v % T wjE ftUEUIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1M Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIYERSrrY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 "Somebody's Changed The Course Of This Stream Too" BOOK REVIEW: i? x '~ A ~V ~ ~'~JHlooer 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 repints. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1955 NIGHT EDITOR: LEW HAMBURGER A Look At Freshman Rushing From Both Sides o hy Nrushee is the most important. For it is he, and Pro. Why Not he alone, who has the power to decide a matter Take Advantage? which is to affect his stay at the University for the remainder of his undergraduate days. o RUSH or not to rush - that is the THE CONSEQUENCES of two weeks of hand- problem. shaking and social get-togethers are often A crude paraphrase of the Bard, we admit, had to overcome by the new student. Neglect but uppermost in the minds of most freshmen. of studies for even this short period of time Sorority rushing is already underway and has much greater impact upon the first semes- fraternities start in less than a week. ter freshman than upon those students who We would advise freshmen, whether they have already become adjusted to the great intend to join now, later or never, to rush. Too changeover from high school to college life. often, students try to decide whether or not to Rushing, undeniably, is a good thing, but rush in terms of whether or not they want to only after the student has had time to become pledge. conscious of his main responsibility at the Rushing does not involve an obligation to University. join a fraternity or sorority. It gives the First semester rushing also works to the fraternal groups and the freshmen a chance todisadvantage of the quadrangle house of which mutually look at one another. the rushee is a member. The new student who STUDENTS WHO feel fraternal living is not has developed contacts in a fraternity will for them have little to lose by rushing. At necessarily show a decrease in spirited attitude worst, only their time. Food is good, cigarettes toward his present house functions. With other plentiful. interests the new freshman will not be able to On the positive side, rushing gives the gain full benefit from his quad relationships. freshmen a chance to meet people aind height- ens perspective. The freshman who decides he IT'S THE OLD issue of divided loyalties. Not does not want fraternities without ever having only will the house suffer, but the rushee stepped foot in them is foolish. The choice is will not be able to say that he has truly seen more enlightened if the chance to see the what independent life is like. He will be fraternity system is taken advantage of. unable to make a fair comparison between ANY STUDENTS who before arriving on fraternity and independent life. M .jIt is not impossible, either, to see that campus decided they would not oin have harmful effects can result to the fraternity changed their mindsafter going through rush- from first semester freshman rushing. The ang Itwortheothontereaypesoe two-week rushing period is in itself a rather Many of the common stereotypes and evils short time in which to select future house attributed to fraternities aren't true. Some are. memers whi edto thfrernity They seldom resemble the Hiollywood and dmembers who willt.blendito the fraternity and help strengthen it-. rovel variety. It's not overly time-consuming and it's BUT WHEN only little more than a week and free. Why not take advantage of it? a half of campus life are added to this -LEE MARKS period, it is only with more uncertainty that the affiliates can properly choose their future Con: Better Learn companions. How can evaluation of the rush- Quad Life First ee's personality and interests be made? He has not yet become fully interested in IN ANY discussion of first semester rushing any activities, he has little idea of his class- for incoming freshmen, the effects on and room worth, and most important, he has not the relations between three groups must be had enough time to determine which fraternity considered: the rushee, the independent house he wants among the 43 represented on this to which he has been assigned prior to arrival' campus. at the University and the fraternity. On the basis of these three considerations Until each and every group has received -the rushee, the independent house and the consideration, no truly sound opinion can be fraternity -' first semester rushing is not a reached. sound program. Of the three groups to be discussed, the -DICK SNYDER TODAY AND TOMORROW: Rule Needed For Ike Crisis Story Told In 'Pan' Editor's Note: Mr. Yates is a me- ber of the faculty in the Depart- ment of Spanish. He is a frequent book review contributor.) By DONALD A. YATES "FABULOUS DUSTPAN" by Frank Hoover. World Publish- ing Co., 250 pp. fabulous dustpan of this book's title is the Hoover vac- uum cleaner. And this is Frank Hoover's story of how his father's tannery adjusted to the shifting demands of a turbulentperiod in American business history. The fascinating Hoover saga began back in 1875 with the Per- fection Horse Collar which Will Hoover devised down in Stark County, Ohio. Frank Hoover tells us that Will, his father, had de- signed the "Perfection" as a prod- uct unique in its field,- a fine horse collar that refused to meet competition on a price basis (it was more expensive) and adver- tised rather on the merits of its unexcelled quality. This was sound business psychology; the Perfec- tion Horse Collar sold, and the name succeeded in becoming a byword among the nation's horse owners. *s * * HOWEVER, the handwriting began to appear on the wall for the Hoover leather' enterprises shortly after the turn of the cen- tury. The lines are familiar to us now. In those years America was converting from horse power to horsepower, and the collar indus- try was approaching obsolesence. By 1918, after contributing thousands of gun slings, artillery straps, cable traces and leggings to a successful war effort, the Hoover company found itself in a situation which could have re- solved itself into a crossroads or a dead end. One big fact domi- nated the company's thinking: the leather business in 1918 was nil. Which way, then, to turn? * * * IT IS AT THIS MOMENT in the story that old Mr. Spangler, a janitor who suffered from asths- ma, is introduced with the little gadget which he had fashioned to keep the dust out of the air while he swept the carpets at Zol- linger's Department Store in Can- ton. Mr. Spangler's was a ialady that sprouted an industry. The rest of the story is con- cerned with the growth of the Hoover Company and the popu- larization of the cleaner which bore the family name. ~ Frank Hoover goes on to tell of the personalities behind the ex- panding business: the engineers, the style men, the conservative credit managers, the crackerjack salesmen, and the unwavering, dominating influence of W.H. ("Boss") Hoover himself. Fabulous Dustpan is a story bound to give the reader insight into the modern phenomena of giant industry and its founda- tions. IFinal Call WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Ike's Health Concealedk -BY DREW PEARSON PRESIDENT Eisenhower's heart attack, coming simultaneously with publication of Harry Tru- man's memoirs, points to two vital facts in the lives of our presi- dents: 1. Politicians don't want the puublic to know the truth about any president's health. 2. Medical checks should be given every presidential candidate in advance, and morebspecialized medical care should be given a president after he takes office. It has long been known to inti- mates of the President and to newspapermen covering the White House that he had high blood pressure, just as it was known during the election campaign of 1944 to intimates of Franklin Roosevelt that the wear and tear of public office had made terrific inroads on his health. But the politicians of both polit- ical parties have hushed up the real facts. Eisenhower himself is the only man who has been frank about it. He has consistently and repeat- edly told the politicians who want- ed him to run again that they could not depend on one man. He has talked about the health ero- sion of public office. He has re- minded them that if re-elected he, would be the only president to reach the age of 70 while in office. He has come about as close as possible to telling that all was not well with him aside from making a blueprint. Approximately one year ago at a stag dinner attended by Vice President Nixon, Attorney Gener- al Brownell, Chairman Len Hall, and other close political advisers, Ike first made it quite clear that they should begin building up new GOP leaders. The only promise they could wheedle out of him at the time was that he wouldn't an- nounce his decision until the spring of 1956. Nevertheless, Nixon and Chair- man Hall both left that dinner to make repeated statements that the President was certain to run again, even though he had indi. cated directly to the contrary. No later than three weeks ago in Denver, Hall told newsmen how the GOP planned to defeat Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon because he "had criticized Ike." "Suppose Ike doesn't run?" a newsman asked. "Then I commit suicide," replied the Chairman of the Republican National Committee who had pre- viously heard from Ike's own lips that the Republican Party should begin building other candidates. This finds a semi-parallel in the Truman memoirs published last week in which he tells how, early in 1945, it was considered doubt- ful that Franklin Roosevelt could last much longer. Yet in the summer of 1944 when Roosevelt was nominated while absent on a cruise to Alaska to regain his health, Democratic Chairman Bob Hannegan knew, as Hall knew about Ike, that FDR's health was not at all good. He also knew that it was a fraud on the American people to put his name on the ballot. The real facts about Eisenhow- er's health have been known to published before his nomination by a few people. While the President's health, considering his age, has been rea- sonably good, his ruddy complex- ion is, deceptive and he is not able to remain in the White House or at his desk for average periods of time. That is the reason for his golf, his week-ends at Gettysburg, his trips to Augusta, and his oc- casional health problems which have been hushed up by those around him. Copyright, 1955, by Bell Syndicate, Inc. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Omctail buient 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, SEPTEMBER 2, 1955 VOL. LXVII, No. 3 General Notices Concerts. The Uiversity Musical So- ciety announces the concerts in the Choral Union Series and the Extra Con- cert Series to be given in Hill Audi- torium. Season tickets are stil available for both series; and beginning Thurs., Sept. 29, any remaining tickets will go on sale for single concerts, at the offices of the University Musical So elety in Burton Memorial Tower. University Choral Union. Tryouts fo membership are yeow being held. Ap. pointments for auditions should be made at once at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burtou Memorial Tower in person or by tele- phoning Normandy 8-7513. Members from last season's chorus may renew their memberships by registering at Tuesday at 7:00 p.m. in Auditorium A. once. The Choral Union rehearses every in Angell Hall. Women's Swimming Pool -- Recream tional swimming hours: Women stu- dents-M.T.W.Th.F., 5:00-$:00, M.T.Th. 8:15-9:15 p.m.; Co.-Rec. Swimming (with men guests)-Sat. 7:15-9:15 p.m., Sun. 3-5; Faculty Night, Fri., 6:30-8:00 for families with young children (under S years), 8:00-9:30 for other faculty mem- bers; Michigan night-Sunday, 7:15-9:15 p.m. Sports and Dance Instruction. Women students wishing to register electively in physical education classes may do so in Barbour Gymnasium from 8:00 asm. to 12 noon on Tues. and Wed., Sept. 27 and 28. Instruction is available in swimming, diving, life saving, water safety, tennis, intermediate golf, riding and dance. Rules governing participation in non. athletic extracurricular activities. Any regularly enrolled student is eligible to participate in non-athletic extracurricu- lar activities provided be not not on academic discipline. RESPONSIBILITY: Responsibility for observance of the eligibility statement is placed direecy 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 elii- bility 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 bythe faculty of the college in which the student is enrolled. ("Needs counsel- ling" as used by the School of Educa- tion and the School of Music, asocon- stitutes ineligibility for such partici- pation.) b) Part-time and special students carrying less than twelve hours. ACTIVITIES: The eligibility requirements must ba met by students participating in such activities as are listed below. The list is not exhaustive but is intended to indicate the iknds 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; productons-of the Gilbert and Sullivan Society, Student Players, and Inter-Arts Union; per- formances of Arts Choraleand the Gle Clubs. b) Participation In public perform. ances which are sponsored by aademe 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, 50 (Choir), Voice 11, 12, 155, 156 (Opera Workshop). c) Staff members of student publica- tions. Examples: Daily, Gargoyle, 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, In- terhouse Council, Inter-cooperative Council, League and Union student overnment groups, Music School As- sembly, Business Administration Coun- cll. g) Committee members for major campus projects and dances. Examples: Michigras, Winter Carnival, League committees, Frosh week end, Sopho- more Cabaret, Assembly Bali, Inter- fraternity Council Ball, Homecoming Dance,. Senior Ball, J-Hop. h) Representatives of offeampus ac- tivities. 1) Representatives on student-faculty committees. SPECIAL PERMISSION: Special permission to participate in extracurricular activities in exception to the regulations may be granted in extraordinary cases by the offices of the Dean of Women and of the Dean of Men. DENIAL OF PERMISSION: The Dean of Women or the Dean of Men may, in extraordinary cases, deny permission to participate in an activity or activities. PARTICIPATION LISTS: Managers and chairmen of student activities and projects are required to submit to the Office of Student Affairs an alphabetized list of all students noartcna+ine i tvt wies uaner+the. , I By WALTER LIPPMAN THE PRESIDENT has been stricken at a, moment when he is at the height of his popularity and his power. He has come to represent the hope of peace in the world and the unity of the nation at home. We are left, his doctors tell us, with some days of anxious uncertainty, and beyond that with a task of carrying on through his convalescence for the rest of his term, and beyond that with the problem of his succession. W eknow that at the best he cannot for sev- eral months be exepected to do the work of the President. We are, therefore, face to face with what has become - almost certainly through a bad precedent based on misunder- standing---a grave defect of our constitutional system. This is the lack of a clear rule as to how the government is to be conducted when the President is 11. Almost certainly this defect will need to be corrected now. There is no reason to doubt that it can be corrected. The root of the trouble is in a grammatical ambiguity in the text of the Constitution itself. It says (Article II, Section 1, Clause 6) that "in case of . .. inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said office, the same shall devolve on the vice-President." The question is: to what do the words "the same" refer? Is it "the powers and duties" of the office of President which devolve on the vice-President? Or is it the office itself? In other words, can the vice-President$ discharge temporarily the powers and the duties of the President without himself becoming the President? The Michigan Daily 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 Helithaler.. .......Women's Editor Elaine Edmonds.............Associate Women's Editor John Hirtzel.................... Chief Photographer Business Staff Dick Alstrom.....................Business Manager ECAUSE OF THIS uncertainty no President1 who was ill has ever allowed his powers and duties to devolve even temporarily on the vice- President. For it was not certain that he would still be President if and when he recovered. This ambiguity, which is due to faulty grammar, can be cured. There is very little doubt as to what the authors of the Constitu- tion meant, and what they meant was what common sense and practical convenience now require. They meant that when the President is incapacitated because he is ill, his powers and his duties, but not the office of President, are to be taken over by the vice-President. The Vice-President does not become the President. But he exercises the powers and duties of the President. For how long does he exercise them? "Until," says the Constitution, "the disability be removed," that is to say until the President is well enough to do his necessary work again. There can be no serious doubt that this is the way the Constiution ought to work. Yet, as we know, it did not work that way during the prolong8d illnesses of Garfield and of Wil- son. Anyone who remembers the obscurity, the intrigue, and the confusion during Wilson's incapacity will wish to take no chance on its being repeated today.- THE PRACTICAL question is how "the powers and duties," but not the "office" can in a seemly way be made to devolve temporarily and constitutionally on Vice-President Nixon. It is obvious that he cannot assume those powers and duties on his own initiative. How then is the temporary delegation to be effected? The simplest procedure, it would seem, would be for the President to call Congress in special session and to send it a message saying that for the time being he is unable to dis- charge the powers and duties of his office, and{ to ask that Congress by concurrent resolution, agree that the powers and duties shall devolve temporarily on the Vice-President. The Vice-President, though he acts as Presi- dent pro tem, would continue to be Vice- President. He would not take the Presidential oath of office, and there would be no question at all but that Mr. Eisenhower was the Presi- dent of the United States. ALTHOUGH IT IS most desirable, indeed necessary, that the line of authority should be made clear, the problem posed by the Presi- REPUBLICAN SPLIT: Ske's Choice May' Pick Candidate (Editor's Note: This is the second in a series of analyses concerning the political situation resulting from President Eisenhower's illness.) By PETE ECKSTEIN Daily staff Writer Few men in recent American history have influenced a political party so profoundly as has Dwight Eisenhower in his three years as leader of the Republicans. This, accomplishment is all the more unique for the President's non- political background. In fact, the popularity which has proved so effective a tool in keeping dissident Republican ele- ments behind the President is not based primarily on his political acts but antedates his emergence on the political scene. The recent conference of Re- publican leaders provided ample testimony to the Eisenhower im- print on his party. Photographs showed all 48 state chairmen car- rying signs indicating support of the Eisenhower-Nixon ticket in 1956, a marked contrast to the party of four years previous, di- vided almost equally between two rival camps. The large turnover in the ranks of the chairmen vis- a-Vis 1952, largely a replacement of old party bosses with younger and more liberal men, was further evidence of the trend toward a more vigorous, modern and popu- lar party. * * * BIG QUESTIONS now on the political horizon are whether the unrestrained by either party re-' sponsibility or reason. Neither restains men like Jen- ner and Malone also, but rather the expectation that Eisenhower would have to be dealt with for four more years and the knowl- edge of what the Eisenhower name on the ticket could do for Neither restraint will be operative now, and it may mean trouble for such administration policies as foreign aid, flexible farm supports and the "spirit of . Geneva." * * * DESPITE an increase in Con- gressional squabbles, the Presi- dent's influence over the Repub- lican convention in San Francisco will be considerable, providing he chooses to exercise it. It does not seem likely that he will want to dictate the convention's choice, but he may lift several men he considers acceptable, though per- haps not publicly. If the President does no more than this, and if none of those listed is acceptable to the "Taft wing" of the GOP (Vice-President Nixon is the most likely of the Eisenhower favorites to be ap- proved), the conservatives may unite behind a candidate of their own, perhaps Senator Minority Leader Knowland. * * * THE TAFTITES missed their big chance for a convention vic- tory in 1952. With their recog- nized leader dead and with the blood infused by the WhiteH Touse. control is doomed from the out- set, but it could create consider- able pre-election dissension. If it does, and if the liberal, forces are unable to readily agree upon a candidate, the President might be persuaded to subordinate his nat- ural inclination not to run the convention to a desire to avoid a bitter convention fight. Should the word from Wash- ington come it will unite a major- ity of the convention behind whomever the President chooses as his successor. For Reviewers In the course of the school year, Daily reviewers offer their opinions. and. 'criticisms. on movies, plays, concerts and other music events, art exhib- its, television, and literature. At the present time, The Daily is looking for students to help fill the various positions on the reviewing staffs. Whether or not you have had experience as a reviewer, The Daily invites anyone who is in- terested and feels he can qual- ify to the final reviewers meet- ing at 8:15 p.m. tonight in the Daily Editorial office. This will be the final tryout meeting of the semester for prospective reviewers. i LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler Qg K , I I I ft% .( I l"--