FISHBOWL, GAZA STRIP CALLED HAZARDOUS See Page 4 Y Seventieth Year of Editorial Freedom maii4 CONTINUED COLD High-28 Low-18 Partly cloudy, cold this aftrenoon. VOL. LXX, No. 95 Swimmers Meet Indiana ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1960 FIVE CENTS SIX PA I By HAL APPLEBAUM Michigan will lay its 33 dual meet win streak on the line this afternoon when it hosts powerful Indiana at 3:30 in Varsity Exhibi- tion Pool. On the basis of times turned in previous to today's meet, the Hoosiers must be rated as slight favorites over the Wolverines, Who won their 33rd consecutive dual meet last night with an easy 65-38 win over Wisconsin. An overflow crowd is expected to be on hand to see the battle be- tween the high - flying Hoosiers and the defending Big Ten and NCAA champion. Wolverines, who are undefeated in dual meet com- petition since Feb. 25, 1956 when they lost, 57-48, to Ohio State. Record Holders Led by world record holders Frank McKinney and Mike Troy, Indiana has easily vanquished all opponents this season setting numerou4 records in the process. McKinney and Troy, as half of the medley relay team and swim- ming their respective specialties, ~the 200-yard backstroke and 200- yard butterfly, are the Hoosiers best bets for first places. Michigan'sbest chances for in- dividual victories lie with Ron Clark, American record holder in the 200-yard breaststroke, and the diving duo of Bob Webster and Joe Gerlach, who will be virtually unopposed by the Hoosiers. Freestyler Pete Sintz, an Indiana sopho- more from Birmingham, Mich. is an outstanding performer in all freestyle events and has been used frequently as anchorman in both the medley and freestyle relays this year. Besides Sintz, Indiana has top- notch stylers in John Parks, Fred Rounds, Tom Verth and Troy. They will in all likelihood be opposed by Michigan's Bill Darn- ton and Andy Morrow. Neither Darnton, a fast-improving sopho- more, or Morrow have equalled the times of Verth and Rounds in competition, but their effective- ness in practice shows that they may be ready to challenge the In- diana duo. In the sprints Frank Legacki and Carl Woolley will be called up- on by Michigan Coach Gus Stager to counteract the presence of Sintz and Parks. Busy Day Legacki is a possible choice in both the 50- and 100-yard free- style asowelleas to anchor both relays. Woolley can be counted on in the same events and Stager will probably wait until the last moment before deciding where to place each swimmer. Backing up Legacki and Woolley will be sophomores Jim Kerr, Den- nis Floden and Chuck Babcock. In the butterfly Gillanders, who upset Troy for first place in the Pan American Games, will be try- ing to repeat the feat. Besides trying to edge Troy, who set an American record of 2:00.8 for this event Feb. 8, Gillanders will have his hands filled with Hoosier soph- omore Dick Kitchell, who has See WOLVERINES, Page 6 Resignation Confirmed Special to The Daily FLINT - University President Harlan Hatcher yesterday con- firmed Prof. Leo Goldberg will go to Harvard University in the fall. Prof. Goldberg, chairman of the astronomy department, announced last month he would resign his duties here, largely because of a shortage of research space. "He's made his decision," Presi- dent Hatcher said. "I can only add that fortunately he will be doing work in this critical field at a fine institution." Prof. Goldberg will not partici- pate in administrative work at Harvard as he did here, President Hatcher indicated. Prof. Goldberg will remain at the University until the end of the present academic year, when his contract obligations are com- pleted. Officials On 'Scie, Criticize Stress nce' Consruct ioi O SWIM SPEEDSTER-Fred Wolf is Michigan's best hope in the 200-yard freestyle individual medley. STAGES PLAY: Prof. Arnott Expounds OAnin GekADram By LORA KRAPOHL ' "The greatest problem in presenting Greek tragedy to the present- day layman audience is that of reverence," complained Prof. Peter D. Arnott of the State University of Iowa's classics department in a lecture on "Practical Considerations in Staging Ancient Drama." To illustrate his ideas on the staging of Greek drama in the modern world, Prof. Arnott presented a production of Plautus' "Me- naechmi" last night. Marionettes were cast in all the roles, with Prof. Arnott pulling the strings. "Scholarly renditions of classical pieces tend to be absolutely frightening. This is because Greek drama is thought to be remote, Gates Plans Examination Of Manuals WASHINGTON WP) - Secretary of Defense Thomas S. Gates Jr. yesterday ordered a sweeping re- view of military training manuals and publications. The Pentagon chief took the ac- tion in noting that some service publications have drawn public fire lately for including matters "inappropriate to military train- ing." Further, Gates said, some of them contained "glaring inac- curacies" and lacked good taste or common sense. The most recent instance con- tributing to the review order Was publication of an air force train- ing manual which said Commu- nists have infiltrated churches. The manual has been withdrawn and repudiated. Explicit Instructions Other manuals have contained explicit instructions on how an airman should wash an officer's dog, and how to make cocktails for parties. Secretary Gates informed the secretaries of the air force, the army and the navy that he will hold them personnally responsible for carrying out his instructions to eliminate matters that might be inconsistent with defense de- partment and national policy. Gates told the service secre- taries to start reviews immediately and to recommend any changes needed in methods of preparing and promulgating training man- uals and military publicatalons. Secretary of the Air Force Dud- ley C. Sharp, shortly before Gates' memo was released, instructed all major AF commands to establish immediately panels of officers to read and evaluate all proposed manuals. The officers on these panels will have the rank of ma- jor or higher. Name Hyde Sharp said in a statement the manual referring to Communists in churches was written by a civilian employe, Home H. Hyde, at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas. He said Hyde's immediate superior was Aaron L. Miller. After Hyde completed the man- uscript, Sharp said, it was given "only a cursory review" by Miller and mailed to Continental Air Command headquarters at Mitchell Air Force Base, N. Y. Sharp's statement omitted ref- erence to the fact that the man- ual was published by Continental Air Command and given distribu- tion by that command with a fore- word by Brig. Gen. J. M. Chappell, deputy chief of staff for operations and the continental command. The air secretary said that the investigation is continuing and a final decision has been made on what might be done to those responsible for its publication. Prince Arrives in England In Music Oversight IT'S A BOY!-Britain's Queen Elizabeth gave birth to a son yesterday, the first infant born to a reigning British monarch in 103 years. The new prince becomes second only to his 11-year old brother, Prince Charles, in the line of succession to the throne which Elizabeth assumed in 1952. And nine year old Princess Anne drops back to third place. The baby's name and weight remain temporarily disclosed until sometime today. FIRST MEETING: Flinit Branch Welcmes'U' Rent 'M' Matmen Down Illi Special To The Daily CHAMPAIGN - Michigan's wrestlers blew over weakened Il- linois, 23-3, last night and imme- diately drove on to Bloomington to face Indiana in a dual meet this afternoon. The Hoosiers are expected to put up a tougher fight than the Illini against the stampeding Wolverine matmen, whose tri- umph here was their eighth straight. The 23-3 score equaled Michigan's most lopsided victory of the season, achieved Feb. 1 against Purdue. The loss was Il- linois' eighth in 11 meets. Coach Buel (Pat) Patterson's Illini were not given much chance! to stop Cliff Keen's Michigan grapplers last night and after the first bout it was all Maize and Blue. Im!n Wins Keen held out Mike Hoyles, and let 123-yound reserve Willard Root get some competition. He got plenty from unbeaten soph Ron Pineda, who scored a 5-0 decision and the Illini's only top team points. Ambi Wilbanks began the string of Michigan victories by topping Fred Hilderbrandt, Fritz Keller- man, Dick Fronczak, Dennis Fitz- gerald, Karl Fink, and Fred Olin followed suit. Fink probably got the most satisfying triumph when he edged Tom Trousil, 31, in the 177-pound Want Action unapproachable - to be admired and held in awe from a distance. Enjoyment is considered vulgar." Lose Nuances This problem, he felt, is not helped in present translations since translators cannot hope to bring out all the nuances which were meaningful to people of clas- sical times. Prof. Arnott blamed this one too literal translations of the Greek texts. "There are some extremely funny lines in 'Euripides' and 'The Medea,'" he said. "But when audi- ences do laugh, too often it is with a feeling of guilt." Calling for not only a transla- tion of the words but also transla- tion with relation and with refer- ence to more modern thought, he said. "Departure from the text is eminently justifiable since some things which were meaningful then are meaningless today." "Appreciation of Aristophanes is on the rise now because his com- edy fits in with today's brand of humor. We now have 'Mad' maga- zine with its sick, sick, sick humor which Aristophanes also used." 'Catastrophic' Technique Prof. Arnott also cited actors. "Modern actors are takenaback by the amount of rhetoric in clas- sical drama. Therefore they try to apply other techniques. Often they try to methodize characters of Greek drama. The result is catas- trophic. "The actor should not act as he knows acting but perform as the vaudevillian knows performing." Urge Congress Against Oath' i Wam* AKT.QT"%11 ra t By CAROL LEVENTEN Special To The Daily FLINT - The University's Flint College welcomed the Regents to their first official meeting at the four-year old branch yesterday, when the College, the Regents and civic leaders exchanged compli- ments and citations of honor. Kerr Given New Post Prof. William Kerr of the Uni- versity engineering faculty was appointed associate director of the Michigan-Memorial Pheonix Pro- ject yesterday. The Regents approved the ap- pointment, effective Feb. 1 and extending to June 30, 1960, to fill the position opened when Henry J. Gomberg became director. Prof. Kerr's duties will include working with the University fac- ulty on developing a research pro- gram on peacetime uses of atomic energy and negotiating with in- dustry and the government for participation of the Phoenix Pro- ject in outside research. Teaching at the University since 1948, he was made project super- visor for the International-Coop- eration Administration nuclear energy project in 1957. Speaking at the Regents meet- ing in the Mott Memorial Build- ing, Dean of Flint College David French attributed the branch's "good fortune" to the "solid back- ing by the University in every way and on every level, and the equal backing of the Flint Committee." "We congratulate your board- and its accomplishments," Regent Charles Kennedy of Detroit re- joined. Although his school is young, French thinks "it's already acquir- ing personality and character. A 'Friendly Place' "It's a friendly place. We have a good spirit in accepting one an- other in a common enterprise, and the students see themselves as a body of people reasonably clear in their educational goals." Combining programs in liberal arts, business administration and education, Flint services 450 stu- dents, most of whom are from the city or Genessee county, in both full and part time studies. The college's enrollment is "not drawn off from other schools, but services those students who would otherwise be stranded," maintain- ing admissions standards identical with those of the literary college in Ann Arbor, French explained. . Students from Flint The senior college (Flint has a third and fourth year program only) draws the majority of its students (76 per cent) from Flint Community College. French, questioned-by Regent- Eugene B. Power of Ann Arbor about the "mortality rate" of transfers from the community col- lege, said it was "surprisingly low; we have asked only about five per cent of our students to with- draw." "We're not far enough along to give results of our graduating classes, but see some signs," French reported. Twenty per cent have pursued graduate studies, 20 per cent have gone into business and accounting, 25 per cent into ele- mentary education (easing the teacher shortage is considered by French to be the school's greatest service), 20 per cent into secondary education, and 15 per cent fall in the miscellaneous group. "We think," headeclared, "we've demonstrated that a University college can operate successfully outside of the Ann Arbor area, and that a senior college can be a working reality." S 'Outstanding' WASHINGTON (A) - The United States Commissioner of Education yesterday defended the American school system as one of Democracy's outstanding achievements. The commissioner, Lawrence G. Derthick, added, however, that the United States is spending only half enuogh money and effort on its schools. Derthick's remarks were made before a House appropriations sub-committee which heard ear- lier criticism of American schools from Adm. Hyman G. Rickover. The subcommittee offered Der- thick a chance to reply. Rickover 'Uncritical Derthick said that Rickover in holding that Russia's educatinal system is better than the United States,' was "uncritical, unsus- pecting, or only partially in- formed." He said Rickover talked only to the top salesmen of Soviet Educa- tion and didn't actually observe the schools in action. Derthick said the goal of the American Educational System is to provide a constantly expanding general level of education for all, Hatcher, Power Ask Environment Balance As 'U' Necessity Special to The Daily FLINT-University officers yes- terday took issue with the state's "science - oriented" building pri- orities and reemphasized a "criti- cal need for more construction funds." Following a morning meeting of the Regents, President Harlan' Hatcher and Regent Eugene B. Power both criticized the exclu- sion of' a new University, music school from Gov. G. Mennen Wil- liams' capital outlay proposals, Power suggested the "Governor didn't think he could persuade the Legislature to provide funds for the music school." Williams has recommended $211 million for the construction, reno- vation and planning of seven Ann Arbor units. "His building sug- gestions are all in the area of si- ence - but we want a. balanced pogram, taking in the whole en- vironment," Power said. The new music school has topped the University's own list of build-. ing priorities for several years. "We realize we have the highest capacity for scientific 'activity in the state," President Hatcher ac- knowledged, "but we can't leave the rest undone. -"I recognize the reasons the Governor offered for the exclusion of the music school, but the need for it is nonetheless urgent. "I would, hope the current ori- entation toward science isn't per- manent. We can work well in both science add other fields," the Pres ident said. Added Medical Unit In his original plans, the Gov- ernor also omitted a University request for continued planning on a medical science unit. However, on the further request of Univer- sity officials, Williams finally recommended $400,000 for the planning, Power said. Both the President and Power admitted money for new construc- tion will be difficult to find this spring. Power listed two difficulties with the Governor's suggested $150 mil- lion bonding program, which would permit construction to begin. First, "payment on bonds would constitute prior lien on legislatiye income," before any other Uni- versity needs could be' met. Bonds No Help Second, the University would not benefit as much as smaller schools under the proposed Build- ing Authority, which could plan, construct and lease buildings to state agencies. The Authority would help small colleges to find funds, Power said, but the Uni- versity is' entitled to issue its own bonds because of its status as a constitutional corporation. "An obligation to the other schools" would keep the University under the Authority, he said. Until a way to raise funds is settled upon, Power stressed, Uni- versity, officials should "underline the fact that our needs are very urgent." Sees 'Immediate Necessity' He reported "an immediate necessity to get under way with our capital plans," and decried a three-year moratorium on Uni- versity building. "Even if we were to start build- ing today, it would take several' years for the University to return to normal schedule," he pointed out. "And all this comes in the face of the greatest student enrollment surge in state history." To Host Taal AFTER-HOURS ANSWER: 'Phonorama' Replaces Conversations By HENRY LEE . .. "My radio is on the blink, but I don't care-I have a telephone," one happy inhabitant of South Quadrangle remarked. It all started when Stephen Glasser, '63E, tried to call the wom- en's dorms three minutes after the quadrangle phone service had closed. The only response Glasser got from the phone was "She Don't Love You No More, Oh Oh." Glasser started listening to "Phonorama" three nights ago when some mysterious hi-fi fiend connected his two Patrician speakers and 200-watt amplifier to the phone system. "Phonorama" or "Quadrama" has become so popular that various hi-fi fans are competing for air time. The program formats range from Chopin's "Polonaise-Fantasie in A-Flat Major," to "Pardon My Blooper" and the reading of e e cummings' poetry. Rumors indicate that the quadrangle officials do not mind the new addition. Quadrangle spirit and cooperation has increased over the exciting topic of "Quadrama." After listening to what has been I ' f .arc ' A =