DUE MICHIGAN DAILY Bagwell Set To Address Group Here By MICHAEL HARRAH GOP gubernatorial nominee1 Paul D. Bagwell will campaign7 Ann Arbor this evening as part of a nineteen-city tour of the state. Bagwell will appear from 5 t 7 p.m. at 'a potluck supper at the American Legion Memorial Home. Lieutenant - Governor nominee Clarence E. Reid, Treasurer nom- inee Davdi Calhoun, and Attor- ney General candidate Wendall Miles will accompany him. Bagwell is presently barnstorm- ing the state in a final drive for votes, using the "Crusade Cruis- er," a 26-foot self-propelled trail- er, to carry the "Bagwell team." The Crusader, containing full sleeping accommodations, full kitchen facilities and a complete- ly equipped working area, is "a completely new concept in cam- paigning," Bagwell says. The "Bagwell team" will cam- paign in Port Huron, Mt. Clem- ens, Bay City, Lapeer, Imlay City, Pontiac, Mpskegon, and Ann Ar- bor, this week, and will wind up the campaign in the Detroit area just before election. Bagwell was enthusiastic as he pulled out of Detroit Monday. "I am definitely convinced that the tide has changed and a ground swell is building for the Republi- cans," he said, Bagwell said he would base his final vote drive on "positive po- litical leadership. Michigan has just ended an era of shameful politics in our state economy and an endless and needless tug of war between classes. "My opponent is part of the administration which left Michi- gan in the worse mess in history. I pledge myself to take steps to clean up this mess once and for all." All Republican state candidates plan to appear with Bagwell dur- ing the week, including Judge James R. Breakey of Ann Arbor, who is campaigning for Supreme Court Justice. International Group To See Election Action International" students w Ill watch the culmination of the Presidential campaign firsthand on the evening of Nov. 8. The group will first visit a voting booth to watch the closing of the public polls and the ballot counting. From there the stu- dents will be taken to both Dem- ocratic and Republican #eadquar- CANCER STUDY: Agency Centralizes Research, By RALPH KAPLAN "The University's Cancer Re- search 'Institute- is a centralizing agency designed to aid the can- cer investigator in any unit of the University," Prof. Burton L. Baker, chairman of the Cancer Research Committee, said. The Institute has three main areas of interest--research, teach- ing and patient care. "Cancer research at the Uni- versity is concerned with gleaning information about an enormous variety of subjects, from the most fundamental chemical and physi- cal principles to the highly com- plicated effects of modern clinical treatment of the disease. Study Metabolism Among the subjects being stud- ied are various kinds of metab- olisms, enzyme activity, variations among different kinds of cancer, and the clinical value of radia- tion treatments. Davis Says Grou Likes Counselling, International students at the University are satisfied with the research facilities and counseling provided by the International Center, James M. Davis said re- cently. Davis, director of the Interna- tional Center, went on to say that the students were less satisfied with the way they could spend their leisure time. They feel that they are not given enough rec- ognition for previous study. They are also dissatisfied with the intellectual stimulation pro- vided by American students. Davis spoke at a seminar on University administration in the United States. The seminar was attended by 10 administrators from nine nations. "A study of foreign students in the fall of 1957 showed that many of them were working in various aspects of engineering. They were generally satisfied with the work they were doing." Davis said that studies of for- eign students done by national agencies have revealed a "gen- erally improved understanding of and appreciation for the United States, a high level of satisfaction with the academic experience and a willingness to share their views about the United States upon re. turning home. However, they did view race relations and mass me- dia in a less favorable light. Davis said that foreign students on the Michigan campus "receive! the same academic advising and housing opportunities. In addi-' tion, they have the -International Center which deals with their par- ticular concern." The teaching of the subject of cancer at the University medicall school is the responsibility of sev-£ eral individual departments. The curriculum is supplemented by special lectures, theater clin- ics, demonstrations, conferences a n d superviser investigations which are included in the instruc- tion of graduate and post-gradu--1 ate students. "Particular attention is directed to arranging special lectures by visiting clinicians And investiga- tors who present first-hand their recent and often still'unpublished' observations to the medical school's staff and students," Prof. Baker said. A large part of support for can- cer study and research in the medical school comes from such agencies as the American Cancer Society, the United States Public Health Service, through its . can- cer teaching and training grants, and the Elsa U. Pardee Founda- tion. "Much of the credit for the quality of the medical school's program for the study and re- search of cancer belongs with these foundations," Prof. Baker said. Give Grants Another part of the teaching aspect of cancer research are the University research grants. Thej fellowship program of the medi- cal school now provides not only for long-term support of graduate students but also makes a num- ber of short-term research fel- lowships available to medical and graduate students for temporary periods. Since June, 1947, the National Cancer Institute of the United States Public Health Service has made unrestricted annual grants- in-aid to medical schools to im- p r o v e undergraduate teaching programs in cancer. These grants, which the University has been re- ceiving since their beginning, have been used at the University to stimulate and supplement teaching and research. Study Diagnosis Study of the diagnosis and treatment of cancer involves most of the clinical departments of the medical school. Among these stud- ies are research on diagnosis which Miller To Talk on Campaign, Prof. Warren Miller of the po- litical science department will analyze the presidential campaign at a noon luncheon meeting of the student chapter of the Amer- ican Institute of Chemical Engi- neers today. Prof. Miller will discuss the campaign's effect on the voters in room 3201 of the East Engineer- ing Bldg. The lecture is open to the public. is centered in the pathology de- partment; drug treatment, being. studied by the cancer chemother- apy unit at the University Hos- pital and blood disease research in the Simpson Memorial Institute. The -cancer control committee. consisting of seven members of the medical school staff, is re- sponsible, for the development of interdepartmental cancer patient care programs and relationship of these programs to interested out- side professional agencies. r constitution The Big Ten Resident Halls Presidents' Conference amended their constitution to make the duties of the Secretariat more ex- plicit at Northwestern last Satur- day. The new duties of the Secre- tariat, which resides at the Uni- versity, are to collect and dispeise information desired by its mem- bers; to collect dues; to carry out the directives of the presidents council; and to report on its progress to the conference per- iodically. II A I 11 I