Traffic Jam Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIvERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Opihions Are Free th Will Preval " SIBLEY & BEATNIK FRIENDS: Garg Marches Onward Though It's a Strain IT'S GARG time again. The only discernible difference between this and any other issue is that the November dose is an off-pink shade, what might be called, in some circles, magenta. One of the funniest bits is on the cover, so one needs to be warned at the outset: go slow; construction work ahead. All of the inside can be divided into three parts, art, advertise- ments, and parody. In descending order. The "giant fold-out" of the diag, the work of art editor David Cornwell is the best thing in the i Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. DAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: NAN MARKEL The 'Superior Student' Concept Questioned VOTING the Wednesday morning session the University Conference on Higher ation to "The Superior Student" raised a ber of questions. st, who is "The Superior Student?" mey be the book-worm who goes beyond red textbook reading and underlining, be- memorizing lecture notes, and beyond, ding a brief number of hours in the library ring each night. And he may be rewarded his efforts with superior grades. perhaps "The Superior Student" is one combines superior classroom and test per- ances with participation in extracurricular Loose Ends? HERE IS more wrong with television than corruption in high places. [hursday evening, viewers were treated to dramatization of Hemingway's masterpiece understatement, "The Killers." [hose responsible for the show apparently ured ol' Ernest left a few loose ends. How i Nick Adams happen to be in Summit in e first place, they wondered? The viewer s shown Mr. Adams arriving by boxcar and ni-trailer. Why did these hired gunmen want to kill -fighter Ole Anderson, they wondered? The der saw Ingemar Johansson as Ole train a fixed fight, mess it up, then run. Was it really awful that Ole was going to ? Yes, the viewer is shown the mother of e's fiancee, and the church where the two mg people were to be married. 7ERE THESE killers really as brutal as they sounded in the dialog in the diner? They e are, for they nearly crush a mechanic be- ath an air-hoist in a service station. But aren't they human at all? Well, one of em shoves a bill into an alms box at the .irch. And what about Ole Anderson; waiting up ere to die? He dies, the yiewer hears the ved-off shotgun go off twice. And Nick Adams, couldn't he have prevented No, he went so far as to borrow a shotgun d wait in ambush for the killers as they me after Anderson. But he couldn't go rough with it. But don't feel so sorry for him, for Nick still s the cute little girl left. You know, the one met in the diner, and whose father called the chief of polite for Nick. That was right er the cop on the beat wouldn't talk to Nick cause he was too busy arguing with his activities. He works actively on at least one student organization, attends concerts and non-compulsory lectures, and still does well in class. If either of these two types of students is "superior," is it then necessary to put him in a class of his own - an honor student? "The Superior Student" is supposedly so outstanding that he is able to handle outside research work and cope with instruction on a higher level than "The Average Student." 1F SO, is it necessary to separate superior stu- dents into honors courses of their own and then "prod" them into doing extra work? If the student is truly "superior," wouldn't he de- vote his hours outside of required classwork and extracurricular activities to outside read- ing, research and work? In addition, separating "The Superior Stu- dent" from his average classmates may prove detrimental to the latter group.-Just as a poor tennis player is more likely to improve if he plays with someone better than himself, "The Average Student" can be stimulated to keep up with his more outstanding counterparts. Then, is putting "The Superior 'Student" into an honors class of his own fair to "The Average Student?" And last, there remains one other question: Why separate "The Superior Student?" SEVERAL SPEAKERS at the Conference en phasized the importance of "directing the gifted into research and academic careers." Although some speakers stressed that honors programs could also be established in "such schools as engineering and journalism to pre- pare for a profession" in these fields, their main interest seemed to lie in molding students in their own image. Surely, there is pride in one's profession and a desire to see the profession pass into the hands of at least an equally (if not better) prepared generation of successors, but how then can one explain faculty appraisal of an honors program for "The Superior Student"? One faculty counselor at the University known as an excellent teacher told a student who had come to him for advice: "You want an honest opinion of the honors program? I would say you should not join it. Students in the honors courses are tools being prepared for a teaching career." Recognition and separation of "The Superior Student" seem to present a number of 'prob- lems. Perhaps such difficulties will be resolved through continued research, discussion, and improvement similar to the University's Con- ference. NORMA SUE WOLFE Her block is way due to illness St..co ' s t PVb ast C . -Thne Senior Column By Barton Jluthwaite mag. Derivative, it is nevertheless interesting as well as charming detail. Another two-page spread, very Steinberg-ish, is also fun; it pur- ports to be a "surrealistic view of the Garg staff." There is a great deal of self-consciousness in this issue. * * * OUTSIDE OF the ads (note the very funny one, for "coeds who like to make their own clothes"), the rest of the magazine is given over to two bits of parody, one a take-off on the game called Monopoly and the other a satire on Generation. To say that both of these rath- er bore me is perhaps to indicate that I am growing old, but I like to think the reason is that neither is very well done. To be clever is not easy. The game which the Garg calls Oligo- poly is almost as dull as the ori- ginal, which I once heard called Monotony. Most of the possibilities for real fun here are wasted (is "Toad" a private Garg joke? Someone on the staff perhaps?) * * * THE SATIRE of Generation has been done before. But that's no excuse. "Friends from Many Lands," featuring a translation from the Arabic fails to catch all of the delicate nuances of the ori- ginal but we must be construc- tive: thanks to Edgar Geiss for a. spunky try. Besides, your poem is longer than any one of the five by Mi- chael Sibley, bard of aloneness. The other pieces make fun of the idea of printing music, and photo- graphs * * s THERE ARE thirty-six pages in this issue. All of them represent more or less sincere efforts at hu- mor. The successes, like most funny things, are evanescent. The fail- ures illustrate the great difficulty inherent in the very nature of comedy. Good humor is, indeed, rare. That this "eclectic issue" doesn't quite come off is no disgrace. A grin or two is a notable achievement these days. Marvin Feheim Department of English A Propos NORTH CAROLINA is setting an example for the rest of the nation in how to revitalize de- pressed areas without Federal Aid. Since 1954 commuiities in that state have been encouraging de- velopment of new industries to manufacture items previously pur- chased from out-of-state. Some 300 such industries have sprouted in North Carolina during that period, and of great significance- only one has failed. In lauding North Carolina's ap- proach to the depressed area problem. Ward Miller, Jr., high- ranking Department of Commerce official, says that the blighted coal-miningyregion of Kentucky, Tennessee Virginia and West Vir- ginia must launch a similar "do- it-yourself" program or continue to face a chronic depression. -Human Events CAMPUS interest in Student Government Council has sunk to an all-time low. Ask any student, excepting members of the "Club" and the fabled "student leaders," what their views are on SGC. Their re- ply will most likely be a caustic "I don't give a damn." Students did "give a damn" when the concept of SGC was brought to them by a campus referendum in the spring of 1954. Almost 7,000 approved the SGC proposal. The recentfall elections only brought approximately 3,500 voters to the polls. Compare the total enrollments of the two years and this student disinterest is even greater.~ SGC'S reputation began spiral- ing downward with the abortive Sigma Kappa issue in the fall of 1956, only a year after the Coun- cil held its first elections. Stu- dents generally felt SGC was bit- ing off more than it could chew in trying to oust the Sigma Kappa chapter here for alleged discrim- inatory practices. They were -proven right .. Sigma Kappa is still flourishing on the campus. Then came a series of ballot box stuffing charges and counter- charges. The "Ted Bomb" fiasco closely followed. Several students urged election of the now-re- nowned mutt for a seat on the Council . . . the snowball rolled and mutt Ted Bomb became a highly popular candidate. The standing campus joke was "SGC has gone to the dogs" and the Council's reputation contin- ued to spiral downward. * * s THIS IS not to say SGC hasn't made some remarkable strides to- ward serving the student body. But these have not come in the form of controversial issues split- ting the campus into segments and alienating administrators. SGC's numerous seminars, study groups and other c onmm i t t ee achievements 'have proved very successful. But campus opinion today con- siders $GC a bungling highly per- sonalized clique of 18 students so wrapped up in themselves that they are oblivious to the campus outside the Student Activities Building. Complicated talk of clarifica- tion committees, Boards of Re- ferral and a cure-all "SGC Plan" fall on deaf ears fed up with the Council's long-winded, reaching- for-the-moon attempts at inter- decorative and amusing, full of DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily offital Bulletin is an official publication of The Unver- city of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPRWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 pm. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daly due at 2:00 p.m. Friday, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1959 VOL. LXX, NO. 53 General Notices Combined Concert Tonight: The Ohio State University Men's Olee Club and the University Of Michigan Men's Glee Club present their Combined Concert, 8:30 pm. in Hill Aud. Stand- ing room tickets, $.75, will be on sale at the Aud. box office from 6:00 p.m. Academic Notices Engrg. Mechanics Seminar, Mon., Nov. 23 at 4:00 p.m. in Rm. 218, W. Engrg. Bldg. Dr. F. G. Evans, Dept. of Anatomy will speak on "Studies in Human Bio-Mechanics." Coffee will be served in Rm. 201 w. Engrg. at 3:30. Doctoral Examination for Malcolm Alvin Conrad, Mineralogy; thesis: "Ul- traviolet Piezobirefringence of Dia- mond," Sat., Nov. 21, 4065 Nat. Sc. Bldg., at 10:00 a.. Chairman, . M. Denning. Doctoral Examination for George Charles Clark, Chemical Engineering; thesis: "Light Scattering in Dense Dis- persions of Spherical Particles," Mon., Nov. 23, 3201 E. Engrg. Bldg., at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, S. W. Churchill. Placement'Notices The following schools have listed im- mediate teaching vacancies: Charlotte, N.C. -- Social Studies for SHS. Mt. Clemens, Mich. - Elem. Vocal Music. Roseville, Mich. -- SHs Home Econ- omics, Counselor (woman). The following schools have listed teaching vacancies for Feb., 1960. Riverside, Il. - English. Willow Run, Mich. - 7th grade Sci- once andMath. The following schools have listed teaching vacancies for the 1960-61 school year. BentonaHarbor, Mich. - Guidance Counselors. Honolulu, Hawaii- 500 Elementary and Secondary positions. For any additional information con- tact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. Personnel Requests: Anderson Chemical Co., Weston, Mich., is seeking organic chemists at the BS, MS or PhD level with or With- out experience and Chemical Engra, at the BS or MS level. Experience in the field of metal-organic chemistry would be desirable. U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Nat'lBureau of Standards, washington, D.C. is In- terested in. obtaining the services of an experienced metallurgist, preferablyin th non-ferrous field, and with some background In powdered metallurgy. Western Illinois University, Macomb, Ill., has an Immediate opening for a Director of Housing and Student u- ion. Desire the person to have college experience in student union operation and to be familiar with problems of college housing and food service. Norman Hoffman Corp., Detroit, Mich., has need of an MIfor sales po- sition. BS degree, experience desirable but not necessary. Age: 25-35, male. Cambridge Acoustical Associates, Ine. ICambridge, Mass., is seeking MS or PhD whose interest lies in these fiels: ap plied mechanics associated with me- chanical vibrations, stress waves, and acoustics. Good ability in mathemati- Ical analysis. It is desirable, but not In-, dispensable, that he have some experi- (Continued on Page 5) #l preting non-existent s t u d e n t opinion. * * * TODAY, Student -Government Council stands as an outstanding failure. It has defeated its major goal of voicing student opinion and transferring this opinion into concrete University policy. It has proved itself incapable of flexi- bility in the light of real student interests. With the very mention of SGC, students see a pie-in-the-sky, un- representative "Club" fighting a battle the students neither know about nor care about. This is not to say the concept of student government is not a good one. But thinking so far has re- stricted 'student government to the bungled SGC form. * * * THE RECENT fall elections brought only a handful of candi- dates and one-eighth of the cam- pus to the polls. What will they bring next year? Abolishment of Student Gov- ernment Council in favor of a more representative body or, if the students choose, no student government, is an alternative. The question today is, who will have the courage to propose such a move? V stress . . AX LERNER: -T. TURNER Indians Aroused RISHNA MENON'S homecoming was any- thing but that of a hero. By delaying a day London he missed a student demonstration, mplete with bitter placards and slogans, hich took place the day he was scheduled to rive, and was met by police with lathis guard- g the house. He-came back to a people thoroughly aroused the aggressions of guile of Communist China id angry at Chou En Lai's latest proposal for >th nations to withdraw twelve miles from the ositions forcibly occupied by the Chinese. And e came back to a people looking for a concrete gure to symbolize the disillusionment and imiliation they have suffered--a people who ave found that symbol in Menon. I suspect that the recurring speculations bout Nehru getting rid of Menon, the albatross e carries on his shoulders, are mostly wishful, tleast for the moment. True, the five princi- es (Panch-Sheel) have gone up in flames and te non-alignment policy is pretty rickety. True, ehru sits amidst the ashes of Menon's foreign licy. JUT TOO MANY people here forget that it has also been Nehru's own foreign policy. ehru has never been the sort of leader who ies to escape responsibility by shelving it on subordinate or who makes a scapegoat out of m to keep his own purity unimpaired. Besides, ere is no party strong enough yet to chal- age Nehru's hold on the people with or with- tt Menon. As Nehru faces the new session of Parliament will have bristling questions to answer, both out the old foreign policy which is dead but At buried, and about a new one which has not t clearly come into being. What is the indict- ent that can fairly be made of both past and esent? 'IRST THERE IS the Maginot Line mentality, with the Himalayas serving the India mili- ry and political leaders as the Maginot Line rts once served the French. So secure did the dians feel about the Himilayas as a natural ber one enemy. It has been Menon's calculation -and Nehru's as well-that the enemy was not Communist China but Pakistan. The na- ture of the army's weapons, its logistical think- ing, and the military build-up all ran in terms of Pakistan as the enemy. Since Ayub Khan came to power in Pakistan, with enough strength to resist demagogic pres- sure for making faces at India, this has been obviously unrealistic. The Menon whose brief hour of national glory came in his dramatic talkathon on the Kashmir issue in the UN was emotionally incapable of seeing that he had mistaken the enemy-until the brutal recent events compelled even him to shift his sights. HIRD, THERE IS the question of India's readiness to resist with full military means. The dilemna of many Indian commentators was put best when one of the leading newspa- permen said to me : "I recognize Nehru's posi- tion. He must operate for the present in the spirit of Munich, but as a journalist I must keep prodding him to act differently." He used a cruel phrase when he spoke of the spirit of Munich, especially in the light of Neh- ru's moral shock and recoil from the Munich agreement when he was in Europe at the time. Yet India is in a cruelly difficult position to- day, incapable of stopping the very aggression it is incapable of allowing. In naked terms, stripped of all the brave words, the picture you get here is that of the impotent facing the intolerable. NO ONE EXPECTS a nation to destroy itself by offering to fight when it is unready. But one might expect the leader of such a nation, whatever his past attitude about military means, to seek added military strength wherever he can, as soon as he can. This is exactly what Nehru refused to do, despite Pakistan offers for a joint military defense. This would be, he in- sists, not only abandonment of the non-align- ment policy but an expression of fear. "I may be guilty of a thousand and one things," he told an audience at Ujjain, "but I hava n~arhA~ a.enw~rA Tn hve anv fear GAP EXHIBIT: Gallery Fills Cultural Vacuum !rH E OPENING exhibit at the GAP, a cooperative art gallery at 117% East Washington, is an exciting and considerable achieve- ment. It is an achievement first be- cause the distinct work of 24 art- ists is so well integrated into a single show. The gallery is well planned, its space is carefully used, and the work is lighted with better judgement than many pro- fessional establishments. Secondly, the individual work of these artists is good, some of it is very good. For the most part these painters, sculptors, and pot- ters are from the cultural envir- onment of Ann Arbor. Yet the di- versity of these artists' concepts and techniques discourage outlin- ing the influences among them. * * * JOSEPH Goto's drawing "Male and Female" is the most imme- diately impressive work in the show, partly because of its size, but primarily because of a dra- matic balance between its calli- graphic and bold sculptural form. Peti Dawson is represented by two woodcuts and a softly trans- lucent collage. Georgeanne Pierce's borealic "Magic Mountian" is per- haps the best woodcut in the show. * * * IT IS TEMPTING to find in- fluences of the fantasy of Paul Klee or Alfred Kubin in Nelson Howe's six "Personages," but these large drawings (which are part of an uncanny sequence of 30) are clearly products of Howe's own virile mind. * * * THREE ITEMS are in a special class by themselves: a demonic rug and a "sit-upon" by Thomas Stearns, and a small bronz "Dem- igogue with Flag" by Stu Ross which only those with searching spirits will see. Thirdly, the gallery is the re- sult of a spirited and well-direct- ed enthusiasm. Since the early part of the summer Miss Pearce and her assistants have carefully transformed a dingy second-floor warehouse type "apartment" into a warm, attractive, and adaptable gallery. They have done this work on the proverbial shoestring bud- get. There is no need for this re- viewer to harangue that a cul- tural gap has been filled by this gallery. This unusual show and the tremendous response it has received speak for themselves. -Gordon Mumma To The Editor I Goof... To The Editor: YOUR EDITORIAL Nov. 17th by Marc Pilisuk goofs badly in attributing a "policy. of military strength" to the Truman-Acheson era. It was anything but. And when the consequences of loving-thy- fellow - red - herring ran their course, we found ourselves in a fight with outmoded weapons in the hills of Frozen Chosen. It's a shame to let the facts interfere with Pilisuk's interesting literary style and ready "conclu- sions" favoring negotiation, but that's the way it goes, fellows. -W.B. Cometh . . To The Editor: ONE GENERATION passeth away-.and another Generation cometh: but the earth abideth for- ever. The thing that hath been, it is form. These reactionaries and scoffers are admittedly inj the minority, but they constitute a significant number nevertheless. My intention and hope is to introduce some of the pitiable Per- sons to the merits of Beat poetry by presenting several of mnl wn shorter compositions. Let me beginw ith a rudimentary selection that will not overwhelm the uninitiated. Bramble-fettered string of glossy sharp Atop three heaps of rancid clay, Thrust a temple built beneath a harp Eating her curds and whey. DO NOT LAUGH. While at first glance this excerpt may appear to be too inartistically obvious and self-evident to be of any value, we cannot help but be impressed by its scathing indictment of our sr- cial structure. We may proceed to more ma- ture-material, my latest endeavor. A wrench in a smooth herd of I -j 4