THE MICHIGAN D 1AILY .a aa. .. ual Valil{11'a.8 L1'1aL1 -.. ___ _ a PAGE THREE c Venezuela Visitors View American Life, Politics INTERNAL AFFAIRS: U.S. Walks South American Tightrope daily paper, showings of both "West Side Story" and "The Won- derful World of the Brothers Grimm." At the Trans-lux Krim Theatre in Detroit is Carlo Ponti's Italian production of "Boccaccio'70." The N o r t h l a n d Playhouse; through Aug. 19, will stage the "Wedding Breakfast" on its stage. The star is Piper Laurie, Academy Award winning actress. For Jazz Buffs For jazz buffs, The Minor Key will open with Miles Davis and his Sextet tomorrow and Baker's Key- board is featuring Shelley Manne and his quintet. Off the sidewalks of New York, and for that matter on them, is perhaps the most excitement. So much there isn't room with- out benefit of a full page of the New York newspaper to list it. Here is some of the best. Plans Float The home of theatre still has some good plays floating around. At the Theatre de Lys is "Brecht fon Brecht." St. Marks Playhouse is present- ing Jean Genet's "The Blacks." Sheridan Square has on stage Brendon Behan's "The Hostage." Circle in the Square has Thorn- ton Wilder's "Plays for Bleeker Street: Infancy, Childhood and Lust." The American Shakespeare Fes- tival in Stratford, Conn., is fea- turing Helen Hayes and Maurice Evans. For the Broadway shows take a look at the ads on the subways you will almost certainly ride. Free Concertl In the music world there are the many free and almost free con- certs always around New York.. Jazz. There's plenty of it. A lit- tle looking and a lot of money will allow you to see Brubeck, Lambert, Hendricks and Bavan, Thelonious Monk, Coleman Hawkins, Eric Dolphy, and more. At Gerde's Folk City are Mikef Seeger and Hedy West. Take your choice. All kinds, all beats, allt prices. If you want something really different and exciting try "The1 Premise" or "The Second City." The Second City was the original1 stomping ground for Mike Nichols and Elaine May and The Premise1 is the funniest livingest t heatret around and all improvised to yourt orders on the spot.r Venezuelan students at the Uni- versity as part of the "Exchange of Persons" program of the State Department gave an off-the-cuff survey yesterday of their impres- sions on this country and its poli- cies. "La cosa mas feas" (the ugliest thing) at first glance was the state's sales taxes, which, they said, "has poor people paying un- fair disproportionate amounts." Venezuelan News Other impressions: -"La gente no es feliz"-the peo- ple aren't happy here. Instead, they seem preoccupied with their work, and devoid of savoir faire; -"Poco refinado," unrefined, are the folk here. Their food, even in good restaurants, is only third- rate, so far as taste is concerned. (But on the other hand, our candies and cakes are good.) -Public services are magnifi- La ler Scores Death Claims Of Lake Erie Predictions of the death of Lake Erie are somewhat premature,' Prof. Karl F. Lagler, chairman of the fisheries department, said re- cently. Lakes-like babies-die a little every day of their lives until they expire, he explained. "Recently there have been re- peated reports that Lake Erie is a dying lake. True though this statement is, it is equally true of a brand new lake just as it is true of a baby from the moment of birth," Prof. Lagler asserted. The normal maturation process started when it was a new lake, full of glacial meltwater, chem-; ically almost as pure as rainwater and low in the chemical nutrients necessary to support life, he con- tinued. "With the growth, death and decay of many generations of life, lake water typically becomes more and more fertile. Ultimately, the lake fills in-then it is dead. Lake Erie, although technically dying is still the most alive and produc- tive of the Great Lakes," he con- tinued. Prof. Lagler cited the report of Ohio bioligists ofa large hatch of perch in Lake Erie this year while commercial fishermen, he noted, are picking up large num- bers of walleyes from the spring 1961 hatch. "Thus, rather than to claim that Lake Erie is a dying lake, which added nothing to existing know-s ledge, a truer statement is thatt it is a changing lake-or even ar lake threatened by disease," he cent, and so is general cleanliness. But the cost of living is too high. Worst complaint was that "la gente aqui no se hace amiga de nadie'"-people here don't make friends with anyone. "'We don't have time to,' you say, but in Ven- ezuela friends of mine get up at 5 a.m., don't get home from work and school until after 8 p.m.-but still find time for being more friendly." Or: "People here are disciplined, serious. But they are also unre- fined; they still wear coonskin caps which need to be shaved off." Invading Cuba was bad, all agreed, but worse was choosing "the fool's way of doing it." As to whether to break off contacts with Cuba now, "Only the most insignif- icant of Latin American countries have done so. Mexico, Brazil and Argentina, for example, have not -nobody likes to be told what to do about such things." What Is the Alliance? The Aliance for Progress is a failure, says one. "No it's not, it's a myth," a second says. "How can it be a failure when it hasn't yet started,? "Latin American countries need development and capital. These have to come from the outside. Alliance for Progress m o n e y shouldn't be going to hospitals or housing developments, but to re- productive investments that cre- ate jobs." What could the U.S. do to im- prove its Latin American relations? "First: make the Alliance for Progress truly effective, to stim- ulate economic growth in the coun- tries concerned; "And second: have much more cultural interchange; Latin Amer- icans try to see foreigners in their own terms, and North Americans should do the same. By LEWIS GULICK Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON - Admist this hemisphere's dedication to non- intervention - in principle - the United States is wading hip deep in the internal affairs of Latin American countries from Cape Horn to the Caribbean. For instance, the state depart- ment made no attempt to deny this week that it has warned rebel army leaders in Argentina against setting up a military dictatorship. By the end of this week, the department plans to resume dip- lomatic relations and aid to Peru -but only after pressuring for a wide range of pledges by the Lima junta on how it will treat the Peruvian people. Chop Off Aid In dictator-ridden Haiti, United States aid has been chopped off with no sign yet when it might be renewed. Extending the long arm of Yan- kee influence into the inner reaches of Latin lands is hardly new. The basic aim of Washington strategists is still- the same: to promote what they consider the best interests of the United States. What is new for the 1960's, as against the old style gunboat dip- lomacy and a later era of good neighborliness without many strings, is a close linking of United States diplomatic pressure with a big flow of dollar help. Goals Effects The announced goals of the 10- year, $20-billion Alliance for Pro- gress program themselves reach deeply into the domestic affairs of the aid-receiving countries. In President John F. Kennedy's def- inition of the massive assistance effort for the Americas, the aim is to show "economic progress and social justice can best be achieved by free men working within a framework of democratic institu- tions." Translated into terms of United States security, this means the Washington strategists now figure a rising, shared prosperity in Latin America under popular govern- ments is the best counter to dan- gerous Communist penetration in- to America's home ground. The ticklish question is how to apply this leverage without mak- ing things worse. Many of the elite now high in the saddle in Latin America don't see how they would fare better with reforms for the masses. Dislike of "intervention" from the outside, especially from the powerful "Colossus of the North," is deeply ingrained among the nationalistic Latins. Fear Outsiders Yet, as one of the inner circle of United States policymakers, Deputy Under Secretary of State 'U. Alexis Johnson, recently said, "The measures we advocate may strike at the very foundations of theseaspects ofda country's social structure and domestic economy on which rests the basis of the government's control." "This calls for the utmost skills of our profession," the long- experienced diplomat said, "for it is always a difficult task and sometimes an impossible one." 1 U.S. Tight Rope The Peruvian case illustrates the tightrope act United States diplomacy must go through to get something done. Months before the Lima coup, the United States had warned the military against a takeover. After the July 18 coup, the United States promptly suspended diplomatic re- lations and sizable aid. Since then, the junta has prom- ised to hold free elections, has restored civil liberties to a sig- nificant degree and has freed ex- president Manuel Prado. Washington has now decided this is about all it can hope for at this time, and is preparing to turn on again the twin spigots of dollars and diplomatic recogni- tion. NSA Congress Begins Debate About Issues (Continued from Page 1) If the Congress follows tra- ditional patterns, delegates will be attracted to the various ucli- tical camps and plan strategy to pass legislation and elect national officers. Resolutions passed by preceeding Congresses have been more left of center than right and conserva- tive student groups have attacked several aspects of NSA. Liberal student leaders are ex- pecting vigorous opposition to their legislation from such or- ganizations as Young Americans for Freedom and the Committee for a Reformed National Student Organization. Outgoing NSA president Edward Garvey, who willdofficially chair the Congress, called upon par- ticipants to face "the challenge of leading the student community in defining and acting upon issues facing American higher education, a society which is struggling to translate quality of opportunity from theory into fact and world where student in the emergent areas are confronted with the task of making democracy, social re- form and university autonomy a living reality." "v:: J: rr::.'.Wm."::.:.....:::."::s..::. :J"........Vr... . .."::.:......:":{":.Y}..".":.A..V..j.whw:,...w:v.. "."."::.:.."::::::.... ....:,f.4..5.....h........l44r....t4t .r .. .... .............. ...."............. ......... ....... . ............. ........ . ....:"::vv ....4. v ...........,..*,..*,. "...****"4}'4"*"*5..******* 4 ,*.*5'**.5****,*** DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETI'N ..4.. w. .A......w....... ......s.......h , ..,a,.A ,...w3 .vv. .... x".v..".:.4 .,M.::..v~k. 4. .T r::. ": r. .. . ...,.:".N:"": 6k V. SWO:K2Sf..{u."k4."S 4}."}}V.W.:":; 4}}:t,Y:<;i}. S ;. :.~: METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER presents in association with SEVEN ARTS PRODUCTIONS JAMES 8.HARRIS and STANLEY KUBRICKS -mIrI S~tarmng JAMES MASON - SHELLEY WINTERS PETER SELLERS .as'QuiIyf and Introducing SUE LYON as STARTING FRIDAY Suggest Keeping of University Zoo ANN ARBOR-Councilman Eu- nice L. Burns offered a resolution of regret at the loss of the Univer- sity's zoo consisting of ten animals during the last council meeting as Republican Henry A. Aquinto sug- gested asking the Regents to keep the zoo if possible. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial *esponsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m., two days preceding publication. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15 General Notices Any Summer Session Student who is planning to attend the fal semester and does not have a student identifica- tion card may obtain one by applying at Window A, lobby of the Admin. Bldg., hours 8-12 and 1-5, Mon. through Fri. All Students must have an I.D. card prior to registration this fall. .Events Doctoral Examination for James Wal- ter Ney, Eng. Language & Lit.; thesis: "A Morphological and Syntactic Analy- DIAL 5-6290 MICHIGRM .... .. -i I said. Prof. Lagler warned that pol- lution is being thrusted into the west end of the lake, changing both water quality and fish popu- lation. sis of English Compositions Written by Native Speakers of Japanese," Thurs., Aug. 16, 2601 Haven Hall, at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, A. H. Marckwardt. Doctoral Examination for Chikashi Moriguchi, Economics; thesis: "Manu- facturers' Short-Term Production De- cisions under the Different Phases of Business Cycles as of Shown by Select- ed Industries 1949-1960," Thurs., Aug. 16, 2A Economics Bldg., at 10:00 a.m. Chairman, D. B. Suits. Degree Recital: Bertha Hargarty, or- ganist, will present a recital on Fri., Aug. 17, 8:30 p.m., Hill Aud., in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Music. Miss Hagarty will play the compositions of Johann Sebastian Bach, Sigfrid Karg-Elert, and Olivier Messiaen. Her recital is open to the public. Pakistan Students Association will celebrate the 15th anniv. of Pakistan's independence on Sat., Aug. 18 at 7:30 p.m. at YM-YWCA. The program con- sists of movies, a talk by Richard Ni- heoff, coordinator of Pakistan Project in the Office of the Dean of Interna- tional Affairs at Mich. State Univ., and Pakistani, refreshments. All are cor- dially invited. Placement ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER- VIEW-Seniors & grad students, make appointments by signing schedule on bulletin board outside Engrg. Place- ment Office, Room 128-H West Engrg. for the following: THURS., AUG 16- Bell Aerosystems Co., Buffalo, N.Y.- Require all.degrees in AE, EE, EM, & ME and a BS in E Physics. Will do re- search, development & design work. POSITION OPENINGS: Archer Daniels Midland Co. (ADM), Minneapolis, Minn.-Seeking BS or MS level Chemical Sngnr. with 0 to 2 yrs. exper. for Newark, N.J. Chemical Plant. Should have strong interest in produc- tion supervision. Kelly Girl Service, Inc., Detroit, Mich. -Recent grad, man or possibly woman, for Junior Accounting Management. BA, possible Econ., with some course University Musical Society Presentations - 1962-1963 CHORAL UNION SERIES DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA. . . . . 2:30, Sunday, October 7 work in Accounting & Statistics. 1 or 2 yrs. gen'l business exper. Oppor. for advancement to general mgmt. position for graduate interested in bus, career.. Tridea Electronics, Inc., South Pasa- dena, Calif. - Positions for Electrical Engnrs. for various phases of Design in electronic systems development. Also Reliability Group Head & Ass't. All re- quire BS degree minimum & from 2 to 5 yrs. exper. County of Westchester, New York- Openings in field of social work for recent grads. BA degree-any field. New York residence waived. Apply by Sept. 4 for exam in Oct. Sperry Electronic Tube Div., Gaines- ville, Fla --Openings as follows: 1) Mar- keting Rep.-Engrg. or Physics degree, BS, with tech, sales exper. 2) Equip- ment Engnr.-BSME. 3) Environmental Test Engnr.-BSME plus exper. 4) Proj- ect Engnrs.-MS or PhD in EE or Phys- ics. 5) Buyer-Bus. Ad. grad with exper., buying machined parts. City of Muskegon Heights, .Mich.- Director of Urban Renewal to adminis- ter the planning & carrying out of a Community Renewal Prog. Exper. in Urban Renewal, City planning, housing, public admin. or municipal govt. pre- ferred, although trng. & other types of admin. exper. considered. Brunswick Corp., Chicago, 11.-Per- sonnel Ass't., Bowling Division, for work in employment, wage & salary admin., training & other related personnel functions. BA or MA, Indu'1 Relations pref., with 0-5 yrs. exper. in personnel field. Age 25-30. For further information, please con- tact General Div., Bureau of Appts., 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544. Teaching vacancies for the school year 1962-63. Kanakee, III.-Jr. HS Engi/French. River Grove, Ill. (Dist. 851)-Sp.Corr. Baltimore, Md. (Samuel Ready Girl's School)-HS Engl., Sch. Newspaper, Sch. Annual. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Graduate Outing Club, Hiking, Swim- ming, Canoeing, etc., Every Sunday thru September, 1:45 p.m., Rackham Bldg., Huron St. Entrance. DIAL 8-6416 ENDING TONIGHT WHAT WAS , THE STARTIeNG TRUTH - ABOUT. LoCARNO j FILM FESTIVAL, and "''.An RIO DE JANEIRO EMBASSY So. Orange & Maplewood, N.J.-HS Engl., Math, Fre/Span., Bellport, long Island, N.Y. (Central School Dist. No. 4)-1st gr., 2nd gr., 7th gr. Engl., 9th gr. Engl., 7th gr. Sci./Math, HS French, HS French/ Span.; Sch. Nurse/Teacher. Cleveland, O.. (Anti - Tuberculosis League)-Director of Patient-Family Ed- ucation. Jeromesville, O. (Hillsdale Local Sch. Dist.)-Elem. Voc. Mus. Norwood, O.-Sp. & Hear. Ther., Psy- chologist, 9th gr. Algebra. Tiffin, 0. (Seneca County Scba.) - Span/Engl., Span/PE, Elem., Math/Sci., Ind. Arts, Ind. Arts/Hist., Engl/French. Hartland, Wis. (U n iversit y Lake School)-Sci./Math. * * * For additional information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB, 663-1511, Ext. 3547. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE: Indian River Inn, Indian River, Mich. -Mrs. P. DeVore is very much in need of men & women as waiters and wai- tresses, plus one man and woman as cocktail waiter and waitress, to begin immediately, continuing until begin- ning of school. Room, board, large tips. Call her collect ADams 8-9343. A- a Wednesday and Thursday EXODUS starring SAL MINEO PETER LAWFORD PAUL NEWMAN EVA MARIE SAINT Show at 9:00 QiIjlJI~lI~~1t~~ii111II DIAL 5-6290 Positively Ends Thursday "IF YOU WANT TO SEE 'THE MUSIC MAN' AT IT'S FINEST, GO SEE THE MOVIE VERSION!" -Ron Martin, Free Press THE MOST MARVELOUS MOVIE EVER MADE I FROM THE PLAY THAT KEPT PLAYING6FOREVER I H9E TPRE?( }SHI ^ S1RE fS BUY fHU(T ClrE U IU i 1'~Pt~iL[ [9R0 ECHiM>R " vt'sisioiWANiER BROS. "LA TRAVIATA" (Verdi). . . . . . . . . Friday, October 19 Goldovsky Grand Opera Theater FRENCH NATIONAL ORCHESTRA . . . . . Wednesday, October 24 UDAY SHANKAR HINDU DANCE COMPANY. . . Tuesday, November 6 LENINGRAD PHILHARMONIC . . . . . . . Monday, November 12 "MARRIAGE OF FIGARO" (Mozart) . . . Saturday, November 17 New York City Opera Company GERALD SOUZAY, Baritone . a . . . . . Tuesday, January 8 PITTSBURGH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA . . . . Thursday, February 14 TOKYO CLASSICAL BALLET, "Komaki". . . . 2:30, Sunday, March 3 TORONTO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA . . . . . Tuesday, March 12 SEASON TICKETS: $20.00-$17.00-$15.00-$12.00-$10.00 EXTRA SERIES' Ii g I1 "THE SOUND OF MUSIC" . a. . Rodgers & Hammerstein musical NATIONALBALLET OF CANADA. . . Wednesday, October 31 . . a . Friday, November 9 THE ,UIS E FERNAND RAINER- GRAVEl M ILIZA V/ADI 11 {II 811111'111 111 {1BI11 C-0-0-L DIAL . f I ?I Itl llli i Ull' IIIL " VIII I II 2-6264 a 'lt '111y, {{ ,' IIII I III' I "RIGOLETTO"(Verdi). . . . . . . 2:30, Sunday, November 18 New York City Opera Company NDR SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA OF HAMBURG. . Wednesday, January 16 BIRGIT NILSSON, Soprano . . . . . . . . . Monday, March 18 Shows at 1:00-2:55 4:55-7:00 and 9:15 Feature at 1:00-2:55 5:05-7:10 and 9:25 HELD OVER THRU SATURDAY Their nights are as fast and frantic as their days! 11 11