Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNTVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PuBuCATIONs BLDG. 0 ANN ARBOR, MICH. 0 Phone NO 2.3241 nOvpinions Are Free -uth Will Prevail" ditorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. DAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS TURNER "Oh, Well-We'ce Got Two Years To Explain That We Were Only Kidding" - ... ....w - 1- 6 00 C OFFEE... BLACK On6G ET'S TRY TO BE reasonable. Now that the sound and fury over the gambling "scan- al" of the past week has, died down, some rt Af evaluation must be made. "Right" answers to this kind of problem nnot be found by running a set of index rds through an IBM machine, and the an- ver is not found either by grinding anybody's )cial set of axes. When the story broke last Wednesday that ven University students were picked up for leged involvement in a parley card ring, udent reaction split quite clearly (This does ot count those who don't care either way). ne group, the more vocal one, was out to A Barton Huthwaite and Philip Munck, the porters who worked with the police, because iey were "dirty squealers," disloyal to the niversity because they blackened its name, lc "anyway everybody does it; it's not im- ioal, it's just against the law." The other side sed this opportunity to "prove what they knew 1 along;" that athletics were a dirty busi- ess, had no place in a great University or erhaps the wrong place, and anyway, "Who o these athletes think they are?" ) COURSE, neither side has the answer; we'd submit it as somewhere in between nd, in fact, that both groups are missing the By Richard Taub rambling * t people should be angry at two young who worked with the police to help en- a law strikes us as somewhat beyond be- Frther, it is quite clear that these men a working within a journalistic tradition ' has the support to some degree or other o finest newspapers In the land: The New i Times, The St. Louis Post Dispatch, just me a couple. This tradition holds that a aper is a public trust and is responsible e public welfare. is "dirty squealer" business is apparently T carry-over from childhood, when we are t is bad "to tell on" somebody And the rsity's reputation has not been blackened 1 time; it may be hurt for a few weeks, n fact, we suspect that the University's tion is built of firm enough stuff so that injured scarcely at all: publicity or no E THE PROBLEM does become a bit mplicated. The whole business was not ed as well as it should have been. The t rsity sh ld have been brought in at a s earlieEoe, and perhaps the situation u have been handled with a good deal less and considerably more light. And unfor- ely too, probably some people were caught 1hould not have been and other were not t who should have been. Finally, experi- reporters generally keep their names out e newspapers. But this is rather weak ds on which to hang two reporters in or to make unpleasant telephone calls r tening them within an inch of their lives. Oes, however, suggest some interesting rs a hant thekinds of people who are in* e K--M -pari~ey cards. " here is the attempt to avert- sponsibility from the people were picked up. One reaction is to blame whole thing on "professional gamblers," the other is to blame It on Huthwaite and, nck. Yet, three University students have ady pleaded guilty to the charge of "ille- occupation,' and-the answer that every- y does it is no justification at all. "Every- 'discriminates" in the South, and logical- To The Ewitor ly, following the above argument, we should do nothing about it. Few people believe that. Second, we fail to see any clear cut distinc- tion between illegal and immoral activity. Third, a distinction can be made between gambling for profit, the profit of large syndi- cates and the kind where everybody in the same office chips in some money to a betting pool to see who wins, or for that matter a bet be- tween friends. Here we need not go into the uses to which syndicate money may be put; we just have to be aware that professionals are in the business to make money, and they make a living by violating the law.- And there is even a moral question about doing business with people who live by breaking the law. TH{ISLEADS to a final point, and this has to do with the athletes involved. If they are guilty, and they may not be, the one may be and the other not, they are the ones who are disloyal. They are the ones who are re- sponsible for the front page headlines all over the nation - newspapers are not concerned with ordinary students, and even with the two athletes, the Detroit newspapers have sheepish- ly retreated to playing the story on inside pages after they discovered how much they distorted the situation. But all the same H. O. (Fritz) Crisler, had the right idea when he said, "The University of Michigan expects its athletes to remain above all suspicion, neces- sarily maintaining even higher standards of conduct than expected of students generally." The athletics department has looked on its program as a "showcase" for the University. Last year in a statement to The Daily, Prof. Marcus Plant, faculty representative to the Big Ten Conference and a member of the Board in Control of Inter-Collegiate Athletics, said "That Inter-Collegiate athletics give the University an opportunity to present its fine student citizens to the public in terms it can understand." It then goes without saying that it is the athletes, if they are guilty, who have sold the University short. In fact, it is pretty clear that the students involved are those re- sponsible for giving the University a black eye. HOWEVER, those on the other side; those who have used this story to knock down athletics are equally in the wrong. We too feel tlat athletics have gotten somewhere beyond what they should be on the University campus --but certainly betting on or distribution of parley cards has no relevance for the situation. Parley cards and other forms of syndicate betting take place on big campuses and little campuses, on campuses with big football, or campuses with little or no football, which serves not to indicate how horrible sports are, but rather how interested people are in them and in betting on them. THE UNFORTUNATE factor in the entire scandal was the way it was blown way out of proportion, and this seems to be related to the facts of circulation life which govern not only the papers in Detroit, but all over the nation. They appear to be involved in a life and death struggle, and frequently don't care who goes under. However, although parley card distribution on campus is a crime, it is not a serious one. It would be hoped that students would not have to pay for one youthful error with thie rest of their lives. Especially since there is a pretty clear-cut double or triple standard in our society concerning this matter. But this is a problem for tJhe Judge and a problem for the University. Certainly justice with 'mercy or "wisdom" is called for. f P W CAPITAL COMM' LiNTARY: Nixon Leprend Still Continues le d y WILLIAM S. WHITE %5J&T w~~ "~r - CURIOUSLY bittersweet legacies have come to Vice-President Richard M. Nixon from his vast exertions in the Congressional election campaign. He has so consolidated himself with the organizational Republi- cans that he is the undoubted head today of the GOP, in the place of President Dwight D. Eisenhower. This reality is freely accepted even by some memb frs of the Presi- dent's own Cabinet. But Mr. Nixon has also hardened - or rather' circumstances have hardened - a public view of him- self as a bitterly divisive politician that already had been rather wide- ly held. The first of his new inheritances -the practical acceptance of him throughout the party structure as "the boss," two years before Presi- dent Eisenhower is officially to bow out-is logical and only fair. It was Nixon who, for better or worse really directed the Republican campaign; it was Nixon who took the pressure and the heat. * * * * THE SECOND inheritance-the deepened image of the Vice-Presi- dent as only a dark and scowling guerrilla fighter-is not logical and not fair in the view of this column- ist, who is no uncritical Nixon admirer and never was. The Vice- President simply is the victim of an odd emotional process that bears little resemblance to the objective reality. The truth is that Nixon was a world away from the Nixon of the 1954 Congressional campaign. Then, he repeatedly dropped in- nuendoes suggesting that a very- large part of the Democratic party has a doubtful patriotism. It was vi n plain fact a mean, tough N 17, n then - quite mean enOuWgh F i n. tough enough, if never quite so ; I )ad as the Democrats claimed. This U me, however, he said nothing ; remotely of this sort. Rather, I1 e went out of his way to declare tA at there was no "party to treason n"a tve for the Communists. Indeed a nd here is the great irony - his reported words were not F my - 4 arper than those of the 1,tsidy at himself. And in some impo hant instances they were not even Ne noun one-' spee( a s sharp. vel rtheless, nobody has de- ca : the Eisenhower speeches ter th so mucn as the Nixon the s have been denounced. * * * NI X0 )N in 1954 was doing what the P-r 3sident did not care per- sonr ly to do--fighting for a Re- pul lica n Congress in behalf of the Pri 1ida nt's Administration. It has bef At . wnerally forgotten, but the Pr eside nt knew what was in those Ni xon~ speeches then. And repeat- er fly if d Aiunreservedly he praised ' ir, N on for them. In 958 the President himself V /as ta ing what Nixon was doing- rndls. ying words at least as harsh. Vixor 4 however, is the sole villain of,.,ba se who, because of outraged A ariAss n feeling or in simple dis- t kst e, , disliked this year's GOP t1ccicsr ,. - Wh; 'is this so? No strictly ra- tioni p j nd adequate explanation is , r ossible. True, Mr. Nixon had a b. Id record from four years ago ai id . to some, from the time he fhi st entered Congress in 1946. T ui , thei President's words were largely discounted by a public which sensed that he did not really mean them. But there are also these con- siderations: In 1954 at least Nixon was work- ing far more for President Eisen- hower than for himself-and in- deed he would have been this time had the President chosen to exer- cise his own traditional party lead- ership rather than hand it over to his junior.' The President was quite content to accept both the methods and the results of the Nixon campaigns -in both years. a * *a AND ,. . arguably at least-it surely would seem to be as bad to say harsh things and not mean them as to say them and mean them. Nothing measurable can ex- plain that words which are entire- ly permissible for the President are entirely impermissible for the Vice-President. The only answer to the riddle seems to be this: Nixon has become a cliche-figure to the Democratic and allied opposition just as Harry S. Truman was to the Republican and allied opposition. All legend to the contrary, Mr. Truman never said of the Republicans things as deeply wounding as Franklin Roosevelt said. Just as, in this campaign at any rate, Mr. Nixon has said nothing worse than Presi- dent Eisenhower. But when the Republicans seek to put a name to reckless ektrem- ism they automatically cry "Tru- man." And when the Democrats seek the same they automatically cry "Nixon." (Copyright, 1958, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Delusions To the Editor: Your name is Si Coleman and you're a columnist with delusions of grandeur. You've been reading Jimmy Cannon and you decide to try his style out on some Mid- western readers who have probably never read his column in the New York Post. Only you're not really as good as Connon and you'll never be able to capture the haunting imagery of his prose. But you try,. At a time when those members of The Daily staff need the support of everyone on the paper, you take it upon yourself to flex your half column muscles and castigate them. Perhaps you would rather have had the police expose this thing themselves and have the typical police press treatment given to the story. Perhaps you would rather have had the fact that Michigan students helped to break up the gambling ring that operated on their own campus deleted from the wires of the vari- ous press services. Or, perhaps you would be in favor of giving varsity letters for gambling. It is a wonderful exam- ple in Michigan's brand of "clean" athletics to have the captain of the basketball team and starting fullback of the football team to merely be implicated in this scan- dal. No high pressure recruiting of players but a well organized parley system is what this school can now boast about. It's not the fault of those "scandal-clamoring newspaper- men" that this story has hit front pages across the nation, Their job is to print the news as they find it; you're a journalist yourself, you should know that. Your reasoning indicates that you would attract newspapermen across the country for printing what they did about Melvin Nemer a month or so ago. No one asked for this publicity, it came about as a natural conse- quence of the actions of certain individuals. The whole thing is bad, Si. Both as a newspaperman and as a Micl). igan student, you should know that your column on Friday was, to say the least, in extremely bad taste. You name is Si Coleman and you're a columnist with delusions of grandeur. --David Droisen Disturbance . . To the Editor: Thursday evening at the VFW Hall on East Liberty Joseph Pirin- cin, the national organizer of the Socialist Labor Party, spoke on socialism. Throughout the talk a group of about ten students, sitting at the rear of the hall, heckled, clucked, and otherwise made sub- stantial fools of themselves. Per- haps Mr. Pircinin's logic was weak at times, and maybe he did over- state his case in a talk that seemed to be more designed for unem- ployed workers. But this is irrele- vant to the issue. Without re- verting to the worn platitudes of "freedom of speech," "Democracy," etc., one can still inquire as to the purpose of these ten enlightened creatures that led them to create an annoyance that was not only distracting to most of those who wanted to listen, but also became incitingly aggravating to a few people who finally walked out, no doubt feeling more kindly towards the much-maligned Socialist Party than towards the "students" who will some day enter the economy Mr. Pirincin was flouting with his enduring arguments. -Wells Gray Distress . . To the Editor: We are distressed by the attitude of the majority of students on this campus. Even in situations that are almost pure black and white, we note how often student opinion turns against the& people who are acting in the students' own inter- est. Earlier this month SOC tried to stand up to a patronizing adminis- tration although it realized that the majority of students did not care about Sigma Kappa or SG. Then it developed that powerful student pressure blocks joined with the administration to make a farce. of SOC and thus cripple the stu- dents' only bargaining organiza- tion. Now, the attitude expressed con- cerning the gambling expos is consistent with those expressed in the Sigma Kappa issue. Students want the administration to handle everything. They make a sacred cow of the administration (whe- ther it wants to be or not) because of its "vast experience." Since no strong student voice is heard in important matters, this weakness allows outside groups, motivated by self interest. to pres- sure the administration.However, if a student, or two, does take the initiative and speak out, he (or they) are silenced with epithets of "Quisling!" Is this the new spirit of democracy? If we had had a strong SOC -possibly the two students in ques- tion would have taken the evidence to it. And, presumably SOC would work with the administration in good faith. The fault does not lie with the two Daily reporters, but with the Michigan student body. Unfortunately we are getting what we deserve by our short sighted- ness. We suggest that a good victim for an effigy hanging would be a typical U of M student draped i ivy league uniform with its head buried in the sand, and a sign stating, "I prefer loyalty to integ- rity and justice." "I hold reputa- tion higher than truth." "I do not think anything is really important enough for me to act." "I always mind my own business, in spite of everything." "I advocate hundreds for gambling and pennies for World University Service." -Jame W. Hamilton -Torre Bissell -Liz Wright --Nan Marrel) Duty.... To the Editor: It requires many painful steps to build a reputation, it require but one faulty step for that repu- tation to fall-to crumble into oblivion. And that step was taken by a handful of students last Tues- day. "Two Michigan'Athletes Held in Gambling Ring" shouted one New York paper; and "... seven Upiversity of Michigan students were arraigned in a football pool scheme., ." reported at least one national TV network in a coast-to- coast broadcast. And so an institution regarded by all as a focal point of intellec- tual and physical prowess is pres- ently the subject of ridicule and scorn. But for a few lunatic fring- ers, the Michigan tradition would be untarnished; not it stands de- famed. We take no holier-than-thou position for that would be wholly unrealistic. We do take the position that the quick killing would better be made on the gridiron than off it; that profits would better be reaped) from a high score on the bluebook circuit than off the point spread gimmick, We take the position that wheth- er he knows it or not, the Michigan student, athlete ard scholar, owes a duty-a standard of conduct-to his school and his schoolmates. Last Tuesday this standard was breached to the derogation of school and schoolmate. The breachers must assume the risk of their foolhardiness. We shed no tears for them; we feel for. the institution from which we were proud to say we were graduated. --Robert M. Kaplan,'57LS&A -Davey Krasney'58E4 Dodge City. .. To the Editor: I WISH to call attention to the sad happenings which are oc. curring with alarming regularity at our central campus intersec- tion. The Diag, gentlemen, is com-a mencing to look like Dodge City after the vigilantes have made a sweep through town. Now, mind you, I'm not saying that some of the bodies floating in the breeze have not every right to be strung up, but, as Dean Bingley said, "Our p.r. is in one helluva shape." It is relatively cer- tain, I believe, that having bodies hanging from this tree is not the best means to gain favorable pub- licity for this great haven of knowledge, especially since they aren't real bodies. There is a second problem in- volved here, one of pressing im- port. The University is known world-wide for its creative, im- aginative students. Surely they could use some of this imagina- tion, this creativity in finding some more original, more effec- tive way to show their displeasure. Tar and feathers, voodoo dolls, etc.,., --L. L. Bridges, '60 Debate , . To the Editor: In reference to the YR-YD de- bate of Oct. 29, we would like to state that the Young Republicans were not advocating anti-union '. i I N GUBERNATORIAL ON TOP': Senate Cotte st Overshadowed 'Concurrent Jurisdiction' Threatens Student Government IA S concurrent jurisdiction? The ad- i ration, in the person of Vice-Presi- r Student Affairs James A. Lewis, now s e position that Student Government cilI nd the administration have "con- . ent jurisdiction" in recognizing student ps; as exemplified in Sigma Kappa. ds is a new doctrine. Nobody was talking t concurrent jurisdiction two years ago n SGC first found Sigma Kappa in viola- of University regulations; it was SGC's de- n under the SGC Plan. Now it is a joint ern, and SGC finds suddenly it doesn't the power it thought it had; indeed, it n't have the power it had two years ago, a it made precisely the same decision. ie nearest thing to a basis for the new ept can be found in the SGC Plan's state- t that Council authority is subject to ad- strative policy. Does administrative policy insist on concurrent jurisdiction where years ago it did not? If so, administrative y can easily become the loophole in the By means of the doctrine of administra- practice, one major responsibility of the icil has suddenly become circumscribed ply. other areas; the failure of the administration to specify before last week that recognition is a joint responsibility leaves it able to make the same specification in the future when the Council comes to consider other matters, thus progressively limiting the Council's powers. For the moment, however, the question is: what is concurrent jurisdiction? It apparently means that unless the administration agrees with an SGC decision concerning recognition, the decision has no force. Can the procedure be reversed - if SGC disagrees with a decision of the administration, is the decision null and void? This would appear to be next to impos- sible to work out in practice, since SOC is the group that would take public action; how then does concurrent jurisdiction work? IN THE PRESENT CASE, a hint is provided about procedures from Dean Bacon's com- ment that the administration would have act- ed against Sigma Kappa two years ago if SGC hadn't. Apart from the interesting ques- tions of what the administration would have done and whether a Board in Review meeting would have been called if SGC had found Sikrma Kappa NOT in violation, this would seem to make the point that SGC's authority By SUSAN HOLTZER Daily Staff Writer Perched on the coattails of the gubernatorial race, Michigan's contest for United States Senator skids to a decision at the polls today. Last minute predictions give Democrat Philip A. dart, retiring Lieutenant-Governor, a slim edge over Republican Sen. Charles E. Potter. But the final results, much like the prior campaigning, will probably be shaped by the over- shadowing battle for the Gover- nor's chair. Throughout the campaign, the two contests crossed and recrossed each other's paths, for the same issues were fought out on both levels. Chief among these is the state's economic situation, with each party trying to lay the blame on the other's doorstep. HAMMERING away at what they call the "Eisenhower reces- sion." both Hart and Gov. G. Mennen Williams attempted to place the responsibility in the hands of Republican policy-mak- ers in Washington. Potter, who is directly implicated by the attack, has siiftred a good dea~l from it. bitterly' 1a other unio n ously tried ,'. file work v brought.cl a labor legislo side ef !ect c placab le ar ibasting Reuther and leaders, he simultane- to win over rank-and- rs. Inevitably, this rge of zig-zagging on ation, along with the f organized labor's im- imosity. * . .* dous vote-getting popularity. With the senatorial candidates placed down in the seventh slot on the ballot, Hart has a decided advan- tage. If there is any truth in Pot- ter's charge that he is a "carbon copy" of the governor, Hart can very likely expect some of the popularity to rub through. HA1£ V, 01 THE other hand, is reaping . the- harvest of Gov. Wil- liams' sturdy friendship with the state's 'Unions, Added to the regu- lar pa rty fog es, labor's efficient organization ves the Democrats their ?ljvt ,able foundation in years. Repu blican s cannot offer Potter that so -t of a id. On the state level, the par Fy is si ;ill reeling from stun- ning de,!eat- that have deprived it of everr ma jor state-wide office except that. held by Potter. The Senatorial ra ce is crucial; if Potter loses, the* C Ip will hit bottom. The Senp ~ n knows this. Strong- er than 'is pt itrty, he has concen- trated Y ;is can ipaign on defense of his own .eiisla tive record and criti- cism of Mi.ich igan Democrats; he has steerad cl 'ar of the state GOP. * * . LITTLE J31 , LITTLE, however, Se ntmore Says . ''$. L I