'I "Be a Good Fellow, Now-Don't be Difficult" 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 Will 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 noed in all reprints. 4 AY. JUNE 26. 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: SELMA SAWAYA Urban Renewal: How Necessary Here.? Four 'U' Students Head for South America ;FOUR UNIVERSITY students planned a trip to South America last semester. The summer tour was to be done by motor- cycle, and involved travel through the Darien Gap where there is no road. In the words of one of the travelers, "the jaunt will take us through blistering deserts, treacherous mountains and unmapped areas of jungle." The four, Wilbert Porter, Grad., Richard McElroy, '60, Barton Huthwaite, '60, and Robert Mancell, '59, left Ann Arbor early in June. On June 22 they were stopped in Hope, Ark., by an accident which has eliminated Wil from the rest of the trip. WHILE RIDING ALONG a country road, Wit was forced into a ditch by a deaf farmer driving a truck. Three broken ribs and 38 stitches later, he was resting comfortably in Hope, with- out much of continuing the journey. Thethree remaining stu- dents are currently in Mexico. Bart, who is 1959-60 Daily Features Editor, will communicate the experiences of his trip as facilities for mailing articles and pictures are available. -R. J. AT THE STATE: Taming of the West. Chapter CCCLXII J r .1 N URBAN RENEWAL project is a laudable way to up-grades communities, but is it ally a necessity fox the rehabilitation .of a art of Ann Arbor? This seemingly innocent question raised, :t for the first or probably tho last time, byr layor Cecil Creal last weekend caused a furor nong City Council members and supporters the plan, but apparently no one thought of sking the residents of, the area in question hat they thought of'the whole thing. The Mayor's plaii, presented in an attempt > remedy tlis situation, calls for the forma- on of a coimittee, including both area resi- ants and community leaders, to study means implementing a program of self-rehabilita- on to replace the federal program. While the Council was probably justified -in sanding the Mayor's statement (which ac-, >mpanied a 'veto of the Council's Urban Re- ewal plan) as purely arbitrary and uncalled r at this late date, neglect of the citizen's oint of view has typified the three-year hassle ver what's best for the community. The Mayor, protesting this seeming un'con- ern for the individual's right to be heard, sug- ested that the people in the Urban Renewal rea didn't want progress if it meant they had > give up the homes they own free and clear nd move into multiple living units, and that' iey'd be wiling to initiate improvements by hemselves. OOKING AT THIS realistically, it probably. wouldn't be as effective as the federal plan -where would the people get the funds for ich home improvements? - but it may prove referable to the overwhelming changes sug- ested' by Urban Renewal supporters. 'The mount of concern over this area generated in he last'three years seems sufficient to insure hat the whole rehabilitation idea will not be )rgotten if Urban Renewal is thrown out. It is hoped that the civic groups now loudly i favor of the federal plan will be just as illing to aid smaller-scale attempts to clean p the neighborhood without government mds. And residents have rep'eatedly voiced he desire to make home improvements 'if 'they :uld be sure no one would *step in and tell hem they had to forfeit their home in the ame of progress., One incongruity of Urban Renewal is the plan to get rid of a slaughter house employing 85 people, most of whom are among the low- income families of the area. With no place in the county to which it can move, its demise would swell the ranks of the'unemployed and increase the neighborhood's problems, for a great deal more can be done with a low income than with no income. But that isn't all. The slaughter house would be replaced by an extension of the children's playground next door. Sound like a good idea? The children will still have to put up with the, sight, sound and smell of the asphalt plant, coal yard and railroad tracks just across the street.k SUCH CONFLICTS and paradoxes, admitted- ly without quick or painless solutions, are bound to arise and no plan is capable of iron- ing out all the area's built-in problems. One thing in favor of Mayor Creal's sugges- tion is its focus on persuasion rather than force as a means of attaining at least a mea- sure of improvement while retaining the co- operation of the residents. A mere remodeling program is useless - if the people feel they are being imposed upon by outsiders, they probably aren't going to make any attempt to care for the shiny new apartments they live in.: Before long, trash would start accumulat- ing in halls and yards again, a return .to the practices which' led to the need for improve- ment in the first place. More to the point is Mayor Creal's slightly corny, but nevertheless justifiable, invocation. of civic pride as a way to get the desired re- sults. From just an economic standpoint a person who invests! at least part of his own money in improvements on his own home is usually wiling to protect that investment. Urban Renewal and the alternative plan are still being fought over vigorously, but remarks voiced by local political followers indicate ac- ceptance of community responsibility for im- provement. After all, these people aren't liv- ingin a New York ghetto or a 'Chicago slum, but a dilapidated and slightly old neighbor- hood. Surely Ann Arbor has the resources to give these people any aid they may need - federal aid might better be used elsewhere'. -KATHLEEN MOORE v ASC'f Grs(~c{Gn a Tc, CaHb bean Can'U4 el Twin Killing? ALTHOUGH President Eisenhower has in. dicated that Reichard Nixon's trip to, Mos- cow next month is not intended to further negotiations, there seem to be 'whispers in political circles that the visit might yield two' important results. The Vice-President will open the American National Exhibition next month in Moscow's Sokolniki Park. But it is hoped that his visit will cut more than one string. During a recent news conference, President Eisenhower told the press that he did not regard Nixon's visit as a "mechanism for re- opening negotiations." But, despite it all, the Vice-President is "presumably" going through exhaustive briefing by State Department ex- perts, it has been reported. If the reopening of Big Four talks on July 13 at Geneva proves no more successful than the first six weeks of negotiation, then Nixon, who has scheduled talks with Khrushchev during the last week in July, may be instr'umental in finding a solution or opening a road to the summit. ONE SOURCE even commented that Soviet leaders have actually planned things this way: tired of bumping their Berlin-aimed noses against the Western stone wall, they may have broken off negotiations for the time being with the express purpose of making 'a fresh start with Nixon. Indeed, if their purpose is to explore new routes or initiate possibilities, the Soviets will find the Vice-President ready and more than willing. Besides a thorough briefing, Nixon will' be accomp'anied by two State Department experts" on Soviet affairs. They both sat in on the foreign ministers' conference and, with this background, are prepared to. assist Nixon in making decisions, answering challenges and solidifying the Allied wall. THUS, NIXON is being prepared for his trip to Moscow. If successful where all else fails, Nixon and the fruits of his labor may also yield a sweet harvest of future, political crops. His candidacy for the GOP nomination in 1960 is not much of a secret. The effect that successful negotiations would have on the poll- goers is no mystery either. At and after the Soviet exhibition, Nixon will have much exchanging to do-opening this cul- tural exchange program, swapping ideas with Soviet leaders and possibly trading in his Wash- ington residence for the White House. -NORMA SUE WQLFE - (EDITOR'S NOTE: Thomas Turn- er, 1959-60 Daily editor, is spending his summer at home in Puerto Rico. Throughout the summer he will write while at his home in Santurce and on 'various excursions to Carri- bean islands. This column was writ- ten while he was visiting New York this week on his journey home.) EW YORK -This summer, a year after the Brussels Fair, the United States and ,Russia are again tilting on the tourney field of public opinion. But this year's rival expositions of American and Soviet, "life" sit not one by the other on more or less neutral ground, but each in the largest city of the other na- tion. A lot has appeared in the American press about our exhibit in Moscow. Young guides with command of Russian and money for the trip to Moscow were solic- ited. Then articles appeared on the exhibit's coptent' a $12,000 home is to -be presented ,as one the "average American'" can afford. It seems the Soviet press has been preparing its readers for this ex- hibit and others like it, denying that many Americans could afford such a house. Recently, a color television ex- hibit has been described. Some of the programming will be films: "Mickey Mouse" and a Russian- language explanation of the Wall Street stock market. Other pro- grams will be live, probably in- cluding Moscow talent. All in all, the Russians appear in for quite a show. NEW YORK'S COLISEUM on Columbus Circle is the site of the Soviet show, which opens Satur- day., The American press has not seen fit to give it much of a build- up, perhaps because there is little danger anyone would confuse ,the picture of Sovietlife shown with the current reality in the USSR. The exposition should, however, be on the must-see list of each New Yorker and each tourist com- ing to the city this summer-the quality of Russian technology and of Russian showmanship are both beyond question. Accompanying the Coliseum show in its invasion of Manhattan are two other examples of Rus- sia's ability to put her best public- relations foot forward. "Great is My Country" is a film in Cinepanorama, a curved- screen process apparently similar to Cinerama. It opens Tuesday at the Mayfair Theatre here. Sovcolor, three projectors and nine soundtracks "transport you almost literally to the cities and countrysides . . , the streets and byways . . . the concert halls and theatre stages . . . the farms and factoriesh.., of the Soviet!" (Thee dots are, theirs, indicating: no omission.) Propaganda-laden as it doubt- less is, this should also be well worth seeing, KReviews j By THOMAS TURNER Meanwhile, impresario S. Hurok will open his "RussianrFestival" July 7 in Madison Square Garden. Stars of the Bolshoi and Lenin- grad Ballets will be featured, along with Ukrainian, Georgian, Ar- menian and Uzbek folk-dancers, a folk choir, and a full symphony orchestra. It, too, has "must-see" written all over it. S* * THE SOVIET cultural invasion is being conducted on yet another frcrt, the New York Herald Tri- bune reveals. Russian long-play records, long sold in paper sleeves of the sort used on American 45's and 78's, have customarily shown record- ing know-how not unlike that used. on the waxings of,,Jelly Roll Mor- ton or Enrico Caruso. / As the Herald Tribune unkindly ;put it, they might sound all right or a hand-cranked machine in. Siberia, but were below-par on an American hi-fir i (This reporter can verify this point on the basis of personal ex- perience. A three-disk recording of the Polish opera, "Halka," sung in Russian at Moscow's Bolshoi Theatre, with orchestra conducted by Kiril Kondrashin, bought in Poland and carefully carried half- way around the world by train and plane, proved something of a dis- appointment. The fidelity was none too high.) Now, however, a New York im- porter will be wholesaling Russian recordings,, beautifully recorded and slickly packaged, copyrighted under the importer's name to avoid pirating. It seems he took some earlier Soviet efforts to top sound- engineers in this country and sent detailed reports on what to do about limited range and surface noise. He is apparently satisfied the new Russian disks will be able to compete with their stateside counterparts on equal footing. And artists such' as David Oi- strakh might even give them an edge. JUST THE OTHER night I was sitting in Lydia Mendelssohn reading a good book while some- thing trivial went on stage, when I happened to wonder how the Basques came to California in the early part of the 18th century, bringing with them strange cus- toms, foreign costumes, and a fine collection of vines which produce much of the wine which helped win the West. And would you believe it, only two days later, Paramount Pic- tures has answered all my ques- tions and even a few more with "Thunder in tle Sun," starring Susan Haywire and Happy Chand- ler and the most unlikely collec- tion of French accents outside of the Frieze Building. BACK amidst the misty days of antiquity, a hardy band of Basques set sail from France carrying only their priceless grape vines and a few tons of treasured heir- looms. Once in the land of freedom, they set their sights on sunny California where the vines grow tall and the internal revenue de- partment is far, far away. Big dolly of this fearless expedition is Sue Hayward, fresh out of the gas chambre andeager to go. Guide for the trip across the new con- tinent is grey-haired Jeff Chand- ler, who .cannot be trusted near women and whiskey but has a heart of solid peach ice-cream. The journey is fairly tiring and not too interesting until the Basques come across a wandering tribe of Indians. Then we see the curious.spectacle of Indians beat- en at their own game by the sneaky Basques who know every- thing there is to know about mountain fighting. Unfortunately, the Indians don't. AFTER THE first hundred films, it's not too easy to find a new ap- proach to the Wild West. The ori- ginal hundred thousand or so In- dians have been killed ten times each on the screens of theatres throughout the country. The bad men have been massacred by sheriffs ,and marshals, the dance hall girls married, the cabins built, until I begin to suspect there is nothing more to be done. I forgot about the Basques. Summing Up: Sue wears more mascara than a Basque should; rare moments of realism partly compensate. -David Kessel DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) teaching vacancies for the 1959-0 school year. Battle Creek, Mich. (L a k eview School) - JHS: Math; Gen. Sci.; 88. Covert, Mich. - Ind. Arts; ss (with PE minor); Band/vocal; women's PE. Flat Rock, Mich. -- JHS Math/Sci.; Elem. Fowlerville, Mich. -- HS Girls PE. Ishpeming, Mich. s-HS: Home Econ. omics; Eng./Hist. or SS. Monroe, Mich. - HS: Egn.; JHS: Mathi; Vocal Music/English; Elem.; Girls PE; Speech Corr.; Mentally e- tarded. Reading, Mich. - Girls PE; JHS Eng- lish; HS: English; Eng./Speech; Math; El/JHS/HS Art. Rochester, Mich, - Elementary; JHS Girls PE; Type A Mentally Handicapped visiting Teacher. St. Clair, Mich. -- HSI Chein/Piiyaios; Elementary; visiting Teacher. St. Clair Shores, Mich. - HS: Girls PE; Home Ec.; JHS Science. Willow Run, Mich. - HS: Vocal Mu- sic; Girls PR (with. swimming). Ypsilanti, Mich. - JHS:' Math/c1 English; Elementary. For any additional information con- tact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admnin. Bldg., NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. 'I r a 5.4 4 X J1 INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Head StarIt for Herter BY J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst CHRISTIAN HERTER has achieved with one trip and one speech something that John Foster Dulles received only on his death bed and which never has really arrived for Dean Ache- son. Whether Herter will be ranked in history with the greatest Secretaries of State remains to be seen. But at the moment he has some- thing approaching universal approval in the United States and among her Allies. General acclaim is not something to which Secretaries of, State have been accustomed, especially in such times of trouble. Working in a field where there is limitless room for disagreements over policy and the application of policy, Acheson and Dulles were constantly subject to the bitterest sort of criticism. The true stature of Dulles went unrecognized by many until it became known that his services would be lost. That was true in Europe as well as at home. State, served at a time when America was still feeling her way toward permanent positions in the cold war. Not one to grab for credit, his true stature will not be generally realized until the archives of those days are published. But at Geneva the homebound planes had not been warmed up when Herter began to receive the plaudits of his European associates. His quietly diplomatic but stern rebuffs of Andrei Gromyko attracted attention at home. Here was a man who might counter the Soviet, rough and tumble even better than Dulles. Then he came back to report to! Congress, the President and the nation. THE ACCLAIM which has followed didn't come out of the books, for there is nothing in the books as precedent. Criticism has been literally smothered. Even the British papers, voicing the fears of a nation which feels it must talk and talk and talk because it cannot brook even the idea. of war, have praised Herter. Oddly enough, two men have seldom ap- neared in the same scene who had such similar ,. .6 4