- -' - 70 'THE MICHGAN D.AlL-Y a lsl/ li lG11 C/'f~l 11,L31L1 - -r .WEDNESDv{alV + fl u11fl)'Yi li IGAYS i Fifty-Eighth Year I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: New Censorship BILL MAULDIN I - -- ;.. Edited and managed by students of the Uni- versity of Michigan under the authority of the '.oard in Control of Student Publications. John CamnpbeU ...................Managing Editor Nancy Helnick ................General Manager ° Clyde Beoht........................City Editor Jeanne Swendeman ........ Advertising Manager Stuart Flulayson ..............Editorial Director Edwin Schneider .................Finance Manager Lida lailes .......................Associate Editor Eunice tz ....................Associate Editor Dick )Craneu .......................Sports Editor Bob Lent ...............Associate Sports Editor Joyce Johnson ....................Women's Editor Betty Steward ..........Associate Women's Editor Joan de Carvajal .......... .....Library Director Ilelvini 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 news dispatches credited to It or otherwise credited in this news- paper. All rights of re-publication of all other mattera 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 staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: NAOMI STERN Loyalty List 8 THE LOYALTY BOARD'S list really necessary? Treason and sedition - in other words, disloyaly -- have long since been defined by federal and state laws. With this ma- chinery set up, the list looks sort of super- fluous. And is the list in line with the Ameri- cau form of government that it has os- tensibly been set up to protect? Assum- F ing the accused innocent until he's proven guilty is one of the cornerstones of our American heritage, but the Loyalty Board has, in principle, ignored it. To get right down to cases, has the na- tion's highest judicial authority yet ruled that the Communists are disloyal? (It looks pretty much as if this were the group that the list is aimed at.) The last time the : upreme Court ruled on this was in the Schneiderman case in 1943, and its ruling did not find the Communists disloyal. It might be added that Wendell Wilkie was defense counsel in this case, and he could hardly have been called a Communist, or even a pink. If a federal employe is suspected of an overt act of sedition or treason, why not haul him into open court and try him under the laws that we already have? Meanwhile, we should allow him and his two million fellow federal employes - who are, at the same time, free Americans - to think and speak for themselves as individuals. n Maybe you don't like the Communists. Neither do I. But it's an unsettling thing to see anybody's rights get kicked around, because it's axiomatic that when we let that happen, it won't be long before ours start getting kicked around, too. It's a chain reaction. "If there be any among us who wish to dissolve this Union, or to change its republi- can form, let them stand undisturbed, as monuments of the safety with which error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is left free to combat it." Thomas Jefferson said that, and it still goes. -Arthur Higbee Union Opera TODAY IS YOUR CHANCE to get behind the Union Opera and give it a much- needed shove. The Committee is holding a meeting for all students interested in help- ng to revise a book and lyrics for next fall's Opera. This is the first concrete step toward re- viving the Opera, one of Michigan's most colorful and famous traditions. The Com- mittee already has several scripts which it feels can be worked into an Opera worthy of its predecessors. Much has already been said and writ- ten by students, alumni, faculty members and nationally famous musicians like Fred Waring about the need for returning the Union Opera to campus. Oral support will not by itself stage an Opera, however, and this is the first chance for the stu- dent body itself to demonstrate its sup- port for the project. The student authors, men and women, whose work will shape next fall's Union Opera-the group that will make or break its chances for a brilliant revival-will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in Rm. 308 of the Union. Will YOU be there? .-.Harnld Jackson. Jr. By SAMUEL GRAFTON THE COUNCIL of the Author's League of America points out, with burning clarity, that the recent Hollywood dismissals con- stitute a new kind of censorship. It is cen- sorship, not of a man's works, but of the man himself. The entire man is declared unwholesome, from head to toe, and this is done without reading his works or looking at his movies, or pointing to a single sentence or line of dialogue in them as objectionable. It is censorship in blank, ,wholesale cen- sorship, of past work unread and of future work still unwritten. It is the creation of a special category of non-kosher writers, on political grounds, and without reference to what they have produced. You can't censor a book or play without taking the offending work into court, point- ing to the specific passages complained of, proving that they are harmful, and sus- taining your case against cross-examination and counter-testimony. Recent events have shown that you can throw out a whole author with much less trouble, and without giving him any legal safeguards or conced- ing that he has any rights. And in the case of a book, it can still be published, with the offending portions removed, while future work by the same author can be brought out without pre- judice. But in the case of the ten Holly- wood figures a judgment, as the Authors' League council points out, has been rend- ered against the victim's total output; those who buy literary property are, in effect, warned that if they so much as touch ten lines of prose written by one of these people in 1954, they will do so at their peril. At this point censorship shades over toward intellectual lynching. When I write in this style and manner I receive letters, some merely squiffy, some very earnest, asking whether it is not neces- sary that our republic defend itself against subversion. It certainly is. But you have to prove the peril before you' take the action. In the case of a man who makes movies, I think you must prove the peril in his movies, and in the case of a man who writes books, the peril in his books. You cannot proceed on the basis of what is in the backs of men's minds; not in a country which respects privacy and in which district attorneys are required to prove overt acts, and in which men may not be made to testify against themselves. This returns us to the point that no- body has been able to prove subversive content in any Hollywood film. The Au- thors' League council is right in pointing out what a strange business it is to put over an oblique censorship of men with- out reference to their works. The council could have gone further and reminded us that the creation of special categories of wholesome and unwholesome men is one of the most unattractive features of the totalitarian philosophy that we reject. Yes, we must defend ourselves against subversion. But it is not being too smart alecky, I think ,to suggest that government by defamation, and changes in men's status without writ or process, are some of the things we must defend ourselves against in a dismally unfree world. We can and should defend ourselves against totalitarianism by diplomacy, by use of our economic strength, and, at home, by proving the overt act, but not by running about like shrews, dragging people in, out of their homes and offices, and asking them what they think, or by making hysterical purges in industries selected more or less at random. For that is a decline in order, and order is the skeleton of freedom. (Copyright, 1947, New York Post Syndicate) (j~ I s a O © G l -U Letters to the Editor... " He's not so sure war is inevitable anymore. His doc just gave him ten more years." DAILY OFFICIAL BjULLETIN MATTER OF FACT: 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 Angeli Hall. by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- urdays). * * Notices WEDNESDAY, DEC. 10, 1947 VOL. LVIII, No. 67 Reluctant Crusade By STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON is now witnessing a re- markably reluctant crusade. When Pres- ident Harry S. Truman called for an all-out fight on inflation, he spoke with a wholly unaccustomed fire. Since then, however, the Administration's effort to back up the Tru- man program has been chiefly notable for a total lack of fervor and a conspicuous vagueness about what the Administration really wants. This vagueness has already given Senator Robert A. Taft an opportunity to make in five words a point far more telling than any he made in his long radio denunciation of the Truman program. "What," Senator Taft has asked at hearings before his joint economic committee, "is the Administra- Stud ent Voice ALMOST EVERYONE will agree that aid to the war-ravaged countries of Europe is an absolute necessity if economic catas- trophe and political chaos are to be avoided abroad. Another universal sentiment is the desire to avert war. The economic recovery plan now before Congress is a step in the direction of world peace. In working out the details of ad- ministering the plan, however, the United States government is at a fork in the road. There are two possible courses of action. 1. The aid program may be used to secure the allegiance of those countries which will benefit, thereby increasing the strength of the United States in its struggle for power against Russia. 2.-The program may be a means of build- ing up the independent strength of the now impotent nations, thereby inducing their participation in a stronger United Nations. It is evident that if the first course is fol- lowed, the eventual outcome must be war. That is the only outcome possible if what we have learned from the past has any meaning. Power politics have never resulted in anything but jealousies and wars. The alternate course is obviously the one that must be pursued. We must dis- miss the idea of using the aid program as a means of drawing these helpless nations into our camp. The goal of peace cannot be attained without real represen- tation for every nation in a world gov- ernment. There can be no true representa- tion for any nation which is bound, by "obligations," to adhere to the policy of some larger, stronger nation. Students will have the opportunity to express an opinion -on this vital question today, tomorrow and Friday, when the cam- pus chapter of the United World Federal- ists will circulate a resolution in residence halls,, asking for approval of the second course of action. The aid program can be the first con- crete step on the road to peace. But it will automatically become a step in the opposite direction if it is used as a means to the self- ish end of American suremacy. tion's program?" The Administration wit- nesses have found that a singularly difficult question to answer. The Sunday before the President's Mon- day message to the Congress h'as been called by one of the Democratic political strategists, who most eagerly supported an all out attack on high prices, "our Valley Forge." For it was on that day that op- ponents of an all-out program, conspic- uously including Secretary of the Treas- ury John Snyder and Agriculture Secre- tary Clinton Anderson, made their last stand. They did what they could to per- suade the President to present a relatively painless anti-inflation program to Con- gress. The President, mindful of the gloomy forebodings of the economists (and also no doubt of the views of his political advisers, who unanimously recommended a strong program) decided to disregard the advice of Anderson, Snyder, and their allies, and to go the whole way. But this decision was only finally made the night before Truman appeared on Capitol Hill. The results have been two-fold. Because of last-minute, off-the-cuff nature of the decision, no adequate preparation was made for the hostile Congressional scrutiny of the program which inevitably followed the Pres- idential message. As one Democratic critic of the Administration handling of the pro- gram has remarked, "If Roosevelt had made that speech, legislation to cover it, with the last 't' crossed, would have been lying right under his manuscript, ready to drop into the hopper." In the weeks which have passed since the Truman anti-inflation program was unveiled before an angry Re- publican Congress, no over-all legislation has yet been produced, and certainly no 't's' have been crossed. Moreover, it is not surprising that the testimony of such Administration wit- nesses as Mr. Anderson and Mr. Snyder has lacked a certain ardor. It has fre- quently been difficult to guess whether they were testifying for the Truman pro- gram or against it. This bungling and confusion has given the Republicans a much-needed opportunity to recover from the blow the Truman pro- posals have undoubtedly administered to their political prospects. The inept Admin- istration handling o'f the campaign for the program lends weight to the charge whether justified or not (and it probably is not), that the Truman proposals were simply advanced as a gambit in the game which will end in November, 1948. But the Re- publicans will have to do more than shout "politics." They will have to have some reasonable inflation program of their own. For it is becoming inescapably clear that if we are not to abandon most of the world to the Comintern, and if we are to prevent economic disaster at home, we must ac- cept a certain number of restraints, how- ever irksome. (Copyright,-1947, New York l'erald Tribune) Student Tea: President and Ruthven will be at home to dents Wednesday afternoon, 10, from 4 to 6 o'clock. Mrs. stu- Dec. Christmas Vacation, in accord- ance with the academic calendar now in force, begins at noon Sat- urday, December 20. Classses re- sume Monday morning, January 5. Frank E. Robbins Assistant to the President To All Telephone Users: On Wednesday, December 10, the number of the University switch- board will be changed from 4121 to 3-1511. Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary To All University Employees: Except for Christmas Day and New Year's Day, all University offices will observe regular busi- ness hours during the weeks be- ginning December 21 and Decem- ber 28. Absence on any other days will be chargeable to the vacation allowance. Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary Refunds on Rose Bowl Tickets: Students, faculty, and staff mem- bers who have made applications for Rose Bowl tickets and will be unable to use them may secure re- funds today at the Ferry Field ticket office. Such persons wishing refunds should present their receipt and identification card at the office. Varsity Debating: All debaters check bulletin board, 4th floor, Angell Hall. Faculty and Veteran Students: The final date for the approval of requisitions for the purchase of books, equipment and special sup- plies will be Wednesday, Jan. 7, 1948. Women students attending "The Mikado" either Dec. 10 or 11 have late permission until one- half hour after the close of the' performance. Approved social events for the coming week-end: December 12 Adelia Cheever, Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Omi- cron Pi, Alpha Phi, Alpha Xi Del- ta, Betsy Barbour, Chi Psi, Cous- ens Hall, Gamma Phi Beta, Helen Newberry, Jordan Hall, Kappa Alpha Theta. Kappa Nu, Kappa Sigma, Mar- tha Cook, Mary Markley House, Michigan Christian Fellowship, Newman Club, Phi Epsilon Kappa, Phi Sigma Delta, Pi Beta Phi, Pi Lambda Phi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Vaughan House. December 13 Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Phi, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Alpha Kappa Psi, Alpha Rho Chi, Al- pha Sigma Phi, Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Theta Pi, Delta Gamma, Del- ta Sigma Delta, Delta Sigma Pi, Delta Tau Delta, Greene House, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Les Voy- ageurs. Phi Chi, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Kappa Tau, Phi Sigma Delta, Phi Sigma Kappa, Pi Lambda Phi, Sigma Alpha Epsi- lon, Sigma Chi, Stockwell Hall, Theta Chi, Theta Xi, Vaughan House. December 14 Berkeley House, Theta Xi, Hil- lel Foundations. Lectures Lecture Postponed: The illness of Lennox Robinson has forced the postponement of his lecture scheduled for the Speech Assem- bly at 3 p.m. today. University Lecture: "A Free and Responsible Press," N. R. Howard, Editor of the Cleveland News and President of the American Society of Newspaper Editors; auspices of the Department of Journalism. 8 p.m., Wed., Dec. 10, Kellogg Audi- torium. Mr. Howard will address the class in Newspaper Policy and Management at 3 p.m. Wednesday. Journalism seniors, not enrolled in the class, may attend. Lecture: "Popular Latin Ameri- can Music" (songs and music). 8 p.m., Thurs., Dec. 11, Rackham Amphitheatre; auspices of the Latin American Society. The pub- lic is invited. Business Administration Lec- ture: Mr. Julius Hendel, Vice- President of Cargill, Incorporated, of Minneapolis, will speak to the class in Bus. Ad. 141, Production Management, at 1 p.m. Wed., Dec. 10, West Gallery, Alumni Memor- ial Hall. Mr. Hendel will discuss the organization of top manage- ment. Anyone interested is in- vited. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Har- old Guetzkow, Psychology; thesis: "An Analysis of the Operation of Set in Problem-Solving Be- havior," 1:30 p.m., Thurs., Dec. 11, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg. Chairman, Norman R. F. Maier. Applied Mathematics Seminar: 3 p.m., Wed., Dec. 10, Rm. 247, W. Engineering Bldg. Prof. I. Opa- towski will continue his talk on 2-dimensional compressible flows. Astronomical Colloquium: 4 p.m., Fri., Dec. 12, Observatory. Speaker: Carl August Bauer will speak on the subject, "The Origin of Meteorites." Biological Chemistry Seminar: 3:30 p.m., Fri., Dec. 12, Rm. 319, W. Medical Bldg. Subject: "Food Technology and the Nutritive Value of Processed Foods (a) Agene (b) Pasteurization of Milk." All interested are invited. Seminar on Complex Variables: 3 p.m., Thurs., Dec. 11, Rm. 3017, Angell Hall. Prof. Kaplan will speak on integration on algebraic surfaces. EDITOR'S NOTE: Because The naily prints every letter to the editor re- ceived (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. * * * Tag Day To the Editor: IN REFERENCE to Galen Tag Day on the campus. The health of a nation is very important and should not depend on charity. Spending money on Army, Navy, Air Forces and foreign loans is a complete waste in the 20th cen- tury, when peoples at least should learn how to live peacefully. The U.S.A. like the Soviet Union is in a position to give full medical attention to all of its people and thus make a big jump in the prog- ress of the human race. -S. A. Wahio. 'Just Dead' To the Editor: 1 T° TOM SHILSON and five others (in reference to yester- day's letter to the editor) who are worried about being psychopathic because what they see at Michgian pleases them. Who further are satisfied with the present G.I. subsistence pay- ments, who do not picket barber- shops and who do not join "rad- ical" organizations. No, gentlemen, you are not just psychopathic; more than likely, you are just dead. Your claims to normalcy are the facts that you sit on the li- brary steps and watch girls, weather permitting (it surprises me you know enough to come in out of the rain) and that you go skiing in the winter-time. I no- tice also, via the Student Direc- tory, that you are a member of the Detroit Yacht Club. To quote from the Navy vernacular: "YOU never had it so good," BUT WHAT ABOUT THE REST OF US? -Norm Gottlieb. Music To the Editor: W HAT HAS HAPPENED to music on the U. of Mich. cam- pus? I went, with many others, to hear the Christmas program presented by Sigma Alpha Iota. I'm sorry to say that I felt it a Geometry Seminar: 2 p.m., Wed., Dec. 10, Rm. 3001, Angell Hall. Mr. D. K. Kazarinoff will speak "On Paratactic Circles." Concerts Annual Christmas Concert: U. of M. Women's Glee Club, Wed., Dec. 10, Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- tre. The public is invited. Events Today Radio Program: 2:30-2:45 p.m., WKAR (870 Ke.), The Galen Workshop. 2:45-2:55 p.m., WKAR (870 Kc.), The School of Music-Wm. H. Stubbins, clarinetist, R. S. Howland, flutist. 4-4:15 p.m., WPAG (1050 Kc.), Modern Painang Series-Dr. Carl D. Sheppard, Midwestern Region- alism. Michigan Union Opera: Meet- ing of all students interested in writing a script for the revival of the OPERA, 4 p.m., Rm. 308, Michigan Union. Delta Sigma Pi, professional Business Administration frater- nity: 8 p.m., Rm. 110, Tappan Hall. Speaker, Mr. Walter E. Drury, of Argus, Incorporated. The public is invited. Pledges meet 7:30 p.m. Phi Delta Kappa, national pro- fessional fraternity in Education: Dinner meeting, 6 p.m., Faculty Dining Room, Michigan Union. All members are urged to attend. Sigma Gamma Epsilon: Meet- ing, 12 noon, Rm. 3056, Natural Science Bldg. Mr. Fred Honkala will speak on "The Geology of the Centennial Mountains, Montana." Wolverine Club: Meeting 7 p.m., Michigan League. Attendance will be taken. Ullr Ski Club: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Michigan Union. Anyone in- terested in a ski outing to Cadil- lac this weekend is invited. La Sociedad Hispanica, elemen- complete waste of time. The candles were beautiful, the white robes of the choir were very effec- tive but their music was really sad. If.they have people in a choir aren't they expected to sing? There were about six people- mostly sopanos-who carried the enti'e group. Even on the well- known carols such as "Silent Night" not an eye glanced up from the music nor did anyone give any expression to their singing. I counted seven people in the reces- sional who didn't even open their mouths. Technically most of the music was fine, but no one showed any enthusiasm or interest. As one member of the congregation said as she was leaving, "It's as though they begrudged singing to us." This group is not the only one on our campus which is guilty of this. For three years I've gone to hear the Choral Union sing "The Messiah," each year it has ,been worse. If these people who are learn- ing to be musicians aren't inter- ested in music why do they con- tinue with it? I'm not a musician but I appreciate good music and the stuff they push off on the public here is certainly far from good. Music takes more than tech- nical skill and talent, it takes feeling. If everyone had sung Sun- day night as Miss Sallenberger sang her solo the program couldn't have been surpassed. But no music at all is much better than this coldatechnically perfected series of tones and words. As for the Messiah, I'm going again this year still hoping that they'll get away from those books and sing as though it were up to each one of them to make it the masterpiece that it is. -Virginia Howe. EDITOR'S NOTE: Space limitations make it impossible for The Daily to publish all letters received concern- ing IRA's "Operation haircut." The letters which have appeared are a representative sample of those we re- ceived. No other letters on the sub- ject will be published unless cam- paign developments warrant further comment. Radicals? To the Editor: WRITE THIS IN REPLY to Ed. Miller's rather curious observa- tion which he expressed in the Letters to the Editor column on Sunday, Dec. 7. In his letter he states "students by nature are rad- ical thinkers." I question this remark for I find it impossible to believe that the students of this campus are think- ers at all. It is an unavoidable fact that the expressions of their opinions are concrete examples of mental inertia. The pathetic re- sults of polls, petitions and elec- tions are substantial evidence that few students have any opinions at all, let alone any dangerously radical ones. Mr. Miller also expresses con- siderable concern over the idea that the "ever-present danger of Communism" makes the expres- Sion Qf these "radical opinions" dangerous. Have no fear, Mr. Miller, for your so-called "radical opinions" fall upon deaf ears as the cam- pus sleeps blissfully on (ignorance being bliss). We find it quite peaceful to lie fallow in the mire of our own intellectual inaction. After all, why should we con- cern ourselves with things hap- pening off campus, let alone in far away countries. We can avoid a lot of trouble and bother by just not thinking about such things. Besides, resting is sooo . . . com- fortable. -H. E. Blackwell, Jr. mas meeting following elementary conversation group meeting at the Michigan Union. Special program and refreshments. Square Dancing Class, spon- sored by the Graduate Outing Club: 8 p.m., W.A.B. Lounge. Small fee. Everyone welcome. Roger Williams Guild: Weekly "chat," 4:30-6 p.m., Guild House. Guests: Hillel Foundation. The Jewish "Festival of Lights" will be discussed. Coming Events American Society for Public Administration: Mr. Loren B. Mil- ler, of the Detroit Bureau of Gov- ernmental Research, will address a meeting of the Michigan chap- ter at 8 p.m.. Dec. 11, East Con- ference Room, Rackham Bldg. The Inter Co-operative Council presents Dr. John F. Shepard, of the Psychology Department, who will speak on U. S. Foreign Policy at 8 p.m., Fri., Dec. 12, Robert Owen Co-operative House. All are invited. Modern Poetry Club: 8 p.m., Thurs., Dec. 11, Rm. 2208, Angell tary conversation group: Michigan Union. 7 p.m., La Sociedad IHispanica: Christ- BARNABY..U -' ,I ,r T --_- ,..-.----- -I