Aid to Education TIE MIC: THOMAS L. STOKES: Truman Chances this writing the House Committee on abor and Education is in a deadlock the Truman-sponsored federal aid to ,tion legislation. To many experienced iittee members, it looks as if there will o completed legislation on that issue g the present session of Congress. May of 1949, the Senate passed then Inas bill (S-246), which would give ! million to the states to do as they sed with the money. However, in. ch the House committee killed the Inas bill. Bills that have been intro- d in the House and remain in comn- ee include thesBurke bill (HR-5939), h would allot $300 million to public ol teachers' salaries, the Kern-Werdel (HR-7214) which would give $136 ion to the "13 needy states," and the roversial Barden bill (HR-7160) which ld give $300' million to the public ols only. e House Committee, while voting on dments, has decided that funds for the s were not to be used for parochial I bus service, the least of the services I by the parochial school supporters, twice rejected attempts to restrict the o public schools. The contrary nature ese two moves being obvious, we should further into the present state of af- e segment of the Congress, representa- of the private and parochial school rs and those Catholics who use the :es of parochial schools will not let any ation pass unless it includes aid to the te and parochial schools. Another seg- endorsed by liberal groups and many stant organizations is equally deter- I to block any aid to private and paro- schools. Methodist Bishop G. Bromley m has been especially outspoken for 'rotestant group. These two groups are ehard that, coupled with those Con- gressmen who will vote for no federal aid to education, either group can defeat any proposed legislation. Both proponents and opponents of fed- eral aid to parochial schools have advanced arguments to support their stands, many of which are but rationalizations of reli- gious and political viewpoints. It is not necessary to list them at this time. But it is significant that parochial school spokes- men have recently modified their claims. They now ask only for what they term "auxiliary services," which would include school bus service, school lunch benefits, health aids and non-religious text books. Despite the relative merits of the argu- ments employed by both sides, the pres- ent situation is such that no schools are getting any federal monies. This is un- fortunate since a large majority of the Congress desires such aid. But aid will only be realized if the two disputing groups compromise. Such a compromise was roughly outlined at the recent "Michigan Forum" at which time both Rev. Celestin Steiner of the University of Detroit and Priof. Preston Slosson approved of a mea- sure which would give parochial schools one minor concession, school bus aid. "At present, school bus aid is the only thing separating the two factions," said Rev. Steiner. The constitutionality of such a measure has already been decided in the affirmative in the Ease of Everson vs. The School Board of the Township of Ewing. The practicality of such legisla- tion is obvious.- The above proposal would not only be the best way of procuring federal aid to educa- tion, but it would be the method which would least displease those currently disputing the issue. Only through the old American tra- dition of compromise will our schools be re- vitalized for their important work. -Harland Britz ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round WITH DREW PEARSON ASHINGTON-Despite the hue and cry about friends of the Chinese Commu- s in the State Department, top-secret iments in the files of the Joint Chiefs taff will reveal that major decisions on ra were made, not by State Department sers but by hard-headed generals. Che salty seadog, Admiral William ihy; the sober military planner, Gen- ,l George C. Marshall, and their asso- tes on the Joint Chiefs pushed the st far-reaching decision made by the ited States on the Far East. hat decision, argued back and forth in White Housiaw_d thePentagon,- for ks, was to admit Soviet Russia to a ,nership in Asia. Back of this were atening military logistics and a lack of h in the atomic bomb. he somber argument given President sevelt by his most trusted military ad- rs was, "the invasion of Japan will cost 000 American casualties unless a Rus- attack across Manchuria pins down y Jap unit on the Mainland." Simultaneously there were skeptical re- rts to the Joint Chiefs from General Jie Groves, chief of the Manhattan strict, which said the United States ild not count on the atomic bomb to dieve major damage. Leading scien- s opposed Groves, pleaded that the new apon could end the war, but Groves' w prevailed at the Pentagon in 1944- hat was why the Joint Chiefs were pre- d to make major concessions to Russia revent overwhelming loss of life in the orials published in The Michigan Daily written by members of The Daily staff represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: JOAN WILLENS proposed invasion of Japan. In fact, they even agreed to give the USSR Railway ac- cess to Pacific, Baltic Sea and the Persian Gulf. This was much further that FDR ever went at Yalta. * * * - BUDENZ DESERVES CREDIT - THERE ARE several points to be empha- sized about the above. 1-The American public has the right to know it was fooled in the past, and Bu- denz deserves credit for bringing it out. 2-Most of this happened during the war when we were allied with Russia and When millions of people were praying for the Red Army's success, not only to hasten the war's end but in order that American lives might be saved. 3-One harm accomplished by Senator McCarthy is to make suspect as a Commu- nist any public official who sided with the Russians while we were allies. Mrs. Roose- velt and Harry Truman are strong enough to take care of themselves. But there are many little people, unwittingly used by the Communists and now on McCarthy's list, who can hardly sleep at night. They were gullible, susceptible to flat- tery, and made the mistake of lending their names to some "front" organizations. But they were no more Communist than Harry Truman. However, a speech on the Senate floor - and they may be ruined. Therefore it should be remembered that, despite the McCarthy witch hunt, to have been friendly to Russia from 1941-46 does not necessarily mean one was a Communist. * * * Perle Mesta, madame Minister to Lux- umbourg, is back in town after only six months overseas - officially for consulta- tion with Secretary Acheson. Real reason, however, is to see if she can talk President Truman out of an ambassadorship. After all, Eugenie Anderson, of Red Wing, Minn., is Ambassador to Denmark. WASHINGTON-It is evident now that President Trumap will run in the Con- gressional elections this year against his old and familiar friend, Dr. George Gallup, the pollster, in addition, of course, to all the Republicans in Congress who are Up for re- election. Dr. Gallup is out with a survey showing that Harry Truman's popularity rating just now is at a low point, with 37 percent ap- proving his conduct of our government, 44 against, and 19 undecided. THE President, who always grins when Dr. Gallup is mentioned, has accepted the doctor's challenge and his candidacy, so to speak. The President, who was in a particu- larly buoyant and jocular mood, chuckled and recalled how low he was rated in the Gallup Poll at this same time before the 1948 election. President Truman has chosen to par- ticipate widely- in the campaign as Presi- dent and party leader on behalf of Dem- ocratic Congressional candidates. He is, in short, trying to make this a national election by exerting all the prestige and influence of the Presidency in a stumping campaign which opens with his cross- country tour next month and calls for another this fall. It's a difficult chore he has cut out for himself. It is almost a precedent that the party in power suffers the loss of seats in Congress in such a mid-term election. This is attributed to the fact that the President, himself, does not head the ticket and is un- able therefore to translate his influence into local contests. In such elections local is- sues are apt to predominate. A Presidential election always draws out a bigger vote, too, than mid-term Congressional elections. rpl E only time in recent years that a party in power has gained seats in Congress in this sort of contest was in the 1934 Con- gressional elections after Franklin D. Roos- evelt had been in office two years. His New Deal reform and recovery program still carried the momentum of widespread popu- lar support. This has not happened since, not even in the war years, and constitutes, so to speak, the exception to prove the rule. As now envisaged, President Truman's Congressional campaign this year comes closer in the score projected for it to that of Woodrow Wilson in the 1918 Oon- gressional elections than anything that has occurred since. The first World War Presi- dent was seeking a Democratic Congress and openly asked it, to support his peace policies. He was rebuffed, and Republi- cans captured Congress. Since that time Presidents have been timid about project- ing themselves too far and too directly into strictly Congressional elections. President Truman's plans this year are in sharp contrast with those of the last off- year Congressional elections, those of 1946 when Republicans recaptured Congress for a brief, two-year interlude. The President's popularity was obviously at such a low point then-and this was reflected in a continuous low Gallup rating that dropped to 32 per- cent just before the election-that his party strategists kept him completely out of the campaign. Most Democratic candidates would not even mention his name. You would not have known that he was President and party leader. Instead they still des- perately chanted the name of Franklin D. Roosevelt. But nothing availed. * * * THERE is another almost unfailing tradi- tion that when the party out of power recaptures Congress in a mid-term election, as the Republican did in 1946, it then goes on to win the Presidency two years later. Harry Truman broke that tradition with his successful "whistle stop" campaign in 1948. He finally had shaken off cautious ad- visers who were afraid to let him be him- self, who tried to "protect" him behind for- mal and dull prepared speeches, and went back to the folksy, direct type of off-the-cuff campaigning that had been successful for him in Missouri. Consequently, he does not believe in rules of decorum or political precedents. He is out confidently to try to break another this year. As of now, he seems to carry, a heavy load, with continued tension with Russia, continued high taxes and big appropriations to support the cold war, and the attacks on his domestic social welfare program and his foreign policy. But you can't tell. And Dr. Gallup isn't sure. In his discussion of his latest poll showing a low Truman ebb, he took pains to stress the sudden and steep descents and ascents peculiar to the Truman popularity chart. He "coppered" himself for any even- tuality. New Books at the Library .. . Belin, Jean, Secrets of the Surete, New York, G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1950 Engstrand, Stuart, Son of the Giant, New York, Creative Age Press, 1950 Kennedy, Margaret, The Feast, New York, Rinehart & Company, Inc., 1950 Lederer, William J., All The Ship's At Sea, New York, William Sloane Associates, Inc., 1950 Facts A bout Phillips 'HE Lecture Committee could have avoid- ed the furor they brought on by the iillips decision if they had taken the ouble to inquire about him to determine the Regents bylaw applied to him. But ey took the easy way out and simply as- med that by being a Communist he must ,turally advocate violence in modifying e government. Had the committee bothered to inquire bout the political philosophy of Dr. Phil- ips they would have found that he be- Leves completely in the ability of our .emocratic institutions to accomplish any ecessary social change. And that he con- emns the use of any extra-parliamentary, indemocratic methods, which in lieu of heir decision is more than can be said or the faith of the members of the com- nittee in democratic instiutions. The fact that Dr. Phillips admits to being member of the Communist Party is no ason to assume that he believes in every ctrine ever advanced by the Communists. here are numerous members of other poli- are available, which is the case in this country. He went on to say that only in countries ruled by dictatorships and where parliamentary processes were not available would he consent to the use of other means. And then only for the purpose of achieving a democratic society. Dr. Phillips believes the Communist Party is the only group that is constantly striving to protect our democratic institutions against fascistic tendencies that are manifested by capitalism. He believes in the superiority of a planned economy over a free economy, but the only way he would attempt to bring about a planned economy in this country would be via the ballot box. In general his political and economic objectives for this country seem practically identical to those of the ad- vocates of Democratic or Fabian Socialism. The assertion that an address by Dr. Phillips would neessarily urge the destruc- tion or modification of the government by violence is completely erroneous. And there are hundreds of addresses on cam-