t UEv metirst Yeailr Sevent y-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Opinions Are Free- UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS tb WillPrea STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 biorials printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This mus t be noted in all reprints. 19, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL OLINICK Did the Soviets Kill Ha minarsk jold? [ITED NATIONS Secretary Dag Hammar- skjold is dead. >eculation strongly indicates that the agents oviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev sabot- I his plane at Leopoldville as he was taking o negotiate a cease-fire between UN troops the Katanga forces of President Moise ombe. He never made it. His plane exploded aid-air. He was murdered on the eve of the ring of the United Nations General Assem- -the very scene where the Russians threat- I to get rid of him one way or another. pparently they have succeeded in that re- ~t. he Russians will protest their innocense loud long. But all the same the guilt lies on the*r -step. ad among the very first orders of business y 'on the banks of. the East River will be long-standing Soviet proposal for a three-. Secretariat for the UN-acoalition that Id not have included Hammarskjold. E RUSSIANS will say today that the need for their three-man group is now apparent. UN depended wholly and solely on' Ham- skjold. It could not function properly with- him. Now he is suddenly gone. The General mbly has been crippled., hey will also say that, had their proposal 1 adopted ,things wouldn't be in a muddle, if one of their three man committee was nated, the other two could carry on. After it will be said, (with all due respect to the Secretary-General) the uninterrupted fu- of the United Nations is far more import- than his mere life. Yes, they'll say all these things. But if any- thing worthwhile can come from this tragedy, t will be that the people of the world will at last be seen in their true icolors. Will'" they still slide up to old Khrushchev, now that he has murdered one of his chief antagonists, who sought only world peace? Or will they realize what a madman he is and repudiate him at last? The late Secretary-General was a militant anti-Communist. He died fighting their dirty work. Perhaps he was doomed as he set down at Leopoldville, for that city is teeming with Russian agents. BUT HOW he died matters not. Mr. Khrush- chev had him marked for extinction before the General Assembly opened, and so he would have died somehow. Perhaps now the Free world and the uncommitted states will awaken. The Russians started with little murders: pris- oners of war and kidnapped nobodies--all in a sense, little people. Their loss was hardly no- ticed. Then they stepped up to American flyers over neutral waters. Now they've graduated to doing away with world figures. Hammarskjold, a pro-western Swede, but a citizen of the world, was first. America must take revenge on this monstrous act. For if she does not, the butchers will be- come bolder. If Mr. Hammarskjold could have said it, he surely would have wanted his death to be the last. Perhaps President Kennedy is next, and if we do not avenge Dag Hammar- skJold, what will we do then? -MICHAEL HARRAH 1 Ii "We're Not Adjourning" -F 44' 4.I*% VfM5(# c4 4'-C S- - ft r -~F9.fft6"saf'pif' ANOTHER 'LEAGUE'? Hammarskjold's Death Endangers U.N. By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press News Analyst HERE IS solemn realization at the United Nations tonight that it is facing a monumental crisis. Its very existence as an effective organization for protection of the peace has been endangered by the untimely death of Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold. The delegates of the UN's 99 members got the shocking news on the eve of the General Assembly's 16th regular session Now the UN is without a chief executive officer, and the chances ORIENTATION WEEK: Introducing a Myth TODAY AND TOMORROW N yuclearTE iplomacy By, WALTER LI PPHtANN EVER BEFORE have chiefs of state been in a situation like that in Germany today. r this was the first encounter on vital issues ween great nuclear powers, and there are historical precedents, there is no accum- ted experience and wisdom, to guide them. rushchev and Kennedy possess what are all practical purposes. equal and absolute apons. Khrushchev and Kennedy, Macmil- de Gaulle, and Adenauer are working un- r conditions as different from World War II' flying a jet is different from running a am locomotive. None of them has been .ght how to conduct diplomacy in a nuclear . All of them have to guess and to impro e, to 'experiment and to hope. there has been a revolution in the military nation since the previous encounter over Ber- with Stalin in 1948. Then the United States s thie only nuclear power in the world. But inining' with the late 'fifties the Soviet ion with its nuclear weapons and its rockets s become an equal nuclear power. During critical 'fifties Churchill and Eisenhower med what was happening to the balance of. ver. Then the area of summitry began. At beginning of this era Eisenhower made the, tement for which, it may well be, he will remembered the longest. It was not senti- ntality, idealism, or pacifism, but the grim th about the hydrogen bomb which caused sident Eisenhower to say that there is no ger any "alternative to peace." ODERN WEAPONS have not merely mag- nified and multiplied the violence of war. ey have revolutionized the nature of war by roducing into it a new ,order of violence. gays until now, war and the threat of war, ether aggressive or defensive, were usable bruments for the national purpose. They, e usable because wars could still be won or . In the pre-nuclear wars the victorious ver was an organized state which could im- e its will on the vanquished. The damage, ugh great, was not irreparable, as we know n the recovery after World War II of West rnany, Japan, and the Soviet Union. But mn a full nuclear war, which might well mean aundred million dead, the devastation of great urban centers, and the contamination the earth, the water, and the air, there ild be no such recovery. merican nuclear power can reduce Soviet ety to smouldering ruins and leave the tched survivors shocked, starving, and dis- ed. The Soviet Union can, it is coolly esti- ted, kill between thirty and seventy million ericans. Such a war would not be followed reconstruction. It would be followed by a age struggle for existence as the survivors wled out of their shelters, and the Ameri- i republic would be replaced by a stringent itary dictatorship trying to keep some kind order among the desperate survivors. USED TO BE SAID of the British naval commander in the First World War that if made a mistake, he could lose the war in, afternoon. Khrushchev and Kennedy can that now. In a few hours Khrushchev can th_ Snviet state antha hlem vement d nd nuclear war would produce by far the biggest convulsion which has ever occurred since man appeared on this planet. Because the destructiveness of the new arm- aments is equal. and virtually absolute, neither of the two chiefs of government can threaten the other with such a war. As long as each has kept his own\ armory of weapons in order, neither can or need believe the nuclear threats of the other. If, for example, Khrushchev has resumed testing not for technical military rea- sons but for terrorization, he will not and can- not terrorize President Kennedy. For this test- ing cannot remove the awful retaliatory power of the United States nuclear weapons systems. In cold blood no government can, no gov- ernment will, start a nuclear war with an equal nuclear power. Only a moral idiot would press the button. The poor dears among us who say that they have had enough and now let us drop the bomb have no idea what they are. talking about. They have not been able to imagine and realize what a nuclear war would be like. But the governments know quite well what a nuclear war would be like. That is why there is bluff at the core of any threat to ini- tiate a nuclear exchange.' NEVERTHELESS, though a nuclear war would be lunacy and is unlikely, it is an ever- present possibility. Why? Because, however ir- rational it may be to commit suicide, a nation, can be provoked and exasperated to a point where its nervous system cannot endure inac- tion, where only violence can relieve its feel- ings. This is one of the facts of life in the middle of the twentieth century. It is as much a reality as a megaton bomb, and in the nuclear age it must be given weighty consideration in the calculation of policy. There is a line of intoler- able provocation beyond which the reactions are uncontrollable. The governments must know where that line is and they must stay well back of it. Here lies the greatest, danger of miscal- culation, and therefore of war. Both sides, we had better realize, are capable of miscalculating wtere that line is. Khrush- chev, who has no sufficient' experience of a state whose speech is free, is prone to think that Kennedy can and should control an ex- plosion of popular feeling. The fact is that, there is a limit to President Kennedy's ability to lead public opinion,'and he is in sight of that limit. Mr. Khrushchev must make no mistake about this. For our part, we are prone to suppose that because speech is strictly regimented in the Soviet Union, there are no irrestible internal pressures on Khrushchev. This can be a very dangerous illusion. IN' BOTH COUNTRIES there is a line which it is not safe for the other to cross. It is the line where compromise will be regarded as. humiliation and surrender. This, line will have to be made precise in the negotiations. Block- ade of the access routes is such a line for this country. For the Soviet Union such a line would be the giving of nuclear artms to West Germany. These are lines of provocation which cannot be crossed without provoking uncon- By ELLEN SILVERMAN Daily Staff Writer ''HIS YEAR about 4,740 new stu- dents entered the University. Of these, approximately 3,300 were freshmen and the rest were trans- fer and foreign students. Last week was reserved for them, for their orientation to the University of Michigan. "Orientation" as defined by Webster is an adjustment to and ideal or principle, a determination or sense of one's position with re- lation to some particular thing or person. Orientation week is aim'ed at helping the freshman find his position in the University-in a communulty devoted to scholar- ship and the intellect. Last week's program failed to meet this goal. It would have served as a fine introduction. to a summer camp or a four-year rec- reation center, but. not to a great university. *' * * - THE NEW students found them- selves in a maze of mixers, so- cials and coke breaks, which ad- mittedly are fun, but taken in to- tal give a distorted view of 1961 college life. Upon close scrutiny of an orien- tation schedule, two academically oriented programs could be found -squeezed between seven social activities and various open houses at student, extra-curricular of- fices. Student-faculty contact, the basis of University life, was almost nonexistent. The freshmen were told, by lead- ers, friends, and college literature, of the hard wark and study that the University demands. They heard of huge University lecture' classes, note-taking and the high To Err.. WHEREAS one illegitimate child might be evidence of an honest mistake, two. or more seem to indicate a habit that should not be encouraged at public expense. --Senator Herman Talmadge (D-Ga.) caliber of lectures on campus. But they were able to see the faculty only three times, if they expended the energy to find them. . * . * ORIENTATION planning failed to make clear when and where lectures were being held or who was to speakand on what subject. At first, leaders were informed that tickets would be needed to attend. Ultimately they were not; no one was adequately informed. On Thursday, student-faculty discussions were listed on the schedule., The time assigned was 9-11 a.m., early enough to discour- age many. Group leaders could 'discover, only through a phone call, that the discussions were to be held in the Frieze Bldg. No one was informed of the novel use of television to allow more students to hear one of the lectures. No one was told that monitors were placed in 12 rooms on the second floor of Frieze. in- formation from the Orientation office, if one bothered to call, was nebulous. They could inform one that the lectures were in Frieze, but they didn't know which room. "You'll find out when you get there," one was 'told. No signs were at Frieze, one just hunted for the right rooms. THE END result was, of course, that the most important part of the program was lost to most freshmen. Only about 50 had the fortitude to walk through the rain on a typical Ann Arbor morning to hear Prof. George Peek, of the political science department speak on the American presidency and Prof. Richard Hoffman, of he psy- chology department speak on "The Psychology of Being a Freshman." On Friday the other set of stu- dent-faculty discussions were held. Again, neither time, place nor speaker was listed on the sched- ule. Leaders again had to find out for themselves where and who, as it seemed that the list was "left out" of their information packets. Students later found that some of the best known men on campus were speaking on their particular specialty. Informative lectures on "Careers in Dentistry," "Recent Developments in College Engineer- ing" and the "Million Dollar De- cision," as well as comments on "What You Shouldn't Believe at Michigan," and "Sense and Non- sense in Modern Art" were given by such distinguished people as Prof. Jesse E. Gordon, of the psy- chology department and Prof. Vic-, tor H. Meisel, of the fine arts de- partment. While attendance at Friday's lectures .rose significantly, only one third of the new students made use of the opportunity, com- pared to the overflowing Union (3,000 students) and League dur- ing "coke break" times. 'Perhaps one half of the freshmen had been mis- or uninformed on the lec- tures or they, hopefully, would have gone. FALL ORIENTATION is a com- plex administrative process. It is essential that the University tmake plans for freshmen which will aid them in understanding the vast difference, between high school and college, and (that difference lies in the area of study. This fall, Orientation was a suc- cessful program of showhig fresh- men other freshmen of the oppo- site sex; It was successful in filling freshmen full of cokes, cookies and, potato chips; it failed to help freshmen find the correct insight" into University academic life and the responsibility which goes with it. New revamping of the Orienta- tion program is needed. A good start was the development be- tween orientation grouping and housing units and the use of tele- vision. But student-faculty discus- sions should be further enlarged, student-faculty contact increased. It is not sufficient to say, ast some may prefer to do, that life at the University is one half in and one half out-side the class- room. Life at an institution of learning is constantly related to learning, in one form or another, and the freshmen should not only have one or two chances to find this out, but many chances, in many areas, and at many times. of replacing him seem slim. 4 8 * AT BEST it will create even more tension between East and West, already at the boiling point because of the imminent threat of violence over the future of West Berlin. At worst, it can mean an in- soluble deadlock between the Com- munist and Western nations on the future structure of the Secre- tariat. If the UN is to continue its role as peace-maker in the many and varied explosions of a turbulent space-age world, it must have the authority to . act in emergencies. The attack of the Soviet Union and the Communist world on the UN structure has been aimed at destroying the power of the UN to act, and this attack has been centered on Hammarskjold. * * * "THE BIG question is this: was DagHa marsk old the last chief executive the UN would have who could act swiftly to quench the flames which endanger peace around the world? In order to produce a successor as Secretary-General, the Security Council must present a nomination to the General Assembly. There is little chance that the West and the Russians will be able to agree on a single nominee, and each side has veto power. The Russians probably will push once again for their "Troika" plan -a three-nian board instead of a Secretary-General. The board, with built-in veto power, would in- clude a Communist, a Westerner and a representative of the so- called neutral world. Effectively, that would paralyze the UN's ability to take action in time of danger. The UN then would become little more than a debating society in the manner of the League of Nations, which was powerless to act in events leading up to World War II. Peanuts THE Kennedy Administration is. using the Eisenhower budget for petty cash. -Senator Norris Cotton (R-NH) 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. TUESDAY; SEPTEMBER 19 General Notices Important Notice to Students: 1. students who have lost their ID. cards, Registration certificates and/or Athletic Coupon should first inquire for these items at the Lost and Found desk located at the second floor reception area in the Admin. Bldg. 2. If you do not recover your I.D. card you should: report this to the of- fice of Registration and Records. A fee of $5 will be charged for replacement of this card. 3. If youdo not recover your Reg- istration Certificate you should report this to the Student Billing Office (lo- cated in the Admin. Bldg.). A fee of $5 will be charged for replacement of this certificate. 4. If you do not recover your Athletic- Couponti you may report this to the Student Billing Office. A fee of $5 will be charged for replacement of this coupon. Lost coupons will be investi- gated and students who have obtained two coupons will be subject to dis- ciplinary action. 5. In order to avoid long lines at the Cashiers windows in the Admin. Bldg. you are encouraged to MAIL your fee payments. Your check should be made payable to: (Continued on Page 8) LETTERS: No Sweat To the Editor: I REGRET to inform you that I am somewhat amused at the editorial page of the freshman edition of The Michigan Daily now in circulation. An editorial by John Roberts, editor, entitled "Independence Poses Problem" states The Daily "does not essay to be an echo of the student voice." Then I read Harvey Molotch, editorial director: "The Daily's editorial columns are accepted na- tionally as the most authoritative voice of the American student." Finally, I turn to this statement "Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the opin- ions of staff writers or the editors., This must be noted in all re- prints." .,... which explains it all. -Richard Nohl President Student Government Council 4h 'Quaddies' ?. To the Editor: W HILE glancing through the July 28 issue of the Michigan Fraternities Report which is avail- able outside the IFC offices in the Student Activities B u II d i n g, I noted a picture which was titled, "Traditional U of M events receive much participation by Michigan's ' fraternities. Highlighted by Home- coming each Fall, where huge dis- plays emerge on fraternity front yards ... I noted with extreme interest and curiosity, however, that the "huge display~" pictured was the one which appeared on the lawn not of a fraternity, but of South Quadrangle ... Just where Gom- berg House had built it! Thomas Moch, President Inter-Quadrangle Council Ex Officio ... To the Editor: [T HAS BEVN constantly stressed during the last week that SOC is the agency by which the stu- dents govern themselves, and have a voice in campus affairs. It is al- so known that there are seven ex officio members of SGC, namely the presidents of the Assembly As- sociation, IFC, the Michigan Un- ion, Panhellenic Association, Wo- men's League, IQC, and the Daily. It seems amazing that these two statements are not judged contra- dictory by the larger part of this campus. The SGC is supposed to represent the students of this cam- pus, not its most powerful organi- zations. For example, there is no valid reason why the president of IFC should be on SGC .as an ex officio member. Why is there tac- itly acknowledged to be a frater- nit, rather than a student, view- point? If the fraternities com- mand as much power and influ- ence as is alleged, they should be capable of electing a large num- ber of representatives to SGO in completely open elections. In addition, there is no reason why ex officios should be chosen by organization A, and not B. Why is there a representative from the quadrangles, and not the co-ops? If SGC really wants to be repre- sentative ' of the student body, steps should be taken immediately to eliminate the seating of ex of- ficios. -Howard Saita, '64 - - FEIFFER FORCFX66,'' TH 7AT OL109iOiRAS COUIITRJ-I!To O NT6 coAv g Vo Ut10lJ WAR W6 MUST RCTULRN is M O~ TO VC6 COOJC64'OF L5 f REVQL4YflOHARY CRAN96. 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