m - s,/ w -I lane Si* 0 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 16, 1955 Sun&v October 16. 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY "Now, 35, suppose you owned a grocery ... til i.i l .iW r ,/ . vvv+ v . 1 Dignity And Sensationalism In The English Press -Daily-Hal Leeds "A MILLION DOLLARS... . . ..T 0 ANYONE .,.. " ,WHO SAVES... ...MY WIFE ...*.FROM THE FIRE" Showman Dykstra By JIM DYGERT Daily City Editor IT SEEMS like any other lecture until the professor removes his glasses, leans one hand on the front corner of the desk and an- nounces, "There are no outside readings in this course. The text, Dyks--, er, Business Law, by Dyk- stra and Dykstra, I find quite suf- ficient." As it turns out, the text is not sufficient. Dykstra the author needs help from Dykstra the show- man, and, except for two or three lectures a semester, gets it. "I've been told," says Prof. Ger- ald O. Dykstra, who teaches busi- ness law in the business adminis- tration school, "that law could be quite dry." Not by Dykstra, his students unanimously agree. AS A MATER of fact, students come from all 15 schools of the University for "Dykstra's course." It shouldn't be long before the Time Schedule succumbs to the nomenclature, and the business school builds an addition with larger lecture halls for Dykstra. One day a photographer stalk- ed in with purpose to take, as Prof. Dykstra cautioned his aud- ience beforehand, "a picture of the crowded conditions in the class- room." It wasn't just a joke. Some- one was sitting on the floor. Dykstra's popularity, of course, is very easily understood by any- one who has watched him teach with "hypos." These are hypo- thetical situations or actual inci- dents from which arise questions of law. BUT HE doesn't stop at relating the "hypos." He acts them out. There is one case having to do with shoplifting in which a woman shopping in a department store runs outside to catch a friend who is passing by. She neglects to leave behind her a washrag that is still technically owned by the store, an observa- tion that leads the floorwalker to apprehend her for shoplifting. Dykstra illustrates this by dash- ing down the aisle of the lecture hall with outstretched hand clut- ching his handkerchief and wav- ing to an imaginary friend in the 'orridor. By the time he gets out the door, the class is wiping away tears of laughter. "A CERTAIN amount of show- manship is needed to keep an audience's attention," explains Dykstra. His performances are premeditated, as a device for "making education as painless as possible" and "helping students remember legal principles a n d their applications." Who could forget the washrag case? He remembers a University Law School professor who used to em- ploy the device, and Dykstra "just kind of fell into it" when he be- gan teaching business law and re- lated subjects at Ohio University in 1936. Originally his career was a law practice in Cleveland, started af- ter he gratuated from Law School here in 1930. He returned to Ann Arbor in the summer of 1935 to brush up on some business cours- es. "You've got to do so many things to build up a law practice," he had found, HE STAYED for a masters de- gree in business administration and before he could escape back to his law practice, Prof. Earl Wolaver convinced him teaching was his vocation and pointed out an opening at Ohio University to prove it. Dykstra went to Ohio for four- teen years. Then the University asked him back in 1950 to teach business law along with Prof. Wol- aver, who died before Dykstra got here. So he took over the teaching of business law at the University. Besides teaching he writes books, with the help of his wife, the former Lillian Green whom he met in Law School here. Together they have written six textbooks, one of which will be published the first of next year. " USINESS LAW" - the text heinds "quite sufficient"- has been around since 1949 and weighs, he admits tohis class on opening day, "five pounds." Yet he insists it be brought to class as I By GEOFFREY DE DENEY HE ENGLISH newspaper system is peculiar in that it is centered on London with its eight or so morning papers and three evening papers. Apart from the Manches- ter Guardian, which is really a national paper, no provincial news- paper, even in its own locality, has half the influence of the London dailies. This gives the English press a character of its own - each paper is forced to concern itself with the nation as a whole and to compete more violently with its competi- tors than in countries where a local circulation is assured. The competition is made sharper by the fact that few families read more than one morning paper. Dignified readers of The Times look askance at equally dignified readers of the Manchester Guard- ian, both of which are papers con- taining the greatest amount of comment and foreign news and with proportionately small circu- lations. Thesmiddle classes divide their loyalties, according to political affinities, between the Daily Tele- graph, the Daily Mail, and News Chronicle. Finally there is the popular, sometimes called the gutter, press. This consists of the Daily Mirror, the Daily Sketch, and the Daily Express, the first two being Labour in sympathy and the third con- servative, much to the embarrass- ment of that party. These two papers enjoy the largest circula- tions by complete dependence on sensationalism. SENSATIONALISM in the Eng- lish press is probably much the same as it is elsewhere. The prime elements consist of playing up the sex interest (Englishmen can't talk about it to each other so they read about it in their newspapers), relying on emotionalism, and con- spicuously displaying an absence of values. This is one of the chief faults of the Englishpress and has earned it a bad name in many quarters. The English press of a certain category goes about its job with lustful eye and drooling jaws and suggests a more than purely re- formative interest. The chief fault in these papers is their lack of perspective. I'm as happy as the next man to see daily photographs of Marilyn Monroe caught bending but at times one craves for genu- ine information, and then gets pictures of kittens and puppy dogs. The headlines are two inches high, the print large, but the sub- stance very small. Twice the editor of the Daily Mirror has gone to jail for libel, and his memoirs are entitled "Publish and Be Damned.' This may give some idea of the paper's attitude. The Sketch is its fiercest rival and copies its method slavishly. The Express is of a different category. Its accent on sex and sentimentality is less, but its opin- ions are possibly more jaundicec and more vicious. Their policy seems to be "we don't care hos good you are, we can malign yo somehow." But however much one dislikes these papers, one musi admit that they do the job the3 set out to do consummately well. The daily papers have nothing on the Sunday papers for the vic of sensationalism. News of th World is the most notorious in this respect - 90 'per cent of its cop consists of the reports of se crimes and the divorce courts This paper received its greates blow in 1927 when publication o precise details of evidence in di vorce proceedings were prohibited But its imprecise details leav little to the imagination. One or two other papers, such as the Sunday Empire News, are worse if awrthing, but with a much smaller circulation. The Sunday Graphic is the equivalent of the Daily Mirror, and the same applies to the Sunday Express and its daily alternative. THERE ARE two checks on sen- sationalism in the English press. The first is the common law of libel and obscenity, whereby a person can protect his reputation and whereby the crown can prose- cute anything tending to deprave the minds of the young. There is unfortunately a great deal of elasticity in this definition. While the News of the World gets away with a weekly dose of salacity, "The Decameron" is banned in other parts of the country by Puritan magistrates. The other check is maintained by the Press Association, which is a professional committee attempt- ing to maintain the standards of the press. But its sanctions are- moral only, consisting of the effect on public opinion that its criticism of low class journalism may have. It is a recent establishment, but already a step forward towards higher standards in the press. However, the English press is not uniquely sensational by any means. It is simply that this is the element which first strikes one and is most disturbing. Other- wise there are many excellent features, and some peculiarly Eng- lish. Thus the front page of The Times is filled only with small advertisements, and the headlines, such as they are, are in the center pages. Then the largest English paper, again The Times, never contains more than 16 pages. Comic strips are limited to one or two in all except for the adult comics, the Mirror and the Sketch. Most papers have their own cartoonist, some of whom are excellent - others pedestrian. Political cartoons are the ex- ception rather than the rule. Poli- tics, generally, probably enter into the English press as much as in the American, but there is less personal attack on politicians, and more general criticism of policies. The Daily Mirror was generally condemned when it endeavored to charge Churchill as a war monger in 1951. Small items of local news are to be found in all papers, but generally only of the man-bites- dog variety. Genuine local news is only to be found in the weekly local paper, as a 'result of the centralization of the English press. THE BEST reporting to be found is in The Times and Manches- ter Guardian. The only sensation- alism in these papers is in the sports reports, and then only of the highest literary quality. There is no lack of articles of serious- interest and well-informed editor- ial comment. Criticism of the arts and humor also finds its place. The Guardian has a tendency to make intentional puns in its headlines ("June Babies Flood Wards" once appeared at the head of a comment on the rising birth rate), and even The Times once appeared with a law report headed "Libel on Tomb- stone Grave Charges." These elements make The Times and the Guardian far and away the finest English papers, perhaps the finest in the world. Probably the Guardian is the best, avoiding a certain dullness that The Times' restrained policy results in. None the less, there is plenty to entertain and divert in both pap- ers. The difference is perhaps that the intelligent Londoner would read The Times while the intelli- gent man from anywhere else in The for eastern influence has spread to your leisure hours. Look fresh and exotic in our gold accented fashion designed of no-iron drip-dry cotton enriched with striking black and gold-colored India prints. Coral or aqua. lOto 20. 10.95 going. for1 brunch - the sari coat *; ar the world would read the Guard- ian. The Sunday equivalents of these are The Observer and The Sunday Times, both very fine pap- ers with larger book review and art sections than in the daily papers. AS FOR the rest of the English press, with the exception of the Daily Telegraph (though some would not except it), it is not really to be taken seriously. Like many American papers, news is secreted between the interstices of the advertisements, and many are only taken for the sports pages and to provide a barrier against conversation in the subway in the morning. The truth of the matter is that the press does not have any con- siderable influence on public opin- ion in England, which is just as well when the only accurate item in some papers is the date. This was noticeably apparent when the whole London press went on strike for a month this year, and life went on unchanged. The English- man reads his paper, but forgets it quickly. And like many other things in England, tradition goes a long way. J Tr coma Trar for cuits C( "spr have pun( part TI soni: of t and ories Ar pric( the Bi mac vine chin "Wa gam no vent chin ever It n mai brai hav 3:tii. ?t+1 ,.:.:. 5 : : i '. wrv. "^ , w r.w w r Spotlights a collection of distinctive styles for Fall -- The man who selects his fall wardrobe from Rabideau-Harris has decided that fashion is very definitely a man's world, too. He is quite right, never before have men been offered such a variety choice of colors, patterns, and appealing fabrics. "suitable reference material." First day of the semester is al- ways a riot. Not knowing the nam- es of his students yet, he goes by seat number, saying, "Now 35, suppose you own a grocery store and I come in for a loaf of bread and tell you, 'Say, 35 . . .'" or "Suppose, 78, you were walking across the new bridge north of town and you saw a bald head floating on the river and you look- ed down, and said, 'Is that you Dyke?'" And so on for fifteen weeks. But Dykstra is also a disciplin- arian. You walk into his office. announce your name and hear, "Oh yes, you were absent Mon- day." So you stay out of his office and just go to his lectures. )NE ITEM contained by nearly every paper is a gossip column. The three London evening papers, The Evening News, The Star, and the Evening Standard, in fact con- sist largely of gossip columns. The movements of the Royal Family are closely followed as well as the name of afiyone connected with them. Particular attention is paid to the Royal children, so much so that the Queen recently requested that Prince Charles should not be made the center of undue publicity. Princess Margaret is al- ways sure of a.mention. The Evening Standard concen- trates on the debutantes. It is possible by paying a certain sum to the paper to ensure that a deb's name is mentioned at least once a week. But people of genuine interest, and who llave some achievement to their credit,.also receive a men- tion. Even The Times has the equivalent of a gossip column. Its announcement of engagements is closely watched and every couple who hopes to cut any sort of fig- ure must have their engagement included in its columns. Then the results of certain pub- lic examinations are made in the Times, along with army appont- ments, church appointments and University affairs. Consequently, if you happen to belong to one of the groups concerned, The Times can be one of the most gossipy papers there Is. NI RABIDEALJlIAkRI s "Where The Good Clothes Come From" 119 S. MAIN ST. ANN ARBOR Store Hours: Tuesday thru Saturday 9 to 5:30-Monday 9 to 8;30