c. THE MICHIGAN DAILY WDNESDAt, MAY 4, 1949 Student Cause TODAY IS TAG DAY for the University Fresh Air Camp. The student-composed Tag Day Com- mittee hopes to raise 5,000 dollars for this traditional student project. In .fact they have pledged this sum to the 1949 budget of the camp. This is merely carrying on the spirit of something which began 29 years ago largely as a student function. Since the first two-week outing with tents and straw mattresses in 1921, the camp has come a long way. Now it is situated on a 300-acre plot on a chain of seven lakes near Ann Arbor. There were many lean years between that first camping trip and the 26-building lay- out of today. Students were in a large part responsible for the continued operation of the camp. Not only did they make up the counselor staff but their contributions along with those of faculty, alumni and friends in the C urrent Movies At the State , .. THREE GODFATHERS with John Wayne, Pedro Armendariz, and Harry Carey, Jr. A HEAVY-FOOTED Christmas story set on the Arizona desert, this misadventure is a little too dry for comfort. We see three bank robbers fleeing from the sheriff across an exceedingly arid stretch of desert. They encounter an expectant mother inexplicably housed in a sand-bound prairie schooner. An amazingly hardy little boy is miraculously delivered, and the three bandits are named Godfathers by the dying mother. The remaining footage, and there's a lot of it, is devoted to the efforts of the thirsty and repentant outlaws-who have now been revealed as modern counterparts of The Three Wisemen-to follow a star to Jerusalem, Ariz. (Really). Only one outlaw and the baby-who sus- tains several severe falls on the rough ter- rain-succeed in reaching the town. Judge Guy Kibbee appears briefly to award the outlaw a soft sentence, and a Young Lovely is provided to write him letters during his abbreviated sentence in the Yuma clink. Still, it is only fair to make several ad- missions: the technicolor photography is quite excellent, the brilliance of John Ford's direction occasionally shows through the drab plot, and the early part of the picture exhibits much-promise, albeit largely unful- filled. Once again we have seen the result of Hollywood's prime weakness-the inability to discover and/or recognize dramatic ma- terial worthy of the medium. Undoubted technical supremacy and a wealth of production talent obviously can accomplish little without correspondingly excellent scenarios. This picture marks no progress in the right direction. -Bob White. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: DON McNEIL Third Purge ANTI-SEMITIC sentiment has taken firm hold of another Old World nation-not Germany this time, but Russia. The Soviet opinion that Jews have no place in the function of a country's govern- ment, that they speak too many languages, that they have overly binding family rela- tionships, has resulted in many Jews' re- moval from office in Russia recently. In addition, a Jewish newspaper and a Jewish anti-fascist political committee have been dissolved in Moscow. Soviet leaders attempt to justify their dis- criminatory stand through a theory that all Jews are "internationalists," and "bour- geois." No matter how the Russians try to ex- plain their actions, their totalitarian atti- tude itself seems more than enough to mark this new move as something no less than racial discrimination in its cruellest sense. Sharp digs from Soviet officials to- ward "homeless people without kith or kin" ostensibly are aimed at Jews. In the 1920's Russia inaugurated her first anti-Semitic movement, at which time prominent Jewish office-holders were ex- pelled. Even today only one major Soviet government position is held by a Jew-L.M. Kaganovitch, a former friend of Premier Stalin. Hitler and the Naxi Party were to blame for the second full-scale purge of the Jewish people. Now Russian men-behind-the-gun appear to feel that Jews should be driven from their land once and for all. Several correspond- ents, among them C. L. Sulzberger of the N.Y. Times Foreign Service, on the Soviet annual bucket drives were the only regular financial aid that the camp could bank on for many years. The Fresh Air Camp has long been a pioneer in the field of juvenile behavioral correction. It is believed that the camp was the first such project to be established in the country. The 230 boys who are accommodated each summer are recommended by various social agencies from the Detroit metro- politan area. Not only are these young- sters on the road to becoming delinquency problems but they generally come from unhappy environmental situation. Many of them are saved from a perma- nently maladjusted existence through the treatment and careful observation which they receive at the Fresh Air Camp. College students often feel that they are unfairly imposed upon when charity drives are concerned. They seem to be considered fair marks for almost anyone who can dig up a worthy cause and a bucket. The Fresh Air Camp, however, is dif- ferent. It has been, and always should be, primarily a student project. In the past year or so many steps have been taken toward identifying the student more close- ly with the camp. It is rapidly becoming a major recreation center for student week- end excursions. It would be rather too bad if a vast stu- dent body can not manage somehow to drop $5,000 dollars in the buckets today for a cause in which they have been directly in- volved for so long. -Dave Thomas. Scapegoat FOUR STUDENT candidates disqualified by the Men's Judiciary Council are ap- pealin'g the decision-a letter from one of them appears in The Daily today. The letter-writer makes out a strong case. The facts as he has stated them agree with the evidence presented to the Judiciary Council. But, while our sympathy is with this candidate, our conviction is with the Council. We hope the appeals of these dis- qualified candidates are not upheld. For the candidate is always the scapegoat. If he is beaten, it's his fault; and if there is fraud, he suffers. There are good reasons why this should be so. If the candidate for whom the dishonest voter has cast his ballots is allowed in office, that voter will have achieved his end. This would encourage dishonest voting, and discourage the thousands of voters who honestly cast their ballots for candidates only to see them defeated. And, in this particular case, the Men's Judiciary Council has not been able to find out who stuffed the ballot box. But it has satisfied itself that members of the Delta Upsilon fraternity acted as a group to fraudulently elect the candidates from that fraternity. It is for the fraternity, and not for the Men's Judiciary Council, to explain to the disqualified candidates why they are denied office. -Phil Dawson. -A~ ii 1* I'- / A 'I' -Al; Al- 2 '1 A 1 1111 1foulcrilt -I i t Letters to the Editor- 4 "Teach me one o' them 'race preducices,' Uncle Louie. Every kid on th' street's got one but me." DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Chna--To Vews Matter of Fact By STEWART ALSOP TOKYO-Here ni Tokyo, with its curiously American surface atmosphere, the events in China seem almost as distant and im- probable as they must in the comfortable United States. Yet, according to those best equipped to know, what is happening on the Asiatic mainland has a simple meaning for Japan. If the Communists' drive south in Asia is not somehow halted, there is only one probable result. In the course of time, Japan will add her vital industrial poten- tial to the Kremlin's vast Asiatic empire. There are all sorts of reasons-political, psychological, historic-why this is so. But the most obvious reasons are economic. To reach some understanding of what a Com- munist China and Southeast Asia would mean to Japan, it is necessary to examine some of the hard facts of Japan's postwar economic position.. One hard fact is that with a population of eighty million there are already too many Japanese in Japan. And according to Amer- ican experts, if the present rate of popula- tion growth continues, there will be more than one hundred million Japanese by 1975 -perhaps one hundred and fifteen million. There is only one practical answer to this almost cancerous population growth. That is birth control. Curiously enough, Japan is perhaps the only country in the world which has consciously limited its popula- tion in the past. In the long period of isola- tion, Japanese midwives were important gov- ernment servants, and they had the grue- some task of strangling the excess popula- tion at birth. Yet, even if less horrible and more practical methods of controlling Japan's population growth are adopted (as Jap- anese Premier Yoshida has Just pro- posed)-Japan's economic problem is not solved. It merely becomes soluble. For al- though every square foot of Japan's arable earth, even ni the great cities, is tended like a garden, the earth cannot feed more than about two-thirds of Japan's eighty million people. The conclusion is obvious. Japan's trade with its natural trading area in China and Southeast Asia must be even heavier than it was in the imperial past. Japan must get food for its people and raw materials for its industries. In return, Japan must send finished goods, from locomotives to textiles, to North China, Korea, Indo-China, Siam, Malaya, Burma, Indonesia, and elsewhere in Asia. There is no other way, except perma- nent economic dependence on the United States. The political meaning of these economic facts may be summed up in one sentence. People can do without locomotives and even without textiles, but they cannot do without food. It is nonsense to suppose that a non- Communist Japan could hold out indefi- nitely, alone in a Communist Far East, ex- cept as a permanent colony of the United States. And although the occupation has thus far been serene, transforming Japan into a colony is unthinkable. Ultimately, the United States would face a fiercer re- sistance in nationalist, homogeneous Japan than even the British faced in India. No nation, to paraphrase Donne, is an island unto itself. Of no nation is this more true than of hungry, crowded Japan. Difficult as it is sometimes to believe, I'd Rather Be Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON HEAR A LOT OF PEOPLE saying, rather frequently, that Nationalist China's cause is our cause-and suddenly I wonder if it is. Nationalist China has asked for what it is getting. We have not. We have run a pretty decent show here, socially and po- litically. And the results are plain to see; the Communization of America is neither a prospect nor an issue. I can understand why the taking of power by the Communists in China should be irksome to capitalist America. So it must be; this country cannot like it. But the complete emotional identification of Chiang's cause with our own, as if we, in person, had been defeated, along with him, is something different. To treat all this as if it were a failure for us, as if we were the flops, as if what is happening in China is somehow an historical judgment on us, is to borrow agony and humiliation that are not our own. Awkward and incon- venient it may be, but there is no need for us to merge ourselves, emotionally, with Na- tionalist China's failure, and by doing so to obscure our own comparative social suc- cess. And I think it is time to call attention to the disservice that is done to the Amer- ican dream by those frantic souls who treat, as our own failure, the collapse of any so- cially blind ruler who has, perhaps for decades, been acting in a way bound to fuel an ultimate uprising. We're not going down wtih Chiang, because we're not like Chiang. The change that is taking place in China is a grave matter, but I resent the kind of emotional identification which pictures the thing that is happening there as if it were hap- pening to us, as the result of acts or omissions on our part. How smart should we or could we have been, to make up for a generation of mis- rule? It is fantastic to believe that a coun- try can be oppressed and badly governed, for decade after decade, until its people are starved and rendered indifferent-and that then we can blithely come along with a regiment and prevent the natural culmina- tion of that sort of story. This amounts to saying that we can make a fool of history, whenever we please, and anywhere in the world, with a shipload of munitions. , I don't like seeing Nationalist China's fail- ure scored as our failure, because it isn't, and I don't like seeing us settle into emo-' tional glue on account of it, because we have in no way earned that kind of self- denunciation. Ours, fantastic as that may seem to the gloomy ones, is a success story -and there is a real danger that we may forget our own success, and the rules for that success, in the identification we too casually establish between ourselves and some of the dreary failures of this world. Maybe we regret seeing them go down, espe- cially before Communism, but that is still no reason for deciding that we are they and they are us, and that what is happening to them is happening to us. I don't know what kind of ultimate so- cial success we can hope to win by allying ourselves, emotionally, with social failure. For if this is the kind of world in which whole generations of social injustices and inadequacy can be made up for with a couple of gunboats, then this is truly an (Continued from Page 3) trip 4 p.m. today, Hill Auditorium, East driveway. Honors in Liberal Arts: Applica- cations are now being received for entrance into the College Honors Program in Honors in Liberal Arts. The course is open to juniors with a B standing or better who wish to complete a concentration program in an interdepartmental course of study. The two-year program be- ginning September is a course in Politics and Ethics. A small group of students will study with a tutor, and will meet regularly as a group and in individual conferences with the tutor. Students wishing to ap- ply for the program should con- sult Dean Peake, or Professor Dodge (17 Angell Hall), or Pro- fessor Arthos (2222 Angell Hall) before May 15. The Graduate Aptitude Exami- nation will be offered Wed., May 4, at 6:45 p.m., Rackham Building, for graduate students who have not previously taken this exami- nation or the Graduate Record Examination. Students should purchase exam- ination tickets in the Cashier's of- fice and present the Recorder's stub to the Examiner at the time of the examination as evidence that the $2 examination fee has been paid. Veterans may have a requisition approved in the office of the Graduate School before going to the Cashier's office for the exami- nation fee ticket. Political Science 52: Hour ex- amination Wed., May 4, 10:00 a.m. Mr. Eldersveld's and Mr. Vernon's sections in Room 25 Angell Hall; Mr. Abbott's and Mr. Bretton's sections in Room 231 Angell Hall. Examination Schedule, College of Literature, Science and the Arts: Correction to first sentence of Note. Note: For courses having both lectures and recitations, the time of class is the time of the first lecture period of the week; for courses having recitations only, the time of class is the time of the first recitation period. Eng. Mech. 2a Make-Up Experi- ments: Any of the experiments covered during the first five weeks may be made up on Thursday, May 5, between 3 and 6 p.m. in Room 102, West Engineering. All of the other experiments may be made up on Friday, May 6, be- tween 3 and 6 p.m. in Room 102, West Engineering. This notice does not supersede any previous arrangements made between indi- vidual instructors and their classes. Bacteriology Seminar, Thurs- day, May 5th, 8:30 a.m. in Room 1520 E. Medical Building. Speaker: P. C. Rajam. Subject: Some As- pects of Recent Investigations of Bacterial Viruses. Geometry Seminar: Changed to 2 p.m., Wednesday, 3001 Angell Hall. Mr. D. K. Kazarinoff will speak on Some New Aspects of Pascal's Theorem. Senior Honors in English: Ap- plications are now being received for entrance into the Senior Hon- ors Course offered by the Depart- ment of English Language and Literature. The course is open to students who have demonstrated superior aptitude for and excep- tional interest in the study of Eng- lish literature. It is conducted as a seminar; each student is assigned to a Tutor, and will be expected to complete a large amount of inde- pendent reading. Applications should be addressed to the English Honors Committee, and should consist of a brief statement as to why the applicant wishes to pur- sue the course as well as a resume of his qualifications. An up-to- date blue-print should accompany all applications, which may be turned in to any member of the Committee (Messers Ogden, Mue- schke, and Litzenberg, Chairman), or to the English Office. The clos- ing date is noon, Saturday, May 7th. Students who apply will be notified of an appointment for personal interview by the Commit- tee. Lectures William J. Mayo Lecture, aus- pices of the Medical School, will be given by Dr. Howard K. Gray, of the Mayo Clinic, at 1:30 p.m., Wednesday, May 4, in the Univer- sity Hospital Amphitheatre, on the subject "Surgical Treatment of Duodenal Ulcers and Gastric Ulcers." Mr. Armin Elmendorf of El- mendorf Research, Inc., Chicago, will speak on "Some Problems of the Forest Products Industries" on May 4, at 10 o'clock in the East Lecture Room of the Horace H. Rackham Building. Opportunity will be given for questions and conferences. All furniture students are expected to attend; others, particularly those following the Wood Technology Curriculum, who are interested, are welcome. Education Lecture Series: "The Aims and Program of the National Commission on the Defense of De- mocracy through Education" by Virgil M. Rogers, Superintendent of Schools, Battle Creek, Mich., 7 p.m. Wed., May 4. University High School Auditorium. Public invited. Concerts Carillon Recitals: Instead of the usual Thursday and Sunday pro- grams, Professor Percival Price, University Carillonneur, will play a half-hour program before each of the May Festival concerts. His regular recitals scheduled for 7:15 Thursday evening and 2:15 Sun- day a fternoon will be resumed be- ginning May 12. School of Music Programs: After May 3 and until further notice, School of Music programs origi- nally scheduled for the Hussey Room of the Michigan League will be presented in Kellogg Audito- rium in the Dental Building, through the courtesy of the School of Dentistry. Events Today Committee for Displaced Stu- dents: Committee will join with Council for UNESCO in presenting 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 god taste will not be published. The editors reserve the privilege of con- densing letters. * * * Election Fraud * . To the Editor: THIS LETTER is directed to the 242 voters who supported Tom Sparrow for StudenteLegislature. To you I wish to extend my sin- cere thanks for your votes, and sincere apologies for the fact that because of the action of some mis- guided, unknown person, I have been refused entrance to SL. It seems to me a pity that the will of 242 people should be sac- rificed because of the finding of only two ballots stuffed together, both obviously cast by the same person. If the race for SL seats had been so close that those two ballots would have made an ap- preciable difference in the out- come, I could not object to being refused my seat. But, between the last man and me there was a gap of nearly 40 votes, enough so that the two votes could not possibly have affected the elec- tion outcome. I conducted my campaign hon- orably, at great expense of time and energy, and was in no way involved in or ever heard of any shady dealings, as has been ad- mitted by the Men's Judiciary Council report. I wish to thank the Men's Judiciary Council for the time and effort they have spen on this case, despite the fact that I am dissatisfied with the outcome of their decision. I do not condone such fraud. The guilty party should be found, but I see no reason why I should be made the scapegoat of this scandalous episode. Therefore, I am appealing my case to the Uni- versity Disciplinary Committee for further consideration. Lastly, I wish to extend my heartiest thanks to that be- nighted person who so graciously D.P. Student program, 8 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. UNESCO: World Cooperation Week program on Understanding through Student Exchange. Speak- ers: Dr. Haber, Dean Bromage, Dr. Vernon, D.P. students. 8 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Student Legislature, for all members, including retiring mem- bers, the biannual party will be held today. Buses leave the side en- trance to Hill Auditorium at 5 p.m. instead of 7 p.m. as previous- ly announced. ASME-ASCE joint meeting to be held Wednesday, May 4th, at 7:30 p.m. in the Architectural Au- ditorium. Prof. Charles T. Olmsted will speak on "Licenses for Pro- fessional Engineers." Applications will be available. Everyone is wel- come. U. of M. Sailing Club: Meeting of all members Wednesday, May 4, at 7:00 p.m. in 311 West Engineer- ing Bldg. Delta Sigma Pi: Business Meet- ing, May 4, 7:30 p.m., 1212 Hill St. Pre-Med Society: Wed., May 4, Room 3-G, Mich. Union, 7:30 p.m. Election of officers for next school year. Coed Folk and Square Dancing Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wed- nesday,- -May 4, at WAB. Please bring dues. The Westminster Guild of the First Presbyterian Church will have an informal tea and talk, 4-6 p.m., on Wed., May 4, in the Rus- sel parlor of the church building. Everyone invited. University of Michigan Dames Book Group will meet May 4 at 8:00 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Charles Madden, 915 E. Huron Street. Women of the University Facul- ty: There will be no weekly tea until Wednesday, May 18th. I.Z.F.A.: Seminar, Wed., League, 8:00 p.m., Folk Songs and Dances of Israel. A discussion of leader- ship techniques and their practi- cal application. Group participa- tion. Everybody welcome. Michigan Christian Fellowship: (Continued on Page 5) wrapped up two of my ballots and deposited them in an election box. It is to him that I owe all my success in student politics. --Tom Sparrow. * * * SL Proposal .. . To the Editor: PRACTICALLY all of us agree that the Student Legislature should do more to coordinate stu- dent organizations and correlate the activities of various groups at work on a common goal. This is particularly important in getting other campus groups working with the Student Legislature on proj- ects common to both. But the means for achieving this is a matter of substantial dis- agreement. The method proposed by Bill Miller would takerrepresentatives from "the" seven major organiza- tions and place them on the SL as non-voting members. (Surpris- ingly enough The Michigan Daily, the organization with which we now work the closest, is not in- cluded in that group.) Some of us, who feel this pro- posal is inadequate and would de- stroy the representative character of the SL, have suggested alter- natives which may be more com- prehensive. But first, a couple of arguments against the Miller pro- posal. Because its members are elected from the campus at large, the SL is functioning more and more as a single unit with decreasing emphasis on the particular pres- sure groups of its members. It seems inevitable that placing offi- cial spokesmen for organizations like AIM and IFC on the Legis- lature will re-emphasize organiza- tional loyalties which, in the in- terests of the whole student body, should not exist. At that point do we not stop being representative of the cam- pus and become a playground for pressure groups exerting social, moral, or perhaps political influ- ence on our members? Bill Miller would say that the SL can agree on which organiza- tions should have representatives by merely accepting his list. More likely this plan would invoke a continuous running battle on ad- mitting specific organizations, What is the answer? Dick Hook- er, as chairman of the NSA com- mitttee has proposed a standing SL committee composed of three legislators and one representative from every campus organization interested as a means of correlat- ing all campus groups. In addition I would suggest that the SL ask all groups to appoint one observer to sit in on all SL meetings, and that the SL reaf- firm an old policy of encouraging non-legislators to present their views of subjects of particular concern to them. -Tom Walsh. 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 Director Allegra Pasqualetti ...Associate Editor Al Blumrosen.......Associate Editos Leon Jaroff ..........Associate Editor Robert C. White ......Associate Editox B. S. Brown...........Sports Editor Bud Weidenthal ..Associate Sports Ed. 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