'' ° tea, -' .r. . y . w- - - -- .- .-r Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday.January15.1956 SundayJanuary.15,1956 THE MICHIGAN DAILY JF r Activities Men "BIG RED" The Rise of Richard.Ni Dirty Shirts & Beer Busts THE REPRESENTATIVE: Usually really good only when hands with someone . . . undeniably a grand guy and great one for parties. shaking often a (Continued from Page 5) 0-_ -. doesn't do him much good to take a stand on anything, because few pay him any serious attention. 6. THE HUSTLER is forever bringing up new things and stir- ring up new controversies. Ordin- arily on or near the top of his organization, he is sure of himself and sincerely interested in con- structive accompisnments for the welfare of students, which re- mains, nevertheless, a subjective matter. He usually keeps an open mind on the issues that arise, but takes a strong stand once he decides his side.. Usually dissatisfied with the way things are, he works hard to improve them, even in his own organization. These are among the qualities that made him a suc- cess in his organization. He thrives on controversy and is, in some ways, like The Agita- tor. He certainly enjoys the pub- licity he gets and takes at least some satisfaction in a sense of accomplishment and in the feeling' of power that accompanies it. Although he may have a very pleasant personality, he is some- times unpopular with other "cam- pus leaders," both because he up- sets their complacency and be- By FRED STEINGOLD T~HE MEN of Gomberg House, South Quad, are proud of their house and their spirit for the house is expressed in everything they do. If their praise of Gomberg ! seems boastful at times, it's only because the men have developed a high degree of self-confidence based on their outstanding achievements in practically every phase of student activity. Dean of Men Walter B. Rea says that Gomberg is a unique house and represents the type of house the University is seeking to develop. He calls attention to the house "spirit and loyalty." The spirit has paid off in many ways. Evidence of it is seen in the Gomberg trophy case which is filled with 18 awards ranging from a three-year intra-mural sports championship trophy to a plaque for having the third highest grade-point average for men's houses last year. SUCCESS IS part of the Gomberg tradition which was begun in 1951 by Gil McMahon, Gomberg's first resident advisor. He was re- sponsible for interesting Gomberg men in extra-curricular activities. and they've been interested ever since. The tendency to help one an- other shows up in scholastics as well as in athletic endeavors. Two years ago a 'group of freshmen in the house were studying, with difficulty, for a chemistry blue- book. Bernie Berman, then a pre-med student, brought a large black- board into the lounge and for three nights he lectured to the freshmen on chemistry. Their performance on the exam raised the grading curve considerably. TEAM WORK played an import- ant part in Gomberg's victory in a tug-of-war last October. The participants in the contest bor- rowed a rope from the Detroit Police department. They practiced for several nights and when the tug-of-war came they pulled the heavier opposing team into the Huron River. The whole house usually turns out when Gomberg is participating in a competitive event. Shouts of "Go Big Red" fill the air as Gom- berg men cheer the team on to what they hope will be another victory for the house. "Big Red" is the shortened form of the "Big Red Machine," Gom- berg's official nickname. The house colors of red and white appear in Gomberg jackets, derbies, and beer mugs. Even when they are not made conspicuous by their red jackets, Gomberg men can be singled out of a group. Their house usually has the largest block of seats at such events as Gulantics and Union Opera., LESS FORMAL socializing is practiced by the 34 members of the GOE-Gomberg Older Ele- ment. The only qualification for membership in that organization is that the member be 21 years old. The chief functions of the organization are "spontaneous" meetings at local taverns. Another event which makes live- ly conversation for Gomberg men is the famed Gomberg Dirty Shirt contest which began in September of 1952. Participants had to wear the oversized Gomberg shirt for a full day whenever their name was drawn by lot. The incentive was a pot into which each contestant put 50 cents. As time went on, the shirt got dirtier' and dirtier and the wearer often found that he was a social outcast. Men dropped out of the contest when they had to wear the shirt on a date. Finally, in April of 1953 one brave man won himself the 25 dollar pot. The runner-up received the shirt. A MORE serious expression of Gomberg spirit is demonstrated by the Kelsey Memorial Award which the house has set up in memory of Jack Kelsey. Kelsey was a Gomberger who made a valuable contribution to the house and the school through his work in many student organi- zations. He died last April just two months after graduation. The Award provides an annual stipend for the Gomberg man who is most outstanding in "citizen- ship, scholarship, and versitility of aptitude." "This award," says Dean Rea, "is representative of Gomberg's group solidarity and affection -- that bond which means so much to a living group." THE HUSTLER: Sure of him- self, thrives on controversy, in- terested in constructive accomp- lishments. cause he has been more success- ful than they. However, they do not let this show, because of prag- matic considerations attendant to a fear of antagonizing him. By PHIL BREEN RICHARD M. NIXON, the Vice President of the United States, is a remarkable man. Nine short years ago he was a political non- entity, quiet, shy, and embarras- singly sincere. Today, he is a superb hand-shaker, a magnifi- cent back-slapper, .and odds-on favorite to win the 1956 Republi- can presidential nomination, if Ike doesn't run. Mr. Nixon is equipped with all the personal qualities and abilities important to a winning politician. He is personable. He is energetic. He is ruthless. He-can shed a tear at the click of a flash-gun and he can smile in the best toothpaste ad style. He is bright-eyed, fat- checked, and cheerful-looking- the picture of "Republican peace and prosperity., His friends, are many and influential, and he has organized a legion of supporters behind him. As the Nixon-for-President bandwagon rolls up steam and the 1956 campaign draws near there ,will be much said and witten, shouted and whispered about Vice President Nixon. The public will want to know more about this ris- ing young man from California, and it ,.ill have a hard time sift- ing the fact from the fable, separ- ating the truth from the half- truth and the half-truth from the outright lie. RICHARD Milhous Nixon was born on January 9, 1913 at Yorba Linda, California. He is de- scended from Quaker stock and he spent his formative years in Whittier, California, a town which was founded by pioneering Quak- ers in the 1880's and in which the influence of Quaker virtue was still very heavy during the time Nixon was growing up. Nixon's family operated a small grocery, Nixon's Market, u hich his brother Donald now runs. The family business was a modest one, but enough to provide the Nixons with a small measure of prosperity and to enable Hannah and Frank Nikon to educate three sons in the ways of Quaker tolerance and generosity. In 1934 the newly-founded Duke University Law, School offered him a scholarship and he accept- ed. He graduated from Duke in 1937 with honors and went back home to Whittier to practice law. When World War II erupted Nixon moved to Washington to work for a government agency; which badly needed lawyers. By law his Quaker religion exempted. him from military service. He felt, however, that this was a war which "had to be fought." He ob- tained a Navy commission in 1943 and saw combat in the South, Pacific. Near the end of the war, he was transferred to an office in 'Baltimore to work on Navy con- tracts. "Amateur Candidate" ONE SUMMER day, in 1945, while he was observed in the routine of his desk job, he received a telephone call from a long time friend of the family, banker Her- man Perry. Perry told Nixon that a 100 man committee of theRe- publican leaders of California's Twelfth District were looking for a man to run for Congress. In 1946 the committee, In desperate need of a candidate, had bought space in the state newspapers ad-1 vertising themselves, to use thef Saturday Evening Post's words, as "amateur politicians searchingI for an amateur candidate," and "Are you available?" Perry asked Nixon. "I am," NixoiA quickly replied. "Are you a Republican?" "I guess so," Nixon answered. "I voted for Dewey in '44." Nixon took a plane out to the Coast and appeared before the committee. They unanimously en- dorsed him. He was on his way. At the age of 33, Richard Nixon, the man of Quaker ideals, had taken the first step on the way to becoming Richard Nixon, the poli- tician. A grass-roots candidate, he knew little about campaigning. He learned fast. He canvassed the whole area, talking to business and community leaders in every town in the sprawling Twelfth District. Finally, he inveigled his Democratic opponent, Jerry Voor- his, into meeting him in a public debate. At the debate Nixon accused Voorhis, who had served in the House of Representatives for ten years, of being a "New Deal Soc- ialist." He produced documentary evidence showing that Voorhis was endorsed by an organization some of whose members belonged to 'the CIO Political Action Com- mittee, a group which was then controlled by Communists. Ham- mering away at Voorhis' alleged radicalism, Nixon went on to win the election by a big majority, At the outset of his political career he had used a winning campaign strategy which he has employed ever since: attack. Blast away at every one of your oppon- ent's weak spots, and say little, if anything at all, about your own policies and plans. Sell your per- sonality to the public, not your ideas. Be quick, forceful, and dar- ing. "The greater the risk, the greater the opportunity," as he has said. "Lost & Frustrated" A S A freshman Congressman he "felt lost - frustrated." A Washington newspaper even feat- ured an article about him entitled, "Greenest Congressman in Town." But again he learned fast. He was assigned to the "Labor and Educa- tion Committee of the House and was instrumental in the passage of the -Taft-Hartley Labor Relations Act and other important meas- ures. 1948 saw him easily re-elected and he returned to Congress to take a post on the House Un- American Activities Committee. It is reported that he had serious misgivings about joining the Com- mittee, that he was afraid the work of the Committee might damage the basic American -free- doms. "We are deeply concerned," he said, "that in our efforts to com- bat and break up subversive movements ... we do not impair or destroy any of the rights and liberties which we hold so funda- mental in America." Subsequently he publicly de- clared for the rights of accused individuals to refrain from giving self-incriminating evidence, and he urged some coded procedure governing the actions of all chair- men of Congressional investigat-1 ing committees.; It was, however, because of his work on the Un-American Activi-i ties Committee that Nixon first gained national fame. He became] an expert Red-hunter, springing suddenly into the national spot- light when the Committee explod- ed the Alger Hiss-Whittaker came the prime mover in the af- 1 nary speeches in the annals of RICHARD M. NIXON . . .. "The greatest error you can make in politics is to get mad." "I started with ideas of black or white. -But I found that it's hard to find anywh( where it's all black or all white . .. I found compromise is often what is righ Nixon's 1Transformation From "The Greenest Congressmar To "One of the Great Leaders of Men" 'i fair, making headlines every day. He became wonderfully adept at appearing before cameras and microphones, giving speeches and holding press conferences. Nixon the Quaker ,was fast be- coming Nixon the actor, Nixon the orator, and above all, Nixon the politician. BY 1950 the transformation was complete. He had become, as political history. Pouring out the details of his family's penury, he claimed that the fund was necessary to defray the many expenses of Senatorial life that a Senator's salary ordi- narily couldn't afford, and that the contributors of the fund did not expect and did not receive any special favors. Choked with emotion, he made references to his wife and ,i z c i t 1 t z x f -Daily-Chuck Kelsey HOUSE LOYALTY sometimes turns out like this. The famed Gomberg Dirty Shirt Contest, which ran through seven months of contestants, resulted in a 25 dollar bill for the winner-the odoriferous shirt for the loser. The British Philosopher Took His Tea There By RICHARD LAING THE South Cafeteria of the Michigan Union will never be the same. The carved-top tables will still be there and so will the "captain's chairs," t hose "beefed-up" bow- back Windsors painted in solid blues and reds and yellows. It will still be a cafeteria; the alums in fall top-coats will still (during mealtimes) be able to find the really famous carvings. The record of the Rose Bowl games of 1902 and of 1948 and 1951 and names like "Germany" Schultz and Willie Heston will still be there. I suppose even those scores that have been altered by disgruntled anti-Michigan fans will still be there, the 6 points their team made cleverly converted to 36 or to 61. All this will still be there and people will still eat there. What then is lost or missing? Well, the between-meals loungers will no longer be there. The old south side is to become part of a nice neat meal-time-only cafeteria. And it was never the mealtime-only people that made the place what ANY mid-afternoon a few years ago, one might, in looking for some especially famous table top, find near the scores of the '48 games another carving for that year. It would be down at the far end, opposite from where the professor is examining photostats of Alexandrian papyri. At that far end, near the foot- ball records we find that "G.O. '84" has somehow anachronisti- cally managed to carve "War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, Ignor- ance is Truth." Evidently 1948 was some sort of strange topsy-turvy world in which more than that Rose. Bowl game occurred. Someone must have been a bit annoyed about something then, but the Professor of Classical Studies seems unperturbed. He is somewhat more the scholar than the rebel. Perhaps his scholar- ship is a rebellion. For the princi- pal "loungers" of the South Cafe- teria were rebels or scholars. Most were a bit of both. Tea & Vitriol THE clergyman who had proved that the world was flat used, to sit there. The man with the the Armenian fight for independ- ence did his writing there. The young man who pulled the wires out of the public address "squawk-box" was there along with a friend who did the same thing a few weeks later. Dozens of dis- sertations were begun and finished there and scores of graduate stu- dents studied there for prelimin- ary exams for the PhD. Several Hopwood Award win- ning manuscripts were written there. Every evening a depart- ment chairman had a dish of but- ternut ice cream and read the next morning's Free Press. A visiting British philosopher found the place on his second day in town and after that always had tea and cookies there at 3:30 p.m. Cab-drivers, would-be lawyers, candidates for the Neuro-Psychia- tric Institute, mathematicians, and the student who carved the Or- well slogans all sat at the same round-table. OFTEN it was difficult to separ- ate the scholars from the reb- els. This was made more difficult because some were hybrids. At the same table with the . rebels there was a young man who used to sit cross-ways in one of those "captain's chairs," legs hanging over the arm. His companions kept talking and he kept reading. One day he announced to them that he was leaving to take a teaching appoint- ment in an eastern university. While they had quarreled over the state of the nation, the nature of reality, and women of Belleville, -4e had quietly secured his PhD. Reality & Ridicule Scores of men date their in- tellectual growth from the occa- sion of some particularly intense discussion there. There were those that backed off from life abd those that dove head first into it without prior examination of the depth of the water. Now and then things were quite grim. There were those who had tried to get rid of themselves. There were missing places for those who had succeeded. Some- one was always writing a-play, ex- plaining it. NEW cafeteria will be neat- er, cleaner, and better lighted. It will be open only during meal- time. There will be an all-hours tap-room but it will include TV, radio; and juke-box. the students. Most of the South Cafeteria hangers-on have gone off somewhere else, and the new tap room will not suit them. But the tall, and the short and the medium sized classical scholars are still in town. The professor of history, and the department head who had his ice cream there every evening are still around. So are the two professors of ro- mance languages, and the student who studied for prelims with his gloves on, and the teachers of English who had their conferences with students there. THERE are still some of the graduate students about who found that their writing was bet- ter in this place where though there were other humans nearby -those humans did not shout to assert their presence. One of the young men who tore the wires out of the P.A. system is still around and so is the Union house-man who every night flicked the lights at 11:10 p.m. and began putting the red and blue and yel- low chairs up on the carved tables. Maybe the student I once saw there, who carefully salted his newspaper, page by page as he read it is still around. There must Robert Coughlan has put it, "a completely political man," mach- ine-like in his "ability to digest political factors and come up with the predictions." As candidate for the Senate from the State of Cal- ifornia, he was a natural. He based his campaign on the "failure of the Administration's 'Par Eastern policy which had made the Korean War inevitable, made the Korean War inevitable," and he linked disloyalty in the Government, as evidenced by the Hiss case, with this policy. Nixon accused his Democratic adversary, Helen Gahagan Doug- las of being subversively inclined and pointed out that in the House of Representatives she had voted 354 times for the same bills Com- munist..-Congressman Vifo Mar- cantonio had voted for. His decisive victory added to the Republican landslide of 1950. Nix- on had now won three in a row, and he was ready for the next one. The prospect of California's 32 electoral votes and Eisenhow- er's personal liking for the man boomed him (into the. Republican vice-presidential nomination in 1952. "Nickels for Nixon" HE WAS vigorously campaign- ing for the GOP cause when the story of a secret fund (which Democrats facetiously l a b e l e d "Nickels for Nixon") which had been raised for him while he was a Senator was brought before the public. Party leaders were shocked, feared the outcome of the election was in serious jeopardy, and asked Nixon to resign-from the race. Nixon demanded a chance to vindicate himself, and on October, 1952, before a radio and television children, and even to the family dog Checkers which an admirer from Texas had sent him. ("You know, the kids love that dog, and I want to tell you right now,' that regardless of what they say about it, we're going to keep it.") As a result of the speech Nixon received some two millio4 favor- able letters and telegrams and the unanimous re-endorsement of the GOP. Afterwards, speaking about his performance, he gushed: "I told my wife I didn't think I could do it. But it was like before starting in a football game. You're all keyed up, you're praying, your knees are full of water. But then they blow the whistle and you get in there and hit that line. I probably had been preparing to do it all my life." NIXON had been spared the political axe, but his influence and prestige among fellow Re- publicans was seriously damaged. His performance as vice-president has been a real political comeback. No one stands higher in the eyes of President Eisenhower than Nixon. Ike has described the Vice- President as "one of the great leaders of men" and as "the most valuable member of my team." In the Eisenhower Administra- tion Nixon has achieved the repu- tation of "Mr. Fix-it"-the man who is most responsible for any semblance of harmony in the Re- publican Party. He has become the liason man between the White House and stubborn Congressional leaders, the mediator between the left and right wing of the GOP. RESIDENT Eisenhower has al- lowed Vice-President Nixon to J J 1 i 1 1 t 1 I t 1 t F t 5 f t I)