'THURSDAY, JULY 1.3, 1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAG*~ THREE COOL DIA). 8-64 16 Supervisors Set New Post For Deputy Training Plan "BRAWLING and EXHILARANT ABANDON on the SCREEN " -Time Magazine 1 r "A GEM"' - N. Y: Herald Tribune. *aturciyNiand &,*tndayMong DIAL 2-6264 , . Shows at 1 :00 - 3:05 5:10 - 6:55 and 9:05k Feature Starts 25 minutes later Now,TAMMY is teachin' a heap o' LEARN IN' LIVYIN; 10 IN' ...to a shy, young professor! The Board of Supervisors re- cently created a lieutenant's posi- tion in the Ann Arbor Sheriff's Department to implement a new recruitment and training program in the department. It is anticipated that the per- son selected for the new position will make the studies necessary for maintaining the personnel stan- dards and arrange the schedule for training new officers and cur- rent members of the staff. The new recruitment program requires that the new officers complete a recruit training course at one of the established police training schools such as the De- troit Police Academy, the State Police Training School or the training school operated by the Kent County Sheriff's Depart- ment. Standards for the department include recruiting age limits of 21 through 35, high school grad- uation, average general aptitude, top physical condition, as certi- fied by a county physician, per- sonality evaluation by a compe- tent medical authority and gen- eral adaptability and acceptability for police work. The latter is to be determined by "extensive personal investiga- tion and interview by a recruit- ment board." Sheriff George A. Petersen met with the board's joint sheriff's and ways and means committee to discuss the program before the board considered it. He said he concurred substan- tially with the personnel policies, standards and practices of lead- ing police agencies and indicated such policies could be applied for- mally to his department. Petersen set down a policy of: 1) continuously striving to im- prove the quality-of law enforce ment in Washtenaw County Peace Corps To Hold Tests Those interested in joining the Peace Corps can take examina- tions at 8 a.m. today and tomor- row at the main Post Office down- town, 220 North Main Street. The skills tested for cover many fields. Tomorrow's tests will be held for those persons qualified to teach in secondary schools. A college .degree isn't a neces- sary prerequisite for those taking the exams today. Skilled trades- men are also greatly sought after. Tomorrow's examinations will require applicants to have a col- lege degree. They wil test people capable of teaching physics, chemistry, biology, mathematics and English at the secondary school levels. through improvement in the qual- ity and ability of personnel; 2) recruitment and promotion of police officers and other em- ployees of the department solely on the basis of merit and fitness for performing their duties and 3) selection and training of potential officers by methods and procedures which are proved the most effective by leading police agencies. The Washtenaw County sheriff recently was honored by the sher- iff's school at Higgens lake with the grand award for county law enforcement and safety program for counties with populations of more than 50,000. Petersen's department also was cited with first place for the "best improvement" award. "These new policies and stan- dards will assure further advance- ments in the quality of law en- forcement in the county," the committee said in making its re- commendations. The new plan resulted from a four-month study by the board. To Hold Talks on Television, Education Aids The Summer Speech Conference being held here today will cover topics ranging from educational television to auditory disorders. The speech department sponsors the program, which starts with a symposium on education tele- vision at 9:45 a.m. Three area meetings will begin at 11:00 a.m. (All meetings are held in Rack- ham Bldg., and are open to the public.) These meetings will discuss poetry reading, elementary speech courses and auditory disorders. The luncheon speaker (at the Anderson Room in the Union) will be Prof. Ralph G. Nichols, chair- man of the rhetoric department at the University of Minnesota. Prof. John Gassner of Yale Uni- versity will discuss "Shaw on Shakespeare at 2:15 p.m. Three more meetings will be held afterwards. Public address, "Henry Ward Beecher at Fort Surhter," speech correction and speech perception will be among the areas discovered. Reveal Plan' Of Renewal In Ypsilanti Ypsilanti yesterday revealed its, new plan for federal-aided urban1 renewal to cost $2,332,838. The adoption of the plan will come up at a public meeting Au- gust 14. $1,644,757 of the money1 would come from the federal gov- ernment. Over half of the 367 families in the renewal area will have to be moved, according to surveys done early this year, if the renewal plan is adopted. Seventy-one of these families would be eligible for low-rent public housing, because they have incomes of under $300 a month, according to city estimates. The 109 acre renewal area has 163 separately owned lots, which the city would have to buy. Part of the land to be acquired will be added to a neighboring park near an elementary school. About 173 buildings will be torn down, cleared away and replaced by new housing. Most of the area will'be zoned to permit only one- or two-family homes. Their lots would have a minimum of 5,000 square feet. One of the area's business sec- tions would be eliminated by this new zoning. Another section would not be affected. The city will pay one-third of the total costs. This will come to $704,146. Half will be cash, the rest various credit resources. If the residents approve the plan at the August meeting, and the federal government agrees to its share, work could begin this No- vember, with completion expected by November, 1964. Forty-five of the 191 families to be displaced- are expected to re- locate in private rented housing. Seventy-five more are expected to buy homes of their own. Giles To Give Carillon Show Sidney F. Giles, the Univer- sity's assistant carilloneur, will give a concert with the Charles Baird Carillon at Burton Memorial Tower today at 7:15 p.m. Compositions by Schubert, Han- del and Fleyel, plus one of Giles' own pieces, will be included in his performance. By RUTH EVENHUIS Prof. H. Arthur Steiner of the University of California at Los Angeles expects a build-up rather than decrease in Communist power in China. The lecturer said that the stand- ing official United States posi- tion is one of maintaining that; the Communist regime will not hold up and that, hence, the United States hopes to hasten its downfall by a policy of non- recognition. However, non-recognition is not a policy, but a detail or a tech- nique, Steiner said. This techni- que is based on the American concept of "unilinear history" in which the pattern of feudalism giving away eventually to a demo- cracy under the pressure of the middle-class is expected to repeat itself in under-developed coun- tries of the Orient. Difficult View The difficulty with such a view- point is that China's background differs from that of the Western democracies in that it had no strong middle class which es- tablished democratic principles.- When the small middle class over- threw the Manchu dynasty and later backed Chiang-Kai-Shek, it established itself in a privileged position and provided little relief to the peasant masses. Hence, Steiner said the course of development of Chinese society has not followed the pattern of the Western countries. Further the life in China is rooted to the land. Its vast acre- age separates the peasants into parochial groups which are more prone to view events in light of their effect on individual pro- vinces than on China as a whole. Rejects Capitalism China, then, has not developed a capitalist society, Steiner said. In fact, it has rejected it. In the preceding century Western trade with China fostered a small and ineffective middle class. It also pulled the youth of the family into shipping and consequently, uprooted the family system of a subsistence economy. When Mao-Tse-Tung came into power he said that in his reading of Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine he found little that applied to Chinese society. China needed a system designed to alleviate the economic distress of its lower class masses and wanted a system which would PROF. H. ARTHUR STEINER ... unilinear history raise it to a position of status in the world community, Steiner said. Anti-West Feelings He also pointed to anti-Western sentiment created by the "un- equal treaties" effected when China became opened to trade.! Americans living in China were B ILLIARDS, and SWIMMING daily except Sun. at the MICHIGAN UN ION not subject to Chinese law as Western powers obtained conces- sions and spheres of influence, he said. Western imperialism was viewed as the enemy of the Chi- nese people as it exploited them and reinforced the landlord class. China sees the United States as a major threat to world peace. More particularly, it views it as a threat to its own national in- terest. This country's statement regarding hopes for the demise of the Red regime is tantamount to an undeclared state of war, Stein- er said. Chinese intervention in Korea and Viet Nam are the re- sults of a kind of Chinese "Mon- roe Doctrine" in. which China re- fuses to tolerate foreign inter- ference in those'countries which border her. Further, the United States' maintenance of an alter- nate government just off the mainland is seem as a direct military threat, Steiner pointed out. Since China's differences with Russia are mainly in the area of "how far to trust the United States," Steiner thinks it unlikely that any rift between the two countries will occur to place the West in a stronger position. 4 w GROWING POWER: Steiner Views Chinese Policy 1 -1 m "'"" CHARLES DRAKE VIRGINIA GREY JULIA MEADE Cecil Kellaway Beulah Bondi Edgar Buchanan Gigi Perreau Juanita Moore Skeenpay by OSCAR BRODNEY " Oired Produced by ROSS HUNTER " A UNIVEI A ROSS HUNTER PRODUCTN -with the in Eastman COLOR delightful music of America's beloved PERCY FAITH / ed by HARRY KELLER RSAL-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE GRAD SOCIAL HOUR Friday, July 14... 5-7 P.M. V.F.W. CLUB on E Liberty 25c admission sponsored by THE GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL T HIS FRIDAY All-Campus Dance MUSIC by Stanley Mogelnicki & Orchestra MICHIGAN LEAGUE BALLROOM f t k" vt + u 1 I "1..':. e 111 1 1 1 1 .::h. :r:r ". .a :..:;.. ?4. LWi}: .'r}l..1r: Y...f.VVl%% .VV....... p . h~v~.. :.;"}... ... L ...yr..........':1*...... ... . ..";{" :1 h ..:..., t....r.. . . . .1'1 .i:}:}""}}.{:r}}. . .:":1!}:.}.y1: * 1/f don't 1 , . ... guess about sun tail " Y lotions! Our experienced cosmetician at the Quarry will help you 11 DIAL NO 5-6290 HELD OVER 2ND BIG WEEK THE HAPPY SUMMERTIME HIT ! WAIT.y DISNEY a$ ws 2~BU 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. THURSDAY, JULY 13 Events Thursday Baratin, the informal conversation group of the French Club, will meet Thurs., July 13, from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Romance Languages Department Lounge, 3050 Frieze Bldg. All those interested in speaking French are cor- dially invited to stop in. student Recital: Barbara Barclay, pianist, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Music on Thurs., July 13, 8:30 p.m., Aud. A. Compositions she will play are by Schumann, Schoen- berg, and Beethoven. Open to the pub- lic. Educational Film Preview: "'Think- ing' Machines" and "Project "Hohole'" will be shown on Thurs., July 13 at 2 p.m. in the Schorling Aud., University School. Open to the public without charge. Summer Session Lecture Series: "The Nationalism of Right" will be discussed by Paul G. Kauper, Prof. of Law, on Thurs., July 13 at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. A. At 7:30 p.m. he will participate in a panel discussion in Aud. B. Linguistic Forum Lecture: "Some As- pects of English Syntax" will be dis- cussed by Prof. W. Freeman Twaddell, Brown University on Thurs., July 13 at 7:30 p.m. in the Rackham Amphi- theatre. Physics Lecture: "Isotopic Spin" will be discussed by Dr. J. B. French, Uni- versity of Rochester on Thurs., July 13 at 3:30 p.m. in 2038 Randall Lab. Events Friday Educational Film Preview: Fri., July 14 at 2 p.m. In the Schorling Aud., University School. "Nick" and "Secrets of the Underwater World." Guest Lecturer: Roberto Gerhard, English composer and Visiting Profes- sor of Composition Spring 1960, will re- turn on Fri., July 14. to lecture at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. D on "Sound Observed," and will perform his "Colage." Open to the public without charge. Physics Lecture: Dr. G. R. Satchler, Oak Ridge, will speak on "Distorted wave Theory of Direct Reactions" on Fri., July 14 at 3:30 p.m. in 2038 Randall Lab. Doctoral Examination for John Paul Ulrich, Physics; thesis: "The Refrac- tion of Plane and Cylindrical Sound Disturbances by a Plane Moving Shock Front," Fri., July 14, 2038 Randall Lab., at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, Otto Laporte. Organization Notices Hillel Foundation, Folk Dancing, July 13, 7:30 p.m., 1429 Hill St. * * * The Sailing Club will meet this eve- ning, 7:45 p.m., in 311 W. Engineering. Movies will follow the regular business meeting. select the right lotion for your skin. Avoid irritations, burns and discoloration. The Quarry will help you to a per- fect tan. Also choose from the Quarry's selection of insect repellents and other summer cosmetics -biggest under the sun. PAID ADVERTISEMENT presents Thursday, Friday, and Saturday: RASHOMON I 11 ti. ,/ urATA Briani Bain de Soleil Bronze Luster $2.00 $2.00 S.G.C. Cinqem fa yUd4 TONIGHT at 7 and 9 KOJI SHIMA'S THE GOLDEN DEMON Until Kurosawa's extraordi- nary Rashomon won the Venice Grand Prize in 1951, almost all Westerners assumed that Jap- anese films were epigonous pro- ducts for strictly Eastern audi- ences. Ugetsu and Gate of Hell. almost as widely hailed as Rashomon, indicated that there had risen in Japan a new school of directors who were utilizing traditional Japanese stories to comment with telling contem- porary insights on the human condition. Two aspects of their work were immediately strik- ing. Philosophically, they raised questions for which their work was an illustration and not an answer, an implication of social nihilism that reflected the post- war Japanese scene and bore more than a passing resem- blance (which we will not ex- amine here) to the work of Wedekind and Pirandello. Aes- thetically, they were bold and films that employed color, the effects were vivid, painstaking, and so individual that the East- man Kodak Company, accus- tomed to the dull mechanics of Hollywood naturalism, re- quested prints of their own pro- cess for study. The Golden Demon is based on what has been called Japan's first modern novel, a turn-of- the-century tale, in which the old feudal Japan is in full con- flict with the Westernization ordered by the Meiji emperor. A Romeo and Juliet story, it relates the troubles of two young lovers whose match is broken by their parents' in- volvement with the "Golden Demon"- money, the embodi- ment of the soulless industrial revolution. It has been called "a romanticized morality play"; in any case, the theme and its realization brought not only plaudits from the pooular Syou'll flip, ~-. for BESTFORM'S ok'n rol panty girdle For that F Slim Lithe J _ 10, Loop ! ( ~ good.andIflI0 ...for fulflskirts or shorts. Mid-long for eased skirts 4 and Bermudas. Good- and-long for good-and- tight tapered pants and skirts. It's made of nylon if power net elastic, backed with downy stretch nylon (mighty cool!). Has rayon, nylon,.rubber and cotton elastic panels for extra Scontrol where you need it. 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