4,6 an 3pa *i Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 'nen opinions Are tree UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in Tbe Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. 38th Parallel NORV$ KOREA RSDAY, MAY 21, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: CHARLES KOZOLL THE MUSICAL YEAR Ann Arbor Receives Varied Bill of Fare IT WAS THE best of times, it was the worst of times. It was the gayest of times, it was the grimmest of times. It was in three-four time, it was in six-eight time. It was May Festival 1959, culmination of a year of curious musical entertainment out of Choral Union, by George. According to a note at the bitter end of May Festival's program, 208 compositions by 105 composers were heard in Hill Auditorium this year, with 108 "first presentations." On the surface, this seems to be an impressive accumulation. But looking beyond the respectable amount of padding (Robert Shaw encores, the Stars and Stripes, Jerome Hines gargling before the intermission) it would appear that a fairly wicked cross-section of music has been dropped into our laps, along with a fat lady or two and a box full of mutton. HIGHLIGHTS OF THE SEASON were the Chicago Symphony, violinists Stern and Milstein, pianist Tchaikovsky, with Robert Shaw's Chorale, Tebaldi's larynx, and Fiedler's Pops appealing to their own select groups. It is probably pointless to grumble about the sad state the Boston Symphony got itself into for its tour, or the sad state the Pittsburgh group can't seem to get out of; instead one might be content to have heard the National Symphony Orchestras of both Mexico and the United Urban Renewal: Ill Understood i AS ONE RINGS doorbells in the Urban Re- newal area, he is struck most of all by the residents' ignorance of the plan. Some are opposed to it and know something about it, and some are for it and know something too. Still, one's impression is that most of them don't really know much about it. Mrs. LaVaughn Wilson, for instance, said she "really didn't know too much" about the plan. Tom Sheppeard said he didn't know enough to have a definite opinion. In some of these cases, of course, unwillingness to comment probably was a factor, based on caution about being quoted in The Daily and, as one lady said about herself, on the desire not to antagonize neigh- bors. A door-to-door survey would probably turn up more no-comment-makers than Sun- day's Daily article, based about talks with leaders, implies. Even those who did speak out often didn't know the plan really well. Some did, of course, but others had mistaken ideas. Margaret James, who doesn't read newspapers, thought Lydia Newman would lose her house and her lot permanently. In fact, however, she would have an option to buy her lot back cleared and could then build a new house on it. One couple in 'Oh Maja' APOST OFFICE hearing examiner recently . ruled that advertising postcards showing Goya's painting, "The Naked Maja," (pronoun- ced "my-a") are obscene and non-mailable. He charged that the postcard "cannot be considered a masterpiece. In sum, it is simply a color picture of a nude woman." Occasionally nudity is found in this country, he continued, possibly reflecting on several known camps. But, he added, "generally speak- ing, we live in a clothed civilization" and so a nude woman would strike the average person as indecent. If necessary, the examiner's opinion can be appealed to the courts. In the meantime, his head should undergo a process similar to his title.~. The postcards were mailed by a movie firm to promote a movie based on Goya's life. On one side was a brief plug for the film, on the other, the naked woman in all her glory. And this is obscenity? Oh me, oh maja. -NORMA SUE WOLFE Congress and HE SENATE Commerce Committee, after a close vote, recently confirmed President Eisenhower's appointment of Lewis Strauss to the Secretaryship of the Department of Com- merce. In keeping with the Senate's recently increased sense of responsibility over Presiden- tial appointments-which emerged most notably with the discussion surrounding Mrs. Luce's projected selection as Ambassador to' Brazil- debate on Strauss's qualifications was long and loud. Unlike Mrs. Luce, at the moment Strauss seems cotnent to withhold any potential dam- aging comment on his recent "ordeal." As Mrs. Luce, Strauss has the curiously "Nixonesque" quality of arousing violent feel- ings in the politically liberal segment of the country. The Democratic Senators on the Com- mittee, particularly Estes Kefauver and Clinton Anderson (who worked with Strauss when he was head of the Atomic ,Energy Commission), gave ,him a pretty rought going-over; and Senator Morse's comments on Mrs. Luce were anything but friendly. As a result, most of the national magazines, favor of the plan was quite surprised at the possibility that their home might be taken. Andrew Kokinakes doesn't seem to understand that he can move his house to another lot and sell his old lot to the city at its cleared value, and probably somehow get the moving expenses paid by the city too. COUNCILMAN LLOYD IVES found some in- teresting rumors when he talked to 91 fami- lies in the area last fall. One man thought the City Council had hired the mayor to put Urban Renewal through. A number thought that com- pensation for houses acquired by the city would be about equal to assessed valuation, which in the area is about a fifth of market price, instead of on market-price appraisals. The rumor that the University wanted to build buildings in the area was so prevalent, Ives said, that he checked to make sure it was false. Some of these rumors apparently spread because of hostility to and suspicion of the University, as reflected in one man's comment (paraphrased) that "they don't have to come down here and help us." How prevalent erroneous rumors are now is hard to tell, but last week Mrs. Perkins thought that payments for acquired homes would be $5,000 across the board instead of their market prices. MOST OF THE misunderstanding and rumor seems to be against the plan. That is natu- ral, considering that it does threaten some homeowners and that until last summer it was pretty much introduced to them without their understanding or help. The first ward's second precinct, of which the renewal area is the central three-quarters, went Republican in th April election, by 92 votes in the mayoral race and 60 in the Council race. But then Ives found 77 per cent of the 91 families he talked to favored the plan after he explained it to them. He also found that all but one of the 28 families he visited in 16 of the 17 houses unable to be brought up to code were in favor of the plan. More explanation might win more residents over to the plan. At the moment, opinion for and against the plan is largely uninformed. The City Council did well in deciding to put out a pamphlet about the plan. More is needed, though, especially in the form of factual talk, for a pamphlet would not be fully read or understood by all residents. Perhaps the Council should revive the idea of an information booth in the area, -PETER DAWSON Appointments except for those usually classified as leftist or radical, have been grumbling about the way the Iature of the confirmation hearings were con- ducted. "In short, Lewis Strauss' senatorial enemies looked petty and foolish," said The National Review. Others have not been lax to seize the opportunity to beat the liberals over the head for using the very tactics that they hated so much when employed by the late Senator McCarthy. THIS MAY BE TRUE. Certainly "Do unto others as they have done unto you" is not too statesmanlike an axiom for political be- havior, especially if "the others" are of the McCarthy ilk. However, the increased concern expressed by Congress regarding Presidential appointments 'is essentially a healthy sign that Congress is paying more serious attention to its confirma- tion responsibilities than it has in the past. And this, given the nature of some recent Presidential selections, is certainly a good thing. -PHILIP POWER '2'. '1 _ ' V; ,q _ "Y' ' SS' ,,. °l/TiGq . F L5~..eJ K %L CAPITAL COMMENTARY: Pent By WILLI Agonitis' [AM S. WHITE THERE IS a Washington disease which might be called Penta- gonitis. The symptoms are these: a progressive swelling of the whole body (and of the spending budget). A curious thickening of the tongue which soon results in the abandon- ment of the English language in favor of a loud, brisk, multisyllabic dialect. This dialect only the true natives of Pentagonia, plus those whose own culture has long ago been overrun by the Pentagonians, can manage. When, in this odd patois, they wish to say, for example, that they are going to do something or end something they bark the word - or rather the sound - "finalize." And as English is rejected as the ordinary form of communica- tion, other no less fundamental changes also occur. Pentagonitis will require, say, the space of seven rooms for doing, the hard way, what could be done quicker in the space of one room. PENTAGONITIS means the in- troduction of vast numbers of "labor-saving" devices. These de- vices to reduce personnel will ala- ways wind up proving that this is indeed a healthily growing coun- try. For they will require more people to operate the cutting-down plans than the number of people who are in fact thus to be cut down. It would be extreme to say that the machine, the push-button, the automatic gadget, is the god of V Pentagonia. But it certainly would be correct to say that this is Pen- tagonia's unique gift to the art of government. Pentagonia, of course, is the great principality whose capital is the Pentagon - the home, across the Potomac in Virginia, of our military high commands. In terms of years Pentagonia is a Johnny- come-lately in Washington. But in its relatively short existence Pentagonitis has moved across the river like a slow, massive tidal wave. Other government departments have been infected, one by one, with Pentagonitis. (Indeed, one can even observe some of its effects on what used to be the completely detached island of the White House itself.) * * THE LAST of the bureaucratic strongholds to maintain all-out resistance was the State Depart- ment. For a time "State," perhaps immunized by its own peculiar brand of local bureaucrtic fevers, threw off the infection of creep- ing gadgetry, the principle of sub- traction bymultiplication, which typifies Pc ntagonia. But "State" has long since fallen, too. To what used to be its "new" building in Foggy Bottom - a building quite like the parent building of Pentagonia across the river-now is being added another of precisely the same kind. It is a duplicate of a duplicate, except that this second one seems, if any- thing, even bigger, and glossier, and colder than the first. Then, after "State" had suc- cumbed, the very ultimate fortress of non-Pentagonia was Congress. And the heart of this fortress was the United States Senate. For a long time, the Senate persisted in maintaining quarters small enough to be traversed in less than a single day. For a long time, it had a tele- phone system that was the very model of old-fashioned simplicity. You simply picked up the phone, asked for Senator Jones's office, and got it straightaway. For a long time, you could go right up to a small postoff ice in the Senate wing of the Capitol and buy a stamp from a live hand. * * * BUT NOW, what with a new office buildin~g of staggering bulk, automatic elevators, artifical light and all the rest, the Senate itself looks like Pentagonia. Progress in communication has come, too. Now, there are not one but three telephone dial systems. Gadgetry has come triumphantly to the Sen- ate, too. And now to buy a stamp you must put a coin into a ma- chine and then dial-yes, dial-a number or a series of numbers., Thus, this is the sad end of the tale: the final victory has been finalized for Pentagonia and its system for more and more effi- ciency that is less and less effi- cient. (Copyright 1959, by United Features Syndicate, Inc.) States more or less cancel each other out. Turning now to May Festival, it is quickly apparent that the pro- gram somehow filled Hill Auditor- ium just as, one begins to suspect, any program would fill the seats with something or other. AFTER A FIRST-rate opening, mainly featuring Rudolf Serkin at the piano and Ormandy at the baton in a Piano Concerto by Brahms, there was a steady down- hill progression to the inevitable "Victor's March." (It is probably interesting to note that the Vic- tor's March always get the most applause of all but let's not.) The next evening was full of dreary choruses singing something unspeakable by Chabrier who writes foolish waltzes; something surrealistic by Poulencz which be- came understandable just as it ended, and something by Vaughan Williams for the Birds. On the Third Day of May Festi- val, my True Love gave to me: Three Thompson Trifles, Two Pot- Boilers, and a conductor in a Pear Tree. * * * THE CONDUCTOR was Andante Smith, the Philadelphia's assistant conductor who knows only one tempo which, each time used, be- comes more inappropriate. The two Pot-Boilers were Brahms "Haydn Variations," and Dvorak's First, really not in this category. One ought to be grateful to Dvorak, in fact. His symphony saved the day, coming after a collection of Im- pressions of the Mud Pond at Mid- night by Virgil Thompson. Since tempos other than Andante were required, Thompson conducted. Saturday night was the loneliest night of the week for musicians. Lead-off spot was held by a Bach Chaconne reorchestrated for large orchestra and tam-tam by a Philly violinist. Then came some songs by one of the Festival solo clique. It is certainly a pity that the Fes- tival Authority thinks it can pack the Hall by signing up all sorts of soloists, as though the names will bring in the crowds. Even more unfortunate: it's true. Prokofiev's Seventh Syphmony is generally considered to be a sad disappointment, although the man who writes programs notes for the Festival turned to "Pravda" for his description of the symphony. Prokofiev was evidently uninflu- enced by Wagner, so it was neces- sary to turn to the outer world for comment. * * AFTER STILL more songs came a ballet by Roussel best left to the imagination of the completely inane who can doubtless appreci- ate it. Sunday afternoon brought forth the chorus of drudges again for a romp through Handel's "Solo-' mon." An appraisal of this must1 be left to other writers; at any rate, to someone who slept through less than two-thirds. SO FINALLY, after a devious and circuitous route, we are brought to the last evening of the musical orgy. At last, for a brief moment; Mozart's 38th symphony and some singing by Basso Giorgio Tozzi restored some of the lustre which had been tarnished. But a rambling tour through Ravel's Second Daphnis and Chloe Suite soon erased the memory of Mozart and Tozzi. Several years ago, the 3oston Symphony Orchestra played this Suite as it should be played, and it should be played with well- directed enthusiasm or not at all. Ormandy saved his enthusiasm for the Victor's March just as those in the know will save their money for typhoid shots. Summing Up: An interesting year, until the end. -David Kessel DAILY. OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- tnoki,, respnsibility. Notie, should By BRACK CURRY Associated Press Correspondent ENEVA (P)-From the sidelines Heinrich von Brentano wields close to veto power over major Western policy decisions at the Big Four Conference. West Germany's bachelor For- eign Minister has declined the chair reserved for him in the or- nate conference room. He has assigned a subordinate to attend. But he is quietly influencing the talks on Berlin, Germany and European security. He is a spokes- man for 52 million West Germans. Foreign Ministers of the United States, Britain and France must take into account his firmly held views on all these problems. This is the background: The West German Republic is now the strongest economic force in West Europe. Its burgeoning army by 1962 will be the strongest continental element in the North Atlantic Alliance .Chancellor Kon- rad Adenauer has solidified close relation with France, a traditional foe, and with the United States. REUNIFICATION of Germany is one of the major objectives of the West German government. But it is not prepared to accept unifi- cation fon Russian terms. Similarly, it opposed any scheme for a confederation of the two German states, holding that this would perpetuate the division of the country and give the Com- munist East Germans a hand in shaping the future of a united Germany. It considers a firm East- West arrangement on disarma- ment could smooth the path to unity. Von Brentano's absence from the conference sessions stems from one phase of the rivalry between East and West German govern- ments. He doesn't want to give East German Foreign Minister Lothar Bolz any idea that he con- sidersrhim an equal. Bolz sits in as chief of the East German advisory delegation. Von Brentano is represented by Wilhelm Grewe, the West German Ambassador to Washington. But he keeps a close check on con- ference affairs from his palatial villa near the French frontier. * * * ALLIED with French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Mur- ville, he insists on an iron-hard Western line in dealing with the Russians. Britain favors a softer approach. The United States steers a somewhat middle course. When there's a hint of even a slight weakening of the Western line, the heavy-set, broad-shoul- dered German steps in quickly to help repair the breach. Once word leaked out that the Western ministers might accept a face-saving 'truce with the Rus- sians over Berlin and sidetracked their peace plan for Germany.; Von, Brentano charged in with a demand that the West tighten up its posture. Backed by Couve de Murville, he called on the West to demand a maximum price from Moscow for any back-tracking on the West's package peace plan. THE UNITED STATES, British and French Foreign Ministers then joined with Von Brentano to rush out a statement saying that, while Berlin and other issues could be discussed with Russia outside the peace plan, such issues could not actually be settled separately from this plan. With the future of Germany at stake, Von Brentano would like to sit in on the ministerial sessions. But his associates say he is con- vinced it is deirable, for the pres- ent at least, to leave his chair vacant. There are morning conferences with his staff, then a meditative walk among the cedars on the vla. n'vii followeda inerh a fl 8. Sits Out I. POWER: B~rentano I a LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Support Anti-Discrimination Moves INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Factors. of Analysis By J. M. ROBERTS. Associated Press News Analyst THERE ARE A VAST number of factors of varying importance which, remembered from day to day, help in assessment of the Geneva proceedings. First and foremost, of course, are the funda- mental believe of the two opposing sides. L714r Mir4,1-gall Daily Western nations can never feel secure as long as the Soviet Union combines traditional Rus- sian expansionist policy with a revolutionary economic concept which demands universality. The other side of the coin is that the Com- munists believe the West is just as intent on the universality of their brand of democracy, and that their motive is to wipe out the com- petition of Communism. DRIVEN BY THE expansionist and revolu- tionary concepts, coupled with a very real fear of renewed attack by Germany and of attack by the Western world if it feels itself losing the cold war, the Soviets will not aban- don the aggressive posture which created the cold war in the beginning. There are a vast number of situations inci- dental to this major conflict. The presence of American troops in Berlin, as in West Germany itself, is a part of the guar- antee to Europe that it can resist Soviet pres- sures in the full knowledge that an attack in Europe will be an attack on the United States. To the Editor: THE Congregational, Disciples, Evangelical and Reformed Guild Council endorse four resolu- tions, recently adopted, by the NAACP State Convention. We of the Guild, believe it is our Chris- tian responsibility to work for the following four resolutions which will help to eliminate discrimina- tion : A) A resolution supporting amending legislation to the state Fair Employment Practices Act giving all persons the right to em- ployment, public accommodations, housing and education without dis- crimination; and creating a Civil Rights Commission acting princi- pally through mediation and con- ciliation. We of the Guild favor strong anti-discriminatory hous- ing provisions protecting students and others seeking "off campus" housing. B) A resolution supporting strong educational provisions in amending legislation to the FEP Act making it an unfair practice for public educational institutions to practice discrimination in ad- missions, or any other aspect of the institution, or to abet dis- crimination practiced by others. C) A resolution calling upon the U of M Regents, the MSU Trustees, the WSU Governors,-and the State Board of Education to establish in their schools: 1) the policy that these schools not practice or abet discrimination, and support the ticed or abetted in room and room- mate assignments made by resi- dence hall administration. The U of M Residence Halls Governors are commended in this resolution by the NAACP for their removal of questions pertaining to race, reli- gion and national origin from ap- plications. That landlords be dis- couraged from discriminating, and those who do, receive no assistance from the schools. That "'recogni- tion," and therefore sanction not be extended to groups, incltiding fraternal organizations, having discriminatory membership prac- tices. That scholarships, grants and loans administered by public schools have no discriminatory restrictions. The Guild will press for items in these resolutions through its Social Action Committee. We realize morality can not be legislated, but we believe the conditions wherein justice and morality may develop can be legislated.- We call on all persons to support measures which constructively work against dis- crimination.. -The Congregational, Disciples, Evangelical and Reformed Guild Council / *1 ' Quotes from the Bug: ( .'~ I I t 4 Editorial Staff RICHARD TAUB, Editor AICHAEL KRAFT ditorial Director JOHN WEICHER City Editor DAVID TARR Associate Editor LLE CANTOR...................Personnel Director AN WILLOUGHBY .... Associate Editorial Director AN JONES ........................ Sports Editor ATA JORGENSON ..........Associate City Editor IZABETH ERSKINE ... Associate Personnel Director COLEMAN ........... Associate Sports Editor DRL RISEMAN ..........Associate Sports Editor AVID ARNOLD ................ Chief Photographer