THE MICHIGAN DAILY _ U I ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ___ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ __" WEDNESDAY, lMA&H9 -950 Statehood for Hawaii E OF THE most neglected areas of egislation - statehood for Hawaii -is i before Congress. This issue has been I around Washington circles for some now, with no one seeming to care :er or when action is taken on it. at for the people of Hawaii (as a short twith any of the many Hawaiian stu- ts on campus will reveal) statehood is a important and much desired devel- ent. - all the arguments against admitting ii as a, state, the only one having any .ty is the economic set-up of the is- waii's primarily agricultural economy, sugar and pineapple by far the leading is pretty tightly controlled by five, )anies. Opponents of statehood for Ha- argue that these "Big Five" interests itute a monopoly which the federal nment could break more easily while ,ii is still under territorial status. The e push for statehood was started, they by the Big Five interests- who feel that position will be more secure when Ha- becomes a state and can claim "states-t s" privileges. at some important considerations are looked in this line of reasoning. e federal government has had more ample time to break up the monopo- situation on the islands if it intends > so, yet so far nothing has been done. uld seem that this inaction will con- tinue for some time to come because, despite the extensive control which the Big Five have, the paternalism they have established receives at least an aquiescent approval from a large part of the population. This is certainly not to justify a monopo- listic structure, but in economics and politics we must sometimes deal with what is rather than what should be. It is a political reality that as long as people are not grossly dissat- isfied with one system they will not be moved to do away with it for something new. And the situation in Hawaii is such that no basic change seems possible unless an upheaval in world political and economic conditions results in some drastic reactions within the islands. Perhaps the initial push for statehood did come from the Big Five. This has not been proven either way. But in any case, the state- hood issue is now looked upon by a great number of the people as an ethical and moral matter. In a recent plebiscite, they approved statehood by a 2 to 1 vote. Hawaiians consider themselves a part of the United States. Their whole cultural training is American. And their desire for statehood status, which would provide them with the privileges as well as thea responsibilities of democracy is certainly understandable and just. Hawaii has been a territory for more than 50 years. The time to grant the people full- fledged citizenship is long over-due. -Roma Lipsky SL and the Liquor Ban JGRATULATIONS and sympathy arEq o be extended to the Student Legisla- in their announcement thatk they will a forum to discuss the liquor problem Impus. ' e owe them our congratulations for at- pting so noble a project and our sym- 1y because the outcome will probably be too successful, for several reasons: The State of Michigan, has seen fit y that no one under the age of 21 shall intoxicating beverages. (And they it, too.) The City of Ann Arbor, and the Uni- y of Michigan are equally determined said law shall not be violated if they anything to do about it. -There are, on this campus, 20,000 stu- many of whom are under 21 and many rials published in The Michigan Daily /ritten by members of The Daily staff epresent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN DAVIES of whom desire to drink and think they are capable of drinking intelligently. 4-The University, on the other hand, is convinced just as strongly that these stu- dents are not capable of drinking intelli- gently. 5-There are on the campus fraternities, sororities, co-ops, and private dwellings in- habited by students some of whom are over 21 and some of whom are under that magiP age. These students who are over 21 are pre- vented by the University from drinking in their homes despite the fact that according to the state there is nothing to prevent this. 6--On the other hand, the Administration is determined that minors, shall not be brought under the evil influence of alcoholic beverages. 7-On top. of all this, the fact remains that minors ARE drinking in Ann Arbor, in hotels, in private residences, and even in the dorms where the custodians clean out beer bottles from the incinerators Sun- day mornings. So again, congratulations, best wishes, and sympathy extended to the SL on their noble endeavors. -Dick Ehrenberg DREW PEARSON Washington M err ymGo=ound WASHINGTON-The natural gas indus- try's smoothest salesman will learn to- day whether he has made his biggest sale. He is amiable, persuasive Sen. Robert Kerr, Oklahoma Democrat, who has been trying to sell the Senate on exempting natural gas producers from federal regu- lation.' For three weeks he has been shuf- fling from senator to senator, haranguing, cajoling, pumping them full of sales talk. This afternoon they will give their answer in a roll-call vote, Already a millionaire oilman, Kerr has a financial stake in his own salesmanship. During most of his one year in the Senate, Kerr's voting record has been for the pub- lic interest. But in the gas bill, his gain would be the public's loss, for the consu- mers must eventually pay any resulting increase in the cost of gas. Certainly the reason the natural gas companies want to escape federal regulation isn't to reduce prices. Whatever the outcome, the Senator from Oklahoma has set a record in senatorial salesmanship. He nursed his bill every step of the way, fighting for it comma by comma in the Senate and even turning his homey charm on President Truman to get a White House endorsement. On the Senate floor, Kerr set up a wall of billboard-size charts and graphs, portray- ing the natural gas industry from every statistical view. With this as a backstop, he ampled up and down the Senate chamber, haggling with opponents face to face, ges- turing under their noses, pleading in whis pers with the nearest senator when someone else had the floor. a' * * KERR OVERSELLS AT TIMES, Kerr's informal manner and easy drawl gave the Senate the atmos- phere of an Oklahoma town meeting. But of late, his persistency has got under sena- torial skins. Kerr has made the mistake of overselling. Twice in one day Senate major- ity leader Scott Lucas politely called him down for wandering away from his seat and sitting almost under the nose of the senator who was speaking. When Kerr kept this up the next day, Missouri's Senator Forrest Donnell broke in impatiently: "Mr. President, I make the poin't of order which was made twice on yesterday against the Senator from Okla- homa. Under the rules of the Senate, Seqa- tors are supposed to be at their seats when they speak." Between spurts of fire, the debate was dull and technical. Kerr was assisted principally by Sen. Lyndon Johnson of Texas who also flitted from senator to' senator, turning on the charm when a- ments failed. It will be interesting to see how much the ;harm of two freshmen senators will cst the nation's natural gas consumers. JUNE JOB OPENINGS THE COLLEGE SENIOR on the prowl for a job in June would do well to consider :chool teaching. This advice is made by Labor Department experts after a study of job openings. This study, engineered by William Batt, Jr., Secretary Tobin's hustling economic consultant, indicates there will be more college graduates than jobs next June. For example, 169 companies that hired 7,300 college graduates last year are looking for only 5,600 this year. The tightest fields with more graduates than job openings are chemistry, journa- lism, law, personnel work, pharmacy, and, for a few years at least, engineering. In the latter field there are 47,000 graduates for 20,000 openings. The best chances are in school teaching, where there is a need for 75,000 new teachers and a supply of only 25,000 applicants; also in medicine, dentistry, nursing, and social workers. (Copyright, 1950, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Dumpinug Scheme THE ANNUAL attempt to change the European Recovery program into a pro- ject of dumping surplus American agricul- tural commodities is under way. The House Foreign Affairs Committee has approved an amendment by P.ep. John M. Vorys (R-Ohio) to trim the Marshall Plan appropriation by $1 billion and substitute instead $1 billion worth of surplus commodities like wheat and cotton. At first, the European Recovery Program meant sending considerable foodstuffs to Europe in.-order to give Europeans enough energy to reconstruct their economy. Hap- pily, the program quickly moved out of the stage of relief and went into the real job of reconstruction. Then industrial goods and materials, capital and capital equipment were needed more than food. The Vorys amendment would substitute $1 billion worth of agricultural products whether they were needed or not. This would play into the hands of the Communists, who have been saying that the purpose of the Marshall Plan is to avert a depression in the U.S., not to help Europe. It would weaken the effectiveness "I Agree With You 100%" KR t U~S a > ~4w4 +f f u '1/a +i "~';~ / 41IoNJ 0t9y -nt- yYAfNfA*Ta P4 P1l' CM . -e.te--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 are not in good taste will be condensed, kited, or withheld from publicationrat the discretion of the editors.4 i1 + MUSIC + N A HIGHLY successful concert last night, the University Choir showed once more le musical excellence we have come to xpect from it. The program was thought- illy chosen; the singing very good and often uperb; and the orchestral and keyboard ccompanixnents well-performed. The first half of the concert, devoted to 'orks of the 18th century and earlier, in- luded the flowing polyphony of Perti's "O os Omnes," a canonical "Hallelujah" by 'allus, the chorale-like style of Schutz, and alestrina's antiphonal "Stabat Mater"-=all erformed with fine artistry. Just before in- ermission, Pergolesi's "Stabat Mater," for women's chorus, soprano and alto soloists and orchestra, provided what was in many ways the best part of the evening. Some of the solos were especially beautiful. After intermission, the choir presented works by Moussorgsky and Brahms followed by a group of modern works. I liked particul- arly the chorus by Brahms and the three "Metrical Psalms" by Leslie Bassett (who is a student in the music school, incidentally); but Paul Creston's "Chorales from Tagore." was also very well done. The Choir and its conductor, Maynard Klein, are to be thanked not only for pre- senting such seldom-performed works but for doing them so well. -Philip Dawson Cause of War .* To the Editor: [HE CAUSE of war is "not in the hearts of evil men, but in the economic and social system in which we live," namely, capitalism, states a recent writei in these colunmns. A refutation of such an illogical viewpoint is, of course, easy. First, if capitalism, is the cause of war, how do you explain the tremendous numbers of wars - prominent in history-that have- n't in the least been connected with capitalism-most civil wars for instance or any of the great wars before the rise of capitalism? Secondly, it is sheer nonsense to say an economic system causes war. People ultimately cause war and it is only by ultimately chang- ing the hearts and minds that war will ever" be eradicated. Indeed, the writer pdints this out himself when he .says, "War is not inevi- table-unless YOU permit it to be so." The 'proper study of war is, in the ; final analysis,, that "YOU". Certainly, social and economic conditions are impor- tant but only as contributory causes-not as prime ones. To any student who thinks he has THE cure for war or THE plan for peace, in promoting a particular political or economic system, may I suggest the reading of Harvard Sociologist Pitirim Sorokin's provocative book, "The Reconstruction of Humanity." He points out that capitalism, com- munism, world government, the UN, education, etc., do NOT pro- vide a panacea for war. All are inadequate cures to assure peace either because they neglect the decisive factor of altruism and love, without which war cannot be eliminated or are unable to make the overt behavior of persons and groups, with their social and cul- tural institutions, more altruistic than they are now. It is precisely the human indi- vidual that must be changed and that, it seems to me, is best done by promoting the religion which teaches, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind . . . Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself," for "on these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets." -Lloyd William Putnam SullenbergerA equittal To the Editor: (UCH AS I dislike any contin- uancesofethis already over- publicized case, I must reply to Mr. Silk's letter. He apparently was confused about the issues involved, since he seems to consider the case as be- ing a dispute between the doctor and a persecuted, colored, eleva- tor operator. It was, rather, a cri- minal trial, between the state and the accused-and the identity or race of the complaining witness should have nothing to do with it. Thank heaven that in this coun- try we still favor the accused in any criminal trial, whether his name be Dr. Sullenberger, Dr. Sander, or Valentin Gubichev. Mr. BARNABY Silk identifies his beliefs rather well when he deplores our Ameri- can "culture". He undoubtedly approves of the criminal trials held in other parts of the world, where the accused always confess- es or is always convicted and where they do not have the deca- dent idea that a person is inno- ent until proven otherwise be- yond a reasonable doubt. If Mr. Silk, as Mrs. Philpot's volunteer adviser, believes she has a good case, he can suggest she bring a civil action, wherein the questioning will not depend on the public prosecutor and the dispute will truly be between the two par- ties. It is not a true friend of the colored race who makes a cause celebre out of a minor assault and battery and thus prevents the very person he intended to help from living as any other citizen does. -Milton B. Dickerson * * * Flight from Time .. . To the Editor: THOSE WHO at one time or another have dabbled in, or considered dabbling in, esoteric philosophy and mysticism should be interested to learn that the concepts developed in Prof. George Boas' lecture "Flight from Time" have been employed for several centuries in systems of knowledge such as that perpetuated by the "Brotherhood of the Illuminati." "The Acceptance of Time" pos- tulated by Prof. Boas, comprising the three concepts of acceptance of death (or ephemerality), multi- plicity '(or infinite individuality), and change, should make an in- teresting philosophy for the intel- lectually and spiritually adven- turous. A mystic would predict that be- lief in these things would lead ultimately to belief in an abso- lute. "There are more things in heav- en and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy." -Hugh Werner IMalcontenllts .. To the Editor: PERHAPS this might better be addressed to Malcontents of the University of Michigan. It seems that few issues of The Daily go by without reference be- ing made-either through a write- up of the activities of a campus group or through letters to the editor--to the students' need to guard covetously and fight for their "rights." I write as no political conserva- tive when I now cite an omission common to most of these har- angues. Indeed, I'm proud to have been a member of the consti- tutional convention of the Nation- al Students Association, which passed a timely resolution on the securing of academic freedom, in September, 1947. The omission to which I refer is the utter lack of any mention of responsibilities or duties--except those of fighting for one's rights- which are the natural concomi- tants of such rights. If rights are so inherent in man as, for- instance, Nistor Potcova's recent letter implies, why is ita that we deny the vote to infants, inmates of penitentiaries and in- sane asylums, and non-citizens? I feel sure that the reason is our desire to grant suffrage only to those we mhay expect to have the maturational, mental, and experi- ential background and attitude necessary to use it wisely. Thus I submit that this Uni- versity does not exist for "teach- ing a person how to obtain and keep his rights" unless by this is meant that we obtain our rights through the awareness and accep- tance of our responsibilities as cit- izens, which is self-imposed "sub- jugation." - If history teaches nothing else, it is full of examples that freedom belongs only to those who have earned' it. Without waving any flags, how about beginning to put the emphasis on showing that we have? -Richard C. Walsh * * * Progressive Lobby... To the Editor: THE, YONG PROGRESSIVES of America have called their their second annual youth lobby to Lansing, April 4, 1950. Since our last lobby conditions have be- come worse,, not better for young people in Michigan. The threat of atomic war hangs over our heads more today than ever before. Our government in- sanely continues to stock-pile weapons whgse destructive power is beyond imagination. The economic crisis sharpens and in Michigan strikes and lay- offs steadily increase. Unemploy- ment has mountedwell over 5,- 000,000. Most of these are young people..a Jim Crow strangles young America in' a tighter grip. Negro youth more and more are denied equal job oportunities; suffer in- creased brutality, discrimination and segregation. Higher education has become reserved fdr a select few. Quota systems stil deny the benefits of such education to Negro and Jew- ish students. Youth must stand up and speak out for their rights! We call upon all the young people of Michigan, and students especially, to join us in Lansing in order to secure the passage of the following legislation: 1. Memorialize Congress to ban the H-bomb; 2. Increase unemployment com- pensation to $35.00 a week for 52 weeks; 3. A strong, effective FEPC bill; 4. A fair education bill; 5. A bill calling for 18 year old vote. By all ,joining together regard- less of color, creed, national ori- gin, or political belief young peo- ple can obtain a more secure and free future in a world of peace. -Calvin Lippitt, '49 Executive Secretary, YPA of Michigan. * e s Ten Questions . To the Editor: SEVERAL OF THE girls living in my residence hall and I are planning a party to be held at my home in Detroit next week-end. Other University students will be invited.; After reading the DOB the other. day and realizing the similarity 'between our plans and the case.there cited, several ques- tions arise- 1-Are we planning an official University, function? 2-Do we need approval from the SAC or the Office of the Dean of Women? 3-Are my parents considered approved chaperons? 4-I hope to invite a student under 21."an she come? 5-Cai I get 1:30 permission for this affair? 6-Will this party conflict with other University functions as de- finednbySt ,riteria? 7-Since' I live in a second floor apartment, willI be able to have the party, there or must I have it in a neighbor's apartment on the first floor' ) 8-We have no electricity in our home. Will candles do? 9-The bus stops a mile from my home. Can I use the family car to pick up my guests? 10-Mr. Editor, if we give this party, will our entire residence hall be put on social probation? -Lynn Gutenberg * * * Labor Youth League.. . To the Editor: WITH FANFARE and bugles edi- tors McNeil and Jaroff have climbed aboard the witchunting bandwagon in their revelation that the Labor Youth *League has a campus chapter right under their noses! What is the LYL? Jaroff says nothing more than a front for "mother Russia," composed of "harmless individuals, . . . hope- less Russophiles . . ." McNeil puts it a little differently: he says, first, that the LYL is forced to keep its meetings, membership, etc. secret because of the "Communist scare." Later on he declares that secret meetings, memberships, etc. are "... considered, romantic. It also developes a feeling of martyrdom to a cause, a paranoiac feeling of persecution . . ." All this, he adds, "enables Communist doctrine to go unchallenged among them." The Daily editors here follow the best Hearstling, un-American poppycock complete with false- hoods, innuendoes and distortions. In a land of crises, Peekskills, quota systems, Taft - Hartley's, witchunts, layoffs, lynch law; fol- lywood tripe, Mundt = Ferguson bills, and hell-bombs young people are beginning to search for means and methods of fighting the mon- strous injustices of the so-called "free enterprise" system. Young people and especially students are "loyal" to none of these things. They want peace, they want op- portunity, they want freedom. Edi- tors Jaroff and McNeil cannot an- swer these questions by shouting "red, Communist." American youth ARE NOT ACCEPTING such an- swers. The Daily cannot tell us why OVER 50% of the graduating .ek- gineering class from the U. of M. WILL NOT FIND JOBS although 30 miles away a corporation made 656,000,000 dollars profit last year. Why, Mr. Jaroff? Why were tui- tions raised this semester and WHY WILL THEY BE RAISED AGAIN NEXT SEMESTER? Why, Mr. McNeil? The peaceful and rdemocratic traditions of American students will not find expression in The Daily's columns, but in any or- ganization, including the Labor Youth Teague, which stands against American monopolists "plans" for a future of war, hatred and soup lines. 'a ,, -Al Lippitt * * * The Word from Harvard To the Editor: FOR SIX WEEKS I have been alternately amused and dis- mayed by your editorial policy. What has prompted this letteris an article, probably culled from The Harvard Crimson, which would indicate that the Harvard undergrads en masse are up in arms about the ROTC loyalty oath. Having graduated from Har- vard in February, I think I can safely say that few undergrads lose much sleep over it. The article is typical in that it presents edi- torial board opinion as prevailing student opinion. Your treatment of the hospital' case is analogous. Here is an af- fair which by all rights should have died long ago: it has been taken completely out of the hands of the concerned parties by holy- (Continued on Page 5) i LA w1 m ,: ,' '4 a Perennial Spring Gamte TJ HE PERENNIAL spring game, with Fa- ther Time and millions of U.S. citizens as the participants, has arrived. The annual jostling over daylight saving time is warm- ing up to what appears to be the greatest fun festival we may see this year. Keep your eyes and ears wide open-cartoonists, radio comedians, newspaper writers and commen- tators will hash and rehash this yearly 'ev- ent' until we will be ready to throw the clocks out altogether. Once more numerous states will stick to standard time, while others will permit local option changes. Some will even adopt 'fast' time on a statewide level. The changes will raise havoc with commercial transportation, travel and radio sched- ules and will cause countless minor prob- lems, just as they have in the past. In effect, advocates of daylight saving time will insist that the extra hour of day- light will enable more recreation for more health. They will insist that it will conserve electricity and natural resources in drought areas-all of which are good reasons. On the other hand, adversaries of the plan will insist that "natural living" can't and won't be changed. They will say (and are saying) that 'Bessie' and the rest of Zeke's cows will still come from the pasture to be milked at the same time-"God's time." 'Ole Dobbin' doesn't carry a watcbi either, and he will want his oats at what he considers noon whether it be pushed ahead an hour or not. Even Mother Will wail that she can't set junior like she can set het' clock. The merry game is here again, and who would sacrifice all the fun for a sane solu- tion to this national problem? -Larry Martin Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under t4 authority of the Board in Control Of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Leon Jaroff.........Managing Editor Al Blumrosen..... .. CityEdito 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 CQ-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 Staf Roger Wellington... .Business Managel Dee Nelson.. Associate Business Manager, Jim Dangl.......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 use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other mattersherein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Am Arbor. Michigan. as second-class mall matter, Siubscription during the regular School year by carrier. $5.00. by mail. $6.00 .., A' Human Relations Committee '4 AN OBSCURE group of students on cam- pus is working very hard to help you, but they may fail unless you give them your support. This group, the Human Relations Committee, is, using a new approach, in at- tempting to improve relations and "reduce tensions between individuals and groups on campus." They believe that better understanding will come through personal contact, and greater understanding and harmony of in- terests. The committee, which includes Student Legislature members and representatives from major campus organizations, are in- viting residents of dormitories, international and co-op houses, and affiliated groups to participate. "University Legislation on Dis- crymination" and the "British Elections System" have been the topics of the first flan r Qh A t,. fa. Barnaby was so serious about settling the Pixies' strike against his Fairy Godfather-Maybe we shouldn't scoff- This is a cruel blow, Barnaby-That your mother should prefer those Pixies to your faithful old Fairy Godfather- i suppose it was inevitable-The materialistic attitude of this machine age-No thought for spiritual values... Like Fairy Godfathers.. N