THE MICUIGAN DAILY _ I____ Fair Trade Decision DORIS FLESON: Deferred Supreme will probably not set up any broad imme- ~e agree- diate reaction. so-called Nevertheless, there will eventually be a Lien it is reaction. with ho- When current agreements begin to expire there are bound to be defections from the t"' about ranks of controlled business. Moreover, when gged on the present period of spiraling costs passes ties, was from the economic scene there will be room mono- for major cuts in the prices of consumer pathetic goods. conomy, Some enterprising character, who read his ~ry corn- Peterson's E~conomics back at Michigan, Is pporters going to make the cuts first ~nd then the ramount floodgates will be opened. epul and But the new ruling is going to call for some sharp work on the part of our Fed- t permits eral Trade Commission and the Depart- ;reements ment of Justice, to see that the business- Ihem free men who have used "fair trade" laws to sensible, bully excess profits out of the public do not turn to less open but more effective means of holding prices at an artificially ~an Daily high level. )aily staff ~!ers only. More important, the Court's decision calls ________ on businessmen to show as much faith in free enterprise as does the court in this his- ~OUNG toric judgment. ________ -Zander Hollander -I MAGZIE tended as a subtle kidding of modernistic mnd falls fltter tan last niht' beer An The ads prove, however, that art can be humorous. Anyone who can read between the pic- Lures will find what he's looking f or- laughs. An insert take-off on theatre-in- the-round makes even dramatist Will Shakespeare io a gagnian. And old faithful Double Dick, whose continuing ability to fascinate the student body with his campus adventures is amazing, makes his farewell appearance. (Perhaps, how- ever, it's time for the farewell. This chap- ter has enough authentic Double Dick to ke5ep the story moving but it ends with senitimental moralizing more apropos to a Michigan Daily editorial.) Also deserving a good 'Yuk' are "Who Stole My Dinosaur" for its slap-stick and "Heaven's Above" for its satire on science.. fiction. These two prove that the home of- fice humor beats the borrowed jokes by a mil e. One adided comment-the old themes of kidding The Daily and Generation still touch home but they arc getting thin around the edges e.g. the drama, arty illustrations and movie reviews. It may not be only the edges that thin if they make too many more appearances. awar of te extet to whc Wdash- I intorn iled onead nte withr es-rty pec to domsiclegiation aths th scond Trumanditain appras nteodacs its fer in Lesael niown be cah Spee Couert is outsideted ran obseresent most urninga ctrerjsies ise nt factr that they court rfetsa the sae trendo now moedffcl tha1Trmnapiteshold c'te- balane of wer. Tefcti ht The Jstes re oi ng of into the m str tc of a termn exspected to e ldy r a o a sofzonl, abu 90 oiinororls.Ts produc fro inefu men copreo the 90- tha onl thre-toe Blck ndoga -turnedi ot angalss withaegulity- durigateb the palmyidays of thepeal. Thes rani noutr thoatshe court b- hndolo in iswr u that ditsis i casinly mexecs;in its peoaeo refusing one to n-er tertai aealsn. Inrssvl the xysitn heady average ;of aout250caseh, hnedon inm- aperhas20oinos o t apast rega 10s ne undi number.ha ben Anesedaniatond oft the cengtrefssn to arhascohvinesd ny wobserviers o teocousry tat he-ntigismr n aer thand they 'weeorthatnge c ases ar e meuc more. difiut tha they Tcuan' en- erinee morte otem.hThe faterid that the hase eyrit tenio all intomn th hih kis a thfu refcsion of the codln-s bti mtes by thnea colto of Re pui-n canno faryb aee a osraiea that coaliin inted eonsif Jcuallye akes thn iths: efsan oger topneer- olagu es heflect then.onrssioald Whtn Ths inerestn is that this has been cotion, theso Predernuwho camainedok ferociouslyalags.nstsdo-nothidgism and naf- fixd theg "wort Congrdess" ael oth Repulica 80t. Itis M. Trman' ap pointes to reethe court raveale its comperxion hi'CifJsie r is wh rdn has exrisdtegeia ee-makling whckepsrb the tcesoutiofs the headlines has. Tyielddeanndnnualgcropeofand opinon onlys. r aleig easete. r o Mr Tgrumn tappied tsh Chef Jutire andctreenl otheni or emerAtrely Gen- lte usieslc and DousglaspamaykembJus- tcsyrgJackson b and Frnfer ayaicae n.ook /~ ~ M 5.5 F T2i~...\... S4,'S. .5 .~.....5'. 'S.,. ~.. ~ .~..,.............,..~,... .5 'S C j I ..................... Daily-Bill Hampton 'w ashin~ton Merry-Go-Round with DREW PEARSON t A it Ii 0 otr rhe a Edithor:r1 hbpee h "hte war."ca Tad i re e a r adley' an sweb r toy M c rtur. Iht willeshock then world. aits that thoe-T govrmet Tsettn irbts sights.o etingv- hr ight war, against the Seoveto hnen Buiait foraece hmann iys no arqeston tof thge "right Thr"nd he "oesng war."n Hu- 'hrvte "GRATiEBTE nounds13 kelighc"nfyrencetg of s MudropIsc. It isr th "Gatst BhetKraal" o [iens peae hes Aer and. f ect humaity.i radleyo eash- aing tof Hirkohitons pae foe n auerinsg China? wudbevnmr ~ut what aes Dtintasst L5imtaio of Hile' pafo N to ab it d t h1 tg II AAC has ompentsa roeft ow coersn Al Sier ons prud- b annune "it is elibeat idt vcousl a nti-N. eo etaitl igadthe d huma sprt tat is fulh o Edieraehsoil TorEtEXTns tha e tomirgeeet EeyNegr osrganiation cont- dernthuishamedlys Tracsdfilm ersonalo slandritallwi Negr months I atemteDs onliaerte Rastrt rced thei fra whic wes ristogh austonwar.apli )apron orpersns must h boe annmed aisuoecho ests.u na rerermdis to regoadr- soassiumn cygdanda a ghood Sir admitshe cargdaef agans Aito a Natiohn. He grt a ary fiul whUihdrait hand ralen thatr reitte prsen, t wold sitaon he Soly angl h th ..hoe dems- ise inforeincon tries.g thues Etor:qusio InHEsTEgT ofs the Comthte t Endt Dfat iscrimination stte endbisheds Linslat Thur0say's nti poinit. Te M dicliSchool 3 nowthony college. ofthe ni- dersiyno ihiganu whdich -ch4 tont aferegng the ngofrenceam aepr ured the remvalsf is p- triatoy qusionsfrom appli- tion blanks-hsmd omv Speifcaly,-e the Medical ho emadol shaved the eis gin, na- ipnl ancestry fortmerl nam i t- soas been hasng and harmfhoto- ~raphof eery andSidae,~ Daission.io L 4 4 XetteP4 TO THE EDITOR l2he 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. -Wendy Owen [| A AA A t Lydia Mendelssohn .. RING ROUND THE MOO0N, presented by the Ann Arbor Drama Season. "RING Round the Moon," second in the current theater program, shows some- thing of an improvement over the initial offering of the season, CAPTAIN BRASS- BOUND'S CONVERSION, but is so much the same kind of play that it is difficult to understand the programming plans. Both are plays of wit rather than charac-- ter. of contrapuntal talk rather than drama- tic substance. Set in the same era, each also incorporates an Roratio Alger message as minor justification for their existence., The present production, although ham- pered by a slow first act, gets rolling well in the second, where it reaches the un+ questioned high point of the play with the mock tango between William . Allyn and Betty Low. From then on, it main- tains a generally high level unti te end. chair-ridd dwager, heads a cast that does not entirely measure up to her, but is uni- formly competent. She functions in the play as a kind of deus ex machina to make everything come out all right in the end. Donald Buka, in the dual role of the neph- ews, is all right, but does not completely capture the sparkle necessary for the role of Hugo or the reticent charm of Frederic. Grace Kelly, as the indigent heroine, lives up to the not-easy task of being as beautiful as everybody on the stage says she is. Billed as "a charade in music," the stag- ing of the play is conceived in a series of tableaus, which is in a large measure re- sponsible for the difficulty in getting under- way. With a large number of characters to introduce, playwright Anouilh and/or translator Fry mechanically repeats with a different inflection the exit line of one char- acter for the entrance line of another. This is part of the technique that seems to grow less unwieldly later. One the whole, however, the set, the tone, and the texture of the "play add up to an evening's entertainment. --Dick Kraus and Bill Wiegand '/ASHINGTON-Despite Dixiecrat-Republican opposition to Hawai- t " an and Alaskan statehood, two Senate reports next week will t call upon Congress to admit these two territories as full-fledged I states, thereby putting 50 stars in the American flag. Without pulling punches, the reports hit squarely at the ra- i cial issue, which has been the secret roadblock in the way of Hawaiian and Alaskan statehood. Though both the Democratic and Republican platforms have promised statehood, certain Sena- tors privately fear that nonwhites from Hawaii may be elected to their exclusive club, the United States Senate. It is also feared that the addition of two new Senators from Alaska would mean two votes for closure and against filibustering. ] With this general issue in mind, the Hawaiian report declares bluntly: "With the entire world looking to the United States for moral and spiritual leadership, the (Senate Interior) comimittee does not believe that the 82nd Congress will deny full political equality to 1 a group of its own citizens who have met every historic test of qualify- ( ing for statehood, merely because the ancestors of a part of that I group came from Asa." Describing Hawaii as "a bastion of Americanism in the critical I Pacific area," the report argues: "it is of highest importance that the I moral and psychological position of the United States with the peoples I of Asia on this Pacific front shall not be weakened by the paradoxical status of Hawaii.", The Alaskan report echoes the same seniment. - "Although the native population of Alaska constitutes a minor- ity of the population." the Senate Interior Commhittee declares, "there are six such natives presently holding office as respected and influ- ential members of the territorial legislature . . . . Alaska, along with Hawaii, has been a pioneer in establishing and realizing the dream of our founding fathers for true democracy and equality of opportunity." * * * * - -SEATTLE SALMON FISHERMEN- N THE CASE of Alaska, the report also observes slyly "that no resi- dent of the territory appeared in opposition (to statehood), but that the burden was carried by representatives of the fish-packing industry with headquarters in the states." Both reports also stress the critical issue of defense. Of Ha- 1waii, the report solemnly reminds: "Pearl Harbor, for all its tragedy, served one grimly useful purpose. It made the United States aware that its western front was not the coast of Calif or- nia, but a group of islands some 2,000 miles southwestward in the Pacific." Of Alaska, the report warns that a "mere 54 miles of the Bering Strait separate it from Soviet territory . . . . It is the only part of the American continent which suffered actual invasion and enemy occupation in World War II . . . . The shortest, most direct air route between Soviet centers and inland cities of the United States, 'such as Detroit, Omaha, Denver, is across the narrow Arctic waters which wash Alaska's northern shores. The strategic importance of Alaska can perhaps be summed up in the succinct words of America's air- power pioneer, Gen. Billy Mitchell: 'He who holds Alaska holds the world." * *. * * TURNING TO economic reasons, the report points out that Alaska "has the greatest reserves of untapped raw materils-minerals, forest and sea products-under the American flag . . . . Statehood for Alaska should supply the needed stimulus for enterprise and private capital to make that area of vast riches one of the strongest segments of the American economy tomorrow." The Hawaiian report also underlines the heroic record of Hawaii- ans, particularly the Japanese-Americans, "in fighting for and shed-. ding their blood for the ideal of American democracy." The cold statistics show that the distinguished war record of Hawaiian units in World War 11, including the most decorated unit In American military history, the Japanese-American 442nd infantry, Is now being repeated in Korea. - "In Korea, as of April 17, 1951, Hawaiian battle casualties totaled 681," the Senate Committee reported. "This represenits a casualty rate of 1.36 per thousand of Hawaii's population . . .. thus, Hawaii's battle casualties in the Korean fighting are something like three and a half times those of the rest of the country. "It is submitted," the report adds, "that if the ultimate test of loy- alty and patriotism is the willingness to fight and die for one's coun- try, then Hawaii has nobly met this test also." , (Copyright, 1951, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Yirth of a Nation ** g To the Eiors: 5 d PRESUMABLY Allan Silver an r his associates will contend ths ~ year, as. they did last year, that t ,heir tenacious determination to show "The Birth of a Nation" is founded on a concern for freedom )f utterance. They will contend that no pressure group should be permitted to deny the rest of us the ~ right to see the film if we wish to see it. Surely a commendable 1 mnotive, and surely commendable tenacity- .But this year, as last year, their mnsistence is vastly and almost in- 1 credibly wrong-headed. Whereas they may be quite convinced that they are asserting the right of free utterance, they are in a much more substantive way asserting the right to defame an underprivileged minority. This 'last, of course, is not a right worth defending. It is a lamentable, and a very danger- ous, atavism. actually intereste ins comatting censorship and oppression, then let them devise a riposte to some compelling menace like McCarthy- ism. If they are, on the other hand, more profoundly interested in trapping and exposing "left totali- tarlans," then surely some chal- lenge could be found which would discriminate the enemy somewhat mnore accurately than this un- eakably mendacious and un- speakably gross film. If Silver's Ashley Street promo- tion is picketed, and If I am among the pickets, I want him to under- stand that I shall not 'be there in an effort to coerce, but merely to advise him that I disagree strong- ly with the content of the film, and that I hold it highly immoral to be concerned in any way with its RoIobert L. Chapman, Grad. * * * Birth of a Nation . . To the Editor: AL.SILVER'S letter explainig his attempt to bring Birth of a Nation to Ann Arbor is interest- ing because it fits into a national pattern behind the current drive toward fascism in the United States. Silver claims to be a liberal. But it was precisely the German liberal upon whom blame for the nazification of Germany in the 30's must lie. That liberal failed to see clearly where the danger was an 1 thus yemained iactivergwhile united front against the fascist menace. The call for a united front to stop the rising violence against the American Negro has been issued with a fairly good Ann Arbor re- sponse; all shades of political be- lief are represented in the Qom- mittee to .End Discrimination (which has stated its opposition to the film) and the newly formed St A .1 A t The Michigan - . TRIO, British production of three W. Somerset Maugham stories. S KLLFL ACTING and directing are welcome attributes in a movie at any time, but particularly so when the material is a kit thin. Such is the case with these three tales, which combine to provide a most pleasant evening's entertainment. This should not be construed as a slam at Mr. Maugham, for the old gentleman has seldom aimed at profundity and is at his best in frothy little squibs such as the first two of this trio. But it is the finesse of a fine list of performers and stagers which finally makes them succeed. Article number one is The Verger, in reality no more than an embellished punch line. A veteran verger, or white collar janitor, is relieved of his posi ton because the naew vicar discovers that he can't read or write. After the canny ver- ger mnakes a fortune as a tobacconist, he is asked what he might have become had he been able to read and write. The ans- wer is delightfully obvious. Mr. Knowall depends almost entirely on the ability of the title character to make an intriguingly fatuous ass of himself. He suc- Sixty-First Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority oftetoard in Control of Editorial Staff Jim Brown ...........Managing Edity.' Paul Brentlinger .. ...Cit.01y Editoi. Roma Lipsky ........Editorial Director Dave Thomas...... ..Feature Editor Nancy Bylan .. . .\Associ ate Eio James Gregory ...... ..Associate Editor Bill Connolly ............Sports Editor B b 9Sandel .. ..Assocato rs E ior Barbara Jans".........Women's Editor Pat Brownson Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Bob Daniels........Business Managel Walter Shapero Assoc. Business Manager P'aul Schaible .. ...Advertising Manager Bo lle111r ... .... Circulation Mnger Telephone 23-2'4-1 Member of The Associated Press e Associated Pess isexusively of all news dispatches credited to It or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republicatiol of anl other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at - the Post Office at Ann Arbor. Michigan as second-ciass mail matter Subscription during regular school year: by carrier, $6.00; by mal, $'i.0O. 'C' A BARNABY I r'sntmuch time, m'boy-That homcialmaniac's bullet-piercediny Tennessee Hennessy only shot the brach ou ereonMr.'Maley And you knocked out Tennessee Hennosqy! I