UR~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1948 . . . . . . . . ........ . .......................... . ...................... . . For Sale: One Tradition SO YOU DON'T THINK there should be any racial discrimination. Well start practicing your signature, because you may soon be registering as a Communist. Sure-if you go around saying that our Palestine policy is rotten, or that our eco- nomic system isn't providing enough of the right things for all the people-you will probably be judged a Communist under the Mundt-Nixon bill for "inciting of economic, social and racial strife and conflict." Not only that, but you are part of a Russian directed world wide conspiracy which is trying to overthrow the Amer- ican government. * * * ONE OF THE MORE amazing features of this Mundt-Nixon bill is the authors' profession that it is not intended to harm theoretical Communists - just subversive conspiratory ones. No thought control, you understand, just safeguarding the country. It's peculiar then, that the bill succeeds in stating that every Communist is a mem- ber of a conspiracy to overthrow the gov- ernment. And as we've pointed out, a Com- munist is just about anyone who doesn't like the way things are run around here. As part of this unique feature of the bill, it would not longer be necessary to prove advocacy of force and violence to overthrow the government-a long-stand- ing safeguard of civil liberties in this country. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily ire written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT WHITE The Mundt-Nixon Bill just says that if you "attempt in any manner" to set up a totalitarian dictatorship in this country you'll pay high fines, go to prison and lose your citizenship. This warning to keep your mouth shut is better than those "some- one is listening" war signs you used to see. * * * ANOTHER LITTLE CLAUSE of the bill says that a group is a Communist front "if its views and policies are those of a Communist political organization, a Com- munist foreign government or such world Communist movement." Just watch what Communists say, then say the opposite and you'll be safe-you'll get used to ignoring those twinges of conscience. And by the way, if the group you belong to insists on following a policy also held by Communists, it will have to mark all its mail inside and out with a Communist label; its members will not be able to obtain passports or hold government jobs; and if the members don't feel that they should register annually as Communists, they can just think it over in jail. ONLY ABOUT 50 faculty members at this University, and a small percentage of the students, came out against the Mundt-Nixon Bill. But this product of the Un-American Activities Committee can't be brushed off lightly as the work of a bunch of crackpots. They are serious about getting it passed, and so are a lot more of our Congressmen. This bill, which has no place in American law, comes up before the House today. A telegram addressed immediately to your congressman on the floor of the House may be in time. --Harriett Friedman. Experiment in Generality STUDENTS ON CAMPUS missed an op- portunity to win a brand-new Capital- istic 1949 Ford Convertible last Thursday. Ann Arbor's mayor William E. Brown, Jr., clamped down on an illegal raffle being conducted by The Committee for the Ad- vancement of Capitalistic Enterprise newly formed organization for the preservation of red-blooded Americanism and sweetness and light. The group's organizers, Ralph H. Andrews and William F. Dannemiller, forgot that this nation of free enterprise has gambling laws to protect its citizens. Admittedly a "sensational" way of launch- ing their campaign, the raffle poses many questions which the group's explanatory statement to The Daily does not answer. 1. Where did these two get the $80 for a Daily half-page display advertisement and the money to pay for hundreds of leaflets, posters and tickets? 2. Where did the money for the purchase of the *Ford Convertible come from? 3. Where did they get the 'pull' necessary to obtain the first 1949 Ford Convertible? 'fio these questions, they answered: "Part of the story in connection with the car cannot be told yet."' rrHE FUNDS hoped to be raised by the raffle were to "champion the things that make America the finest place in the world in which to live-to work-to raise a family." With that in mind, they plan to educate the people to the beauty of Capitalism. They see manifestations of discontent on campus. "In these days of political unrest through- out the world, there are many maladjusted individuals who are taking advantage of existing turmoil to spread doctrines of hate and discontent in this country," they state. Although they admit the existence of "turmoil" in the world today-the fact that something is wrong with conditions- they aim to stifle liberal criticism. Other Americans, who also believe in the American ideals, recognize that liberal criticism is one of those American ideas. Through open minded criticisiu and public opinion the turmoil is ended. It will be interesting to watch for the next development in this "experiment in enterprise." -Phyllis Kulick. Craig Wilson. Jewish State IN ALL THE UNHAPPY tangle of the Pal- estine problem, one fact is incontrovert- ably clear. On Sunday, May 16, a Jewish State will declare its independence, and, in effect, carry out by itself last November's United Nations General Assembly's plan for partition. It makes no difference whether or not it will be recognized, for it cannot be ignored out of existence. The Jewish State will have its roots in the struggle of eighty genera- tions of Jews to return to Palestine and find its strength in the determination of a ma- jority of world Jewry and the armed force of the Haganah. One must keep in mind that the de facto government has grown out of ap- parent indifference by the United States and the UN to the fate of the Jews in Palestine and the submission to Arab blackmail. Since the passage of the partition reso- lution, it has become evident that American support was based on an almost unbeliev- able naivete. The Administration in Wash- ington and its assembly delegate were con- vinced, in spite of numerous warnings to the contrary, that partition could be effected without armed backing. There was no bluff by the Arab League; its members were in- tent on preventing partition and would have succeeded but for the equally strong intent of the Jews. The Jewish people, in opposing trustee- ship and declaring their own nation, are merely exercising a right recognized by Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Roosevelt-- the right of men to seek their own destinies through democratic governments of their own choosing. The drive to exercise this right is a powerful one which cannot be pushed aside for considerations of expedi- ency. It is as fundamental in Western man as the will to live. Observing this fact, American Pales- tine policy must adopt a new tack and support the de facto government and lift the arms embargo to Palestine Jews. There is still no bluff in the threats of the Arab nations. Invasion of Palestine by the British-trained, British-subsidized Arab Legion of King Abdullah of Trans- Jordania is certain. Other invasions in the near future are likely. The inescapable conclusion is that the eventual goal of the nations of the Arab League is to wipe out every Zionist in Pales- tine. The Haganah and the Irgun can be expected to offer effective resistance, but only within the limits of their supply of arms and munitions. It is too late, for the immediate future, to provide a UN police force for Palestine to maintain peace and protect life. Without a UN police, the de facto government must be allowed to receive arms shipments, or face eventual annihila- tion. We wish a long and peaceful life to the new Jewish Republic. -Jake Hurwitz. Novel Action SENATOR MORSE has suggested a novel action for an election year when he asks the congressional body to act NOW on some of the campaign promises its mem- bers have put into their party platforms. The incident of the 15 Southern states which desire to start a regional University system is an excellent time for the making of both political and moral hay. There is no question here of state's rights. No such argument upon which the southern Democrats can base their stolid opposi- tion to all moves for Negro equality. In order to establish the regional univer- sity system, the Southern States must have their inter-state compact approved by the national legislature as per the constitution. Senator Morse has asked for the inclusion of a clause forbidding segregation in the schools under this compact. The move has been made-a move to make the Civil Rights Program an ac- tuality rather than a dream. It should be supported by every politician who has announced his support of the Civil Rights Program. We have had a bi-partisan Congress on issues of foreign policy. How about a bi- partisan action on the question of Negro rights. Orchids to the Republican from Oregon. -Don McNeil. It is characteristic of the far vision and fine eloquence of Winston Churchill that The Hague conference for European unity should be called the "Congress of Europe." Like Churchill's great design for a United States of Europe, the world Congress draws upon the American pattern. In many ways the meeting at The Hague corresponds to the Annapolis Conference which preceded the Constitutional Conven- tion at Philadelphia. The Hague conference will not itself establish European union, but the consultative assembly which it would have the European parliaments set up may encompass this great achievement. nT-1 g o f,'c r n 9 r2 tinns _incluiin e- c yY r ~ . ', t J -,s _ f , - : ; ." (> r,,.. , , e?,.' ,,. ' vk:= , r +'_,< ' : + DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 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 Angell Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). * * * Notices THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1948 VOL. LVIII, No. 157 Faculty Meeting, College of En- gineering: 4:15 p.m., Fri., May 14, Room 348, W. Engineering Bldg. Post Session: The "Post Session," which tentatively announced the Summer Session, is The demand was not for its operation. OUR APOLOGIES TO MARK TWAIN NEWS IT- M'~ RUMOR COMES FROM A WOMAN WHO CLAIMS DOOR TO HIM IN u "' ,,3 EASTERN GERMANY. AFRAI "'0 tL ARsGRAL UXA GERATWD \7771 1 J r. ° , Y S so-called had been to follow abolished. sufficient Y IA Letters to the Editor... I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Good Old Days By SAMUEL GRAFTON KNOW A CYNICAL woodpecker who lives two from the right in a row of lombardy poplars. Sometimes, by pretending to take a nap, or by indicating in some other way that I want to be alone, I can induce hiur to come down and discuss public affairs. Te other day he lighted on a twig near my head. "Wake up!" he screamed. "Don't lie there sleeping. These are the good old days. Get up and enjoy them." "What do you mean?" I asked. "Well," he said, "just suppose Congress adopts every major bill that's now before it." A shadow seemed to pass overI darkening the nearby lake, and it look as if it had winked. * * * the sun, making "FIRST, THERE'S the draft," he "Just think of that. Peacetime scription in America." said. con- With this, the absurd bit of poultry did a burlesque forward march on his twig, shrieking "Twit, two three four! 'Twit, two three four!" "Well, it will be tough on the youngsters," I said. 'Tough on the youngsters!" he cried. "It'll be a different country. And then you've also got the Mundt Bill moving right along in Washington." "That won't affect you much," I ventired to point out. "It won't, hey? Why, for all you know, there might be a Communist woodpecker higher up in this tree. In that case this tree could be formally listed as a Com- munist front, and it would have to register and file annual reports." He roared with laughter. A woodpecker's laugh is not the pleasantest sound in the world. "Oh, those good old days!" he shrieked. "These are them." "LISTEN, you infuriating fowl," I said. "All I want is to take a nap and-" "And those thirty billion dollar arms budgets!" he cried. "Wait 'till you have compulsory military service, the Mundt Act in force, and all your money going for arms. Why, you'll remember this as the year of low taxes, the year when America was .young." "Do you really have to make all of these changes?" I asked. "So you want to keep things the way they are? A radical, hey?" yowled the tiny creature, doing a pinwheel on his branch. "That's not radical-" I began, but he guffawed. "Sure it is," he said. "Nowadays a conservative is a fellow who wants to change everything, and a radical is one who wants to keep them the way they Summer Positions: A represen- tative of the H. J. Heinz Co., Hol- land, Mich., will be here Thurs., May 13, to interview men inter- ested in work in Contract Crops Procurement, Clerical and Physi- cal, and supervision of farm labor. No experience required. Boys' Camp Position: A repre- sentative of Camp Daggett, near Petoskey, Michigan, will be here Saturday morning to interview men for the position of general counsellor. For further information and ap- pointment call at 201 Mason Hall or call Extension 371. Campus organizations whose women members wish to request late permission are instructed to present at the Office of the Dean of Women a written list of names, hour needed, and reason for the request no later than three days before the event. This will enable the office to make adequate an- nouncement in The Daily Official Bulletin. Lecture Muriel Lester, international secretary of Fellowship of Recon- ciliation, will speak on the sub- ject, "Gandhi" at 8:15 p.m., Fri., May 14, Kellogg Auditorium; aus- pices of Intercooperative Coun- cil, Interguild, and Hindustan As- sociation. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Dan- iel Seth Ling, Jr., Physics; thesis: "The Theory of the Angular Cor- relation of Successive Gamma and Internally Converted Gamma Ra- diations," 3 p.m., Thurs., May 13, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg. Chairman, G. E. Uhlenbeck. Doctoral Examination for Doug-, las Neil Morgan, Philosophy; the- sis: "Photography and Philoso- phy," 4 p.m., Fri., May 14, Room 204, Mason Hall. Chairman, D. H. Parker. Students, College of L.S.A.: Advisory Series on Professional Schools: Thurs., May 13, 4:15 p.m. Room 231, Angell Hall, "Bus- iness as a Career," Dean R. A. Stevenson, School of Business Ad- ministration; Room 35, Angell Hall, "Public Health as a Profes- sion," Dr. J. J. Harlon, School of Public Health. Seminar in Applied Mathemat- ics: Thurs., May 13, 4 p.m., Room 247, W Engineering Bldg. Mr. W. C. Sangren will speak on "A Gen- eralization of Sturm - Louisville Expensions." Astronomical Colloquium: Fri., May 14, 4 p.m., Observatory. Speaker: Dr. Helen W. Dodson. Title: "Current Studies of Promi- nence Motion." Mathematics Orientation Semi- nar: 1 p.m., Thurs., May 13, Room 3001, Angell Hall. Mr. Kenneth Fowler will continue his talk on "P-adic Numbers." Qualifying Examination, Direct- ed Teaching: Students who plan to do directed teaching in the fall are required to pass a qualifying examination in the subject in which they expect to teach. Ex- amination will be given at 8:30 a.m., Sat., May 15, University High School Auditorium. Prompt- ness is essential as the exam con- sumes about 4 hours time. Bring bluebooks. Concerts Music and Dances of the Renais- sance and Baroque Eras will be presented at 8 p.m., Thurs., May 13, Michigan League Ballroom, by the Collegium Musicum and stu- dents of the modern dance, under the direction of Louise Cuyler of the School of Music staff, and Juana de Laban of the Depart- ment of Physical Education. The music will be played by a string orchestra with harpsichord, con- ducted by Myron Russell; auspices of the University Extension Serv- ice and the Collegium Musicum in connection with the Adult Educa- tion Institute being held in Ann Arbor. The general public will be admitted without charge after 7:45 p.m. Student Recital Shirley Fryman Goldfarb, pianist, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music at 8:30 p.m., Thurs.. May 13. Assembly Hall, Rackham Bldg. A pupil of Mrs. Maud Okkelberg, Mrs. Goldfarb will play Sonate, K.281 by Mozart, Op., 76 by Brahms, Beethoven's Sonate, Op. 53, and Grieg's Bal- lade, Op. 24. The public is invited. Student Recital: Francelia Whitfield, pianist, will play com- positions by Bach, Schubert, Brahms, Lee Pattison, and Wilbur Perry, at 8:30 p.m., Fri., May 14, Rackham Assembly Hall. A pupil of Joseph Brinkman, Miss Whit- field is presenting the program in partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Master of Music. The public is invited. Events Today Radio Programs: 5:45 p.m. WPAG-Campus News A Bill of One-Act Plays will be presented at 8 pm., Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre, by speech de- partment students in advanced courses in theatre. Admission is free to the public and no tickets are required. Doors open at 7:15 p.m. and close as soon as theatre is filled, but nqt later than 8 p.m. No one will be seated during the performance of any of the plays. Students and Faculty of the English Departmet will be spe- cial guests at the Student-Faculty Hour, 4-5 p.m., Russian Tea Room, Michigan League. International Center weekly tea: 4:30-5:30 p.m., Thurs., May 20. Hostesses: Mrs. Albert B. Peck and Mrs. Mildred I. McDonald. Motion Picture: "Micro-Moving iGontinued on Page 5) The Daily accords its readers the privilege of submitting letters for publication in this column. Subject to space limitations, thergeneral pol- icy is to publish in the order in which they are received all letters bearing the writer's signature and address. Letters exceeding 300 words, repeti- tious letters and letters of a defama- tory character or such letters which for any other reason are not in good taste will not be published. The editors reserve the privilege of cop- densing letters. Foreign Correspondence To the Editor: A FEW MONTHS ago the Uni- versity's NSA Committee was named to establish a regional cor- respondence exchange which would enable American students to get into contact and correspond with students throughout the world. Thus far a .sub-committee has received lists of names from Eng- land, Germany, Italy and France, together with scattered names from other areas. More recently we have received application blanks from the cor- respondence bureau set up by the International Union of Students. Through its facilities you can cor- respond with students from most any part of the world. The NSA has recently suspend- ed negotiations for affiliation with the IUS because of its political inclinations and activities. Your committee has been unanimous, however, in the belief that we should cooperate fully with the IUS in cultural projects such as the correspondence bureau. As political events create con- tinually mounting tensions in the world, the correspondence ex- change presents one of the few remaining means of communica- tion with students of Central and Eastern Europe. Believing that such communi- cation, particularly with students on the "other side" of the world, is a healthy and constructive ac- tivity for thinking students, we en- courage you to call project chair- man Dick Cortright at 24591 and get an application blank. -Tom Walsh, Chairman, NSA Comm. Terse Verse To the Editor: "DON'T CHASE that lass across the grass," Is one of the signs that you will pass. We thought t'would make the campus green, If pleasing signs were only seen. We dotted laws both near and far, But we were reaching for a star. As fast as we can new signs make, Some students the old ones take. This project done by APO, Really keeps us on the go. Many an Hour, many a Day, We've painted signs to show the way. , The time we've spent in doing this, We hope won't really go amiss. We don't mind working without pay, If only the signs you will obey. This prograr will not work at all, Unless everyone answers the call. First, see that signs that we put up, Do not by chance (?) become erupt. We ask of all, both freshman, prof, That our new signs they keep hands off. And also please observe the signs, So proudly we say, "This campus, 'tis mine." This poetry though not the best, We hope the spirit will you infest. -Joe Guttentag, Corr. Sec., Gappa Pi of Alpha Phi Omega, National Service Fraternity. Nomination To the Editor: OUR "DIXIECRATS" would do well bo go outside the South for their presidential candidate. It seems to me that Harry Ben- nett would best represent their mode of civilization, and would be equipped by experience to admin- ister their social program. So long as the graft was good, he wouldn't mind, I suppose, shifting from straight whisky to mint juleps. -P. H. McNutt. Looking Back From the pages of The Daily FIFTY YEARS AGO TODAY: Fraternity editors were elected to the Michiganensian board, with campus soror- ities deciding to rotate their offices each year to prevent dissension over the posi- tions. The affiliated students were mem- ber$ of a committee composed of repre- sentatives from the literature, engineering and law schools. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY: Prop problem perplexed the cast of "The Play's The Thing," but President Little, University head, came to their aid by lending his dress suit for the performance. "tri llt +itho n lrtnun n +1-a .fist Mundt Bill To the Editor: BY THE TIME this letter reaches print the Mundt-Nix- on Bill may well have passed the House of Representatives with the final battle being waged in the Senate. Time slips by while the fascist-minded proponents of the bill make haste, and the true na- ture of the bill is kept from the American people by a conspiracy of silence in the press. Are these more Communist slogans' "fas- cist-minded" and "conspiracy of silence?" For the latter, few newspapers outside New York (and there only PM and the Herald Tribune) have printed comprehensive sum- manes of the bill. Editorial com- ment has been evasive of the true intent and danger of the bill, in the few cases where there has been editorial comment. "Fascist-minded?" The Mundt- Nixon Bill (Subversive Activities Control Act of 1948 HR 5852) is sponsored by two members of the Un-American Activities Commit- tee and is the product of that committee's hearings on outlaw- ing the Communist Party. Consider: under the Mundt-Nix- on Bill you could be required to register as a foreign agent if you belonged to any organization that the Attorney General listed as subversive. If convicted of sub- versive activity, you could be fined $10,000, sent to jail for ten years and deprived of your citizenship. And what would make you subver- sive? Believing in, advocation, supporting or associating yourself with the program of the Com- munist Party or anything re- sembling that program, You're subversive in the eyes of the Un-Americans if you favor Soviet-American friendship, if you oppose UMT or Jim Crow in the Army, if you support the Third Party, if you supported Operation Haircut, etc. You can be consid- ered a foreign agent if you are a Zionist. Advocating nationaliza- tion of atomic energy. means over- throwing the government (force and violence doesn't have to be proved). You don't have to believe us. Get a copy of the bill and read it yourself. Read it carefully-fig- ure how it could be used against YOU. Then let your Congressman know what you think of it-before he's telling you what to think. -The Executive Comm. Ralph Neafus Club, CP. WHAT WILL BEAT both Dewey and Taft is the likelihood that they will go into the conven- tion with so much strength that neither can get a majority and that in the subsequent shuffle a compromise candidate will come forth. -Karl Keyerleber in Current History. Fifty-Eighth Year 11 y espgfg lig- eeer-=-. - . Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan tader 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 Dailes .......... 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 Bess Hayes ................. Librarian Business Staff Nancy Helmick .......General Manag r Jeanne Swendeman......Ad. Manager Edwin Schneider .. Prance Manager Dick Halt....... 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 dispatched credited to it o otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of re-publication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Anti Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mal matter. Subscription during the reguler school year by carrier, $5.00, by mall, $6.00. Member Assodated Collegiate Press 1947-48 a :,,i BARNABY. , I hooe this is one of Mr. Blahis' good days. ,Ask that imaginary Pixie of yours to 1 Sli think Ralph is sorry he turned down I can ask I 1 I