Seventieth Year EWnmED A'ND MANIAGED BY STUDNTSrrF u'~TTH NYvE~ ?VRszjL vo Ic-mG~Am Ten Opinions Are Fr UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Trth Will Prval I STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. *"Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. Y, JULY 8, 1960 Displaced De May Be Deni THERE ARE SIXTY eighth grade students less than forty miles from Ann Arbor who ae apparently being denied their right to attend high school. These students are residents of the Carver school district in Royal Oak Township, a pain- ful thorn in the sides of Detroit and its pros- perous northern suburbs. Carver high school students have previously been attending Detroit's Northern High School as tuition students, paid for by their home school district. They have now been told to find another school by Detroit's Board of Edu- cation. This was necessary because of the re- putedly overcrowded conditions at Northern, board spokesmen said. The students, whose own school district has yet been unable to finance addition to its first eight grades, took their problem to their neigh- .ors, Ferndale and Oak Park. These suburbs are in sound economical health and have good school systems rated among the nation's best. O AK PARK AND FERNDALE were not ob- livious to the Carver cry for aid. Oak Park suggested a meeting between the four school districts involved, which State Superintendent of Education Lynne Bartlett attended. Fern- dale even conceded they were willing to enter discussions (on a temporary basis) on their 14 year old policy against tuition students. Yet both of these districts claimed that their own overcrowded situations made the absorb- tion of the sixty Carver students impossible. They were willing to help, but refused to accept the students into their classrooms. It this claimed lack of space the only reason for this refusal? wT APPEARS THAT there are at least three major reasons for their position: the actual lack of space, a fear that the quality of the educational system will be lowered, and the brutal fact of racial prejudice. Carver happens to be an all-Negro school district in a community with comparatively low social and economic levels. Absorbtion of these students would no doubt lower the aca- demic standards of the host district, even if it is only a slight drop. One can also predict sourly, but with much justification, that the amount of violence and the number of fights in this district would increase. Let us examine one of the involved districts, the Oak Park one, to see how it reacts to the Carver school problem and motives for its refusal. MOST DEFENSIBLE, of course, is the plea that the school is already overcrowded. Although a new school (not quite as modern as Ferndale's mammoth high school of 1958), Oak Park High has already been forced into half-day sessions because of the junior high population. The upper grades attend classes in the morning, and the younger group occu- pies the building in the afternoon. Half-day sessions have been in effect for a year and may continue for another one. Full-day sched- ules will probably return when an addition to the former junior high school building is completed. Thus, the actual amount of room at Oak Park High appears a lot less now than will actually be the case in January or, at the latest, September 1961. The fear that academic quality will be NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL BURNS troit Students ed Education lowered is a real one. Like Ferndale, which has a nationwide reputation for a sound edu- cational system, Oak Park has been producing graduates of superior quality. The district has kept pace with the mushroom growth of the community and has awarded high school degrees to relatively well educated young men and women. Two-thirds to three-fourths of the graduates go on to college. The 1959 class of 179, the district's third graduating group, had 16 National Merit Scholarship winners, finalists and runnersup. No WONDER THAT the district officials and the community find pride in their school system. They do not want to see any drop in the academic level if they can help it. Thus they only see the admission of sixty Carver district students as a harmful additive to a strong educational element. The problem of this discomfort and others caused by social friction is over-shadowed in this instance by the duty of the individual citizen to help secure the right for all child- ren of the state to have a free and equal edu- cation. The Carver students are not wanted because their educational, social, and economic back- ground Is poor. Yet the main reason for this background is the very denial of the education these people are supporting. This reason was certainly not in evidence as the Oak Park Board of Education acted. Their problem of a crowded school is real, and not an imaginative excuss created to shadow baser motives. Yet these other reasons exist, and the deepest one, the one least evi- dent on the surface and hardest to destroy is the ugly existence of racial prejudice. THE OPINION AMONG many Oak Park residents is that the admission of any Negro, no matter what his personal qualities and intelligence, would precipitate a "Negro invasion" of the suburb and cause a sharp decline in the comfortable upper middle class real estate values. The only solution that was raised at the districts' meeting was summarized by Supt. Bartlett who appointed a committee to study the long-range future of Carver. He said, "Per- haps the only solution will be to establish a ninth grade" in Carver. The speed with which tuition money could be converted into new classrooms and quality faculty gains for the sixty students will have to be phenomenal if Carver is to be ready to educate its own high school students two months from now, If these facilities are not ready by September, and this is very feasible, the students are literally without means of public education. IN THESE CIRCUMSTANCES, one would think that Oak Park, Ferndale, and Detroit would each be able to find room for twenty students apiece and instruct them without too much permanent harm to the current educa- tional level. Now is the time for them to dem- onstrate their belief in education for all, a credo they claim is being violently flaunted in the South. Their "sacrifice" In admitting these students would be a lesson in human relations and human dignity that the young- sters and adults in four communities would be proud to have on their school record --MICHAEL OLINICK "I Want You To Have Complete Freedom To Marry Anyone I Select for You" t V -, . - y -11-17 \ 6 ' ~ tJ~Nwaro4!o r AT CINEMA GUILD: One for the Boys In the Backroom THE CINEMA GUILD'S summer program outlining the history of the American film since the 1920's has buckled on its six-guns and gone West with "Destry Rides Again" (1939). This is the frst and certainly the funniest of all Hollywood's Adult Westerns, and the trip is well worth the trouble. Even before the credits are finished, several thousand bullets have been fred, horses have ridden in and out of the saloon, and the town of Bottleneck has proved to be the lawless town par excellence. Brian Donlevy is the villian, and a good one, but Frenchy (Marlene Dietrich) is the power behind the throne, FROM THE SIRENS of "Blue Angel" and "Morocco" emerges a supremely charming and com- pletely inimitable bad-woman with a heart of gold. She coos and rolls her eyes, cheats'at cards and finally repents, and sings, superb- ly. To hear "Let's see what the boys in the back room will have" is worth twenty times the price of admission, and to watch her run down the bar in sequined-and- boaed cowboy costume while she does it is worth even more. Dietrich is one of the great wonders of the century, or any century, and her sense of style is beyond compare, let alone criti- cism. * * * JIMMY STEWART is there too, as the nice hero who cleans up Bottleneck, looking younger than this generation will remember him, but acting the same way, in fits and starts of boyish charm. In the process of cleaning, he does a little work on Frenchy's morals, just in time to have her be shot. in the ba'ck with a bullet meant for him. The plot abounds in those ab- surdities that Hollywood has used again and again, and with a few that they have dropped. Practi- cally everyone is caricatured with a gusto that seldom misses its mark. There is the corrupt mayor and the alocholic sheriff, the upstand- ing pioneer family and the town matrons that detest the saloon girls. And there is a great fight between Frenchy and the hotel keeper's wife with hair-pulling, kicking, and screaming in more than satisfying degrees. * * * IN FACT, EVERYTHING comes in splendid Western profusion and we need but sit and watch to have a wonderful time. And all with- out thinking a creative Freudian thought. The fly in the ointment is theI short, a dull essay in tall corn and the TVA. It's a good idea to go at 7:30 and Just avoid the whole boring thing rather than suffering through darkness and light with the farm folk. --Michael Wentworth LETTERS to the EDITOR Pickets Welcome To the Editor: WE, AS MEMBERS of Osterweil House, were shocked at the article which appeared in Wed- nesday's Daily concerning the withdrawal of permission to hold picketing meeting at Osterweil. This article was given to The Daily without the authorization of a majority of the membership of the house and contains several inaccurate statements. The picketers have been meet- ing at Osterweil periodically since last April. Throughout this period there has been no substantive damage done to the house. The meetings have been held quietly in the living room, so quietly that several members, who now claim to object, did not realize that a meeting was' taking place. The leadership of the picketing group has continually emphasized that the group is the guest of the house and has behaved accord- ingly. The picketers are not a serious inconvenience. They are a group closely allied in their beliefs and goals to the cooperative move- ment. The Inter - Cooperative Council operates on the principle of open membership, believing that all people can live and work together. Our houses on campus are a living example of these igoals, which are similar to those toward which the picketing group is striving to achieve in the larger society. -Mary Louise Pekar, '62 President -Amy Sue Miller, '61A&D --Delores Zemis, '61 -Barbara Goldman,'60Ed. New Books at Library Wellman, Paul I.-Stuart Sym- ington; N.Y., Doubleday & Co., 1960. NEED TO INFORM PUBLIC: Scientists Warn of Crisis By FRANK CAREY Associated Press Science Writer WASHINGTON - A group of scientists charged yesterday that most scientists are lax about keeping the public informed on important issues with which they deal. A special committee of the American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science said this failure has contributed to an im- pending crisis which "may dis- rupt the history of mankind." The Association is the world's largest general organization of scientists. In what was described as a major policy statement-growing out of more than five years' study -the nine-man committee chal- lenged the scientists to speak out directly to the public. * * * THE GROUP SAID scientists have "a serious and immediate responsibility to mediate the ef- CUBAN SITUATION: U.S. Begins Move To Stop Castro Regime By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst STILL TRYING TO AVOID direct intervention, the United States nevertheless has now taken the first direct step toward elimination of the Castro regime in Cuba. One step after another now will have to be taken to prevent the strategic island, lying across the hemisphere's trade routes not far, from the American shore, from becoming a Communist outpost. There can be little doubt that the Communist sphere will respond to Castro's sugar crisis by taking more and more of the product in trade-at Communist rates of exchange. They may treat Castro well i THEIR OPINION: Smoke-Filled Classrooms WHY DO WE HAVE to listen to lectures in smoky classrooms? This is a question often raised by perplexed students always attentive to what their pro- fessors lecture after careful preparations, Tobacco was originally produced for the pur- pose of relaxing strained feelings or stimulat- ing nerves. Therefore, it is quite natural that the more the world becomes tense and full of complexity, the more people look for relaxa- tion or stimulation. In this respect, we are not hesitant to admit the need for cigarettes. However, we want to suggest that students who have a strong weakness for smoking in classrooms keep in mind some etiquette espec- ially as smokers. In no other country is a man or woman given the right to disregard others by smoking at a place where such a habit is not desired or is prohibited. UNFORTUNATELY, in our University, stu- dents have formed a bad habit of smoking in their classrooms in a recess. We do not mean to ask them to stop it during that time since they are entitled to it, but what we want to suggest is "please not in the classroom." A certain professor complains of his smoky classroom whenever he enters it a bit behind time, and even criticizes its atmosphere as that of a local tea shop or cabaret where usually a large numher nf nnn1 re nakdin in lg.- Studying in a smoky classroom, it goes with- out saying, is very harmful to one's health- already recognized by students whose common sense is highly developed, unlike children. Students seated in the back rows of a class- room are often hardly able to read small words written on the blackboard because of smoke hanging low. If this bad tendency continues, it will be impossible to improve conditions for studies however strongly we may press the school authorities for the improvement. Such being the case, we sincerely hope that smokers will be discreet enough to stop reckless smoking in classrooms. ON THE OTHER HAND, there are two rea- sons for students indulging in reckless puffing in their classrooms. One is that sev- eral professors come to their classrooms two or three minutes behind time, irritating their nerves. The other is that they take to smoking in order to divert themselves from constant strains resulting from studying their difficult lessons day after day. According to the latest theory concerning the effects of cigarettes on cancer, it is said their relations have become closer, as evi- denced by an increase in deaths over those by tuberculosis which once used to show the highest rate of death in Japan. It is also said that smoking in an irritated state of feeling t i. n Q ..r n--a v- an nr s a. no*..nn.a jli . ar now for political purposes, but they'll have him hooked just the same. THE UNITED STATES appar- ently has considered this prospect, along with the outlook that the hook will be further set if eco- nomic sanctions are now set up by Joint action with other American states, as against the prospect that Castro can be forced out be- fore the Soviet Union can move in. Certainly now the Cubans are going to have a chance to judge whether they profit more from the revolution, which has helped a great many of them in short term ways but which heads faster and faster for economic collapse, or from regular relations with the United States. As Castro confiscates more and more foreign business without hope of paying for it, his odor will become worse and worse for the other Latin American states who need a stable atmosphere in which to set up various inter- American development programs now being established. THESE GOVERNMENTS are al- ready backing the United States privately -especially thoseswho will help fill Cuba's shoes as sugar suppliers. The question is whether they will risk the old cry of "im- perialist collaboration" in con- certed action against Castro in public. Time after time the American states have considered gingerly the establishment of an interna- tional police force to handle in- flammable situations. The idea is being kicked around again, especially in connection with reports that the Soviet Union issending armst in Castrn DELEGATIONS- May Contest Credentials WASHINGTON -Delegate con- tests are shaping up for the Democratic national convention. They involve charges of party dis- loyalty and violation of a good faith rule. As yet, not a single contest is in the offing for the Republican convention, . The Democratic National Com- mittee's credential committee will hold the first hearings on dele- gate challenges. Its decisions are than passed on by the convention credentials committee and the convention itself, Democratic National Chairman Paul M. Butler says his commit- tee's credentials, or contest, group will challenge Southern delegates known to have publicly supported President Eisenhower in 1952 or 1956. THESE DELEGATES, Butler adds, probably will be asked to sign a "simple statement, not a loyalty oath.' This statement will say they come to the convention in good faith and will support the convention nominees and plat- form, and favor Presidential elec- tors pledged to the national ticket. Refusal to sign such a state- ment, it is assumed, would lead to recommendations that balking delegates be denied seats in the fects of scientific progress on hu- man welfare," as regards such issues as: The control of nuclear energy; disarmament; population control;I the use of scientific research in international military and politi- cal rivalry; the biological effectsI of food additives; and the social consequences of automation. On such issues, the report said, the task of scientists is not to recommend specific courses of ac- tion but "to provide for the gen- eral public the facts and estimates of the effects of alternative poli- cies which the citizen must have if he is to participate intelligently in the solution of these problems." * * THE COMMITTEE'S report, published in "Science," official publication of the Association, proposed a four-point program for scientists to follow on key issues : 1) Stimulation of discussion within the scientific community, to identify issues precisely and "serve as a guide for the develop- ment of a specific program." 2) Preparation of a detailed re- port on prime issues, including the relevant data, a discussion of assumptions and sources of error and a description of the expected consequences of alternative courses of action. 3) Translation of this scientific report into complete, but less tech- nical, forms suitable for distri- bution to the public "through all available channels." 4) Development of liaison be- tween scientists and the public on a local level. KNOWN AS "THE AAAS Com- mittee on Science in the Promo- tion of Human Welfare," the group said: "With each advantage in our knowledge of nature, science adds to the already ,*immense power that the social order exerts over human welfare. With each incre- ment in power, the problem of di- recting its use toward beneficial ends becomes more complex, the consequences of failure more dis- astrous, and the time for decision more brief . .. .there is an impending crisis in the relationships between science and American society ... At a time when decisive economic, political and social processes have become profoundly dependent on science, . . . . (science) .. . . has failed to obtain its appropriate place in the management of pub- lic affairs. "IN THE LAST few years," the report said, "the disparity between scientific progress and the reso- lution of social issues which it has evoked has become even greater. What was once merely a minor gap now threatens to become a major discontinuity which may disrupt the history of man.", Members of the committee are Barry Commnner Washingtnn INTERPRETING THE NEWS Russian Volunteers U istlie Poneering By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press News Analyst HE MOVIE SCREEN in Moscow depicts old soldiers as deliriously happy about the prospect of fading away. A documentary shows a general, several lesser officers and men from the ranks, first fighting in Berlin, then 15 years later in civilan clothing, happily kissing one another. They have been demobilized. Many will go to farms and factories in remote areas Nikita Khrushchev wants to develop in a hurry. His success with the old soldiers and their civilian compatriots in the so- called virgin lands may determine Khrushchev's future. The documentaries show officers, soldiers and civilians all enthus- iastic for the tasks ahead. It is Khrushchev's propaganda to break down real-life resistance to the idea of pioneering new areas. * * * KHRUSHCHEV HAS DEMOBILIZED about 250,000 officers from the top-heavy armed forces. From them he hopes to select men to supply leadership in remote and often forbidding areas far from Mos- cow. He wants to use young demobilized soldiers, now being shipped out in trainloads, as "model workers" for newly opened areas. He wants other young Russians to supply the brains and brawn to trans- form a wilderness. Western observers in Moscow report a marked lack of enthusiasm for leaving the comforts of the privileged officers class to pioneer a wilderness. Even Khrushchev has admitted that the pioneering spirit fades when the men see what they are up against. He complained recently: "Tens of thousands of young people go to the virgin lands' singing , . , with enthusiasm . . . but when they sort things out they begin justly to criticize." * * * THAT WAS PUTTING IT mildly. The pioneers are appalled at the barracks life offered them, the lack of privacy, the impossibility of normal family life, the lack of sufficient goods and provisions, the dearth of diversions, the drudgery and dreadful dullness day after day. Some live in barracks-like quarters. Some in trailers, tents-even dug- outs. The government tries to induce girls to go to the underdeveloped areas, but few respond. Westerners in Moscow who have traveled in virgin lands areas report deep resentment among the "volunteers." There have been in- stances of labor trouble-even a strike-arising from the living con- ditions. Often, young city people regard such assignments as punish- ment. Khrushchev has fired some high Communist figures for failure.in the program. He hopes to ease the desperate problems of housing and storage facilities in the area within two years. But, say Westerners in Moscow, two years could be costly. Few of those in the areas are bona fide settlers. For the rest, disillusionment comes swiftly. THE VIRGIN LANDS PROGRAM is an important part of Khru- shchev's over-all agricultural plan. And he has other worries. In the Kazakh Republic last year millions of acres of- grain were lost, mostly because of blundering and mismanagement. Khrushchev punished I N