THE MICHIGAN DAILY No Choice At All WE WONDER HOW the Democratic party will survive this one. With the left al- ready peeling off, the southern democrats are threatening a new split, and Demo- cratic leaders are faced with the inevitabil- ity of paying for their pretty words. Taking the familiar designation of the south as' "Democratic stronghold" a little too seriously, southern leaders have served an ultimatum on national party head- quarters to abandon Truman's civil liberties proposals. They evidently figure that their threat will bring party headquarters around in a hurry. But the democratic party is out to prove that it can win without the help of the far-left liberals. It may scorn many of Wallace's arguments, but civil liberties cannot be dropped from the party plat- form with equal aplomb. Many liberal -u, Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: BEN ZWERLING voters who have avoided Wallace to date, would find such ar muve too much to stomach. The anti-poll tax, anti-segregation, anti- lynch proposals of Truman's civil liberties program are not the only issues on which Democratic leaders will have to show they really mean it. 'Ihe PEepuhlican party is no longer it's only critic. Wallace has shown that there are a lot of dissatisified voters, enough to form the basis for a party eager to grab the spot on which the Democrats once stood. And unlike some former third parties, the Wal- lace group will play the game of politics for all its worth. The unhappy north-south coalition may produce one compromise too many and then even the red scare will not be enough to save it. The Democratic Party really has no choice at all. If it accedes to southern demands, it will be admitting that it has failed as a liberal party. And if it does not stand by such issues as the civil liberties proposals, it will eventually he replaced by an organiza- tion which is willing to pay for progress. --Harriett Friedman It's About Time THE DAMNING of the Wagner-Murray-, Dingell Bill for health insurance is an- other example of how far behind the times social legislation can lag. This bill, if passed, would provide hospit- alization through federal and state appro- priations for some 40,000,000 people in the United States who could not otherwise afford proper medical care. It would provide a uni- tary system of hospitalization in which the talents of the medical profession and the technological facilities of science would be concentrated in readily available places in- stead of being scattered and unrelated.. A health measure providing for care in time of emergencies would give the com- mon man a security against dispair and charity. It would keep him from mortgaging his home when he is flat on his back. A pri- vate institution like the Blue Cross which has established a voluntary health insurance program throughout the nation and has gained the support of over 29,000,000 mem- bers is proof for necessary action on the part of Congress. As long as the strictures of the American Medical Association and the propaganda spreading of the National Physicians Com- mittee exert pressure against Federal en- croachment of the medical profession, action by Congress awaits the rise of popular demand. The fact that millions of people in the United States have voluntarily sought health insurance through the agencies of the Blue Cross is valid indication that the Wagner- Murray-Dingell Bill for compulsory health insurance was not manufactured in , the Kremlin as the National Physicians Com- mittee would have us believe. All the technological advances of science do not mean much if they cannot be applied to human needs. They will not be unless all the available talent in the country is re- cruited to develop methods for applying. science to human problems. --Jim Marchewka -a MATTER OF FACT: Real China Policy. WASHINGTON WIRE.0 Niceties of Resentm-lent Hy JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP BEHIND the singularly fraudu- lent China aid program pre- pared for the Congress, there lies a remarkable Administration, or at least a George C. Marshall, policy toward China. That policy is being concealed, and its exis- tence will undoubtedly be denied. But the realthinking about China, oan which the present phony aid program was formulated, may be bluntly summarized as follows: To rescue the regime of Gen- eralissimo Chiang Kai-shek will require a very great investment. Its rescue will also be, at best, a very messy business.hThe United States has neither the cash nor the stomach to do the job. There are several points to con- sider in connection with this China policy. First of all, there is the nature of. its inception. The man chiefly responsible for it is Secretary of State George C. Mar- shall. Marshall is one of the two or three undeniably great Amer- icans. Yet every one who knows the problem privately admits (and it may as well be said publicly) that Secretary Marshall is deep- ly influenced in his views on China by a sharp personal dis- taste for the Generalissimo. This waseborn inethe period of his friend General Joseph Stilwell's bitter wranglings with Chiang Kai-chek. It was in-- tensified in the course of Sec- retary Marshall's nonsensical mission to marry the unmar- riageable, Chiang and the Com- munists. This distaste is no doubt the subconscious root of Marshall's wholly negative ap - proach to the China problem. A few, like General Albert C. Wedemeyer, have been construc- tive in their advice on China. But these are exceptions in the government. The great majority of policy makers have not even attempted to understand our own past tragic errors: such as the gi- gantic investment in opening the Burma Road, which cost us East China, undermined the National Government, and was officially declared worthless as a military highway a fortnight after the fanfare of the opening; or the American role in the successive political crises of the Chiang gov- ernment, i which our decisive in- fuence was so ignorantly and stu- p dly used that we twice promot- ed the triumph of anti-American elements. Because this sort of criminal folly did not produce good re- sults in China, it is inferred that wisdom must also fail to produce good results. The whole study of the great majority of those mak- ing China policy has been not what can be done, but the diffi- culties of doing anything at all. And the impossibility of doing anything about China has been proved by grossly, but again no doubt unconsciously, misleading documentation. -The simplest example of this crudely false documentation is the talk you hear, all over the government, of the "billions" We have already "wasted" on China since the war ended. Our major tangible gifts to China have in fact been Army. sur- plus officially valued at $700 million, but actually consider- ed not worth the trouble of bringing home, and an Export- Import Bank loan on which we frankly welched. Our only real- ly major post-war contribution to China was the intangible of transport for the Chinese arm- ies to Manchuria. Here are no "billions." This does not mean that our present China policy cannot be defended. The Communists may conceivably be unable to hold Chinavafter they get it. It will be undeniably expensive and messy to rescue Chiang Kai-shek's gov- ernment. What is utterly inde- fensible, however, is the hypoc- risy of our China policy's pre- sentation, and the concealment of its inherent risks. These risks admittedly include geographical link-up for the Soviets with the embryo Communist movements of southeast Asia, prevention of Jap- anese trade with the China coast; and creation of a situation in which the 80 million Japanese must either join the Soviet-Asi- atic sphere to live, or be perment- ly subsidized by the United States at unimaginable cost. These risks, it must be realized, add up to a clear possibility of Far Eastern war in a few years. (copyright, 1948, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) By IRVING JAFFE WASHINGTON, Feb. 20-Harry S. Tru- man, the man, never comes through to us from the words of his prepared speeches, which he reads wit;i a conviction that, after nearly three years in the presidency, still sounds forced. But last night, in addition to his prepared speech, he tossed out some off-the-cuff re- marks at a Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner. At one point, he said, "I honestly can't trust these reactionaries." It was a completely sincere utterance. Mr. Truman has discovered that, in all truth, he can't trust "these reactionaries." The Re- publican leaders in Congress have tripped him up at every occasion. Their eyes focused steadily on that magic month, November 1948, they have been above no possible means to discredit him. The men who were his, Senate colleagues, the men with whom good- natured Harry Truman joked and chatted on Capitol Hill, now permit not even con- siderations of honesty and good faith to in- BOOKS OTHER VOICES, OTHER Random House, $2.75. ROOMS- THIS IS Truman Capote's first novel. Only twenty-three, Capote has already gain- ed a considerable reputation from his deli- cate andthaunting short stories, and from the curious pictures of himself that have appeared in Life anti many of the reviews. Other Rooms, Other Voices is typically Ca- poteian. It is the story of Joel, a rather beautiful and sensitive twelve-year-old boy who, after his mother's death, leaves New Orleans to live with his father and step- mother in a remote and nebulous area of the Louisiana hinterland. Here he finds himself a member of a strange and decay- ing household which includes Amy, his step- mother, whom he discovers killing a blue- jay with a poker, Randolph, her hairless pink-skinned homosexual cousin, and his father, a mute and paralyzed wreck living in a bed filled with red tennis balls. The hot summer landscape is filled with charm- ladei hermits, copperheead snakes, sinister yellow cats, amorous midgets, a hundred and nine-year-old Negro and his giraffe-necked daughter whose throat was slit from ear to ear on her wedding night. It is in this half- real world that Joel reaches adolescence, frustrated by a red-haired tomboy, con- verted to homosexuality by the evil Ran- dolph. Although hailed as a prophet of trends to come in American fiction, Capote has created nothing essentially new in Other Rooms, Other Voices. Like so many con- temporary novels, it is a case history. The perversities, the pathological characters, all the psychological abnormalities of Faulk- ner and Caldwell are present. But what distinguishes Capote is the beauty of his prose. His horrors are presented in writ- ing as exquisite as a Chinese lacquer box, in sick-sweet colors of lilac, cloud-pink, lemon and orange. There is throughout the book an elusiveness and delicate magical quality that reminds one of the paintings of the contemporary Magic Realists. Critical readers may consider Other Voices, Other Rooms the same old stuff in a new and more skillfully wrapped box. Yet in an exceptionally artistic and finely rea- lized novel form, more effective than a doz- en clinical reports, Capote makes a definite contribution to the litei ature on homosex- uality, a subject, which in the light of re- cent studies, notably the Kinsey Report, has taken on new and broader significance. -Hal Raphael NTpw Rooks at Gneral Librarv terfere withtheir all-absorbing aim of bring- ing about his political slaughter. Mr. Truman is deeply resentful. He feels, justifiably, that he has not even re- ceived the respectful treatment of honest political enmity. But the measure of the man is not whe- ther his disillusioning experience with the Republican leaders has made him resentful because of the personal anguish it has caus- ed him. It is rather whether that experi- ence has taught him the broader lesson of what manner of men can be trusted and which men are not to be trusted, from the standpoint of his responsibility as President to further the interests of all the people. The measure of Mr. Truman's growth is whether lie has been brought to see the es- sentially destructive part "these reaction- aries" play on the larger stage of national government - not merely with respect to Harry Truman's personal fortunes. Unfortunately there is much evidence to support the doubts about Mr. Truman that provoke these questions. How can you help but wonder whether the President's judg- ment of men has matured when, on the one hand, his loyalty to his coterie of petty- minded White House and Administration aides who are often getting him as well as themselves into trouble, never wavers, and when, on the other hand, he persists in his campaign to rid the government of some of its best men? How can you help but wonder, when he demotes Marriner Eccles from the chairmanship of the Federal Reserve Board, when he drops James Landis as Civil Aero- nautics Board chief, when he gives walking papers to Surgeon-General Dr. Thomas Parran? Is it that here too, though for far dif- ferent reasons, Mr. Truman is resentful ... not because these are not good men to have in government, but precisely because they are too good? Perhaps, whether he understands it or not, the President re- sents them because they are essentially better men than he, and he is reducing the level of his government administrators down to his own, which is a mediocre level. There are many reasons for which you can trust men, and many reasons why you can distrust them. In Mr. Truman's case the reasons, and not the mere fact of trust or distrust, constitute the crucial measure. At Kellogg Audiforiuin THE LADY VANISHES, with Michael Redgrave, Margaret .Lockwood, and Paul Lukas. Directed by Alfred Hitchcock. MINCE ANY ATTEMPT at summarizing a Hitchcock plot is forever bedeviled by a host of characters and incidents, I shall confine my remarks to the more general- and less bewildering - aspects of this film. In the first place, then, "The Lady Van-. ishes" got off to a rather slow start until the first corpse was produced, after which episode things became progressively more lively and, shall we say, breathtaking. After the initial shock Hitchcock was in control of the situation throughout, piling one anx- ious scene upon another with utter abandon. Acting is always a minor consideration in a picture of this type, but Mr. Redgrave and Miss Lockwood seem to have handled their stock roles with more concern than these assignments are generally given and Dame May Whitty lent a steady supporting hand. What with its suspense and laughs, "The Lady Vanishes" makes the evening pass quickly and it is regrettable that the print which is being shown on campus is marred in spots by a partially damaged sound THE GENERAL OUTLOOK of art in Amer- ica today is fairly well pictured in the Rackham exhibit of the works of six art school professors. Varying from the strictly abstract work of Don Prendergast and Chet LaMore, through the expressionistic renderings of Paul Jones, to the more realistic paintings of Frank Cassandra, the show reveals the lack of orig- inality existing in much of current art. Yet, each of the exhibitors shows a finely devel- oped style, as well as excellent technique, to produce good paintings. Most striking picture in the entire ex- hibit is Jones' "The 125th Street Vendor." Painted in bold blues, the picture reveals the artists ability to use color and lines in a strong and free manner to create his effect. Jones' boogie-woogie paintings, on the other hand, fail to capture the spirit of their subjects, resulting in rather sterile work. Richard Wilt's painting is as interesting for its social commentaries-mainly local-- as for his style which combines realism with semi-abstract. The result is an impression of the type of thing in which a figure is drawn onto a photographed head. One of Dewey is especially prominent in a clever painting entitled, "Holt It, Mr. Candidate." The abstract art of Chet LaMore reveals little in originality, some of his best seeming to resemble that of Joan Miro. "Necro- mancer II" utilizes triangular shapes in an excellent composition of grays and greens to convey an uplifting feeling. In another style, LaMore's "Equilibrium in Red" attains fine shape relationships and depth. Don Prendergast's work exhibits great vitality in color and line, yet one has the feeling in most of his paintings that they are composed of disconnected design units, which cuts the rhythmic effect. An exam- ple of this is his "Angry Flowers" which just misses being a successful design be- cause of its incomplete rhythm. "Bedside Companions at 3 A.M." seems to overcome this defect with excellent design and com- position. Both the mural cartoons and paintings of Frank Cassara are good in composition and lighting but lack originality. N-ice contrasts in texture and lighting are shown in the photographs by David Reider. His "Big Top Tapestry" is especially fine in these respects. Too often, however, his work becomes over- symmetrical in line. Thehealthiest aspect of the entire show is the fair amount of variety in style shown by most of the artists. This would seem to reveal their continued interest in experi- mentation, which breeds hope for new de- velopments and improvements in our art. -Joan Katz IN EUROPE, there is a terrible tension in the air. You are caught at once by the haunting fear that comes only when Com- munism is beating at the gates, when the rich in your country grow flagrantly richer and the poor grow desperately poorer, and hatred steals along the streets. -Christian Science Monitor. (Continued from Page 2) Lecture: "Legal Standards for In- dividual and Official Acts," by Burke Shartel, Professor of Law. 4:15 p.m., Mon., Feb. 23, Rm. 120, Hutchins Hall. The public is in- vited. Academic Notices' Botany 1 Make-up final exami- nation: Wed., Feb. 25, 3 p.m., Rm. 1139 Natural Science Bldg. Economics 51, 52, 53, 54: Make- up Final Examination, Thurs., Feb. 26, 3 p.m., 102 Economics Bldg. Each student who appears for this examination must have received permission from his instructor. Editorial Council Seminar: The heads of all departments on the editorial staff of the Flint Jour- nal will demonstrate to journalism students how they operate as an editorial council at 3 p.m., Rm. E, Haven Hall, Mon., Feb. 23. Cof- fee hour, 4 p.m. in the News Room. Concerts Student Recital: Dolores DiLor- enzo, Pianist, will present a pro- gram of compositions by Franck, Beethoven, Mozart, and Harold Triggs, at 8:30 p.m., Tues., Feb. 24, Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Given in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music, the recital will be open to the general public. Miss DiLorenzo is a pupil of Joseph Brinkman. Student Recital: Noah Knep- per, oboist, will present a program at 8:30 p.m., Wed., Feb. 25, Rack- ham Assembly Hall, in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music in Music Education. He will be assis- ted by Merrill Wilson, playing the French horn, and David Hildinger and Jean Farquharson, pianists. Mr. Knepper is a pupil of William Fitch, and his recital is open. to the public. Events Today Radio Program: 9:15-9:45 a.m., WJR, Hymns of Freedom. Donald Plott, Music Director; James Schi- avone, Narrator. Graduate Outing Club: Hiking or skating. Meet at 2:30 at north- west entrance to Rackham Bldg. U. of M. Hot Record Society: 3 p.m., Michigan League Ballroom. All music lovers welcome. Wesleyan Guild: 5:30 p.m. Sup- per, followed by a program on "Time, Talents and Possessions," with Dr. James Brett Kenna, as speaker. Roger Williams Guild: 6 p.m. Cost supper, followed by Dr. Wil- liam Frankena speaking on "The Christian Attitude Toward Man. Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stu- dent Club: 4 p.m. Bible Discus- sion Hour. 5:30 p.m., Supper meet- ing. Address by Mr. Alfred T. Wil- son, president of the International Laymen's League. Unitarian Student Group: 6:30 p.m. Dr. Rensis Likert, head of Survey Research Center will speak on the subject, "Survey. Research -a Tool of Democracy." Lutheran Student Association: 5:30 p.m., Zion Lutheran Parish Hall. 6 p.m., Supper Meeting. Speaker: Miss Ruth Wicks, Assis- tant General Secretary of the Na- tional Lutheran Council, Student Service Commission. Congregational-Disciples Guild: 6 p.m. Supper, Memorial Christian Church. Dr. Preston Slosson will speak on "Christianity Demands Liberalism." Coming Events RadioProgram: Mon., Feb. 23, 2:30-2:45 p.m., WKAR. The Medi- cal Series. Dr. M. T. Fliegelman; 2:45-2:55 p.m., WKAR. The Stu- dent Questions Religion, John W. Craig; 5:45-6 p.m., WPAG. The News and You, Preston W. Slosson. Association of University of Michigan Scientists: Mon., Feb. 23, 8 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. Dr. W. Kincaid will speak on the subject, "Science and Public Policy." The public is invited. Alpha Chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota, National Professional Music ART DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 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 views expressed in letters are those of the wrters only. Letters of more than 300 words are shortened, printed or omitted at the discretion of the edi- torial director. * * *s Clear Advertising To the Editor: Y ESTERDAY I went to a lecturej by Mr. Robert Kenny, who was advertised as speaking on "The Bill of Rights Today". Unfortun- ately, what promised to be an extremely interesting lecture by an authority on the subject turned out to be a thirty minute plea for members in the Lawyers Guild and a ten minute dissertation on Mr. Kenny's part in the recent Holly- wood Screen Writers fiasco before the Senate. Now all this may have been of great importance to the law stud- ents, but I don't think it fair for them to display placards promin- ently around campus inviting the student body to a lectufe on one subject or who is simply not in- terested enough to speak on it. The Lawyers Guild is not the only outfit on campus who is guilty of this sort of thing. It has happened many times in the past, and I for one am tired of getting fcoled. I suggest that when a speaker is presented in the future more effort be made in advertis- ing his subject. --Mike Zass. ADA 'Line' To the Editar: PLAUDITS to Mr. Blumrosen for his fearless espousal of the contraversial issue of the St. Law- rence Seaway project and our present tariff policy as the central points of a rejuvenated liberal movement. I should like to offer him my unqualified support on these issues (be he for or against, for high or for low) provided he will join me in my fight to th death against the Louisiana Purchase and the Annexation of Texas. Mr. Blumrosen and I could per- haps best expedite the final achiv- ement of our mutal goals by the formation of Tea Time Folk Club. I hasten to assure him that this would be a club for TALKING ONLY. At the same time this will be a vigorous, dynamic organiza- tion where other liberals like Mr. Blumrosen can find truly active support. If wandering liberals will only subscribe to our simple basic principles certainly they will find Fraternity for Women, will pre- sent a Contemporary American Musicale, Wed., Feb. 25, 8:30 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Pro- gram: Vocal solos and instru- mental solos and ensembles, and will include work of Barber, Cres- ton, and Schuman. The public is invited. Gilbert and Sullivan: Full re- hearsal of the chorus and cast, 7 p.m., Michigan League, Mon., Feb. 23. Films on Public Opinion-World Trade, auspices of the Audio-Visu- al Education Center, Kellogg Aud- itorium, 4:15 p.m., Tues., Feb. 24. -"Does It Matter What You Think?" and "Round Trip-The U.S.A. in World Trade." Astronomy Club: Mon., Feb. 23, 7:30 p.m., University Observatory. Le Cercle Francais: Tues., Feb. 24, 8 p.m., Rm. 316, Michigan Union. Prof. E. B. Ham, of the Romance Language Department, will present and comment upon a film entitled "Toward Tomor- row in France." French songs and social games. New members ac- cepted. Sociedad Hispanica: Conversa- tion group, Mon., Feb. 23, Inter- national Center, 3 p.m. Armenian Students' Association: Mon., Feb. 23, 7:30 p.m., Rm. 304 Michigan Union. Students of Ar- menian parentage are invited. United World Federalist Public- ity Committee: Mon., Feb. 23, 3rd Floor, Michigan Union, 7:30 p.m. Women of the University Fac- ulty: Meet Tues .,Feb. 24,.8 p.m., Women's Athletic Bldg. Intercollegiate Zionist Federa- tion of America: Tues., Feb. 24, 8 p.m., Hillel Foundation. Dr. Max Weinreb, of Tel-Aviv, will speak on the subject, "Inside Palestine." Dancing and refreshments. All welcome. Faculty Women's Club: Play Reading Section, Tues., Feb. 24, 1:45 p.m., Mary B. Henderson Room, Michigan League. BARNABY ... I fhnttnhf vnitr rntivin-writ ff-jur- IL e A; f. I'" 1 if I I I 144 mnv he-Iva frs v;c;f fha i 1 0 Parhnnc wmir nnrenk knew 1 I ( 11-1- 0-1-L --.. I