Seventy-First Year - EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 'Where Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" 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. "Just Give Me A Hand With This First One, Son' U i1) Move UN To West .Berlin a By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press News Analyst PREMIER KHRUSHCHEV'S remark that West Berlin might make an appropriate home for the United Nations hints at Soviet groping for means of backing away from a crisis which has given the rest of the world an attack of war jitters. It is doubtful Khrushchev was serious about the proposal as such, or that he had any expectation it would be welcome in the form it:was made. The way he advanced the idea, it seemed loaded in his own favor. Among UN delegates, U.S. leaders, West Germans or West Berliners DAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDITH OPPENHEIM Underdeveloped Nations Key to UN Future rHE MICHIGAN SENATE may not be very representative of population, but it has nothing on the United Nations General As- embly, with its one-vote-per-nation represen- ation. While the so-called "big" powers are ickering about the fnture of the UN, the World is waiting and watching to see how the mall nations will use their 80 votes, which epresent only one fourth of the UN's con- tituency and a tiny fraction of the world's conomic power. It has always seemed that these countries ire quick to concede to the Reds. For instance, he United States has always been afraid to lebate the question of admitting Red China o the UN because it would be allowed mem- iership due to appeasement by neutrals. But the whole China question has been clipsed by the biggest crisis in UN history' concerning the future executive leadership f the world organization. While the Red Relief Measure SINGLE BILL is holding up the adjourn- ment of Congress. One would expect, in- this time of crisis, that his measure deals with foreign policy. Or, erhaps, it is some great program to improve he economy and reduce unemployment. May- e it is a measure extending civil rights? Actually, the bill in question is a relief easure for duPolt stockholders who must all their, General Motors holdings. Conservative senators are refusing to expedite he consideration of an important supplemental ppropriations bill. By delaying this measure he required three days, they are forcing Con- ress to consider this bill now rather than next anuary as originally planned. N THIS ERA when the underdeveloped na- tions of the world have acutely perceived heir poverty and yearn for economic advance- ent, and when technoloyg is impoverishing nd unemploying millions of workers at home, is ridiculous for the work of Congress to be eld' up to enrich a few stockholders of the orld's biggest and most profitable companies. It is the height, of hypocrisy for the con- ervative senators who oppose any measure aid people at home and abroad to insist hat Congress stay in session to aid a few in- ividuals who probably do not need the money nyway. Congress should reconsider this situation st it makes a fool of itself before the world. -P.D.S. China question was (and is) basically one of moral judgment and emotion, the executive crisis is one of completely practical politics. And the very life of the small nations may depend on their willingness to stand firm against Communist intimidation. THE SOVIET UNION has the political power to stall the operations of the UN. until it gets the Secretary-General repaced by a three- man executive council. As Khrushchev well knows if he has ever driven a "troika," only one of the three horses pulling the cart need go astray to end the ride in chaos. Concession to the Russian proposal will mean stagnation and death for the UN. Un- fortunate as it is, power and force are the only means to maintain peace in this world. The small nations' only hope for security rests in international military strength which can protect them from being digested, whether under the banner of "colonialism" or "libera- tion." It is conceivable the Russians will agree to another Secretary-General, but if they do, the man they endorse will be one they can count on not to get in the way if, some in- cipient nation looks ready for admission to the Great Communist Brotherhood. And Russia is holding all the high cards this time-it can stall and stall until one of these alternatives is selected by the UN. ("Would you prefer the gas chamber or the electric chair?") THE ONLY POSSIBLE way out is for the neutral nations to farm such a vigorous and uncompromising opposition to Soviet schem- ing that the Reds are forced to cooperate. Even this is taking a real chance. When Russia resumed atomic tests during the Bel- grade conference of neutralists, it said, in ef- fect, that world opinion no longer is a con- sideration in Soviet planning. And the neutrals, in failing to rise in in- dignation against the Russian affront, in- dicated that they may well concede to one. of the deadly alternatives facing the UN at the moment. IT HAS ALWAYS turned out before that if the Communists are met with determination they will eventually concede for the moment and wait patiently for the next chance to intimidate their opponents. Perhaps they are beyond this now. Perhaps if the neutralists give them any trouble this time they will leave the UN entirely. But it is worth the risk, because a UN stag- nated to the level of a debating society would have little meaning in the present world crisis. -RICHARD OSTLING Associate Editorial Director THE KAMEN CASE: Punishment by Draft? By JEFFREY HEUER LAST DECEMBER, Brandeis graduate Charles S. Kamen, 21 years of age, incurred the wrath of his draft board (or the Miami Rotary Club, which are all but the same thing) by mocking and otherwise creating disturbance at a Rotary Club showing of the controversial film, "Operation Abolition." In June Kamen received pre- liminary Peace Corps acceptance. When Kamen, supported by a letter from the Peace Corps, ap- plied for the customary draft de- ferment granted by Peace Corps candidates, he was turned down. It seems that his actions had so enraged the local patriots that they' decided he was unfit for Peace Corps service. In fact the president of the draft board said at the time, "Young Kamen would be better placed in the service where he would be taught Amer- icanism, than in the Peace Corps where he would teach it." IN THIS GRAVE MATTER, it is almost incidental that these worthies take it upon themselves to assume that the function of the Peace Corps is to teach "Americanism." It is not. They are teaching skills that, hope- fully, will help underdeveloped nations to improve their lot. Of course it is expected that their work will result in increased un- derstanding and good will between the participating countries, but this is a by-product. It would be interesting to hear a definition of this nebulous "Americanism" that the local draft board feels Kamen lacks, but would acquire in the service, where high-ranking officers have been dismissed for showing the __.. BERTRAND RUSSELL: The Rationale For Dissent Integration IT IS REALLY sickening to find a "citizen" with so little feeling for his country and what it stands for that he hands a tremendous propaganda victory to the Soviet Union at a ime when its public relations is at such a low bb. Yet such a man is William Clark, a Negro n Newark, New Jersey, who sent his 14-year- )d daughter Huldah to school in Moscow esterday. Huldah was enrolled in the Essex County Vocational School for Girls, which Clark calls "Jim Crow type school within the Negro ghetto." There are a lot of ways to improve local chool systems, but Clark and his fellow mem- ers of the Committee for the Promotion of he Education of Negroes in Russia have pre- erred to reach for the grand scale. When Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev was in the Uhited States last fall, Clark's group got him o promise an education for Huldah.. Good >ld Uncle Nikita, always willing to don the father image when it yields political profit, aid 'yes' and dreamed of headlines in Pravda. THIS IS NOT to criticize educational ex- changes with Russia. As long as they are intellectual excursions and not political foot- balls, they can prove very useful. Not only does Clark's action tend to discredit such ex- changes, but he has put his daughter in a difficult position by his antics while she really is not in a position to choose what is best for herself. The American Negro's willingness to work patiently for improvement of his status is an example to all peoples and all races. Clark's move can only act to discredit legitimate Ne- gro action groups in the minds of the public.' "I'd rather send my daughter to Moscow than to Mississippi," the activist inanely told reporters. Well, we might too, .if put in this position, except for these other considerations. When the furor dies down and Huldah is attending classes in Russia, we can only hope she finds less racial prejudice than some Afri- can college students have discovered in the same situation. It would be too ironic. --R.O. (EDITOR'S ,NOTE: Following is Bertrand Russell's statement to the court on being sentenced to prison September 12 in an effort to. pre- vent earcivil disobedience rally against nuclear war called for Sep- tember 17.) THE COURT PERMITS, I should like to make a short statement as to the reasons for my presentcourse. This is. my personal statement, but I hope that those who are accused of the same so-called crime will be in sympathy with what I have to say. "It was only step by step and with great reluctance that we were driven to non-violent civil disobedience. "Ever since the bomb was drop- ped on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, I have been profoundly troubled by the danger of nuclear war. I'began my attempts to warn people by entirely orthodox meth- ods. I expressed my fears in a speech in the House of Lords three months after the bombs were dropped on Japan. I called to- gether scientists of the highest eminence from all parts of the world and am now Chairman of,. their periodic meetings. They issue wise and reasoned reports con- cerning nuclear warfare, its prob- able disastrous results, and ways of preventing its occurrence. No newspaper notices these reports and they have no effect either on Government or on public opinion. The popular press minimizes and ridicules the efforts of those work- ing against nuclear warfare, and television with rare exceptions is closed to us. In recent months one 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 television company, and only one, offered me two minutes for gen- eral platitudes, but when I said I should wish to speak on Berlin the offer was withdrawn. "IT HAS SEEMED to some of us that, in a country supposed to be a democracy, the public should know the probable consequences of present Great Power politics in East and West. Patriotism and humanity alike urged us to seek some way of saving our country and the world. No one can desire the slaughter of our families, our friends, our compatriots, and a majority of the human race, in a contest in which there will be only vanquished and no victors. We feel it a profound and inescapable duty to do everything in our power to make the facts known and thereby save at least a thousand million lives. We cannot escape' this duty by submitting to orders which, we are convinced, would not be issued if the likelihood and the horror of nuclear war were more gener- ally understood.... "Non-violent disobedience was forced upon us by the fact that it was more fully reported than any other method of making the facts known, andthat it caused people to ask what had induced us to adopt such a course of action. We who are here accused are prepared to suffer imprisonment because we believe that this is the most effec- tive way of working for the salva- tion of our country and the world. If you condemn us you will be helping our cause, and therefore serving humanity. "While life remains to us, we will not cease to do what lies in our power to avert the greatest calamity that has ever threatened mankind." -Bertrand Russell Footnote very movie that is the cause of the present controversy. The defi- nition evidently does not include freedom of speech. Kamen's original action is no longer the issue. Heckling may or may not have been the proper avenue for voicing an objection. In certain cases it is the only way. While Kamen's action may or may not be defensible, there can be no justification for that of the draft board. THE PEACE CORPS has a very extensive program for selecting candidates. There is a preliminary acceptance based on transcripts, references, and other information submitted by the applicant. This is basically a negative choice. Those who are obviously not qual- ified are eliminated. Final selec- tion is made near the end of the training period. It is based on per- formance during training and in- terviews with psychologists, ex- perts on the designated foreign country and Peace Corps admin- istrators. Roughly two-thirds of those given preliminary accept- ance go overseas. It would appear obvious that it is the Peace Corps and not local draft board 46 which is'qualified' to choose its members. Out of 500 cases, Kamen's is the only one where a deferment was not grant- ed. It seems safe to assume that the Miami board has no greater insight than any of the others. Without a deferment Kamen is of no use to the Peace Corps. He cannot even leave the country. If, at the time of final selection, Ka- men is a borderline case, the se- lection committee will be in an almost untenable position. If they accept him, there is a good chance they will not be able to use him. If they do not accept him, it will look as though they succumbed to outside pressure. * * * BUT THERE IS still a more basic issue. It directly concerns every male, eligible for the draft, but indirectly every American. The selective service system is, at best, a necessary evil. Military service, admittedly, can be a good thing for some. A majority of these individuals find their way into the service sooner or later. Others, who normally would have no need of it, are forced to serve in the interests of national de- fense-all well and good. However, even in times of na- tional crises-such as these-all eligible males are not needed, and the administration of the selec- tion of those who are needed must be handled with the utmost in- tegrity and impartiality. When, as was the case in Miami, the draft can be used as a weap- on to punish those who, in the eyes of self-appointed judges, have committed some wrong, then the entire system is in grave dan- ger. There are well-established criteria on which to base selec- tion. Political views should never be one of them-nor should any other standard that fails to ad- here strictly to an established sys- tem.I Kamen's appeal of his classifi- there appears little disposition to anything more than a probing thrust. Few see any practical pur- pose in the idea of moving the UN to Berlin. But students of Soviet strategy note that the Russians now, sud- denly, are professing to see signs of change in Western attitudes. A good guess is that in the Soviet timetable it is expedient to ease off a bit, permitting the Kremlin to concentrate on the 20-year inter- nal program it is about to propa- gandize at the October congress. IN MOSCOW eyes the Berlin tension probably served its pur- poses. It was an excuse for re- newed Soviet nuclear testing and military buildup. It created an at- mosphere in which Soviet people could be told they were forced to wait indefinitely for any marked increase in light industry production for consumers. It pro- vided an excuse for postponing promises, such as the shorter work week. It supplied a pretext for dragooning satellite economies un- der over-all Moscow planning and control. Seeming to feel his way cau- tiously, Khrushchev casually re- marked, in a talk with a British leftist Aug. 31 that it would be all right with him if the UN moved to West Berlin. And early this week, the Soviet government newspaper Izvestia said the idea deserved attention and "shows again the favorable opportunities for West Berlin that will be created by its conversion into a demilitarized city." That clearly showed how the proposal was weighted. West Berlin first would be abandoned by West- ern occupation forces - a key Khrushchev demand-even before there was any talk about moving. the UN there. In the unlikely event this gam- bit was taken seriously, the West would surrender its Berlin rights. West Berlin would be isolated in a Communist sea. The Russians could talk forever about the next step, without permitting the idea to get anywhere. KHRtJSHCHEV in any case ad- vances his own propaganda. A year ago in New York he insisted the UN should be moved out of the United States. The Berlin headquarters idea keeps the prop-1 aganda alive. And in some quar- ters, it has its effect. Queried on the idea, Ali Sas- troamidjojo of neutralist Indo- nesia, which has some influence in Africa and Asia, said it seemed to be the "general consensus that we move from New York." The Indonesian added, however, that if the UN had to move it should be to a "more pleasant, a more quiet place." He suggested Vienna. Ambassador Luis Padilla Nervo of Mexico, disarmament commis- sion chairman and a former as- sembly president, said the UN should remain in New York. He added that if the assembly so elects, it can meet whenever it wants in Berlin without changing the headquarters. The West would hardly look favorably upon a UN headquarters deep inside Red territory and thus possibly subject to Soviet-Com- munist influences. West Berlin as it is constitutes a symbol of resist- ance to Communism. In any other circumstances it would be likely to lose that symbolism. Birth WHAT IS HOPEFUL about the national movements that have emerged in modern Africa is their unembarrassed eclecticism-their readiness to draw intelligently at the same time on the Western democratic (including within this the Marxist) tradition and on their own indigenous resources: their efforts to assert the moral wealth and Ydignity of individuals against the racialists; to push for- ward the frontiers of liberty against the representatives of au- thority and legitimacy; to develop the idea of common African needs and interests against the particu- larists; to insist on peaceful co- existence against the advocates of power blocs and nuclear deter- rents; to remind the world of the possibilities of human happiness in the face of the prophets of doom. In doing this they have follow- ed in the tracks of earlier revolu- tionary movements, no doubt; but they have given old principles a new application and meaning. Americans, in particular, are in- clined to argue that Africans must be democrats in their sense of the term - meaning "Western values," anticommunism, two- party systems, free enterprise, regard Khrushchev's remarks as LETTERS* Red China Overdue To the Editor: 0UR LONG-RUN HOPES for peace in the world might re- ceive vital aid soon from a humili- ating U. S. defeat in the United Nations. The lack of cooperation from our allies, the Chinese Na- tionalist, may' have upset our government's plan to stall UN seating of Communist China. If it is the primary purpose of the UN to promote peace by re- conciling international conflicts without war, this is an event long overdue. The U.S.'s humiliation would be a much-deserved pun- ishment for the reactionary nature of our opposition which seems to place national pride and revenge ahead of peace. THOSE WHO oppose the ad- mission of Communist China be- cause of her acts of aggression do not take account of the axiom of psychology which states that one of the major causes of aggression is frustration. With a proud dic- tator as with any person, being denied recognition is an obvious form of frustration. Further denial of recognition will inevitably cause further aggressive feelings and further aggressive actions on the part of Red China. THIS TAKES an enormous sig- nificance when we consider that China presents the greatest threat of nuclear war. Whereas the Rus- sian "overnment and the Russian people fear nuclear war, the Chi- nese may be less alarmed at the prospect of a nuclear war than at the prospect of a conventional war. The Chinese will soon have nu- clear weapons. The U.S. and Rus- sia would be crippled by war and China might well emerge the most powerful nation on earth. With tens of millions of her civilian population starving, great loss of life is not of vital importance, but sending millions of her most able- bodied Workers to fight in a for- eign battlefield would be a crush- ing burden to her economy. Travelers report that the Rus- sian people are friendly to the U.S., but that the soaring Chinese population hates the U.S. We are blamed for their heavy arms ex- penditures which they can so ill afford. The UN cannot alleviate the bad feeling between the U.S. and China if China is refused access to the arena of conciliation. We might well remember that Russia sees us as rivals, whereas the Chinese see us as bitter ene- mies. --J. L. Allen, Jr., Grad. Cooperation... To the Editor: IN REGARD to your news article and editorial about the Michi- gan House Plan in today's Daily, I would readily admit that the Inter-Quadrangle Council has in the past had its differences with the Assistant Dean of Men John M. Hale, but I hardly think that the impression of "total war" that was given in your article gives an accurate view of the size of these differences. There have been many items in the past that have shown that a true spirit of cooperation has ex- isted, and in result produced many fine improvements in our residence halls system. I am also sure that tinue in the future and that a new and feasible Michigan House Plan as well as uncountable other pro- jects will arise from it. --Thomas Moch, President Inter-Quadrangle Council Retreat .. . To the Editor: SOME DAYS AGO, on a Sunday, I happened to be passing through the Galveston area of southern Texas. The center of the hurricane "Carla" was only about thirty miles distant and all local radio stations were giving infor- mation about various local events which had been cancelled because of the storm. I was most surprised to hear announcements that sev- eral churches in the area would not be holding the usual evening services.'This struck me as an interesting observation on modern afif*a t nnna-nnn jrinanfncq, *1 ; JSSELL'S 'PRANKS': Pacifists Say 'Red and Dead' ONDON'S TRAFALGAR SQUARE is perhaps best known for its thousands of tame 'eons, wheeling in sudden circles about the intains as they zero in for crumbs from rist's hands. 3ut Sunday, these pigeons were not in the adlines. Instead, fun-loving Bertrand Russell I several hundred of his satellite pacifists tinguished themselves by getting .carted off jail for "civil disobedience"-a sit-down nonstration in Trafalgar Square for uni- eral disarmament. jAg jtjjjn Rally Now, we have little against unilateral dis- armament. It is a fine, round-sounding term that flows off liberal tongues like honey. But- and perhaps here we're old fashioned-we hold the notion that perhaps it would be safest to let the Russians unilaterally disarm FIRST. SINCE KHRUSHCHEV seems rather opposed to this course, we cannot help asking why the pacifists don't demonstrate in the Soviet Union-at least to give the Soviets a chance of hearing the world peace gospel, anyway. Those who insist on juvenile pranks and headline-snatching stunts such as Russell's seem almost on the level of infants throwing temper tantrums. The article on pacifist dem- onstrations written by Champaign's Gene Keyes