PAGE TWO tlE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1967 Bloc States Attain Diplomacy DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press News Analyst In their two days of meetings at Glassbo'o, leaders of the United States and the Soviet Union came as close to statemanship as Rus- sians and Americans had for a, long time, even though their sum- mit failed to make discernible progress on major explosive issues. Glassboro was just a small be- ginning, but the fact remains that it happened. In that alone, Glass- boro becomes a sort of beacon, Even the damp blanket spread by Alexei N. Kosygin once he left. New Jersey failed to smother the glimmer of hope which the face- to-face meeting produced - the hope, as President Johnson put it, that the world now is a little less dangerous: Now Kosygin has some fences to mend. A Soviet leader had come close, perhaps too close,' to looking human. Russian leaders, trapped by their own cliches, now must try to allay suspicions which have arisen among those who already were distrusteful allies. Thus, the first stop onz Nosy- gin's long journey home is Com- munist Cuba, . whose "maximum leader,'' Fidel Castro, must take a dim view of any Soviet deputy exchanging handshakes with the leader of "the imperialists," Nobody had expected a radical change from the meeting. Any deep-going change in U.S.-Soviet relations would take time and pa- tience. But there was, indeed, a change in the fact that the Pre- mier and the President met at all, and that both, for the time being, put aside domestic and foreign considerations which could make S 1 A 3 t , 1 such a meeting politically risky. selves, with the rest of the nations the UN Assembly by Comrade Soviet-American summits tend as spectators. Alexei Nikolayevich Kosygin has to refocus attention on something Once back from Glassboro, expressed the position of our party which often is forgotten. rhat is Kosygin stopped smiling. He re- and government," Pravda, the that there are two enormously treated to the rigid, prefabricated Communist party paper said. powerful nations in this world. positions of Moscow policy on all The position had been maped The United Nations has been a major issues. out in advance. Kosygin was just safety valve, a forum for debate. What he said at his news con- a messenger of the collective, the But major decisions affecting the ference at the United Nations was representative of the whole Soviet future of the world and the future practically a rerun of his speech leadership. of peace cannot be made without a week ago in the UN debate on By the same token, however, American-Soviet collaboration. the Middle East crisis. Kosygin could not have attended U.S.-Soviet summits in the past Before he even arrived in Glass- the summit without that collective have shaped the destiny of the boro, a Pravda edtiorial made it leadership's approval. rest of the world, or made the clear the Soviet premier was in Now the Chinese Communists difference between extreme ten- no position to depart in any sig- will point scornfully again at sion and relative tranquility. nificant respect from prescribed Moscow and cry, "We told you so." Whatever was accomplished was lines. Cuban Communists will be sus- done by the two big powers them- "The speech at the session of ! picious. Algerians and Syrians, the farthest left and most loudly "anti-imperialist" of the Arab bloc, will entertain doubts of ' long-range Soviet intentions. Kosygin hardly made the Arabs happy, for example, by conceding, that Israel had a right to exist. - China will accuse the Russians of under-the-table deals looking to- ward a future Vietnam settlement. But whatever Kosygin and the Soviet collective do now, they can- not turn back history's pages.: There may be repercussions in Moscow and perhaps even a new clash at the top, but Glassboro will stay in the'history books, con- tinue to represent a timid step on a long road.a The Daily Official Bulletin is an otriciai putbliration of the Univer- sity of Micnigan for which T'he Michigan 1 atiy assumes no editor- ial responsib ly. Notices should be sent in TYIWK lT''N forth to Room 3564 Administratton Bldg. be- fore 1 p.m. of the day prereding pubitcation and by 8 p.m. Friday for Satarda) aud Sunday. Generasi Notices may be publshed a maxi- mum of two times on request; 1/ay Calendar items appear once only. Studentrorganization nntices are not accepted for pubitciattnn. Yor more inrormation call 74-tl7O. TUESDAY, JUNE 27 Day caxlenda~cr. Bureau of industrial Relations Sem- inar---"Improving Management Skills": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. to 3:15 p.m. College of Pharmacy Conference - "Annual Meeting of American Society of Pharmacognosy": Rackham Bldg., 9:30 a.m, Audio-Visual Education Center Film Preview-"Search for Ulysses": Multi- purpose Room, Undergraduate Library, 1 :30 p.m. Linguistic Institute Forum Lecture - Opening of Institute : Rac~kham Lecture Hall, 7:30 p.m., Women's Jrife Guard Corps Meeting - Tuesday, June 27, 7:30 p.m. in the Mtargaret Bell Pool Lobby. All women with WSI's are welcome to attend. College of Pharmacy Seminar - "Teachers' Seminar on Pharmacognosy 1967": Rackham Bldg., 8 p.m. Plaxc~reen Cooperative Educational Service Agen- cy No. 8, Appleton. Wis.-Two Speech ._ e:....._._. _ ____ _ __ __ 'CHARGE POLICE BRUTALITY: Student Death May POSiTiON OPENINGS: therapists. Public Health Nurse, $$ de- grEe plus certification. 10 mos. terms of LCamp Fire Gxirls, lnc.--Opeinigs at duity. Detroit and Battle Creek. Mich.--ExeC- utiv-e Directors, women.25 or ov er, BA C'ity of Saginaw, Mich.-Recreation degrees require 3-5 yrs exper. in oCF.G. Supervisor III, Center Director in win- teaching, business with supv. respon. ter, summer may supv. large play area. MA degrees require 5-7 yrs. for more Graduate with any major, adequate advanced position in larger communi- yphsical and moral qualifications. ties. University of Wisconsin Medical Cen- Flint Osteopathic Hospital, Flint, ter, Madison, Wis.-Large variety of de- Mich.-Administrator, 250 bed hospital, partments need BS degrees in Chem., some exper, in similar capacity. i Bio-Chem, Biol.. Med. Tech., Path- Ideal Induxstries, Inc., Sycamore, Iil. ology- and Bacteriol. MS degree in -Openings in Detroit. Cleveland, In- Psych. for Psych.-Phystol. dianapolis, and Milwaukee. Sales Engi- * * * neer, O.E.M. and Distributor Markets. Degree and related exper. with electri- For furt'her lIiformlation please call cal, electronic and automotive Indus- 764-7460, eneral Divisioni, Bureau of tries. Appointments, 3200 SAB. UNIVERtSITY PLAYER S ,. TOMORROW NIGHT with Precipitate 4, 4 Demonstrations in West Germany By HUBERT J. ERB Associated Press News Analyst In this era of wars, the death of one man can go unnoticed. But the death of a West German student from a West Berlin po- liceman's bullet has brought to the surface boiling discontent among students across the coun- wild West Berlin demonstration against the Shah of Iran are but one indication that for the first time since World War II a na- tional German student movement is in the making. Exactly what happened when Ohnesorg was killed may never be made clear. filled eggs, vegetables, sand and and lowered the American flag to try. It is enough for the students Solidarity marches from Bonn that a police bullet killed him to Berlin in sympathy for the during what they allege to have death of Benno Ohnesorg, 26, of been brutal police action against Hannover in the aftermath of a demonstrators who threw paint- stones. A score of policemen were injured as well as about 24 dem- onstrators. According to their own state- ments, the students now are pro- testing what they consider an overly authoritarian German so- ciety, which they say they were told would be more democratic. German universities, however, traditionally h a v e been very straightlaced and this as much as anything else appears to be what the students want to break away from. Add to this the division of Ger- many, the unnatural position of Berlin, the legacy of guilt from Nazi times, concentration by gov- ernment and the mass of the pop- ulation on "wohlstand" - pros- perity - and what bothers the students becomes a little clearer. On the government side, there is some resentment that the stu- dents use state funds to study and then criticize their bene- factors. But there also is latent sympathy for Their dissatisfaction with the status quo. "I too," said a member of the German federal parliament. "am disappointed when I look back over the last two decades of Ger- man progress. We are no nearer a solution to the division of our country than we ever were." Here a long history of class differences that transcend current developments is visible. University students always have felt them- selves to be something special in Germany, where most workers leave school at 14 even today. For a worker, faced with his own problems, the disruption of law and order through demonstra- t ions by the more fortunate stu- dents is difficult to understand. Concerning West Berlin speci- fically, the battle lines were hard- ened on Feb. 5, 1966, when a group of anti-Vietnam war dem- onstrators spilled over to the U.S. i ti .I ; ;f . r. half staff. In a followup sidewalk sit-in, police use of rubber clubs and the students retaliation escalated the level of hostility.N i On the eve of Vice President General No' lees Hubert H. Humphrey's visit in Doctoral Examination for John Wil- Ap Liam Koch, Physics; thesis: "Interac- Apri, police arrested 10 sd artions of Cosmic Ray Nuclear Active members of what the students Particles in Iron at Mountain Altitude,"' call "the horror commune" for Tues., June 27, Room 629 Physics-As- traonomy Bldg., at 2:30 pm. Chairman, planning to throw such things as, w. E. Hazen. pudding at him. When the 10 were released even Doctoral Examination for Jan Emily Farrell, Education; thesis: "An Appli- before Humphrey left the city, cation of Programmed Instruction to student self-righteousness found the Perceptual-Motor Skill of Tennis," itself well-served and the stage wed., June 28, West council Room, was set far much bolderaction Rackha Graduate School, at 1 p.m. wsstfrmc bodrChairman, S. A. Howard. during the Shah's visit this month. Doctoral Examination for Hirokuni Tamura, Business Administration; thes- That the students of West Ber- is: "Linear Models for Macroeconomic lin have struck a responsive note Policy Making," Wed., June 28, Room in their protests among other stu- 816 Business Administration, at 3:30 dents is seen from supporting statements of student leaders e,:Se- where. One national rallying point ForeV t0 " pr \. / Y j a //l r ' i ' I ; !. ; _ ; / , 1 'I , . t a . , i ki f ' is a=hat the students call ina. l - C. 1 7 4 " + 1 4 . 1 r ' r ' 1 ' ((V U ~~ "-~ """^ " " "" The following foreign visitors can be quate facilities and not enough reached through the Foreign Visitor schools. Programs Office. 764-2148. Dr. Ambalal S. Patel, Center for Ad- How far aly joint student ac- vanced Study in Education, University tion program Will go or what form of Baroda, India, June 24-July 2. it will take is still not evident de- Janos Barat (accompanied by Mrs. Barat), research worker, Research In- spite the students' avowed pur- stitute for Automation, Hungary Acad- pose of becoming a political force. emy of Sciences, Hungary, June .25-29. Miss Afaf Deeb Kandis, research as- More certain is that the general sistant, UsIS Regional Research Office, population sides with the estab- U.S. Government, Beirut, Lebanon, June 25-Aug. 19. lished authorities. A labor leader Masaki Yoshimoto, professor, Depart- i West Berlin said his workers ment of Literature, Hosei University, wanted to stage counter-demon- Tokyo, Japan. June 25-Aug. 19. Christianz Bore, student in economics strations against the students. 1 from France, June 26-30. DIAL NO 2-6264 ____________OPEN 12:45 P.M. e ~'1~' 4 " yf S t J 1 wUi~im -Daily-Thomas R. Copi THE STAR II, A 'SUBMERSIBLE,' or miniature submarine, is pictured above, aboard the USCGC Woodbine, a seagoing buoytender. The Universit y's Institute of Science and Technology is rent- ing the Star II from General Dynamics, Inc., fo r underwater research in connection with work being done by its Great Lakes Research Division. Star II Makes Exhibition Dive Into Lake' Michigan for Press SE 7 AN FOMN'SE ::;.:AI IA' M ::::: j~I :r :;.f N t _ "Amerikahaus" cultural center By THOMAS R. COPI Special To The Daily GRAND HAVEN, Mich.-"It was as though it was raining dandruff . . .dandruff all the way down," newsman George Fulk commented last Friday. Fulk was the first non- ,scientist to ride the General Dyna- mics Submarine Star II to the bot-; - tom of Lake Michigan. The Star II, which is being rented by the University's Insti- tute of Science and Technology; ° for Great Lakes research, is tech- nically known as a 'submersible' and is capable of carrying a two-! -man crew to a depth of 1200 feet. Lake Michigan is 923 feet deep; 'at its deepest point. Fulk, representing WMKG-TV,' Muskegon, was chosen in a blind dzawing to represent the press aboard the Star II in a special; press' dive to a depth of 50 feet. The "dandruff" Fulk saw out- side the portholes of the 'mini- sub' consisted, according to Char- jes Pow ers, oceanographer for the IST, of suspended organic mate- rial, apparently the product of de- caying plant and animal life. TOM CORNELL of the Catholic Peace Fellowship speaking on DRAFT RESISTANCE ..AND THE -u~r E.U ~ A The "underwater snow" prob- blen was also encountered on ear- lier dives, Where the bottom of the lake was not visible, even though the Star II was resting on it. How- ever, in a dive made in the middle of the lake, at a depth of 135'feet, visibility increased to about ten feet. Prof. David Chandler, director of the IST's Great Lakes Research Division, said that the primary ob- jectives of this first submarine ex- ploration of Great Lakes depths has been "to determine the feasi- bility of using a vessel like Star II in further Great Lakes re- search." Chandler, whose specialty is aquatic biology, listed several biological and geological studies that are being undertaken on the Star II dives: -Deep rock formations will be examined to learn more about the nature of the lake basin. Scientists aboard the Star II will try to ob- serve the face of rock ledges and take samples at depths of 600 to 700 feet to help improve sampling techniques. -Efforts will be made to learn the living and movement patterns of fish and of bottom-dwelling or- ganisms on which fish feed. Another question concerns the depths of rooted plants. Some may reach 150 feet or more, beyond the range at which they can now be effectively sampled. -Bottom sediment will be ob- served as fathometer readings are made, These findings will be cor- related to determine a pattern for future readings. Phone 434-0190 Eranca Ox.CARPENT ER READ mnd"TWICE"is the only way to five! II[BERTR. BRO~CC6I a' HARRY SAIi7AN. PANAVfSIONTECHNNCOOR> 1:00-3-0 5:00-7:10 9:20 "IT IS IMPOSSIBLE NOT TO BE INTRIGUED! Brutal massacres-grisly sightS "-'.YDalys presents THE FOURTH ANNUAL SUMMER CONCERT SERIES in RACKHAM AUDITORIUM ;air-conditioned) ' 1 L DIAL 5-6290 RO)CERS. M ME HAi# ST ii" RvB:RT R ISE %ttucjC OPEN 8:00 P.M. --NOW SHOWING-- WOOLNES BROS. Preets FERUiN J40DN HUSKY LANSING BOWMAN IIABIIYS IN " by~h~ eL UXE "HITS LIKE A TON OF BRICKS! his film should he seen by a l!"-Cu. ANGELO RIZZOLI o~c " . '" .". ' . ec~ JACOPEITI r~ PROSPER! AN10NIO CUIMAT! R#Z ORTOLAN# " SIAN#S NIEYO Kli/(lrI.I TECNNICOLoR/TECHNISCOPE ",,. SHOW TIMES: Mon.-Thurs. , 9 P.M. Fri. 7, 9, 1 1 Sat. 7, 9, 1 1, Sun. 6,8$, 10 ' You W() i' Want /0 mis any of these fine plays iii Suimmer Festival '67' MACBETH THE PHYSICISTS THE COUNTRY WIFE LITTLE MARY SUNSHINE Box offiCe open daily 1 - A.. suen ,e A MALCOLM FRAGER, Pianist Sonata in F major, Op. 10, No. 2. Sonata in G minor, Op. 22. Waltzes, Op. 39. Prelude, Op. 12, No. 7. March, Op. 12, No. 1. Sonata No. 3, Op. 28. MONIQUE HAAS, PianistM Variations Serieuses. Six Etudes ....... Trois Etudes. Trois Preludes. Deux Regards sur l'Enfant Jesus. Quatre Caprices Variations, Op. 27. Le Tombeau de Couperin . MICHEL BLOCK, Pianist M Sonata ilnA major, Op. 120. Goyescas . . Trois Mouvements de Petrouchka. Friday, July? ..... .Beethoven .. Schumann ..... Brahms ...... Prokofieff .....Prokofieff .....Prokofieff )nday, July 10 Mendelssohn Chopin Debussy .Debussy .. Messiaen Mihalovici Webern Ravel onday, July 24 Schubert Granados .....Stravinsky 4' I I.: I