FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1952 a- I top 4 tkte By CRAWFORD YOUNG Daily Managing Editor T HISWEEK students will have an oppor- tunity to express their opinion on the driving ban. It is hoped that they take advantage of this to express disapprobation of an obsolete and inoperable restriction. A glance at the record reveals that the driving ban was imposed in 1927 by Piesi- dent Clarence Little, after several deaths had resulted from some perhaps over-zealous student driving. At the time, there was tremendous protest on campus - students demonstrated in front of University Hall (on rollerskates). But since then, the dispute has for the most been the subject of occa- sional idle discussion. Many University administrators have come to feel that the rule is completely unenforcible, and should be removed or substantially modified.% This year in particular the rule has come to be almost a joke. The Ann Arbor police refuse to enforce it for the University, and will not stop a student on the suspicion that he may be driving a car illegally. And the University has never been able to muster enough police assistance to do more than make occasional spot arrests. Students are quick to sense and seize an opportunity to honor a rule in the breach -and many have made a career of flaunting the driving ban with great success. It is quite well-known that the University is un- able to enforce the rule-and full advantage, is taken of this inability. Even if the student wishes to abide by the "THE INDIVIDUAL'S religion may be ego- tistic, and those private realities which it keeps in touch with may be narrow enough; but at any rate it always remains infinitely less hollow and abstract, as far as it goes, than a science which prides it- self on taking no account of anything pri- vate at all." -William James rule, it has become increasingly possible to obtain a permit-over 3,000 have been issued this year. When the ban was origin- ally promulgated, there were no exceptions made-there have been gradual liberaliza- tions over the years. The upshot of it all is that any student who has a strong desire to keep a car on campus can do it-either legally or other- wise. The question arises whether the vast influx of cars predicted by apologists for the ban would materialize. It has been argued by those who would retain the status quo that the ban is demo- cratic, in keeping all students afoot. However, this point would seem negated by the inequity inherent in the existing regulation if unenforced. A premium is placed on dishonesty-those who disobey it Cave all the advantages of automobile transportation with an infinitesimal risk of apprehension, while those who obey find themselves cast in the role of a sucker. It would appear elemental that if the University wished to generate respect for those of its rules that are necessary and practicable, it should wipe from its books those that can be broken with impunity. The cause of democracy is'never furthered by unnecessary restrictions. As for the parking problem, it is just that. However, it has its own limits-if University parking lots are reserved, as now, for University personnel, students who are within walking distance will find the park- ing difficulties make it easier to walk to class; the others already drive. It is un- fortunate that the new Angell Hall Addition was not equipped with a basement garage; perhaps future buildings can be. But the driving ban's demise, it would seem to this observer, could not do much to worsen the present parking problem in Ann Arbor. In short, the driving ban is about ready to fall from its own weight. A resounding vote for its removal in this week's elections by the student body will speed it on its way into oblivion. Under the Shako THE LAST home football game of the year is always a sad event for the grad- uating senior. The list of sentimental "lasts" is always long and painful. Tops on this reporter's list is the final great appearance of a three year Michigan tradition, Drum Major Dick Smith. Prof. William D. Revelli's statement that Smittle is the nation's finest, merely lends support to the thousands of University stu- dents who have cheered him each Saturday for the past three years. Our appreciation of Dick Smith's ability and loyalty to Michigan becomes firmly grounded when we realize that Smittie's most outstanding quality is his modesty. The plaudits that go his way each week have not permitted his head to fill the large shako he proudly -wears. Besides his talent at baton twirling and his brilliant highstepping antics, Dick actu- ally seems to be the "captain" of the band, much as Tim Green captains the blue grid- ders. As a sterling representative of Michigan and a performer of outstanding talent, Dick Smith deserves our congratulations. May his outstanding career here be capped by becoming the only Michigan drum major to lead the band twice at Pasadena. --Harland Britz The City Editor's SCRATCH R PAD By BARNES CONNABLE DEMOCRATS APPARENTLY have more than a bluff up their sleeve in their in- timations that a recount in the Potter- Moody race may be forthcoming. Television viewers may recall the big dip in votes that Sen. Moody suffered suddenly during the original count while Gov. Wil- liams was holding his own. Election irregu- larities were definitely involved in Moody's defeat by Chicago-Tribune-supported Char- les Potter. It seems unlikely that state Republicans will throw in Fred Alger's towel hoping to avoid an embarassing second look at the senatorial race. State Democratic Chair- man Neil Staebler has indicated that the expensive recount may take place regard- less of GOP action in the tight guberna- torial contest. And Moody is reportedly sniffing out possibilities of a Senate in- vestigation of the affair with big Wash- ington datelines. Although chances of Moody's swinging enough votes to keep his job in a retabula- tion appear slim, a recount could provide good ammunition for the opposition when Michigan's senator-elect lays his interesting voting record before the populace six years hence. WASHINGTON COLUMNISTS are saying President-elect Eisenhower will turn back to his original supporters in guiding national policies for the next four years. Although Gov. Stevenson might have picked better men, this is certainly en- couraging speculation. But, cynical as an observer gets to be, it is sometimes a little difficult to forget the nature of Ike's campaign. Just a few months back the Hoffman crowd was warning the general to keep out of Wisconsin and Indiana but was over-ruled by Summerfield & Co. If the Republican ca- binet is dominated by the back-seat men of the campaign, the old political axiom may be here to stay in "high-level" politics: it takes one kind to win the election and another to write the record for the next one. " *a SOME TIME AGO, you may recall, stu- dents and townspeople got their sole oppor- tunity to hear Jack Dawson and George Meader debate the issues in the congression- al election. The meeting was thrown off-kilter by a foremer philosophy student named David Luce, who was seeking the seat on the Pro- gressive ticket. Luce's performance was characterized by time-consuming "reflec- tion" and unintelligent comment. As a re- sult, what would have been a worthwhile debate was killed. Luce, who was placed on probation last semester for misconduct before the Joint Judiciary, got on the program after a ser- ies of strange phone calls. First he con- tacted an official of Hillel, sponsor of the event, who hesitated to include him but said if Dawson and Meader agreed he couldn't object. Then Luce called Meader, said Hillel was ready and eager, and at the last minute put Dawson ton the the same spot. Having no quarrels with free speech, the two contest- ants gave reluctant consents. Luce also put in an eleventh-hour call to get in on a joint appearance at a local high school, but inasmuch as this program has also been set up far in advance, thumbs were put solidly down. One might expect, even from this party, a little maturity in fundamental decency. A PROGRESSIVE supporter gave us a ring the evening after the Robeson rally, said he was sampling opinion on the success of the affair. We told him probably the most symbolic event of the afternoon was when the Ameri- can flag came toppling to the floor of the stage. (He blamed the city for this.) Then we went on to register our amuse- ment at the Labor Youth League and its goon' squad who stood in the out-field in the hope some dramatic incident might move them to deeds of grandeur. (He said they were genuinely concerned with Robe- son's personal health.) We noted in passing that something should be done about presidential candi- date Hallinan's face.It just' wasn't convinc- ing. (They're very sincere people, he told us. Think of the careers they gave up to save America.) We finally reached a point of agreement, however. Although it's nothing like the old days, Robeson's voice is still a pleasure to listen to. Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writer only. This must be noted in all reprints. NIGHT EDITOR: ALICE BOGDONOFF "OBJECTI E EVIDENCE and certitude are doubtless very fine ideals to plav _ . , U; , ... _ .. r _ . . ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round with DREW PEARSON i . 'L ,' e!t F "// M 'CARf = \ S t _ ' 't d ( ( l i 1 .z..,, " !r , 6: : The Weeks News . . .IN RETROSPECT . . Local .. . Student Legislature candidates began their annual campaigning trek from house to house and residence hall to residence hall as the Nov. 18 and 19 election drew near. Patient occupants sat with poised forks and listened to the platforms of 37 candidates for the 23 posts open. Climax to all the activity will be Wednesday night, with the usual hectic Hare ballot-counting process in the Union ballroom. The Legislature hoped the campus would imitate the national election's record turnout. However, it will take more than 7,800 voters to break the record set last spring when 45 per cent of the campus trooped to the polls. Voters will not only select candiates in this election; they will also help determine the University's position on the driving ban by their votes on three referenda questions. HIGH FINANCE-President Harlan Hatcher said he would ask for a record operating budget for the 1953-54 fiscal year as part of the largest general expenditures fund ever drawn up by the University. The budget will be laid before the State Legislature's next session, and is now in the hands of the Budget Division of the Department of Administration at Lansing. The budget request tops last year's appropriation by more than three and a half million. CLOSE SHAVE-The campus Young Progressives feared loss of recognition, when the time for turning in their membership list drew near, and the group was still more than ten people short of the min- imum required for approval. However, by the en of the week, enough people had joined to push them over the bare necessity level. SCHOLARSHIP BIAS-The Student Legislature approved a a motion to ask the University hereafter to refuse any scholarship grants which must be awarded on the basis of race or religion. ARMCHAIR FANS-University Athletic Director Fritz Crisler proposed giving the "armchair football fans" eight games on tele- vision each Saturday instead of just one. The former coach suggested dividing the nation into eight districts, and letting the colleges in each district select one of their own games for televising every Saturday. -Diane Decker * * * * Caught in a cross-fire between Kremlin attacks and by a U.S. Senate Committee investigating subversive activities in the United Nations,-UN Secretary-General Trygve Lie submitted his resignation last week. As the rest of the world watched to see what the action would mean, some UN insiders speculated that Lie's action might possibly be a request for a vote of confidence, while others saw a note of finality in the Norwegian diplomat's action. Later in the week British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden set off a move to retain Lie in his position, but the Russian bloc appar- ently was happy to see the UN administrator go.. Barely had the furor over Lie's resignation died down when the UN once again was involved in headline stories as Abraham H. Feller, one of Lie's top assistants, plunged to death from his 12th floor apartment. Described as a "buffer man" between the UN and the federal probes of Communist activity among American personnel in the or- ganization, Feller had suffered a nervous breakdown several weeks ago. Citing the "great loss" suffered by the UN in Feller's death, Sec- retary-General Lie said the 47 year old legal expert had killed himself because of the strain of defending UN employees "against in- discriminate smears and exaggerated charges." On the same day of Feller's death, it was learned that Val Johnson, president of the University's literary college class of 1949 and a former Michigan track star, was under medical obser- vation in the psychiatric ward of New York's Bellevue Hospital. Johnson, a former United Nations employe in New York and Paris, was entered into the hospital after security officers reported that he had "created a disturbance" Wednesday in seeking an interview with Secretary-General Lie. NEW REGIME-President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower spent a busy week conferring with GOP leaders who hurried to Augusta, Ga., where the General was vacationing, to participate in top level dis- cussions of post-inauguration plans. Biggest announcement of the week was the appointment of defeated Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. of Massachusetts to the post of liaison man between Eisenhower and the executive depart- ments. Eisenhower also announced.that Detroit banker, Joseph Dodge, would represent him at the Budget Bureau in the interim before Jan- uary. Meanwhile, in Washington, tentative budget estimates for the fiscal year 1954 set up by President Truman and the Budget Bureau amounted to a giant ,$84 billion figure, just slightly less than last year's request, but far more than the $60 billion limit pledged by Ei- senhower. However, the General will get a chance to revise the figures. NIET-It began to look like a long, cold winter in Korea des- pite the hoped-for Eisenhower solution of the stalemate after his visit to the front. The USSR's Andrei Y. Vishinsky gave the tip-off "Well, It Looks As If We May Be Getting Rid Of Him" etteP'd TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. Chap N a ed Jill .,. To the Editor: THERE IS A CHAP named Will, Who at accounting has much skill, His 25th century accounting methods make us thrill, His 19th century political ideas make us ill, Of his poetry we have had our fill. -Herbert Klaff Robert Bloom Richard Weinstein Czech Students..,. To the Editor: O YOU remember November 17, 1939, the day on which the Nazis shot nine Czechoslovak stu- dents and sent thousands more to concentration camps? November 17 has become an international symbol of the fight for freedom against every kind of oppression of spiritual thought. It is known as International Students Day. The initiators of this movement, hav- ing managed to escape the Nazi bullets, were recently sentenced by the Communist regime in Czechoslovakia to many years of forced labour and even death. Consider the fate of the chair- man of former student prisoners in Nazi concentration camps, D. V. Jandecka. Students from all over the world who attended their first post-war World Congress in Prague, in 1945, elected him unan- imously as their chairman. Now Dr. Jandecka has been sentenced to imprisonment for 20 years. Communists, like Fascists, con- demn and murder those who stand for freedom and democra- cy. Total suppression of human rights and of all Christianity is threatening us, while the free world continues to allow itself to be fooled by adherents of a hos- tile ideology. -Milos F. Jilich, Member, Executive Com- mittee, National Union of Czechoslovak Studeits in Exile DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Lutheran Student Association. Mr. Theodore Markwood, lawyer in Toledo, Ohio, will speak on "Christian Stew- ardship" at 7 p.m. in the Student Center. Canterbury Club. Meeting at 6:45 p.m. will feature a film: "The Won- derful Life." Discussion by a special student panel will follow. Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club. Supper-program, 5:30 p.m. Dis- cussion i "Revised Standard version of the Bilble." Hillel. Tonight at 8 p.m. the Drama Group will present "Under-ground," a play based on a story by Peretz. This will be followed by an Israeli Dance program and group dancing. Graduate Outing Club meets at the rear entrance of the RackhamBuilding at 2 p.m. for hiking and games. Young Republicans. There will be a Board Meeting at 4 p.m. today, in The Kalamazoo Room of the League. All Club members may take part in this meeting. Congregational Disciples Guild. Meet- ing at the Congregational Church 7 to 8:30. Bob Zajonc, of the Social Psychol- ogy Department, will discuss group dynamics through role-playing with the group. Coming Events Engineers, Chemists, and Physicists. A group meeting at 7 p.m., Mon., Nov. 17, will be held in 1042 East Engineer- ing Building by representatives of the Humble Oil Company of Houston. Job opportunities in all phases of the pe- troleum industry will be discussed. Faculty Luncheon with The Very Rev. James A. Pike, Dean of the Cathe- dral of St. John the Divine, New York City, lecturer in the "This I Believe" series, Tues., Nov. 18, Michigan Union, 12:15 p.m. Phone reservations to Lane Hall by Monday noon. Volunteer Naval Research Reserve Unit 9-3. Meeting Mon., Nov. 17, 7:30 p.m., 2082 Natural Science Building. Professor Peter Smith, of the Chem- istry Department, will give an illus- trated lecture on New Zealand and sur- rounding islands. La P'tite Causette will meet tomor- row from 3:30 to 5 p.m. in the North. Cafeteria of the Michigan Union. Michigan Actuarial Club will meet Mon., Nov. 17 at 4 p.m. in Room 3-D of the Union. Mr. Joseph Reault will speak on "Problems of the Small Life Insurance Company." Deutscher Verein. Meeting, Tues., Nov. 18, in Room 3A Union, at 7:30. Singing of German Christmas carols. International Students Association. There will be a Council meeting Mon., Nov. 17, 7:30 p.m., Room 3-B, Michigan Union. The member organizations are hereby urged to send their delegates. Opera Ticets .. . To the Editor: I wish to protest against the favoritism which is being exhib- ited by many student officials of the Michigan Union with regard to Union Opera tickets. One of my friends is a Lambda Chi. He went down to the Uniont at 7:30 a m. on the first day that organizations could legally re- serve blocs of seats for the Opera, so that he could get good seats for his fraternity. He was the first person to apply for seats on that day. However, he was in- formed that thirteen other fra- ternities had already reserved blocs of seats! It seems that these fraternities had "connections" in the Union Executive Council. Con- sequently, my friend's fraternity had to accept a bloc of less de- sirable seats. As an independent I condemn this situation, for if this can hap- pen to organizations, then it can happen to individuals like my- self. This corruption is not fair to the student body as a whole. I de- mand an official investigation into this matter, and the removal of the guilty Union officials. Robert F. Shellow SL Reorganization.. To the Editor: M AKING THE campaign circuit with the other SL candidates, I've noticed that the main plank in almost each one's platform has been "SL must reorganize." I don't understand the fuss and fury. Each candidate must know that a group, composed of representa- tives from all the major campus organizations, has been set up to study the whole question of student government at Michigan. The very fact that this committee won't re- port until March is an indication that reorganization isn't a sub- ject which can be settled as soon as elections are over. Besides, I don't see how SL can be improved by tearing it down and starting over from scratch. Because we're elected from the campus at large, we at least con- stitutionally can represent stu- dent opinion better than any other campus organization. Perhaps as- suming that the legislators have the interests of the campus as a whole at heart because we are elected in this manner is too ideal- istic, but it certainly is much bet- ter than having an organization of interest groups. SL is far from perfect, but any reorganization should be an in- ternal one. The scope of its com- mittees should be broadened, the Administrative Wing improved, and most important of all, the legislators should be made more aware of their responsibility. Maybe this reorganization com- mittee will decide that a "super" government, embrading the League, Union, and other campus groups would represent the students bet- ter-ideally this would probably be true,- though I'm afraid that any organization would be hesitant about giving up any of its sover- eignity regardless of the benefit to the campus. But whatever the end result, the fact remains that students must be allowed to par- ticipate in shaping their own edu- cations. Until the opposite is prov- ed to me, I firmly believe that it is through the Student Legisla- ture that they can best do so. -Ruth Rossner 14g 4 1 . t 1 i WASHINGTON - Washington cliff-dwell- ers are twittering, twerking, and titil- lating. There is nothing they love more than a change of administrations, and since most of them are R'epublicans anyway, they are preening their social feathers, whetting their social axes, and getting ready for the Eisenhower administration as if it was to be the first rain after a 20-year drought on the social Sahara of Washington. Especially they are looking forward to Mamie. Frankly there are some misgivings about Mamie. For some of the cliff-dwellers remember, a little regretfully, how Mamie lived here all during the war with hardly a soul giving her a mere fare-thee-well. Mamie lived in an apartment at the Wardman Park Hotel with Ruth Butcher, wife of Commander Harry Butcher, naval aide to Eisenhower. They had a common sitting room, separate bedrooms, and lived as unobtrusively as hundreds of other army wives, of which the capital had a wartime surfeit. As far as the elite along Massachusetts Avenue and the cozy snuggeries of George- town were concerned, Mamie didn't exist. Even when her husband climbed the pin- nacle of military fame, no one bothered much, if any, about Mamie. Now, some of them are wondering if Mamie will-remember. Will she remember Books at the Library Cary, Joyce--PRISONER OF GRACE. New York, Harper & Bros., 1952. Davidson, Louis B.--CAPTAIN MARON- NER. By Louis B. Davidson and Eddie Do- herty. Introduction by William McFee. New York, Thomas Y. Crowell, 1952. and resent? Washington society has heard tales that Mamie has. changed since those war years. At Versailles, when she gave cocktail parties, so the ladies whisper, she tolerated no guest lower than the rank of Lieutenant General. Will she be uppity in the White House or will she hold out the olive branch to the Republican socialites so long starved during the era of those hard- drinking, poker-playing "how-are-ya-honey" Democrats? - BIG ATOMIC DECISION - One of the first things General Eisenhow- er and congress will have to decide after Jan. 20 is a question which a few years ago would have been considered a 21st- century, Buck Rogers problem-whether to let private industry in on atomic research and know-how. Eisenhower doesn't know it yet, but a secret vote was taken by the Atomic En- ergy Commission while the rest of the country was worrying about who was to be President, that the government's mon- opoly on atomic research should be aban- doned and its long-treasured information shared with private industry. This means that private utilities, such as gas and electric companies, would be given the secrets of government research, in order to develop their own atomic energy eventu- ally to replace coal, gas, oil, and water power. There is no intention to open up the secrets of the atomic bomb, though with the Russians having developed a bomb of their own, and with the British reputedly well caught up with us, even this may not be much of a secret. However, a majority of AEC members, after prolonged and solemn debate, voted that atomic industrial secrets should he f Sixty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Crawford Young.......Managing Editor Barnes Connable............City Editor Cal Samra..........Editorial Director Zander Hollander......Feature Editor Sid Klaus.......Associate City Editor Harland Britz........Associate Editor Donna Hendleman..Associate Editor Ed Whipple........ ......Sports lditor John Jenks...Associate Sports Editor Dick Sewell.Associate Sports Editor Lorraine Butler........Wowen's Editor Mary Jane Mills, Assoc. Women's Editor 4 I Business Staff Al Green...........Business Manager Milt Goetz.......Advertising Manager Diane Johnston....Assoc. Business Mgr. Judy Loehnberg ....,Finance Manager i i