THE MICHIGAN DAILY F' AY. Y . THE MCHTGN 11L 1 I I a avlTa!V I1T171V f 17 Childish C Ihlrl O U D I D ." , "I did not!" This, apparently, is the petty argumen- tative pass that has been reached by Mr. Thompson of the UAW and Mr. Bugas of the Ford Motor Company. And while the haggling proceeds, more than 60,000 local Ford workers sit at home, and an inconceivably broad international in- dustrial shut-down looms. The union has contended that Ford in- creased by ten per cent the speed of one of its final assembly lines. Ford has consistently and flatly denied the charge. And so, into the closet went the leaders of labor and industry, and the childish argument proceeded. The strike deadline came and went, and out went the 60,000 workers. TWO FACTS are clear: 1-If Ford is impairing the health and safety of its employes, regardless of whether or not the line has been speeded up, the Union has a legitimate complaint. 2.-The only way to settle the argument is to submit it to an impartial judge. Ford's Bugas asserts the company is ready to call in an impartial engineer at any time. The Union blithely calls the offer "double talk." Why? Perhaps the UAW, for some un- named reason, wants a strike and is de- termined to preserve the current issue, even if it is fabricated. There is every evidence that the company, in offering to submit to unprejudiced arbi- tration, is acting in good faith. Meanwhile, the union is being cagey. -Robert C. White. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff Md represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: JO MISNER I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Incoherent House By SAMUEL GRAFTON AS MATTERS stand now, the Taft-Hartley Act is still law. The chronology of what happened in the ''house is complicated, but here goes any- way: The Administration tried to repeal most of the Taft-Hartley provisions through the Lesinski Bill. House Democratic leaders decided the Lesinski Bill didn't have a chance, and at the last moment pushed the Sims measure as a compromise. It wasn't much of a compromise, because it con- tained, though in modified form, one of those anti-strike injunction features, hated by labor. The House voted down the Sims Bill, and substituted the Wood Bill, which is, on essentials, very much the same as the Taft-Hartley Act. Then, the next day, it incoherently sent the Wood Bill back to committee. Nothing is changed; the Administration music At Hill Auditorium.. .. VIGOROUSLY ushering in the fifty-sixth annual May Festival concert series last night in Hill Auditorium, the Philadelphia Orchestra with Eugene Ormandy, conductor, and Set Svanholm, tenor, presented an All- Wagner program which included represen- tative excerpts from a good part of the Wagner repertoire. Although the effect of the full music- drama is lost in hearing merely "arias" from Wagner's operas, a program such as this one serves, at least, to point up the com- poser's symphonic genius, and we reach the conclusion that Wagner presented in concert is still powerful, though not satisfying. Opening the program with the prelude to "Parsifal," Mr. Ormandy's exciting or- chestra demonstrated a rarely heard mel- lowness of string tone, a purity of flute tone, and generally fine understanding of the music.. "In ferman land" from "Lohengrin" proved Set Svanholm, Metropolitan Opera tenor, to have an expressive voice which showed knowledge of and familiarity with the Wagner style. He did, however, demon- strate a tight throatiness at times which detracted from a full round tone. The "Rome Narrative" from "Tannhauser" was artisti- cally performed, but lacked again a certain freedom of tone which would have made it more effective. Presenting excerpts from "Das Rhein- gold" and the Siegfried Funeral Music from "Gotterdammerung," the orchestra was brilliant in its interpretation. In the rollicking "Forging Song" from "Siegfried," the Wagnerian tenor did his best singing of the evening. The spirited tone and interpretation brought forth by the singer combined to produce a huge ova- tion from the enthusiastic audience. With his well-managed voice, Mr. Svan- helm performed Siegmund's Monologue from "Walkure" which, though showing expres- siveness was lacking in energy when the tenor failed to build it up to its climatic heights. -Elaine Brovan. has suffered a defeat; we have gone around the mulberry bush and the Taft-Hartley Act is still on the books. * * * W HAT DOES IT ALL mean? Conservative observers and editorialists are quick to tell us what it means. The House votes, they say, prove that the Administration had no popular "mandate" to repeal the Taft-Hart- ley Act. I don't see how it proves any such thing; I do not fully accept the theory that the fact that the House ovtes against some- thing shows it to be unpopular; this House is against almost everything that got Tru- man elected. The House votes prove only one thing, and that is that we need a civil liberties program to open up Southern elections so as to get the kind of Southern Democrats elected who will not vote methodically with the Republicans on key social issues. I doubt whether some of these observers would, in other contexts, find the votes of conservative Southern representatives to be unquestionably indicative of deep currents of popular sentiment. ** * THE HOUSE VOTES also blow up the notion that the best way for liberalism to prosper and succeed is to try to charm and soothe the other side. The idea that you can alter the votes of hard-boiled right- wingers merely by being conciliatory has been tried elaborately for ten years in the lower house, and yet there are some who are still working at it, with stunning faith. The compromise didn't break up the right; it actually broke up the liberals, a couple of dozen of whom voted against it along with the Southern conservatives and the Republicans. The suddenly attempted last-minute compromise made the liberals look as if they were clutching at straws; it made them, in a word, look bad, and invited the mockery which, next morning, rode high on the editorial pages. The fact that the liberal side was able to send the Wood bill back to committee and avert out-and-out defeat shows that it had at least a little more strength than it had appeared to have the day before, when it suddenly embarked on the compromise strategy. * * * THE INCIDENT as a whole shows that the President was right the first time, that he was right last summer, when he found a clean break with the Oixiecrats 'to be an indispensable prerequisite for popular victory. Some conservative observers are saying that the President lost on the Taft- Hartley issue because he was too uncom- promising with conservatives in his own party. It seems very odd, after the last elec- tion, that he should be told any such thing. The President should, as a matter of fact, transform this momentary setback into a clear fighting position, by making the House action on the Taft-Hartley issue an argument for a revived civil liberties program. Let him use this incident to show how necessary reform of Southern voting pro- cedure is, let him make a positive value out of it, by treating it, not as a defeat for himself, but as a further argument for his program, as a clarifying episode in his fight against the Republican-Southern Democratic coalition that rules Congress. His defeat at the hands of poll-taxers is not a proof that he is wrong, but, rather, that he is doubly right. (Copyright, 1949, New York Post Corporation) Wings Over Berlin :1 -I alr SO.- AILY OFIILBLEI Letters to the Editor- Needed Bill CONTROVERSY and swarms of proposed amendments surround the United States Senate bill which would grant $300,000,000 in federal funds to the states to be used to aid state school systems. A look at current American educational problems should make the need for such a measure -quite clear. In about three-fourths of our states,, ele- mentary school teachers' salaries have not advanced beyond a minimum of $2,000 a dear, even for college graduates. At a time when factory laborers can easily earn fifty or sixty dollars a week, such a salary is certainly not very attractive to the ambi- tious young college graduate. The complex modern world demands the services of educated people. People can be educated well only if they have good teach- ers, and we can, have good teachers only if they are paid well. A $300,000,000 federal education grant would certainly help the states raise the salaries of their teachers to a level which comes a little closer to reflecting the im- portance of their duties. Unless this is done, there can be little hope of luring high cal- ibre people into the ranks of the school teachers. Objections have been raised to the Senate bill on the grounds that states would be per- mitted to use federal funds to aid schools which practice some form of racial discrim- ination. Sen. Lodge offered an amendment to the bill, which would have withheld aid from such schools. Ideally, the amendment should have been passed. However, proponents of the educa- tion bill realize that they need the support of Southern Senators to insure its passage: Rather than invoke the ire of the southern- ers and jeopardize chances for getting some form of an education bill passed, they chose to oppose the amendment. The bill in the Senate is not perfect. But it is better that we do something to aid our suffering educational system than forego all possibility of aid just because we demand perfection at the outset. If the bill passes Congress, and if the states put the $300,000,000 to good use, there may even be a chance that our educa- tional system can overcome some of the racial prejudice which plagues the country. Even in segregated schools, better teach- ers procured by use of federal funds can surely do a better job of teaching students the "facts of life" about racial differences than can poor teachers. --Paul Brentlinger. Fabled Foibles STUDENTS at a nearby school, suffering from the weather and heated class- rooms, laid down the law yesterday. The blackboard in one of the classrooms said: "This Ed. Psych. class is meeting out- side today. Come if you want, professor." ** *a Problems facing the universities are seep- (Continued from Page 2) Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Ad- ministration Building. Academic Notices The Scholarship Committee of the Detroit Association of Univer- sity of Michigan Women an- nounces four scholarships of $200 each for the academic year, 1949- 50. Women students whose homes are located in the Detroit metro- politan area are eligible to apply. Awards will be made on the basis of financial need, University citi- zenship and academic progress. Application blanks are available in the Office of the Dean of Women and will be accepted until May 15. Doctoral Examination for Wil- liam Munger Boothby, Mathemat- ics; thesis: "A Topological Study of the Level Curves of Harmonic Functions"-Friday, May 6, 3:00 p.m., East Alcove, Assembly Hall, Rackham Building. Chairman, W. Kaplan. 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 qualificatibns. 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. Doctoral Examination for No- land Rall Heiden, Geography; thesis: "A Land Use Sequence Study of the Dort Highway Area, Flint, Michigan," Friday, May 6, 210 Angell Hall, at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, R. B. Hall. Doctoral Examination for Hil- ton Atmore Smith, Pathology; thesis: "Renal Lipidosis," Satur- day, May 7, 8:00 a.m., 1562 East Medical Building. Chairman, C. V. Weller. Lectures Forestry Assembly: Mr. Fred C. Simmons, forester in charge of forest utilization on the Northeast- ern Forest Experiment Station, will speak on recent developments in small logging operations at 11 a.m. Friday, May 6, in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. This talk will be illustrated with slides and film and forestry students are expect- ed to attend. Others who are inter- ested are invited. Forest Management Group: Mr. George Banzhaf will speak on1 "What a Private Employer Expects from a Forest School Graduate," Monday, May 9th, at 7:30 p.m., in the East Lecture Room of the Rackham Building. All those in- terested are welcome to attend. Concerts MAY FESTIVAL-Six concerts, in Hill Auditorium. Philadelphia Orchestra at all concerts. Second concert, Fri., May 6, 8:30. University Choral Union, Thor Johnson, conductor; Shirley Rus- sell, soprano; Martial Singher, baritone; Benno Moiseiwitsch, pi- anist. Program: Brahms "Re- quiem"; and Beethoven Concerto No. 3 for Piano and Orchestra. Events Today German Coffee Hour: Friday, 3:00-4:30 p.m. Russian Tea Rm. All interested students and faculty members are invited. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation- Services this Friday evening will begin one-half hour earlier, at 7:15 p.m. Visitors' Night, Department of Astronomy-Friday, May 6, 8-10 p.m. in Angell Hall (fifth floor), for observation of the Moon and Saturn. Dr. Freeman D. Miller will give an illustrated talk on, the Moon in Room 3017 Angell Hall. The scheduled talk will be given even though a cloudy sky may pre- vent observations with the tele- scope. Children must be accom- panied by adults. (The last Visi- tors' Night during the second se- mester will be held on May 20). Roger Williams Guild - Open House at Guild House following May Festival Concert this evening. Canterbury Club: 4-6 p.m. Tea and Open House for all members. Coming Events General Semantics Study Group: Sunday, May 8, 3-5 p.m., Inter- national Center. Picnic: A picnic sponsored by the 19th-24th district of the As- sociation of- Independent Men will be given on May 15, 2:30 p.m. All independent students living out- side University Dorms are invited. The cost of $1.50 per couple should be paid this week in Room 3C of the Union, from 2-3 p.m. on Wed., Thurs., or Friday. Any students desiring dates for the occasion should call Bob Dressel at 2-1531 by Friday evening of this week. "The Westminster Guild of the First Presbyterian Church will have a picnic at the Island, on Sat., May 7th, from 1:30 to 5:00 p.m., to which everyone is invited. Meet at 1:30 p.m. at the church. A.S.C.E.: The student section will hold it's annual spring pic- nic Saturday, May 7, at Professor Housel's farm. Those who wish transportation shouldi meet at 1 p.m. on the parking lot at the south end of the West Engineer- ing Annex. Sign up on the board outside of Rm. 307 West Engi- neering Building. Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences: Topic: Annual I.A.S. Faculty Baseball Picnic; Place: Out Geddes Rd. past riding sta- bles; Date: Saturday, May 7, 1949; Time: 1:30 p.m. All those wanting a ride, meet in front of East Engineering Bldg. at 1:30 p.m. sharp. Refreshments will be provided. The Daily accords its readers the privilege of subnittng 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. e * * * Tragedy . To the Editors: TRAGEDY HAS descenced upon us. During the waning moments of the last session of our beloved eight o'clock English class, our be- loved instructor, Donald Q. Hill, sadly informed us of impending doom. Quoth he: "On the way to this beloved class, I cross a rail- road track. Out of the corner of mah eye, every morning I spy this large-sized train lurking in the shadow of the round-house. He appears to be steaming with all hands aboard. Therefore I feel I am about to be rubbed out by this ominous monster. If I don't show up here, Wednesday, you shall know that I, Donald Q. Hill am nevermore. "A gasp, a buzz, a sense of horror swept through the crowd. There was a spell over us. We sat staring morbidly, not knowing what to do. The ominous bells rang,.the engines roared, and here it is, two days later and Don- ald Hill, prophet, scholar, instruc- tor extra-ordinaire, didn't show. In fond memory of the above- mentioned Donald Q. Hill- (who was rubbed out by a locomotive), we, his beloved English Class, are accepting contributions to erect an underpass. "Now;no more the juice of Egypt's Orape shall moist his lip." -Morticians of the Beloved Eight O'clock English Class, Sec. 1. * * * Disappointed .. . To the Editor: I JUST SAW the movie "A Letter to Three Wives" which was re- viewed so favorably. I must say I'm disappointed. I don't under- stand how a movie which pre- sented such a thinly-veiled attack on the free enterprise system could pass the censors. I refer of course to the unwarranted criticism of serial stories and commercials. Commercials form the backbone of radio. And as such they form for me and for most of the people that I know the really interesting part of any program. Who can deny the ingenuity and genuine genius that goes into the creation of a great many of them. Such attacks as that made by the af ore- mentioned movie can only serve to upset, deceive, and mislead the great listening public which is for the most part genuinely satisfied with the voice of American in- dustry, namely radio. I say that some of the best poetry ever written is to be heard on any pro- gram-the commercials. Only the malcontent dares to claim that anything so thoroughly dead and meaningless as classical poetry is superior. Modern radio advertis- ing, although not all perfect, is a living thing. The much-maligned serial also scarcely needs a defense. Most of the literature which we now con- sider great was not accepted by the self-styled intellectuals of its day. And the modern radio serial is no exception. There is more human understanding in Stella Dallas' little finger than can be found in the whole set of charac- ters of many of the "great" classic novels like "Gone With the Wind." I say give us more of these moving real-life dramas and less of this Communistic criticism. There must be others who feel as I do. Let's hear from you. -Willie C. Meacham. . * Matoy Questioned,... To the Editor: I HAVE ONLY the greatest re- spect for Dick Maloy's opinions on discrimination, but after read- ing his comments in The Daily, I find myself obliged to question the validity of Dick's remarks. Allow me first to say that my statements are not to be construed as rep- resenting those of fraternity men on this campus or as those of an officer of the IFC speaking for that organization. Rather I am writing as a fraternity man who has been fortunate enough to be in a position from which I could observe the events leading up to the recent SAC meeting. The Daily City Editor first points to the vote of the SAC and concludes that ". . . all but two of them (students) oppose the measure." Dick is plainly off base in making such a positive state- ment since the vote was complete- ly secret. If his statement is based on inside information, he should quote his source, so that his read- ers might better judge the validity of his conclusions. The Scratch Pad then drew an- other opinion from the vote of the committee stating ". . . that the student SAC members who were affiliated with Greek organizations voted down the line to kill the measures which would eventually mean the end to discrimination among fraternities and sororities." That any law, edict, decree, or other form of scratch can mea the eventual end of discrimina- tion within any group of society is in my opinion completely ridic- ulous. Even the most amateur so- ciologist will agree that discrim- ination is the product of our so- ciety and that the outward evi- dences of discrimination are bt reflections of general social con- ditions. Discrimination is not the product of the groups to which people belong. In criticizing the IFC's failure to continue the work begun last February, Dick allows two facts to escape his attention: (1) the pres- ent officers of IFC, elected lust a little over a week ago, are pledged to an active handling of the problem, and (2) the IFC has a committee which was set up last March which is empowered to investigate into discrimination and propose effective methods for handling the problems. Delegates were sent to a recent conference where ideas were exchanged- with representatives from other Big Ten Universities where the problem is being successfully dealt with. Discrimination is the product of several thousand years of so- cial development; it cannot be erased in four months. -Dick Morrison. * * * Vets' Center .. . To the Editor: T HAVE BEEN following with ggreat interest the fate of M4lh- igan Veterans' Readjustment Cen-. ter. This organization for malad- justed veterans is the only one of its kind in the country in th t it admits in-patients as well as out-patients who are treated by a most competent staff. Closing down the Center would not only rob the patients of treatment sorely needed for their emotional problems but would also peril the nation's progress in mental health. The Michigan- Veterans' Readjist- ment Center should be allowed to continue and should be an e- ample for other states to follow. Harry J. Philip (Rep.) proposer dX the bill to shut down the Center, cannot possibly have any insight into the needs of these veterais or into psychiatric treatment in general. -Kay Engel. L~r +i~oltIO MATTER OF FACT: New Old South By JOSEPH ALSOP WASHINGTON-One of the most signifi- cant political phenomena in Washing- ton has been concealed, until now, behind the closed doors of the Senate Foreign Reltions Committee room. There Senator Walter F. George of Georgia, most influ- ential of the Southern conservatives, has been hammering on Secretary of State Dean G. Acheson and other witnesses to secure an admission. He wants them to admit that a vote for the Atlantic Pact will not commit him to voting funds to implement the pact. This clearly implies that he means to oppose rearming Europe, if rearming Europe is at all costly. In order to grasp the meaning of George's new line, what he is doing now must be contrasted with what he has done in the past. It was George, for instance, who par- ticipated in the negotiation of the British loan agreement; fought the then Secretary of the Treasury Fred Vinson because he thought the amount too small; and with Arthur H. Vandenberg of Michigan led the battle for the loan in the Senate. Until now, George has always gone along with every major foreign policy enactment. This has been, of course, .the Southern conservative tradition. At the beginning of the first Roosevelt administration, there was still a discernible difference between right-wing Southerners and right-wing Northerners, even on domestic issues. Men like Pat Harrison of Mississippi and the gigantic, powerful Joseph T. Robinson of Arkansas, might be deeply conservative at Harry F. Byrd and George were leading in- terventionists. Although the anti-Wall Street attitude had been lost from the Southern tradition, the world-mindedness (deriving from cotton's dependence on foreign mar- kets) still remained. George's line of questioning in the For- eign Relations Committee signifies an im- portant new development. On issues of foreign policy, as well as on issues of do- mestic policy, the right-wing Southern- ers of the Democratic party are now join- ing hands with the right-wing Northerners of the Republican party. The new alliance will play a major role in this session of Congress, which must face the fact that we can no longer finance our foreign policy out of surplus. The Southerners come from states where the political oligarchy has been more or less heavily infiltrated by large business and large industry. Moreover, the South is one of the two strongholds of the most reactionary element in the American business world-the other, of course, is in certain areas of the Mid-West. And what has caused the sudden switch-over of the right-wing Southerners to the new isolationism is ex- tremely simple and obvious. They talk about "preserving the sound- ness of the American economy." But what they frankly mean is that they do not wish to raise taxes in order to pay for American security in this troubled world, or for any other purpose. Very roughly speaking, the importance of the right-wing Southerners' defection to .ienlains-m l a rptrmnrlby a 'en- Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by student. Id the University of Michigan under thb authority of the Board in Control ct Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harriett Friedman ....Managing 3d1a Dick Maly ............City Editce Naomi Stern.......Editorial Director Allegra Pasqualetti ...Associate Editor Al Blumrosen ........Associate Editos Leon Jaroff ..........Associate 3 to Robert C. White ......Associat Editce B. S. Brown...........Sport Editor Bud Weidenthal ..Associate Sports IM. Bev Bussey ...Sports Feature Wrie Audrey Buttery. ... Women'sEditas Mary Ann Harris Asso. Women's dit4E Bess Hayes ...........IdbwarlaA Business Staff Richard Halt .......Business Mnae* Jean Leonard ....Advertising uanager William Culman ....Finance Man.ie Cole Christian ... Circulation Manage Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Pres The Associated Press is exclusiy* entitled to the use for republi%.tibsa of all news dispatches credited to it'oc otherwise credited to this newspaawr. All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at An Arbor, Michigan, as sewon!-clas hall matter. Subscription during the regulMr school year by Carrier, P"A$.by mail. ".00. BARNABY [ Atlas-tell Barnaby about myI ...walkingalong a quiet road In -~0&0~4UJN 4 I PA aMIM