THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY; XiY- 21, 1949 __ Disciplinary Decision N REVERSING the Men's Judiciary Coun- cil and allowing the election of four stu- .dents who received fraudulent ballots, the University Disciplinary Committee has dealt a powerful blow to responsible student government. The committee ruled that, because the candidates themselves were apparently not at fault, they should not be penalized for someone else's dishonesty. There is something to be said for this view, but the Disciplinary Committee ought to have taken final action. For, in ruling on the case, the committee has taken upon itself the responsibility of deciding it. There is no question about the commit- tee's right to do this, although it seems to me unwise for University authorities to get entangled in purely student affairs. It is not only unwise, it is inane for them now to hand the matter back to the Men's Judiciary "for such further recommendation as it may caret make." A final decision is needed, and if the Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: ROMA LIPSKY Disciplinary Committee doesn't want to make it they should have let the students make it. As the matter stands now, the four can- didates for whom fraudulent ballots were cast are to be allowed office; the Men's Judiciary is to meet again and reach an- other decision; then the Disciplinary Com- mittee will look it over, and if the Judiciary's decision is unsatisfactory a second time it will presumably be reversed again. This could go on all summer. Meanwhile, confidence in the Men's Ju- diciary Council has already been seriously undermined by this reversal; confidence in the Student Legislature will soon be undermined by the knowldge that fraud- ulent balloting may go unpunished; and the Disciplinary Committee will hardly rise in the esteem of the students-or the faculty-if it cannot decide once and for all a case that is appealed to it. Perhaps the committee's decision, or, lack of it, is based on a theory that the Men's Judiciary will "profit" from its "mistake" and come out all right on a second try. Whatever the reason for the Disciplinary Committee's action, it will have the effect of making the Men's Judiciary a minor ad- junct of University authority and lead to a student government that is little more than a feeble joke. -Phil Dawson. I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Beyond Court's Power By SAMUEL GRAFTON FREE SPEECH is sick in our country to- day: it is at least suffering from scat- tered local ailments, if not from a general malaise-and it is not going to be cured by the Supreme Court's decision in the case of the Rev. Arthur W. Terminiello. The Rev. Mr. Terminiello was con- victed in Chicago of disorderly conduct in breaching the peace by a sensational 1946 speech in which, according to a Supreme' Court Justice's summary, he attacked Mrs. Roosevelt, Wallace, Morgenthau and Jews. The Supreme Court has reversed this con- viction, rejecting the trial court's construc- tion of a local ordinance on breach of the peace, even though the Rev. Mr. Termin- tello's speech was delivered in an atmo- sphere of tension, with a hostile crowd milling outside the hall, and responding with great anger to the speaker's opin- ions. In delivering the 5-to-4 majority's deci- sion, Mr. Justice Douglas nobly holds that speech is "often provocative and challeng- ing" and upsetting to people, "as it pesse for acceptance of an idea," and that there- fore it must be protected against punish- ment unless the danger it seems likely to produce "rises far above public inconven- ience, annoyance or unrest." Soviet Methods CONGRESS'S DENIAL of federal scholar- ships to American students who happen to be Communists has wide-spread implica- tions which need to be considered before such an important step in education is taken. If this is to be the official policy, one need only follow it to its logical conclusion to see the Veterans Administration refusing the G.I. Bill to anyone of Communist lean- ings. This of course leads to a loyalty check on a great percentage of the student body, which is perhaps what the mentors are hinting at, anyway. The way in which these investigations snowball is alarming. A young veteran from Chicago got a fellowship to study physics and because of his party connections became overnight a public figure. Not because of any security regulations-he won't come within remote contact with the atomic bomb proj- ect-but apparently because he doesn't be- long to the right party or parties and doesn't deserve government aid. David Lilienthal has led the rebuttal to the Congressional action with a seem- ingly unanswerable challenge that "One never knows where Genius is. Political beliefs of a student are irrelevant in judg- ing his capabilities for advancing the cause of science." But so strong is the present fear of Communism that some of our national lead- ers seem to overlook the fact that atomic energy is not exclusively a war making weapon; that harnessed for peace time it can be a tremendous boon to man. Lilienthal says that this student may have worked on atomic applications to medicine- to cancer. Can we afford to reject the eagerness of a student of any party to ex- plore new fields and contribute their knowl- edge to the nation? But such reasoning was not even allowed in the Congressional hearings. As a result we have established another dangerous prece- dent-the loyalty check of students getting government aid. This is not the atmosphere to promote much needed research in atomic enrgy. It may well deter students from applying for the federal scholarships. The National Research Council told the ONE CAN WELL BELIEVE that Mr. Jus- tice Douglas and those who voted with him, Justices Black, Murphy, Rutledge and Reed, are not at all in sympathy with the Rev. Mr. Terminiello's opinions, as expressed in the Chicago speech, any more than are the four minority justices, and thAt there- fore the Court has given us a glowing re- enactment of Voltaire's famous crack about disagreeing, etc., but defending to the death, etc., etc. Check. Very good. The decision is a sound one, and I am happy it was handed down. Love that free speech. * * * BUT THERE IS A danger involved in this legal incident, taken as a whole, as a social-judicial phenomenon, and I want to point out what the danger is. The danger is that we are going to be- come too fond of ourselves because of this decision, too proud of ourselves, too easily convinced that free speech has been saved in a different time-when, as a matter of fact, the real, actually existing danger to free speech today is not touched upon in this decision at all. The danger to free speech today is not that the police will prosecute rightwing speakers, but that, in increasing areas around the country left wingers are, be- cause of private opposition, being denied fo- rums. * * * , The Court has actedtonprotect a man's right to speak freely when he sands on a platform, but that must be small comfort to followers of Wallace, for example, or dev- otees of other pupopular causes, who find themselves denied the use of platforms, as in the case of campus speaking facilities, etc. In a democracy, every citizen is a mem- ber of a kind of larger supreme court, handing down fundamental decisions by his every act, and the orthodoxy which is gradually creeping over us is limiting freedom of speech in a way that no for- mally constituted tribunal can counter- act. I am in political opposition to Mr. Wallace, but I often find myself feeling sick over the humiliations to which he is subjected, and, especially, the gleefulness with which, on occasion, these seem to be administered. In this area the Supreme Court cannot act at all. The free speech problem of 1949 is not that of overzealous police action against in- dividuals; it is that of community unconcern about the denial of rights and privileges which were once taken for granted. Here the decision has to be made within our- selves, and in our rejoicing over the Court's disposition of a 1946 free speech problem, let us save a corner of our concern for the special and characteristic free speech prob- lems of 1949. (Copyright, 1949, New York Post Corporation) MATTER OF FACT: No Master Plan By JOSEPH ALSOP W ASHINGTON-Possibly the noise the business forecasters and economists are hearing is not the crash of surf on a reef of bad times. But it must be said that when so many of the chart-studiers think there is depression ahead, it is a bit alarming to find that the vast, cumbersome old ship of state is perilously close to drifting. What is frightening is not that the Presi- dent and his advisers have adopted bad plans for coping with a business recession, but rather that there should be no plan at all. The President is known to feel that the increasingly widespread predictions of de- pression contain an element of big business propaganda, intended to defeat his economic program in Congress. Probably there is some justification for this view. But that does not justify ignoring the problem altogether. The treatment accorded the quarterly re- port of the President's Economic Advisory Council is highly symptomatic in this con- nection. After frightful internal wrestlings and disputes, Messrs. Nourse, Keyserling and Baldwin submitted a unanimous report con- taining one major admission and four sig- nificant recommendations. The admission was that the inflation danger was past, and that a business recession must now be regarded as a definite possibility. THE' TWO MOST important recommen- dations, which have been much misrepre- sented in the press, were as follows: 1- Since they were not immediately needed, the inflation control provisions of the Presi- dent's January request to Congress should be temporarily shelved. 2-To encourage business, the President's January demands for new taxes should be revised downwards. Specifically, the Council suggested jettison- ing the $2 billion of proposed social security tax increases, and lowering the original pro- posed increase in corporate and income taxes well below $4 billion. Considering how seldom his experts are unanimous, it is rather surprising that the President should have ignored them when they agreed for once. For in fact, there are four separate and distinct theories about how to deal with the depression now cur- rent in the highest Administration quar- ters. THEORY ONE is that of Dr. Leon Key- serling. Keyserling, a New Dealer, advo- cates stabilizing the economy at its present high level, by major governmental efforts if necessary. Theory two is that of Dr. Key- serling's chief, the chairman of the Eco- nomic Advisory Council, Dr. Edwin Nourse. Dr. Nourse advocates the policy popular with business, of drastically reducing both government expenditures and taxes. Theory three is that of the Secretary of the Treasury, John Snyder. He is close to Nourse, but differs from him in Insist- ing that business is still good and the prospects are not alarming. Finally, theory four is that propounded at the Federal Reserve Board by Marriner Eccles. Hepisclose to Keyserling, but be- lieves the present economic level cannot be maintained and accepts the inevitability of considerable disinflation. Since Eccles thinks the bump must come some day, he would prefer it to happen now. But he too wants the government to intervene massively be- fore the readjustment becomes a serious slump, stabilizing the economy at a level lower than Keyserling advocates. These are extremely brief and crude summaries of complex and expert view- points. Inevitably, they disort a little. None the less, the divergence of the view- points is sufficiently indicated to show that the administration has nothing like a master plan for dealing with a possible depression. There cannot be a master plan, when the men who should be making it are all travel- ing in different directions, without 'higher direction from the President. In the end, of course, political pressures are likely to rec- ommend Dr. Keyserling's approach to the White House. If the forecasters are correct, and bad times really come, the Adminis- tration will seek to promote to recovery by spending. But even the spending theory will not be given a fair trial, if it is applied hapahzard and in crisis. (Copyright. 1949. New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) DAILY OFFICI. Publication in The Daily Officialj Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Office of the Assistant to the President, Room 2552 Administration Building, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00a.m. Saturdays). SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1949 VOL. LIX, No. 165 Notices Forestry Assembly: Mr. Newton Drury, Director, U.S. National Park Service, will address an as- sembly of the School of Forestry and Conservation in Kellogg Au- ditorium, 11 a.m., Tuesday, May 24, on the subject "How the Na- tional Parks are Run." All forestry students are expected to attend' and others who are interested are welcome. The Personnel Office has a num- ber of openings as kitchen assis- tants on the staff of one of the University summer campsfor young men who are interested in work of this nature. The camp is located in northern Michigan in an exceptionally fine resort area and will be open from June 21 to August 23. Compensation will in- clude room and board.j Women students attending the Senior Ball, May 21, have 1:30 a.m. late permission. Calling hours will not be extended. Appeal of Student Election: Messrs. Morgan Ramsay, Jr., Roger R. Vogel, Frederick P. Spar- row, and James W. Morse, Jr., having appealed to this committee from an order of the Men's Judi- ciary Council disqualifying them from taking office as that they were guilty of conspiring to have fraudulent ballots voted in that election, and having appeared be- fore the committee to give testi- mony in relation to the matter, the1 committee, after hearing the tes- timony of the appelants and after1 questioning the members of the1 Mens' Judiciary Council finds: 1) That there was evidence of concerted fraudulent voting in the aforesaid election; but 2) That there is no evidence sufficient to justify a finding that the appellants personally partici- pated in such fraudulent voting or that they conspired to bring it, about.- In view of these findings it is or- dered that theappeal be allowed and the order of the Men's Judi- ciary Council set aside, and that the whole matter be referred back to the Men's Judiciary Council for1 such further recommendation as it may care to make. University Sub-Committee on Discipline Phi Eta Sigma: New initiates may obtain copies of the latest is- sue of Forum, the national maga- zine of the fraternity, at the Of- fice of Student Affairs. Teaching Positions: The Public Schools of Santa Barbara, California, are in need of elementary teachers in the early and later grades. Teachers must have 24 semester hours of educa- tion including 8 hours of directed teaching. , The Public Schools of Newark, N.J. are interested in receiving ap- plications from teachers who are Study Date V Y. y -Daily-AI Jackson 'AL BULLETIN interested in positions in the sys- tem. For further information con- cerning the above, call at the Bu- reau of Appointments. University Community Center: Willow Village Sun., May 22, Interdenomina- tional church program: 10:45 a.m., Church service and nursery; 4:30 p.m., Discussion group; 5:30 p.m., Pot-luck supper. Mon., May 23, 8 p.m., Cosmo- politan Club. Wives from other lands and their friends invited; 8 p.m., Cooperative Nursery Study Group. Tues., May 24, 8 p.m., Wives' Club party for the members who are leaving. Make reservations at the University Center. New mem- bers invited. Wed., May 25, 8 p.m., Bridge group; 8 p.m., Studio Workshop General Business Meeting. All members urged to be present. Thurs., May 26, 8 p.m., Ceramics. Water-color. Sun., May 29, 1045 a.m., Chil- dren's Day Program - Interde- nominational church. Mon., May 30, 8 p.m., General Meeting-Cooperative Nursery. The University Community Cen- ter will be open as usual between semesters. Academic Notices Electrical Engineering Collo- gfluium: 4 p.m., Mon., May 23, 2084 E. Engineering Bldg. Prof. L. L. Rauch of Aero. Eng. will speak on "Analysis of Information Transmission via Radio Teleme- try." Departmental Honors: Teaching departments wishing to recom- mend tentative June graduates from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and the School of Education for depart- mental honors should recommend such students in a letter sent to the Registrar's Office, 1513 Ad- ministration Building, by noon of June 1. Attention June Graduates: Col- lege of Literature, Science, and the Arts, School of Education, School of Music, School of Public Health: Students are advised not to re- quest grades of I or X in June. When such grades are absolutely imperative, the work must be made up in time to allow your instruc- tor to report the make-up grade not later thantnoon June 6, 1949. Grades received after that time may defer the student's gradua- tion until a later date. Concerts Carillon Recital: by Percival Price, University Carillonneur, 2:15 Sunday afternoon, May 22. Program: Ave Maria by Arcadelt, The Lady Piper, by Chambon- nieres, Preludium by Bull, Dead March by Purcell, Courante; a group of carillon compositions by Wilhelm Bender, and four, of his arrangements for carillon. Student Recital: Allene Knight- en, graduate student of organ with Frederick Marriott will pre- sent a program at 8 p.m., Mon., May 23, Hill Auditorium, in par- tial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree. (Continued on Page 5) Letters to the Editor- 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 Addres. 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. Kucher Case .. . To the Editor: PLEASE FIND enclosed a copy of a letter sent by me to Pres- ident Truman. I would appreciate it if you would publish this letter in your letters to the editor col- umn. The President of the United States, Washington, D.C. Dear Mr. Truman: I am writing you regarding the case of James Kutcher, a legless veteran, who was fired from his Veterans Administration job at Newark, New Jersey, for his mem- bership in the Socialist Workers Party. His discharge was based on your order to dismiss any federal em- ploye who was a member of a subversive organization. A subver- sive organization is one which is listed as such by the Department of Justice. Please note that no open hearings are held, nor are the organizationsallowed to ap- peal such listing. Also please note that your order applies to any federal position, regardless of whether or not such a position could be used to obtain informa- tion detrimental to our national security. The federal government, as an employer, has the right to deny employment to persons it believes do not have the best interests of the government at heart. However, as is recognized in the principle of civil service, the federal gov- ernment is the government of all the people, and must therefore give all the people an even chance at the jobs available. If member- ship in an organization is prima facie evidence that the person in- volved seeks to harm the United States. Even if this is shown, denial of position should be lim- ited to those positions where def- inite harm couldbe done. In view of the above I urge you to consider this order. I further urge you to require immediate re- instatement of any persons who have been fired without the above considerations, as e.g. James Kut- cher. -Thomas F. Schatzki. * * * Liquor Ban . . To the Editor: THIS SITUATION is simply bizarre! The Dekes are closed out, in part for an offense committed 20 years ago. The attitude toward drinking is as immature as it was during prohibition, and in precisely the same unrealistic way. This was admitted by almost everyone, so a committee was set up to study the problem; it is doubtful, however, that their accomplishments will ensure the members of that com- mittee a place in the Hall of Fame. The SL's female members are struggling in vain to be al- lowed to stay out late enough to do the job they were elected to do; and, amazingly, their antag- onists are, largely, the rest of the coeds. School spirit exists in just sufficient quantity to be laugh- able. The University forbids "haz- ing," but last week the campus witnessed some mighty strange goings-on, with no protest from the front office. There is talk of re-instituting the ancient "cut" system; partly, at least, because no one really understands the present rulings on classroom at- tendance. The political ban, an unmitigated farce, was lifted amid much ridicule, and now you can't tell a dirty Red from a die-hard Republican without a program. Every group is so resentful of every other group that investiga- tions are being born like lrabbits. Are these isolated phenomena? NO! They are obviously the ante- deluvian "System" of University regulations; 21,000 college students are being bogged down, in their attempt to live normal social and intellectual lives, by the absurd concept that they must all be governed as though they were chil- dren. There is no salvage value to this idea: let's scrap it en- tirely, and let the students write the rules, with the advice of the administration. The University is confessing its nability to attract mature and ra- ;ional students; we will become a laughing-stock, a center of pedes- trianism and intolerance, if this attitude is permitted to prevail as embodied in these outrageous re- strictions. This idiocy has simply got t o stop. --Harold T. Walsh, * * * To Jimersn ... : To the Editor: YOU'RE ALL RIGHT Norman, just don't let those nasty old people who drink poison your mind. The University Museum is behind you. -Jeannie Johnson. Poesy. . . To the Editor: HEREIN LIES my epigram... Oh, I'm a liberal, yes, by damn. Let all be free, goodwill to men; Anathema be with a contrary yen. Love fellowman, that's para- mount, Rousseau, Spinoza, Sermon on the Mount. Freedom of action, freedom of thought, Freedom to catch and not to get caught. No dogmatist I, no creed or ism, I ain't got no catechism. A better life, that's what I'm for. I've so much ahead, I'm a sophomore. As I look at it now, I really should say There are a few things that stand in the way. These several clogs I hasten t stammer Should be relieved in the fol- lowing manner. To hell with Taft, Hartley, Bingay, The NAM and the AMA, Gerald Smith and the AP chai, Father Coughlin and Franco Spain, W. R. Hearst and others in tune, Bertie McCormick's Chicago Tribune. Since down in bitter depths we are wallowing, I might also mention the following: Fraternities, sororities, discrim- ination, P-Bell beer, constitutional limi- tation. The Republican Party, Demo- crats too. Hold on to your hats I'm not quite through. John L. Lewis, the Ku Klux Klan, Wall Street Journal, the Boston Ban. Pegler, Pearson, Leo Durocher And ,everythingrelse that's not quite Kosher, Wherry, Rankin, Forrestal-- Say .. all. . I ain't so liberal after --Tom O'Toole, mlrjatg3i j + CINEMA + Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students ofA the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control or 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 Weidenthal ..Associate Sports Ed. Bev Bussey ...Sports Feature Writer Audrey Buttery.......Women's Editor Mary Ann Harris ...Asso. Wom's Editor Bess Hayes ...................Librarian Business Staff Richard Halt ........Business Manager Jean Leonard ....Advertising Manager William Culmnan.. Finance Manager Cole Christian .... Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or 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 mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. A t theOr phe-... LOST HORIZON, with Ronald Colman, Jane Wyatt, and Thomas Mitchell. FRANK CAPRA productions continue to be exploited at the Orpheum. Re- grettably, Lost Horizon, the second of the series, fares not nearly as well as its prede- cessor, It Happened One Night. There are irrefutable evidences of advanced age. Without laboring the point, I take ex- ception to Mr. Hilton's thesis. Not only do I think a Utopian Shangri-La based on a "be kind" rule of thumb the worst kind is restricted exclusively to chit-chat about world-reform of grandiose proportions, illog- ically motivated, the whole effect is mis- erably dull. Capra's Shangri-La is an inviting, if some- what futuristic, looking place. Since it con- tained Jane Wyatt, I was able to justify Mr. Colman's preoccupation with the moun- tain settlement . . . until he got that world- reform gleam in iis eye. Neither Hilton nor Capra, however, satisfactorily account for Colman's being "the one" chosen to take over the reigns of the "head-less" govern- ment. Appearances or philosophy attributed to Mr. Colman in the movie would never BARNABY FTakin~gthe situation in *at agcncE+