"Never Mind About Already Having A Book' M1w Sthi an muiIy Sixty-Eighth Year DITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN NDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS rUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MIcH. * Phone NO 2-3241 e Michigan Daily express the inditidual opinions of staff writers e editors. This must be notedin all reprints. D57 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID TARR, Military Science Gets Top Priority By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THE APPOINTMENT of "czars" to- handle vital phases of de efforts is an old practice, having come to full bloom in the da McAdoo and Baruch in World War I. President Eisenhower's 'appointment of' Dr. James R. KilliA eminent scientist and administrator, puts the military science pro on virtually a wartime basis. First guesses as to possible cost around two billion dollars a year. That's how serious the President considers the revelation starting late and having taken various twists and turns, the Ame Candidates ,, Us, Consideration Cou Wed hen just h resi ncil consequences have yet to be debated by stu- nes- dent government. Many locally important prob- stu- lems, including those of , the Campus. Chest be- and Sigma Kappa sorority, will face Student pect Government Council during the coming year. aca- With all these problems and possibilities for vi,ng Council consideration, this week's election takes tion on an importance equal to that of having a stu- eral dent government at all. It is imperative that every student on campus, graduate or under- graduate, affiliate or independent, meet the and task of evaluating and selecting and voting for two competent, well-qualified and thinking indi- hip. viduals to take seats on Student Government 'Council. 3's often - of change Council's of leaders tion has Y actor for lit :hools and o some exi sity. nelda ber- col- tent ver, student govern- having to cope with, lems of the growing to provide a greater its," "academie "are becoming RUNNING for six vacancies in this week's election are eleven candidates, four of them incumbents. Most of these eleven persons have something definite to contribute to Student Government Council. Many of them are par- ticularly deserving of voter cnsideration for their experience, ideas and demonstrated or potential ability for competent performance in a position of importance. Platforms and comments by these candidates appear on pages six and seven of today's Daily. Every individual-for he is the only person competent 'to judge - should accept as his" responsibility the serious consideration of can- didates before Tuesday; he should not vote until he has done so. A competent and ac-. complishing student government can be created only by an informed student body aware of today's problems. -VERNON NAHRGANG City Editor s reaching a greater fences of these con- otentially threatened omnipresent lecture ested with the recent ided invitation ' to a WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: , Soviet Papers Collect Dust By DREW PEARSON- 1I by missile program has been out- stripped by Soviet Russia. It's a reminder of the historic maxim that men charged with the security of their countries cannot afford to rely on personal judg- ments, but must prepare at all times for the worst. To put it an- other way, .when leaders take an optimistic view of the chances of war or domination by another na- tion', they must still operate from the standpoint of how badly they could be wrong. THE AMERICAN rearmament program, launched after the Rus- sian capture of Czechoslovakia nine years ago, was conceived as something which would achieve a certain level and then be held on a plateau. Leveling off was emphasized after the Korean War and closely connected with the Eisenhower administration efforts to balance the budget. Critics who reminded of what had happened to world relations because of drastic cut- backs after World War II were waved off as alarmists. There is, then, policy as well as a new awareness involved in the new program, 'and the President has not yet addressed himself to that beyond the field of science. He refers to 'the Air Force and' the nation's other military re- sources as strong defenses. Cut- backs in these fields have been based on the theory that better weapons make reductions possible without endangering strength. ., *, * * THE QUESTION now arises whether reliance on this theory is also permitting Russia to make unsuspected gains in the whole field of preparedness. The discussion involves manyr variable factors. The most optimistic interpreta- tion of Khrushchev's statement that Russia will overtake Ameri- can industrial production in 15 years is that Russia will not de- liberately make war before then. If that be true, then an all-out war production program now would be merely shooting the na- tion's resources into the space of obsolescence. Nevertheless, the Unitde States must keep up if only for the pur- pose off preventing the Commu- nists from using their power to blackmail 'other, nations into strength-sapping agreements. And the nation now has good reason to remember that the Com- munists are capable of big sur- prises in. any field where they choose to concentrate the efforts of the countries over which they. hold away. Gratified . .*4,j To the Editor: THE STAFF of the Development Council has read with interest Richard Salo's editorial called "De- velopment Council and Students; which appeared in The 'Daily, Wednesday November 6. Flrst'of ail, may I say that the Development Council is gratified that the official rews organ of the University has recognized our at- tempts, and the efforts of Michi- gan alumni throughout the coun- try, to provide financial aid for students on the campus through scholarship, fellowships and grants in aid. And we appreciate your concern with our efforts to establish a rore substantial line of communications with the student. body, namely the Student Relations Committee of the Development Council. IT WAS RECOMMENDED in the editorial that student repre- senation 1be expanded from its present status (two students on the Board of Directors) to a full repre- sentation on our various com- mittees. This 'idea of larger student rep- resentation in the affairs of the Development Council, I am happy to report, was favorably considered in the recent past with the result that some of our committees have agreed wholeheartedly to welcome students as part of their member- ship. We hope that this development will lead to a fuller understanding on the part of the Development Council concerning the opinions, the needs and the interests of the student body. -John W. Sweeney. LETTERS to the DITOR speak on campus. 1 of an honor system and its Lures of Students, Candidates 411 ALLY DEFINING term of the Student Government Council elec- rked lack of interest. Only eleven all time low, are running to fill the )uncil positions. a houses have been nowhere nearly il as they might have been. In some didates came to speak and no one r people were there to hear them. places, constituents came to hear and no candidates, or more usually ame to speak to them.' that only 11 candidates will have a ne getting around. to six houses in g, especially if the houses are on les of the campus. ;ruth is that there were some candi- lust did'not campaign very hard. CANDIDATES on the whole have t had.enough interest to attend the etings. Almost all of them came to gat which they were introduced, but ed the subsequent two meetings. .seem that any person who really t being on SGC would really care iding meetings. on who wishes to do a competent attend meetings, not only to under- SOC works, but also to understand n which the Council is now working. sume that this lack of interest of, the Ad 'candidates is the Council's fault, elieve that it is; the Council has cer- mplished a great many worthwhile even with this assumption, the lack is difficult to understand. dent government has more power t any similar groip on other cam- puses. And because of this, SGC has the oppor- tunity to do a great many worthwhile things for students-. And students seem to show discontent about a good many things on campus., This discontent may raige from the growing. size of the University and its increased im- personality to the difficulty of getting a call through to the Hill. And student government represents at least ,some way students can not only get these problems heard, but even have something done about them. IN OTHER WORDS, lack of interest on the. part' of the students, because the Council never does anything, can only be the students'. fault for they elect the people who serve on the Council. And these people are students themselves. Tuesday and Wednesday there will be a Student Government Council election. On pages six and seven of this paper are the platforms of the Council candidates. We strongly urge that students read these platforms-well. And we urge that students then vote of the basis on these, as well as the speeches candidates have given in open houses. And then we urge that students vote. If Student Government Council is not a successful as it might be, it can only be the students who are responsible. If Student Government Council is not re- flecting the needs of the students, it is the fault of students. We only hope that the number of people voting in the elections will reflect greater stu- dent interest than has been shown in the past two weeks. -RICHARD TAUB I WM T MAY BE HARD to believe, i ut the Administration has been so complacent about Soviet scientific progress that it hasn't bothered to translate the Russian technologi- cal documents that enter this country, except for a few hit-and- miss translations. Truckloads of scientific papers and reports, containing clues to Russia's brainwork, are piled up in the Library of Congress, un- sorted and untranslated. Our tech- nologists are convinced they could learn more Soviet secrets by read- ing these papers than all the re- ports, of the costly Central In- telligence Agency. * * * IT WOULD COST an estimated one and one-half million dollars to translate and catalogue 80 per cent of' the most important re-. ports-a mere fraction of the CIA ;budget. Yet these papers are known to contain vital information on such Soviet programs as missile and satellite research. The Administration has had the smug attitude that our sci- entists are so superior we must protect our technological secrets.\ We needn't bother to learn Rus- sian secrets. American scientific delegations that visit behind the Iron Curtain are given stern warnings not to --v _ _ T _.._ disclose technical information of a security nature. Yet the Administration has, all but ignored Russian technical in- formation reaching this co'antry. If this information were properly catalogued by subject matter, it would not only help our scientists in their research, but would en- able them to evaluate the level of Soviet scientific development. Our technologists have found that Russian scientists discuss their findings with amazing frank- ness in their technical papers. . * * YET THE LIBRARY of Con- gress translates only occasional passages from these key journals. Private universities also do some translating. But the mass of Rus- sian. technical intelligence_ is never read by American experts. In the light of Russia's missile- satellite achievements, this failure to study Soviet scientific docu- ments may go down as the great- est scandal of the Eisenhower Ad- ministration. Norris Cotton, 'homespun lawyer who represents New Hampshire in the United States Senate, has a shrewd, way of gauging public opinion, whether in Asia or New England. In Japan recently, he and other senators were .lectured by Am- bassador Douglas MacArthur -on the danger of Japan's drifting'into ' the arms' of Red China. Naturally, Sen. Cotton gave, weight to the words of the nephew of the man who once ruled Japan as head of the United States Army of Occu- pation. But he also did some ob- serving for himself. He noted :that .in every store window which, displayed clothes on a female dummy, the dummy was a blonde, Western model, not. a dark oriental type. * * * . HE ALSO NOTED that Japanese' women were having their eyelids operated on to remove the slant- eye effect and give their eyes the appearance of Wesrn women. 'This is done by a relatively easy operation which makes the eye- lash stand out from the lid, as do those of American girls, instead of. growing straight up. and down. ."I saw Japanese. women stand- ing in lines two blocks long in front of doctors' offices, waiting, to have their eyelids operated on," Sen. Cotton observed. "It cost $13.50. When they go to all that trouble 'to imitate Western wom- en, I don't believe Japan will rush suddenly into the -arms of Red China." (Copyright 1957 by-Bell Syndicate Inc.) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin Ia official publication of the Unive sity of Michigan for which 1 Michigan Daily assumes no e torial responsibility. Notices shou be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form Room 13519 Administration Bul lug, before 2, p.m. the day preced:i publication. Notices for Sund Daily due at 2:00 'p.m. Friday. , t DISCUSSES RESEARCI PROGRESS, NEEDS: Top U.S. Missile Expert Answers Questions Planes Over Stadium 1TISING HAS GONE far enough in its ivor to capture the consumer in a hold and smear his face In, the multi- products it tries to sell. Advertising's is to push a "gimmick" on a lot of egardless of their willingness, and what 'a better' place where there's a captive than Michigan Stadium on a football' s throng the stadium to enjoy the" sm of picking sides, to contort and , if they picked the lucky team, to cheer .ditorial Staff PETER ECKSTEIN. Editor . ELSMAN, JR. -VERNON NAHRGANG anral' Director City Edi'tor IANSON ................ Personnel Director MIORRISON..............Magazine Editor. GERULDSEN .. Associate Editorial Director HANEY.................Features Editor 'RLBERG.........Activities Editor 'RINS ... AssociatePersonneDirecor sAD ...... .......Sports Editor ENNETT .......Associate Sports Editor LLYER ...... AsociatSorts Editor with each determined lunge of the players. They don't go there to have their lives en- dangered by low flying aircraft dipping and buzzing around the packed bowl with 200 to 300 foot long tails of heavy metal letters spelling out the slogan of an advertiser. It probably hasn't occurred to either the fans or advertisers but the injuries that could befall hundreds of spectators if the metal chains of letters ever broke loose could be very serious. The engines of the antique airplanes labor strenuously under their struggling loads like broken-down work horses forced to run the mile at Churchill Downs. IHE THREAT of danger is not the only worry that mars full enjoyment of the afternoon. The halftime spectacle of our magnificent band suffers the fate of not being heard properly when it has to compete with the hoarse voices of exhausted engines. This was especially' true during Gene Krupa's solo performance last Saturday which was almost inaudible to begin with. There are federal laws specifying that a planeT cannot fly directly over a stadium, but even if this *ere carefully observed, in the eventu- ality that a plane did fall. its own motion and Copyright 1957 By The Associated Press (EDITOR'S NOTE - The United States, in the words of President Eisenhower; is behind Russia in de- velopment of satellites and "in- some missiles in special areas." The Associated Press has obtained this exclusive signed story with Dr. Wernher Von Braun, director of the Development Operations Division at the Army's Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Ala. Dr. Von Braun was asked a series of questions relating to the mili- tary aspects of the Sputnik program and the future of space in general. Here are his answers.) Q. How do you account for the U.S.S.R.'s apparent ability to out- strip the United States in reach- ing into space? A. The main reason is that the United States had no ballistic mis- sile program worth mentioning be- tween 1945 and 1951. These six years, during which the Russians obviously laid the groundwork for their large rocket program, are irretrievably lost. The United States went into a serious ballis- tic . missile program only in 1951, with the decisions to weaponize the Army's, JPL Corporal rocket and to develop the Redstone. Thus our present dilemma is not due to the fact that we are. not working hard enough now, but that we did not work hard enough during the first six to ten years after the war. Q. How long before it will be possible for the United States to launch a rocket to the moon: How long before manned space travel will be feasible? How soon might .ip hi.A.m ono n- f fnr- - ---n form do you believe these shocks will take? A. Yes, it is most likely that we are in for a ,few more shocks. With the powerful multi-stage rockets they must have used to launch Sputnik II, the Soviets have a definite immediate capability to fire a payload of possibly over 100 pounds on a one-way trip to the moon. Another possible surprise they may have in store for us is a manned ascent into an orbit with ensuing return and recovery. Q. Is it now possible for the United States to launch a satellite with the military' hardware now available? What is this hardware and what could it do? A. Yes. But any further com- ment in this regard would have to come from the Department of Defense. Q. What can be done by the United States to. achieve superior- ity in the satellite and issile ,fields? How long do you esate it will take? for future growth potential, would help tremendously in the long run. Q. With pr.,sent techniques would it be possible to launch a satellite and call that satellite in on a target at will? A. Yes. In order to return the orbiting satellite into the atmos- phere, it must be retarded by a short rocket blast. Once the origi- nal orbit has been accurately de- termined by optical and radio tracking, it is easy to calculate how much the orbital speed must be reduced in order to place the lowest point of the new orbit into the uppermost layers of the at- mnosphere-say 50 miles up. - After the satellite has thus been slowed down sufficiently, a parachute may be deployed'to carry it safely to the ground. By triggering the initial re-' tardation blast from. the ground at a carefully precalculated mo- ment, it appears possible to ,re- store the satellite with a sufficient accuracy to land within an area the size of European Russia.. A. The U.S. Air Force has a department for space medicine at- tached to its school of aviation, medicine in Randolph Field, Tex- as. The Navy's Air Medical Cen- ter at Pensacola, Florida, is like- wise'actively engaged in physiolo-, gical research. in space travel. Experimenters from Wright Field; Olio, have test-fired rhesus monkeys' in Aerobee rockets as early as 1950. Q. Do you believe a consolidated programi, such as the Manhattan Project, would improve our devel= opment of. missiles? Would this free any scientists for work, say in the field of space travel? A. We should not lose sight of the fact that there are some fun- damental differences between the situation which led to the Man- hattan Project; and' the situation ,in the missile' field today. The Manhattan' Project was in- itiated because the physicists haoi come up with a revolutionary new concept - namely the nuclear chain reaction-which could only be translated into something of a military value-namely an atom bomb - by the construction of huge facilities where difficult processes hitherto only demon- strated in the laboratory-namely isotope separation-could be car- ried out on a ,vast ,industrial scale. ,In the missile field today, we have practically all the facilities. we can intelligently use. Several projects are handled by several teams, each of whieh is in a dif- ferent geographical location. Any SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1957 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 47 General Notices All women students attending ti concert at Hill Auditorium Sun., Noy 10 will have 45 minutes after it is ove to return to their residences. 'Lectures The International Center is present ing a series of free illustrated trav talks as a community service. Open ig the series are three talks entitle "Report: Africa," of which the first wi be given Sun., Nov. 10 at 7:30 p.m. I Aud. A, Angell Hall. Douglas D. Crar associate professor of Geography, wi present "African view," a color iir account of a journey from the Ci to Cairo. Lecture, auspices of the Universi Committee for the Program in Russia Studies. "Travelers' Accounts of ti Soviet Union Today," Andrei A. Lobi nov-Rostovsky, professor of histor chairman. "Camera Shots of the Ru: sian People," Deming Brown, associgt professor of Slavic languages and Ii eratures; "Geographer's Impressions c the Soviet Union," GeorgL Kish, prc fessor of geography; "A Journey to BE mote Parts of the USSR," William $a: Its, professor of political science. 8:( p.m. Tues. Nov. 12, Aud. B, Angell Ha' AAUP Chapter Meeting, Tues., No 12, 8 p.m, East Conference'Room, Raci ham Building. "What is the Future Faculty Participation in Universit Government?" Talk by Algo D. Hende son, professor of higher educatioi School of Education. Comments by Joh C. Kohl, professor of civil engineerix and chairman, Senate Advisory Corr mittee; Charles E. Odegaard, dean College of L.S.&A., and Warner 0. Ric Vrofessor of English and chairma Dept. of English, L.S.&.A. AAUP mere bers, nominees, and other interests faculty members invited. Next chapt meeting will be on "Problems of Un. versity Research Policy" with Dr. Thor as Francis, Jr., School of Public Healt as speaker. Tues., Dec. 17, 8 p.m., Rac} ham East Conference Room. Sigma Xi and the Museum of Paleor tology announce the Ermine Cowl Case Memorial Lecture to be presente by Prof. Erling Dorf, Department Geology, Princeton University, on "T1 Earth's Changing Climates" at '8: p.m. Wed., Nov. 13, Rackham ampI t s .. f L t . v A. Before we can achieve su- If the ussians have mas periority in these fields we have tered the ability to return a sat- to catchdup with the present Rus- ellite to earth at will, what would sian lead. ' be the United States' best defense? Even with no holds barred, I A. Mastery of this recovery think it would still be well over technique in itself does notcon- five years before we could catch stitute a threat to the United up with the Soviets again, because States. It should rather be cdn- they are not likely to. idly sit by sidered as an important detail in the meantime. achievement within the frame- work of an obvious all-out effort Q. Is money a factor in the de- by the Soviets to establish them- velnnmen t nf miqcA1ePa oAn.ti.- s elves a smatetsre nf the gn~op