Wul a1 . ..A. N V4 Sixty-Eighth Year o'EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS revall" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG.'* ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 ted in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. Not Be Spoiled FROM THE very first scene, when star Tony Randall appe screen made up as a one-man band promoting his ownf: Success Spoil Rock Hunter" is a grand spoof of TV and organizations. Even the screen credits are shown to a background of "cor for shampoos, refrigerators, and beer. Rockwell P. Hunter is a hard-pressed advertising man, n executive, but living a clean life and engaged to his secrete his agency is about to loose the Stay-Put Lipstick account, he udderly attractive film star Jayne Mansfield to tell the worl 29, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS BLUES ilegory of Education's Woods 4E, in a forest very close wise old squirrel named best acorn gatherer in espected squirrel, for, not biggest hoard of acorns ,lso possessed a great deal every type of tree and forest of the world. uld sally forth from his ee and gather each sea- Then he woulh carefully separate them according id put them in different ir. the hospitable soil , they would begin the elp them stand by them- y years ago, when Michy, el living in a young forest, ent in gathering acorne g forest. However, if he' was energetic and would 6a t get acorn trom : posited in the hospitable soil around Michy's tree, but many did mature into fine specimens. To these, he -pointed with justifiable pride. ,BESIDES, a fev miles to the north, in an- other part of the woods, there was another' squirrel named Sparty who was also harvesting acorns, but was using the *rong technique ..- according to Michy's admirers. But through the years as more and more acorns were barvested by Michy, , smaller and smaller percentage showed any change. Perhaps it was because the caches were bigger and more crowded. Or maybe it was because he had so ,many acorns he could no longer give each ons any individual examination before putting it in one of the many depositing places. For some reason, more and more acorns seemed to get swallowed in the process and Michy was growing fatter and fatter. By this time, the forest was so big that other squir- relp began moving In ehoosing oak trees and haryesting, but Michy .still felt he had an ob- ligation/ to take care of as many acorns as be possibly could. SQ R CONTINUED harvesting acorns, and as he grew fatter and fatter. he grew less and less energetic. Sometimes he lost track of all his acorns and forgot to see if they were taking root or Just lying dormant in the'. soil he thought was so fertile. Also, he forgot what the trees and shrubs in the other part of the forest looked like. Perturbed by this, he decided to climb to the top of his tree and get a better look at the forest around. him. But it was too late. As he tried to leap to a higher branch, he misjudged the drag of his excess weight and fell to the ground, breaking his leg. And so he lived hobbily ever after. Although he could still gather in some acorns, Sparty and the other squirrels moved in and began harvesting most of the best specimens, --MICHAEL KRAFT )N his own forest began to mature ~gathered more and more acorns A the percentage of different acorns woods began to decline. he forest about him produced more chy's caches grew. He built a few s and enlarged the old ones so that his hoard grew. Eventually he had rns, all within ,the shadow of his ree and' he predicted he would soon 0. . many? Michy was a conscientious' d felt he had an obligation to har- ny acorns as possible to make sure not lie around the forest floor with- .g into useful trees that would bene- ire woods. re, not all acorns changed while de- LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Integration and the .Law ., , i iy j LOOKING UP: A. Rock in the Road Ay JAMES ELSMA I JR. IDING A PLANE back from Little Rock it rather suddenly hits you that your three- >re-years-and-ten have fallen in an age ien history is galloping faster than ever fore. Science has made things fast-it takes hours to fly the girth of our nation-but cial. man las made things faster. T'he Second World War triggered the times; gave the largely illiterate, mostly non-Cau- dan, politically naive but inquisitive two- .rds of the world a new place in the sun; it, turn, toppled the stable but stagnant Western perialist order, exploded the myth of. Asian frIority and gave impetus to a new concep- n of the ultimate society in opposition to estern democracy-the Communist state. In this competition the antagonists are Rus- and our nation; at stake is the economic d social dignity of the individual. In the npetition both sides have fought to nearly a Lw. While gross national product in this, untry far outstrips the Russians, our lead is inking - some and we are susceptible to arges of inequality of income. But it seems men are not primarily, con- ined, in their choosingbetween the two sys- as, with which system can offer them a her income. Foremost, I hope and believe, .the desires of socal man is the quest for a itical arrangement which provides that the nity' of the life that burns within each,, no ftter what creed or skin, be respected and tected by the state. IS IN the area of human dignity, and only n this area, that a political system can claim idity. Here, American democracy has in- ent advantages for outstripping the Soviet te, but. it is tragic to report it is just in s area that we have so shamed ourselves in eyes of watching Africa. Asia, Latin Amer- and the Middle East. /' Secondary citizenship for the United States gro has compromised our - democracy so ch to the watching world that we may never rieve our face. Though communism has )ught much degradation of the human per- tality to this era, positively it has presented h a challenge to Western democracy that Editorial Stafg PETER ECKSTEIN, Editor JAMES ELSMAN, JR. VERNON NAHRGANG Editorial Director City Editor NTNA HANSON:..................Personnel Director MMY MORRZISON.............. Magazine Editor NARD GERULDSEN ..Associate Editorial Director LIAM H.NEY................Features Editor SE PERLBERG ................Activities Editor ROL PR-.NS.........Associate Personnel Director; IES BAAD ................ .'. .... . Sports Editor: JCE BENNETT.. .Associate Sports'Editor IN HILLYER . ......,.......Associate Sports Editor ARLES CURTISS .............Chief Photographer Business Staff we are being forced to clean linen left dirty too long. Though I think there is some altruism in President Eisenhower's program and moves to secure more rights for the Negro, I think there is too much political motivation, (if only one-tenth of all noble moves were made with noble motivation) and most, T think the Presi- dent shows a 'considerable awareness of the ideological struggle for the minds of men. THIS world-view is what counseled the Presi- dent t6 make an extreme move in Little Rock, though he may have left the Constitution in the dust. Though this may seem evident, I must say no such -visionary approach to the problems of rights and integration (I equate the two terms) is takenby leaders of the solid South. Having just returned from Little Rock - which cannot correctly be labeled part of the solid South, though Governor Faubus made relations between the races reminiscent of Louisiana, Georgia, Florida. and South Caro- lina when he ordered out the Guard-I must say Washington must soon make a major policy. decision. The most important domestic question of our country is this: Is it important enough to our good name throughout the world to endanger our domestic morale by forcing, at gunpoint, the integration and equality of the races in the South and elsewhere? If the answer is yes, then this nation should prepare for some coming bloodshed when inte- gration is forced upon the contrary minds of deeper Southerners. In Little Rock, during con- versations with men from the deep South, I became convinced that federal troops would be shot at before they marched into some Loui- siana and Georgia towns. Though they be a wrong and ignorant breed. they must be dealt with slowly if bloodshed is to be avoided. I also became convinced, and 90 years of history support me, that these rights will not progress of their own initiative. What we have is a situation where there is no longer a distinguishable road of moderation. Washington now says "You obey or we'll send troops"; the South answers "We'll not move an inch 'ti] we have to." WHEN MAKING our decision we should cone sider the advice of the South warning us against the evils of strong, unlimited central government and indeed we must be vigilant lest might be used for wrongs sake. But foremost in our minds should be, I conclude from seeing the problem first hand this past week, that Negroes in the South are still being spit at, slapped, called contemptuous names, frightened from the streets at night, denied .the franchise, forced into working for a "bos" whether it be as a store hand or sharecropper, made to enter different doors, drink and eat at different places, see different football games and sent to separate but not equal schools. New Books at the Library Philosophizin... To the Editor: MR. DRAKE's conviction (Let- ter to the Editor, Daily on Sept. 27), that an enduring solu- tion to the integration problem must be found in the South itself and that an imposition by force does not represent a solution so. much as an exacerbation of the conflict, is compelling. But I am puzzled by his defense of those who are opposed to com- pletq integration as I am by his hint of behind-the-scenes manipu- lation of the South by Madison Avenue. I believe Mr. Drake mistakes the intent of the law that is being im- posed, for he confuses the equality of status or egalitarianism, which indeed may be one of the effects of law. I do not wish to minimize the difficulties of enforcing integra- tion by law, but I believe the ob- jections he raises to the latter on egalitarian grounds should be re- L 2rved for the more implicit and unflattering social sentiments now overtly aroused in segrationists. **, * 'HESE ARE far more powerful than laws because they are not so palpable, and it would be an eva- sion to describe the egotism, pre- judice, inferiority, insecurity of segragationists, etc. as mainfesta- tions of "cultural complexity."-a a complexity, moreover, that should be preserved from egali- tarian sentiment. It should be pointed out that it is a virtue of the law to sometimes confront individuals w.with their own unexamined passions; if agi- tators have thereby been taught. the meaning of the "depersonal- ized" abstyaction Mr. Drake de- plores, viz., equality, the impos- tion o'f the law may have accomp- lished a lasting benefit. In econonically depressed areas, the search for social status may. assume racist forms. The solicit- ing of northern industry (e.g. tex- tile manufacturers) to relocate in the South, as the majority of southern governers is aware, is a means of bringing an increased material prosperity to some of the southern states, and they are not blind to the fact that some of the causes of social and racial conflict may thereby be eliminated. If Madison Avenue, then, is lurking in the shadows, it is all to the good. -Robert Rosthal, Grad. Philosophy Teaching Fellow Unfair ... To the Editor: MR. WIEALEY'S comparison of_ Oxford and Michigan is un- fair in some respects. He compares Michigan's 23,00 students and nine professors of philosophy with Oxford's 7,000 students and 66 tutors of philosophy. But there are more than nine teachers of philosophy at Michi- gan and only four Oxford philoso- phy dons with the title of "pro- fessor." Again, a better compari- son would be between the number of students of the humanities in the two universities. This' would still, I think, favor Oxford, but it wouldn't look quite so bad. The long history of both Eng- land and Oxford as compared with the Unitetl States and Mi- chigan surely deserves more em- phasis. And it should be noted that G. B. Shaw was Irish, that Hume was a Scot who never attended or taught at Oxford, and that Lord Keynes was a Cambridge man. The suggestion that Oxford Stu- dents do not attend lectures is false: in full term there' are lec- tures from 10 a.m. to one p.m. and seminars.in the late after- noon. The students Ire not re quired to attend these, but I can testify -that they were well at- tended. The American and English systems are rather different, but they do have this in common. --Charles E. Caton Silly. To the Editor: I'M AFRAID your editor missed the significance of the integra- tion melee. It wasn't until Louis Armstrong castigated the President that her turned into a military despot. ' Sending 500 Federal troops to integrate 11' Negro children in Little Rock is a little silly! -J. Anderson No Plot... To the Editor: S THE -DAILY so inconsistent that it can condemn the people. of Little Rock for disregarding the law, and at the same time plot how its own representative could ille- gally enter the restricted high school? How did The Daily earn the privilege of living above the law? -Bill Fitzgerald, '58NR uses Stay-Put on her kissable lips. to be Jayne's Lover Doll to make a big publicity splash. To a constant background of TV-type gratuitousbplugs(Jayne reads "Peyton Place" in her bath- tub, flies in a big TWA plane) Rocky finds himself an overnight success to his delight and dismay. For while he is at last made a V.P. and given his own key to the glorious Executive Wash Room (which he enters to the singing of a heavenly choir), his true love deserts him because she is Jealous of bosom friend Mansfield. After a big publicity jaunt which has Rocky and Jayne traveling around the world together making headlines, there ,comes a grand moment. The President of La Salle, Larkin, Pooley and Crockett decides to retire to a life.of horti- culture. which is what he has always secretly wanted, and give the Presidency of the firm to Rockwell whom "success will fit like a shroud." (Half-way through the film is inserted an extraneous break, out of respect for Television addicts who expect thin sort of interrup- tion. The wide-screen is reduced to a 21" TV size, complete with dis- tortion, flicker, high contrast and real snow. This is a cunning touch.), Now Success really begins to spoil Rock Hunter who enters the palatial President's wash room to another chorus of Angels, But somehow, the elusive success =fas to please, and Rock deserts it all to raise chickens with his secre- tary; thus he emerges unscathed after all. So happiness comes to all the principals of this film while the cameras grind. Special praise must go to Joan Blondell, 'Jaynes tra- veling companion; .Betsy Drake, Hunter's secretary; and Mickey Hargitay, another ad-man. Their supporting work is admirable. Although there are occasional moments when the parody is a trifle heavy, when the philosophy wears thin, when the devices be- come overly noticeable, mostly "Rock Hunter" is a bit of good clean fun, even If' it occasionally overflowsthe container. But then how could an oganizatioq fail with Rockwell Hunter as Presi- dent and Jayne 'Mansfield as Titular Head? --David .Kessel DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1957 VOL. LXVI, No. 10 General Notices All students who expect education and , training allowance under Public Law 550 (Korea G.. Bill) or Public Law 634 (Orphans' Bill) must get in- structors' signatures at last class meet- ings in September on Dean's Monthly Certification form and turn the com- pleted form In to Dean's office by 5:00 p.m. Thurs., Oct. 3. Varsity Debate Team, under the aus- pices of The Department of Speech, will hold its first meetinig of the se- mester for all former and prospective members at 7:30 p.m. Tues., Oct. 1 in Rm. 2040, Frieze Building. Meeting of all those interested in Rhodes Scholarships in Room 2013, Angell Hall, on Wed., Oct. 2, at 4:15 p~m. Application forms for Rhodes Scholarships may be obtained at 2026 Angell Hall and should be handed in on or before Oct. 18. Anyone inter- ested who .is unable to attend the meetingis. requested to see Clark Hop- (Continued on Page 8) But, in return, Rockwell must ag INTERPRETING: Di lomac1 fl By 3. M. ROBERTSl sociated Pres News Analyst THE FIELD is now open for plomacy to replace propaga in American dealings with S and the Middle East. With the exception of Jor with whom they may yet v out a coexistence policy, the states, including America's frie Iraq and Saudi Arabia, are forming their front. Iraq, estranged from Syria s she joined the Baghdad Pact, now reached an agreement 1 the new Syrian regime for coo: atlon on major all-Arab poli Except for Jordan, the A are uniting to defend Syria aga the Western estimate that she fallen under Communist rule the sway, of Moscow. Kfing 1 has testified publicly and in vate advices to Washington- there is no basis for fearing i Syria is to be used for aggres against, her neighbors. PRESIDENT NASSER of E4 Joined with Syria's Foreign I\ ister Bitar in an 'expressed i ingness to, confer With Secre Dulles on a revision of the A can approach,to the problem4 Dulles already had indicatec least a partial sfteni g of tough policy adopted when 8' evicted American represenat on charges they had interfere her Internal ffairs,a Reports have leaked out 1 the Americans, indeed, were exactly passive in the maneu which finally resulted .in the by President Kuwatly of his -1 on the government., A good many 'nations ai'e advising the United States to further into the matter be; trying to arraign Syria before the United Nations as a ti to peace. CONSIDERATION r e o li around two major points. On theindication that many de tions will refrain from defini action. The other' is that evide is piling uAthat no. firm policy ward Syria can be safely ado until after further exploration. There is fear in some ci .that abuse will only. drive S farther toward Russia, wher they now consider the situation trievable. Syria and Egypt, , though the other Arab states, still claim their belief that Wes imperialism is responsible for t troubles. They don't mentionjE sia. But they are disturbed cause the United States and sia have made the Middle East topic of a bitter propaganda w Lost Love CHANNEL VIEWS: New TV Breed Bows in,-Flops By CHARLES EWELL FOR SEVERAL years the dom- inant theme of dressy, evening television was the "extravaganza," presided o v e r by vaudevillian comics like Berle, Caesar and Gleason. Though their passing was largely unmourned, their reputa- tions should be substantially en- hanced by their successors, the crooner impresarios. Perry Como would seem the pro- genitor of this breed. The personi- fication of blandness, his popu- larity is based on a uniform in- offensiveness: his singing, though not distinguished, is lilting, and he carries on a not unpleasant banter with a succession of guest stars. He is, all in all, Just like your next door neighbor, 41 * * I PERSONALLY expect some- thing more positive from enter- tainment than inoffensiveness, and would rather resort to my next door neighbor first-hand (though he is frenetic and mean, he doesn't croon). I can, never- theless, appreciate Perry's appeal for many people. But the TV moguls never get enough of a good thing. Working is too tired to be easygoing, they resorted to Eddie Fisher, Julius La Rosa and others of that ilk. In this selection, the networks over- looked the essence of Perry's popu- larity, his inoffensiveness. If he is an insult to the minority's intel- ligence, the others are an insult to majority's ignorance. Of these, Julius La Rosa should be cited as the principal offender; a moronic clod that makes you look forward to the commercial. Julie fancies himself some sort of gruesome sweetheart of the audi- ence; mugging, leering and awk- wardly delivering banalities and primitive essays at wit. His version of the "Perry Coma" are the antics of a punch drunk shaggy dog under the influence of narcotics, whose unabashed, even depraved, overtures of familiarity are literally nauseating. THE CROWNIN r blow of one of his "affairs" is the appearance of the guest star. The evening I watched, it was someone named Andy Williams, another "singer" (this one doesn't even stay on key). After Julie got over the shock of his being there, and they had slapped one another on the "Andy . . '. let's talk about sing- ing." That convulsed the audience, but I couldn't get in the spirit of the fun._ In contrast to Julie, who makes 'the worst of a poor situation, was the hour debut of Polly Bergen, an attractive girl whose singing was no worse than many another "song stylist" (denoting someone who compensates for lack of quality and training with volume and fervor). One had to admire this gal's courage. With inexcusable com- posure she struggled with dialogue that would have embarrasse. Ab- bot and Costello. Her guest pack made faces and beat one another until even Julie (a guest) began to show the strain. But the studio audience, ordin- arily appreciative in the worst kind of pinch, couldnt muster a snicker. AS THE DEBACLE proceeded, it achieved a brilliant dramatic pitch. Would the audience have compassion, would Polly crack and turn on Julie, or would Jack Car- son save the day by committing hari-kari, a beau geste that would surely get a laugh? As it turned out Julie intimi- PUBLIC REGARD for la unions has suffered subst tially since John McClellan's S ate Labor Rackets Subcommi began showing up corruption the Teamsters Union last Feb ary. Pollster George Gallup week surveyed the U.S. on question: "In general, do you prove or disapprove of IE unions?" Result: Approve.......... Disapprove ....,.. No opinion......... Feb. 76% 14% 10% LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Biblet upZ 0 .' . 3 t Vw/ { "" V ' y , ' , ' 1 ti a v , , K ' s , ,, ^ r per. ; , ,. /v "' *. fy i