LAMS VS. BAGWELL: STATE SUFFERS Bee Page Lu: 43f $ixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom :43 t1ly CLARNG, COOLER -I v l.LX . a34 ANN ARBOR, MICHIG4N, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1958 FIVE CENTS sI1 i Appoint Strauss To Cabinet Post Becomes Secretary of Commerce As Weeks Leav-es Administrationl WASHINGTON ()- A change of command at the Commerce Department was announced by the White House today. Secretary of Commerce Sinclair Weeks has resigned and President Dwight D. Eisenhower has appointed Adm. Lewis L. Strauss, former chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission. to succeed him. Weeks, 65, was a Boston industrialist before entering the cabinet at the beginning of the Eisenhower administration in 1953. Admiral Strauss, 62, used to be a Wall Street investment banker. Created in 1913 The Commerce Department was created in 1913 to foster and develop the foreign and domestic commerce of the United States, including its mining, manufactur- Wolverines To Seek In Annual Gopher AT REGENT'S MEETING Approve New Engineering Program omeback Encounter 'M' Hoecoming FeatresRivalry Teams To Struale Before 73,000 In Effort To Avoid Big Ten Cellar By SI COLEMAN Associate Sports Editor Consitution Change Cited ByBromage (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fifth r Is 'a series of410sartle wrtteby rf Arthur . Broae of te Uni- Ws 7Upolties seiene department for -the Asscitd Press on the que- tio of caflnj a ConstItutional Con- vetiou. That Issue wil appear on the Nov. 4 balot.) By ART UI W. BROMAGE Revisions in Michigan's Consti- tutlon which a convention might propose will be influenced by trends elsewhere, In up-to-date practices, the Constitution of the state of Alas- ka is, of course, the last word. A movement s current to build up the office of the gvernor. Pro- visions in various states in line with the strong governor doctrine Include: a four year term; power to appoint and remove depart- ment heads; a short ballot for, other executive officers; and a convenient number of depart- ments to supervise. Included In Alaska Alaska's Constitution incorpor- ates all these features. MkIchgan, In the constitutional sense. does not have a strong gov- ernorship. The long ballot presented to Michigan voters every other No- wmber extends over the post of governor, lieutenant governor, at- torney general, secretary of state, treasurer and auditor general. In the biennial spring election, the superintendent of public instruc- tion must be elected rid, in add! tion, members of three boards having significant authority In higher education. Separate Agencies Michigan belongs to the minor- Ity of the states which have a two-year term for governor,. There are 123 separate depart- ments, boards, commissions and; See STATE, page 2 MSU To Ask *11 1 $45 Milo From State EAST LANSING (Jf-Mch gan State University will go to the Iegisature next year with a $45,- 707,292 budget request-more than 20 million dollars over the legis- lative appropriation for the cur- rent fiscal year,j The State Board of Agriculture . M;U's governing body, okayed the, figure toay. It includes 31,396,- 492 for operations and $14,310,800 for construction,. Lawmakers, faced with a grow- state deficit this year cut back Michigan State's appropriation a million dollars, setting it at $25,- 315,000. There was no allocation for building purposes. The operations budget calls for $24,700,700 for the main MSU campus at East Lansing, $590,000 for its Oakland branch, $2,996,792 for the Agricultural Experiment' Station, $2,489,000 for Cooperative Extension Service, $370,000 or its Highway Traffic Safety Center and $250,000 to support its Labor and Industrial Relations Center., Jet Crashes Near Detroi DEROIT (A -A British Royal Air Force delta wing Vulcan bomb- er exploded over Detroit yesterday ing, shipping and fishing Indus- tries and its transportation facili- ties. Weeks will leave his post not later than Nov. 10. In an Oct. 22' letter to President Eisenhower' he said he was resigning reluc- tantly "and only because of press- ing business, personal and family considerations, which seem to me to make it imperaitve that I return to Boston and my interests there." President Eisenhower gave Ad- miral Strauss a recess appointment which will enable him to take over as soon as Weeks leaves. When Congress convenes in January the Senate will be asked to confirm the appointment. May Meet Opposition Admiral Strauss may run into some opposition there, although he probably will be confirmed. He was often a center of controversy as AEC chairman. He made many friends in Congress while heading the AEC but also some powerful enemies. Admiral Strauss retired from the AEC June 30, telling President Eisenhower "circumstances beyond the control of either of us make a change in the chairmanship of the commission advisable." He pre- sumably had in mind the certainty that his renomination would have run into bitter opposition from some Democrats. He also gave up his job as spe- cial adviser to the President on atomic energy matters, but took on a new assignment as special as- sistant in charge of promoting President Eisenhower's Atoms for Peace program. Persuaded by Ike As long ago as 1954 Admiral Strauss said his AEC post would be "my last public job on earth." President Eisenhower evidently persuaded him otherwise. Admiral Strauss conferred with the Presi- dent at the White House this morning. His has been an extraordinary path of achievement: Has Colorful Career Friend, secretary and adviser to Herbert Hoover ... a partner in the Wall Street banking firm of Kuhn, Loeb & Co.... an ordnance officer and desk admiral in World War II days .. . member and then chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission .,. . and now, Secre- tary of Commerce. Rumors of Weeks' resignation preceded the official announce- ment by several hours. Dow Jones, the Wall Street business service, also reported that Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfieldi was expected to resign. Summerflild's office promptly stated "he has no such intention."} Aides noted that the postmaster general only recently said he ex- pected to stay through the last two years of the Eisenhower ad- ministration. By JOAN KAATZ A new graduate engineering program emphasizing practical application of the subject ratherI than research aspects was ap- proved by the University Regents at their meeting yesterday. The two-year plan requires 30 credit hours of work beyond the level of master of science in en- gineering. It replaces the old graduate program of professional degrees in engineering.R The Regents also discontinued a similar professional program in forestry and wood technology due to lack of the demand for them.j New Degree Rating+ The degree conferred does not fit within the present academic terms, Vice-President and Dean of Faculties Marvin L. Niehuss said. The skill denoted by com- pletion of the program is above that of the masters' level and be- low the doctorate level. Degrees under the new plan willI be given in the fields of aero- nautical, civil, chemical. metallur- gical, electrical, industrial, me- chanical, nuclear, applied me- chanics and marine engineering. Included in the new program will be 24 hours of course work ina the department area, specified by the department advisors. Six hours will be required in a re- search, design or development problem which will culminate in Du lies Says No Concessionlt To Red China WASHINGTON (m) - Secretary of State John Foster Dulles ac-1 cused Red China yesterday of deliberately creating a new, war, scare in the Formosa area as part of a campaign to drives the Unitedf States from the Western Pacific,- He pledged anew that the Eisen- hower administration, backing Na- tionalist China, would "stand1 against retreat in the face of armed agression" to foil the Red strategy. Dules made the remarks in a statement issued at the White House after he reported to Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower on his three days of talks with General- issimo Chiang Kai-shek in For-1 mosa. Dulles returned to Washing-, ton early today. Dulles said the Chinese Reds' new bombardment of Quemoy,1 ending their own cease-fire, is" designed to "throw roadblocks in! the way of stabilized tranquility." "We returned confident that the Chinese Communists will not gain their ends either through military efforts or their propa- ganda guile," he said. Chiang made such a pledge int a communique which he and Dulles issued jointly in Taipeii Wednesday. both a written and oral report to be presented to a supervisory fac-f ulty committee. In addition, three cognate courses will be required in fields other than mathematics. The chief reason for this requirementj is to get the student out of his specialized field, Associate Dean of the Graduate School Robert R. White said. The courses will most likely be in the physical or social sciences, but the decision depends on the way the student organizes his program, he added, Nine credit hours of work in methcr.:atics beyond the bachelor of science in engineering level are also required by the program. A World News roundup By The Associated Press VATICAN CITY-A brief con- clave and a new Italian Pope of the Roman Catholic Church were generally predicted as 52 members of the College of Cardinals pre- pared for the solemn election ritual. Talk of breaking the 400-year- old tradition of Italian Popes gave rise to fresh rumors about the pre - eminence of Gregory Peter Cardinal Agagianian, Patriarch of Cilicla of the Armenians, as the outstanding candidate, * * * HAVANA-The evacuation of 55, American women and children be- gan today from rebel-dominated Nicaro in northeast Cuba. The United States Embassy re- ported the evacuation was pro- gressing rapidly but did not say} when it would be completed. f The U.S. embassy said the first group was moved by launch to the fast attack U.S. Naval Trans- port Kleinsmith at 4:55 p.m. The transport had arrived at dawn for the evacuation. * , , LONDON-Field Marshal Lord Montgomery lashed out at United' States policy today. He said it sabotaged the British- French Suez operation of 1956 and helped undermine the British Em- pire. WASHINGTON -- Chairman Paul Butler of the Democratic Na- tional Committee said yesterday some of his party's candidates are targets of "one of the worst, most vicious smear campaigns in his- tory." TAIPEI -- Nationalist big guns on Quemoy traded fire with the Chinese Reds in a day-long ar- tillery duel. The Reds intensified their shell- ing for an hour in the afternoon. Then firing slackened off.+ grade average of B or better Is necessary. The previous professional de- gree program took up to eight years to complete, Ralph Sawyer,, dean of the graduate school, said. The Bachelor of Science graduate had to complete seven years of practical engineering experience and prepare a dissertation before he received his professional de- gree. Old Plan 'Unpopular' This old plan was "not popular or useful," Sawyer said. Most of the graduates who had been work- ing seven years did not want to bother with a thesis, and those who did often found it difficult to get the necessary information released by their employers, he noted. Planning of the new program was begun about five Years ago by the curriculum committee of the engineering college, White said, The proposal was presented to the graduate school last spring. It was estimated about a dozen students would enter the program next fall. This estimate is based on the response to a similar pro- gram initiated at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Medical Unit Head Selected By U' Regents University Regents yesterday approved the appointment of Prof. William D. Robinson as new chair- man of the internal medicine de-j partment. Prof. Robinson, 47 years old, succeeds Prof. Cyrus C. Sturgis who resigned in February, 1957. Prof. Paul Barker has been acting chairman during the intervening period. A graduate of Albion College, Prof. Robinson headed the Rack- ham Arthritis Research Unit from 1944 to 1953, when he was named consultant to the group. He received a doctor of medicine degree from the University in 1934, when he served as an assistant in the bacteriology department. From 1936 to 1940 he served as an instructor in the internal medi- cine department here. After a leave of four years, he was ap- pointed an assistant professor of internal medicine. He became a full professor in 1952. Prof. Robinson left the Univer- sity from 1940 to 1944 and was1 with the International Health Division of the Rockefeller Foun- dation. He taught at Vanderbilt Uni- versity, was a member of the health commission which made a nutrition survey in Spain, and was a staff member in charge of developing a nutrition section in the Mexican Federal Department of Health. Can Michigan bounce back? This question has been asked innumerable times during the past week. The answer will be furnished today at 1:30 p.m. when the Wolverines play host to Minnesota before an estimated 73,000 fans. Both teams enter today's game with dismal records. Michigan has a 1-2-1 record, and the Gophers have failed to register a win in four attempts. But records are tossed aside when these two teams meet. for both are playing for big stakes and records are meaningless, The Little Brown Jug, one of the most famous of all gridiron trophies, will be up for grabs. For Michigan it will be Homecoming, and a victory over its ancient rl v al V ' '- DAVID NEWMAN *...to head Garg Reactivation Of Gargoyle Announced By JUDITH DONER Gargoyle has been reinstated. The humor magazine, which was dropped from the list of campus publications last spring when no one petitioned for its managing' positions, was reinstated by the Board in Control of Student Pub- lications at the meeting last night. Former Generation Editor David Newman, Grad., was named Gar- goyle editor. John Weichsel, '59. was appointed art editor and Larry Snider, '60, and Donald Onkin, '60,. were announced co-business man- agers. Garg To Change Indicating that Gargoyle will re- semble the Gargoyle of the past in name only, Newman stressed the new concept of the magazine. "It is going to be a magazine which represents the campus sense of humor, expressely geared to the University," he said. It will contain parody, satire, humorous fiction and cartoons which will concern the thingsf which students come into contact with every day, he continued. Newman announced that an or- ganizational meeting will be held "as soon as possible." Publication is tentatively scheduled for some- time in November-the issue to be titled "Back from Camp." Humor Needed "I think there is a definite place for the humor magazine on this campus," Newman said. A large amount of student talent here happens to be funny." "As a matter of fact," he added, "Some of the funniest people I' know go to the University." Newman said that they have been working on the idea for a, "new" Gargoyle officially since September, but that plans were being considered even last May,' after Gargoyle publication was suspended. will prevent a damper from fall- ing over the day's festivities. Minnesota has lost four straight games. Against Northwestern, however, a team which needs no further comment, the Gophers outrushed the Wildcats 220 yards to 113 and had a total net gain advantage of 357 yards to 222. First downs were 15-10 in Minne- sota's favor, but the Gophers still lost, 7-3. Consequently, if Michi- gan can bounce back, it will have to do so against what may be a formidable opponent. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan has also been wondering whether' Michigan can bounce back. At yesterday's brief workout, which was forced indoors by the in- clement weather, Oosterbaan said, "You can never tell how football games will work out. However, I am sure of one thing. The boys' will go all out." Coach Murray Warmath brings to Ann Arbor a team that is very similar to Michigan in one respect. The Gophers in their early games have shown their ability to con- tain the running game, but like Michigan have been very weak on pass defense. With Noskin and Ptacek, Michigan will go all out to capitalize on that weakness. See BOTH, Page 3 Prowler Flees Prie'sHome Prof. Percival Price drove an armed prowler from his Ann Arbor home early yesterday, only an hour after he had returned from a month-long search in Canada for his son Alan, '59E. Having completed a 900 - mile trip from Moosanie, Ont., he met his wife in Ann Arbor at 4:30 a.m. yesterday. The couple then drove home and retired. About an hour later, the prowl- er, wearing a mask resembling a pillowcase, roused the professorl in his bedroom. The man warned the couple that he was armed. The prowler fled when Prof, Price began to get out of bed. Nixon Begiir Presidential Campaignn MADISON, Wis. (P) - VI6 President Richard M. Nixon. car' paigning across Wisconsin, hung wide-open sign today on the 19 Republican presidential nomini tion contest, In an unusual news conferenc aboard the chartered plane carry ing him from state to state to plui for Republican candidates, Nixo practically invited Nelson Roch feller to fight it out with him ci the nomination-if Rockefeller : elected governor of New York. Rockefeller himsef said In NO York, after a breakfast with th vice-president, he has "no intere in the presidential nomination." May Change Mind Nixon, who is obviously driVin for first place on the 1960 tlcke indicated he thinks Rocketell might change his mind if he b comes governor. Adopting an air of the-morn the - merrier, Nixon volunteere that President Eisenhower ha tod him In 1955 that the Presi dent wanted to develop more pnei idential timber within the part The question came up, the vIc president said, when there we speculationabout whether _isez2 hower would attempt to plick White House successor, p a Eisenhower asked he mak speech at a university Nixon ddn name, Nixon quoted Eisenhower $ saying at that time: % .I want you to make it becaue I am consciously trying to bull up a number of strong leaders i the party." Although he said he was unabI to make the speech, Nixon sal he agreed thoroughly with EIeen hower's idea of developing m9r Republicans of national stature. Candidate Inconsequcnta* t All of us currnt natione figures will behelped by develo ing other national figures,, no mat ter who is the canddate in 190, he said, Nixon maintained, as $oeke feller had after their meeting I New York, that there is no il between them. He said he sup ports Rockefeller's course of ca paigning on state, rather than n tional, issues. There had been some report that Rockefeller was unenthui astic about Nixon's ai in New York. Appoint Kan Pakistan Chiel By The Associated Prm Gen, Mohammed Ayub Khan, Sandhurst-trained army man Wh commands in characteristk Brt4 accents, tonight was named Im Minti,or of igtn WILTED WORKERS, MUSHY MACHE: Dismal Drizzle Ushers in Homecoming Festivities By JEAN HARTWIG Soggy crepe paper, mushy paper-mache and limp cardboard marked the beginning of the 1958 Homecoming weekend, Loyal display-builders in slickers and trench coats braved the, dismal drizzle for the glory of their fraternity, sorority or residence hall last night. Groups of wilted but undaunted workers painted, hammered, stuffed and slashed far into the cold, wet night to ready their entry for this morning's judging, Jam Session Moved The "Pick-up" Jam Session, a group of musical numbers and, variety of acts originally scheduled for the Diag, was "picked up" and moved out of the rain into Barbour Gymnasium. But still, throughout the depressing wet, the Homecoming com- mittee decided to proceed as usual with plans for this year's then- "Comedia del Commercial," freely translated as a spoof on current methods of advertising. Following the judging of the 84 houses entering the competition, - - ~iM~ Dim'r I