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 TruthWiPeai" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. 0 ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 EUROPEAN COMMON MARKET: Stress in Economic Combination Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff uriters or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. -..--r-, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT FARRELL YR Con-Con Proposals Endanger Education THE MICHIGAN FEDERATION of college Young Republican Clubs has sent delegates of the constitutional convention a list of sug- gestions ranging from a four year gubernatorial term to changes in the control of higher edu- cation. The YR's suggestions on higher education deal with the governing boards of the state- supported schools and a budgetary coordinating board. Although they suggest that the con-con maintain the constitutional status of state- supported schools, the YR's ask that members of the governing boards of each of the state- supported schools "be appointed by the legis- lature." HE STATE LEGISLATURE is a highly poli- tical body seething with partisan dissen- tion. To entrust to a small group of politicians the right to select the Regents who determine the educational policies of this University is insane. I shudder to think of the possibility (however remote) of several straight party members being, appointed (or retired) to the position of Regent., Partisan politics should remain outside the University community as much as possible. Perhaps even the present system of running for Regent on a party ticket should be changed to election on a non-partisan ballot. The State Legislature and political parties should be concerned with higher education in the 'same manner that an aware citizen is con- cerned. But the politics of the Legislature should not have a direct influence over the University through appointment of Regents. ACADEMIC FREEDOM and the strength of higher education rests upon free discus- sion and "fearless sifting and winnowing" of ideas. Higher education should be able to investigate all problems from any direction without political or economic sanctions. The, right to dissent and question is the force which strengthens our nation and leads to progress. A proposal which can lead to state control of higher education would seriously hinder progress and degrade the University. BUT, as if that were not enough, the YR's also suggest that a coordinating board be established "to investigate completely the an- nual budgets of the state-supported colleges and universities before they are submitted to the Legislature." State aid to education is not sufficient and, acting together, the state col- leges could obtain more funds. But the pos- sibility of economic choice shifting from the particular institution to the impersonal board is great. Where is this great Republican "individual- ism" that is talked about across the land? The YR's say each state-supported school should have its own governing board (a status' currently enjoyed only by the University, Michi- gan State and Wayne State). If' each college has a specific educational function to fulfill, if each college should be wholly autonomous, then why should each college filter its finan- cial problems through a coordinating board? The YR's leave the specifics of this board to tlie con-con. But could a representative from the University justify a need for a new music school to a junior college which is seeking more funds to enlarge its vocational shop program? Such dissention in the board could get even worse. What if the Legislature ap- proaches the board and says, Here is $X bil- lion for higher education. Split it up among yourselves? The situation would be as bad as it is now. It is better for each college to seek its own funds and unite when each feels the necessity, than to form a coordinating board which, in the end, represents no real progress. --HARRY PERLSTADT By RONALD WILTON Daily Staff Writer THE ENGLISH CHANNEL was bridged yesterday at a table in Paris as Great Britain sat down with France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxemborg to negotiate the fu- ture of Western Europe. The event was the start of the "preliminary" talks to consider and discuss the terms of Britain's application for membership in the Common Market. These talks are not actual negotiations-these will start in November. Rather, they will center around the nature of the concessions Britain will need to make in order to shift from a centuries-old policy of aloofness towards European af- fairs to integration into a group which could be the forerunner of an equally old dream-the United States of Europe. * * * ONCE THE NEGOTIATIONS start they must be successful. Due to the political and economic facts of life, England, the Six and, most importantly, the whole West- ern world can not afford a break- down of the talks. Failure would be disastrous. At best it would strain relations be- tween Britain and the Six se- verely; at worst. it could split the Atlantic Alliance. The gradual shift towards the unification of Europe would grind to a halt for longer than anyone would want, except perhaps the Russians. Britain's smaller friends in Europe-Denmark and Norway- would probably stay out of the Common Market if Britain were refused membership. Along with Portugal, Austria, Sweden and Switzerland they wouldnre-activate the European Free Trade Association. This would leave Western Europe divided in- to - two, economic blocs whose rivalry would greatly hurt the Western cause in the Cold War. * * * THERE WILL STILL be a Com- mon Market with or without Brit- ain. Without her it would be dominated by West Germany, a fact contemplated with less than enthusiasm by several European nations. This is partly due to memories of World War II and partly because Germany is. not considered to have had enough experience with democracy to make her ready to assume a role of leadership in the non-Com- munist world. Events in France, the only other possible leader of the Six, have tended to indicate that when de Gaulle dies, a stable governmental transition is not a surety. In ad- dition there is the war in Algeria to consider. This tends to leave Britain, with her political- maturity, the only qualified .leader in the shift to- wards European unity. ANOTHER FACT dictating Brit- ain's entrance into the Six is her own own economic condition. Britain's share of world trade has fallen as her manufactured goods have tended to be con- sumed at home rather than being exported. This has lead the Mac- millian government to adopt an austerity policy which has met with opposition from almost all segments of the British public. The Common Market, on the other hand, is the fastest-growing market in the world. In moving towards the elimination of all tariffs among themselves by 1970 and the creation of uniform tar- iffs against outside countries, their share of world trade has been growing sharply. The British know that if they don't join the Six, there is a good chance that they will be frozen out of the Continen- tal Market. Despite the above reasons, Brit- ain's application for membership in the Six has met with strong opposition from two main groups, who will be affected by the move. * * * THE FIRST SOURCE is the British Commonwealth nations, whose opposition stems from eco- nomic considerations. Under the present "Preference" system, Brit- ain imports large quantities of food, raw materials, semi-manu- factured goods and some finished goods from Commonwealth coun- tries without tariff or other re- strictions. If she joined the Com- mon Market, Britain would have to erect a tariff on many of these items, a move which would re- sult in heavy damage to the econ- omies of the various Common- wealth nations. A high Indian governmental of- ficial estimated that if Britain joins the Common Market his country would lose over $100 mil- lion a year in exports, resulting in inability to finance their de- velopment plan. The difficulty is compounded by the fact that last year Britain sent 41 per cent of her trade to the Commonwealth and only 14.5 per cent to the members of the members of the Common Market. It is in the matter of eonces- sions for Commonwealth coun- tries that the present negotia- tions are most likely to be dead- locked. Both Prime Minister Mac- millan and Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations Duncan Sandys have said that if such con- Think "T BELIEVE we should go to the moon, but I think every citi- zen of this country, as well as the members of the Congress, should consider the matter care- fully ... " --John F. Kennedy .'1 * "I Can Be Continental, Y'Know" A 4 A 4 I 4 .d A r940Tj s + 4Ffl GTO4.t os1-t >'i'ept we: By PHI P (EDITOR'S NOTE: The cupola of the Student Publications Building, pictured above, whose in- terior wails are lined with the names of past Daily senior editors, symbolizes this new series of col- umns, written by the 1961-162 senior staff. Ap- pearing twice weekly, "OVERTIME" will have seven contributors and will range widely in style, temper and subject matter.) Pharisees SHERMAN, City Editor cessions are not forthcoming and the "vital Commonwealth in- terests" are not protected, then the price to pay for joining the Six would be too high to pay. On the other hand, the members of the Common Market, especially the French, are unwilling to make any concessions which would ser- iously compromise their basic system. Proposals to settle the problem have dealt with special arrangements for special products from the Commonwealth, such as Canadian aluminum, Indian tex- tiles and Nigerian cocoa. No matter what concessions are made, the Commonwealth coun- tries can not expect to come out completely unharmed. However, in the long run they might benefit, because lessening their dependence on Britain will provide a stimulus for them to diversify their econ- omies in order to sell to a world- wide market. THE SECOND GROUP of op- ponents comes from insiderBritain herself and brings, together such diverse elements as right-wing Conservative Party members and left-wing Laborites. The former are against the move because they see it as British acknowledgment she is not a first-rate world power any more, an acknowledgment the right-wingers are not prepared-to make. The left-wingers are afraid that the move would give Euro- pean governments some share of control over Britain's economy, which would make it difficult, if not impossible, for the left-wingers to nationalize the country's in- dustries if they ever came to power. *4 * SINCE BRITAIN is aiming for an entry date of January 1, 1964, the talks can be expected to go on for some time. The world will be watching, for successful nego- AWEEK AGO, Columbia University President Grayson Kirk said Russia can't be com- pletely blamed for the world's troubles. Kirk said that Americans must realize that, "though. the Soviet Union is today an ever-present danger to the Western world, much of the same trouble and confusion of our day would have existed in about the same form if the Romanoff dynasty still ruled in Moscow. It would still be with us tomorrow if, somehow, the Soviet Union suddenly ceased to exist." Speaking along the same line, the eminent Arkansas Senator, J. W. Fulbright has said that the West is partially responsible for the present Berlin mess, because of r "mistakes" mnade in the early stages of setting up the present four-power agreements. Last summer, Fulbright deprecated the idea of "total victory" in any world conflict, saying that such victories "generate more problems than they solve." Kirk and Fulbright's comments are sympto- matic of one point of view on human relations, unfortunately more popular in Europe than in the United States, where the actual West- ern power lies. The American attitude - and often the world's attitude - has been one of "crude moralisms" in- international affairs or, alter- nately, a Pharisaical posture toward the world. The Soviets accept these terms of debate, because the resulting ideological politics cause' them no harm at all. THE PHARISAICAL ATTITUDE can be characterized in a number of ways: 1) The world is divided into' parties of "good" and "bad," with "our" side (whatever that may be) as the good. No effort is made to understand the other side, or to admit that such good-bad dichotomies just don't exist in the world of men. 2) There is a primary emphasis on ideology, on both sides. An ideology of the "good" (de- mocracy,-the state, the classless society) isr opposed to the bad (exploitation and oppres- sion, democracy, the state, the classless so- ciety.) There are slogan like "making the world- safe for democracy," "Cuba Si, Yanqui No!" and "Deutshland Uber Alles." Actions are justified and condemned on ideological grounds. No admission is made that a nation is doing something as a matter of pure self- interest, on either side. 3) "Total Victory" is a well-stated aim. The "war to end war" has to be fought so there will be peace; once the "bad" aggressors are rAafPan fad, a nn..nca 5) The Pharisaical attitude is also character- Ised by short-sight. The conflict of the moment is dramatized so that it appears that the next month of war will decide the fate of the world for a thousand years (or the German Reich, as Hitler said when his troops invaded Russia.) The conflict is phrased so that each side is fighting to preserve the human race. SUCH A POSTURE is relatively new in world politics. It really came into effective play with World War I. Previous to that-from, say, the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713 to the Sarajevo, with the exception of the French Revolution-a condition of limited-aims war and diplomacy prevailed. No effort at total victory was made, because it was realized that, destruction of part .of the world fabric of order would mean more, perhaps never-ending change. Ideology was not introduced because it would confuse and compound the issue (as it did do in the French Revolution.) War could be an "instrument of policy," and was. Came 1914, and the world seemed to change -:--or, better, the Pharisaical tendencies in men, relatively dormant since the Wars of Religion, began to come more to the forefront. The eloquence of Woodrow Wilson declaimed the moralistic attitude, though Wilson is hardly thought of as an ideologue. Lenin, Hitler, Mussolini, Roosevelt, Khrushchev, Goldwater, Nixon and Kennedy followed along the same path, always fuelling the fire of popular in- dignation and righteousness in their utter- ances, always binding themselves through their own words to demand total victory and un- conditional surrender, always condemning, never understanding. BECAUSE THEIR LEADERS do not under- stand that such a position is wrong, the people have not understood either-and now the peoples of the world are divided against each other on the basis of simple but dis- torted ideologies. There seems now to be no way out. The Soviets manipulate their popular opin- ion-but they have no reason not to phrase the conflict ideologically, because their ideol- ogy sounds good to all but the few. The Americans employ ideology too-but even when they are honest; the words of Locke and Jef- ferson and Lincoln are lost on the world's illiterate millions. Too, the American leaders can hardly ig- nore the popular opinions they have created, the John Birchers being only the most extreme example. THE ANSWER: some courage on. the part of more leaders than Senator Fulbright; and a realization, like President Kirk's, that tiations would mean the creation of a third great bloc in the world, combining over 220 million people in a prosperous and industrious union. The talks must succeed, for in that direction lie unity and a stronger Western' alliance. European unity has been talked about for centuries but this is the first time that the eventual pos- sibility, small though it now may be, has existed. If the difficulties are overcome and feet are set upon the path it could be one of the adventures of our time. War' Jitters FEAR IS A BAD foundation of i policy, an even worse one if is coupled with ill-will toward the country which is feared and toward its friends. Fear and enmity have driven the Soviets into a position (on Germany and West Berlin) from which they will obviously now have difficulty in extricating themselves even if they wanted to. "The West, not altogether blameless for the turn which events have taken (though most of the blame must fall on the Soviet Union) is on the defensive and has very little room for re- treat .. "The worst pessimists can already see the moment when the last opportunity for compromise in the narrow field in which it is now possible will have passed. Then Fate will take over from helpless men, and a war psychosis will have produced actual war." -John Gellner DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 1 4 I N Ia ls J R:A - _ .. _ ^.-". y-m, - -~ _~ - \ 04 -_ - -n _ "-i-- . -/ -_ -- ~ r --- SYRIAN REVOLT 7.7a a---- - 4hdar ti- -. x _ : UNITEDCAR-- -- - - - - S -IS-P-A-E ASSA-S-N--E-. H.S-EIN Uniy~ luiv in ArabWorld - - -- -_-P- - -- a SY.11--.N REVOLT -ntEuiei rb -- -- -,I The Daily Official, Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for wnich The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m, two days preceding publication. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11 General Notices Blue Cross-Blue shield annual open Enrollment Period will be held in the fourth floor lobby, Admin. Bldg. on State St. from Oct. 10 through Oct. 20. New applications and changes to existing contracts will be allowable. Any family member, eligible for cov- erage, mayabe added at this time. No new applications, changes, or additions will be accepted after this two week enrollment period until October, 1962. Events Wednesday Seminar on Functions of a Complex Variable: will meet in 3017 Angell Hall, Wed.: Oct. 11, at 4 p.m. John Kelingos will complete his talk on the paper of Beurling and Ahifors, "The Boun- dary Correspondence Under Quasicon- formal Mappings." Events Thursday Carillon Recital: Percival Price, Uni- versity carillonneur, will present a re- cital on Thurs., Oct. 12 at 7:15 p.m. in 4 . By SID MOODY Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer THE DISRUPTION of the infant United Arab Republic is but another sign of Arab disunity. Time and again Arab .leaders proclaim their supra-national bro- therhood only to have their words of fellowship snarled in intrigues, threatened aggression and deep mistrust. When Syrians voted for the merger with Egypt declared Feb. 1, 1958, 1,312,759 persons balloted approval. Only 39 voted no. Gamal Nasser's name was cheered in the the troops of Iraq after Premier Kassem threatened to annex that tiny but oil wealthy sheikdom. Jordan has been a prime ex- ample of the Arab states' failure ,to live in peace with one another. In 1958, just two weeks after the United Arab Republic was pro- claimed, Jordan and Iraq merged into the Arab Federation. Unlike the Egypt-Syria UAR, the new Federation had a common border, similar peoples and countryside. The Federation had the beaming approval of other Arai states. Six months later it was dissolved when for the assassination of Jordan's King Hussein. -In November, 1958 Hussein charged that UAR jet fighters from Syria, a country that only a year before had agreed with Egypt and Saudi Arabia to extend aid to Jordan, had tried to shoot down the plane that was carrying him to a European visit. Yet less than a year later, Jor- dan had resumed the diplomatic relations it had previously severed with the UAR. And relations be- tween Nasser and Kassem had de- cidedly cooled as Iraq and Egypt vied as snnkeman for the Arab termination to be as strong out- side Egypt as he is in it. U.S. Marines landed in Lebanon the day after Kassem's purge at the request of then Lebanese President Camille Chamoun. Cha- moun claimed that pro-Nasser elements had caused the civil war then dividing that small nation. It was Nasser's growing subor- dination of Syria in the UAR that is believed to have set off last week's successful revolt. Cairo in- creasingly concentrated control of the republic in Egypt. Nasser's recently announced economic con- trols counled with strict T"lnd r- .1