ARY 19, 1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ARI9 9~TEMCIA AL sRSCORE: Fallout: Clear and Present Danger For Direct Classif ied Ad Service, Phone NO 2=4786 from 1:00 to 3:00 P.M. Monday through Friday, and Saturday 9:30 'til 11:30 A.M. __.__ i By MARTHA MacNEAL Daily Staff Writer T MTHE Russian resumption of atmospheric atom bomb ng, and the possible resump- of our own tests the ques- of fallout is in the air again. ally important, if not more so, ie question of how bomb test- affects the chance of nuclear A report in the Dec. 9 issue of "The Nation" describes the prob- lem of fallout in knowledgeable detail., In a nuclear explosion, matter is annihilated and turns into energy through either the splitting of a heavy nucleus (fis- sion) or the joining of two light nucleil (fusion). The atom bomb functions through the former, the hydrogen bomb through the latter. Fusion produces no seriously dangerous radioactive products, but fission results in unstable remains of the uranium nucleus which emit high, speed particles of radiation. Of the approximately 200 different kinds of radiation formed in the atom bomb fireball, about five per cent is radioactive strontium which emits short range beta particles, harmless outside the body, but extremely dangerous in- side. Another five per cent of the total radioactive products is ces- ium, which emits gamma rays of such high penetrating power that they are dangerous both external- ly and internally. Most of the other radioactive products formed in a fission ex- plosion have short periods of ra- dioactive activity; enough to be severely destructive over the down- wind vicinity of a wartime blast, but ineffective over long dis- tances. Thus these may be disre- garded in the case of testing. STRONTIUM and cesium have half-lives of approximately thir- ty years, i.e., half of the original amount disappears in that period of time. A longer half-life would reduce the amount of radiation emitted from decay within the body system, and a short half- life would increase chances of complete decay before the fallout reaches human beings. The 30-year period, however, maximizes radiation danger in hu- man beings. Cesium remains in the system for only 140 days, but strontium-90 lodges in the bones where it proceeds to decay and emit radiation. One curie of radioactive mate- rial emits 37 billion particles per second. As these particles pass through living tissue, they lose en- ergy, causing harmful chemical changes. * * * RADIATION damage affects ei- ther somatic cells (those of the body) or the genetic cells. The low radiation doses resulting from test fallout are unlikely to damage a dangerously high number of so- matic cells, except in cases of cancer and leukemia which are not well understood. But even slight damage to the sex cells can result in serious mutations in succeeding generations. Bomb testing prior to 1961 re- leased approximately 92 million tons of fission energy. By now about 5.5 megacuries (5,500,000 curies) of strontium-90 have set- tled onto the earth's surface, and the recent Russian tests have re- leased about four more mega- curies into the stratosphere. Rains bring down large amounts of both cesium-137 and strontium- 90. Plants absorb these materials through their leaves and cows then consume contaminated food, so that the strontiuni-90 passes into milk. Milk in New York City aver- aged 8 strontium units in 1960, 11 in 1959. But by next June, milk units in New York will probably rise to 40 units. By 1964, the av- erage levels in children's bones will be 4.5 or 5. THE FEDERAL Radiation Coun- cil sets the strontium unit dan- ger point at 50. Though the av- erage level may be only one-tenth that amount, the report estimates that one per cent of the popula- tion will reach or exceed the dan- ger point, and that 150-500 leuke- mia deaths will result. But any amount of radiation carries the possibility of genetic mutation and life-shortening. Ge- neticist James Crow predicts 20,- 000 mutations resulting from tests prior to 1958; "The Nation" would double this prediction since re- cent Soviet testing. And next spring will bring the highest fall- out ever. Fallout is, right now, causing death from disease. It is, right now, altering human genetic ma- terial. Can testing really be called protection? WE ARE TOLD that we need testing to better our deterrent strength. Our bombs get bigger and better. The Russians decide to increase their deterrent strength. Their bombs get bigger and bet- ter. What are we deterring? Cer- tainly not bombs. Are we deter- ring war? Does one deter an ef- fect by multiplying both the causes and the means? Nobody fights until somebody makes threats. Weapons are the means of war, fear is one of war's major causes. The defense of nuclear testing in the name of "deterrence" is ab- surd. Peace does not and cannot exist under force of arms, because an increase of threat breeds an increase in tension, and tension eventually breaks whatever has to bear it. In effect, nuclear testing is causing death now in order to cause more death in the future. The United States has one of the most valuable chances it has ever had for positive action. The So- viets broke the test ban. If we de- clare to the world, unconditionally, that we refuse to follow in the very action that we have con- demned, we can score a victory on the side of life, one of the first in a long time. AUTO REPAIR b T FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and models of Foreign and Sports Cars. Lubrication $1.50 Nye Motor Sales 514 E. Washington Phone NO 3-4858 82 WANTED-Busboys for fraternity be- ginning Feb. 1. Call Steve, NO 2-3215. H??? WEEKENti HOUSE PARENTS-Mature adult couple needed for Washtenaw County Juvenile Home. Give care to 13-16-year-old children. Write or tele- phone Mr. Rome, Room 214, Wash- tenaw County Building. H7 LINES 2 3 4 1 DAY .70 .85 1.00 3 DAYS 1.95 2.40 2.85 6 DAYS 3.45 4.20 4.95 MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Figure 5 average words to a line. Phone NO 2-4786 i CHOICE OF RISKS: Disarmament or Protectionism? By ANNE SCHULTZ' Daily staff Writer THE UNITED STATES govern- ment is facing the increasing- ly important problem of the 60's: the choice between armament and disarmament. To decide intelligently, we must consider the implications and as- pects of both. Can we survive if we continue to develop nuclear arms and weapons? Must we give up our freedom and be subjected TODAY AND TOMORROW. Negotiation Realistic- We Both Need It 0 - By WALTER LIPPMANN TALKING recently with a jour- nalistic colleague whom I great- ly respect we came to the point whether it is possible to negotiate agreements with the Soviet Union. My friend argued that it is im- possible. They will never, he said, concede to us anything which we can accept, and we can never con- cede to them anything that they want. If negotiation is indeed impos- sible, I said, there can be no ac- commodation of any kind about Berlin. The Soviet Union will be free to do what it dares to do, and we shall be free to react as we can react. The fate of Berlin will depend on events that we do not control, and will be at the mercy of accidents and collisions. I do not feel that this is a toler- able future for the people of West Berlin. We cannot resign our- selves to it. THE CRUCIAL POINT was that my friend regards a negotiation as an interchange in which one side wins and the other side losses. I was brought up to believe that a true negotiation is one that leads to an agreement in which each side gains more than it gives up. In the long run the agreements which work and are observed are those whose provisions insure that both parties would lose much, and neither would gain anything com- parable, by breaking them. We have made one successful negotiation with the Soviet since the war. That was about Austria. Whether anything comparable can be done about Berlin is not clear now and we shall have to wait and see what the exploratory talks now under way produce. But what I think I do know is that we must try for such an agreement because the disadvan- tages of not getting one will grow heavier for us. Because I believe that the losses from refusing to negotiate will also grow heavier for the Soviet Union, I dare to believe that a modus vivendi can be found. * * * WHAT WOULD we lose by fol- lowing Gen. de Gaulle's line and refusing to negotiate? We have already had one spectacular dem- onstration of the kind of risk that lies in refusing to negotiate. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Last summer, after the Khrush- chev-Kennedy meeting in Vienna, the United States policy was to carry out a partial mobilization in order to validate the firmness of our purpose and at the same time to begin negotiations with Mos- cow. In July, Gen. de Gaulle ve- toed the negotiations which not only Britain and the United States but even West Germany, although reluctantly, were willing to enter upon. It was not merely a coincidence that a very few weeks after this refusal to negotiate Khrushchev approved the erection of the wall in Berlin. It may be that he would have done this even in the midst of negotiations because of the pressure from the flight of the refugees. But it certainly would have been greatly more difficult for him to do it. * * * ' NOW, with Berlin divided by the wall, the Western position in West Berlin is weaker than it was last July. The refugees from the East are locked in. The division of Germany is marked by the wall and the West has acquiesced in that symbolic division. We have lost so much ground that my greatest worry today is that West Berlin will wither if its freedom, its rights of access, and its function are not restated and reaffirmed. * * * SO GREAT is our need to ar- rive at an agreed status for West Berlin that, as I said above, the temptation in Moscow to refuse it must be big. But there are, I be- lieve, countervailing reasons in Moscow which will lead the Soviet Union to work out an arrange- ment. The paramount reason is that in Berlin there is a direct con- frontation of the two nuclear powers. While a direct and deliber- ate resort to nuclear war by either power is most improbable, the irritations and provocations which can arise when nothing is definite- ly settled are too great to be ig- nored. There is, I believe, another rea- son why Moscow has a serious in- terest in arriving at an agreement. It is that an agreement which stabilizes the situation of West Berlin will reduce the tension and tend to stabilize against popu- lar uprisings the situation in East Germany and Eastern Europe. Some Westerners will say that this is just why we ought not to to the ideals of others if we sub- mit to world disarmament? * *. THE MOST desirable goal is the preservation of both civiliza- tion and democracy. Conserva- tives, like Sen. Barry Goldwater, see armament as the only solu- tion. Sen. Goldwater maintains that the United States should stress "victory over, rather than coexistence with Communism." Dr. Hass A. Bethe, head of a government advisory committee of scientists, says that armament of both powers will create a stabil- ity where either country could de- fend itself against any attack by the other, thus creating an "in- vulnerable deterrence." Armed forces and arms themselves would become obsolete and therefore non-existent. The strength of each country would lie in anti-missile missiles and nuclear missiles. Opponents to this theory, such as James P. Warburg, author of "Disarmament: Challenge of the Nineteen Sixties," maintains that there is. "little stability in stable deterrence." This supposedly in- vulnerable deterrence would only permit each power to completely destroy the other, not protection against destruction. Until the powers reach this claimed "invulnerable deterrence," the advantage lies with the pow- er that strikes first. Some opposed to armament and skeptical of Bethe's "stability" theory, advo- cate world disarmament. This would include banning nuclear tests, stopping arms production, clearing the stockpiles of nuclear weapons, and submitting each country to an international board for arbitration and arms inspec- tion. Through disarmament, no country would have the power to destroy the other-preserving our lives and our civilization. * * * ALTHOUGH this sounds fine, one must consider the feasibility and results of disarmament. 1) Would it work? Would both countries actually destroy all their present bombs and stop all future production? All existing nuclear weapons would be destroyed, but if, in some obscure laboratory re- search continued until one atom- ic bomb were developed, then dis- armament would become mean- ingless. Disarmament must mean complete disarmament of all coun- tries with nuclear weapons. Is this possible? 2) For disarmament to be ef- fective, someone would have to settle disputes and to see that the "rules" were carried out. A UN or international arbitration board has been suggested, but if, as War- burg suggests, this board extends its powers into any other realm beside arbitration, every country could loose its sovereignty. 3) All disputes to this time have been settled by war and the in- dustrial economies of the major powers revolve around defense. Would it be possible to so dras- tically change our economy, our labor force, our educational sys- tem and almost every element of our society? * * * BUT EVEN if these obstacles are surmountable, the U.S. and USSR must still come to an agree- ment on the means of disarma- ment. During the Eisenhower admin- ament before the United Nations. This plan would disband all na- tional armies, destroy all atomic weapons and depend on the Unit- ed Nations to keep peace. Stage one of this plan consists of establishing an international disarmament organization, ban- ning nuclear tests, stopping Pro- duction of atomic weapons, cut- ting forces to 2.1 million men, limiting output of other arms and the manufacture of missiles, and destroying all weapons above a certain number, prohibition of the launching of weapons in space, and reporting all launchings to the International Disarmament Organization. Stage Two gives the IDO more power of inspection, reducing nu- clear stockpiles even further, and establishing a United Nations Peace Force. Stage three completes stages one and two, providing for fur- ther reduction of military forces to the point where each country has enough only to maintain in- ternal order. s- . RUSSIA refused to accept this plan, insisting that total inspec- tion and nuclear test bans be post- poned until total disarmament has been achieved. Russia also advo- cates a troika-type control organ- ization with one representative from an Eastern, Western, and neutral power, where action would require unanimous agreement of the three. Disarmament negotiations are at a standstill until the Geneva conference on March 14. But until then, the United States must take a definite stand on its disarma- ment policy and be prepared to maintain this policy if no agree- ment is reached in Geneva. * * * THERE ARE two main alter- natives open: resumption of test- ing-trying to protect ourselves and keep a stable balance of pow- er in the world; or unilateral dis- armament-putting ourselves at the mercy of the Communists in an attempt to prevent an all-out destruction of humanity. Resumption of testing might in- crease the possibility of war; uni- lateral disarmament would pre- sent the economic problems of bi- lateral disarmament plus the prob- lem of our vulnerability to Com- munism. Many who urge this be- lieve that each power is compet- ing in the arms race primarily for defense rather than offense. Therefore, if the United States re- moved some of her threats to Rus- sia, world tension would diminish and Russia too would begin to lessen some of her offensive pow- er. Some suggestions which have been made (and are again to be presented to Kennedy in a 10,- 000-student rally in Washington, D.C. on Feb. 16-17) propose to decrease our offensive power while keeping our defenses intact. The proposals include: public announcement of nuclear test bans by the United States, the denial of nuclear weapons to any other country, withdrawal of mis- sile bases from Turkey since these bases are solely for offensive pur- poses, and repeal of the Connelly Amendment which would ack- nowledge our acceptance of all decisions of a World Court. Rath- er than center our economy around ATTENTION ROTC OFFICERS' SHOES Army-Navy Oxfords - $7.95 Socks 39c Shorts 69c Military Supplies SAM'S STORE 122 E. WASHINGTON W6 C-TED STANDARD SERVICE FRIENDLY SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS It is fall change over time. Time to check your cooling system and put in ATLAS PERMA-GUARD anti-freeze. "You expect more from Standard & you get it." SOUTH UNIVERSITY & FOREST NO 8-9168 STUDIO, 800 sq. ft., Music, Dance, Re- ducing, Ceramic, large assembly room 33x15, 4 smaller rooms, over Pretzel Bell, 2-5 year lease. Will sell entire building of 3 floors. Call Lansing, ED 7-9305. R6 '54 NINETY-EIGHT OLDS HDTP, power steering and power brakes-best offer takes. Call NO 5-6388. Nil '54 STUDEBAKER Champion. Radio. heater, overdrive, and rebuilt engine. Used as professor's commuter Clean and dependable. $330. Call 663-72 DON'T YOU HAVE a heart? Even rough, tough bikes from Beaver's need to be protected from Ann Ar- bor rain and snow. Get a cover for your Bike today at BEAVER BIKE AND HARDWARE Z13 WANTED-Ride to vicinity of Dart- mouth College, N.H., on Feb. 8. Will- ing to share expenses and driving. Call NO 3-1561, Ext. 1006. F24 WANTED: two female roommates for second semester to share house-- ideal setup - close to campus - call 3-2761. M6 RIDE WANTED TO CHICAGO Feb. 2, will share driving and expenses. Call NO 5-9627 after 5. G1 ONE OR TWO GIRLS wanted to share beautiful, modern apartment. Two blocks from campus. Phone NO 2-5997 after 5:30. H13 WOMAN ROOMMATE wanted to share apartment with woman art student. Beginning Feb. 1. Modern apartment with all conveniences. Call 665-0874 after 5:30. H14 AM LOOKING FOR RIDE to town in southwestern corner of Virginia on route 23 during any vacation. Willing to share expenses and driving. Call Mary Ellen, NO 3-1561, Ext. 920. iS NEED EXTRA MONEY? Wanted: some- one with aptitude in shorthand and/ or typing. 4 or 5 hours a week-time at your convenience. Write Box 27, Michigan Daily. H11 -f ESTES ACR ES Mobile Home Center New - Used GOOD FOOD in an international at- mosphere. Meals Monday' thru Satur- day, lunch and dinner. $12.60. Call Mrs. Griffee, NO 5-5703, 724 Tappan. M LEM AND TIGER: See you Wednesday. P141 C. F. G., II: Happy Birthday-Better early than never! F16 FOR INFORMATION on U. of Chicago Folk Festival, call NO 8-7548. F32 SBX has FREE plasticized book covers FOR YOU. Save $ at SBX. F39 LOVER BOY LEVITSKY: Happy Birth- day early. Good luck in 331. C.H. P12 IT'S ABOUT THOSE LEOTARDS, "Sex- pot"-I understand they're excessively couth! F13 GIRLS-Get it while it lasts. Peace and quiet at the League Library, third floor, Women's League. ,P22 BUY AND SELL used texts at SBX. Save 10-20 per cent. Basement SAB. P38 EVERY responsible person should see "The Crucible" at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre this week. Flo ALL SENIORS-Please pay senior dues. $3 payable by check made out to Senior Board may be mailed to 2528 SAB. F31 APPLICATIONS are now being ac- cepted for MORALE BOASTER. The positiop1 requires a female student between 18-21. For information call NO 2-5571. F3 TERRIFIC NEW CONTEST - Great prizes, great prestige. In 25 words or less write why you want Andy back writing personals. Send to Box ASC. F5 LOTS OF LUCK ON EXAMS, especially to the goddess of fertility and fire fighting, the shoe repairer, and the most coordinated girl in the world, ie. Genevieve, Laughing Legs, and Small Spastic. F15 THOSE COMPOSITES of the best of Williams Houe men and the beat of Jordan Hal women leave much to the imagination. The irregularities in the individuals originally are what makes things confusing. F17 PLANNED PARENTHOOD CLINIC. Ad- vice of physician on birth control. Professional counsel on: marriage problems. Clinic hours Tues., and Thurs. 7:30-9. 201 E. Liberty. Call NO 2-9281. F20 TO ZEKE GABBOUR, president of the Civic Theatre: Dear Zeke, Sorry I can't make it to "The Cru- cible" tonight. I've been hung up. John Proctor F11 WE PUBLISH humorous greeting cards designed exclusively for college stu- dents. We are looking for good ideas or sketches. Top prices paid. Write College Hall Cards, Larchmont, New York. P21 DISPOSING of my large library at pri- vate sale. Rare opportunity for stu- dents to build up a library of good books at low prices. Special low prices on sets of books. Showings at 617 Packard St. (near State) from 12 P.M. to 4 P.M. every day except Sub day. F8 MICHIGANENSIAN your yearbook s. now selling for $6.50 THIS IS NO JOKE! DIAMONDS WHOLESALE Diamond specialists for 17 years. Before you buy, consult us. ROBERT HAACK, Diamond Importers Suite 504, First Nat'l Bldg. NO 3-0653 Miners-Cutters-Setters Ann Arbor, Milwaukee, Madison, Minneapolis, and Caracas, Venezuela F26 LADY'S Raccoon Coat-size 12, good condition. $39. Call 3-0680. B40 WHITE STAG powder blue hooded ski jacket. Size 14. Unused. Call NO 2- 0006. B7 2 SCOOTERS-Lambretta 150 and Vespa. Graduating senior-best offer. Call NO 2-5196. B4 DIAMONDS-Charles Reaver Co. is of- fering for sale estate and imported diamonds. For appointment call NO 2-5685 after 6 P.M. M2 HEAD SKIS-6'9" medium, flex well kept; used two seasons, $25 with poles included. Also G e r m a n c a meras (Voigtlander and Vitissa) rapid re- winding range finder, built-in self exposure timer, comes in original leather case.e$68. Call NO 5-4338. B8 2967 Packard NO 8-8688 Ann Arbor R4 m Why buy from out of town - see this, GARRARD "A"Changer Shure M7D Cartridge not $103.50 BUT 79.50 You Save 22% at Hi Fi & TV Center 304 S. THAYER ACROSS FROM HILL AUDITORIUM Service and repairs by Fred Flack, M.A.E.S. DOES FOOD leave you listless? Is that your problem, Bunky? Then try a Schwabenburger. You haven't tasted anything until you have one at Schwaben Inn. J71 MAKE CAMPUS HEADLINES WITH YOUR NEW COIFFURE from Florence Beauty Studios 106 E. Liberty St. Hutzel Bldg. NO 2-0897 J22 HI-FI, PHONO TV, and radio repair. Clip this ad for free pickup and de- livery. Campus Radio and TV, 325 E. Hoover. NO 5-6644. J24 A-i New and Used Instruments BANJOS. GUITARS AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington NO 2-1834 BEFORE you buy a class ring, look at the official Michigan ring. Burr-Pat- terson and Auld Co. 1209 South Uni- versity, NO 8-8887. J11 RITZ BEAUTY SALON COMPLETE LINE OF BEAUTY WORK 605 E. WILLIAM PHONE NI 8-7066 Finding holes in your winter cloth- ing? Find that the wind whistles through and sends chills up and down your spine? Then send them to WEAVE-BAC SHOP 224 Arcade NO 2-4647 "We'll reweave them to look like new" J12A COME IN AND BROWSE AT THE TREASURE, MART 529 Detroit St. NO 2-1363 Featuring student ufrnishings of all kinds, appliances, typewriters, televisions, bicycles, etc. Open Monday & Friday evenings 'til 9. 4 J112 X9I I I1