Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Opinions AreFree tbi Will Prevail" litorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. Y, NOVEMBER 15, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: JEAN HARTWIGI China Policy of U.S. Product of Paradox ALKS OF summit meetings are now flying with a frequency and seeming seriousness purpose that many observers had not ex- eted to see for many years. A new era of od feeling seems to have at. last arrived in ernational relations, and although pessimists ntinue to warn that little can ever come of king with the Reds, thoughtful men on both es of the Iron Curtain are doubtless wonder- whether the "big thaw" can at last have in. side from this, and in strictly Realpolitik -ms, the apparent easing of East-West ten- ns may offer the United States a way out one of her most serious foreign policy prob- as. OME TIME AGO, the annual bid for admis- sion-of Red China to the United Nations was sented by the Communist-Neutralist bloc -- d promptly stopped by the United States. It s long been felt that our opposition to Red ina's admission to the UN, coupled with our usal to grant her diplomatic recognition, s been a grave error in our. Far Eastern licy. The argument for recognition-admission is t particularly new, but has atrophied recently e to lack of use in administration circles. It ,tes that it is silly and ineffective for the ited States continually to attempt to deny e existence of a nation with a population of ) million. Eventually, the argument goes, the ited States will have to stop sulking about r early mistakes in China and admit the fact at China exists-and is decidedly Communist. UT THIS admission has become more and more difficult as the years have passed. The inese, in their highly effective propaganda the Asian world, have stressed the point that e United States is, n fact, a "paper tiger," at her vaunted power is meaningless in La, and that she is too lacking in resolution use what power she has in an effective way. . important area of this "paper tiger" attack that the United States, under the continual werful pounding of Red China, will even- tually be forced to grant her both diplomatic recognition and entrance to the United Na- tions. The Chinese have stressed this line of attack so strongly that any accommodating action by the United States-leading perhaps to recog- nition -- would be interpreted by vast and powerful segments of Asian public opinion as a sign of profound weakness in United States policy. Such a public opinion shift might set off a pro Red China bandwagon movement in Asia that could well lead to a complete neu- tralization of United States influence there. MHE UNITED STATES, thus, is caught in a vise that tightens as the years go by: We eventually must recognize Red China, but such recognition might have disastrous /effects on our position in Asia. Until recently, this di- lemma, imposed on our foreign policy by our childish reaction to the Communist capture of China, has appeared well nigh insoluble. It was felt that regardless of what the United States did about it, she had ,something to lose. But the current feelings of relaxation of tensions, even of tentative entente, may offer the best opportunity we will ever have for getting out of the problem. As a gesture toward the Communist world to evidence our sincere desire for peace and an eventual relaxation of world tensions, the United States should offer immediately to recognize Red China, and sup- port (or at least not oppose) her bid for ad- mission to the United Nations. NOW IS the optimum time. Now any attempt by China to label our actions as a sign of weakness can be met by our assertion of our sincere desire for world peace and cooperation. We got ourselves into the China mess by not acting to recognize her at the proper time. It would be a shame if we were to miss our best opportunity of extracting ourselves from the mess by making the same mistake a second time. -JO HARDEE Guest Writer Romney By ARNOLD SAMEROFF considered.C Daily Staff writer definitions AFTER A YEAR of crisis in every local Michigan's economic and po- mendations litical life, there has been a great back to the deal of general dissatisfaction ex- Following pressed by many of the citizens will gatheri of the state. Working on the be- sible pertain lief that strictly partisan politics submit then is not helping but is in fact a ters who wi detriment to the solution of Mich- conclusions. igan's problems, a group of citizens this is tor led by George Romney, President opinion on h of American Motors Co., is setting can be solve up an organization to determine, a new path toward this end. EACH L The organization, Citizens for contain ac Michigan, is being founded on the hers frome basis that the individual must nomic grout work to help his state. Mr. Rom- there will n ney, current president of the tion by any group, stated that it will succeed zation is fi only if the individuals in it put range from the welfare of the state before any dollar to a. kind of personal advantage. dred dollars sents onlyr he may bel ROMNEY DECLARED that the an exampl two' parties in the state are con- executive co trolled by powerful minorities, the Conway, a r Democrats by labor and the Re- ther's UAW publicans by management. Both mera, a For of these groups have too narrow William E. a viewpoint in their approach to dent of the the problems of the state and as Romneyh a result we find the chaotic situa- experience% tion which is in existence today. Study Grou Citizens for. Michigan is pres- sufficiently, ently being organized throughout quate infor the entire state. Although previ- tain conclu ously there have been many civic dent. The g reform groups organized to over- facts thatc come special problems in many greater the towns and cities, this is the first reached eve time that a state organization of flicting view this type has been attempted. By havin Within the fourteen regions in- discuss each to which the state has been divided light, it is h chapters will be organized to meet can be reac and discuss state problems in four to these m majqr areas: 1) an analysis of the their person services' that the state must pro- down to ral vide to its citizens; 2) investiga- sues. tion of the way the state can pay for these services; 3) the organi- THE MU zation needed for administering ment of Cit these services; and 4) the future bento"C growth and economic welfare of be to "educ Michigan. zen who no: hg * * active politi Conant, exe ACCORDING to the timetable organization of the organization, conclusions Dr. Conan on the first three problems will worker in c be ready in June 1960, in time for gon, stated the fall elections. At the ,present, that the fru state-wide study groups composed who felt th of experts are being set up in each them no ro: of the four problem areas: Citizens fo The immediate goal is the exact any organiza definition of the problems to be now numbe Once this is done, these will be discussed in chapter and recom- made that will be sent state-wide groups. this, the state groups as many facts as pos- bing to the issues and se to the local chap- ll attempt to formulate The whole point of reach a consensus of how the state situation ed. * * * OCAL chapter must cross-section of mem- every social and eco- aping. To insure that ot be economic domina- one group the organi- nanced by dues which a minimum of one maximum of one hun- s. Each member repre- himself even though ong to other groups. As e the organization's ommittee includes Jack member of Walter Reu- V staff, Robert McNa- d executive officer and Stirton, a vice-presi- University. felt that from his past with the Detroit School, p that if a question is well defined and ade- mation available, cer- sions become self-evi- greater the amount of can be presented, the agreement that can be n by groups with con- rpoints. g each local chapter h of the issues in this hoped that a consensus hed. People who come neetings should leave nal axes home and sit tionally discuss the is- ** * NIMUM accomplish- izens for Michigan will cate the ordinary citi- rmally doesn't take an cal role." Dr. Ralph W. ecutive director of the n set this goal for CFM. nt, formerly a research ivic affairs in Muske- that it appears clear strations of individuals e political parties left le has turned them to r Michigan. Without ational drive, the group rs over 1,600 members. Only now is the real organization of local groups being started. When the organization was be- ing set up-last summer there were many accusations that it would undermine the two-party system. Arthur G. Elliot Jr., Chairman of the Oakland County Republican Committee, in a letter to Romney declared that he (Romney) should decide which party best fitted his opinions and then back that one. There were also suggestions that Romney run for Governor or some other political office. Romney replied that the in- dividual is ineffective among the major power concentrations in the parties. "Michigan's need for a more active and better informed citizenry is far more pressing than the need for new political candi- dates." ' ss's "WE MUST place the interests of the state above the interests of either party." Romney believes Citizens for Michigan is no threat to the state political parties, but rather should aid them in deter- mining the will of the electorate. Continuing, Romney voiced the opinion that "We must return party control to the hands of the citizens." We have to be looking toward a better future. With peo- ple living better and having more leisure time, they have to take greater political responsibility to maintain these conditions. If with a higher standard of living the American people lose Interest in political questions, then we will lose all that we have created until now. "There is nothing to stop our civilization from expiring as many other great civilizations have done in the past." ROMNEY HAS carried over his philosophy of business to the po- litical sphere. In business the needs of the consumer must be met and in government the needs of the voters. Politically, governments should be responsive to the needs of the voters. Romney believes legislative apathy to voters' needs has created the present situation in Michigan economy. By informing the elec- torate, Citizens for Michigan hopes to jar Michigan's lawmakers from this apathy and cause them to be- gin solving the existant, pressing problems. Four principles of membership were formulated at the meeting founding Citizens for Michigan last June: Forms Citizens Group 1 4 George Romney, president of the Citizens for Michigan Group, discusses problems facing the state's economy. 1) Members in their capacity as citizens should actively participate in the study of problems and for- mulation of recommendations for solutions that are in the best in- terests of all citizens and con- sumers in the state. 2) Members shall seek to keep themselves informed as to the fundamental political and eco- nomic facts on the state's needs and problems. 3) Members shall recognize that any position with respect to Mich- igan needs that is contrary to the national interest or world welfare would be in the long run contrary to the interests of Michigan. 4) Members shall be guided by a concept of service and participa- tion that shall place the needs of the state above and apart from perlonal, political, economic or so- cial affiliations. LERNER: Candidates,1960 Rx: A Drop a Day 'DOING FINE': Student A dapts. To U.S. Li fe i IGHT THOUSAND miles from home, my home thoughts are frequent and fond, but stly I miss the fun of talking and writing ut the state of the Presidential race. I have n getting a good deal of pleasure therefore of Candidates 1960 (Basic Books), the col- tion of articles by ten newspapermen about Tent hopefuls which Eric Sevareid has edit- with Robert Spivack's help. the editors have chosen for each candidate writer basically in tune with him, except for :on, where a rather pious piece by Frank leman is balanced by an astringent one in Philip Potter of the Baltimore Sun. The tors went at their job sensibly, but I wish aeone now would come along and put to- her another book on the same candidates, igning to each a writer who would work in ter's spirit-skeptical, critically independ- , highly knowledgeable, ndt hostile, yet aewhat abrasive. The results would be iore ous. IEWED FROM this distance, most of. the candidates suffer a shrinkage of stature. the Democrats to run Symington would be open invitation to disaster. The campaign, ild become an exchange of charges and inter-charges about Air Force equipment I missiles, Once outside of that, Symington ild be out of his element. And Nixon has eady hinted at how he would manage a. npaign against Symington, when he asked w many missiles' Symington ordered when was Air Secretary. The fact that the mis- age had not startled then is one, of those ts that doesn't and wouldn't bother Nihon. mington would get snowed under by a Re- olican peace campaign. Lyndon Johnson would be a different kind of aster. If Symington is a prisoner of his Air ce experience, Johnson is a prisoner of ge-' aphy and Southern tradition. The fact t he has been trying to break out of the, son, and view the Democratic Party as a? ional and not Southern institution is to his dit. But it must be remembered that each the two Republican candidates-Nixon and ckefeller-will run on a strong civil rights tform. and they would murder Johnson in ry balance-of-power Northern, mid-Western i Western state. le has a Parliamentary mastery that aches his brilliance of intellect and maneu- But as a test of his world image, I tried imagine him on the kind of visit to Asian ptols that Eisenhower may be making, and at a critical press would make of 'him-and iidn't click. JT JOHNSON'S disease, I fear, is not only 2enovanhv- it iq akrn the 1rind fsenne nf manner. Americans like a fighting stance in their champions. Hubert Humphrey's disease, on the other hand, is usually said to be glibness, just as Adlai Stevenson's was once 'aid to be the wisecrack. Too many people dismiss him too glibly for his glibness. Humphrey's real weak- ness is his virtue. He has come out, with a few exceptions, for all the right causes, which is a foolish thing for a candidate to do. Even the liberals don't want to, vote for a man with whom they agree 100%: it makes them feel they might as well be running them- selves. They prefer a man with silences, so that they can feel-when he does declare on the side of the angels-that they have saved his immortal soul. Humphrey has the distinction of having talked for 8 hours with Khrushchev-but then Khrushchev talked for 13 days before the American TV cameras, and there was a suspi- cion that he was just repaying the U.S. for sending Hubert.:-. THE THING about John F. Kennedy is that everyone wants him as a Vice-presidential running-mate. He seems doomed to be always a Vice-President-in-the-making, never a Presi- dent. He stands tolerably well with Gallup, but that may not help him much. People want to discover a man for themselves, and not see themselves as a statistic. His biographer draws a picture of the Massachusetts dowagers pour- ing him into the Senate at a sequence of Bos- ton Tea Parties the year he ran against Lodge, but it is hard to envisage a Presidential campaign in terms of the same pouring ladies. He took a militant attitude ,toward France, and liberated Algeria before DeGaulle-which is unlikely to endear him to the French leader at some future summit. His youth and inexperi- ence are also against him, and although Pitt ran an empire at 21 it is hard to see Kennedy's eternal crewcut charm pitted against Khrush- chev's swaggering toughness. AS FOR Stevenson, so much has been-and can be-said against him that for once he may be ripe for that most decisive of all fac- tors in American politics: the underdog appeal. The big fact against him is the fact of his two defeats. But if the Democrats reach a despairing deadlock, they may gulp down the defeats, and send him back to the plate, on the theory that a batter with two strikes on him is not out. He is probably no more liberal than Johnson or Kennedy, and certainly less so than Humph- rey, but no one of those three has spoken a memorable phrase for years and Symington never will, while Adlai can still impale a party or a man on the sharp end of a declarative .1 4 r . Ali r ..i " 4 ;; " . {"" i 3 [:3 " .rte .''auV' Y (EDITOR'S NOTE: One, of the great problems facing foreign stu- dents at the University is that in- volved in their adjustment to the United States and its ways of life which are so different to them. In c o n n e c t i o n with International Week, The Daily here presents an interview with one student who has come to grips with these difficul- ties.) By JEAN HARTWIG Daily Staff Writer RAQUEL 'arrero, Grad., who came here from Cuba almost. two years, ago, has had no prob- lems in adjusting to life in this. country. "Don't judge me as a typical foreign student-I'm doing fine," the dark-haired Cuban said with a twinkle in her large brown eyes. She explained that she has never felt unwelcome in the United States. "Americans have always ac- cepted me," she said. "They were kind of puzzled by me, but ac- cepted me anyway." Miss Marrero, who attended the University of Havana for a year before coming to the United States, is now one of the most well-known people at the Univer- sity. She is currently secretary of the International Students As- sociation representative to the Student Government. Council In- ternational CoordinatingBoard which is sponsoring International Week. ASKED WHY she chose to come to the University, she explained that the University of Havana was closed for two years during the revolution. During this period she wrote to several American universities, finally choosing the University because of -its good academic reputation. She especially chose the Uni- versity for its good psychology department, she said, adding that she will get her masters degree in June. English was no problem for Miss Marrero, since she had attended an American high school for a year when she was 14 - "early enough to get-good English gram- mar, but late enough to keep a Spanish accent." Shes alsoattended Columbia University for summer school and, intended to stay there "except my parents said New York was too big for a college girl." *- * * to campus and because "I kind of like independent living." Miss Marrero is a woman of many interests. She loves all kinds of music and dancing, especially Latin American. She also misses year-round swimming possible in Cuba. Reading is also high on, her list of interests and she lists Ernest Hemingway and Somerset Mau- gham as her favorite authors, as well as several Spanish writers. She also enjoys poetry very much and confessed that she, had writ- ten some pieces that have been prin'ted in high school magazines in Cuba. Next year she hopes to publish some of her poems and possibly submit some of them to Genera- tion. * * * COMPARING higher education in Cuba with that in the United States, she said the main differ- ence is that students go directly into their field ,ofconcentration when they enter South American universities. Basic studies are given in high school. "Our high schools are extremely hard, but when students graduate they know what field they want," she said, adding that Cuban uni- versities are almost free for stu- dents who. have received a high school degree. Because high school is very dif- ficult and because it takes five years to complete, many Cuban students; who do not plan to at- tend college go to niormal, com- mercial or trade schools. ASKED IF SHE had-noticed any problems common to most foreign studentscoming to this country, she said that it takes time for a student to become acquainted with American values. Shecriticized American stu- dents for their lack of knowledge about other countries, which she attributed to the lack of geography - courses in. high school. Miss Marrero explained the American attitude by the psycho- logical concept that "when a per- son doesn't know enough about something, he says he isn't inter- ested," she noted however, that American students are extremely interested in foreign students when they get to know them In June Miss Marrero plans to return to Cuba where she will join Herblock is away due to illness Capyright, 19S9, The Ptulltzer PtbIIISIIIICM St. Louis Post-Dispatch LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Discuss Generation' Review To The Editor: IT IS refreshing to see a writer openly attack institutions that might, because of their noble aims and purposes, often be treated more gently than they deserve. It is also refreshing to see a critic frankly admit that he has never read any of the poems the transla- tions of which he discusses and that he has not condescended to study an author who is the sub- ject of a critical essay under re- view. But the situation becomes slight- lv embarrassing when these two of a few sensible suggestions, Prof. Hagopian's recent criticism of Generation seems to me to be es- sentially of the sort described. PROF HAGOPIAN appears to be very worried that the inter-arts magazine is trying to becdme too international. His evidence is, I suppose, that the issue contains, besides a sizeable number of ori- ginal contributions by local stu- dent writers, the aforementioned article about the German poet Gottfried Benn and a few transla- tions from the French and the German, also all done by Univer- er's blunt faux pas of calling Traxl's magnificent poem, "Gro- dek", (well translated, too!) not worth Printing-"either in German or in English!" I WONDER Just how much en- lightenment Prof. H1agopian's re- fined intuitions-to use his phrase --will give to the reader who is as unspoiled by any knowledge of German or French literature as he seems to be, There is, I suppose, no reason why a teaccher of Masterpieces of= English Literature should read