THE MICHIGAN DAILY Heifers for Europe ILLIONS of Europeans are trying to live The animals are inocu on less than half the food Americans ment-inspected and shipp . The crisis in Poland threatens to reduce table relief agency to any average daily consumption to 1,100 cal- person designated by thet es. Anything below 1,800 calories is a resentative of the nationa rvation or semi-starvation diet, and the sonally delivers the heife grage American consumes 3,500 calories a that they are received by] V. This is a constructive Vot only is the diet in many countries on cause it helps the hungry tarvation level, but it is also poorly bal- it helps restore their pri ced. Since thousands of dairy cattle were restocked with the cows a r victims, protein food is almost entirely The farmers must promis lated and govern- ed through a repu- European area or donor. A field rep- il organization per- rs, making certain really needy people. plan of relief be- to help themselves, de. Farms can be and their offspring. e to give any extra ly milk, to starving ood. lacking. There are undernourished children who have never known the taste of fresh milk. UNRRA was discontinued at the end of last year, leaving these people to depend on smaller organizations which might never get around to the relief of their suffering. Your chance to do something to alleviate this situation is the "Heifers for Europe" drive, which will officially begin on campus tomorrow. The University Famine Commit- tee, sponsor of the drive, is asking all houses and other organizations for contributions to purchase heifers which will be sent to European farmers. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: MARY RUTH LEVY dairy products, particular children in the neighborh A project like this can do more to es- tablish brotherhood between nations than any amount of talking done at a council of foreign ministers. It is all very well to preach democracy to Europe, but there can be no receptive minds where there are empty stomachs. We can prove to them that what we say is not just so much idle chatter and empty words. The next time you go through the cafe- teria line and try to figure out some way of getting an extra glass of milk without the dietitian's seeing you, remember those children who don't know what milk tastes like. When the time comes for your house or group to make its donation, give all you can and rest assured that your gift will be appreciated by many grateful people and that you will have helped to establish a firmer world brotherhood. -Ellen Mulvihill CROSS RUFFS By SAUL GROSSMAN The chances of a finesse succeeding are fifty-fifty, unless you can place the missing card through clues revealed by the bidding and the fall of the cards during the play of the hand. S H C 54 A 9 8 Q 7 6 5 2 J 8 3 K 10 7 2 J 4 A. 10 3 A K 7 H S D C 2 K Q 10 6 2 A 6 8 Q 10 9 5 4 S Q J 9 8 3 H 7 5 3 D K J 9 4 C 6 E-W Vulnerable, North Dealer. The bidding: NORTH EAST SOUTH WEST 1 C 1 H 1S Pass 3 S Pass 4 S Pass Pass Pass IJOMINIE Sayp: No COURT ACTION for the last quarter of a century has so dramatically divided public school leaders and so "alerted" the Christian world as the recent decision of the United States Supreme Court, five to four, approving public transportation for private church children. The majority focused attention not on public expense versus private education, but upon the social right to ride being the right of all, not some. Here is a major difference. The social worker, parents of the poor, the teachers across the tracks, first generation immigrants, the politicians who drum up votes over the ward, and drivers who travel the alleys before most of us are up, with the Catholic sisters who teach the kiddies third floor back-all such can see the justice of this decision. But the white collar man for whom bus fare is insignificant, the avenue dweller who has one child not six, the family whose investment is in bonds not babies, and every champion of universal demo- cratic public education see in the decision eventually, if not now, a division of the educational dollar between public and pri- vate agencies-these cannot find justice in the inclusion of church patrons. Inasmuch as fully 80% of all private sec- ondary schools in the United States are sus- tained by Catholic citizens, the debate in editorials, lectures, and sermons, is about the Catholic church and our public schools. Here is a Good Friday theme just because the Cross, a symbol of voluntary sacrifice among Christians, gives us the perpendicular plane cutting the horizontal one. If we will always remember that our American democracy thrives on the separation of church and state, the private perpendicular love of the human soul for God being crossed by the public horizontal affinity of man for man, we will understand our nation. Also, if we will recall that the two planes divide the functions and also the week, we will save ourselves much emotional strain. First, pub- lic schools using five sevenths (Monday through Friday) of every week for education in "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thy self." And secondly, the private church, sup- posedly using two sevenths (Saturday and Sunday) of every week to learn the first commandment "Thou shalt love God with all thy soul, might, mind, and strength." Of course, this theory of education presupposes that families loyally take public week day education and on weekends engage in pri- vate church discipline. The major decision of the court kept its ftatment free from motivation and relig- West opened the Ace of Hearts and con- tinued with the nine. East took this trick, laid down the Ace of Spades, and exited with his last trump. When I saw this hand played at the East Quad the Declarer led the Ace and Kiig of Clubs, discarding a Diamond from his hand, and then played the Ace of Diamonds. East showed out on the next diamond lead and South was automatically down one. Declarer did not give himself a chance on this hand. After playing the Ace and King of Clubs he should have ruffed a Club, led his last Heart and trumped it in Dummy, and then ruffed the last Club in his hand. At this point East's hand is an open book. He has shown up with two Spades, five Clubs, and should have five Hearts for his vulner- able overcall, which leaves him with at most one Diamond. The King of Diamonds should have been played, in case East held the sin- gleton Queen, and then the finesse could have been taken against West with every assurance of success. M. R., of Stockwell, requests an explana- tion of the San Francisco slam convention. I found this convention used on the Pacific coast in preference to Blackwood. Briefly, over a 4 No Trump bid, responder shows his Aces and Kings in one bid. If he has no Aces he bids 5 Clubs; one Ace, 5 Diamonds; one Ace and one King, 5 Hearts; one Ace and two Kings, 5 Spades; one Ace and three Kings or two Aces, 5NT two Aces and one King; 6 Clubs, etc. EDITOR'S NOTE: Questions and comments are welcomed and willbe answered in this column. MATTER OF FACT: Palestine Plans By STEWART ALSOP JERUSALEM, March 22-A struggle which has for some months wracked the Zionist movement is now quietly but tensely in pro- gress here. For the Jewish Agency Executive now in session is attempting to plot. the strategy to be adopted in presenting the Jewish case before the United Nations. Two factions within the executive are battling for their programs. One faction, led by the American Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver, wants to stand pat on the so-called "Biltmore program." This calls for unlimited Jewish immigration into Palestine and the elimination of all restriction on land sales to the end that the Jews, at present outnumbered 2 to 1 by the Arabs, should eventually become a majority and a Jewish state throughout Palestine should be estab- lished. The opposing faction, whose leader is Dr. Nahum Goldman, close friend of the great Zionist statesman, Chaim Weizmann, wants to plump for the partition of Palestine into Jewish and Arab states. One of these programs will be chosen to be presented to the United Nations. By the time this is read, the issue may be resolved. At present the betting is on Rabbi Silver. Whichever is chosen, it will be opposed by the Arab plan for a "democratic state" backed by all the Arab countries. If the Jewish state were to be more than a travesty, it would necessarily have a large and disaffected Arab minority. Both trun- cated states would be so small as to be virtually invisible. Most important, there would be an angry reaction throughout the Arab world, and the already sinking reser- voir of Arab good will toward the United States would be further drained. Yet it is necessary to consider the alter- native. For those who have argued against partition have always assumed that in the course of time, Jews and Arabs could learn to live together. With every day of added violence and hatred in this country, it is becoming clear that that premise is utterly false. No state can long survive with two BOK NO MORE WITH ME, by Russell Ladue Doubleday & Co., $2.50 HERE is a young book by a young author, and as such it has pace, dash and ex- citement. The story, however, which con- cerns itself with the happenings of a dis- charged Marine during the first five days of civilian life on his way home, is not without ideas. The book speaks for youth-liberal youth, but it does not preach. Mr. Ladue creates a mood and masterfully sustains it right down to the last paragraph. This in itself is an accomplishment not achieved by a good many of our so-called leading novelists. No More with Me won a major award in the Hopwood contest in 1946. But unlike many previous Hopwood novelists Mr. Ladue has written a first book-not an only book. -Don Thornbury * * * * RIP VAN WINKLE'S DREAM, by Jeanette Haien, Doubleday & Co. THE CURRENT PUBLICATION of Jean- ette Haien's narrative poem Rip Van Winkle's Dream, represents a trend in the book-sellers trade which we had thought would have ended with the successful cul- mination of the war. The books, which glor- ify the American past, in the unrestrained terms of absolute ignorance, seem to be a menace to the evaluation of any nation by its own people, as well as a definite stay against the wider world view so necessary, especially to this country today. The re- working of the myth demands constructive criticism, as well as eulogistic primitivism. Even the casual reader of Crevecoeur will unearth the division of thought that trou- bled the colonial thinker. Yet Miss Haien says, ". . . visions of a Free America were etched In one ascent to unity With freedom's symbol as everyman. and implies in every word of her poem that this is true. Although there is at times a freshness of language in Rip Van Winkle's Dream, which is truly dreamlike, the cautious reader will be distressed with the frequent use of poetic cliches instead of original expression. We note with horror the well-worked "soft-eyed doe," and "rock-bound coast of New England." More serious than the use of an occa- sional trite expression is Miss Haien's con- sistently fizzy images. The most imperative mandate of all imagist poetry is that its images be clear, no matter how dreamlike they may need be. The appeal to the im- agination must be successful. The senses, the eye, the ear or the hand, must see, must hear, must feel. We defy the reader to pic- ture in any way such lines as, The lily-punctuated monotone Of the frog's song- or, Spring in Boston and arrival fair- Flowers abroad in the sea-swept square; Miss Haien's verse descends often into prose. The breaking of lines, the juxtapo- sition of nouns, adjectives or even clauses has never made a prose rhythm that of poetry. The sentence I quote is ample illustration, Housed obscurely, those frenzied intellectuals Who worked to change a settled destiny. as is, Thus Rip would while the early after- noon away, Later to wander to King George's Inn, There to join the company of men Who understood him best. for this is prose, and nothing more. The reader is apt to notice that at the end of the poem Miss Haien has claimed of Rip that "He had achieved a final wisdom:-" but then neglects to give this to the reader in word or image that can be understood. If this wisdom were present, and the poem contained a sincere and adequate message there would be little reason to condemn it. The poem needs the clearness that Miss Haien obviously did not believe necessary. -J. M. Culbert TIME PRACTICING OF CHRISTOPHER, by Josephine Eckert, The Dial Press, $2.75 THIS is a 1946 Major Hopwood Award win- ner and certainly one of the better ones. Miss Eckert, presently an instructor in Eng- lish at the University of Missouri, has per- formed the almost impossible feat of pre- senting a nine-year-old boy as a human being and not as the sentimental memory of an'adult. Christopher, the nine-year-old, is the son of an author-father and a musician-mother, a most unholy predicament at best. Christo- pher has his problems, with his parents, with Binkie, his poet-friend, and with himself. The story concerns the solving of these problems. Never does Miss Eckert become obvious or sentimental. The story is told with finely modulated humor and pathos. Generally, I dislike children, but I would like to have known Christopher. -Don Curto BILL MAULDIN (Continued from Page 2) Prof. R. C. Angell, Chairman, De- partment of Sociology. "College and University Education for One World," Provost James P. Adams. Monday, 3:30 p.m., Station WP- AG, 1050 RC. "The News and You," Mr. Preston W. Slosson, Pro- cessor of History. The Modern Poetry Club. 7:30 p.m., Mon., Mar. 24, Rehearsal Room, League. Discussion: "The Poet's Belief." Phi Beta Kappa. Annual2Meet- ing, 4:15 p.m., Wed., Mar. 26, Rm. 1035, Angell Hall. Members are urged to attend. Open house, 7:30-10 p.m., Wed., March 26, Sports Building. Pro- gram of 20 different sports. College of Architecture & De- sign: Seniors meet at 5 p.m., Wed., March 26, Rm. 101, to dis- cuss plans for a Beaux Arts Ball. Association of University of Michigan Scientists: 8 p.m., Mon., March 24, East Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. Prof. Lawrence Preuss will speak on "Voting and other procedural questions in the United Nations, and their impli- cations for international control of atomic energy." Business meet- ing will follow. Graduate Student Council: 7:30 pm., Mon., March 24, East Lecture Room, Rackham Bldg. "Plan for Peace," the Army's new film on Universal Military Training will be shown at Rack- ham Amphitheatre on Thurs., March 27, 3:15 p.m.; sponsorship of the Department of Visual Edu- cation and the ROTC. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Income TaxC aut To the Editor [HAT incomes are cut by the Republican Knutson reduction $3.84 billions out of $16 billions, 1947 personal income tax: First of all, 65 thousand men get 780.5 millions rebate. Every man of these has a net in- come of over $60 per working day (not per week). Everyone gets a rebate of $12,000, $40 for 300 work- ing days. Then 144 thousand men get $160 millions rebate. Every man of this group has left after taxes $30 per working day. Everyone has a gift of over $900 up to $2,600 - average $1,100. These 209 thousand above get 940 millions gift; 25 million people under $60 per week ($3,000 per year) get 850 millions rebate; 9 million - no income tax; 12 mil- lion under $1500 per year net in- come. These 25 millions, 120 men for' every one that gets about $1,000 gift the 25 million get a gift of $34 on the average including 9 million who get nothing. Knutson always counts these as receiving 37% ben- efit. They receive nothing and 37% of nothing is still 0, buys no milk. 3.4 million people receive 274 millions of rebate. This group have net incomes before taxes be- tween $3,000 to $5,000. 1 million (950 thousand) people receive 284 millions of rebate. This group has between $5,000 and $15,- 000 annual net income before tax- es. Everyone receives $284.00 gift. The figures above are taken from the Statistics of Income for 1942, published November 16, 1945; but apparently not distributed be- fore 1946. The infamous Ruml, that min- ion of the wealthy, talked about the workmen. In the rebate of 7 to 8 billions the working man whom Ruml continually mentioned got about 1 billion but the wealthy -above $5,000 net income - re- ceived 6 to 7 billions. The ten billions given largely to the wealthy would give every fam- ily in America 2 quarts of milk every day for two years. The pre- sent reduction would furnish milk not only to all the Hottentots for many months, but to all the in- habitants of Africa. A cut of all taxes on incomes below $2,000 would have cut off half the income tax payers sav- ing millions of dollars of expense of collection. -Louis C. Karpinski Deplores Stand To the Editor: Open Letter to Senator Arthur Vandenberg: YOUR name and the UN have been almost synonymous since the inception of the organization. On the basis of this, I was both shocked and dismayed to read your comment supporting President Truman's deplorable stand on the Greece-Turkey situa ion. Your November election slogan pro- claimed "The world listens to the man from Michigan." I do not think the world has been pleased with what it has heard the past few days. I see no possible justi- fication for the President's speech, and I see even less justification for your support of this action. You have been emphatic in your statements that spheres of in- fluence, power blocs, and cordon sanitaires are and have in the past been impracticable. Our unilateral action, or proposed action in Greece can be called nothing else than power politics, if not clear- cut imperialism. The by-passing of the World Bank and the UN Security Council in this matter' was rationalized away in President Truman's speech. If we are sin- cere in our professed aim of mak- ing the UN an effective sovereign- ty, let us now take a concrete step toward that goal by referring the problem to the appropriate agen- cies of the UN, and by following up this action with the acceptance and full support of the decision of the UN. A great number of my student friends are deeply perturbed over the proposed action. They re- member the pre-war, British-pup- pet Metaxas regime, they remem- ber theabrutal cruelty of the Brit- ish toward the EAM, and they are fully aware that the present gov- ernment of Greece is far from democratic. That Turkey is much closer to being fascistic than dem- ocratic, there is no doubt. In view of all these factors, I should like to register a vehement protest against both the recent speech and the proposed action. Communism will not be checked by reaction: reaction is its mother. Our blundering support of the vi- cious Chiang; our undemocratic treatment of the Hukbalahaps in the Phillipines; our outright usur- pation of the Pacific Islands: our vacillating on the Franco problem; our questionable de-nazi- fication of the U. S. German zone; our witch-hunting in the states; and now our stand regarding Greece-all these things are not in effective program for the pro- motion of democarcy. Let us, instead of negativism, nut forth a vital, progressive posi- tive program based on solid dem- ocratic principles. Let us disso- ciate ourselves from all traces of cooperation with fascist cliques and governments. There is dan- ger, much danger from the Right, too. This is not the time for con- servatism, not the time for the preservation of balances of power and the status quo-now is the time for progressive, cooperative democracy. We citizens of Michigan and of the world look to you for just such a program. -William L. O'Neill Hare Plan Theory To the Editor: WISH to disclaim entirely the incredibly garbled "explanation" of the Hare plan which appeared under my name on the back page of yesterday's Daily. A reading of that supposed "clarification" could only add to the confusion which seems to exist on this sub- ject. The Daily's space limitations prevent me from including a cor- rect explanation in this letter; but in a subsequent letter or letters I shall try to dispel some of the misunderstandings. Probably someone will write a letter complaining that a system which requires more than 300 words to explain can't be much Members interested in thel good. I would be the first to de- clare that the theory of the Hare plan is complicated. The real test of a system, however, is not the ease with which it can be explain- ed but the effectiveness with' which it operates. Judged by its results, the Hare plan is a marked advance over previous systems be- cause it is more sensitive to the exact wishes of the electorate, and because it is the only system yet proposed which gives fair repre- sentation to all groups, organized and unorganized, large and small, in proportion to their numbers. The Hare plan was hailed by John Stuart Mill as "among the very greatest improvements yet made in the theory and practice of gov- ernment". The principal obstac- cle to its more widespread adop- tion has been the refusal of the electorate to take the trouble to understand it. We incorporated it into the Student Legislature Con- stitution because we felt that col- lege students would be willing to do a little arithmetic in ordet' to benefit by the advantages of fair representation in the Legislature. --Bob Taylor Chief Teller Student Legislature Worth a Thousand' To the Editor: IN RE: the front page picture of Miss Sonia Drews (3/19/47). Thank you for a most inspiring sight. As Confucius said. . one pic- turd is worth a thousand words. -Edward Tumin. Sense of Guilt PERHAPS you can help us in the :following problem: What is the procedure-what forms are used-to what office does one for- ward cash payments to the Vet- erans' Administration? Maybe we had better clarify this question. We have been fol- lowing closely the Letters to the Editor section of The Daily, in particular, those articles pertain- ing to the increase in the subsis- tence allowance. After perusal we are left with such a feeling of guilt that it is only with the great- est reluctance that we open the brown windowed envelopes which arrive (more or less) regularly around the first (more or less) of the month from the Federal Re- serve Bank in Cleveland. As a result of these articles we no longer have the impertinance to cash these checks for fear of rebuke from the bank teller-we have been sending our wives. Therefore, if you could tell us where, we feel we should return a certain percentage of the month- ly subsistence to the V.A., so that we may arise in the morning here in Soot Hollow without the deep sense of guilt that has surrounded us since reading the current con- tributions to the Editor's Page. -H. V. Naley Jr. -J. W. Rigoni "Good heavens! I'd swear I heard one of the pieces groan!" Letters to the Editor... American Society of Mechanical Engineers Field Trip to the United States Rubber Company in De- troit, Wednesday afternoon, March 26, please sign ride list on ASME bulletin board near Rm. 231, W. Eng. Bldg., before Tuesday noon, March 25. Phi Kappa Tau: Meeting 7:15 p.m., Mon., March 24, Union, pre- ceded by dinner at 6:30. There will be two Alumni from Detroit and a number of rushees. The rushees' meals are on the house. If you know of a prospect, bring him along. All members are urged to attend., T.A.S. invites the A.S.M.E., S.A.E., A.S.C.E. and anyone in- terested to a film and lecture on the development, design, construc- tion,nand flightatesting of the Phantom, new Navy jet fighter, built by McDonnell Aircraft Co., at 7:30 p.m., Tues., Mar. 25, Mich. Union. Square Dancing Class. Spon- sored by the Graduate Outing Club, 7:45 p.m., Tues., Mar. 25, Lounge, Women's Athletic Bldg. Everyone welcome. A small fee will be charged. Conversation Group, Sociedad Hispanica, Mon., March 24, 3:30- 5 p.m., International Center. Inter-faith Workshop, Student Religious Association, cordially in- vites all students to attend a meet- ing to study and visit the Roman Orthodox church, 7:30 p.m., March 25, Lane Hall. Ball and Chain Club. Russian Tea Room, Michigan League. Churches First Presbyterian Church. 10:45 a.m., Morning Worship. Lenten Sermon by Dr. Lemon, "Blessed Reversals." 4 p.m., Chancel Choir will present' Haydn's "Creation" Following this Westminster Guild meets in the Russel Parlor for the program - "Seeds of Destiny." Supper follows. University Lutheran Chapel Services, 9:45 and 11 a.m. Sermon by the Rev. Alfred Scheips, "Per- severing with Pious Patience." Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stu- dent Club. Supper meeting, 5:1 p.m., at the Student Center. Lutheran Student Associatioit. 5:30 p.m., Sunday, Zion Lutheran Parish Hall. Supper, 6 p.m. Pro- gram will follow. The Rev. Henry 0. Yoder, student pastor, will speak on "The Christian Home." Bible hour, 9:15 a.m. at the Cen- ter. Worship services, 10:30 a.m., both Zion and Trinity Lutheran Churches. First Unitarian Church. 10 a.m., Adult Study Group and Church School. 11 a.m., Service of Wor- ship. Sermon by Edward H. Red- man, "Which is Niemoeller-Saint or Sinner?" 5:30 p.m., Vesper Ser- vice. Sermon: "What About Pray- er?" 6:30 p.m., Student Group Supper and Discussion. A. K. Stevens on "Labor's Community Responsibility." First Church of Christ, Scien- tist, 409 S. Division St. Sunday morning service at 10:- 30. Subject: "Matter." Sunday School at 11:45. Wednesday evening service at 8 p.m. Friends. 4 p.m., 3rd floor, First Presbyterian Church. All friends and visitors are invited to come. I A Fifty-Seventh Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editoral Staff Paul Harsha ......... Managing Editor 'Clayton Dickey ........... City Editor Milton Freudenheim..Editorial Director Mary Brush...........Associate Editor Ann Kutz.............Associate Editor Clyde Recht .......... Associate Editor kJack;; Martin ............ Sports Editor Archie Parsons.. Associate Sports Editor Joan Wilk.............Women's Editor Lois Kelso .. Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Robert E. Potter .... General Manager Janet Cork.........Business Manager Nancy Helmick ...Advertising Manager Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively BA RNABY Pop. I've got something to He has no place to stay. Would it be all right if he slept in 1 We'd be delighted i I . . I How hospitable- How gracious of him to extend such a heartfelt I I