FEIFFER Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS 4 ere Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MIcH. Truth Will Prevail"a NEws PHONE: 764-0552 O00E17AM A OMW ''WRT 1"o '66 EMPEROR CM PARA9W AkV 5AW Riol2 II6JMA5, AW &WA IMc3 (J A NFIX '~ tOM612CAR~A6e A 6IAMT OF A MAPWA JI)OWAS 'aTAP' N~AK a12 H{AS No 0CLOTH5c!" 1 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the inidividual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. ESDAY, JUNE 28, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: MEREDITH EIKER Detroit Is Facing The Ultimate Traffic Jam J DETROIT--On the near east side of the city, a number of once-splendid brown- stones and row houses stand on still pleasant tree lined streets. The houses and the trees are doomed, for they stand in the path of yet another freeway to be built through this already car-choked city. Detroit is beginning to pay dearly for being the motor city. Despite attempts at diversification, this is still a one-industry town. Chrysler dominates the east side while Ford virtually owns the southwest- ern suburb of Dearborn. General Motors is conspicuous by its general offices in the heart of town-the fourth largest office building in the world--and its numerous factories. Other major industries such as Kelsey-Hayes and Budd wheel are totally dependent on the automobile industry.- IN THE SIXTH decade of Our Ford, De- troit's total preoccupation with the car is more prominent than ever. Three major freeways are named Ford, Chrysler and Fisher. The city's newest high school is named for the man who put women be- hind the wheel, Charles Kettering, inven- tor of the electric starter. This automobile hang-up, together with the overt and co- vert opposition of the industry to any- thing which would weaken its position has prevented the city from seeking any sort of imaginative solution to its massive transportation problem. While the traffic situation has not yet become as critical as Manhattan's, it is still possible to average thirty miles per hour that even in rush hours, the powers- that-be in the community seem deter- mined to do nothing until the Ultimate Traffic Jam finally develops. The Ultimate Traffic Jam-that state in which the streets become so saturated with motor vehicles that all traffic finally grinds to its ultimate, final bumper-to- bumper dead stop-lies in the future of all major metropolitan centers unless a good deal of time and money are spent on seeking imaginative solutions to the problem of getting several million people from their homes to their jobs every day. THE SAN FRANCISCO Bay area is the first major urban center to actually make an attempt at finding a better way. Work is beginning on the first integrated megalopolitan rapid-transit system. Unfortunately for Detroit, the mere thought of rapid transit ranks with Com- munism and highway safety as something to be fought on the beaches, in the streets and doorways. Apparently, they will never surrender. Every plan for effective public transportation has been stymied by the vocal and powerful opposition of the auto industry and its friends. Public transportation in the nation's fifth largest city is an extremely unfunny joke. It consists entirely :of a large fleet of very slow, air-poluting, smelly buses. The system is so bad that it is used generally only as an absolute last resort. The control of the auto companies is so strong that when the Detroit Street Rail- ways, operator of the system, recently bought several buses from an Ohio com- pany rather than General Motors, which had previously been the sole contractor, the public outcry was loud and persistant. 'THUS FAR, Detroit's only answer to this overwhelming problem has been to build ever more expressways, destroying more old brownstones, cutting into the property tax base, dislocating thousands of residents and ultimately only creating new traffic jams. Detroit simply refuses to face the in- creasingly evident fact that the personal automobile has become economically and socially a totally obsolete mode of urban transportation. The average commuting car carries only its driver. The most ef- ficient six-lane freeway can only handle 50,000 autos per hour at best. Once down- town, the car must be stored and each vehicle occupies at least 100 square feet of floor space. The mere statistics can eventually lead only to the Ultimate Traffic Jam. DETR'OIT AND the auto makers must come to the realization that while the car is an outstanding vehicle for high speed, cross-country transportation, its day in the city is over. The car manufac- turers should reconsider their position on rapid transport before Henry Ford one day finds himself caught in the midst of the Ultimate Traffic Jam. -STEVE WILDSTROM TO~ V5w A TRIPP Wt'J MAUi A12PU *ME~THER COfR WT -ME EMFEROQ gCMOVL9DAVE 6DJ6 (ITO 7t' 6T~T WITHGoOUT CtOTHU S s wo HE6RELY? AA 76R(O7ii -N6 FACE' IS TRAT NE i; 7 ME~e AWL Uf APECMMTED." IMpl6 pom 3AU. V5wf'ti CAUC6V FOR WI( A~r1) 7M OF VSIVJ6S WftI Iwe Tt4 mcsutV65 OFTHC- AAQ OrTOLERATf/JG 7 D MT. J) TWHICH A LWIEMAGI 79Pt[6* U tOITY H I MF RP1 Ik) flS%s Nk Ct0THEs, IT 15' IRR I SIXiNLr CRfIC(SM TO .SAY' HE fS(MAKWR SCAV$5 11(AT APPROACR F&5USTQ OFFU. lAGA-UTkAi.' 'SliME1 OC~tAS W1EMPROR Wt0 UE FACE lAt? 6APED16 D 1AtO606 Pmlov- wAs To tAT6 pOT 1T,, IMI~mr-OIJUY W103kAM 0 PfW' E 6 U1W OF FREDL pATh'CA) W6 VMRAIM& 1H6 F~ACrs.# JtFSjFr5#AtDA O12 ISe' Mme,"Wf6U) CAu wt86)5soR6v THiAT 'M E1r6Rcre VlX5kT HAVE' A CCE6S To HATERIAU 1AT tW RAL.Y c5J6JCT MJ67TO yn.e.' RAS CtOT8e/yC'5r u l I s a Europe: Change in the Order of Things 4 j GEN. CHARLES de Gaulle's visit to Moscow is by no means the only sign of change in the order of things to which we have become accustomed during the postwar era. There is evidence of a thaw in both parts of Germany. There is first of all the remarkable agreement to hold open televised debates between the German So- cial Democratic Party and the East German Communist-Socialist Fusion Party. Though the Soviet government may yet prohibit the debate, this would only confirm and emphasize the fact that there is a strong and potent feeling in both Germanys in favor of talks and positive collaboration. THE SIGNIFICANCE of this break with the old immobilized official German tradition was proved spectacularly the other day when the majority leader in the German Parliament, Christian Democrat Dr. Rainer Barzel, pro- posed terms of a settlement with the Soviet Union which have never been dreamed of before and are, to say the least, offbeat. There are signs also of a thaw in -United States policy, not only in the President's wise refusal to get into an altercation with Gen. De Gaulle, but significantly in Secretary of Defense Robert Mc- Namara's statement to the Jack- son subcommittee that if the So- viet Union reduces its troops in Eastern Europe the United States would act correspondingly. This comes after McGeorge Bundy's brilliant testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in which he advised the West Germans to accept the Oder-Neisse frontier and to re- nounce the business of nuclear weapons. IT IS NOW clear that Gen. De Gaulle's objective has been to put an end to the cold war between the Western coalition, which in- cludes the United States, and the Eastern coalition, which includes Today and Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN the Soviet Union. His objective will be achieved fully when and if the two Germanys and the two Europes are brought together. As this process develops there will be solved as a matter of course the theoretical disputes of how much and how little influence the United States is to exercise in the new Europe. For in an in- creasingly reconciled Europe such issues as the integration of mili- tary command and nuclear shar- ing will no longer matter and will cease to be interesting. A militarily reconciled Europe will, one may imagine, be chiefly concerned with the problems of the coexistence, the reciprocal ad- justments and the collaboration of the many different kinds of economy which now exist between, the Atlantic and the Urals. For there is no longer any such thing as an old-fashioned capitalist economy or a Stalinist Communist economy. They are all mixed econ- omies in varying degrees. GEN DE GAULLE has released and encouraged this European process, and there is no doubt that it carries with it strong anti- American overtones. These are due in the main to two things. One is that, thanks to the State Department, we missed the bus in Europe and are associated in the minds of so many Europeans with the prolongation of the cold war which they hope to end. Another source of European anti-Americanism is the fact that without consulting them, without asking the judgment of the United Nations, of NATO, of SEATO or of any other international body, President Johnson is waging a war in Asia which could become a world war. From the European point of view, to be an ally of the Johnson administration with its inveterate unilateralism is to be in a dangerously entangling alliance. WHEN GEN. DE GAULLE tells the Europeans that they cannot count on the United States in Europe because America's main interests are now in Asia and else- where, he does not mean that Europeans can deal with, their own affairs and give the United States a free hand in all other continents. There is much more to it than that. Along with the changes which in Europe are making ob- solete the military confrontation with the Soviet Union, there are changes in the rest of the world which are altering radically the role of military power in the midst of social turbulence. We are only beginning to think about this, and we -shall have to talk about it much more in the future. (c), 1966, The Washington Poet Co. . Urban Renewal: *Saving Old Neirghborhoods Registration: Long Lines and Bad Counseling T'S SUMMER TIME, and as the Summer Session (known to the initiate as IIIB) begins, one finds orientation groups of freshmen-to-be staggering around cam- pus in the heat, looking very uncomfort- able and a little awed, while sadder-but wiser upperclassmen grit their teeth for another round of registration. It seems as though University's schools; might take advantage of the smaller en- rollment during the third term to try to make registration more bearable for students. But apparently they're determ- ined to see us standing in line, hot wea- ther notwithstanding. IN THE LITERARY college, although "registrationaires" and "class cards" were available in advance, students could not get the needed approval from a coun- selor until yesterday. This means that the counselors can give only a few min- utes to each student, and that many stu- dents are being forced to wait, whether or not they really need counseling. But waiting in line is nothing com- pared to what faces the student when he finally reaches a counselor. How many of our counselors really understand the scores of the QAIS or "raw carrots" test? (Many of us can remember the day when we were told, in the manner of a death sentence, "Your motivation is below average.") How many departmental counselors are well-informed about courses in other departments which might help a student with a particular field of interest? How many freshman and sophomore counsel- ors try to talk students into taking courses in their departments, whether or not the students are interested? EVERY SEMESTER everyone agrees that the University counseling ser- vices could be much improved. The sum- mer would be a good time to start. Maybe next year ... CAROLE KAPLAN The Budget C 0 * Ceiling Debate PRESIDENT JOHNSON and the Con- gress are once again wasting valuable legislative time in farcical debate over how much to raise the National Debt ceiling. What difference if the figure is set at $300 billion, $330 billion, or $500 billion -the amount has as much meaning as a campaign promise if it can be raised at will whenever expenditures exceed the limit. The necessity to continually develop verbose and believable excuses for having By NEAL BRUSS WHEN CURRENT social work- ers and their patients are dead, the buildings raised for ur- ban renewal will be the prime- concrete, perhaps-testimony to a war on poverty that was begun even before the Great Society. The housing projects, the con- sequences of slum clearance, are black comic testimony to the sad absurdity of the American up- heaval. THEY ARE the deteriorating high-rise buildings placed futur- istically on flat weedy malls. They are the ranch-style housing wedg- ed tight on the dark and narrow sidestreets, the ones where shiny late model cars are parked bumper to bumper on both sides of the street. Both kinds are honeycombed with miserably cramped apart- ments outfitted with shining new electric appliances and fixtures. Sometimes the occupants shrug their shoulders over whether the new place was better than the old, the house with the leaky pipes and crumbling stairs. And the rats. THE HOUSING PROJECTS sit on land once covered by real neighborhoods. But the buildings were old and filthy. There was crime and violence. The neighbor- hood was titled a slum, and per- haps slowly the neighbors were relocated. The buildings were smashed. Motorists from the outside would drive by and gape at the ruins recently created by the destruc- tion tools, and they would pride themselves on a city that was helping its poor by destroying dangerous old homes. Then the big pieces would be carted away, and the little pieces would go into the basement fill, Some noble signs would title the parcel of land, explain that the land could be bought by industry, or that it had been set aside for an international village or some luxury apartments. Or a housing project. But there would be a hole in the skyline. Square blocks, a neigh- borhood would be missing. Then the new, monolithic struc- tures would be placed on the empty lots-new housing, perhaps without leaky pipes for a while. slum for demolition. The residents protest; but because of the classi- fication, owners are discouraged from making improvements, banks will not finance renovations, ex- cellent but timid residents move away. So by the time the protest drags through the hostile adminis- trative procedure, the neighbor- hood is certifiable as a slum and is demolished. The example is grim because there is, at the same time, a critical shortage of hous- ing, and a functioning neighbor- hood has been disrupted." GOODMAN, who believes borhoods should be given' rule," presents a rather example. neigh- "home tame half the cost of building new pub- lic housing. "Neighbors are talking about bricking in and planting the once junk-filled courtyard at the back; the city will close off an entire block for a park, and U.S. Gypsum has promised playground equip- ment, treets, and lights ." Perhaps it is too early to give sweeping praise to all involved in the Harlem experiment. Perhaps as U.S. Gypsum tackles other apartments, results will be less shining. HOWEVER, this alternative to knock - em - down-and-toss-em-up urban renewal has accomplished several laudable aims. It has provided decent and dur- able "new" housing, It has been economical. It has not necessitated reloca- tion of neighbors. There are no refugees to outlying neighbor- hoods. It has, rather, returned tennants to stunning old homes. It has retained the character of an old significant spot on the city map. It has uplifted morale and ban- ished commonplace crime. It has stimulatedresidents to improve their neighborhood. And it will probably inspire en- thusiasm among residents of other shabby neighborhoods. The U.S. Gypsum project and the Goodman example provide evi- dence, at least, that slum clear- ance is no panacea. TO% WRECK a neighborhood does remove a pitiable problem demanding attention. In many cases, the old neighborhood may be beyond repair-or perhaps painfully out.of-keeping with a sound urban design. Then wreck- ing and rebuilding may be defend- able. But the men who order the bull- Proponents of slum clearance would say that the real slums must be cleared, that Goodman's neigh- borhood is far from home, that nothing like that happens in their town. But even in possibly The Worst Neighborhood In The United States, slum clearance has been challenged, and urban renewal may be discounted. It is in Harlem, according to United Press International writ- er Maggie Bellows, that slum re- habilitation has proven itself, and the U.S. Gypsum Company has done some pleasing efficient work. U.S. GYPSUM, Miss Bellows re- ported, "found a row of six time- wracked brick buildings in the notorious section of East Harlem, on 102nd Street. They were dingy and peeling; the hallways stank of urine and winos; the streets were littered with 'Harlemairmail' (garbage tossed out' of the win- dows at night). "The apartments had no closets; no showers (Just tubs in the kit- chens). Plumbing hung precar- iously to the gaping walls; win- dows rattled at the rims; patched against the cold with old rags or cardboard," Miss Bellows' article, published Sunday in the Detroit Free Press, accounted. "The company found empty apartments on the block for tem- porary housing, made repairs, moved the families out of No. 307, and went to work with sledge hammers, stripping it to its orig- inal brick, tearing down parti- tions and ripping out old plumbing and wiring. "Special materials developed for rehabilitation work were used. LETTERS: A Refusal To Send dozers into action must be very careful that they are not acting out of bitter revulsion at some- thing that mocks, terrifies, and shames them. They must also be wary of a trend of demolition that destroys their City itself. The odd, quickly-depreciating new buildings are 'alien to new tennants, who may not know how to operate their new appliances. The new housing has been expen- sive to build and certainly not durable. EVEN FRAGMENTARY results of urban revitalization projects of saving and refitting, and the fail- ures of the new housing of the poor point that the new housing approach may be only a short- sighted expedient to a reworkable problem. But whether newly- constructed or salvaged, the hous- ing left after the war on poverty will mark the urban landscape long after the poor and the pov- erty administrators. !Grades like "blind idealists" and, although I may have been deluded in col- lege by "marching moralists" and their "new hurrah," I am in graduate school and have learned the necessity for perseverance to the task at hand and will bring that dedication to whatever serv- ice you people think can benefit our country and its great society. I AM AFRAID I have forgotten my questionnaire but I'm not sure why you need it since you already have a file for me with the num- ber 51 20 44 50 with your local branch number 85 here in Ann Arbor. If you have any further questions, please do not hesitate to send me another form. -Mike Karreich Union Pool To the editor: AS AN ALUMNUS of the Uni- versity, a life member of the Union, and a present graduate student, I want to indicate my op- position to the present plan to close the Union swimming pool to make room for Alumni Associa- *. - EDITOR'S NOTE - This is a copy of a letter sent by Ruven Brooks to The University Regis- trar, Vice-President for Aca- demic Affairs Allan F. Smith, and to Local Board No. 85, Ann Arbor.) Dr. Edward G. Groesbeck, Registrar 1550 Administration Building University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan Dear Sir : By SENDING out class ranks without specific, positive con- sent on the part of its students and by its willingness to com- pute these ranks on a males-only basis, the University of Michcigan has shown support for a Selective Service policy which is arbitrary, immoral, and inherently unjust. I am, therefore, unwilling to have any part of my academic record, class standing or anything else, sent to my draft board un- less the board makes a specific re- quest to me to review my entire academic record to see if, indeed, I am a "student in good stand- ing, making normal progress to- wards a recognized degree." berlane, Peace Corps Selection Service, as encouragement to other not-so-outstanding stu- dents to serve with her organ- ization. Dear Miss Chamberlane: I AM COMPLETING the form you sent me. Although I realize how immense your task must be and how impossible it is for you to maintain a personal corre- spondence with all your applicants I hope you won't consider me forward for writing to you. Your form is so exact and I'm afraid my answers may not have satis- fied them. I hope this letter may clarify them. IT IS DIFFICULT (as you can perhaps imagine) to find six per- sons who can corroborate my ac- count of the year since my appli- cation. I had thought of suggest- ing the registrar would could ver- ify my enrollment at the Univer- sity of Michigan but the tran- script I have sent will (I hope) servejust as officially since it carries the University's seal. That CI4r Atd jigazn Daily Editorial Staff LEONARD PRATT ................. ..Co-Editor OHARLOTTE, WOLTER .................... Co-Editor HUD WIL$YNSON ...................... Sports Editor BETSY COHN .................. Supplement Manager NIGHT EDITORS: Meredith Eicter, Michael Heffer, Shirley Bosick, Susan Schnepp, Martha Wolfgang. Business Staff 1~