I - Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNVERSYTY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 "Would You Say You Favor Some Kinds Of Rigid Support?" - - - d 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. VEMBER 4, 1955 NIGHT EDITOR: LEE MARKS' Better Job of Campaigning Needed In SGC Race THE SGC elections are but two weeks away. Candidates have two weeks in which to plaster a myriad of posters around the dorms, sororities, and fraternities. They have two weeks to interrupt meals and present their various campaign speeches to students who are more interested in eating than listening. This year, the elections fall under the juris- diction of an SGC subcommittee, the Central Elections Committee. While this committee is doing a great deal of work in attempting to promote students' interest in voting, they fall short of establishing certain "rules" for cam- paigning which might benefit election results. Campaign posters should be limited in num- ber and size so that each candidate's populari- ty would not be determined simply by the num- ber of posters he could afford to put up. By doing this, another problem of cluttering up every and any available space with posters would be eliminated. After a period of poster cluttering, students become completely obliv- ious to the posters, thus extinguishing the very purpose of the posters. MEALTIME campaigning tends to make the students more antagonistic to the candi- dates. It means that the students must stop their eating and talking to listen to election speeches. After each candidate has taken his turn, it is usually difficult connecting the faces and the individual platforms. True, the candidates do face the problem of assembling the students in order to talk with them. However, with a little cooperation from the dorms, fraternities and sororities, house meetings could be arranged after meal hours by the Central Elections Committee at which time the candidates could present their various stands and answer questions. At such meetings, the primary impression that a candidate makes upon the students is of course important. This impression "should not" be made merely by the physical appearance of the candidate, but rather by clear, logical speeches which could be presented extempor- aneously and informally for interest. This problem also lies with the students who should know their student government enough not to be swayed by merely "nice sounding" speeches which convey absolutely nothing. If the students want a good representative student government, it is up to them to find out about the various candidates' qualifications, to listen critically to what they say and to ask pertinent questions. IT IS too easy to say, "I don't want to go listen to any election speeches. They're us- ually dull anyway." It is too easy to vote, blindly choosing candidates merely by the sound of the names or by checking every other name. It is also too easy to criticize the student gov- ernment, once put in office, about conflicting opinions. --DONNA HANSON w~Ic- WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Humphrey Looking for Out I -BY DREW PEARSON INTERPRETING: No Gain In Geneva This Time By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst AMERICAN efforts to accentuate the positive at Geneva fall far short of eliminating the negative. Secretary Dulles enumerates sev- eral po:nts where East-West view- points are approaching each other. The West seems to be taking the propaganda line that, since nego- tiations can be continued, the for- eign ministers conference is a posi- tive gain. It's not easy to swal- low. Indeed, while the ministers have shown no signs of any real agree- ment, the Russians have again in- jected into these discussions an element of discord which has been played down in formal conferences for some time. S * * * THAT IS the everlasting Rus- sian effort to advance Communist ideology. Molotov coolly laid it back on the conference table with his in- sistence that any solution of the German problem must include pro- tection for Communist institutions in East Germany. He denied the right of the German people as a whole to have any voice in that. The Russian "new look" also has been badly spattered by her admission, after hiding for a time behind the claim that it was Czech business, that the Commun- ist arms deal with Egypt was really made in retaliation against the new Northern Tier Middle East defense pact. It is notable, too, that the re- cently announced Communist slo- gans for another year returned in many respects to the Stalin line, even to quoting from his prescrip- tions for expansion. * * . THE WEST needs to be very sure that in continuingtthe pres- ent negotiations against all hope of agreement its is not playing Russia's'own tune. CINEMA GUILD: Veronica As Witch ALTHOUGH Veronica Lake, her long golden hair nearly bi- secting her face, and Frederick March, his firm-set jaw bravely defying the small screen, turn in swinging performances in Marc Connelly and , Robert Pirosh's screen-play about a beautiful young witch who pops out of a tree into the life of a respectable New England gubernatorial candi- date to perform wonderful and wicked feats of magic which turn his previously well-ordered affairs into a Hollywood-type shambles, and Rene Clair does an admirable job with the cameras, whipping up the story's tempo into a near fren- zy, "I Married a Witch," currently at the Architecture Auditorium, has one serious defect which keeps it from being a truly great comedy: the film's characters are not in themselves funny because they are not made real-the situ- ational gimmick is too heavily re- lied upon with not enough atten- tion to the really comic aspects of the people whom the picture is about. -Phil Breen Pep In The Right Direction SHARP, foresighted planning may be elimin- ating a panty raid fiasco after the coming Ohio State pep rally. The proposed pep pro- gram passed in part by SGC Wednesday should provide top-notch, organized entertainment. - At the same time it should stimulate fans' spirit for what may be the Big Ten cham- pionship game. SOC members were apprehensive as they looked over pep rally plans. They asked ques- tions carefully hoping to nip weaknesses that would turn pep rally spirit into chaos. They found to their surprise and pleasure, the Central Pep Rally had convincing answers. Chairman Myki Gold left those at SGC thinking Michigan spirit would be channelled directly to the foot- ball team November 18. Across the road in the clubhouse, the team should be happy to know students are aiming their spirit toward the team and not the women's dorms. -DAVE BAAD, Managing Editor Murry Frymer - IN THIs CONER >r> Toledo Expose Offers No Facts THE man upon whom President Eisenhower leans most heavily while he is well and who is decid- ing major policy while he is ill, does not at all enjoy being in the government. In fact, he wants to get out, definitely and categori- cally, at the end of 1956. He is George M. Humphrey, Sec- retary of the Treasury, most po- tent member of the Cabinet and one of the most potent business- men in the world. Despite his reluctance, Humph- rey is on the list of those whom GOP king-makers are considering as a possible candidate for Presi- dent. Shortly before Eisenhower was stricken, Humphrey told a close friends that he would not make a single speech during the 1956 election campaign, not because he doesn't want to see theRepubli- cans re-elected, which he does, but because he didn't want to be obli- gated to serve in the next cabi- net. * * * DESPITE HIS reluctance to serve, Humphrey is the strong man in the Eisenhower Cabinet, not only with Ike, personally, but with members of the cabinet. At one luncheon alone, Eisen- hower four times said, "We'll have to talk to George about that"- meaning, of course, George Hum- phrey. In times of crisis, other Cabinet members automatically turn to Humphrey for support. If there's an important decision to be made it has become natural for men like Wilson, Brownell, Weeks, Sum- merfield and Benson to "check with George." If it's serious, they tend to gravi- tate around him. They'll phone or stop by to see him. That's why so many of the emergency meet- ings, following Ike's heart attack, were held in Humphrey's office-- rather than Nixon's or the White House. HUMPHREY HAS formed a warm personal bond with each of his fellow Cabinet members. For example, when Wilson was on the griddle for his crack comparing workers with dogs, Republicans tripped over each other in their hurry to disassociate themselves with Wilson. They were issuing statements left and right, criti- cizing Wilson for his remark. But not Humphrey. He quietly picked up the phone and told the panicky Wilson, ,in effect: "Don't you worry, we're not going to throw you to the wolves. This isn't the only thing you have done in your life. You have every rea- son to say you are a great Ameri- can, and don't you forget it." Humphrey runs over opposition like a steamroller. But he is al- ways careful to pick up the man after flattening him down. A year ago, for example, Humphrey flew to Brazil to tell our South Ameri- can neighbors that Uncle Sam was ending the big giveaways. * * * NO SOONER had he got the words out than Harold Stassen, back in Washington, announced a grandiose Marshall Plan for Asia. Humphrey got Stassen on the ov- erseas phone and laid him low with a barrage of blunt language. But as soon as Humphrey re- turned, he went out of his way to make Stassen feel important at Cabinet meeting. Because news of Stassen's scolding had leaked to the Washington Merry-Go- Round, Humphrey met with a small group of reporters off the record and spent most of the time sympathizing with Stassen's prob- lems and giving him a build-up. Virtually the same thing has happened regarding Nixon recent- ly. Shortly after Ike was strick- en, Nixon, in the role of "acting President," crossed Humphrey's path by calling in the Budget Di- rector and questioning him about the Budget. Humphrey doesn't like anyone to monkey with his budget. So Humphrey clipped Nixon's wings,.leaving nothing but plum- age to impress the public. Hum- phrey has now turned around, however, and picked Nixon up again, giving him support and backing as long as he keeps his place. The diplomatic way the whole thing was handled-namely, the letter from Ike authorizing Nixon to preside at the Cabinet and Security Council-was a typi- cal Humphrey operation. Personally, Humphrey is warm, earthy, considerate. He speaks in blunt, simple language, is persua- sive to the point of being magnetic. Though he was invited by the President just to sit in on National Security Council meetings and doesn't even have a vote, Hum- phrey has emerged as the most influential man on the Council. (copyright, 1955, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 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. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1955 VOL. LXVII, NO. 35 General Notices Choral Union Members with good attendance records please call for courtesy pass to the Cleveland Orches- tra concert (3rd concert in the Choral Union series) on Fri., Nov. 4-between 9:00 and 11:30 a.m., and 1:00 to 4:00 p.m., at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. After 4:00 no tickets will be issued. Change In Parking Lot Use. Effective Mon., Nov. 7, parking in the right of way leading to the Michigan Union from Thompson Street will be changed from Staff Parking to open Metered Parking. Parking will be permitted on the north side of this drive dly and the meters are arranged for parallel parking at a nickel an hour on a 24- hour basis. Student Government Council. Sum- mary of action taken at meeting of Nov. 2. APPROVED: Minutes of previous meeting. Scheduling of meeting on November 18 at 3:15 p.m., Union; and on Novem- ber 22 at 7:30 p.m.; no meeting will be held on November 16, the night of election count. Officers will be elected at November 22 meeting. Opened petitioning: for Student Ae- tivities Scholarship Board, to close Nov. 16. APPROVED: Calendar of activities for spring term, including eight one o'clock closing hour nights-February 18, March 17, 23, April 20, 21; May 5, 18, 26. Amendments to constitution of Senior Society. Additional performance, Union Opera, Tuesday, December2. Plans for pep rally program on Nov. 18; further consideration to be given to plans for a dance on that night. Student Religious Association-Inter- national Student Association. Inter- cultural Outing, November 5-6, Saline Valley Farms Youth Hostel. ENDORSED: Charter of organization of the Student Relations Committee. In taking this action the Council recognized the re- sponsibility of the Committee to the University Development Council from which it derives its authority; and ac- knowledged the work of the Committee in promoting the program of the De- velopment Council on the student level. REFERRED: To the Campus Affairs Committee for study and recommendations-procedure and policy relating to activities attract- ing all-campus attention, sponsored by individual housing units. . . to report to the Council at the December 14 meeting. DELEGATED: Book Exchange operation to the Union for a trial period of one year. Lectures University Lecture, "Biochemistry of Visual Excitation." Dr. George Wald, professor of biology, Harvard University, 4:15 p.m. Fri., Nov. 4, Rackham Amph- theatre. Open to the public. Lecture - "The Peopling of Latin America:Pioneer Settlements in the Central West of Brazi" by Dr. Clarence Jones, chairman of the department of geography, Northwestern University. Sponsored by the Latin-American Stud- les Committee and the Department of Geography. Fri., Nov. 4, 7:30 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham 'Building. Astronomy Department visitors' Night (Only high school age and older admit- ted.) Fri., Nov. 4, 8:00 p.m., Room 2003 Angell Hall. Dr. Freeman D. Miller will show the color film, "The Story of Palomar." After the movie the Student Observatory on the fifth floor of Angell Hall will be open for inspection and for telescopic observations of the Per- seus double cluster and a double star. Note: Individual children accompanied by adults will be admitted. A special children's night has been scheduled for Nov. 25. Concerts Composers Forum, 8:30 Mon. evening, Nov. 7, Aud. A, Angell Hall; works by student composers Karl Magnuson, Sey- mour Altucher, Judith Vander, Yalcin Yuregir, and Henry Onderdonk. Open to the public. Academic Notices Astronomical Colloquium. Sat., Nov. 5, 2:00 p.m., the McMath-Hulbert Ob- servatory, Lake Angelus, Michigan. Dr. Leo Goldberg will speak on "Recent Results with a Solar Vacuum Spectro- graph." Events Today First Laboratory Playbill presented by the Department of Speech tonight at 8:00 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. All seats reserved at 35c each. Tickets on sale at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre box office 10:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m. Placement Notices PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS: City of Detroit, Civil Service Coi- misio. nnunce peninflflgs for Medit- "DICE Lure Students" screams the headline. The story is "played" big, expose stuff. University of Michigan students are visiting the gambling tables ir a Toledo den. How do they get there? How many are there? This is big. But the only thing big in this case is the headline. And the only thing big in this case is the headline. And the only expose is that some people in Ohio are gambling and its illegal. Not that newspapers don't have the right to be as sensational as they want. That's freedom of the press, no matter how they write the news. But there's more to it, this time. An inside page headline states: "Toledo Dice Lure Michi- gan Students." That leaves the impression that hordes of Michigan students are filling the gambling hall. Readers will be demanding something be done. BUT the story mentions Uniiversity of Michi- gan students only twice. "There are indications that students from the University of Michigan find their way into the dim parking lot. Inside they manage to drop their spending money, sometimes a little more." That's all-indications. For example, the cars sport Michigan license plates. I guess that's all the proof you need. If there is any more, there is no mention of it. Inside a youth, called the "professor," who Editorial Staff Dave Baad ........................... 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 Edmunds.............Associate Women's Editor John Hirtzel ..................... Chief Photographer Business Staff Dick Alstrom ....................... Business Manager Bob Ilgenfritz ............ Associate Business Manager Ken Rogat .......................Advertising Manager says he was graduated from the University of. Michigan in 1952 is rolling the dice. He looks about nineteen, the newspaper says. Hardly old enough to be a graduate. But he says he's from the U of M. That's all the proof you need. And from the story, it seems that's all the proof there is. BUT today parents will be wohdering about it. This is the first indication of such ac- tivity for Michigan students, but it's all you need. People will be wondering and some will be pointing the finger. It might well be that a Michigan graduate is gambling illegally in Toledo. As Dean Wal- ter Rea saidhere, in the thousands of students and graduates from the U~niversity, "one or two would probably do anything." But isn't the University entitled to some kind of facts in support of the charge? News- papers for years have been editorially opposed to this type of behavior coming from congres- sional committees, and particularly from one senator. The newspaper that ran this story has been one of them. Certainly if Michigan students are going to be incriminated some facts are necessary in support. There's more to the newspaper busi- ness than selling the copies, but "exposes" like this one make you wonder. New Books at the Library York, William Morrow, 1955. Curtis, Charles P.-The Oppenheimer Case; New York, Simon & Schuster, 1955. Ellison, Jerome-Report to the Creator; New York, Harper & Brothers, 1955. von Kurenberg, Joachim-The Kaiser; New York, Simon & Schuster, 1955. Marret, Mario-Seven Men Among the Pent guins; New York, Harcourt, Brace, 1955. Maziere, Francis-Expedition Tumuc-Humac; New York, Doubleday & Co., 1955. Cloete, Stuart-The African Giant; Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1955. Foster, James-Great Folktales of Wit and Humor; New York, Harper & Bros., 1955. Hays, Will-The Memoirs of Will H. Hays; New York, Doubleday, 1955. Hillary, Edmund - High Adventure; New York, E. P. Dutton, 1955. Jennings, John-Chronicle of the Calypso LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Plans.Student Apathy' Club; Poem on Rally Hooray for Apathy ,, , To the Editor: AN ABOMINABLE situation at our school has come to my at- tention. The present student ac- tivity program at the U. of M. is designed to exploit the interests of only approximately 5% of the student population. If a student is interested in re- ligious affairs, he can join one of the many religious clubs. If a student is interested in politics, he can join one of the many political clubs. If a student is interested in a weekly orgy, he can join a fraternity or a Co-op. But what of 95% of the student population who just don't care? I propose the formation of the STUDENT APATHY CLUB (SAC). Membership in this club will unite these students for a common pur- pose-'To spread the gospel of apathy to the entire student body.' All members of this club will get a free year'scsubscription to TV Guide. A lecture series will be initiated. Leading non-entities from all over the world will be thing? You will only forget it in a couple of years. If the apathetic population of the world can convert the few am- bitious people, all wars and strife will end. Never in the history of the world has an apathetic group started a war. We have an up-hill fight. The student affair personnel will fight us at every turn. They have self- ish interests-their jobs. As our organization grows these people will be re-located to more worth- while jobs: i.e. turning on and off TV sets. We have set our sights on a gol- den age void of all turmoil, strife and ambition: AN AGE OF WORLD APATHY. --Richard N. Myers, Grad. Poem... To the Editor: I MOVED at leisure a half an hour before eight To Choral Union to hear that no- torious debate Arabs and Jews alert, there sat and wait Conducted the meeting without a bit Himself entangle or to either side commit While facts the panel took pleas- ure to omit. Oh I hate them I must confess For the ugly beliefs I heard them profess Shame! The very facts they did suppress O God, unseen, why must they oppress? One fourth the truth they did re- veal Three fourths of it they did can- ceal Demos tell me! how does this ap- peal to you? Is there a chance for re- appeal? Tell me Demos do you believe their fabrication? Much of what you have heard is pure falsification Of truth, History in all its rami- fication O God of truth, thy Truth need no verification. My memory is not poor I can re- call Story omitted. If these are the leaders of to- morrow With hardened hearts and no sor- row And from past experience would not borrow The lessons, the sailors learned in their borrow Supposing in them lies the hope of the morrow How can we solve the problems of tomorrow? -K. Hanna, Grad. Who's Who?... To the Editor: YOUR PHOTOGRAPH of Doug- las McKay on the front page of Thursday's Daily was indeed a fine likeness of that distinguished Oregonian. Is Ezra Benson so busy "mending fences," as your cut- line states, that McKay is acting as his proxy in relations with the press? -Kathleen Armstrong, '58 Item of Interest...'