i 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 "We Wait Till He Begins To Act Restless, See?" Then We Sort Of Mosey Up To Him--" 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. ,DAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1955 NIGHT EDITOR: MARY LEE DINGLER rf ,{ '. 7-44 Spirit of Sport Degenerates In Final Game ...0 NEW WOUK NOVEL: 'marjorie Morningstar': Full of Truth The author of "The Caine Mutiny," climaxing a long, pregnant silence of four years, has released to an expectant world his new novel, a long and prodigious work. "Marjorie Morningstar" tells (in 48 chapters, 565 pages) of the emergence into womanhood of the middle-class Jewish girl of that name. But Marjorie Morningstar isn't really her name; at 17 she changed it to that from Marjorie Morningstern. Herein lies the beauty of the stark title, which points up so poignantly the essence of the novel: the book relates in detail the complex history of an ex- ceptionally attractive girl named Morgenstern, striving to make of herself the successful actress, Marjorie Morgenstar. Not a particle of the book's impact is destroyed by telling you that she does not succeed. We follow author Wouk's New York heroine through her school years and the jobs at upstate summer camps; we observe her growing away from her family and-for a time-away from the strict practices of her religion; we witness her, a girl not lacking in talent, setting out to storm the formidable barriers that face the would-be Broadway actress. But what marks Marjorie's growth, from the author's point of view, more than anything else, is her succession of romances. * * * * THROUGH THESE the reader (as well as Marjorie herself) gauges her level of maturity. The basic importance in the novel's structure of these early love affairs is stressed by the fact that for nearly four- fifths of the book the major dramatic tension is the question of the heroine's chastity. There are several questions the reader will ask himself as he puzzles in the subsiding wake of Marjorie's career. Whether she was a good or bad actress-a question which would seem of major im- portance in the story-is actually a point that will excite little con- jectrue. What does seem to be of maximum significance here is the rotten hand that author Wouk has dealt his main characters: Marjorie has picked the wrong profession to break into: and she has picked the W ITH collapse of Michigan's Rose Bowl hopes The chant has been heard at every home game yesterday came a degeneration of the spirit and the pressure on the team has mounted ac- of sport seldom seen at a Michigan athletic cordingly. event. Fans leaving the Stadium were strongly dis- INHEN it became evident yesterday the trip gusted over the last three minutes of yester- to Pasadena was vanishing the students' day's game when two Michigan football players athletic perspective vanished. Although argu- were kicked out of the game, fights started ing with the referee, and rough play when among fans, football players became targets of you're behind has always been sour grapes, a fun-loving snowball throwers and goal posts few of our players also were victims of this came down. extreme pressure for that trip to the Bowl. Many were happy the sight was limited to Players can be somewhat excused on these the 100,000 spectators and not sent over a TV grounds. Fans can't. network as rumored earlier in the week.g It's been said through the years that -Michi- Destruction of a mid-winter vacation in gan carries on a dignified athletic program. California is no reason to let the University's Fans brag about the school's reluctance to fine dignified athletic tradition suffer simul- overemphasize athletics while still turning out taneously. True athletc perspective would have fine records year after year. We look down been preserved if fans had instead spent the our noses at our contemporaries to the north- last three minutes remembering some parting west and south as typifying athletic over- seniors playing their last game for Michigan. emphasis. Capt. Ed Meads, Lou Baldacci, Tony Branoff, But yesterday's episode resulted from over- Ed Hickey, Jim Fox, John Morrow and Dave emphasis on our football team's performance Hill deserved standing ovations for three fine this fall. Since the first victory last September years of football for Michigan. fans have been pointing for the Rose Bowl. -DAVE BAAD, Managing Editor ..Fans,-Players Share Blame - - t N WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Housing Gives GOP Headache " MICHIGAN football players and rooters should not be ashamed . . . ever . .. to lose a football game. Yesterday, however, was an unfortunate situ- ation for two influential state schools-involv- ed in a "widely-watched roughhouse." More than just a few apologies should be issued from both sides, Michigan, a fine team that won seven of nine games this year, lost 17-0 to Ohio State, probably the better team. There can be no argument here; we can hold our head high. Players and coaches did their best to keep the fine, winning tradition that "is Michigan." However, the end of yesterday's contest saw sportsmanship thrown to the winds. The out- come of a football game became secondary to the atmosphere it was played in. No one can truthfully say that they were "really proud" to be affiliated with either Michigan or Ohio State after yesterday's fiasco. F OR the second time in three years, the visi- tors have arrived in Ann Arbor and created havoc. The sight of fans rushing onto the field and tearing down the goal posts, throwing snow balls at players and officials while the game was still being played, certainly does not leave a favorable impression. Michigan, too, is at fault in this respect; but worse, was the general lack of sincere support for the team, when behind. Conspicuous were the many students who didn't stay with the team to the very end-to give recognition to all the seniors who played courageously for the last time. Emotionally, the final contest was at a key pitch. It was understandable but still very unfortunate that the conduct of some of the players should set such a poor example for nearly 100,000 people, young and old. They say that a sour taste can be overcome by a sweet one later on. Michigan should do more than its share in the future to regain some of that lost respect. --DAVE GREY v TODAY AND TOMORROW: The Changing Answers. By WALTER LIPPMANN WHETHER or not any solutions were evolved at the Literary College conference Thurs- day, the necessary questions were asked. Is there intellectual curiosity? Is it being thwarted by either students or faculty, or just size? Is there a blame, and how do we approach it? For each problem, there was an opinion, a pro and con which attempted somehow to reach a logical solution to a rather indefinable crisis, This "crisis" could only be expressed in this broad, indefinable way. It involved the student who felt stifled and overlooked in the mass lecture halls, the professor who felt overlooked sitting alone in his office waiting for the per- sonal contact both he and the students crave, and the question of marks-are they necessary, are they accurate? It involved to a large de- gree the question of size, its effect and how, if thwarting, it could be overcome.- However, students, and often some faculty people as well, tend at times to be critical of such attempt at solution. "They've been talking about it for years," one student said in an informal discussion after the conference. "But that's all they do-talk. We all realize the problem, and there were a lot of good solutions given-why doesn't some- body do something?" yET, it's not that easy. If there's realization of the problem, it isn't clear, and if the solutions seem applicable, there is always an- other opinion to challenge them. What we need is smaller classes was one solution. Yet Dean Odegaard, at the meeting, pointed out that the University compared very favorably in its class size with even many of the Ivy League colleges and someone else men- tioned that his students preferred lectures to small discussions. Another solution was more student-faculty integration. But why, asked one professor, do we sit alone in our offices with no one to see. If the students want faculty advice and dis- cussion, it is available to them. 01hr Mtrhinan satnth Still another solution was that of raising the University's standards. They're high now, said the speaker-make them higher. He pro- posed more papers, more books, longer assign- ments. This way, he felt, only the really in- tellectually curious would remain. Yet another speaker asked less work, fewer courses with more class credit, so the student had more time to devote himself to his subject matter and explore it when his curiosity was aroused. FROM all this, the only clear conclusion is that the conclusion is not clear. "These are all pseudo solutions," one speaker said. They don't work any better for everyone than does the present system. The problem seems to be that of a new era. Education is entering a new environment, just as politics and much of our social life is. The students that the Universities are dealing with are not the same students of 50, even 15 years ago. They come with different goals, for different reasons than their predecessors. . The solutions that such groups as the Liter- ary College faculty must find, then, cannot be based on the logic of a previous age. There ac- tually can be no assumptions. How do we know that today's students really are intellectually curious? One speaker said that if they weren't they shouldn't be in col- lege. That isn't really the answer.. If they are in college they show every sign of. achieving marks as high as the student of old, or at least high -enough to remain. Maybe today's student is happier in the mob. He may not want to discuss, he may just want to "get through," or as our society has so nobly entitled it-"succeed." Maybe today's student isn't the individual that some think he is, or even that he thinks he is. Maybe he's been referred to so long as a statistic, that he's lost consciousness of being anything else. IF THIS is the modern student, then the mod- ern colleges seem to be treating him ap- propriately. But what .of the one out of 10, or 20, or 100 who is the "student" we would like to envision - who wants to dis- cuss, be treated as an individual, react with ONE Negro worker, fired from the Housing and Home Finance Agency, may cause Visenhower forces more political headaches than all the other civil servants dropped from government since 1953. The reason is that Mrs. Corienne Morrow, after being fired by the Housing Agency, was qvdered rein- stated by the Civil Service Com- mission on the ground that her dismissal was arbitrary. The Hous- ing Agency complied with the tech- nicality of the order by reinstating her for a few hours, then dropped her again. The second time, she was not actually fired, but riffed-in other words, dropped for "reduction in force." This means her job was abolished. Mrs. Morrow had previously been fired as an adviser on racial rela- tions.after she opposed segrega- tion in granting federal loans for housing. Her colleague, Dr. Frank Horne, was fired at the same time. AL CAP, author of the famed comic strip Li'l Abner, was talking to the Washington Advertising Club about some of his comic char- acters, including the latest, "Moon- beam McSwine." He was explain- ing how he invented these charac- ters. Spying Washington Post car- toonist Herblock in the audience, Capp announced: "I see that kind, gentle and con- siderate colleague of mine, Herb Block, over in the corner. I see you've got some new characters too, Herb. I especially like that character of yours, Roy Cohn. And I see you've got another new and interesting character, Dick Nixon." * * * PRESSURE on Senator Kefauver to run for Vice President is mount- ing. It would be a unique idea if nominees for Vice President were chosen through Presidential pri- maries, not picked at the last min- ute in smoke-filled rooms. With the increasing burden placed on the President, the job of Vice President has become increasingly important. One-fifth of our Presi- dents have died in office, yet the By DREW PEARSON man who succeeds the President in time of emergency is picked by politicians rather than by the people. The politicians aren't quite sure whether Adlai's present position as a front-runner will help or hurt him. Ordinary politics doesn't liven up until next spring, but the pace was sharpened as a result of Eisenhower's September illness. From now on, Adlai has to re- member that everything he says or does, every wiggle of his little finger, will be interpreted one way or the other by friends and ene- mies. * * * IT'S BEEN a long time since General Motors ran the Demo- cratic party. Most people have for- gotten it but John J. Raskob, Chairman of General Motors who took over the Bankrupt Demo- cratic Party after the Al Smith defeat in 1928, paid off the deficit. and put the Dems back on their feet. It was Raskob who hired acid-penned Charlie Michelson who did so.much to defeat Hoover in 1932. Today General Motors has three members in the Eisen- hower Cabinet plus important po- litical impact. Democrats at Chicago speculated whether Eisenhower would get bored at Gettysburg. If he gets too bored, they wonder, will he listen to the palace guard, and run again. It's significant that Mrs. Roosevelt came out for Adlai Stev- enson some time ago. Inside rea- son, according to friends, is the fact that Averell Harriman pushed aside her son, FDR, Jr., for the Governorship of New York. Carmine DeSapio, head of Tam- many, who is Governor Harriman's Jim Farley, was noticeable by his absence at Chicago. Judge Sam Rosenman of the old Roosevelt Brain Trust, now brain-trusting for "Ave," has been advising Harri- man to keep DeSapio in the back- ground. Almost 10 days ago De- Sapio announced he had a virus and wouldn't come to Chicago. The course of a virus infection normally can't be predicted that far in advance. Roger Tubby, who left Harriman to work for Steven- son, did so with Harriman's full consent. No friction was involved. (Copyright, 1955, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) THREE BIG NAMES: Democratic Convention Void of New Ideaso wrong man to love. Here are the facing upbravely, characteristic- ally to the facts, transcends her failure. We respect her at the story's end. There are wide dissimilarities be- tween "Marjorie lhMrningstar" and the fabulously successful "Caine Mutiny," and the books have few points in common. "MARJORIE MORNINGSTAR" tells a more leisurely story, com- pelling and memorable in its own way. Marjorie herself is, more- over, a heroine who will doubt- lessly be long remembered.dIt is the length of the novel as much as anything else, I think, that will tend to produce this retentive im- pression. Other critics will denounce the book's length and indict the auth- or with tediousness. It is true; author Wouk spares us none of the tedium of rambling conversations or backsliding soliloquies. But neither are we shut off from an insight into some of the drawn- out, hard-to-profit-by experiences of growing up. The book is full of truth. The author writes of Jewish cus- toms and family religious celebra- tions for the first time in a work destined for widespread popular- ity. These descriptions, and the portrayal of Marjorie as a mem- ber of a good Jewish family, con- vey the breath of reality that sur- rounds the work, that imparts substance and life into prose. And let it further be said, since now is the moment for praise, that no one writes a clearer prose than Herman Wouk., -Donald A. Yates LETTERS F to the EDITOR Rebuttal...* To the Editor: IN REGARD to the insidious mis- sive of Thursday by Messers., or we should say Comrades Corn- feld and Goldberg, we have a few points to clarify: 1. Tradition is the cornerstone upon which our society rests-in- deed it is the key essence of all that is highest and most lofty in Western Man. The "M" is a tradi- tion! Need we say more? 2. Rivalling tradition as the key to society is thekeducational pro- cess. As we all know, the normal curve, here at Michigan at any rate, figures prominently in the educational system. Consider for a moment the awful consequences entailed in removing the "M". Those who venture to tread upon this "M" before examination meet with diaster. However unfortunate this phenomenon may appear, it is nonetheless a necessary condi- tion that 10 per cent of the stu- dents must meet with this disaster in order that normal curve may be constructed. It is therefore mani- festedly apparent that a removal of the "M" would ultimately lead to the total destruction of the edu- cational process as we know it. 3. In the pursuit of their deviant ends, Comrades Cornfeld and Goldberg have grossly misrepre- sented certain facts. a-The co- efficient of friction between bronze and shoeleather is not .2 but is instead .47 which is insignificant at the 5 per cent level of confi- dence. b-The "M" was implanted in Michigan soil 34 and not 37 elements of tragedy. But Marjorie, I . DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN THE Daily Official Bulletin to s official publication of the UivtitY of Michigan for which the McigAa Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 8553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notice for the Sunday edition must be in by 2 p.m. Friday. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1955 - Vy M. LXVII, NO. 48 General Notices Students who are now securing their new automobile license plates (1958) should record the change with the Office of Student Affairs, 1020 Admin- istration Building, at this time. Notice is hereby given that the University automobile regulations wil be lifted from 5:00 p.m. wed., Nov. 2 until 8:00 a.m. Mon., Nov. 28, 1955. The General Library and al the Divi- sional Libraries will be closed on No. 24 (Thanksgiving Day) and on the Set. following, Nov. 20. There will be no Sunday service on Nov. 27. The General Library will be open on Wed., Nov. 23, and Fri., Nov. 25, 8 a.m.- 6 p.m. All service units within the building will be open on their regular schedules. Divisional libraries will be closed Wed. evening and will be open theft regular schedules on Fri., Nov. 25. Womens Swimming Pool-Thanksgiv- ing Week-End Hours: The pool will be open for recreational swimming at the following times: Co-rec swimming-Sat., 7:15-9:15 p.m., Sun., 3:00-5:00 p.m.; Michigan Night-Sun. 7:15-9:15 p.m. Michigan Actuarial Club: Mon., Nov. 21, at 4:00 p.m., in Room 3212 Angell Hall. J: P. Stanley, Actuary, Social Security Department of the UAW-CIO, will speak on "Actuarial Problems of the UAW-CIO." Lectures "An Evening With Mark Twain.' Actor Henry Hull presents a program of readings and comments from the works of Mark Twain tomorrow, 8:30 p.m. in Hill Auditorium as the fourth number on the Lecture Course. Tickets on sale tomorrow at the Auditorium box office, 10:00 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Lecture-"Metabolic Effects of Dini- trophenol in Relation to Thyroid Func- tion," Dr. C. W. Castor. Auspices of Medicine Journal Club. Mon., Nov. 21, Hospital Amphitheater, 12:45 p.m. Open for medical students and physicians. W. Beverly Carter, publisher of the Pittsburgh Courier, second in the series of University Lectures In Journalism Tues., Nov. 22. "The Role of the Negro Newspaper in a Changing Society" at 3:00 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheater. Concerts The Robert Shaw Chorale and Orches- tra, Robert Shaw, Conductor, fifth con- cert in the Choral Union Series, Tues., Nov. 22, at 8:30 p.m. In Hill Auditorium, auspices of the University Musical Society. Information at the offices of the University Musical Society in Bur- ton Memorial Tower. The box office in Hill Auditorium will be open at 7:00 p.m. Tues. Academic Notices All Teacher's Certificate Candidates: Be sure to fill out yourrteacher's cer- tificate application and return at once to 1437 University Elementary School. Seminar in Chemical Physics. Tues., Nov. 22, 4:10 p.m., Room 2308 Chem- istry Building. Richard Anderson will speak on "The Application of High Speed Digital Computers to Some Problems in Molecular Structure." Mathematics Colloquium. Tues., Nov. 22, at 4:15 p.m., in Room 3011 Angell Hall. Prof. H. D. Kloosterman will speak on "Places In Algebraic Function Fields." By LEWIS HAMBURGER Daily Staff Writer CHICAGO-Although the avow- ed purpose of the Democratic Na- tional Committee's current meet- ing here is 'how,' the main topic of conversation seems to be 'Who?' Ostensibly the meeting is sup- posed to discuss the parties plans fo rthe future and more specifi- cally the organization of the 1956 convention. Most people here, though, limit their conversation to three names -- Stevenson, Harri- man and Kefauver. Despite this fact the basic work does continue. In day-long meet- LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler IIE J I ( NWI ings, detailed discussions of grass roots politics highlight activity which has assumed campaign heights. THE DISCOURAGING factor from the voters point of view how- ever, is the lack of concrete policy stands. Aside from attacking the Republican platforms in the field of foreign affairs, education and farm policy, the Democrats have failed to come up with any new ideas. A meeting of farm leaders, in- cluding former Secretary of Agri- culture Charles Brannan, was deemed "advisory and non parti- san," although it is thought to be the Democrats policy making group as far as farm issues are concern- ed. Governor Harriman itas been here since Friday when he was honored at a cocktail party by Chicago's Mayor Daley who is gen- erally thought to favor Stevenson. .rSen. Kefauver arrived Friday and former President Truman Sat- urday. * * * STEVENSON, the leading can- didate for the nomination has been at the Hotel Hilton several times during-the week establishing campaign headquarters and meet- ing people. The first Roper Poll taken since he announced he would run for the nomination favors his election over that of Vice President Nixon, should both men be candidates in 1956. 4 v I