PAGE FUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY TrURDA', OCTOBE1Rv 14, 1944 Slight Contradiction IT ALL DEPENDS really, on which news- paper you read. If you picked up the New York Times, you got the original text of a Tom Dewey cam- paign speech, complete with flag waving, platitudes, jingles and "What's good for the country." But if you picked up the Detroit News, you got an equally reliable quote, but also an indication of what kind of legislation you can expect, come a Republican Con- gress in 1949. While Dewey was attacking the record of President Truman in the last Congress in the Times story, saying that Truman failed to get along with that 80th Congress, he slipped from his high pinnacle, just far enough to give what might be considered a definite statement on issues: the Tom Dewey 12 point labor program . In supporting all that is "good for the country," Dewey says, "We will press for- ward in solving the problems of race rela- tions and discrimination in the great Amer- ican tradition of freedom and equality and thus deepen the unity of our people." Nice statement if you like the flag waving type, but it didn't mean a thing as far as other Republicans were concerned. Down in Nashville, Tennessee, Sen. Robert A. Taft, on the pretext of helping the GOP Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are, written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: LEON JAROFF candidate's campaign, was making another speech at almost the same time, according to the news story from the United Press. Said Taft, "There is a basic agreement between Southern Democrats and the Re- publican Party." Taft said that President Truman's Demo- cratic party follows the "prdgram of Henry Wallace and the Political Action Committee of the CIO." The Republican Senate leader hinted that his party would go easier on the South than the Democrats where civil rights are concerned, according to the U.P. story. This then is the Republican situation. If Mr. Dewey really means to attempt a civil rights program, then he should not be talking about President Truman's inability to get response from the 80th Congress. There is no indication that were a similar Congress' to go back, the Republican candi- date would even have the support of his own party. With Senator Taft's statement as evidence, there is every reason to believe that he would not. This argument concerning ability to get along with Congress reminds me of a story a local Democratic candidate is telling these days. The Republicans, he says, couldn't get along with Truman last year, so they say Truman is inefficient. In Michigan, the Re- publican governor could not get along with the Republican State Legislature. Does this mean that Michigan's governor is inefficient too, or is it that no one can get along with a Republican legislature? Don McNeil. MATTER OF FACT: Dewey, Taft, Congress By JOSEPH ALSOP CINCINNATI-What is to be the relation- ship between President Thomas E. Dewey and the Eighty-First Congress? This question is already more urgent than the outcome of the election, which is now vir- tually a foregone conclusion. And it is appro- priate to ask the question in this city, the personal stronghold of- Senator Robert A. Taft, whose strong character and superior ability make him the natural leader of the more conservative Congressional Republi- cans. Not long ago, Taft's opposite number in the House of Representatives, Speaker Jo- seph W. Martin, passed through Ohio on a campaign speaking trip. He told friends here that he would stand for no dictation from the White House, even when its oc- cupant was Republican. Similarly, Mar- tin's henchman, the great tax-cutter, chairman of the ways and means commit- tee Harold Knutson, has intimated to Re- publican insiders that President Dewey may need taking down a peg or two. In fact, however, Martin and the other members of the junta are simply old-line professional party regulars. Another such was the late Senator Joseph E. Robinson, Senate Democratic leader until 1937. And although Robinson was an infinitely bigger man than Martin, the first thing Robinson did every morning until he died, after putting in his false teeth, was to swallow his principles. If Robinson stuck with Roose- velt in order to be regular, one can expect, Martin to stick with Dewey. F ANY ONE fights Dewey, it will be Taft, who always refuses to compromise be- liefs. Taft has already openly expressed his uneasiness at the line taken by the Dewey- Warren team. And unless the new President briskly abandons the progressive, interna- tionalist brand of Republicanism he is offer- ing the country in this election, it is hard to see how a Taft-Dewey conflict can be avoided. They would like to agree but they cannot. These facts, in turn, confer a curious special interest. on the gubernatorial con- test here in Ohio. The Republican incum- bent, Governor Thomas Herbert, a slightly -. -. New Chorale S OMETHING NEW under the University's choral sun will get underway on a per- manent basis at 7 p.m. today. The Arts Chorale, organized by literary college students, is holding its first "work meeting" in Rm. 506 Burton Memorial Tower. Aspiring engineers, educators, archi- tects-in fact, students from every school except music school, will be welcome tonight. The movement for the Chorale started when several non-music students told May- nard Klein, associate professor of choral music and director of University choirs, that they missed singing in choirs. They felt that choral music filled a defi- nite need in their lives, they said, but there was no time in their schedules for five- day-a-week choirs. They asked him to conduct a group, meeting only once a week, for non-music students only. Many a doctor, lawyer or teacher plays in a civic orchestra or sings in a church choir. According to Prof. Klein, some of the world's greatest choral organizations are leisure-time projects. improved version of Senator John W. Bricker, is rather breathlessly defending his seat against former Goveror Frank Lausche. Lausche may not be an ideal administra- tor but he is a man of obvious integrity, high purpose and appealing personal color. If Lausche defeats Herbert, he will immediately become a formidable potential candidate for the Senatorship when Taft must run again in 1950. And Lausche's defeating Herbert is far from impossible. * * * TWO FACTORS favor Lausche, aside from the contrast between himself and his opponent. First, Ohio has long had the habit of voting for governors and presidents of opposite parties. In 1924, for instance, while giving Calvin Coolidge a majority of nearly 600,000 over John W. Davis, Ohio chose a Democratic governor, Vic Donahey, by a majority of nearly 200,000. Second, while Bricker was governor, he made it much easier for Ohioans to indulge in their habitual ticket-splitting. In order to protect himself from Roosevelt landslides, he passed a law by which Ohioans now actually vote for national and state candi- dates-for president and for governor, for instance-on two separate ballots. Dewey is strong in Ohio and his strength will still help Herbert. But for the reasons noted, the best local experts estimate that Dewey's Ohio coat-tails will have to be at least 350,- 000 votes long-a really whopping majority- to send Herbert back to Columbus. Lausche is hinting that if he wins the governorship, he will still hesitate to oppose 'raft for the Senate. Bricker is the man he says he wants to beat. Yet Lausche is highly unpredictable. And the mere pos- sibility of such strong opposition is bound to influence Senator Taft's choice of a role in the next Congress. Taft is reported to have decided already to relinquish his Labor Committee Chairman- ship. He is known to be considering taking one of the vacant places on the Foreign Re- lations Committee but probably only in the uncertain event that Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg becomes Secretary of State in- stead- of John Foster Dulles. But this still leaves the question of Taft and the Senate leadership entirely open. As of now, Taft seems to want the leadership. He may leave the floor leadership of the Senate Repub- licans to Senator Kenneth Wherry of Ne- braska. But the chances are that he will seek for himself either the formal title of Majority Leader or the permanent chair- manship of the Senate Republican Policy Committee, which comes to the same thing. On the other hand, if Taft has to think about facing Lausche in 1950, he may pre- fer to retain the freedom of action of an individual Senator. And thus this Ohio gubernatorial election may end by influ- encing the Dewey-Congress relationships more than any of the hotly disputed Senatorial contests. For if Taft does not plunge into the fray against Dewey, no one will. Copyright, 1948, New York Herald Tribune Inc.) d1 I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Vinson. Plan By SAMUEL GRAFTON SOME OF THE poking that has been going on against President Truman because of his abortive plan to send Chief Justice Vinson on a mission to Stalin reminds me, for the first time in this election, of the campaigns against President Roosevelt. There is the same kind of hectoring, the same unrestrained belaboring. "Truman's Blunder" at once became a proper noun, like Pike's Peak, and within six or eight hours even the quotation marks were dropped from arond the words. But it has not been juridically deter- mined that the move was a blunder. To call it that, without qualifications, is only to dress up a value judgment as if it were an established fact. I must confess I find myself rather as- tonished by the violence of these attacks. The chief complaint seems to be that Mr. Truman did not discuss his plan with the Republicans, and that therefore he endan- gered the structure of bipartisan harmony on foreign policy. Well, that may be serious, but from the tone of some of these state- ments one might readily imagine that the world's greatest danger at this moment lies in friction between the Republicans and the Democrats, and not between Russia and the West. Whether Mr. Truman's plan would have worked or not, it was at least directed against the larger friction; and whatever he was shooting with, he was at least aiming for the target. But here we get into very curious ground, for the objectors do not only object to the fact that Mr. Truman did not. discuss his proposed move with the Republicans; they object to the move itself. The formula in which the objection is stated is that to have sent Chief Justice Vinson to Stalin would have been a unilateral action, a uni- lateral peace move, sidetracking the United Nations, which is, at the present moment, considering the Berlin crisis. * * * ONE MIGHT ASSUME, from the tone and nature of this argument, that there is something inherently bad, something that is almost a violation of international law, in a unilateral peace move. The exact opposite happens to be the case. The United Nations was not set up to oppose unilateral peace moves; it makes no objection to such moves; its charter is shot through with solemn ad- jurations to all contending parties to try to settleidisputesaby themselves; the Security Council is even required by the charter to try to prod quarreling nations into making independent peace efforts before it is allowed to act. In point of fact, the U.N., as a body, would have been delighted if the Truman move had come off, and overjoyed if it had succeeded, for one small reason, among many, because such an outcome would have definitely saved the U.N. It seems to me that some of those who are making the most noise about preserv- ing bipartisan harmony on foreign policy are hurting it rather than helping it. For bipartisan unity on foreign policy was es- tablished, just before the San Francisco Conference on the U.N. charter, for one purpose only, to preserve the peace of the world. To find that a peace move, how- ever dim and weak, is now considered, in some way, to be a blow at bipartisan har- mony gives one the feeling that we are beginning to put last things first, and that perhaps the time has come for us to concentrate a little more of our attention on the goal, and a little less on the in- strument. Copyright, 1948, New York Post Corporation) Face Facts WHEN A LARGE ENOUGH group of stu- dents see and use a straighter line be- tween two points than is provided for by existing cement paths on the campus, the University very wisely makes paths. An unsensible ruling just can't be main- tained. For years Michigan students have been making the Friday of Thanksgiving week a holiday. The time is long overdue for the administration to yield to stronger forces and proclaim a LEGAL four day holiday. As it is now, that Friday and Saturday are frustrating experiences. Half of us go home but a damper is put on our holiday feelings by speculating on whether or not that English prof. will REALLY give us triple cuts as threatened. The other half go to school but usually get bolts because "there aren't enough students present to continue with the work." Nothing is taught that Friday and nothing is learned. Thanksgiving is by and large a day of family gatherings, and it just plain hurts to think that while you are eating that "fancy" meal in the dorm your family ancd relatives are having their coffee while they exchange family gossip, after having done justice to a real Thanksgiving dinner. If the University realizes the idiocy of the present situation and manages to rectify it in time, they will be rewarded with 20,000 sincere and fond prayers of thanks. -Abby Franklin. r f 4- Z&/~ t k FL N"p 11/ P ! C oe p - 1 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). THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1948 VOL. LIX, No. 21 Notices College of Literature, Science and the Arts, Schools of Education, Forestry, Music, and Public Health: Students who received marks of I, X, or "no report" at the close of their last semester or summer ses- sion of attendance will receive a grade of E in the course unless this work is made up by October 20. Students wishing an extension of time beyond this date in order to make up this work should file a pe- tition addressed to the appropriate official in this school with Rm. 4 University Hall where it will be transmitted. Placement Registration: Uni- versity Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information will hold its annual registration for Feb., June and Aug. graduates, graduate students and staff mem- bers who wish to register. Those interested in TEACHING will meet at 4:10 p.m. Mon., Oct. 18; and those interested in GEN- ERAL or NON-TEACHING at 4:10 p.m. Tues., Oct. 19. Both meetings will be held in Rackham Lecture Hall. The Michigan Civil Service Commission announces an exami- nation for the position of Vision Consultant III. Closing date for application, Oct. 27. For further information, call at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason 1hal. L. i. r University Lecture: Professor Kurt Weitzmann, of the Depart- ment of Art and Archaeology of Princeton University and of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, will lecture on the sub- ject, "The Imperial Art of Con- stantinople" (illustrated), at 4:15 p.m., Mon., Oct. 18, Rackham Am- phitheatre; auspices of the De- partment of Fine Arts. The pub- lic is invited. Academic Notices Seminar in Applied Mathemat- ics: Thurs., Oct. 14, 4 p.m., 247 W.E. Prof. E. H. Rothe speaks on Expansions of Functions and In- tegral Equations. Concerts Marian Anderson, Contralto, with Franz Rupp at the piano, will be heard in the opening concert of the third annual Extra Concert Series, Thursday evening, October 14, at 8:30, in Hill Auditorium. Miss Anderson will sing a pro- gram of songs and arias by Han- del, Caladara, Legrenzi, Schubert, Ponchielli, Griffes, Quilter; and will close with a group of Negro spirituals. A limited number of tickets are still available at the offices of the University Musical Society in Bur- ton Memorial Tower. On the eve- ning of the concert tickets may be purchased at the Hill Auditorium box office after 7 o'clock. Events Today School of Business Administra- tion: Faculty - Student Coffee Hour, 3-5 p.m., League Ballroom. La p'tite causette: p.m., Grill Room, League. NSA Committee: Michigan Union. today 3:30 Michigan 4:00 p.m., Ceiling Zero International Center weekly tea, 4:30-6 p.m. Hostesses: Mrs. Ar- thur L. Brandon and Mrs. H. L. Pickerill. Kappa Phi Rushing Dinner and regular meeting for all Methodist and Methodist preference women. 5:30 p.m., Methodist Church. Call 6881 for reservations. Delta Epsilon Pi: Hellenic Fra- ternity. Students of Greek de- scenttand Phil-Hellenes are urged to attend an important meeting, 7 p.m., Michigan League. Com- mittee chairmen for the Mid-West Thanksgiving Convention will present their reports on the Social Program. Arts Chorale, Lit College Choir, 7 p.m., Rm. 506, Burton Tower. Alpha Phi Omega, Service Fra- ternity. Regular meeting for members and prospective pledges, Michigan League, 7 p.m. (not at the Union as previously an- nounced). U. of M. Sailing Club: Meet- ing, 7 p.m., Rm. 311 W. Engineer- ing Bldg. The Gilbert and Sullivan Socie- ty will hold a full rehearsal for chorus and principals, 7:15 p.m., Michigan League. Room will be posted. Association of Interns and Medical Students: First meeting of 1948-49, 1:30 p.m., Michigan Union, Room 3-A. Business meet- ing, and symposium by students who visited Europe this summer. Young Democrats Meeting: 7:30 p.m., Michigan Union. Forestry Club: Meeting a£ 7:30 p.m., Room 2042, Natural Science Bldg. All members of Forestry School and friends invited. University of Michigan Young Republicans will have as guest speaker, Owen Cleary, Chairman, Michigan Liquor Control Commis- sion, at their meeting at Michigan League. He will report on the progress of the State Administra- tion for the past 2 years. New, members are invited. Coming Events German Coffee Hour: Friday, 3:00-4:30 p.m. Michigan League Coke Bar. All interested students and faculty members are invited. Business Administration: Mr. Charles Fleckenstein, Manager Administration Department, Standard Accident Insurance Co., Detroit office, and national direc- tor of the research program of National Office Management As- sociation, will speak on research ThegDaily accords its readers the privilege of submitting letters for publication in this column. Subject4 to space limitations,tthergeneral 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 con- densing letters. * * * . New Blood To the Editor: B. S. BROWN, in a special dis- patch to The Daily on Sun- day stated: "Michigan coeds at the Purdue game couldn't be dis- tinguished from other female fans." Putting it discreetly: Good intentions hindered objectivity. Putting it frankly: How blind can you get? We spent two hours before the game riding around the Purdue campus in an open convertible, carefully observing feminine pul- chritude-and it sure was abun- dant! The contrast for us Michigand- ers was tremendous, though a little disheartening when we re- called what we had to return to. Now we know where the four out of five who are beautiful go. We tried to persuade a few of the comelier specimens to transfer, but with little success. Then we thought of transferring ourselves, but after the 40-0 rout, that was out of the question. However, af- ter some cogitation, we finally came up with the ideal solution. ,Let's have an en masse ex- change of entire female student bodies, the Purdue girls coming to Ann Arbor, and the Michigan "girls" going down to West La- fayette. The Purdue males may not like this, but at least it would probably improve their football team. -Robert Carneiro. Bruce Cook. Bernard Abrams. * * * Call for Review To the Editor: WE WANT TO condemn as the ultimate in narrow-minded reaction the use which has recent- ly been made of the regent's rule prohibiting political activity on the campus outside of organized clubs. That such an interpretation as the recent one by Dean Walter can logically be made is proof enough that the regents' stand is absolutely untenable in the kind of country ours is supposed to be. The fundamental bases of the Constitution and the system it es- tablishes are freedom of speech and freedom of peaceable assem- blage. That a so-called great uni- versity should be among the first to abridge these rights is terrifi- cally alarming to us. When we firsthcame to the University of Michigan we expected to find it devoted intellectually and emo- tionally to man's constant, al- though faltering, quest for truth. We thought that we would find a place where every viewpoint would be allowed-rather, enthusiastical- ly encouraged - and open and forthright discussion of the problems of the day would be an unquestioned principle upon which the university would stand or fall. We have learned, however, to expect much less than this. The University of Michigan has ordered a halt to the debates which centered around the Wal- lace Progressive's table on the Diagonal last week. We can imag- ine only one possible reason why such gatherings should be banned. And that is if they become unruly or destructive. They were anything but that. They were orderly and enthusiastic and the debaters (largely unrehearsed) were even logical at times. They discussed the draft and Soviet-American re- lations. Southern whites and northern whites and Negroes to- gether discussed segregation and other aspects of the race prob- lems as calmly and as intelligently f _. , Letters to the Editor .. as we have ever heard them dis cussed. They argued disarmamen and the American plan for a Atomic Development Authorit and the Russian counter-propos als. Being largely spontaneous, w call it the most healthy and dem ocratic sign we have ever see And we agree with Dean Walte and the regents in the larger def inition of the word: this was pol itics. And we hold that politic are the stuff of which democrac is made. The authorities do no agree. The present university phi losophy seems to be analogous t that once applied to sex educa tion: that it should be taught i the gutters rather than in schools Today's college students must b protected from the horrible trut of life. We call for the regents to re consider their action of last spring We want to see this university i the forefront of the struggle t make our democracy work at time when it must work or fal by the way. It is unbearable t see it instead sabotaging every ef fort in that direction. -Allen B. Robertson. Robert H. Bradley. Wayne Garrett, Jr. Ulises M. Lopez. SCHOOLS, colleges, universitie research foundations, tan other endowed institutions all ove the United States are in a critica state financially. Their costs o operation have been rising an their income from investments an gifts has not kept pace . . . As anybody why this crisis has arise and he will promptly answer tha it is due to taxes. Although th country is prosperous, our syste of income taxation bears down s heavily upon large incomes, an provides such scant credit for do nations whether out of large in comes or small ones, that th sources of philanthropy are dry ing up. The resultant crisis is mor acute and more ominous th most people realize. Many a colleg president, as he looks into the fu ture, sees no alternative to a snow balling deficit or government sub ventions . . . Yet there is an al ternative . . . a revision of th income-tax laws to provide mor substantial and logical credits fo philanthropic contributions. Some students of taxation esti mate that if the personal and cor porate income tax schedules wer revised so as to permit deductio of contributions to educationa and scientific institutions, no from one's taxable income, bu from one's tax itself, up to sa five percent of one's income; thi would unlock the needed funds. -Harper's Magazine. Fifty-Ninth Year r 1 Edited and managed by students the University of Michigan under th authority of the Board in Control a Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harriett Friedman ... Managing Edit Dick~ Maloy ...............City Edito Naomi Stern.........Editorial Directo Allegra Pasqualetti ....Associate Edito Arthur Higbee ........Associate Edito Harold Jackson ......Associate Edi Murray Grant.......Sports Edit Bud Weidenthal. .Associate Sports E Bev Bussey ......Sports Feature Write Audrey Buttery........Women's Edito Business Staff Richard Hait .......Business Manage Jean Leonard ....Advertising Manage William Culman .....Finance Manage Cole Christian ....Circulation Manage Bess Hayes.... ...........Libraria: Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusivel entitled to the use for republicatio of all news dispatches credited to ito otherwise credited to this newspapea All rights of republication of all othe matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at An: Arbor, Michigan, as second-class ma matter. Subscription during the regula school year by carrier, $5.00, by mat $6.00. Member Associated Collegiate Press 1948-49 projects being developed in of- fice standards and procedures, Room 165, Bus. Ad., Fri., Oct. 15, 8 a.m. All persons interested are invited. Hawaii Club: Meeting, 7 p.m., Fri., Oct. 15, Rm. 3A Michigan Union. I.Z.F.A. Wiener Roast, Sun., Oct. 17, Island. Meet at W.A.B. 2:30 p.m. (Hillel in case of rain). Nominal fee. For reservations contact Sam Hack, 1120 Forest * Ave., Phone 9431, by Thursday. Loking Back BARNABY 30 YEARS AGO TODAY: Pres. Wilson rejected the German peace 1 Maybe he's not home- 1 hate bearing bad F Hello, O'Malley. Hello, little boy. I'm I m-