PAGE TWO- THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, N'OVEIVMER 14, 1946 PAGE TWO~ TIITJRSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 194(~ Interpreting Price Rises Inflation THERE can be no doubt that the recent $100 hike in new car prices is another sign of the inflationary trend which American businessmen have been following since the end of the war. The arguments which they have presented: that supply cannot be increased under their OPA ceilings-that supply can only be made to equalize demand by allowing business to regulate the economies of the nation with a "free" pricing system based upon competitive bidding-now falls through by their own ad- mission that competition among businesses is based upon mutual agreement of the owners of the businesses. ENNRAL MOTORS termed their $100 per car increase as an "adjustment" to bring their prices up to the price levels of the other car manufacturers. They lay the blame for the orig- inal increase to labor demandsand to the in- creases granted to Ford and Chrysler some time ago by the OPA. They infer that the. only way to make supply equal demand is by cutting the demand with prohibitive prices. They state out- right that their competition is based upon a coer- cive agreement among themselves to compete only in quality, not upon a free market. How is it possible, under such restrictive actions, to check inflation? The local dry cleaners also have raised their prices. They argue the same way; it is a price "adjustment." The only basis which the dry cleaners' argument in general could possibly' have is on the reasoning: everything is going up. This is a "free" economy. -Bob Hartmnan Adjustments W ITH the return of free prices to our economy, the cry of "inflation" goes up with every announcement of price increase. This was the manner in which many greeted the recent addi- tion of $100 to the selling-price of every General Motors car, and the price-hike announced by cleaning establishments. In the light of surrounding circumstances, these first changes are more properly seen as adjustments than as inflationary increases. Qeneral Motors have taken, on their own, the action which they had asked of OPA some time before its decline, action which is designed to bring the prices of General Motors products into line with those of its competitors. In the past, the Big Three in this industry have not depend- ed upon price as a basis of ,competition, rather upon the quality that could be built into their re- spective products at a fixed price. Competition has returned to this quality basis, and it would seem unlikely that the other leading manufacturers of cars will upset the present balance by further price increases. The price level was set by the OPA when it granted in- creases to Ford and Chrysler. The increase in lgcal cleaning rates is per- haps more significant because it strikes closer home. This again can be considered, in part, in the nature of an adjusment, since there has been no price relief for the 'cleaners since the early part of the war. The inevitable part of the rising price trend is the fact that no segment of the complex business set-up can be left out. Let us hope that business integrity will prove an adequate substitute for administrative control in hold- ing the present line. -Ken Herring o.e..er. to the 6.1-tor Confiscated Ticket . . To the Editor: THE CASE simply stated is this. I am a mar- ried veteran now living at the Law Club. I bought a coupon book and season tickets for my wife. My right to do so has not only been questioned, but this property has bee arbi- trrily confiscated by Mr. Andrew Baker of the Athletic Department. Friday I received a courteous letter from this gentleman requesting my cooperation in straightening out a "discrepancy in his records." I quickly complied, and in good faith presented the letter and gave him my tickets to check. The meeting quicky changed into an inquisition. Charges were made that I had violated the contract for purchase, and the tickets and cou- pon book were forfeited. I protest such un- ethical and highhanded procedure. What right has anyone to inquire into the use of another's personal property? This is an usurpation of the Dean's authority at the very least, and even he would be justified only in a legal manner. Mr. Baker's letter misrepresented his pur- pose. One guilty of misuse of his tickets would not have been so naively helpful. Nothing was stated at time o'f purchase that a wife must attend every game. It does not follow that such a man will get away with these Gestapo meth- ods for long. Surely some of us are no longer children to be dictated to by the bureaucrats of the Athletic Department. Those students who have received similar letters should be fore- warned to place them in "file 13." If Mr. Baker had a discrepancy in his books before, what are they like now? For example, how is a ticket duly paid for shown when both money and ticket are held by the athletic de- partment? If that is the kind of discrepancy he has, the auditors should investigate. This is a very messy business. What a school spirit results from adding injury to insult! Along with the rest of the student body I have sat behind the goal line all season without com- plaint. Now even that poor privilege is chal- lenged, if you please. -Warren C. White EDITOR'S NOTE: The Daily contacted Mr. Baker who declined to comment. Further Qualifications To the Editor: DO NOT intend to enter into an argument with Mr. Goodman as to his letter in The Daily, November 9, entitled "Political Football." I do wish, however, to correct the impression which was given, when he referred to the a- pintment of Mr. Roscoe Bonisteel as member of the Board of Regents in these terms: "The can- didte's qualification: chairman of the Washte- naw Republican Party." To cite this as a quali- fication and to imply that it is the only qualifi- cation for this position is obviously inadequate, to say the least. For the record let me add: graduate of the University of Michigan Law School, 1912; city attorney, Ann Arbor, 1921-28; president of the University of Michigan Club of Ann Arbor, 1934; members of the Board of Trustees of the Alumni Fund of the University of Michigan, 1935 to date; member, Board of Directors, Michigan So- ciety for Crippled Children, 1934-35; director of the Michigan State Bar Association, 1932-35; past president of the State Bar Association (1937); chairman of the drafting committee of the State Bar Association; appointed by the Su- preme Court of Michigan as member of Board of Commissioners of the State Bar of Michigan, 1935; at present, member, State Board of Law Examiners. Past president, Ann Arbor Rotary Club; past district governor of Rotary Inter- cation of a distinguished citizen. The informa- tion was readily at hand in the usual reference books (presumably in the office of The Michi- gan Daily) and in the office of the Alumni As- sociation of the University of Michigan. -C. E. Griffin *,* Political Awards To the Editor: I AGREE with Mr. Goodman-Political Foot- ball, The Michigan Daily, November 9-that the University offices are non-political and should be treated as such. However, as long as politicians have a hand in Educational finance 'they will also use the offices as political awards. If the Communists were in power a conservative would never be appointed to the Board of Re- gents. Mr. Goodman forgets that Governor-elect Sigler was the choice of an overwhelming ma- jority of a record number of voters. This is considered an endorsement of his policies. Mr. Roosevelt conceived his election to a fourth term as an endorsement of his aims. The liberals of the University have not under- gone any persecution under the many years of previous Republican administration. In fact, they have increased in number and power. I cannot see anything so horrible in policy of elimination of Liberals and Progressives even if such a policy were adopted. It would be a great day for education if certain narrow- minded professors who grade on the similar- ity of theirs and the student's opinion, were asked for their resignation. Mr. Sigler would be a very poor Governor in- deed if he sat back and let the Communists eat out the life of American education. Why not give the Governor a chance to see what he can do? If, in two years, this University has sunk into a condition of sterility the people can change the government and rebuild the University along stronger lines. I would rather be sterile than be ruled from Moscow. -Charles E. Payne * * * Election Inefficiency To the Editor: N YOUR Daily of October 26, you said that "A J-Hop chairman will be selected from the following candidates," and the names were then listed. Upon going to the polls Tuesday, I dis- covered that I was to vote-not for one candi- date-but for eight candidates who would then form the central committee. Many of the stu- dents in my class were under the impression that only the J-Hop chairman would be elected, and that the rest of the committee would be voted upon at a later date. Because of poor publicity, many students, who had intended to run for the central committee but not for the chairmanship, were eliminated. I also know of several capable seniors who wished to, run for a class office, but again be- cause of limited publicity, they were not noti- fied as to the date when petitions were due. For an important election such as this one I feel that the publicity should have been stretched over a longer period of time, and the available positions should have been better defined. The entire election was handled inefficiently, and unless the Legislature improves its future pub- licity, the students will not support this organi- zation. ---Betty Eaton 61/ OP flhin9 NOW the AVC membership can begin looking under its bed each night for the Red bogey- man. The recent anti-Communist statements by its leadership is certainly a discouraging note, especially as the organization has been consid- ered the most forward looking of all Veteran groups. Perhaps, the leadership might profit by perus- ing their past history and asking themselves exactly why such an organization came into be- ing. Mr. Bolte answered the question well enough in his Life magazine article of December, 1945. There was no existing veteran's organization which would fit the need of the New Veteran. One of the reasons for excluding the American Legion was because, "Digging into the past, I found that the Legion had been organized de- liberately to quell the Bolshevist bogey among armistice doughboys of the AEF, had spent its chief talents in warning America of an exag- gerated Red menace, had been a constant vio- lator of civil liberties and had almost entirely ignored the rising tide of fascism." And further, Mr. Bofe was repelled by the Legion, because a prosperous Chicago businessman had said to him, "All my business friends are counting on the American Legion to Americanize the Ameri- can youth. You know what they mean by Amer- icanizing the American youth-fix 'em up so they don't bother us with any ideas. Don't let 'em jar us out of our fur-lined foxholes into the real world, where things are changing." -Yes, "where things are changing." And Red-baiting is exactly what these old-guards would have the "newveteran" resort to. For what easier way is there to discredit any progressive legisla- tion, so sorely needed by the veteran-citizen to- day, than to paint it Red? It is time that the AVC leadership, and, in fact, all liberal leaders, realized that the most reliable tool of the reactionaries throughout Arnerica's history has been the creation of a division among the more Progressive forces. Their prize tool since the first World War has been Red-baiting. Immediately after the 1918 armistice they created such a mass hys- teria among the people by invoking the Red menace that hundreds of laboring people either lost their lives or were deported. Their efforts gave encouragement to the infamous Klu Klux Klan, which inflicted a reign of ter- ror unequaled, in this country's history, for its brutaility and destruction. THESE men have utilized every other device known to the Nazis in order to create this di- vision in the ranks of the people. They have not hesitated to call President Roosevelt an "Inter- national Jewish Banker" as a means of discredit- ing his progressive legislation. They have not hesitated to sponsor Fascist front groups to carry on their work. Unless the American liberal seeks his strength through the unity of every progressive force in America the reactionaries might well sit back and smile. ,When the liberal begins adopting the insidious methods of these men, he is spelling his own doom. -E. E. Ellis IT SO HAPPENS "*News Behind the News Shoplifter's Extravagance OUR favorite news story this week is about an arty thief that broke into a Park Avenue shop in New York and made off with $50,000 worth of expensive neckties, all of which ranged from 10 to 15 dollars each. This sort of coup is always open to our ad- miration, but we wonder just what our friend has in mind. The hot tie market isn't what it used to be. The thought of him hawking hand- paints on a street corner for 25 cents each as 'the same ties that sell in the better Park Ave- nue shops for ten to fifteen dollars" is an en- couraging one to old shell game patrons like ourselves, but there's hardly much of a future in it. Maybe he just likes ties. Any day the police may uncover an otherwise shabbily dressed man in a Third Avenue bar who has been noticed sporting some very lively ties indeed for that neck of the woods. If his lavish taste goes unchallenged he may even resort to raid- ing some of the Madison Avenue haberdashery shops picking up boutonnieres, cumberbundes and wool Argyle hose as he goes along. Latest rumor has it that he is a disappointed Brooks Brothers account seeker. Taking No Chances BILL MAULDINE Cop,.194 by u;dFehSy ict ,. 'To,. Rag, U. S. Pc't. Off--AII cfeI nc'ievej I a Tm. Reg 1,-1 j \ "This is just for expediency. You mustn't forget you're a socialist at heart." i DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN C C C c 1 __ - Publication in The Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the Assistant to the President, Room 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11.00 a.m. Saturdays). THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1946 VOL. LVII, No. 45 Notices Members of the University Senate: The first regular meeting of the Uni- versity Senate for the academic year 1946-1947 will be held in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre at 4:10 p.m., Mon., Nov. 25. Deadline for Veteran Book and Supply Orders: Dec. 20rhas been set as the final date for the ac- ceptance of veteran book and supply orders at the bookstores. All faculty members are requested to anticipate material needed through the end of the semester and authorize same on or before Dec. 20. All back-orders for material not in stock at the book- stores will be canceled as of Dec. 20. Freshmen and transfer students who have been notified of the Prin- cipal-Freshman Conference are re- minded of their appointments in the Rackham Building Thursday morn- ing, Nov. 14. Ira M. Smith, Registrar Students, College of Engineering: The final day for REMOVAL OF IN- COMPLETES will be Sat., Nov. 16. Petitions for extension of time must be on file in the Secretary's Office on or before Fri., Nov. 15. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for DROPPING COURSES WITHOUT RECORD will be Sat., Nov. 16. A course may be dropped only with the permission of the classifier after conference with the instructor. Faculty College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: Midsemester re- ports are due not later than Monday, Nov. 18. Report cards are being distributed to all departmental offices. Green cards are being provided for fresh- men and sophomores and white cards for reporting juniors and seniors. Reports of freshmen and sophomores should be sent to 108 Mason Hall; those of juniors and seniors to 1220 Angell Hall. Midsemester reports should name those students, freshmen and upper- classmen, whose standing at mid- semester is "D" or "E", not merely those who receive "D" or "E" in so- called mid-semester examinations. Students electing our courses, but registered in other schools or col- leges of the University should be reported to the school or college in which they are registered. Additional cards may be had at 108 Mason Hall or at 1220 Angell Hall. E. A. Walter Women students in League Houses are reminded that payment of board and room charges for second half of the fall semester is due to the house- mother Nov. 15. Office of the Dean of Women corded with a grade of E.' Varsity Glee Club Members: The picture for the Michiganensian will be taken at the League immediately after rehearsal tonight. Willow Run Village: West Court Community Building Thurs., Nov. 14, 2:00 p.m., open class in Prenatal and Child Care, sponsored by the Washtenaw County Health Department. Topic: "Health of the Infant"; 8:00 p.m., Bridge session; 8:00 p.m., Extension class in psychology. Fri., Nov. 15, 8:00 p.m., Classical Recordings, Room 2 . West Lodge Activities: Fri., Nov. 15, 8:30 p.m., U. of M. Student Dance with Jerry Edwards' Orchestra. Lectures University Lecture: William H. Chamberlin, author and foreign correspondent of The New Leader, will speak on the subject, "British Foreign Policy under the Labor Gov- ernment," at 4:15 p.m., Mon., Nov. 18, in the Rackham Amphitheatre; auspices of the Department of His- tory. The public iscordially invited. French Lecture: Professor Charles E. Koella, of the Department of Ro- mance Languages, will open the ser- ies of French lectures sponsored by the Cercle Francais at 4:10 today in Rm. D, Alumni Memorial Hall. The title of his lecture is: "Topaze et autres pieces de Marcel Pagnol." Tickets for the series of lectures may be procured from the Secretary of the Romance Language Depart- ment (Room 112, Romance Languag- es Bldg.) or at the door at the time of the lecture for a small sum. Mem- bers of the Cercle Francais are ad- mitted free upon presentation of their membership cards. These lec- tures are open to the general public. Phi Delta Epsilon Lecture. Dr. Roy D. McClure, Chief Surgeon, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, will speak on the subject, "The Historical Devel- opment of the Treatment of Burns," at 8:00 p.m., Wed., Nov. 20, in the Main Amphitheatre, University Hos- pital; auspices of Phi Delta Epsilon medical fraternity. The public is cordially invited. Academic Notices English 107, Section 1 midsemester examination will be held in Rm. 1121 Natural Science Bldg., at' 9:00 a.m., Friday. A. L. Davis Economics 121 will meet Friday at 10 o'clock in Alumni Memorial Hall. Discussion sections will not meet this week. Mathematics Seminar on Stochas- tic Processes will meet at 3 o'clock today in Rm. 317 W. Engineering. Prof. A. H. Copeland will continue the discussion of Kolmogoroff's foun- dations of probability. Physical Chemistry Seminar will meet at 4:15 today in Rm. 151 Chem- istry Bldg. Prof. Ralph A. Wolfe will speak on "New Methods of Spec- tographic Analysis." All interested are invited. Concerts CORRECTION -- Student Recital: Carolyn Street, mezzo-soprano, pre- sented a recital last night in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music, instead The Kappa Nu Fraternaty neet at 7:30 tonight in Rm. Jnion.. will 321, earlier) and take trays to the Facul- ty Club lunchroom. Dr. Tom F. W. Barth, Professor of Geochemistry at the University of Chicago, formerly Director, Mineral- ogical Institute, Oslo, Norway, will speak on the subject, "Alkaline Rocks of the Oslo Province and Their Re- ations," at 4 o'clock today in RmF 2082 Natural Science Bldg. The Psychology Club will hold its second organizational meeting at 7:30 this evening in the West Lec- ture Room, mezzanine floor, of the Rackham Bldg. All graduate stu- dents and urdergraduate concentrate students in psychology, members of the staffs of the Psychology Depart- ment and the Bureau of Psychologic- al Services are urged to attend this meeting. Sigma Gamma Epsilon, Profes- sional Geology Fraternity, will meet today from 12:00 noon to 1:00 p.m. in Rm. 3055 Natural Science Bldg. Bring your own sandwiches. Institute of Public Administration students: There will be a social sem- nar at 8 o'clock tonight in the East Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. Mr. William F. Doyle, manager of the Michigan Chain Stores Bureau, will be the speaker. Your attendance is requested. The Regular Thursday Evening Concert sponsored by the Graduate School will include Beethoven's Quartet in C Major, Franck's Sym- phonic Variations, Brahms' Varia- tions on a Theme of Haydn, and Schubert's Symphony in B flat Ma- jorn. All graduates are cordially in- vited. The Graduate Outing Club is spon- soring a class in square-dancing at 8 o'clock tonight in the Women's Athletic Bldg. All interested are in- vited. A small fee will be charged. The Sociedad Hispanica will meet at 8 o'clock tonight in the Interna- tional Center. All members are in- vited to bring friends interested in joining the club. Refreshmnents. The Modern Poetry Club will meet tonight at 7:15 in Rm. 323, Union. Dr. Greenhut. will lead a dis- cussion of two of Shakespeare's son- nets and Andrew Marvell's "To his coy Mistress." Coming Events The Geological Journal Club will meet in Rm. 3055, Natural Science Bldg., at noon Fri., Nov. 15. Under the auspices of the Department of Mineralogy, Dr. Tom F. W. Barth, Professor of Geochemistry at the University of Chicago, formerly Di- rector, Mineralogical Institute, Oslo, Norway, will talk on "Unorthodox Meditations on Metamorphism." Tea will be served; bring your own sand- wiches. Visitors' Night will be held at the main Observatory from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., Fri., Nov. 15. The Star Clus- ters will be shown if the night is clear. Children must be accompan- ied by adults. If the sky is cloudy, the Observatory will not be open. The Graduate Outing Club is plan- ning an afternoon of outdoor sports and supper. All graduate students, faculty members, and veterans are invited. Sign up at the check desk in Rackham Bldg. before noon Sat- urday. Meet at the Outing Club rooms in Rackham Bldg. at 2:30 p.m., Sun., Nov. 17. Use the north- west entrance. A mixer for all gradiate students will be held Friday night, Nov. 15, at 8:30 in the Rackham Bldg. Re- freshments. There will be a smll admission fee. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation is (Continued on Page 4) Xidlian Ba tt Fifty-Seventh Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the author- ity of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Robert Goldman.........Managing Editor Milton Freudenheim.....Editoral Director Clayton Dickey...............City Editor Mary Brush............Associate Editor Ann Kutz.................Associate Editor Paul Harsha..............Associate Editor Clark Baker ................Sports Editor Des Howarth..,....Associate Sports Editor Jack Martin......Associate Sports Editor Joan Wilk............... Women's Editor Lynne Ford. Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Robert E. Potter........Business Manager Evelyn Mills...Associate Business 'Manager Janet Cork.... Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper. AU rights of re-publication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school NOTE ON LECTERN SNATCHING: The following message is to be found place designated,-"This lectern is the erty of Prof. Karl Litzenberg and is not to moved from room 2235 Angell Hall." in the prop- be re- **lectern--"A reading desk, in some churches, from which the Scripture lessons are read."--Webster's Contributions to this oluin are by all iin- hers ofeheDaily staff, ajd are the responsibility of the editorial director. Graduate Students: dropped after Nov. 16 All courses will be re- BARNABY Hmm. No wonder that little pixie ' couldn't locate them, son- The. Cngri t vae, rM rPe.. .popee FM, u Reg. V. 5. at. 00. rHow careless of him-- To Smix a metaphor. HE could It was night. You couldn't see your paw before your eyes- !1 I know he wants to get 1 1