THE MICHIGAN DAILY TIWRSDAY. DECEMBER 21. A 4.98 Research Grants ...... .. i -- -THE MICHIAN DATTYL 1~V7L1 Ly ILAAi QPID F I I r LAST WEEK the University announced the receipt of a $358,290 grant from the -National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. t*,The funds are to be used to search for a -chenical means to control polio. y x: Ou the surface this would appear to be 2 so untarnished blessing. It is most cer- t iainly a blessing, but unfortunately it has a perceptable tarnish. At one time medical schbols depended al- .most entirely on endowments to supply ,building funds and to overcome operating deficits. Income taxes and especially inheri- s tance taxes have reduced this income con- r siderably in the last 30 years. This has of course affected the medical schools ad- versely and placed them in immediate need of a substitute source of income-a need that still is unanswered. This situation is made worse by the method available money r. (from persons or institutions) is now being donated. A° jIt has become the fad to give endowments 6i in the form of grants-in-aid for certain i specified projects; the grant from the in- V fantile paralysis foundation provides an 16 ;example. For the donor there are two advantages ; to this kind of "restricted use" grant. it attaches the name of the benefactor to some *p publicized activity, and it allows for a great- Ser control of the amounts expended. For the university that accepis the grants, °there are two serious disadvantages: the university's permanent facilities are used 'without contribution to amortization, and qualified teachers are drawn from the uni- versity staff into research because the V ,grant generally provides for higher salary :;'schedules than the university does for in- Editorials published in The Michigan Daily w ;are written by members of The Daily staff b jand represent the views of the writers only. ii struction. This practice is harmful to the field of medicine now and eventually could be totally self-defeating to research pro- jects. For it is axiomatic that the number and worth of doctors drawn into research depends in large part on the quality of medical school instruction and the ade- quacy of the teaching plants. While no one objects to the practice of bestowing grants, we may all disapprove of the manner in which grant funds are now being allocated. A healthier situation might obtain if the 70 medical schools in the country got together on a policy for accept- ing grants. That policy should provide that each university be allowed to set aside a portion of each grant for the amortization of its permanent facilities, and it should give each university some control in deter- mining the salaries offered. The latter is necessary because of a" basic ill, and is only symptomatic treatment for that ill. University salaries are lamentably low. The best obvious solution to keeping good teachers teaching is to pay them what they are worth. No one will take them away from the university by paying them more than they are worth. It is paradoxical that one must ask as temporary remedy to the destruction of university staffs the lowering of research salaries. But it is a fact that high re- search salaries draw good instructors from teaching-lowering the standards of the very university whose facilities they are using. Raising all university salaries should be our ultimate goal, but right now it is imperative that unjust deprada- tions on university staffs be stopped. Uni- versities accepting grants. must be al- lowed to keep the research salary sche- dules at a level that will not threaten them with the loss of their own staffs. With a policy that would make some funds available for amortization and provide for some university control of salary, special grants would become the blessings they now only appear to be. -John Briley. Draft Plan WITHIN THE LAST few days the State Boardof Regents of New York recom- mended to President Truman a sound and constructive plan to aid the manpower short- age in event of a long term national mobili- zation. In essence, the plan called for a reduc- tion of the high school course from four to three years. If placed on a national scale for all high school students, it would release about two million additional people in the labor force. This potential addition would be divided into two groups. O n e would imme- diately enter the labor force, and the other, relatively smaller, would continue going to school. The real idea behind the regents proposal was to provide "for a very large number of young men to receive at least one year of college education before a possible call to the military service." The regents believed that this education would result in a "gain, in maturity of judgment, which is most im- portant both for the young people involved and for the total welfare of this nation." With the prospect of a long period of mobilization, the plan will provide an ad- ditional boost to the labor force. The pro- posal will also weed out many superficial high school courses, as well as eliminate the insignificant parts of other courses. Many students have long complained that much of the four years in high school was academically wasted. Although the plan is rather nebulous in its present stage a mention was made of utilizing the summer sessions. But this as- pect of the problem is rather bad because summer employment of students is neces- sary to meet the seasonal labor peaks. Keep- ing this group in school during the sum- mer would not aid the labor shortage during these peaks, and eventually would tend to nullify the total labor force advantage that a three year high school course makes pos- sible. But perhaps most important is the chance it would give students to receive a year's college training before they join the service. This year; can do a great deal toward sta- bilizing and maturing the individual. A great number of students are uncertain about their occupational interests after graduation from high school, and even after some time in col- lege. With one year of liberal education and two years in the service, the student will be able to make a more rational choice without wasting valuable time and money floundering around for a field of concen- tration. In view of the fact that this country may face a state of mobilization and semi-na- tional emergency for a long period, stream- lining high school education appears to be a fine step in conserving the labor force re-" sources of this nation and adding to the welfare of the nation through wise educa- tional practices. -Ron Watts Christmas Shopping is true that we must be strong at purpose is to police the world present, but if we forget the rea- and enforce world law. This su- son for our strength we are doom- pranational force must be a lim- ed to failure. Our society is based ited form of world government. on many honorable ideals, but one The only "argument" against of the most inspiring is the idea world government is that it is that, given the proper social at- impractical, that we 're not ready mosphere, all men can live in peace for it yet." Can you think of any- and brotherhood. We claim the thing more impractical than try- Christian ideal that all peoples of ing to piece the world back to- I, I the world are of one body. gether again after this next war, It is more than an analogy to or any more ready a time than say that if we attempt to decapi- when the world teeters on the tate a part of that body we would brink in Korea? be destroying a part of ourselves. This is not the time to pray to And need I say that this is ex- God for guidance while feverish- actly what Russia would like to ly trying to build up our muscles have us do? To build ourselves in- as our challenger builds up his. to a military garrison in which Nor is it the time to bawl to our our liberties will ebb away, and friends for help, because our op- chauvinism remain as our sole ponent has friends too. This is motivation . .. that is the crum- the time to call in the cops to bling weakness Russia would have break up the fight before it starts. us aspire to. 1 Only there aren't any cops yet .,. Our purpose should be instead We'd better get busy and set up to hold the Bear at bay until we, a police force, fast. can remove its claws. And there -H. S. Seltzer, M.D. is a way ... Department of Internal We can do it by halting the re- Medicine action in this country that would University Hospital have us believe the principle of the good neighbor changes its cash Both Sides value at national boundaries. T h dtr We can do it by realizing that To the Editor: our present short range policies N REPLY to George Paul Mos- toward the Communistic half of koff and everyone like him: the world are building up the bar- I 'find on this campus that a riers between us, and by putting great many people, to hear them our great emphasis on breaking talk, question everything, believe down those barriers. in nothing, hang onto nothing, We can do it by admitting that and, I hope, only a few of them if there is anything good about are doing as you are-spreading Communism it is the fact that it gloom and depression amongst the stands for a sort of international- few who are struggling to hearts- ism, and capitalizing on that ideal bursting to do the work which by providing new lyrics for its mel- could have been light upon all ody. We too can stand for a world shoulders if even a small percent- ideal rather than a region of the age of the people had done their world. share. We can do it by reaching those Our pioneers here had work to other people with a message that do. They couldn't afford to spend is real-by making sure it stays time questioninghandhspreading realandbecmesmor rel hregloom. If one of them had chosen real and becomes more real here, to stand and talk as you are while If we can preserve democracy in t tn n aka o r hl crisis that threatens to destroy someone else curried the horses rand milked the cows, (kept the it, then we will win out in the mechanized units repaired in the long run. This crisis demands that bitterest weather and raised crops we keep our guns leveled on our to feed your mouth Mr. Moskoff), long range goals . . . and this is h would have received a blow in one of the prime challenges to the the face from a work hardened, student, the foremost keeper of the horny fist with the strength of flame which burns in New York work hardened muscles behind it. harbor. ,! 1= 3 f .tete'4TO 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. Wa 0.0 0 4 NIGHT EDITOR: CHUCK ELLIOTT To the Editor: THE COMMUNIST sympathizers on this campus are trying their best to deceive us with lies by dis- tributing to every room in the West Quad (while the occupants were sleeping-a Communist trick,) a leaflet stating that Wall Street, gone to Mosher there were never more than six people in the lounge, she rather blithely and incoherent- ly mentioned some petty squabble in which the New Dorm and Mos- her had engaged. She asked my date what dorm she was from, and if she liked to study at Mosher why didn't she move. She then took her name and subsequently got in touch wthehos-t- n ON THE Washington Merry=- Go ...Round I WITH DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-A unique backstage dif- ference of opinion has developed be- ween two of the most important policy- nalers in the cabinet-Secretary of State Rcheson and Secretary of Defense Marshall ' Ihover hostilities in the Orient. E The difference is that Acheson, accused by Republicans of being an appeaser, is far more belligerent than Marshall, a mili- nary man. Marshall's view-and it's shared by other nilitary men-is that we must let no hys- terical cries from Congress or irresponsible ilitary actions in Asia embroil us in war. What; Marshall and his military staff fear that some sudden move by us may con- since the Russians we are about to attack, h ereby causing them to move first. Our best intelligence is that Russia does ot want a major war, though she could e stampeded into one. y Therefore, Secretary Marshall, in meet- igs of the cabinet and the national secur- jy council, has pleaded for calmness. He as also warned General MacArthur against any move which would bring on world war , and he was opposed to MacArthur's 'oop movements near the Manchurian bor- er after it had been agreed that we would keep a 40-mile neutrality zone this side of Manchuria. WAR CAN BE AVERTED ECRETARY MARSHALL points out-and it's no secret to the rest of the world- Vat we are in no position to fight world tar III and cannot be for at least a year. We also believes that if we live through the next 12 months without war, there is a dance of averting it altogether. That is e reason President Truman's recent speech# emphasized that peace, not war, is our.goal. Though Marshall and Acheson are warm friends and worked together' iV the State Department, Acheson is perhaps the most militant non-appeaser in the administra- tion--perhaps the natural reaction to un- fair attacks against him as a commie sympathizer. Acheson has proposed a naval blockade of the China coast, urged the bombing of Chinese cities, and favors keeping a mili- tary bridgehead in Korea. These measures were opposed by Prime Minister Attlee dur- ing his recent visit, and are also opposed by top U.S. military men. THREE REARMAMENT DANGERS THESE MILITARY MEN warn against three dangers in the present rearmament period: 1. Politicians who clamor for all-out military aggressiveness. Governor Dewey's speech was regarded by the pentagon as too aggressive, though it was secretly encour- aged by the State Department. 2. Military Men who clamor for a pre- ventive war. General MacArthur is placed in this category. 3. State Department officials, including Acheson, who insist on aggressive action. Note-Military chiefs point to another domestic danger in connection with rearm- ament-namely, drafting too many trainees before the army has enough camps and training officers. Secretary Marshall wants to move just as swiftly as possible but only as fast as the military machine can absorb men and weapons. He hopes for a steady 365-days-a-year preparedness, not a lot of quick hullabaloo followed by lethargy. TRUMAN AND MACARTUR PRESIDENT TRUMAN came into a cabi- net meeting some time ago carrying a copy of the New Republic, the liberal weekly magazine. During the cabinet session, Secretary of Defense Marshall complained about the difficulty of getting cooperation from Gen- eral MacArthur. He indicated that Mac- Arthur was a law unto himself. Truman listened, finally held up a copy of the New Republic. "This is the way to handle that bird," he said. Cabinet members, after the meeting, im- mediately sent for copies of the magazine. It contained an article by former Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes criticizing Mac- Arthur for violating directives from Wash- ington. AUSTIN BOWS PHILOSOPHICAL ex-senator Warren Aus- tin of Vermont, now U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, was sitting in the dele- gates' lounge at Lake Success the other day, when visitors asked him how he felt in view of the dangerous days ahead. "We have a lot to go through," Austin re- plied. "And maybe we will have to bow our heads a bit. It reminds me of a line of Cot- ton Mather's. He and Ben Franklin were good friends-though in their ideas they were as far apart as the poles. "Well," continued Ambassador Austin, ( CURRENT MOVIES Solution HERE HAS BEEN much talk about low r student morale and the overall mental .epression. In true academic fashion we *ave all sought far and wide for the answer. e e have turned campus problems into sym- 'nls of universal destruction and tragedy. Cliches have been cast at the foundering udents: "Keep a stiff upper lip;" "Turn your creator;" and "Do your duty toward Ae academic advancement of mankind." And only a few voices seem to have come Up with a rather obvious solution-TAKE A VACATION. ( Toward December of each year we nat- ally get a little tired of the academic life. %e fall months are the longest unbroken riod of school we have. --An annual let pwn is no rarity. , On a cold morning it's often more com- _fortable to stay under the warm blankets ,han to trudge across the diag to another tarly morning lecture. It's the same story every December. Only this year we have got the war and Vie draft and the A-bomb and the com- iunsts. Why say that we're just a little i i i i At The Michigan.. . BETWEEN MIDNIGHT AND -DAWN with Mark Stevens, Edmond O'Brien, Gale Storm and Donald Buka. THIS IS NOT the best cops and robbers film ever made, but it is good. In somewhat the style set by "The Street With No Name" and "The Naked City," this film traces the career of two night car-patrol cops. As played by Mark Stevens and Edmond O'Brian, the picture reaches a degree of reality that has been lacking in many of its kind. Their cops are neither the ideal pur- veyors of justice nor the hard boiled police- man that Hollywood has so often pictured. In and out of uniform their characteriza- tions are Deasy to believe. The film begins by following the patrol- car on a few of its typical assignments. After serving justice in these minor crimes, Stevens and O'Brien become involved in a gang war that occurs partly within their district. The film's climax is reached when one of the gang leaders, Donald Buka, in his attempt to escape a police encirclement threatens to throw a hostage child out of a window. This final scene is one of the goriest seen recently. Somewhere, among all this, the pro- ducers found time for a love story. The girl, who doesn't want to marry a cop, is played adequately by Gale Storm. It seems that she is finally learning how to act. "From Midnight to Dawn" will not win any awards but it is good entertainment for even the college student. -Joel McKible. Middle East Tensions IN ADDITION to the problems which they face elsewhere the Western Powers are confronted with the task of consolidating defenses in the Middle East, which show increasing signs of strain. This strain is especially evident in the' dispute between Britain and Egypt because of Egyptian de- mands for the evacuation of British troops from the Suez Canal zone and the ending of British influence in the Sudan. But it is 1 l l 1 l 1 f k Truman and MacArthur are re- er complaining to her that she had sponsible for World WAr III. This dragged a date over to Mosher. is nothing but lies. It was the I feel that Miss Eisle has been North Korean Communists, arm- grossly petty in her interpretation ed with Russian equipment that of a rule that is practical if han- started the war. It was the United {de nelgnlbtwihi Nations forces that drove the Cn- dled intelligently, bul which if Ndo drawn to extremes becomes antag- munists from South Korea. Oneonistic and unreasonable. Oct. 7, the UN Assembly voted We elf ohrw e overwhelmingly and enthusiasti- When we left Mosher we met cally for the war to be carried Miss Eisle at the door and she bid into Red Korea. Among the dele- us adieu with the following sac- gations who supported this action carine comment. "We hate to be were Great Britain, France, Cana- anti-social, but in the future, da, Australia, New Zealand, South you're no longer welcome here." Africa, "free" European delega- A true expression of ladylike be- tions, and all of Central and South havior and hospitality? America. -Robert Pick It was China that based air- planes to shoot down our airmen. Post-Alorttu . . It was China, armed with Rus- To the Edito-: sian equipment, that invaded Ko- rea and attacked UN Forces. H JJAVING RIPPED off a few edi- Business in this country does not! torial pages of the Daily for want a war. Business is now en- future reference, and having mis- joying its highest profits. A war placed the reference until today, would bring government controls I discovered how a post-mortunm and tax all their profits. It is Rus- reading can be so enjoyable-like sian business that wants a war- having teeth pulled. war is the only business they A letter of Dec. 7 labeled "In- know. tellect Level . . .", while leaving Our leaders do not want a war. me cold intellectually, called my In this country of free speech andamenton toe lettclumn free elections, our leaders know of two days earlier: t the writing exactly what the people want and of a mis-guided, tot eager for they must carry out their wishes peace at any price (see "Warsaw or find another job. In Russia, the Congress . . .") Directly below it peoehaesno freedoms, and their I found a bit of postal abberation leaders easily lead them like by one Nistor Potcova that really sheep. made my dentures rattle. Consi- Al those wanting peacepar dering the extremity of viewpoint wasting their time 'signing peace btenteetoltes n e petitions to be sent to Washing- between these two letters, and re- ton. It is not in Washington that gretting that no one had taken peace or war is decided-it is in the opportunity ,to simultaneously comment on these opposed errors Moscow. in reaction, I now take the liber- It is only in decadent unwork- in able economies as Communist ty t Russia that war is profitable. Rus- In this crisis that faces the sia has nothing to lose by war, world, and against a threatof -Robert B. Bentley Credit . . . To the Editor: CREDIT SHOULD be given where credit is due. So a healthy por- tion belongs to the 'U' administra- tor who wisely decided to allow publication of statistics from the recent faculty-rating by students Dec. 15. This publicity will tend to establish more firmly the faculty- rating system and increase stu- dent understanding of what they are doing when they make their judgments. My own guess is that the deserv- ing administrator is Dean Kenis- ton, himself. Am I right? And while I'm writing a letter, I might as well resent the infer- ence on page 13 of your Dec. 19 edition to the effect that most University students not residing in dorms don't bathe regularly. -Craig Wilson * * . Road to Peace To the Editor: AS OUR entranced country sinks deeper into the quick- sand of supermilitarization which will bankrupt it even without a war, it is amazing that, except for Thomas Stokes, no 'one who reaches the public eye or ear has seen fit to tell us how we got into our present fix and how we can prevent a world war instead of trying to win one. In 1945 Emery Reves wrote a book called THE ANATOMY OF PEACE. In 1947 Cord Meyer fol- lowed up with PEACE OR ANAR- CHY. Both of these men ap- proached the problem of the cause of world wars objectively, threw the false concept of the ideological struggle into the ashcan where it belongs, and were therefore able to arrive at the only con- clusion possible: that world wars stem directly from the struggle for national supremacy, for main- tenance of cherished national sovereignty. Their supporting evi- dence is irrefutable; and daily since August 14, 1945, the course of international affairs has con- solidated their argument. Having established the diagno- sis, they were able to prescribe the only effective treatment. Until there is set up a supranational government equipped with armed authority to enforce world law, there will be world wars. The only good that can result from Korea is to awaken the American people to the blazing fact that peace has never come and will never come from militarization, that peace cannot be a matter of consent among nations. There must be something bigger than any nation -bigger than the United States, bigger than Russia-whose sole 1 all those things free people have against our will to get strong. If produced. it is necssary to defend certain Campus Communist Sympathiz- principles and ideals with force, ers, look about you at this great then we have to do it. free country of ours. Don't you enjoy your freedom and your comforts. Instead of spreading lies that will lead to our destruction, SPREAD THE TRUTH AND HELP SAVE OUR COUNTRY. -Nistor Poteova Hospitality . . . To The Editors, I HAD A disheartening experi- ence last week which might in- terest the readers of the Daily. My date and I were asked to leave Mosher Hall where we had been studying. The cause given by a Miss Eisle was that we had vio- lated an unwritten law of the Un- iversity, which states that women students from one unit of the dorm system could not use the facilities1 In defending our society, fur- thermore, we must recognize real- ity for what it is. Regardless of Mr. Sharpe's avowals, a wolf is a wolf, whether it wears the clothing of a wolf or a dove. If we keep our doves in a cage it is because their feathers are drooping. So much for Mr. Sharpe. It was the other letter, Mr. Pot- cova's, which alarmed me since its tenor was more malicious than misguided. Without chastizing its writer personally, I would like to point to it as a clear example of the dangers our democracy faces in these times. As I read it, the words of a Long or a Smith wr a Coughlin dripped into my ears. Call it sabre rattling if you like, this is the type of. thinking which appeals to our less honorable emotions when intelli- X c t s i a c s f t s d s 0 s s c t: 9 a t: 9 i ti n f G a Si b Sixty-First Year Edited and managed by students of the University of 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 Eldtor Janet Watts............Associate Editor Nancy Bylan........Associate Editor James Gregory ....... Associate Editor Bill Connolly............Sports Editor Bob Sandell.... 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 Waiter Shapero Assoc. Business Manager Paul Schaible....Advertising Manager Bob Mersereau....... Finance Manager Carl Breitkreitz.... .Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credite tO it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all othver matters herein are also- reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second-class mail 1matter. Subscription during regular school 3 year: by carrier, $6.00; by mail, $7.00. Sure we're ashamed of our scum which has risen to the top in occidental history! Of course the orientals would have done so much better-they wouldn't have had any thing to be ashamed of if they had been doing the job the Occident has done in the past, now would they Mr. Moskoff? If you hate the United States so why are you in it? No one asked you to stay. And if you're not go- ing to do anything constructive, we could do better without you. We're not going to stand by and see savage hordes destroy every- thing good that man has done. No one asked China or Russia to shed blood, and if they do it's their own fault. We've done the best we could and the past has to be the past. If Asia wants to take your tack and destroy instead of improve why then I guess she'll have to take the consequences. If all you're looking for is rot-- look at the Orient as well as the Occident Mr. Moskoff. -Iva L. Moshier -k II t .1 of another unit. When I point- gence seems about to falter. It is ed out to Miss Eisle that the fa- the reaction which stands as our cilities we were using consisted of most nauseous danger right now. a couch and a floor lanp, and "Once the Bear's head is cut that in the several times we had off, his claws won't hurt you." It 'I BARNABY Cushlamochree. Your mother sold her silver teapot to buy your father a golf bag- Because HE sold his golf clubs to buy a cream pitcher and sugar bowl to go with It's sheer genius, m'boy! Reminds me of a piece l helped O'Henry with one time ... Think of it!... The perfecf I