THE MICHIGAN DAILY nette Warns of Slackening Business COMPUTER ADVANCES CHARTED: Technology Outp aces Programming Educators Attack Method Of Selectig New Studen (Continued from Page 1) Reserve Board has kept too tight a rein on money. Prof. Wernette, a director of the Ohio Citizens Trust Co. of Toledo, said the recent lowering of the discount rate and increase of the lending capacity of member banks by the FRB may, not take effect fast enough to prevent a business slowdown. "The Fed has taken its foot off the brake, but it has not yet stepped on the accelerator," he said. On a long-term basis, however, the outlook is bright, he added. While the nation may experience some minor business setbacks be- tween now and 1970, total produc- tion of goods and services will increase about one-half during the next decade; from the present level of $500 billion to $750 billion. Prof. Wernette predicted a rise' of the country's standard of living of about 25 per cent during this period. "The Sixties will witness a race between American domestic pro- gress and international disaster," he went on. "More and more na- tions will obtain weapons for .man's destruction. "Our greatest problem is to pre- vent their use. If the earth is not ruined, man may make prodigious economic progress in this and suc- ceeding decades." Wernette is the author of "The Future of American Prosperity," and a forthcoming volume on "Growth and Prosperity Without Inflation," which will be published early next year. "The Federal Reserve Board has been excessively concerned with inflation for many years," Prof. Wernette said. Prof. Wernette , received his Ph.D from Harvard University, and served on the faculty there from 1927 to 1945. He has been editor of the Michigan Business Review. Costa Awarded Fulbriglht Prize Charlotte Costa, '58, has been awarded a Fulbright Scholarship for study in Paris during the 1960-61 academic year. Miss Costa, a former teaching fellow in the French department, will do research in the field of contemporary French drama. The development of computer technology in the past 20 years has been "just unbelievable," but advances in programming for computers and in using the elec- tronic brains in mathematical theory work have been much slower in coming. The analysis of the current high-speed computer field came from Herman Goldstine, director of mathematics research for IBM. Winding up a University series of computer courses for some 300 computer experts and students, Goldstine spoke recently, on "Where We've Been and Where We're Going." Technologically, c o m p u t e r s have advanced considerably since the early stages of their develop- ment during World War I. Then, about 25 people worked with the machines and computers had a high speed memory capacity of around 20 words. Great Advances Today, computers' vocabularies run into tens of thousands of words and computations can be completed thousands of times faster than before. And, Gold- stine, a former University math- ematics professor, added, peopleI specializing in computing work now number in the "hundreds of thousands." Work on the ENIAC, one of the earliest types of high speed digital computers, occupied Goldstine during World War II. Composed of about 20,000 vacuum tubes and costing half a million' dollars, the ENIAC was used to compute firing tables for the armed services. Since then, transistors have re- placed vecuum tubes, decreasing the size and increasing the effic- ience (and cost) of the machines. ..Increases in the speed, capacity and corresponding size of compu- ters and their signals are ulti- mately limited by the speed of light, Goldstine explained. Light, according to Einstein's theory, cannot travel any faster than 186,000 miles per second- nor can anything else, including the electronic signals within a computer. With these practical limitations, "it is pretty obvious" that if com- puters are to operate at the rate of one computation per 1000 mil- lionth of a second (a millimicro- second), then the limits to how big a computer segment can get OF. J. PHILIP WERNETTE , predicts business slump rof. J. Philip Wernette of the versity business administration :ol told a meeting of the Colo- o Bankers Association Satur- that business may slacken iewhat for the remainder of ), largely because the Federal 0 Q '? O O* O dO b*0",y0 bO sp __ II 'g 1 O___ *od p sa * O* P 0 0 s0 *0 oi luff .~ ")! -s MOPO O+ PO COLD WAR VICTIM: East and West Vie for A fghanistan is about six inches to a foot on a side, the length a signal can travel -in a millimicrosecond, Goldstine explained. Computer design advances in the past 20 years have not been matched by developments in pro- gramming and mathematical theory, Goldstine noted. Programmers have increased their ability to use machines only about ten times since the days of ENIAC, but this has not kept up with advances in the technology of computer design. Theory Lacking "There is no theory (to help) in the programming field," he said, "and none seems imminen.t" But mathematics of the type required to solve problems on corn- puting machines (numerical ap- alysis) has "advanced even less than programming," he continued. "It is a serious problem; while technology has advanced greatly, htis type of mathematics is the same as it was in the days of Gauss (a famed German mathe- matician who died in 1855). "The advances one could expect in numerical analysis have not come about." However, the computers them- selves have had only a limited usefulness to pure mathemati- clans (as opposed to engineers or applied mathematicians), he noted., Help Mathematicians In 1948, Goldstein and the late John Von Neumann pointed out computers could best help mathe- maticians by providing heuristic insights (insights leading to fur- ther investigation and solution of the problem). "Very little in that direction has ben done to this point," he said. But computers have been of little help because they rigidly limit mathematicians in extreme- ly difficult situations. For instance, computers limit them to a finite number of steps--a serious inhi- bition to a mathematician--and to a small enough number of steps to fit a computer program, large as it is. Besides, the solution must be accomplished by the computer in a reasonable length of time. "This is why the numerical analysis is so hard," he pointed out. In addition, the computer can handle only so many digits and numbers have to be rounded off. Any error resulting then must be carrided over perhaps millions of computations, meanwhile accumu- lating more possible error. tion, noted that more than half the college entrants in the nation were drawn from high school graduates below the level of the top 30 per cent in ability. . He suggested that the four-year colleges have not yet appreciated the role of the junior colleges and technical institutes. He 'also challenged the public attitude that he said "fails to acknowledge that occupations for which less formal education is needed are more satisfying to the interests of many individuals.", Tests Narrow Current testing procedures, ac- cording to Donald Mackinnon, di- rector of the Institute of Per- Colloq uium To Examine, Interpretation sonality Assessment and Research at the University of California, are too narrow. By selecting only those from the right side of the tracks and the "right" social background, he said, many students with high levels of creativity who may have been un- derprivileged in their early years are overlooked. There was a similar reaction from Stouffer of Harvard, who said he considered it a "disgrace to America" that so many youngsters were deprived of a good educa- tion because they had gone to "schools that do not have the re- sources or the imagination to cope with the problem." An example of what can be done in this area was described by Daniel Schreiber, coordinator of the Higher Horizons Program of the New York City Board of Edu- cation. Adds Incentive This program, which was started in 1956 in one junior high school in an underprivileged- area, has spread to more than forty. It pro- vides an enriched curriculum, in- cluding many cultural advantages the youngsters ordinarily would not experience, and it has acted as an incentive for them to remain in school. While much talent is lost before it ever reaches college, the main concern of the colloquium was that more is lost in college than between high school and college. Dropouts High "If you look at the top 30 per cent of our children in academic ability," Monro noted, "you will find that about 90 per cent of the boys and girls graduate from high school; about two-thirds of the boys and half the girls get to col- lege; and about half the boys and one-third of the girls finally gradu- ate from college. "The number of individuals in this able group who do not finish college, who drop out of educa- tion along the way, is now over 400,000 a year.", The number of individuals in the top 10 per cent who do not finish college, he said, is more than 125,- 000 a year. Monro, in summing up the con- ference, said that despite efforts of the College Scholarship Serv- ice, there was still "fierce and ex- pensive competition for top schol- ars in good schools and no co- operative effort worth the name for the discovery and encourage- ment of buried talent." (Reprinted by Special Permission of The New York Times) ;° ,A Pwownt ht *k$ ET Ends dnesday From the director of "The Robe" ai From the producer of "A Man Called Peter"... SAMUEl G.GENGEL CJNEMASCOPE COLOR by DE LUXE s, AT THE COOL 4 MCH IGAN (EDITOR'S NOTE: Antiquated Afghanistan was bypassed by mod- ern tmes until the United States and Russia each decided they wanted the strategically placed Asian nation on their side in the cold war. Since then, Afghanistan's economy has taken a leap and At- ghans find themselves beset on both sides by helpful friends anx- ious to spend money.) By WATSON SIMS Associated Press News Analyst KABUL, Afghanistan-The cold war means different things to dif- ferent people. In America, it brings higher taxes to support foreign aid. In Russia it translates into fewer consumer goods at home to make up for Soviet benefience abroad. For speech-making diplomats on both sides of the Iron Curtain, it's something to deplore. But for the people of Afghani- stan, it means manna from heaven. Before the world's two greatest powers began competing for her friendship, Afghanistan was one of the world's most backward countries. The average Afghan, herding his sheep from one pas- ture to another as the seasons changed, earned less than $50 per year. Texas-Sized Nation Fewer than one in five could read. There were virtually no roads and the only way to get around this Texas-sized country was by camel, donkey or afoot. The cold war changed that. The change began in 1946 when the United States export-import bank loaned the first $21 million in a program for agricultural de- velopment of the vast Helmand Valley in southern Afghanistan. The ante on this project has since been boosted to $49 million. Since 1950 America has granted or loaned $51 million to develop transportation in this once track- less country. Airport Goes Up 'II________ __ .. I I I An international airport cap- able of handling the biggest jet planes is nearing completion at Kandahar under American super- vision. Nearly a hundred United States education experts are modernizing a school system which for cen- turies depended on scanty instruc- tion by religious scholars. But this is only part of the pic- ture, for the United States is not - Afghanistan's only benefactor. With no visible sings of dismay, the Afghans discovered in 1954 that Russia also was interested in their development. The first sign was a comparative handful of rubles-about $5 mil- lion worth-for industrial devel- opment. Then, in 1955, Moscow, granted $100 million worth of credits in a single stroke. U.S., USSR Link Roads While American highway engi- neers link Kabul with Preshawar and Kandahar, Soviet technicians are laying roads down from the Soviet border to Kabul and in a great arc around the western bor- der to join the American highway at Kandahar. A country which a decade ago depended primarily upon camel - paths will soon be spanned by macadam throughout its length and breadth.' Soviet technicians have built a huge military airport at Bagram, 30 miles from Kabul, and are modernizing Kabul's civil airport to handle the latest jets. Soviets Build Silo Soviet experts have built glass, coal briquette, fruit processing, textile and fertilizer plants and three automobile repair shops. Moscow has contributed wheat, trucks, automobiles and busses. It has erected a silo, a flour mill and a bakery which provides one- fourth of Kabul's daily bread. Fifteen years ago Kabul's streets were rarely touched by foreign feet. Now the American commun- ity alone totals around 600. The Soviet community is even larger. Where does it all lead? What does each side expect to get from aid programs which, taken to- gether, must amount to about $40 for each of Afghanistan's 12 mil- lion men, women and children? Selfless Motives Given When Soviet Prime Minister Nikita Khrushchev came to Kabul in March, he blandly asserted that Russia seeks only to help a friend- ly neighboring country. He said Moscow would not try to impose its way of life on Af- ghanistan. Equally selfless motives were professed in Kabul three months earlier by President Dwight D. Eisenhower. This has not kept Afghanistan altogether out of East-West argu- ments, and here the Russians have often won points in Kabul by keeping silent. The government has been far less pleased by Western observa- tions on the Soviet effort in Af- ghanistan, particularly the claim by some journalists that Afghani- stan is lost to Communism, No Strings Wanted This pains and angers Prime Minister Daud. "I don't understand it," he said in an interview. "If we took help only -from one side one might argue that we had infringed out neutrality But we need all the help we can get, and we'll take it from anyone who is willing to give it: But so long, and only so long, as no strings are attached." The West does not want Af- ghanistan to become a Communist wedge between India and the mid- dle East. Russia, sharing nearly 1,500 miles of border with Af- ghanistan, does not want this country to follow its Moslem neighbors, Pakistan and Iran, into t Western military camp. On both sides, as well as in the middle, there is agreement that the cold war manna could not fall on a more needy country. i PROF. L. LAMONT OKEY oral interpretation Prof. L. Lamont Okey of the speech department will discuss "Literary Research in Oral In- terpretation," at today's speech colloquium at 3:00 in the Rack- ham building. The colloquia, which will also meet on the next three consecu- tive Tuesdays, features Prof. Hugh Norton, speaking' on "Theatre in West Germany;" Prof. Garnet Garrison, on "The Challenge of Educational TV;" and finally, Prof. G. E. Densmure, on "The 1960 Presidential Campaign." o 0 oO Your 1960 Summer at 0 o * The Air-Conditioned Cafeteria° Luncheon, dinner and Sunday dinner o The Air-Conditioned Snack Bar Breakfast, Lunch and Snacks Coffee until 11:00 P.M. oQ Ii * Special Party and Banquet o Servie 0 Each individually planned in a private room Ui for groups of 16 or more 0 Breakfasts, luncheons, dinners, teas, receptions 0 Daily except Sunday + Overnight Aecommodations 0 For family and friends 0a o 'I An Invitation ... I The Michigan Daily . . invites you to gain valuable experience in writing, reviewing, advertising or accounting i F while enjoying the benefts and fun of a worthwhile extra-curricular activity, THE PROMETH EAN (Ann Arbor's only Espresso Cafe) -- 508 East William open 2 P.M.-2 A.M. Entertainment Friday, Saturday 1XDIAL NO 8-6416 * END\NG TONIGHT "SORCERER'S VI LLAGE" STARTING WEDNESDAY TOWr LE~umMMO BILLY mAO ma IN '4 a m I We feel we can offer you this and fi_ more. Come see us anytime at 420 THE UNIVERSITY LAUNDROMAT 1327 SOUTH UNIVERSITY WELCOMES STUDENTS!! During this session of knowledge attainment, extricate your- self from the persevering problem of clothes that are in need of washing! Let us-do it for you! We offer you one-day service. Maynard or Phone NO 2-3241. ,,I 1 11 11