THE MICHIGAN DAILY reUSDA, #$R , 9 Fifty-Eighth Year I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Hollow Diatribe BILL MAULDIN .._- --., fem..=. - _ _ u 1 Edited and managed by students of the Uni- versity of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Stafff John Campbell ...................Managing Editor Clyde Recht ..........................City Editor Stuart Finlayson ................EditorialtDirector Eunice Mintz ...................Associate Editor Lida Dailes....... .............Associate Editor Dick Kraus ..........................Sports Editor Bob Lent ..................Associate Sports Editor Joyce Johnson ....................Women's Editor Betty Steward.........Associate Women's Editor Joan de Carvajal ..................Library Director Business Staff Nancy Helmick.................General Manager Jeanne Swendeman.........Advertising Manager Edwin Schneider .................Finance Manager Melvin Tick ..................Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all new dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this news- paper. All rights of re-publication of all other matters herein also reserved, Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, as second class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. Member, Assoc. Collegiate Press, 1947-48 Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily stafff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: LIDA DAILES No Need for Reds ALL OF US should support organizations working for desirable programs whether or not Communists are members of those organizations, according to a letter appear- ing today in The Daily. An active member of MYDA, the writer declares that she "would be surprised to discover that it is a Communist-front organization," and further that even "if Communists want to help us, why can't we use them for our purposes and dis- miss them afterwards?" These statements indicate that the writer is not in sympathy with the Communist pro- gram as a whole, as exemplified in Yugo- slavia and Poland. Reliable sources disclosed last spring that AYD, the parent organization of MYDA, included 10 per cent' Communists. Let us, then, examine the assumptions upon whic this letter is based. In proposing to discard Communists after the specific program of MYDA is accomplished, it is assumed that Com- munists will be willing to be discarded, and that they will not themselves attempt to discard the non-Communist elements of the organization. That assumption is wholly unwarranted, as shown by the struggle Walter Reuther had to dismiss the Communists in the UAW. Another assumption is that Communists, as Communists, will receive no benefit from the carrying forward of MYDA's program. "By no stretch of the imagination could-... (retention of rent controls here after March) .. . help Stalin." Why would the Communists be in such organizations, as they have been proven to be in AYD, if there were no ad- tage to be gained for the Communist pro- gram? Assuredly, if there is an advantage, it is not the retention of rent controls. I believe that the disorder avoided by that move would in fact be a substantial disadvantage to the Communist Party, which admittedly is most effective in the midst of chaos. The benefit to Communists resulting from the fulfillment of the MYDA pro- gram would rather, I think, be contingent on the size and political strength of the organization built up in carrying out that program.. If AYD, and in turn MYDA, were completely successful, the advantages to the Communist movement, in terms of a ready-made political tool, might be con- siderable' It is also assumed that MYDA is the only rganization on campus willing or able to pport the program enunciated by it. "Can . sacrifice the student book-exchange' e fight against discrimination ... and the est of MYDA's program" because Commu- ists are sympathetic toward it? Certainly, it is worth a great deal of effort to maintain the student book-ex- change, to continue to combat racial and religious discrimination, and to retain rent control. But citizens can accomplish a political program without relying on, and thereby building up, an organization which probably includes Communists. Those parts of MYDA's program which re worth a struggle can be achieved with- ut supporting MYDA, which would be at risk of assisting Communists in disguise. ere are other organizations and other By SAMUEL GRAFTON THE COMMUNIQUE issued by the "new Comintern" is not a very brilliant docu- ment. There have been Communist papers in the past that were written with eloguence and passion, but this seedy script is not one of them. One has a curious feeling, reading this What Is This NSA? TONIGHT IS THE TIME to find out! Ten University representatives partici- pated in the National Student Association's constitutional convention last month and helped formulate its program and policies. They took stands on racial discrimination and on academic freedom. They established a Bill of Rights for stu- dents and set up a criteria for academic freedom for faculty members. They agreed to negotiate for affiliation with the International Union of Students under certain specific conditions. They made plans to provide travel tours in Europe possible for American students next summer. They applied for and obtained as the re- presentative of college students a seat on the United States Commission for UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization.) Just how is the NSA going to affect us? If we ratify the NSA constitution, is the NSA going to do us any good? Is it going to act to the best interests of our campus? Michigan's delegates believed that it would. To present the facts about NSA to you the Student Legislature has brought the national president and vice-president of NSA to the campus to explain this new, non- partisan National Student Association. They, together with Harvey Weisberg, the Legis- lature's president, will speak and answer questions on the NSA at 8:30 p.m. today in the Rackham Lecture hall. Whatever it does, the NSA will exercise a profound influence on the academic com- munity. Tonight's meeting will explain how that influence affects us. -Tom Walsh Peace and Reason WE SHALL NOT reach a new equilibrium in which peace and reason become the habitual instruments of action until we realize that, in itself, the material control over nature is not an assurance of a civilized way of life. That power must be matched by a proportionate capacity to use our in- sight into the processes of nature, to offer more spiritual dignity and a higher level, of intellectual satisfaction to the underpriv- iliged citizens in every nation state. And it must be able to offer greater adequacy, also, to the nation states which now fight among themselves for what well-being there is. For it has become common knowledge that well-being is limited less by the depth of our insight than by the boundaries with- in which the prevalent economic order forces it to remain confined. We have created all over the world fear and envy and anger in human relations by the restraints we have seemed to impose upon men's access to a richer civilization; we have even fought world wars to impose those restraints through one channel rather than through another. We shall not persuade men to go down a third time into the abyss to rescue a way of life that decays before their eyes. -Harold Laski in Foreign Affairs Quarterly. 1. pronunciamento, that European Commu- nists don't really know how to abuse Americans and Englishmen. They have acquired a certain fairly effective vocabu- lary in dealing with the kind of people they are used to, and have lived among, decrepit Polish pans, aging relics of Hun- garian feudalism, Romanian Iron Guard- ists, the French Cagoulards, etc. But when they turn the same verbiage, dully and monotonously, against America and Eng- land, the effect is grotesque. Americans will be fascinated to learn that European Communists believe we fought the war in order to eliminate "competition on the world market" by Germany and Japan. Nothing could be further from the truth. The fact is that American capitalism has had a very minor interest in world trade. The promotion of world trade has, dur- ing the last decade, been a leftwing idea in America, a New Deal idea, and one which, for periods, has had the hot sup- port of the Communists themselves. The most conservative elements of American capitalism have been quite content with high tariffs and a minimum of world trade. Furthermore, American capitalists are often accused today of plotting to rebuild German and Japanese industry. But if their war aim was the destruction of that indus- try, why have they switched over insanely to a peace aim of restoring it? It doesn't add up. If the picture of a greedy, cunning, av- aricious America presented in this vacu- ous document is correct, then a still great- er puzzle is raised, namely: Why didn't we go to war against Russia? If we are like Nazi Germany, as this paper hints, why was it Nazi Germany that we fought? Why didn't we join it, instead? It is a point which Cominterns, new and old, find it curiously difficult to explain. There are many such holes and gaps in the tirade issued by the Communist func- tionaries in Poland. The Marshall Plan is pictured as the current spearhead of Ameri- can capitalist aggression. But there is no effort to explain why so much (perhaps most) of American capitalism opposes it, including the official publication of the National Association of Manufacturers. Europe's Communists are so sure of where America's capitalists stand, that they aren't even looking, to check. You tap this diatribe, and it is hollow, you look inside it, and it is empty. The representatives of Communist Europe have concluded and obscure devotional exercise, somewhere in Poland; as part of the cre- monies they have constructed a clumsy mechanical monster, and labeled it Ameri- ca." Its jointed limbs and chromium claws do not very much resemble a people who put twelve million of their best into uni- form (to wipe out German competition in world markets, was it?) and who were swept by tidal waves of hope for One World. It is the Balkan baron treatment we are getting, and its wild inappropriateness gives one a funny, twilight kind of feeling, as if European Communism, too, has reached the end of a certain road, and does not quite know what to do, or what, really, to say next. (Copyright, 1947, N.Y. Post Syndicate) 0 It has been truthfully said that in a certain section of the Texas Panhandle you can stand on a soapbox and look farther and see less than in any other part of the world. When you drive across it the road goes on and on, without end, and I defy anybody to make the trip, even if he has had plenty of sleep and is full of benzidrine tablets and coffee, without fall- ing into a coma from sheer bore- dom before he is halfway through the place. In Amarillo I spoke to an elder- ly gentleman who runs a gas sta- tion, and he tells me he won't drive any more in Texas since they surfaced most of the high- P"'~~ A'"' 9"' 'ig,'rtara ways. In the old days, he says. crossing the Panhandle was no chore at all. There was a dirt road with ruts going East and ruts go- ing West. All you had to do was start out in a pair of ruts go- ing your way, set your hand throt- tle at cruising speed forget the steering wheel, put your feet on the dash, light a cigar and open your eyes only when you needed to make sure nobody was stalled ahead of you in your set of ruts. At a speed of 20 m.p.h. in that country, you could see clear road far enough ahead at one glance to be able to doze safely 15 or 20 minutes before looking again. Those were the days of cultur- ed living and gracious traveling. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN CINEMA Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewrittenuform to the officesof 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). THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1947 VOL. LVIH No. 15 Notices Telephone Service-Outside Calls: Those who have occasion to use the telephone facilities of the Unversity for calls other than on campus will please note;that the number of such calls shou.ld be held to a minimum. Since classes began on September 22 all trunk lines to the downtown switchboard have been overloaded during most of the day. It is, at times, impos- sible for several minutes to get an outside connection. At present we have only 23 trunk lines from the campus switchboard to the central office board downtown. This sit- uation cannot be corrected until late in January or February when more trunk lines will become available. Please, therefore, use outside lines only when absolute- ly necessary and be patient if you receive a busy signal. Herbert G. Watkins Secretary School of Forestry Assembly: 11 a.m., Fri., Oct. 10, Rackham Amphitheatre. Mr. Russell Wat- son, President of the Michigan Foresters Assopiation, will speak. All students in the school not hav- ing nonforestry conflicts are ex- pected to attend. The Committee on Student Af- fairs will meet October 14 at 3 p.m. Petitions for consideration at this meeting must be submitted to the Office of Student Affairs, Room 2, University Hall, not later than Thursday, Oct. 9. Pre-football guest luncheons from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. and after game open houses held in or- ganized student residences will be approved chaperoned or unchap- eroned provided they are an- nounced to the Office of Student Affairs at least one day in advance of the scheduled date. Bomber Scholarship Checks: The following students may re- ceive their Bomber Scholarship checks at Room 205, University Hall: Ray Morris Ashba, Richard L. Burlingame, Alan S. Bradley, Philip R. Collins, William F. Daw- son, Henry Wynand DeBruin, Maurice Dubin, William C. Field- binder, William J. Fitzgerald, Wil- liam Roger Frakes, John Earl Franklin, Emerson Andrew Frey, Joseph John George, Paul E. Greenwood Jr., Paul Harvey Grev- engoed. Charles L. Hammer, Lewis L. Horton, David L. Howe, John Stinson Howell, John Howard Hubbell, George Arthur Johnson, Edwin L. Jones, Richard Clair Lane, Albert Mathieson, Robert N. Milham., William E. Millard, Nor- man Adam Miller, Daniel John L r l J ( 1 -tow y r O'Halloran, Thomas S. Par Harry R. Shuptrine. Harry J. Scott, Jr., Vance C monds, Alfred H. Slote, Willia Starr, John Robert Staton, ward James Sullivan, Ric Vickery, Claude Ware, J. G Wetzel, James R. Watzke. Student Loan Print Collec Students may call for prin Room 205, University Hall, T day and Friday, Oct. 9 an Please bring 4,x6 white claim with you. Graduate Students expe degrees in February, 1948, have their diploma applica in the Graduate School Offi later than October 11. Graduate Students in S Studies and Science: There Teaching Fellowship in E Studies available for the fall spring terms of this year i University High School, a Teaching Fellowship in Sc available for the spring ter this year. For further info tion, telephone the Principal' fice, J. M. Trytten, Ext. 675. The Municipal Civil S Commission of New York nounces that it will receive a cation for Playground Dir either men or women, from C ber 7 to October 24. Appli must be bona fide residents of York City for at least three immediately preceding app ment. For further inform call at the Bureau of App ments and Occupational Info tion, 201 Mason Hall. Current Federal Civil S5i Announcements for men women entitled to 10-point eran Preference are posted i office. For complete inform call at the Bureau of Ap( ments, 201 Mason Hall. The State of Maryland i cruiting qualified applicants are interested in a career st in the field of government x ning. They are announcing aminations for the positior Planning Engineer, Researc alyst and Draftsman. Full i mation may be obtained a Bureau of Appointments and cupational Information. Academic Nothc History Language Examin for the M.A. degree: Fri., Oc 4 p.m., Rm. B, Haven Hall. student is responsible for his dictionary. Please register a history office before taking examination. History Final Examination m up: Sat., Oct. 11, 9 a.m., R Haven Hall. Students must with written permission of ins tor. Economics 51, 52, 53, a make-up examination: 3:15 Thurs., Oct. 16, Rm. 207, Eco ics Bldg. Doctoral Examination for Hsin, Economics; thesis: Letters to the Editor... EDITOR'S NOTE: Because The Daily1 prints every letter to theeditorsre- ceivedi (which is signed, 300 words or less in length, and in good taste) we remind our readers that the views expressed in letters are those of the writers only. Letters of more than 300 words are shortened, printed or omitted at the discretion of the edi- torial director. NSA Speaker To the Editor: y OU HAVE BEEN subjected to many appeals to join various campus organizations. You have1 heard from so many agencies thatt if you are the way I was last year you have probably decided to for-1 get all about extra-curricular ac- tivities as far as "alphabet soup" agencies are concerned. Last year I felt exactly as you, feel now. But that was before I, attended the National Student As- sociation Convention. At Madison, I saw come together over 600 del-' egates, representing over a million students, just like you and me. I saw those delegates sit around conference tables, wrangle and fight, learn and understand, and finally, compromise and agree. It was then that I realized that here the students of America did' not have just "another" organiza- tion. Here was an organization that was not limited in scope or region, membership or purpose. Its goals were: Universal student betterment; its membership: All students; its scope: The entire country. What can this organization do? Primarily it can serve as the tr:aining ground for the leadership of tomorrow. Immediately, it can promote understanding and coop- eration among the various geo- graphic, political, and racial ele- ments which make up our coun- try. NSA must not die "aborning." Thursday, at 8:30, Bill Welsh, president of the organization and Ralph Dungan, vice-president, will speak. I will be there because I was at Madison. I hope many of you will be there to see what I saw. -Gellert A. Seel, Alternate Delegate, NSA West Lodge Food To the Editor: TOWARD the end of the last se- mester, due largely, we be- lieve, to the efforts of the AVC, the University took over the man- agement of the West Lodge cafe- teria at Willow Village with a resultant great improvement in the quality and appearance of the food served. That improved con- dition persisted through the re- mainder of the semester. We are now in our third week of the current semester, ample time in which to make judgment on the quality of food being served. Although we speak for ourselves alone, we believe we are expressing the opinion of the ma- jority of Village students, and that it would be a simple matter to get hundreds of signatures to this letter. Our judgment is that the food is bad, that it hasretrogressed almost to the very low quality of last semester at the time the Uni- versity took over operation, and we make these specific com- plaints: 1. The quality of the food is bad. This is no reflection upon quality of ingredients, but solely upon preparation or palatability. 2. The foods are very unap- petizing in appearance, salads of- ten wilted, vegetables and meats unappealing, and desserts espe- cially poor in appearance. We know nothing of the prob- lems of management, which may be great, but, as diners, we feel qualified to pass judgment by the only valid criterion of food prep- aration, the result. We know also that the food at both the Union and the League is much more palatable. We make no complaint about prices or service, points upon which, again, we feel that we are not qualified to speak. We deem this a justified com- plaint and hope that through this means action may be taken so that we will not again be faced daily with what are known here as "the dejected salads, the jaded meats, and the apathetic des- serts" -Edward Norbeek. -Carroll Barber. Student Rally THURSDAY NIGHT'S rally in Rackham on the National Stu- dent Association deserves the at- tendance of every student on this campus. They will have an op- portunity to hear, at first hand, from the president and first vice- president, as well as from Weis- berg, the head of the Michigan region. I don't think that the majority of the students have had an op- portunity to become fully con- scious of what the NSA means to them, individually and as a body. They have not received fully, and accurately, all of the information available of what occurred at the last convention. The fact that 350 colleges and universities, Negro and white, Catholic and state schools, were able to agree upon a minimum program of students' needs, rang- ing from full academic freedom to a recognition of the need for in- ternational cooperation repre- sents a historic step forward on the campus. Through the Nation- al Student Association the- stu- dent of the North will become bet- ter acquainted with the student of the South; the problem of dis- crimination and segregation will be brought to the attention of all the students so that it can be solved; the needs of students over- seas will be brought to our at- tention, so that we will under- stand more fully why we contrib- ute to the World Student Service Fund; ways and means can be worked out so that the student of this country can visit and study abroad. These are but a few of the things which NSA will help to 'bring to the campus. However, NSA can accomplish only what the students make it accomplish which means understanding more fully the program of NSA. -E. E. Ellis MYDA Program To the Editor: LAST NIGHT I was discussing the MYDA program with a very intelligent, well-informed young man. I was shocked when he stated that although he thought the MYDA program ex- cellent on all points he would not support it either as a mem- ber of a group or as an individual. By supporting it he believed he would be aiding Stalin "in the long run." Because I am an active mem- ber of MYDA I should be surprised to discover that it is a Commun- ist-front organization, as charged last year when it was banned from campus.' Yet I know, as this young man feared, that we are working for goals that Com- munists also think desirable. But can we, without confessing that we are rationalizing our apathy, sacrifice the student book-ex- change, the fight against dis- crimination, the NSA, improved eating facilities for students, and the rest of MYDA's program, sim- ply because it embraces incident- ally some things which Commun- ists happen to be sympathetic toward? I don't think there are any Communists in MYDA, but if Communists want to help us, why can't we use them for our purposes and dismiss them after- wards? The student I was talk- ing with thought it would re- flect credit on the Communists if MYDA's program were carried through, because of the "taint" on MYDA's reputation, and there- fore the program ought not to be supported. The pressure for reforms has usually been initiated ,by small groups, whose pressure on larger groups causes them to adopt the reform. The thing we should be interested in is the reform, not who takes the credit. -Marie O'Brien 4 P- ,,1 MUSIC Karin Branzell, contralto, opened the Choral Union Concert Series last night with a performance generally below the accus- tomed series quality. With many of her selections not well suited to her voice, and obviously ill at ease during the better part of the evening, Miss Branzell had little chance to reveal the power and richness of her tones, apparent in a few of her numbers. Although her first choice, Purcell's "Dido's Loment" from "Dido and Aeneas," was a welcome program selection, marking one of the too rare appearances of 17th century music at Hill Auditorium, it was interpreted lifelessly and with -constraint. Markedly more at home in the Grieg and. Schubert, Miss Branzell sang with surety and poise, technical skill and dramatic sensi- tivity, particularly in Schubert's popular and much mishandled "Der Erlkoenig," and in her Schubert encore "Tod und das Maed- chen." The Brahms and Wolf numbers were well sung, but again did not approach the high degree of feeling and richness attained in the Grieg and Schubert selections. At Lydia Mendelssohn UN CARNET DE BAL. Raimu, Marie Bell, Fernandel, Louis Jouvet, A CERTAIN NUMBER of European films have impressed themselves so thorough- ly upon American audiences that they may be regarded as classics. Un Carnet de Bal is one of these films. Its perennial popularity is due to a good many of its features, but primarily to the fact that it happens to be a well-paced story. Rather, it is a series of stories (seven, to be exact) within a story. These separate stories are unfolded as the heroine, a wealthy widow, looks back upon the various lovers of her youth in an attempt to escape the boredom of middle-age. She begins her journey into the past with nostalgic illusions and returns from it with understandable regrets. In the course of her travels she comes upon a very memorable group of characters. The acting is uniformly excellent and in- volves what looks like the entire top stratum of French talent. Marie Bell is seen in the principal role, which she handles with con- siderable assurance. But if a single per- formance were to be selected as outstanding, it would almost certainly be that of the veteran Raimu. Before his death early this year, Raimu was undoubtedly one of the most capable comedians in motion pictures, and, cast as the mayor of a small provincial town, he is given adequate opportunity in this particular film to display his genuine ability. -Kenneth Lowe. Theory of Industrial Development in Economically Undevelopes Countries," Friday, Oct. 10, 204 Economics Bldg., 4 p.m. Chairman W. B. Palmer. German 32, sec. 2 (Prof. Reich- art) will meet in Rm. 209 Angel: Hall beginning Thursday, Oct. 9. Seminar in Differential Geome- try in the Large: Thurs., Oct. 9 4:15 p.m., 3011 Angell Hall. Prof. Hans Samelson will speak on Classical Differential Geometry of Surfaces. Variables, Fri., Oct. 10, 3 p.m., 3201 Angell Hall. Mr. Lapidus will Speak on elliptic functions. Exhibitions Architecture Building. Prints. Lontemporary American Artists from the collection of W. W. J. Gores. Through October 10. Main floor. Biology of the Bikini Atoll, Mar- shall Islands, 1946: Department of Botany, 2nd floor, Natural Sci- ence Bldg. through October 18. Events Today Carillon Recital: Percival Price, University Carillnner.wiln-oe- Ying "The Mathematics Seminar: Complex BARNABY.. . 2F s:rr r r r r r._r. r ..r """.- 1 i r r _ r_ .. r R." . 94. 5B. . Q8. , B I . * I I