Upstaged SeventiethYear 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 To TheEdwit. ~ ll Then Opinions e tFree Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AY, SEPTEMBER 23,1959 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDITH DONER The Development Council Looks at Public Relations rIS WEEKEND, the sixth annual Develop- ment Council conference will be held, ap- propriately enough, in the Michigan Union. This is a relatively unpublicized group, as groups go, but it has enormous potentialities. The Development Council was started several years ago to stimulate alumni interest in the University, assist in public relations, and en- courage financial support through gifts from alumni and others; worthwhile tasks to be sute. IN THE LIGHT of the present financial crisis, the problems caused by the past expansion, future plans for still more expansion, no one can deny that alumni interest and help will be vital for the maintenance of the high stand- ards we presently enjoy.. Unfortunately, the scene is far from ideal. Alumni activities have become too closely asso- ciated with football scores and athletic recruit- ment, class reunions and fraternity home- comings. In 1946 Student Legislature began a War Me- morial project which eventually became the Phoenix-Memorial program. The fund-raising organization for this project eventually became the Development Council. But the Development Council has long since forgotten its begin- nings, and now hears reports on the student scene with ill-concealed distaste. HERE ARE two student members of the De- velopment Council, now appointed by the Regents at the recommendation of SGC. SGC has recently set up the Student Relations Com- mittee, composed of students who are pre- sumably interested in Development Counciling the student body. For clearly the students here should get some idea of the roles they may play as alumni, and why. But the Student Relations Committee has not found the road an easy one. All too often the group has tended to expect that other campus organizations will do its work, and its level of imagination has not been high. The Development Council, and those associated with it in administrative positions have tended to look upon student representatives as public- relations men, who will tell them soothing, stories, designed to minimize problems, and emphasize progress (if any). As a result of this attitude, and the irrespon- sibility of some so-called student leaders, the Student Relations Committee has deteriorated into a collection of vaguely well-meaning souls who limit themselves to occasional pious state- ments about the "responsibilities of students undergoing transition from carefree under- graduates to worthwhile alumni." It is a long and unsightly trail from this attitude back to the 1946 Student Legislature. IWMH THE ARRIVAL on the scene of /the age of technology, where a college degree is the key to the door of progress, many stu- dents have come to think of their college as an "obstacle course," with the best jobs reserved for those who make the best showing. It seems unnecessary to observe that people do not usually send back gifts to their old obstacle course, nor do they think kindly of it. The answer to this problem is not bigger and better football teams, nor will newer and more elegant public relations programs help. So long as this obstacle course orientation persists, the present student attitude will persist., Student Government Council has, in the past, made several attempts to modify this orientation, but with little success. The type of orientation best exemplified by the Michigan Union--"Let's keep things like they were"- prevails. THIS WRITER attempted to present the views -expressed above to the 1959 spring meeting of the Development Council, only to find a letter of apology from the Alumni Office was later sent to members of the Council to attempt to lull them back to sleep. But if the "obstacle course" philosophy be- comes a new ,Michigan tradition, future De- velopment Councils may find themselves up against a new obstacle: unalterable alumni in- difference. The answers to this problem are not obvious. University orientation is slowly evolving, but the changes are slow to come. The grand pro- posal of a reconstructed Freshmen Orientation, discussed by SGC last April, when Spring Rush- ing was retained, has yet to be started. Alumni are still urged, by letter, to "come meet the football team." Student representatives to the Development Council are still selected by a modification of the spoils system. Members of the Student' Relations Committee are recruited more or less at random. And the administration seems more concerned with public relations than with progress. IF MEMBERS of the present Student Rela- tions Committee are seriously concerned with this "transition from students to alumni" that they talk about at such great length, perhaps it is now time to forego their public-relations role and begin attempting to work towards an eventual modification of the present student orientation system. More important, some pro- ject might be found which could capture the imaginations of students and alumni, as did the Phoenix project. -DAVID KESSEL Guest Writer Herblock is away. due to illness ecs s " mf umishx co.. 'THE COOL WORLD' WeDying Allthe ,ime Growth To The Editor: W HEN I first entered Michigan State University, in 1955, there was a prevalent +feeling that the school was only second-rate. Jokes were constantly made about rais- ing educated apes for the football team. The professors were as sar- castic about the paternalistic atti- tude of the administration as were the students. Somewhere in the course of time an undefined spirit entered M.S.U. The sarcasm became in- dignation and the whispered jeers turned into action-oriented move- ments. Then only last year, when I was a senior, Michigan State suddenly became filled with an atmosphere of expectation. Practices which had been accepted since M.A.C. days became issues of controversy. A Young Socialists' Club received acceptance from Student Govern- ment above raised conservative eyebrows; a movement to abolish compulsory R.O.T.C. led to debates and petitions by both sides; a faculty Committee for the Future of the University was organized, and some of its recommendations did not sound as if a cow-college" could have produced them. ** * . RECENTLY there appeared, in The Michigan Daily, an article about Michigan State's new branch at Oakland, planned by' "a group of 30 educators and business lead- ers, operating behind closed doors and retaining individual anonym- ity;" and if a State alumnus may say so, the praise sounded quite un-U. of M.-lke. I would predict, at this point, that the article on September 18 may mark a change of attitude toward our ;'sister-in- stitution." I think that State has left her childhood days and is entering adolescence. Certainly there is much to be done, for adolescence has always been a clumsy time of life, but let us be assured that Michigan State University is not lacking in "anonymous" commit- tees meeting secretly, theanonym- ity of whose members is mainly formal. Hank Goldbaum, Grad. Un fair . To the Editor: HIS L=I'TER concerns the re- cent establishment of the Stu- dent Bicycle Exchange, which is located in the Student Activities Building on the University cam- pus. As we understand the situa- tion, the Exchange was set up to enable the students to purchase and sell their bicycles at a better price, for them, than the Ann Ar- bor bikeshops can offer. We would like to explain the reasons for our prices. First of all, we have established our business in Ann Arbor and are therefore subject to such taxes as income, personal property, and county. Also we have such over- head as rent, heat, light, and ad- vertising. We have built up a good reputation in this area and there- fore have to stand behind ' all of our merchandise and service. We al s o provide employment for people in the community, as wel as college students. The Student Bicycle Exchange has none of the above expenses, with the possible exception of Reviewers IF YOU have opinions on any form of entertainment, and want to express them, The Daily would like to meet you. We are seeking qualified reviewers for drama, music, art or motion pictures. A meeting for potential re- viewers will be held at 8 p.m. Monday, Sept. 28. All those interested are urged to attend. some paid personnel. We feel that this places -an unfair advantage to the bicycle competition in this city. It is also of interest to note that our taxes are paying part of the overhead for our competitors. IF THIS Bicycle Exchange is su- cessful, we will lose a certain amount of business. This of course will be in the area of bicycle sales and will have to be made up. Therefore we will be forced, bY the students, to raise our prices. Thus, those students who save money when they purchas a bike will spend that money on the in- creased cost of repairs. In conclusion, the city of Ann Arbor is different from other cities because of the presence of the University. But does this mean that the students should dictate thebusiness policies of the city? It is impossible to call to mind any other city in the United States where a bike shop is set up in the city hall or in any other public building. Fred Beaver Student Bicycle Shop Error ... . To the Editor: HAVE received numerous ques- tions about my article "Lady Chatterly and Censorship" which appeared in the nIagazine section of the free Daily Freshman Sup- plement. The problem is this: the first three lines of column four should appear lower in the same column, directly above the picture. The transposition was evidently a typesetter's error. Gordon Mumma DAILY OFFICIAL $ iILBULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is ~ official publication of The Univ r- sity of Michigan for which he Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Rood 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1959 VOL. LXX, NO 2 General, Notices School of Business Administration. Faculty meeting on Wed., Sept. 23, at 3:30 pm., B. A. 164. Ushers are needed for the Choral Union and Extra Series Concerts and for the Lecture Series Lectures in hill Auditorium for the comingĀ° season. Persons interested in ushering may file an application at the Box Office in Hi l Auditorium from 5 p.m. to8 p.m.any_ day this week and from 10 a.m. to noon on Sat., Sept. 26. Students, staff "members and faculty members are all eligible to sign up for these positions. If you have any questions please call Mr. Warner at NO 8-857. ..Prospective Debaters for the Univer- sity of Michigan are- invited to a meet- ing sponsored by the Dept. of Speech. The meeting will be in Rm. 2040 Frieze Bldg. at 7:30 p.m. on Thurs., Sept. 24. Participation in debate is open to ali students. The University Choirs, School of Mu- sic, Ensemble No. 49, may be elected for one hour credit by students in many schools of the University. Bach Choir, M. T. Th. Fri., 3:00 pm, And. D,' Angell Hall (One hour credit).' University Choir, Wed., 7:00 p m., Ad. A, Angell Hall (No credit). Tenors and basses are greatly needed. Student Government Council agenda, Sept. 23. 1959, Council Ri., 1:30 p3.m., Minutes previous, meeting. officer reports: President - letters, prospectus; Exec. Vice-President - In- terimraction approved since last meet- ing, Appointments; Admin. Vice-Presi- dent - Petitioning; Treasurer - Fi- nancial report; Student Activities Scholarship Report, Delhi Project, fi- nancial report. ,11 Committee reports: Student Activi- ties Committee; Nov. 21 Men's Glee Club Concert, Michigan-Ohio State: Discussion project (calendaring). Old Business -- Reading and Dii- cussion project. (Continued on Page 5) AN IMPORTANT novel dealing with juvenile delinquency was published in America this year- Warren Miller's "The Cool World." The book is quite remarkable as a work of fiction but will probably go unnoticed since it is not sensa- tional enough, in the profitable sense, to merit the publicity that would be given a "Peyton Place" or a "Lady Chatterly's Lover." * * * "THE COOL WORLD" (Little, Brown & Co., 241 pp., $4) is War- ren Miller's second novel, the first being "The Way We Live Now," a mild legend of "nouveau riche" society with a Manhatan setting. The new book is set in Harlem, the principle protagonist being Duke Custis who is fourteen years old and a prominent figure in the Royal Crocadiles, a teen-age gang whose chief activity is "rumbling" with the Wolves, a rival hoard. Duke's ambition is to buy a gun and become leader of the gang. He states it nakedly: "Someday I come walkin down the street they all look at me with respect and say. 'There goes a cold killer. Here come Duke Custis. He a cold kill- er.' Then everybody pay attention -and listen when I talk-I be at the top of the heap and when I push they stay push ... * * THE CROCADILES move into an abandoned tenement fiat and are joined by Lu Ann, a fifteen- year-old girl, who becomes the club prostitute. Blood, an older boy who is leader of the gang, announces, "She dont put out for nobody but Crocadiles hear? . . One dollar fifty. One dollar for Lu Ann and 50 cents for the treasury. 50 cents is the club cut . . . We have money soon to buy some pieces." No, one knows where Lu Ann comes from. She is obviously a "pro" and a dedicated reefer smoker. "I put the. smoke in her mouth and say 'Lasts.' An she takes a big pull on it. 'Put it out careful.' She say. 'That my break- fast you got'." Through Duke's descriptions, we are given pathetic insight into the sparse upbringing of these young- sters. ", . . We lay on the bed an read the comic books.... She read the one about the monster an askin me to tell her whut is this word an whut is that word. Some of them I knew an some of them I dont know. I read the Mighty Mouse. But they was only one Mighty Mouse an when I finish it I didnt feel like readen anymore." Eventually, Little Man, an im- portant lieutenant in the gang, is killed by the Wolves. Blood, the old Crocadile leader, becomes a nar- cotics addict and takes to plunder- ing the club funds to support his habit. A "showdown" results in Blood being ousted and Duke tak- ing over' the responsibilities of club president. Little Man's death can- not go unavenged. In his despera- tion to raise money for arms, Duke on the advice of a friend, goes to Central Park. The experience dis- gusts him. "He put his arm' aroun me an I let him. He lead me off the TODAY AND TOMORROW: M.y on Disarmament :r , , By WALTER - LIPPMIIN path. 'Over here.' He say in my. ear. 'Over here. I know a real private place no one ever find us.' * * * THE SCHEMATIC layout of "The Cool World" is a curious one. We,eventually learn that Duke is disclosing the story to a clinical psychiatrist. In addition- to those chapters in which the plot is de- veloped, there are random sections in which he speaks intimately of himself, his childhood, his family,, his deepest thoughts. "I rather be dead like Little Man than work my life out hauln gar- bage cans or breathin steam in a laundry in the Bronx like my Mother. We dyin all the time but when you get you hand in the pie you live to be old like them white hair women on Park Avenue they walk with canes but they still alive. Unless somebody cut you down while he tryen to get his. "Well Man that the chance you take. You dont want to take the chance why you live in the cellar. Carry the garbage cans an fight the rats till you dead." Such is the raw wisdom that an unshut- tered reality has thrust upon this youth barely in his teens. Warren Miller has written a bril- liant novel. Its language is col- loquial because the author thought it the most effective way to write of his characters. Duke's narrative is warm and clear, occasionally ap- proaching the rhapsodic, and not without humor. WHAT IS most commendable about "The Cool World" is that it mirrors the life of these neg- lected boys, growing like weeds, in a way that points no finger at any- one but teaches much. The book is didactic in the same way that all good literature is didactic by' its very reflection of the world and its people. It is sure to jolt a good many would-be sociologists "-who view the social scene from an ivory tower. -Al Young / i . KHRUSHCHEV'S set speech at the U.N. was hard to follow as he delivered it, and it is not easy to read. But if I have understood him rightly, he proposed not one but two pro- grams of "disarmament." One is for "general and complete disarma- ment." This is to be carried out by mutual agreement in three stages within a four-year period and it is to end in the destruction of all arms but small ones, the abolition of con- scription and military training, the ending of research for war purposes, the dismantling of general 'staffs, and so forth. The second and separate set of proposals contains a list of "partial measures of disarmament." It is reasonably clear that in the General Assembly of the United Nations Mr. K. wishes to have the debate turn on Plan One for gen-' eral and complete disarmament. But at Camp David and at the meetings which follow it he appears to wish to negotiate about Plan Two for partial disarmament. BESIDES THIS, the address contains a clear, though not very explicit, explanation of his attitude towards our Western demands for in- spection and control. The crux of t is that as long as the great powers are in a race of arma- rents, secrecy is a most valuable military asset to the Soviet Union. It is a closed society and it is able, therefore, to maintain a higher de- gree of secrecy than is the United States which is an open society. Therefore, under an effective system of international inspection and con- trol the Soviet Union would lose the advantage which it now possesses. From this analysis Mr. K.'s reasoning is that nly if there were total disarmament would it :e safe for him to agree to complete disclosure >f all military information. Only if the powers agreed that in four years they would liquidate their military establishments could the Soviet Union agree to an inspection which would verify heir liquidation, and keep watch after that. But if the race of armaments is to continue, even at a reduced rate, the Soviet Union will not agree to inspection which deprives it of ment. Mr. K. is also aware of our insistence on inspection and control for the purpose of know- ing whether the agreed measures of disarma- ment are being carried out on both sides of the line. How does Mr. K. deal with this in view of his basic conviction that international inspection would be a Western intelligence operation?- An examination of his five measures for partial disarmament shows, I think, that they have a common characteristic. With one ex- ception dealing with "surprise attack" his pro- posals do not depend in any difficult degree on inspection. They would be comparatively easy to inspect and control witho4t any penetration of the Soviet Union itself. For they apply to continental Europe outside the Soviet Union. OF THE FIVE proposals the first two are the~ most substantial and the most immediately interesting for a possible negotiation. The first proposal calls for "the establishment of a con- trol and inspection zone with the reduction of foreign troops" in the territories of the corres- ponding countries of Western Europe. This was originally put forward as a Western idea, and it is well within the boundssof what might pro- fitably be negotiated. it does not call for "dis- armament" or for "disengagement" but for some "redeployment." The second proposal is for a variant of the Rapacki Plan which would prohibit nuclear weapons in a zone which would include the two Germanies, Poland and Czechoslovakia. The third proposal is for the withdrawal of "all foreign troops from the territories of Euro- pean' states and liquidation of military bases in foreign countries." This proposal is, of course, unacceptable. TH9 FOURTH PROPOSAL is for a non-ag- gression pact between N.A.T.O. and the Warsaw Treaty states. It is hard to see any serious objection to this, or for that matter any great value in it. The fifth proposal sounds as if it were an afterthought inserted to catch the attention of PLAYING IT COOL: Khrushchev Exhibits Political Flair By ARTHUR EDSON Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer NIKITA Khrushchev has been in this country only three days, but already he looks like a born, and highly practiced, American politician. Mr. Mr. K. misses none of the touches so dearly beloved by our own officeholders-the extra wave and the big grin for the photog- raphers, the appearanceo of being affable and friendly at all times. He is giving an excellent illus- tration of the flair he has, of that hard-to-define something we call color. For as some baseball players make each home run seem extra special, so does Khrushchev make the most of every opportunity. * * * HE CAME into New York under the worst possible conditions. Probably for security reasons, he was greeted in the baggage room of the Pennsylvania Station, dis- mal and cheerless as a tomb. The confusion was incredible-- photographers relentlessly strug- gled for better position, radio and television men trying to protect their wires from the onrush, news- men squeezing in everywhere. speeches by Henry Cabot Lodge, Ambassador to the United Nations, and by the mayor.: Then, like the seasoned old hand that he is, he leaped into the oratorical fray fresh as a daisy. Possibly he didn't plan it that way, but he even borrowed a trick United States politicians have been using since 1952: praise President Eisenhower and hope to ride on his coattails. Khrushchev praised Eisenhower. -* * * HE PRAISED Wagner. He made little jokes. Hes' such an effective mimic, and gestures so eloquently, that his stories sound better a in Russian than in tepid translations. Then, when everyone was lulled into a jolly spirt, he came to the point: don't waste your breath,' Comrades, in trying to convert me to capitalism. One surprising by-product of the Premier's visit: usually "The Star Spangled Banner" is sung by few, if any, in the average audience. Today almost everyone sang lust- ily, even though some had trouble remembering the words. * *a * AND THE SECURITY provisions continue to amaze, and dumb- .Windshield Scrabble