FTHE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, APRI 15, 1949 Cditi'i'itIkte (Editor's Note is written by Managing Editor (Edito rNoten.written by Managing Editor Harrett Friedman.) PI E STUDENT LEGISLATURE'S resolu- tion asking the Student Affairs Com- mittee to bar from recognition all groups with discriminatory clauses is altogether praiseworthy. There are a great number of people who will protest that it was not the SL's job, that this is not yet the time for action, and that the resolution will lead to action against all present fraternities. But what can be better timing than the moment when fraternities themselves, through IFC and President Bruce Lock- woody have pointed to their own discrim- inatory practices and called for their re- moval. And what could be better than the stu- dents themselves taking action, rather than faculty or administration. Of course many fraternity men insist that they should be left to work it out gradually for themselves. They plan a Big 9 meeting and pressure on national groups. But fraternity discrimination history has shown that this action will be inade- quate. Various fraternity men have for years tried within their groups to get majority action on the question. Almost invariably they have failed. Whenever something has been done it has resulted from strong out- side prodding or action. Take the current investigations. Frater- nity discrimination is not being discussed because the fraternities themselves have brought it up. The IFC investigation here would never have taken place had it not been for several outsiders who threatened to do the work themselves if IFC refused. IFC obliged with a survey, for which they deserve high credit. BUT FRATERNITIES will have little suc- cess. if they go to the nationals for changes with their present ammunition. Many of these groups have southern chap- ters, and filibustering tactics in such cases are well known, to say nothing of the strong fraternal ties which would deter splitting of north and south chapters. It's all very well for fraternity men to indulge in wishful thinking about the ef- fectiveness of pleading with nationals. As long as some fraternity men actively believe in discrimination, as long as there are south- ern chapters, a strong tendency to status quo and little enthusiasm for change ap- parent even here except when someone gives a strong push-more direct action is needed. The real pressure on nationals to re- move discriminatory clauses is the threat that colleges all over the country will force fraternities off campus unless there are changes. National IFC took up the discrimination question last fall because of cases like Am- herst where a college ruling forced fra- ternities to remove clauses. If students on this campus bar discrim- inatory clauses, and other colleges follow suit, fraternity men will have the best argu- Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff ind represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: PHIL DAWSON ment they could desire for forcing nationals into action. Fraternities say they want an end to clauses-well, here's a handle for them-in sane and wise action in line with the edu- cational purposes of this University. * * * BUT THERE are others who argue that discrimination is a problem of educa- tion-the practice, not just the writing must be changed-and forcing clause re- moval won't help the bigger problem.- Of course it's the practice of discrimina- tion which must be changed. But will it ever be 'changed so long as clauses remain? Can any fraternity man be educated to living with others than his own kind if he is enclosed by legal barriers? If the clauses are removed now, fairly soon some fraternity here will actually live tolerance by taking men from one of the original barred groups. And when that happens, the rest will follow. It's a very old argument. Should we not have FEPC or anti-lynch laws until people no longer feel like lynching or discriminat- ing in employing others? Was Branch Rickey wrong to fight discrimination by hiring the first Negro in major league baseball, al- though it had never been done before and "people weren't ready for it?" * * * . SOME FRATERNITY men are eager to invite others into their houses, but are barred by clauses. And those who defend the clauses because they are prejudiced themselves can only learn by seeing the barred groups in their houses during rush- ing, by meeting them on the same grounds as others. At present most fraternity men are care- fully cloistered by their second year. I won- der how the "slow-education" people plan to change their ideas. Without quibbling about carts and horses, it seems clear that the written bar must be removed to aid long range active tolerance. And there is a strong argument for action now in the fraternity-independent cleav- age. Certainly, independents would be more tolerant and appreciative of fraternity life if they felt that any man would join on his merit, rather than because of his relig- ious and color background. * * * FRATERNITIES are not privileged groups -and the sooner they realize it the better. They exist on a college campus with other students who have taken steps to remove discrimination from their lives. These other students do not want dis- crimination, anywhere at their school, and their representatives so voted at the SL meeting Wednesday night. Rather than protesting, fraternity men should welcome the fact that students them- selves are taking these steps. Through the SL and student members of the SAC, ac- tion can be taken without administrative decree from above. Now the students can clean up their own mess. Later, they may be forced in the form of a real ultimatum in which students have no say. EXISTENCE of discrimination in any form at an institution of higher education is disgraceful. The fraternity men themselves know it, but their planned efforts are inade- quate to solve the problem. It is up to the members of the Student Affairs Committee to settle with their own consciences if they do not live up to the real meaning of education by acting to remove discrimination on this campus. PD RATHER BE RIGHT: Crop Props By SAMUEL GRAFTON THERE IS GOING TO BE a fantastic hull- abaloo over the Administration's new farm price support program. Some of our leading viewers-with-alarm will really let go now, and before they get through crit- icizing Mr. Truman on this one, he is going to be indistinguishable from Karl Marx, Atlantic Pact or no Atlantic Pact. It is important for city people to un- derstand at least some of the issues in- volved, or they are in danger of losing the debate without ever having heard what the resolution was. The one feature of the new program which is of most interest to town and city characters is that which proposes to keep down the retail prices of certain relatively perishable commodities, such as meat, milk, vegetables and eggs, by paying the farmer direct subsidies to keep him prosperous, while allowing market prices to find their own level, however low. There is another way to do it-the way we're using now-and that is for the gov- ernment to protect the farmer by keeping all prices up, wholesale and retail. This the government does by going to the farm or to the market and buying-and buying -and buying. This helps the farmer, sure enough, but, unfortunately, it pegs prices at a point at which consumption (namely, eating) falls off. There are many reasons for opposition to subsidies. One is the argument that sub- sidies involve too much government control over the farmer, because the government, as a normal part of a subsidy program, tries to steer the farmer into producing foods that are badly needed and in short supply. Those who offer this argument would be more persuasive if they were against all govern- ment props, but they're not-they want the money, without the planning. Another reason for opposition is that the government does not intend to make full subsidy payments to large commercial farms; it plans to reserve most of the benefits for the family farm, and this, naturally, makes for a certain amount of difference of opinion and friction in the farm field. The argument you are most likely to hear is this-that low market prices, under a subsidy plan, are deceiving, that "you pay the high prices anyway" in the form of the taxes that give the farmer his subsidy. Ah-but at least you get the low market prices. Under the present scheme of artifi- cial purchases, you pay the taxes to sup- port government buying-and you pay, the high prices, too. It's certainly better to pay once than twice. Some observers have been wondering, as a matter of fact, how long consumers would "stand for" paying the taxes that are used for propping schemes to keep their own food prices up. I don't think they're going to stand for it very long. Weare going back to a Roosevelt idea, one that should never have been dropped. (Copyright, 1949, New York Post Corporation) Current. Movies At the'Michigan .e MY DEAR SECRETARY, with Kirk Doug- las, Laraine Day, and Keenan Wynn. ALTHOUGH THE PICTURE has some very funny flashes here and there, the general evidence of wasted talent is appall- ing. In other words, it's fairly entertaining- but it might have been substantially better. It's the same old trouble as always: a good cast is handcuffed by a mediocre story. Here we have best-selling author Kirk Douglas chasing his private secretary-Lar- aine Day-a tale so weak that the part of Keenan Wynn appears to have been thrown in as a last minute effort to give the thing some zip. The result of this inept culinary proce- dure is a rather tasteless left-over stew. Douglas-who has finally achieved justly due acting prominence in the forthcoming "Champion"-is responsible for what small unity the picture has. Through alternating reels of tortured comedy and marital trag- edy he succeeds, at least, in being consistent- ly indifferent to unlikely and unhappy plot situations. Laraine Day, although more attractive than the set furnishings, serves no more use- ful function. She, as the object of the boss' affection, is a beautiful picture of girlish vigor-but a graven image would serve al- most as well. -Bob White. *,* * At the State . . MY OWN TRUE LOVE, with Phyllis Cal- vert and Melvyn Douglas. IF YOU ATTEND the theatre at all you know what happens when a person de- cides to . . . "go to Cornwall for a few days on the seashore." 'Oh come now . . . Yes you do. You may have seen it happen to Redgrave or Mason or Olivier. Now you can find out how Melvyn Douglas does it. It's all here, kiddies. War problems, Love C ,, use "a'p t a'" 4A A& "That Was A Right Nice Dove That Truman Sent Me" Letters to the Editor- i DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) I tunities available under the Merit1 System for college graduates. In addition to the general infor- mation herein contained, an ex- amination for the position of the Junior Case Worker to be held May 7 is announced. Applications must be sendt in immediately. , For further information and ap- pointments concerning the above,t call Ext. 371, or stop in the office, 3528 Administration Bldg. Lectures' The Thomas M. Cooley Lectures, third series; auspices of the Law School and the William W. Cook Endowment. General subject, "Some Problems of Equity." First lecture, "Coming into Equity with Uxlclean Hands -1." Zechariah Chafee, Jr., Langdell Professor of Law, Harvard University. 4:15 p.m., Mon., April 18, 120 Hutchins Hall. University Lecture: "The Poetry, of Wallace Stevens." Dr. J. V. Cunningham, University of Chi- cago; auspices of the Department of English Language and Litera- 'ure., 4; pm Fri.. April 15, Rackham Amphitheatre. University Lecture: "Vergil and ' Augustus." Erik Sjogvist, Director of the Swedish Academy at Rome and Visiting Professor at Prince- ton University; auspices of the Department of Classics. 4:15 p.m., Mon., April 18, Rackham Amphi- theatre. University Lecture: "Heredity and Modern Life" (illustrated). Dr. Laurence H. Snyder, Dean of the Graduate School, University of Oklahoma; auspices of the Laboratory of Vertebrate Biology. 4:15 p.m., Mon., April 18, Kellogg Auditorium. Economics Lecture: "Bias in Communication." Dr. Harold A. Innis, Professor and Head of the Department of Political Economy, University of Toronto; auspices of the Department of Economics. Tues., April 19, 4:15 p.m., Rack- ham Amphitheatre. The public is invited. American Chemical Society Lee- ure: Dr. Henry Eyring, Dean of the Graduate School, University of Utah. "Application of Modern Re- action Rate Theory to Living Sys- tems." Fri., April 15, 8 p.m., 1300 Chemistry Bldg. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Ed-1 win Lavern Cooper, Zoology; the- sis: "Age and Growth of Brook Trout, Salvelinus fontinalis (Mitchill), in Michigan," Fri., April 15, 3091 Natural Science Bldg., 9 a.m. Chairman, K. F. Lag-, ler. Astronomical Seminar: Fri., April 15, 4:15 p.m., Observatory. Speaker: Dr. Evry Schatzman, In- stit ut d'Astrophysique, Paris, Subject: Wave Phenomena in the Solar Chromosphere and Corona." Concerts Good Friday Choral Service, 4:15 p.m., Hill Auditorium. Uni- versity of Michigan Choir, May- nard Klein, Conductor, Marilyn Mason, Organist, and Philip Duey, Narrator. Compositions by Pales- trina, Bach, and Heinrich Schutz. Open to the public without charge. Student Recital: Evelyn Wohl- gemuth, Mezzo-soprano, will pre- sent a program at 8 p.m., Mon., April 18, Hussey Room, Michigan League, as partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music. Miss Wohlge- muth is a pupil of Arthur Hackett. Program: Works by Handel, Lawes, Horn, Debussy, Barber, and Schumann. Open to the public. Events Today "The Synchroton," Dr. H. R. Crane, 8 p.m., Rackham Amphi- theatre. Sponsored by Detroit Section IRE and Student Branch AIEE-IRE. Alpha Lambda Delta: All women who are eligible for membership in Alpha Lambda Delta and who wish to be initiated this spring must register in the Women's League lobby today from 2-5 p.m. Dues are $3.50. Pins, if desired, may also be ordered at this time -plain pins $3.5$, jeweled pins $5.00. Hawaii Club: Meeting, Rm. 3-G, Michigan Union. Modern Poetry Club: Meeting, 8 p.m., West Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. The Daily accords its readers the privilege of submitting letters for publication in this column. Subject to space limitations, the general pl- lcy 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- toryscharacter 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. * * * Trials Debate To the Editor: WE WOULD LIKE to call the attention of the University community to a meeting which we believe to be one of the most im- portant that has been held on campus this year. The Lawyers Guild and AVC are jointly spon- soring a discussion of the Com- munist trials now being held in New York. The meeting will take place at the Michigan Union this afternoon at 4:15 p.m. and the public is invited. Problems raised by the trial are among the most urgent that the American people are now facing. The repercussions will be felt in our international relations, as well as in our attitude toward personal liberties of our citizens. The out- come of the trial will have a pro- found effect on our system of gov- ernment. The speakers are three persons Morton, Pa., will be in 1523 E. Engineering, Tues., April 19, to interview Mechanical, Civil, Elec- trical, and Aeronautical Engineers. There will also be a speaker from Piasecki, 7:30 p.m., Mon., April 18, Rm. 3G, Union. The Annual French Play: Le Cercle Francis will present "La Belle Aventure," a comedy in 3 acts by de Caillavet, de Flers and Rey, Tues., April 19, 8 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Tickets on sale at the box office, 2 to 5:30 p.m., April 16 and 18; 2 to 8 p.m., April 19. Free admission to mem- bers of the club (except tax) upon presentation of their membership cards. The Inter-Guild Council will not meet this Sunday as formerly planned due to the fact that this is Easter Sunday. Committee to End Discrimina- tion, subcommittee of the Inter- Racial Association, meeting is postponed until Mon., April 18, 4 p.m., League. Congregational Disciples Guild: Meet at the Guild House at 5:20 a.m. or at the Geddes entrance of the Arboretum at 5:30 a.m. for an Easter Sunrise Service. Wesleyan Guild: Easter Sunrise Service on Top o' the World. Meet at the Wesley Foundation, 5:30 a.m. Breakfast follows the Serv- ice. Reserve for transportation and breakfast by calling 6881. With a whine of petulant anger, the Illinois State Legislature has decreed an investigation of "any and all subversive activities which may now exist" at two of Chicago's notable educational institutions, the University of Chicago and Roosevelt College. Although the inquiry is presum- ably aimed at determining ,the ex- tent to which students there have become "indoctrinated with Com- munistic and other subversive the- ories contrary to our free system of representative government," loca liberals, mindful of the witch- hunting tactics of other legisla- tive bodies, anticipate a smear campaign against both schools. What gives special interest tc the investigation, scheduled to start any day now, is the manner in which it was touched off. On last March 1, the Illinois Senate Judiciary Committee con. vened in Springfield, the state capital, to consider six bills pro- posed by the Seditious Activities Committee, named two years ago and headed by Representative Paul Broyles, a downstate Repub- lican and former American Le- gion officer, who is sincere, naive, and plodding. These bills, the result of con- siderable probing and nosing about by ex-FBI men, are intend- ed, among other things, to outlaw the Communist Party in Illinois, force teachers as well as public officials to take non-Communist oaths and make membership in al- leged Communist-front groupsa felony punishable by a fine and jail sentence. -New Republic well-qualified to discuss the ques- tion in all its aspects; legal, po- litical, and historical. Professor Paul Kauper teaches constitution- al law at the law school here. Professor Preston Slosson is a member of the history depart- ment, formerly a radio news ocm- mentator, and the Democratic candidate of Congress from this district in the 1948 election. Mr. Ernest Goodman is a well-known civil liberties lawyer, Progressive Party candidate for attorney-gen- eral for Michigan in the 1948 election, and a member of one of the law firms handling the de- fense in the trial of the Commu- nists. The afternoon promises to be an interesting and informative one. We hope that youir readers will take advantage of it. -Leo Weiss, Chairman, Lawyers Guild. -John Sloss, Chairman, AVC. ** * Eating Club To the Editor: THE STUDENTS of Michigan are at long last going to get a break.aThree weeks ago, a tre- mendous blow was dealt which has slightly dented Ann Arbor's iron bound grip on runner up po- sition to Washington, D.C. as the highest cost of living area in the United States. This bit of prog- ress was perpetrated by a group of students who got together with Doug Miller, cafeteria proprietor and arrived at the conclusion that the status quo is a crime, against any student's pocket book and that it is possible to alleviate and remedy the situation by offering high quality food at rock bottom prices. Thus, one of the main planks of a proposed eating club was nailed into place. Not only will this group eat the best food at the lowest prices but one of the great features of the organization lies in the fact that the food, management and administrative policies will be for- mulated by the students and car- ried out by Mr. Miller. There will be a committee elected by the club to handle any gripes or sug- gestions as to the quality, quan- tity and diversity of food, that might come up. What could be better? For those luxury loving indivi- duals who don't get up for break- fast, or itinerants who don't eat during the week-end for various reasons, special rates have been designed. The price of a meal ticket cover- ing the full nineteen meals is $9.50; no breakfasts, '$8.50; no breakfasts, no week-ends, $6.95. -Cal Klyman. lA~d!w EU1 4 Association Coffee Hour: p.m., Lane Hall. 4:30 i Cannon Fire IME INTENSE mental strain of turning out wise legislation is beginning to tell on our Congress, to the extent that some of its august members are speaking like can- didates for a psychopathic ward. Doubtless inspired by a constituent's suggestion that we wage war by flying radio-phonographs, Representative Can- non, (Dem., Mo.), head of the House Mili- tary Affairs Committee, stole the show when he declared, "Let us equip soldiers from other nations and let them send their boys into the holocausts instead of send- ing our own boys." This is sweet music to the ears of senti- mental mothers and draft-age Americans, but it's incomprehensible and unrealistic music nevertheless. It is like telling Western Europeans, whose fate has recently been cemented to Amer- ica's by the North Atlantic Pact, "Now that we're legally allied, one of our country's leaders, supposedly speaking for a sizeable segment of American opinion, thinks that you should take our material, which it didn't cost any blood to produce, and send your men out onto the field to fight our war." It might be that Cannon has not heard of the North Atlantic Treaty, or that he just wanted to let off some of his feelings of anxiety for a draft age son, and thought Congress was a good place to speak. But leaks do occur from the floor of Congress, and Europeans will unfortunately be quite surprised, and none too pleased when they learn that the United States, which has recently promised to stand by them through thick and thin, has concluded that the best way toward Western solidarity is giving the Europeans all the arms they want, with the understanding that our peo- ple will not be discommoded should there be a war with Russia. -Fran Ivick. Committee for Civil Rights: Open meeting, 7:30 p.m., Un- ion. Elections and discussion of the case, "The Trenton Six." AVC forum on Communist trials: Professors Kauper, and Slosson, and attorney Ernest Goodman. 4:15 p.m., Rm. 3A Union. German Coffee Hour: 3-30 p.m., Russian Tea Room, League. Stu- dents and faculty members invit- ed. Hillel Foundation UJA Central Committee: Meeting for all cap- tains, 4:15 p.m., Rm. 3N, Union. Canterbury Club: 12-3 p.m. Three-Hour Service with addresses by Rev. John Burt. No tea at 4 p.m. "The German Requiem" by Brahms will be sung by the mem- bers of the Schola Cantorum at 8 p.m. Coming Events Applicants for the Ph.D. in Eng- lish are invited to a meeting, 4:30 p.m., Mon., April 18, 2235 Angell Hall. Requirements for the Doc- tor's Degree in English will be dis- cussed. Economics Club: Dr. Harold A. Innis,-Professor and Head of the department of political economy at the University of Toronto, will speak on "The Impact of Technol- ogy on Public Opinion in the United States," Mon., April 18, 7:45 p.m., Rackham Amphithea- tre. The public is invited. Interviews: Mr. Walter W. Bishop, Director of Industrial Re- lations, Isiasecki Helicopter Corp. Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harriett Friedman ....Managing Editor Dick Maloy...............City Editor Naomi Stern.......Editorial Directo Allegra Pasqualetti .. .Associate Editor Al Blumrosen ........Associate Editor Leon Jaroff.........Associate Editor Robert C. White ......Associate Editor B. S. Brown...........Sports Editor Bud Weidenthal ..Associate Sports Ed. Bev Bussey ....Sports Feature Writer Audrey Buttery.......Women's Editor Mary Ann Harris Asso. Women's Editor Bess Hayest. ..................LlbrariaD Business Staff Richard Hait .......Business Manager Jean Leonard ....Advertising Manager William Culman .... Finance Manage! Cole Christian ...Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclueiAy entitled to the use for republiow&tion of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by ma. $6.00. + C. At Lydia Mendelssohn .*. THE WELL-DIGGER'S DAUGHTER, with Raimu, Fernandel and Charpin RAIMU AS THE shrewd French workman, Fernandel as his good-hearted, not too bright assistant, Charpin as Raimu's foil- dignity, and above all, proud. His pride in his work is surpassed only by pride in his family. It is an altogether humane pride and when his daughter's wrong- doing threatens it, it is his love for her which redeems it. "The Well-Digger's Daughter" is filled with delightful incidents sometimes rather BARNABY FAby, !rcevedtU I did act in haste. And if one H Through some oversight, your mother 11 I