Two VUHE MICHIGAN IAILY4 rl TUESDAY; DECEMBER 3, 1949 Economic Situation ALTHOUGH we are inclined to think of the current economic situation in this country as an inflation, it has been observed by columnist Samuel Grafton that it lacks many of the earmarks of one. In a real inflationary period, prices spiral upward without a sign of reduction anywhere along the line. However, he points out several instances in the present situation of drastic price slashing that should not De lightly regarded as isolated cases. Grafton cites the paradox of the de- partment stores running full-page adver- tisements announcing price reductions just at the start of the Christmas shop- ping season, and the announcement of a prominent men's hatter of a 40 per cent drop in prices. Occurrences such as these would not exist in a true inflation, and have led many economists to expect a re- cession by the spring. This phenomenal turnabout may be partly explained by the buyers' strikes in many cities which have been instrumental in preventing a large-scale inflation. - Yet there is an important group in this country that is determined not to let the last stages of even a small inflation pass into oblivion without reaping some individ- ual benefit from it. That group is the land- lords, with their increasingly louder cries Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: EUNICE MINTZ to move rent ceilings upward. They are obviously determined to get in their licks before the true situation is more widely real- ized. And landlords happen to be just the people who will have the least to worry about once prices start falling in earnest, because of the enormous demand for hous- ing which will enable them to do capacity business even during a recession. Not only would raising rent ceilings be an uncalled for move under these circumstances; it would be dangerous as well. Rents, unlike prices on other con- sumer goods, freeze into leases, and do not go down quickly by means of natural processes. This would give landlords an unmerited advantage in the economy when all prices would be declining while their own incomes remained high. The howl of businessmen to let prices take their natural course was answered by removal of OPA restrictions from the great bulk of commodities. Rents continued to be controlled since it was generally, agreed that this was necessary in order to prevent unscrupulous practices on the part of land- lords who might take advantage of the acute shortage of housing and charge ex- orbitant rents. Now, feeling cheated, land- lords have taken up the martyr's cry, in- sisting that if they must be burdened with ceilings, at least they could be higher ceil- ings. There is no reason to assume that housing will be more plentiful in the near future, and in light of this fact and the prospect of declining prices in most other spheres of our economy, their demands can hardly be justified. I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Toward 1928 By SAMUEL GRAFTON HAVE a kind of incomplete idea to offer today; nothing rounded and thought-out, call it an intimation. It is an odd feeling that our economy is beginning to be pulled out thin, so that there is a greater distance between richer and poorer than there was a year ago, or two years ago. The New York Journal of Commerce tells us, for example, that there is a decline in meat consumption in the low income groups; that would make this the first time in five years when all the meat being offered couldn't. be sold. At the bottom of the economic scale, say, typically, people on relief in New York City, there is something close to hunger again, as inadequate city pay- ments fail to match grocery prices. That, too, is a new note; the shortages from which these people are suffering are not like the shortages of wartime, which were shortages-in the stores, shortages for everybody; these are shortages in the kitchen, at a time when stores are loaded. It's new, it's different; and I have a feeling that this new economic attenuation goes rather far. The typical small extrava- gancies to which the lower income groups turned, with such zest, during the war were travel, restaurant meals, good clothing, and theatre tickets. It is in just these fields, according to the Journal of Commerce sur- vey, that activity is now dropping, and that barkers are being used in place of the cops who were recently required in order to keep the customers out. My incomplete thought about our ec- onomic attenuation projects a picture of a great productive machine busily com- peting for a small market. That is not an attractive picture, nor a very Ameri- can picture, in the mass production sense; yet one feels that it is forming up when one hears the automobile industry, for example, declaring that it looks forward to good sales for three years even if car prices do rise further and some cus- tomers drop out. We may be moving, even if slowly, toward an atmosphere, politically and morally, very much like that of 1928, when woe was form- ing below, even though the luxury trades were still doing pretty well above. The problem is one for those to solve who have so heedlessly welcomed and fought for in- flation, and who, just as blithely, now reject any prior planning to head off*a recession. As to what they will get for their pains no one can, of course, rightly say; the last time they got Roosevelt. (Copyright 1946, by the N.Y. Post Syndicate) I, '4' BILL MAULDIN l Y I I Copr. l94b by United Feature $+/nd cafe, Inc. Tm, Rag. U. S. Pet. Cff -AIf rights reserved a a 3 S 1 "t K f rY . w iia. " I : 3 EDITOR'S NOTE: No letter to the editor will be printed unless signed and written in good taste. Letters over 300 words in length will be shortened or omitted; in special in- stances, they will be printed, at the discretion of the editorial director. * * * Flag of Liberalism . .. IN MANY QUARTERS a flag of liberalism is flown. This liber- alism by limitation of definition carries the meaning of freedom of opportunities and employment on the basis of merit. Neverthe- less when racial minorities seek these opportunities or apply for employment this liberalism is found to be only a camouflage over racial hatred and prejudice. This liberalism is found to be only a shell; such a shell is only a cover to gain favor, or protect itself from criticism of society. Often by concerted efforts of an individ- ual, groups of individuals or or- ganizations to show the shallow- ness of any person or any groups, there comes a sharp rebuke from the latter. Systematic "passing of the buck" is used to exclude individu- als from these openings. Agencies who state that they have no au- tl tl u f: a it n b tl tl f; e v t n D Il .E? t J v s 7 t a t t a Y t Y r t E i t -DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Letters to the Editor... t__ _ __ _ _ _-__ I-Gloria Bendet Housng rogram T IS a curious sign of the times when a public official with his hands on the na- tion's purse strings expresses concern over the disposition of the taxpayers' money. Nevertheless, this is the crux of the con- troversy now waging between George Allen, head of the Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration, and Wilson Wyatt, Federal Hous- ing Expediter. Wyatt seeks a loan of $50,- 000,000 for the Lustron Corporation for the purpose of building prefabricated homes. Since this company is putting up only $36,000 of its own capital, Allen has taken a stand against this exploitation of the country's tax money. Wyatt contends that the loan is essential in carrying out the government's program for providing the necessary housing so urgently needed. Incidental to the story is the claim of a' new auto manufacturer,' the Tucker G'rr"tion. to use the plant facilities that have been leased to Lustron. In the first stages, this appeared to be a battle of homes vs. cars, lut a proposed com- promise that the plant be shared has thrown the issue back to the more funda- mental question. - Shall an individual company be allowed to profit through the indiscriminate use of public funds? The RFC, in exercising its proper 'control of these funds, has stead- fastly said no. In the war emergency just past, RFC loans were made to expedite the flow of war materials. In the final analysis, the issue to be decided would seem to be- is the gravity of the present housing sit- uation comparable to the urgency of the war period? Millions of homeless or home- hunting veterans would say that it is, other millions of- taxpayers would un- doubtedly take the opposite view. The rate of return Lustron would receive from the use of its loan is considerably in excess of the RFC interest rates, and the profit on $36,000 of invested capital be- comes enormous. The ideal solution would seem to be the granting of the loan on a conditional basis, allowing a fair return only on Lustron's own, capital, and passing on the benefits of the loan to the public in reduced cost of housing. But this has the drawback of imposing a limit on the profits of private enterprise, and would meet op- position on that account. Compromise is not unknown to our econ- omy when the public interest is at stake. The immediate need for new housing should provide the incentive that will lead to a satisfactory settlement of this current con- troversy. -Ken Herring CURRENT MOVIES, LL 'ALL or NOTHIN G THE foreign ministers departed from Paris several weeks ago, the out- look for the future was dim indeed. The Wallace-Baruch controversy had brought to light the friction underlying the most basic issue confronting the big Powers, the atom bomb. The crux of the matter lay in the fact that Russia refused to submit to the International inspection of Atomic re- sources, claiming infringement of sovereign- ty, though her real concern was that the United States would continue to manufac- ture the bomb during the interim stages of development of international control. The Trieste and Danube questions were a major point of difference. The United Na- tions opened at Flushing in a somewhat dubious atmosphere. Since that time we have come a long way. Molotov offered a disarmament pro- posal soon after the opening session. Af- ter a few days of headline news, in which opinion ranged from the purely obstruc- tive (bemoaning the absence of specific proposals by Molotov) to the ridiculous (fearing disarmament as impractical at this time) the proposal gave way to other issues. Trieste and the Danube took the spot- light. Major concessions by the Soviet Union have erased some of the points of friction, bringing the issues closer to a final settlement than they have ever been. The Trusteeship question was left hanging after several imperialist utterances by Smuts and Dulles. A week or so ago, the Soviet delegation brought up the disarmament question again. They asked for a troop census. The British delegation -objected that there must be "on the spot" observation by United Nations representatives. The dead- lock 'was broken last Friday when the Soviet delegation agreed to International inspection of all troops and arms, pro- vided that the atom bomb were included. To this the British objected on the ground previous position. First, they asked for a census in all occupied territories which were not enemy countries. This the British and American delegates refused. Then, the So- viet delegation asked for a- troop census in every part of the world, including troops within the Big Five. This was objected to because United Nation representatives could not be present to verify the nations' figures. They asked for International Inspection. This, the Soviets have agreed to. They ask in return that the Atom bomb, which in Vishinsky's words, "hangs as a sword of Damocles over our heads," be included in the Inspection. This is the most important question that has faced the United Nations, and that which will make or break it. There can be no real inspection unless the atom bomb is included. Is it not somewhat absurd for our delegates to ask that the Soviet Union allow full inspection of her arms and equipment, while we reserve the right to retain in secret the most powerful weapon? It remains for our representatives, along with the British, to respond to the challenge and follow through with real disarmament, without reservations. They could not but gain the support of all but a few of the whole population. -E. E. Ellis DecidingIssute ELEGATES to the UN now understand that this General Assembly may be a great success or a disistrous failure. Spain. has become the deciding issue. A majority of the delegates favor the resolution backed by the Giral government to cut off all imports 'roin Spain. Giral has pointed out that this action will increase At the Michigan... TWO YEARS BEFORE THE MAST (Paramount), Alan Ladd, Bill Bendix, Howard da Sylva. THIS PICTURE is dedicated to Richard Henry Dana Jr. who, throughout most of the action, sits to one side writing in a small black notebook. Through the haloed haze of his literary activity can be detected the toupee of Brian Donlevy. But the plot is more concerned with the regeneration of Alan Ladd, who characteristically looks just the same when he is playing the weak- ling spendthrift as he does when he is playing the stalwart stalwart. The sympa- thies of the audience are admittedly sup- posed to be with the crew members of the cast. The script-writers, however, could not resist throwing in sympathetic explanations of why the captain and his officers are such brutes. The results of this were that my sympathies, at least, were with the captain. Howard da Silva as Captain Thompson walks away with the acting hon- ors. The opportunity for effective use of such players as Roman Bohen, Albert Dek- ker, and Frank Faylen was completely over- looked. Love interest was dragged in by its hair. I * * * At the State . THE KILLERS (Hellinger-Universal), Burt Lancaster, Sam Levine, Edmund O'Brien. 'WHEN A competent producer and director combine with a group of lesser known but equally competent actors and a tightly knit, swiftly moving story, the results are usually excellent. That term, and such ad- jectives as "sweet" and "neat" can easily be applied to The Killers. The picture could easily have been spoiled by the use of the usual Hollywood big names and extras. As it is, everyone and everything fits-so well in fact that it is difficult to determine whether this is due to excellent acting or beautiful type casting. Regardless of the reason, the picture is one of the better attempts of the year and should be seen if only to find out what can be done in the realm of the motion picture. -Joan Fiske Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members 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. Sat- urdays. TUESDAY, DEC. 3, 1946 VOL. LVII, No. 60 Notices Veterans: Opportunity is af- forded to those veterans who have been enrolled in the University 30 days or longer and have not re- ceived either a subsistence check or a Notice of Award of Subsis- tence, to report this situation to Sthe Veterans Administration. Those affected may have special attention given to expediting their checks by contacting the local guidance Center office, Room 100, Rackham Bldg., December 2, 3, 4, or 5, between the hours of 8:00 and 4:00. Petitions for admission to the Combined Curriculum in Letters and Law are again being accepted from out-of-state students. Pro- spective applicants who have be- gun the first semester of their junior year may apply for admis- sion to the program provided pe- titions are filed with the Chair- man of the Committee, 1220 An- gell Hall, not later than April 19, 1947. Prospective applicants are referred to a description of the curriculum on pages 38-39 of the current Announceilient of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts. Deadline for Veteran Book and Supply Orders: Dec. 20 has been set as the final date for the ac- ceptance of veteran book and sup- ply orders at the bookstores. All faculty menbers are requested to anticipate material needed through the. end of the semester and au- thorize same on or before Dec. 20. All back-orders for material not in stock at the bookstores will be canceled as of Dec. 20. University Women Veterans As- sociation has offered to assist the Student Legislature in conducting a house to house survey for the purpose of locating available rooms for next semester. Volun- teer canvassers sign your name to the lists on the bulletin boards, Willow Run dormitory and Un- dergraduate office at the League. Instructors of Freshman Engi- neers: Ten-week grades for all Freshman Engineers will be due in Dean Crawford's Office on De- cember 7. 1946 'Ensian: Anyone who ne- glects to pick up his 1946 Michi- ganensian by Wednesday, Dec. 4, will lose all rights to it, according to the statement on the receipt issued when purchased. 'Ensians are being distributed in the 'En- sian Business Office, Monday through Friday, 1 to 5 o'clock. Willow Run Village West Court: Tues., Dec. 3, 8:00 p~m., Wives of Veterans Students Club meet- ing; 8:00 p.m., Extension class in Spanish, Ross School. Wed., DecA4, 8:00 p.m., Wednes- day Lecture Series, "Votes and Ve- toes in the United Nations" by Professor Lawrence Preuss; 7:30- 8:30 p.m., Personal Counselling by Rev. J. Edgar Edwards. Thurs., Dec. 5, 8:00 p.m., Exten- sion course in Psychology. Fri., December 6, 8:00 p.m., Classical Recordings. Sat., Dec. 7, 8:30-11:30 p.m., Open House for all couples. Danc- ing, bridge, refreshments. West Lodge: Tues., Dec. 3, 7:00 p.m., Special meeting of Athletic Directors; 8:00 p.m., Fencing Club; 8:00 p.m., Women's volleyball and badmin- ton. Wed., Dec. 4, 6:30 p.m., Basket- ball League; 7:00 p.m., Duplicate Bridge Club; 7:00 p.m., Social Di- rectors meeting; 8:30 p.m., Dance entertainment committee meet- ing. Thurs., Dec. 5, 7:00-8:30 p.m., Volleyball; 8:30-10:00 p.m., Bad- minton. Fri., Dec. 6, 8:00 p.m., Bridge; 8:30 p.m., U of M Student Dance with Hal Jackson's Orchestra. Lectures University Lecture: Charles P. Parkhurst, Jr.; curator of the Al- bright Art Gallery of Buffalo, will lecture on the subject, "The Dis- covery an'i Restitution of Art Loot in Gemany" (illustrated), at 4:15 p.m., Tues., Dec. 3, in the Rackham Amphitheater; auspices of the Department of Fine Arts. University Lecture: Professor W. V. D. Hodge of Cambridge Uni- versity, England, will lecture on the subject, "Harmonic'Integrals," at 4:15 p.d., Wed., Dec. 4, in 3011 Angell'Hal'. under the auspices of the Department of Mathematics. The public is cordially invited. University Lecture: Professor A. S. P. Woodhouse, University of Toronto, will lecture on the sub- ject, "Christian Liberty and Order in Milton," at 4:15 p.m., Wed., Dec. 11, Rackham Amphitheater; auspices of the Department of English Language and Literature. The public is cordially invited. Dr. Wolfgang Stechow, profes- sor of Fine Arts at Oberlin College, will lecture on the subject "Rem- brandt: Genius and Tradition" (illustrated with lantern slides), in the Rackham Amphitheater at 4:15 p.m. on Fri., Dec. 13,; au- spices of the Department of Fine Arts. The public is cordially in- vited. The fourth lecture in the Mar- riage Relations Series will be given at 8:15 tonight, Rackham Lecture Hall. Lecture with motion pictures at 8:30 p.m., Wed., Dec. 4, Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. "Holiday in Cuba," Robert Friers; auspices of the Sociedad Hispanica. The public is cordially invited. Academic Notices Graduate Record Examination will be offered on January 7 and 9 for graduate students who have not yet taken the examination. Application forms may be ob- tained in the Graduate School offices through December 10. All fees must be paid and applica- tions submitted by Dec. 12. Education B291. Dr. Warner G. Rice, Diector of the Universityr Library, will discuss the topic, "The Library and Its Services to the College Teacher." Members of the faculty and graduate stu- dents are invited to hear Dr.{ Rice. E.M.2a Classes Please Note. The answers to any two questions at the end of experiments 9 and 101 can be omitted. R. T. Liddicoat Inorganic Chemistry SeminarY meet at 5 o'clock today int Room 303, Chemistry Bldg. Mr. J. E. Boggs will speak on "The Use of Mass Isotopes in Tracer Reac- tions and Rate Studies." All in- terested are invited. Physical Chemistry Seminar meet at 4:15 p.m. Thurs., Dec. 5, Room 151, Chemistry Bldg. Mr., Raymond O'Rourke will speak onj "Semi-Conductors. Part I. Elec- tron Theory of Metals." All in- terested are invited. Seminar on Special Functions meet at 10:00 a.m., Wed., Dec. 4,. Room 340, W. Engineering. Mr. Hansen will talk on Laguerre and Hermite Polynomials. Concerts Salvatorre Baccaloni, distin- guishe.basso buffo of the Metro- politan Opera Association, will be heard in the second extra con- cert Thursday night, December 5, at 8:30, in Hill Auditorium. Mr. Baccaloni has built a spe- cial program of opera and other numbers in the performance of which in the-major opera houses of the world he has attained the reputation of the outstanding basso buffo of the day. The public is requested to come sufficiently early as to be seat- ed on time, since doors will be closed during numbers. The University of Michigan Symphony Orchestra, Wayne Dunlap, conductor, will be heard at 8:30 Wednesday evening, Dee. 4, in Hill Auditorium, assisted by Andrew B. White, baritone, and Nelson Hauenstein, flutist. The first half of the program will be devoted to the works. of Brahms; the latter part will consist of compositions by Ross Lee Finney, Kent Kennan, and Cecil Effinger. The concert will be open to the general public without charge. Faculty Recital: Three sonatas for clarinet and piano will be pre- sented by William H. Stubbins, clarinetist, and Mary McCall Stubbins, Pianist, at 8:30 p.m., Fri., Dec. 6, Assembly Hall, Rack- ham Bldg. The public is cordially invited. Events Today University Radio Program: Tuesday, 3:30 p.m., Station WP- AG, 1050 Kc. Tuesday Playhouse, "A Little Learning," Moliere. Science Research Club meeting at 7:30 tonight, Rackham Amphi- theater. Program: Spaces and (Continued on Page 3) Thursday, thority other than to refer leave the situation a problem for more unified action. FEPC as a policy, should come from the heart, but in order to aid the process of establishing "the right to the pursuit of happi- ness" such legislation affords new basis to instill these concepts in the minds of men. Institutions supported by public taxation should already exercise fair employment, but they do not, especially those of higher learning where men and women are taught to reason by learned men and wo- nen. The question that lingers in my mind is when will Americans rea- lize that all of its citizens are Americans (Meaning citizens of the U.S.A.). Rev. David A. Blake, Jr. * ** Free Reporting . . To the Editor: IT HAS BEEN very gratifying in reading The Daily these past weeks to discover that unlike most sections of the American press, The Michigan Daily is adhering to the principles of free reporting and still respects the opinion of the writer, regardless of the posi- tion of the controlling board. We are referring specifically to the highly informative and well writ- ten column, "All or Nothing," by E. E. Ellis. While the respectable N. Y. Times, the Detroit News and the Chicago Tribune do not deem it expedient to criticize the appease- ment of one Francisco Franco by the U.S. State Department, it was a relief to read Mr. Ellis's very clear presentation of the actual situation. The black-shawled women wait- ing in the dawn outside empty food stores in Spain, the Republi- can militiamen held without trial in Franco's jails can tell the gentlemen of the U.N. very well whose planes blackened the Span- ish heavens during those bloody battles of '36, and whose cannons and shells were responsible for the death of thousands of innocent Spanish men, women and child- ren. The war in Spain in 1936 was not merely a civil war between factions of the Spanish people, but an attack by German and Italian fascists, in cooperation with their representatives in Spain, upon the majority of the Spanish people and their popular- ly elected republican government. The gentlemen of the U.N. are asking for further proof of Franco's guilt in spite of the evi- dence against him and the Ameri- can press has certainly not been conscientious in supplying this in- formation. Once again, congratulations to The Daily on its impartial char- acter and especially to Mr. Ellis on his courageous reporting and constant attempts to give us a true account of the current scene -something which we seldom find these days. Doris Pfeffer Jeppy Madison The effect of consumer resis- tance on some prices was dis- closed by a Bureau of Labor Sta- tistics report showing that in 12 large cities the cost of 20 foods dropped from one to two per cent during the first two weeks of Nov- ember. Meats, poultry, butter, eggs and oranges led in the downward price swing. -New Republic Fifty-Seventh Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Robert Goldman .....Managing Editor Milton Freudenheim .Editorial Director Clayton Dickey...........City Editor Mary Brush............Associate Editor Ann Kutz............Associate Editor Paul Harsha......... Associate Editor Clark Baker..............Sports Fditor 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. Putter ....Buginese Manager Evelyn Mills E...y..... ssociate Business Manager Janet Cork Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 BARNABY V I' F