THF MICHIGAN DAILY Tm1TtDAv. A vI1. 1 M4 sn __ i --- a as vaa a aa a "A aral/ foal 107J ,. Need for Revision THE UNIVERSITY'S financial situation is perilous enough in itself; one of the reasons for it is even more serious: the need for constitutional revision in the State ,overnment. Money for the University has to come from a State administration already ham- trung by the diversion of sales tax funds o local units. And this diversion is due not o much to local avarice as to real need for noney. The sales tax is not an equitable tax in he first place; it is aimed indiscriminately it the consumer, with minimum regard to his ability to pay. But the tax is written into he State Constitution in the form of an amendment, and it has been the main source >f funds for the State. Now that the tax has lost much of its usefulness to the government in Lansing, it is clear that the tax system of the State needs to be completely re-examined, not 3ditorials published in The Michigan Daily re written by members of The Daily staff nd represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: FRAN VICK just bolstered here and there. The schools and colleges will continue to suffer under the present system of taxation. They also suffer from lack of coordination. Three major institutions-Michigan State, Wayne, and this University - are forced to compete for prestige and money. All three are losers in the competition. Public education in the state also suffers. It is one reason Michigan has not developed small colleges and junior colleges as much as it might, or as much as it needs. Real coordination is an obvious need in the state educational system. It must be accomplished by constitutional revision, for the governing boards of the state in- stitutions are constitutional bodies. Possibly a single Board of Education for the whole state would meet the need. There are disadvantages to this idea, but it would have the major advantage of keeping squabbles within the educational system and not allowing them to spill over into state politics. Constitutional revision, like any other legislation, is not a panacea. But it is ap- parently the only way to provide more than a palliative for the ills that now infect state education in Michigan. -Phil Dawson. . ... + ART it + r Irk! X VISIT to the North Gallery of Alumni Memorial Hall should provide any stu- lent with enough supernatural power to get aim through finals. On display is part of the Alexander Col- ection of Masks, a recent gift to the Mu- eum of Anthropology from Dr. John Alex- .nder, a surgeon at University Hospital. Representing the Far East, Africa, Cen- tral and North America, and Europe, the masks and effigies show considerable var- iation in 'style and material. "Each group of masks mirrors the cultural standings and creative abilities of the peoples who made them," Prof. Agla-Oglu of the an- thropology department explains in a post- ed summary of the exhibit. However, despite explanations which ac- ompany each mask, the show is more im- )ortant for an artistic appreciation than a ultural one. The .masks have been hung 'ery effectively against gaily colored card- oard rectangles, which certainly enhances he aesthetic enjoyment of the show. How- ver, in this end, masks of a similar nature r similar origin have been separated, so hat one must study each work separately nd mentally tie things together. Of particular interest from an artistic standpoint are the African masks and effigies. One in the form of a male figure, constructed in metal and wood, is typical of the primitive art which has inspired many modern artists. African king and queen masks carved in black wood and painted with red and white designs are very effective, as is the symmet- rical representation of a goat's head with its curved horns and diamond-shaped eyes. The most technically expert of the African pieces, however, is a smoothly finished, deft- ly carved mask encased with a fine modern American copper mask by the sculptor, Sar- gent Johnson. Among masks used in the drama, a Bal- inese "buffoon" type and a Japanese demoh effigy are highly expressive. Both are ex- quisitely carved in wood. Interesting also are a number of works from Ceylon. These are elaborately carved and painted with serpent and flower de- signs. A Mexican mask representing a wild boar with tufts of the animal's hair like- wise increases the very decorative air of the I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Gadgets By SAMUEL GRAFTON SENATOR FLANDERS, of Vermont, has come up with two, count them, two. gadgets for saving the Western World from Communism. One of them, which has been proposed in various forms before, is that the twelve nations of the Atlantic Pact shall constitute themselves into what might be called "a little UN" inside the big UN. It would be a very cozy sort of little UN, without a veto. And here, I think, the gadget approach to foreign affairs reaches its zen- ith. If the world disagrees, the answer is simple: cut up the world. Slice the orange. It is easy to have a UN without a veto: all you have to do is set up a UN without a UN. But the proposal also has a serious and dangerous side, not to be countered with mere gagging. Such an organization would be, in effect, a Western court, rendering judgment on non-members; and of this court the Atlantic Pact would tend to be- come the military arm. The coloration of the Atlantic Pact, as a regional organiza- tion within the UN, would be completely washed out. The veto may be injurious to the UN, but the effort to veto the veto really destroys the UN. That's the trouble with so many new gadgets; you kick one up and try to use it, and it nips your finger. Senator Flanders' second gadget is a pro- posal that "private agencies" shall organize airplane flights over Russia, to drop propa- ganda leaflets-"thought bombs." The Sen- ator believes that such planes would prob- ably be shot down, hundreds of volunteer fliers could be found from among fugitives from the Soviet orbit. But somehow I don't believe that waves of unscheduled airplane flights over Russia at this time would add much to the world's chances of solving its immediate problems. The trouble is that Senator Flanders is trying too hard. He is, like so many others, hunting for a gadget that will magically resolve our difficulties; he seeks the bril- liant stroke, the novel move. But sometimes it -isn't necessary to be too brilliant to do pretty well in life; it isn't really essential to invent a brand-new mousetrap to make a success. Sometimes just running a pretty good sort of grocery store will do it, too. I think, for example, that the Atlantic Pact nations could develop their relation- ship further. They might, in a body, and without forming a fractional organization within the UN, propose a conference wtih Russia for the settlement of some of the stickier outstanding problems. Such a move would not at all conflict with the Charter of the UN, which simply dotes on negotiation. Another advantage is that news of this move would come very quickly to the ears of all the Russian people with- out the need for suicide flights. This suggestion is not at all ingenious. But it is none the less valid for lacking in brilliance. Another suggestion for the At- lantic Pact nations, and one which also is not in the least inspired, would be for them to set up a political bureau to take note of fascist developments in our world. It is not necessary, as I say, to advance ideas that nobody has ever thought of be- fore. Just simple, even trite notions that trend toward peace and liberty, will do. In politics one does not have to be original; one just has to be for meritorious and promising things, and it is enough. I urge this approach upon those who are, perhaps, making the problem harder than it really is, in their quest for ingenious solutions. (Copyright, 1949, New York Post Corporation) show. -7.- - Xi - 4 (C tGRESSMA ~VE 1c15 M NV'CjS f AT \Xr;. q--0 p.-. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN1 -Joan Katz. MATTER OF FACT: Wire W ame In Letters to the Editor- By JOSEPH ALSOP WASHINGTON-It was only a little more than three years ago, in the winter of 1946, that Secretary of State James F. Byrnes made his monientous decision. Main- ly because the Soviets were threatening to take by force the Iranian province of Azer- baijan, Byrnes abandoned conciliation and adopted his famous policy of "patience and firmness." From that decision flowed all the great events of the intervening period. Now, three years later, it is reliably un- derstood that the American ambassador at Teheran, the able John Wiley, has for some time been reporting renewed danger of Soviet aggression against Iran. The Kremlin still wants the same province of Azerbaijan. Having watched the successive death throes of two of the Baltic states, Wiley may permit his all too vivid memories of the past to color his estimate of the present. Here in Washington, at least, there is rela- tively little fear of extreme Soviet measures at the moment. Yet the background situa- tion is none the less instructive and signifi- cant. Very briefly, an American mission has been helping to train the Iranian army for some time; and on February 1 this year, American arms purchased under an Amer- ican credit also began to arrive in Teheran. This American assistance to the Iranians has long been the subject of a thunderous Soviet campaign of propaganda and diplo- matic threats. Two main themes have been stressed by the Soviets. First, the American aid to the Iranian army has been ludicrously said to transform Iran into an "American base." Second, many references have been made to clause 6 of the Russo-Iranian treaty of 1921. This provides that the So- viets may invade Iran, if a third power attempts to use Iran as a base against Russia. Thus, by implication, the Soviets have openly menaced the aggression that Wiley fears. The Soviet Ambassador at Teheran, Sad- chikov, is pretty good at menaces, his chief diplomatic talent being to simulate apop- lexy. He has gone so far as to state that the presence of the Americans in Iran was a "dishonor," and to add that the Iranians' refusal to give the Soviets oil rights in Northern Iran was "intolerable." Concurrently the Red Army has also been atively a e in eating incidents along the Tudeh party the chance for a coup d'etat, before American arms could put the Iranian army on a footing of displeas- ing efficiency. The same motive appears to lie behind the subsequent intensifica- tion of threats and provocations on the border and elsewhere. All this must be contrasted, of course, with the possibility that the Russians may lift the Berlin blockade, long ago reported in this space. What is happening in Berlin and in Europe is happening of course only because Russian aggression has been met there with firmness. What is happening in Iran is happening, equally of course, only because the Soviets feel there is less re- sistance at this point. We can expect threats and dangers of aggression in Europe to begin again, when- ever the re-arming Soviets feel stronger than the West. There is no safety in weak- ness, even collective weakness. (Copyright, 1949, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) Looking Back 50 YEARS AGO: Five May Festival concerts in the spring will be held in University for three dollars. Single admissions are one dollar and res- ervations are 25 cents extra. A woman in Detroit who withheld her name donated a $10,000 gift to the Univer- sity to be added to other gifts until $35,000 was raised to finance a female professor- ship provided she didn't teach athletics. 30 YEARS AGO: Seniors in all the regalia of graduation turned out on the campus in the first senior exercises for the class of '19. Though the city water had cleared slightly since the storm last week, Ann Arbor health officials said that it was still contaminated and should be boiled before using. 20 YEARS AGO: Richard Haliburton, famed explorer and author, told The Daily that before he writes his next book he plans to spend two months as a full-fledged prisoner at famed Devil's Island, French Penal Colony in the Carib- bean Sea; and would spend several more months on the Island of Tobago, where Rob- inson Crusoe stayed, armed with a man Friday, a dog and a keg of nails. 10 YEARS AGO: (Continued from Page 2) Speed of Reading Course: There will be two sections. The first 100 students to attend at 3:00 will be in the first section; any additional students will attend the 4:00 ses- sion. Both sections will meet on Tuesday and Thursday in Room 140 Bus. Admin. Bldg. Any student that did not take a test Tuesday can arrange to take one Thursday. Doctoral Examination for Ly- man Walton Orr, Electrical Engi- neering; thesis: "A Study of the High Frequency Structure of Spectral Light Intensity Produced by Spark Excitation Using Elec- tron Multiplier Phototubes," Fri- day, April 22, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 2:15 p.m. Chairman, L. N. Holland. Concerts Student Recital: Wallace Behn- ke, Organist, will present a pro- gram of compositions by Bach, Samuel Wesley, Mendelssohn, Leach, James, and Vierne, at 8 Friday evening, April 22, in Hill Auditrium. Mr. Behnke is a pupil of Marilyn Mason, and presents the recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music. The general public is invited. MAY FESTIVAL: The fifty-' sixth annual May Festival of six concerts will take place in Hill Auditorium as follows: Thursday, May 5, 8:30; Friday, May 6,8:30; Saturday, May 7, 2:30 and 8:30; Sunday, May 8, at 2:30 and 8:30. the Philadelphia Orchestra will participate in all concerts. The University Choral Union will take part in two concerts, and the Fes- tival Youth Chorus is one pro- gram. Conductors will be Eugene Or- mandy, Alexander Hilsberg, Thor Johnson, and Marguerite Hood. Soloists will include Pia Tassi- nari and Shirley Russell, so- pranos; Gladys Swarthout, mez- zo-soprano; Tann Williams, con- tralto; Set Svanholm and Harold Haugh, tenors; Martial Singher, baritone; Erica Morini, violinist; Gregor Piatigorsky, Violoncellist; and Benno Moiseiwitsch, pianist. Prospectus giving detailed pro- grams and tickets for individual concerts may be obtained at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower.' Events Today American Ordnance Association Industrial Preparedness Meeting: The problems involved in convert- ing from peacetime to war produc- tion will be discussed by Mr. Clin- ton H. Harris, Vice President in charge of manufacturing and en- gineering for Argus Incorporated. The meeting will be held tonight in Room 301, West Engineering Annex, at 7:30 p.m. Members and their guests are invited. The meet- ing will be particularly interesting to those who intend to go on the field trip to Argus's plant the af- ternoon of April 26. Last day for A.S.M.E. Field Trip. For information, see Bulletin Board. open today from 4:00 to 4:45 in the Office of Student Affairs. Miss Nancy Richardson of American Friends Service Committee will be present. La p'tite causette meets today at 3:30 p.m. in the Michigan League. Graduate Student Council Meet- ing: tonight at 7:30, West Lecture Room, Rackham Bldg.; Dr. Trav- ers and Dr. Angell will discuss the Graduate Examination Program. Motion Picture: "The Baker's Wife," French film, presented by Art Cinema League, at 8:30 to- night, Fri., and Sat, at Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Box office opens at 2:00 p.m. today; phone 6300. American Ordnance Association: Meeting, tonight at 7:30, 301 W. Engineering Annex. Mr. Harris, Vice-President of Argus (Cam- eras), Inc., will speak on "Optical Fire Control Instruments and Conversion from Peace to War." Field trip, Tues., April 26, Tour of Argus plant. All persons must be at Argus main gate by 1:15 p.m. Student-Faculty hour: Today, 4-5 p.m., Grand Rapids Room, League, Germanic languages de- partment will be guests. Co-spon- sored by Assembly and Panhel as- sociations. International Center weekly tea for all foreign students and Ameri- can friends, 4:30-6 p.m., today. International Center. The Political Science Round Table will meet as scheduled to- night 7:30, Rackham Bldg. Gradu- ate students in the Department are expected to attend. Wives are invited. U. of M. Dames Drama Group: Final dress rehearsal for the sit, which will be presented at the Spring Dance by the U. of M. Dames Drama Group tonight at 8:00, Basement, 1472 University Terrace Apartments. Deutscher Verein: Meeting, tonight at 8:00, Union. Student participation program and popular German recordings. I.R.A.: General - membership meeting, tonight at 7:30, Union. Gilbert and Sullivan Society: Full chorus and principals re- hearsal today, League. Committee for Displaced Stu- dents: Meeting tonight at 7:30, Russian Tea Room, League. Spon- sorship and scholarship reports. U. of M. Rifle Club: Big Ten postal match, tonight at 7:00, ROTC range. Phi Eta Sigma: Meeting of all January initiates today at 4:30 p.m., Union. Coming Events Visitors' Night, Department of Astronomy-Friday, April 22, 8 to 10 p.m., in Angell Hall (fifth floor), for observation of Saturn and double stars. Dr. Dean B. Mc- Laughlin will give an illustrated talk on planets in Room 3017 An- gell Hall even though a cloudy sky may prevent observations with the telescope. Children must be The Daily accords its readers the Privilege of submitting letters for publication in this column. Subject to space limitations, the general 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. * * * What Type-Crusade? To the Editor: I NOTE WITH REGRET that once again we are to be treated to a demonstration. Yesterday a crusade left for Michigan State Capitol. It will "present it's views" on pending fair educational and employment practices legis- lation, plus a lick in opposition to the recently- introduced, single sentence, Detroit Free Press in- spired bill banning Communists as school teachers in Michigan. I had hoped that we on this campus had learned the folly of such escapades, and had come to the realization that effectiveness must be a large determinant in considering action. For recent edi- fication, we need only look to Illinois where a studenthmarch on Springfield to protest the Broyles anti-conformist bills resulted in an "investigation" of communist influence on the University of Chi- cago and Roosevelt College cam- puses. Can anyone suppose that this "Lansing Lobby" will achieve any more positive results? I can see no other merit than the simple duality of an alliterative.title, and this hardly sustains the venture. What this "march" will do is to provide rural Republicans with an opportunity to show their misin- formed constituents how they "courageously" resist pressures, es- pecially that of an "alien-minded student group." Perhaps if the half-dozen Communists on this canipus are lucky they'll even get an investigation. This will give them the limelight they desire, becloud other issues, and perhaps result in another Academic Free- dom Committee farce. There is no argument on the merits of the anti-discrimination measures. That should go without saying. But you just don't get ef- fective action this way. You get it, among other ways, by making your weight felt in elections, and where were many of the present lobbyists two weeks ago when there was a chance to impress the Republicans by giving Gover- nor Williams control of the ad- ministrative board, and by elect- ing a couple' of Regents. Now ask Martha Griffiths, Detroit Demo- crat and co-sponsor of the FEPC Bill, what some previously con- curring Republicans told her the day after election: "Martha, you might as well forget your bill, we saw the election returns." Finally do you think that the pseudo- liberals among these "lobbyists" want these bills passed? I doubt it. It would rob them of one of their points of agitation. -Robert Greene. 'Evidence' To the Editor: t AM REFERRING again to Mr. Darnell Roaten's "evidence" of the existence of a housing short- age. He says, "The pitiful be- ginnings that have been made show the inability of private enter- prise to supply our housing needs, even when new units are not un- der rent control . .." accompanied by adults. (Other Visitors' Nights during the second semester will be held May 6 and May 20.) German Coffee Hour: Fri., April 22, 3:00-4:30 p.m., Russian Tea Room, League. All students and faculty members invited. Wesleyan Guild Record Dance: Bring a dance record to the Wes- ley Lounge, 8:30 p.m., Fri., April 22. Reserve, for Senior Banquet on Mon., April 25, by calling 6881. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation: Friday evening services at 7:45 to be sponsored by Alpha Epsilon Phi Sorority. Fireside speaker will be Professor Charles L. Stevenson of the Philosophy Department. Barbour Scholarship Party on Friday, April 29, at 8:00 p.m. in East Conf. Room, Rackham Bldg. The only inability shown here is the inability of housing to com- pete with automobiles, washing machines and television sets on a free market. The American con- sumer is not willing to pay twice as much rent now as he did in 1939, BUT he is quite willing to lay out three or four times the cost of a 1939 radio for the cost of one of today's television sets. He is even willing to pay 10 cents for a nickel glass of beer. He is will- ing, in other words, to postpone the purchase of better (and more expensive) housing in #order that he may enjoy some of these other components of the "good life." To be brutally frank, the American consumer doesn't want better housing if it means giving up his new car and/or television set. Here is the greatest benefit which comes from living under a system of FREE enterprise: namely, the fact that if the consumer would rather have a car than a new apartment, then he is going to get his car, and the construction of apartments will Just have to wait until he gets around to want- ing new apartments. He is not forced to spend his money on better housing just because that's the only thing avaiable for him to spend it on, In other words, he spends his income more or less wherever he darn well pleases, and if the guy next door doesn't like, that's his tough luck. Now if all the people in this country who are cramped for housing space really wanted hous- ing worse than they want any other thing, the apartments and private homes would be going up so fast it would make your head swim. But evidently they don't want housing worse than any other thing. This is not to say that We wouldn't all like to live in better homes, or that there is no need at all for better housing. That would be folly. It merely says that when we are faced with the nec- essity of deciding between housing and automobiles, the majority of us right now are choosing auto- mobiles. I'm not opposed to public hous- ing per se, but I believe that is a matter for the individual states to control. If part of the money for the poorer states has to come from the richer states (via the federal government), all well and good; but let the states administer' the program to suit their own re- spective (and differing) needs. This country was founded on the principle that a central govern- ment is a necessary evil, and that principle is truer today than it was in 1789. --Harry McCreary. MIC1gatjDil tT IT SO HAPPENS ® It's the Weather Was It Pointed? .. A FRIEND of ours has been keeping a pretty close eye on her housemother the past few days. Seems she walked into the housemother's office the other day and be- fore she had a chance to even say hello, her housemother glared at her and burst out: "What's the penalty for third degree mur- der?" * * * Habit... W HAT WITH ALL the ballots to fill out, the current election has con- fused a good share of the electorate. But the best one we've heard-and we vouch for its truth-is about the coed who calm- ly presented the ballot puncher with her liquor card. * * * * Misunderstanding . . ONE OF OUR professors got quite a scare the other day about the contents of modern Sunday school curricula. His young son informed him that the class had been warned they'd be thrown in the furnace if they missed two Sundays in a row. Upon investigation, he found that the statement about attendance had been, "Any Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of , Student Publications. 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Entered at the Past Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mau matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $.00, by man, $6.00.1 UWF: Meeting, 4:15 today, Union. p.m., The NSA Travel Bureau will beI BARNABY I have no choice but to authorize my biography... I can't stand in the If I refused, I'd be doing you 1 Therefore, after considerable thought, and weighing of theI