Sixty-Sixth 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 "Let's Dig Up That Little Worm, Shall We?" Opinions Are Free, th Will Prevail Editorials printed in The Michigan 4Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or editors. This must be noted in all reprints.' AY, FEBRUARY 12, 1956 NIGHT EKITOR: MARY ANN THOMAS r -' .' b - . FT AA OD 0 TV REVIEW AND PREVIEW: 'Tonight' Fans Just Can't Get Enough By LARRY EINHORN Daily Television Writer ADMIRERS of the "Tonight" show will be able to focus their sleepy eyes on three more achievements of the show's stars this week. Ordinarily fans of this show have no trouble in obtaining an ele- gant sufficiency of entertainment from the "Tonight" gang. They can see seven and a half hours of "Tonight" weekly, read Steve Allen's books and listen to a few albums by Steve and the orchestra. But this week "Tonight's" constituency are really being treated royally. They can see Steve starring in "The Benny Goodman Story" at the movies, they can watch Gene Rayburn star in "Robert Mont-. gomery Presents" on Monday (9:30 p.m. - NBC) and they can see Steve star on "Kraft Television Theatre" on Wednesday 9:00 p.m. - NBC). * * *. * USUALLY the results of the ratings of shows coincide with the results of the critical analysis of shows. Occasionally there is some Two Issues: Praise For Driving Modification; Hockey Ruling Puzzling rWO VACATION occurrences need editorial comment as we swing into another 15- reek semester. The first is of definitely laudatory nature. t may have resulted from the new University philosophy that students have a responsible ontribution to make in formulating University policy. It may have simply been a necessary ompromise inevitably due to the non-worka- >ility of old policy. But all responsible are to be commended for nodification of the old driving restrictions. The Regents, administration, city officials, faculty' nembers and students all shared in producing he University's first workable driving regula- ions since the advent of the automobile. The new restrictions extending the driving privilege to all students over 21 years of age and at the same time putting teethf into en- orcement possibilities brings the University finally abreast with policy already in effect Lt other top mid-western schools. The problems were somewhat peculiar here. Desire to keep the University a residential chool along with memories of an abundance )f accidents when there were no restrictions had to be compromised with the unreality of blanket restrictions which had produced noth- ng but antagonism, dishonesty and ridicu- ously unsuccessful enforcement. The compro- nise reccnciles both sides effectively., A special compliment is due former Manag- ng Editor Gene Hartwig. It was Hartwig who nitiated proceedings last spring by proposing a committee to study the problem. Hartwig then served diligently with the committee, and rovided leadership impetus as the committee worked to its solution. There are a lot of ideas loating around campus but follow-through is 'are and deserves commendation. ANOTHER recent happening is of a different character. Two Michigan hockey players were declared neligible over the holidays and this inspires iome less laudatory comment. Taken purely objectively the three-man Big 'en committee that suspended Mike Buchan- an and Wally Maxwell from further collegiate :cnpetition. could have come to no other de- ision. When such cases are. brought into the >pen there is little that can be done except enforcing a suspension. Otherwise the present- y existing amateur codes might as well be hrown out the window. The injustice involved comes from the fine line that has been drawn in these cases. The decision indicates supreme but almost unavoid- able hypocrisy on the part of athletic direc- tors or faculty boards which have to rule on such problems. Buchanan and Maxwell received expense money for trying out with professional teams. It has been argued they shouldn't be penalized because this is very much in line with Canadian amateur codes, and neither player was aware he was breaking any United States regulation. ALTHOUGH this argument is worthy of con- sideration, the hypocritical connotation leads us to another more important point. The committee must have attached great weight to the fact these were out and out professional teams that gave Buchanan and Maxwell expense money. However, expense money to prospective ath- letes for visits to various United States uni- versities is extremely common and sometimes the least of inducements for attendance at cer- tain colleges. This may be an extreme charge but it's not likely the board which suspended Buchanan and Maxwell was unaware of this American practice. This becomes even more relevent when ex- amination of the regulations speaks only in terms of the expense money they received with little or no mention of who gave it to them. Whether our universities should suddenly give up handing out expense money to high school athletes is a question already argued loud and long many times before. This isn't the point in consideration. TWO questions are important. Are all Big Ten college athletes who re- ceived expense money for visits to universities eligible for suspension from conference ath- letics? If so, aren't we reaching a point of absurdity when a school which has perhaps been winning too much accidentally falls victim to public recognition of expenses once given a player and then receives such extreme punishment? It hurts not only the school but the unsus- pecting player whose college athletic career is virtually eliminated by such "shocking" and unusual revelations, DAVE BAAD, Managing Editor ' ' : ' !' y:. A! y ;^ ", yP r T ' , t : , .' ..F _ s ti * ,.;3 z .c; WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: 'Dear Doug' etter Row By DREW PEARSONĀ° THE OTHER day Jim Hagerty, genial White House Press Secretary, dropped his geniality long enough to accuse me of a "scurrilous lie." I should now like to straighten out the facts on that charge. The charge was made in con- nection with a column on the Mining Claim in Rogue River For- Oregon in which I reported that when a letter arrived at the White House regarding the Al Serena Rogue River National Forest in est, Ike had-scribbled a note across the top of the letter to "Dear Doug"--meaning Secretary of the Interior Doug McKay-and sug- gested that he se'e what he could do about the matter. HAVING HEARD reports that such a letter was found in the files of the Interior Department during the Senate probe of the Rogue River National Forest sale, I sent my assistant to see Robert Redwine, Counsel of a Senate In- terior Subcommittee. Redwine said he had such a letter but that he did not intend to let me see it. He indicated, among other things, that he plan- ned to make use of it later in the year, when it would be more effec- tive in the Presidential campaign. I then went to a Senator who is a member of the Interior Com- mittee and suggested that any probe of the Al Serena-Rugue River National Forest giveaway should present all the facts in an orderly manner and should not withhold any for political purposes later. He agreed and contacted Redwine. * * * r REDWINE SAID he did have a letter which had been forwarded to McKay by the White House with a note addressed to "Dear Doug" scribbled across it in Ike's own handwriting, but he demurred about letting me see it and re- garding the use of it. After some further pro-ing and con-ing, continuing over several days, I finally published the report that such a "Dear Doug" letter was in the files of the Senate In- terior Committee. I did not quote the text of what Ike allegedly said to "Dear Doug' since I had not seen and therefore did not know the exact text. Every Republican on the Full Interior Committee immediately turned up at a Subcommittee hear- ing plus crochety Congressman Clare Hoffman of Michigan, a member of the Joint Subcommit- tee, who demanded that I be sub- poenaed. Other Senators, led by Goldwater of Arizona, called in Redwine and wanted to know about the letter. When asked to produce it,- he came back with a letter from the Interior Department acknowledg- ing one from the White House. Obviously it was not the "Dear Doug" letter. In brief, he did not produce. I was out -on a limb and still am. LATER HE TOLD other Senate committee staff members that he had seen such a letter and that he would swear under oath that he had seen it, but that he had searched high and low and could not find it now. He also stated that he had found his files rifled. It was at this point that Jim Hagerty issued his White House blast. Since I cannot produce the let- ter I am now prepared to accept Mr. Hagerty's statement as being correct.. * * I THINK HE WILL agree with me that a "scurrilous lie"-or in fact any kind of a lie is a delib- erate telling of an untruth, and does not apply to reporting some- thing which one believes to be the truth but later turns out to be in doubt. However, there's no use quib- bling over terms. And not being able to produce the letter-if it ever existed beyond one man's imagination-I hereby extend my apologies to President Eisenhower, to the White House, and to the Senate Interior Committee. And since Mr. Hagerty has on two occasions phoned me to apolo- give privately for what he said about me publicly, I am further delighted to apologize to him pub- licly for what I've thought about him privately. (Copyright, 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Freedom and Compromise dispersion from this rule, but nev- er has there been so much devia- tion as was evident in the results of "Inside Beverly Hills" and "Fes- tivai of Music" seen recently on NBC. Almost every television reviewer in the country (present company excluded for THE DAILY was not in publication at the time) called "Festival of Music" a "television masterpiece" and "Inside Beverly Hills" a "big letdown from what was expected via the NBC publi- city" When the ratings came out "Hills" swamped the CBS Sunday night opposition and "Music" was completely overshadowed by the Monday evening CBS offerings. So just try to outguess the public! TOM DUGGAN, Chicago's con- troversial television star, last week walked away with TV Guide's an- nual local television awards. The entertair. er received the awards for the best male personality and the best interviewer on Chicago television for the second consecu- tive year. He was the top money-maker for the local ABC outlet and his popularity seemed to be constant- ly increasing. Mr. Duggan didn't show up for his evening show and later it was announced that he had quit ABC. A few years ago, when Duggan was fired by NBC and it looked as though he was through in tele- vision, ABC hired him and it was at this station that he achieved his present popularity. Which goes to prove that tele- vision personalities, like all other people, are foolish enougl to oft times bite the golden hand that has fed them so very well in the past. DRISCHELL TOPS: Pygmalion' IDAC Hit (EDITOR'S NOTE: The final DAC performance of 'Pygmalion' will be at 2 :30 p.m. this afternoon.) OF ALL George Bernard Shaw's plays, "Pygmalion" is probably the most popular. It is rich in humor and characterization and Shaw's usual "talkiness" is limited. * * * SHAW BASED his play loosely on the Greek myth about Pygma- lion, the King of Cyprus who sculpted a statue of a woman so beautiful that he fell in love with it. The goddess Aphrodite felt so sorry for him that she brought the statue, Galatea, to life. But Shaw raises some doubts about the fairy-tale ending by putting the legend in modern (for him) dress. His Pygmalion is Henry Higgins, a vitriolic phinet- ics expert who can place a man within two miles just by his ac- cent. His Galatea is Eliza Doo- little, a Covent Garden flower seller that Higgins passes off as a duchess by teaching her correct speech. Unhappily, Shaw provided no Aphrodite and the ending is more or less unresolved. For this production, DAC switches services.rJoseph Gistirak, who usually directs, heads the cast as Higgins, while actor Sydney Walker takes over directing duties. The switch is successful from the directorial standpoint, and after a stiff first act warmup, Gistirak settles down and gives a creditable performance. Irma Hurley hurdled the transition from flower-seller to duchess nicely, making Eliza, as Shaw had intended, a cut above the ordinary. * * * OLD PRO Margaret Bannerman is her usual polished self as Hig- gins' mother. Jay Lanin, as Hig- gins' companion in crime Colonel Pickering, is debonair and genteel to the proper degree. Ric Lavin, Robin Hall and Ann Gregory are all quite good as the Eynsford Hills, Freddy, Mrs. and Clara respectively, bit Marie Gil- son seems a little ill at ease as Higgins' exasperated housekeeper, Mrs. Pearce. But the acting bouquet of the day should be tossed to Ralph Drischell, who virtually demonates the two terrifically funny scenes he is in. Although the part of Eliza's mistunderstood father. is ON HIS ELECTION to the presidency almost 100 years ago, two thoughts were foremost in the mind of Abraham Lincoln. He sincerely believed that the concept of slavery should be checked as not in the best interests of the "plain people." He also held firm in a belief that the Union of states was sacred as a model experiment in government "of the people, for the people and by the people." Today, slavery has vanished as a nominal institution. It vanished when Lincoln became President. We are presently living under the rocky assumption that because-an Emancipa- tion Proclamation has been made, because our contemporary-Supreme Court justices have de- clared against segregation and inequality, we are free of any burdens upon our conscience. Lincoln's first proposition- has been allowed to succumb to the second belief-that the unity of the nation should also be preserved. Compromise is often extolled as a significant democratic idea. But when. compromise means the abandonment of principles and ideals for the preservation of a calm, serene nation, we are only leaving ourselves vulnerable to the propaganda claims of other nations. W HEN we continually expound on the evils of segregation and real inequality, only to check our remarks and actions with the delu- sion. that the Unio'n will be shattered if they are put into actual practice, we are only pay- ing lip service to apparently old-fashioned con- cepts of free and equal citizens. The lesson that comes to us from Lincoln on his birthday today is that the continuance Editorial Staf Dave Baad. -. Editorial.Staff.-.Managing Editor Jim Dygert. .... ......... City Editor Murry Frymer-...................... Editorial Director Debra Durchslag ..................Magazine Editor David Kaplan ...,.....................Feature Editor Jane Howard ......-...... ,....,. Associate Editor Louise Tyor ... ................Associate Editor Phil Douglis -........................ Sports Editor Alan Eisenberg .......... Associate Sports Editor Jack Horwitz................ Associate Sports Editor Mary Hellthaler ,.. ...................Women's Editor Elaine Edmonds ...... Associate Women's Editor John Hirtzel . ..........Chief Photographer Business Staff Dick Alstrom ...........................Business Manager of our existence depends not on the stressing of one proposition over another, but on the effective application of both beliefs. --DICK SNYDER Birth of a New Sports Legend. CONNIE MACK died last Wednesday. To most students around the University of Michigan, this fact may not have been vitally important. Registration and J-Hop were cer- tainly more important to their lives. What modern-day college student would possibly feel it important to mourn an old-time owner of a distant athletic enterprise? But there were some that did feel sad at the news. Connie Mack's passing meant an end to an era--to an age of sport. The last real link with the old days of our. national pastime had been severed forever. Now, only Amos Alonzo Stagg remains as one of sports living pioneers. It is not necessary to go into Connie Mack's accomplishments here. They have been hashed over many times. More important was his value to sports lovers as a symbol of the golden age -- the era that began with Cy Young-went on through Babe Ruth and Wal- ter Johnson-and ended last Wednesday after- noon. Cornelius McGillicuddy was a living legend last week. Now he is a real one. As Fielding Yost is to Michigan--as Grantland Rice is to sportswriting, so is Connie Mack to baseball. Those who saw that lean blue suited figure-- waving a score card deep in the shadows of American league dugouts down through the years will never forget him. Y An era has ended, but a legend has been born. --PHIL DOUGLIS, Sports Editor New Books at the Libra Adamski, George-Inside the Space Ships; N.Y., Abelard-Schuman, 1955. Berrill, N.J.-Man's Emerging Mind; N.Y., Dodd, Mead & Col, 1955. Bjorn, Thyra Ferre-Papa's Wife; N.Y., Rine- hart & Co., 1955., Castle, Marian-Roxana; N.Y., Wm. Morrow & Co., 1955. Coon, Horace-Triumph of the Eggheads; N.Y.. Rndnm Hnu. inrt LETTERS to the EDITOR Need Apparent.. To the Editor: TAMMY Morrison, in her article in The Daily of January18, advanced several sound reasons why the amount of donations to the March of Dimes should not slacken due to the success of the Salk vaccine. However, she missed one im- portant point by just stressing the need for money in the fields of vaccine and therapy research. As a former polio victim (who had to postpone entering college because of the disease) I am well acquainted with the individual suffering and cost that this sick- ness incurs. Although my attack was comparatively slight I still rolled up a bill for hospital ex- penses at the rate of $23.00 a day for several months. Then about two hundred physiotherapeutic- treatments which would have cost me $5.00 each immediately follow- ed. Fortunately the Polio Foun- dation paid almost all of this huge bill. Multiply my experience by the thousands of former victims re- ceiving treatment now, and . the continued need for funds is quite apparent. These people need our aid, so let's not have the March of Dimes fall short of its goal. -Ernie Rein, '59 Redundant Ticket... To the Editor: HAVING recently lost my bien- nial struggle with the Univer- sity's ill-famed railroad ticket, I was prompted to look with some care at the means by which that instrument overwhelms the regis- tering student. The means of course is grinding repetition. My inspection revealed that the rail- road ticket requests twenty-three separate items of information more than once. It asks six of them twice; three of them three times; five of them four times; one of them five times; two of them seven times;" two of them eight times; one of them nine times and three of them twelve times. When my ticket was filed in Wat- erman Gymnasium, the University was notified at nine different points that I am male and at eight more that I am married.- I hope the in-ormation is worth its price in good will. No one with th faintest under- standing of the Uni'ersity'sprob l m in registerinyg22,300 students 97ll want to minle the diffi- culties faced by the administra tive staff. But other universities have dealt effectively with the problem of duplicating these simple items of information with- out depressing the spirit of their student bodies. It ought to be able to happen here. -Donald Stokes, Grad. Evaluations In Use... To the Editor: QUCH of your readers as may have noticed the editorial by Mr. Marks just prior to the end of last semester will be relieved to know that the School of Busi- ness Administration has made good use of student evaluations of faculty and courses since before Mr. Marks was born. Originally these evaluations were initiated by the faculty, but in re- cent years they have been pro- moted and to no small extent, ad- I 4 ' A- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS: Integration Seen As Slow Struggle t By SUE JESSUP Daily Staff Writer DR. HUBERT M. Blalock, a mem- ber of the University. sociology department, has for a length of timerconcerned himself with the racial problems and race integra- tion. Although he avoids being called an "authority" on the desegraga- tion issue, he here offers his ans- wers to some of 'the more pressing questions of the day. Q. As a whole are Southerners accepting the Supreme Court's anti-segregation decision or do they resent the situation? A. It certainly hasn't been fully accepted at the present time. Cer- tain communities near the border areas are going along with deseg- regation more than places in the so-called "Deep-South." Q. How well is desegregation working in a specific Southern state, for example Virginia? A. Since it is impossible to gen- eralize about this state as a whole, it might be said that the eastern part of the state seems to have a vested interest in slavery as a result of historical tradition. Prob- ably the western mountain area would be less likely to fight the issue. It should be pointed out that certain nSothern citie f inr y- have accepted it with a minimum of difficulty. Q. Do you feel that using deseg- regation as a campaign issue tends to distort it? A. There has been a typical pat- tern of using desegregation polit- ically to take the attention from real economic problem. Often it is a convient issue to keep the poli- ticians name in front of the voters. However there are undoubtedly ome individual Southern politic- ians who genuinely believe deseg- regation is a harmful and danger- ous idea. Q. What part have the Citizens Councils played in this issue? A. Citizens Councils are seem- ingly organizing the battle against desegregation by using legal meth- ods to stall acceptance. They manage to stay within the law and exert economic pressure. They tend to use a polite type of pres- sure rather outright violence. Q. How effective has the Nation- al Association for the' Advance- ment of Colored People been in utting desegregation into effect? 'rA. This organization seems to have been quite aggressive in its use of legal measures. However they are limited because in order -o accomplish their goals they have to have the support of school boards, courts etc. If the courts are controlled by nennle whon a be pointed out that integration isn't complete in the North and that residential segregation does exist. Residential segregation is not so much a matter of laws as it is of subtle pressures, for ex- ample the zoning ordinances which place people in certain areas so there is no chance of White and Negro children attending the same schools. Integration is a very dif- ficult problem to deal with and certainly can't be fought Consti- tutionally. Q. Generally speaking do news- papers give an accurate account of developments in the desegrega- tion situation? A. The amount of slanting de- pends primarily on the specific paper and reporter. There are Northern papers- which overplay sensational aspects of the situa- tion. Southerners sometimes feel, since all the integration problems aren't solved in the North, more attention should be devoted to them rather than emphasizing problems in the South. Q. How would you state the case against desegregation? - A. Southerners sometimes feel that forcing the issue causes trouble. Temporary hardships for Negro teachers arise because Southern schools will be reluctant to hire them to instruct students. It is said since educational stand- - -tl rf --, Y irn Wo s - p s)