THE MICHIGAN DAILY OIL IN SIGHT-Work is being done on the installation of aluminum railings in the front of Angell Hall and the Alumni Memorial Hall, the University Plant Operations Department an- nounced yesterday. The railings should be in by the end of the week and will be the same as those at the back of the Administration Building. 'U, Plannersl To Convene Tomorrow The University Development Council will hold its seventh an- nual conference tomorrow and Saturday. The purpose of the conference is to appraise the programs in- itiated by the Council in the past year and to outline development plans and projects for the future. Alan W. MacCarthy, director of the Council, said. Tomorrow's program includes a luncheon speech . by Allan F. Smith, newly appointed dean of the Law School; a meeting of Alumni Fund local chairmen and directors and a joint meeting of the board of directors of the Development Council and the Alumni Fund. University President Harlan Hatcher and Vice-President for University Relations Lyle M. Nel- son will speak at dinner. A Satur- day morning panel of University administrative officers will discuss "Michigan in the Sixties." The panel will include Robert Ford, associate dean of the gra- duate school John McKevitt, as- sistant to the vice-president in charge of business and finance; and University Admissions Direc- tor Clyde Vroman. Administrative Dean Robert Williams will mode- rate the panel. The Student Relations Board, the student adjunct of the Devel- opment Council, will give a report on its activities, The SRB is in existence to keep students in- formed on the work of the De- velopment Council and inform students of their responsibility as future Alumni of the University. Musket Seeks New Tryouts MUSKET will hold its mass meeting at 7:30 p.m., Sunday in the Union Ballroom. The short meeting will be fol- lowed by sign-ups for all com- mittees, according to John Fried, general chairman. Committee work is open in either production or administration areas. MUSKET is the only all-campus coed show for both graduates and under- graduates, he said. Tryouts for the leading roles, singing chorus, dancing, and orchestra will begin Sunday night and last until Thursday night of this week. On the subject of casting, "I want to emphasize that tryouts are open to freshmen through graduate students. We have made no commitments. We are depend- ing entirely on the tryouts for the cast," Fried said. This year's production, Kismet, an Oriental Fantasy which first appeared, on Broadway in 1954, will take place on Nov. 30 and Dec. 1, 2, and 3. Fried also announced the ap- pointment of Esther Levine '61Ed, to replace Josephine Kasle '62, as! assistant general chairman and Gaye LaGuire, Grad, as make-up chairman. SGC To Auction Bicycles Saturday The annual bicycle auction,, sponsored by the Student Govern- ment Council, will be held from 9-12 Saturday, at the Student Activities Building. About 50 bicycles will be auc- tioned by Robert Rossman and Norman Moscow. Sailors Club To Organize Fall Season The University Sailing Club holds its open meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Union Ballroom. Sailors and would-be sailors are invited to meet old members and see sailing slides and movies. Re- freshments and the slide sequence of Selma Sawaya "hiking out" are to be featured. With a fleet of nine boats on Base-line Lake and three ice boats, 'U' sailors are in action every weekend the year around. This weekend, the club offers an open weekend to those inter- ested in sailing at the club before joining. Lessons will also be available. Anyone in the Ann Ar- bor area is eligible to join. In addition to lessons the Sail- ing Club offers Sunday morning racing and a chance to race inter- collegiately with the University team. Free rides to and from the lakes are provided by members. State Requires 'Job Creation' "The central economic problem Michigan faces is making job creation more attractive," Prof. Paul W. McCracken of the School of Business Administration said in a speech before the State Chamber of Commerce meeting. To provide full employment for its population, Michigan must grow at twice the national average according to Prof. McCracken. "Our objective should be the ambitious one of making -Michi- gan's 'climate' particularly favor- able for the expansion of industry and job opportunities -and the making of the 'new Michigan' known," he emphasized. "This is no be-kind-to-business movement," he noted. "Those who would otherwise be unemployed have the greatest stake in making Michigan a more attractive place to do business." CARLOS MONTOYA Coming Friday, October 7th Educational A dvantages Aid Family (Continued from Page 1) affection to each child. The easiest way a mother can give more at- tention to each child is to have fewer of them. "By and large, most Americans would say that they want fewer children because they love them so much, not because they dislike them." Data for this study, the first obtained from a cross-section of wives in a communiyt, was gath- ered by graduate students in the sociology department's Detroit Area course. New Marriage Analysis by Prof. Blood and Wolfe turns up facts about new marriages, too. Apparently two people marry because they love each other already, not because they expect their love to blossom after the ceremony. "New brides tend to be especi- ally satisfied with the companion- ship of their husbands."But after the first few "honeymoon years" their enthusiasm tends to wane. They stop waxing the car and drying the dishes together, having discovered (usually) that the hus- band does best with the car and the wife best with the dishes. Sharing drops and specialization increases. When children arrive they bring greater love for the family, and not much less time for husband- wife companionship. The wife does tend to become more depen- dent--"the husband's a man of the world but she's confined," Prof. Blood explains. Increased Domination The longer a couple is married, the more one person comes to dominate the other. Highly edu- cated men usually hold most fam- ily power because their back- grounds help for success. "Today, the more successful the husband is in the eyes of the community, the more dominant his part in marital decision- making." That sociological spectre "mom- ism"-a theory which holds that American women are increasingly wrapping their husbands in ap- ronstrings-doesn't stand up in light of this new data, though. Test Ideas' Evans Says (Continued from Page 1) of their society, what are they- what is their unifying principle? What takes the place of reli- gion? How does a tribal society transform itself into a nation without too extreme nationalism, produce a democratic society, rather than a Communist feeding ground, and at the same time get economic and social development? These and other questions have been studied by UNESCO in the past, but more research and ef- fective action is needed, he said. The whole of knowledge, which must confront these problems, is greater than ever before, he em- phasized. Knowledge is growing fast but becoming disorganized. He expressed concern for the great power combined with a lack o funderstanding which accom- panies the impact of our country in the world today. "Schools are becoming a lot better," Evans said, "but not fast enough to overtake our growing responsibility, because our sys- tem of learning and solving prob- lems is disorganized and waste- ful. But we want it that way, be- cause we believe the creative mind should not have ,limitaitons, and that it should{ be allowed to choose to waste itself." However, he went on, this sys- tem makes it especially neces- sary to develop the .total poten- tial manpower through educa- tion. Evans questioned whether the current methods of training grad- uate students to be teachers and researchers do not place too much emphasis on the assimilation of content, rather than on the ac- tual process of teaching or train- ing in the various methodological approaches to finding answers to posed problems. Soph Show Central Committee sang a mournful dirge during the noon hour yesterday on the Diag. The funeral march procession' of 18 sophomores was a publicity stunt to advertise the organiza-i tion's mass meeting at 7:30 p.m., Sept. 28, at the League,. This stunt song was a sample of some of the plans that began to take shape Tuesday evening in' the basement of the League where Soph Show 1960 held its first Central Committee meeting of the new semester. The Central Committee is the core of Soph Show, but the en- tire sophomore class is encourag- ed to join in the production, Cody Engle, '63, general co-chairman, said. "Soph Show has room for people in every capacity. We are looking for enthusiastic, not necessarily talented, sophomores to join in the production of our show." Any, sophomore is eligible to attend To Resume Song Group The Folklore Society will hold its first meeting tonight in the third floor conference room of the Union. The meeting is open to the campus and is designed to sign up members for the coming semester. There will be no admis- sion charged for the folksing. The society holds meetings on the average of, every two weeks either on the Diag or in the Union. Dues for the 200 or more mem- bers are $2 a year. In addition to sings, the society sponsors concerts and guitar workshops in the Student Activi- ties Building for beginning, inter- mediate and advanced students. Last year, the group published a magazine, "Folkways", devoted to a discussion of the folk arts. the mass meeting and sign up for a committee. The 1960 Soph Show Central Committee was chosen last spring by the previous Central Commit- tee. This year's committee chair- men are: Marsha Kanter and Cody Engle, general chairmen; Judy DeCaprio and Eddy Stein, co-directors; Susan Hirsch and Michael Endres, music co-direc- tors; Barbara Rady and Carol Kaufman, dance co-directors. Other committee chairmen are Mary Schmidt and Bob Walters, co-secretaries; Linda Newman and Mark Moskowitz, co-treasurers; Diane Jacobson and Sam Zell, publicity co-chairmen; Pat On- drus, posters chairman; Pat Reit- er, stunts chairman. Also included are Claudia Ratt- ner and Bob Fink, programs co- chairman; Gay Fuger - Shaw, and Robert Luri, productions co-chairmen; Ronna Bergman, props chairman; Fredda Weiss, stage manager; Louise Hindley and Marilyn Grossman, costumes co-chairmen; and Joanne Steiner, makeup chairman. The Broadway musical, "Bells Are Ringing," was chosen for the 1960 Soph Show. The production will be given at 8 p.m., Nov. 17, 18, and 19 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, DIAL NO 2-6264 ' ENDS FRIDAY * Committee Seeks Talent For Annual Soph Show ENDS TONIGHT DIAL NO 5-6290 TR OAN-OU'EM STSCO WENDY ILER-MAIY UII I SATURDAY Daily Classified "LOTS OF FUN!*" -N.Y. Herald Tribune You orbit into the future n METRO/ OR Aid Entertain- -i-y N.Y. Daily News st""Sn. ROSANO DRBU M111MCAYNO JON KERR "FRMNCENIKME Bring Results 'So met ROD TAYLOR - ALAN YOUNG I i'i i PR6ICR6 First Contemporary Opera in Ann Arbor Gian-Carlo Menotti's "THE MEDIUM" and his comic companion opera "The Telephone" starring MURIEL GREENSPON as "Baba" with MARLOWE TOM KAREN TEIG CULTICE KLIPEC SUZANNE ROY DIANNE FRANJAC THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN BANDS Presents the Dave Brubeck Qartet featuring PAUL DESMOND September 23 . . HILLAUDITORIUM All Seats Reserved 8:30 P.M. Hill Auditorium Box Office Open9-5 SEE! HEAR! FALL'S FIRST JAZZ CONCERT _____._,w._ ___ _ _..__ . a i 1 4 F RESHMEN JUDITH HAUMAN JERRY LAWRENCE Musical Direction and Staging by Edgar LaMance i i i I Student Government Council I# I Ial I I I- I Is