DUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, APRIL 29,1949 N Army-Navy Feud THERE IS MUCH MORE than a personal feud involved in the announcement of John L. Sullivan's final resignation as Sec- retary of the Navy, as witnessed by age old Army and Navy rivalries. This intra-service friction, brought on by highly intensified publicity campaigns waged by both service units, is currently being blasted by Defense Secretary John- son. In his recent address to top service officials he pointed out that the only way to establish U.S. military security is through complete unification of the Army, Navy and Marine groups. Moreover, he frowned upon service at- tempts to outdo each other, both in produc- ing goods and in giving themselves more individual credit than they deserve in the winning of certain World War II decisions. Now the controversy seems to have flared anew. Sullivan's resignation is admittedly based on his belief that the Navy is not being given the "proper consideration" in American defense policy. He charged the new defense head with acting "drastically and arbitrarily" in the latter's move to cease construction of the Navy's 65,000-ton super-aircraft carrier, the U.S.S. United States, without proper Navy advice. Later he indignantly Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff nd represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: MARY STEIN maintained he was convinced such action means a "renewed effort to abolish the Marine Corps and transfer all Naval and Marine aviation elsewhere." Johnson countered the accusation with a statement of regret of Sullivan's charges, and intimated that his resignation repre- sented a renewal of this anti-service coop- eration sentiment. To a discerning public he appears well justified in his stand. Vari- ous senators echoed his feelings by claiming that a continued carrier production would mean encroaching upon the field of stra- tegic bombing, a field they feel belongs to the Air Force. Inquiries into the problem have already been asked by other Washington legislators. Some are concerned mainly with the per- sonal angle, but the majority are eager to get cold facts on all military activities that can be halted at no expense to the strength of America's defense. In the interests of military harmony, a distinct line should be drawn to show which functions belong to which service unit. An effort should also be made to keep a balance of power between the Army, Navy and Marines. And any field of military operations that is not totally necessary for full defensive power, or which leads to inter-service bick- erings, should be carefully checked for flaws by the Defense Department. Only by impartial arbitration then can recurrences of Johnson-Sullivan feuds be ironed out, and service units' cries of tres- passing be quieted. -Don Kotite. 0 Hoover Commission CLIMAXING 20 MONTHS of exhaustive work the Hoover Commission has now given Congress 18 sets of suggestions which it believes will save several billion dollars by eliminating many of the notoriously wasteful duplications which prevail in the executive branch of the federal govern- ment.. Congress established the twelve man commission on a bipartisan basis under the leadership of former President Hoover in June, 1947. These men, all with ex- perience in government, undertook what can probably be called the most formid- able attempt that has been made to reor- ganize the federal government. The immediate problem of the commission was to straighten out a maze of some 1800 different administrative units which now exist in the federal government. During the last 160 years so much red tape surround- ing the administrative agencies has grown up that the President is no longer in com- mand. The commission discovered that re- shqfling bureaus was not enough. They had to make provisions for eliminating over-laps and conflicts between depart- ments and agencies in order to make a concentration of policies possible. There are now some 40 or 50 administrative bu- reaus who have independent authority given to them by Congress. If the recommendations proposed by the commission are followed, a new and more powerful presidency will replace the exist- ing one whose power is hedged by so many restrictions. There will be a two-thirds cut in the 65 departments, administrations, boards and commissions now reporting directly to the President, under the watchful eye of the White House staff secretary. Scores of appointments now requiring Senate confirmation will rest with the ex- ecutive alone. Many cabinet-level commit- tees now set up by Congress will become appointees of the President. The National Security Council will be moved into the President's office to shape policy under presidential control. The National Security Resources Board, top planning body for military and indus- trial mobilization will become part of the White House and its members will be ap- pointed by the President. Cabinet offices, including a new depart- ment of education and public welfare, will take over most of the agencies that are now independent. The Secretaries of the Army, Navy and Air Force will be reduced to undersecretaries and the Secretary of Defense will be given more authority. The Civil Service Commission will be re- vised so that it can choose persons suitable for government service, but will leave their final selection up to the department con- cerned. A new performance budget for each de- partment, based on functions, will replace the present obsolete one based on services. An accountant general will be set ub under the Secretary of the Treasury to work with the present comptroller general, who is a functionary of Congress. The Coast Guard and eight outside agen- cies dealing with rail, sea, air and highway transportationwould be brought into the department of commerce. There are many more noteworthy recom- mendations too numerous to mention, but the trend is clear-and the commission knows what it is doing. The problem is not new. Every President since Taft has asked Congress for author- ity to initiate the reorganization of the government. But never before has Con- gress been the one to start such a proceed- ing and give it the resources to do the job. In the past, proposals to Congress for reorganizing the many bureaus and inde- pendent agencies have always aroused their opposition thus destroying the possibility of constructive action. Let us hope this time, that these or- ganizations will overlook their petty losses of independence and that Congress will realize the importance of reorganizing the executive and military establishments to increase the efficiency and economy of our government. Our security depends on it. -Joan Willen-. NSA Delegates THIRTY-SIX ambitious students, who were defeated in the recent election of Student Legislature members, still have a way of serving the campus. They may apply for positions as Uni- versity of Michigan delegate or alternate to the National Student Association along with other students. The fourteen students who are chosen will represent the campus at regional and national meetings of the organization. The NSA-now in its third year-is the only effective link between all students on more than 250 American campuses. Its work is that of being of service to students. It promotes legislation of inter- est to students, it provides direct services to financially-handicapped students, and it. serves as a nationwide educational force in behalf of students everywhere. To continue this list of projects is not necessary. NSA takes up the projects students want it to take up. The problem is to select intelligent, capable students to represent all campuses. They will plan and direct the work NSA will do for the coming year. The power of these delegates is greater than that of Student Legislature members because the vast network of NSA can be brought to bear on issues too large to be tackled by the representative group of an individual campus. The SL cabinet will choose delegates and alternates next week. In the meantime, tests will be given to interested students to de- termine the general qualifications of can- didates. They must understand the func- tioning of student government on campus, have a basic knowledge of how NSA works, and be versed in Roberts Rules of Parlia- mentary Procedure. Data on all the questions is available through members of NSA. The examination will be given at 7 p.m. today, in Rm. 35, Angell Hall. -Craig H. Wilson. I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Forgive Franco? By SAMUEL GRAFTON LET'S NOT TURN the current session of the General Assembly into a world con- ference to forgive Franco. That will be the effect if the General Assembly passes a Brazilian motion to rescind the UN's 1946 recommendation for the withdrawal of ambassadors from Madrid. It will mean that, in this critical year, the delegates to the UN will have traveled from the ends of the earth to pin a rose on Franco. As they used to say in wartime: Is it worth the trip? Looking ahead, three or four years ago, I never foresaw this as one of the activities of the UN. Pardon me for pointing, but the UN was born out of a war against fascism. Our own government is, of course, well aware of the embarrassments involved in supporting any such motion. It has, therefore, announced it will ab- stain on the motion to send ambassadors to Spain again. That sounds as if the Administration were taking a neutral position, which would be bad enough. But abstention is not quite so gently neutral and moodily withdrawn a stand as it seems to be. It requires a two-thirds majority of those voting to rescind any part of the famous 1946 resolution which recom- mended the withdrawal of ambassadors from Madrid. Abstaining is considered non-voting. Thus every abstention reduces the total vote, and, correspondingly, re- duces the number of votes needed to as- semble a two-thirds majority. And so by abstaining we help Franco, while looking as if we're merely waiting for a streetcar. It is my understanding that a vote or two may make all the difference, a fact which loads every abstention with significance. On another resolution, which would ad- mit Spain to the "subsidiary agencies" of the United Nations, we have actually an- nounced that we are going to vote affirm- atively. This would open the back door of the UN to Franco-less than thirty months after the General Assembly declared itself, in a formal resolution, to be "convinced that the Franco Fascist Government of Spain, which was imposedtby force upon the Spanish people with the aid of the Axis Powers and which gave material assist- ance to the Axis Powers in the war, does not represent the Spanish people And now we come to the hideous matter of timing. We have just passed through a big winter of anti-totalitarianism, and we are heading into what looks like the busiest spring season of anti-totalitarian- ism in our history. What sort of blind- ness is it that allows us to think that we can build a moral case against to- talitarianism on Mondays, and give help to Franco on Thursdays, and get away with it? What do we think people are, (Continued from Page 2) ics, Thurs., April 28, 4:15 p.m., Room 274 W. Engin. Bldg. Prof. G. E. Hay continues his talk "On a Problem in Plane Stress." Education F-218, Seminar in Tests and Measurements, will meet Friday, April 29, 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m., Room 2532, U.H.S. Lectures University Lecture: "Emerson and the Liberal Tradition in American Education." H. G. Good, Professor of the History of Educa- tion, Ohio State University; aus- pices of the School of Education and the Department of History. 8:00 p.m., Thursday, in Rackham Assembly Hall. University Lecture: Professor Karl von Frisch, formerly of the University of Munich, will lecture on "The Language of the Bees," Friday, April 29, 4:15 p.m., Natural Science Auditorium. Auspices of the Department of Zoology. The public is invited to attend. Lecture: Mr. Kenneth Macgow- an, of the University of California at Los Angeles, will lecture on Thursday, April 28, at 4:15 in the Rackham Lecture Hall. His talk, which is sponsored by the Art Cinema League, will be "The Screen-a Better Blackboard." Law Lecture: Under the aus- pices of the pre-Law Society, The Michigan Crib, Judge Edward M. Sharpe of the Supreme Court of Michigan, will speak on the Con- stitution of the United States. Kellogg Institute Auditorium, 8:00 p.m., Thursday, April 28. Open' to the public. Lecture: Dr. John F. Flagg of the General Electric Company will lecture Friday at 4:00 p.m. in Room 1400, Chemistry Building on the subject, "What Lies Ahead for Organic Reagents"? Concerts Student Recital: Charlotte Boehm, mezzo-soprano, will pre- sent a program at 8:00 Thursday evening, April 28, in the Hussey Room of the Michigan League, as partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the Bachelor of Music degree. Miss Boehm is a pupil of Arthur Hackett. She will be assist- ed by Donald Sanford, violist, and Lennis Britton Swift, pianist. The general public is invited. Carillon Recital: Percival Price, University Carillonneur, will play the third program in the current series of carillon recitals at 7:15 Thursday evening, April 28. It will include the Andante from Haydns Surprise Symphony, Sonata for 30 bells by Professor Price, Selections from te Mikado, and a group of Stephen Foster songs. West Quad Glee Club will pre- sent its Annual Spring Concert at 4:00 p.m. Sunday, May 1, in the Michigan Union Ballroom. Admis- sion is free and everyone is invited to attend. Events Today International Center weekly tea for all foreign students and Ameri- can friends, 4:30-6 p.m., Thurs., April 28, International Center. Student-Faculty hour Thurs- day, April 28, from 4-5 p.m. in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. Geography and Geology departments will be guests. Co- sponsored by Assembly and Pan- hel associations. U. of M. Rifle Club: Big Ten Postal Match Thurs., April 28, 7 p.m., ROTC range. Gilbert and Sullivan Society- Business meeting for all members. Discussion of new constitution, election of officers, and discussion of choice of shows for the 1949-50 school year. 7 p.m., Thurs., Rm. 164, Bus. Ad. U. of M. Young Republicans meet Thursday, April 28, Michigan Union, Rm. 3S. Members urged to be present to discuss topic: "Civil Rights and Discrimination." Undergraduate Psychological Society: Mr. Roger W. Brown will speak on "Gestalt Psychology: A New Rationalism" at the Russian Tea Room of the League, Thurs- day, April 28, 7:30 p.m. Coffee will be served. Phi Lambda Upsilon: Will pre- sent an educational film, "High- lights in Steel Making" by the Bethlehem Steel Corporation, Thursday, April 28, 4:15 p.m., Room 348 West Engineering Build- ing. Anthropology Club: Meeting, Thursday, April 28, Room 3024 Museums Building. Program: 7:30 p.m., election of officers for com- ing year; 8:00 p.m., Dr. Paul Leser of Olivet College will speak on "Eugene Fischer's Concept of Race Circles." Canterbury Club: Episcopal Married Students Club meets at 7:30 p.m. for dessert and LLscus- sion. The St. Louis Club: Meeting Thursday night at the Union, at 7 p.m. Foreign students from the International Center will be guests. "Abe Lincoln in Illinois," Rob- ert Sherwood's Pulitzer Prize play, will be presented tonight through Saturday, p.m in Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre with a matinee Sat- urday at 2:30 p.m. Produced by the department of speech, a spe- cial rate for students will be grant- ed for the Thursday evening and Saturday matinee performance. Tickets are now on sale in the theatre box office. Arts Chorale: Meeting Thurs., 7 p.m., 506 Burton Tower. Committee for Displaced Stu- dents: General meeting 7:30 p.m., Russian Tea Room, Michigan League. \' ' .,) / 4'P /' Letters to the Editor- k >-' 07-1 F D -.0,PC 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. * * * Thank You To the Editor: THE UNIVERSITY Day Com- mittee would like to take this opportunity to thank all the stu- dents who helped as guides and in other capacities in presenting Fri- day's program. From all reports the high school visitors had a very enjoyable stay which we think in the main part was due to the fine cooperation received from the guides. The organizations that helped are to be equally congrat- ulated on their fine job in adding to the success of University Day. In the future we can look forward to another fine University Day and some energetic freshmen. -Dick Allen, Bob Bristor, Dick Johnson, Dan Elyachar. Clear Picture Please To the Editor: I WOULD LIKE to answer Mr. Rechtman's letter of Saturday, April 16, concerning the Student Legislature's vote on discrimina- tion. First of all, Mr. Rechtman, don't you hink it also a wise and demo- cratic policy to print the reasons why the 17 people voted their nos? It is my opinion that the stu- dent body should know the whys and wherefores of their represen- tatives' votes. They certainly are not going to get a full picture of the issue by your noble effort in printingtheir names. There was a reason for everyone of those nos and, whether sound or unsound, the student body should know those reasons! Those 17 people have stated their sentiments in Student Legis- lature meeting and I'm sure would be glad to do so before the entire student body. Perhaps those who voted yes should state their rea- sons too! Let's get a clear and complete picture of the issue, Mr. Rechtman, not a small section of it! -Ileana Lindh. * * * Better Housed? To the Editor: [N HIS LAST letter, Mr. Mc- Creary says, "The American people are better housed today than in 1940." He argues by im- plication that if we are better housed today than then, ergo we are adequately housed and there is no housing shortage. It is evi- dent that we could be better off at present and still have a short- age of housing. The error in logic is obvious. He does not define the term "economic need" so I am left to infer from what he says that it means the ability of our economy to provide the needed housing. This is a separate problem that is in no way related to the original question, "Is there a housing shortage? He also says, "A statement of a social need for 8 million housing units is, ,not proof of a housing shortage."-The article from which d quoted which was written by two experts in the field, makes it very clear that the existence of a social need is proof of such a shortage. For them, in fact, social need is identical with short- age. Their evidence and opinion are far more convincing than the unsupported denial by Mr. Mc- Creary. He has added nothing new to the argument. His tactic is clearly the familiar one of chang- ing the subject and arguing be- side the point. Please inform Mr. McCreary that this is my last letter on the subject. I have exposed him. That should be enough. -Darnell Roaten. * * * Inadequate' To the Editor: THINK, that your dramatic re view on the French play, La Belle Aventure, which Le Cercle Francais presented last Tuesday was very inadequate and rather poor. In the first place, Mr. Rov- ner, your so called "critic," was a member of the cast. (I wonder if The Daily knew about it.) It is most unethical, and generally not accepted, that a member of any cast should write a review on the very play in which he is taking part. Secondly it seems to me, that your reporter didn't have the slightest knowledge about the French Dramatic Literature, and in general he had a lack of un- derstanding of the French So- ciety. Here I am quoting a few lines from his review. "The play which dates back to pre-World War I days shows its age unbe- comingly and with the possible ex- ception of the first act, the play suffered much from its static na- ture." For your information, La Belle Aventure is a very good example of a typical French comedy which has a little bit of scandal in it. As the French will say: "un peu du sel dans la salade," which they are so fond of. It represents un- mistakably their "la bonne so- ciete" with its customs, habits, and intrigues. To understand and then to report the true value of the play one should know something about the French social system and morals. I believe that to be a dramatic critic is one of the hardest things in the newspaper business, and especially when it comes to re- viewing a foreign play. The critic should be thoroughly familiarwith the language, customs, and litera- ture of the country with which the play deals. I fully realize that The Daily should encuorage stu- dent participation in their col- umns but there is a limit to it. After all it is a newspaper in its own right and should be treated like one. In a big university such as ours, to find competent dramatic critics for each foreign language play shouldn't be difficult. I do hoy* that in the future The Daily staff will be more careful in assigning their "critics." It sure will save a lot of embarrassment. -George A. Petrossian, Afir4gwn &ziI MATTER OF FACT: Withering Away By STEWART ALSOP TOKYO-The route to the official resi- dence of the Prime Minister of Japan is lined with endless little boxlike struc- tures, built higgledy-piggledy on the waste- land left by the American fire-bombs. The residence itself is a large, modern, de- pressing structure. Its present occupant, Shigeru Yoshida, is a tiny, old-fashioned, extremely cheerful man. His most striking characteristic is a smile which is apparently a permanent fixture of his face. The smile is very merry, and seems to suggest that Mr. Yoshida is always on the point of shar- ing some enormous joke with his visitor. Politically, Mr. Yoshida has some right to be cheerful. His conservative coalition commands a crushing majority in the Diet. Smiling, Mr. Yoshida explains that he is not a conservative at all. On the contrary, he is very liberal. Hardly anyone in Japan would agree. Joseph Dodge, for example, is a former president of the American Bankers Associa- tion, and is hardly a radical. He is the most important of the current crop of visiting firemen here. He has had the nightmarish Japan constituted the greatest concen- tration of economic power in any coun- try in the world. Sanzo Nozaka is a sleek, well-groomed man, with curious, heavy-lidded eyes and an air of sweet reason. All he wants, he says, is peace, and rice for the Japanese masses. In the last elections in January, Mr. No- zaka's party tripled its vote and multiplied by eight its representation in the Diet. The party is still a small minority. But it is more and more the party of youth and the intellectuals, and it controls more than half the labor unions. Mr. Nozaka speaks With great assurance of the future. No such confidence emanates from Tet- su Katayama, former Prime Minister and leader of Japan's non-Communist Labor Party, the Social Democrats. Mr. Kata- yama has a small, very black moustache, a curiously pointed head, a jet-black suit which appears to have been cut from a dyed army blanket, and an air of intense melancholy. His melancholy is natural. His party, once the strongest in post-war Japan, was cut to r'ibbons in the JnTaniinxv .'ry ncxv ~ar La p'tite causette:' p.m., Grill Room, League. Today, 3:30 Michigan planning a twilight picnic should attend a meeting Friday, April 29 at 4:15 in the Periodical Room of the Study Hall in Rackham. The Westminster Guild of the Presbyterian Church: "Open House" party Friday, April 29th, 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. in the social hall of the church building. Dancing, games, and refreshments. Deutscher Verein Picnic, Sun- day, May 1, 3 p.m., on the Island. Tickets available in 204 Univ. Hall prior to noon Friday. Club Europa will hold Open House Friday night from 9 to 12. Members and everyone interested are invited to attend. German Coffee Hour: Friday, 3:00-4:30 p.m. Russian Tea Room. All interested students and faculty members are invited. Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under t authority of the Board in Controli Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harriett Friedman ....Managing Editol Dick Maloy...............City EditoR Naomi Stern........Editorial Director 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 Writes Audrey Buttery.......Women's Editor Mary Ann Harris Aiso. Women's EditOW Bess Hayes................Idbrrilfl Business Staff Richard Halt .......Business Manager Jean Leonard ....Advertising Manager William Culman ....Finance ManAer Cole Christian ...Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusitAl entitled to the use for republiVAtioa of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all otha matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-claus ai matter. Subscription during the reg.l, a '3chool year by carrier. $5.0. by =&t4l "6.00. I Coming Events Panel Discussion: "Cooperative Business Education in the Michi- gan High Schools," School of Bus- iness Education in the Michigan High Schools," School of Business Administration, Room 130, 7:30 p.m., Friday, April 29. Students of education and teachers are espe- cially invited. Graduate Students interested in BARNABY Then Miss Dixon asked ml That one, "Gone With The W IShe asked me about J . __ _ __#- 11o ...nd wht to711