THE MICHIGAN DAILY 4 -. r1 Fifty-Sxth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Margaret Farmer . . . . . . . Managing Editor Hale Champion. .........Editorial Director Robert Goldman....... . . . . City Editor Emily E. Knapp . . . . . . . . Associate Editor Pat Cameron . . . . . . . Associate Editor Clark Baker .. .. ... .....Sports Editor Des Howarth . . . . . . . Associate Sports Editor Ann Schutz . . . . . . Women's Editor Dona Guimaraes . . . . Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Dorothy Flint . . . . . Business Manager Joy Altman . . . . . . Associate Business Manager Evelyn Mills . . . . . Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newpaper. All rights of re- publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. REPREENTD FOR NATIONAL. AVERTI3INO BY Nation Advertising Service, Inc. Coleg Publisers Representative 420 MADSON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CICAO - BOSTON * LoS ANGELES * SAN FRANCISC Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR-PAUL HARSHA Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. rll Mne Health Fund Con-trol WITH EVERYONE0 in the holiday spirit, it is only natural that John L. Lewis' latest de- mand on the coal mining industry should inspire considerable comment. The formidable union leader's present demand of the nation's soft coal operators is a seven per cent levy on their gross payroll to create a na- tional health and welfare fund. At the annual wage of $2,500 the gross payroll for the 400,000 bituminous miners of the United Mine Workers would total $1,000,000,000. The tax therefore would net Lewis $70,000,000 a year if granted. Certain mine operators have estimated that this levy would add 14 cents a ton to the cost of coal at the mines. No remarkable power of vi- sion is required to see that this increase would immediately be passed on to the consuming public as one step more toward inflation. The higher cost of operation, moreaver, would cause corresponding increases in railroad rates and factory prices. If there is an actual need for the proposed health fund, then objection on the basis of in- creased cost alone is not sufficient to con- demn the plan, for human lives are worth more than 14 cents-or $70,000,000 for that matter. Coal mining is a dangerous occupation. Not only is there constant danger from coal dust explosions, cave-ins and asphyxiation, but the working conditions' are definitely unhealthy. The labor is heavy and long, the atmosphere is damp, there is no sunlight and very little light at all, and the wages are certainly inadequate to provide a standard of living that will alleviate these poor health conditions. HE ISSUE in the present dispute is not, or should not be, the need of the miners for health and welfare assistance. The mine opera- tors have professed willingness to cooperate in the establishment of such a fund. The real issue is the control of the proposed fund. According to Government Concialiator Paul W. Fuller, the payroll tax demand calls for administration "neither joint nor public." The inference is that Lewis is sticking to lhis original demand for ex- clusive union control over the funds. This is basically the same issue in.volved in Petrillo's band on recordings two years ago. The recording companies offered to devote part of their receipts to a fund to aid unemployed musicians, providing that they had some re- presentation in the distribution of these funds. Petrillo, however, insisted upon absolute union control of the royalties collected, though there had been nothing in his past actions and policies to suggest confidence in his ability or intentions. N W IT IS REASONABLE to question whether 11there has been anything in John L. Lewis' previous career to suggest that he is capable of administering wisely or fairly a $70,000,000 fund? It is a matter of record that Lewis tossed $500,000 of the union's treasury into Roosevelt's 1936 presidential campaign. There is also ample evi- ....-- +. n1 - hn4 T..,i nnr iC'~A I1iinnfundsffI to the dior C* tnYoJepdiaI f~epohte' . DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Atomic Alert To The Editor: L ITTLE has been written of late on the ques- tion of atomic control, and I bclieve people should be kept aware at all times of steps being taken in this direction, because of the serious im- portance of the bomb as an omnipresent threat to our very existence. While I agree that control should be kept in the hands of civilian authorities, I also think it should be part of the United Nations Organiza- tion's plans to form a permanent investigating committee, with powers to examine and investi- gate research, developments, and scientific work being done in this field, in all the laboratories of the major countries of the world. If it is dis- covered that any one country is making moves towards production of atomic bombs, this should be reported to the UN and machinery should be put into action to prevent that country from any further access to materials needed in their production. This is a proposal which .needs the backing of every citizen in the United States. It must be enforced by public opinion. -Karen Holmes '*' * * * Feeble Humor To The Editor: I HAVE READ from time to time, with various reactions, the feeble attempts at wit of Miss Lois Kelso in her columns, "It's ,a Gay Life." I feel that the opening gun of her latest effort is the crowning offense to the discriminating read- er. I refer to the sentence, "I am shaken, I am shattered, I have been to Percy Jones Hospital and face to face with the Horrors of War." I too have been to Percy Jones Hospital, which is the Army's largest hospital center for ampu- tation cases. I did not regard what I saw there as a fit topic for an alleged humor column. Per- haps Miss Kelso closed her eyes to the thousands of veterans with every conceivable type of ampu- tation and disfigurement, learning to use their new artificial limbs. Probably she did not visit those who are paralyzed for life because of in- juries to the spinal cord. I realize, of course, that Miss Kelso's ensuing article does not deal with the disabilities of these men; but I fail to understand how she can be so utterly lacking in sensitivity and a sense of proper perspective as to allude to them-even in one sentence-in a spirit of levity. -Stuart L. Main * * * A No More Laughter To The Editor: Open letter to John Campbell and others. THE NERVOUS LAUGHTER of William Ran- dolph has ceased. Communism is no longer a laughing matter. The term 'Commy' no longer suits Hearst's purpose ... the people have stopped laughing. They look at the roster of Communist parties and begin to wonder. China-1,000,000 members, four million troops, a nation of one hundred million people . . . France-1,500,000 members, the highest vote of any party in France . . Jugoslavia-the largest single party in the coun- try, its *hief, Marshall Tito, head of a unity government . . . Italy 1,700,000 members . - - Checkoslovakia-1,200,000 members . . . even Brazil has a Comunist Party of 400,000 with its leader, Luiz Prestos almost a legendary hero in Brazil. The people have stopped laughing, and Mr. Hearst notices and his nervous laughter ceases too. Now he screams epitaphs instead . . . 'Red fascists' his headlines screech. And people like you, John, swallow his desperation rantings. It is a strange commentary on people who pro- fess to favor democracy and dispise these horrid 'red fascists', that they admit that these same 'red fascists' were the only group which solidly backed the French Constitution which provided the most complete form of democracy by giving all power to a representative parliament. So well constructed, in fact, was this constitution, that its opponents could attack it only on the basis that its acceptance might stop the United States loan to France. One wonders if perhaps, a the time of the French Revolution people like Lafayette weren't labeled the 18th century equivalent of 'red fas- cist' . . . 'probably paid in Washington gold.' Hysterical headlines in the Hearst papers of Separate Peace WHEN Secretary of State Byrnes left for the Paris foreign ministers' conference, he styled it in the final test of Big Three cooperation. Now the conference, after last minute agree- ment on reparations and the administration of Italy's North African colonies, has broken up over the disposal of Trieste; Byrnes has made good his 'threat' by proposing that Britain and the United States make a separate peace with the Axis if Russia continues to balk. Quite aside from the justice of either side's position, practical considerations make the Secretary's ultimatum extremely ill-advised. A peace not adhered to by a power of Russia's strength is no peace at all. The United States and Britain know it. Russia knows it. If Byrnes has visions of himself as a tight-rope walker, he would do well to remember that he is risking much more than his own neck. -Ann Kutz the nineties threw America into the Spanish American War. Willingly Mr. Hearst would scream us into a war with the Soviet Union. But a strong young socialist state is not a deca- dent feudal monarchy. And, as I have said, the people are no longer laughing. They are speaking in voices loud enough to shake Hearst's San Simeon. Unplug your ears John-you'll hear them too. -Kenneth S. Goodman Vet Praises Wfives To The Editor: THERE IS A GROUP on campus which hasn't had much publicity, and it certainly deserves it. It's called the Veterans-Wives' Club and is composed of the wives of the vets who attend school here at the U. of M. The vets have good taste, for en masse the organization presents as good-looking a bunch of women as I have ever laid eyes upon. But what they really deserve an orchid for are some of the entertainments they have put on for married couples-affairs where you can have some fun and meet some of the other twosomes. I recall with pleasure the picnic at the Women's Athletic Building-all you could eat of home- baked beans, franks, coffee, ice-cream, potato chips-and the jim-jam at the League, which featured an A-1 program of songs and floor- show and special instruction on how to rhumba. The officers and gals who worked on the project get thanks from me and from the crowd which attended. An orchid to Miss McCormick, too, who, I have noted, is there giving help and advice when the women want it. Here's good luck to them in their dance June 1 for married couples. Keep it up gals-you're doing yourselves and your husbands proud! -Larry Welsch No Rest HELP ! HELP! Justice weakly flops her wings and stumbles to the ground. Dark night closes in. The rumble of distant drums makes hideous the moment before catastrophe. Would it not be wonderful, in this our last hour of agony, for the colleges to light one candle of fair dealing to shoot its beams through the murky world? Just one! And mankind might yet be saved! It is a small thing I propose, I admit. And yet, as Confucius said, the journey of a thousand miles begins with but a single step. All through my spoty career-high school, Army, payrolls, Social Insecurity, etc., whenever names were called, I knew in advance my ap- pointed place, and wearily I trudged to it. Bright-eyed I came to college. Would things be different? But no-sometimes I was so far back in the classroom it seemed like the Tunnel of Love. And now Dr. Norton, in recommending changes in the student elections, has killed my last hope. To quote from The Daily: "There is another change Dr. Norton feels would increase the fair- ness of future elections. That is the listing of all candidates names in absolute alphabetical order, thus doing away with advantages by position on the ballot. Help! Help! -Zeniter Z. Zzizzbuzz (Paul Kircher, East Quad) r, II "Dear Sir and Brother: AM WRITING you with reference 4 to your sanitation proposal which the coal operators called a gratuitous insult' I am an employee of the Black Mountain Corporation which is owned and operated by the Peabody Coal Corporation. I am also president of Local Union 4493, Kenvir, Kentucky. This coal camp has a population of over 3,000. All the houses which1 the officials, office workers and bos- ses live in are equipped with bath-t tubs, lavatory, and commode. Alla other employees have a privy about 30 feet from the house. The refuse from the privies is dipped out and hauled by wagon and dumped less than 100 yards from my house ... My family, along with others haveC to go through this excretion going to and from school and the store.. .. At my insistence the doctor report-1 ed the condition to the State Health Department. This doctor had been 1 at our camp a very short time and did not know the condition between 1 the coal companies and the Health Department. The Health Department wrote the company pertaining to this matter,e and as a result the doctor was sentg packing and the method of refuse1 still exists today. . . " f HE above telegram to John -L. Lewis is reprinted here from an advertism it entered in lastSunday'sr Chicago Sun by the Labor Non-Par- tisan League. The truth of the state-t ments contained in the telegram is t attested to by three other membersc of the local union, and by the Presi- dent and Secretary-Treasurer of the United Mine Workers, District 19. 7 Possibly the average student of this1 University will not believe that thisE telegram describes the conditionsc which are not uncommon in the United States. I am certain that many faculty members will not believe these, facts . . . "The source is biased" willr be considered a scientific analysis.} We prefer to think that such med- ievalism exists only in Europe and Asia, while we in this country would not be guilty of tolerating such condi- tions to make a larger profit. We pride1 ourselves o the high standard of liv ing enjoyed by our own families, and assume that all families throughout the country equally enjoy the bene- fits of modern science. It seems strange that we should claim so much credit for introducing sanitation into} the Philippines, while conditions such as these continue to exist in Ken- tucky.f Nor is Kentucky much different from West Virginia or southern Illinois or western Pennsylvania in this respect. A mining town is a mining town, and the ugly sil- houette of the search for profits dominates any such town. The workers live in company houses and pay company-fixed rent. They buy food in company stores at com- pany prices. They get silicosis from company coal dust. The health of their children is wrecked by com- pany refuse. Everything the worker sees is owned by the company. There is only one real issue in the mine strikes. The issue involved is the right of the workers to enjoy an American standard of life. Any at- tempt to ascribe to the strikers any aim other than this desire to raise their standard of living is based on deliberate falsification or a lack of knowledge. Doubtless there are many people who simply don't know the conditions, and who have condemned the mine strike honestly because they do not understand the real issue in- volved. BUT we should not lose sight of the others . . . those paid lackeys of Big Business who foster strikes with the left side of their mouths and con- demn them with the right side. The majority of Congress is only too ea- ger to cause more strikes by ending all effective price controls, and at the same time they are drawing up new anti-strike legislation. Their sup- posed logic goes something like this: "John L. Lewis uses questionable tactics. Therefore the Mineworkers tare a threat to America. Therefore we should outlaw all strikes." There is no logic involved in such reasoning. John Lewis is not the is- sue. The standard of living of the miners is the only issue. The miners have learned to distrust government, and when we remember the Kentucky Health Department who can blame? The miners are today trying to help themselves, trying to win their just demands.They will have the support of all honest, informed Americans. --Ray Ginger Publication In the Daily Official Bul- T. letin is constructive notice to all mem- ti bers or the University. Notices forte He Bulletin should be sent in typewrittenW form to the Assistant to the President, W 1021 Angell hall, by 3:30 p.m. on the day Vi preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- urdays). FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1946 VOL. LVI, No. 142 A /s p Notices19 d To the Members of the University 2: Senate: T At the meeting of the Senate on Monday, May 20, at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre, considera- " tion will be given to the following 8 agenda: t Annual Report of the Senate Ad- d visory Committee on University Af- fairs. A. D. Moore, Chairman t Memorandum from the eans' J Conference on Sabbatical Leaves. 5 F. E. Robbins, Secretary Enrollment Problems. Provost J. P. Adams. Building Program. Vice-President R. P. Briggs. " 1 Other matters as may be presented c by members ofuthe Senate and by c President A. G. Ruthven. W a Mentor Reports, College of Engin- u eering - Ten-week grades for En- p gineering Freshmen are now due in L Dean Crawford's Office. 1945 MICHIGANENSIAN: All those b who have subscriptions and who have n not yet called for their 1945 Michi- t ganensian must do so today. After i today, all 'Ensians which have not been distributed will be sold to those on the waiting list of last fall.- l1 Swimming - Women Students: c There will be open swimming at the Union Pool from 9:00 to 10:45 every Saturday morning for women stu- dents in the University. All women students attending the m Crease Ball tonight will have late per- i mission until one-thirty. Calling m hours will not be extended. Willow Village Progran for veterans r and their wives: o Friday, May 17: Dancing Classes d Beginners, 7 p.m.; Advanced, 8 p.m.;J Open Dancing, 9-10 p.m., Auditorium, fc West Lodge. s Friday, May 17: Leadership Class, i Dr. Fred G. Stevenson, Extension o Staff, will conduct the final meeting s of this class. 8 p.m. Conference s Room, West Lodge. Saturday, May 18: Square Dance, t Scott Colburn, caller. Be present for p the forming of Squares at 8:30. 8- f 11:30 Auditorium West Lodge. Sunday, May 19: Classical Music, (records). 3 p.m. Office, West Lodge. b Lectures Alexander Ziwet Lectures in Mathe- matics. The final lecture of this series will be given by Professor Kurt Fried- richs of New York University today, R at 3:00 in Room 3011 Angell Hall, t The subject will be: "On the Inter- U relation between Point Spectra and a Continuous Spectra." t t Academic Noticesn Doctoral Examination for Williamc M. Cruickshank, Education; thesis: " A Comparative Study of Psychologi- cal Factors Involved in the Responses of Mentally Retarded and Normal,, Boys to Problems in Arithmetic," t Saturday, May 18, at 2:00 p.m., inf the Board Room, Rackham Build- ing. Chairman, C. Woody.s Biological Chemistry Seminar willa meet in Room 319 West Medicalr Building today at 4:00 p.m. "Denatu- ration of Proteins." All interested are invited.1 Notice to Sophomore and Senior Students taking the Profile Examina- tions: You will be excused from classes where there is a conflict with, the examinations. Present to your instructor my communication regard- ing the test as proof of your eligibil- ity. Hayward Keniston, Dean Concert Student Recital: Jeannette Haien, student of piano under John Kollen, will present a recital in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music at 8:30 Sunday evening, May 19, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Her program will include compositions by Bach, Chopin, Ravel, and Schumann, and will be open to the general public. Student Recital: Vincent DeMat- teis, clarinetist, will present a recital in paitial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Master of Music in Music Education, at 4:15 Sunday afternoon, May 19, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. He is a pupil of Albert Luconi, and will be assisted he program will include composi- ons of Brahms, Glazunov, Edmund aines, Kabalevsky, and R. Vaughan illiams. The public is cordially in- ted. Exhibitions The 23rd Annual Exhibition for rtists of Ann Arbor and Vicinity, resented by the Ann Arbor Art As- ociation. The Rackham Galleries, aily except Sundays, through May 3; afternoons 2-5, evenings 7-10. he public is cordially invited. Michigan Historical Collections. Public Schools in Michigan." Hours: :00 to 12:00, 1:30 to 4:30 Monday hrough Friday, 8:00 to 12:00 Satur- ay. Fishing and fish management. o- unda, Museum Building. Through uune 30. 8:00-5:00 week days; 2:00- :00, Sundays and holidays. Events Today The Art Cinema League presents Peg of Old Drury", a British histori- al film of the stage, in middle-18th entury London. Anna Neagle as Peg Voffington and Sir Cedric Hardwicke s David Garrick. Tonight and Sat- rday at 8:30. Box office opens 2:00 .m. daily. Reservations phone 6300. ydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The regular weekly Tea Dance will e held this afternoon at the Inter- ational Center from 4 to 6 under he sponsorship of ANCUM. Anyone nterested is cordially invited. The Westminister Guild will have a noonlight hike to the Island with unch at the fireplace. Meet at the hurch at 8:30 p.m. Coming Events There will be no house presidents neetings for League Houses or Dorm- tories on Tuesday, May 21. The next neeting will be Tuesday, May 28. Members AIEE: Ratification of the ecently proposed bylaws, election f officers for the coming year, and iscussion of the picnic to be held une 1. are the main business topics or the last AIEE meeting of the emester, Wed., May 22, at 7:30 p.m., n the Michigan Union. The speaker f the evening will be Mr. R. J. Teet- ell 'of The Westinghouse Elec. Corp. is talk, "Electrical Measuring In- truments, their Construction, Opera- ion and Selection," will be accom- ianied by a sound slide film. Re- reshments will be served. Phi Delta Kappa: Meeting of mem- ers of Phi Delta Kappa Saturday norning, May 17, at 9:00 a.m., in 3r. F. G. Walcott's office, Rm. 3206, U.H.S. to consider candidates for membership. The Omega Chapter of Phi Delta Kappa will hold a joint meeting with he Alpha Omega chapter of Wayne University May 24 at 4:00, dinner at 6:00 p.m., in Detroit at the down- own YWCA. Following the initia- ion of new members, Austin Grant, radio commentator, will address the members. Members desiring trans- portation or willing to drive please call 25-8034. Phi Sigma, honorary biological fraternity, will sponsor a talk by Dr. E. C. Case, professor emeritus of his- orical geology and paleontology, and former Chairman of the Geology De- partment and Director of the Mu- seum of Paleontology, on Monday, May 20, in Rackham Amphitheatre at 8:00 p.m. Dr. Case will speak on his "Reminiscences and Impressions" of his years as a professor on this campus. Students, faculty, and pub- lic are cordially invited to attend. La Sociedad Hispanica will an- nounce the names of those students winning scholarships to the Univer- sities of Mexico and Havana at a reception-dance to be held 8:00 p.m. Saturday in the Union. The reception is being held to honor the cast of the two plays presented this year and is open to all members of La Sociedad Hispanica and friends. Refreshments and entertainment will be included. The Graduate .Outing Club is plan- ning a hike or canoeing, depending on the weather, on Sunday, May 19. Those interested should pay the sup- per fee at the checkroom desk in Rackham before noon Saturday and' should meet in the Outing Club rooms in the Rackham Building at 2:30 Sunday. Use northwest entrance. ' Veterans' Wives' Club will meet Monday, May 20, at 7:30 p.m. in the Michigan League. All wives of stu- dent veterans are cordially invited. The Lutheran Student Association will meet Sunday afternoon at 3:30 in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall, 309 CINEMA .. at the Lydia Mendelssohn Peg of Drury Lane with Anna Neagle and Sir Cedric Hardwicke. WHY THE ART CINEMA League should have happened to choose this of all the British pictures available is almost as much a mystery as the reason for being of the short feature which preceded it, something about the Soviet Conservatory of Music. There were redeeming features. Hardwicke was almost impressive as David Garrick, more so, however, as Garrick being Shylock and a host of other Shakespearean characters. Other members of the cast might well have been guided by the easy severity of Hardwicke's characterization. Anna Neagle, his co-principle, was from the beginning in a difficult position. As a hyper- thyroid Irish girl finding the usual love, disillu- sion, fame, and love in the big city, she had Alice Faye material with which to work and the whole thing just didn't pan out. The rest of the picture was notable for little. The curious wouldn't have learned a thing about the famed Johnson-Garrick coterie, the rural Irish humor only ocasionally has a note of spon- taneity, and the plot would make a Universal musical director blush. A few conventional good touches-such as are to be found in almost every English film effort- helped the weak-kneed story through some other- wise dismal spots. The maid who in one of Peg's darkest moments blithely helped herself to the mistress's nightly tankard and Garrick's dresser. a straight-faced English servant in the classic tradition, both deserved better surroundings. At that, Peg of Drury Lane is probably the best movie in town. -Hale Champion ------ ------ BARNABY Don't disturb your father. A nap before dinner will make him feel better. But why he wants to play By Crockett Johnson Has Pop's team a name, Mom? The Dodgers. The other twoj Under contract to the Dodgers? Hmm. Probably as a replacement for Zach Wheat in left field. What wifely pride she must take in his career. I don't think