I____THE MICHIGAN DAILY Rent Increases L ANDLORDS HAVE something to be happy about as a result of the rent hike for- mula promising them an extra 30 per cent on their operating income, but students in gen- eral seem to have an opposite reaction. Especially in Ann Arbor, where an over- flowing population and a shortage of rent housing combine to make a seller's para- dise, should students have a cause to complain. And many have complained, in effect, that current room rates are high enough as they stand. Any further increase, which will probably come about as an end product of Housing Expediter Wood's formula, would definitely wreak havoc with that monthly check from home. Looking at one side of the problem, land- lords will find it a great relief to be able to determine whether or not they are running at a loss. This will be done by means of/ petitions, drawn up by the government, on which landlords must list their operating expenses for the past year. As a result, Federal and local rent representatives hope to decide on a "fair net operating income," to be applied to landlords with both large and small structures. Owners of small structures, one to four homes, may raise rents to boost their net operating income 30 per cent. Landlords of large structures, or more than four homes, are allowed 5 per cent less. Now despite the ardor with which land- lords have responded to this latest develop- ment-shown by recent rent office reports of landlords swarming in by the hundreds to get petition blanks-their student room- ers should find themselves in a much less fortunate position.hThey are the ones who N will have to do the actual kicking in in order to substantiate their landlords' "fair net" income. f In this case, we can assume that one man's meat is another man's poison. Land- lords stand to gain-considerably-while student roomers will probably suffer. Unless landlords suddenly decide that their promised rent increases do not appeal to them, the students will be getting the raw end of the deal. Congress Outlook I'd Rather Be Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON WASHINGTON-I've spent a couple of hot days in Washington, trying to de- cide whether it's hot for liberals or hot for conservatives. On the whole, I think it's hot for conservatives. You may, if you voted for Truman, feel like like moaning low because this Congress hasn't put through a comprehensive program of social legislation during the first four months. But you have to remember that no social legislation has been passed by Con- gress since 1938. The wage-hour law, now eleven years old, was the last substantial social reform put on the books. Ever since then it has been a case of holding on, tinker- ing, repairing, or more often, wrecking. But this year the Senate has already passed a good housing bill and a Federal aid to education bill, and Congress has given the Tennessee Valley Authority its controversial steam power plant. For the first time since the long drought started in '38, the issue is how much social legis- lation we're going to add, not how much is going to be destroyed. Conservatives know it, and that is why they are sweating two drops to the liberals' one on these steaming streets. * * * IF YOU WANT a measure of the gains that liberal sentiment is making in this coun- try, note that Senator Taft has sponsored and supported both the housing bill and the Federal aid to education bill. Taft's voting record is a better barometer of the changes that are taking place in this country than are the editorial pages of the papers that support him. This is a transition Congress, still uncertain as to whether it is the last conservative Congress or the first liberal Congress in more than a decade. Neither interpretation gives much comfort to the rightwingers. Even on the Taft-Hartley issue the record isn't as bad as it can be made to appear. * * * WE CAN EXPECT a transition Congress to be a slow Congress. As a matter of fact this one hasn't been as slow as it some- times looks. The two chambers have been working in different fields, the Senate on social leg- islation, the House on the major appro- priations bills. Actually, the House has passed these in record time; last year it was still struggling with appropriations deep into the summer. The House now has plenty of time to take up social legislation, without running into the "automatic filibuster" of a last-minute log-jam of necessary measures. I did hear complaints in labor quarters that the liberals, who took over the Demo- cratic convention and platform last summer, don't fight hard enough within the party; that they are content to draw up good bills and accumulate good voting records, without striving sufficiently to avoid such confusing and even shattering surprises as the sudden attempt to swing the party behind the weak Sims. com- promise in place of the Lesinski repealer of the Taft-Hartley Act. All this is part of the stewing that's going on here. The important point is that the long drought is over, the thing is fluid again. (Copyright, 1949, New York Post Corporation) Matter of Fact By JOSEPH ALSOP WASHINGTON-The crowing over Pres- ident Truman's troubles with labor leg- islation is singularly premature. The Pres- ident is certainly not going to induce the Congress to bring back the old Wagner Act days, as he ratier unconvincingly says he desires. But the chances are now excellent that he will get a new labor law severely diluting the Taft-Hartley Act, and probably expunging that controversial name from the statute books. His victory will not be total, but he has good hopes of victory. One sign was the recent defeat of the Republican-Southern Democratic coalition, and the humiliating recommitment of their just-passed Wood Bill to the House Labor Committee. This means there is far more support for moderate labor legislation in the House than most observers had supposed. This is looking far into the future, con- sidering that neither House nor Senate has taken final action as yet. But the House outlook, after recommital of the Woods Bill, is for compromise. And in the Senate, a curious, complex and hard to disentangle situation has arisen which, despite all its confusions, also seems to promise an exceedingly moderate labor law. Very briefly, the whole-hog, Truman- sponsored Thomas Bill, repealing the Taft- Hartley Act outright, is now before the Senate, having been reported by a majority of the Senate Labor Committee. Also be- fore the Senate is the recently presented report of the Labor Committee minority, headed by Senator Robert A. Taft. This recommends a middle ground between the Taft-Hartley Act and the Thomas Bill. But even this middle ground represents a long retreat from Senator Taft's former posi- tion. The plain fact is that Senator Taft wanted few things more than to have the progres- sive Republicans marching side by side with him in this struggle over labor policy. His real objective, in fact, was to prepare a Taft-Ives bill; and the minoirity report he has now presented is his substitute for the bill he wanted to offer. Another plain fact is that the progressive Republican Sen- ators did not want to be Senator Taft's com- rades-in-arms. Hence the present oddly complicated legislative picture. If you analyze the picture's compound elements, however, several striking points emerge. First, if Senator Taft so much wanted the company of the progressives, he will not fight them very desperately on the floor. Second, Senator Ives, Morse and Aiken have still retained their free- dom of action. Third, the whole apparent trend is favorable to the labor groups. Meanwhile, there is a political moral in this situation. Only two years ago, the republic was supposed to be in danger if a statute less strong than the Taft-Hartley Act by one jot or one tittle was even con- sidered for a moment. The act had a great deal to do with the Republican defeat, which surely brought no happiness to the business community that demanded such strong labor legislation. And now the Taft-Hartley Act is going down the drain. The moral is: "Be moderate, even when you're on top, be- cause some day, you won't be."- (Copyright, 1949, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) "You Guys Order One of These?" + O 't- po( 1-. "&"' DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Letters to the Editor- The Daily accords its readers the privilege of submitting letters for pubication 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. * * * On Mleacham,... liberal, pink-tinted, reformers who have never seen the inside of a fraternity house trying to tell them how, where, and why they can exist. More to come. -*otsy Ryan, Jazz Critic . . To the Editor: -Don Kotite. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. M " NIGHT EDITOR: PETER HOTTON . 4, Current ove At the Michigan . . u ENCHANTMENT, with David Niven, Ter- esa Wright, Farley Granger, and Evelyn Keyes. IF WE DID NOT KNOW that this was by Samuel Goldwyn, we might have believed it was a J. Arthur Rank production. This is not to say that it is entirely good, or entirely bad. It is simply a rather im- passioned duel love story of the most senti- mental sort-definitely smacking of English influence. The picture's primary point of excel- lence - the parallel telling of two love stories-also becomes its main weakness. There are so many flashbacks to the ill- fated turn-of the century romance of David Niven and Teresa Wright, and so many flash-forwards to the modern war- time romance of Farley Granger and Evelyn Keyes, that both stories suffer. Niven appears alternately as young army officer and an elderly gentleman, and in either role is his usual excellent self-al- though somewhat Mr. Chipsish when he dons the white wig. The rest of the cast is adequately emo- tional, and Farley Granger does especially well in his first starring role. --Bob White. . (Continued from Page 3) cil Room, Rackham Building, 4 p.m. Chairman, G. A. Satter. Doctoral Examination for Wil- bert James McKeachie, Psychol- ogy; thesis: "Individual Conform- ity to Attitudes of Face-to-Face Groups", Tues., May 10, 2125 Nat- ural Science Bldg., 4 p.m. Chair- man, D. G. Marquis. Chemistry, Colloquium: 4 p.m., Wed., May 11, 1400 Chemistry Bldg. Speaker: Mr. B. B. Brown; Topic: "The Decomposition of Azides." Concerts Student Recital: Estelle Hose, Soprano, will present a program at 8 p.m., Wed., May 11, Kellogg Auditorium, instead of the Hussey Room of the League, is previously announced. A pupil of Harold Haugh, Miss Hose will sing com- positions by Paisiello, Jommelli, Bach, Handel, Debussy, Verdi, Schubert, and Rachmaninoff. The program is presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music. Open to the public. Student Recital: Ruth Kluck- holm, Contralto, will present a program at 8 p.m. Tues., May 10, in the Rackham Assembly Hall, in partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Master of Music in Music Education. Miss Kluckhohn is a pupil of Leslie Eitzen. Her program, open to the public, will include compositions by Hendel, Legrenzi, Torelli, Ca- valli, Dvorak, Bach, Brahms, Wolf, Rimsky-Korsakoff, ad Gretchan- inoff. Events Today Mr. H. C. Bigler, G.M.C., De- troit Office of College Relations, will speak on "What General Mo- tors Expects of College Gradu- ates." 8 p.m. 130 Bus. Ad. Public invited. Sponsored by Delta Sig- ma. IFC Glee Club will not meet to- night. Wolverine Club Flash Card Committee: Meet at 7:15 p.m., Union. UNESCO: Organizational meet- ing of UNESCO Counci. Commit- tee reports and election of summer officers. 7 p.m., Student Lounge, School of Education. Students in- terested in a campus UNESCO group are invited to attend. Sigma Rho Tau, Stump Speak- er's Society, Meeting, 7 p.m., 2084 E. Eng. Bldg. Program: The regu- lar circles will workout, also fur- ther preparations for our forth- coming Tung Oil Banquet. ADA: Meeting. Charles Holzing- er mid-western organizer, will be guest. 7 p.m. at L. Berman, 324 John St., phone 5252. Members are urged to attend. Polonia Club: General Meeting, 7:30 p.m., International Center. Plans for membership drive and forthcoming picnic. IFC House President's Meetifg, 7:30 p.m., Rm. 3-C,Union. Committee on Student Affairs: Meeting, 3 p.m., 1011 Angell Hall. Michigan Dames: Annual Spring installation banquet, 6:30 p.m., Allenel Hotel. Christian Science Organization: Testimonial meeting, 7:30 p.m., Upper Room, Lane Hall. Coming Events American Society for Public Administration: Social Seminar, Wed., May 11, 7:30 p.m., East Con- ference Room, Rackham Bldg. Speaker: Walter H. Blucher, Ex- ecutive Director of the American Society of Planning Officials. Topic: "Practical Aspects of Pres- ent-Day Planning." Open meet- ing. Sigma XI: Annual initiation program, Rackham Lecture Hall, May 11, 7:30 p.m. Dr. Emil Artin, Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University, will speak on the subject "The Theory of Braids," at 8:15 p.m. Lecture open to the public. A.S.M.E.: Meeting, Wed., May 11, 7:30 p.m., 1042 E. Engineering Bldg. Speaker: T. A. Boyd, Techni- cal director of the General Motor Corp. Research Dept. AIEE-IRE: Final meeting of the semester, May 11, 7:30 p.m., 348 W. Engineering Bldg. Mr. Donald Courter, Chief Electrical Engineer and Lear Incorporated will speak on "Aircraft Electronic Control Systems." Democratic Socialist Club: 4:15 p.m., Wed., May 11, Union. Mr. Tucker Smith of Olivet College, will discuss "Academic Freedom at Olivet." At 8 p.m., Mr. Smith will speak on "Democracy Must Be So- cial " Architect Auditorium. Every- one is invited. U. of M. Sailing Club: Meeting of all members, Wed., May 11, 7 p.m., 311 W. Englineering Bldg. Election of officers. Sigma Gamma Epsilon: Mr. Branch, Mr. Bradley, and Mr. Lemish will lead a discussion on employment in geology, Wed., 12:15 p.m. Flying Club: Meeting, Wed., May 11, 7:30 p.m., 1215 E. Engineering Bldg. Jazz Concert Ushers come to the box office at Hill Auditorium Wed., May 11, from 5 to 6 p.m. to pick up your tickets for the Dixieland Jazz Concert, Sun., May 15, 8 p.m. Ush- ers who have received their tickets should be at Hill Auditorium, Sun., 7 p.m. for the concert. Coed Folk and Square Dancing Club: 7:30 p.m., Wed., Barbour Gym (instead of WAB). Canterbury Club: Wed., 7:15 a.m., Holy Communion followed by Stu- dent Breakfast. Westminster Guild, First Pres- terian Church: Informal tea and talk, 4 to 6 p.m., Wed., May 11, Russel parlor, Church Building. To the Editor: I HAVE, in late years, watched with increasing apprehension the growing tendency toward what Mr. Meacham so aptly defines as "the unwarranted criticism of se- rial stories and commercials." It strikes me that Meacham has put his finger precisely upon the spot: such "thinly-veiled attacks on the free enterprise system" as are dem- onstrated in the recent "Letter To Three Wives" ought to be dragged out into the light and exposed as the subversive and essentially un- American sort of thing they are. Next to television and movies, radio is our most highly-regarded disseminator of Culture and The American Way of Life. I agree heartily with Meacham's opinion that radio is not yet perfect, but I insist that if criticism is to be made it be done without the usual snide and irrelevant comparisons to what is loosely termed "the classics." It takes tremendous sen- sitivity and understanding to write today's commercials and serials- you can just bet that Shakespeare would be hard put to if he were re- quired to write "Stella Dallas" or "The Heart of Julia Blake." I know; I've heard them. In conclusion I should like to reaffirm my faith in this most promising of American art forms, and to place myselfsfour-square behind such understanding sup- porters of radio as Mr. Meacham has shown himself to be. -W. J. Hampton * * * To the Editor: A FRIEND of mine, Stan S., has said that he would eat Willie C. Meacham's letter as printed in The Daily of May 6 if the letter was serious. Could you tell us whe- ther or not this letter was a gag? -Kurt Back To the Editor: MEACHAM'S speecheum Causeum Nauseum --Marvin Cassell ** * * The Daily's Crusade .. . To the Editor: O TOM WALSH and John Campbell, members of the Board in Control of Student Pub- lications, to Dick Maloy, city edi- tor of The Michigan Daily. To Don McNeil, leg man for the same publication. To Harriett Friedman, managing editor of The Daily; and to Don Rothschild, who ce tainly must be somethin' or other. I am writing to comment on The Daily's recent attack on fra- ternities and sororities on campus, an attack which has grown into a crusade against these groups which gobble up poor little pledges and lead them down the primrose path to un-Americanism, which, in turn, can lead to nothing but dirty capitalism. And I also have a few choice remarks to make about the recent battle of words between The Daily and Bob Holland, for- mer President of the Michigan Union. First of all, to Mr. Campbell, Mr. Walsh, and Mr. Rothschild. In your all-out attack against Holland in Saturday's issue of Mr. Campbell's "favorite newspaper" you have made several statements whichadeserve comment and may- be even a snicker or two. Campbell leads the parade by stepping right up to the line and calling Holland, of all things, a Head Turtle (and from the scorn in his voice, I gather that a Head Turtle must be something nasty like a Republican) for the fra- ternities, which he implies, ain't got any right to have a Head Turtle because they are nothing but a minority group anyway. (And after all the good things The Daily has had to say for mniority groups too, John. You should be ashamed of yourself.) And besides that, Campbell says who do Greek letter groups think they are any- way, to think that they are priv- ileged. I would like to ask Mr. Campbell just what privileges the fraternities have asked for on this campus except the privilege to go ahead and mind their own bus- iness without a group of ultra- 'WE'VE NEVER heard Louis play better . . ." So goes a portion of a recent review of Louis Armstrong's performance at the Michigan Theatre earlier this week. In my opinion, the quote reveals one of two things; either the reviewer is not too familiar with the subject on which he writes or he has unfortunately never heard "Satch" on a good day. Unless any further evidence reaches me, I'll discard the first possibility. After hearing Louis ha _ver a dozen occasions and in at least a half-dozen settings, I feel quite safe in saying that Monday's per- formance was excelled on more than half these occasions. It seems evident that the best jazz will not be heard in the environment afforded by a theatre engagement. It may possibly be that the review- er has only seen and heard Louis at such theatre performances. If so-a little advice. Catch Satch- mo at an informal session, or, if that isn't feasible,, at a midnight concert, John! Perhaps then, the next time you write "We've never heard Louis play better," you'll have a substantial basis for your comments. -Chuck Kalflan. * * * Weird Fantasy. . . To the Editor: IT'S VERY thankful I am to the movies for the delineation of Hamlet - a play I've never been able to understand simply from reading the script. The criticism also came for my perusal. Omissions here and there etc. But black and white is right. I watched the film approving now the man and then in doubt. When Hamlet flung Ophelia down on the stone so hard her guts came out I rebelled. And so I think would Will himself have done. For it's not in the vacillation of the mandbut in the indecision of the audience that the balance must be preserved. So out upon the fiend would make our man a brute! And what of color? Have they never heard of tinting films to make their timing clear? Gold for sunlight and a tint of pink or blue to clear monotony of its jogged hue. There's plenty room for im- provement in that weird fan- tasy. -Thure Rosene. + MUSIC + DRAMA AH, WILDERNESS! at the Mendelssohn. WHEN Valentine Windt directs a show, that show is invariably worth seeing. Certainly we all spent a happy evening wel- coming the return of the Drama Season to Ann Arbor. In what I see will be a rather limited space, RI will say that about the middle of the second act Ernest Truex began giving us what we had been led to expect, and continued to improve the sensitivity of his performance until at the conclusion he had truly become the star of the play. I feel, how- ever, that Mr. Truex is sometimes uncom- fortable when his lines call for hip to be angry. He would much rather be pleasant and undemanding, It is to the women that most credit should be given for flawless characterizations. Both Jylvia Field and Frieda Altman were superb Aroughout. The same may be said for stu- THE FIFTH CONCERT of the May Fes- tival, which took place Sund ay after- noon brought to the stage Gregor Piati- gorsky whose playing of the Dvorak con- certo in B minor for 'cello and orchestra reached the highest artistic and most mu- sical level of performance in the program. Flawless technique, rich and vibrant tone, good intonation, and a spirited, romantic interpretation added up to a memorable musical experience, Thor Johnson and the Philadelphia Symphony orchestra seemed at all times to understand each other, to wit: the quick response of tricky accompaniment parts in the Dvorak; the lively and rapidly paced rendering of the Prometheus Over- ture by Beethoven, which opened the program. Mr. Johnson's direction was in- cisive rhythmically and he maintained good dynamic control of the orchestra, both in a softened background to the cello and in the light and shadow play of the Beethoven. The second half of the program was devoted to two works for chorus, solo voices, organ and orchestra. The University Choral Union displayed clarity of sections and acute timing in the syncopated Chorus No. 10 "Rasga O Coracoa" of Villa-Lobos. The Villa-Lobos work is new and very interesting rhythmically. The last work "Gloria in Excelsis" by Llewlyn Gomer was given its world pre- miere. Harold Haugh, baritone, sang his solo part with a full tone, and wonderful projection above the orchestra which had a full score in back of him. The part which Martial Singher, tenor, shared with Shirley Russell, soprano, was hardly enough to give us a real sample of his WITH A FLOOD of beautiful music, the Philadelphia Orchestra and their con- ductor Eugene Ormandy concluded Sunday night, this season's May Festival, leaving their fortunate audience hungrily looking forward to their return next year. Samuel Barber's romantic "Adagio for Strings" was caressed by a rarely heard oneness of string tone characteristic of this orchestra. With a wondrous pianissimo tone, the strings rendered long phrase and melodic lines expressively and skill- fully. Pia Tassinari, Metropolitan Opera so- prano, whose fame seems incredibly not to have reached, noticeable heights in the Middle West, sang Mozart's "Deh vieni, non tardar," from "The Marriage of Figaro," "O del mio dolce ardor," from "Paride ed Elena" by Gluck, and "Stizzoso, o mio stiz- zoso" from "La Serva Padrona" by Per- golesi-all with a magnificence of vocal style which awakened echoes of the great Amel- ita Galli-Curcci and Lucrezia Bori, whose Italian bel canto singing has almost faded into the past. Miss Tassinari's warmth, smoothness, and absolute control of vocal tone should serve to refute any theories that this style of vocal art no longer has any place in the present musical world. In- terpreting tragedy, humor, coyness, and pure lyricism, the soprano left her overwhelmed audience (who cared little that her count- ing was inaccurate in places) with "L'Altra notte in fondo al mare" from "Mefistofele" by Boito, "Io son l'umile ancella" from "Adriana Lecouvreur" by Cilea, and, as an encore, "Voi lo sapete" from "Cavalleria Rusticana" by Mascagni. As a grand climax to the evening, the 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 Editor Leon Jaroff .........Associate Editor Robert C. White ......Associate Editor B. S. Brown ........... Sports Editor Bud Weldenthal ..Associate Sports Ed. Bev Bussey .....Sports Feature Writer Audrey Buttery.....Women's Editor Mary Ann Harris Asso. Women's Editor Bess Hayes...............Librarian Business Staff Richard Halt......Business Manager Jean Leonard ... .Advertising Manager4t William Culman ....Finance Manager Cole Christian ...Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusilAy entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it of otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class aU matter. , Subscription during the reguar school year by carrier $5.00, by mail. S.OO Square Dance Group: Lane Hall. 7 p.m.,I BARNABY Mc~nydBarnaby is working on Gosh! WILL you help, McSnoydU [You overtook the fact that " ' "'k ior '; El