Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Vhen Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Wil) Prevail" 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. "Merrily We Roll Along" -a-... y1 AT RACKUAMV: Quintet Presents Unusual Selections ESDAY, JULX 22, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: SELMA SAWAYA Both Sides Fumble In 'Garme of Smiles' 1 THE SUICIDAL little joust between Rus- sia and the United States, many an un- endly gesture has been made and many a gative attitude has been shown. Lately how- er, a strange new trend has been visible, and e era of the Great Smiling Face is apparently re. This is plainly seen in the various cultural d educational exchanges either proposed or eady in operation, in exhibitions of art, ck meets, touring ballet companies, visits Im parties like the one headed by University, esident Hatcher this spring, and most prom- ntly, by the sightseeing tours of Comrades koyan and Koslov. Clearly, the Americans and Soviets are mak- g an attempt to understand each other' rough friendly communication,.rather than. terms of nuclear weapons. NDOUBTEDLY, most of this is of great, some say immeasurable, value. However, it. unfortunate that the visits most publicized ;hose of Mikoyan and Kozlov-were perhaps e biggest flops. Mikoyan received worse treat- nt, in terms of eggs thrown, than did Koz- , but neither can claimi the establishment much better American-Russian relations. In ,t, a good deal of resentment might very 11 have been promoted. Certainly, better men: could have been chosen for public relations work. In Richard M. Nixon the American govern- ment apparently thinks it has the powerful man who can succeed where Mikoyan and Koz- lov failed. The government is quite mistaken, however, and Nixon's forthcoming trip to the Soviet Union promises to be nothing less than grim. NIRON IS NOT the most exuberant and pleasant of Americans, as South Americans who stoned him on his good' will tour last year will testify. He is neither the man to talk to the Russians and Khrushchev in the hard mili- tary terms they might understand, nor is he the man whose smile is going to enchant a na- tion. Nixon's trip can be an important one. But with 80 newsmen tagging after, there is some doubt as to whether anything worthwhile will emerge from the two-week affair, perhaps not even a presidential nomination. Nixon's trip may be the most important step America has taken in this Smiling Era. Much good or much harm can come of it. Much good is hoped for, of course, but it will only emerge if the Vice-President displays no little good will, and a great deal of statesmanship and courage. Such a display may be too much to hope for. --THOMAS HAYDEN THE UNIVERSITY Woodwind Quintet presented an enjoyable program of seldom-heard music Monday night at Rackham. Both the quintet and its invited guests, Larry Teal on the Saxophone and Clyde Thompson on the bass viol, performed more than competently. The main interest of the evening was the selection of works which were performed. Unfortunately your reviewer missed the first worn., "Divertisse- ment" by Gerald Hartley. Like all but one of the works presented, it is a multi-movement affair, the tendency to fragmentation, being apparently inescapable in wind ensemble literature. The next work was a three- movement "Suite" by Charles Le- febvre. There is not too much to say about this work except that the first two movements seemed heavy and academic, the third more idiomatic, the whole was rather 19th-century and the least interesting work of the evening. * * * THE NEXT WORK, whatever its- merits, certainly was not conven- tional. Jorgen Bentzon's "Raccon- to" for flute, alto saxophone, bas- soon, and bass viol must have been composed for some unusual combi- nation of circumstances . However this may be, the piece uses the pdssibilities of the com- bination satisfactorily, and the themes 'have. the "once. upon a time" quality suggested by the title. In the middle the saxophone delivers himself, of a ,longish ca- denza, following which the themes of the first section return in due order. The "Five Easy Dances" of Denes ,.Q.aze' s.1#jq $'4sTr ? ' Sr' 'pos. . Agay and the "Rengaines" (nine of them) of Andre Souris were both examples of typical woodwind slapstick - unexpected accents, staccato chords, and assorted squeaks and squeals. The Agay pieces were based on modeth popu-. lar dances, including a seductive Tango, while the Souris pieces were modeled after more traditional forms. The best of these to my thinking was the mock-passionate love-song of the bassoon In the Romance. 4, . THERE IS no Baroque literature for woodwind quintet, but if there were, it would sound like Mlhaud's "La Cheminee du Roi Rene." These seven pieces convey the spirit of the old suite" in delightfully mood-' ern, urbanev and above all French terms. The quintt played these with all the transparency they de- served. Last on the program, for some reason, came the most pretentious- work, a "Sextet for Alto Saxophone and Wind Quintet" by Leon Stein. As the name suggests, the saxo- phone predominates, although the chamber music spirit is maintained throughout. The work is intricately written, but somehow fals to leae a lasting impression. Many thanks to the quinet for presenting these unusual works. -John Denton DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin "is'aia official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assume no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 'p~m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1959 VOL. LXIX, NO.,21-S General Notices Seniors: College of L. S. & A. and Schools of Education,; Music, Pubic- Health, and Business Administration: Tentative lists of seniors for August graduation have been posted on the bulletin board in the firsthfloor lobby Admin. Bldg. Any changes therefrom should be requested of the Recorder at Office of Registration and Records, Window No. A, 1513 Admin. Bldg. FrmLectures For nLecture, Linguistics Institute, Thurs.;.-July 23, 7:30- p.m., Rackhank Amphitheater. "Four Basic Postulates, Bernard Bloch, Prof. of 'Ling., Yai Univ. Concerts The University summer Session Band outdoor concert on the diagonal near Haven Hall, Wed., July 22, 7:1 p.m. Hill Auditorium in event of rain. Music Education Lecture: Mr. John Kendel, Vice-President, of the, Ameri- can Music Conference in Chicago, il lustrated lecture on various phases of Music Education. Multipurpose nn. Undergrad. Library, Thurs., July 2., at 4:15 p.m. (Continued on Page 5) x LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Writer Disputes Picture of German Universities INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Dispart bat Similar By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press. News Analyst 'WO WORLD FIG URES of great disparity, both of them leaders of their people in a culiarly personal way, have within recent ys adopted the unusual tactic of resigning. iblic office in order to emphasize their true. iblic power. One, David Ben - Gurion ,of Israel, who lopted for himself the name of the lion, has ssed his three-score and ten. Steeped in the Hebraic' traditign, familiar rough constant reading with the world's eat philosophers, his gurs have been logic 1d persuasion, yet he has not shrunk from;, iysical war. 'HE OTHER, Fidel Castro of Cuba, not quite 33, has not yet entered that time of life hen men are expected to display their great- t wisdom. With the beard frequently asso- ated with eccentricity, he is built in the mold. the revolutionary, and his guns have, been ns. Yet he, too, since adolescence, has been grop- g for a philosophy, vague in spots as to its onomic applications, but obviously involving e individual dignity and economic well being lesser men. For 12 years he has been an ac- re revolutionary, in the Dominican Republic,. Colombia, and finally as'leader of the six- year movement which ousted dictator Batista and made Castro the ruler of Cuba. Some of Castro's theories have brought ac- cusations that he is a Communist, which he heatedly disavows, and which objective ob- servers discount. ON THE OTHER hand, nobody has accused old David Ben-Gurion of being Communist, although he has sponsored commune-type set- tlements as the first step toward establishment of many of the immigrants in Israel and as a means of. developing the nation's undeveloped areas. He lives in one of. them when "at home" Ben-Gurion's recent resignation as Prime Minister is different but akin to Castro's. He met criticism in his cabinet because he chose to keep Israel's arms industry going even by sell- ing supplies to West Germany, where so many of his constituents were persecuted under the Nazis. He beat his critics in Parliament, then. resigned to force from office his dissident asso- ciates. Now he -heads a caretaker government, is expected eventually to form a new'one. Castro, to date, seems only half-resigned. But he has obtained the resignation of Cuba's provisional President and installed another who says the revolutionary leader is still Pre- mier. No one questions that he is still the boss. Ben-Gurion and Castro. Two disparate men who use unusual but similar tactics. To the Editor: YOUR FRONT PAGE article of Thursday, July 16 gave such a misleading and erroneous account of German university life today that I feel obliged to set the score straight, having studied four years (1954-1958) at the University of Heidelberg. In the first place there was mention of an "unusual intellec- tual problem" in Germany today, namely that no courses are taught at the universities dealing with German history after 1914. Pro- fessor Davis may have taken a trip to: Germany but apparently he has not taken one- to the 10th floor of the stacks of the main library of the University of Mich- igan, for there he would have found current catalogues of most of the outstanding German uni- versities. Assuming that Professor Davis has just returned from his trip, we find the following courses be- ing offered during his stay in Germany: The Totalitarian System of National Socialism (Bonn). The Totalitarian State: The Germany of National Socialism, 1936-1945 (Hamburg). Contemporary Political His- tory, 1933-1945 (Munich). More Recent German Consti- tutional History, 1808-1955 (Munich).' Studies in the History of Ger- man Jewry since 1933 (Berlin). * * * IT IS REMARKABLE that any courses are being offered at all on the LNazi era by German profes- sors because a great number of the pertinent documents were confiscated by the American army and are available only in Wash- ington, D.C.- Professor Davis continued that the students he talked with were not "really much interested in the modern period." When I was a student in Heidelberg I attended a course given in 1955 by Professor Fuchs on the history of the years just prior to World War II. It was given in the largest classroom of the university which seats some 200 students. * * * ON JANUAY 30, 1958 there was a special program offered by the University of Heidelberg as a reminder of that fateful day in Berlin 25 years before. The audi- torium of the university was jammed; I remember distinctly for I had to stand along with many others. Tape recordings' were played of speeches. by Hit- ler, Goebbels, and Goring. I shall never forget the expression on the faces of those young German students, many of them hearing' these voices for the first time. In closing it must be pointed out that the, whole article was misleading because in Germany there are no "student leaders" and no campus "activities" in the American sense of the word. The Germans have preserved a strange medieval notion of the university. They seem to consider it a place. where students should learn some- thing from books and professors. Gary S. Johnson German Department Goddess ,,. To the Editor: RE: Certain editorials of July 10, 15, and 16:' MY GODDESS: A REVIEW 0 Goddess of the Inland Seas, Can it your noble fancy please To be assaulted by a one Whose writings all good sense doth shung sne All progress to him evil seems, Of ugly hulks and worse he dreams. Fresh paint and bricks fill him with dread; He thinks the campus spirit dead. He raises for the Rifle Range-- A pile of planks grown gray with mange-- A bitter, cynical lament In hopes of seeming eloquent. The Alpha Gamma Delta place. He thinks a hideous disgrace Its newness views with great distaste, Its very purpose thinks a waste. In every change- he sees no use, But showers it with vast abuse;. An antique campus he desires,, The primitive alone admires. To end at last his shrill protest. I have a plan I might suggest: All building projects now suppress, Make Michigan a wilderness! James Berg, '60 P. S.: BUT LEST these lines should seem unkind, I'd have the reader bear in mind: They flay not "R. J.'s" shallow wit, But rather, merely what he writ.. I doth shun? I But rather, merely what he writ. CARIBBEAN CAROUSEL Old San Juan Forms Hub of Urban Network TODAY AND TOMORROW: 'Fact-Finding' and Steel By WALTER LIPPMANN J AMONG THE MANY big questions posed by the steel strike perhaps the most important is what should be the role of the Federal gov- ernment. For there is much confusion about this. The strike is taking place just as Congress is working on a law for the regulation of labor unions, a law which calls for comprehensive and far-reaching Federal intervention 1$ the internal affairs of the unions. Yet on the steel strike there are many, including now the Presi- dent himself, who want no Federal intervention and wish to see the issue settled by the test of economic power. THE PRESIDENT'S views on intervention in the steel controversy have crystallized only recently. A month ago, at his press conference of June 17, he was asked this question by Mr. Raymond P. Brandt of the St. Louis Post Dis- patch: "Both the steel management and the steel unions are using self-serving statistics which are in great conflict. Is there any way that government can bring out some impartial figures on profits and wages and productivity so that people can understand the issues and make their own decision?" The President answered Mr. Brandt, saying, "Well, I think you have asked about the most intelligent question on that particular question, particular matters; and I haven't thought about it in this paricular way . . . I don't know whether this would be helpful or not, but I'll take your suggestion and have it studied." Last week, at his press conference on July 15, the President had had the matter studied. He had learned that "as far as a fact-finding board is concerned, I believe that all the facts are pretty well known ... In all our reports, in the reports that are published, how is the public to know, how is Congress to know, how are newspaper editors to know, which of the facts are important and relevant? The task of finding the facts that matter and of judging how they matter is a semi-judicial function. It cannot be done without a specialized inquiry by trained minds. If there is no impartial tribunal to find the facts, then there can be no such thing as an' enlightened public opinion. And if there is no enlightened opinion that can be brought to bear upon it, a strike of this magnitude must become a test of power in a whirl of propaganda and of prejudice.: WHEN THE PRESIDENT rejected the idea of a "fact-finding" which he had thought rather well of a month before, he affirmed a new doctrine: "I believe that we have got thoroughly to test out and to use the method of free bargaining." Where great andvital in- terests are involved how much free bargaining do we really believe in? In the steel controversy today, the companies happen to have the stronger bargaining posi- tion, their customers have large stockpiles, public opinion is stoutly opposed to another round of'Wage and price increases. The union appears to be far frop solid within itself. But this favorable balance to the companies will not always be the case, and I wonder whether it is wise and prudent for them to set it up as a "principle" that in these great con- troveries involvin gthe national interest the issue shall be decided by .a contest of power? I do not believe it is true, as has been said By THOMAS TURNER CLAN JUAN, P. R.- Metropoli- 2tan San Juan is less a city with suburbs than a network of cities of more or less the same size, over seven miles across. Farthest out from the center lies Rio Piedras, home of the beautiful University of Puerto Rico campus. Adjoining Hato Rey is largely industrial. Santurce, where I live, ranges from a Gold Coast of fine hotels to squalid slums. Miramar is resi- dential and commercial. * s * PUERTO de Tierra is industrial and commercial, with a large warehouse district. None of the cities, or sections, is really very interesting. But the hub of the system is Old San Juan, founded in 1521 and loaded with atmosphere. It actually lies on an island, just off the shore of the main island. The old city is surrounded by fortifications, most spectacular of which is the Morro Castle. Con- struction of El Morro began in 1533 -- the castle was not proven' obsolete until an American can- nonball penetrated the thick out- er wall. THE BUSINESS section of Old San Juan and most of the sight- seeing points of interest are crowded into a small area, rough- ly seven blocks square. Casa Blanca, ancestral home of Ponce de Leon's, family, is now the ,residence of the Army coin- mander in Puerto Rico. La Fortaleza, for 400 years the seat of government here, now houses Gov. Luis Munoz Marin. Within its walls is one of the most beautiful gardens I've Aver seen. From its walls there s a marvelous view of the harbor. San Jose Church is probably the oldest church in continuous use in the hemisphere. It once housed the remains of Ponce de Leon, now buried in the cathedral a few blocks away. * * * THE CHURCH and the cathe- dral contain vaulted ceilings which are among the few exam- ples of medieval arcitecture in the Americas. Also of interest to the tourist are many of the shops which line the narrow streets. Many of the items sold there turn out to bear "Haiti," "Mexico" or even "Japan" marked on the bottom, but others of course are products of Puerto Rican handicraft, r c a '1 THE ATMOSPHERE OF A CITY, SEEN IN ITS STREETS ... ... .. ... . m