THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JANUARY19,, if _____________________________________________________.. MW I I r Text-Book Drive ONE OF THE big problems which comes at the end of the semester is that of what to do with the shelf full of text books you no longer need. You have several choices, most of which require the expenditure of a lot of energy. You can carefully wrap the books up and send them home, if you can find the wrap- ping paper, string and stamps; and if 'you. want to haul them to the post office. You can take them to the nearest book- seller, and haggle with him over the price. If you are lucky, you may sell them for a small fraction of what you paid for them. But the bookstore ia probably a frightful distance from your room, especially if you are carrying a load of obsolete texts. You can climb to the top of your closet or crawl under your desk in What will probably be a vain attempt to find some space in your room for the books. This prac- tice is fine for a semester or two, but things begin to pile up if it continues. There is, however, one good way to get rid of your old textbooks without ex- cessive exertion. You can take them to the University's textbook loan library. This library provides books of all sorts for students whose financial resources are limited. Having no income of its own, the library depends largely upon the contribu- tions of generous and thoughtful students to keep its shelves well-stacked. Alpha Phi Omega, the service frater- nity is now sponsoring a special drive for the library. It has set 20,000 volumes as its goal. Your contributions of old text- books used in any course in the University can help meet this goal. By contributing your books to thja library, you will certainly gain the lasting gratitude of a great number of students less fortunate ,than yourself. -Paul Brentlinger. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: PETER HOTON CII NIE MA At Lydia Mendelssohn . . lilE MAGIe HORSE, and RUBENS THAT WELCOME RARITY, a really ex- cellent double-feature is on view at Lydia Mendelssohn this weekend and de- serves two hours stolen from anybody's study time. The two films complement each other admirably, "Rubens" being a fasdi- nating study of that painter's work, and "The Magic Horse," an enchanting ani- mated Russian fairy-tale. Although animation in "The Magic Horse" is not as smooth as that in Ameri- can cartoons, Disney et al have seldom produced anything comparable. Color is warm and rich and far more subtle than the harsh, absolute tones which mark most home-grown technicolor efforts. In addition the drawings have a highly decorative quality, characterized by the Oriental influence which lends excite- ment to "The Magic Horse" as to more serious Russian art. The story contains all the universal fairy- tale elements plus traditional creatures from Russian mythology. A modern musical score enlivens the film adding its sprightli- ness to the charm of the entire production. "Rubens" presents a provacative study of the painter's .technique and composi- tion as evidenced in a substantial amount of his work. The academic devices of com- parison with other periods and other ar- tists, and dividing the canvas into sec- tions to illustrate construction of the painting is used to the best advantage. But it is novel photographic techniques such as rotating the camera in front of the painting to give the effect of movment which show the particular effectiveness of motion pictures for exploring art. - The film presents Rubens' paintings in such a way that they are easily compre- hensible to even the novice and succeeds in doing this without compromising its artistic honesty. -Fredrica Winters. MATTER OF FACT: The Hydrogen Bomb And the Future, If Any "Want To Meet My Friend Too?" DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 1WTASHINGTON - There is one single, " simple, central fact about the hydrogen bomb that everyone must grasp, if we are not to wander blindly into a new age of nightmare: The mere possibility that this terrible weapon may be built in two or three or four years alters the whole face of world affairs. * * * THIS is so, moreover, whether President Truman settles the current controversy within the government by deciding to build hydrogen bombs, or by refusing to build hydrogen bombs. For no one can be so sim- ple as to suppose that the Kremlin will shrink back from constructing the absolute weapon, just because we have shrunk back. Nor should anyone wishfully assume that the Kremlin will not have the know-how for the job. Indeed, the leading Soviet physicist, Peter Kapitza, is one of the world's two or three greatest authorities on the major problem of the hydrogen bomb-the be- havior of materials at very high and very low temperatures. We may hope to build such bombs sooner than the Soviets. But we must expect the Soviets to be able to build them in the end. Unless the whole world situation radically changes, the ex- istence of a hydrogen bomb will, sooner or later, become one of the facts of world strategy and politics. This new fact will in turn violently affect all the old facts, causing most current politi- (4ttted P~en TOO MANY careless people are losing things. The Daily's editorialbpages, both editorials and letters. are beginning to look like the gathering place for people who can't afford to pay for Want Ads. It may be that the University began it all when they brought in a lecturing king who had lost his country; but what- ever the cause here are the facts as our readers have seen them: James Gregory, the champion of engineer- ing and Bus Ad professors, started all the trouble with a plea for some of the things "he misses-Plymouth Rock and a bunch of Indian arrows flying around his head. He recently extended his search to include government eggs. Surprisingly enough, the Letters-to-the- Editors were soon full of queries from peo- ple who were missing the same things. Thien, Phil Dawson, champion of Ed Shaffer and Ernie Ellis (former Michigan greats in the revolutionary field) came wanderingddazedly into print to ask "Where are the radicals?" There hasn't been too much response to Dawson's question yet, but it seems to me that if both of these boys would come out from behind their typewriters and use some of our American initiative (Is that missing. too?) to meet the other 20,000 students on campus they might FIND what they are looking for. Or Gregory could even take a quick trip to Massachusetts and bring back his rock. What's the matter with these people anyway? Questions, questions, questions. Doesn't anybody have any answers but me? -Don McNeil. cal and strategic assumptions to become outworn or groundless. And this is so be-. cause the construction of a hydrogen bomb will represent mankind's final, suicidal tri- umph-the harnessing of the inmost secret of creation for purposes of unimaginable destructions. * * * IN BRIEF, the process that makes the sun the course of life is nuclear fusion, rather than nuclear fission. In the sun's intense heats, the lower elements in the electronic table continuously combine into the more inert elements of medium elec- tronic weight. Vast energies are released in this process of fusion. Vast heats are needed to make fusion occur. A hydrogen bomb is now possible, simply because the uranium - plutonium bomb briefly generates heats as great as those of the interior of the sun, from 1,000,000 to 10,000,000 degrees. The principle of the hydrogen bomb, which is known to physicists the world over, is to use uran- ium-plutonium fission as a trigger. Fission of the uranium-plutonium will generate the needed heat. The heat will send hydrogen nuclei crashing into the hearts of other atoms. The nuclear fusion will continue thereafter, with hundreds of thousands of times the destructive force of nuclear fission, until the whole charge of the bomb has been consumed. There is one main characteristic of the hydrogen bomb that set it wholly apart from the uranium-plutonium bomb. It is "open-ended," as the physicists put it. In, other words, there is no critical size that places a limitation on its power. It can be built, in theory at least, to any size desired. The ability to build such a bomb is, in theory, the ability to blow up the earth. * * * THIS KIND OF Caligula-madness is not, of course, the real danger. Yet the danger is there, all the same. For instance, those with long memories will recall the wide- spread fear, at the time of Hiroshima, that the radio-active by-products of uranium- plutonium bombs might eventually poison the world atmosphere. The scientists then reassuringly told us that 10,000 uranium- plutonium bombs would be needed to ren- der the atmosphere noxious to life on earth. Everyone stopped worrying because the ex- plosion of this number of bombs was quite inconceivable. No one can say, however, that the ex- plosion of ten hydrogen bombs may not be an eventual possibility. With 1,000 times the force of uranium-plutonium bombs, the hydrogen bombs' release of radio-active by-products will also be in- finitely greater. The by-products will be different. The rise in quantity released per bomb may not be proportional to the bomb's increase of force. The release of by-products may even be controlled in some measure-an Atomic Energy Commission project is studying this problem. But you cannot get away from the fact that mere manufacture of hydrogen bombs is an act that jeopardizes life on earth, in this way and in others. Thus a sort of circular dilemma is cre- ated. On the one hand, it is intolerable, because it means eventual surrender to the Soviet Union, to let the Soviets build these bombs while we do not. On the other hand, it is equally intolerable for these bombs to be competitively manufactured by two hostile world systems, thus men- acing all life on earth. All the current po- litical and strategic assumptions are now about to become obsolete, precisely be- cause they offer no escape from this di- lemma. (Copyright, 1950 New York Herald Tribune Inc.) Xettep4 TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish alliletters 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. Mercy-Killing . . . To the Editor: ALTHOUGH I had hoped to draw fire from some abler op- ponents of euthanasia, I seem to have only this letter from Mr. Zoet (The Michigan Daily of 13 January), which is the only dis- agreement I have thus far heard expressed in regard to my first letter. It had further been my hope to steer clear of religious argument since it always dead- locks on some absolute truth. To begin with, Mr. Zoet has completely mistaken my point in the mention of my attitude toward our charities among certain peo- ples abroad. I certainly am in favor of easing their pains and filling their stomachs insofar as this gets at the cause of their misery, but I oppose doing so. when it only begets more misery. Coning back to the case of Dr. Sander of New Hampshire, let me first refer all readers to the opin- ions of Dr. Clarence Little, former president of the Univesity, in The Michigan Daily of 13 January. He has a good plan for meeting the problem. Dr. Little is, I believe, "capable of sitting in judgement of the life of a fellow human." And in our society, founded upon Christian principles, as Mr. Zoet pointed out, many less-capable people Are called upon to sit in that same judgement-at least in states where the death penality is meted out for certain crimes. Our civilization is in no great danger from a change in ethics; it has grown from the start with changes of attitude among its most ethical element (see Salem trials, Inquisition, attitude toward mercy-killing, prevention of hu- man misery, and even, probably, suicide must come. Mr. Zoet, I cannot compromise a single point. / -George W. Byers To the Editor: emotional advocates to one side- euthanasia makes sense only to those who do not believe in God and the eternal responsibility of the human soul." With the sentimental and emo- tional aspects so effortlessly pushed out of the way, let Manion find meaning in love, peace or brotherhood. As for the numerous Protestant pastors acused of athe- ism, I leave them to defend them- selves as best they can. 3-". . . if the incurably sick maybe deprived of life unnatural- ly, then so may the insane, the aged, the unemployed and the un- desirables." In this instance, we have "in- curably sick" substituted for "in- curably sick, suffering intense and unremitting pain, and desire to die." We also find such emotion- ally loaded and misleading words as "deprived" and "unnaturally." But the pattern of the argument has a familiar ring. Didn't the other one go, "If you're willing to let a Negro sit in the front of the bus, you must likewise be willing to let him marry your sister"? 4-"If we may justifiably kill a person merely because he wishes to die we may likewise kill him against his will." This one is the prize of the package! From it follows: If we may justifiably hang a war crimi- nal merely because he is respon- sible for the torture and murder of 3,000,000 people, we may justifi- ably hang anyone at all. -Lee E. Paul. * ~* * Discrimination To the Editor: SEVERAL WEEKS AGO there appeared an article in The Daily stating that the University of Michigan basketball team had been invited to participate in the Big Seven tournament. The invi- tation had been accepted. Then a few days ago a series of statements between several students and Coach McCoy concerning alleged discrimination against Negro bas- ketball players was published. Coach McCoy claimed no discrim- ination was practiced. These three announcements tie up in a most peculiar chain of events. The Big Seven Conference is famous (or infamous) for the fact that a conference rule is that no Negro may play in varsity competition. One of the schools, the University of Oklahoma, re- cently and quite reluctantly (it took a Supreme Court ruling) ad- mitted one Negro Graduate stu- dent in education. The University of Missouri has in the past few days issued a statement reaffirm- ing its policy of discrimination against Negroes. I might point out at this time that I am not attempting to be- little the invitation to our basket- ball team to play in the affore- mentioned tournament. Undoubt- edly the invitation was extended in recognition of the champion- ship caliber of the team. The im- portant factor here is not the rea- son for the invitation but the fact that it was accepted. A team which supposedly practices no discrimi- nation accepted an invitation to play in an area where such prac- tices are the rule, rather than the (Continued from Page 3) Wesley Foundation: 5 p.m., Kappa Phi meeting in the social hall. Program: Displaced Persons and Our Responsibility. Intercultural Meeting, 7 p.m., Lane Hall. Plans will be made for a retreatsduring vacation between sem esters. Dean. Hayward Keniston of L.S.A. will speak on the crisis in civil liberties today at the first 1950 membership meeting of the University Council of Arts, Sci- ences, and Professions, at the Michigan League, 7:30 p.m. Prof. Emeritus John L. Brumm will serve as chairman. Graduate stu- dents and faculty are urged to at- tend. Corning Events German Coffee Hour: Fri., 3:15 4:30 p.m. League Cafeteria. All students and faculty members in- vited. exception. If, as Coach McCoy has stated, the only reason for the absence of Negro players is the lack of Negro talent in tryouts and if the coach was alert to his responsibility in coaching a team from an institution where no dis- crimination is practiced, then he would, and indeed should, have followed a policy which many oth- er coaches have followed when faced with this same situation. The invitation would have been firmly and diplomatically declined. It is a hollow victory indeed when a supposed honor is bestowed upon a campus which is in contradiction to the ideological foundations of that institution. Coach McCoy's remarks leave me with a strange and empty feel- ing, a feeling that all is not quite right, when they are viewed with respect to his actions. -Martin Edwin Gluckstein * * * IFC 'Gag' Rule . - To the Editor: RE THE IFC's internal troubles prolninent of late. The article concerning the IFC censorship resolution in Friday, the 13th's, front page has been quite reveal- ing. Do M". Morrison and those sup- porting said resolution think that a proposal of this sort enhances the . . . IFC'S apparent solidar- ity in the eyes of the campus?" An affirmative answer would be forthcoming if one defines Soli- darity in terms of an organization so absolutely hamstrung that only one mind, and one alone, exists. Viewing this organization objec- tively, the obvious becomes over- bearing! There is no unity, no one mind, no solidarity, nor is any ex- pected. Michigan's fraternities have banded, together giving sub- stance to the IFC for only, one purpose: the propagation of their views. Now, who can claim "soli- larity," in the strict sense, for such a body when there exist a diversity of groups, backgrounds, and personalities? The passage of the anti-bias motion typifies the degree of "loose" solidarity that can be reached, as does any mo- tion. It has been brought to light that this motion was deceptive in char- acter when Donald Rothschild wrote a "Letter to the Editor." Such action appears to be the only method influential enough to achieve enlightenment of this sort! Mr. Rothschild has been under at- tack for signing said letter as house president of ZBT; thereby abusing his position as an IFC member, etc., which he has by right of being a house president. His accusers are either avoiding the issue or missed the point. Is there an intimation that ZBT's views were not Rothschild's? Ap- parently, this was the only avenue afforded him and now it seems the IFC wishes to close just that. I find no foundation for Stan Crapo's interpretation of the reso- lution. It may have been designed to prevent fradulent impressions of IFC's views, but the passage of such would only complete a sur- pression of sincere individuals who desire to expose inadequacies of IFC action. Next IFC meeting, every frater- nity president should be present to vote this resolution down. If passed, it might someday stymie their own honest attempts. -Stuart Fever, '50 Coal Strike . To the Editor: WHY IS IT that many people who praise Free Enterprise also expect the government'to step into the coal dispute? Presumably U. of M. Hostel Club. Sat., Jan. 21, Saline Sleighride, supper, dance. Leaders: Dorthys Bell and Porter. Phone 5077. Meet at 5:30 p.m. at side entrance of Michigan League to drive to Sa- line Hostel. Call for reservation. Early evening slelghride and, or, skating. Exhibition halls of the Univer- sity Museums will be open to all students and to the public Fri., Jan. 20, from 7 to 9 p.m. Rotunda exhibit: "Invertebrate Life of the Alpena Region, Michigan, three hundred million years ago." Nat- ural History motion pictures: "Reptiles," and "Frogs, Toads, and Salamanders" in Rm. 3024, Uni- versity Museums Bldg., 7:30 p.m. and again at 8:15 p.m. Sigma Delta Pi (National Hon. orary Fraternity of Hispanic Stu- dies): Beta Omicron Chapter will meet Fri., Jan. 20, 5:30 p.m., in the Masonic Temple. All members and initiates please be present. Guests permissible for dinner at 6:45. these people do not attack the very existence of labor unions. If then they believe that workers have the right to organize, that Free Miter prise increases our material well- being and that government should keep its hands off our economy, they have no right to demand government intervention , in the coal mines. The word, "National Emergency," does not belong in the Free Enterprise vocabulary. If business is free to act as it chooses, labor should also be free. People should not care if miners have a minus-one-day work week. Diamonds are a crystalline form of carbon. As Marie Antoinette might have said: "If they do't have coal, let them heat dia- monds." -John Neufeld * * * 'New Voice ..'. To the Editor: AFTER filling the editorial page of The Daily the last few years with hundreds of pieces of social- ist propaganda ("blab," to use Mr. Dawson's term), aren't you pinks showing a bit of intolerance of minority views when you whip up a chorus of abuse of Mr. Gregory for venturing a few remarks on the other side? Surely the advan- tages of the socialist state and the merits of proposals to legislate se- curity for all (in this very uncer- tain world) are not so indisputably established as to render any un- favorable comment thereon im- proper. You must also remember that we still haven't quite reached the point (as in Russia) where'tt is treasonable for those who are trying to preserve a traceof per- sonal liberty and initiative (the true liberals of this era) to speak up. More power to Mr. Gregory, and let's have a few more voices crying in the wilderness. -W. A. Paton Professor of Accounting and Economics to rt aft .41 i 4 4 4I f A ON THE Washington Merry- Go -Round WITH DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Here is how the Repub- lican-Dixiecrat coalition is riding roughshod over the-right of free democratic processes in the House of Representatives. Meeting behind closed doors in the Rules Committee, the Republicrat coali- tion not only demanded the reinstatement of the old gag rule by which the commit- tee can bottle up any bill, but even re- fused to let Chairman Adolph Sabath of Illinois, who opposed the gag rule, speak. Each time the 83-year-old Sabath start- ed to talk he was shouted down with cries of "Vote! - Vote!" by Democrats Gene Cox of Georgia and Howard Smith of Virginia and their Republican cohorts. Finally, GOP Congressman Leo Allen of Illinois took pity on the little chairman "He has a right to talk," pleaded Alle above the Bedlam. "Let him speak for tw or three minutes." Sabath didn't appreciate the humori this. He was so riled by the roughhouse ta tics of the coalitionists that he almost chok ed up. "We ought to have at least a publi hearing, so that opponents of this resolu tion can be heard," he demanded. "Thi is a matter of vital concern to every mem her of the House. Since we repealed th gag procedure last year, this committe voted out 55 rules on bills and resolutions the greatest number in history. "Some of you say that the resolution w give the committee more power-thati power to stifle legislation which you oppos As committee chairman, I don't want th kind of power. I want to protect the righ of the House membership." - FAIR DEALER BACKSLIDES - HOWEVER, Sabath's motion to postpo action on the Cox resolution and give House members a right to testify fc or against it at a public hearing was smot] ered under a 7-4 vote. The three member who joined Sabath for a free discussio were: Democrats Ray Madden of Indiar THE Ann Arbor News (Jan. 16) carried a statement by Clar- ence E. Manion, dean of the Uni- versity of Notre Dame Law School headed, "Notre Dame Dean Blasts 'Mercy Killings'." It is not his point of view that arouses my in- dignation, for I have heard it de- n, fended intelligently; but that an o intelligent man should use the subterfuges, twisted logic, and emotionalism which are also typi- in cal of the diehard race-baiter who c- finds himself short on facts but k- long on rhetoric. I would like to take those statements in which he c was directly quoted and show - where this type of thinking can s lead. 1.-"Voluntary euthanasia is e death by request and death by re- e quest is suicide." e As all propagandists know, an , emotionally loaded word is always better than a neutral one. But let ill us carry out this form of argu- is, ment. A martyr is a person who e. follows his convictions regardless at of personal danger. Since at dif- ts ferent times and in different parts of the world following one's con- victions means to invite death, and inviting death is suicide, most martyrs are suicides. ne 2-"Pushing its sentimental and Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students O9 the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Leon Jaroff............Managing Editdl Al Blumrosen............ City Editor Philip Dawson. ..Editorial Director Mary Stein.........Associate Editor Jo Misner..............Associate Editor George Walker..... .Associat. Editor Don McNeil.........Associate Editor Alex Lmanian......Photography Editor Pres Holmes........ Sports 00-FIt~or Merle Levin........Sports Co-Editor Roger Goelz.....Associate Sports Editor Miriam Cady......... Women's Editor Lee Kaltenbaci. .Associate Women's Ed. Joan King...............Librarian Allan Clamage......Assistant Librarian Business Staff Roger Wellington...-BusinessMansW Dee Nelson. .Associate Business Manager Jim Dangi......Advertising Manager Bernie Aidinoff...Finance Manager Ralph Ziegler. Circulationaw ee Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Pres fhie Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to # ,o otherwise credited to this nowspa q All rights of republication of all Otbat matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Officea j #W matter. Subscription during the regular sool year by carrier. $3.00. by mal. *GAO, I f UA W'S Political News THE UNITED Automobile Workers have offered their members a sober arguient on who to vote for and who to vote against in this year's Congressional elections. The December issue of the Union's month- ly paper, the United Automobile Worker, has listed the voting record of every Senator and Congressman in the 81st Congress on issues T . r. +h nnn fo- n nnr o t[ om nt This type of campaigning is a good idea. Unions can thus accomplish black listing of politicians without boisterous hand bill passing, public demonstrating and mud slinging, which only bring laughter from the more subtle political propagandists. And the union member is more likely to heed this quiet record than a name calling n~mv 4"+ v~ v n4n 4,- -A 4.--, -C.0-...,. BARNABY These pajamas will be just the thing for the Vacuum Cleaner Pixie. Note the r±r LI r ..LI...n.{.....ne ------------II.. Here, my man-Slip these on. i, I'm terribly embarrassed.. My washing 'machine is one of the best on the market.