THE MICHIGAN DAILY ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round WITH DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON--Here are some of the things that are taking place backstage in the steel strike discussions. -THE STEEL COMPANIES-The major companies are divided regarding the con- tributory or noncontributory pension plan. Inland Steel already has a good pension plan, while Jones and Laughlin, together with Bethlehem, favor a pension plan where- by labor does not contribute; for the follow- ing reasons: Only 10 per cent of the workers con- tinue in their employ until they reach the age of 65. When they leave before that age under a worker-contribution plan, they take their contributions with them, which entails complicated bookkeeping. But when they do not contribute, the amount set aside for them by the company stays in the fund and mounts up. Thus the com- pany, over the years, contributes less and less money. Flatly opposed to Bethlehem, Jones and Laughlin, and Inland is the giant of the industry, U.S. Steel, which sets the competi- tive pace. Despite all arguments, U.S. Steel has held out against a company-contributed pension plan-chiefly as a matter of prin- ciple. It claims that labor should not get something for nothing, that labor should contribute at least a small part of the pension. Possibly this view is influenced by the fact .that directors of U.S. Steel include heads of other companies-Walter Gifford, of Amer- ican Tel and Tel; Sewell Avery, of Mont- gomery Ward and U.S. Gypsum; James Black, of Pacific Gas and Electric-which might be affected by any pension precedent set for the steel industry. * * * THE WHITE HOUSE-Presidential ad- visors have discussed with Truman the idea of invoking the Taft-Hartley Act, but he is opposed for this reason: The United Steel Workers already have suspended a strike for 77 days at his re- quest-practically the equivalent to the 80-day suspension possible under the Taft- Hartley Act. If the President now in- voked the T-H Act, it is feared labor might refuse to obey the injunction. And if half a million men refused to obey their government, the nation would face not only a breakdown of democracy, but reverberating ammunition would be hand- ed to Moscow for use in every country in the w6rld. Furthermore, the President's fact-finding board's recommendations have been accepted by the union, though rejected by manage- ment. That is why other White House ffinds,~iclufhdiir Mayoi' David Lawrence of Pittsburgh, Jack Arvey of Chicago ond Chairman boyle of the Democnatic National Committee have been urging Truman to put the bee squarely on the steel companies. PENTAGON MERRY-GO-ROUND RONIC TWIST of fate: The Navy is now bitter at Adm. Louis Denfeld even though he went all-out for them before Congress. Other admirals felt his blast was too late, that he had played footsie with the Army and Air Force in the privacy of the joint chiefs of staff . . . Navy lobbyists pulled wires to get Adm. William H. Blandy appointed in Denfeld's shoes as Chief of Naval Operations. Adm. Forrest Sherman isn't popular with his co-admirals. They figure he was the first to drill a hole in the dike that led to unification. What happened was that Sherman was appointed by Secretary Forrestal to sit down with Gen. Lauris Norstad of the Air Force and work out unification. Result was the milk-and- water unification bill of 1947, now con- siderably strengthened. Brother admirals never forgave Sherman for this . . . Ad- miral Sherman was top war planner on Admiral Nimitz's staff in the Pacific, is a brilliant strategist, fought for airplane carriers when other admirals were still fighting for battleships.... While the Navy's friends in Congress are Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: DOLORES LASCHEVER Looking Back 50 YEARS AGO: A CURIOUS astronomical discovery-the fact that the North Star was composed of three stars rather than one as was prev- iously believed-was made by Professor W. W. Campbell, a former Ann Arborite. Prof. Campbell graduated from the University in 1886 and was an instructor of astronomy here until he became head of the Link Ob- servatory in California. * * * pleading for peace, the Navy is still waging an undercover campaign against usually gentle Gen. Omar Bradley. They enlisted the powerful voice of Walter Winchell, long- time Naval reserve officer, in a campaign against Bradley. Winchell did his best for the Navy during the war, got kicked around for his pains, but is still loyal . . . also it was considered no accident that Congress- man John McCormack of Boston unloosed an out-of-the-blue blast at General Bradley. The Boston Navy Yard is about to feel the effect of Secretary Johnson's economy move, and some of McCormack's constituents will lose their jobs. * * * UNDER THE DOME MICHIGAN'S CONGRESSMAN Lesinski, the Detroit Democrat who staged a sit- down strike against the aid-to-education bill, is already in for reelection trouble. Wal- ter McNary, a Wyandotte, Mich., shoe re- tailer, will run against him in the primary. McNary stands strong with labor. There is an ironic twist in the New York Senate race between John Foster Dulles and ex-Governor Herbert Lehman. What most people don't know is that Dulles' law firm, Sullivan and Cromwell, have been the law- yers for Lehman Brothers for many years. Usually, the lawyer helps his client. (Copyright, 1949, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) CIINIEMA At the Orpheum .. . INTERMEZZO: Ingrid Bergman, Leslie Howard and Edna Best. AS THE VEHICLE that transported In- grid Bergman to the attention of Amer- ica, "Intermezzo" has been widely heralded. It has earned its acclaim. With a combina- tion of restraint and good taste, the movie presents the story of two musically-gifted people whose sensitive natures lead them into a tender, moving love affair and sub- sequently to adultery. There are several excellent touches evi- dent in the movie. Spared a picture of rapturous "love at first sight," the audi- ence witnesses a gradual realization of love between Anita and Holger. Thrown together by circumstances, the one recap- tures the feeling of a young love, the other finds a temporary happiness with a man whom she had long admired as an artist. Their escape from reality, although im- practical off the screen, effectively and artistically portrays the paradox and agony in an unsanctified love. Not seriously detrimental, but worth ob- serving, is the fact that the film loses ground on occasions that the principles get bogged down emotionally. And when it suddenly catapults into a "happy" conclusion wherein each is granted the thing that is "best" for him, the movie unhappily loses validity altogether. Because the Intermezzo melody dom- inated the airways so persistently ten years ago, it palled a little on me this time. The music generally, however, by avoiding the error of pretentiousness and consequent interference with the plot, fig- ures as a very pleasing addition to the film. As Anita, Ingrid Bergman is both appeal- ing and competent. Leslie Howkard doesn't quite match the picture I'd conjured up of him since his death. Edna Best does a superbly believable job as the forsaken wife -Jim Graham. MATTER OF FACT: Fake Defense WASHINGTON-It is hard to imagine any- more serious than President Truman's decision to weaken America's defenses in the year of the Beria bomb. The vast issues in- volved in this decision may be simply sum- marized, in the manner of a high school debating society: Shall America have real defenses? At the State Department many policy makers believe that the Kremlin desires to expand by infiltration and political con- quest, and does not want war. They there- fore argue that the political aspects of the world struggle are all-important and that strategic requirements can be met by assuming a mere "posture of defense." The idea is, in short, that the Soviets will be deterred from aggression if we make them think we are willing to fight, even if we are patently unable to fight successfully. The principle has become established, that fake defense would do as well as real defense. Since that momentous event, there have been three further developments. First, the Beria bomb has exploded, three years before the Joint Chiefs' planning date of 1952. Logically, therefore, a much more rapid defense buildup is now necessary. Second, President Truman, having dis- carded the idea of a defense buildup last IFCAIM Platitudes ACCIDENTALLY or not, some semblance of plain truth has been achieved by IF'C and AIM leaders in their latest pre-election mouthings. Their approaches to the campus bugaboo of bloc voting are different on the surface, but their attitudes on the subject are basi- cally the same. IFC's and AIM's unstated attitude to- ward the coming SL election can be summed up in this way: They will not overtly encoourage bloc voting, and have said as much. But they know perfectly well that it exists among houses on campus, and that they can't stop it. So they've decided to olpose it vocally, while actually letting it help their respective sides. This is the summit of good public relations, they realize. Why, it may even win a couple of votes! AIM President Walt Hansen and IFC President Jake Jacobson, two exceptionally able campus leaders, are also consum- mately successful politicians. This is evidenced by the IFC statement that it can of course do nothing about bloc voting and vote swapping among individual fraternities. It shows up in AIM claims that it is powerless to prevent the practices among independent houses. AIM did slip up a little when, bucking Hansen momentarily, it voted to back in- dependent candidates, as such. IFC kept strictly "non-partisan," and to that extent it has AIM over a barrel. Both sides know it. But Hansen speedily patched things up as best he could, by declaring that the AIM policy is not an encouragement of bloc voting. Maybe it isn't. At any rate, having gotten the proper platitudes and pious proclamations off their chests, both Walt and Jake deserve a rest. Bloc voting will carry on their fight from here on. -James Gregory. Teacher Oaths (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following editorial, re- printed from the Washington Post, seems to us a definite statement on loyalty oaths for teach- ers.) THE EDUCATIONAL Policies Commission of the National Education Association some months ago took the position that "members of the Communist Party of the United States should not be employed as teachers." Now the commissioh has issued a statement saying that while it still ad- heres to its earlier position, it wishes "to emphasize again that citizens should be espe- cially alert at this time to defend the essen- tial need of their schools for freedom of teaching and learning." At the same time it declared that State laws requiring special loyalty oaths of teachers are a menace to educational freedom. The essential test of a teacher's fitness should be his teaching competence. If he employs his position to advocate the Com- munist Party line-or the Republican Party line or the Democratic Party line -he indubitably disqualifies himself. If he keeps his personal political philosophy to himself, then it can no more properly be made a test of his fitness than his religion. The question whether an individual teach- er corrupts his function by injecting pri- vate prejudices into his teaching is a question that can best be answered by his professional colleagues. It is to their hands, rather than to the hands of trustees or legislators, that the determination of tenure ought to be entrusted. At the university level in particular, it is of the essence of academic freedom that a fac- ulty should be the judge of the qualifica- tions of its own members. To require teachers whose performance has earned them tenure to swear that they are not members of the Communist Party is to subject them to a test which at once impairs their dignity and limits their liberty as individual citizens. Such an oath (as distinguished from an affirmative declara- tion of loyalty and devotion to duty) is as offensive to an upright man as an oath that he is not a bigamist or a burglar. And the humiliation it inflicts is exceeded only by its futility. It cannot reach the crypto- Communists or fellow travelers who preach the party line out of sheer soft-headedness. These can be detected and weeded out only by their associates. But "uniform tests and criteria of loyalty," as the Educational Pol- icies Commission now points out, "impair the vigor of local school autonomy and thus do harm to an important safeguard of free- dom in education." The point of this can perhaps best be illustrated by a news story just reported from Japan where General MacArthur has ordered a purge of Communists from Jap- anese universities. The purge, according to Allen Raymond in the New York Herald Tribune, is being resisted by non-Com- munist and conservative professors who demand a careful distinction between freedom of thought and freedom of action. Perhaps a purge of professors on political grounds is tolerable in a country under military occupation and until lately riled by "thought police." It is not tolerable in a society that considers itself free. And it comes a little hard to have this lesson "He Doti Bestride The Narrow World Like A Colossus" F'' _,.51. p~ ± R ,h ; \ . ", 3" ..'EW( .O Gr a Xetter4 TO THE EDITOR The Daly accords its readers the privilege of submitting letters for publication in this column. Subject to space limitations, the general pol- icy is to publish in the order in which they are received all letters bearing the writer's signature and address. Letters exceeding 300 words, repeti- tious letters and letters of a defama- tory character or such letters which, for any other reason are not in good taste will not be published. The editors reserve the privilege of con- densing letters. Liberal Education.. .. To the Editor: READING CHARLES DIXON'S letter to the editor (Thursday, Oct. 27, 1949) was like looking at a mirror image of my impressions of the so-called liberal education here at Michigan. As a transfer student (Fall, '47) from an equally large university, I have some basis for comparison of student attitude concerning grades. Grades here at Michigan have become an end in themselves -not a means to an end as they should be. Mr. Dixon has ade- quately described the results. I feel as does Hutchins of Chi- cago that education is a develop- ment of the "thinking process." To say more would be redundant. If The Daily would print Mr. Dixon's letter on the front page where it would attract more at- tention, I'll bet there would be a terrific response. May I further suggest that The Daily as a repre- sentative student voice investigate this situation. I'd like to know what Dean Keniston's reaction is. (President Ruthven and others). Maybe it's just me! -George F. Flaridis. *~ * * Appreciation .. . To the Editor: IT IS IMPOSSIBLE for me to express the enthusiastic appre- ciation felt by all the cadets and officers for the hospitality accord- ed us by the University of Mich- igan. The Commandant of Cadets also wishes me to express his own keen appreciation for the many courtesies extended to the cadets and officers accompanying them. I wish you could hear the enthus- iastic comments I have received from the Cadets covering all phases of the visit. For my own part, I wish to ex- press my deep appreciation for the invaluable assistance rendered me by Dean Walter, Dean Rea, by Dr. Ostafin, by Miss McCormick and by Mr. George Roumell, president of the West Quadrangle Council. I doubt if it would be possible for anyone to receive more generous and cooperative assistance in any assignment. It is my sincere hope that some day we may have an opportunity to repay your hospi- tality and renew our acquaintance. -D. V. Bennett, Lt. Col., F. A. Officer in charge of football trips. .* * * NSA Answers . . To the Editor: RE CHARLES R. Fuller's letter to The Daily (October 27): Question -1. What happened to the $1,000 or more which was col- lected by the NSA at the Univer- sity of Michigan last year? Answer: Every dollar collected by NSA through the sale of PCS cards was allotted on the follow- ing basis: 65c was deposited in the treasury of the Student Legisla- ture for the use of that body; 20c was sent to the National Office of the NSA; 10c was sent to the Re- gional Office of NSA; 5c was sent to the Area PCS Committee. The last three delegations of funds covered PCS operation costs exclu- sively. Question 2. "Where are my cop- ies of the NSA News?" Answer: It was announced in The Daily and at the time of sale of the PCS cards that no sub- scription to the NSA News would accompany the purchase of a PCS card. Though a statement is made on the PCS Card that a subscrip- tion to NSA News is included, it was decided after the printing had been done not to include the sub- scription but rather to turn that amount into the local student gov- ernment body instead. Several cards were issued without the statement of subscription crossed out. This was an administrative error of which C. R. Fller was a victim. Question 3. " . . . Ann Arbor merchants who were supposed to honor these cards have refused to do so." Answer: Fuller is using the fill- ing station listed on the NSA list of participants as an example. This participant was a member of a national . chain. He accepted the NSA Purchase Card plan and agreed to operate under it in Ann Arbor for the benefit of Michigan students. This filling station par- ticipant dropped out of the Pur- chase Card System without notify- ing the PCS Committee or without reference to the contract he signed with NSA dated to expire Novem- ber 1, 1949. -Leonard Wilcox, Chairman PCS, NSA Committee. * * * Comm 'unists . . To the Editor: AFTER ALMOST nine months of - trial, eleven Communist Party leaders were found guilty, in a New York federal court, of crim- inal conspiracy against the United States government, for teaching and applying the principles of Marxism-Leninism. That Friday evening, and on the following days, people all over our country were "slightly stunned," whether they agreed or disagreed with the verdict. We, on campus, were so impressed with this historic outcome that the news rated one article, one edi- torial, I believe, and one letter to the editor in The Daily. Can we, in these higher halls of learning, be so detached that we are unim- pressed at the broad reverbera- tions this case may have on us as students, thinkers, and as cit- izens? Such would seem the case . . This trial was based on the Smith Act which was passed dur- ing the height of a war psychosis back in 1940. At that time, we were about to enter a war to over- come the "real and present dan- gers" of fascism. That war is now over, but the Smith Act is still very much alive. Perhaps we will continue to have external enemies to our country, but I can think of no greater in- ternal enemy to our democracy than this act which abridges- a section of the Bill of Rights- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLTIN Publication in The Daily Official tals," 4 p.m., Mon., Oct. 31, 130 Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices Chemistry Bldg. for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Office of the Assistant to the President, Room 2552 Academic Notices Administration Building, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication Application blanks for the Laa (11:00 a.nm. Sat ur Aplctinblnk orte.a School Admission Test to be giv SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1949 en Nov. 12 are available at the Bu VOL. LX, No. 30 reau of Psychological Services 110 Rackham Bldg. Application Notices are due in Princeton, New Jerse not later than Wed., Nov. 2. Women Students: Women's Co- operatives are now accepting ap- Bacteriology Seminar: Tues plications for roomers and board- Nov. 1, 10:30 a.m., 1520 E. Medi ers for the coming spring semester. cal Building. Speaker: Dr. Rut. Contact Nina Kessler, Muriel Les- Lofgren. Subject: A Brief Stud ter House, 1102 Oakland, 2-4914. of Some Chromogenic Marine Bac teria. Curtiss-Wright Scholarships: The scholarships of $500 each are Mathematical Logic Seminar for one year. The remaining 7:30 p.m., Mon., Oct. 31, 3217 A.F scholarship is open to stu- Professor Burks will conclude hi dents who have completed at discussion of recursive function least the freshman year of study and the Godel incompletenes in the Engineering College, or its proof. equivalent, and whose field of in- terest is manufacturing and pro- Mathematics Orientation Semi duction. To be eligible, students nar: Mon., Oct. 31, 3 p.m., 300 must be American citizens, par- A.H. Mr. Norman will continue hi tially self-supporting, with an talk on "Dehn's Theorem." academic standing above average. Applications should be filed with Organic Chemistry Seminar Professor H. W. Miller, Chairman 7:30 p.m., Mon., Oct. 31, 130 of the Committee on Scholarships, Chemistry. Speaker: Williar Room 414 West Engineering Build- Spliethoff. Topic: The Addition o ing, by November 1st. Maleic Anhydride to Monoolefin Lectures Concert Lecture, auspices of Sigma Xi. Student Recital: Ruth Obei "Atomic and Splar Energy" (illus- holtzer, organist, will present trated). Farrington Daniels, Pro- recital at 4:15. Sunday afternoo fessor of Chemistry, University of Oct. 30, Hill Auditorium, in parti Wisconsin, National Lecturer, So- fulfillment of the requirements fc ciety of the Sigma Xi, 8 p.m., the degree of Master of Music. Mon., Oct. 31, Kellogg Auditorium. pupil of Josef Schnelker, Mi Oberholtzer has planned a prc Dr. Farrington Daniels, profes- gram to include music by Buxt sor of physical chemistry, Univer- hude, Bach, Brahms, Hindemit] sity of Wisconsin, will speak on and Fantasy and Fugue by Home "Thermoluminescence of Crys- (CGntnued on Page 6) and that abridgement during munist trial in New York "migi peace time.j make a difference in two camp This case is of vital importance organizations" and quoted m to us all. Personally, I would like about CP members in Detroit. to see the act declared unconsti7 was heralded as the campus de tutional (as I believe it is) and fender of Communism. have an end to. the abridgement To all skeptics I openly and o of our democratic rights. But, ficially declare myself NOT whatever my feelings on this case, Communist and those who sa it is important for all lovers of >therwise had better provide the freedom to see the outcome that selves with an able lawyer. I kno this verdict may have for our nothing about CP members t country. Detroit, and the only change i -Phyllis Ranstead. the YP on campus has been * * * great increase in membership. Health Insurance Again *I am opposed to the Commt nist Party and their beliefs, bi To the Editor: will readily defend their right I express them. Recent history h DO NOT WISH to engage in a shown only too well that the Con drawn out Daily tirade on prin- munists are the first to be a ciples which are common knowl- tacked, and reaction has goals e edge to most readers. But I am wiping out everything left of 9 compelled to straighten out a mis- degrees right. After Communisn conception which has resulted it will be the trade unions, N from D. B. Murray's letter of the groes, Jews, and then all thos twenty-seventh. He quoted in that remain. Liberals must n part from my letter, thus alter- be divided on the red scare. To d ing the inference. My original so will be suicide. statement was, in substance, In the future I should like t "Compulsory Health Insurance see The Daily make correct qu would increase the number of pa- tations and represent viewpoin tients without increasing the num- fairly. ber of doctors." Murray feels that -Gordon MacDougall. this suggests my wish to withhold medical attention from those who cannot afford it. THIS IS NOT TRUE. I am merely pointing out the impasse that since most mnedical men are working at ca - t ICttt pacity, how can they conceivably take care of more patients-needy or otherwise. The only practical solution for this difficulty is more - - doctors turned out by our univer- sities; to attain this end no effort should be spared. Providing the care potential for the population}' is the essential first step in rais- ing our comparatively high na- tional health standards still high- er. Not until this potential is creat- Fifty-Ninth Year ed will it be possible for any sig- Edited and managed by students nifiantaddiionl cre t bepro the University of Michigan under tt nificantadditional care to be pro- authority of the Board inControl vided for anybody. Then we will Student Publications. have the opportunity to furnish the voluntary clinical and hos- Editorial Staf pital facilities to those needy in- Leon Jaroff.........Managing Edit Al Blumrosen.............City. Edit( dividuals who cannot afford op- Philip Dawson ......EditoriaV Direct timum medical care. It appears Mary Stein.............Associate Edit .Jo Misner ............Associate Edit' that such an optional clinical pro- George Walker.......Associate Edit gram- which puts a floor under Don McNeil.........Associate Edit Alex Lmanian ...Photography Edit' standards below which none may Pres Holmes........Sports Co-Edit fall, makes far more sense than Merle Levin.........Sports Co-Edit' a system of "Compulsory Health Roger Goelz.....Associate Sports Edit HelhMiriam Cady.......... Women's Edit( Insurance" that would place an all Lee Kaltenbach. .Associate Women's E inclusive ceiling over everyone Joan King...................Libraril whether they need it or not. Allan Clamage......Assistant Libraria -Lyle Thumme. Business Staff * * * Roger Wellington....Business Manag Dee Nelson.. Associate Business Manag At It Again . . . Jim Dangi......Advertising Manag Bernie Aidinoff. Finance Manag To the Editor: Ralph Ziegler....C..Circulation Manag Telephone 23-24-1 THE DAILY is at it again-try- ing to have the Young Pro- Member of The Associated Press gressives appear as a subsidiary of The Associated Press is exclusive the Communist Party. This is the entitled to the use for republicatic only possible conclusion that one of all news dispatches credited to it otherwise credited to this newspape could draw from the feature ar- All rights of republication of all oth ticle appearing, on page one of matterseherein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at An Wednesday's issue under the head- Arbor, Michigan, as second-class ma ing "No Direct Effect Here." matter. The article said that the Com- year by crier. t5.00. by mail. 600. jBARNABY I'll just wipe this point off-Ooops! Snrvlifl nrl AIw.a Such carelessness. Leaving loose-stamps al l I