PTE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, SEPTEM EER 27,1050 PAGE F~UR WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, i~s~ -~ A lcoholism in America "Hand Me Some More Of Those Olive Branches" Dean B ursley THE RECENT DEATH of Joseph A. Bursley, the University's first Dean of Students, has saddened all who knew him during the more than 50 years he was associated with the University. When he died unexpectedly three weeks ago of a heart ailment at the age of 73, he left behind him a long record of service to the student body, the University and the community. For 26 years until his retirement in 1947 he was Dean of Students and served on numerous student governing boards where his generosity, warmth and capacity for hard work gained him the friendship and respect of hundreds of University students. As a professor of engineering he was a highly-regarded member of his profes- sion, serving with the army ordnance during the first world war and later as a reserve officer. He also interested him- self in local politics and was a member of the Ann Arbor City Council from 1925-29. Dean Bursley first came to the Univer- sity in 1895 as a student. After taking his degree and spending four years In pri- vate business, he returned to the en- gineering college as an instructor. By 1947 he had risen to the rank of full professor and after his war ser- vice, returned to the campus to fill the newly-created post of Dean of Stu- dents-the first position of Its kind in the country. When he went on retirement furlough in 1947 he was appointed Dean Emeritus of Students and Professor Emeritus of mechanical engineering by the Board of Regents. -The Editors. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only., NIGHT EDITOR: VERNON EMERSON ABOUT a month ago, many people were angered by a report that the G.I's in Korea had been temporarily denied one of the few pleasures available to them-a daily ration of cold, foaming, diluted 3.2 beer. Local indignation throughout the coun- try led to quick federal action. But no sooner had the issue been settled than the temperance groups presented evi- dence indicating an alarming increase in the number of chronic alcoholics in Amer- ica. Specific figures showed: 1. The approximate number of alcoholics in the United States has risen to 1,000,000 (the figure reported by the Catholic Total Abstinence Union at its recent meeting in New York.) Actually, however, the number is much higher because police are reluctant to arrest women when drunk. 2. In addition to the million alcoholics, there are 3,000,000 "problem drinkers" close to the medical classification of alcoholic. 3. The number of traffic deaths due to drunken drivers-a growing percentage of them young people-is higher this year than ever before. Groups actively fighting alcoholism warn that they are at a loss as to what effective methods can be used to halt the growing national disease. Many of their reform pro- grams are practically useless, as is the pass- ing of a resolution asking bar owners to "discourage the presence of women at 4he bar." Also ineffective are petitions request- ing4he military for "sane liquor regulations and personal supervision and example of officers." The very fact that such paper- programs must be used proves that alcoho- ism has reached a dangerous point. Those in favor of beer rations for the G.I. advance strong arguments, protesting that to deny the G.I. a can of beer is prud- ish and picayunish. Besides, runs the argu- ment, the beer is often diluted and is sup- posed to cost less to transport to ,Korea than water. In seeking a solution to the problem of alcoholism, two facts are plain. First, it has clearly been shown in the past that a ON THE Washington Merry- -Go-Round WITH DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-It was probably not love of Louey Johnson so much as appre- hension of the hard-hitting Senate watch- dog committee that brought the abrupt re- sig nation of Hubert E. Howard as chair- man of the Munitions Board. Only a few insiders know it, but the mittee was all set to put Howard onthe hot coals for pushing the sale of govern- ment-owned synthetic rubber plants. He was scheduled to appear befor Sen. Lyn- don Johnson's watchdogs.at 10 a.m., Tues- day, when he suddenly resigned Monday afternoon. The committee's first report scorched Howard and his munitions board for lack of "a firm aggressivce" rubber program. What the report does not reveal is that when Chairman Lyndon Johnson was mov- ing heaven and earth behind the scenes to stop the sale of a synthetic rubber plant at Akron, Howard was urging its sale. GEN. DEAN'S MEMORY A project of friendship for Korea in mem- ory of a gallant General who died in action will be the theme of a reunion of U.S. vete- rans of the Korean war. The U.S. armed forces in Korea associa- tion, composed of the 200,000 G.I.'s who served in the Korean occupation, with gather at Fort Meade, Md., October 7, at which time a plan will be launched to help edu- cate the children of Americans who died fighting in Korea, plus Korean students who want to study in this country. The scholar- ships will be dedicated to the late Maj. Gen. William Dean. * * * MEDICAL LOBBY One congressman who can always get in to see the President, even in these busy days, is forthright Andy Biemiller of Wisconsin. Truman is genuinely fond of the Wisconsin iberal, who has been a tower of strength in fair deal battles. The fact that this has won him the bitter opposition of the big lobbies, including the American Medical Association, is a matter of pride to Biemiller. "I'm glad they're fighting me," he told Truman the other day. "It keeps me on my toes. When the A.M.A. and those other pres- sure groups let up on me it's a sign I'm slipping in my responsibilities to the people I represent. I've been fighting the lobbies since 1937 and they're out to get me again this year." "Well, Andy, I can go you one better," grinned the President. "I've been fighting the same lobbies since 1920, when I was a county judge in Missouri. In those days it was practically impossible to get into a hos- pital in my section unless you could lay $200 on the line. "I finally was able to get a big hospital built in the county, where people in need were assured proper medical care, but I had to fight the doctors' lobby to do it. I intend to rarry n that fiTht, with your help. Andy. on the senate schedule, the rules provided that it could not pass without unanimous consent. This was requested by Tennessee's junior Senator Estes Kefauver and was just .about to be grante(l. But suddenly Nebraska's Senator Kenneth Wherry broke in, explain- ing he had no objections but wanted an ex- planation of the bill first. Wiley offered to make the explanation and got all wound up in 'his own oratory. Kefauver pulled at Wiley's coattail a couple of times to shut him up, but the Wisconsin Senator boomed on and on. His speechmaking finally woke up the Sen- ate's grandpa, McKellar of Tennessee, who had been dozing in his seat. Disturbed, he grumpily began whispering around to find out what was going on, learned that Kefauver was behind the bill. That was enough. Aid to thousands of children made no difference. McKellar hates Kefauver so ferociously that he won't even allow his staff to mention Kefauver's name. So, after Wiley's eloquent speech, Mc- Kellar snorted: "I am compelled to object and I do object." The stunned Wiley explained that the children's aid bill had already been ap- proved in principle by McKellar's own ap- propriations committee. But the surly Sen- ator from Tennessee mumbled that his com- mittee had been given the "run-around." Then, in a tone indicating he didn't wish to discuss it any further, he rasped again: "I am compelled to object." That ended it. There will be no aid to children despite the huge amounts of food stored in our caves and warehouses. * , * SENATOR FROM MINNESOTA Sen. Hubert Humphrey, the Minnesota firebrand,uruefully confessed recentlythe greatest temptation of a freshman lawmaker. "You come to the capitol all full of vim and new ideas the people back home gave you," Humphrey said. "Then, the first thing you know you are worrying about as much over what your fellow Senators think about you as your program. The Senate is such a small body, it gets to be very impor- tant to have Senator Zilch greet you with a smile and a friendly word." He told of one experience a few weeks ago. He left Washington depressed and tired by Senatorial pressures. "My wife and I just got in our car and drove around through Minnesota for a week," he recalled. "It was the most wonder- ful vacation I've ever had-the fresh, natur- al response of neighbors after the suspicions of Washington. "I think the best way to strengthen Demo- cracy," said Senator Humphrey, "would be to require congressmen to visit their coi- stituencies at least once a month. I found out the pressures and problems that really determine votes in Washington often don't amount to a tinker's damn among the peo- ple." return of prohibition would not work. Sec- ond, the social problems of any nation will increase during a war and the reconstruc- tion period that follows. Alcoholism is an- other of the small but important threads in the general pattern of social mores that are bound to be strained and loosened a bit. In making a final decision on policy, the important question is this: What cum- ulative effect 'will a policy of beer ration for the G.I. have in the long run? For instance, while the troops can drink water instead of beer, how many of them will choose to do so? Suppose a few G.I.'s don't drink their share but give it to an- other, how much is the efficiency of that soldier reduced at a time when his life may depend on split second timing? Many sol- diers drink only to find a temporary escape from combat jitters. But when the draft is over, will the discharged G.I. use the beer ration habit as a means of adjustment to peacetime life? If the problem were only one of sending beer to the G.I's in Korea, the answer could definitely be yes. But when this single policy is related to the undeniable fact of increas- ing alcoholism among the country's popula- tion, there is justifiable reason, for strongly opposing such action. -Bob Solt Interpreting The Netes By J. M ROBERTS, JR. AP Foreign Affairs Analyst THE "UNOFFICIAL" diplomats have put the official diplomats on the spot again, providing the Russians with a new vehicle for their peace offensive. From time to time for five years well- meaning individuals and organizations have asked the Russians if they were agreeable to certain nice things which ev- eryone thinks would help toward peace. The Russians always say they surely are. Then the official diplomats are faced with the necessity of offsetting the resultant pro- paganda without appearing themselves to be opposed to peace. DEAN ACHESON told the Russians and the world six months ago what was needed for peace-treaties with Austria, Germany and Japan; an end to the So- viet use of force and threats of force in in- ternational affairs; an end to Soviet ob- struction in the UN; Soviet agreement on the UN plan for atomic control; an end to Soviet efforts to undermine other govern- ments, mistreatment of foreign diplomats and distortion of western motives in propa- ganda and diplomacy. Joseph Stalin, Jacob Malik and Andrei Vishinsky never said yes to that. Their answer was to create a new and worse deadlock over Austria; to unleash military force in international affairs in Korea and then to attempt to obstruct UN action on the ase; to redouble the drafting of labor for the uranium mines; to seek to undermine the governments of Yugoslavia, Iran, South Korea, Indo- China and Tibet in particular, and all the rest of the world in general. But when a Baltimor-e group, apparently sincere but still pretty close to the line of the "Stockholm" peace appeals, submits its list, Malik, presumably after conferring with Moscow, is quick to say yes. RUSSIA, MALIK SAYS, would be glad to agree not to be the first to use the atom- ic bomb; favors general disarmament and outlawry of atomic weapons under a UN control system; would like a top-level U.S.- Soviet conference; and favors free exchange of ideas and information between the coun- tries. But he doesn't say how. He doesn't say Russia will quit jamming the Voice of America to permit free information. He doesn't say that regardless of what agree- ment Russia might make, she could let a satellite drop the first bombs just as she has used a satellite to make her first post-1945 war. He doesn't say that Russia will accept the terms for atomic agreement which a large majority of UN members has agreed are fair. He doesn't say that Russia's word given at any top-level conference would be any better than heretofore, or that Rus- sian intent, the whole root of the matter, has changed. Russia has carried her policy so far now tlat no one could depend upon the results of any negotiations. It will take acts for her to clean the slate. In the meantime, over the years she has used the Willkies, the Stassenis, the Quakers, the inquiring newspapermen and now the Baltimore group to keep on muddying the waters. But she gave her real answers to Acheson. The Role of Disenters DISENTERS have played more than one role in history. At various times, at var- ious places, and on issues big and little, they have been responsible for confusion, division and discontent. And for progress. Your true prophets have always been dis- senters, Heretics have often been gravely in error. Nevertheless, as I am not the first man to observe, the heretic has always been the growing point in society. When he is repressed by force society stagnates. A verile society follows its true prophets and ._ - I .....,_ ,4 .. ,.t ...-. n «.. 4u _ 41 . (Continued from Page 3) 1 register the occasion and place, and, if out of town, the complete address. No telephone calls may be re- ceived or sent after 11 p.m. or such time as the switchboard closes. All local calls must be limited to five minutes. No outgoing long distance calls may be made after 11 p.m. without special arrange- ment with the house president or the Resident Director. In case of emergency, incoming long dis- tance calls may be received after 11 p.m. Quiet hours shall be fixed by the individual houses, and their enforcement shall be supervised by the house president and the Judi- ciary Council. Callings hours for men are Mon. day through Friday at 1 p.m. Sat- urday and Sunday, the hours are decided by the individual house. Closing hours are: Sunday, 11 p.m.; Monday through Thursday, 10:30 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 12:30 a.m. Girls who attend the following events must be in the house one- half hour after the termination of the event: 1. Functions approved for late permission by the Committee of Student Affairs or the Dean of Women. 2. Choral Union Concerts, May Festival Concerts, Oratorical As- sociation Lectures, and Athletic events. 3. Play production performances and other functions in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Any student who finds that she may be more than thirty minutes late after the regular closing hour or more than 15 minutes late after a late permission shall notify her Resident Director of her expected lateness and probable time of re- turn to the house. Any girl who violates the house rules and is brought before the Judiciary Council may be placed on social probation. Office of the Dean of Women Judiciary Council Approved student sponsored so- cial events for the coming week- end: September 29, 1950: Alpha Delta P, Angell House- Lloyd House, Betsy Barbour-Mich- igan House, Cong. Disciples, Evang. and Ref. Guild, Kappa Nu, Kappa Sigma, Women's Physical Educa- tion Club. September 30, 1950: Acacia, Alpha Delta Phi, Alpha Epsilon Pi, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Alpha Phi Alpha, Alpha Sigma Phi, Anderson House, Chicago House, Chi Phi, Delta Chi, Delta Sigma Delta, Delta Sigma Pi. Delta Tau Delta, Delta Upsilon, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Michigan Christian Fellowship, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi Kappa Tau, Phi Rho Sigma, Phi Sigma Delta, Phi Sigma Kappa, Psi Up- silon. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Mu, Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Theta Chi, Theta Xi, Tri- angle, Victor Vaughan House, Zeta Beta Tau. October 1, 1950: Alpha Rho Chi, Phi Delta Phi. I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I History, will meet on Wed., Sept. 27, 4 p.m., in the Clements Li- brary. English 31, section 6, (Prof. Ev- erett) will meet MWF at 9 in Rm. 3231 AH. English 201 will meet MWF at 9 in Room 2219 AH. History 171, American Founda- tion: Engl. Colonies in Amer., 1607-1763, will meet in 110 Tap- pan Hall. History 181, American Econo- mic History to 1865, will meet in 225 Angell Hall. Sports Instruction for Women: Women students who have com- pleted their physical education requirement may elect physical education classes on Tuesday and Wednesday mornings, Sept. 26 and 27, in Barbour Gymnasium. D o e t o r a l Examination for Awadh Kishore Prasad Sinha, Psychology; thesis: "Experimen- tal Induction of Anxiety by Con- ditions of Uncertainty," Thurs., Sept. 28, 3121 Natural Science Bldg., 10 a.m. Chairman, C. R. Brown. Physical Chemistry Seminar: Wed., Sept. 27, 4:07 p.m. Rm. 2308 Chemistry. Professor F. O. Koenig of Stanford University will dis- cuss "The Relation Between Sur- face TensionrandCurvature." All interested graduate. students are invited. Freshman Health Lectures for Men: It is a University require-' ment that all entering Freshmen,' including veterans, attend a ser- ies of lectures on Personal and Community Health and pass an examination on the content of these lectures. Transfer students with freshman standing (less than 30 hrs. credit) are also required'to take the course unless they have had a similar course elsewhere which has been accredited here.' Upperclassmen who were here as freshmen and who did not ful- fill the requirements are request- ed to do so this term. The lectures will be given in the Natural Science Auditorium at 4, 5, and 7:30 p.m. as follows: THOMAS L. STOKES: Acheson's UN Proposal NEW YORK-Nobody can tell yet what the U. N. Assembly will do eventually about Secretary of State Dean Acheson's bold proposal that the Assembly clothe itself with power to act promptly to chal- lenge future aggression, and with its own armed forces. But submission of this plan in the present world crisis has served to dramatize a basic weakness in the U. N. which sooner or or later must be repaired if it is to fulfill its ordained mission and function. This is, of course, the veto power granted to the Big Five mem- bers of the U.N. Security Council, the executive branch of the world organization, which thus far has been exercised chiefly and with monotonous repetition by Soviet Russia to hamstring the top agency of the U.N. * * * * THE SECURITY Council was able to act in the Korean crisis only because of the absence of Russia-which had abstained from the proceedings in a prolonged walk-out, unluckily for her own purposes. But she is back again and, in event of another aventure through her satellites as in Korea, she would be able to check by veto any such U.N. action as the quick challenge to the North Korean Communist aggression. This confronted us with the dilemma which the Truman ad- ministration resolved for itself with the plan to give the General Assembly, the legislative body, the power to act, since there is no veto in the assembly. This is a function which, under the U.N. charter, is entirely legal procedure, if unusual. Our government finally decided, for the salvation of the U.N. and for our own protection and that of the other free nations of the world, that it was time for unusual measures. As far as we are concerned, too, it is grounded in cold war and grim necessity. The North Korean aggression, sudden and without warning, opened our eyes to the apparent new strategy of Soviet Rus- sia, which was to strike through satellites at vulnerable points under the disguise of "civil wars" or "local conflicts," and with no expense to herself. We are bearing the burden of the U.N's Korean challenge almost alone. But, for obvious reasons, we can't keep on doing that and it is essential that other nations must contribute substantially in anoher such emergency, far beyond the scale of the low bits and pieces in Korea. For that, the international army embodied in the Acheson proposal would meet the need. Such an army-an international police force, it was called-was authorized by the U.N. charter, but has never been established, mainly because of the obstruction of Russia in protracted and fruitless ne- gotiations ever since creation of the world organization. OUR PLAN has provoked some hard thinking here, as it was de- signed to do. It has brought the free nations of the world right smack up against the realities. It is a challenge from us-the arsenal and the banker-in which we say to the other free nations, in effect, that if they mean business, it's time to show it or, idiomatically: "Put up or shut up." It is, likewise, a challenge to our effective allies on the Big Five in the Security Council-Great Britain and France-on the veto principle, itself. Nationalist China, the other of the Big Five, sits figuratively now in an uncertain and immobilized status, chal- lenged by Communist China for her seat on the council and with nothing but nominal authority. It must be remembered that all of the Big Five, including us, have clung up to now to the veto principle in the Security Council, through our government suggested modifications in its application long ago, about which nothing ever has been done. Those of us who were at San Francisco when the U.N. charter was being written can recall how a delegation of senators rushed out there to insist on the veto and to warn that, without that right reserved to us, the U.N. charter could not be ratified by the senate. SECRETARY Acheson's proposal is then, too, a challenge to those who have been complaining about Russia's continual use of the veto to show their sincerity now by going along with his plan for action through the Assembly, where no veto is possible. For this proposal to act now in the assembly without the veto -if we are consistent-must necessarily be only a preliminary step to going all the way eventually to revise the U.N's executive branch, the security council, so that it can function as it was sup- posed to'function. That is the long-range situation which we must face if the U.N. is to survive. The Acheson proposal should stimulate those, including organi- zations and many members of Congress, who have been agitating,for revision of the United Nations to strengthen it and to whom, up to now, the State Department has given little encouragement. Necessity is the mother of invention-and progress. (Copyright 1950, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) /. ' TS Lecture No. Day 1 Mon. 2 Tues. 3 Wed. 4 Thurs. 5 Mon. 6 Tues. 7 (Final Exam) Wed. Date Sept. 25 Sept. 26 Sept. 27 Sept. 28 Oct. 2 Oct. 3 Oct. 4 social worker and poet, will speak at a luncheon at the Methodist Church, Thursday noon. Reserva- tions accepted at Lane Hall up to Wednesday noon. Art Print Library: Students may continue to sign for pictures today at Alumni Memorial Hall in the North Gallery, from 8-12, 1-5. After today for information come to 510 Administration. Sigma Gamma Epsilon. Busi- ness meeting, Wed., Sept. 27; 12:15 p.m. Rm. 3056, Natural Science Bldg. Election of officers. Senior and Graduate Students in Aeronautical Engineering, Phy- sics and Mathematics: You are in- vited to attend the lecture by Dr. Max M. Munk of the Naval Ord- nance Laboratory, "Some Aspects of the Turbulence Problem," 3 p.- m., 1042 E. Engineering Bldg. U. of M. Women's Glee Club tryouts: Wed., Sept. 27; Thurs., Sept. 28, at 4 to 5; also Wed., Sept. 27, at 7 to 9 p.m. Young Progressives of America: Executive board meeting, 4:15 p.- m., Michigan Union to make plans for first membership meeting. Young Democrats: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Union. Plans for cam- paign and campus activities. Delta Sigma Pi, Professional Business Administration Frater- nity: Business meeting, 7:30 p.m., Chapter House, 1212 Hill. (continued on Page 5), i You may attend at any of the above hours. Enrollment will take place at the first lecture. Please note that attendance is required. Concerts Carillon Recital: Percival Price, University Carillonneur, will open his series of fall programs at 7:15 p.m. Thurs., Sept. 28. The recital will include University of Michi- gan songs, instrumental selections by Scarlatti, C.P.E. Bach, Corel- li and Schubert:, Carnival of the Bells by James Lawson, and vari- ations on a group of British folk songs. Events Today Dr. Toyohiko Kawaga, Japanese' Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and rnaged by students of the Universitydf Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications.. Editorial Staff Jim Brown......... Managing Editor Paul Brentlinger..... City Editor Roma Lipsky....... Editorial Director Dave Thomas......... Feature Editor Janet Watts ....... ..Associate Editor Bill Connoily.... Sports Editor Bob Sandelln.. Associate Sports Editor Bill Brenton .:. Associate Sports Editor Barbara Jans ........ Women's Editor Pat Brownson Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Bob Daniels.......Business Manager Walter Shapero Assoc. Business Manager Donna Cady ...... Advertising Manager Bob Mersereau...... Finance Manager Carl Breitkreitz .. Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press isexclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication- of all other mattersherein are also reserved. Entered at the Past Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail mater. Subscription during regular school year: by carrier, $6.00; by mail, $7.00. 7 1 --I i" , , Academic Notices History 323, Seminar in English , ,,. BARNABY Just got back, Barnaby, from a lovely vacation- Oh, Gus and I found ourselves somewhat at sea for a bit. But soon I Ah, yes. Thank you. As 1 was saying, your old Fairy Godfather calmly I And, as that very ship just then happened to be bearing down on us, Gus and I clambered aboard. Note-Actually Senator Humphrey h shown more independence regarding t as he I I