"Gee, Sixt y-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UwTERSrTY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PuBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONs BLDG. *AN ARBOR, Micn, 0 Phone 1o 2-3241 Fellows. This Is Fun. By The Wav, Who Are The Rest Of The Boys?" "KWaeD UUpir,;na Are Free Trutb Will Preval: INTERVIEW WITH HENDERSON: Report Shows Need For Legislative Support By LANE VANDERSLICE ily Staff Writer THE PRINCIPAL BENEFIT of the Russell Report is its denmonstra- tion that state-supported colleges and universities do need more legislative support, Prof. Algo D. Henderson, director of the University's Center for the Study of Higher Education, said yesterday. "The Russell Report is forthright in saying that state schools need larger legislative appropriations." the professor of higher education said. He observed that the state legislators appeared to have suspected state schools of crying "wolf" in regard to their need for more money. Editorials printed in The Michgan Daily express the indiwidual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT JUNKER WilliaIs, Bavell Swing While State Hangs FIGURES DON-T LIE, but who can guarantee the honesty of those who figure ... espe- cially during an election campaign. Gov. G. Mennen Williams, on the trail of his sixth consecutive term, and challenger Paul Bagwell, in quest of an upset, have spent most of the fall on the ropes of the state's economic difficulties. The most recent encounter came Thursday night when the pair squared away in a televi- sion studio. After the half hour debate ended and the camera's eye turned to other things, Gov. Williams accused Bagwell of using false statements during the debate on Michigan's job situation and Bagwell declared the governor as "splitting hairs." UNDERLYING the dispute is the state's eco- nomic mess ...,a mounting deficit and an inadequate tax structure. In the meantime, Re- publicans charge that the governor, with his various statements and proposals for new taxes, has created an "unfavorable business climate" and industry is shunning the state. The variety. of figures conveniently offered by either side. concern how many firms have left, how many new ones have entered, and who is to blame for the state's financial mess. Missing, however, seems to be a real concern for the state itself. Both sides are so busy swinging at each other that they've neglected to do any searching for solutions. Perhaps that's too much to expect during an election year, but just once, it would be refreshing. It might shock the voters so much that they'd even pay atten- tion to the election. -MICHAEL KRAFT * Editorial Director Industry and Gifts T HEFORD Foundation grant of $569,850 designated for specific University research projects comes at a most appropriate time. This recent trend of industry's increased in- terest in the activities of higher education is somewhat compensating for the University's deficit. In the past legislative appropriations have not been sufficient to finance the ma- jority of the research projects which the Uni- versity faculty wants to undertake. The Ford Foundation grant is, at leastdasbeginning to- ward fulfillment of these studies. Each of the studies which the gift helps Is concerned with areas of public welfare - low incomes, youth problems, and problems of the aged. Policies adopted from the con- clusions of these projects may prove beneficial to the State. It seems a shame that the Sta cannot even provide funds in this area to serve. its own interests as well as those of higher educations. THE THREE STUDIES are not particularly concerns of industry, per se; but they are concerns of the company executives in their role of citizens. However, this doesn't justify the necessity of industry to finance the projects. Industry has its own problem with labor, management and consumers . .. and the State has its problem with pttlic welfare. In this definition of areas, industry has no obligation to solve welfare problems. But since the large companies have shown their interest by promoting funds to higher educat'ion, the State, as well as the school, owe them a sincere thanks. The Ford Foundation grant initially helps a problem . . . possibly the State will make the problem only temporary. -JOAN KAATZ LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Football, Reviews Draw Comment MANY PEOPLEI is not somethin that it must bea process of educati Unfortunately, e and there can be e which fosters the b and violence aroun harder to teach pe teach them to tol to children from t without aid of a through example.; school, there is lit do, because the hat deep. Do people wh believe that sudden ing to their childre taught for gener alone is not enoug ready shaped by t yET, MEN SAY t end to segrega bring an end to wa quency. Education world's ills. All tha Education No Cure-All have said that integration heaven on earth is Education. Education is the ng that can be hurried, but 20th century's panacea, its magic formula, its achieved slowly through a true religion, on. 7n those civilizations which are called less ducation works two ways, civilized than this one, shamans, medicine men ducation of hate. It is this and conjurers flourish. "Where such men flour- burning of crosses on lawns ish," the late anthropologist Clark Wissler d the next corner. It is no once wrote, "they are called upon whenever the eople to hate thani it is to course of events goes wrong, sickness. famine, crate. Hate can be taught love, war, no matter what the nature of the he moment they are born, trouble may be, and they always proceed in one classroom but at home way: i.e., recite or demonstrate a formula of By the time they get to some kind.. . Our great formula for bringing te a formal education can about the realization of our leading ideals in red is already ingrained too education." to plead education as a cure ly parents will stop teach- EDUCATION is very good and necessary, but n the hatred that has been it is not an answer to every problem that has ations? Formal education ever faced mankind. If one of its products is gh to change attitudes al- the Salk vaccine, another is the atom bomb. lie community. A college degree for every man on earth will not decrease the tension over the vital oil of hat education will bring an the Middle East. Education is needed if only tion, as it will eventually because there are people who want to learn, r, an end to juvenile delin- but it is not the final answer and it must be is the cure for all the viewed in its proper perspective. it is needed to bring about -JANE McCARTfIY Tarn isled . . To the Editor: JN JUNE of this year I ended eight years on the Michigan campus as a student in the Lit. and Medical Schools. In that period of time I learned to re- spect and be proud of the Univer- sity of Michigan. In what travel- ing I have done since I began school in Ann Arbor, I have al- ways been proud to be able to say that I went to Michigan. I've maintained this pride through many trying situations, including Michigan's recent 55-24 loss to Northwestern University. However, when I picked up the San Francisco Chronicle and saw that Bennie Oosterbaan had been hung in effigy on the Michigan campus, that pride b e c a m e smudged, if not permanently tar- nished. The respect Michigan commands here on the West Coast and, in fact, all over the world, was diminished greatly by this incident. Bennie Oosterbaan has been one of football's winningest coaches with far from the best talent available. What is more import- ant, he has done more for Michi- gan athletics as a player and coach than any other one man. There isn't a more sincere man in the world and it must have hurt him a lot to have even a small segment of the school he loves do such an under-handed thing. He has many friends throughout this country, Michi- gan people _and others, who were shocked and upset by such a dis- play, I realise this was probably the work of only a few people, none of whom could know the first thing about football or Michigan itself. I hope that the majority of the Michigan campus maintains its dignity and its respect for' a man doing his very best at an extremely difficult job. -Tad Stanford I' Wonten? . . To the Editor: WTHAT HAS happened to The Michigan Daily and Michigan students since I graduated in 1951? The Michigan Daily reports on the deliberate give-away to Northwestern last Saturday as if Michigan had won. There is no report of the poor playing and coaching of the Michigan team. If this happened in 1951, the students would burn "Benny" in reality not in effigy. I realize that the enrollment of girls has increased since 1951 but I did not realize that the enroll- ment of girls had increased to 100 per cent of the student body. What Michigan needs is more action from The Daily and the student body. Art Page. . . To the Editor: 'OUR GENEROUS coverage of the visual arts on the editorial pale of last Runday's Daily helps to keep a much-needed balance in such matters, of a kind which has sometimes been notably lacking in Ann Arbor journalism Your very out for special mention a few of the dominant tendencies repre- sented in this exhibition. He might also, without going out too far on a limb, have noted some of the items he particularly liked and have dropped a provocative word or two indicating why he liked them. In any case, orchids to an edi- torial director for whom the vis- ible world exists, and for whom it exists not merely in terms of movies and plays and (we hope) the dance, but also in terms of painting and sculpture and graphic art and the crafts. -Jean Paul Slusser ReviewI.C . To the Editor: "W E HOPE it is temporary" also -Mr. J. Philip Benkard, that is! Were you really there in Hill Auditorium Saturday night, J. Philip? Mozart's 41st may not be "brushed with brooding introspec- tion," but does a composer have to be brooding to be good? The "Haffner" Symphony is happy, party music-and surely it needs no further justification than that, Why didn't you stay home and play a funeral dirge on your hi-fi, J.P.? And to casually label an entire concert as "unexciting"- a pro- gram that contained a number like Honegger's Fifth, is going too, too far-even for a Daily review. The grave, panoramic opening, the blasting sustained trumpet notes throughout, the swift tempestuous finale, ending with an unexpected quiet tone-all added up to a very exciting and unusual effect. How very gracious of the re- viewer to admit that Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony contained "some lovely moments"-as indeed it did. As well-known and often played as it is, the number was a joy to hear again by the Boston Symphony, I am sure that Charles Munch w ill be able to overlook this the ridiculous review in Sunday's Daily very easily, but I could not. In a university atmosphere, the critical attitude is to be expected, and I am not one to disapprove of it. But The Michigan Daily's editorial page has seen too many farcial reviews in the past to be a laugh- ing matter at this point. -Jane Myers, '60, LSA Clarification To the Editor: UNNECESSARY confusion on three aspects of the WUS Bucket Drive resulted from the incorrect presentation in The Daily issues of October 15, 16 and 17, of: 11 The placement of the buckets 2) The amount collected in previous years; 3) The name of the drive chairman. To correct the misstatements: 11 A bucket was never intended for the Frieze Building: 2 In 1956, from a two-day bucket drive for WUS, $662.61 was collected. In 1957 and 1958, $850.00 and $652.75, respectively, were allocat- ed from Campus Chest: 3) Judy Judy is chairman of WUS, not Carol Holland Miss Hollnnd is 401o rmty. To the Editor: AFTER READING the article on non-conformity in the October 22 issue of The Daily, a perplexing question comes to my mind. Isj this "Bohemianism." (or indi- vidual taste as it was phrased) or is it actually conformity? It seems to me that an amazing number of "individuals" prefer' blaek ls'eaters and dungarees to the widely varied costumes of the majority of campus co-eds. Nonconformity, as I see it, doesI not necessarily involve making a spectacle of one's self in public, nor does it involve copying the mannerisms of other so-called ec- centrics. Rather, it is something that comes from within - some- thing that involves one's own per- sonal thoughts, sensitivities and intellect, and is not visible through dress or facial expression. This ever enlarging group of "non-conforming individuals" seem to i esemble one another in appearance, enjoy similar activi- ties, and have common interests, because "they like them." I ask you, is this or is this not CONFORMITY? -Diane Danches C . . . To the Editor: l WOULD like to know one good reason for supporting SGC? Every time I read about it in The Daily, the article mentions some blunder that it has pulled. I never have heard of it being praised by the students. In fact many that I have heard talking about it con- sider it little more than a club for a select few, Undoubtedly SGC has done something worthwhile, but if so, when? Since it seems to be of no apparent value, then why should it continue? Furthermore., since there seems to be a lack of in- terest in the organization alto- gether, it seems to me that it would be far the wiser if we mere- ly turned its responsibilities, if any, over to the administration. I realize that this leaves a few people without a job to perform, but it seems to me that with the innumerable - organizations on this campus, that somewhere, they could find a position where their services would have, at least,; a little value! Anyway this group' appears to have no real signifi- cance, or if so, it does not know how to use it properly. -Kermit Krueger The Russell Report clearly docu- ments that this is not the case, he said. The recently-completed report was the product of the Legislative Study Committee on Higher Edu- cation. The committee is com- posed of five senators and five representatives. A staff headed by John Dale Russell, Chancellor of the New Mexico Board of Educa- tional Finance, prepared the bulky 13-volume report. Prof. Henderson's major criti- cism of the completed report was what he termed "vacillation" on several important study areas. "Some of the biggest educational problems in the State were left dangling," Prof. Henderson said. Chief among these was the Uni- versity's role in State education. He questioned whether there was enough recognition in the report of the University's role as a quali- ty educational institution and one of the nation's great universities. Prof. Henderson pointed out the University's role as the producer of prospective college teachers in the state. If teachers are not pro- duced higher education will deteriorate rapidly. A higher per- centage of graduate students re- quires more expensive instruction- al and research facilities, he noted. The Russell Report at one point "pays lip service" to the Univer- sity's role in the state, Prof, Hen- derson said. But at another point, he said, the report calls the Uni- versity's productivity in terms of money spent per student educat- ed lower than other state schools. * * * THIS VACILLATION allows newspapers and legislators to in- terpret the report as they wish, Prof. Henderson said. The Russell Report wavered on other important educational ques- tions, according to Prof. Hender- son. The report no sooner recom- mends a four-year college at Grand Rapids than it recommends that a commission should be set up to study the problem, he said. Needed in the report was a more intensive study of present or near future need for new col- leges, Prof. Henderson said. How- ever, he did agree with the need for more facilities for upperclass students and the need for state action in some form in Grand Rapids. Because of the community col- lege already in Grand Rapids, Prof. Henderson suggested a new college might provide only the junior and senior years. He criticized the Russell com- mittee's recommendations on community colleges for lack of detail. The report should have provided factual data which then could be used as a basis for di- viding the state into community college districts. e * , PROF. HENDERSON supported Russell's proposal for a central state educational agency respon- sible for the coordination and state wide planning of higher ed- ucation. While recognizing the danger of creating a bureaucracy, the need exists, he said and there is "no suitable alternative" to the plan. It would appear that cur- rent efforts to provide planning through ,voluntary cooperation have not been too successful, Prof. Henderson said. He cited rivalry between the University and Michi- gan State University in establish- ing a branch at Grand Rapids as an example of conflict which a state board might iron out. Ques- tions such as the establishment of new community colleges or a new university could be handled better by a central board, he said. Such a board might also be influ- ential in recommending how many advanced programs in vari- ous specialties including nuclear physics, musicology, and doctoral programs in educational adminis- tration are needed in the state, he pointed out. ASWAN DAM: .Reds Gain In Egypt By WILTON WYNN - Associated Press Correspondent EIRUT-In taking the Aswan Dam loan from Moscow, Presi- dent Nasser has made his biggest step toward the Communist bloc since his 1955 deal for Czecho- slovak arms. The 400 million ruble loan means Nasser is depending on Soviet aid for almost all the United Arab Re- public's future economic develop- ment. He had already accepted Soviet loans for industrial development in both Syria and Egypt and for the bulk of his modern arms from Communist countries. Egyptian and Syrian trade has been increasingly steered toward the Communist bloc. Soviet aid for Aswan means Nasser is depending on Soviet help for his most ambi- tious plan to expand Egypt's agri- cultural potential. Accepting the Soviet loan repre sents a change in Nasser's avowec intention to build the dam witt Egypt's own resources. * * * THE CHANGE In the Nasset viewpoint undoubtedly 'is due to deterioration of his relations With the West, When the British recently sup- plied Israel with two submarines, Nasser made it clear he was going to give the West a new jolt, His defense chief and vice presi- dent, Field Marshal Abdel Hakim Amer. then went to Prague and Moscow while observers waited for the blow to fall. The Moscow loan announcement looks like the blow. Nasser also was bitter at the West for sending troops to Leb- anon and Jordan in the past sum- mer and blames the West for Tunisian President Bourguiba's re- cent open attacks on the Cairo regime. Acceptance of the loan indi- cates Nasser has given up hope of any serious reconciliation with the West or any major cooperation in the economic field. After the Czech arms deal Nas- ser preferred to get Western fi- nancing for the high dam to bal- ance the Russian influence on the military side. « , . WHEN THE WESTERN offer fell through, Nasser tried going it alone, maintaining neutralty be- tween West and East. Now it ap- pears his neutrality no longer exists in economic matters, The Moscow announcement does not necessarily mean the high dam actually will be built. The biggest cause of delay has been not financing but the dif- ficulty of reaching new agreements with Sudan on the sharing of Nile waters. The high dam reservoir would inundate the Sudanese town of Wadi Hafa and considerable Sudanese territory. Under international law, Egypt cannot build the dam without Sudan's consent. So far the Su- danese have taken a dim vew of the project. a If Nasser tries building the dam against Sudan's will, it will touch off another major international crisis. OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity ofR Michigan for which The MihinDa ily assume.F no ecli- torial responsibility. Notices should be hent in TYPEWRTITTEN form to Itoo:n 3519 AdmInistration Buld- luT, before 2 p.19 the dayrpreceding pubhlication. Notices, for Su~iday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 2S, 1959 VOL. LXIX, NO. 34 Lectures I i I INTERPRETING THE NEWS: The Old Russian Song By 3. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst NIK ITA KHRUSHCHEV has rejected the American proposal for a United Nations economic aid program in the Middle East. This comes as no surprise. Thesurprise would have been if he had agreed. He sang his usual song about Western aid programs being designed to place a yoke around the necks of underdeveloped peoples. That's the Red line of attributing their own motives to others. Actually, his statement does a little bit to clear the atmosphere. Having tried to make a United Nations project of it. the West is now free to go ahead with some of the taint of so- called imperialism removed. Wbr idligau &ii. It is interesting that Khrushchev's state- ment, broad enough to cover all suggestions of cooperation between East and West for world improvement, came simultaneously with a new Russian overture to Yugoslavia. Yugoslavia has been the best example of how the Kremlin attempts to use its foreign aid program for political enslavement. During the post-Stalin courtship, Russia promnisd Yugoslavia an industrial loan. The two countries were to share the expense of a development program. -UGOSLAVIA spent money on preliminary work, only to have Russia cut the water off when Belgrade dissented from Soviet actions in Hungary. Then work was resumed. Yugoslavia reasserted her independence of Soviet political control again last spring, and the water was cut off agai. Red China abet- ted the Soviet action by cutting off trade. Now Russia is renewing her efforts to make the Middle East believe that aid from her is safer than from the West. So an agreement for shipment of wheat to Yugoslavia, held up since the Hungarian dis- pute. is renewed. The effort to rehabilitate Red motives in the eyes of the world, however, is likely to fall short. The Chinese Reds have blocked a trade agreement with Japan over political differ- ences, thus keeping alive a reminder of the Red tactic. And while the Arabs are not likely to worry about Israel, others will i'emember how Rus- Senimore Says . . I Editorial Staff RICHARD TAUB, Editor CBAEL KRAFT JOc ditriali Director OHN WEICHER City Editor DAVID TARR Associate Editor LE CANTOR .,.Personnel Director A.N WiILLOU[GHBY I'..,Associate Editorial Dreor ATA JORO NSON Asociate City Edtor LZABETHi ERSKiNE ,Associate Personnel Director AN JONE .... , . Sports Editor RL RISEMAN...,...........Assocate Sports Editor COLEMAN .............. As ociate Sports Editor IAN .......... . Chief Photographer flusiness Staff " 4 . f 11/M I . / f ' Mr. James Wright wil gIe a read- ;1;, fromn hIs poemis ol Mon., Oct. 27, 4:00 p{m.. Aud. A. This reading is spon- sored by the Dept. of English and all interested persons are cordialy invited. A cademic Notices Medical College Admimion Test: Can- didates taking the Medical College Ad- mission Test on Oct. 28 are requested to report to Rm. 140 us. Admin, at 8:O0 am. Tues. :b