THE MICHIGAN DAILY, & A TRtTRSLAY, Tb AI 2. 1950 6_1_____________ .-_- _ aa.a"vil fI LVOV W Arts Festival IN ITS SECOND annual Student Arts Festival, the Inter-Arts Union will again provide an unusual opportunity for a display of student creative works and talent. The three day festival, scheduled for March 17, 18, and 19 will include per- formances of music, drama and dance, exhibitions of photography, sculpture and painting and both student and fa- culty panel discussions. Contributions for the festival are still being accepted in art, sculpture, poetry, photography and dance. For anyone on campus who has work in one of these fields, the festival 'of- fers an occasion for an audience reac- tion to the work, as well as intelligent discussion and criticism. The chance is here, and is too valuable for anyone with a creative bent to pass up. -Roma Lipsky 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 THOMAS L. STOKES: GOP & British Election Crlake Mine Beefsteak" DAILY OFFICIAL BLLETIN ll 4 WASHINGTON-Whether the British elec- tions offer a favorable omen for the Republican Party in our own November Con- gressional elections is a highly debatable question. But it is clear they offer a lesson that might help the Republican Party if properly capitalized. What was the strategy of the British Con- servative Party, which must have had some- thing to do with its substantial and sur- prising gains? It was not to come out against everything the Labor Party stood for or had done. Instead, it accepted social reforms thus far achieved and proposed to consolidate and administer them more effi- ciently, and to pause before proceeding fur- ther. THIS IS COMPARABLE, in political stra- tegy, to that of the moderate and pro- gressive element of the Republican Party in our country. That has, as a matter of fact, been the approach in the last three Repub- lican platforms and by the Party's presi- dential candidates in 1940-44-48-Wendell L. Willkie and Governor Thomas E. Dewey. Through it, which is often overlooked, the Republican Party moved from its lowest ebb with the_1936 debacle, when it carried only Maine and Vermont, to the high point reached in 1948. ON THE Washington Merry- Go -Round WITH DREW PEARSON I WASHINGTON-Atom scientists h a v e secretly informed the Congressional Committee on Atomic Energy that there is absolutely no way to detrmine the cost of the frightful H-bomb until it is built. However, they have further testified that the new bomb would cost a lot less than the original estimates, which ran into billions of dollars. This is because a great deal of equipment now used for making atom bombs can be reused or easily converted to the production of H-bombs. Officials of the Atomic Energy Commis- sion also have informed the committee be- hind closed doors that the hydrogen bomb can be made for considerably less than the estimated $2,000,000,000 cost of the original atom bomb. The atom chiefs revealed, in fact, that all they would need to get started on pro- duction of the H-bomb is $80,000,000, chiefly for special facilities and new lab- oratory equipment. i This $80,000,000 is already well on the way to Congressional approval, being in- cluded in the $450,000,000 deficiency ap- propriation bill that passed the House last week though only a few House members knew they were voting for H-bomb funds. * * * ' W ASHINGTON-A slow fire burning across the midwest prairies will stir the biggest rumpus in the 81st Congress and decide the 1950 elections. This is the opinion of rank- ing politicians on both sides of the aisle. The fire is a rank-and-file farmers' re- volt against the sliding scale of parity pay- ments which was jammed through Con- gress by the powerful Farm Bureau Fed- eration plus a coalition of Republicans and Southern Democrats. Signs of the revolt are: 1-A poll among Iowa hog farmers taken by Wallace's Farmer, which revealed 45 per cent favor the Brannan plan of direct gov- ernment payments to farmers, while letting Eliofibility Cards STUDENTS ON scholastic probation or on warning for scholastic reasons are al- lowed to stay out all day and most of the night, yet these same students are not al- lowed to participate in many campus acti- vities without an eligibility card. The University, in allowing unlimited so- cial engagements for those in scholastic difficulties, shows its faith in the matur- ity of its students. However, this faith is forgotten when eligibility card time rolls around; for the cards are almost unob- tainable for those on scholastic probation. It must be remembered that extracurri- cular activities are not merely fun for the kiddies. They provide intellectual stimulus; they are a means of improving one's reason- ing powers as well as one's extemporaneou speaking. Students whose eligibility is now auto- matically taken away should be given a chance. It is not unfair to expect eligibility cards to be issued on a more personal basis. If a student can convince the Office of Student Affairs (and himself) that extracurricular activities are not the cause of the student's particular scholastic difficulties; an eligi- bility card should be issued. -Leah Marks t fall the prices to the consumer. Thirty-five per cent are back of the present system of the government buying and storing surpluses to keep prices up. The remainder could not decide. This is a gain of 11 per cent in eight months for the Brannan idea. 2-In North Dakota, Sen. William Lan- ger and the Non-Partisan League are pre- paring to leave the Republican Party in favor of the Brannan plan. A major farm authority in the Dakotas, editor William Ronald of Mitchell, S.D., has been fran- tically urging the GOP leadership to write a new farm policy. 3-A grass-roots farmers' meeting in Crawford County, Wis., recently turned into a debate on the Brannan plan. Before the debate, 75 were for the plan, 45 against, and 92 didn't know. After the debate, 103 voted pro, 45 against, -and 47 still undecided. 4-Chirman Harold Cooley of the House Agriculture Committee, noticeably unenthusiastic about the Brannan plan last year, recently told the Farm Bureau of North Carolina, his home state: "Either come up with something better than the Brannan plan, or stop standing in the way." Back of the farm revolt is an estimated drop of five to six billion dollars in farm income, the fear that farmers' income will drop further under the sliding-scale formula backed by the Farm Bureau, and mounting criticism of piled-up surpluses while food prices remain high in .the grocery stores. UNEMPLOYMENT PICTURE THE COUNCIL OF Economic Advisers has just presented a significant, secret, three-page analysis of the country's eco- nomic problems to the President. Here in brief is what Truman's advisers told him: 1. The major problem facing the coun- try today is the sharp rise in unemploy- ment: A) During the month of January, unem- ployment set a record postwar high with 4,500,000 out of work - almost 1,000,000 higher than the previous month. Unemploy- ment is now at 7 per cent of the total labor force as against only a little over 4 per cent one year ago. B) The increase of 1,000,000 in the ranks of the unemployed in a 30-day period is considerably more than would normally oc- cur at this time of year. 2. Partly offsetting the poor unemploy- ment picture is the high level of home con- struction, business loans and bank clearings. In addition, those people who are still em- ployed have not received any appreciable pay cuts. 3. In general, the present situation, while warranting the closest study, is not as yet alarming. 4. The basic problem is one of expanding the U.S. economy fast enough to absorb the ever-increasing number of people available to work. During the year 1949, for example, the labor fore increased by 1,300,000. To- day's high level of unemployment is due to the failure of the economy to grow suffici- ently during 1949. 5. The present economic situation calls for action along three major lines: A) The development of a program to stimulate business investment, planning for large public-works expenditures and in- creased attention to local areas of severe unemployment. B) Continued government spending in order to pour money into the economic That course, astutely pursued, might ultimately bring victory. But, just now, unfortunately, the dom- inant leadership of the party in Congress, especially in the House, as well as in the national committee, is branding such a course "me-tooism," demanding an all- out attack on social welfare reforms, and finally reached the frantically desperate stage of calling Truman Fair Dealism "socialism." Curiously enough, it is this element of the party that is hurrahing the loudest about the British election. It will be too bad for the party if its interpretation becomes party policy. For there is no substance in this view of the British elections. Those who hold it have read too much into the word "Conservative" that is attached to Great Britain's second party and overlooked en- tirely what the party stands for. * * * IT IS, IN FACT, far to the left of the Truman Party, so there cannot even be Pcomparison. It has accepted what Presi- aent Truman has never even advocated, which is the nationalization program al- ready accomplished that includes banks and several industries, railroads and airlines among them, though it balks at nationali- zation of steel. It also accepted Britain's "socialized medicine" program, as it is called here, claiming credit for originating the idea. Mr. Truman sponsors a milder federal health program, though unable yet to take his party with him. If the moderate Truman program of social welfare reforms is "socialism," pray what is the British Conservative Party's program? Winston Churchill, who is among the oldest of active political leaders in the world today, nevertheless knowstheworld has changed and he is moving along with it, a lesson that some Republican leaders much younger refuse to learn. Harry Tru- man is no youngster, either, but he is very canny politically, and it will take more than placid acceptance by the Republican Party of what looks-like a "trend" to upset him- in the Congressional elections this fall, or in 1952. IE ALREADY has been busy at what - right be called "discounting" the Brit- ish election. He began it some time ago. While the rural and small-town vote came in to take the Conservative Party of Britain very close to victory, it may be recalled that Republicans waited in vain "for the farm vote to come in" an clinch their victory through those early Corning hours of No- vember 3, 1948. They waked up to learn that Democrats had regained strength in the farm belt through a slip of Republicans in their 80th Congress, which was to listen to speculative grain interests, rather than farmers, and cut down grain storage facili- ties. Since that time Mr. Truman has sought to create a new political alliance of mid- west farmers and big city constituencies of the eastern-midwestern industrial belt to offset defections in the South. Republi- cans still have not met this with a farm program of their own, and they have like- wise muffed an opportunity to strengthen themselves with big city constituencies by failure to unite on the civil rights issue, which is traditional with them and on which the party was founded. If the Party went back to Lincoln it would come closer to 1950, for he was a very mod- ern statesman ,despite what some Republi- cans said about him in recent Lincoln Day addresses. (Copyright, 1950, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) stream (defense spending, social security, unemployment compensation, veterans bene- fits, etc.) C)The rapid settlement of the coal strike before coal shortages send a chain reaction of unemployment throughout the nation. NOTE: Few economists in Washington go along with the President's advisers on Point- 3 wherein they minimize the economic dang- er signals. Other economic experts consider the sharp and unexpected increase in job- less to be a serious economic storm signal. ** * CAPITAL NEWS CAPSULES GETTING TOUGH WITH NAZIS - In- side story on American High Commissioner McCloy's tough-talking speech to the Ger- mans is that Secretary Acheson chided him for being too namby-pamby with the Ger- mans, insisted that he make a public state- mentsaying the United States was aware of. the threat of revived Nazism. McCloy wasn't enthusiastic but consented to have the State Department write his speech, which inci- dentally is considered the best thing the United States has done in Germany since the war ended. AIR COMPETITION - Two small, un- scheduled airlines have offered to fly the mails for one dollar a year - to prove that government subsidies aren't necessary. Golden North Airways and Air Transport Associates claim they can fly the Alaskan run for the post office and still make enough money from commercial freight to give the government free service. This would save the taxpayers more than $7,000,000 a year. (Copyright, 1950, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) / "" ... ? , )l ., ^ rtl _ Ri. . d', z _ l r' = a r - . lL-' -III. l y V --...., -__. (Continued from Page 3) Exhibits i. '" Museum of Art, Alumni Memor- etry. ial Hall: Eugene Atget's Magic Lens and The Arts Work Together, La P'tite Causette: 3:30 p.m., through Mar. 15. Brooklyn Mu- -Gill Room, League: 3 seum Third Print Annual, through GilRoLau \ U 4 4. eo ®7Y(p THY wNtKY f i'4N faYr ti.: XetteP/ TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason areanot in good taste will be condensed, edited, or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. Mar. 22; weekdays 9-5, Sundays 2-5. Creative Photography, Reproduc- tions by' Museum of Modern Art. Corridor, first floor, Architecture Bldg., through March 10. Events Today Theology Forum: 9 a.m., Lane Hall. Social Ethics Forum: 7:15 p.m., Lane Hall. How To Meet Human Frontiers: An eight week course led by H. L. Pickerill.; .7:15 to 8:15 p.m., top floor, Congregational Disciple Ev- angelical and Reformed Guild. Congregational Disciples Guild Lenten service, 5 p.m., "Woman behold thy son . . . Behold thy mother." Canterbury Club: 12:30 p.m., Lenten-meditation; 5:15-5:45 p.m., Evening.prayer and meditation. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation: Purim services, 7:45 p.m. International Center Weekly Tea: 4:30-6 p.m. Student Science Society: Meet- ing, 7:30 p.m., 1300 Chemistry Bldg. Speaker: Dr. W. R. Vaughn, "A New Anti-malarial Drug." Political Science Round Table: 7:30 p.m, Rackham Amphitheatre. Graduate Student Council: Meet- ing, 7:30 p.m., Rackham Bldg. Program of One-Act Plays, pre- sented by the Department of Speech. "The Admirable Bash- ville," by Bernard Shaw; "Lord Byron's Love Letters," by Tennes- see Williams; "Les Femmes Sav- antes," by Moliere; scenes from "Othello," by Shakespeare. 8 p.m., Thurs., and Fri., Mar. 2-3, Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Tickets are available at theater box office, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Call 6300 for reser- vations. Gilbert Rehearsal pals,- 7:15 U. of M. Sailing Club: Shore school. 2 classes; beginners-no- menclature; advanced - racing rules. 7:30 p.m., 311 W. Engine. Phi Sigma: Meeting, Mon., Mar. 6, 8 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Speaker: Dr Richard J. Porter, associate professor of protozoolo- gy, School of Public Health. "Re- cent Advances in the Study of Malaria or Malaria-like Organ- isms." 7:30 ' p.m., Installation meeting of new officers. Druids: Meeting, 10:30 p.m., Union. IZFA Study Group: 8 p.m., B'nai B'rith Hillel House: "Israel's Sig- nificance to American Jewry." Alpha Phi Omega: Meeting. De- tails of Tag Day drive and pre- sentation of new pledges. '7 pm., Rm. 3-R, Union. a and Sullivan Society: of chorus and princi- p.m., League. 11 i ~i. x Polonia Club: Meeting, p.m., International Center. 7:30 SL Calendaring . . To the Editor: DON McNEIL, in an editoria last Tuesday, criticized th calendaring of student-sponsored events and asked for SL action. It is difficult to refute the state- ments presented when the viola- tions, on the surface, seem so fla- grant. I do believe the situation could be ameliorated by student cooperation with the Calendar Committee of the Legislature. It is the purpose of the Calendar Committee to calendar events for this and the ensuing semester, and when calendaring to take into con- sideration the amount of people expected to participate in each eventeand point out conflicting events to the Student Affairs Com- mittee which gives final confir- mation. In my mind, SAC deliberates and weighs all potentialities care- fully before making 'a final deci- sion. Often it is possible to hold a major and minor function of the same evening when student appeal may be determined to rest in cer- tain special groups rather than in an over-all generalness. The fact remains that there are only a limited number of weeks in which to crowd a great number of diversified events, all of which must be given equal consideration. Secondly, all organizations are confident of their ultimate indivi- dual success. On these grounds it is difficult to refuse student peti- tions. What we need is more consider- ation and planning by the student organizations. May I suggest, first, that all or- ganizations interested in holding a function consult the calendar in the Office of Student Affairs be- fore establishing a date. Don't make final arrangements and then seek confirmation. Too often stu- dent groups approach a situation through the back door. This sim- ply confuses the issue and makes definite confirmation difficult. Second, consider the function carefully before plunging headlong into it. Some student groups do little or no investigation before presenting an extremely skeletal and undeterminable proposition to the SAC. Lay the groundwork be- fore asking permission. After pro- per deliberation, the group often realizes the utter impossibility of holding a function. Third, make dates final. The Calendar Committee has been plagued with continual changes of dates. This simply confuses the calendar and often leads to con- flicts. Fourth, present petitions at the earliest opportunity. It is extreme- ly difficult to give proper consid- eration to a petition. presented the day before the SAC meeting. It is also difficult to control and pre- vent functions in which student interest is determined to be high. Thus it istnecessary to allow many events to take place and leave fin- al decision concerning participa- tion to the student body. However, I believe congestion can definitely be avoided by stu- dent groups following the sug- gestions offered above. 1 For discussion of your parti- cular problems in calendaring, ] am available in the Office of Stu- dent Affairs 'Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 3 to 4 p.m. -Arnold G Miller, Chairman Calendaring Committee Student Legislature L * * * France, 1950... To the Editor: After nearly a year in France we are beginning to feel compe- tent to express what is felt here about world problems which dir- ectly affect Americans. The popular feeling against another war is overwhelmingly strong. Here in Provence," where damage from the last war was considerable, there have been re- pairs but very little new construc- tion. The attitude toward the atomic and hydrogen bombs is best expressed by resolutions pass- ed by many municipal govern- ments demanding that the use of atomic weapons be absolutely and formally outlawed by the United Nations .. The war in Indo China is a very close and tragic problem here. Marseille is the principle port for supplying the French Army in Indo-China and also the principle reception center for returning sol- diers. In the last three months over 500 French soldiers were re- turned in coffins. We have talked to some of the living and found them sick at heart from the ig- noble thing that they have done. The war is condemned by the working class, disapproved by the middle class, and feared as lost by the Banque of Indo-China and the Bidault government. A Par- liament Investigating Committee has revealed bribery on a grand scale in connection with the rati- fication of the Bao-Dai govern- mental device. This investigation, which resulted in the resignation of General Revers, Army Chief of Staff, has revealed the extent of the corruption, involving govern- mental figures and members of the National Assembly from the So- cialists right to the DeGaullists. To genuinely aid the people of France the American people should demand: 1) the outlawing of the atomic bomb. This is of primary importance to Americans too, of course, but the French have the additional insecurity of being in the middle; 2) that no military assistance be given directly or in- directly to the Bao-Dai group-it is ridiculous for the U.S. to fight a war for French Colonialists that the French people oppose; 3) that the present aid to France in the form of ECA "gifts" be changed to one of granting credits, without strings, to be repaid. The peopleI of France do not need or want "gifts." Like ourselves they need a change of governmental policy, which would make it possible for] them to repay us in goods to be used to raise our own standard of living. -Max and Virginia Dean Coming Events University Museums: Human bio- logy featured in Friday evening program, Mar. 3, University Mu- seums. Exhibits open from 7 to 9 p.m Motion pictures: "Heredity" and "Human Reproduction," aus- pices of the Museums, 7:30 pm., Kellogg Auditorium, Dental Bldg. Exhibit in rotunda, Museums Bldg.: Water colors of Michigan Mammals, painted by Richard P. Grossenheider, St. Louis. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation: Membership committee meeting, 4:15 p.m., Fri., Foundation. Solici- tors bring in -all money. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation: Friday evening services, 7:45 p.m. Dr. Valeria Juracsek, department of psychiatry, "What Makes for a Successful Marriage?" German Coffee Hour: Fri., Mar. 3, 3:15-4:30 p.m., League, cafeter- ia. U. of M. Hostel Club: Sat., Mar. 4: Membership dance, potluck supper, and community sing, 6 to 11 p.m., Jones School. For pot- luck reservations call Jane Fink- beiner, 7804. Bring eating uten- sils. All A.Y.H. members admitted free. All dance admissions appli- cable toward the cost of member- ship if bought within 30 days. Flo altDail ;. Modern Poetry Club: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., League Garden Room. Bring Oscar Williams Anthology. Dsussion of what is Modern Po- -4 . DormFPlan To the Editor: AS A member of the committee mentioned in The Daily of February '24 to draw up a list of points around which the proposed residence halls council would be formed, I would like to correct the impression that the committee was formed of only the nine people mentioned. The .motion as adopted by~ presi- dents of :the 28 dorm units on campus stressed that the com- mittee would be open to any in- terested' resident. Eighteen resi- dents signed up to work on' the committee' and the work done by Bill Welke; Bob Leopold, Bob Paul, Barbara Johnson-to name only a few-should not go unnoticed. To name all the people contacted by committee members for opinions would read like a roll call of the residence halls.a, The basic idea is one of the most controversial issues I can ever re- member in the dorms and I feel that it has the most far-reaching implications of any resident-in- stituted plan since the inception of the Michigan House Plan. I feel certain that I speak for all the committee in thanking all those men and women without whose in- terest the dream of a campus-wide cooperation between the dorms would never become a reality. -Thoburn Stiles, '51 * *, * Text-Book Drive.. . To the Editor: IN BEHALF OF Alpha Phi Ome- ga, National Service Fraternity, I would like to thank all the peo- ple who contributed books, time and effort for the successful com- pletion of the campus-wide text- book collection. The Textbook Loan Library has been considerably expanded through the efforts of these many generous people and many needy students will be helped along in their - University careers due to these -unselfish contributions. Again, I express my sincere ap- preciation to all those, students and faculty members alike, who helped us to make this worthy en- deavor a complete success. -Paul L. Weinmann, Co-chairman, Textbook Collection Drive. & _A Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Controln of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Leon Jaroff.........Managing Editor Al Blumrosen............... City Editor Philip Dawson......Editorial Director Mary Stein.............Associate Editor Jo Misner..............Associate Editor George Walker.......Associate Editor Don McNeil.......... Associate Editor Wally Barth.......Photography Editor Pres Holmes .......... Sports Co-Editor Merle Levin.........Sports Co-Editor Roger Goelz.Associate Sports Editor Lee Kaltenbach......Women's Editor Barbara Smith... Associate Women's Ed. Allan Clamage................ Librarian Joyce Clark........Assistant Librarian Business Staff Roger Wellington.... .Business Manager Dee Nelson.. Associate Business Manager Jim Dangi.......Advertising Manager Bernie Aidinoff ....... Finance Manager Bob Daniels .....Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The, Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the usefor 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 schoo -4 A ., -Max and Virginia Dean Textbook Collection Drive. year by carrier, $5.00. by mail. $6.00. BARNABY Notice the Radio Pixie's indolent attitude I can't be responsible for that bump- See, Barnaby! He doesn't really want to When 1 infrodure my new work H arp _ ;' 41f IisTth:e L....,..I...:..the ThIm mrrin hrrrnd+hoe ronrncon# #Ra erirrltl tfiac