Man In Space 4r 3441ga &ziRt 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' wiU Prevail" TSTUDENT 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. EDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDITH OPPENHEIM s~ Through the Hoop For Hopwoods NOVELIST SAUL BELLOW has appealing eyes. You can see them, or at least a rep- resentation, inside this year's "official publi- cation" describing, the Avery Hopwood and Jule Hopwood Awards in "Creative Writing. Bellow, the Hopwood lecturer last spring, moves in to replace Theodore Roethke whose photo graced the pages last year. Uunfortunate- ly, however, the "same old rules" which greet- ed us last year still prevail. University students seeking to get their hands on the generous Hopwood stipends to further their writing caree'rs or some other aspect of their academic life must be carrying 12 hours, of credit (graduate students need only nine) to compete. They must also achieve a C average this semester. Grads, with a lighter load, are obligated to amass a 3.0 mark. MANUSCRIPTS must be submitted, mind you, on 100 per cent rag paper, 16 pound weight, 81/2 by 11 inches, at least for the original. For some odd, mystic reason carbons of the original work (two are required) may be done on "any white paper of good quality and of at least 13- pound weight." Watermarks are not specified.: After hurdling these relatively non-contro- versial limitations of his personal freedom, the would-be Hopwooder faces the tough one. Some- where in his schedule of academic elections, he must squeeze in one course in composition in the English language and literature depart-' ment or in the journalism department. The course need not be taken in the fall semester. If the contestant feels he has penned a Winner during the Christmas recess, he can elect his comp course or one in the editorial during the spring. But he has to have one. UST WHY this is so has never been clear. Mr. Hopwood asked that the prizes go to stu- dents in the department of rhetoric, now non- existent. I suppose that the Hopwood commit- tee believes that a student interested enough and talented enough to spend his time writing material suitable for the contest would be in- terested enough in critical advice to elect courses where his writing ability could be as- sayed and aided. At least, he ought to be in- terested. This is not true, however, of all people who enjoy writing, or who happen to be any good at it. There are many students on the campus who are not majoring in English or creative writ- ing or journalism, but who write. Their reg- ularly elected field of concentration may not afford enough time to complete the work of a regular course or, composition or they may not desire the requirements of writing on a schedule. (In the manner of C. P. Snow and Winston Churchill.) Moreover, the motivation to express oneself in a poem, play or novel has no necessary cor- relation to the desire behind the election of newswriting. T IS TRUE that Hopwood's will specifies students in the rhetoric department, and that the present rules may be a liberal interpreta- tion of his language. It would be no stretch of' his interpretation to include those electing any course in the English department. And con- sidering that rhetoric is no longer considered an independent discipline, but which has man- ifestations in every field, a still wider inter- pretation is possible. If the committee fears that it would not be faithful to the Hopwoods' desire, they should. note that Hopwood further specified that the contents of the compositions not be confined to academic subjects, "but shall be allowed ;the widest possible latitude, and that the new, the unusual and the radical shall be especially en- couraged." This uplifting line shows that the spirit be- hind Avery Hopwood's bequest to the Univer- sity was one seeking the widest possible arena of discussion. To further this concept, one can- not rest with guaranteeing the freedom of topic; the freedom of who shall write is equal- ly as important. -MICHAEL OLINICK r 4 k }^'N s '.J_; j N W/ I', TODAY AND TOMORROW: When Gen. Clay Was Overheard By WALTER LIPPMANN WHAT GEN. CLAY said to the newspapermen at the cocktail party in West Berlin has aroused a certain amount of perfunctory criticism in West Germany and a perfunctory denial from American official sources. As a matter of fact, what he said has not really been denied, and it is significant to see that it has note seriously been opposed. He said that the West Germans would have to face the fact that East Germany exists and that the hope of eventual reunification lies in an increasing contact and a negotiation between the two German states. Although this is the simple and obvious truth, it was startling to find it in print. For this is the first- time that a truly responsible and informed leader has said out loud what has long been a commonplace in private conversations. * ,* * * EARLY IN 1958, for example, I was in Bonn, as well as in Paris, London and Berlin. Wherever I went, it was taken for granted-as being too self-evident for serious discussion-that the official promise of reunification by means of a general German election was un- realizable. The. Soviets would not permit German reunification inside the Western alliance; the French and the British did not want it. Although I had known this much, what surprsied me was what I heard in Bonn from an official whom I must not identify but who was both highly responsible and fairly informed. He explained to me at length that the two Germanys in the past fifteen years had grown so far apart that it was idle now to talk about reuniting them under a single elected government. There are by now enormous ideological, religious, and political obstacles to an attempt to fuse the historically Protestant and Socialist East, Germany with the con- servative and Catholic West. These basic difficulties are complicated by the relative richness of West Germany and the poverty of the East. I remember well his telling me that the Bonn authorities had made a very careful study of the problems and the economic consequences of reunification, and that the study showed that if West Germany were to be taxed to finance the rise of the East German standard of life to the West German level, it would mean forcing down the West German level by about one-third over a considerable number of years. I I .I t+ ~1 It ': . : I , r r- b. t4j:. f Z; i(N LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Keep Red Chna hOut, 0lertime: Student Autonomy By SUSAN FARRELL BY A NEARLY unanimous vote, delegates to the United States National Student As- sociations' August conference passed a basic policy declaration condemning "the tradition of 'in loco parentis' and the educational habits and practices it justifies." Demonstrating profound understanding of a, student's obligation to his own intellect as well as to his society, eloquently protesting the obstacles many universities deliberately or unthinkingly raise to the fulfillment of this obligation, the declaration presents an intel- lectually and emotionally powerful argument against paternalism. "USNSA continues to affirm the belief that the, university must not restrict those freedoms of thought, associations and action which are simultaneously the prerequisites of a fully democratic social order and personal develop- ment," it says in part. And then . . . "the vision toward which we strive is that of a. democratic university in which all share certain rights of participation in matters of common concern, and of freedom of inquiry, association, and development, and where paternalism is replaced by fellowship in the company of scholars." BUT IN THE agonizingly slow process pre- ceding any significant change in Univer sity policy, this argument is disappointingly ineffective. The administration simply does not (or cannot, perhaps) undertake reorgan- ization of the Office of Student Affairs, clari- fication of the Student Government Council plan or consideration of a new speaker policy in terms of furthering "a fully democratic social order" or of establishing a "company of scholars." If student opposition to paternalism-as a philosophy or as a mode of operation (inter- ference with the judiciary structure, reversal of SGC decisions on matters within its proper jurisdiction)-is to be as effective as it could be in producing desired changes, some other, additional line of argument must be found. ONE SUCH ARGUMENT is suggested by Yves R. Simon's discussion of the functions of authority. Concede, for a moment and for discussions' Editorial Staff JOHN ROBERTS, Editor PHILIP SHERMAN HARVEY MOLOTCH L, Personnel Director sake, the University's necessity, to exercise some sort of paternal authority. (In hard fact, some of it is required by state laws- those pertaining to the possession of alcoholic beverages by minors, for example.) Such authority, according to Simon, has three charac- teristics: it aims at the proper good of the governed, it is made necessary by a deficiency in the governed and is therefore not essen- tial but "substitutional," its purpose is educa- tional and so it aims at its own disappearance. FROM THESE CHARACTERISTICS, one point emerges: it is impossible to profess the principle of paternal authority without at the same time professing a "principle of autonomy." For the main purpose of paternal direction is that the governed attain the ability for self-government. "With regard to the proper good either of the individual or the group, the possibility of self-government makes it obligatory for authority to disappear," Simon says, "and the possibility of progress toward self- government makes it obligatory for authority to follow the ways of such progress . . . If paternal authority remains necessary past the earliest possible date for its disappearance, it has failed to a degree; if it intends its own maintenance and manages things in such a way as not to have to disappear, it is guilty of abominable abuse." The dissolving of paternal authority into autonomy has, in other words, very little to do with democracy; it has a great deal to do with logic and justice. BUT THE DISSOLUTION of paternal author- ity raises special questions in a university community. The concept is much easier to posit in a parent-child or mother country- colony relationship, for in both of these the coming of age of the child can be determined with some precision. In a university a genera- tion is four years long-and the citizens are always the same age. Yet the obligation of authority to work for its own disappearance cannot be denied, for by such denial it ceases to be paternal-and begins to live a lie. One alternative remains: the deliberate, self-conscious creation of a tradition of auton- omy. The University has moved in this direction. The Daily, for example, is free of faculty or administrative control. Student Government Council has broad power of considerable sub- stance (much of which it does not exercise). Students will be appointed to the study com- (Letters to the Editor should be limited to 300 words, typewritten and double spaced. The Daily re- serves the right to edit or withhold any letter. Only signed letters will be printed.) To the Editor: AS I RETURN to graduate school, after two years in the Army, I find myself aghast at the kind of fuzzy thinking which can appear in as fine a paper as The Daily. I am referring to Har- vey Molotch's tirade against rea- son which appeared in Saturday's edition under the saddening title "A United Nations Needs Red China."' It appears that Mr. Molotch has tried to apply the universality of his left-wing logic to a problem which transcends Liberal-Con- servative differences. It is to me a naive and immature approach, the failure of which I hope was as evident to all who read the ar- ticle as it was to me. * * * AN EXAMPLE of this is Mr. Molotch's assertion that one of the reasons behind the United States' opposition to Red China's admission to the UN has been the placating of America's right- wing. Yet he accurately observes that this policy began under Mr. Truman, and is continued under Mr. Kennedy. Are these two Pres- idents men of principle, doing what they think right, or did they abandon their ideals to placate a minority? I'm sure there is no truth to the latter. My main objection, however, lies in the fact that it always grieves me to see a position being defend- ed by unsubstantiated assertions, as Mr. Molotch has done. By way of example. 1. ". . . no country except the United States and a handful of others . . . can see and logic in (U.S. arguments against Red China's admission)." This is sim- ply not the case. 2. "Bending to the wind is cer- tainly better than being blown over." Is it? The United States used to have a considerable say in determining the way these winds blew. I like to think it still does. 3. "Preventing Red China or East Germany or any country on earth from participating in world organization is a blatant disregard for the original purpose of the UN."-Ridiculous! A righteous, pompous crying in the wilderness. If the U.S. thought Red China and East Germany were "any coun- try," the opposition of their ad- mission would be devoid of rea- son. But they are not, and a sim- ple knowledge of the contents of the Charter of the UN will explain the difference. One must first know what this Charter is about. Then take anotheV look at Red China. 4. "... any of the exaggerated problems caused for the West by a Red China in the UN are dwarf- ed in comparison to the key is- sues of the day-issues which in What is there in the admission of Red China to the UN that would change this? 5. "We will . . . bear the onus for destroying the earth's only realistic hope for survival." - I assume that this means the UN will be destroyed, with the United States to blame, if Red China is not admitted. No comment. * * * THE HEART of the problem is that the United States is "dedi- cated to the proposition that all men are created equal, with cer- tain, inalienable rights," and is equally dedicated to peace. The United Nations operates on the same theory, which is the only factor by which people, usually our enemies, seek to call it an anrm of the West. Red China does not believe these ideas. Therefore, the problem reduces itself to this: either we stand on principle, which IS NOT suddenly imprac- tical, or we do not. So I ask the question which the article failed to answer: WHY does a 'United Nations' need Red China? -John F. Diebel Criterion *. * To the Editor: HAVING RECOGNIZED and "played ball" with other total- itarian states, I agree with Har- vey Molotch-editorial, Michigan Daily, Sept. 23-that it seems somewhat ridiculous for our na- tion to oppose the seating of Red China in the UN. However, I have'long advocated that we establish a criterion which all nations who seek our recogni- tion and good will should be re- quired to meet, regardless of what means they used to come into pow- er. This criterion would insist that such nations submitproofsthat at least two, bona fide political par- ties are being permitted to oper- ate within their boundaries. If they cannot submit such proof, we should withhold our recogni- tion and should sever diplomatic relations with those nations which we have previously recognized and who stilleoperate under a one- party .system. * * * AS FAR AS I KNOW, there exists only one type of "one-par- ty" system which is satisfactory to all concerned. That is the pro- cedure which one usually finds in the average Parent-Teachers-As- sociation. In these organization, it is customary to appoint a nomi- nating committee which prepares one slate of candidates for office. At election time, nominations from the floor are permitted. None are ever made because most of us are too lazy to offer our services. As a result, the previously prepared slate of candidates is votedin without a dissenting vote.. This procedure is in accordance with Robert's Rules of Order. The totalitarian states are very careful in their compliance with parliamentary procedure-except country always sees eye to eye concerning its representatives is to insult the intelligence of even a moron. And, to continue to hope for fruitful negotiations or peace- ful co-existence with such repre- sentatives, is to exhibit the intel- ligence of an imbecile. -E. J. Steiner, Illini '33 Milk-Drinkers . To the Editor: Y ENGLISH IS POOR, but I: will try to answer the article by Mr. Gerald Storch. The very simple reason why for- eign students do aggregate in groups of their own or culturally similar nationalities is said in this phrase: "because of their similar cultural background." That means that understanding betweeni a Eu- ropean and an Asiatic is easier than between a European and an American. * * * STUDENTS in the Old World are young men, not children. These young men are used to be- having like men. They are educat- ed to face all realities of their future life, which certainly can- not exclude such 'depraved' things as alcohol! The European and Asiatic stu- dents are not only used to alco- hol, but they are carefully taught to appreciate it, to understand it -to know at what time, where and how to enjoy it. And they are used to handling it with disci- pline. Alcohol belongs in theOld World to the culture and tradi- tion, just like art. The American student, in the opinion of Europeans, has the 'air' of an old maid. He is milk-drink- ing, soft, mild-minded and afraid. He is afraid of telling his own opinion. He is afraid of the opin- ion of those around toward him- self. He is afraid to be different, while Europeans are proud to be --every single person-a single character with single individual- ity. Hundreds of American stu- dents are speaking, thinking, eat- ing, living and acting in the same way, without any sign of individ- uality. As it was said, the American young men are milk-drinkers. In the Old World a milk-drinking man is a curiosity, something ad- verse, unnatural and womanish. . * * * THE YOUNG MEN from the Old World are used to a strong man's life, with experiences and relations with the opposite sex. The Euro- pean girls dislike men without any experiences; men who are not ready for life, for love-like an unboiled egg., Young Europeans will not marry during their student-time. The very few doing so are not the best ones. The European young men know their responsibilities toward the wife and the family. They are taught and accustomed to sup- porting a family and they know that marriage does not belong to the classroom. * * * * ARGUING WITH HIM, I insisted that however difficult reunifica- tion was, the danger of permanent partition was even greater. He did not deny this. But he replied that the reunion must come very slowly -probably in the course of a generation-and that it should be approached very gradually. When I asked him how it should be ap- proached, he replied that the two German states already had practi- cal relations, negotiated by their officials and embodied in agree- ments, which deal with currency matters, trade, and West German civilian access to Berlin on the surface. These relations should be multiplied he said, and their levels should gradually be raised to higher official forms of recognition, so that eventually Germany would become a confederation of the two German states. This is, of course, Mr. Khrushchev's proposal. But I heard it first from this high German official whose record of loyalty to the West is impeccable. The idea was bound to take hold because it fits so exactly the reality of the German situation. WE SHALL FIND, I think, that the European situation will change as the break-through proceeds from the official make-believe of German 'reunification to the practical reality of the two Germanys and their relationships. Mr. Reston reported in Monday's "New York Times" that there was disappointment in the White House over the lack of support in NATO for the President's Berlin policy. The Western governments, knowing that the main architects of that policy were men, who wanted only to stand firm and stand pat, saw no future in what they were told was the President's policy. After August 13, when the unrealism of the policy was revealed, there has been a sufficient. revival of positive thinking in Washington to open up the grim deadlock of the nuclear deaf mutes. (p) 1961 New York Herald Tribune, Inc. I CHINO-SOVIET ALLIANCE: Two-Front War Death for U.S. 0 ;I i (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following article was written by Marvi n Kalb, Soviet affairs specialist for the Columbia, Broadcasting Systemu and As. sta- tioned in Moscow.) "WHEN CHINA develops its own atomic bombs, the United States will have reached a crossroads in its history . . . China has' made no secret of the fac~t that it wishes to destroy the Tnited States. With nuclear weapons and the possibility of implicating Russia, China may decide to force America out of the Far East. Peking feels it represents the "middle kingdom," and the "middle kingdom" cannot tolerate the continued presence of American troops and influence in Korea, Formosa, Viet Nam, and Thailand. Since it is unlikely that we would simply possibility exists that we would be dragged into a major war against China. "AS IF THIS PROSPECT were not sobering enough, it should be added that this war miglht also involve the employment. of Soviet military power . . . We would be fighting a war on two fronts against two enemies that together seem to have the capacity to wipe the United States off the face of the map. It would be little con- solation if in the process we de- stroyed the Soviet Union. "If the Soviet Union managed to stay out of the war, then we would still have an extremely formidablet foe in Communist China. Even if we were victorious, we would be a tired, battered na- tion, unable to withstand the prob- able economic and political assault of the Soviet Union in the rest of the world. "So, in either case, the challenge is direct; and the challenge is mortal. Therefore, we should adopt a highly flexible foreign policy aimed at exploiting the di- visive pressures in the alliance so that Moscow and Peking. will be deprived of the opportunity of facing the United States as a united team. For we would be playing with out national survival if we based our policy on the assumption that Russia and China will inevitably break away from each other. "This is a big job, since it re- quires the seizure of the diploma- tic initiative from the Commu- abandon these nations, the- strong DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Building before 2 p.m., two days preceding publication. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 General Notices The Women's Judiciary Couneil: Trainee Program for all House Judi- ciary Chairmenis scheduled for Wed., Sept. 27, 7:30, Women's League. Topics for discussion include rules and regula- tions, judicial duties, appropriate ra- tionale, and current campus questions. Events Wednesday Seminar on Functions of a Complex Variable: Will meet in 3017 Angell Hall, Wed., Sept. 27, at 4 p.m. John Kelingos will continue his dis- cussion of recent results due to Ahi- fors and Beurling. t Placement INTERVIEW: SEPT. 29-PART-TIME- American Tobacco Company-J. w.W Ramsay will he at the Bureau of Appts. on Friday, Sept. 20, to interview sopho- more or junior men for part-time job as representative for the company on campus. Call for an 'interview. Ext. 3544. Please contact General Division, Au 'reau of Appts.," 3200, SAB, for further information. The following schools have. listed teaching vacancies for the 1962-1963 school year. White Plains, N.Y. - Elem. Fields: Most Secondary Subjects.