians like other people are waiting for "the pill." The officials are unwilling to risk any large- scale use of the oral pills in the Pincus ex- periment in- Puerto Rico because of the fear of secondary effects. Even a safer pill would be prohibitive in cost on a mass scale until the government learned to set up its own labora- tories to produce them. THERE REMAINS the problem of valid knowledge. The studies show that the vast majority of Indian villagers have either not heard offamily planning or have never learned what can be used to achieve it. The problem in short is how to get to them-the problem of communication. That is why the new research project sponsored by the Ford Foundation in India but administered by the Ministry of By RUTH EVENHUIS Daily staff writer A MAJOR OBSTACLE to the ideal of complete racial inte- gration-Negro ghettos-is being attacked by a group, of builders who believe in the right of all people to have equal housing op- portunities. And in Deerfield, Illinois the effort of these builders to con- struct 51 homes in the $30,000 price range and to sell ten or twelve of them to Negro families is being attacked by a group of residents who believe in brother- hood until it moves next door. Most of Deerfield's residents are the families of junior executives who commute to Chicago. The average take-home income is $9,- 000 a year; their houses average $23,000. The growing suburb's population is 10,500. * * * MODERN COMMUNITY De- velopers headed by builder Morris Milgram, a veteran of four suc- cessful integrated housing projects in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, purchased 22 acres of land in the new North Shore suburb last year as the site of their next experi- ment in racial equality. As news of the builders' inten- tions leaked out, the alarmed com- munity formed an action com- mittee to block the proposed in- tegrated project, believing that they "are setting an example for other communities throughout the North and rendering a great serv- ice to those of us who are determ- ined to prevent the amalgamation of the {white and Negro races." THE COMMITTEE, calling themselves the North Shore Resi- dent's Association, is headed by Harold C. Lewis, vice-president of a Chicago investment company and composed of ten members of "top Chicago law firms," accord- ing to Lewis. The association in- cludes members from the sub- urbs Highland Park, Northfield, Northbrook, Lincolnshire and Bannockburn. Two days after a local minister announced to the Deerfield Village Board that he had learned the new development would sell homes to Negroes, the building commission- er ordered work on the model homes stopped. Two days 'later, the builders confirmed the rumor. The Deerfield Park Board, pre- members of the Residents' Assoc- iation and the local ministers, meeting at a home, discussed the high crime' rate among Negroes, venereal disease and lawlessness in Chicago's ghettos. Some citizens hinted at a com- munist, influence and suggested that everyone associated with the developers should be asked to take a loyalty oath. Speaking to a group at a private home, Eliza- beth Dilling handed out material entitled "The Red Hand Over Deerfield." There was some vandalism at the two model houses under con- struction. A partially-burned cross appeared on the lawn of a sym- patheticdDeerfield citizen, and of- fensive ananymous letters were sent to several of the citizens who favored the project. In a record turn-out of voters, Deerfield decided 2,635 to 1,207 in favor of acquiring the land for parks. The developers sought a Federal injunction to restrain the park board from condemning the. land, and asked damages for de- lays and violation of their civil rights. The builders have appealed the decision of a Federal judge who dismissed the suit and ruled that the park board had a right to institute condemnation pro- ceedings. The case is expected to come up again toward the end of this month. * * * IN THE MEANTIME, Deerfield citizens continue to analyze, ra- tionalize and "emotionalize" their situation. Underlying the furor, perhaps more deeply than racism, is an economic fear, Residential transience is char- acteristic of this community. As one resident puts it, "although we've got most of our money tied up in our homes, we don't expect to live in them real'ly very long. Some of the junior executives ex- pect to become seniors and move a few miles east to the real North Shore, and a lot of us will be transferred all over the United States. When this happens, we want to be sure our homes have resale value." * * * IN A NUMBER of cases, then, the prevailing attitude is that "We just can't afford to be demo- cratic." Deerfield residents seem to be try of non-whites into previously all-white neighborhoods was much mqre often associated with price improvement or stability than price weakening." Where panic selling decreased property values, he found that the values rebound to previous levels. Perhaps Deerfield residents will be persuaded to view from a more scientific viewpoint their "eco- nomic peril" as more communities integrate with economic stability maintained by the previous sim- ilar projects of the Modern Com- munity Developers. It would seem that the real "economic peril" in such an un- dertaking would accrue to the builder who much sell $30,000 to $40,000 houses in an inter-racial development to 40 white families.. MILGRAM, though, has already proved that his projectg are "not only good democracy, but good business." A Deerfield citizen answers his community's economic reserva- tions by observing that this coun- try is founded on freedom of re- ligion and it is certainly "within everyone's right to worship as he sees fit. He continued that it is evident what, Deerfield residents worship, and recommends that "the local bank be opened on Sunday morn- ing in order that these people be allowed to worship in 'an atmos- phere that is close to their God." A current folk-saying exempli- "fies the moral attitude of many residents. "In the South, white people don't mind how close a Negro gets to them as long as he doesn't rise too high (economic- allytor socially), while inmthe North, white people don't. mind how high a Negro rises as long as he doesn't, get too close." . * * * A CITIZEN WHO upholds the project remarked, - "It's interest- ing to note that our struggle has been solely within the white com- munity - a conflict in our .own conscience. "You see, once a Negro moves into Deerfield he has to receive equal treatment-attend the same schools, use the same parks. There is no separate set of facilities, 'as in the South. We have no way of letting a Negro in and yet keep- ing him out at the same time." * * *r AT ANY RATE, the impending court decision will, perhaps, de- termine whether the children of these Deerfield residents will en- joy 22 acres of parks in which to learn, with/ their all-white play- mates, that white people are su- verior to Negroes, and that eco- nomic considerations take prece- dence over moral considerations. And as they get older, perhaps they will follow their parents' ex- ample of teaching, preaching and refusing to practice racial inte- gration. Looks at, TV By DREW PEARSON SOME tough Senate cross-ex- amination of FCC Commis- sioner Robert J. Lee for failing to police the radio-TV networks gave warning that Congress in- tends to be tougher With the ra- -io-TV industry in the future. Senators were especially con- cerned that radio-TV stations went all-out for advertising reve- nue, paid little attention to pub- lic service. Sen. Mike Monrohey (D-Okla.) said: "I, had occasion Ito try and find the public.service requirements that these stations, accept when they take a license for television or radio. I think it was on about Page 20 in agate type.,it said service duties will be found in document "so and so" of the Fed- eral Communications Comnis- sion.' "I STARTED to search for that. I was told it was out. of print. I asked the Congressional refer- ence library if it did inot have one, and finally the .goodvLibrary of Congress, that has everything, did 'come up with a copy of this document. It referred almost ex- clusively to radio because it had not been revised since radio days to include television. "Yet this is the basic document on which public service now is be- ing granted to TV stations get- ting franchises that are worth from two to three to 'five million dollars. The public service require- ments have never been updated or revised. "I think the requirements ought to be put in neon lights on page one, in about 10 point type, at least, so the public will know what to demand and expect." (Copyright 1960, by the Bell Syndicate) '1 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. TUESDAY, MAY 17, 1960 VOL. LXX, No. 169 General Notices Recommendations for Departmental Honors: Teaching departments wishing to recommend tentative June graduates from the College of Literature, science, and the Arts, and the School of Edu- cation for departmental honors (or high Session of 1959 and of February and June, 1960. Those eligible to partici- pate : If exercise must be held indoors, Graduates of Summer Session of 1959 and of June 1960. Tickets: For Yost Field House: Two to each prospective graduate, to be distributed. from "Tues., May 31, to 12:00 noon on Sat., June 11, at Cashier's Office, first floor, Ad. Building. For Stadium: No tickets necessary. Children not admitted unless accom- panied by adults. Academic Costume: Can be rented at Moe Sport Shop, N. University Ave.; Ann Arbor. Assembly for Graduates: at 4:30 p.m. in area east of Stadium. Marshals will direct graduates to proper stations. If siren indicates (at intervals from 4:00 to 4:15 p.m.) that exercises are to be held in Yost Field House, graduates should go, directly there and be seated mas for all graduates except the School of Dentistry, the Medical School, and Flint College,willnbe distributed from designated stations under' the east stand of the Stadium, immediately after the exercises. The diploma distri- bution stations are on the level abovo the tunnel entrance. If the exercises are held in the Yost Field House, all diplomas except those of the School of Dentistry, the Medical School, and Flint College, will be dis- tributed from the windows of the Cashier's Office and the Registrar's Of- fice, lobby, Ad. Building. Following the ceremony, diplomas may be called for until 9:00 p.m. Doctoral degree candidates who qual- ify for the Ph.D. degree or a similar degree from the Graduate School and who attend the commencement exer- cises will be given a hood by the Uni- versity. Hoods given during the cere- mony are all Doctor of Philosophy