rTHE MICnGAN DATTY WE~DNESDAY,. MARCH f8. 1950 I. , w _ v avvv f' [AS L. STOKES: R i .. Spies in Government WASHINGTON-The Communist-spies-in- government issue is sprouting again in the dank swamps of politics-as sure a sign of an election season as the crocus is of spring, though it is unjust to the timid flower to mention it in the same breath with the weed. Some Republicans and some disaffected Democrats have exploited it now for some years in an effort to discredit social and economic reforms of New Dealism and Fair Dealisin, and with the same wearying repeti- tion with which some Democrats exploited the Herbert Hoover depression episode of the early thirties long after it had worn thin.' * * * W HETHER THE professional spy hunters will swing many votes, in the end, re- mains to be seen. But it is certain they can create a disturbing doubt in our government and its institutions among some people by. their flimsy insinuations and that is, in- deed, a serious responsibility. The Communist issue was used freely and loosely in the 1946 Congressional elec- tions, but it is likely that other things rather were responsible for that Republi- can victory-war restrictions, continued controls, and the like. It was capitalized again in 1948 but obviously, from the re- sult, people were more concerned about the Republican 80th Congress' derelic- tions on matters closely affecting them than in scare stories designed to divert attention from the main issues. The issue has assumed new vitality in re- cent weeks through the Alger Hiss convic- tion, the Coplon trial, the Dr. Klaus Fuchs atomic spy conviction in England, and the fear generated generally by the atom and hydrogen bomb developments. There is un- certainty and confusion in the public mind that is easy to play upon. Some politicians, in seeking political capital, either for them- selves or for their party or both, often be- come irresponsible as they strain for an issue. SUCH A CASE is offered here now in Sena- tor Joseph R. McCarthy who is making wholesale charges about Communists in the State Department. The number is, he says,j 205 or 81 or 57 or what-have-you, depending upon when you happen to hear him. He has got hold of an old "list"; and such dog-eared "lists" seem to be traded around here the way youngsters of another generation swap- ped those pictures of baseball stars that came in cigarette packages, greasy from boyish hands. President Truman put his finger on what is going on now when he said that anybody really concerned about alleged,, disloyalty could report it to him and he would have it investigated. He pointed out that he, himself, had done all that has been done to eliminate disloyal persons from the government by setting up the loyalty system. He explained that in this the effort had been to protect the civil rights of citizens and to uphold the Bill of Rights which he considers the most im- portant part of our Constitution. This was his way of condemning the tac- tics of spreading gossip and rumors in an irresponsible manner, which is not the way to ferret out any real disloyalty, if any, and to protect the nation's security. Such tactics, furthermore, certainly infringe the rights of citizens guaranteed by the Bill of Rights, which some politicians are taking too light- ly. It can, to be sure, produce sensational headlines and attract attention to a pub- licity-hungry politician, and maybe make a temporary political issue. (Copyright, 1950, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Coca-Co ionization GIVE THE Frenchman wine and he'll ask for coke - this, in essence, is what the Communists are assuming when they support an "anti-cocacolonization" ruling set down by the French National Assembly. Naturally, everyone concerned has a right to be up in arms - from the Pari- sian W.C.T.U. bloc to the Algerian Mos- lems whose religion forbids the use of al- cohol in any form - and to curse this latest Communist infringement. All ex- cept the French wine-growers, that is. But unlike most other nations, France would find it difficult to subsist without tradition. That ubiquitous force is as re- quisite to La Patrie Francaise in the eyes of its natives as a revolver is to Fearless Fos- Pick. With the introduction of coke in France's hotels and sidewalk cafes - as much as it gladdens the hearts of American beverage exporters - comes this situation: Maybe the French might get to like it too well, and break this one-sided winey tradition. Assume this happens. Then take a vaca- tion to France, count on enjoying the mer- ry madcap pace enjoyed - at least in theory - by other European tourists and French- men. Plop down in the corner of an existen- tialist hangout and ask the waiter for a bottle of wine. He might say, "Sorry, but everyone's drinking coke here these days. Do you want to be out of line?" It won't assume such alarming propor- tions, I'm sure. But one can't get the most out of the Folies-Bergiere while sipping a coke. -Don Kotite, IF ANY ONE needs further proof of thV terrors of Communism, let him consider the case of France, where the Red scourge has wreaked its latest bit of havoc. The French Communists, in an unholy alliance with those titans of big business, the French wine-growers, have succeeded in ramming a bill through the French par- liainent which would give the minister of health power to ban the sale of America's favorite cola drink. Why was this done? A newspaper support- ing the anti-cola lobby declared that because of this beverage "whole peoples have been intoxicated." What is even worse, the newspaper warned that "The moral landscape of France is at stake!" For years the average American male has looked up to France as the country offering the ultimate in sensual and free living. And what has happeneed to this once-proud country now? What has happened in the birthplace of liberty, equality and fraternity? It may be that you no longer will be abh to walk into your favorite Parisian sidewalk cafe and call for a "coke." The French have let us down, thanks to the insidious propaganda campaign of the Communists and the wine-growers. How can we ever again think of the French as a racy race, if they admit, through their parliament, that their morals are being contaminated by this mere soft drink? We cannot. If this proposal is not guillo- tined soon, France is sure to tumble from the pedestal which it has so long occupied in the dreams of American men. -Paul S. Brentlinger Mercy Killing WHEN CAROL PAIGHT was being tried fh r the murder of her cancer-stricken father, the courts ignored the fact that she was not an ordinary murderer; she killed in the name of mercy. Now the courts are making the same er- ror in the trial of Dr. Sander. They ignore the fact that he is not a man who killed selfishly. This fact cannot be disregarded. Special laws for mercy killings must be passed. Our laws are outdated and will be until the generally accepted idea that a mer- cy killer is not a murderer, in the usual sense, is accepted by the law books. As human beings we allow mercy killings; yet, as lawyers, we do not recognize mercy killings. Lawyers are ignoring the problem of our outdated laws, a problem can never be decided by ignoring it. The problem was first given publicity a few years ago when a doctor chloroformed his armless, legless, deaf, feeble-minded daughter. Our human impulse condones his action. Yet, no one had the legal right to let that glob of protoplasm die. Newspapers have written profusely about the problem, especially since the trials of Carol Paight and Dr. Sander. Some believe that human life is sacred; that no one has the right to play God. Others answer, "Sci- ence is now defying the mercy of God by keeping hopeless, painful cases alive." Many fear that no type of murder can be legalized without dire effects. New pro- posals allay this fear that legalized mercy killings would encourage cold-blooded, sel- fish murder. One proposal would not allow a mercy killing unless: 1-The consent of the patient were ob- tained. 2-The consent of parents or/and spouse were obtained. 3-A board of doctors unanimously agreed upon the hopelessness of the case. 4-A court agreed upon the action after hearing all evidence; this court would protect the patient from selfish motives. Unless we modernize our laws, we are criminals. For the real criminals are less those who kill in mercy than those who re- fuse to reecognize htat this phenomenon exists. -Leah Marks Press Monopoly Or Freedom? THE GOVERNMENT'S first anti-trust suit against a newspaper opened in Cleve- land yesterday, with the Lorain, Ohio, "Jour- nal" as the defendant. The government charges that the "Journal" combined and conspired to restrain and monopolize the dissemination of news, advertising and other information' in violation of the Sher- man Act. Among other specific charges, the "Journal" is accused of refusing to publish advertising of persons, firms and corpora- tions who advertised in a competing news- paper and in a radio station competitive with the "Journal's" radio station. We do not prejudge the case. But the charges are serious, and, if the "Journal" is guilty, it must be ordered to cease its illegal practices. That is why we think the American Newspaper Publishers Association was ill-advised to enter the case "as a friend of the court" in behalf of the "Journal" and against the prosecution. The A.N.P.A. says that if the govern- ment wins its suit, "For the first time in history the press of this country will be subject to an order requiring it to give access to its columns to anyone who de- mands the same. If that access be granted to advertisers, it follows that it must be granted to those who wish to disseminate information, either in the nature of news or editorial comment, irrespective of the judgment of the publisher as to its value or importance." This is errant nonsense. There is a vast difference between a pub- lisher's refusing advertising in order to hurt a competitor and his refusing advertising because it is fraudulent. There is a vast .dif- ference between a publisher's deciding to omit advertising in order to exert illegal economic pressure and his deciding to omit a news story because he judges it to be false or trivial. To confuse these differences is to argue that the First Amendment to the Consti- tution exempts newspapers from anti-trust laws. It is to maintain that there cau be no free press unless newspapers as a busi- ness enjoy an immunity not granted to other businesses. The free press rests upon free advertising, not on monopolized advertising. t The free press rests on competition, not on monopoly. The factors in newspaper publishing, such as increased costs and reduced reve- nues, tending to the disappearance of competition are powerful. They are so powerful that illegal and unfair devices to destroy competition must be scotched quickly and vigorously. The question, the only question, of the Lorain Journal trial is whether the Journal is guilty or innocent. For the American Newspaper Publishers Association to pretend that freedom of the press is menaced by the trial is to cry H-Far-Hysteria Bomb Ie VEs 1~ 1 ettepd TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters whichsare signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited, or withheld frompublication at the discretion of the editors. Westminster Guild: 5 p.m., Len- ten Vespers. "Fishermen Prefer- red." Tea, 4 to 5 p.m. Residence Staff Institute: Meet- ing for staff members of women's residences, sororities and League houses, 10 a.m., League. Mrs. Mary T. LaMore,- Health Service Coun- selor, will lead the discussion on "The Role of Confidante: prob- lems in personal counseling." A.I.M. Office Hours: 4-5 p.m., Monday through Thursday each week, Rm. 3-C, Union. Delta Sigma Pi: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., 1212 Hill. W8ZSQ, West Quad Radio Club: meeting of all members, including Broadcasting Associates, 7 p.m., in the shack, fifth floor, Williams House.. Industrial Relations Club: Meet- ing, 7:30 p.m., Rm. D, League. Mr. Anderson, business agent of A.F.L. Carpenters Union will speak. Opera. "Cosi fan tutte," by Mo- zart; presented by the Department of Speech and the School of Mu- sic. 8 p.m., Wed. thru Sat. and (Continued from Page 3) Hospital Affair .. . To the Editor: It has been interesting to watch the development of the "Poor Persecuted Dr. Sullenberger Club." Its members seem determined to prove that medical men can do no wrong and that assault and bat- tery laws should be modified with this in mind. A Daily letter today is indicative of the "Poor Doctor" defense ap- proach. Dorothy R. Pravda, RN; MA '49 (Members of the 'Club' impress us with their professional standing!) asks that we "imagin- atively reconstruct" the facts of the case, and then she proceeds to do so. Let's see where it leads her: 1. Dr. Sullenberger is "an ex- cellent thoracic surgeon." (Is this an attempt to establish his char- acter, or is it cited as an exten- uating circumstance? Dr. Samuel Green, Past Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan, was a prominent Atlanta dentist!) 2. "Mrs. Philpot provoked rath- er than appeased his wrath." (Does this mean that a Negro wo- man is unjustified in answering the foul Rankinisms of a Dr. Sul- lenberger? The Pravda letter and others imply that Mrs. Philpot would not have been assaulted had she "known her place.") 3. It is stated that "the unfor- tunate blow was not delivered un- til after Mrs. Philpot grabbed the Doctor's shirt and tore it down the front." (Miss Pravda conveniently forgets that Sullenberger was twisting Mrs. Philpot's arm and that she tore his shirt in the effort to wrench free from his painful hold!) 4. Miss Pravda's "imagination" leads her to a malicious attack on Mrs. Philpot's honesty. 5. The letter terms the blow struck by Sullenberger as 'unfor - tunate.' However, at another point it is stated that "the University Hospital elevator service has lately been noticeably good." (We're to believe that a little brutality was a good thing! It, after all, im- proved the elevator service!) 6. Miss Pravda's letter links the C.E.D. with the case. The C.E.D. has not been participating. It is engaged exclusively in working toward the elimination of poten- tially discriminatory questions from University application forms. Miss Pravda, RN; MA '49 closes with a rather desperate: "I have ...lived with other races, and am as free of racial prejudicedas anyone" We get it. Some of your best friends .. . --Charles H. Bisdee, * * * To the Editor: DAY BY DAY we inch nearer to the nub of the matter in L'- Affaire Hospital: viz.-the eleva- tors per se. They're no good. To the satisfaction of all-the manage- ment, the manipulators, and the marooned - escalators should be installed. A rotating interne should be assigned to keep the side-panels gleaming under the joint supervi- sion of the senior staff men and ex-elevator operators to enste employment for all. -John T. Manning, M.D. AIM Fracas ... To the Editor: Re Mr. Wachs' Statement- HAD MR. WACHS attended more AIM Council meetings while he presumed to represent Anderson House, instead of deriving his misapprehensions from the often inaccurate Daily reports, I am sure he would not have made his four unsubstantiable statements. Having served on the Council of AIM since last semester without having been absent from a single meeting, I would like to try to clear up the fallacies in Mr. Wachs' arguments. 1 The first point is an insult not only to the intelligence of the members of the "dorms" but to all Daily readers. It is completely lu- dicrous. 2 Under the present AIM con- stitution the Executive has no leg- islative power nor were they dele- gated any such power at any meet- ing I attended. 3 Mr. Wachs cannot name one instance in which the CE D issue was used by any Council member to further his own political inter- ests. AIM did not "move to dis- band CED" but only "to stay in the CED until such a time as the SL undertakes the objectives of CED." (You could have found this out by a perusal of the Council minutes Mr. Wachs.)- 4 No Independent candidate was purposely left off the AIM elections list in the past elections and I doubt if Mr. Wachs could name specific instances. There were,. however, two or three re- grettable ommissions, but noneof those ommitted felt that this was purposeful elimination. All in all the statements of Mr. Wachs are complete untruths. Mel Cohen, '51 Representative to AIM Council, Prescott House * * * Coal Strike . . To the Editor: EARLY THIS WEEK a group of students from this campus, visited the heart of the coal coun- try in western Pennsylvania in or- der to get a first hand impression of the strike of the United Mine Workers. I think it is important that students hear a little bit about what's going on with the miners in order to judge the issue at stake more accurately. Here are a few impressions which might be of interest. First, the miners are grimly de- termined to stay out of the pits until they receive a new contract. Everywhere we went, from men, women and children we heard the same slogan: "no contract, no work." Nothing seems to have de- terred them from their goal. Two telegrams from Lewis, Taft-Hart- ley injunction, court orders, fines haven't made a dent in their de- termination. They are particularly angered by the coal companies' in- sistence that the provision for a union shop and the "willing and able clause," which allows the miners to walk out whenever they face unsafe conditions in the pits, be stricken from the new contract. The removal of such clauses from the contract, which the UMW won many years ago, have convinced the miners that the coal opera- tors will stop at nothing less than breaking their union. They can- not understand why the operators were not penalized for raising the price of coal during the negotia- tions, why they continually are at- tacked for their just demands. Everywhere the food situation is critical. Credit from local stores has run. out, they are denied un- employment compensation, they receive no strike benefits from the union, and most of the mine workersado not want to go on re- lief since it endangers the owner- ship of their homes. The specter of hunger is very real to them and they asked us to help by organiz- ing food collections. I got the im- pression that for them the strike is a life and death struggle, not only to save their union but to keep body and soul together. For all this the miners and their fam- ilies are not embittered, but . are unusually friendly and have a tremendous faith in thearightous- ness of their demands and even- tual victory. -Al Lippitt Gulantics Review... . To the Editor: FEEL THAT The Michigan Daily, if it is truly a student publication, fell down in its job miserably over the past week-end. The Gulantics review, a program run entirely by students, partici- pated in solely by students, and given for .the benefit of students, was held last Saturday night in Hill Auditorium. If The Daily had printed .some story about it of such size that it would have at- tracted attention and informed peopleabout Gulantics rather that the three-inch squib on the back page, the show would have been financially successful. We didn't lose our shirts on it, but at the same time our profit was negli- gible. This, in a sense, defeats one of our purposes for sponsoring the show. We would l'ike to continue spon- soring Gulantics. It not only pro- vides an outlet for talented stu- dents, but monetary reward for their efforts, as judged by audi- ence appreciation. The proceeds from the show go into the Men's Glee Club Award Fund, an award available to any student on cam- pus who is scholastically eligible. Certainly these are worthy objec- tives. The Daily should use its power of publicity to help foster such a show. -C. Wayne Wright, President Men's Glee Club * * * West Quad Food .... To the Editor: HAVE BEEN following the con- troversy in the Daily over the food situation in the West Quad with increasing trepidation. I feel that the time has come to speak and speak frankly. I havennown Hugh Cameron Brown for a period of more than twenty years. My first memory of Mr. Brown dates back to 1932 when, at the age of four, he near- ly burned our garage to the ground by smoking three cigars behind it. The local newspaper seized upon this item and published notice of it, along with Hugh's name, on page 8. Ever since that day Mr. Brown has been an avid seeker of personal publicity. No act is too daring, no feat too difficult for Mr. Brown to perform in his con- tinual search for notoriety. I can remember back to the 4th of July parade when Hugh let the air out of the tires of the mayor's parade convertible. And then there was the time that he appeared for high school commencement in a bright red cap and gown and once more got his name in the news- paper. But his greatest moment came in the Rialto Burlesque The- ater in Chicago when, in answer to a request from the stage, he vol- unteered to waltz with a voluptu- ous cooch dancer. He performed to the satisfaction of the audience, but was so reluctant to leave the limelight that he had to be remov- ed forcibly by two irate stagehands and a deputy sheriff who happen- ed to be present. But never in my wildest dreams could I have imagined that Mr. Brown, in his thirst for publicity, would publicly praise the food in the West Quad. I have had to apol- ogize for Hugh in the past and so I must again. I am not angry, just terribly, terribly hurt. -Archie M. Brown Wait for Watery Soup GREECE -- "Weary, hollow- cheeked, dull-eyed students line up here for hours outside the hostel canteens to receive their daily ration of watery soup," ac- cording to "Universities in Need," UNESCO publication. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Interfaith Committee: 4:15 p.m., Foundation. Meeting, matinee on Sat., 2:30. Lydia Men- delssohn Theater. Special student rates for Wed. and Thurs. nights, and Sat. matinee. Tickets on sale 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., - Mendelssohn box office. Call* 6300 for reserva- tions. Sociedad Hispanica Lecture: Mr. Emiliano Gallo-Ruiz. "Picasso, An Interpretation" (illustrated). 8 p.m., League. AIEE-IRE presents VIr. Robert J. Morrison, personnel director, Peerless Cement Company. "Mak- ing a Success of Your Job After Graduation." Meeting, 7:30 p.m., 348 W. Engineering Bldg. Michigan Arts Chorale: Regular rehearsal, 7 p.m., Rm. B, Haven Hall. Details at meeting about concert Mar. 14. All members must bring eligibility cards, including those who are taking it for credit. Union Student Offices: Tryout smoker and staff meeting, Rm. 3-D, Union, 7:30 p.m. Square and Folk Dance Club: 7:30 to 9:45 p.m., Women's Ath- letic Bldg. UNESCO Council: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Lane Hall. Semester pro- gram to be established. (Continued on Page 5) A r4 k ON THE Washington Merry- Go -Round WITH DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-It looks as if the U.S. attorneys, some of them hitherto phleg- matic about prosecuting income-tax frauds, were now getting to work. On January 20 this column published the sordid details of a hold-up scheme by which five Internal Revenue agents in New York City shook down federal taxpayers who either had violated the tax laws, or else wanted to avoid tax argument. We cited dates, names and places regard- ing these shakedowns, and raised the ques- tion as to why this type of fraud had not been prosecuted. One of those named, in- cidentally, was William A. Ganey, chief of the fraud squad of New York's third In- ternal Revenue collection- district, and a friend of certain high-up Democratic poli- ticians. Finally, on March 3, the five men were indicted. ACHESON PASSES DEADLY TEST A TALL MAN with an elegant mustache and a soft, cultured voice went through a special variety of hell in a tiny, smoke-filled Senate room the other day. Dean Acheson, the Secretary of State, sat before the mighty Senate Appropriations Committee and an intent audience. The test began when urbane Sen. Styles Bridges of New Hampshire casually asked: "Mr. Secretary, what do you consider a security risk?" Everyone in the room knew Bridges' "security risk" was Alger Hiss. An Assistant Secretary of State looked anxious- ly at his boss. Acheson's expression was a be-nice-to-senators look, but his voice was cold as he answered: "We have regulations on this matter." Minutes later, Bridges was back again with a smooth "would you say that a friend of a known Communist would be a security risk?" "Yes," the Secretary said, quietly, "I think probably so." He parried the thrust and was on guard again for the next one. "Would you say a friend of a person who is a member of a Communist front organ- ization would be a security risk?" Acheson, still in the low, cool voice, said, "It all depends on whether the person would know what his friend was up to." Senator Bridges was playing the role of the charming lawyer trying to draw 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 Leon Jaroff.......... Managing Editor Al Blumrosen.............City Editor Philip Dawson....... Editorial Director Mary Stein..........Associate Editor Jo Misner..HL .........Associate Editor George Walker.......Associate Editor Don McNeil..........Associate Editor Wally Barth......Photography Editor Pres Holmes.........Sports Co-Editor MerlesLevin...... .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 Dangl........ Advertising. Manage~r 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 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. 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