Labor Spokesman ' IS UNFORTUNATE that Victor Reuth- r's rather eloquent proposal of state so- ,lism last Tuesday night on the Student wn Hall platform was not adcquatcly at- ked. Reuther's presentation of labor's wpoint on the wage-price issue and his ggestions for a stabilized economy amount- , in effect, to a plea for state control of r national economy. Mr. Reuther has evidently lost faith in the e enterprise economy which has made e American standard of living permanent the world. Now that we have achieved paralleled national living standards, uther wants to discard our free system, rich alone has made those standards pos- le, in favor of so-called "Labor-Manage- tnt- Consumer Councils", to dictate wag- prices, production levels and profits in ery industry. Reuther defines this pro- ss using the ambiguous term of "democrat- control". ditorials published in The Michigan Daily re written by members of The Daily staff nd represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: EUNICE MINTZ In rationalizing a defense for his thesis, Reuther cited the tremendous war-time pro- duction record of the United States, yet he conveniently disregarded the fact that our output was possible only because of the in- dustrial potential which was built up under an economy impelled by the profit motive. During the war we matched idle men with idle machines, so why can't we do the same thing in peace-time? Reuther asked. The answer is obvious. During the war the capi- tal investment was supplied by the govern- ment, while in peace that capital must come from private investors who are seeking pro- fits. Throughout his speech, Reuther neglected the importance of the profit motive, which is the keystone of our free economy. Prof. Sumner Slichter, of the economics depart- ment of Harvard University, says that pro- fits are the lubricant of our economic sys- tem. Without that lubricant our free enter- prise economy will rust and break down. Then the only alternative is some degree of communism. --Stu Finlayson -Clyde Recht Management Speaker rt Indifferent R. ANDREW COURT is a champion 'hedger'. A statistician in the Labor Economics Section of the General Motors Corporation, Court, in a debate here Tuesday with Victor Reuther, educational director of the UAW- CIO, discussed as little as possible the issue at hand, Wages and Prices in a Stabilized Econoiy, and attempted instead to prove hat the CIO adding machines were brok- In answer to a query by Reuther as to why GM had refused to open their books to he government fact finding committee in he recent GM-UAW dispute, Court hinted broadly at secret collaboration between the J. S. Department of Commerce and the Au- o Workers Union in preparing the investi, ration reports, Court quoted Robert Nathan and Karl Marx to show that wage raises and di- vided profits would lead to unemployment, but when asked by a member of the audi- ence if he knew any way to prevent de- pressions in our capitalistic society, he passed it off lightly saying, "If I did, I'd be a millionaire." Court, early in the evening advocated more production as a solution to our economic problems. He was asked again in a question from the audience that if this was so, why lidn't industry produce to capacity. "Can't et steel", Court answered shortly. Reuther pointed out that although short- ages did contribute to slack production, there vas no shortage of steel in 1932, and in- lustry was not producing at capacity. Consistently wise-cracking his way around important and leading questions, Court was caught up sharply when Reuth- er commented that if we could joke our way through the problem there would be nothing to worry about. It is to be hoped that the indifference to he pressing wage-price problem apparent n Court's statements Tuesday, is not the 'eflection of an indifference felt by the in- lustry which he represents. -Naomi Stern No Solution Offered NDREW T. COURT'S testimony on in- dustrial management's behalf in the Student Town Hall discussion hardly gave management's case against organized labor much support. The General Motors spokes- man had to satisfy himself with a negative stand while his more eloquent opponent, Victor Reuther of the UAW-CIO carried the issue to him on almost every count. Court, who must be given due credit as an exhibitionist, wasn't able to resolve any concrete argument throughout his lecture; it wasn't clear exactly what convictions he- had until forced into a stand by queries from the audience in the concluding open forum. If it might, then, be called a conviction, his main point of contention seemed to be that since history has shown all depressions pre- ceded by wide-scale wage increases, there- fore these same wage increases were unmis- takably the prime causes for depression. Yet, for the most part Court was on the defensive and frequently resorted to such weak defenses as, belittling and gloss- ing over Reuther's inescapable charges. This was particularly true in regard to the economic figures studding Reuther's testi- mony which Court passed off as menda- cious. Whether they were or not is not known but certainly it's no argument just to condemn facts without going a step fur-- ther and offering abetter plan than the one behind the facts in question, Any such constructive proposals were no- ticeably lacking from Court's discussions. He failed to show any concern for future econo- mic betterment or the necessity of finding a program that will lead us away from instead of toward the economic disasters of the past. Instead he merely sidestepped the real points and contented himself with citing narrow cases to dispute Reuther. The only things he did concede were some of Reuther's very arguments. Court's statements contained more praise for Reuther than one would ex- pect from a management representative. It couldn't help but appear that either he was covering for his own feeling of inadequacy or else was making Reuther out as the excep- tionally reasonable labor spokesman and therefore not truly representative. Perhaps Court was fully justified in ex- pressing doubt in labor's answer to economic needs but a defense without some sort of offense to lend it weight is never effective. The regrettable thing was that he had no solution. That in the long run is what is needed, not just a negative attitude toward the proposals of others. --Bruce Schwartz MATTIER OF FACT: 'Fire Brigade' By JOSEPH ALSOP W ASHINGTON, FEB. 25-Something very close to panic is beginning to seep through the sectors of the Administration most closely in touch with the foreign situa- tion. The reason is simple. Progressive economic and political deterioration, such as was dramatically described in a report from Greece in this space two days ago, is becoming more and more widespread abroad. The tempo of deterioration has al- so increased abruptly, as a result of such unforeseen tragedies as the British coal cri- sis and the freezing of the French winter wheat in the ground. An explosion at a key point like Athens (which the above-mentioned reporter Indi- cated might occur in a matter of weeks) is now quite capable of setting off a series of explosions at other key points. The process might take a long time. But in the end, where the Western nations once presented a fairly solid front to Soviet expansion, such a series of exposions would leave little bet- ter than a political vacuum. The political deterioration going on abroad has its origin,in poverty, hunger and devas- tation. Under Secretary of State Will Clay- ton gave half his time last week to telling Congressional leaders about the $350,000,000 post-UNRRA emergency relief appropria- tion for Greece, Italy and other acute defi- cit areas. This country is morally commit- ted to provide the money, and Senator Ar- thur H. Vandenberg has said as much on behalf of the Republicans. The proposed ap- propriation is a mere palliative drop in the bucket. Yet the Republican economizers gave Clayton such a hostile hearing that even the fate of the relief appropriation is doubtful. Meanwhile, the contagion is al- so spreading from Capitol Hill to govern- mental agencies like the Export-Import Bank. William McChesney Martin Jr., and the other little men who compose the Bank Board are suffering from a severe attack of Republicanitis. They now obstruct most State Department efforts to use bank funds in crises on the ground that bank loans must be "financially sound." On the one hand, in short, there is American governmental paralysis. And on the other, there is a broad panorama of acute danger which should make it diffi- cult for any American to sleep well at night. AN EARLIER REPORT in this space from Ankara suggested that the Turkish gov- ernment might soon be undermined by the economic strain of keeping 600,000 men un- der arms to counter Soviet pressure. Greece is in even more immediate danger, and from the same pressure. These are the keys to the Middle East. If either Greece or Tur- key ever falls within the Soviet orbit, the British Middle Eastern position will be- come indefensible. In Britain, meanwhile, the coal crisis has glaringly revealed the probable inadequacy of the American loan to put the British economy on its feet. And the grinding misery of the people has pro- voked areat national debate over the wis- dom of continuing the cruel struggle to act as a great power. In France and Italy, where the Commu- nist parties are gaining strength, the re- percussions of a great Soviet gain in the Middle East will also be impossible to cal- culate. And the same dangers repeat themselves elsewhere, monotonously, in almost the same pattern. AT THE OTHER extremity of the land mass of Europe and Asia, the process of deterioration is also working with fright- ening rapidity in China. The inflation is progressing at a fantastic rate. Despite strong pressure from Secretary Marshall, the Export-Import Bank has managed to tie up the long-promised $500,000,000 American credit to China in a hopeless tangle of red tape. If no American help is forthcoming, the strongest man in the government, Dr. T. V. Soong, has already privately declared that he would abandon his thankless task in a few months. In this event, China will sim- ply explode, just as Greece now threatens to do. What needs to be done is fairly obvious, The World Bank must be revived from its present catalepsy. The board of the Ex- port-Import Bank must be taught a sharp lesson that its business is to serve American policy. Somewhere in the Administration, authority to cope with all the related crisis and near-crisis overseas must be concentrat- ed in a sort of politico-economic fire brigade. Congress must be asked to provide this fire brigade with a very large sum of money, ei- ther as an addition to the Export-Import Bank's diminished resources or in some oth- er form. And with these funds we must first buy a lkttle 'time and then join the World Bank in the complex, long-range task of fundamental economic reconstruction. In the higher levels of the Administra- tion, a debate is now in progress whether to admit the existence of the" emergency, offer some such program to Congress, and fight the issue out on that basis. The de- featism generated by such experiences as Under Secretary Clayton's with the Repub- lican economizers operates against any bold decision. It is just possible that the dangers described above may not in the end materialize. (Copyright, 1947, New York Tribune, Inc.) I &I IALYOFIIL ULEI t S "Sorry, we're full. Have you tried the flophouse next ,door?" DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN EDITOR'S NOTE: Because The Daily prints EVER't letter to the editor (which is sign~ed, 3004words or less in length, and illgood taste) we re- mind our readers that the views ex- pressed in letters are those of the writers only. Letters of more than 3100 words ,ac shortened, printed or omitted at the discretion of the edi- torial director. * e * Defeds Minn. Daily... , To the Editor: A FEW DAYS ago, reference was made rather sarcastically to the University of Minnesota's Daily in regard to their achieving the award of "best collegiate daily newspaper." Further mention in- cluded the fact that little national news coverage was given. For my part that's what I read The Daily for--campus news and not world news. Moat of the students can get all the world news they desire by reading the Detroit Free Press. It's a paper, supposedly, for the campus, so why not give the cam- pus adequate coverage rather than attempting to be reporter of world news. As soon as The Daily be- comes a collegiate newspaper, I'll join with your opinion that The Michigan Daily ranks in equal merit with the Minnesota Daily newspaper. Until then, I'll con-' tinue to question The Daily's role on campus. Moremver, I believe I am justi- fied i rsayingthat the bulk of your readers live in fraternity and sorority houses and in the dormitories. Why not increajse your coverage of the various ac- tivities of these groups? I'm sure you Would find a larger body of students interested in the activi- ties in these groups than in what AYD, MYDA and ICC are doing in their own left-handed sort of way. What percentage of the student body is interested in or holds membership in one of the groups? My opinion is that it is a very minute minority, and that the publicity they receive is all out of proportion to their value on campus or to the interested stu- dents who wish to read of their constant crusading. The Daily can be improved ! -Kenneth S. Armstrong, Jr. Editor's Note: Totaling the inches of news copy in the three papers we first laid our hands on, we found: Saturday, Feb. 22 - Local news, 267 inches; Associated Press news, 38 inches. Tuesday,aFeb. 25-. local, 191 inches; AP, 62 inches. Wednesday, Feb. 26 - local, 282 inches; Al', 38 inches. Poor Lost Soul ... soldier was left free to formulat( his ideals for a better world. The soldier endured his fev privations in silent cheerfulness knowing his sacrifices would cer tainly result in eliminating profi teers. of all kinds, from the futur world, which was just and easily attainable. True, the citizen-soldiers' time was going down the cQsmic drain pipe. But his life was picayune compared with the final pot o gold which awaited him at the en of the military rainbow--a tlete world, at peace. True, his health would be im paired: his eyes blinded by ex plosions. his stomach pierced b lead, neck nicked by shrapnel. Bu his health was expendable in orde to attain a better world which wa just around the corner. With Herbert Hoover and Mi Mayerson, we condemn a mer cash bonus which would seem al most obscene for putting a pric tag on the priceless idealism c every veteran. Only Cold Cash Cynics wh maintain "there was never a goo war nor a bad peace" will suppo Mr. Emmet Donnelly's demand fo a Federal Bonus for Veterans. Warmblooded lovers of a bet ter world, which is just aroun the corner, will say with M !Ma yerson, "We will live on our memorie even without money." -Pierce Coryell Re: Sharpe Letter To The Editor: Letters to the I I BILL MAILDIN (Continued from Page 3) ust, 1946. The purpose of the Con- ference was to gather outstanding scientists and scientific groups to- gether for the opportunity of dis- cussing the natural resources and scientific assets of the British Em- pire. Colonel Melvin Purvis, FBI agent and author of "American Agent" and "Under Secret Orders" will be presented tonight at 8:30 in Hill Auditorium as the seventh number on the Oratorical Associa- tion Lecture Course. An authority on crime and juvenile delinquency, Col. Purvis will speak on the sub- ject "Can We Lessen Crime in the United States?" Tickets may be purchased today from 10-1, 2-8:30 at the Auditorium box office. French Lecture: Prof. Edward Ham, of the Romance Language Department, will lecture on the subject: "Renart et les Croisades," at 4:10 p.m., Thurs., March 6, Rm. D, Alumni Memorial Hall; aupices of Le Cercle Francais. Mr. Laurence Sickman, curator of Oriental Art of the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art in Kansas City, will give an illustrat- ed lecture at 4:15 p.m., on Fri., March 7, Rackham Amphitheatre. His subject will be, "Archaeologi- cal Research and Discoveries in China During the War Years!' The public is cordially invited; auspices of the Department of Fine Arts. Academic Notices Botany I Make-up examination for students with excused absenc- es will be given Thurs., Feb. 27, 7- 9:30 p.m., 2033 N.S. History Final Examination Make-up: Fri., Feb. 28, 4 p.m., Rm. G, Haven Hall. Students must come with written permission of instructor. History Language Examination for the M.A. Degree: Fri., Feb. 28, 3 p.m., Rm. B, Haven Hall. Each student is responsible for his own dictionary, and must register at the History Department Office be- fore taking the examination Make-up Final Examination, Economics 51, 52, 53, and 54 at 3:15 p.m., Thurs., March 6, Rm. 207 Economics. Mathematics: Short Course in Mathematics will be given this year by Professor Steenrod. The subject will be Fiber Bundles. A meeting to arrange the hours will be held at 5:30 p.m., Fri., Feb. 28, 3011 Angell Hall. Algebra Seminar: 4:15 p.m., Fri., Feb. 28, 3201 Angell Hall. Miss Davidson speaks on Frobenian Algebras. Mathematics: The Relativity Seminar, 3 p.m., Thurs., Feb. 27, 3001 Angell Hall. Mr. Parks will discuss "General relativity theory without tensor analysis." Note change in time. Mathematics Seminar on Com- plex Variables: 10 a.m., Sat., March 1, 3011 A. H. Mr. Gale will speak on the Riemann mapping theorem. Concerts Faculty Recital: Helen Titus, Assistant Professor of Piano in the School of Music, will be heard in a program at 8:30 Sunday evening, March 2, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Program: Beethoven's Sonata, Op. 27, No. 1, Griffes' Ro- man Sketches, Op. 7 Scenes from Childhood, Op. 15 by Schumann, and Sonata No. 3 in E by Finney. The public is cordially invited. Exhibitions The "Incas," an exhibition of 32 photographs by Life photographer, Frank Scherschel, Ground floor corridor, College of Architecture and Design, current, through Feb- ruary 28.' Paintings by Charles Farr and Gerome Kamrowski of the faculty of the College of Architecture and Design. Rackham Galleries, Feb. 24-March 14. Gallery will be open from 10-12 a.m., 2-5.p.m. and 7 to 10 p.m. The Museum of Art presents two exhibitions:. Forty Modern Prints, through March 2; and Painting by George Grosz, through March 14. Alumni Memorial Hall, week- days, except Mondays, 10-12 and 2-4; Sundays 2-5. The public is cordially invited. Events Today IT SO HAPPENS. . Campus Mores: First Query. Pleased To Introduce OST INTERESTING to us of the scores of questions submitted at Student Town fall the other night was one asking, "Who is that girl on the platform?" "That girl" was Bette-Hamilton, chairman f the meeting. Let this be her introduc- ion. fo, No, No! N ENTHUSIASTIC English professor was attempting the other day to make his lass actually feel the spirit of the English eople in the later part of the 18th century. "What would you think," he asked, "if ou were to go out here on the diagonal and ee a woman, with a rope around her neck, tripped almost naked, hitched to a cart and eing beaten by two big huskies with clubs nd lashes?" A very small voicetin the back of the room nswered, "She wrote for the Gargoyle". MUSIC University Radio Program: 1:30 p.m., Station WPAG, 1050 Kc., The Great Lakes Series, "Backwoods Physiologist." 3:30 p.m., Station WPAG, 1050 Kc., World Masterpieces. The Regular Thursday Evening Record Concert sponsored by the Graduate School will include Beethoven's Piano Concerta in G major, Prokofieff's Symphony No. 5, and Moussorgsky's Pictures At An Exhibition. The concert is for graduate students only and silence during the program is requested. Men's fencing classes: 4:30-5:30 p.m., Combat room, I. M. Bldg. Foils and masks will be furnished. La P'tite Causetts: 3:30 p.m., Grill Room, Michigan League. Russian Conversation Group: Thurs., Fri., 2 to 3 p.m., Michigan League Coke Bar. All interested are invited. Sigma Gamma Epsilon: 12:15 P.m., Rm., 2054, Natural Science. Mr. M. V. Denny of the Mineralogy Department, will give a slide talk on "Geologic Features of Western United States," All in- terested persons are invited. Alpha Phi Alpha: Epsilon Chap- ter, 7 p.m., Union. The Modern Poetry Club: 7:45 p.m., League. See bulletin board for room. Mr. Baker will discuss "Difficulty in Modern Poetry." Smoker: 8 p.m., Union; spon- sored by Alpha Phi Omega. All men formerly affiliated with the Boy Scouts of America are invited. This campus service fraternity is open to affiliated as well as inde- pendent men. (Continued on Page 5) To the Editor: T SEEMS that I am duty bound to warn a most unfortunate in- dividual. He is one of those poor lost souls who will need the help of his fellowman throughout his entire life. I am referring to that misguid- ed creature who stole my two books from the downstairs coat- rack in the law library. He ob- tained the enormous sum of three dollars and no sense. Thanks to Wahr's my books were returned to me when I identified them. The loss was three dollars on their part, time on mine, and worry for the fellow who stole them, for per- haps the person he sold them to remembers him. My sympathy goes out full fold to this poor individual who needed three "lousy" dollars so much that he would put his whole college ca- reer at stake for its sake. Surely a higher education brings out man's full possibilities and perhaps some impossibilities. .-Robert E. Albright For a Better World .. To The Editor: WE FEEL STRONGLY, with Mr. Allen Mayerson, that all talk about a Federal Bonus is misdi- rected. The important thing about the war is, Not the Cash which the soldiers at Iwo Jima and Italy failed to make, nor their time irretreivably elapsed, nor their chances lost. . The important thing about the war is the memories' which the veterans salvaged from the war, to be theirs forever. Let the profi- teers toll their profits and loll on Miami Beach. We veterans, both in AVC and outside it, despise the cold world of mere money. We live in the warm glow of ideals for a better world. Our ideals were nourished by a democratic citizens army, in which no officer ever publicly proclaimed himself to be better than any private. The American Army tolerated no discrimination between officers and nurses. It gave absolute mili- tary justice to all deserters appre- hended. It never practiced mili- tarism of the Prussian type. With this Army trampling to- ward a better world, the private JN REPLY to Richard Sharpe's "dull" analysis of AYD and MYDA, I would merely like to point out how inflamed his mind seems to be with anti-Communist slogans. It is time to take stock of where the human race is going, Mr. Sharpe, and certainly swallow- ing the distortions of the Hearst and McCormick press will lead us tray-into a devastating war. What is Communism? Rather than fall prey to the usual con- ceptions of this philosophy, e.g., that it is striving to overthrow our so-called democracy and its insti- tutions and replace it with a ruth- less dictatorship, return to the or- iginal works of Marx and Engels and study what dialectical ma- terialisin actually is. May I quote a few sentences from Max Ler- ner's "The Dozing American Tra- dition"? "The great American tradition was developed as part of a revolu- tionary quest for the good life. It now serves mainly the function of consolation against the fearful re- alities of life, a sedative against the fretful and sleepless night of the modern world." What constitutes the revolu- tionist is not absolute-it varies in accordance with the problems and conflicts of a society. Are you con- tent to rest on the laurels of our forefathers, to regress into our pre-war state of smugness, to al- low free speech and discussion, the very life blood of democratic pro- cedure, to be destroyed at the hands of hysterical politicians? To you, as to many others on campus, I say, reexamine your "realities" and help revive and redefine the American revolutionary traditions, lest you see your illusions shat-~ tered by more human destruction. -Betty Goodman, '47 Former Secretary Morgenthau has been charged with carrying off some documents when he left office. Carping critics say that a departing official should take nothing with hime but his hat, coat, and fond memories. -The New Yorker +14L , In an extremely pleasing program'of lie- der, Lotte Lehmann presented the ninth concert of the current Choral Union series last night at Hill Auditorium. Miss Lehmann devoted her program to the music of Beethoven, Schubert, Brahms, Wolf and Richard Strauss. Singing with almost perfect modulation and delicate care and restraint, she chose a program of sweep and beauty. Always in control, Miss Lehmann produc4 ed particularly happy results in the Schu- bert selections. Ranging from the wistful sad beauty of Fruhlingstraum to the dra- matic harshness of Die Krahe, she sang throughout with feeling and sincerity. In a happier vein, Beethovel's Der Kuss, Schubert's Ungeduld and Wolf's Auf einem grunen Balcon were gracefully delivered. -Harry Levine BEFORE THE NAZI WAR, there were a hundred thousand Jews living in Amster- dam. Today, there are five thousand. The Gestapo merely cut the bridges of the canals leading to the Jewish neighborhoods they Fifty-Seventh Year Edited and managed by students o the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff PaultHarsha.........Managing Editor Clayton Dickey ......,....City Editor Milton Freudenhei ,Editorial Director Mary Brush ...........Associate Editor Ann Kutz ............Associate Editor Clyde Recit......... Associate Editor Jack Martin ............ Sports Editor Archie Parsons Associate Sports Editor Joan Wilk...........Women's Editor Lynne Ford Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Robert E. Potter .... General Manager Janet Cork........ Business Manager Nancy Helmick . Advertising Manager Member of The Associated Press Trhe Associted Press isexclusively e Note ELINQUENT students in the school, we hear, don't flunk chool. They flat out. * * * * music out of BARNABY fLeave me get this sright, p.j U s--e--l SUnless, of course, you're wiling it was a noble experiment. But t didn'f woik, Vat, in the Text