'r FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY ;Zfi. FOUl' SUNDAY, MAY 26, WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Lewis PledgesCooperation r*_________________ ___________________________________ By DREW PEARSON W ASHINGTON.-John L. Lewis had a confi- dential conference with Labor Secretary L. D. Schwellenbach on Monday at which he gave definite assurance that his miners would stay on the job if the Government took over the mines. Here is what happened at the ultra-secret meeting. Schwellenbach informed Lewis that Truman had decided to seize the mines and asked him if the miners would stay on the job when the truce ended. Lewis replied that he would co- operate in keeping the mines in operation add- ing, however, that he would first have to advise with his policy committee, a very perfunctory measure. Lewis then inquired if the Government would begin negotiation of a new contract with the BKHIS WEEK'S publishers' lists don't seem to hold anything breathless with promise, and we've got something else on our mind anyway. It isn't in desperation, but. with some pleasure that we turn to the first issue of Perspectives to be published in three or more years. Issued as a supplement to today's Daily, this literary magazine more than justifies itself as a con- tinuation of a long and varied, if not always distinguished, publication history. Don't let the none-too-skilled art work mar the lead story by Art Hill, a story about the Philippines written on a high level of direct and simple effectiveness. There are rough spots in James Brnell's Southern Booking and Jo- Ann Jones' Miss Painter, but they both have redeeming features which is more than we can say for the story Blue by Thomas Phil- lips- The poetry is of uniform technical excellence, but the few unusually perceptive insights aren't enough to make it remarkable. An emotional review of lack Metropolis is probably the best non-fiction piece, not from the standpoint of being well-written, but from that of effectiveness. While most of the Perspectives work is on a student level, it is consistently good on that level, and on occasions rises well above it. -Hale Champion General Library List Caldwell, Erskine A House in the Uplands. New York, Duell, Sloan & Pearce, 1946. Fowler, Gene A Solo in Tom-Toms. New York, Viking, 1946. Godden, Rumer Thus Far and No Further. Boston, Little, 1946 Hume, Edward H. Doctors East, Doctors West. New York, Norton, 1946. Payne, Robert Torrents of Spring. New York, Dodd, 1946. Sinclair, Upton A World To Win. New York, Viking, 1946. NIGHT EDITOR: FRANCES PAINE Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. M - - - - -- - - Secret Weapon IT IS DIFFICULT to take the news of the super- secret weapon at its face value. According to Representatives Thomas (Dem., Tex.) and Sheppard (Dem., Calf.) the United States Navy has perfected a super-secret weapon far more terrible than the atomic bomb and has it ready for instant use. The facts upon which this statement is based are not known to the general public, nor to the majority of Congress. It is hard to understand why such information would be disclosed to any Congressman in the first place since restricted in- formation is about as sacred as taproom gossip to the average legislator. If the Congressmen are actually in possesion of information concerning a new secret wea- pon, it is hard to interpret their statements, at first glance, as anything other than dangerous loose talk. Some observers have suggested, however, that the statements are carefully-constructed pro- paganda intended to counter-act recent claims by other nations that they have developed wea- pons more powerful than the atomic bomb-a bluff, in other words. It has also been suggested that the Congressmen have purposely exagger- ated scraps of information in order to achieve a definite political aim-in this case reduction of the appropriation for the armed services. We can hope that this is a ridiculous assertion. Rep. Thomas' statement that the secret weapon was developed in the Navy's Bureau of Medicine and Surgery stirred speculation on the possibility of bacteriological warfare, but many Congressmen believe that the new weapon, if it exists, is nothing more than another poisonous gas. At the moment the existence of the super- mine union once the mines were seized. He was assured by theSecretary of Labor that negotia- tions would begin as soon as a Government ad- ministrator or coordinator was chosen by Presi- dent Truman and Interior Secretary Krug. Hear- ings would be conducted on the proposed health and welfare fund, increased wages and other disputed matters Lewis was told. Schwellenbach also assured the bushy-browed miners' boss that any wage increase decided on would be retroactive to May 13, though the min- ers returned to work under Lewis' truce order. Ch,?ap POwer Alternative IF PRESIDENT TRUMAN really had wanted to beat John L. Lewis to the punch, he could have scared him to death by resurrecting the St. Lawrence Seaway previously urged by both Roosevelt and Herbert Hoover, but which has been gathering dust in the Senate for months. There is nothing that worried John L. Lewis more than cheap electric power-unless it be cheap natural gas. And Truman also has neg- lected one other club he could brandish over John L. Lewis-namely, the two government- owned pipe lines from Texas to the east coast which Texas natural gas operators want to take over. With the threat of cheap natural gas piped into industrial Pennsylvania and New Jersey, and cheap electric power feeding the factories of New York State and New England, John L. Lewis might have started singing a less belli- gerent tune. The 12-year fight over the St. Lawrence Sea- way is the greatest monument to effective lob- bying ever seen in Washington. In part also it is a monument to Congressional inertia. Both Re- publican and Democratic leaders have urged the construction of the waterway, by-passing the St. Lawrence river rapids and giving ocean- going vessels access to Duluth, Detroit and Chi- cago, For a long time Senator Overton of Louisi- ana, who wants Great Lakes traffic to flow through New Orleans, blocked the St. Lawrence Seaway.uMore recently a Senate Foreign Rela- tions sub-committee reported favorably on the seaway but the absence of Senator Wallace White, a Maine Republican, blocked a vote. Meanwhile, Dutch and Norwegian steamship lines are getting the jump on American shipping by putting small vessels into Trans-Atlantic service which can operate directly between Europe and Chicago. These boats will be shallow enough to navigate the St. Lawrence without a seaway, while large American vessels will be out of luck. Meanwhile, New England and New York in- dustry operates at the pleasure of the gentleman who heads the United Mine Workers of America. Two companies have applied to the Govern- ment for purchase of the Big Inch and Little Inch pipe lines laid during the war to carry oil to the east coast. But believe it or not, the Federal Power Commission has not even set a date for hearing their applications. If the White House really wanted to put a bombshell under Lewis, hearings could be started over- night. The two companies applying for the pipe lines are: (1) Trans-Continental which offers $40,- 000,000; and (2) the Big Inch Gas Company, which also offers 40 million, and was organized by Oscar Cox, former Assistant Solicitor General of the Justice Department. Both companies have already made arrangements with the big utility companies in New York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey to sell all the gas they can deliver. A lot of brickbats were hurled in the direc- tion of Congressman Carroll Reece of Ten- nessee when he was first elected chairman of the Republican National Committee. He was called a reactionary and a stooge for Senator Taft. People who have worked with Reece, however, don't find him that way. Quiet spoken and a competent backstage worker, Reece has a record of helping liberal causes which only a few people know about. It is now forgotten history, but Reece is the Republican who helped F.D.R. pass the important law giving the Security and Exchange Commission power to regulate over-the-counter stock traders. (Copyright, 1946, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Trumiian, Not Rebuffed PRESIDENT TRUMAN pitched his first strike of 1946 yesterday as he belatedly threw the full force of government into his successful at- tempt to end the rail strike. There was no sanction either of necessity or expedience in the rail workers' abortive walk-out, and the President's plan to avoid further direct conflict between the government as an operating agency and the unions in- volved impresses us as a good one. Once again food can move to the ports which supply the starving of Europe, Americans can stop suffering for the sins of others, and guilt- less labor unions may escape penalties for the transgressions of others. For once Truman is top man, We can only pray that it will stay that way. -Hale Champion KIC K S & K COMMENTS THE LONG YEARS between the first Paul Whiteman "jazz concerts" and the "Jazz at the Philharmonic" performance in Detroit last Saturday, have seen a remarkable change in the way swing is now presented. The days of tuxedo- clad musicians, over-arranged music and that annoying attitude of bemused tolerance on the part of all present, are at last gone. Judging from the reception these new young men got last week, there'll be little mourning for the "good old days," either. Last Saturday's concert involved only nine people, one of whom, Norman Granz, was the man responsible for the venture. The musicians were Buck Clayton, Lester Young, Coleman Haw- kins, Helen Humes, Meade Lux Lewis, Curly Russell, Ken Kersey, and Shadow Wilson, while Granz acted as master of ceremonies. It should be mentioned here, in praise of this Granz, that he shows good taste on the selection of his mu- sicians, and that he kept his own appearances on the stage down to the barest minimum. Actually, the evening started off rather badly. Shadow Wilson's drums were still somewhere south of Milwaukee when the first curtain went up, and his absence produced a general list- lessness about the first ensemble sets which my Hollywood reporter characterizes as a "five guys named Moe" kick. Things brightened up con- siderably towards the close when Wilson joined in though, especially for Buck Clayton, who had wasted most of the early evening trying to find his range. There':, little to say about the other musicians, since, with the exception of Lewis who seemed in a hurry to get his stint finished, they all played as well as they usually do. My own favorites were Young. who has been away far too long and Humes' vocal on "He May Be Your Man." -Lex Walker c[e e loe or Re Cortright Trihd To the Editor: ON MONDAY, May 20, a six-au jury chosen at random from cam- pus retried the case of Richard Cort- right. Its decisions on questions of fact were that Cortright was not guilty of intentional fraud; but that he was guilty of a violation of election rules in voting with an identification card not his own. On the question of opinion put to them the jury recom- mended that Cortright be seated. At the Wednesday meeting of the Legislature, it was moved that the body adopt the three verdicts of the jury and seat Cortright. The majority feeling was that the Legislature did not delegate authority to seat or un- seat Cortright since a jury is a body to decide on questions of fact and the final responsibility must belong to the Legislature. Since the motion included a definition of the third decision of the jury as a verdict, it was defeated. The undersigned moved to adopt the jury verdicts on the first and sec- ond questions; and to reject the re- commendation on the third question; and to refuse to seat Cortright. Once the jury had decided Cortright was guilty of violation of the election rules, it was the inescapable duty of the assembly to decide whether or not a person -o convicted should sit. The majority opinion was that since the jury had called Cortright so guil- ty, he could not be seated. Cortright's counsel argued that one vote made no difference in the election, and Cort- right should be declared elected. But to adopt such a rule would mean that the most energetic cheater would be elected. The only just rule must be that anyone convicted of violating election rules is disqualified, however ,mall the violation. Some of those voting against the" motion believed that CortrightJ Should be admitted, then impeached or allowed to resign. The majoritya Lelieved, however, that to admit a candidate convicted of violating the election rules would be impro- per, whatever the reservations.' The latter motion was passed with1 Mary Benson, Hack Coplin, Virginia1 Councell, Ray Davis, Lynne Ford,1 Harry Jackson, Lou Orlin, apd Steve Scourles voting for it. -Ray Davist President Student Legislature Minority Opinion To the Editor: LAST WED. EVENING, as some- times happens, people's feeling that wrong has been committed and justice must be done excited them to the point of outraging the very prin- ciples of justice that they believed they were upholding. The only result was to heap one wrong upon another. No matter how guilty an offen- Cer may be, all rules of fair pro- cedure and human decency require that his case be acted upon by calm, dispassionate, and disinterested minds. The judges must be pre- sented with all the evidence, but must not be susceptible to per- suasion by the press, by outbursts of hysterical "public opinion," or by other influences outside the courtroom. The jury trial of May 30 was thor- ough and fair. The jury unanimously decided that Cortright was innocent of intentional fraud-the only ground for disqualifying him, in the eyes of the jury. They concluded, therefore, that Cortright should sit in the Legis- lature. Tuesday's DAILY announced, "Cortright Acquitted by Student Jury." We did NOT contend that we agreed the verdict. Having no direct evidence, we were in no position to agree or disagree. But once the Legis- lature had delegated to an impartial jury the responsibility of deciding upon the case, we contended that we had no choice but to uphold their findings, in all respects. Not to do so, we argued, would make a farce of the whole proceedings and give the lie to our supposedly sincere efforts to establish justice. If the Legislature saw other grounds for expelling Cortright than those which the jury deemed neces- sary, then impeachment charges should have been brought, on fresh grounds. It was entirely illegal to originate a new resolution, opposite in effect to the recommendation of the jury, and to act upon it at the same meeting without further in- vestigation. To enact a resolution had the effect of expelling a member, by an 8-to-7 vote, was a flat violation of the Legislature's Constitutional Authority, Robert's Rules of Order, which requires a 2/3 vote. The essential point is that Seymour Chase, Judy Chayes, Charles Helm- ick, Wink Jaffee, Henry Kassis, Bob Taylor, and Terry Whittsitt DID NOT vote to reinstate Cortright per- manently. They voted to uphold the jury's decision for the time being, pending whatever impeachment charges might be brought. The major- ity, on the other hand, voted not only to nullify the outcome of the trial but to finally expel a member-by an 8-to-7 vote. These facts were em- phasized; no Legislator who bears part of the responsibility for Wednes- day's action can plead ignorance of the issue. -Bob Taylor Dominie Says RELIGIOUSNESS is a major problem following every war. Meaning is uppermost. Some of our compatriots are dead for that remote reason called patriotism, a group loyalty. The state, man's effort to govern himself and to preserve acquired values, has conscripted neighbors and set them at a defense which could be effective only when it became offense. Taking life, even for defense and by remote operation and com- plex controls, is evil. It can be rationalized while the enemy is coming but as soon as he is stopped we have to reason about the rationalization. Either the God, whom prophets, Jesus and the saints teach us to worship, cannot have designed such a world nor intended his children to turn to destructive ways as soon as they acquired freedom of will and mastery of machines, or he has lost his creative power, in which case he is no God. Therefore, to contemplate the meaning of life is one of the major interests after a war. Man by his war, technologically implemented, has so compromised reason that only some fresh grasp on deeper truth will restore faith and re- turn us to security. , Animals, even human ones, when scared first run to the cave as the child runs to its mother. The frightened animal invariably reverts. It is only the man whose mind is highly trained, and whose soul is both dedicated and disciplined, who can calmly look the situation over and use fore- sight. Only leaders can invent solutions, econom- ic or social, apply attained wisdom and keep to a chosen ocurse which will stand re-examination. He only can undergo revision, keep discovering nobler purposes and make certain to implement ascending goals, who is a superior person. Such intellectuals in the realm of behaving are never numerous in any population. The liberals who are supposed to be such persons seem feeble first because they cannot be dogmatic, secondly be- cause they are rationally cold and thirdly because they must honestly promise less to deliver more. It is our office, therefore, as a University, is it not, both to perfect our counseling agencies now creaking beneath a double load and to see that every Michigan student gets a superb chance to discern his own powers, learns the art of step- ping out of war's prescribed mode into civil dress with its personal choices. Because at Michigan upper classmen are not herded into adjustment lanes but are invited to seek guidance, many of the recent candidates for office in the Congress, promised that if elected they would "improve the Counseling services." Here is the crux of our prob- lems. The optional service invariably serves few and frequently overlooks the one who needs it most. Integrated democratic behavior, or reli- giousness, being an art, and something deeper than a system or even a science, can be attained only after the free person has caught a glimpse of distant heights. To expect an overloaded teaching staff to teach so well that youth who are caught in the psychology of war and revolu- tion will invariably choose wisely is asking much, but that is the aim of every great teaching staff. It is reassuring to feel the thrill of achievement which is Michigan today. Says Plowright in "Re- bel Religion": "For good or for ill life has become plastic and fluid once more, and we are making the mould into which it is being run." In such an epoch leaders become Saviours. -Edward W. Blakeman Counselor in Religious Education DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 3) Mason Hall, ext. 371 and make appointment to see him. an The Curtiss-Wright Corporation, Propellor Division, Caldwell, New Jer- sey, is looking for men who have a bachelor's or master's degree in Me- chanical, Electrical, Aeronautical or Metallurgical Engineering or the equivalent B. S. degree. For further information, callat the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall. WILLOW VILLAGE PROGRAM for veterans and their wives: Sunday, May 26: Classical Music, records, 3 p.m. Office, West Lodge. Monday, May 27: Child Care Class, final meeting, Mrs. Agnes Stahly, 2 p.m. West Court Community House. Tuesday, Max 28: Discussion Group led by Mrs. David Palmer, Woburn Court. 2 p.m. Conference Room, West Lodge. Tuesday, May 28: Safety Series "Sparks" Movies, talk and demon- strations presented by The Detroit Edison Company, 8 p.m. Village Com- munity House. Wednesday, May 29: Bridge, 2-4 p.m.; 8-10 p.m. Conference Room, West Lodge. Friday, May 31: Dancing Class: Beginners, 7 p.m.; Advanced 8 p.m.; Open Dancing, 9-10 p.m., Club Room, West Lodge. Saturday, June 1: Club Room Dancing, 8:30-11:30 p.m. Club Room, West Lodge. Sunday, June 2: Classical Music, Records, 3-5 p.m. Office, West Lodge. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for John Stapleton Lash, English and Educa- tion, thesis: The Academic Status of the Literature of the American Negro: A Description and Analysis of Curriculum Inclusions and Teach- ing Practices," Monday, May 27, at 2:30 p.m., in the East Council Room, Rackham Building. Chairman, C. C. Fries. Concerts Carillon Recital: Percival Price, University Carillonneur, will present another in his series of spring recit- als at 3 p.m. this afternoon. Pro- gram: Selections from the Magic Flute, by Mozart, Professor Price's Variations on an air for bells by Si- belius, six French folk songs, and Strauss' Blue Danube Waltzes. Student Recital: William Payne, student of piano under Joseph Brink- man, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the Master of Music requirements at 8:30 p.m. this eve- ning, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Program: compositions by - Bach,, Beethoven, Liszt, Chopin, Schumann, and Five Preludes written by Mr., Payne. The. public is cordially in- vited. Organ Recital: Emma Jo Bowles, a student of organ under PalmerChris- tian, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Bachelor of Music degree at 8:30 Monday evening, May 27, in Hill Auditorium. Program: Compositions by Bach and Franck. The public is invited. String Orchestra, Gilbert Ross, conductor, will be heard in a program of music of the 17 and 18 centuries at 8:30 Tuesday evening, May 28, in the Assembly Hall of the Rackham Building. Program: Compositions by Stamitz, Purcell, Frescobaldi, Mozart, and Sammartini. The public is in- vited. Student Recital: Evelyn Olsen, mezzo-soprano, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Bachelor of Music, at 8:30 Wednesday evening, May 29, in Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. Miss Olsen is a pupil of Thelma Lewis. Program: groups of Spanish, French, German, and English songs. The public is invited. Recital Cancelled: Ruby Joan Kuhlman's piano recital, scheduled for Friday, May 31, in Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre, has been postponed; Madeline Ardner, pianist, who had planned to give her recital in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre on Saturday, June 1, will play at 8:30 Friday eve- ning, May 31, in the Theatre. Comning .events Annual Pharmaceutical Conference sponsored by the College of Phar- macy will be held at 2:15 p.m., Tues- day, May 28, in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. The prin-. ciple speakers and their subjects are: Mr. G. F. Emch, pharmacist of Tole- do, Ohio, "The Physician-Pharmacist Relationship"; Mr. C. F. Buck, Eli Lilly and Company, "How to Plan for Profit"; and Dr. Maurice H. See- vers, Chairman of the Department of Pharmacology, Medical School, "Some Drugs Which Influence the Auto- nomic Nervous System". At the eve- ning program, beginning at 7:45, Dr., John M. Sheldon, Associate Profes- sor of InternalkMedicine, Medical School, will speak on "Our Present Concept of Allergic Disease". The public is cordially invited. Alpha Phi Omega will hold a short pre-dance meeting Mon., May 27, at 7:30 at the Union. Every member should bring any unsold tickets with him and receipts for tickets sold. Women's Research Club will hold their annual dinner meeting Mon- day, June 3, at 6:30, at the Michigan Union. Dr. Gertrude E. Moulton will talk on "The Relationship of the Field of Physical Education to Gen- eral Education." Reservations must be made by May 28 through Dr. Avery Test, 1204 Henry Street. House Presidents: There will be a House Presidents meeting of League Houses and Dormitories Tuesday, May 28, at 5 p.m. at the League. All Presidents are urged to attend be- cause some very important announce- ments wil be made. Elmer Groefsema, of Detroit, one of the nation's foremost trial negli- gence lawyers and vice-president of the Detroit chapter of the National Lawyers Guild, will speak on "Trials of the Trial Lawyer" at 8 p.m. Wed- nesday in Room 116, Hutchins Hall. The lecture is sponsored by the re- cently organized student chapter of the Guild. All university students interested are invited to attend, An Evening of Bridge is featured at the International Center every Monday at 7:30 p.m. Sponsored by ANCUM, this activity is for anyone interested. The Polonia Club will meet Tues- day at 7:30 in the International Cen- ter. Professor Wlosczewski, sociol- ogist, will lecture to the group. Mem- bers are requested to be at the meet- ing promptly at 7:30. Refreshments will be served. Churches First Presbyterian Church: 10:45: Morning Worship Service. (continued on Page 8) Fifty-Sixth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff BARNABY 1t wasn't much of a game. But we won #. Maybe he iurned up7 of Ebbets Field- . r By Crockett Johnson A humiliafing fact, m'boy. But the blooms. In Brooklyn's The gates were closed to Botanical Gardens. Fabulous, your Fairy Godfather. But m'boy. Present these to your Margaret Farme Hale Champion Robert Goldman Emily E. Knapp Pat Cameron Clark Baker . Des Howarth . Ann Schutz . Dona Guimaraes r .. ........... . . , . Managing Editor . . . . . . . . . . . Editorial Director . . . . . . . City Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . Associate Editor S. . Associate Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sports Editor .. , . .. .Associate Sports Editor . . .. . . . .Women's Editor .. . . . . . . . Associate Women's Editor