Ix'TV THE MCHIGAIN' DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCTOBERS, 1933 VOTIR THE 1~tICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1953 4 4r Airliian Buibg 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 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1955 NIGHT EDITOR: GAIL GOLDSTEIN Everyone Loves Bums-But Brooldyn IT FINALLY happened. It had to-eventually. Brooklyn has won the baseball champion- ship of the world. Such a title is an honor not undeserved. The pride of Walter (Pay As You See) O'Malley has bludgened those D--n Yankees of musical comedy fame into submission in seven games- and today Johnny Podres and Company are the toast of Flatbush. Alston's athletes certainly rated the moniker "World Champs"-for they turned the solid National - League into a shambles-a mere crowd of pretenders-before the season was even a quarter over. They then beat off Stengel's hotshots-after being down two games to none in the best of seven series. A LONG AND glorious history has blossomed into all its splendor-but here's the rub. The fans of baseball's top team are apparently everywhere BUT in Brooklyn.-The Dodgers are about to be run right out of their own town. It is ironic that the World champs are talk- ing seriously of packing up and departing for Jersey City-where they wish to play a set of games next season-and maybe even move there permanently. This seems to be a ridiculous way to celebrate the long pull to the top. It is a sad commen- tary to make on our national game, when a home tovwn won't even support the game's best team. ' AND, IF they do become the Jersey City Dodgers-a great and colorful chapter of the game will die-for they could never re- create the tradition that was Brooklyn. The only saving feature of such a move would be that the world champs would still be in the New York area. Looking at the picture realistically-it is inteed dark-for hidden among the toasts to the victors which resounded over Bedford Ave- nue last night-there loomed vast empty spaces in the Dodger's treasury. It appears that the Brooklyn fandom-often called the most loyal in the game-and for- ever offering prayers for their boys, better stop praying-and start PAYING . .. for time and money are running out-and so are the Dodgers. -PHIL DOUGLIS Daily Sports Editor Shall We Open The Doors Now?" * fJTgAL. --T E JT .. CoIT.cO MJY S CCOMMAiM ,. E Murry Frymer - INd THs CORNR -sl. Raider Breaks Rules For 'Thrill' ! 4 ' _y q. + ,-n " > ' . 1-- s -.' - , 3 x , .:? s" , : .:, + cCOUNYRY Y _. AT RACKHAM GALLERIES: Panorama of Moods At McMullen Exhibit THE HIGH-NOTE of E. Ormond McMullen's watercolor exhibit, at the Rackham Galleries, is the virtuosity with which he creates a panorama of moods. One may note the delicate serenity of a New England lake juxtaposed to the explosive eruption of a log jam. This oscillation 1 . IT'S AGAINST our policy to print unsigned letters, but this one is pertinent. It's in answer to views expressed here dis- cussing last Friday's panty raids, and some psychology behind it. Dear Mr. Frymer, I thought that you might be interested to know how a 19-year-old sophomore and an active participant of the panty raid feels about his "achievement." I realize that my participation in the panty raid was wrong, and I am not trying to justify myself. However, I also know that I probably had more fun Friday night than I did at any other time here at the University. It isn't that I am an unhappy, frustrated kid who spends all of his time studying or stays by himself in a corner and this was my only chance for an emo- tional outlet. No, I am not like that. Rather, I am the "average one-in-twenty-thousand student" who was looking for some fun and derived a great thrillfrom doing something he wasn't supposed to. It was fun to be an active cog in the strong, happy mob which was big enough to do whatever it desired. ("A very immature idea of 'fun'," you may ,say. Perhaps. But then, I have plenty of company. Maybe it's just belated adoles- cence that prompts us to act that way .. . or rather perhaps it's human nature.) No, a better organized pep rally is un- likely to be the solution to the problem. Had a panty raid been the proper and correct thing to do, I would have not par- ticipated in it. There would have been no "fun" in it. I derived my thrill and satis- faction from breaking a rule, from doing something I was not supposed to. (Will you call me a psychopathic case or a juve- nile delinquent?) Hell, what kind of life would this be if one never did anything but what's proper and customary.! What, then, is the solution to the prob- lem? I don't know. I don't think the problem can be solved; it will always re- appear in one form or another. Further- more, I am not too sure that the problem needs solving. Consider it a little less sternly: is a panty raid so very harmful if it occurs only once every four years or so? "It creates very bad publicity," claims every one. True, but it isn't as bad as it seems. The University's reputation is not based on the panty raids of its freshmen! There was no financial loss suffered by the University. (The one window screen torn at Stockwell can be fixed very easily.) The only real problem is the loss suffered by the women.. Editorial Staff Dave Baad ,......................... Managing Editor Jim Dygert .............................. City Editor Murry Frymer ......................Editorial Director Some poor girl might have lost more than $10-worth of wardrobe on the occasion. For this I am sorry, and I wish it weren't so. But then, if one compares the women's total loss that night with the money that will be spent on them in the course of this year by us males, it seems to me that their loss is just a drop in the bucket. The panty raid is not the recent major problem here at the University. Rather, there is another aspect of Friday-night's activities that I think you newspaper men should concern yourself with. It is the vandalism of the students. I am referring to our discourteous and dangerous treatment of cars that were met by us students in front of the State theater. I am not objecting to such things as block ing traffic, for I too participated in it, and I am not the least bit ashamed of it. How. ever, I do object to the sadistic treatment that many drivers, be they young or old- some of them strangers from different towns-received from us students. I think it's alright to stop traffic; per. haps it may be even alright to rock a car. But when a mob of students start rocking and lifting a car with its passengers inside so hard that there is danger of the car's tipping over, when the passenger inside has to do all he can to guard against breaking a window with his head, that's going a lit- tle too far. And it's usually the older and more careful drivers that get the worst treatment, for the young and reckless driv- ers usually manage to break loose. (There. was almost one head-on collision on Fri-. day after one of our victims broke loose.) When the students open the hood and start fooling around with the motor, when they open the back doors and start taking stuff out of the car while their victims look helplessly on, when at least two cars stop- ped by the students had the air let out of the tires right in the middle of the street--- that's not simply "horse-play," that's van- dalism. Not only was our behavior towards our victims, to say the least, discourteous, but most important of all, it was dangerous for the students themselves. Isn't it likely that some driver would get panicky as result of the rocking (all of them were scared), lose his head, step on the accelerator, and run over half a dozen students who were blocking the path in front of him? Or, more likely yet, couldn't a student accidentally step in front of a speeding car that was trying to break loose? Only then would we get the unfavorable publicity in the headlines that would really hurt the University. But then it would be too late to correct the matter. Please, Mr. Frymer, instead of devoting any more editorials to the silly but rela- tively harmless panty raid-I think enough has been said on this matter-why don't you tackle the really harmful aspect of our riotous behavior. The panty raid involved only University students, and the loss of a couple dozen slips and panties is relatively small when compared to a possible car accident or loss of lives down town. A panty raid does not ruin our reputation forever, but I am sure that our driver victims will long remember the students of the University of Michigan. Well, I've told you everything I wanted to say. Thanks for reading this letter, if you got that far. I am sorry I can't sign it, WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: A rab Relations Gettng Worse -BY DREW PEARSON RJ ELATIONS with Egypt and the Arab States are even worse than appears on the surface. Here are the latest developments: 1. The expulsion of the Ameri- can air attache, Col. Gilbert E. Erb, under circumstances that in- dicate Egypt has a dangerous chip-on-the-shoulder attitude. Colonel Erb had remarked mere- ly in private conversations that he thought the Israelis had probably shot down two Egyptian planes instead of their having crashed in the air, as the Egyptians claimed.' The Egyptians had explained that the two planes bumped into each other and crashed. The Israelis claimed they shot them down. * * * BECAUSE COLONEL Erb re- marked that it was unlikely the two planes bumped into each other and indicated the Israelis were trigger happy anyway and probably shot down the two planes, he was declared persona non grata and asked to leave Egypt. 2. George V. Allen, the Dulles special envoy, carries a much sterner warning for the Egyptians than has been indicated. He was instructed by Secretary of State Dulles to tell Premier Nasser that the powerful Israeli army is all set to start attacking the minute Communist arms are delivered. The Israelis have the force to take Cairo in a short time. 3. A proposal to dump the huge U.S. cotton surplus on the world market as an economic reprisal against Egyptian cotton is gaining support. Southern Congressmen have been urging this on Secretary of Agriculture Benson for some time, not as a move against Egypt, but in order to get rid of the cot- ton surplus. Now that Egypt is determined to buy Communist 'arms, the proposal has new ad- vocates. 4. The former executive director of the Republican National Com- mittee, Douglas Whitlock, has be- come top lobbyist for the Arab League in Washington. * * * WHILE THIS has had no effect on the international situation it hasn't particularly helped the do- mestic political situation, since Whitlock continues to be high-up in Republican circles. He was the chief organizer of Eisenhower's campaign train during the 1952 campaigh and as recently as last month addressed the Republican State Committeemen here at the special Len Hall "school" to pre- pare for the '56 campaign. Note-On the agricultural front, Congressman Jamie Whitten of Mississippi has just finished a barbed report attacking the Ad. ministration for not selling its surplus cotton. Though Secretary Benson proposed, in various Cab- inet sessions, that the cotton be sold abroad, the State Depart- ment, reinforced by the Secretary of the Treasury, argued against "dumping" on the ground that it would upset our relations with Egypt and other cotton-growing nations. Now that our relations are al- ready upset, and Egypt has pro- ceeded to barter cotton for Com- munist arms, the cotton-bloc Con- gressmen see no further reason for holding our huge supply of cotton off the market at tremendous cost to ourselves. * * * Washington Pipeline SEOUL. - Exclusive-Stubborn old Syngman Rhee is involved in a bitter argument with the Ameri- can Embassy which is jeopardizing all of Korea's rice production. Rhee flatly has refused to buy urgently needed fertilizer from his old enemies, the Japanese, even though the United States has of- fered to pay for it. As a result, the Korean rice harvest is in dan- ger and it's too late to buy rice from any other area. Before he became ill, Presi- dent Eisenhower ordered Secretary Dulles to stay no more than two weeks at the Big Four Foreign Ministers Conference if it looks like the Russians are stalling. (Copyright, 1955, Bell Syndicate, Inc.) in mood produces in the viewer climax which though never reach- ed leaves the spectator highly stimulated. "Byrnes' Burn's Burning" is a dramatic composition reminiscent, with regard to physiognomy, of Daumier's "Uprising." A tremen- dous surge of movement is created by the pattern of the running men's hands and legs. MANY PIECES in this exhibit will indicate a cartoonish quality akin to Daumier. In "Politics and Potatoes," Mr. McMullen has captured Millet's earthliness and Daumier's sense of humor. A nebular. handling of "Chil- dren's Cotillion" makes this the most vibrant work in the show. Within a compact group girls' skirts swish and flow as easily as the surf. This work contains all the gaiety and delightfulness of the empressionists while still satis- fying the "moderns" demand for design. Perhaps, "Dante, the Moon and the El" is the most intellectual painting. Silhouetted by the moon, Dante stands grandiose against the pedestrian city. One may wonder if Dante and the Moon are not symbols of the absolute in contrast to the cult of the "immediate" which plagues our modern society: FROM a technical viewpoint "Grappling for the Body" is fine stuff but the Aegian sky and Classical architecture lessen its powerful potential. Mr. McMullen's fort is that spongy, ethereal atmosphere in such paintings as "Little Mallard Gun Club." He loses his appeal when his colors become less subtle and take on that commercial hard- ness. In this exhibit most viewers are likely to find nourishment. Some works are too "livingroomish" but all are pleasing to various de- grees. --Thomas F. Bernaky LETTERS to the EDITOR Liked Editorial... To The Editor: YOUR EDITORIAL on Friday night's raid was an excellent piece of handling of a ticklish situation so far as writing about it is concerned. It was cleverly done, but left no doubt as to what it meant. The line ending in ". . . suffer- ing.from too early separation from their mothers" is a slight slap in the face. But the best parts, in my opin- ion, are the last two paragraphs. Here you are hitting a touchy point with Michigan students- that of our superiority over State. Perhaps this is a good lesson for all of us to learn. We might once in a while give a little credit to State. They certainly behaved themselves this weekend. I felt ashamed reading the editorial, even though I was not a partici- pant in the raid. Preaching does no good so you have appealed to something that everyone feels (last two para- graphs.) I think my high school paper advisor would enjoy reading this because the editorial practices what she used to preach. Thank you and congratulations. -Barbara Crain Strange Methods. To the Editor- THE WAYS of a University are strange, and stranger still, the particular methods of the admin- istrative branch of the organiza- tion. Friday, the Plant Department of the University went on a decor- ous sit-down strike in protest of the parking situation. The administration, faced by the one group to join in vocal and active dissent, mumbled something about arranging transportation for the men. Then, Monday morning, came the wonder of seeing the massize organizational machinery at work. Parking meters - where were they? And parking permits? -unfortunately, through a slight oversight, the incorrect date had been printed upon the permits. And the ritual of applying for a permit? - instructive, as handled by people who, secure in their importance and power, could well afford the appearance of benefi- cence, tempered by the sneer. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for the Sunday edition must be in by 2 p.m. Friday. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1955 VOL. LXVII, NO. 9 General Notices Regents Meeting: Friday, October 28. Communications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than October 20. Freshman Testing Program: Make-up sessions for Freshmen who missed any of the Aptitude tests given Mon., Tues., Wed. or Fri. of Orientation Week will be held on Tues., Oct. 4 and Thurs., Oct. 6. Please report to Aud. B, Angell Hall promptly at 7:00 p.m. For further information call Ext. 2297. Notice-University Parking Permits on Cars Bearing Out-state Licenses. The Ann Arbor Police Department has called to the attention of the University the Provision of Michigan law requiring all residents of Michi- gan to have an operator's license to operate a motor vehicle and to have Michigan license plates on their cars. Te provision of the Michigan stat- ute permitting nonresident owners of pleasure vehicles to operate a motor vehicle in this state for a period not exceeding 90 days without securing cable to Michigan residents. The Ann Arbor Police Department has Issued a warning that all full-time staff members of the University are presumed to be Michigan residents and that motor vehicles bearing a Univer- s ity parking permit and out-state licen- se plates will be presumed to be operated in violation of law. Applications for Phoenix Project Re- search Grants. Faculty members who wish to apply for grants from the Michigan Memorial - Phoenix Project Research-Funds to support research in peacetime applications and implica. tions of nuclear enegry should file applications in the Phoenix Research Office, 118 Rackham Building, by Fri., Oct. 7, 1955. Application forms will be mailed on request. Telephone.250. Rules governing participation in non- athletic extracurricular activities. Any regularly enrolled student is eligible to participate in non-athletic extracurricu- lar activities provided he is not on academic discipline. "RESPONSIBILITY: Responsibility for observaice of the eligibility' statement is placed directly upon the student. In case of doubt of status, students should inquire at the Office of Student Affairs. Partici- pation in an extracurricular activity In violation of the requirements may sub- ject a student to disciplinary action. RESTRICTIONS: In interpretation of the above elig blity statement, the following are spe- cifically forbidden to participate in extracurricular activities indicated be- low: a) Students on academic discipline, i.e., notification, warning, probation, action pending, as determined by the faculty of the college in which the student is enrolled. ("Needs counsel- ing" as used by the School of Educa- tion and the School of Music, also con- stitutes ineligibility for such partici pation. ) )b Part-time and special students carrying Jess than twelve hours, ACTIVITIES: The eligibility requirements must be met by students participating in such activities as are listed below. The list is not exhaustive but is intended to indicate the kinds of extracurricular activities for participation in which eligibility is necessary. a) Participation in public perform. ances which are sponsored by student organizations and which require group rehearsals. Examples: Union Opera, Junior Girls' Play; productions of the Gilbert and Sullivan Society, Student Players, and Inter-Arts Union per- formances of Arts Chorale and the Glee Clubs. b) Participation in public perform- ances which are sponsored by academic courses and which require group re- hearsals, for those participants who are not enrolled in the sponsoring course for credit. Examples: Ensemble 45, 46 (Orchestra), Ensemble 47, 48 (Bands), Ensemble(49. 5 (Choir), Voice 11, 12, 155, 156 (Opera Workshop). c)Staff members of student publica. tions. Examples: Daily, Gargoyles Michiganensian, Technic, Generation. d) Officers and chairmen of stand. ing committees in student organiza. tions, including house groups. This includes positions in house groups such as social, athletic, rushing, personnel, pledge training, and publication chair- men, house managers and stewards. e) Class officers and candidates for such office. f) Members and candidates for mem- bership in student government groups. Examples: Student Legislature, Judici- ary Councils, Interfraternity Council, Panhellenic Board, Assembly Board, Interhouse Council, Inter-cooperative Council, League and Union student government groups, Music School As- sembly, Business Administration Coun- cl. g) Committee members for major campus projects and dances. Examples: an awareness of an impending DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN F; PLEASE RELAX, MILT: Comedy Writers Overdo Tumbles' For Laughs By CHARLES MERCER (Associated Press Writer) jT'S A commentary of some sort on the current state of so-called comedy in television that in three program debuts within a space of three' hours the other evening three comedians did pratt-falls into pools of water. Not since the infancy of the movies, in the hey-day of Mack Sennett, have so many comedians been so dependent on such a tire- some device. Milton Berle returned to tele- LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler I12eNtlF CATION t "N SFRESHM'AN..,..! - 4," EtNfIARTS l' vision for a new season which will bring him to the screen 13 times in the next 39 weeks. Personally I think Berle is' a pretty funny guy. * * BUT COMEDIANS are as much the victims of fashion as women's clothing, and last year Berle went out of fashion. I never heard a satisfactory explanation why. Now he's back. The best thing about his return was that he came back giving his all, unlike certain other television personalities. But he still seems to be haunted by the fear of failure. He was pressing mighty hard. Please relax, Mr. Berle. You can press pants and military advan- tages, but you can't press humor. When you fell into the Grand Canal in that Venetian sketch, even though you may have been burlesquing Katherine Hepburn in "Summertime," I was saddened instead of amused. * * * THE NEXT victim of water was Red Skelton, who made his sea- son's debut. Skelton was gently nudged into a sewer opening by Ed Sullivan, playing a bus driver. Incidentally someone ought to scout this guy Sullivan as an actor. He has real talent. Into New York and many an- other city these evening is coming a film package called The Great Gildersleeve. This situation com- edy, in which Willard Waterman k 4 Debra Durchslag.................... Magazine David Kaplan ...................... Feature Jane Howard ...................... Associate1 Louise Tyor ..........Associate1 Phil Douglis ............................ Sports1 Alan Eisenlerg ................ Associate Sports1 Jack Horwitz ................ Associate Sports7 Mary Helthaler ..................... Women's1 Elaine Edmonds ............ Associate Women's Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor 4 John Hirtzel ..................... Chief Photographer Business Staff I 1