iir £irki gun Bailg Sixt y-Ninth Year EDruED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTs OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PuBucATIONs STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. & ANN ARBOR, MicH. * Pbone IO 2-3241 len Qp~nonsAre Fre Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writeri or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: LANE VANDERSLICE New Worlds To Conquer: The Race for Space IN THE 16TH CENTURY, Spain and Portugal were engaged in a struggle to control a new world. An overt clash was averted by appealing' to an impartial, international authority-the Pope-for an equable compromise. The Pope split the new world in two parts and gave each country one of these halves. This was an "ideal" solution, but it ran into one major snag: other countries like England, Holland and France also wanted a share of the new world and soon developed the naval power necessary to stake out their claims. And several wars were fought over the issue of possessions in this world, Man has now discovered a new world and has begun the process of conquering it. This new world is Space. AT PRESENT, a situation quite similar to the Spain - Portugal one has developed. There are only two nations which show any active intense interest in Space and, more im- portant than interest, they are the most capable of actually translating interest into achieve- ment. These two countries, the United States and Russia, presumably could reach some bilateral agreement on Space or they could go to war over it-either out in Space or back here on Earth. But the first possibility seems more likely. This solution would also be "ideal," for a while. But we should have learned from our experience with our Atom secrets that, even without espionage, one nation cannot enjoy a monopoly on scientific information for very long. It is only a matter of time until England and then other nations start entering the Race For Space. If colonization of Space follows the usual colonization procedures - including the "first come, first serve" basis for ownership-it is likely to follow the usual colonization procedure in other areas. In other words, colonization tends to lead to conflicts and wars between the colonizing powers. Admittedly, it sounds fan- tastic to talk of Space ships having dog-fights on the far side of Jupiter, but there was a time, a few centuries ago, when it would have seemed equally fantastic for Columbus to propose to sail off into the infinite void at the other end of the Atlantic. HOWEVER, this "fantatic" situation can be avoided by the simple expedient of not following the usual colonization procedures. All of Space should be placed under the juris- diction of the United Nations. All nations interested ought to be granted the right to explore space and set up scientific observing posts, but this should be done under UN authority. If the time ever comes when any area of space has commercial possibilities, or if someone wants to colonize it, this too ought to be done only under UN license with the UN retaining ultimate ownership and jurisdiction over it. This way, perhaps, the United Nations can maintain peace in the new world-something they have not yet succeeded in doing in the old world, -JAMES SEDER UlY Stirs Up Con troversy SGC Election CIRCUMSTANCES have made it imperative that the coming Student Government Coun- cil election be handled a good deal better than it was last spring. The Council cannot afford the same kind of election mismanagement. Last year, unmanned poll booths left opportunity for ballot box stuffing. Nothing was done by the Joint Ju- diciary Council, which had the power to dis- qualify candidates for rule violations, although questionable ballots were disregarded by count night officials. In an attempt to insure that future viola- tions would be dealt with, the SGC Credentials and Rules Committee was formed. From the beginning, it was given the authority to rec- ommend candidate disqualification to the Council. And at Wednesday's Council meeting the committee's power was further extended to include the fining of votes of candidates whose violations are not so offensive as to war- rant their disqualification. The committee may subtract, at its own discretion, any number of first place votes.- IN THEORY, the plan appears sound. es- pecially as compared to money fining system CAPITAL COMMENTARY: Ike GoW ro By WILLIAM S. WHITE WASHINGTON--President Dwight D. Eisen- hower is risking the substance of his criti- cal last two years in the White House in try- ing to become a "give 'em hell" politician in the Congressional campaign. Moreover, he is the wrong man in the wrong war at the wrong time and in the wrong places. This is not really his fight. First, it is not a truly national election, but only a series of highly mixed local and regional contests on issues more parochial than national. Second, he owes nothing to the very GOP wing for which le is turning himself inside out in the evening of his public career. And even if it were his fight, his tactics are not the tactics that have won for him the far greater fights he has won in the past. Twice he beat the Democrats by being exactly what he is not being now - himself. He is not a genuine partisan, antd never was. He is not a "regular" Republican, and never was. He is not even a politician - as he himself has often said - and never was. It is not possible to say that he is doing the Congressional Republicans no good any- where. It may even be that he has arrested, here and there, what had seemed a pell-mell rush to the Democrats. IT IS ENTIRELY CLEAR, however, that in highly critical races he is doing Republican nominees more harm than good in obediently -but not convincingly-presenting himself as a "tough' Republican partisan flinging epi- thets like "radical" at the Democrats. He is also gravely injuring his own wing of his party - the "modern" or liberal Republi- cans,. All this is made perfectly plain, for one 11- lustration, in New York, There, Nelson A. Rockefeller, the modern Republican candidate for governor, has publicly if politely disavowed which was proposed but-fortunately voted down by SGC. Intelligently, the Council did not set a minimum or maximum number of votes which could be confiscated so as to allow for any and all situations. Much of the work which might fall to the committee can be diminished by competent election direction and the selection of honest and thinking polling booth officials. Last year at closing hours, booths were left unattended and ballots left in the open. Instances were reported where those students in charge of the polls made deals, "Let me put in ballots for this candidate, you can stick in a few for that one." It was reported that some pollsters exerted pressure on voters to vote for certain candidates, and in at least one instance, a bal- lot which was not completed was completed by the poll booth official. The number of these instances would tend to refute any possibility of these occasions being "freak." Rather, a slip-shod job at the least and dishonest prac- tices at the most, turned the election into the farce that it was. It is ceratinly hoped that a duplicalon of last year's proceedings will be averted. The Council does not have a great deal of face left to lose. --JUDITH DONER riPolitically The "new" Eisenhower is bad news to the moderns, who can live at all only with some Democratic support - and who can have no national spokesman of any real power after the Eisenhower retirement in 1960 unless Mr. Rockefeller wins now in New York. And the "new' Eisenhower is also bad news to the President himself in two ways: It is creating unnecessary animosities among the Congressional Democrats, who on the voting record have often been more useful to the President than the Republicans. And it is set- ting up a condition in which the regulars will control almost everything in sight within the GOP once, the November spasm is passed, Except for such possible islands as might be established by a Rockefeller victory in New York, the regulars will have liquidated what- ever is left of the Eisenhower wing before the new Congress is two months old. They will have done this regardless of which party is then in control there, F OR THE PRESIDENT, by heeding the regu- lars and staking his prestige in a non-Presi- dential campaign, has deeply compromised the powerful independent position he has held so long in the GOP. He is now only trying to do what Vice-President Richard M. Nixon is do- ing - and he is not doing it nearly so well. He is doing it badly for two reasons: His heart is not in it; and he is no Nixon on the stump, just as he is no Harry S. Truman. Nixon and Truman can dish it out and can take it. The President cannot do either very easily. The image now being offered of a "fighting" Eisen- hower simply won't go down. The hard words are too often accompanied by apologetic smiles. All the same. President Eisenhower has adopted the line of his junior, Nixon. Thus the whole Republican national leadership has been turned over to the faction made up of the orthodox Republicans, like the Vice-President, Sando henmtanr ~ ~;r.,,tLc Hope for Future .. . By DAVID TARR Daily Associate Editor IT HAS BEEN only a mere 13 years now since the United Nations came into being and still much too soon to render any really definite judgment for or against the United Nations. And while it is equally difficult to fully assess the organization's progress, one thing can be said -with assurance: the United Nations has not been a failure. In examining the UN's usefulness and purpose, perhaps the most frequently neglected point is the multi-purpose role that organization must assume in an increasingly complex, interdependent and unstable world. It has been the tendency of critics of the UN to picture it in black and white terms: has it succeeded or failed to prevent war and produce harmony in the world? The question is legitimate, but to ask no others, to fail to realize that the UN has social and economic as well as political orientations would neglect a good part of the work the UN is suited to handle. The UN is young. but the concept of international organization goes back far, being dated as earl; field. In the 140 plus years since, the idea of nations grouping to- gether for their mutual benefit has slowly grown, has passed through hard and trying stages, until to- day international organization is an accepted but very essential method of dealing with the prob- lems of this age. This idea of a working body-in this case the UN-that can serve nations in furthering their own, and in many cases, other people's welfare, should not be confused with an overly optimistic, glowing and naive belief that all countries will cease their bickering, renounce their special interests and live to- gether in sweetness and light. It is rather a recognition of the need for some central organiza- tion which can be used as a sound- ing board for nations with com- plaints, which can draw together representatives of opposing claims where they can shout instead of shoot at each other, where inter- national problems such as educa- tion, better health, better food, better homes, better labor condi- tions, human advancement and human rights can be approached and perhaps solved. INDEED, IT CANNOT be denied that the UN has not solved the sensational and serious political difficulties in the world and de- livered a brave new world from one of chaos. But it has made strides in resolving to a greater or lesser degree some of them and has gone even further in non- political problems, The UN was conceived and has been until recent years mostly an Atlantic Aliance dominated or- ganization. It is only with the surge of independence by the smaller and newer states in the world that the UN has begun to function as something approach- ing a world representative body. This has and will continue to cause anguish for Western nations who have become used to doing what they please in the General Assembly. As these states emerge in im- .ortance' in theUNitis ti, t, as 1815 by some students of this DAG HAMMERSKJOLD . . U. Secretary-General DAG HAMMARSKJOLD: A Changing Concept of By NAN MARKEL Daily Staff Writer UNITED NATIONS Secretary- General Dag Hammarksjold's decisions are strictly his own, and they must be made with principles and not policy expediency in mind. Since Hammarskjold accepted the post of secretary-general, his concept of his role and the deci- sions he has to make has changed. When he first came into office on April 10, 1953, he pictured himself as a higher civil servant. As Ham- RED CHINA: Recognition Hinges Upon Quemoy, Matsu' By CHARLES KOZOLL Daily staft Writer UEMOY and Matsu-manifes- tations of Red China's aggres- sive intentions in Asia - have added a new slant to the question of recognition of the Peiping gov- ernment and their admission to the United Nations. While 45 nations still maintain their faith in the Formosa strong- hold, 19 nations have affirmed the stability of Mao Tse Tung and his grip on the mainland of China, However, the recent attacks by the Communists in the Formosa Strait raise doubts as to how long the 19 nations will continue to maintain a favorable opinion of the Peiping government. Certain neutral nations, includ- ing India, have been led to believe that the Communists would agree to a type of peaceful co-existence. But in restating American foreign policy views on this point, Secre- tary of State John Foster Dulles noted, "the ultimate goal of the Red Chinese is control of Asia." His examples were Korea and now the Strait area. * * THESE aggressive actions have served to re-affirm the State De- partment's view that recognition of Mao Tse Tung and his possible admission to the UN could only bring harmful effects to the free world bloc of nations, Optimistically regarding the fu- assumptions of the United States and her "in-group." More than realize their stability, neutrals feel it imperative that Mas Tse Tung's group be granted admission to the UN. As an aid to diplomatic negotia- tions,the presence of the Red Chinese would break down gaps which hinder limited cooperation. Cooperative discussion which could involve disarmament and control of atomic development is some- thing to be desired. Recent news from the General Assembly's political committee re- ports that the Chinese are within reach of a very strong atomic weapons program-a fact which easily makes them the predomi- nant military power in Asia. This fact alone serves as a ,warning that the Communists are no longer the protectorate of the Soviet Union, but a. world power to parley and negotiate with. * 91 THE CHINESE have given indi- cation that Moscow no longer dominates activities in Peiping, that agreements could be reached with the West, that trade could be beneficial to all parties. A seat in the General Assembly and possibly in the no-longer effective Security Council could be influential in widening the China-Russia gap and moving the Asian government closer to "free-world" opinions, , w J 1 "i J 1 t t t . Or Relic of Past? By JOHN WEICHER Daily City Editor IN THE WAKE of World War I, the victorious allies set up an inter- national organization to insure that future wars would be avoided by means of concerted action against any aggressors. But one of the principal powers, the United States, remained outside, and as a result the League of Nations had little effect-twenty years later the world was at war again. Consequently, in the wake of World War II, the victorious allies again set up an international organization to insure that future wars would be avoided by means of concerted action against any aggressors, This time all the main powers joined. But, thirteen years later, the United Nations, like its predecessor, has had little effect; it is con- tinually bypassed by the great powers when really important matters are under consideration, This year, the world witnessed a graphic example of this in the Middle East. While Secretary-General Dag Hammerskjold was busily assuring the world that affairs in that area were strictly internal matters, the United States, at the direct request of President Chamoun, acted in Lebanon; the British, at the request of King Hussein, acted in Jordan; the Iraqis rebelled against King Feisal and assas- L e d rsh psinated him. The United Nations de s idid nothing. The inaction is characteristic. In its thirteen years of existence, marskjold sa Inegt to guided the United Nations has seldom by a reasonable mandate from his acted decisively (or even acted at byricpesonabele mnaerom this ll)on major problems. The shape principles, the members of the of the world has changed radically it was natural for the secretary- in the period of its existence, but general to advocate a "quiet di- it has contributed little or nothing plomacy." Technical and even apo- to that change, litical, his background includes* * degrees in law and political econ- IN PART, this flaw is due to the omy received from Sweden's Upp- form of the UN. It is simply a sala University and a session of collection of national representa- teaching economics at the Univer- tives under one roof; few of those sity of Stockholm, representatives have any particu- He served as Secretary-General lar interest in making an organi- of the Swedish government's zation such as the UN work. finance department from 1936 to Under these circumstances, it is 1945 and then entered the diplo- perhaps not surprising that UN matic service as a financial spe- has few accomplishments cialist for the Foreign Office. In But the weakness is more basic 1949 he became Assistant Foreign than this. The UN was conceived Minister and in 1951 Deputy Min- in the Concert of Europe plan, ister. with the five major allies of World Although Hammarskjold has War II uniting to eliminate any spent much time in public life he possibility of aggression by an- has never run for office. Rather other power - particularly per- than a brilliant politician, he has many. The assumption was that always been known as a mediator these five powers would always be and an expert at a compromise. on the same side of vital questions. But recently he has been becoming Few assumptions have been less and less the "quiet diplomat." more wrong. Agreement between the major powers has been, at ON HIS ELECTION to a second best, a sometime thing. The prob- five-year term as Secretary-Gen- lem is not simply that of the veto eral last year, Hammarskjold told power, any rewriting of the UN the United Nations General As- Charter would not settle matters. sembly: "I do not believe that the There is a fundamental dichotomy Secretary-General should be asked between the Western powers and to act, by member states, if no the Communists that no interna- guidance for his actions is to be tional organization can bridge. found either in the Charter or in The Communists have recognised the decisions of the main organs this, recognized the futility of any f the United Nations; within the attempts at compromise through limits thus set, however, I believe it the UN, and have simply used to be his duty to use his office and, thatUogandahasawpon in d indeed, the machinery of the Or- that organization as a weapon in ganization to its utmost capacity 4 A each stage by practical circun- stances, "On the other hand," he said, stating his changing impression of his role of world leader, "I believe that it is in keeping with the philosophy of the Charter that the secretary-general should be ex- pected to act also without such guidance, should this appear to him nnessrv "in nrer + oher IN RESPONSE, the West has taken notice of political reality, formed private alliances among its members, and worked out its strategy outside the UN. Like the Concert of Europe, any international organization can work only as long as its members are willing to make it work. In the world today, the Communist countries at least hnvA memn-