Seventy-Second Year rEDrmTD AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY Of BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where OpinitP Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. 0 Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints., SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: CYNTHIA NEU The Best Laid Plans Nuclear Warfare Policies Immoral HE POSSIBILITY of nuclear war raises grave moral problems. A public discussion led by the Rev. Father Leo Sands at the Newman Club center Wednesday evening brought up some of these problems. They de- serve further consideration. At the end of World War II the world had a taste of what nuclear warfare can be like, but the atomic bombings of Japan were minis- cule in comparison with what today's weapons can do. Technology has multiplied mankind's capability for destroying himself to the point that now nearly all life can be eliminated from the earth with a go-ahead from the leaders of the three most powerful nations of the world. The Americans, the Soviets and the English are each capable of committing nearly in- stantaneous mass murder of great portions of the world's population. Viewed from the Fifth Commandment, this is clearly immoral, for the Fifth Commandment states, "Thou Shalt Not Kill," which read in the Greek de- clares, "Thou Shalt Not Murder." MURDER IS ONE TYPE of killing: it is the deliberate and malicious taking of the life of another; it is offensive. Some moralists say that in contrast, defensive killing may be moral and at least is not immoral: just as capital punishment protects the people of a state by eliminating a dangerous criminal, mas- sive retaliation or at least the threat of it also offers something of a protection, they say. This line of argument can lead to the idea of a pre-emptive attack and to the notion that such an attack is morally justifiable for pro- tection, and it can result in the concept that a criminal deed less than murder can be pun- ished by capital punishment. Yet capital punishment has never been shown to deter, and any kind of pre-emptive attack short of complete destruction almost inevitably results in a counter attack that also causes death. In short, death-making causes more death- making and once the process begins any pos- sibility of deterrence ends. This is why it is dangerous to pursue the notions of punish- ment by death, or attack, for protection. De- fensive killing can become just as offensive as intentionally offensive killing. LIFE IS NEEDED for the improvement of the international scene. Any policy of death disintegrates this key, since nothing can be accomplished in a state of nonbeing, while when there is being there is at least hope. There is hope that a criminal can change and become beneficial to his society; there is hope that an oppressive regime can be overthrown or at least liberalized. This is why there should be no capital punishment; this is why it can be better to be "Red" than dead. For as long as there is life, there is the possibility of betterment. As long as people exist under Communist oppression, there is the possibility of passive or even active resist- ence. Even now the people of Poland fight the Communist party through their churches and in their schools; just in the past decade there have been major rebellions in East Ger- many and Hungary. But to put human beings in a state of non- being is to deny them a chance to rebel, their chance to pressure for improvements, their opportunity to resist. For this reason the death of a nation is worse than the sub- jugation of a nation to oppression or control by a foreign power. THIS RAISES a- means-ends problem. For a democratic civilization the means should always fit the ends, but there is danger that both can be destroyed. A civilization can con- duct a policy of peace for an end of peace, but if it is bombed its good means will be of no avail. It is hard to keep means con- sistant with ends when an enemy feels no need to do likewise. The ends a democratic society may wish to preserve may be freedom, due process of law and government responsible to the people. Yet not only these ends but the whole fiber of a society can be destroyed by a nuclear attack. In this case, the threat of retaliation would be justified, pragmatically if not morally. But the carrying out of that threat may be immoral, since this involves taking lives, including many -innocent lives. Most of the Russian people are against not only nuclear warfare but any kind of warfare; they are bitter after losing one-tenth of their population in World War II and they want peace. But if their Communist rulers wage not peace but war-nuclear war-what are we to do? it t Editorial Staff FRED RUSSELL KRAMER .................. Co-Editor PETER STEINBERGER .................... Co-Editor AL JONES ............................. Sports Editor DENISE WACKER ....................... Night Editor f*VV- f'. V A % TT* 4. ., t -tm. THE POLICY of the Kennedy Administration, as spelled out by Defense Secretary Robert McNamara in his address at the University's commencement in June, is this: in the event of a nuclear war we will aim to destroy the Soviet Union's military centers while leaving her civilian population alone. But is this pos- sible? As Rep James Roosevelt (D-Calif) points out, this is a humane and considerate policy but it is not practical. There are two reasons why not. Many mili- tary centers are located near, if not at, centers of civilian population; a near miss would result in the taking of innocent lives. Second, the Soviet Union is a secretive country; the only way we could be completely sure of wiping out all her military cores (missile launching bases may be hidden) would be to wipe out all of the Soviet Union. This would be in- humane and immoral. The dilemma arises because the alternatives under the present state of conditions are im- moral. Pre-emptive attack would be grossly immoral. Retaliation to an attack would be immoral since innocent lives would be taken. Perhaps an answer lies in adhering to a policy that pledges action along other lines, and in choosing the lesser of the evils that confront us, such as the threat of retaliation. BUT ALL THIS becomes meaningless when a policy of threatened retaliation fails -when it is most needed. For when retaliation is "necessary," the threat-and the policy- will have failed. It is like being pushed over a cliff: you can grab your enemy and take him with you or you can fall alone. The first course of action is immoral as is any act of revenge (Christ said that if you are slapped on the one check, turn the other check also). But the second course of action is defeatist. It is important to keep in mind that suicide can be just as immoral as murder, for both cases mean killing. It could be suicide for the United States government to remove the de- terrent while the Communists have destroying power and evil intentions. This would be im- moral, just as pre-emptive attack or retaliation are immoral. The deterrent and the threat of retaliation lead to murder, but they are neces- sary to prevent suicide. And this lends more strength to the argu- ment that it is better to be Red than dead. If an act of dying is in effect an act of suicide, the act of dying is immoral. Living under a Communist tyranny may be immoral too-but less so because the most basic value is life itself. Without life the other values-liberty, due process, government responsible to the people- could not exist; without people there would be no society, much less social ideals. The existence of life is a prerequisite to the existence of any other values; in this way dying for your country or for freedom achieves nothing and is defeatist. DYING FOR FREEDOM, however, achieves value in providing an example for future generations. Your death at the hands of an oppressor may inspire resistence among those who remain. In this way it can be better to be dead than Red. The question weighs on how much good or how much less evil will result out of a course of action. If you can accomplish more as a martyr, then it might be better to be dead. If you can accomplish more in remaining alive and in providing leadership and resisting op- pression, then it may be better to be under Communist domination. If more good can be accomplished by the threat of massive retaliation than by submis- sion to enemy demands, then this would seem to be the better course. But this principle of international dealings does not work in matters of capital punishment: when the threat of the electric chair or gas chamber is instituted, the rate of murders does not change much; a man about to commit murder either feels he will not be caught or does not rationalize the consequences. As long as our Communist enemies act ra- tionally, the threat of retaliation may hold. But if they act irrationally, nuclear warfare with all its immoralities may result, and the human species extinguished. SUPPOSE WE LEARN that the bombs and rockets are on the way and suppose we cannot stop them from doing their work. Could we retaliate and still act morally? Some say the answer is yes-to protect the ,neutral land of the world, as South America, from conquest and oppression. This seems a legitimate an- swer, and if this situation came up, retaliation would be both moral and immoral-moral in protecting the innocent of South America, im- moral in killing the innocent of thebSoviet Union. A pre-emptive attack. might be said to be moral in this sense as well as immoral. Hence, the deeds nations would commit in a nuclear war may be compound in morality. Furthermore, the degree of immorality would over their government. Americans would be depend on the degree of control a people have more responsible than Russians since Ameri- ~ 7 7 1/ SA! ____ IN "' "I r ---l oMM7T E AT THE CAMPUS: Cry 'Wolfenden' In Sheep's Clothing ANOTHER sociological whodunit is upon us, but it is not the bad second novel one might fear it to be. Made by the makers of "Sapp- hire" (Michael Relph and Basil Dearden), "Victim" is roughly more of the same, except that where "Sapphire" was about The Negro Prob- lem, "Victim" is about The Homosexual Problem. - - UNDERSCORE: The People' and Government By PHILIP SUTIN Daily Staff Writer ONE OF THE most often used phrases on the editorial page is "the people." Some writers think that all policy decisions-especially the ones they are opposed to- should be taken to "the people" for approval. Others see "the people" as the ends of social and economic justice. Yet "the people" are never de- fined. Their identity and powers have never been spelled out. Their limitations have never been delin- eated. "The people" are the mass ci- tizenry of the country. They are not any particular group, but everyone in aggregate. Under American tradition and law, so- ereign power flows from them. * * * THIS DEFINITION hides many things. It obscures the individual and the conflicting groups that make up our' society. Disagree- ments and divergencies are hidden as "the people" are taken as one. "The people" are the majority, but their powers are limited. These stop at the individual whose thoughts. beliefs, speech and pri- vate life cannot be tampered by any mass organization be it gov- ernment or the mob. If "the people" were allowed to have their say in everything, then there would be none of the basic individual freedoms. Dissent would be squelched; there would be a state religion; conformity would be the rule. * * * THUS the Bill of Rights sets limits to majoritarianism. The first and fifth amendments are the individual's basic protection against the majority. The 14th Amendment extends these 14th dividual guarantees to all legal situations, erasing the federal lim- itations of the Bill of Rights. These safeguards allow diver- sity among "the people" to flour- ish. It permits the wide variety of thought and action conducive to progress and happiness and sets the narrowest of limitations on enforced consensus. The diverse opinion of "the people" is another major limita- tion to their direct rule. Agree- ment could be reached on very basic issues-the God, motherhood and country of the politicians' cliches. Otherwise, they are split into many diverse elements, con- verging and diverging, depending on the issue. In this complex world, if every policy were taken to "the people," nothing would get done.. "The people" would never agree. "The people" must rule through governmental machinery respon- sive to their diverse needs and interest. Every fixed term, "the people" decide who shall rule for them and endorse, by the election of officials, the general policy the government will take. Then the government is given a free hand limited only by the protections guaranteed the individual, the op- position and public opinion. When the term is up, "the people" re- evaluate their government and give a new mandate. "THE PEOPLE" are still left limited power of direct rule. In- itiative, referendum and recall are available when governmental channels become unresponsive. Governmental responsibility to "the people" is the other side of the coin. In this complex age, "the people" are not able to meet all their needs by their own efforts .and it becomes the responsibility of government to make sure that they are met. These needs fall into two cate- gories. One is social-the ordering of society so that all have an equal chance to succeed at their endeavors. The second is economic --the assurance that all have a decent standard of living. * * * GOVERNMENT must be the guardian of civil rights and lib- erty. It must make sure that no individual is denied his opportun- ity because of race, religion, na- tional origin, sex or economic status. This is a complex job in- volving fair employment practices acts, housing legislation and regu- lations, human relations commis- sions, the courts and other anti- discrimination means and meas- ures. Civil liberties-the individuals rights of free speech, religion, press, assembly and others-are also in the province of govern- mental protection. Such protection is the hallmark of the American legal system. De- spite the many guarantees, the courts and sometimes the execu- tive branch of government stands ready to defend civil liberties when the need arises. The economic needs are less clear-cut and sometimes conflict with libertarian principles. To ef- fect governmental programs it is often necessary to curtail the in- dividual's freedom of action. Yet it is justifiable because these ac- tions involve group life and often of a selfish nature beyond the realm of individual freedom. THE GOVERNMENT must as- sure "the people" decent housing, education, livelihood, medical care and availability of other social services. These are so complex and expensive today that not all individuals can afford to obtain them without governmental as- sistance. As these are necessary to assure equal opportunity, it is the government's responsibility to make them available. Further, the government must protect "the people" from exploi- tation by special minority interest groups. Labor and anti-trust reg- ulations are prime expression of this sort of responsibility. Thus "the people" and their government have a two-fold rela- tionship. They are its sovereign rulers who give it the mandate and direction to operate. In re- turn the government is the guar- dian of "the people against them- selves and the vicissitudes of the age. And the gang's all there: the wise old police chief who gently lances the boil of bigotry (not to mention solving the crime), the tragic social group, helpless vie- tims of their own weakness, and all your other old favorites. SAPPHIRE apparently w e n t over just fine in this country as a slice of Soho and, so as not to throw away a good thing, Victim is more British than even Brooks Brothers could stand. The hero is a barrister, and so there are quick references to "taking silk," and lines like, "Lord knows why they call it a brief, it never is," to im- part an authentic legal flavor. The barrister (played by Dirk Bogarde) is a homosexual trying to find a blackmailer who is prey- ing on other homosexuals, one of whom hanged himself to protect Bogarde's reputation. In order to convict theblackmailer, the bar- rister will have to enlist the aid of the police and testify in court, moves which will ruin his bril- liant career and finish off his already shaky marriage. * * * IN THE end, he decides to martyr his future to help the law in a larger sense. But this brings his wife, who really always loved him, back into his arms. None of this happens, however, before we are exposed to a 90- second discussion summary of the Wolfenden report (in sheep's clothing), and a running exhibi- tion of every conceivable type of homosexual, including ones who are but don't look it, ones who aren't but do, and many, many others. Since this is, in name anyway, a mystery, I won't reveal any sec- rets but it's only fair to forewarn you that like most mysteries, nothing's really cleared up much, plot-wise, until the end. There is the full measure of melodrama, false leads, and so forth; things ain't who you think they is. THE background music in "Vic- tim" is a little more sophisticated than Sapphire. There is now the use of a gripping leitmotiv to indicate when a blackmailer is around. Listen for it. Scenery and costumes are noth- ing extravagant, except maybe for the inside of Westminster, and the film is in black and white, which, surprisingly enough, is not too much different from the local color used in "Sapphire," "Victim" is definitely an export product, and to this end is highly calculated. A side product of all the calculations, however, is the fact that the plot manages to resolve itself quite neatly (if ob- viously) into a symmetrical set of ironic results. A chance to shape the chancery is sacrificed for a resulting bigger effect on it. A marriage imperiled by homo- sexuality is finally strengthened because of it. And so forth. In all, the film is only a little clumsy, and quite entertaining, if you don't mind being talked down to. It's probably worth seeing; who knows, Relph and Dearden may wind up as an institution, like Alfred Hitchcock, or corn flakes. -Dick Pollinger Social Logic SOCIALISM, like the ancient idea from which it springs, confuses the distinction between govern- ment and society. As a result of this, every time we object to things being done by government, the socialists conclude that we ob- ject to its being done at all. We disapprove of state education. Then the socialists say we are op- posed to any education. We object to a state-enforced equality. Then they say that we are against equal- ity. And so on, and so on. It is as if the socialists were to accuse us of not wanting persons to eat be- cause we do not want the state to raise grain. -The Freemant -wWwwwonowkwo LETTERS to the EDITOR To the Editor: ENJOYED READING the article by Mark Slobin, in the August 1 Daily, regarding the revival of in- terest in the recorder. It may interest other readers to know that Ann Arbor has a flour- ishing community of recorder players. The Ann Arbor Recorder Society has over 50 active mem- bers and offers a program of con- certs, lectures and workshops at all levels during the year. In his article, Mr. Slobin makes the statement ". . . there is little solo literature (for the recorder) outside of the large amount of simple songs .. * * * THIS IS FAR from the truth, In the Baroque period, when com- posers scored music for "flute" or "flauto," they intended the use of the alto recorder.(The term "tra- verso" or "traversiere" was used to indicate the transverse flute.) Thus, the flute parts in Bach's Brandenburg Concert Nos. 2 and 4, and in many of his Church Cantatas and in several oratorios were originally written for the re- corder. Handel wrote six very beautiful sonatas specifically for the recorder. Telemann left a wealth of wonderful solo music for the recorder, including solo sonatas, triosonatas, concerti and. even unaccompanied fantasies, which all require the highest de- gree of technical skill and vir- tuosity in the performer. Some of the other composers who contrib- uted to the solo literature for the recorder were H. and D. Purcell, Loeillet, Mattheson, Schickhardt, A. Scarlatti, Quantz, Fasch, Vival- di, Pepusch, Couperin and Bois- mortier. * * * IT IS TRUE that the greater part of the solo literature is for the alto recorder. However, there are two very challenging concerti, one by Sammartini and one by Woodcock, for soprano recorder and strings. There is even an orig- inal triosonata for bass recorder, viola and continuo by C. P. E. Bach. And, of course, there are the Vivaldi flautino concerti (now- adays played on the piccolo) which are charming on the sopranino recorder. --Carolyn Rabson Arms Race' "ALREADY we beg the Germans for arms orders, the French for pre-payment of debt, to ease the pressure on the dollar. A few years ago they were the recipients of our charity, now they confer favors. Mr. Kennedy is rightly concerned about the proliferation of nuclear arms and the develop- ment of independent nuclear de- terrents. But nothing can stop this development except an agreement between the two present super- powers for a disarmed world in a new system of law ... "In Japan, the other day anoth- er warning bell tolled when the 82-year-old, pre-war Premier Yo- shida, its leading elder statesman, told the Japan-American society in Tokyo (Washington Star, July 12) that Japan may have to de- velop its own nuclear arms "to de- fend the Orient from the unfor- tunate threat of Communism." It was under cover of pre-war pro- testations about the fear of Com- munism that Japan began its at- tacks on China, on the British and French empires, and finally on Pearl Harbor. Then too, a second- rank power toppled the pillars of world respectability, and unleash- ed the storms that bore their most bitter fruit at Hiroshima." -I. F. Stone's Weekly I 11 Fy 1t1 II FEIIFER THAT? ITS MINE, T 15 T~WHAT IT 15s. IK$ PQUIET! WHA'r 1- Tf U- 1 r. -~ 599#9'- 'f6'L W)A!T MAMMA T1o UA?? AGU R[69*r JUST' ON6 OP (qOU 66t qfOU MWAM U3 '5UPPME? 'ro BE 60HE MO (A WM VE~q SAP FOR WJT' 6UPPO'W C. iI I NEVCR SAW Af~q- tO - U QUIEQfT u~ QOWM OR * _U-I.me, IT Wf- i-R7 R1 THE I