THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 17, 1951 I. Airing the Draft Issue "But First A Few Words From Our Sponsors ---" Current **s s s C * Student Exemptions : Pro and Con Confusion T HE CONFUSION that exists over the present draft laws has been a major cause of public distaste toward conscrip- tion. While a few people are charmed by the prospect of giving up future, plans, or at the least, delaying them, the uncertainty of individual status has become an added handicap. No one is qutie certain of where he stands from one day to the next. At no time is a registrant able to orientate himself toward a definite future unless he takes the dubious course of immediate en- listment. If he does not enlist he is subject to daily rule changes. Yesterday there was a 30 day postponement after graduation. Today February graduates are allowed another semester of school. Tomorrow there may be no such beneficial plans. The uncertainty, however, is not a unique quality possessed only by registrants. Pity the poor draft boards who must, in accord- ance with these daily changes, re-open each person's case and go through the individual records again and again. And many of the new rules are in no.way as simply phrased as' reported by newspapers. Each regula- tion is a verbiose tangle of unqualified state- ments. Also, within the same day two new regu- lations may be received, the first rescinding the previously established policy, and the second regulation rescinding the first. The result is that the board, despite its sincere desire to help registrants and the consistent courtesy extended to all who seek advice, is almost as confused as the public. Because of this, interpretation by the lo- cal board becomes as important a factor as the law passed by congress. The political, economic and social viewpoints of the board members cannot help but be a deciding factor in deferments. To correct this situation we don't have to clean house in Washington or ferret out perverts in the State Department. What we do need is a simple and direct statement of draft laws and draft board policies. While English majors are considered non-essential personalities, the presence of a few clear, concise and accurate writers in the Selec- tive Service organization would be a na- tional blessing. This should be followed by a continu- ousinformation program for draft offi- cials, registrants and the public as to what these clarified laws are. We cannot control the whims and fancies of the Defense Department or of Congress but we can insist on clarification not only for the benefit of registrants but also for the sake of those who must administer the draft laws. -Leonard Greenbaum Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: RICH THOMAS MANY DRAFT OFFICIALS seem some- what prejudiced against college stu- dents. This is particularly true of Col. Glen Arnold, Michgan's Selective Service Director. It was Arnold who, after receiving or- ders to defer February graduates for 30 days so that they might find essential jobs, declared that he was sick of seeing college men get all the breaks while men who can't afford to go to school are drafted. As it is, many college, students have a hard time discovering just what "breaks" they are getting. The February graduates are being allowed to find essential jobs not for their own personal benefit but to fill gaps in our national defense program. And statements such as Arnold's don't make their lot any easier. It has been argued that simply defering students for the academic year is a big favor to them. Some people have pointed out that students are just lucky in having rich parents who foot the bill while they have -a four year spree. But these critics overlook the fact that with increasing college enrollments the playboy element has a minor role in campus life. The majority of students are hard working people, many of whom work for their dollars in the same way as those non- students who draw the compassion of Col. Arnold. What is worse, the "don't give college- men a better break" people fail to see the importance college graduates now play as national leaders. They fail to see that disrupting college life today may discour- age many students from returning to cam- pus after military service. It would be beneficial to the country and to the biased persons themselves if they were set straight in their thinking. It might be well if college students were ex- empt from the draft until graduation, or if in-service college training were re- established. The best lobby for students would be the. college administrators and educators, who after a brief struggle. of ideas about con- scription, seem to have currently withdrawn from the draft law battlefield. These peo- ple are the natural connection between the college student and the general public. They, better than any other group, can help bring about the much needed change in people's attitude toward the subject of col- leg students and the draft. -Vernon Emerson IT SEEMS EVIDENT from all the breaks that General Hersey has been giving the college men that he must have been a col- lege grad himself. Thanks to the General, the college man was first deferred until the end of the current year, then he was able to join any branch of service at the end of his de- ferment in the spring, and'now the Feb- ruary college graduate is going to have a 30 day period after graduation to find some job in an "essential" industry. And if he can't find a job he may return to school until June. All these exemptions have led many to justly charge that people in the institutes of higher learning are not carrying their fair load of military service. Is it illogical to reason that a university man does not owe as mUch service to his country as the person with an eighth grade education? A rather nasty result of this deferment policy is that a group of intellectually elite will be able to duck the draft pleading that their brains are of much more value to the United States than their marksmanship ability. Often the ability to carry the financial obligations, not the intellectual aptness, are sufficient to classify a student in a "vital" medical or legal school. In other words, the economic position of the family would in some cases be important in determining if certain individuals might be drafted into the armed services. The citizens of this country should realize that military service has always been one of the burdens that we must bear. In a democracy we like to believe that all citi- zens from all classes and groups carry the burden equally. Militaryservice is one of the obligations that we assume in payment and protection of our democratic privileges. If this country is truly in an immediate, acute national emergency that some of our leaders would lead us to believe, Gen- eral Hersey's "kindness to collegians" program is an unfairly discriminatory policy. When the danger reaches the dimensions of a national emergency, we must be willing to drop our education temporarily and stand behind our coun- try. If the situation is not a national emer- gency, then we should completely review our present policy for drafting 18 year-olds, college students in the midst of their edu- cation, married men and vetrans. -Ron Watts s~sPWAK Q~i K7sm' O . 0 etteA' TO 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. Timely Appeal To the Editor: IN THESE DAYS of emotional, social, and economic stress, the great American solution is the training program. Beginning with the ROTC and ending with the civil service (or vice versa, depend- ing on one's military viewpoints), the greater majority of the popu- lation is engaged in some sort of plan determine to educate the novice. Therefore, we, on the "Gargoyle" staff feel that it is our patriotic duty, as Americans, to further this great institution and have thus drawn up the plans for a compre- hensive try-out and training pro- gram designed to make humorists, advertising executives, and capi- talists out of the Michigan Schnook. However, we have run into one great difficulty. The Michigan Schnook appears de- termined to remain just that. And so, we appeal to him, here in print, as a citizen, an American, and a patriot to attend the "Gargoyle" try-out meeting on Monday. Feb. It is your patriotic auty. -Peg Nimz Service for 18 Year Olds Drafting Women T HE HOT ISSUE of drafting 18-year-olds is now causing much consternation on Capitol Hill. Anguished howls at the pros- pect are arising from mothers, educators, scientists, and industrialists. On the other hand, our military leaders and mobilization-heads feel it is essential to a smoothly-flowing, long-range pre- paredness program. And the second group has, from an over- all point of view, the more compelling argu- ments. The Pentagon Universal Military Service plan, which in a nutshell provides for two years of military service for each male citizen at the age of 18, calls for every man to give up two years of his life to his coun- try. ,It is only fair to exact that price with music . HERE HAS BEEN a lot of talk about drafting women. We hope it will continue to be just talk Drafting women for compulsory military training would be a step unwarranted un- -less the nation were prostrate in the face of a world struggle. This does not mean that women should not and will not do their part in the current national emergency and any succeeding one. The days when women stayed home to tend the fires while their men went off to war are long since past, and the woman, in her sphere, is just as important as the man in the defense set-up. And, as proved by the last war, her sphere is pretty large. It includes women who sign up voluntarily for military serv- ice, war workers, government workers, teachers, doctors, nurses, nurses aides, bandage rollers, USO workers, cab drivers, clerks and members of any other occupa- tion whose ranks will be filled by women when the men are in the services. Mrs. Mildred McAffee Horton, World War II Commander of the WAVES has accused policy makers of "putting women in the category of a national luxury instead of an available asset.' This is ridiculous. People are never lux- uries. And as Mrs. McAffee should know in case of emergency women will voluntarily fill in where they are needed. If a voluntary system should fail, then a compromise between military and volun- tary service could be effected. This could I 1 the least possible interruption to the normal continuity of his career. At the age of 18, most men would be caught just as they emerged from high school. This marks a natural break in one's life--there is no college career to in- terrupt, there is no job to leave. The void which immediately follows high school graduation could be filled by a khaki uni- form with a minimum of personal hard- ship. The need for a consistent policy to re- place the haphazard, hit-or-miss drafting and accompanying hysterical enlistments is obvious. If a boy could plan on two years of Army life at the age of 18, then the uncertainties and worries which have been so damaging to teen-age morale would be ended. Little credence can be given to the pious cries of maudlin matrons to "Leave Johnny at home till he's grown up." There is no magical metamorphosis at the age of 19 which suddenly changes the youth from faltering boy to resolute man. But more serious objections can be raised on other grounds. A large drop in college enrollments, although o n 1lytemporary, might prove disastrous to small, endowed institutions and bring about an educational crisis when the inductions and discharges reached an equilibrium and the volume of applicants returned to normal. The probable solution for this difficulty would be for the government to bail out the hard-pressed colleges one way or an- other. The most likely method would be through a reinstitution of some sort of re- vised V-12 and ASTP programs. Or per- haps outright subsidization would be neces- sary. The costs would then have to be written off as an essential part of our de- fense effort. Another problem would be the interrup- tion of the normal flow of college-trained technicians, already in short supply, into industry and government. Just how great the effect of a temporary choking off of the supply of trained men in technical fields would be hard to predict. The short- age caused would no doubt be painful, but it would seem that the long-range im- nortance of gettinx such a comprehensive ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round with DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-GOP backing for Chief Justice Fred Vinson as Secretary of State if and when Dean Acheson resigns was indi- catd at a private luncheon gajiring by no less than GOP Sen. Owen Brewster of Maine this week. Brewster's statement is significant because it happens to coincide with some backstage talks among Democrats-namely, elevating Acheson to the Supreme Court and replacing him with the Chief Justice. What the Republican Senator from Maine told the Harvard Alumni Luncheon Club in Washington was: "I advocate replacing Dean Acheson with Chief Justice Vinson and I made a pilgrimage to the White ,House to discuss it with Mr. Truman. I also discussed it with Justice Vinson. The Republican Party as a whole would be solidly behind this proposal.f "As I said," continued Brewster, "I talked to Mr. Truman, of whom I am very fond, and he put on his humility act which he does so well. Both the President and Mr. Vinson listened carefully. I understand that Mr. Vinson is number one on the list if Secretary Acheson resigns, and that Mr. Vinson would accept if asked. , "If Justice Vinson came in and dug us out of the hole we are in and stopped the threat of war I wouldn't care if it would build him up as a successor to Mr. Truman. le would deserv to be President if he did that." Note-The White House inner circle has long felt that if Presi- dent Truman does not run, he would endeavor to promote the Chief Justice as his successor.1 UNITED ELECTRICAL WORKERS THE UNITED ELECTRICAL Workers' Union is now so pro-Com- munst that it recently admitted two Russian newsmen but simul- taneously barred the American Press from a district meeting in Chicago. 0 As a result the only news of the meeting was broadcast over Radio Moscow. Quoting two Russian writers named Filippov and Rassadin, theSoviet Broadcast reported: "The representative of the central executive of the U. E., Julius Emspak, delivered a short report in which he proved how the aggressive policy of the U.S. government, carried out in the interest of monopolies, is loading more and more burdens upon the shoulders of the Ameri- can people." The broadcast then dramatically continued: "A great silence falls upon the conference hall. The chairman calls upon the delegate to the second world peace conference, Harold Ward (financial secretary of U.E. Local 108), who in his speech appeals to workers to fight for peace in a more active and energetic way . . . "An elderly man rose to his feet," the Moscow narrative went on. "He reported that a the works where he is employed, the manage- ment has recently increased even more the speed of the conveyor belt. 'It is becoming increasingly difficult to work, and workers are so worn out at the end of the day that they are hardly strong enough to get home,' he said. He called upon the workers to fight against the sweated labor system and against the increase of the work week." Perhaps the United Electrical Workers prefer to join the starved slave labor of Russia. TIDE OF TOYS W HETHER OR NOT you agree with Herbert Hoover about sending a land army aboard, the American Legion has touched both the root and the heartstrings of the European problem by building friend- ships among children. That's why hundreds of Legion posts are pouring the tide of toys toward pier 38, Philadelphia, after which the toys will be shipped to Europe and distributed by CARE, the organization which has done so much to bring food and friendship to the Euro- pean people. Here's how the tide of toys is flowing: Toledo will surpass last year's total of 10,000 toys with a 1951 total of 22,000. The Toledo Boys Club even sacrificed part of its Christmas Vacation to making brand new toys . . . Miami has chl- lenged Denver, Memphis, Omaha and the bigger Legion posts to beat them this year. But Omaha, the world's largest Legion post has al- ready piled up a pretty good start. .. Sears, Roebuck at Wilmington, Del., is donating $600 worth of toys, with the state of Delaware contributing 10,000 toys ... In Boston, American Legion theatrical post No. 270 has established headquarters for their toy drive on the famous Boston common, and newspapers and radio are cooperating to make this campaign a success . . . Biggest campaign so far is in Buffalo where about 80,000 toys are being shipped in eight boxcars to Philadelphia. * The tide was so great that mayor Joseph Mruk opened up Buffalo's memorial auditorium with railroad siding facili- ties for packaging and shipment . . . Note-Don't forget to send a, letter of friendship with your toy. (Copyrght, 1951, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Cinema Guild. " To the Editor: AS A WELL-fetched up young man it seems to me only fit- ting to thank you for the kind words in Wednesday's Daily. And as a practical man, it seems doubly fitti.g to do so concurrently with the Cinema Guild's Hill Auditor- ium showing of "Tight Little Is- land." While accepting the editor's bou- quet with a modest blush, I would like to take this opportunity-to say a few words on the aims of our organization and on the general film situation in Ann Arbor. Many long years ago the Art- Cinema League set up shop. It was Orpheum Reviewt 17AJOR BARBARA, by George Bernard Shaw, with Wendy Hiller, Rex Harrison, Robert Morley and Robert New- ton. THE DRAMATIC tracts of the late George Bernard Shaw happily contain as much wit as they do insight. Mr. Shaw's dis- concerting talent for carrying some of our most cherished con- cepts to their ridiculous "logical conclusions" maks us laugh not only at the concepts but at the human nature that conceived them and makes pathetic at- tempts to live by them. His sage derision has seldom been easier to take than it is in this delight- ful eulogy to money and material well-being. Besides using this film to state that poverty corrupts, the Irish dramatist also takes some caustically comic swipes at hypocrisy, love and piety. Though he mauls some of the conventional vices (in an imp- ishly tolerant way), he is at his pungent best of course when he acidly pans the virtues. It is perhaps Mr. Shaw's (or maybe the world's) personal tragedy that the good sense so often gets lost in the good fun. In any case MAJOR BARBARA has a full quantity of both. Wendy Hiller, as a conscienti- ously forthright Salvation Army major who gains a new opinion of what is good from her million- aire, munitions-making father, leads a wonderfully capable cast through this adequate and un- pretentious production. Shaw's words and philosophic gymnas- tics are the action of the play, the rest is background, and that's the way they've handled this mo- vie. The sets and physical action are appropriately unobtrusive, while the words keep things mov- ing with customary Shavian brisk- ness. In fact about all that could improve this splendid English film is a prologue by George Ber- nard Shaw. -John Briley successful because it brought films to the campus with an eye to the kind of society it serviced. The best proof of its success is the lighted marquee of the Orpheum Theater. The Orpheum has increased the problems of a campus art film group by offering competition not only for customers, but for movies. Several films we had hoped to bring have already been booked by the Orpheum. A campus art theater is more than a money-making proposition. The S.L. exists to serve the student body. The Cinema Guild as a sub- sidiary of the S.L. is also a service organization. The University is a cultural center, hence the few movies that are worthy of attention in any giv- en year should be shown here as soon as possible. If we can show them without putting ourselves in financial jeopardy we feel it our responsibility to do so. Last se- mester we brought "The Bicycle Thief." This semester, March 9 and 10 we are bringing Jean Coc- teau's "Orphee," and April 20-21, "T h e Rockimghorse Winner." These are expensive movies and a greater financial risk than some others that would certainly sell as well or better. Movies like these should be brought to Ann Arbor. If we do not bring them and the Orpheum does, that is the next best thing. In the near future even the rmost reactionary elements will be forced to admit the movies to -the realm of the arts. This is an unfortunate thing because the movies will im- mediately become less popular. An extensive barrage of films lik "Tight Little Island," will be the' best kind of counter-propaganda, films that are art films, but .not militantly so. -Dick Kraus, SL Cinema Guild Manager Letter to Ruthven .«. To the Editor: BECAUSE THE entire expenses of the recent showings of the Rose Bowl films were paid for by Dr. Ruthven's discretionary fund the following letter was sent to him by the Student Legislature: Dear President Ruthven: On behalf of the Student Legis- lature and the "M" Club, I would like to thank you for your munifi- cent aid in financing the recent Ann Arbor showing of the Rose Bowl films. I am sure that the more than 15,000 students and townspeople who had the privilege of seeing them would also join me in my gratitude. -George Rounell, Jr., President, Student Legislature - ,I I r t r: 4, Hk BUDAPEST QUARTET opened their recital last evening with Four Fugues from Bach's "Art of the Fugue." These es- says in four-part counterpoint ranged from moderately dull to mildly interesting; ex- cept for the final fugue, they were too simi- lar in texture, tempo, and dynamic range to wholly engage the ear. I missed a necessary contrast between fugues which one more interested in the particular musical problems that Bach was solving might have overlook- ed. Needless to say, the playing of the Quar- tet was superb. The Budapest's playing of Bartok's Sec- ond Quartet made forcefully explicit the emotional meaning of this great modern work of art. There was despair without pa- thos, capriciousness without archness. Most wonderfully played was the lovely section to- ward the close of the first movement when the first violin plays a quietly lyrical melody over-cello pizzicati. Equally moving was the close of the last movement when thex cello plucks out its two final notes. Y, J' Sixty-First Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control ot Student Publications. Editorial Staff Jim Brown..........Managing Editor Paul Brentlinger............City Editor Roma Lipsky..........Edtorial Director Dave Thomas **.........Feature Editor Janet Watts.........Agsociate Editor Nancy Bylan..........Associate Editor James Gregory........ Associate Editor Bill Connolly............Sports Editor Bob Sandel... . Associate Sports Vditor 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 creditea to it 0r otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second-class mail matter. Subscription during regular school year: by carrier. $6.00; by mail, $7.00. I BARNABY t trust you hod no difficulty toting your Fairy Godfather's Naturally, a Private Eye of my ability realized that. As soon My secretive clients, who left the $99,987 retainer There's their car! Parked across the road now! And I ,I II PER