If. IL r .-ii ; ....... ... . .......... ........... ........... . ...... . .......... . . . ............. ei 5tdgrn Bad ~ Fifty-Eighth Year AI Edited and managed by students of the Uni- versity of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Kohn Campbell................Managing Editor gancy Helmick ...................General Manager Mlyde Recht ..........................City Editor Jeanne Swendeman.........Advertising Manager Edwin Schneider ................Finance Manager Lida Dalles .......................Associate Editor Eunice Mintz ....................Associate Editor Dfick raus .......................Sports Editor Bob Lent...............Associate Sports Editor Joyce Johnson ....................Women's Editor Betty Steward ..........Associate Women's Editor Joan de Carvajal ..................Library Director '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 news dispatches ;redited 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 ditorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff arnd represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: HARRIETT FRIEDMAN and NAOMI STERN Subsistence Boost sTUDENT VETERANS from 21 Michian campuses launched a campaign last week to boost subsistence payments to $100 per month for single veterans and $125 for married ex-GIs. Pressure will be brought again upon Congress shortly. But should subsistence rates be raised? George Antonofsky, Michigan's Operation 'subsistence chairman, has no doubts: if (subsistence is not increased) the whole educational program for vet- erans is liable to collapse." And a trail of half-educated veterans and largely abn- doned campuses are in store if we fail, ie added. Antonofsky ha ses his -lains on cost of living surveys completed recently on Mih- igan campuses. The surveys showed that s3 per cent of the single vets and 83 per ceni of married vets could not continue much longer without substantial increases. Antonofsky has powerful arguments, if his figures indicate the real state of affairs. There are, however, other considerations to be evaluated: 1. Should a student be expected to supple- ment his income by working? Last fall an AVC poll showed that over 73 per cent of single men who were staying in the black were working, but only 11.6 per cent of the "ets going in the red each month had jobs. 2. Did the sponsors of the GI Bill in- tend that students should be wholly sup- ported by government funds? And even if they did, in view of new economic de- velopments, should raises be granted in- definitely? 3. Or would it be better for vet groups, as suggested in last Sunday's Daily, to exert "a little pressure to keep prices down so that you won't have to be making monthly pilgrimages to Washington?" The letter from which this is quoted also makes the claim that Antonofsky's figures aren't as po- tent as theyl might be. 4. And what about the formation of more campus co-ops, of co-op bookstores and eat- ing places? Certainly there is need for them. About the only indisputable point in the whole subsistence picture is that some vet- erans, maybe only a few, need help, and need it soon. We doubt that anywhere near 63 or 86 per cent of vets here will be forced to leave. But it's a crime that any one who has a genuine need for a little extra help should be denied it---it's for his education. -Fred Schott. I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Vo- --of Non Negoaiuon j BILL MAULDIN - -- Letters to the Editor "s Ry~liIVSGEL RIAF'1fTN IN EFFECT, we and the Russians now enter upon a period in which there will be no negctiations. The principle of unanim- ity.1of peace by agreement, died the last of its many deaths at London. The breakdown ol the Council of Foreign Ministers really desm nauk a new phase in the history of the world. It is not only that a meeting has col- lapsed; the Council itself has collapsed; this instrument has collapsed. In fact all such instruments are collaps- ing. We have fallen into the habit of holding an unsuccessful meeting of the Security Council. reshuffling the personnel somewhat and calling it the Council of Foreign Min- isters, then failing again, and reshuffling again, and going back again as the Security Council. But these agencies are only forms, which were set up to embody the principle of unanimity. With that principle gone, the agencies become arenas, cockpits, debating halls, which they were never intended to be. Substance stands out in ironic contrast with form, with the result that these agencies MATTER OF FACT: British Aid By JOSEPH ALSOP AS WAS FORECAST in this space many weeks ago, the London conference has ended with open acknowledgement of the division of the world. On this side of these barriers, Messrs. Bevin, Bidault and Mar- shall stand together, at least in temporary unity. A special interest attaches to the problem of the Anglo-American partnership. Be- fore proceeding to conclusions, it may be well to run over rapidly this problem's main factors. 1. Wherever their own courage and de- termination can tell, the British are now visibly turning the post-war corner. 2. Their shortage of capital in gen- eral, and their acute shortage of hard assets in particular, have implication which must be squarely faced, however. The truth is the British do not have the cash in 'hand, for the present, to carry all the costly burdens which the Anglo- American partnership involves. This is urgent. For many reasons, it is impossible for the United States to assume these burdens. 3. In the special sphere of military strat- egy, the Anglo-American partnership is al- ready operating with the utmost intimacy and smoothness. But this is not true in tihe spheres of political and economic pol- icy. In these spheres, because the makers of British and American policy have been dealing with each other at arms' length, there have been many petty irritations and breakdowns of co-operation. 4. Without a supply of fresh capital from the United States, the British will be driven, perforce, to try to devise a new foreign policy-which can only, in the last analysis, be a policy of surrender to the Soviets. Yet even if the capital is forthcoming from America, another major difficulty will still remain to be sur- mounted. From Attlee and Bevin to the British man in the street, every one in this country fears that acceptance of American aid may entail loss of Britain's independence of action. The answer was very simple. The strategic placement of the countries was intensely important. They could not, therefore, be cast adrift. But in the course of giving this answer, all the Anglo-American inter- ests in the area were examined, and some- thing like a common policy was evolved. This kind of thing must now be done on a much larger scale, and in a much less accidental manner, covering not one but all areas of common interest. Probably informal but workable machinery to do the job, on the order of a combined political and economic staff working with the Com- bined Chiefs, is the bst solution. And per- haps the most hopeful aspect of the situa- tion, after the breakdown of the empty For- eign Ministers' meeting in London, is that some such solution is being discussed. (Copyright, 1947, New York Herald Tribune) Lutkewvarm Water THE HOT WATER into which a local bar- ber has apparently plunged is turning out to be luke-warm. Dominic Dascola was charged by a Uni- versity medical student with violating the Diggs Act by refusing service on the ground of race. But Judge Jay H. Payne set the trial date as Dec. 26, when hardly any students will be on hand to "hear what he has to say." Whether Judge Payne realized that it will be difficult to get witnesses for the prose- cution the day after Christmas is not the issue. The point is that we are all defendants in this trial-if Dascola is convicted we will also be criminally guilty. Many of us de- fendants by proxy should be at our trial, but it is improbable that we will hear the case against us. The IRA deserves praise for attacking now serve only to amplify disagreement and to make failure more poignant. It is a regrettable thing to have to say, but it is also a measure of deterioration, that the world feels a little easier today when none of these are meeting than when any of them are. Up to now it has been the thing to stress hope. Perhaps the time has come to stress the deterioration that has visibly taken place; for only by facing it can the world rebuild on a sounder basis. It is now per- fectly clear that both sides have decided to leave the great issue up to the cracking pressures of the years. We stand before the void of non-negotiation. Each side enters that dark area equipped with a theory. It is our belief that Western Europe will recover, and will avoid Communism, that the Balkan satellites will want to resume trade with the world, and will become discontented with Russian rule; that Russia herself may weaken under the strain of non-co- operation. The Russians have a theory, too; it is that we are imperialists, that Western Europe, with propaganda help, will come to hate us for our imperialism, and that finally, we shall bog down into depression and domestic crisis. The two theories are set for the butting-match. Perhaps, if we are lucky, nothing much will happen ; the passing years may only harden the status quo, the two theories may gather dust, and then one day, a long time from now, an ambassador may call quietly upon a foreign minister, and the life of negotiation may be resumed. But that is asking for a good deal of luck. Is there no shorter and straighter way? Must we be the generation that lives in the powder mill? Perhaps a year or two of non-negotiation may produce those deep chemical changes needed on both sides to start us over again. But again, it is a measure of current de- terioration that the world almost banks on more deterioration to make it behave. When terror does the work of hope, then hope is really ill. (Copyright, 1947, New York Post Syndicate) Best Seller WITHOUT TRYING too hard one editor- ial writer managed to miss the boat in yesterday's column on the justification of the University's stand in regard to l'affaire Eisler. The point is simply this: In banning Eis- ler the University created the same effect that comes from banning a book in Bos- ton. Eisler became a "best seller." Whether the columnist likes it or not, the University was responsible for the unpar- alleled exhibition that took place. The re- sults of a policy of inaction are as open to criticism as the effects of an active policy. The University certainly did not organize the mob of 500-odd students intent upon heckling Eisler and preventing him from saying his mind in any manner that pre- sented iteslf. Yet it has been pointed out that had the University pe'rmitted Eisler to speak on University property the mili- tant mob would scarcely have dared the extreme tactics they undertook. Surely, it is reasonable to expect the University to take cognizance of the repercussions of its ad- ministrative policy. The columnist then went on to discuss the irony of a man using his rights to argue against a system he does not uphold. In other words we are to protect free speech by limiting its use. Lincoln once defined democracy as that form of government which allows minorities who say "When we become a majority we will change this form of government." The nervous so-called lib- erals who fail to understand this also fail to understand that when they attempt to limit free speech they lose it. The editorial writer seems to be so naive that he believes the University administra- tion and the people of Michigan must agree with what every speaker has to say or suf- fer the wrath of indignant parents. Strong flourishing democracy requires free expression of opinion and the respon- sibility of the University lies in clarifying its rules toward this end. -Jacob Hurwitz. ,AM Speaks Up COLLEGE DENIAL of the right of Com- munists to speak to students has stirred up opposition from an unexpected source. Morris Sayre, president-elect of the Na- tional Association of Manufacturers, has expressed himself as "disturbed at the action of City College (New York) and other col- leges in denying the right of a Communist to speak to students." "Why shouldn't he speak to them?" Sayre asks. "They are in college to hear all the sides. If the American system can't survive knowledge and discussion it isn't a sound system." -Harriett Friedman. (IV ,l U P~MA ( i t IIMV Cp 1947 by United Feture ynict Inc. ~--I I -All qhs a r'd "Well, I figger if I order it now, I'll be rich enough to buy it an' old enough to drive it by the time it comes." I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) tending school outside of the State. The period of service covered by the bonus is from December 7, 1941 to September 2, 1945. Every county in the State of New York has a County Veterans' Service Agency under the name of the county where veterans may receive state bonus information. No applications for the bonus will be available prior to December 31, 1947. Veterans who are attending school under Public Law 16 are cautioned to consult their train- ing officers before making any changes in course elections. Fail- ure to obtain clearance for course changes may result in suspension or complete loss of educational benefits under Public Law 16. Veterans enrolled under Public Law 346 who do not plan to be in school during the Spring Semester 1948 are requested to make this fact known to their training offi- cer prior to Friday, January 16, 1948. At a meeting of the University Committee on Student Discipline held December 16, 1947, two stu- dents who were found guilty of irregular practices in connection with the student election held Thursday, November 6, were fined twenty-five dollars each and were deprived of the privilege of par- ticipating in extracurricular ac- tivities for the remainder of the current school year 1947-48. E. A. Walter Dean of Students Bowling: The bowling alleys at Women's Athletic Building will not be open for public use either this afternoon or evening, and will be closed for the vacation period. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation will be closed from Friday evening through the first week of vacation. Will be open during the second week, days only. California State Civil Service Announcement for Assistant In- dustrial Hygiene Engineer has been received. Salary range is $325-$395. California residence is not required. Closing date, Jan. 8, 1948, Michigan Civil Service An- nouncements have been received for: Physical Therapist Aide A, I, II, $195-$320. Closing date, Jan. 7, 1948. Child Guidance Clinic Director VA, VIA, $565-$800. Closing date, Dec. 31, 1947. Candidates must possess a license to practice medi- cine in Michigan. For complete information, call at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall. Lectures University Lecture: John Ciar- di, Briggs-Copeland Instructor in Engish, Harvard College, will read from his poems and discuss mod- ern poetry at 4:15 p.m., Tues., Jan. lish Language and Literature. The public is invited. "Resuscitation from Asphyxia" (illustrated). Dr. Andrew C. Ivy, Distinguished Professor of Physi- ology and Vice President in charge of the Professional Schools in Chicago, University of Illino; the annual Phi Delta Epsilon Lec- ture for 1947-48. 8 p.m., Thurs,, Jan. 8, Rackham Lecture Hall. Classroom .Assignments - Courses in German and Philoso- phy: Beginning January 5, the fol- lowing classes in German which have been meeting in 206 Univer- sity Hall will be transferred to the following locations: German 2, Section 1, 8 o'clock, 200 South Wing. German 1, Section 6, 9 o'clock, Tuesday & Thurs., 2029 Angell Hall; Mon. & Fri., 2 Economics. German 31, Section 4, 10 o'clock, Mon., 18 Angell Hall; Tues. & Thurs,. 315 Haven Hall; Fri., 2nd floor Aud., Lane Hall. German 31, Section 5, 11 o'clock, 120 Temporary Classroom Bldg. German 1, Section '13, 1 o'clock, 130 Temporary Classroom Bldg. German 31, Section 8, 2 o'clock, 120 Temporary Classroom Bldg. German 2, Section 11, 3 o'clock, 4054 Natural Science Bldg. German 2, Section 1, 4 o'clock, 212 Angell Hall. Beginning January 5, the fol- lowing classes in Philoosophy which have been meeting in 206 University Hall will be transferred to the following locations: Philosophy 34, Section 4, 10 o'clock, 2014 Angell Hall. Philosophy 34, Section 5, 11 o'clock, 202 South Wing. L S & A Examination Schedule- Correction Evening classes are scheduled for Wed., Jan. 28, 2-5 and not for Jan. 21. Speech 31 and 32 are scheduled for Tues., Jan. 20, 2-5. Doctoral Examination for B. Elizabeth Horner, Zoology; the- sis: "Arboreal Adaptations of Pe- romyscus, with Special Reference to the Use of the Tail," Fri., Dec. 19, 3091 Natural Science Bldg., 9:00 a.m. L. R. Dice, Chairman. Doctoral Examination for Jul- ian Ross Frederick, Physics; the- sis: "A Study of the Elastic Prop- erties of Various Solids by Means of Ultrasconic Pulse Technique," Fri., Dec. 19, West Council Room, Rackham Bldg., 2:00 p.m. Chair- man, Otto Laporte. Doctoral Examination for Odin Waldemar Anderson, Sociology; thesis: "The Health Insurance Movement in the United States;, A Case Study of the Role of Con- flict in the Development and So- lution of a Social Problem," Fri., Dec. 19, East Council Room, Rack- ham Bldg., 2-4 p.m. Chairman, L. J. Carr. Doctoral Examination for Clif- ford Herbert MacFadden, Geog- raphy; thesis: "The Santa Maria Valley, Santa Barbara County California," Fri., Dec. 19, Room 9, Angell Hall, 3:15 p.m. Chairman, EDITOR'S NOTE: Becalse The Daily prints-every letter to the editor re- ceived (which is signed, 30 words or less in length, and in good taste) we remind our readers that the views expressed in letters ar those of the writers only. Letters or more than salt words are shorteded, prnted or omitted at the dicretion of the edi- tori. i director, * * * To the Editor: 'THE preservation of civil liber- ties is a duty of every Gov- ernment-state, federal, and lo- cal." On the evening of the 15th of December 1947. the 156th anniver- sary of the ratification of the Bill of Rights, mob action occurred in Ann Arbor. Individuals were threatened and prosperity was cte- stroyed as officials failed to main- tain complete law and order. We believe these events were to some degree encouraged by the failure of University and city officials to provide opportunity for expression of minority opinions. We, citizens of Ann Arbor, therefore consider it necessary to call attention to some of the basic principles of American demo-c- racy as reported by the President's Committee on Civil Rights. " Our American heritage teaches that to be secure in the rights he wishes for himself, each man must be willing to respect the rights of other men. . . Freedom can exist only where the citizen is assured that his person is secure against bon- dage, lawless violence, and arbi- trary arrest and punishment. ". . . Where the thret of vio- lence by private persons or mobs exists, a cruel inhibition of the sence of freedom of activity and the security of person inevitably results." Where a society permits private and arbitrary violence, its own integrity is inevitably cor- rupted. ". . . We have reported the fail- ure of some public officials to ful- fill their most elementary duty-~ the protection of persons against mob violence." We urge that all University and city administrators use every means at their disposal to honor the spirit and the letter of the re- port of the President's Committee on Civil Rights. The unfortunate incident of December 15th proves anew the responsibility of those authorities to demonstrate that this campus and community abide by the constitutional principle of freedom of speech for all. Any re- currence of perilous threats to in- dividual rights, to private prop- erty, and to law and order must be prevented. (PS. Copies of the above state- ment will be sent to University and city officials and to repre- sentatives of the press. All indi- viduals wishing to support this statement may do so by slipping this letter and sending it with his name to any one of us.) Theodore M. Newcomb . Prof. Soc. and Psyh. Rabbi Hershel Lymon, Hillel -Jack Geist, Chairman campus AVC Ralph McFee, Publisher Washtenaw Post-Tribune William T. Brownson, Editor Washtenaw Post-Tribune John F. Shepard, Prof. Psych. Harvey Weisberg, Student Legislature H. J. McFarlan, Assoc. Prof. Eng. Mech. M. B. Stout, Prof. Elec. Eng. Wesley H1. Maurer, Executive Secretary, Journalism Dept. Edward W. Blakeman, Reserved Consultant in Religious Education * * * To the Editor AS A FORMER member of the Eight Air Force, I wish to reg- ister my vehement disapproval of the manner in which the, student body was treated in an article by Miss Friedman, appearing in The Daily on December 16. My co-pilot and I, together with our crew, marched over to Felch Park, not as part of a violent mob, but to preserve democracy in Ann Arbor. Even our crew was thoroughly convinced that Mr. Eisler and Mr. Marzani represent- ed a threat to our existing form of government. To a man, we felt obliged to prevent this influence from being absorbed by a student body which any officer and gen- tleman will agree is far from adult -an untrained group, incapable of disciplined thinking necessary in these times. How well I remember a similar incident which occurred not so long ago in our rear echelon sta- tion at old Hiccup-on-the-Huro . On that occasion, a group of irre- sponsible pfe's decided to protest the allotment of'- 3-day passes, without going through chiannes. Only through the most commend- able efforts of my police, Captain Jeboney. feadquarters, Military Police, was such a preposterous move prevented. The point of course, is obvious: we leaders must constantly be prepared to guide the unfortunate, uninformed, un- disciplined groups for whom we are responsible. To say that we came armed with snowballs is not enough. Surely Miss Friedman would not have us go forth to battle unequipped, particularly when the weight of ,numbers was so obviously to our disadvantage. I wish to take this opportunity to applaud Mr. Matthaei, Jr., for his exhausting efforts in mobiliz- ing the various units into con- certed action. We should be truly grateful that such leaders avail themselves to us, and step forward, unafraid, to lead us into the glorious campaign to preserve our democratic campus. I shudder to think of what might have happened, had not Mr. Matthaei been present. 2isler might have spoken; Marzani might have spoken, and hundreds of students would have straggled back to their quarters, total- ly confused, unprepared, and un- equipped to reject what, of course, could only have been the most de- structive type of propagandized rantings. I sincerely hope that Miss Friedman will immediately apolo- gize for her totally unwarranted remarks. Hundreds of hurt vet- erans, and many anxious young- sters are currently distrugh- how long must they continue to suffer because of her unladylike denunciations? -Elliot H. Smith *9 * * To the Editor: N VOTING TO invite Gerhart . Eisler, as well as "a qualified faculty member of opposing views" to speak under University auspices, the Student Legislature has acted in good stead for the ma- jority of the student body of the Michigan campus. It was a minority of students who constituted the rabble-rous- ing mob opposition to the speaker invited here by MYDA. The Legis- lature action indicates that we are nut all being educated in vain, that all of us do not sanction u- ing the very totalitarian methods of suppression that we denounce. Those of us who are convinced that the foundations of a free de- mocracy are strong enough to withstand criticism, welcome this invitation to Eisler. We further applaud the decision that two points of view be upheld, in the spirit of debate. Michigan is the first University at this time of "un-American ac- tivities" where students have mobbed a "witch-hunted" indi- vidual. In refuting the action of this minority, let us also be the first university today to assert otfr faith in the freedom of speech and the principles of true education actively supporting the Legisla- ture enactment. If a student body, as an indicator of the youth of a nation, does not have the courage of its convictions, we can expect little more from the adults who will eventually govern the United States. -Susan Sins To the Editor: CHEERS to Mrs. Curto for her story of what went on while Eisler spoke at the press confer- ence. Her description of the tense feeling that prevailed in the up- stairs room was very vivid and amazingly accurate. I was present at the press conference and al- though I was there as a photogra- pher I couldn't help feeling sorry for the way Eisler and Marzani were "holed up." I expected the crowd outside to burst in any min- ute. If they had broken in, I be- lieve any imaginable action could have taken place. The moronic person who, threw the chance snowball which broke the storm window of the conference room, would certainly never pull a stunt like that again, if he had been in that room. Mrs. Curto said, "If the inner window had been shat- tered, everyone in the room would have been hit." There were re- porters and photographers who were there to record the state- ments of Eisler and Marzani -- they weren't invited to tea. While taking pictures of the crowds at Felch Park, I was hit by several snowballs. I suppose I unfortunately happened to be in the way of a few, but I sincerely believe that a few were aimed at me by "playboys." When I was a "Kid," I enjoyed frolicking in the snow, and even threw snowballs. ] still throwbsnowballs, but if I think I'll be hurting somebody II A 4 e 4 A E a i Anti-Inflation THE DEFEAT of the Republican anti-in- flation bill in the House was exactly what the Republicans wanted. They wanted it so badly that they even made a two- thirds vote necessary for passage, a pro- ceedure which, at the same time. blocked any amendments that might have put teeth in the bill. It all worked out very neatly. When Presi- dent Truman' came out with his program to really get in there and stop inflation, the Republicans could just see 140 nillion Americans turning quizzically to them and asking, "Well?" The poor little Wolcott bill was the Re- 6, Rackham Amphitheatre; aus- R. B. Hall. pices of the Department of Eng- (continued on Page 6) BARNABY . . . . . . . . . I ~ ~ l1Afre* IVTT -Nall. , _ R irnrhv !m i'm Atlas. Finshd.Atlas? ExcellepnftWe I nlr'lI 5