Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "When 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. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS TURNER Responsible Campaign, Election Could Preserve SGC as Student Voice Oosterbaan Backed as STUDENTS on this campus have a rare op- portunity to affirm their confidence in stu- dent government. Participation both as candidates and as an intelligent, enthusiastic electorate in the cam-, paign period now beginning would give SGC* a great deal of support. This support is now called for as never be- fore because the current jurisdictional dispute with the administration, unless resolved in favor of SGC, would leave the student with little real power. FOR THE ADMINISTRATION, in the person of Dean of Women Deborah Bacon, has de- clared the letter to SGC signed by Vice-Presi- dent for Student Affairs James A. Lewis to be a directive to the Council to find Sigma Kappa no longer in violation of University regulations. Since the administration let SGC handle the Sigma Kappa question in 1956, presumably with the knowledge that withdrawal of recog- nition could result, the current Board in Re- view action can only represent a change in administration attitude toward SGC. That is, it can onlyrepresent a change in attitude if the administration really meant what, Miss Bacon said it meant by the Lewis letter. It was not at all clear from reading Lewis' letter that he meant to do anything by it beyond expressing opinion. And neither Lewis nor Dean of Men Walter B. Rea have said in public that they were tell- ing the students how to govern. ALL THIS AMBIGUITY will presumably be cleared up a week from today. As things look now, the three administrators will be meet- ing with the Council at that time to iron things out. By that time, they may have had either sone insight into how to compromise, perhaps re- defining SGC power without wrecking the or- ganization. Or they will have decided to reaf- firm what would seem to be their position now, that SGC is subject to any administration statement. In any case, it's ,campaign time right now, and if the student body does not normally feel any great affinity for its legislative voice, the body which can do most to reflect its wishes in meaningful changes on campus, then the danger SGC is in should certainly prompt a vigorous but responsible election. -THOMAS TURNER Research at the University THE ENGINEERING RESEARCH Institute last year did $11 million worth of business, the second most successful year since its found- ing in 1920. Although the business of the In- stitute dropped $1 million from the alltime high in 1956-57, this still represents big busi- ness in any context. The, Institute serves several valuable func- tions and under its recent reorganization as the University Research Institute will prove even more valuable. Under its new set-up, the Institute will not be devoted exclusively to en- gineering research, but will conduct research in any area in "which the University has a faculty. UMRI is a non-profit research group which performs contract investigations for private industry, individuals or government agencies. No public tax funds are involved since all work is paid for by the contractors. At the same time the Institute can utilize both the University' facuilty and facilities in their work. LAST YEAR ERI supported 200 faculty mem- bers in research. The results of this are many. Contract research provides practical outlets for faculty talents and keeps them in contact with modern research and technical developments. This can aid both himself and his students, who will benefit from his research and his close contact with other research in the same field. At the same time this research work provides an additional source of income to faculty members and thus helps to hold many of them on the staff when salaries re- main static. The Institute also employed almost 800 stu- dents, most of them on a part-time basis. This sork enables students to get practical training in their fields and to get early training in ad- vancing scholarship, as well as financial as- sistance. The most important results from ERI are practical. Rocket research led to International Geophysical Year success in probing the up- per atmosphere, gaining knowledge both for use in predicting weather and in gaining facts which may one day help man conquer space. The 24-story Illuminating Building in Cleve- land was provided with ax foundation on un- settled earth because of ERI research in soil mechanics. All this, aid to faculty, students, and scien- tific knowledge, is to the credit of the Institute. With the humanities and social sciences in- cluded in the new UMRI, contributions to so- ciety should increase even further. The Insti- tute provides both publicity and prestige to the University. It makes one feel that the Uni- versity is not an educational factory, but an institution concerned with scholarship and activities beyond the pedantic. -ROBERT JUNKER Difficulties Of Position~ By AL JONES Daily Sports Editor BENNIE OOSTERBAAN is ft gentleman with many prob- lems. As Michigan football coach he assumes a position that is thank- less. He is praised when he wins, attacked when he loses, and ap- preciated never. Such is the strait of all football coaches-but doubly so in Oosterbaan's case. Every coach is pressed to bring forth a winner in a game where only half the teams win every Saturday. But Oosterbaan's problems go past this 50-50 position. At Michi- gan he is obliged to work under the most "adverse" recruiting con- ditions in the Big Ten, if not in the entire country. To play at Michigan an athlete must also be a student. However, under these "adverse" conditions, Oosterbaan has com- piled an amazing record. He has been head coach for 11 years, and during that span he has the most impressive record in the Big Ten -and he has never had a losing season. * * * MAYBE HE WILL have his first one this year, but the downgrade cannot be blamed on the coach. Michigan was forecasted to have a poor season. Instead, they started off with a victory and then went to the surprise tie with Michigan State. This was obviously a mis- take, since subsequent losses-have been disappointing rather than expected. Yet, what coach could win with half of his team injured, and the top players sidelined indefinitely? Oosterbaan has never been an imaginative coach. He has always advocated solid football, depending on a tough line and hard-hitting backs. When he has neither of these, naturally the team loses. But nevertheless Michigan always wins more than it loses. Perhaps it is ironic that Ooster- baan picked this year to use more imagination than ever before. He may never get the due credit for it. * * * OF COURSE, this imagination hasn't always paid off. It worked at Michigan State, and everyone cheered. It failed at Navy, on a very controversial quick-kick, be- cause the defense didn't hold. It never got started at Northwestern, because the key man was carried off the field with an ankle injury. Still, the imagination is there. Oosterbaan is perhaps a better coach this year than ever before- but he won't win as many games, But this is obviously not the time for Bennie to go. Michigan's troubles this year are twofold-the team doesn't have the personnel, and what good men there were have joined the injured list. Neither of these are the coach's fault. Injuries can't be blamed on anyone, and in the Michigan setup the lack of ma- terial isn't Oosterbaan's fault. Consider for a minute the prob- lems of. football at Michigan, and ask exactly what kind of coach is best suited for the situation. In the first place there is the Michi- gan tradition of winning football games - Oosterbaan has always had winning teams. * * * THEN THERE is the tradition of high academic standards. Oosterbaan has accepted these standards, and even defended them. Since they cramp the style of big time recruiting, he has stayed out of the frantic battle for material. The national reputation of clean hands that Michigan has earned under Oosterbaan, amidst the re- cruiting scandals, is something to be proud of. It is the best publicity that Michigan can ever hope for. The fact that Oosterbaan rates character development as an equal to football technique has made him a favorite with his players,and has earned him their friendship and respect. Certainly, all good coaches command respect-but friendship is just as important. One of the things that Michigan coaches down through the years have always pointed to is the fine record that 'M' men make after they leave the Ann Arbor campus. Can there be any doubt that this is a truly important part of a coach's job? IT SEEMS obvious that if Mich- igan is going to have football it must be under the Oosterbaan philosophy. Full recruiting. low entrance standards for athletes, and "killer-type" football tech- niques have no place at Michigan --and never will. Michigan doesn't want a "holler- guy" coach like other schools have -- wanted is a gentleman, and Oosterbaan is the man. Under the present conditions at Michigan, which aren't going to change. I.don't believe that there To the Editor: INFANTS of the world unite! Ap- parently they already have since they gathered together to hang our coach in effigy. The young babies are currently defending themselves and assuring everyone (mostly themselves) that the "University can't kick me out." Maybe not but the aspirsions cast by this assinine act on the name of our University are momentoes to be pasted in that scrapbook along with the clippings you young ir- responsibles are pasting in your scrapbooks from the news stories of your faux pas. You youngsters think that no- body knows who you are. Well, the world now knows that you're all from the third floor of one of West Quadrangle's houses. Also that the pajamas composing the body of one of the effigies is from room number 306 and they belonged to a lad who is also famous for being caught with an Ann Arbor stop sign in his room. Quite a collection of events for one freshman. Apparently he's on an activities scholarship. Just to add to your uneasiness may I add that at 6:52 p.m. last night most of you juvenile culprits were gathered in the above room planning to write a letter defend- ing yourselves to The Daily. Never mindkiddies, everything is explained herein. -Harry R. Sarf,'59L Laughter . To the Editor: "CHEERS FROM the crowd of 41,345 turned into uproarious laughter . . . ." This is a line that appeared in Sunday's Grand Rapids Herald. It wasn't in a story about a comedy act on stage, in a movie, or on television. It was in a story datelined Evanston, Illinois, and described the reac- tion of the crowd watching as the University of Michigan football team met defeat at the hands of the team from Northwestern Uni- versity. Oh, the shame of it! That any group of people representing -Daily-Harold Gassenheini BENNIE OOSTERBAAN - A COACH UNDER STRAIN LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Reader Spots Bennie Hangers Michigan should be held up to scorn, laughter and ridicule. Is this the fruit of the coaching policies of Bennie Oosterbaan? If it is, then Michigan has been sold a poor bill of goods. Has the ideal. of being a good loser and "losing gracefully" become such an achievement that the team must lose each game more gracefully than the one before? (The words in quotes are those of Coach Oosterbaan.) Or maybe this downward trend in Michigan's football fortunes over the past eight years is the result of the University's recruit- ing policies. I don't believe that talent for college football should be recruited on a professional. basis, but 'there is certainly noth- ing wrong with a coach and his staff selling themselves and their school to the young men in high school who could help build a championship team. It is obvious that not much has been done recently to sell the University of Michigan to the talent available in the state, as most of it seems to have congregated at a certain college just to the north of Ann Arbor. Strange too, isn't it, that the fortunes of this college have been on the rise while those of Michigan have been on the down- grade during the last eight years. IF THE PRESENT policies on coaching and recruiting are to continue, then I suggest that the University of Michigan withdraw from the Big Ten and join a con- ference where a team recruited and coached under present condi- tions would be better suited to compete. At least the crowd won't laugh at the futile efforts of the football team as it attempts to move an inflated hunk of pigskin from one end of the field to the other. Another thing that would bear looking into is the question of why the Michigan star is so often hurt early in the game. Hasn't the coach told his boys that it's rough out there? One sign of a poorly coached team is one that is con- tinually beset with injuries. Men New Hope for the Underprivileged CRIPPLED AND DEFORMED, a poverty- stricken child huddles in front of his thatched-roof hut somewhere in Africa. His, name is not important as he is but one of the millions like him suffering around the world. Doctors would say he is the victim of a dread- ed human blight - leprosy. That is, if there were any doctors available to diagnose his dis- ease. Hope is unknown to him. Resigned to his fate, he knows the miracles of medicine will never reach his village.I But meanwhile, a piece of international ma- chinery is fighting for this crippled child. Far from the floor of the General Assembly and the world politics of the Security Council, the United Nations World Health Organization is battling sickness and disease in the some- times obscure corners of the world. Their work is far from the glare of publicity. While the future of nations is being debated within the United-Nations, the WHO is coordi- nating international health work for the under- developed countries of the world. With the as- sistance of WHO, hope may soon extend its helping hand to this leprosy-ridden youth THE WHO IS only one example of the many such United Nations supported services. There are many more. Designed for the bet- terment of the human race, they preach no doctrine -- offer no economic "cure-all." The value of the United Nations has some- times been rated as worthless and other times as the savior of the human society. Foreign diplomats have turned in disgust at the lack of progress and the stalemate of the Commu- nist bloc on the General Assembly floor. But at political level, the various United Nations sponsored services offer new hope to the under- no matter the achievements on the internation- privileged peoples of the human race. -BARTON HUTHWAITE in poor physical condition st little chance of coming throug game without injury? Or c Coach Hayes of Ohio State h something in his contentionst the play is not as clean a might be. I plan to be watching the Ho coming Game Saturday. I hope thatmthe laughter from crowd doesn't upset the player -J. R. Barber, " Millions .W To the Editor: I CERTAINLY AGREE with Langer in his Sunday ar that while Russia is quickly v ning friends with her flex timely foreign aid policy, United States lags far behind However, in the case off nomic aid to India, a more1 anced picture could have been: sented. For example, last June India and the United States sig a 57 million dollar loan agreem for. immediate'receipt of 700 tons of food grains, and ano agreement for 75 million dollar a long term development loan specific' projects as part of $225 million loan granted ea this year. How about it? Isn't quite a few million to overloo -Ruth Le Bombings .. . To the Editor: IN THE PAST WEEK our at tion has been turned from. type of bomb testing to anot though not recent, innovation bombings. For the past decade world has faced the ever grow crisis of international tension 1 has threatened to destroy al mankind. But as with most thi we Americans tend to specie and this is the case with the cent bombings of Jewish tem and synagogues. The test involved here is on which the nation's moral fiber been laid bare and the issue i doubt whether we will survive ordeal brought on by the dis of hate. Because of these boi ings, allusions have been m and will continue to be made a what occurred in Nazi Germ before and during World War This, I think, clouds the is Until we come to realize that of us are responsible for w happens in this country or in; other country, that these are temples that are being destro and that this is our disease, will never effect a recovery f this fear which is stalking country. -Torre Bissell Chairman of Young Friend wus... To the Editor: THE WORLD University Ser bucket drive netted $200. T Indeed is only a "drop in bucket" compared to the $1,0 $2,000 total in previous ye Carol Holland, chairman of drive, said that lack of knowle about WUS was the reason for decline. True, this was prob part of the reason; but it is the whole explanation. Wednesday's Daily said t among other places, canvas would be in front of the Fr Building, the League, and Natural History Museum. I pas all of these places on Wednes and, although I looked for on could see a bucket nowhere. A the majority of students I h asked say they did not see+ X Coach- Academnics Important By MICHAEL KRAFT Daily Editorial Director DESPITETHE increasing secu- larization of modern civiliza- tion, this country still 'seems to hold certain things sacred. Among them are, in the approximate or- der of importance, God, County, Mother flag, and the importance of a winning football team. To question the first four of these, one must have a complete distaste for holding public office. To question the last, one runs the risk of being hung by theears from the nearest stadium flagpole by some irate alumni. However, alumni will be alumni. BUT sometimes, emotionalism carries too far. It seems to happen every fall.. . A Saturday afternoon suddenly turns dark as Michigan gets smeared in the stadium mud, rumblings of discontent begin echoing in the taverns and the er lightning phrase "Bennie must go" flashes from irate tongues. For suddenly, Bennie is com- mitting blasphemy. He's letting Michigan's sacred tradition crumble and perhaps more in- portant, he's letitng the fans down. They can't brag next Mon day in the office or back home during the next vacation, how and THEIR team was successful. ha * * " does PERHAPS, however, it is the ave shouters who should go hang, for that their sense df values, which places s it a winning football team above all else, belongs to some other gener- me- ation and at some other type of Let's school. the To be blunt, we like Bennie. We s. think he should stay. 48 For Oosterbaan is rooted to a far deeper Michigan tradition than winning football games. Over the years, some Universi- ties have established themselves Mr. as having a solid core of academic tile concern and truly deserve to be win- called institutions of higher edu- ible, cation. Michigan can proudly take the its place among them and can be . equally proud that its football eco- coach, and athletic staff general- bal- ly, embrace the importance.of this pre- tradition and emphasis. 24, * * ned FOR AN institution of higher nent education is properly and primari- 1,000 ly concerned with other things ther. beside pushing a leather bladdet s as across the opponent's goal. for To be sure, there are those who' the say that gentlemen don't win foot- rlier ball games. And they can also this point to the many fine athletes k? that were sold on coming to Mich- m igan but couldn't meet the en- trance requirements. THE SUGGESTION they offer of course is that Michigan realize ten- what it takes to play big time one football and do what is necessary her, to get it .. . According to at least in one newspaper report, some alum- Sthe ni say the admissions stardards wing should be relaxed. that But if it is a question of adopt- h of ing two standards, one for stu- dents, and one for athletes, it's ngs' time to take another look at a ize- University's purpose. re- Perhaps it isn't Bennie but ples Michigan's participation in the e 4"Big Ten which should go. INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Industry and War By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst STUDENTS of international affairs have as- sumed for years that the time of real crisis between the United States and the Soviet Union will come when there is something approaching parity in their industrial capacities. Every Soviet announcement of industrial plans ,therefore, produces special interest in this country. They have promised to amaze -the world in the next seven years, and to "bury" the United States when they are ready. Now they are working on a program to do in six years what they had previously planned in 13. They hope to be producing, by 1962, 91 million tons of steel. United States production in 1957 was 112 million tons, some 20 million less than capacity. Russian production figures presum- ably are close to their capacity. The United similar scale, including consumer goods. Con- sumer production, however, has seldom kept up with schedules during periods of emphasis on heavy industry. IN ONE FIELD, iron ore, the Reds expect to produce in 1962 nearly 75 per cent more than the United States consumed from all sources, both domestic production and imports, in 1957. They would thus have ore considerably be- yond their steel and pig iron production needs which could be used as a weapon against the West in their economic war. They already have used their export ability in tin, aluminum and oil to disrupt certain specific markets through dumping - tin throughout the world, oil in Argentina, alumi- num in Britain. Iron ore would be an important addition to this list of weapons. It would also increase Russian ability to make trade agreements, increasing her ties with coun- tries which she will help to erect steel mills. AT HILL AUDITORIUM : A Solo Performance: 'Thde Ages of Mant' "OUR REVELS now are ended . . ." With a concluding set of speeches from "The Tempest," Sir John Gielgud begged the audience at Hill Auditorium for his liberty last night, and so ended a program of Shakespearean recitation that in two and a half hours spanned the events of man's life from his birth to his death. Combining sonnets and songs with longer excerpts from the plays, the actor used his rich and marvelous voice to draw from the audience a response which al- though uneven, deepened as the evening went on. Reviewing such a performance as Gielgud gave is more like com- menting on music than criticizing drama. He stood before the audience in a black tuxedo, equipped only with a table and a book, and the speeches he gave, depended as much upon sound for their effect as any concert arias. Which is not to say that his efforts were consistently successful, for they were not. Whereas much Shakespearean poetry is sufficiently self-contained to stand on its own, much of it still depends for its proper effect upon the tensions of its natural, dramatic background. Since the complex interplay of human emotions and character which form this background are necessarily absent from a solo performance, Gielgud was forced to create his own context. * * * THIS IS A DIFFICULT THING to do, especially from a bare stage in Hill Auditorium, and it places heavy demands upon both the skill of the interpreter and the imagination of the audience. A sort of effect of intimacy is necessary to substitute for natural context, and to pre- vent some of the less poetic speeches from sounding like mere echoing rhetoric. Such intimacy was for the most part lacking, and until the last third of the program, Gielgud did not show quite enough dramatic Mowrtofniiictfv i1-q oh~,g~rn e in has s in the ease mb- iade s to any II. sue. all vhat any our yed we 'rom the as vice This the 000- ars. the dge this ably not hat, sers ieze the sed day e, I lso, ave one DAILYI OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin isn official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial rest onsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. NoticesforSunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1958. VOL. LXIX, NO. 31 General Notices The next "Polio Shot" clinic for stu- dents will be held Thursday, Oct. 23, only in Rm. 58 (basement), of Health Service. Hours are 8:00-11:45 a.m. and 1:00 a.w. - 4:45 p.m. Proceed directly to basement, fill out forms, pay fee ($1.00) and receive injection. Lt should be noted that the 4th (booster), "shot" should be obtained approximately one year after the 3rd. The next "Flu Shot" clinic for stu- students, staff and employees will be held in the same room Thurs., Oct. 30. The hours and procedures (except for the number of "shots") are the same as above for polio. It is recommended that each person receive injections ap- proximately 2-3 weeks apart. This clin. ic will be open for both 1st and 2nd "shots". Directory: It is expected that the Di- rectory for 1958-59 will be ready for dis- tribution about the end of Oct. or the first of Nov. The chairmen of the vari- ous depts. and directors of other units will please requisition the number of copies required for University campus use. Requisitions should be sent to the Purchasing Dept. andidelivery will be made by campus mail. If individuals 0