- li .t' MYDA-Czech Stand Recognition Due ALTHOUGH they haven't changed their name to the University Communists In- corporated, or adjusted their constitution on an absolutely pro-Soviet level, MYDA has made the move that stamps them as Communist through and through. In upholding the Communist coup in C zechoslovakia, they have shown their will- ingness to support the CP in whatever action she takes-legal or extra-legal. No more must University officials feel it their duty to protect the students from the "masquerade" MYDA. That group has de- clared its true colors for once and for all. Oddly enough then, the reason for the MYDA ban is gone. Few students can now be goaded with tempting liberal crusades to join a society that condones the sup- pression of the student viewpoint in Czech- oslovakia. The University need fear no more. If a student couldn't decide what MYDA's policy was in the past, he certainly can now. Therefore, the University should rein- state MYDA as soon as possible. For two good reasons: 1. To establish the contrast between MY- DA approval of student suppression and the University's inherent desire for free- dom of expression. 2. To restore freedom of speech before the campus chapter of MYDA completely collapses as result of popular opinion and the University is literally stuck with their ban. MYDA's support of the coup, wherein protesting students were injured only by an accidental gun shot and stray auto, reveals officially a position suspected for a long while. In fact, we knew it all the time! -Craig H. Wilson. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT WHITE Candidate Needed PRESIDENT TRUMAN'S announcement that he would seek a full term in the White House has been greeted by rebel yells from the-South and an embarrassed silence from Democrats in the North. The angry reaction of the Dixie politicians was to be expected, since Mr. Truman, in making his bid, reiterated his unwavering support of the civil rights program.. But the fact that Democratic bigwigs in the North received the news and that there was no apparent rush to board the Truman bandwagon is indeed significant. It indi- cates that Mr. Truman's chances to lead his party to victory in November are considered nil. Tven with the full support of the "Solid South" assured, the Democratic party has always had to depend on the heavily indus- trialized metropolitan areas of the North to gain the electoral votes necessary for the election of its presidential candidates. But a recent survey has shown that Democratic strength in these areas has been depleted to the danger point by the third party candidacy of Henry Wallace. In fact, Wallace's greatest show of strength is in four states whose combined electoral votes could easily swing the election one way or another. These states are California, Michigan, Illinois and New York. It appears that the only chance the Dem- ocrats have to emerge victorious in the '48 race is to nominate a candidate attrac- tive enough to the left wingers to pull them back into the fold and yet acceptable to the middle-of-the-road voters. This candi- date may or may not cause the Southerners to bolt the party, but that is the chance the Democrats must take to win. A difficult task awaits the Democratic party. It must find a candidate with the above qualifications-if one exists. -Leon Jaroff. Views Iackfire THE MICHIGAN YOUTH for Democratic Action has proven for all time the very un-democratic nature of its teachings and ideologies. While protesting publicly its ban from campus, while insisting that all students have equal opportunity to speak, MYDA has paid lip-service to democracy and fol- lowed the line from Moscow as dictated to it in the Daily Worker. Silence on the issue of Czech student freedom was bad enough but support of the actions of the new government is the epitome of blind subservience to the dictates of Russia., It is hypocritical of an organization to vehemently protest its own suppression and still uphold the attack on and arrest of college students in Czechoslovakia. Regard- less 'of 'disagreement with the principles for which the Ozech students stood, their right to speak was an essential of the MYDA pro- gram. They broke no laws of the Czech state which existed before the coup d'etat., What MYDA has proven by its action or inaction, is the truth of the charges leveled by the University last spring. That MYDA travelled under false colors. That it is in- deed, a weapon of the Communists in the United States. MYDA IS A FRONT FOR AMERICAN COMMUNISM. Liberal groups can learn a lesson from the MYDA affair. Most organizations on cam- pus, with good intentions, have supported MYDA's bid for re-recognition. But what they had failed to investigate first was whether or not MYDA itself supported the kind of democracy the liberals were advo- cating in asking that MYDA be readmitted to the campus ranks. The Communist philosophy that "the end justifies the means" ruled in Czechoslovakia. IT DID NOT MATTER that citizens were denied their right to speak, their right to protest against the government. (Much as MYDA did during Gerhardt Eisler's visit, the holding of individuals without bail, etc.) The Czech students were in dis- agreement with the Communist philosophy and were therefore suppressed. This was the action that MYDA supports. Ed Shaffer, MYDA leader, has said that the group protesting represented a small segment of the college students in Prague. Need we remind Mr. Shaffer that MYDA at Michigan constitutes some- thing like 35 members, indeed a small segment of the students attending this university. -Don McNeil. .Poor Atonement HOLLYWOOD is attempting a politcal comeback. "Behind the Iron Curtain," forthcoining production of 'Twentieth-Century Fox, will prove that the movie industry is not Com- munistic, that it is not pro-Russian, and that it did not mean to imply in any of the wartime films that Russia had more than an insignificant part in the defeat of Ger- many. Unfortunately, however, a few less laudable things will be proved by the film. When shown before foreign audiences, for instance, it will be a most convincing proof that American memories are short. When the defenders of Stalingrad are called cowards by an American film four years after an American president has officially commended them for "courage, fortitude and devotion," it would not be illogical for a foreigner to suspect Americans in general of a certain inconsistency of attitude. The picture might also be accepted as proof that American support of the UN is not particularly reliable. Since the General Assembly has condemned all forms of propa- ganda "likely to encourage any threat to the peace," and since it is impied in the film that Russia is determined to start shooting as soon as she has the atomic bomb, it should not be difficult for a foreign audi- ence to draw another unfortunate but log- ical conclusion. The movie industry is fond of referring to its products as a "great educating force." "Behind the Iron Curtain" is sure to further substantiate its claims. This film will edu- cate for war. By presenting a false picture of Russia it will teach Americans to take an even more biased view toward her. And by showing just how fickle and sensational- istic American taste can be it will teach the rest of the world to distrust us. Poor, bungling Hollywood. For trying in the best tradition of free enterprise to pro- duce cgmmodities with customer appeal, she succeeds only in getting her knuckles rapped by the house committee or by public opinion. For having been caught up in the wartime trend and producing a film which depicted Russia as a large factor in defeating Germany, she is attacked as pro-Eussian. Then, when she tries to atone for her sins, she goes way overboard in the other direction and makes a picture which is saved from the ridiculous only by the serious damage which it is capable of doing, -Ivan Kelley. " _ r1 J "d0 'w Co, 98b d i dFetr ydctte "i-I-Iji rxev~ Letters to the Editor,. , ,, ; "Only yestiddy we wuz teasin' him poppa's old shoes." about havin' to wear his DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ITLSO HAPPENS... * y1,4db? Jftm ping Unique Find Ouch' AFRIEND OF OURS was having a cup of coffee with us, and we were both on a jag of the mid-week blues. Our friend, who is - somewhat self-consciously - the Left Bank type, remarked that life's tragic fact is that we're all just so many square pegs in a lot of round holes. We both realized at once, of course, that CURRENT MOVIES_ At the Michigan ... TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE, with Humphrey Bogart, Walter Houston and Tim Molt. IN VIEW of the extravagant praises dished out by LIFE and TIME and the pleasant two hours I spent viewing this picture, the only comments that come to my mind con- cerning "Treasure of the Sierra Madre" are of such a nature that even the manager of the local cinema may speak to me here- after. It is the story of three men's search for gold in the hot barren mountains of Mex- ico, the simple carefully drawn tale of how they find it, work to mine it and bring it back to civilization. They are three very different men, and in the dirt, sweat and incidents of their particular story is a par- able of gold and human nature, the effect of the magic element on fallible man. Holly- wood has forgotten its tinsel and glitter long enough to tell both stories well. All three of the leads are praiseworthy, but Walter Huston, as the spry and wise old prospector, turns in the performance of the year. At the State ... SLEEP MY LOVE, with Claudette Colbert, Robert Cummings and Don Ameche. IN EVERYDAY LIFE, rich women seem to putter along quite happily with their neuroses and poodles, but the lot of the screen heiress is seldom so pleasant. Sleep My Love is the latest version of husband wishing to do away with wifey for her his remark had gotten off to a flying start and then lapsed into a passe cliche-the sort of thiigs that Left Bank remarks just don't do. He looked sheepish, but only for an in- stant, because he redeemed himself imme- diately by saying, "The trouble is, there aren't any square holes any more." One in Hand OVERHEARD - TWO MALE students in yarn shop pricing hand-knit ar- gyles. When told they run $6.50 on up, one turned to his companion and said: "Guess I better get a girl." Knights in Armor WE DON'T LIKE the Temporary Class- room Building any more than you do, and usually, taking a cue from one of our favorite professors, we call it "shanty town." But it's singularly appropriate place for a German 2 class. Right now, we're reading "Wieland der Schmied," a medieval legend. And when we come to class in the morning we're already very much in the spirit of the thing, be- cause in order to get there, we cross a bridge-you can even pretend it's a draw- bridge-that goes over a genuine moat. Proboscis Problem WE WONDER if there is a hidden mean- ing in this post-script a friend recently received from his father-who of late has been getting more E's than education for his hard-earned dollars. "And remember, son, noses are made fundamentally to dip in books." Look g Backward From the pages of The Daily, 30 YEARS AGO TODAY: A Daily editorial hit at pacifists and pro- Germans who were calling for America to withdraw from the war in the face of con- tinuing German victories. The all-Russian congress of Soviets rati- fied peace terms with Germany immediately after the reading of President Wilson's message which assured them that America would take the first opportunity to restore Russian sovereignty. 20 YEARS AGO TODAY: A local theatre, advertising the play, Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to al 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 AngelliRaall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publicaton (1:00 a.m. Sat- urdays). Notices TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1948 VOL. LVIII, No. 116 Motion Picture Equipment: Ther demand for furnishing University- owned motion picture equipment has become so great that we must ask that reservations be made at least twenty-four hours in ad- vance of the shoings. These re servations shlold be made with either Mrs. -Tastings or Mrs. Moore, University Extension 2244.l Apha Lambda Delta: The Michi gan Daily of Marcli 14 contained a list of wemen eligible for initia- tion in Alpha Lambda Delta. Freshman women who have a 3.5] average should check that list; if your name is not included, call Mrs. Bach, Office of the Dean of1 Women. Bureau of Appointments & Occu- pational Information, 201 Masonr1 Hall Job Opportunities Conference sponsored by the Bureau of Ap- pointmentsy tillbe held on Wed., March 17, 4 p.m., Natural Science " Auditorium. Representatives of the Proctor and Gamble Company,' The Detroit Edison Company, andl Crowley Milner's Store will discussr job opportunities in their fields. Questions will be invited. All stu- dents interested are urged to at- tend. Procter and Gamble Company will have a representative in our office on Thurs., March 18, to in- terview men for sales positions. Any men interested may make ap- pointments by calling extension 371. University Community Center: Willow Run Village. Tues., Mar. 16, 8 p.m. Wives of; Student Veterans' Club, combined with General Cooperative Nursery Meeting. Educational films on child development. Wed., Mar. 17, 8 p.m., Plays and Games Group (Gymnastics for women). Thurs.. Mar. 18, 8 p.m., Arts and Crafts Group. Instruction. Acadeniic Notices Concentration Discussion Series: Tuesday, March 16 Philosophy and the Degree Pro- gram in Religion and Ethics-4:15 p.m., 231 Angell Hall. Prof. C. L. Stevenson: Concen- tration in Philosophy Prof. William Frankena: Relig- ion and Ethics as a Field of Con- centration Botanical Seminar: 4 p.m., Wed., March 17, Rm. 1139, Natural Sci- ence Bldg. Paper: "'Mushrooms in their Natural Habitats," by A. H. Smith. Open meeting. Chemistry Colloquium: Prof. R.t K. McAlpine will speak on the sub- ,ject "Action of Starch - Iodine March 17, 4:15 Chemistry Bldg. The Engineering Mechanics De- partment is sponsoring a series of seminars. Seminar, Wed., 4 p.m., Rm. 406, West Engineering Bldg. Mr. Paul F. Chenea will review technicj papers of current in- terest. All graduate students, in Engineering Mechanics are urged to attend as well as students from other departments. Concerts Faculty Recital Postponed: Mar- garet Ling, harpist, whose recital has been announced for 8:30 p.m., Thurs., March 25, has postponed her program until Saturday eve- ning, May 22, Rackham Assembly -1 -all. Chamber Music Program pre- sented by the Collegium Musicum under the direction of Louise Cuy- ler, Associate Professor of the Theory of Music, will be heard at 3:30 p.m., Tues., March 16, in the Rackham Assembly Hall. The group will be assisted by the stu- dent choir of St. Mary's Chapel in a program of music of the 14th, 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries. Open to the public. Student Recital: Joyce Lawr- ence, student of piano under Joseph Brinkman, will pre- sent a recital at 8:30 p.m., Wed., March 17, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Given in partial fulfill- ment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music, the program will include compositions by Bach, Beethoven, Brahms, Shepherd, Liszt, and Paganini. Open to the public. Exhibitions Museums Building rotunda, Chi- nese Porcelain-Celadon and Blue and White Wares. Through April 30. Exhibition of Japanese Art: West Gallery, Alumni Memorial Hall; auspices of Center for Japanese Studies and the University Muse- um of Art. Through March 25. Museum of Art, Alumni Memo- rial Hall: THE PAINTER LOOKS AT PEOPLE and JOHN BROWN SERIES, JACOB LAWRENCE; through March 28. Tuesdays through Saturdays 10-12 and 2-5; Wednesday evenings 7-9; Sundays 2-5. The public is cordially invit- ed. Gallery Talk: Dr. Carl Sheppard, on "The Painter Looks at People," and Jacob Lawrence's "John Brown Series;" Museum of Art. Alumni Memorial Hall, Fri., March 19. 3:30 p.m. The public is invited. Events Today Radio Program: 5:45-6, WPAG-The German Se- ries-Prof. Otto Graf and Dr. Kurt Berg. Films on British Political Cus- toms Kellogg Auditorium, '4:15 p.m.: "English Criminal Justice" (Continued on Page 6) Alkali on the Complex," Wed., p.m., Rm. 303, EDITOR'S NOTE: Because The Daily 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 views1 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. Relative Few To the Editor: HR. DA COLA was acquitted by a jury which was subject to the approval of both the prosecu- tion and the defense. This jury was sworn and charged to decide the case on a factual basis. Axily inference that they did otherwise is libelous. Mr. Carroll Little would do well to keep his growing-pains out of print. oPersonally. Mr. MacNaughton, I prefer the Dascola establish- ment because I get a good hair- cut there. Whether this is de to "specialization," I do not know. These IRA people are wasting their time trying to force social equality by the use of legislation or otherwise. No one is acceptable in any society unless he accepts and upholds the standards of mor- als, ethics and deportment of that society. This, as I see it, is a deep- ly rooted trait of human nature and cannot be legislated out of existence. Any person, regard- less of race, creed, or station in life, who tries to force a distaste- ful and unwarranted social or business contact on me is in for trouble. Nor am I alone in my at- titude. I know colored people who would no doubt violently resent my presence at their hotels, bars, or barbershops. It is only a rela- tive few on either side of such a so-called problem who, encour- aged by those seeking to foment confusion and strife, think their "rights" are beng infringed and who only demonstrate what ap- pears to me to be an inferiority by demanding admittance any- where without an actual or im- plied invitation. Incidentally, my background is northern not southern. I have lived, eaten, and played with a cross-section of thecolored race, and what I have written is based on my experience - not on the asinine preachings of some ism about a classless society. There ain't no such animal. -A. F. lHammarstrom Ntot 'errified To the Editor: rtHE NEAFUS CLUB, Mr. Bill - Carter, and their ilk are ap- parently blind or deliberately per- verse as evidenced by their am- plified mewling. Mr. Sweinhart in the Detroit News is presenting enough facts, testimony, and learned opinions to convince any but those with abortive intellects. Communism is everlastingly op- posed to what has dleveloped and what is the United States. As I murdered to destroy fascism, so will I murder to destroy commun- ism should the occasion arise. Mr. Jake Hurwitz falsely represented me in his "War Talk." I fought but I was scared not "terrified" and the nearest I came to "heart- break" was when I viewed the hu- man wreckage left in the wake of dictatorship. As for socialism, it is but a step along the road to communism. Borrowing an illustration from Mr. Bingay in the Detroit Free Press, the distinction between so- cialism and communism is the same as between having a mild case of pregnancy and being preg- nant. Socialistic England is about to fall on its financial face and will -if the U.S. doesnt help. Repub- lican governments in the Balkans and elsewhere have been bombed, clubbed, machine - gunned, and hanged into communism. It's about time the U.S. undertook some legislative surgery to rid her- self of these cancerous growths and took the preventative medi- cine of UMT to control further infection. -A. F. Hammarstrom * * * Strange Business To the Editor: POLITICS is a strong business. France and America, fdr ex- ample, illustrate this point well. France last week was living dra- matically. From vote to vote the government of Premier Schiima=n was getting barely enough sup- port to enact its tax program. On one issue of the forced loan measure of the government was carried by the dangerous y low margin of three votes. The op- position was a combination of Communists and rightists. This seeming flirtation between ex- treme points of view is hot new. Irreconcilables in politics oft'n themselves allied with bitter ene- mies against the middle way. The strategy of the French Rightists is clear: they believe that a government crisis could be used to bring M. de Gaulle to power. The motives of the Com- munists, there, other than th short range motive of defeating the Marshall Plan, are not clear. But reports from French obser- vers seemingly lead us to con- clude that they feel M. de Gaulle is their own stepping stone. Here in the United States sone political writers have intimated that the Wallace camp at times has looked rather longingly in the direction of Mr. Taft's oppoition to the Marshall program of Eur- ope and universal military train- ing. It has also been stated, though less convincingly, the idea of M. de Gaulle as an introduc- tion to a Communist government, that the Communists in the Uni- ted States are counting on a Taft victory, in order to use the una- voidable confusion to their ad- vantage, With this picture of 1948 poli- tics before us we can no longer smile. The strange business seems to spell a white knight for France, and for the United States, the same, except here, it is called black disaster. -Roger Shaw Dislikes Review To the Editor: THE ONE-SIDED and unfair re- view of Alexander Brailowsky's concert is a source of concern to me. Donald Anderson is obvi- ously a cynic; is not able to ex- press himself in writing, and is a discredit to The Mchigan Daily. I must ask Mr. Anderson oy what standards he judged Mr. Brailowsky's interpretations, or if he bothered himself with such matters. I must also ask Mr. An- derson what the advantage is for a pianist to look into space and give a circus performance for the benefit of "some" . . . who would otherwise find it dry and unin- teresting? I do congratulate Mr. Anderson for saying that Mr. Brailowsky in- corporated imagination into every number he played. Mr. Anderson's statement, "This lack of imagina- tion was painfully absent from every number lie played" was prob- ably a grammar mistake, but in its printed form, completely twist- ed the meaning that was intend- ed. And I have every reason to believe that every statement in his article was borne of the same in- tellectual crudeness, and there- fore feel that any opinion in an article of this caliber should be viewed with suspicion. --Charles D. Elder Fifty-Eighth Year 4 ATTORNEY GENERAL CLARK recently delivered an opinion on a bill to bar Communists from the ballot in any local, state, or national election. He expressed his belief that no particular group or party could be barred from the ballot without jeopardizing the constitutional guarantees of all other political groups and parties. Clark declared that such a bill could be found unconstitutional for three reas- ons-that it might be considered In the nature of a bill of attainder, as a denial of the process of law, and as an attempt by the Federal government . to legislate the qualifications of a political party. What makes Clark's conclusions admir- able is not just the obvious common sense with which they were reached, but the realization that the statement was issued at the very time that Clark's activities were being questioned by a Senate investigating committee. It is certainly gratifying to find that there is one man in the administration who has refused to be upset by both the Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff John Campbell.......Managing Editor Dick Maloy...............City Editor Harriett Friedman .. Editorial Director, Lida Dalles.......,.Associate Editor Joan Katz........... Associate Editor Fred Schott......... Associate Editor Dick Kraus ..............Sports Editor Bob Lent ......Associate Sports Editor Joyce Johnson.......Women's Editor Jean Whitney Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Nancy Helmick........General Managwe Jeanne Swendeman ......Ad. Manager Edwin Schneider .. Finance Manager Dick Hait....... Circulation Manager Bess Hayes ................. Librarian Telephone 23-241 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatched credited to it at otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of re-publication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Enteredi atthe Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. Member Associated Collegiate Press 1947-48 -4 -I . k BARNABY .s.. hope the presence of my colleague, Pete, ~il Pt!Woke up? We're here for a 'ck imor a Tell your uncle we'll be back . .