hen Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTAtOL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevai_' - - _ - a_ _- . s A- . IN THE LATEST number of the Michigan Technic is a reprint of an article about Student Council, which was the all-campus student government of three decades ago. The Technic's editors thoughtfully added, in. italics in parentheses (Government) between Student and Council. It apparently is intended to be a kick in the head of the first magnitude. ,However, it is the magazine and not the Council that should be kicked. Without stopping to recount the out-date article's contents, Women's Fashions -One Common Interest Foreign Role Merits Expansion Several thousand students heard Carl Sandburg, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Henry Steele Commager in past years, but their speeches did not begin to bridge the gap. This injection of new inter- national programs may merely produce glorified student activities and add to the extra-curricular fetish. Weeks, activities, associa- tions, and boards per se do not increase communication. They often merely absorb the time and energy of people working in the activities and prevent these people from personally developing the communication they are working to encourage. The problem is complex, the task is large, and the efforts have been puny. Some embryonic pro- grams are tackling the problem more directly. The League's adop- tion program has brought foreign sisters to nearly 40 women's hous- ing units and the Union's Inter- national Brother Program has built communication channels for 75 newly arrived foreign men. An undergraduate girl from Germany is now spending the year in Delta Gamma on a scholarship from the sorority, and Panhellenic is con- sidering a large-scale expansion of this plan. THESE ARE MERE beginnings in a relatively new field. However successful they may prove, they cannot, by themselves, provide the missing communication. 24.000 Americans and 1600 foreign stu- dents are living together in a University community. Increased communication cannot be pro- duced in a neatly wrapped pack- age; it will require conscious ef- fort on the part of each indM-- dual student. This, of course, is also cliched. However, most meaningful arti- culations of human ideals and emotions have been rejected as trite by our sophisticated genera- tion. They are trite because they are often employed hypocritically and facetiously-because we refuse to guide our actions by our ideals. When I presented the Inter- national Week theme, "Clasp the hands and know the thoughts of men in other lands" (John Mase- field), I was told that it was so beautiful that it was trite. We can hardly afford to discard all beauty, all expressions of human goodness and altruism, as trite and useless. The U.S. verbally abandoned political isolationism 18 years ago, but we cannot abolish isolation by decree. If we are to live rationally with the world beyond our borders, we must first learn about it, and we can learn only through com- munication. Interesting conversations with foreign students obviously will not affect the world situation. It is absurd to issue a call to save democracy by befriending an Af- rican or an Asian. It is, perhaps, senseless to plead at all. DAILY 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. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2 General Notices Woodrow Wilson Fellowships. Nom- inations for Woodrow Wilson fellow- ships for the academic year 1960-61 for first year graduate work leading to a career in college teaching are due Oct, 31, 190. Only faculty members may nominate candidates. Letters of nomi- nation should be sent to Prof. Frank Grace, 'Department of Political Science, University of Michigan. The following student-sponsored so- cial events have been approved for the coming weekend. Social chairmen are; reminded that requests for approval for social events are due in the Office of Student Affairs not later than 12 o'clock noon on Tuesday prior to the event. OCT. 28-- Alpha Xi Delta, Cooley House, Fletch- er Hall, Geddes House, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Sigma Sigma, Rumsey House. OCT. 29--- IT IS NOT A matter for coer- cion or for dramatic appeals. I can only point to the many stu- dents and to the absence of com- munication. Several avenues are open to interested American stu- dents. From Oct. 28 through Nov. 6 programs are planned for In- ternational Week. At World's Fair foreign students will be present in their display rooms and will be anxious to talk with visitors. On Thursday evening a panel of foreign students will join an Aus- tralian journalist and a political science professor to discuss the "Ugly American" and reaction to American foreign policy in their homelands. At the International Folk Sing following the panel and Saturday night at ISA's Monte Carlo Ball, these students can be met on an informal basis. At 4:30 p.m. every Thursday ISA sponsors an Inter- national Tea. These are usually at the International Center, but some will be held in women's- residence halls. Eighteen nation- ality groups across Asia, Africa, and Latin-America operate clubs, most of which are open to Amer- ican membership. More informa- tion on these and other channels can be obtained at the Inter- national Center, 603 Madison St., alongside the Union. let it be said it is based on premises now irrelevant to Student Government Council. * * * THAT PRESENT .SGC members are not childish pseudo-politicians may be seen in last Wednesday night's meeting, which was the finest this writer ever attended. Debate on the question of pro- testing "anti-trespass' laws, and the discussion on access to mem- bership clauses in fraternityand, jsorority constitutions was excel- lent. Even the normally humdrum parts of the meeting went along rather well. It was. unfortunate that only four or five of the prospective candidates for the upcoming Council election were present. * * * ' THE ATTITUDE of adminis- trators towards commenting on the new proposal on sororities was ,interesting. One especially em- phasized he didn't want to sound like he was pressuring the Council by his comment. Another just gave views, period. It does seem all right for ad- ministrators to comment on Council issues, if, as in the case of constitutions, their opinion is germane. At the same time, it is good that at least some of them have. reservations about doing so, Con- necting the names to the atti- tudes would be instructive, but anybody who cares probably can guess anyway. *. * * SGC PRESIDENT John Feld- kamp lined up the Council last night for its 'Ensian picture,' then sat down right in the middle, somewhat to the left of Jim Had- ley and to the right of Roger Seasonwein. But Dan Rosemergy was on Seasonwein's side too,, pointing up the general futility of labeling. To the Editor: T[WO OFTEN-repeated Demo- crat charges at the Republican Party are particularly irksome. One such charge is, "The United States is falling behind Russia in the missile race." The other is, "The United States is losing pres- tige." This letter is intended to show that the frist charge s false in 1960 but was true in 1950. Andrew G. Haley, President of the International Astronautical Federation, states in his book entitled Rocketry and Space Ex- ploration, "Then, at the eleventh hour, the United States inaugur- atted in the early 1950's its first uninterrupted program for devel- opment of Intercontinental Ballis- tic Missiles and Intermediate Range Ballistic Missiles-named Atlas, Titan, Thor, and Jupiter." He also states that, "It was Rus- sia's all-out concentration on rocketry from the beginning of the postwar period that gave her lead time over the United States." The missiles such as Atlas, Titan, Jupiter and Polaris, and our many satellites have all been realized under the Republican ad- ministration. In spite of the five year lag inherited from the Demo- crats, it appears that the United States now lacks only the com- pletion of the powerful Saturn booster in having a family of rockets and instrumentation equal to or superior to those of the USSR.R l --John R. Caidwell, '58E CUBA POLICY: U.S. Role in Castro's Revolution (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of two articles on Cuba. To- morrow Communist influence and a model of American policy in Cuba will be discussed.) By JOHN ROBERTS Daily Staff Writer THE CUBAN revolution, once hailed as the triumph of an oppressed people over a dictator- ial regime, has since become a subject of mounting concern to Americans. The violent anti- American diatribes of Castro, the nationalization of American-own- ed property, and the growing signs of Russian infiltration all have raised the fear that, while Batista had great wrong, a worse has come in his place. American policy, once ostensibly sympathet- ic to the difficulties of the new government, has become increas- ingly rigid, and the statements of Senator Kennedy and Vice-Presi- dent Nixon indicate it may be- come yet firmer. But what, really, is behind the Castro phenomenon, and where does it fit into the overall his- tory of the twentieth century? To answer these questions, I recently interviewed Prof. Irving Leonard of the history department, and Robert Taber. *. *' * Cuba and ngw organizer of a Fair Play for Cuba program, burns with an intense indignation and sense of injustice. Prof. Leonard has an academic, almost detach- ed, mein. Both, however, are in agreement on a number of things: The Cuban revolution is the payoff for our long record of eco- nomic exploitation, support of dictators, and indifference to the needs of the vast number of have- nots in Latin America; Cuba is not'likely to become a Russian satellite; American policy in the future must be grounded on sincere re- pentance for past blunders, and consist of patient negotiations on a basis of equality. * * * THE AMERICAN RECORD in Cuba is not a commendable one.- While we may boast of having "liberated" the people from Span- ish rule, we are less likely to ,mention that this liberation was soon followed by American con- trol of the economy and outright military intervention. The fa- mous Platt Amendment, written, into the constitution by America, reserved to ourselves the right to unilaterally intervene in the do- mestic affairs of the country - a right which was used, and has left the United States with a lega- cy of distrust among the Cuban people. THE flicting former TWO HAVE sharply con- personalities. Taber, a network correspondent in At the height of the American hegemony, according to Taber, we controlled 100 per cent of the mineral wealth, 40 per cent of the sugar, the electric and telephone companies, much of the island's banking, and (with the British) 90 per cent of the oil. Little con- sideration was given to the actual welfare of the country and, where it would conflict with American interests, some of the U.S.-owned resources were not developed: Ta- ber says that the third biggest iron deposit in the hemisphere is in Cuba, and was not even touch- ed by Bethlehem Steel, who had bought it 50 years earlier for $100. PRO. LEONARD points out that the history and geography of Latin America-particularly the lack of primary resources such as coal-had prevented the area from developing on its own in- dustrially. The region remained predominantly agr'arian, with an alliance of church, landowners and army 'maintaining power. Eventually, foreign investors be- came silent partners in this alli- ance, trading military and psy- chological support of the dicta- tors for the right to tap and siphon off much of the natural wealth. The partnership was rec- ognized by the have-nots in Latin America, and remembered. The United States, for example, gave aid to Batista: A military training mission, arms, tanks, air- planes, and (through TruJillo) bombs, Our ambassadors to Cuba, most of them political appointees who could not even speak the lan- guage, gave moral support to the dictatorship in exchange for American business concessions. An arms embargo slapped on the island in March, 1958, hurt only the revolutionaries who were eventually to overthrow Batista. Scores of Fidelistas were arrested for recruiting activities in this country, * * * AT THE SAME TIME that American business interests were draining the Cuban economy, the American government was pursu- ing a policy of studied neglect., Shortly after the inauguration of the Marshall Plan to rebuild Eu- rope, General Marshall himself appeared at Bogota to announce bluntly that aid to Latin Amer- ica would not be forthcoming. Present plans to greatly expand aid to the area, said Prof. Leon- ard, are too late and too conserva- tive; moreover, the Latin Ameri- can have-nots are more likely to attribute the money to Castro's influence than to American bene- volence. O.FICI. AL.BUL.LET..N..:... Li.....:...::..... ..h...i.. OFFI CIAL BULLETIN Interim Action Approved: Oct. 25 Democratic Socialist Club, speaker Robert Taber. "The Truth About Cuba," Union, 4:00 p.m. Oct. 27 Young Republican Club, Pa- rade for Nixon, Diag, 8:45 a.m. Oct. 28-Nov. 6 5G0 International Coordinating Board, "International Week" series of events.. Nov. 3-4 J.I.F.C., Jr. Panhellenic, Assembly Association, IQC; Fund Drive for the Fresh Air Camp.., Approved: The following appoint- ments to the Student Government Council Credentials and Rules Commit- tee to terminate ,following their re- port to Student Government Council on the fall Student Government Coun- cil elections: Nancy Adams, James Hadley, Per K. Hanson, John Feldkamp, Chairman, Ron Bassey, Art Rosenbaum, M. A. Ryder Shah, Roger Seasonwein, Bill Warnock. Approved: The following appoint- ments to the NSA Michigan Region Fall Assembly to be held at Kalamazoo College Nov. 4-6: Delegates: Lynn Bartlett, John Feld- kamp, Chairman, Dick G'sell, Myra Goines, Ken McEldowny, Art Rosen- baum, Kay Warman. Alternates: Eugenia Pann, Jean Spencer, Roger Seasonwein, Tom Hay- den, Michael Olinick. Accepted: The Fiscal Report for July 1, 1959, to June 30, 1960. (Vol. 6, p. 17). A*.n*.r.A. A -,1,i+,,+ tmtion re- membership selection. Accompanying such should be the group's interpreta- tion of these provisionsas to their ability to comply with the University Regulation on membership. C. Send a letter to all fraternities and sororities explaining these regula- tions. Approved: That Student Government Council direct the Education Commit- tee to communicate with: 1. A member or members of the Michigan Senate and House of Repre- sentatives committees on education, and the Michigan Department of Pub- lice Instruction requesting informa- tion on any proposed legislation deal- ing with higher education or with any" matters in any way affecting education, whether it be public or private. 2.- Either ao Michigan member of the U.S. Senate and House of Repre- sentatives or a member of their re- spective Education Committees, and the Office of Education of the De- partment of Health, Education and Welfare requesting any information concerning any proposed legislation an any matters in any way affecting edu- cational policies, aid or other fields. This communication should be con- tinuous. A report shall be made to Student Government Council after the receipt of the replies from' the Initial letters and henceforth whentany new legislation is first considered or pro- posed or there is any suggestion from any of the representatives that might