LETTERS TO TI u: t 19&u ad9 Seventy-First Year, EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN - UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUSLICATIONS pnions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO Z-3241 Will Prevail" Autumn Haze Readers Deprived Of 'Right to Know' printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. '.OCTOBER 27, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDITH OPPENHEIM 'Challenge' from Within: Failure of Seminars JLLENGE HAS SET high goals for itself. rivate groups and the University have ed funds to the program. Prominent ers have addressed Challenge audiences. rty members and other informed persons been carefully selected to lead Challenge, cars. dl yet Challenge has failed to create an :t on the campus in proportion to the y and time which have been put into the iizatlon. e greatest problem facing Challenge is the threat of nuclear attack nor the ction of civil liberties-the lecture and iar series faces a "challenge" from within.. E PROGRAM, initiated at the University st fall, was specifically designed as a ination lecture and seminar series. The. p felt that lectures alone would not serve urpose, and a schedule of seminars was p to supplement "addresses by principal :ers. the end of each principal address, at- d by approximately 100 students and ty members, the organization has left for a question-and-answer period. In- b at this time is readily shown, and the ,n is generally a lively one. Presumably would think that this enthusiasm would fest itself in equally enlightening seminars gnate topics. was the goal of the Challenge program icourage participants to frame key ques- on critical topics of our time and discuss * at seminars held on Tuesday and Thurs- evenings following the main speeches on ays. Unfortunately, this part of the Chal- lenge program has not succeeded, and without. it the series has no purpose. Yet, attendance at the seminars rarely ex- ceeds ten. And those who seemed interested and ready to voice their opinions at the larger programs quickly lose interest or are too busy with other things to 'be able to attend. THE REASON for this -apathy is obvious. Challenge, itself, has not seen fit to give adequate publicity to the seminars. If Challenge intends to achieve its goals, it will have to re-organize its Program now. Per- haps the seminars should be eliminated en- tirely and be made a part of the principal programs. If not, the week night series needs a total- over-hauling. Leaders of the organization feel that sem- inars wil be most successful if they are at- tended by the "select few" who are genuinely interested. The only publicity these programs get is through The Daily, and post cards which are sent out to a limited mailing list of stu- dents who have requested they be notified. It is clear that this system does not work, IF CHALLENGE if going to serve a useful purpose at the University some serious eval- uation is necessary. If the organization believes that, student participation in the series is essential to its success, the seminar program must be given thoughtful consideration. Without success in this aspect of the pro- gram, Challenge is neglecting its most im- mediate goal. And unless it solves these in- ternal problema, it cannot successfully look to the greater issues of our times. -JUDITH BLEIER To the Editor: ONCE AGAIN The Daily, exer- cising the much-abused fran- chise of so-called "editorial free- dom," has deprived its readers of their right to know. With what has become customary in its ap- proach - so-called "liberalism," "progressivism," and the like -- The Daily has disregarded the dictates of taste and of propriety, and in a spirit of over-ambitious modernization, has most cruelly and unthinkingly seen fit to omit a long-standing campus tradition, one deaf to the hearts of all who have trod these hallowed halls. Last Sunday, groping up to the nadir of mediocrity, The Daily w failed to print the Slippery Rock score in its traditional place of honor above the masthead. -Mason Wyzun, Jr., '60 Dean Bacon.. To the Editor: I HAVE JUST READ another in The Daily's. tradition of front page editorials. On trial this time was Dean dof Women Deborah Ba-.r con. The indictment is dated September. 30; it is _time that a voice is raised in her defense. Dean Bacon cannot be charged. justly with "the stifling of in- dividual expression." As a member' and officer of Student Govern- ment Council several years ago, I had the pleasure of knowing and working with Miss Bacon. We dis- agreed on occasion, but her open- minded intellectual integrity was something which was a challenge to those who had contact with her. From my observations, Dean Bacon stimulated, not stifled, in- dividual expression. * * * ALTHOUGH the student sup- port which she enjoys may not be as vocal as Then Daily's journal- istic columns, I would wager that this support hasbeen and is more widespread than ;that.. given to The Daily. Lesser persons often have decried those with stronger and more versatile minds, but charges of "paternalism" "an' never diminish Dean Bacon's im-; mense contributions to the Michi- gan community.- The maximization of individual responsibility and opportunity is more likely to come from a Dean Bacon than from the collective and conforming security of an editorial signed by "The Senior Editors." -Lewis A. Engman, '57 WEST GERMANY: Missiles Will Add Tension TODAY AND TOMORROW US Face+EE By WALTER LIPPMANN THEN GREAT BRITAIN decided to apply for full , membership in the European onomic Community, knoWn as the Common irket, she set in motion a chain of events ich will involve the whole non-Communist rld. In the coming months, during the next sion of Congress, we shall have to re- amine our economic- foreign policy. As- ning always that there is no war, the issue I be how far and in what way we should' rk with what will then be the greatest ding community on earth. The original Common Market, which was inded in 1957, consisted of six Western ropean nations: France, West Germany, ly, The Netherlands, Belgium and Luxem- irg. They have prospered greatly, and last nmer Great Britain decided to apply for 1 membership on the understanding that the al interests of the Commonwealth countries ild in one way and another be safeguarded. eat Britain has 'now been followed by Den- rk, Ireland and Norway, and most recently the three classic European neutrals, Swit- -land, Sweden and Austria. The neutrals ve agreed to apply jointly for associate mbership. An associate member, presumably, uld participate in the internal free trade hin the Common Market; it would, how- r, keep away from the political association .ich looks, as yet quite vaguely, 'towards ne kind of confederation. Before long, there .1 come to be a working arrangement em- acing all the nineteen European countries ich belonged to the first European organ- tion for economic cooperation, the OEEC. HESE DEVELOPMENTS, which stem origin- ally from the Marshall Plan, have always had e warm approval of the American govern- nt. We have worked for a strong, prosperous d united European community which would a mainstay of Western civilization. Now, the British negotiations in regard to the erests of the Commonwealth are successful, ere will exist what since 1948 we have always nted to see. Then we shall find that we ve to live with and trade with and negotiate th an economic and indeed political bloc. ich will in a few years have a common tariff ainst all the rest of the world and free ode internally among its members. It is and to become also i great political power the world, and necessarily, indeed by delib- ate purpose, it will have many of the at- butes of a new great World power. This new community will have within it 0 million people. It will not only be the rgest trading unit in the world but its onomic and financial power will be virtually= ual to ours. 'HE ECONOMIC and financial pre-eminence of the United States originated in the First orld War. It grew even greater during the cond World War when almost all of Europe is occupied and prostrated. R..J tha c.i. r.'14-,". Amw rn'.. n w .. 1iD'flI in devising ways in which we and the Europeans can use our resources-to accomplish better the tasks we have jointly in the world. In 'recent years, the' economic growth of the nations of the Common Market has been faster than that of the United States. Britain's growth has been slower. But her coming participation in a larger and less sheltered market will provide the discipline of wider competition and the stimulus of Europe's economic boom..In Prime Minister Macmillan's- words, Britain will be entering a "bracing cold shower, not a relaxing Turkish bath."._ Spurred by the enormous economic expan-r sion of the Common Market, trade has pros- pered not only within the Common Market countries but between them and the rest of the world. The so-called "trade-diverting" ef- fects of the new tarriff arrangements have proved to be negligible. Although the growth of trade among the nations of the Common Market has been greater than the gr'owth of imports from outside their bloc, the entire world has benefited from the economic growth of Western Europe. SO FAR, THEN, the growth of a major free trade area has not endangered our com- mercial interests or our larger stake in the prosperity and unity of the Western society. But we cannot assume that this will continue unless we make a careful adaptation of our trade policies to this changing world. The parallel between our position and that of Brit- ain before her decision to join the Common Market is not precise. But it is instructive. In recent years, the gap between the Con- tinent and the United Kingdom grew wider because within its own protected market Britain was isolated from the booming econ- omy of the Western Continent. We cannot afford to let a similar gap open up between the United States and the great new and en- larged trading community. The economic con- sequences for us, but especially for Latin America and Japan, would be grim. The po- litical consequences of our economic alien- ation from the rest of the Western alliance would be still worse. IN PRACTICAL TERMS, this means that we shall have to reverse the protectionist trend of the past few years and set out on a deter- mined and unambiguously liberal trade course. As part of this effort, we must devise new procedures for negotiating reductions ofd tariffs exacted on our exports. Before World War II, the United States trade agreements were negotiated on a bilateral basis. That method was changed to suit our postwar ob- jective of increasing multilateral world trade,, and for the past fourteen years we have con- ducted multilateral-negotiations through what is called the" GATT'. Now, as we enter an era of increased and f'eer world trade, we shall have to discard the cumbersome system of negotiating tariff reductions on an item-by-item basis. The By RONALD WILTON Daily Staff Writer 'T HIS COUNTRY'S recent reiter- ation of its intention to supply; West Germany with missiles to deliver nuclear warheads can only have the effect of increasing the tension over the Berlin crisis and further alienating the peoples of ,Eastern Europe and Russia, Admittedly the present plan is not as bad as a proposal advo- cated in some quarters, which sug- gests that the West Germans be supplied with the warheads in ad- dition to the means of delivery. Under the present policy, at least the warheads will remain under the control of the United States. * * AMERICA'S ANXIETY over the possibility that Red China may acquire nuclear capability is well known. Eastern Europeans and Russians have the same attitude with respect to Germany. Distrust, suspicion and even fear towards the Germans are emotions held in common by all the countries of Eastern Europe and Russia. These feelings stem mainly from German actions during the two World Wars, and are reinforced by repeated West German claims to part of her territory given to Poland after World War II and West German rearmament. * * * THESE FEELINGS, to a lesser extent, are shared by people in some Western countries. This was made obvious by the recent uproar over Germany negotiations with representatives of Franco's gov-, ernment' for training space in Spain, and the British Labor Party's adoption of a resolution asking the withdrawal of German troops now training in Wales. Critics of this view will argue that West Germany is too firmly committed to integration with the West to be dangerous by herself. However, the Free Democratic Party, which has just formed a coalition government with Aden- auer's Christian Democratic Part contains a number of neutralists who would like to see Germany take a more independent line. They also tried, although un- successfully, to force the resigna- tion of West German Foreign Minister Heinrich von Brentano, who is one of those chiefly re- sponsible for this same integra- tion.. * * * ACCORDING TO the New York Times, one of the delivery systems considered for German use is the Pershing missile which has a range of 500 miles. A missile with this range is primarily an offen- sive weapon. What German troops fighting within the context of a defensively orientated NATO would need with such equipment is hard to see. Further, if the need for such a strike ever did arise it would be just as militarily effective to use an American or British mis- sile capped with the same nation's nuclear warhead, or ground sup- ported aircraft designed for just such a mission. * * * THE SAME conditions apply to West German need for short- range nuclear capability. As of now, the United States has no publicly announced plans for pull- ing troops out of Europe. These troops' are equipped with tactical nuclear missiles of varying ranges, as are British troops. These could effectively provide the defensive nuclear firepower needed by West German troops, as could the al- ready mentioned ground support aircraft. President Kennedy supposedly has recognized the worry in East- ern Europe and Russia over the, possibility that the West Germans will be given atomic capability. In his latest speech before the United Nations he said: "We recognize the Soviet Un- ion's historical concernabout their security in central and Eastern Europe, after a series of ravaging invasions. And we believe arrange- ments can be worked out which will help to meet those concerns and make it possible for both security and freedom to exist in this troubled area." * * * BEFORE "security and freedom" can exist "in this troubled area," distrust and suspicion must be re- moved. In the light of past his- tory this will be an enormously difficult step. A United States decision against giving West Ger- many nuclear delivery systems would be an effective step in that direction. ALBANIA: New Fragmentation In Soviet Bloc Domesticity .. To the Editor: THE LETTER published in The Daily of Oct. 24, signed by four graduate students with Arab names was quite disturbing. It ap- pears from that letter that these four students and the other mem- bers of the Arab Club consider it their right to dictate to the stu- dent organizations on campus what they should or should not discuss, and what speakers they are to engage. This 'they base on an equally preposterous claim that the renewal of Syrian indepen- dence is a "domestic Arab" affair. It is precisely this contention that deserves discussion: is there such a thing as "an Arab?" who is to determine what areas are to be included in the nonexistant "Arab homeland?" etc. It is particularly disturbing that the ISA had let itself be intim- idated into cancelling the pro- jected panelon Syria. The argu- ment that the ISA does not want to antagonize anyone is ua- cepatable since such an apprroacht would practically' eliminate any discussion. I am at a loss to un- derstand in what way was the pro- jected discussion on Syria dif- ferent from other topics discussed previously and since, e.g. Algeria, which the, French claim to be an internal affair; South Africa, also a domestic affair; Cuba, surely domestic; Congo; . Berlin; the problem of the American Negro, definitely an American domestic affair; etc. Why are the feelings of Frenchinen, Cubans and South- ern whites of less significance than those of the members of the Arab Club? I believe that the members of the Arab Club did a gross dis- service to themselves. Their be- 'havior demonstrated that they stillhave much to learnabout tol- erance, democracy .and freedom o' speech. They .demonstrated some- thing akin to a persecution com- plex. Above all, they lost an op- portunity to explain the develop- nzents themselves. Therefore, we have no other ,recourse but to' believe the new leaders of Syria who tell us that they freed them- selves from Egyptian tyranny- hardly a domestic matter. -Joseph A. Lopez, Grad. UGL..., To the Editor: FE~ED THE UGLI add to its many problems? It is bad enough that you have to get there by six-thirty to get a seat be- cause half of them have been reserved during the afternoon. I believe that groups send represen- tatives over in the afternoon to reserve a section as if they were buying block tickets to a concert. Speaking of music, just what are they attempting to accomplish with their evening concerts. As far. as I could see nobody ap- preciated it. About all the music does is drown out the noise of those who are talking around you. I thought the library was a place to study. If the ULGI Wants to go all out they can play rock and roll on the first floor, folk music on the second, classical on the third, ballads on the fourth and leave the basement quiet for those who want to talk. -Michael Levitt,'6Z Pece... To the Editor: PEACE, PEACE, PEACE. Nobody talks about anything but peace. It's enough to turn a strong man's stomach. Not a weak one's, maybe, but a strong one's. If only in the, interests of perspective, I feel another side should be expounded. It's national policy which de- termines whether there will be war or peace and the main factor in this connection is power or dominance. Every nation-state has some dominance over someone somewhere. Even little Mali could severly discomfit stronger Nigeria merely by diverting the Niger river, causing flood or drought. Mali's total possible dominance, though, is limited. The United States, on the other hand, has a great variety of possible domin- ance. Further, it must be realized that the present situation between nation-states is anarchic. Among other things, this means that if a state decides on a certain goal this aim cannot be compared to an absolute world standard of agreed-on right or wrong. Hence, an objective is right or wrong only in relation to the state's own stan- dards. * * * PUTTING THE TWO concepts together we find that if a state has an international objective, the. only thing which can prevent it from attaining this goal is a rela- five lack of dominance. But the United States has the greatest relative dominance in the world! Therefore, whatever our national policy is, it can be effected. This 'canbe made even stronger by as- serting that it is our duty to shape By ROBERT SELWA Daily Staff writer ONE OF THE ILLUSIONS of the cold peace is that everywhere and at all times the West is being mauled by a huge Communist dra- gon and that in the years to come if the United States dissolves from within and disintegrates from without, it will dissolve and disintegrate because of the ap- plying laise. But dicate fering tation but a of a single monolithic ma- recent events plainly in- that this "bloc" is suf- from problems of fragmen- which make it anything united threat. Yugoslavia takes a firm neutral stand in the East-West conflict-she called a conference of nonaligned nations and held it at her capital. In Poland, the Catholic Church openly defies the Communists, and in Hungary, bitterness remains. But the disunity of Communism is most glaring at the moment in the China-Soviet dispute over Al- bania. * * * PREMIER KHRUSHCHEV con- demned the Albanian Communist party leadership for its Stalinism, "perversion" and cult of the per- sonality - the personality being dictator Gen. Enver Hoxha. Albanian party chiefs responded by accusing Khrushchev of anti- Marxist actions and of attempting to wreck what unity the inter- national Communist movement still has. '; 'By publicly attacking the Al- banian Workers' party," the Al- banians charged, "Nikita S. Khrushchev has in effect started an open attack against the unity of the international Communist and workers' movements, against the, unity of the Socialist camp. For this anti-Marxist act and all the consequences that may ensue from it, Nikita S. Khrushchev bears the full responsibility." * * * COMMUNIST CHINA is back- ing 'Albania in the dispute, and President Ho Chi Minh of North Vietnam and Premier Kim Il Sung of North Korea have refused to join Khrushchev in condemning the Albanian leadership. Communist China's economic and military experts have been re-. placing experts pulled out' from Albania by the Soviet Union and the East European Communist nations. The experts are helping Albania with her new Five-Year Plan. In addition, Communist China, despite her own severe; economic troubles, is delivering. $123 million in aid to 'Albania. This is equal to all the credits given to Albania by the Soviet- bloc countries during the previous Five-Year Plan. * * * ALBANIANS feel Yugoslavia is more of an enemy than the Soviet Union. When Yugoslavia broke with the Moscow Communists in 1948, it left Albania the only mem- ber of the Soviet bloc without a land link to another member of the bloc. The debris of anti-Moscowism in' Albania came to shore last fall when General Hoxha reportedly accused Khrushchev of revision- ism, the worst of all Communist party offenses. Khrushchev re- portedly was outraged and de- manded an apology, which he did not get. This year Gen. Hoxha DAIY FI AL BULLETIN ..::rf,..'fl... . r::: :7 ::f.S.' ~ . . .v^..tcvro . ..:r vr.."e.:.v. ;;r... ";{5; "" aA {:"Y{s"a ""Jon F ";{. Mueh, speakeJ:olr. 1:45 {";;a.i. I 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. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27 General Notiees The Student Locator Service (NO 5- 4491)will be discontinued as of 6:00 p.m., Fri., Oct. 27. The SGC Cinema Guild Board an- nounces petitioning for sponsorship of movies, by campus organizations. Inter- viewing will be held in 3529 SAB on Sat., Ocet. 28, 9-12 a.m. and 2-5 p.m. Petitions, due Fri. afternoon, may be obtained on the first floor, SAB. OCT. 27- Alpha Delta Pi & Sigma Kappa, Barn Dance; Delta Gamma, Pinafore Party; Hunt House, Record Dance; Society of Les Voyageurs, Halloween Party; Psi Upsilon, Party. OCT. 28-- Alpha Tau Omega, Party; Beta Theta Pi, Record Dance; Chicago House, Date Party; Delta Tau Delta, Party; Delta Upsilon, Record Party; Lloyd House, Halloween Party; Phi Epsilon Pi, Party;. Phi Gamma Delta-Phi Kappa Psi, Band Dance; Psi Upsilon, Party; Theta Xi, Rock & Roll Party; ,Zeta Psi, Record Dance. OCT. 29- Couzens Hail, Open-Open House; Phi Delta Phi, Open House. Events Friday Navy Day Luncheon: In commemora- tion and celebration of Navy Day 1961, a Navy Day luncheon will be held at the Michigan League, Michigan room John- F. Muehl, speaker. 10:45 a.m.' Aud. A. Esquire Symposium: "The Role of the Writer in America," Rackham Lecture Hall, 3:00 p.m. Public invited. Prof. K. Kuratowski, University of Warsaw, will present the second and. third of a series of lectures on "Duality' Theorems Between Cohomotopy Groups and Integer-valued Measures" in' 2037 Angela Hall at 10 a.m. on Sat., Oct. 28 and in 2037 Angell Hall at 10 a.m. on Sat., Nov. 4. Astronomical Colloquium: Sat., Oct. 28. 2:00 p.m., McMath-Hulbert Observa- tory. Dr. C. E. Fichtel, Nuclear Emulsion Group NASA-Goddard Space Flight Center; will speak on "Solar Cosmic Rays Observed at Fort Churchill Dur- ing the 1960 November Events." Placemet ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER-