Seventy-Second Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OP THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. " ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FALLOUT SHELTERS: The Survival Fallacy SUNDAY. MAY 13, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDITH OPPENHEIM Activities Provide Valuable Experiences (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second of threearticles analyzing the United States civil defense pro- gram.) ByTHOMAS HUNTER Daily Staff Writer PRESIDENT Kennedy has taken steps other than the controver- sial $400-plus million shelter pro- gram in the name of civil defense. In not too original a move he assigned emergency powers and responsibilities to the various fed- eral departments. Food and medi- cal stockpiling responsibilities have been assigned to the secre- taries of agriculture and welfare. The secretary of commerce will develop plans for the control and allocation of transportation. The Department of Labor will be re- sponsible for civilian manpower mobilization and wage stabiliza- tion. The secretary of the interior THE individual cannot compete in this race. And it is doubtful that Washington can do much better. It must work toward compromised objectives on compromised means from the unsound premise that "something - must - be - done - and - fast," and if it insists on preparing for five megaton attacks with a safety factor of two weeks for emergence, as it does in the controversial pamphlet "Fallout Protection," then whatever action it can and does take in pursuing its objective must be based on un- realities. A current example of this: re- cently 100 sailors volunteered to spend two weeks cramped under- ground so Navy scientists could learn about the effects of pro- longed stays in fallout shelters. The test seemed to prove that after breathing non-radioactive air from approximately 25 per cent of the population to about three per cent. The provision of shielding against radiation effects would ta the same time protect against blast and thermal effects for the vast majority of the population." That "Life" magazine took up the chant last September and with President Kennedy's untime- ly blessing started a run on shel- ters, called in some places a "pan- ic", is history. Nobel prize win- ner LinUs Pauling's reaction was "There is a discrepancy here. The statement made by "Life" is ludi- crous. My own estimate is that all of the people in the United States would be killed in a nuclear war" with or without fallout shelters. Thereais indeed ahdiscrepancy. The discrepancy is that no matter what the information, there can be no effective plan for saving peo- THE CLAIM that extra-curricular activities are a hindrance to learning is based on the false assumption that education is purely an intellectual process. Education should prepare the individual to contribute to the human community in three ways: as a citizen, as a person with special in- tellectual or mechanical skills, and as a human being capable of working and sharing with others. Extra-curricular activities can offer active preparation for all three of these roles. This is not to say that academic studies are not essential to the first two, but rather that ac- tivities offer the student an opportunity to put knowledge and skills into practice. STUDENT organizations offer the individual a chance to make his personal contribution to the community. He can use his knowledge to achieve a result which he can see. Activities provide a chance to learn democ- racy first hand. Student organizations are run under a democratic framework, and the stu- dent learns how to take his role in the struc- ture. He also learns how to change things as a participant in the University community and the national community. They also allow for creativity that the class- room often cannot tolerate. Under the limita- tions of subject matter and grades, there are isunderstanding THE NUCLEAR submarine Thomas A. Edi- son and the destroyer Wadleigh collided in the Atlantic Ocean during anti-submarine warfare exercises last month, according to a report from the Associated Press. An Atlantic Fleet spokesman said the collision resulted from a "misunderstanding" between the Edison and the Wadleigh. President John F. Kennedy visited the Edi- son a few days later, en route to review fleet units and observe amphibious war maneuvers. The day before his visit, as the submarine lay rhoored at a Norfolk Naval Station pier, fire broke out in the insulation in the Edison's tail section. Was that a misunderstanding too? -J. 0. many areas a student may want to explore, but can't. Areas such as problems of current affairs and of the University and education can be explored under the auspices of a student organization, and findings can be used for some purpose. Re- sults are either printed for the whole campus to read or used to plan a project, symposium, or lecture to inform the campus. Fresh ideas not subject to old prejudices can be used by students to change our society for the better. Student activities offer the best place for the expression of these ideas and for possible action. WORKING with others is perhaps the most valuable aspect of student activities. The world after graduation will require individuals to work together and get along in intimate cir- cumstances. In this field extra-curricular ac- tivities offer something that the classroom can- not. The student group contains individuals who will appreciate one's endeavors. Perhaps even more than the individual needs an activity, the University community needs activities. The campus would be a narrow place if it did not have the many lectures and sym- posiums sponsored by student groups, the lit- erary magazine, the paper, and all the other student projects. These groups keep the campus up to date on current world affairs and their implications, and on the state of the University. These groups pose serious questions about education in\ general. The projects they offer the engi- neering student, the music student and the nursing student a chance to become rounded. IT HAS BEEN the student groups in many cases which have spurred the University to make needed changes. Student groups have also been a link students have with the faculty and the administration. Some activities can naturally be more edu- cational than others. The ones that offer the most to the individual and the campus are those that try to supplement classroom con- cepts. These are sincerely concerned with im- proving the individuals within their organiza- tion and the campus as a whole. -CAROLYN WINTER BETTER THAN EVER: Glee Club Concert Shows Polish, Precision LAST NIGHT a large and extremely appreciative audience was treated to a concert shining with the kind of precision and polish that have made the Michigan Men's Glee Club internationally famous. Under the guidance of Prof. Philip Duey, the Glee Club moved through a program of varied and well-chosen material which left its audience in Hill Auditorium satisfied that the Club is singing better than ever as it prepares for its third European Tour during the summer of 1963. After the traditional opening hymn, "Laudes Atque Carmina," the first'group of songs were more traditional in flavor, and featured three excellent works from the sixteenth century. Easily the high point of the group, and indeed one of the evening's brightest moments was the counter-tenor solo, "Shall I Sue?" sung with ease and full control by David Schwartz, whose technique as a counter-tenor grows steadily with each welcomed performance. SCHWARTZ LED a group of unusually good soloists in this year's concert, whose work ranged from the clear tones of Steven Jones' "Green Leaves of Summer" to the rousing comic efforts of Frank Kratky, Brian Forsyth and Michael Robbins, whose "With A Little Bit O' Luck" rounded off the first half of the program on a high and delightfully spirited note. A Gershwin medley, composed of fragments, of some of America's finest popular music, began the second half of the concert and here it must be noted that the medley was not as successful in terms of a musical entity as have those of previous years. * * * * IT IS DIFFICULT to pick a high point of performance in a program of uniform excellence and taste, but somehow it appears that the Glee Club does its finest work in singing the traditional Michigan, songs. "The Old Friars' Song" must. unquestionably be one of the finest collegiate songs ever written, and the performance of the Glee Club on this number was, as always, flawless. With the singing of these Michigan songs, the Club again executed the immaculate precision, balance and intonation that long have marked it such an outstanding group, and that bear witness to the superb training accomplished at the hands of Dr. Duey. Special note must be made of this year's Friars, who seem to be improving year by year, and who employed one of the most hysterically original exits ever seen in Hill Auditorium, as they valiantly sang themselves out of sight and sound on the descending stage elevator. The Spring Concert should go far in reassuring alumni and fans that the Glee Club is singing better than ever, and its members are totally deserving of the praise they have received at home and abroad. -Jack O'Brien LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Resigns YAF Position A . 11 d DEFENSE ALERT-Three foot balloons soar over Charlotte, Michigan, showing that civil defense test alert call has been heard over warning devices placed in homes. SIDELINE ON SGC: Council Action Futile sources. The Federal Aviation will handle power facilities and re- Agency will regulate civil airports, aircraft and operations, and the Interstate Commerce Commission will have charge of use of rail- roads, motor carriers and water- ways. THE MACHINERY of govern- ment itself would be saved, a "U.S. News and World Report" article says, by an extensive network of "underground capitals built to survive a nuclear attack" and con- nected by a hardened communica- tions system. Lines of succession have been established to keep fed- eral and some state and local posts operating. The federal government may switch its operations to any of 94 centers within 300 miles of Washington or to eight regional headquarters across the nation. Of the steps that have been tak- en, HR 10262 - the administra- measure that might afford some tion's shelter bill - is the only protection for the population at large. But none of these measures can be satisfactory. Both the nature of nuclear war and that of politics make govern- ment action ineffective. Passage of the $20 billion which Represen- tative Chet Holifield sees as nec- essary to an effective system is an impossibility. Even if the funds could be secured, time would be needed to create effective shelters and and time and more money to keep them effective in the face of changing technology. in the not uncomfortable condi- tions of a $70,000 shelter with an ample supply of cigarettes and the prospect of emerging not into torn and hostile surroundings but into a 72-hour leave, strong young men can survive. BUT WHAT are the realities of nuclear attack? How should we really prepare? In one sense, the government's figures are as ac- curate as anybody's.'There are no facts. Attack can come in any of in- numerable ways. Locally, where defense would seem to take on its ultimate importance to the indi- vidual, the target may expect lit- erally anything. He may expect 15 kilotons of the kind that leveled Hiroshima. He may expect a relatively common 10 megatons, one thousand times as powerful. Expect 100 megatons, a bomb currently being developed, or even 1,000, entirely possible within the near future. Expect any number and any combination of thesein any number of attacks. ,Expect high blast, expect low blast, direct blast, firestorms, ra- diation. Expect the horrors of bac- teriological or chemical weapons. Expect nothing. * * * HOLIFIELD'S Subcommittee on Radiation under the Joint Com- mittee on Atomic Energy in 1959 made the "remarkable" observa- tion that "civil preparedness could reduce the fatalities of the as- sumed attack on the United States ple in general or people in par- ticular from nuclear destruction. Shelters add a measure of protec- tion but the measure especially in metropolitan- or military-target areas is miniscule. Assurance of any kind is less than left to the winds. You will survive an attack by chance. New York Times military editor Hanson W. Baldwin wrote recently, "There are only two answers: luck, pure luck, or a national program so im- mense, expensive, detailed and se- cure as to appear impossible." * * * THE LATTER alternative is im- possible no matter what. The gov- ernment's seemingly arbitrary se- lection of the five-megaton, two week basis for its program is in- deed a minimum protection for the millions it proposes to save. But perhaps it does not matter that shelters be capable of saving lives, perhaps they would be valu- able simply if they existed and an enemy thought they could save lives. President Kennedy men- tioned a second use for the pro- gramin his July speech - shelters as a deterrent. In a curious bit of double talk, Holifield's Military Operations subcommittee has backed him up. Civil Defense cannot deter a nu- clear attack," it reported, but it is "an integral part of the national defense and is a very essential part of the deterrent strength and posture of the nation." Perhaps this is the only purpose behind the program. STUDENT GOVERNMENT COUNCIL met from 8 p.m. last Wednesday until 3 a.m. Thursday morning. During those seven hours, it passed a motion on The Daily and a motion establishing the procedure for filing membership statements, necessitated by the fact that the original letters requesting the statements from sororities and fraternities were lost for two weeks in the basement of the Administration Building. SGC also took care of several administrative chores such as committee reports, appointments, reading of letters to the Council, recognition of the Graduate Chemical Society and selection of the delegation to the regional National Stu- dent Association convention. All these were rou- tine matters, but nonetheless important. There were also unforseen delays during the course of the meeting as it was twice rather unceremoniously interrupted by the Druids and then the Vulcans in their quest for members who were subsequently tapped for these dis- tinguished honoraries while Council recessed to look on. NOW, IT MAY be reasonable that it should take SGC seven hours to accomplish all this business, and it is certainly reasonable for it to adjourn by 3 a.m., but, unfortunately, two important pieces of legislation had to be post- poned. A motion by Tom Brown to change cer- tain counting procedures in the SGC elections never got before Council though it was on the agenda. After suspending the rules to discuss a motion regarding a possible tuition hike, Council quickly dropped debate until the next meeting. It was not vital that either of these motions be passed last week. The proposed change in ballot counting could conceivably wait until just before the next election. Any motion re- garding tuition will have to be passed this week, however, since the Regents are likely to decide about tuition at their meeting Friday. Even though a motion regarding a tuition hike was not on the agenda, it was a serious thing to postpone it. As it was, SGC had to suspend rules to discuss the motion in the first place, and next week it will have to suspend rules so that it may vote on it without waiting the week required for action on expressions of student opinion. This is a move members were unwilling to make Wednesday. Furthermore, by having only one meeting to discuss what prom- ises to be a controversial issue, it is quite possi- ble that an extremely hasty motion will be passed or that nothing may be done at all. COUNCIL MIGHT WELL remember the prob- lems it had in putting together its resolu- tion on the Office of Student Affairs Study ties nearly as much as it should. It insists on having the final say on all appointments to its committees and delegations, though the people who do the interviewing and nominating for these groups are selected by SGC and are often Council members. 'Following the approval pro- cedure wastes much Council time and gainsj nothing. It is really very foolish for SGC to insist on making all appointments. It does not know the nominees in many cases, and even when some members do know some of them, SGC has shown great reluctance to overturn committee recom- mendations. It often uses the argument that the nominating committee was in the best position to know the candidates, and that, after all, it set the committee up to take the selection chore off its hands. If Council carried these arguments a little further, it would realize that they apply equally well to all Council action on appointments, ex- cept in truly exceptional circumstances. A num- ber of SGC's other functions could probably be equally well handled by committees. THE SECOND POINT that SGC's actions bring up is of considerably more controversy and importance than the first. It is a question of the propriety of Council's passing resolutions on issues like that concerning the Daily-Board conflict. It is quite difficult to see what value, if any, an SGC resolution on an issue such as this will have. What can Council hope to achieve by passing motions such as the one on The Daily? It exerts no authority over either the Board in Control of Student Publications or The Daily. It can- not even claim that it is necessarily represent- ing student opinion on campus. That the welfare of The Daily is of some im- portance to SGC and to the campus at large cannot be denied. However, there is little point in just "saying something" if no one will do anything about it. Furthermore, even if Council could hope that someone would pay heed to what it said, what did it say? After a long and heated session in which every possible type of meaningful statement was rejected, what fin- ally came out was a long and empty motion which said little that has not been said time and again by both parties in the dispute. THE TRAGEDY of The Daily motion is that it is so typical. Whatever Council decides to say about tuition will be equally unheeded, as are nearly all its resolutions and motions in areas where it does not have power. The solu- tion to this problem is not to tell SGC to make no such motions. The solution is to give SGC the power it needs to make its feelings felt on matters which are of vital importance to Uni- versity students. SGC's motion on The Daily UNDERSCORE: The Lesson of Laos To the Editor: AS AN ENTERING freshman, I was more than anxious to af- filiate myself with a political or- ganization which stood for those ideals to which I, myself, adhered. I quickly became acquainted with an organization whose political ideals were similar to my own, the Young Americans for Freedom (YAP). It was through this organization that I felt I could best serve the Conservative movement to which I had always identified myself. I was offered a position on the Policy Committee which I more than gladly accepted. However, it is at this time that I choose openly to resign both my position on the Policy Committee and my membership in the organization. It can be argued by the mem- bers of YAF that my participa- tion this semester has been slightly less tha nenergetic. To this I would readily admit, although the organization of YAF study groups this semester was under my di- rection and for which I received little active support. But to me, YAF has left much to be desired as the voice for the Conservative movement. IT HAS DONE very few things of outstanding merit, at least few with which the University student body is acquainted. Its director has little or no knowledge of even the basic fundamentals of par- liamentary procedure and organ- izational technique. The YAP meetings, with very few exceptions, are at best only moderately or- ganized. There is much trivia dis- cussed and the organization tends to fear taking definite and firm stands on many issues. I would be extremely interested to know how many people are familiar with the "stand" taken by YAF in regard to the House Committee on Un-American Activities. There is, however, one more issue which has substantiated my desire to resign my membership. On a Naval ROTC application, a list of political organizations was given. According to the applica- tion, the NROTC midshipman would not be permitted to con- tinue his ROTC program if he held membership in any of the organ- izations. One of those groups was the Young Americans for Free- dom. At this time I am not en- tirely certain as to why YAF was listed, but the mere fact of its being listed raises further doubts in my mind as to the ultimate credibility of YAF. * * * IN CONCLUSION, I would only say that I do not condemn, reject, or discredit in any manner, what- soever, the Conservative principles and ideals upon which YAF was founded. My condemnation is of the organization, itself. I humbly but earnestly urge all present YAP members to consider the merits (or lack of same) of their organization and to act accord- ingly. I would further urge any per- spective members to consider care- fully the values. that YAP has or does not have to offer them. I sincerely hope that they can find Suggetios... To the Editor: THE UNIVERSITY administra- praise for its efforts to establish an academic atmosphere in one of the East Quadrangle houses this year. I sincerely hope that this is only a beginning effort of a major project and would suggest the following possibilities: The freshman orientation pro- gram should include some semi- nars .in the residence hall units, instead of by the present system. Recitation sections of large lec- tures should be divided by resi- dence hall units, instead of-by the present system. An office for academic affairs should be established under the Office of Student Affairs. The di- rector of this office would be in charge of advising academic pro- grammers in the residence halls, and arranging for faculty to eat and live with students,rand ar- ranging for the transfer of the counseling process from the class- room buildings to the residence halls. SERIOUS consideration should be given to the University's physi- cal layout Instead of the present central core of academic buildings, surrounded by a periphery of resi- dence halls, the University should be composed of classroom facili- ties and residence facilities situ- ated next to each other through- out the campus, and in the same building wherever possible. If faculty could be interested in this project, the possibility is to have faculty members spend their sabbaticals as residence hall ad- visors. In order to make classes smaller, formal class sessions should be abolished in those cases where they are clearly unnecessary for the course work. This would free faculty time for teaching classes in which a formal class session is helpful. IF THE UNIVERSITY is to suc- ceed in building an academic community, students must be much more helpful than they have been in the past. A great concern of Student Government Council's Committee on the University, the Literary College Steering Com- mittee and the academics beat of The Daily should be with the problems of the academic com- munity in the University. This means that both The Daily and the Council committee should be making substantive comments and proposals on these topics and the LSA steering committee should be considering the whole topic of curriculum requirements and content from the point of view of their effects on the -creation of an academic community. All these groups should also be pressing for more student partici- pation in making the actual de- cisions about what, generally and specifically, goes into the cur- riculum and' the curriculum re- quirements. It is to be hoped that students and faculty living together in the residence halls will be a first step in getting stu- dents to comment on their cur- riculum. A 4' By PHILIP SUTIN Daily Staff Writer THE UNITED STATES is in trouble in Laos all because it put its money on the wrong horses. Now this country is faced with the gravest crisis since Rus- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLE TIN (Continued from Page 2) pert Vigors) at Cedar Creek Forest, Anoka and Isanti Counties, Minnesota," Mon., May 14, 2009 Museums Bldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, W. H. Burt. Doctoral Examinatio for Frank Mere- dith Andrews, Social Psychology; thesis: "Creativity and the Scientist," Mon., May 14, 5609 Haven Hall, at 3:00 p.m. S. A. Mednick and D. C. Pelz, co-chair- men. Doctoral Examination for Henrietta TenHarmsel, English Language & Lit- erature; thesis: "Jane Austen's Use of Literary Conventions," Mon., May 14, 2601 Haven Hal, at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, R. C. Boys, Doctoral Examination for Aloysius Ed- ward Misko, Education; thesis: "An In- vestigation into the Validity of Three Employment Tests of a Clerical Per- sonnel Selection Program," Mon., May 14. E. Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 7:30 p.m. Chairman,3. TM. 'rytten. Doctoral Examination for John Stu- art Goodman, Linguistics; thesis: "The Syntax of the Verb 'To Be' in Malory's Prose," Mon., May 14, 2601 Haven Hail, at 7:30 p.m. Chairman, J. W. Downer. sian and American tank muzzles were pointed at each other at Berlin's Checkpoint Charlie. President Kennedy, meeting yes- terday with his advisors, pondered solutions to this intractible crisis. They are now faced with five stopgap alternatives, none of which is entirely satisfactory. 1) Let the situation remain as it is. Laos will fall into the hands of the pro-Communists without much trouble. According to press dispatches a large part of the royal forces have fled into Thai- land. If that country follows tra- ditional international practice, it may intern them, ending any use- fulness they might have had. * * * 2) APPLY DIPLOMATIC and military pressure to all sides in the Laos war to effect a cease- fire and continued coalition gov- ernment negotiations. This is ap- parently the road the Kennedy ad- ministration has chosen for the moment. By ordering naval troops to Thailand to "show the flag," and by alerting U. S. forces, the Administration hopes to convince all Laotian factions, the Chinese and the Russians that the United States has an active interest in maintaining the status quo. Simul- taneously it will pressure the Rus- sians to end tacit acceptance of the Pathet Lao drive and retain the neutral Laos they had agreed to. 3) Begin active Southeast Treaty Organization intervention. Ac- cording to the SEATO charter, 4) Intervene informally. The United States is applying this solu- tion in Viet Nam by using military assistance advisors in both train- ing and combat roles with limited success. 5) Intervene directly. The wire services said Friday that some Kennedy advisors were thinking in these terms. However, the prob- lems of geography, climate, a hos- tile local populus, and internation- al politics make this an unlikely solution. The French experience of fighting eight years of dibilitat- ing guerilla warfare should deter followers of this course of action. - * * * HOWEVER, none of these seems to point to a permanent solution to the Laos crisis. Past United States errors have caused damage beyond repair. Seven years of misused foreign aid, corruption, and Central Intellegence Agency directed revolution against the wishes of Laotion people have eroded the United States 'position. Its erstwhile puppet Gen. Phoumi Nosovan has turned against his benefactor so that now with the Laotion army collapse the United States is prepared to write him off. Even the latest goal of a neutral Laos seems withering away since the new Red offensive. So Laos seems all but lost, but its lessons may save Viet Nam. A government cannot survive un- der crisis for an extended period of time if it does not have the sympathy of its masses. In Laos r :I