TWO THE MICHIGAN IAILY SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1950 U Reply to Gregory APPARENTLY there are still some con- servatives, of whom James Gregory ap- pears to be one of the most rabid, who don't realize that there have been some changes made from the way of living of the Pil- grims to the culture of the present. In re- futing the social advances that have been made during the past two decades Gregory pretends to be completely unaware of the main factor that has made these social re- forms necessary - technological advance- ment. It is because of the great techno- logical advancement that has been made since the time of the Pilgrims, that the so- ciety of the Pilgrims, which Gregory be- moans the loss of, cannot work today. Technological advancement must affect society. These effects can be good and can be harmful, and it is these harmful ef- fects which the various pieces of social legislation have sought to control in the interest of society. Conservatives often oppose company-paid pensions and benefits to employees and government social security. What does Gregory believe the average factory worker can live on upon becoming too old to work? With the cost of living so very high during recent years there is little to be saved for the future from the worker's salary. And as the worker thought of his old age there was little hope. That is until the government re- alized its responsibility and enacted social security. And the workers organized to de- mand benefits from their employer's with the idea that depreciation of human em- ployees is as much a company responsibility as depreciation of machinery. Conservatives do not like the idea of price suports for farmers, believing that the consumer will suffer. The purpose of price supports is to protect an unstable economy which would be in danger of col- lapsing without them. This not only aids the farmer, but also the consumer in the longer run. In listing the benefits which compulsory health insurance offers, Gregory believed that a loss of self-respect outweighed the benefits to be had. Does one who is poor and sick lose any self respect if he allows his government whose main purpose is to pro- tect its citizens, to care for hih? A comparison of the standard of living of workers before and after the passage of the Wages and Hours Law is all that is necessary to prove the value of such an act, which-Gregory also seems to oppose. As technology continues its great advance and as economic power becomes concen- trated in fewer hands, the people can only look to the political power of the govern- ment for protection against the various ill effects and abuses that arise. -Paul Marx. ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round WITH DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-For Republican ears only, Senator Taft gloomily predicted that the GOP will not recapture Congress this November, and as a result the issue of the "social state" won't be decided until the 1952 Presidential election. Talking shop with GOP senators be- hind closed doors, Taft solemnly added that he himself didn't care to'come back to the Senate "if the Republican member- ship is decreased." Taft took the floor after colleagues hailed his re-election as the most important to the Republican cause. New Hampshire's tart- tongued Senator Charles Tobey almost turned the meeting into a Taft rally with an emotional speech. "The most important thing to the Senate and the country is to re-elect a man who has had guts to vote how he stood," rang out Tobey, who disagrees with Taft as often as any Republican in the Senate. Tobey even offered to "talk to some of the people of hio-some of the humble peo- ple.". "All the people of Ohio are humble," chirped Taft's junior colleague from Ohio, ,"Handsome John" Bricker. Taft then stood up and told applauding senators: "I don't want to come back if the Republican membership is decreased. I 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 mUsic, want to see all of you come back who are here now-and a few more. I don't expect the Republicans to get a majority in No- vember, but the important thing is to win some gains. The whole issue of the social state won't be settled anyhow until 1952." -BARE GOP CUPBOARD- M AIN ISSUE of the GOP Senatorial meet- ing was whether to draft a statement of GOP "aims and purposes" for the 1950 cam- paign. Opinion on this was by no means unanimous. Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., astute 'Massachusetts blue blood, spoke for the majority when he reluctantly agreed to a statement of GOP aims. Normally he would be against such a statement at this time, he said, since both parties set down their aims in the 1948 platforms. "But in view of all the publicity," Lodge argued, "if we don't restate our aims, it might look as if we didn't want to." Lodge also pointed out that contributions had stopped flowing into the GOP cam- paign chest and suggested that a statement of aims might increase the flow. But Colorado's Senator Eugene Millikin shook his bald and shiny head. "If you have a statement of aims to please not the little contributors, but the big con- tributors," he warned, "it would take us back not to the oxcart age but to the antediluvial age." Maine's Senator Owen Brewster broke in tauntingly that he had heard Lodge remark on a television program that he was in sympathy with only 80 per cent of the Re- publican platform anyhow. Sen. George Aiken of Vermont then jumped up and announced he favored 90 per cent of the Republican platform - "probably more." "What part of the 1948 platform do you want to change?" Aiken demanded. But his question was never answered. In the end, the conference agreed to ap- point a committee to help draft a new GOP statement. This brought two senators to their feet to announce they would re- fuse to serve on the committee. They were Senators Wayne Morse of Oregon and Bourke Hickenlooper of Iowa, who said they preferred to run on their own records. It was clear that the 1950 campaign was on. There was one new voice at the GOP senators' conference. He was newly appoint- ed Senator Harry Darby of Kansas, who recited a short statement that he would try to measure up to the standards set by his fellow senators. "You'll have to do better than that," boomed Senator Vandenberg merrily. * * * -NEW A-BOMB PLAN- INSIDE REASON why David Lilienthal postponed his resignation from December to February 15 was Truman's personal plea that he stay on for six more weeks to pre- pare a new international control plan for atomic energy superseding the old Baruch plan. The Baruch plan was conceived on the idea that Russia would not have the bomb before 1954. In other words it was based on an American atomic monopoly. Since Russia now has the bomb, the Baruch plan is out- dated, and Lilienthal is framing new pro- posals to be submitted to the United Nations this spring. -BRITISH DIVERT FUNDS- UNITED STATES banking and business leaders are mapping a strong drive to put a reservation on 1950 Marshall plan ap- propriations. They will insist that before any more money goes to Britain, the British government must put a stop to the practice Cdit'e4 Wefte By LEON JAROFF WHAT Soviet Russia needs most today is a Five-Year-Plan to completely overhaul her awkward propaganda machine. No lengthy documentation is required to prove this statement. The Soviets have thoughtfully condensed their efforts into a semi-monthly publication called the USSR Information Bulletin which proves beyond a doubt that no one connected with Russian propaganda has the slightest conception of the workings of the Western mind. The purpose of USSR, which is pub- lished in Washington by the Soviet Em- bassy can be only to sell Russia and its policies to the American people. But where it attempts to impress, it amuses; where it attempts to preach, it alienates. * * * J. V. STALIN TAKE, for example, the December 21 issue which coincided with Stalin's 70th 'birth- day. The table of contents gave some in- dication of what lay ahead: J. V. Stalin, Great Continuer of Lenin's Cause J. V. Stalin, Founder of the Multinational Soviet Socialist State Struggle for Peace is Keystone of Soviet Foreign Policy J. V. Stalin, Inspirer and Organizer of Socialist Industrialization Generalissimo Stalin, Great Military Leader J. V. Stalin and Soviet Science J. V. Stalin and the Efflorescence of Soviet Culture Gori, Birthplace of J. V. Stalin The Love of the People (for J. V., of course) Disregarding the blundering ommission in the third title, the listing immediately brought to mind the titles of a popular series of boys' books-Tom Swift and his Giant Cannon, Tom Swift and his Wonder- ful Flying Machine, Tom Swift and his Electric Runabout, etc. As every red-blooded American boy knows, Tom, Swift was a remarkable young man who either invented or improved upon every important device in our civilization and took time off occasionally to perform hu- mane and heroic deeds. .* * * STALIN VS. SWIFT UT ACCORDING to USSR, Joseph Vi- sarionovich Stalin's deeds make Tom Swift's look insignificant indeed. With a straight face USSR revealed, in this series of articles by prominent Russian writers, that J. V. Stalin personally planned an carried out almost every important military, social, technological and political development in Russia since the October Revolution. A few of the minor acheivements at- tributed directly to Stalin are the mechan- izaotin of Soviet industry, the collective farm system, and the brilliant military strategy that saved Moscow and Stalin- grad during the last war. In all fairness, however, USSR did no credit Stalin with all of the Soviet acheive- ments. Nowhere, for instance, was it stated that Stalin had personally developed the atomic bomb. But USSR noted that it was "Stalin science" that had performed the manifold Soviet miracles; that every important de- velopment was guided or at least inspired by Stalin. * * * THE CORN IS GREENL IN THE magazine's final article, Boris Polevoi, after making a remarkable effort to contain himself, finally burst out with: "Stalin! This is the name most respected and honored by millions of working people in the Peoples' Democracies who were liber- ated from fascist chains by the Soviet army and who are now joyously laying the foun- dations of socialism. "Stalin! Upon him are now turned, the eyes of the common people of the globe, all who hold dear liberty and genuine democracy, all who hate war and dream of- a stable and lasting peace." Let's give credit where credit is due. Joseph Stalin is a remarkable mortal-for better or worse. But to the awkward attempts of the Soviet propagandists to create a Messiah, we offer a long and loud razzberry. Extremist MR. R to the fourth power-Republican Representative Robert Rich of Pennsyl- vania-came forth with a bemusing bit of reasoning in Washington, D.C., the other day. "I'm as right as far as I can get," he said. "I'm not going to get to the middle of the road, because I believe it might get me over to the left, and I -don't want to get there." These are the defensive words of the ex- tremist. With a few changes, the words could be made to express the philosophy of everyone who is afraid to admit that the world is not simple. I Once admit that the world is not black and white, cold and hot, steam and ice, good and bad, they ask, and what happens? Simplicity is swallowed up by complexity, a swirling riot of the spectrum, the thermometer, of degrees and shades, of ifs and buts. The only parallel to Mr. Rich's remark that occurs to us at the moment is the farmer's expanation of why he didn't like "How Mysterious Can You Get?" t Sf sI ONs 15 ?1-5& DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of s the University. Notices jfor tihe Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Office of the Assistasit to the President, Room 2552 Administration Building, by 3:00 p.m. on the day,, preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1950 VOL. LX., No. 74 - Notices Saturday Evening Service: The General Library will be open Sat- urday evenings until 10 p.m. dur- the month of January. Lectures Lecture: Auspices of the De- partment of Political Science. "Politics in the Far West in.19- 50." Thomas S. Barclay, Professor of Political Science, Stanford Uni- versity, and Visiting Professor of Political Science, University of Michigan. 4:15 p.m., Mon., Jan. 9, Rackham Amphitheater. Economics Club Lecture: "Cur- ent Problems and Procedures of Monetary Policy." Woodlief Tho- mas Economic Adviser to the Board, of Governors of the Fed- eral Reserve System. 7:45 p.m., Mon., Jan. 9, Rackham Amphi- theater. Academic Notices Progress in Michigan, through January 28, weekdays 9-5, Sun- days 2-5. The public is invited. Events Today Inter-Arts Union : Meeting, 2 p.m., League. Room will be an- nounced on the League bulletin board. U of M Hostel Club: Square Dance at Jones School, 8-11 p.m. Everyone invited. Student Legislature: Cabinet meeting, 1 p.m., Union. Agenda: I. Selection of Committee Chair- men. II. Formulation of Program for Spring Semester. Coming Events Inter Guild Council: Sun., 2:30 p.m., Lane Hall. U. of M. Hot Record Society: Record program, 8 p.m., Michigan League Ballroom. Everyone in- vited. Tuesday Play Reading Section, Faculty Women's Club: 1:45 p.m., Tues., Jan. 10, League. Deutscher Verein musical pro- gram originally scheduled for Jan. 9 has been postponed to Jan. 16. Naval Research Reserve Unit: Meeting, 7:30 pm., Mon., Jan. 9, 18 Angell Hall. Prof. W. H. Hobbs, "The Isthmian Canal Problem." Editorial Staff, Inter-Arts Ma- gazine: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Mon., Jan. 9, Garden Room, League. Graduate Outing Club: Meeting, Sunday, 2:15 p.m., northwest en- trance, Rackham Bldg. to go 'skating or hiking. (Skating at the Michigan skating rink, 3-5 p.m., Sunday.) U. of M. Hostel Club: Sun., Jan., 8: Leave League at 10 a.m. for ride by car to Kensington Ree- creation Area for hike through woods. Bring lunch, return by 6 p.m. Call leader Bill Walton, 2- 5235, about transportation. 4 ,° -i /etteP 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, edited, or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. It 4.. 'S Mathematical Logic 7:30 p.m., Mon., Jan. 9, gell Hall. Seminar: 3217 An- 'New Voice . To the Editor: 1w 4 Something is right with Amer- ica.t More and more a new voice is9 benig heard from the people. A1 voice promising all the best thatF our government has to offer. A1 voice infinitely more firm than that of those few souls who strove for a free public education sys- tem in this country and were de-f nounced as socialistic radicals. A< voice far louder than that of the1 few who preached Christ's ori- ginal doctrine of brotherhood and1 have been successively denounced as: "subversives attempting toI undermine the structure of thei RomanEmpire," "heretics," "ri- tual murderers," "anarchists," "nigger-lovers," and "Commun-E ists." And this voice is crying for security. It is asserting its right to this security, and those who would keep the people enslavedI are using the same tactics again. They are labelling this a social- ism, they are calling .it by the loose term of statism, they are claiming that it is communistic and have labelled its proponents visionaries and criminals. But the people will not be fooled ...-. Yet there are those who are against price supports for farm-, ers. (Never mind the fact that, the farmers are thehbackbone of our society. Never mind the fact that if they do not make a de- cent living our country will starve. Never mind the fact that their children must be clothed and made to feel secure, or the fact that the average farm family in- come is $400 a year. They don't have enough money to matter.) There are those who are against rent control and adequate hous- ing. (Never mind the homeless veteran whose marriage may be ruined by living with relatives away from his wife. Never mind those who are evicted because of a landlord's insatiable lust for money. Never mind the awesome fact that the landlord's profits have gone up 17 per cent over 19- 48. He's got the money and the veteran doesn't.) There are those who say that the Company must make its mon- ey and labor be damned. (Never mind about Andrew Giresek, who worked for U.S. Steel for 44 years. As a token of the esteem the com- pany held him in, they had de- cided to give him his pension for the next 10 years in a lump sum. It came to $34.45, or 29 cents a week. Five days later, U. S. Steel reported a profit of $133 million for the first nine months of 1949: a 51 per cent increase over the previous year. Never mind An- drew. He hasn't the money to matter. There are those who are against a sane health and public hygiene system. (Junior is fine, thank you. He had smallpox at age five and died. He didn't have to worry about his self-respect.) It is interesting to note that those who cry most loudly about the dangers of this welfare state, the ones who speak of the hu- man's supposedly consequent lack of self-respect, the ones who speak of the dangers of security, tend to be those who are most secure. It is those who are secure already that are against the wel. fare state. __ntm Jareki with luxuries, said this upright American as he drained -his glass of champagne. Just when things had quieted down a bit, along comes Mr. Gre- gory who makes Eisenhower look. like a positive radical! Gregory is afraid - price supports, wages, pensions . .. who ever heard of such nonsense? This reporter says that price- supports are bad for the consum- er. I agree, but this is the Land of Profit and who cares if mil- lions of dozens of eggs rot in caves in Topeka? First comes the profit, then comes the people. But rent control-ah, that's a bit different. Landlords today are in -absolute misery, with only 99.99% of rooms filled, unpainted walls, no improvements and high- er prices than ever before! But those awful unemployed tenants who demand hot water and all sorts of frills for their $100 per month. And, oh yes! Pensions and high- er wages, indeed! These workers must think that they're people! They should have been content with their 10 hour day and open shop. Just because corporation profits were higher this year than ever before (please note, Mr. Gre- gory) certainly doesn't permit workers to ask for a living wage or a decent pension plan! After all, if Mr. Gifford of A.T.&.T. can live on a pension of tens-of- thousands -of dollars, an ordinary worker should be able to do it on $30 per month. At any rate, few people past 65 eat a great deal. So while the wealthy hug their riches and welfare payments are reduced, I leave Mr. Gregory with this thought: Toasted buns for our hot-dogs and less foam on our beer. -Hy Bershad * * ~ To the Editor: I have just read James Gregory's brilliant analyses of the dan- gers of security in today's Daily (issue of Jan. 5) and I should like to thank God for James Gregory! Why, do you know that Ihad al- most been lulled into, thinking that security was a good thing? But not any more, though-oh no. I think that we ought to form a Committee to End Security, and elect you, Mr. Gregory, as chair- man. (Of course, your term of office couldn't be for more than a day or so, otherwise you would become too secure, and lose all that wonderful self-respect.) Anyway, Mi. Gregory, there are a number of things that we have to do, and the sooner the better. Here are just a few of the things that I think should be adopted to help defeat this monster, secur- ity. 1-I think that too many people are passing their courses here at Michigan, and as a consequence, students are getting altogether too secure. Why do you know, a lot of my friends (well some, anyway) are confident that they're going to pass? Naturally, they don't have any pride or daring left at all. Maybe we could peti- tion the faculty to flunk out 50 or 60% in each class; I'm sure that this would tend to reduce that hateful security among the student body. Of course, there would still be some bright boys who would be secure, you know the average-raiser type, but if we Mathematics Orientation Semi- nar: 3:30 p.m., Mon., Jan. 9, 3001 Angell Hall. Speaker: Mr. Lubel- feld. Organic Chemistry Seminar: 7:30 p.m;, Mon., Jan. .9, 1300 Chemistry. S p e a k e r : Leonard Bruner. Topic: Infrared Absorp- tion Spectra and Molecular Sthuc- ture. Exhibitions Museum of Art: Alumni Me- morial Hall: Accessions, 1949, throughi F'ebruary 1; Work in ;4 Stark Facts' THE FINDINGS of Senator John' Sparkman's (D, Ala.) subcom- mittee on low-income families will document the need for the pro- gram President Truman will de- mand of Congress January 5. The testimony presented during the last two weeks has brought to light some stark facts and points up the need, more forcibly than ever, for the Fair Deal program. Nearly 10 million American families in the prosperous year of 1948 had less than $2,000 annual income. More than four million had incomes under $1,000. Dr. Dewey Anderson of the Public Af- fairs Institute told the committee that "it is not enough to under- write full employntent and then depend on the trickle-down, per- colating system to care for the lower third." The three largest c i l groups in the low-income bracket, he said, are: poorly educated per- sons who do not rise above occu- pations requiring little skill; wid- ows who are breadwinners, and, lacking special skills, are forced to accept low-paid jobs; old persons able to find only low-paid jobs or who have retired on small incomes. Anderson recommended four immediate steps to deal with the problems of the lower economic one-third: 1. A Fair Employment Practices Commission would deal not only with the problems of racial minori- ties but with those of older work- ers, women, and all persons handi- capped by disabilities. 2. The creation of a Welfare Re- view Board to study the adequacy of current programs affecting the lower-income group. 3. The creation of a national scholarship and loan program to assure opportunity for education. 4. Substantial liberalization of the present Social Security Act. In addition, he emphasized that other proposals before Congress - healthrregional development, the Brannan farm plan, higher un- employment compensation, and aid to education - would provide indirect benefits for the lower third. -The New Republic. >-K -4 V * ETURNING TO ANN ARBOR after sev- eral years' absence, the young American musicians, Carrol Glenn, violinist, and Eu- gene List, pianist, played an extensive pro- gram in Hill Auditorium last night. Undoubtedly the most well coordinated and finely executed work of the evening, the Haydn "Concerto for Violin and Piano in F Major" opened the program. Played only twice before in this country, the com- position was delightful in its dynamic con- trasts and devilish ornamentations, and the performers pointed up these charac- teristics with fine artistry and assurance. Miss Glenn's phrase lines were well thought out, giving a rounded continuity to the performance. Perhaps a comfortably slower tempo in the Presto movement would have eliminated tle rushed feeling and occasional blurring of the scale passages. A more subtle interpretation than is us- ually heard was given by Miss Glenn to the Saint-Saens "Introduction and Rondo Cap- riccioso." Irridescent and feathery in its imagina- tive programme was the first encore de- manded from Miss Glenn, the "Fountains' of Arathusa" by Smelowsky,, In the major work of the evening, the Franck "Sonata in A Major" for violin and piano, it was unfortunate that the artistic abilities of the performers were so un- balanced, The violin line sang long, pas- sionate, and deep, while the piano, instead of causing this feeling to be integrated, merely served as an accompaniment and thus destroyed the full beauty of the com- American part of the Constitu- tion. You know the part I mean, something about the right (ima- gine!) of people to be '(ssh) se- cure in their persons and houses, etc. This will never do. . 4-I think that we can settle all these horrible strikes for pen-I sions by just not letting people retire-that'll fix 'em; they won't have any security. Let them work until they die, I always say--at1 least they won't lose their pride that way. 5-I agree with you that high- er wages 'and shorter working hours are very bad, bgut this sit- uation could be improved merely by passing a new Wages and Hours Act, setting the maximum wage at 10c an hour, and setting the minimum hours per week at 84 (that's still only a 14 hr. day, with a whole day off, and remem- ber, idle, hands do the devil's work.) After all, I'll bet that the settlers of Jamestown didn't earn more than $8.00 a week, and they had the "initiative that built a nation where there had only been an idea." And if it 'was good enough for them, I don't see why it isn't good enough for us too. I notice that you feel sorry for the poor landlord, who, as you say, is "barely getting enough to pay for taxes and repairs." Well, James, don't feel sorry for him, after all, if he has no money, at least he won't lose his daring on account of security. You should really feel sorry for those tenants, who as everyone knows, are just rolling in money. You know as well as I that all that money is going to cause tenants to lose t-_ - . L ., ." ' -- 1. LL . 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 ............Associate Editor George Walker ........ Associate Editor Don McNeil.........Associate Editor Alex Lmanian......Photography Editor Pres Holmes ......... Sports Co-Editor Merle Levin.........S.. ports Co-Editor Roger Goelz.....Associate Sports Editor Miriam Cady.......... Women's Editor Lee Kaltenbach..Associate Women's Ed. Joan King....................Librarian Allan Clamage......Assistant Librarian