"4r fulrhigatt Dai Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UtNWERSTY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBCrCATIONs STUDENT PUBUICATIONS BLDG. ANN ARBOR, MIcH. " Phone NO 2-32412 "How About This-Will You Agree To Admit Inspectors If They Don't Bring In Any Books?" "When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" NUC~LEAR TEST JBAN LTALKS Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: LANE VANDERSLICE I" I AT LYDIA MENDELSSOHN: Promising Season Begins in 'Wilderness' A LTHOUGH THE speech department's first production of the 1958- 59 season is set in 1906, there is something more than faintly mod- ern in "Ah Wilderness." Eugene O'Neill's sitting room comedy which opened last night at Lydia Mendelssohn might almost be considered the forerunner of some of the family comedies offeredafrom time to time on television. The situation and many ingredients are there, including the "modern" family concern with the problems, naturally romantic, of teenagers. But more important in "Ah Wilderness." O'Neill's only comedy which was written oddly enough during the depression years, are the I 1 9 I Defeat of 'Work' Laws: An Unfortunate Decision 1N E _ xz . f x lp" % t [UESDAY, VOTERS turned down right-to- work laws in five of the six states in which they were up for judgement by the electorate. Only in Kansas, a relatively unindustrial state, did the law succeed. In such states as Ohio, Washington and California, right-to-work failed by 3-2 margins, and Republicans who supported the measures in the campaigns went down to defeat. Right-to-work laws ban the union shop, and are now on the books of 19 states. These laws say that a man need not join the union after being hired by a business concern. Organized labor, of course, objects to this proposition, primarily because it costs them members. However, right-to-work laws are not only desirable but necessary. Labor is no longer being exploited by big business; some, in fact, feel the reverse is the case. Unions with large strike funds can beat any competitive firm with its investments in equipment and its market positions to maintain. The only notable excep- tion to this in recent years has been the effec- tive strike-breaking action by the Kohler Com- pany, which is still operating without union members. Union, if not in the driver's seat, are at least equal in power to management. THE QUESTION arises: are unions outdated? The unions themselves apparently think so, They fight the right-to-work laws which would end their monopoly on labor. A man hired in a state without a right-to-work law must join the union within a specified time to hold his Job, according to most contracts., Why, except for fear of losing many members would the union fight such laws? If, indeed, union mem- bership would drop substantially with a right- Sugga ion R TONIGHT THERE will be a pep rally at which it is generally hoped that spirit for the Illinois game will be built up to a fever pitch. There will be music by the band, speeches by men with their trouser legs rolled up to the knees, a bonfire and possibly a panty raid. On Saturday, however, the student cheering will be much the same as it has been, all year-- inferior when compared to some large schools in the state. There are a good many reasons for this lack of coordinated enthusiasm-some of them in- herent in the nature of the University and some which could be changed. But still there is much room for improvement. First of all, it must be borne in mind that with 23,000 students on campus there is bound to be a certain amount of lethargy. On the other hand the rather obscure set of traditions are definitely in the path of the spirit sup- posedly missing on this campus, The areas in which improvements could be made are cheers, cheer-leading and the Block-M, THE CHEERS--traditional though they may be-are ridiculous and out-modea. Take the Michigan locomotive cheer; after. spelling out M-I-C-H-T-G-A-N a number of times the natural ending of the cheer should be to shout "Michigan" at least once. Instead of this, the cheer ends with an absent-minded "yeah" to-work law perhaps the unions are propagat- ing themselves unfairly. Preventing manage- ment from keeping on the job whomever they wish, regardless of union affiliation, is beneficial to unions in terms of membership and dues. But detrimental to management in that they do not have free choice in hiring, and also to the rare workman who has moral reservations about joining a union. If right-to-work laws would rid the country of unions which do not have popular support among workers,' they are serving a Valuable function. If unions are afraid to continue with- out guarantees of total membership among workmen, the situation must be that they are ngt offering all they should to the working man. If a drop in membership would be the result of right-to-work, unions might be forced to make, necessary reforms to hold their members. PERHAPS THE CONCEPT of the union itself is outdated; management has been educated out of exp.iting the workman, but unions, now that serious grievances have been settled must find new outlets for their energies. These take the form of politics or "sharing" company profits to which they have no claim. Voters in five states made a serious mistake In voting down right-to-work laws. Labor, its big membership assured, can rest easy for a few years, avoiding the challenge of modern eco- nomics and attempting to gain the entire profits "pie." One day voters, including union mem- b ers, will wise up, 'or more improbably, unions will shape up and not fear to meet individuals in the labor market on equal terms. -ROBERT JUNKER S forSii which always seems to get lost somehow. Michi- gan does not need a number of intellectually peculiar cheers, but four or six simple, logical cheers that everyone knows and understands. Also, there should be some system to tell the entire student section when a cheer is about to begin. Hand megaphones are nice for small audiences but in a 101,101-capacity stadium the sound tends to become lost beyond the first 30 rows or so. There seems to be no reason why a low-power public address system could not be employed by the cheer leaders. LASTLY THE BLOCK "M" should perform more as a cheering section and less as the rather useless card-flashing group it is now. With the present seating arrangements the cards are invisible to the television cameras as well as the students and has no present value. At present, Block M receives unusually good seats for students and in turn they should be doing something worthwhile, such as providing a strong nucleus for student cheering. It is an accepted theory that student cheering helps team morale. If the students are inter- ested in seeing the team win they should be able to give them vocal support. These changes are so elementary that the change-over could come in a week and form an effective cheering section instead of the half-hearted, lethargic group it now is. -PHILIP MUNCK 0000000 x - f "' ' ' qo y '-- V " '" t e_ hi' 2 .''_.tZ+ ~l s r4...c~cZ b'~a -. - I SGC IN REVIEW- Council Role, Leadership in Doubt By THOMAS TURNER Daily Staff Writer STUDENT Government Council President Maynard Goldman has withdrawn from next week's election, the second officer not seeking re-election. In so doing he has brought upon himself much criticism. One faculty member, for example, is said to have devoted 10 minutes of class time yesterday to blast- ing Goldman's decision. This criticism can broadly be divided into two categories: that directed to Goldman's personal motives and that concerning the position in which his withdrawal leaves the Council. THE PERSONAL has been by and large unfair, since it pre- sumes on the part of the critic a fuller understanding of those motives than most outsiders could claim. Goldman has been subject to the personaldinvolvement with the successes and failures of the group which any organization head feels. And the prominence of SGC and his own personality have com- bined to produce what Goldman characterized Wednesday night as "loss of individuality." Thus his withdrawal need not be interpreted as meaning that Goldman felt the jurisdictional dispute with the administration had dealt SGC its death blow. More fair is the view that he as an individual felt he could no longer be an effective Council leader following the recent events. Goldman's withdrawal differs largely in time from the decision of Executive Vice-President Dan Belin not to run. Both are plan- ning to enter law school, for ex- ample, and must consider the ef- fect of grades on scholarship aid. Belin's decision two weeks ago could not be based on definite knowledge that Goldman would be around for another semester, and had their roles been re- versed, the same results seem likely. But once Goldman has with- drawn, SGC is faced with a double problem: what role should it play in the future, and who is to lead it in this role? It is obvious that regardless of whether or not it is right for the administration to say SGC has "concurrent jurisdiction" when it had once given the impression the jurisdiction was complete, the ad- ministration has spoken. And as a result, SGC hasn't the power it thought it had. , , ," COUNCIL members have ob- viously been giving this a lot, of thought. At Wednesday night's members time following the regu- lar meeting, David Kessel outlined the choices for the future. Either the Council must learn- to sit down with the administra- tion and work out action with them, Kessel said, or it must con- cern itself with representing stu- dent opinion and thus act as an "outside pressure group." As personally "detestable" as the notion of sitting down for dis- cussion and cooperation with some administrators is, Kessel contin- ued, this seemed to him the proper course. Since all SGC power must come from the administration, unless the Regents specify other- wise, it would be wise to work with the administration, earning its confidence and regaining the "lost" power. SGC knows now that the ad- ministration, for a variety of mo- tives no doubt, had been letting them go around for four years with a B-B gun labeled Browning Automatic Rifle. Just as the Council will have to show some enthusiasm for student govern- ment in its cooperation with the administration, the administra- tion will have to show a little "good faith" in SGC in these co- operative dealings, which as the members will ultimately all agree, are necessary. Such is the path SGC will ap- parently have to take in its come- back, if there is to be a comeback. And the second question looms large: who is to lead the group? Two members of the executive committee, President Goldman and Executive Vice-President Belin, are not seeking re-election. * * *' THUS A President will have to be selected, once elections are over, from Administrative Vice- President Jo Hardee, Treasurer Mort Wise, members Fred Merrill, Rger Seasonwein, Scott Chrysler, Kessel, and Sue Rockne if she is re-elected, plus any new members who may be elected Tuesday and Wednesday. The problem is even more acute if viewed from long-range, since Wise, Merrill and Chrysler are seniors and Kessel is a graduate student. So the electorate has a greater responsibility than ever to elect good people if student government is to survive at all. elements, especially fire-water, contained in his other, less relaxed works. This time, however, it is the son who gets drunk, and Phil Smith brings both the necessary youthful looks andair of wistful- ness to the role of Richard Miller, high school senior with a love problem. "I'm a cynic," Richard declares early in the play. But O'Neill often borders on the brink of sentimentality to show the contrary and Smith, in his gen- erally skillful portrayal, keeps his feet on the ground while he shows his heart Isn't. Especially effec- tive are the contrasting scenes, one in a bar with a B-girl named Belle, played to the hilt, even to an obnoxious accent by Estelle Ginn, and the secret meeting in the moonlight with his true love Muriel McComber, a "nice girl" role nicely handled by Janet Kosse. *C « C BUT PERHAPS some of the most effective lines in the soft shoe rather than rapid patter comedy are handled by Howard Green. The veteran of numerous Speech Department productions again shows his versatility, this time playing Nat Miller, who as father, must cope with son Rich- ard's mild rebellion. Most of the characterizations, like the play itself are rather styl- ized and frothy, but the rest of the cast all provide solid backing. Sympathy for young Richard, the broken-hearted, and more laughs for the audience come from Uncle Sid Davis, a good-for-nothing, played with effective timing by Donald Ewing. The expected motherly mushyness is adequate- ly offered by Elizabeth Robertson as Mrs. Miller and Ruth Heller provides the proper innocuousness to the part of Aunt Lilly, who broke her engagement to the un- reformed Sid some 17 years ago. With the direction of Jack Bender and settings by Ralph Duckwall, Jr., "Ah Wilderness" offers not only good entertain- ment in itself, but also the prom- ise of a fine Speech Department season. -Michael Kraft F DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN frm 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, I FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1958 VOL. LXIX, NO. 45 General Notices Summary of Action taken by Student Government Council at its meeting Nov. 5, 1958. Approved8minutes of previous meet- ing. Approved activities as follows: Nov. 5, Muslim Student Association, program, Angel Mall, Aud. A. (Inter- im action) (Continued on Page 8) LETTERS to the EDITOR Sensitive .. . To the Editor: ON BEHALF of the men of Gomberg House, we should like to correct some serious misinfor- mation and slanted implications found in Wednesday's Daily ar- ticle, "Final Totals In: Students Elect to Study" In this, article, the author, Lane Vanderslce, tries to show Michigan students as shamefully occupied with trivia during a history-making event, using a Gomberg activity as part of his "proof." Mr. Vanderslice wrote, that dur- ing a national election, "'Raunch Night' took most of the 170 men of Gomberg House down to the basement of South Quadrangle to shout approval at a parody bur- lesque show." This statement is j3ypical of the crude slanting of the article. The implication given by Mr. Vanderslice was that Gom- berg men were wasting their time in riotous living instead of taking their duties as citizens seriously. A further implication was that their activities were typical of .the way Michigan students ignored, something important for trivial things. We should like to correct those Implications with these facts: 1) The Gomberg men assembled not for "Raunch Night" but for their annual "Skit Nite." The parody burlesque show was only one of five skits presented by the four wing groups and the staff. This event, which is only one of many held by this very active house, was a stag event, but there was as much intelligent wit as ribaldry. 2) The Skit Nite only lasted a little under an hour. It was over before 10:30 p.m., long before the election results could be called definitive. 3) The election was one of the biggest discussion topics in Gom- berg House before .,the Skit Nite, after it, and at breakfast the next morning. Many men followed the returns late into the night, and most discussions turned to the election. The statement about Gomberg's Skit Nite was only one of a list of statements intended to show the political apathy of Michigan students. Surely this is a serious charge, and should be made only after a serious study of the facts, It seems that instead of basing his conclusions on a serious study of sufficient factual evidence, Mr. Vanderslice carefully chose and interpreted evidence to support a conclusion made a priori. As a group who suffered from this slanting, we are glad of the op- portunity to establish the facts, though we regret the necessity of doing so. -Robert Snyder, President -John Jeandrevin, Resident Advisor (EDITOR'S NOTE: Mr. Vandersice, is a former .resident of Gomberg House.) Ikie Loses Friends, Alienates People PRESIDENT Dwight D. Eisenhower, like a small boy who has just been cleaned out in a game of marbles, has reacted to Tuesday's Democratic landslide in a characteristically (soreheaded) fashion that may possibly have cost him a large measure of Congressional support. In a bitter statement at Wednesday's press conference, the President curiously lashed out at the voters themselves for "obviously voting for the people I would class among the spend- ers." He went on to pledge that "for the next two years . . . I am going to fight as hard as I know how against excessive spending." The peculiar twist that caused him to pledge himself to oppose the 'obvious" wishes of the voters apparently went unnoticed. The possi- bility that the majority of the nation really wants more government spending, as a pos- sible aid to halting the recession, just as evi- dently escaped him. (71b4r Sirljan .#1 BUT PERHAPS even more damaging, at least to the President's other policies, is the ef- feet such a statement will undoubtedly have on the "spenders" when they next assemble in Washington. It is the height of the ridiculous for a Presi- dent to lash out against his newly-elected Con- gress even before it has begun to function. It is even more absurd for President Eisenhower to do so under c'urrent circumstances. Perhaps more than any other President, Eisenhower must rely heavily on the opposi- tion party's support for his programs. Given a solidly Democratic Congress, given the hostili- ty of a large Republican faction, and given the declining influence of an outgoing Presi. dent, Eisenhower is faced with the possibility of complete repudiation of his entire program. LIFE UNDER the twenty-second amendment will most likely not be pleasant for Presi- dent Eisenhower. Yet he must live under it for the next two years, with less and less con- trol over his own party as the GOP turns its back on him to face 1960.rss Many times before this, President Eisen- hower has had trouble lining his whole party up behind him. Often, for one or another por- tion of his program, he has had to turn to the Democratic party for added support, evenj with a Congress containing more Republicans. Faced now with a decimated party, he will be literally forced to gain Democratic approv- al for any legislation he wishes to have passed, And he has in one short speech managed to antagonize nearly all of those he needs. If, during the coming Congressional session, President Eisenhower happens to blame leis- lative defeats on Democratic opposition, he will have to blame them on himself as well. -SUSAN HOLTZER UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO: College Football Enters Political Arena EDITOR'S NOTE: The University of Chicago has had a controversial subject before it these past few weeks. It seems that Bill Stern, sportscaster, not only charged that Chicago and several other schools wvere "hotbeds of Conmmunism," but said that the primary reason for their being so was that the schools didn't have football teams. An article on Stern's October 6 broadcast, and the University of Chicago's reply to his thesis, ap- pears below. Challenge . . "COMMUNISM has flourished in American colleges, largely in certain big Eastern institutions and at the University of Chicago," said Bill Stern, noted sports an- nouncer in a broadcast on Octo- ber 6. "Rather than just another pro- gram tonight that discusses to- day's World Series game, I'd like to talk about something this eve- ning that everybody else is not discussing," Stern ventured, "DO YOU THINK there is any connection between communism and college football? Probably not. I do, I think there's a strong con- nection between big time college football and communism. Eastern universitieg s rh a college football completely or they have de-emphasized it to such a degree that the students no longer support it? "Now perhaps this is all a mere coincidence, but I don't think it is. "I believe," he added, "that if you give the students some way of letting off steam, such as big time college football games on Saturday afternoon, they will not have time to seek other means of letting off that steam. Youngsters have a lot of pent-up emotions. They love to yell, they love to make a lot of noise. Football gives them this opportunity. They can go out to their stadiums and yell their heads off. "OR IF YOU take football away from them, as has happened in Chicago, CONY, NYU and to a degree at Harvard, these same youngsters will then look for an- other way of making noise,'* Stern remarked. "In many cases too many of them have turned to communism. Here they can rant and they can rave, working off the excess emotions that football would be using up on Saturday. How mucnh btter t+o sri+the And Reply MR. STERN IS not the first uninformed individual to call a great center of learning "com- munist" - although putting the blame on a "de-emphasized" foot- ball program is a new one to us. Indeed a great free university is not a place where a reasonable man would expect to find com- munists because the life of such a university is freedom of thought and expression which is just what Communism cannot practice or tolerate. As the late Robert Redfield so eloquently expressed on the six- tieth anniversary of the Univer- sity in a speech entitled "The dan- gerous duty of the University," a reputation for "dangerous radi- calism" is an evidence that the University is doing its duty. It shows that the University is en- gaged i defending the very liber- ties which its detractors believe it to be endangering. '*'* C "I WOULD go so far as to say that if the University were not from time to time accused of dangerous thoughts its professors could not then be doing their duty act. The unswerving faith that truth may be approached by the exchange of idea and the test of fact. An exaltation of the im- portance, both as means and an end in itself, of freedom of thought and speech. A willingness to listen to the man with an idea opposed to one's own. A disposition to attribute reasonableness to the other fellow. "...-These virtues of the mind are values of the general com- munity. These goods are part of 'the American way.' . . . Of all freedoms this University is proud- est of freedom of the mind. And it is in the University, above all places, where this freedom is most consistently exercised." * * C - FREEDOM OF discussion the appeal to the evidence and the persuasion of reason, the deliber- ate effort to listen to unconven- tional ideas or heterodox theories -these are the ambient of the University. 8o it is especially in th'e University that this important part of the common values is cul- tivated and preserved from tyr- anny, from cowardice and from iorn fnnnn believed to be said and thought there. The fears of people create that mythical radical with the mortarboard cap. So it comes about that in the very course of defending by its exercise the freedom of thought which stands high in the values of the whole community, the Uni- versity comes to be regarded by some part of that community as a hot-bed of dangerous radical- ism, a hiding place of pernicious communists. THE UNIVERSITY is not to be deterred from speaking out for freedoms by the fact that it will be misunderstood and criticised. Ii the university continues to do its duty, some people will con- tinue to regard it as dangerous. . . . but the reputation of this university for dangerous radical- ism is falsely but honorably earn- ed. It is unfortunate that the Uni- versity is wrongly suspected. It would be worse if it were not sus- pected at all. For if everything that university people did were acceptable to all influential seg- ments of public opinion, the Uni- versity would be failing its duty. .4 Editorial Staff RICHARD TAUB, Editor MICHAEL KRAPT JO Editorial Director >4 HN WEICHER City Editor DAVID TARR Associate Editor L CANTOR .. ... Personnel Director AN WILLOUOGBY . ,,...,Associate Editorial Drector ATA JORGENSON Associate City Editor [ZABETH ERSKINE....Associate Personnel Director AN JONES.A ----.-..... .. Sports Editor ,RL RISEM"AN...,.,,, ,,,..Associate Sports Editor COLEMANA..........Associate Sports Editor VID ARNOLD...,.,...... Chief Photographer Business Staff STEPHEN TOPOL, Business Manager