THE MICHIGAN DAILY UNIVERSITY QUOTA SYSTEMS: Racial Discrimination Behind the Scenes IT SO HAPPENS... o Folk wys, (;sfoi s (1nId Mors RACIAL DISCRIMINATION is probably one of the ugliest aspects of life in this democracy. By a kind of tacit agreement, the prejudiced have lately withdrawn into more covert applica- tions of their prejudice; it is no longer quite the fashion to be avowedly "against" Jews, Negroes, Catholics. It is a thing to be whispered among one's own set, with politely qualifying phrases, to be practiced behind an elaborate facade of excuses. But that it actually is practiced, and this in major spheres of our life, there is ample evidence. One of the most objectionable expressions of discrimination is the "quota system" of accept- ing applicants at American colleges, particu- larly medical and dental schools. By this method, we have succeeded in wasting a fair amount of potential talent in these fields. Qualified students from minority groups have been refused the educational advantages they need, while others less capable, but of accept- able race and religion, are welcomed to replace them. This practice is scolded by the general public as "unfair" and "un-American", but from there on in it is shrugged off as a neces- sary evil. And the quota system remains se- cure and unimpressed. Concrete action along this line has recently been set off by ex-Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia's "Report on Discrimination in Institutions of Higher Learning." Following complaints from citizens, LaGuardia appointed a Committee of Unity, headed by Charles Evans Hughes, Jr., to investigate discrimination in colleges and uni- versities throughout the nation. Findings of the committee revealed that such discrimination is not the figment of anyone's imagination, but a provable fact. The report further indicated that the percentage of students from minority groups admitted under quotas has been decreasing rapidly during the last decade, and that medical schools are the worst offenders. Evidence shows that although New York' City schools officially deny that quotas exist, officials of these same schools will admit "off the record" that such discrimination is practiced. Several encouraging developments can be trace ed to this report. New York University decided to eliminate questions on religion and national- ity from its applications blanks, and Columbia University will omit questions on religion. Establishment of a New York State university which would not practice racial discrimination has been proposed; and two bills to that effect have been introduced in the legislature. Other bills would empower the State Commission against Discrimination to eliminate such prac- tices in educational institutions as well as in em- ployment. AN APPLICATION to cancel the tax exemption granted to Columbia University as a non- sectarian educational institution has been filed with the New York City Tax Commission by Dr. Stephen S. Wise, president of the American Jew- ish Congress. He charges that an institution which fails to select students "exclusively be- cause of their intellectual ability and moral character, but for the unavowed purpose of serv- ing racial or religious prejudice, does not devote its property exclusively to- educational purposes and is not an educational institution within the meaning of the tax law." He quotes a section NIGHT EDITOR: STUART FINLAYSON Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. from the state law as follows: "No education corporation or association that holds itself out to be non-sectarian and exempt from taxation pursuant to the provisions of this section shall deny the use of its facilities to any person, other- wise qualified, by reason of his race, color or religion." Probably the most important result of the La- Guardia report, however, is a general clearing of the air which has followed open discussion of the problem in New York. The facts made public by the Committee on Unity have generated more widespread understanding of the situatiqn, and paved the way for future action. That such discriminatory practices are not confined to New York State, however, is borne out both by the LaGuardia report and by other survey on the subject. The "Jewish News" estimates that an average of only 700 Jewish students are graduated annually from the med- ical schools of the entire nation. "Jewish Af- fairs" survey supplements this figure by re- porting that in 1940 the total admitted to medical schools fell to 477, a drop of forty per cent in three years. Frank Kingdon, form- er member of the Methodist conference and president of Newark University, shows in the October, 1945 "American Mercury" that while three out of four non-Jewish students who apply to medical schools are accepted, only one out of every thirteen Jewish students are given the chance to enter. This is fairly conclusive evidence that the problem is far from being solved; nor is it especially remote from this campus. The "Amer- ican Mercury" lists Wayne University medical school among those who practice discrimina- tion. Philip Slamovitz in the Detroit "Jewish News" refers to quotas enforced in medical schools, "including the Detroit and Ann Arbor colleges." Quotas are admittedly a topic of general debate on campus. In the light of testi- mony to the prevalence of quota systems, it is not strange that this should be so, and that a questioning attitude toward the- University's policy should be a noticeable undercurrent here. T IS ESTIMATED that not more than eight out of 135 (approximately five per cent) stu- dents admitted to the University medical school for the coming year are Jewish, compared with the sixteen to eighteen Jewish students in this year's 150 member graduating class, (approxi- mately 12 per cent), which was admitted under the non-discriminatory Army program. These estimates are not, of course, conclusive; we do not pretend that they in any way "prove" the existence of either discrimination or a quota system. But they do give weight to the questions being asked about University admissions policies. The University has denied that discrimination is practiced. The findings of the LaGuardia com- mission in New York have made headway toward correcting a condition which should be correct- ed. It is only reasonable to suppose that a simi- lar investigation would prove equally valuable here. Such a survey, conducted by an impartial commission, would remove suspicion of unfair practices by Michigan colleges if such suspicion is unwarranted. -Mary Brush and Margaret FArmer Ca}ref ulith Those Mo rtarboards A RCHAEOLOGISTS of the future, delving among the kitchen mid- dens of old Ann Arbor' may well pro- fit by the following indication of University ritualistic protocol: "In order that the Commence- ment exercises may conform to aca- demic tradition, it is requested that no flowers be worn by women grad- uates; and that men refrain from smoking in the procession and dur- ing the exercises at Ferry Field." --(signed) just Like the 'Ertsian AT LEAST ONE faculty member we know is considerably put out by the mystery of the lost summer classes bulletin. We hope this ulter- ior motive won't give him away, but it seems that our acquaintance can't arrange his summer fishing schedule until the blankety blank bulletin is had a litt le trouble with a publicity issued. gag in Chicago. : * * Press agents persuaded him to lift Bess TMiss America I Myerson to his shouldet for a picmure. He hoisted A YOUNG MAN of re olutionarythe 140-pound beauty queen with some difficulty. Then Bess slid down lreanings brought 11h 1 inth o o off his shoulder and lifted our boy of our classes the other day, durmin with ease. a discussion of sometime student We told yo h' dg u apathy. He raised his hand tri- y umphantly and told the teacher, "In a paper now on your desk, I have proved'conclusively that apathy is traceable directly to the capitalis- tic system." * * *I We Like Our W'ome,, husky THOSE OF YOU who were im- pressed by the cut of strong man Allen Stephan, which graced pagel one of The Daily a fortnight ago, should be interested in the following item. It seems that "Mr. America" PERHAPS THE MOSi flagrant ex- ample of "made work" we've seen in many a year is the guy who straightens chairs in the General Library. The chairs are in pifect echelon wx'en he -et" through every night - only by that time there's no~body around to see them. He could be better employed hold- ing candles for those hundreds of students who every day knock their eyes out trying to read by the library's murky lamps. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN L OPA Emasculation By DREW PEARSON W ASHINGTON.-Seldom has a Senate com- mittee been so loath to put its name to a piece of legislation as the Senate Banking and Currency Committee which finished sabotaging the price-control bill last week. About all that was left of the bill was its name. When it came to signing it, New York's Sena- tor Wagner, chairman of the Banking and Cur- rency Committee, flatly refused. He pointed out, in a closed-door session, that he had opposed the emasculating amendments and would submit his own minority report. Senator Taft, who did more than almost anyone to tear the bill to pieces, also hesitated. He said he had his own bill which he wanted to introduce. Finally someone proposed that the senators' names be signed in a circle, so the public could not tell who signed first. "It reminds me," said Kentucky's Alben Bark- ley, "of the young man who shot his mother and father, then appealed to the court for leniency on the grounds that he was an orphan." Note - Finally, Senator Barkley agreed to re- port the gutted OPA bill to the Senate, but accompanied by a stinging criticism of the way the OPA had been virtually destroyed. INSIDE FACT is that all Truman's strongest cabinet members - including Jimmy Byrnes, Judge Vinson and Bob Hannegan-were opposed to John Snyder's appointment at Secretary of the Treasury, though they were given no chance to express themselves. Inside fact also is that John Snyder himself was the strongest advocate of Fred Vinson's appointment as chief justice. Snyder kept urging Truman to promote Vinson out of the Treasury department to the Supreme Court. There was no question as to what was in the back of Snyder's mind. He wanted Vinson's Treasury job for himself. Reason for the inner-cabinet opposition to Snyder is that other cabinet members have seen him work close-hand, have witnessed too many tragic mistakes. Hannegan, for instance, has tried so many times to ease Snyder out of the White House because of his errors, that Truman once in- structed Hannegan that the question of Snyder was taboo. He said he didn't want to discuss the matter further. Secretary of the Treasury Vinson also has had various brushes with Snyder. One came shortly after V-J Day, when Snyder wrote a 40-page memo recommending that all war controls be- dropped. By accident, Vinson, who knew from experience as Economic Stabilizer and War Mobilizer what decontrol meant, discovered the Snyder memo and rushed over to the White House. "Are you fellows crazy?" he asked. He finally managed to stop Snyder's proposed action. However, Snyder did drop the controls on construction, and then had to restore them later; on woolen goods, which is one reason for veterans' clothing shortage; on nylons, which is one reason for the nylon shortage. One of John's worst blunders was to promise a price increase to the steel industry without first getting a commitment that industry would raise wages. This one moment of "Snyderizing" prolonged the steel strike for several weeks and cost the nation millions. This is why conservative senators shudder at the thought of putting the delicate problems of American finance in the fumbling hands of John Snyder. (Copyright, 1946, by the Bell Syndicate. Inc.) Current MOVies , ,at the Michigan Bing Crosby, Bob hope and Dorothy Lamour in "The Road to Utopia"; a Paramount pro- duction. rHE FAMILIAR BRAND of breakneck comedy cultivated by Bob Hope and Bing Crosby is on view at the Michigan this week, where the pair take to the road for the fourth time. Their technique of calculated incoherence has much in common with the Marx Brother efforts. Since that group's retirement, Hope and Crosby have been practically the only ones to successfully carry on this type of thing, and they do it well. The film is an amusing string of frank, un- subtle and well-sustained gags. As usual, Hope and Crosby's traveling companion on the journey is Dorothy Lamour, who, despite the Alaskan locale, finds sufficient occasion to appear in a sarong. . . (it the State Maria Moutez and P'estou Foster in "Tan- gier"; a Universal production. Shady character meets shady character in this old, -old refrain, compounded of venerable cloak-and-dagger cliches and Maria Montez. Proceed at your own risk. -Barrie Waters (Continued from Page 2) have not cleared their records at the Library by Tuesday, June 18, will be sent to the Recorder's Office. The credits of these students will be held up until their records are cleared, in compliance with regulations es- tablished by the Regents. Warner G. Rice, Director Notice to all Graduating Engineer- ing Students: Caps and Gowns for the Commencement Exercises, will be available for rental this afternoon from 1 to 5 in the Garden Room of the Michigan League. All Engineer- ing students must make their rentals today as they will not be available after today. The University Automobile Regula- tion will be lifted at 12:00 noon on Wednesday, June 19, for students in all schools and departments except- ing the Medical School. Sophomores in the Medical School are relieved of driving restrictions as of Saturday noon, June 8, but all other Medical classes will continue under present restrictions until their designated va- cation periods are officially announ- ced. Students having lockers at Water- man Gymnasium should .clear lockers and secure refund prior to June 20. Senior Engineers: Announcements will be distributed in Rm. 218 W. Eng. at the following times: Tues.: 11-12, 4-5. Wed.: 11-12, 4-5. Receipts or identification cards will be required. cepted. Attention is specifically call- ed to the closing time for registration on Saturday, June 29, which is 10:30 a.m. Late registration will not be permitted. Any diviation from the alphabetical registration schedule must have permission of the Dean or Director of the school in which en- rollment is sought. Registration Material, College of LS&A, Schools of Education, and Music: Summer Session registration material will be available in Room 4, University Hall, beginning Wednes- day, June 12. All Students: Colleges of LS&A, Arch. & Design, Schools of Education, Music, For. & Cons., and Public Health mailed blueprints will not be mailed before July 15. Grades will be mailed, the last week in June on the election card stubs as is done in the Fall terms. College of Engineering Registration Material: Students enrolled in the current term should call for Sum- mer Session registration material at Room 244, West Engineering Build- ing, on Friday and Saturday, June 14 and 15, from 9 to 12 a.m. and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Student Veterans: Because of the acute housing situation, and the pos- sibility that no quarters will be avail- able at a later date at Willow Village, the University strongly recommends that student veterans occupying apartments for married students at Willow Village retain their quarters during the summer. Veterans' Books: The Textbook Lending Library, 1223 Angell Hall, will be very happy to receive any textbooks which the veterans do not care to hold. The books contributed by veterans will be loaned to veterans who in future terms are unable to procure assigned texts at bookstores. In case they are not required by vet- erans, the books will be made avail- able to future students who are in need of help and are recommended by an academic counselor or mentor. Willow Village Program for Vet- crans and their Wives:, Tuesday, June 11: Discussion Group, 7:30 p.m., Office. Wednesday, June' 12: Bridge at 2 and at 7 p.m., Gard Room. Saturday, June 15: Record Play- ing, 8 p.m., Auditorium. Lectures Hopwood Lecture, Harlan Hatcher "Towards American Cultural Matur- ity," Tuesday afternoon, June 11, at 4:15 in the large lecture room ofl the Rackham Building. Announce- ment of this year's awards follows the lecture. Open to the public. Speech 35. A special review sessior will be held today at 7:15 at the Speech Clinic, 1007 East Huron St. The Chemistry Colloquium will meet Wednesday, June 12, at 4:15 p.m., in room 303 Chemistry Building. Mr. D. O. Niederhauser will speak on "Surface Active Constituents of Crude Petroleum Oils." Required Physical Education Women Students: There will be no required physical education classes for women on Wednesday, June 12. Academic Notices Room assignments for final exam- ination in Chemical and Metallurgi- cal Engineering I: Rooms 348 and 347, West Engi- neering Bldg.: All Prof. Monroe's Quiz Sections. All Prof. Wood's Quiz Sections. All Prof. Thomassen's Quiz Sections. Room 102, Architecture Bldg.: All Prof. Brier's Quiz Sections. All Prof. Foust's Quiz Sections. Room 445, West Engineering Bldg.: All Mr. Banchero's Quiz Sections. Room 311, West Engineering Bldg.: All Prof. Schneidewind's Quiz Sec- tions. Room 1042, East Engineering Bldg.: All Prof. Upthegrove's Quiz Sections. English 1, Final Examination Schedule for Tuesday, June 18, 8-10 a .m. Austin 103 Ec Bacon 206 UH Calver 203 UH Chase 202 WPhy Dice 3209 AH Fletcher 16 AH Fullerton 4203 AH Norton 209 AH O'Neill 2231 AH Plumer 3056 NS Riepe 207 Ec Robertson 3011 AH Sparrow E Hav Stimson G Hav Stocking 203 Ec Weaver 3017 AH Welsch 2054 NS Whan 2116 NS Wolfson 3116 NS Closing Hours for Women English 2, Final Examination Schedule for Tuesday, June 18, 8-10 Stu- dents:; June June June June: June June June June June June 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, Thurs., 10:30. Fri., 12:30. Sat., 12:30. Sun., 11:00. Mon., 10:30. Tues., 10:30. Wed., 11:00. Thurs., 11:00. Fri., 12:30.' Sat., 12:30. a.m Abel Baker Bertram Boyd Boys I Brower 18 201 1035 225 1007 AH UH AH AH AH 'Archaic' U. S.Congress <4> i THE SCREECHES OF PROTEST which Con-j gressional inefficiency recurrently induces make Senator Conally's argument that "we are discrediting ourselves by telling the country we are running the Senate in a slipshod way" (by considering the Congressional Reorganization Bill) both ostrich-like and inance. The Bill, based on the report of the La Fol- lette-Monroney joint committee, is the result of more than a year's study of the creaking ma-. chinery of Congress. Congressman after con- gressman appeared before the committee to give such evidences of "slipshodiness" as the fact that Congress, which presumably must know about a subject before it can legislate on i., is shockingly curtailed with respect to sources of information. (The La Follette report some- what bitterly remarks that because the present fact-finding agencies are so over-worked, com- mittees must often depend on newspaper a:- tiles, borrowed personnel and usually-slanted hearings.) Congressmen went on to complain that because the District of Columbia has been given little self-government Congress must act as a city council when it should be deciding on national problems. Their animadversions were limited to Congressional structure and facilities only because the Committee was not authorized to invesigate procedure: the fact that almost a month of each session is wasted by bills being readsaloud by the clerk from one to three times, a custom dating from the time when members of the English parliament were illiterate, could not be mentioned. Senator Connally was wrong, therefore, in shouting that the country would lose faith in a Senate which admits that it is not doing as well as it could; that fact is already self-evident. Senators were probably right, however, in pre- dictiing that the bil is "as good as dead." The same reasons which have kept the needed Control Committee. Congressmen, who now serve on as many as 9 or 10 committees, might have time to do their jobs better on only two. And in view of the fact that the air age seems to be definitely here, the continuance of the commit- tee on Interoceanic Canals, which was set up during the Panama Canal negotiations, seems rather silly. But a strengthened committee sys- tem would mean less committee chairmanships, .and committee chairmen are more anxious to cling to the power and prestige they have won by sitting on their committees for the most years than they are to increase efficiency. Because of this, the Committee's recom- mendation that committee chairman be re- quired to report on any bill which the major- ity of his committee has approved, instead of grimly killing it by ignoring it, seems futile. Committee chairmen will undoubtedly continue to hold an inordinate amount of power. One recommendation on which Congress is likely to look with favor is the provision that congressional salaries be raised to $15,000 a. year starting after the next election. As the Com- mittee points out, the salaries which business and industry offer seriously weaken the incen- tives for becoming a congressman. But while increasing salaries generally recognized to be inadequate might procure better congressmen, Congress would still be ham-strung by what Ma- jority Leader Barkley has called "the most ar- chaic conglomeration of contradictory rules that ever prevailed in any legislative body." -Mary Ruth Levy Literary School, Business Adminis- tration and School of Education: Senior cardboard, leather bound, and folding announcements will be ready for distribution today and may be picked up between the hours of 10 to 12 and 1 to 3 in Room 4, Univer- sity Hall. Seniors are required to bring "either their receipts or their identification cards to obtain their orders. Every senior should check his order to see that it is correct as no corrections will be made after the student leaves the room. For those who are unable to pick up their leather and cardboard orders today there will be a later distribution on June 18 from 1 to 4 in Room 2. Presidents of Women's Houses: All sign-out sheets for the spring semester must be in the League Un- dergraduate Office by Wednesday, June 19. The functions of the Women's Judiciary Council will be transferred to the Office of the Dean of Women from June 12 through June 19. Housemothers and house presidents are responsible for re- porting violations of house rules to the Dean of Women in that interim. All Students, Registration for Sum- mer Session. Each student should plan to register for himself accord- ing to the alphabetical schedule. Registration by proxy will not be ac- W Phy Lee Cohn 2003 NS Edwards 1018 All Engel 4003 All Everett 2016 AH Fogle W Phy Lee Gram 2219 All Greenhut 1020 AH Hawkins 2203 All Hayden 2029 AlI Huntley 6 All King 2215 All Markland 231 All' McClennen 202 Ec Morris 3231 AH Muehl 2013 AH Needham 229 All Panush 2082 NS Peake 2235 All Rayment 2014 All Rich 3010 All Schroeder 35 All Sessions 215 Ec Shedd 4208 All Smith 231 All Stevenson .1121 NS Wells 2235 AH Wunsch 4054 NS Make-up final examination for both English I and 2, Tuesday, June 18, 7 to 9 p.m., in Room 2225 Angell Hall. 1IRooni Assignments for German 1, 2, 31, 32 finial examinations to be held Friday, June 35 Angell lall Krueger...... Van Duren.. Dewey........ 1035 Angell Hill Willey ....... Willey ....... Raschen..... 14, 8:00-10:00 a.m. Ger. . Ger. ... Ger. Gel'. .Ger. . .. Gr. 1, 2, 2, 1, 2, 2, Sec. Sec. Sec. Sec. Sec. Sec. 7 8 7 4 2 11 (continued on Page 6) 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 Margaret Farmer . . . . . . . . . . . Managing Editor Hale Champion. . . . . . . . . . . . Editorial Director BARNABY Mom-Do you think my Barnaby! 9 Fairy Godfather and McSnoyd, the Invisible Leprechaun, will knowI9 wh ua rea.ImcWrv4h7 AA See! The game's about to sfart, Barnaby. The umpire is dusting off the home plate. rMaybe Mr.O'Malley .. , ,.. . , .. By Crockett Johnson Where am t, McSnoyd...? Robert Goldman Emily E. Kn;pp Pat Cameron Clark Baker Des Howarth Ann Schutz . Dona Guimaraes Dorothy Flint . . . " . . a. s . . s. . . . City . . . . . . . . . . Associate . . . . . . . . . . . . Associate . . . . . . . . 4 . < . Sports . ... . . . Associate Sports . . . . . . . .. . . . . W omen's .. . Associate Women's Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor . 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