yj u4 a ButI "You Sure You Won't Let Me Fall?" 44 Seventy-Second Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Win A Prevaee 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. Joist Judiciary: Peers or Mimics? MARCH 4,1962 NIGHT EDITOR: CYNTHIA NEU Kennedy's 1Deeisior: The Saddest Words _ ' c , 'rF', ya ,. , -1 a fyY ,. 1^ p I + w y ' , lam . ,c3 , " i. ' k' i-' 4 3 .. _. a . - PRESIDENT John F. Kennedy's announce- ment that the United States will resume mospheric testing is disastrous In itself, t the greatest immediate tragedy for Ameri- ns is that we could hardly have expected. .ything else. If we want to win the peoples of the world democracy; we must first insure that those ople will exist in a cohesive, society. If the ms race continues, we can be fairly sure at. they will not. As one of the signs in the :ket line of the Washington Project marchers ' Ld, "Peace in 1970, with or without people." is- is the essence of the choice we face, and esident Kennedy's answer is one more impe=- s to the latter alternative, the peace of radio- tive ash. The United States has just muffed another of many chances to take a real initiative to- tds peace and human welfare in the eyes of e whole world.-The Russian series of atomic Its breaking the moratorium placed the bur- n of blame on their shoulders. By sheer con- ast, an announcement that the United.States uld not follow suit would have given us the opaganda advantage which we have not had a long, long time; an advantage towards the nning of a living world. 'HE ARMS RACE only perpetuates the image of a United States pitted against the Soviet ion to the exclusion of all other ideas. If we d not resumed nuclear testing, and if we had stead increased foreign aid, that image would ve been changed.'We would' no longer have en involved in an essentially negative struggle ainst the Soviet Union, but rather in a posi- e struggle for the economic and social de- lopment of the whole world. As long as Rus- is our enemy, we have nothing to win. Only ien poverty, disease, and tyranny wherever appears become our enemies will there be y morality or hope in our battle. Kennedy left one tifny ray of hope in his itement that we will not resume testing if' e Russians sign a disarmament agreement.. But, knowing ,the general trend of disarma-, ment conferences, it all seems rather futile now. To the hundreds of thousands of Ameri- cans who have utilized every right given to them by democracy to protest the insanity of the arms race, it all seems very futile indeed. To all those who know that rational, civilized man is the prerequisite to all ideals, the very faith in rational civilization has been shaken. ANYONE WHO SAW President Kennedy on television last night must have wondered if this was the face of a man announcing a de- cision that he really believed to be right. Ken- nedy's face recalls the Adlai Stevenson now working in the United Nations-a man rapidly Sbecoming a ghost. We wonder what happens to men in our government; we wonder who makes the decision andwhy; we wonder in what dusty and forgotten cabinet are filed the basic prem- ises.of America and of the human race. The United States, and the world, belong to .people. The race to annihilate these people is the greatest act of tyranny the earth has ever known. And it is to this that John Kennedy, elected President of the United States of America, has given his approval. PRESIDENT KENNEDY might have told the world that the United States, dedicated as it is, to the dignity of man, repudiates forever the. arms race that would reduce man to a cinder. He might have said that our ideals are the ideals of living, and that therefore we will not be partisan to universal death. He might have said that our faith is in the human being func- tioning in a creative society, not in a blind missile of destruction. President Kennedy might have made a speech Friday night that would have changed the course of history on this planet, but that speech got lost somewhere; somewhere in some elusive .limbo that contains the spirit of man and the impetus of life. -MARTHA MAC NEAL TODAY AND TOMORROW: Investigating telU To the Editor: F TOHN ROBERTS' recent editorial J observations on the procedures of Joint Judiciary Council were not only incorrect in many im- portant specifics, but misleading in their general tone. I fear that Roberts has distorted the truth to justify his preformed opinions of how a student judiciary should operate, rather than given an ac- curate account of Joint Judic'. actual procedure and general phi- losophy. He was most "alarmed" at what he termed the Council's "hypo- crisy." In my opinion, Roberts seems incapable of recognizing the unique position of Joint Judic. As students, Judic members are aware of, sympathize with and usually share personally the com- monly accepted mores of campus culture. We derive our authority as a group, however, from the faculties of the several schools and colleges of the University, and as such, must alsotacknowledge the existence of state and local laws, and regulations of the Re- gents and Administration. * * * NO INSTITUTION can survive without rules of some sort; the University has those which it im- poses upon its students. I feel that if we are to play the game it imposes upon its students, we must play it by the rules. If those rules are unfair or out of line with the times, as often they are, we must do all we can, as re- sponsible members of the Uni- versity community, to see that those rules are changed. I do not see how we can con done evasions of state laws. There are several laws of this state re- garding the purchase and con- sumption of liquor by minors. Mr. Roberts strongly implied that be- cause "these are things which al- most all students do constantly; . even SGC holds unchaperoned parties at times," Joint Judic should ignore student drinking as if it didn't exist, and should not punish violators. In the first place, it seems a bit presumptuous for him to suggest that Joint Judic overrule the Michigan Legislature, in effect finding their legislation unconsti- tutional and invalid. Secondly, if the law is unacceptable to us, it seems that rather than to ignore it; the proper thing to do as re- sponsible citizens would be to organize a student lobby at the Michigan Constitutional Conven- tion and at the Legislature to pressure for the adoption of our progressive point of view. I sug- gest this as Mr. Roberts' next pro- ject. BECAUSE of lack of space, I have confined my discussion to Roberts' misunderstanding of this general principle, which he sees as "hypocrisy." However, in his specific references to Judic pro- cedures, a subrantia: portion of his editorial comments were either distorted or completely untruth- ful. For example, his contention that Dean Bingley is "constantly inter- jecting facts, opinions and ex- hortations" is very misleading. The dean sometimes comments on our actions, but only after our deliberation is finished and our decision reached and announced. Thus, he may voice his pique or approval, but only as "the voice of experience," and after our decision is rendered. However, I would not have it seem that Joint Judic is compla- cent in its approach to these prob- lems. On the contrary, we are constantly debating them and struggling to formulate a better system, procedure and general ap- proach. To illustrate, within the next few days we shall present to Vice-President Lewis our recom- mendations for reforms in the student judiciary system, based on the OSA Study Committee report. This is not an isolated incident, nor merely a reaction to the Com- mittee's findings, but a consistent and regular part of the Joint Judic program. This sort of reappraisal on our part takes place each semester, and is part of our con- ception of playing the game by the rules. -Robert Berger,1'63 Chairman, Joint Judiciary Council Pavlov To the Editor: THE STUDENTS on Joint Judic are mimicing the administra- tion. But, Mr. Roberts, what else can they do? They are a carefully chosen group who have passed an intensive screening process to make sure that their decisions will coincide with the point of view of past members who have them- selves just finished mimicing the administration for the past year. Only those with the potential of becoming well coordinated "pup- pets" are chosen. The new coun- cil seemed an improvement to Mr. Roberts, but give them time. This was only their first meeting. Pavlov didn't train his dog over- night. Having been a member of the South Quad Judiciary I am aware of how "peer" decisions are shap- ed by the administration. In the quad there is .little question, of guilt, for who can question a member of the staff? The decision reached as to punishment comes after a member of the adminis- tration gives his views on the case. If he were not trying to influence the decisions' why say anything. OF WHAT PURPOSE is a ju- diciary council if it only hands down the administration's dic- tate? Students on the judic realize the outdated rules are being bro- ken everyday even by their own members. They should show more insight than taking two hours to say "$10." But what else can they do as the setup now stands? The problem is wider in scope than judic. Student government in the quadrangles is likewise sty- mied. The house council passes a motion but if the advisor says no then it fails. Petitions by resi- dents go unrecognized if the ad- ministration does not agree. What true function 'do these "student" run groups perform? If they are to serve their true purpose, then the administration had better face reality and allow some changes. -Michaei Levitt, '62 Sevice.,.. To the Editor: AFTER READING John Roberts' editorial on Joint J u d I c (March 2, 1962) I felt 'again that The Daily does indeed perform a real service to the University stu- dents. When people fall in love with the legal or judicial process, the basic principles which called them into being are lost sight of. When part of the judicial procedures are fol- lowed and others completely ig- nored, those principles 'behind their establishment are easily be- trayed. If Editor Roberts' facts are as accurate as the Judic members think their charges are, this seems to be in part what has happened to our Joint Judic. Could it be that the venerable members of Joint Judic are frus- trated individuals who seek a kind of vengeance on students by wear- ing the mask of peers, when in reality they are "yes-men" who obediently follow the guiding opinions of their administrative superior? -Jack Maier.'62 In the Hope... By PAT GOLDEN, Associate City Editor ,L-I By' WALTER LIPPMANN THE mounting controversy about the UN, though it turns on the proposed purchase of $100 million worth of UN bonds, is plainly not a money question. By comparison with our expenditures for defense, or for agriculture, or even for .for- eign aid, the sums involved are very small. The total-budget of the UN for last year was $231.7 million and our share of that was $102.1 million. This is one-third of 1 per cent of what we are spending for defense. Our share of the proposed bond issue is to be $100 million and if these bonds were never repaid, this would be a minute sum in our public expenditures. The fact is that if the UN serves a good purpose in the pacification of the world, it is fabulously cheap at the price.. The real'question at the root of the controversy and in the country is whether the UN today, in this year 1962, serves a purpose which the United States has good reason to support and promote, or whe- ther the UN is out of hand and should be cut down or even broken up. The movement to cut down the UN, if not to dissolve it, is led by two great powers, the Soviet Union and France. The Soviet Union has the sup- port of the countries of the Com- munist bloc and on the other side along with France are Portugal and until recently Belgium. The United States is the great power which most actively supports the UN. Recently it has had qualified and reluctant support from Great Britain.- OUR RATHER lonesome emi- nence among the great powers has aroused, naturally and properly enough, much uneasiness and questioning even among the old friends of the UN in this country. All this cannot and should not be hushed up. On the contrary, the activities of the UN and our own part in them should be investi- gated thoroughly and publicly, and the question of the kind and de- gree of our reliance on the UN should be thoroughly discussed. What is called for is in effect a vote of confidence by Congress to determine what we should do and what we should not do in the UN as it now exists. Such a review and vote is in fact overdue. For the UN today is a very different organ-, ization from the one which the Senate, with only two dissenting votes, voted to join in 1945. The UN today is the creation, in which, we played the leading part, of those who in 1949 were carried through amendments to make the General Assembly, where a two- thirds vote prevails, the dominant organ over the Security Council where the great powers have a veto. From that amendment, spon- sored by the United States, have developed the anxieties which now disturb European and American opinion. With ,the admission of the ex- ' WAS SHORTLY AFTER 8 a.m., August 6.3 The sky over Hiroshima was clear blue, and band was playing in the park. At exactly 13 the band stopped playing, and all of us opped talking. There was 'silence for a moment, and then great fluttering of wings as a hundred white' >ves of peace rose above the crowd gathered , commemorate the sixteenth anniversary of e first atomic tragedy. After the doves came the words. Speakers uched on the past, and moved quickly to .e hope of the future. They quoted the in- ription on the peace memorial behind them :b the hope that this may never happen ,,in." The people around me stood quietly, remem- ring a greater horror than I could compre- .nd. Together we watched the doves circling; gether we applauded the words "peace," .isarmament," unity." Then I saw a black-eyed baby staring at y light hair and strange shaped eyes. Sud- nly I was an outsider, an American, a cause the horror. When I was the age of that wring- child my country dropped an atomic mb on Hiroshima. Sixteen years later I share e guilt. LL DAY I wandered through the Peace Park with the crowds, performing little rituals at somehow soften the guilt and soothe the Lef. I bought bundles of incense and bou- ets of wilting garden flowers to pile before e memorials. The doves still circled over- gad, but it was harder to see them through e smokey clouds of incense. Burning incense before the mound of earth at covers the names and remanents of all e people who died in the bombing will not ng them back to life; nor will it prevent e deaths that may be caused by America's cision to resume nuclear tests in the atmos- ere. The symbolic, personal gestures toward ace, unfortunately, stands outside the cold :ts of the arms race. An urn of coffee was President Kennedy's rsonal response to student peace picketers the White House two weeks ago. But facts d figures held sway in his public decision resume atmospheric testing. Even the politi-5 .ly-designed confrontation of students and :islators failed to blur the logic of statistics. .e confrontation got lumped together with e beautiful but futile gestures of burning :ense and marching eight thousand strong the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. The dead of Hiroshima were ninety thousand ong. ICTURES of their agony and, charred bits of their possessions fill a museum now. I walked through it numbly, with the wierd music from "Hiroshima, Mon Amour" jangling in my mind. There is a diagram in the museum showing the degree of destruction in con- centric circles spreading out from the park. I wondered how the circles would, fit on a map, of Ann Arbor. "Within a radius of .5 kilometers, roof tiles melted," said the map. At my feet were twisted hunks of brown tile. There was nothing left of the wooden houses they had covered. Hiroshima today is made 'of concrete block. I It may not be fallout-proof, but it won't burn. There are few scars left in the bustling, modern city. Seven story office buildings almost hide the gaunt skeleton of the exhibit hall dome. Grass grows in the park, where some said it might never grow again. But there are no old trees in Hiroshima. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN, colonial nations to the General Assembly a majority is able to exert strong pressure on the West European countries - "Britain, France, Belgium, in a measure the Netherlands, and above all Portu- gal-which have not yet completed the solution of the problems of colonialism. We cannot take the view that our allies in NATO have a blank check which requires us to support all their foreign policies, even those on which we are not con- sulted and over which we have no control. Wha't needs most to be investi- gated, exposed, explained, and de- bated is the Congo affair. The UN intervention there has been a big and dangerous experiment, and whether it succeeds-as i now conceivable-or whether it fails, which is always possible, the na- tion must face the question of whether there was any alternative which would not have been infi- nitely more dangerous. * * IN ENTERING upon this debate about the UN, it is useful to re- mind ourselves of what Sen. Van- denberg and John Foster Dulles said about the Charter when it was before the Senate Foreign Re- lations Committee. Mr. Dulles said: "Now, of course, I recognize that this. Charter does not do what many people would like-to guar- antee at a single step perpetual peace ... but the world does not move at a single step from a condi- tion of virtual anarchy to a con- dition of well-rounded political order. Those steps are made falter- ingly. "There are missteps; there have been missteps. This, for all I know, may 'again turn out to be a mis- step. But when (a previous wit- ness) said . . . that he did not him- self know what to do, I say that here is, at least, a step which pre- sents itself to us, which may be, or which has a good chance to be, a step forward, onto new, firm, and higher ground." That is the langu- age of an experienced and reason- able man. This is what Sen. Vandenberg said to the Senate about ratifica- tion : "You may tell me that I have but to scan the present world with realistic eyes in order to see these fine phrases often contemptuously reduced to a contemporary sham- bles, . . . that some of the signa- tories to this Charter practice the precise opposite of what they preach even as they sign, .. . that the aftermath of this war seems to threaten the utter disintegration of these ideals at the very moment they are born. "I reply that the nearer right you may be in any such gloomy indictment, the greater is the need for the new pattern which prom- ises at least to try to stem these evil tides, . . . if the effort fails, we can at least face the conse- quence with clean hands." (c) 1962, New York Herald Tribune, Inc. ° Cycle UR OWN PLANET, in which philosophers are apt to take a parochial and excessive interest, wa10, f a + fln + +n t ,,nr 4.l I T HE TREES DIED all at once, sixteen years ago. The people are dying still. Every week they straggle up the hill overlooking the city to the Atomic Bomb Casualty Center, a joint Japanese-American effort that both treats and studies bomb casualties. They come now with ugly scar tissue growths called keloids, with blood diseases, with blinded eyes, and sometimes with the strange set of symptoms called "radiation sickness." The Center has reams of data on radiation-. caused diseases, which are, of course, available" in the event of emergency..In the next nuclear bombing perhaps Hiroshima will be spared, and then Center can come to America and care for us-returning the favor. A bombed America won't be as lucky as Japan was. Hiroshima was a horror that no nation deserves, but it becomes a toy beside the holocausts conjured up by nuclear testing in the sixties. There will be no benevolent con- queror to pick up the pieces of New York, City; there will be no conqueror at all. The black holes of Moscow and Chicago will look alikce. There will be no white doves to circle either crater. . J WHITE DOVES are the pointless, defenseless offering of men with the "hope that this will never happen.again." The offering and the men have little to do with the inexorable pro- cess of defense and counterdefense, missile and anti-missile missile, Russian test and American test. But the farther a man gets from the real decisions, the more he needs a dove. Hiroshima understands about doves, and cold facts, and the men who die. At nightfall on August 6 I walked with the Hiroshimans' from the Peace Park to the river bank, to join in an o-a..nl d rmnnv fo the soni nf an. 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 Roomi 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m., two days preceding publication. SUNDAY, MARCH 4 General Notices Martha Cook Building applications for residence are date no later than March 8. First Appointments will be made through March 6. German Make-up Examinations will be held Thurs., March 8, 7:30-9 p.m. in Rooms 1088, 1092, and 1096 Frieze Bldg. Please register in GermanaDe- partment Office by Tues, noon, March. 6. Events Monday Automatic Programming and Numer- ical Analysis Seminar: L. R. Herche speaking on "I.P.L. V-List Manipula- tion Language" at 4:00 p.m., Mon., March 5,.in the Computing Center Sem- inar Room. Math. Colloquium: Prof. R. G. Swan, of the University of Chicago, will speak on "Projective Modules over Group Rings and Maximal Orders" on ,Mon., March 5, at 4 p.m. in Room 3209, Angell Hall. Refreshments will be served at 3:30 in 3212 Angelli Hall. Southern Asian Colloquium and As- sociates: Lecture' by Morris D. Morris on "Some Aspects of Indian Economic Development," Mon., March 5, in Rack- ham Assembly Room, 8:00 p.m. Events Tuesday University Lecture in Journalism: Fe- Placement ANNOUNCEMENT: New York State Professional Career Test will be held Saturday: Date: March 10, Time: 8:45 a.m., Place: Room 3529 SAB. (Note: This notice concerns only those students who have already applied & made prior arrangements to take this March 10 Exam in Ann Arbor, thru the Bureau of Appts.) PLACEMENT INTERVIEW, Bureau of Appointments Seniors and graduate students, please call Ext. 3544 for inter- view appointments with the following: MARCH 5-7- U.S. Navy-Naval Officers Procure- ment Team from Detroit & Naviator Team from " Naval Air Station, Grosse Ile, Mich., will interview potential of- ficer candidates Mon. through Wed. on the ground floor of the Mich. Union. Will furnish material on 'all Naval Of- ficer programs. No appointment neces- sary. TUES., MARCH 6- American National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago, I. - Feb., June & Aug. grads. Men with degree in Liberal Arts, or Bus. Ad. for Banking & Accounting Programs. International Paper Co, New York, N.Y.-Feb., June & Aug. grads for 'lo- cations throughout U.S. Men with de- gree in any field for job opportunities In Production, Market Research & Sales. Prentice-Hall, Inc., Chicago, Il1-Feb., June & Aug. grads for locations throughout U.S. Men with degree in Liberal Arts or Bus. Ad. for Book Rep- resentatives. These reps. will call on college professors to sell books for classroom use, & to negotiate with them regarding publishing of their manu- scripts. Opportunities for promotion in both domestic & foreign areas. Some sales territories 'require no travel & some only limited amount of travel by car. Continental Casualty Co., Chicago, Ill. -Feb., June & Aug. grads. Men & WOMEN with degree in Liberal Arts or Bus. Ad. for Underwriting Dept.; Claim Dept.; Actuarial Dept.; Promotion Dept., including Adveritsing; Agency IQC.ASSEMBLY SHOW: .Duke Still Swing ,THE MASTER of the Big Band was here last night. The show ended with a string of Duke Ellington hits that no-one else can match, and it featured the variety in sound and conception which decades of other groups have found so useful. Even though this band has recorded some pretty far-out sounds, the program stayed on the straight and narrow. The arrangements \are nowhere near as difficult as those featured on Maynard Ferguson tours, and a lot of excitement (Will they be able to play it or not?) is lost. It is 'to Ellington's credit that he can still field an entertaining show in his traditional style and compete with the pyrotechnics of the relative newcomers. NOT THAT THERE wasn't some fire last night. Stocky Cat Anderson's trumpet let loose a blistering Summertime, and tenorman Paul Gonsalves revived the good old days at Newport by wringing about 20 choruses of Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue from his s(ax). But the opener set the general tone for the concert. Instead of a potboiler to warm the audience up quick, the band played a couple slow ones which showed how purely the blues feeling can translate to the band idiom. The Ellington style has a lot of variety. While Stan Kenton seems content with two hours of fortissimo these days. Ellington can afford to put those famous mutes in his brass soloists or barely whisper a melody from the ensemble. Not content with the stock tone color of the dance band, he brought in some clarinet sound here and there. S* * * *