(4r M11id gan aiy Seventy-First Year ..- EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "When Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Wi.r e STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * 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. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: FAITH WEINSTEIN Lodge Seeks Expansion In Youth Exchange Programs HENRY CABOT LODGE must be commended the fragmenting effect of national partitions for his concern with international student in order to approach the ideal of an open exchange, recently expressed in a concrete forum of ideas on an international scale. five-point proposed program to expand present Hardly less important is the good will that government-sponsored exchange. develops from the sharing of educational re- His main point dealt with the need for sources with other countries; this form of more exchange with communist countries. foreign aid is perhaps one of this country's "Today a mere handful of Russians are study- strongest obligations. ing in the United States," the Republican Lodge's proposal, I think, represents a legiti- vice-presidential candidate said in a campaign mate and careful consideration of a vital area speech at Asbury Park, N. J. "We should be where expansion and modification must be able to accomodate many more from Russia reviewed continually. and the Iron Curtain countries, perhaps as many as 1,000 a year. If the Russians are HOWEVER, it raises some questions as well. unwilling to pay their share of the students' The National Student Association, which tuition and expenses in American colleges, we carries on extensive international student should be willing to pick up the bill." exchanges of its own, outlined a warning re- He further pointed out that "dividends from garding exchanges in its working papers for throwing open a free and democratic society this summer's National Student Congress, to the inspection of communist youths would urging clarification and focus on the primary far outweigh the cost." educational goals of such programs, "There has been too great a tendency, in the LODGE SAID the international education midst of tensions of the cold war, to seize program administered by the state depart- upon educational interchange as a quick ment presently provides for exchange of about panacea to international problems and to 6,000 American and foreign students each year consider it as an immediate solution to - a third American students studying abroad emergency situations. and the rest foreign students brought to this "Programs have been endorsed as a sure-fire country. Foreign students included in this weapon against the spread of communism. figure represent about ten per cent of those in They have been cited as a means to guarantee America. support abroad for U.S. foreign policy. Some Other points in his proposed program would even claim that they will immediately prevent expand goals and means of the government war and assure a peaceful, stable world. program at present. "Although it is true that well planned and Lodge wants government assistance to well operated exchange programs can and do American-sponsored schools abroad increased contribute to these important objectives, they from the present six million dollars yearly. cannot be justified primarily on this basis. It He would establish "freedom scholarships" for should be made eminently clear that inter- outstanding foreign students with qualities of national interchange programs are not a potential leadership, psychological wonder drug which, if taken More of the foreign currency in which the in correct doses, will cure all the grave social United States is paid for the sale of some and political ills of the world," the papers surplus crops should be used for the education conclude. of Americans studying and doing research Unless primary educatonal and professional abroad, particularly In some of the under- aspirations are realized, secondary gains in developed countries, he said. understanding and development of other coun- He is also in favor of embarking on a more tries will not be, the working papers assert. comprehensive and systematic program to ex- With the expected boom of college-age people plain American history, culture and ideals to in the nextten years, maintenance of ex- foreign students when they arrive. change foreign student proportions in the universities should be valued highly. TpERE CAN BE no question of the benefits The Lodge proposal deserves praise for of a vigorous international exchange pro- pointing out to the citizens and the government gram. The increase of understanding and co- an important area for their consideration and operation in the pursuit of educational goals united action. is perhaps the most apparent. The world -JEAN SPENCER academic community must strive to minimize Editorial Director MAX LERNER= The First Election Debate f INTERPRETING: Russia's . .motives At the UN By 3. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst S'NIKITA Khrushchev trying to destroy the United Nations? Canadian Prime Minister Diefen- baker says the Soviet Premier's proposal for a triumvirate at the head of the secretariat would do it. So does Henry Cabot Lodge. Secretary General Dag Hammar- skjold said it was not the attack on him, but the Secretary- General's office, which threatened the future of the whole organiza- tion. Lodge, until recently chief dele- gate for the United States, also says, however, that the proposal is "frivolous" and "with absolutely no chance of realization." * * * . THAT'S WHAT most observers think, too. Doesn't it seem probable that Khrushchev realized that? Attempting to read Khrushchev'sj mind is foolhardy. It is like tryingI to translate Russian into English -very difficult because there is a fundamental difference in Oriental and Occidental thinking,a and therefore a difference in theI thought behind 'the words. Com- munist double talk makes it worse, If you go by what Nikita says about it, you can fly off in all directions. * * * IF HE FAILS in his reorganiza- tion move move, he says there will be no disarmament. If he fails, he says, he will keep trying to improve the UN. If he fails, he says, there will be tno normal relations between the states which rm~ake up this organ- ization" and there will be "an aggravated situation" in which we shall have to rely upon the balance of forces," continuing the state of cold war. Those words must be taken against the background of pre- ceding events. The international communists have just taken a serious beating in their efforts to make hay in the chaos of the Congo. UN forces, in effect, were interposed between the various Congo politicians, and Soviet in- filtrators were driven out as a side product. Action had to be swift in order to be effective. THE RUSSIANS, thinking the UN force would be nothing but police, not daring to oppose in the security council the world's desire for an end to Congo atrocities, went along. When the true effect of the UN Intervention became obvious, the Russians tried to buck, claiming Hammarskjold overreached his authority. The General Assembly gave Hammarskjold an over- whelming vote of confidence. Now, if there had been a com- munist, a representative of the West and a neutral in Hammar- skjold's place, no effective deci- sion could have been made. After a long deadlock, the Security Council would have had to re- possess the issue, would have been handcuffed by the veto, and would have had to refer the matter to the assembly, ** * BY THAT TIME, the Russians and Lumumba might have been in charge of the Congo or the nations would have been taking unilateral action to prevent that, and the world would have been on the brink of war. It is probable, then, that Khrushchev does not want to destroy the UN. He wants to have the strings ready to tie it up in future need. And he wants to impress the newly emerging na- tions with the power that he and they could wield if they would only come in with him. . 5'; j ' t WALTER LIPPMAN: Soviet Policy Changed Since the Summit Hard Line y9 F Al eS z rU " 1~2 a4, cyl e -a^ {. L-s~~ttsw #st -* DISTRIBUTION REQUIREMENTS: Math-Philosophy Changes Proposed- t (EDITOR'S NOTE: Last week literary college officials revealed that the college curriculum ,com- mittee had drawn up recommenda- tions to the rest of the faculty for extensive changes in the distribu- tion requirements of the college, This is the third in a series of ar- ticles on these recommendations and the distribution requirements in general.) By ROBERT FARRELL FOLLOWING the general policy of continuously considering the literary college curriculum and requirements, the college's cur- riculum committee has readied a report for the faculty recommend- ing sweeping revisions in the dis- tribution requirements in several areas. One of the areas affected is that of mathematics and phil- osophy. At present, the literary college requires that a student have, in order to graduate, a two-semester sequence in specified distribution courses in either mathematics or philosophy. The curriculum committee's recommendations urge the elimi- nation of this requirement, with the joining of philosophy and the present humanities area and a corresponding rise in the re- quirement in this area to 12 cred- its, rather than the presently re- quired two-semester sequence. * * * THIS WOULD totally remove all distribution credit from math- ematics. These changes will be final if they are given approval by the literary college faculty, but would affect only entering students, not those already enrolled. They might HISTORY has often turned on the hinge of a single event, and the current, fateful Presidential campaign may in the end prove to have turned on the first Nixon-Kennedy debate and its successors. Up to then the campaign had gone sluggish, Each of the candidates was running, as the phrase has it, like a dry creek. Each was work- ing away at his campaign in a kind of isolation, local segment by local segment. The prevailing mood was of apathy, doubt, indifference, lack of commitment. What was needed to make the campaign come alive was a direct confrontation of the candidates. This the first debate provided. It was no Lincoln-Douglas affair, but it had drama, dignity and tension. The UN debates helped, since the audience which had watched them must have wondered why the living drama of the world crisis could not rub off on the contest which was to decide who would lead America in that crisis. For the first time also, an audience of the leaders of the world's nations was able, like the American audience, to size up the two candidates as they con- fronted each other and the world, faced the same problems, answered the same questions. I SHOULD GUESS that this debate furnished Kennedy with his first real breakthrough. The vast audience had a chance to compare two programs for the nation, two visions of its future, two men as personalities. It was an exacting thing to watch, demanding much of the viewer-listener, since he had constantly not only to absorb what he saw and heard but make reassessments of both men at each point. An hour is not a long stretch for this purpose but it is long enough for a judgment to emerge. On all three scores-program, vision, man-the judgment seemed to me strongly to favor Kennedy, at Nixon's expense, Curiously the whole debate turned on the nature of the welfare state which has come to stay in America. If the debate had been between Kennedy and Barry Goldwater the issue would have been sharp. Between Kennedy and Nixon it was blurred by Nixon's I-agree- with-your-ends-but-not-means attitude. But Kennedy had the advantage because on every phase of the welfare state they discussed- minimum wage, health insurance, farm aid, federal aid to education-Kennedy was affirm- ing while Nixon was qualifying, Kennedy was on the offensive while Nixon was on the defensive. If anyone doubted Kennedy's liberal position before, there is no longer any basis for doubt. But along with the program itself, what counted was the passion behind it. Here is a man who in a brief spell of time, under the stress of events, has found maturity because he has found conviction, His answers were not learned by rote, to be repeated parrotlike, they came readily and swiftly because they were part of what he felt. BUT THE SHARPEST difference lay in the two men themselves. Both were being sedulously careful, of course, to present them- selves at their best. Kennedy tried not to look boyish, Nixon tried to dispel the old picture of the hatchet-man and to present an unfailing sweet reasonableness. But there are limits to what you can do in doctoring your image. The truth manages to come through. Nixon emerged as an anxious man, overager, overexplaining, repeating himself, assuring everyone of his opponent's sincerity and his own, At one point his tension was so great that he offered by inadvertence to "get rid of the farmers" before he stumbled into the clear to get rid only of their farm surpluses, If a team of psychologists were watching, and comparing notes, their reports on Nixon as a personality would be worth reading. The product of an age of anxiety, he showed the characteristic marks of his era. Kennedy, by contrast, was alert, crisp, quietly cdnfident. His economy speech revealed a spare and muscular mind. An intellectual, he sought neither to hide nor parade that quality. He spoke an thought swiftly, and his words- while rarely memorable-were the right words in the right place. He could demolish an argu- ment in two sentences. He knew his stuff, as Nixon did too, but he marshalled it more effectively. f',,rln,,Iv ha Asnrhnla *c4a of-t *np -rnLflP even be delayed until after next year, literary college officials said, since a great deal of time would be required to make the necessary changes in parts of the program. THE PRESENT recommenda- tions are the final culmination of a long and complicated history of investigation by faculty groups, both formal and informal, into the mathematics-philosophy re- quirement. For a long period of time, much of the literary college faculty has been concerned with the fact that the mathematics-philosophy un- ion does not have any real basis. Originally, the union of the two areas was justified by their com- mon use of "clear and exact rea- soning," according to the An- nouncement of the college. Two other basic similarities al- so appear and are cited in the An- nouncement: "Both deal with questions that have a greater gen- erality than those of any science or other discipline. Both also, though in different ways, furnish tools for the study of other sub- jects: Mathematics in providing methods of computation and sta- tistical techniques for the sci- ences, philosophy in treating of the methods of reasoning and of leading ideas and values that have played a part in our tradition." LATELY, HOWEVER, there has been much worry about the ques- tion of whether or not the dis- tribution courses in these areas, as they are and not as they might be, fulfill this purpose. Certainly many philosophy dis- tribution courses are not courses in logic, which many faculty members feel are the only type that should be included in the area if it is to follow the general outline of its purpose. Equally certainly, many of the mathematics courses used for dis- tribution credit are of the type that one faculty member has call- ed "problem-solving." These too are not really fulfilling the basic purpose of the area, many faculty members feel. ANOTHER feeling that his con- tributed to the final recommen- dations is that mathematics is primarily a "tool" subject, use- ful mainly in the sciences and social sciences (and, outside of the college, in engineering), Others favoring the change point out that the demand for mathematicians, scientists, and engineers is rising drastically, both increasing the load of students taking mathematics and pulling qualified teachers to posts in non- academic fields. They point out that this has already required the use of a 1arn --r - a m fh -+f- its students from the engineering college, upholding the view that much of the teaching must go to future technical workers. Also on the side of the proposals is the fact that, although a defi- nition of the exact area of the humanities is hard, many philoso- phy distribution courses seem to fit better in this area than with mathematics. * * - ON TIRE OTHER side of the coin, there are arguments against the recommendations. Many feel that the science dis- tribution program is hurt by the lack of mathematical maturity of the students in it, particularly as the level of achievement of in- coming high-school students has been found to be extremely low. (However, those in favor' of the recommendations point to recent evidence that this achievement level is on the rise.) One faculty committee stated: "One of the essential character- istics of science is quantification. A distribution course, one of whose main objectives is to acquaint the student with the nature of sci- ence, ought to contain evidence of this characteristic of science. There are at least four natural science distribution courses which do not call for any mathematics at all at the present time (1957)." Most of those who emphasize the "tool" aspect of the courses but who oppose the change seem to favor a move establishing a basic competence level in mathe- matics as a requirement. This would be something similar to the present foreign language requirement of fourth-semester proficiency in a language, though almost certainly not so demand- ing. (Tomorrow: Conclusions.,) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Building, before 2 p.m. two days preceding publication. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 General Notices Recreation Swimming-Women's Pool: Women Students: Mon. through Fri., 5:10-6.00 p.m.; Tues. and Thurs., 8:00- 9:00 p.m. Co-Rec Swimming: Saturday evenings 7:30-9:00 p.m.; Sundays, 3:00-5:00 p.m. Faculty Night: Families with small children, (under 8 years of age), Fri., 6:30-8:00 p.m.; other faculty families, Fri., 8:00-9:30 p.m. Michigan Night: Employees and fam- ilies, Sun. 7:15-9:15 p.m. Resumed R. KHRUSHCHEV'S speech re- veals how Soviet policy has evolved since the crack-up at the summit last May. The subject of his speech was the historic upris- ing of the submerged peoples in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, against the political and economic hegemony of Western Europe and North America. There is no issue between him and us over the his- toric fact that this hegemony is being liquidated and that At is being replaced by new constella- tions of sovereign states. The is- sue between us is not whether what he calls colonialism is to be ended. The issue is how the tran- sition from dependence to inde- pendence is to be brought about. * * S IT IS ON THIS point that his position has changed since the dip- lomatic disaster which wrecked the summit and has brought about a rupture of communications and negotiations between the Soviet Union and the Western powers. Until the crack-up, as late as April when he visited President de Gaulle in Paris, Mr. K., though a champion of the colonial revolu- tion, was prepared to recognize that the western powers have in- terests, as for example in the se- curity of the European settlers, and hat a certain tolerance and patience were necessary in making the difficult transition to inde- pendence. A crucial example of this was his public indorsement of President de Gaulle's Algerian policy, and this carried with it the understand- ing that during the series of sum- mit meetings which were then con- templated, the liberation in Africa would be helped and guided by the. United Nations and the great pow- ers. NOW WE SEE THAT since the crack-up in May Mr. K.'s position is that he will not facilitate the transition to independence by al- lowing the Western powers to col- laborate. His new position is un- conditional support of the ouster of the Western powers and a re- fusal to let them play any part in the transition to independence, The West, because of its imperial- ist history and because of the cer- tain residue of semi-imperialistic privileges today, is in his present mood disqualified from assisting and guiding the new states. The assault on the Secretary General is a corollary of, is inci- dental to, his policy of excluding the West from the transition. Mr. Hammarskjold's conduct of the Congo operation has been a faith- ful and a skillful attempt to facili- tate the transition from Belgian colonialism to Congolese independ- ence. Mr. Hammarskjold's sin in Mr. Khrushchev's eyes has been that the UN mission has been ded- icated to helping the Congo, which is not ready for independence, to overcome the obstacles on the way to self-government. Mr. K's post summit policy does not permit Westerners to play any important part in such a transition. IT IS NOT CLEAR as of now how much of Mr. K.'s new position is a continuation of his wrath after the U-2 and President Eisnhow- er's avowal of our right to over- fly the Soviet Union. It is not clear how- much of his new posi- tion is considered policy. I would guess that not even Mr. K. himself could answer these questions today. For what is now evident is that these questions .will be answered only if, when, and as the crack-up is repaired and communication is restored. The speech Mr. K. deliv- ered on Friday is not the speech he would have delivered last April. For then he recognized that Brit- ain, France, and the United States had a necessary and useful part to play in the rise of the new nations. On Friday he seemed to say that we were untouchables and have no part to play. THE ISSUE he raised on Friday will have to be arbitrated by the new nations. They must decide whether they want the help of the West, the help of the Com- monwealth, and the help of the French Community, and the help of the United States. We have no power and no desire to compel them to accept our help. But if they are wise in their own in- terests, they will take help where they can get it, and with the smallest amount of string attached to it. They will make sure that they do not become wholly de- pendent on any one government, and they will guard, as they would the apple of their eye, the author- Ity and the dignity and the uni- versality of the United Nations. They will find if they look into it while they are here that in these matters there has been a great change of opinion in the past few years. There was a time when we regarded their neutrality It's Not Where You Are.. .* ti u'