S1t 3it4idan Daily Sixty-Eighth 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 "No, Name's Sherman Adams And I Just Work Here" --,' hen Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. RIPE FOR REVOLUTION: Turbulent Indonesia- Far East Powder Keg By JOHN AXE Daily Staff Writer DURING THE PAST WEEK, a problem which has been bothering American and Western statesmen for a long time came back into the headlines. Thep roblem-Indonesia and into whose camp this strategic and wealthy island republic will finally land-has been botiering the Free World ever since the young nation won its independence from the Dutch nearly a dozen years ago. At first the republic was threatened by Dutch attempts to hold on to what was its most valuable colony by military action. Next came )AY, DECEMBER 18, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: JAMES BOW Exporting Our Best To South East Asia t VEN' IF THE Student Government Council Southeast Asia steering committee never iches its goal of sending six students to e Far East next summer, it will give students iO attend its meetings a deeper insight into e problems of this critical area. And, if funds are raised to send University dents to Southeast Asia, then the student egates will have the opportunity to give ian students a -deeper insight into what so abstractly term "the American way of '," and perhaps more importantly, our dents can learn of the diverse South East an ways of life. The preparation necessary student delegates to discuss the United ites with Asian students should prove as allenging as the trip.' Sending "unofficial" delegates-neither gov- anent representatives nor :mere sightseers- a practice that has been used by the Soviets many years. India and nations of Southeast [a have been influenced by Russians who ne to Asia claiming'no other motive except "cultural exchange." The fact is important -that University students are trying to initiate a type of program often overlooked by our own government and often used by the Soviets. COMBATING COMMUNIST propaganda is certainly an important responsibility of University Southeast Asian delegates, although a genuine cultural exchange should be the primary purpose of the Asian trip. The idea of such a delegation is not new, for the University of California tried it last year. But one idea of the trip is still new to our government-the fact that as much, if not more, can be done to fight communism by sending to Asia people instead of dollars. The United States sends money, food, ma- chinery, and famous personalities to other nations, but we seldom think of sending our' most valuable commodity-the American citi- zen. -JAMES BOW A Phone in Every Room ALL THE GIRLS on "The Hill," and all the boys in East and West Quads, can likely have phones in their rooms-if they want them. With the phones would also come private exten- sion lines.1 Leonard A. Schaadt, Residence Halls Busi- ness Manager, is prepared to have the telephone company submit a report on the ways and means of putting phones in the old dorms which presently have the buzzer system. Once' student interest is evinced, it is more than possible that individual phones could be sup- plied., Under the present budget, Mr. Schaadt says, or under any other conceivable one, considera- tions of expense make it impossible to provide more trunk lines. The only other way to in- crease efficiency is to do awaSr with the buzzers, although this would still probably entail an additional five dollar charge per semester for the students. But the charge would be made by rooms, since each room 'would have a phone, and the cost could be split between roommates. Actually, the charge does not cover the expense, it would merely serve to defray it. Boys in South Quad where 'the individual phones system is now in effect seem to think the service is worth the charge. For girls it might be doubly worthwhile. HOW DOES THE BUZZER system decrease efficiency? It is mostly a matter of time lost at the switchboards and in the rooms. The switch'board operators in South Quad have only to ring the extension to'complete a call. Opera- tors with the other setup must wait for the phone to be answered after buzzing the room. A report prepared for the Residence Halls administration by the telephone company shows that between 6:45 and 7115 on an average evening at the switchboard in Alice Lloyd Hall twelve out of fifty calls observed were not answered in 10 seconds. One was answered after more than a minute and a half. Ten seconds is the allowable delay, most delays are longer, and even 10 seconds is too long. Multiply it by the number of calls in a day coming over the switchboard; the product is a great deal of time lost which would not be lost with indi- vidual phones. IN 1950, when South Quad was built, the Residence Halls administration proposed a change in the phone -system for the girls on "The Hill" and the boys in East and West Quads. However, through some misunderstand- ing, the students in these older dorms were told that they would have party lines. Wanting to maintain what little privacy they had, they vetoed the proposition. With the understanding that more phones would also mean private extensions, a re-vote now might have a dif- ferent result.s The present residence halls telephone system, excepting South Quad, is outmoded and in- efficient. It is both practicable and possible to change it. Proper student organizations, such as Assembly and IHC, could start the ball roll- ing. ILike the weather, we all complain about the setup but we never do anything about it. Why not? -NAN MARKEL (Herb ock Is on Vacation) C° rbi1. 1 M, a ss-P atch . WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Highlights of Gaither Report By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON - An extremely hush-hush dinner was.held at the home of William Foster, former Deputy Undersecretary of Defense, now chief sparkplug of Olin-Mathieson. It was held not so much in honor of Vice-Presi- dent Nixon, as reported, but was inspired by Nixon in order to pry loose the suppressed Gaither Re- port. This report, one of the most im- portant in the history 'of the na- tion, concludes that the United States is on the way to becoming a second-class power because of the missile lag. It also hints in guarded terms that the United States may have to desert its traditional policy of never going to war unless at- tacked first. The first attack in modern atomic war would be so massive, the report points out, that the country which makes the attack would probably win. And with the arms race going against the United States, the inference is: we can't afford to wait. This, in blunt language, is pre- ventive war. * * * THOUGH the White House wants the report suppressed, Vice- President Nixon and the business executives who wrote the report want the American people alerted regarding the danger facing the nation. Because of the importance of the report, this column has been able to secure the main highlights and they are published below: 1) The report strongly urges educating the public on national defense. The security of the na- tion, it points out, depends upon the understanding of the people. 2) The USSR probably will have operational ICBM's with mega- warheads by the end of 1959. By this time, Soviet military supre- macy over the U.S. should be complete. 3) Russia was stronger than America following our disarma- ment after V-J Day, but we caught up and jumped ahead of. Russia during the Korean War. Recently we have dropped back. Though our strength today is about parallel, the Soviet is swooping ahead so rapidly that it will be well ahead of us in the next 18 months. 4) The report urgently calls for stepping up the "initial operation- al capability" of our IRBM's (in- termediate-range missile) four times the present goal. Even more vital, it recommends increasing our planned ICBM (intercontin- ental missile) capability almost 10 times. 5) THE REPORT sketches a five-year program that would boost our defense spending almost $20 billion. It recommends a $3 billion increase in 1959, $4 billion in 1960, $5 billion in 1961, $4 bil- lion in 1962, and $3 billion in 1963. 6) The report declares solemnly that the fate of the U.S. and its population today rests on the Strategic Air Command. The re- port urgently recommends wider dispersal of SAC's striking power and quicker reaction to an alert. SAC can now get one-third of its bombers into the air within 15 minutes after an alert. The report urges increasing this capability by at least dhe-half. It also calls for improving the warning net- works. 7) The report recommends "hardening" of our bomber and missile bases either by building concrete shelters or putting them underground. Note - Assistant Defense Sec- retary Mansfield Sprague fought inside the committee for an even stronger report. This is signifi- cant, "since he is an Administra- tion man. He argued for a 'stronger rec- ommendation on the question of letting the enemy hit us first, and, though not advocating preventive war, he made the point that if war appears inevitable some time in the future, it would be disas- trous for us to wait until the Kremlin strikes the first blow. WASHINGTON PIPELINE - John L. Lewis won't hook up with the ousted Teamsters. He feels he has enough problems, what with competing fuels and shrinking coal production. Lewis also is planning another safety campaign in Congress to make every coal mine in the country subject to the Federal Mine Inspection Act. Sev- eral hundred smaller coal mines, with 15 or fewer employees, are still exempt. (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Communist rebellion, Islamic un- rest, numerous coups and coun- ter-coups, and most important, a decline in the economic situation, which usually accompanies such turmoil. Only one man, President Su- karno, has been able to ride out the repeated storms, and he is known to be more than sympa- thetic toward the Communists, who are the majority party on the republic's most heavily popu- lated island, Java. $y the end of last week, how- ever, Sukarno, who had long been attacked as a political opportunist pitting faction against faction to stay on top, was, most observers believed, out of the picture, at least for the time being. * * * THIS CAN be said to be a bright spot in a bleak picture, for Su- karno, after a recent trip behind the Iron Curtain, called for a "guided democracy" to be run by a coalition regime which would include the Communists. Then, despite strong opposition to his plan by the Moslems, who were so opposed to it that they began to form regional governing councils almost completely inde- pendent of the capital, Jakarta. Sukarno attempted to restore na- tional unity by agitating the un- settled issue of Netherlands New Guinea, which the Du'tch still control. This issue, which was to be negotiated later in. the agreement which gave Indonesia its acknow- ledged independence, has never been settled. Last month, Sukarno warned that if West Irian, the Indonesian name for the Dutch-held region, was not given to Indonesia through United Nations action, he would take more drastic meas- ures. * * * ON DEC. 1, a general strike was called against all Dutch firms; this was followed by a series of anti-Dutch decrees, including one ordering 46,000 Dutch nationals to get out of Indonesia. What happened after this is still not completely known out- side of Indonesia because of gov- ernment censorship of news.. Apparently, the Communist led labor, peasant and youth groups in a widespread seizure of Dutch ships, offices, estates and ware- houses. Last Tuesday, however, the sit- uation took a turn for the better as Premier Djuanda declared that Dutch nationals would be pro- tected, and in so doing put a stop to much of Sukarno's "hate the Dutch" campaign. Finally, on Thursday, the Pre- mier announced that President Sukarno would go abroad for "re- cuperation" and that the chair- man of the Parliament would serve in his absence. He also an- nounced that the army would supervise control of all Dutch enterprises, quite likely to pre- vent the Communists from step- ping in. * * * SUCH IS the situation today. The Army is presently in control, apd the Communists seem sub- dued for the moment. In the face of what has happened, however, this cannot be expected to last for any great length of time. Too much is at stake for the Communists to take this setback, if it actually is that, and do noth- ing in return. The Russians have long regarded this new republic as ripe for a Conmunist govern- ment with the accompanying ties to Moscow and Peiping. One' spark could set off a dis- astrous revolution in which the Communists might well emerge victorious. Indonesia is, with good reason, the powderkeg of the Far East. I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Uni-er- sity of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editori- al responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday' WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1957 VOL LXVIII, NO. 75 General Notices Regents' Meeting: Fri., Jan. 10. Com- munications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President'* hands not later than Tues. Dec. 31. PLANS FOR MID-YEAR GR bUATION EXERCISES Sat.," Jan. 25, 1958, 2:00 p.m. TIME OF ASSEMBLY-I :15 p.m. (except noted) PLACES OF ASSEMBLY Members of the Faculties at 1:15 p.m. In Room 2054, second floor, Natural Science Building, where they may robe. Regents, Ex-Regents, Dean and other Administrative Officials at 1:15 p.m. in the Botany Seminar Room 1139; Natural Science Building, where they may 'robe. Students of the various Schools and Colleges in Natural Science Building as follows: SECTION A - LITERATURE, SCI- ENCE AND THE ARTS-front part of auditorium, west section EDUCATION-fron part of audi- torium, center' section ARCHITECTURE-front part of auditorium, east section SECTION B-GRADUATE-rear part of auditorium with doctors at west end 'PUBLIC HEALTH-Room 2004 SOCIAL WORK-Room 2004 (be- hind Public Health) SECTION C-ENGINEERING-Room 2082 BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION - Room 2071 LAW-Room 2033 PHARMACY-Room 2033 (behind Law) DENTAL - Room 2033 (behind Pharmacy) NATURAL RESOURCES - Room 2033 (behind Dental) MUSIC-Room 2033 (behind Nat. ural Res.) MARCH INTO HILLmAUDITORIi - 1:45 p.m. Academic Dress International Center Tea, sponsored by International Student Association and International Center, Thurs., Dec. 19 from 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. at the In- ternational Center. Fellowship applications are now available for the Margaret Kraus Rams- dell Award. This Fellowship is used to assist students who are graduates of the University of Michigan in pur- suring graduate studies in this coun- try or abroad, in religious education or In preparation for the Christian min- istry. Both men and women may apply for the fellowship. Applications should be made to the Dean of the Graduate School, on forms obtainable from the Graduate School. The deadline is March 15, 1958. Lectures Research Club December meeting, Wed., Dec. 18, at 8:00 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Two paper will be presented: Ernest Pulgram (Romance Languages and Classical Lnguistics): "The Etruscans: Old Prob- lems and Current Answers;" Donald A. Glaser (Physics): "Bubble Chamber Holiday Performance of Ginna Sche- American Meterological Soc., South- eastern Michigan Branch. Prof. Sydney Chapman will speak on "Sunstorms and the Aurorae," Thurs., Dec. 19 at 8 p.m., in the Rackham Amphitheater. Re- freshments; everyone welcome. Concerts Annual Christmas Choir Concert, 8:3 p.m. Wed., Dec. 18, in Hill Auditorium, performde by the University Choir and the Michigan Singers, Maynard Klein, conductor. Bach's "Break Forth, O Beauteous Heavenly Light," Willan's "The Three Kings," Vittora's\"O Mag- num Mysterium," Palestrina's "Hode Christus natus est," Brahm's "O Ba,. viour, Throw the Heavens Wide" "Sing Ye to the Lord," and Verdi's "Te (Continued on Page 5) I I INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Kohler of Wisconsin U . I By SAUL PETT By The Associated-Press SI#EBOYGAN, Wis. - After 3 12 years, the sound and fury of the country's longest major strike have subsided into a quiet war of mimeograph machines. Each side of the strike at the Kohler Co., makers of bathroom fixtures, continues to roll out opposing statements. But the violence-the shouting, the slugging, smashing of windows and splattering of paint on private homes-has long since banished. What remains, among people directly affect- ed, is hate-deep, abiding, stone hate. BUT EVEN HATE has gone underground. After so long a time, it becomes pointless to call your neighbor names, to paint "scab" on his sidewalk, to spit as he goes by. You have not moved him, he has not moved you. So you just don't talk and you go on, hating each other-across 30 feet of lawn., Even now, 43 months later, some marriages continue to break up in Sheboygan because of the strike, and this in a generally religious, stolid community where divorce is not taken lightly. Even now, 43 months later, brothers who split over the strike still dn't talk, don't recognize each other on the street. Editorial Staff PETER ECKSTEIN. Editor JAMES ELSMAN, JR. VERNON NAHRGANG Editorial Director City Editor DONNA HANSON' ............... Personnel Director TAMMY MORRISON..............Magazine Editor EDWARD GERULDSEN .. Associate Editorial Director WILLIAM HANEY...Features Editor ROSE PERJBERG ................. Activities Editor CAROL PRINS ........ Associate Personnel Director JAMES BAAD ............................ Sports Editor BRUCE, BENNETT........... Associate Sports Editor JOHN HILLYER...........Associate Sports Editor CHARLES CURTISS...........Chief Photographer Few people now discuss the strike. Most try to forget it-with varying success. For obvious business reasons, merchants and town boosters shudder every time the national spotlight focuses on Sheboygan as a strike-torn town and study in human tragedy. BUT THE SPOTLIGHT is swinging back. Early in Janury, the Senate Rackets Com- mittee is expected to take up the dispute, the early violence, the national boycott of Kohler products by the United Automobile Workers. The company, the town's biggest single em- ployer, continues to operate with men who never favored the strike, with strikers who weakened and went back, with outsiders who moved into town or commute from other communities. Most of the other strikers now work elsewhere-in furniture or toy or enamel- ware plants in Sheboygan, in breweries or steel plants in Milwaukee, 60 miles away. Many have moved out of the state completely. But the strike goes on and so does life, in Sheboygan. To the visitor, it appears no differ- ent from many towns in the Midwest. Its 45,000 people are mostly of German and Slovak ancestry. Located on the west shore of Lake Michigan, the town is rich in elms. Its streets are wide, clean, unhurried. It is a friendly town. Economically, the' town seems to have boun- ced back from 1954, when the Kohler plant was shut down for 54 days by mass picketing. But no major new industry has been attracted to Sheboygan in the. past three years, probaly because of the strike publicity. Various efforts have been made locally to counteract that publicity. The physical signs of stike are now few. At the Kohler plant, three miles from town, there's only token picketing. Much of the time the pickets leave their sign standing unmanned at the gate and retire to a car to play a Teutonic card game, "schafskopf." In town, the UAW maintains strike head- quarters over Klein's clothing store, directs ' LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: 'Eliminate Letter Grades' Q Grading s*"* To the Editor: THE PRESENT grading- setup used at the University is the point system. This system evaluates the stu- dent's' achievements by assigning to him a prescribed number of points per course hour. These points are derived from letter, grades which the student receives from his instructor. These letter grades are, in turn, derived from the average of the numerical scores which the student receives on his exams. If this sequence is examined it may be observed that the final grade a student receives is a num- ber - from a letter - from a number. An obvious inference is to eliminate the letter grade entirely. Another suggestion might be an extension of the present system, e.g., place everyone with a 2.5 or better into category "X" and those below 2.5 into "Y". Then our grades could go from a number to a letter to a number to a letter ... This would also save the poorer students considerable to smother the question of alco- holic regulations in a wet blanket of pedogogical pacifism. While I entirely disagree with Mr. Beebe's solution to the drink- ing regulations at Michigan, I ad- mire him for having the guts to take a stand on the problem. The dignified silence advocated by Mr. Andrews, would be of littledvalue in the mutual exchange of ideas and opinions which is the only means by which progress is ever realized. Consequently, while I and those few unenlightened students who drink are relaxing at the P-Bell in the peculiar light reserved for those who discuss controversial matters, I trust Mr. Andrews will be functioning his mature judg- .ment in the Arboretum with the rest of the campus trees, who if not particularly neat, are at least as stable as he could wish. -Jim Clabault, '60L Misleading? ,,, To the Editor: THE ARTICLE published today, (Tuesday) publicizing the spe- cial study made for President Miss Holtzer and The Daily are entitled, of course, to evaluate this study as they please; how- ever, both in the light of the ac- tual phrasing of the university re- lease, and in the light of our own experience in visiting high schools on accreditation visits, we must disagree with this evaluation. There is a lack in high school mathematics, not only in the number of advanced courses of- fered, but in the quality and con- tent of those courses which are of- fered. To imply otherwise is to do a disservice to those who are work- ing to improve mathematical in- struction in the high schools. -Prof. R. K. Ritt --Prof. N. D. Kazarinoff --Prof. A. J. Lohwater Department of Mathematics (Editor's Note: The lead paragraph of the story in question ("Survey Shows No Lack In Math, Science Fields;" Dec. 17, pg. two) was a para- phrase of a portion of a University News Service release which read: "Mathematics and science are well represented in the curricula of 668 Michigan high schools accredited by the University of Michigan. "Each of the following subjects is }f l LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler t r I.p '-4* .~ Is l ij'I t 1*. , r v; ii , - .. /