TiiE MICHIGAN DAILY Needed:* An SRA Revamp LAST WEEK was Brotherhood Week, and it was plenty weak. Most of the students hardly knew or cared. In its own programs, ;he campus Student Religious Association ias been running into the same sort of tudent apathy for a long time. On Sunday SRA held a timely meeting. It seems that SRA was getting as little attention as the by-passed Brotherhood Week. SRA leaders were overtly troubled by student apathy-and even antipathy-- towards the organization. x In the past, with great determination and Iltruism SRA had undertaken what was supposed to be an all-encompassing pro- gram. This included student recreation at bane Hall, discussion groups, field work, and a variety of other activities. But unfortunate- y, these activities were not all-encompass- ng The student body remains disinterested. Sunday's meeting, then, was to determine where and how SRA is falling down in its obligations to the student body. No doubt hese obligations exist; SRA could normally oe a dynamic factor in campus life. Perhaps the cardinal problem SRA faces oday is the prevailing sentiment of a rather rreligious, skeptical, don't-give-a-damn stu- lent body. Any attempts to rejuvenate SRA nust consider this prevailing attitude, and SRA's activities must synchronize with this" attitude. The most obvious solution is to capital- ize on this skeptical attitude. Doubting persons are also likely to be searching- in quest of an answer to their many ques- tions. Consequently, if SRA could bring a variety of controversial religious leaders to campus for a series of lectures or de- Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: DAVIS CRIPPEN bates, it would give both the campus and SRA a shot in the arm. Reinhold Niebuhr, Rabbi Irving Miller, Cardinal Spellman, Duncan Littlefair are good examples. And even a few atheists here and there might enliven things. At the same time, SRA could discontinue putting so much emphasis upon harmony between the various member guilds. Tol- erance is fine, but not tolerance to the ex- tent that it produces narrow-mindedness. Of course, the members of each guild are quite complacent with their respective re- ligions. But the point is: the rest of the campus (a huge majority) is still in the searching stage. An enlightening program of polemics might help the rest of us find a few needed answers. A sprinkling of philosophy professors and political leaders, if brought on an objective basis, would also serve to bolster interest in SRA functions. Ideally, the organization should not take sides in any such program. But there are some matters in which SRA cannot afford to remain inadvertent. Nothing should prevent SRA from publicly throwing its weight behind the objectives of the Committee to End Discrimination, objectives which are so fundamentally of religious import that they can't be dis- regarded. Greater emphasis on field work-in and around Ann Arbor-would probably attract the large numbers of University students concentrating in social work. Finally, as was suggested, a liaison be- tween other campus organizations and the newly-created President's Conference would keep SRA in continual contact with the student body. These suggestions were mentioned at Sun- day's meeting, along with several others. SRA leaders might do well to ponder over them if they are really interested in making their organization an intrinsic part of Uni- versity life. -Cal Samra. 11 N MATrRO F A CT By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP AS OF MARCH 1 WASHINGTON-Tomorrow these report- ers will separate again for some months, one to make an expedition of inquiry in Western Europe, the other to hold the fort in this dreary city. It seems a good time to try to take stock-to observe the flight of starlings over the capital, to trace the vein- ing of the luncheon calves' liver, to consult the bunion that foretells bad weather, and by these sooth-sayers' devices, to answer the great question, "doom or no doom, war or peace?" Two things are clear about the last three months. On the one hand, it is clear that in December the masters of the Kremlin were actively preparing new ag- gressions, both in the Far East and in Europe. The physical preparations for at- tacks on Indo-China by a "liberation army," and on Yugoslavia by the sur- rounding satellites, were being pushed forward with all haste. The logical con- clusion, glumly reached by the leaders of most of the Western governments, was that attacks on Yugoslavia and Indo- China were planned and would shortly be launched. On the other hand, the situation has not developed in quite this simple manner. The tempo of preparation has slackened, al- though the Kremlin only needs to give the signal for both Yugoslav and Indo-Chinese operations to begin. Certain other decidedly ominous signs have been given-for exam- ple, the heavy reinforcement of the Soviet garrison on Sakhalin island, combined with the remarks on the Korean war in Stalin's interview, can quite possibly mean that the Kremlin intends to rescue its Chinese vas- sals from their difficulties in Korea by di- rectly intervening in the war in the Far East. * * * AT THE SAME TIME, the Western lead- ership has not been so idle as one might have expected from the condition of paraly- sis and division that prevailed in December. Lieutenant General Ridgway and his men have decisively turned the balance of the Korean fighting-at least unless and until the Soviets intervene. Strong diplomatic measures have been taken by London and Washington, to show the Kremlin that Yugoslavia cannot be attacked with im- punity. Above all the great military asset of the West, the American atomic stockpile, has at least been un-frozen. All sorts of steps have been taken to convince the of immediate destruction of Russia's vital centers. Over-all, despite the ominous new signs above mentioned, the present atmosphere is decidedly less tense, distinctly more hope- ful, than it was in December. The wave of despair that engulfed the leadership in Washington (and in most other Western capitals) after the. Chinese intervention in Korea, has at least subsided. The hope that the deterrents which are being so carefully paraded may actually do their work, is now rather generally held. , , , IF IT IS permissible to make a guess-and one can only guess-the masters of the Kremlin seriously intended to launch the Yugoslav and Indo-Chinese operations when the preparations for these attacks were first noted. December, after all, was their good time, when it was natural for them to plan boldly. If one may guess further, the de- velopments in the interval have persuaded them that the game is not worth the candle, and they have therefore adopted new tac- tics. The first installment of these tactics is now only too visible. All the signs suggest that the Conference of Foreign Ministers of the Big Four, which has been the subject of so long an exchange of notes, is to be the scene of a final, grandiose/ attempt to split the Western alliance. No one can say how far the Kremlin will be willing to gamble the positions it now holds in Germany and elsewhere in order to divide Britain, France and the United States. Equally, no one can say whether the United States, Britain and France may not be able to turn the Krem- lin's gamble to good diplomatic advantage. But while no one can foresee the Soviet methods, the Soviet aim is perfectly. plain -split the West for good and all, and thus achieve the great objective, which is to halt Western rearmament. Perhaps the Soviets may attain this ob- jective, by the follies of the Western lead- ership. If the Soviets fail, we must certain- ly expect another interlude of acute and imminent danger this summer. A Spring Conference of Foreign Ministers that does not satisfy the Kremlin can all too easily be transformed into the prelude to a Sum- mer attack all along the line. Stalin has told us in his interview, "War is not inevi- table unless these dreadful people persist in trying to defend themselves from us, and continue to refuse to give our Chinese al- lies everything they want." That sounds, at least, like stage-setting for the Foreign Ministers' meeting. Then, if we get through this summer, a new and very different time of danger will begin within another twelve-months, when the Soviet Union will have accumu- lated a large enough stock of atomic wea- pons to make a crippling surprise attack on the United States. And if this danger, which is universally underrated, does not in the end materialize, there will be ano- ther long period of political raids and jockeyings and pressures on obvious soft- spots like the Middle East, which will also be very perilous. In peering forward down this bleak vista, however, there is no reason to lose heart. The point to remember is that we have ex- perienced many other great perils, from the DORIS FLEESON: Congressional Telecasting WASHINGTON-The St. Louis betting. commissioner who defied a congression- al committee to make him testify before television cameras will doubtless get con- siderable sympathy from others who have sweated under the combination of hot lights and heated questions. But sympathy is all he'll end up with in the opinion of the administration's le- gal lights and of others expert in the col- lateral questions raised by the novel chal- lenge to congressional authority. Their conclusion is that television itself is the novelty but a merely mechanical no- velty in this instance. The telecast, which is what the witness actually complained of, is regarded as an extension of communica- tions, its most modern version certainly but still a version covered by the freedom of the press concept. * * * JAMES J. CARROLL, nationally known ex- pert on betting, when called before the Kefauver crime committee in St. Louis, called attention to the television cameras and repeatedly refused to answer Senator Kefauver's questions. He argued that tele- vision violated hisconstitutional right of privacy and held him up to ridicule and embarrassment. The Senator said he would ask congress to cite Mr. Carroll for con- tempt. Solicitor General Philip Perlman is the government's principal lawyer and not pri- vileged to offer public legal advice. But he did make these general observations: All that the constitutional privilege of privacy consists of is the right not to in- criminate one's self. Article' 5 of the Bill of Rights states: "No person shall be compelled to be a witness against him- self." The Kefauver investigation is not a crim- inal case, of course, but it could sometimes be that if it was furnishing links to present or future criminal cases. Thus Nyitnesses might conceivably have the right to refuse to answer certain questions. But Mr. Car- roll would answer none. * * * The Federal Communications Commis- sion bowed out of the controversy. Com- missioner Frieda Hennock said FCC's only power was the grant of television licenses in the public interest. Obviously a television station cooperating with a congressional committee could claim to be serving the public interest. Miss Hennock added that section 326 of the communications act specifically prohi- bited FCC from censorship. An experienced criminal lawyer, Miss Hennock suggested that in some situations television could be turned by a witness against harsh inquisitors or a hostile judge. What better way to prove injustice on ap- peal, she said, than to offer in evidence a telecast showing expressions, inflections, innuendoes, In a manner words cannot con- vey. Others agreed with her that actual damage would first have to be shown, not predicted, by the witness. It was gener- ally felt that the real question was the gontempt. Was the witness looking for reasons not to answer or did he try to find himself unable to combat the cameras? Like the American people, Congress loves television. Its most important members are rarely too busy to give the folks the benefit of their dramatic talents. They can be ex- pected to deal sternly with Mr. Carroll. (Copyright, 1951, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) At The Michigan .. . VENDETTA, with Faith Domergue and George Dolzel. A SCREEN PLAY by W. R. Burnett of The Asphalt Jungle, direction by Actor Mel Ferrer, and emoting by "new discovery", Faith Domergue, manage to record little more than a fairly near miss for Howard Hughes' latest production. Remote to begin with in its setting, Corsica of 1825, it never succeeds in quite persuading that its people are anything more than characters moving in a dream. Excessive underplaying and consciously murky photography, it seems, can make even a well-plotted blood feud have little more than a detached interest. At that, within these considerable limitt, the conflict is believable and the characters consistent once they are safely past a shaky beginning in which even a funereal nar- rator is introduced to give explanations, and by implication, apologies for the stiffness and pretension. These scenes set a tone, however, which constantly adds to the re- mote quality of the material instead of com- batting it. Even a single good, healthy clinch is lacking. Hughes should bow his head in shame. George Dolzel, as the confused idealist caught in the web of tradition, is fine "I'll Be Glad When The Great Debate Is Over" .a~ 0- - R ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round with DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON - Drew Pearson, departing for a news survey of gathering European war clouds, left the following instructions for his staff: To the Staff: I shall be traveling in Europe and countries adjacent to the Iron Curtain for the next two or three weeks. During that time you may have to write an occasional emergency column in case I get too far away from a cable office or the going gets tough. In writing such columns please bear in mind the following: Don't hesitate to admit an error. Double and triple check in order to avoid errors, but if you find you are wrong, say so. It is only fair to the man you have wronged, in addition to which the public will respect you for being fair. If you are sure you are right, however, stick to your guns and if necessary we will battle it out. Never bear grudges. If a president or a senator calls you a name, don't call one back. Write facts; don't go in for name-calling. Any scrivener can fill a column with abuse. Epithets can be culled from any dollar dictionary, but it takes good journalism to ferret out graft or the backstage doings of diplomats or the income-tax cheaters- and then make what you say stand up in court. REMEMBER that it is part of your job to right some of the news- wrongs of the capital. The big newspaper chains can be ruthless, their newsmen in a hurry. It is your job to probe deeper than the handout or the official statement. You. are to pick up where the spot- news men, rushing for the telephone or grabbing for the headline, leave off. Frequently the best part of the story is after the spot-news cream has been skimmed. Remember also that ever since politicians became politicians, the thing the public was not supposed to know has taken place in the private lobbies and the smoke-filled rooms. Yet what is hidden from the public is usually what the public is most entitled to know about, and the job of a good newspaperman to report. Remember that in our system of government by checks and balances, it is your job to help in the checking. Government is so intricate and detailed today that congress no longer can do all the checking. Furthermore, congressmen themselves have to be checked. Most congressmen are honest and reasonably conscientious, but it is your job to smoke out the Parnell Thomases, the Andy Mays and the "Doc" Brehms, and report the facts about them-even if it means a tough battle.C However, it is also important to remember that the government is neither all good nor all bad. There are bureaucrats who are woe- fully inefficient, and bureaucrats who are a credit to mankind. It is your job to discriminate. Government is only as good as the men in it. And since men are human, they are subject to all the frailties that make up man- kind-laziness, inefficiency, greed, graft, temptation. But they are also subject to great effort, sacrifice, inspiration. It is your job as a newspaperman to spur the lazy, watch the weak, expose the corrupt. You must be the eyes, ears and nose of the American people. Yes, the nose too, is important. For no matter how much stench you may be exposed to, never lose your sense of smell. But likewise remember that there are scores of underpaid gov- ernment servants dedicated to the cause of good government whom the public never hears of. It is your job to encourage them. It is also your job to let the public know that these men are working for them. For the public must never lose confidence in its government. Should it ever take seriously the scoldings of some of my competitors and lose confidence in our form of government, then the principle we are fighting for would be no more. REMEMBER also that it's the little fellow who usually gets kicked around. It's the little businessman, the G.I., the guy in the lower- bracket incomes who needs a friend. He has few friends in high places, no big politicians to pull wires, no one to speak for him on interlocking boards of directors. He has only the American public's strong sense of right and wrong to back him-and it's your job to spell out those rights and wrongs so the public can know what cooks. This applies to minority groups as well as little people. Sometimes these groups need a little more encouragement than the folks who are doing all right anyway. Finally, remember that though the world moves slowly toward its two great goals-peace and the brotherhood of man-it is your job when possible to help accelerate the pace. Sometimes it is better not to report a delicate diplomatic negotiation. Sometimes the cause of peace is best served by sacrificing a news story until a difficult diplomatic hurdle is over. But if the diplomats fumble, if they betray their trust, then it is your job to be ruthless in exposing that betrayal. You must be their watchdog. You must let them know what the publicity penalty is- if they fail. Finally, when you write anything, remember that the fewer words you say it in, the better. These are the goals of the Washington Merry-Go-Round which I have not lived up to. Perhaps you can. (Copyright, 1951, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) t B st g t o.G , q m rMCW*:.W..Icroa 1pa , Dear Dean Walter: THANK YOU for your good letter of January fourth. You admonished me to "preach a bit longer." While I am not-an authority on international relations, I am obliged to admit there is a viewpoint of detached austerity associated with an APO number on the other side of the world. At an APO you are removed from the day to day argument, discussion, and passion of events in the United States. But-to preach a bit: As a lawyer, it seems to me a person's ability to walk a dark alley alone is dependent upon the Law and Order of the society in which he lives. A bully lurking in the dark alley takes note of that Law and Order. If you lived in a lawless society, you would have to take certain steps in order to walk that dark alley without fear of the bully- First, you would have to be strong enough to beat him up. Second, you would have to convince him that you could do it, Third, you would have to let him know what act of his would cause you to fight., It seems to me, the United States is now walking the dark alley of international trouble. At least one bully (and possibly more) lurks in that dark alley. The United States must take the same steps to protect itself that you would take. In short, it must be strong; others must know it is strong; it must announce what it will fight for (speci- fically: It can not disclaim interest in Korea and then be surprised if the bully moves in). Moreover, it would seem prudent for the United States to gather whatever allies it can find to help it on its travels. In walking an alley of peril the United States would be better off with an old ally (e.g. Chiang)-than without. I am glad to be able to relate to you that in a limited way Ameri- ca is ready to fight. In June of 1948 the United States Air Force organized five tacti- cal air support wings. One of these was located in Southern Califor- nia. This was the 452nd Bombardment Wing (L), commanded by Brigadier General Luther W. Sweetser, Jr. With a maximum of ten days notice (and in many cases individuals reported on the same day they received their notices) the 452nd was ordered to active duty in the middle of the Mojave Desert. Approximately three thousand civil- ians gathered in that desert. They lacked the 75,000 odd pieces of equipment they were soon to acquire; they lacked clothing; innocula- tions; dog tags; identification cards; and all the fiddle-faddle that is required for American combat troops. It is interesting to recall that on that first morning there were only nine cooks. Most of the bar- racks were nailed shut. Beds were stacked in neat piles. General Sweetser had only a desk and chair; and could not offer his staff a place to confer. Suffice to say that within sixty days the 452nd Bombardment Wing had ninety-two percent (92%) of its 75,000 odd pieces of equip- ment. Every man had a full issue of clothing, including three khaki uniforms, one blue uniform, one OD uniform, together with heavy shoes, overcoat, gloves, and all of his field equipment which in turn included two blankets and a sleeping bag. A movement order was re- ceived. T'he wing then moved by bus, plane, truck, train, and ship a distance of seven thousand miles without loss of a single piece of equipment or injury to a man. Seventy-seven days after the 452nd was recalled to active duty it hit the enemy for the first time. At this writing the 452nd has flown over seven thousand combat hours. It has hit the enemy with over fourteen hundred sorties. It has bombed, machine-gunned, rocketed, and napalmed the enemy with observed satisfaction. Perhaps, in a small measure, the 452nd (led by an officer corps which is ninety-seven percent reserve and manned by enlisted per- sonnel who are seventy percent reservists) is indicative of the poten- tial of the United States.- This potential is further exemplified by the continued support the 452nd receives. For each combat mission of forty planes there is required a freight train of twenty-four ten-ton railroad cars. The cars supply only gasoline and ordnance. Fidrther, daily trainloads of food, equipment, supplies and clothing are required. It is interesting to note the combat record has been achieved in spite of a confused and conflicting policy at home. Individually, the men of the 452nd are not enthused about fighting and dying on the Asiatic mainland. They receive daily letters inquiring why they came and what they are doing. Due probably to home-front pressure, those having four dependents have been permitted to go home (without replacement). No more airmen will be called who do not volunteer for duty. In short, the men of the 452nd are fighting what is to them an all-out war (for no matter how small the theatre of shooting-it's all-out) with confusion, doubt and uncertainty at home. If the nation must continue to walk the dark alleys of the world, let's hope we shall be able to produce an unlimited number of these reserve wings. "-Voney F. Morin APO 75 'Unit 1 '1 '(4 r 4. Letter from Korea ~~1 New Amendment . . To the Editor: THE XXII Amendment has been ratified and become part of our Constitution officially, and not as at one time, by precedent only. While it may have originat- ed as a smear against Roosevelt, it does contain a recognition of the type of labor required of our pre- sidents. The office of President is a man-killer. In our last two wars it has broken down or killed the incumbent. Two terms are as much as the human frame can stand in dealing with the multipli- city of problems confronting our chief executive. After that it is time for a fresh man with a new viewpoint. No man is indispensible. There are always good men available to take over if a wise choice is made. This may not seem true at any one particular time, such as 1944, but nevertheless holdsgood. Presi- dents are elected for four years and they should be fresh enough to finish their terms. The people are the ones to suffer if they don't. -Ralph L. Christensen America's Promise THE UNITED STATES is the richest, and, both actually and potentially, the most powerful state on the globe. She has much to give the world; indeed, to her hands is chiefly entrusted the shaping of the future. If democ- racy in the broadest and truest sense is to survive, it will be main- ly because of her guardianship.- -Lord Tweedsmuir i t Sixty-First Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under'the authority of the Board in Control od Student Publications. Editorial Staff Jim Brown.. .... . .Managing Editor Paul Brentlinger. ........ City Editor Roma Lipskcy,.........Editorial Director Dave Thomas ..........Feature Editor Janet Watts.. .........Assoclate Editor Nancy Bylan..........Associate Editor James Gregory........Associate Wditor 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 Walter Shapero Assoc. Business Manager Paul Schaible....Advertising Manager Bob Mersereau.......Pinance Manager Bob Miller........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 credited to it or otherwise credited to this. newspaper. All rights ofrepublication of al other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor. Michigan as second-class mai matter. Subscription during regular school year:-by carrier. $6.00: by mail. $7.00. I' 'I Kremlin that any new where will carry with it aggression any- the terrible risk 1 Looking Back 35 YEARS AGO TWO-HUNDRED canvassers crowded the campus seeking to enlist the first Union life-members. With their goal set at 3,000 student life-members the soliciters sought to pin-down men in the fraternities and dorms. BARNABY My entire ['i deduct the cost of new sheets wardrobe! from the $99,987 retainer fee l'i Vanished! returning to those laundry thieves who misrepresented themselves, Gus. ti Cushlamochree! This is serious! Even though your mother merely meant to do poor Gus's laundry as a favor to him, your household Yes, Gus, nobody relishes the idea of a long legal wrangle. .Barnaby, your old Fairy God father will try to discover an amicable resolution of this dispute. Let Engineers were asked to answer a ques- I El I ''