PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGA-N DAILY ENSAWEDNESDlAY, OCTOBERr 2, 1646 .......... . . Fifty-Seventh Year _. .. ..... r. _ .._ . _. d BILL MAULDIN oeLderi lo theCc1 tor 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 Editor Joan Wilk ............................ Women's Editor Lynne Ford.................Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Robert E. Potter ..................... Business Manager Evelyn Mills.............Associate Business Manager Jsat Cork........ ........ Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches creditedtoitor otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of re- publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Offcie at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by car- rier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1946-47 NIGHT EDITOR: NATALIE BAGROW Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Farmer's View WHEN SHORTAGES and strikes hit us where it hurts the most - in the stomach - it becomes difficult for us to be dispassionate and analytical. We blame the OPA, we blame the President, we blame the meat packers. But we never get to the root of the problem. We see the symp- toms and not the disease. Fortunately no one has yet raised his voice against the farmer. He is the cause of the meat shortage, but who can blame him? Here is what one local farmer has to say about our present vegetarian state: "Sure, there is plenty of meat on the farms. But there is where it will stay. The farmer to- day is just as much a business man as the meat packer or the corner butcher. The farmer can't afford to take a loss any more than others. "Workers in industry got a wage increase and industry is guaranteed cost plus. When labor became dissatisfied, they struck. Today the farmer is using the only means at his command to get the same results. "Look at what the farmer is faced with- rising costs and no equivalent rise in income. With no ceiling on feed and grain, costs for these items have risen more than one-third. But the same old ceiling is back on meat. "What's more, the situation will get worse. There will soon be a shortage of poultry, too. Hatcheries are no longer producing, now that the feed prices are up. Some farmers can no longer buy chicks. And the prices on the few incubators now being manufactured are up $75. As a result, farmers can't hatch their own chicks. Some picture, isn't it?" If this attitude is indicative of the rural viewpoint, it bodes evil for the American dinner table. But this too is merely a symptom of the disease. As long as prices spiral upward, not only the farmers, but all segments of the population will continue to wage a fruitless battle for a cor- responding increase in incomes. -Clyde Recht Legislature Justified To the Editor: IN TODAY'S DAILY, Mal Roemer compared the student legislature's action in the case of the ticket muddle with the passage of an "ex post facto" law. If the students who possess tickets from a section where they are not en- titled to sit were punished merely for having those tickets, that would constitute an "ex post MAN TO MAN: Pipe Line Bid By HAROLD L. ICKES I LEARNED recently from my esteemed con- temporary, Mr. Walter Winchell, that Henry Wallace's almost-esteemed friend, Mr. Jesse Jones, might be behind the so-called E. Holley Poe bid of $80,000,000 to buy the Big and Little Inch Pipe Lines from the War Assets Adminis- tration. If the story is true, the War Assets Administration had better do some keen sniffing because Uncle Jesse has no peer among horse traders that I have known. It seems that Mr. Winchell is right, at least to the degree that George Butler, hus- band of Jesse's only heir and custodian of many of Jesse's enterprises, both business and political, is one of the E. Holley Poe crowd on this bid-a crowd which repre- sents very powerful oil and gas interests in Texas. There are certain things about Uncle Jesse's bid that I like-including E. Holley Poe who used to work for me. First of all, it is proposed to use the Lines to transport natural gas to the Northeast. This would be an honest and economic use of the Lines for oil would be economically sound. I also like this proposal because this could be the way to end John L. Lewis' stranglehold on the economy of the United States. Natural gas for fuel in the Northeast would be a continuous ice bag adhering to Mr. Lewis' presumption that he can, with impunity, challenge the economy, the people and the government of the United States at his own sweet will There is another reason why I like Uncle Jesse's concealed bid. He proposes to pay the United States cash for what he buys. Wash- ington is over-run, I understand, with promoters who want to buy these Pipe Lines on tick. They propose to ask George E. Allen's RFC to lend to them, on precarious terms, whatever they may pay the government. This would be "robbing Peter to pay Paul." If the government has made up its mind that it does not want to keep these Pipe Lines, it should make the purchaser pay real money for them. Any administration which can actually recover for the general uses of government $80,000,000 of the taxpayers' money is under an obligation to do so in- stead of lending it to a crew of promoters who do not offer a real dime of their own. I particularly call this to the attention of the budget-balancing Mr. Snyder while he frantically fires unhappy government workers wholesale and ruthlessly slashes appropriations for essential government services. On such a proposition, Uncle Jesse and I, for once, are fishy-eyed bankers to- gether. But on the other hand there are some things about Uncle Jesse's bid that I certainly do not like. First, in abject surrender to John L. Lewis, he proposes to give a monoply of the gas at the receiving end to the so-called big five utility companies of the New York and New Jersey areas for their exclusive distribution. I do not think that a great government asset like the. Big and Little Inch Pipe Lines should be turned over for the sole benefit of Consolidated Edison of New York and Public Service of New Jersey. I think that every community all of the way up to New England ought to have a chance at this gas. Second, I understand that Uncle Jesse's scheme has another monoply concealed in it -this time at the gathering end of the line. Those who are fronting for him -have al- ready tied up a 30-year supply of gas to be bought from a couple of big gas producers at the incredibly low price of from 11/ cents to 3 cents, per MCF. Since no other pipe line will be available for the transportation of gas to the big Northern markets, the acceptance of Uncle Jesse's bid would freeze at these thoroughly inadequate prices, the selling price of natural gas for the producers in the fields. Other bids before the War Assets Administration offer up to 9 cents per MCF for the same gas that would be frozen under Jesse' Jone's bid at something like 3- cents per MCF. The one inevitable result - if I read the speeches in the Rainey campaign aright - would be that within a few years the State of Texas will become indignant at the price it is getting for its natural resources and slap a pretty export tax on gas. This would raise the price of gas to the Northern consumer without helping the producer in Texas. The people of Texas shouldcertainly see to it that the War Assets Administration is given a chance to think about these things before it decides to accept a bid that is loaded two ways for monoply. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) BARNABY facto" law. However, my understanding is that disciplinary action is to be taken for failure to comply with the legislature's ruling that those wrongfully possessing tickets must turn them in. Hence punishment would be for an offense committed after the rule was made, i.e. failure to turn in tickets within the specified time limit. The situation is comparable to one where a gov- ernment orders surrender of all privately owned fire-arms within a certain specified time limit. Without the time limit, such a law as well as the present legislature ruling would be "ex post facto." However, the present action is in my opinion justified from both the legal and moral viewpoints -Donald F. Mela, '47 Crux of the Issue To the Editor: WITH ALL the controversy over the student seating situation, it seems to this reader that everyone, except Tom Walsh, has missed the crux of the issue - and even he did not hit it squarely. Why has not someone, especially the student legislature (which seems too con- cerned with the machinery of condemning and convicting its fellow men to worry why), attemp- ted to ferret the reason for so overwhelming an action by the student body? We think there can be but one reason: The information demanded on the football ticket stubs on our registration cards. If one will recall, they will realize that there was no place on said stub indicative of the student's actual class standing, only the number of previous semesters attended on this campus. Having worked for the "U" during registra- tion week, this writer was in a position to hear numerous remarks concerning that fact, and the first we recall was the objection of upper- classmen who have been here but one or two previous semesters. They were afraid that they would be seated in accordance with the infor- mation demanded on the ticket stubs. Their ac- tion was quite normal to anyone feeling that they were about to be gyped. Now that sort of thing gets around in a hurry, and before long other persons of all classes were doing the same plus adding a little. How can any group call such actions fraudulent when it was a normal reaction, in a puny individual sort of way, in attempt to correct what was generally assumed to be an error in ticket handling? We are not attempting to say that it wasn't immoral, for it certainly was in most cases- in every case of "fudging"- but we do say that before one bandies the accusation of fraud so freely it had better be determined exactly where the fraud started. -Klemme M. Jones S* * * Insignificant Freshmen To the Editor: MAY I congratulate Mr. Tom Walsh on his article in The Daily September 28. It just so happens, Mr. Walsh, that I am one of the great body of insignificant freshmen you speak of. Insignificant maybe, but with plenty of school spirit, and a fairly strong voice for yelling. College gave me quite a surprise in respect to football. I, like Mr. Walsh, was under what now seems to be the absurd impression that when the team came out on the field, they did so to "win that game!" and not to perform for the "paying guests." I am sure if I were a member of the team, the loyal backing of my classmates would mean much more to my morale than stands filled with so many people representing dollars in the box office. I was not one of the, shall I say "foresighted underclassmen," who received choice seats. On the contrary, Section 34, Row 8 is hardly a. choice seat, and since I own neither a pair of binoculars nor a helicopter, I am afraid it would be a waste of my valuable time to attend a game I could not see. . -Audrey Finley Se. 34,.Row g Comic Strips To the Editor: HOW CAN YOU consider such comic strips as you mention in your issue of this a.m.? True, I cannot fathom "Barnaby"- but then, so few students can. One of us is over the other's head. But to overlook, callously to ignore, the only two strips of epochal proportions - this, is not like the stalwart, fearless, unexcelled Daily whose memory I cherished throughout the sum- mer! The two deathless masterpieces to which I refer are, in order of merit, Li'l Abner and Dag- wood. Can there be disagreement on this point? Can there be even discussion? Most emphat- ically no! Let us have these or nothing. The question is not "can we afford it?" but "can we afford so to neglect the spiritual development of 18,000 souls so far as not to present them with this solace and inspiration?" Gentlemen, with all trust in your support, I remain, yours confidently, --M. L. Higgins (EDITOR'S NOTE: Our business office reports with regret that contractual difficulties prevent pub- lishing in The Daily either of Miss Biggins' "mas- terpieces.") a1. I, sI "Gee - I shoulda bought some while I was there .. .1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued' from Page 3) by their faculty Scholarship Com- mittee, for graduate study and re- search in the fields included in aero- nautical engineering. The students will be employed by the Company the first summer after the awards. Applications available in Aero. Eng. Office. SCHOLARSHIP OPEN TO SEN- IOR MECHANICAL, AERONAUTI- CAL AND ELECTRICAL ENGI- NEERING STUDENTS: Consolidated Vultee Aircraft Corporation has es- tablished an annual scholarship of $250 which is available to students who are in their Junior year in the above fields of engineering and who are highly recommended by their faculty Scholarship Committee. The student will be employed by the Com- pany the first semester after the award. Application forms for this scholarship may be obtained in the Aeronautical Engineering Office. AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING JUNIORS, SENIORS AND GRADU- ATES: Four Frank P. Sheehan schol- arships are available. The selection of candidates for these scholarships is made very largely on the basis of scholastic standing. Applicants should address letters to Professor E. W. Conlon, B-47 E. Eng. Bldg. giving a brief statement of their qualifications and experience in regard to both their scholastic work and any outside experience they may have had. A statement should also be made about their plans for further study in Aeronautical Engi- neering. The present draft classifi- cation and any service record should be mentioned. Applications will be received up to Oct. 9. AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING STUDENTS: There is available one $500 Robert L. Perry Memorial Fel- lowship to students in Aeronautical Engineering who are in need of fi- nancial assistance and who show definite promise in this field. In the selection of a candidate pef- erence will be. given to veteran pilots. Applications should be in letter form, giving a statement of services in the armed forces, and ad- dressed to Professor E. W. Conlon, B-47 E. Eng. Bldg. Applications will be received up to Oct. 5. SENIORS IN AERONAUTICAL ANDMECHANICAL ENGINEERING: The Douglas Aircraft Company, Inc. has established a scholarship of $500 to be used during the current school year, The scholarship will be awarded to a highly recommended student in Aeronautical or Mechani- cal Engineering who has completed his Junior year at the University. Ap- plications should be in letter form, giving a brief statement of qualifi- cations and experience in regard to both scholastic work and any outside experience they may have had. The present draft classification and any service record should be mentioned. Senior Mechanicals will address their letters of application to Professor R. S. Hawley, Rm. 221 W. Eng. Bldg., senior Aeronauticals will send their applications to Professor E. W. Con- lon, B-47 E. Eng. Bldg. Applications will be received up to Oct. 9. WILLOW VILLAGE PROGRAM for veterans and their wives. West Court Community Building, 1045 Midway Blvd., Willow Run Village. Thurs., Oct. 3, 8:00 p. m.: Sewing Club. Fri., Oct. 4, 9:00-11:00 a. m.: Reg- istration for children who have been enrolled in the Cooperative Nursery School; 8:00 a. m.: Classical Record- ings, Mr. Weldon Wilson, Commenta- tor. COMING EVENTS: Oct. 9: Goodyear's Style Show, sponsored by the Wives of Student Veterans' Club. Everybody is cor- dially invited. Oct. 16: Dean Hayward Keniston will speak. This lecture will inaug- urate a series of Wednesday night lectures at West Court. They will be given by outstanding people from the University and are open to the public. Academic Notices Graduate Record Examination will be offered for graduate students on Oct. 22 and 24, beginning at 6:30 p.m. Students taking the examina- tion must attend both sessions. Graduate students who have not turned in to the Graduate School of- fice the fee receipts for the Gradu- ate Record Examination will not be eligible to take the examination this semester. First Year Graduate Students. The results of the Graduate Records Ex- amination which you took as sen- iors at the University of Michigan last May are now available. Your own profile may be obtained at the Graduate School office, Oct. 1 through Oct. 4. The results are use- ful in revealing strengths and weak- nesses in your preparation for con- tinued work and, hence, will be use- ful guide to you. First Semester Juniors. The re- sults of the Graduate Record Exam- ination which you took during the Spring Term are now available. The test scores should be useful to you in helping to plan the remainder of your University program. You may obtain your individual profile chart in the Ofice of the Academic Coun- selors according to the following schedule: A-F......Tues., Oct. 1 G-L......Wed., Oct. 2 M-R......Thurs., Oct. 3 S-Z......Fri., Oct. 4 STUDENTS, COLLEGE OF LITER- ATURE, SCIENCE AND THE ARTS: Courses may not be elected for credit after the end of the second week. Sat., Oct. 5, is therefore the last day on which new elections may be approved. The willingness of an instructor to admit a student later -will not affect the operation of this rule. E. A. Walter Biological Chemistry Seminar will be held on Fri., Oct. 4, at 3:00 p.m. in Rm. 319 W. Medical Bldg. Subject: "Tryptophane in Nutrition," All in- terested are invited. Chemistry 55: Openings in the Wed.-Sat. section are now available. See Prof. Halford, Rm. 274 Chem- istry Bldg. Debaters: All students who desire to participate in debate this year should meet tonight in Rm. 225 An- gell Hall. on Tues., Oct. 1, at 7:30 p.m., Room 108 Romance Languages Bldg. 2 hrs. credit. del Toro. SCHEDULE OF TUTORIAL SEC- TIONS FOR VETERANS FOR THE FALL TERM, 1946-47 (Beginning the week of Monday, Sept. 30.) CHEMISTRY (3) - Mon.-Thurs., 7:30-8:30 p.m., 122 Chem., Chas. G. Dodd; Sat. 9:00-10:00 a.m., 122 Chem. CHEMISTRY (4)-Mon. 7-8 p.m. 165 Chem., R. N. Keller; Thurs., 7-8 p.m., 165 Chem., S. Lewin; Sat. 11-12 Noon. CHEMISTRY (21)-Wed., 4-5, 303 Chem, R. W. Hahn. ENGLISH COMP. (1) - Tue.- Thurs., 4:00-5:00 p.m., 2203 A H, Fri., 5-6 p.m., 2203 A H, D. Martin. (2)-Tues.-Thurs., 4:00-5:00 p.m. 3216 A H, William Gram.; Fri., 5:00- 6:$$ p.m. 3209 A. H. FRENC.H (1) - Mon.-Thurs., 4:00-5:00 p.m., 106 R L, A. Favreau; (2)-Tues.-Fri., 4:00-5:00 p.m., 106 R L, F. Gravit; (31)-Mon.-Thurs., 4:00-5:00 p.m., 108 R L, James O'Neill; (32)-Tues.-Fri., 4:00-5:00 p.m., 108 R L, A. Favreau. GERMAN-Mn.-Wed., 7:30-830 p.m., 2016 A H, F. H. Reiss; Sat., 11:00--12:00 Noon. MATHEMATICS-advanced, Tues- Thurs., Fri., 7:00-8:00 p.m., 3010 A H, E. Spavier; beginning, Tues-Thurs.- Fri., 7:00-8:00 p.m., 3011 A H., G. R. Costello. PHYSICS (25)-Mon.-Wed., 7:30- 8:30 p.m., 202 West Physics; Sat. 11:00--12:00 noon; (26)-Mon.-Wed., 7:30-8:30 p.m., 1035 Randall; Sat., 11:00-12:00 noon; (46) -Mon.-Wed., 7:30-8:30 p.m., 1036 Randall; Sat. 11:00-12:00 noon. Instructors to be announced. SPANISH (1)-Tues.-Fri., 4:00- 5:00 p.m., 205 R L, H. Hootkins; (1), Mon.-Wed., 4:00-5:00 p.m., 207 R L, H. Hootkins; (2)-Mon.-Wed., 4:00- 5:00 p.m., 205 R L, F. M. Thompson; (31, 32) - Mon.-Tues.-Thurs.-Fr., 4:00-5:00 p.m., 210 R L, Staubach Events Today Men's Glee Club: The first section of the Glee Club will meet Wed~, Oct. 2, Rm. 305 of Michigan Union. The following men will report plus those men who did not try-out last week: B. Dutcher, D. Dutcher, Epp- stein, Hansen, Higbee, Hallett, Lewis, Lacy, Major, Ragan, Rieckhoff, Roli- son, Steinbauer, Stroatoma, Swartz, Trow, Trytten, Wilson, Wines include the list of men still to have tryouts. Others who will report are: Arcuri, Bailie, Bay, Beeer, Black, Boatman, Challis, Cochran, Comp- ton, Crystal, Dorsett, Dworsky, Eu- bank, Harmon, Jacobi, Jones, Knabe, Krasner, Lazar, Mackie, Medinedeff, Meli, Merritt, Moore, Merrill, Murray, Olthuis, Ottl, Parcels, Ridder, Rider, Roney, Rosko, Rowell, Rutsch, Samp- on, Scheffler, Sellers, Sodeoberg, Sor- enson, Van Dusen, Walker, Wenley, Wiggin, Williams, Windsor. Watch Thurs. - morning notice for Section of men who are to report Thurs. evening. Engineering Council Representa- tives: the initial meeting of the Coun- cil will take place tonight at 7:30 in Rm. 244, W. Eng. Seminar on the Sociology of Relig- ion will meet at Lane Hall today at 4:30. Mr. Littell will preside. Association Singing Group will meet today at 7:30 in Lane Hall. La Sociedad Hispanica, student Spanish Club on campus, will hold its first meet of the year tonight at 8:00 in Rm. D of Alumni Memorial Hall. There will be an election of of- ficers for the coming year. All those taking Spanish or inter- ested in the language are invited. Perspectives staff will hold an open meeaing tonight at 7:30 in the League Anyone intersted in positions on either the literary or art staffs is urged to attend. The room will be posted on the bulletin board in the League Lobby. The Lutheran Student Association will have Coffee Hour today from 4:00-5:30 at its Lutheran Student Center, 1304 Hill St. You are cor- dially invited to attend. Coming Events The Thursday Evening Record Concert, sponsored by the Rackham Graduate School, will be given in the Men's Lounge at 7:45 p.m. The pro- gram will include Beethoven's Em- peror Concerto and the first act of Mozart's Magic Flute. All graduate students are cordially invited. The American Veterans' Commit- tee will hold nominations for all ma- jor offices at its weekly meeting on Thurs., Oct. 3, at 7:30 p.m., in Rm. 308, Michigan Union. The Willow Village AVC chapter will have a "Report to the"Veteran" rally at 8:00 p.m. Thursday at West Court Community Bldg. John Field from the Michigan AVC Area Coun- cil will speak on the subject, "What AVC Has Done," and Jerry McCros- key of the Village chapter will speak on the subject, "What AVC Can Do." Meat Shortage RESULTS OF A survey of Michigan packing houses indicate no evidence of meat hoard- ing by the state's packing industry, the State Department of Agriculture has reported. The report should eliminate suspicions in Michigan at least that the present meat short- age has been caused by hoarding by packers in an attempt to raise prices. The question remaining is whether the short- age has been caused by over-consumption of meat during the period when price ceilings on meat were lifted, as President Truman has main- tained, or whether there is really plenty of meat, which is being withheld by the cattle-growers in the hope that price controls will be lifted. In either case, retention of price controls on meat seems the only wise policy to follow. If overconsumption las caused an actual short- age to exist, then higher prices will not bring any more meat on the market, but will merely skyrocket the prices of what little there is. 7'C -nra++lc-srrntrn1. .ra hlrlincr alit fnr IBM i jL Never mention Mr. Golebrick's name again-lmagine it! Resign'ing from the School Board. While your Fairy What about Pop, Mr. O'Malley? He's on the Board- Maybe