THE MICHIGAN DAILY TkIURSI)AY, FEBRUARY 22, 1951 ,r * U dean's Report WHILE THE student body murmured pas- sive approval, a group of deans just be- fore the end of last semester approved a list of recommendations which would eliminate questions of race, religion, natural origin and request for photograph from applica- tions for admission to the University. The deans' report climaxes a two year period in the local history of one aspect ,i the 'fight against discrimination. It was a period that featured a split in a student anti-discrimination group, pitted local political and social groups against each other and brought a new low in student-faculty mutual respect, in one in- stace. As the Committee to End Discrimination, organized two years ago, strained its publi- !ity muscles to attract attention to the pos- sibly discriminatory effects of certain ques- tions on the applications, the Student Legis- lature appointed its own sub-committee to study the same question. But it was the work of the deans com- mittee, appointed by Provost Adams, which did the actual background work and finally took the action which will mean the elimination of the questions. Although a tremendous fuss was raised over the issue of removing these questions, with proponents lining up for and against, out of the confusion and chaos developed a fine example of the way student and fac- ulty groups with a common concern can work together. Most of the furor was stimulated by the Committee to End Discrimination which decided a year ago to concentrate its fire on the Medical School. * * * DURING THE past two years the CED never directly accused the Medical' School of discriminatory practices in ad- mitting students. But the group did man- age to direct attention to the harmful ef- fects of the existence of such questions, on application blanks. And that attention was aroused by means which were considered questionable by some students. Most students admitted they believed in the purpose of the CED, but they could not accept the means chosen to achieve the purpose. Member groups within the CED began suggesting that the group fold up and let the Student Legislature take over. Weawhile the SL had been working on the problem quietly behind the scenes. Al- though it is true that SL worked more effi- ciently by moving cautiously and coopera- tively with the administration and faculty, It cannot be said that the CED was a use- le and unnecessary part of the whole pic- tie. MANY OF THE CED tactics were repul- sWe to the student body, but the CED did manage to attract attention to appli- cation blanks and it is possible that with- out this directed attention, the SL might never have considered this aspect of dis- rimination. The noise that the CED was making even penetrated the walls of the Administration Building, for the administrative officers realized the matter of some questions on the admissions blanks was a matter of common concern to the whole University. So Provost Adams appointed a special committee to study the application forms anf to make recommendations to the Deans Conference, made up of deans of all schools. During this study period the special commit- tee and especially Chairman Harold Dorr, revealed that they were concerned about the way students felt about the questions. And the viewpoints evidently respected for many of the arguments expressed by !oth student groups were not rejected as "immature" or "emotional" but were utilized by the committee in making its recommendations. In the final analysis the dean's recom- mendations do not automatically remove forever the possibility of discrimination .on the part of the University, but the report does show clearly that University officials are willing to consider all aspects of a nation-wide problem and to work with stu- dents in coming up with an answer. -Janet Watts 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 r MAGAZINES 11 '[ ELL, THE WINTER issue of "Genera-, tion" is upon us and it behooves every- one who is at all interested in art to buy a copy and review what some of his fellow students who are interested enough in art to try a little creating of their{ own are do- ing these days. Actually anyone who bothers to go to the movies or read advertising posters or Book-of-the-Ionth-Club selections i s interested in art and the issue should be a well-thumbed sellout by the time peo- ple get around to reading this review. There is something for every reader in the current issue. There are four short stories of uneven quality, a group of more or less controversial essays, some photographed sculpture, num- bers of black and white drawings, a photo- graphic review of last semester's drama of- ferings, a section of poetry which is worth reading and even the manuscript of a string quartet. Three of the stories are about the rich- ness of the child's world, or so we are told in the introduction to the fiction section. As it turns out, only one of them actually has anything to say about children them- selves. This is Richard Kraus' 'Pomp and Circumstance" a pleasant tale of two chil- dren who wandered about a city in their birthday suits. The author can't resist un- derlining his meaning with too black a pen- cil at the end, but the story is the best one in the issue anyway. "The Saturday Plan" by Melvyn Zerman suffers from a slow beginning and on the whole doesn't have much to recommend it. "Four Years Old" by Mabelle T. Hsueh has some interesting pen and ink sketches that go with it. The last piece of fiction, "Knife without Ether" by Robert Wagner which somehow strayed into the art section, is about an army sergeant on graves registra- tion duty who goes off his rocker. To the author's credit, he keeps the violence pretty well under control and the story is well told despite the mined-out nature of his mater- ial. ** * * OF THE FIVE ESSAYS, two are on the subject, "war and the university." The first, by Philip Dawson propounds the rather familiar idea that the university, mobiliza- tion or no mobilization, should aim at the education of the whole man, a point which it is well to stress now and then. If one ig- nores a Scylla and Charybdis metaphor near the end which gets out of hand, it is the best-written of the essays. The opposite is true of the companion es- say, written by Gordon MacDougall. His main concern is with what he terms the "fascization of the American campus" and in the course of his argument he marshalls a full quota of the jaded adjectives and tir- ed metaphores which should have bgen pen- ciled out of last week's Daily Worker before it went to press. Also there are frequent style errors. Part of the responsibility for the style errors and incidently, all the blame for the numerous typographical errors which mar the first third of the magazine, can be laid on the heads of the editors, but the thought and presentation of the es- say itself are the trespasses of Mr. Mac- Dougall.. For movie-goers, Allan Clamage has a conscientious essay on movie criticism. It seems safe to say (if I didn't miss a paren- thetical qualification someplace along the way) that most of Mr. Clamage's argument is based on a distinction between movies as art and as entertainment, and a further distinction between movies and other art forms, both of which appear to me to be complete nonsense. Toward the end, how- ever, he gets straightened around again. Rounding out the essay group are a con- troversial bit on the arena theatre, which will doubtless provoke at least a letter in the next issue from the Theatre Arts Club, and a not-particularly-controversial assessment of television. THE DRAWINGS and paintings suffer from being bunched together in one sec- tion but are fairly successful, if not par- ticularly varied. I liked William Gilmore's two highly stylized drawings best for their sure technique. Harold McIntosh also has a good black and white of an earth mother or something along that line. His oil paint- ing "Spring" didn't reproduce too well be- cause much of its effect in the original is dependent on color. Along this line, the whimsical line drawings which John Good- year did for the section pages should not go unpraised. Printing a manuscript for string quar- tet impressed me as being conspicuous consumption although it may be a jus- tifiable bone to throw to promising com- posers every now and then. The essay on "Music and the Performer" was the only piece in the magazine which I was un- able to finish. The poetry in this issue is fairly mature, except for some dark sexual mutterings by Barbara Stonecipher. Donald Hope's "To a Step City Where I Wasn't Born" shows a command of technique and a freshness of treatment. "When I Look at Me," a longer poem on the poetic process is worth the effort necessary to understand his meaning. W. B. Trousdale's "Uncertain Season" is the best of his three poems and Saul Gottlieb does an effective job on the bro- ther relationship in one of his. The cover is a relieving departure from ,the former preoccupation with amoebae and generative whirls, although it still reflects, along with the section introductions and some of the art, an emphasis on the crea- tive process which is symptomatic of the oc- cupational fragmentation of our times and tends to give the magazine the flavor of a trade publication. -Dave Thomas "Doesn't Anybody Believe In Peace Any More?" ., f--7/o tette/ 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. 4' IAR I/ aO+f ,,. ' H lra 4 mfl4POW? . M ATTJER adF' EArF ALSP By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP ON THE Washington Merry- Go-Round with DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Whether justified or not, organized labor is near the breaking point with the administration, with top labor lead- ers as full of venom against Harry Truman as a Union League club discussion of the late FDR. In private conversations, AF of L's Bill Green and CIO's Phil Murray make no bones of their bitterness. But since they begged union members to vote for him in 1948, it's a little hard to at- tack him. publicly. But a telltale sign of labor's revolt is a stinging editorial, "Wake Up, Labor," in the newspaper of the Brotherhood of Railroad Train- men now being reproduced in labor papers across the country with- out comment. It says: "If the rest of the labor movement still has any Fair Deal stardust flecks obscuring its vision, now is the time to apply the towel and face reality. Labor's interests were sidetracked in practically every move and major appointment the President has made since his re-election by the U.S. working men and women." L The editorial opens the gate for reapprochement with the Republican party, and recommends Sen. Wayne Morse of Ore- gon as GOP standard bearer. Sen. Paul Douglas of Illinois is suggested on the Democratic ticket. The disillusionment of the labor leaders who went down the line for Truman in 1948 began soon after his inauguration when they found themselves no longer invited to the White House for confer- ences. Instead, Mr. Truman insisted that labor relations be handled through amiable John Steelman. Within weeks, both Green and Murray were complaining to sympathetic congressm'en that Steel- man was not carrying their messages to the President, that labor's requests for policy appointments were sidetracked. « s . .s - IT'S MUTUAL - ' LABOR'S COOLNESS also had an effect on the 1950 elections where democratic losses in the cities were heavy. What brought the rebellion to a head were: 1. Truman's failure to consult with labor chiefs on the price- wage freeze formula. Roosevelt, though often disagreeing with Green and Murray, always made it easier for them to sell disagreeable news to their members by frequent consultation. 2. The absence of a top-flight labor man on Charlie Wilson's staff. When Stuart Symington ran defense mobilization, he appointed a labor advisory council, but not Wilson. 3. Truman's crack comparing railroad strikers to Russians. This convinced labor chieftains that the President was against them for keeps. Now it's mutual. * * * MOHAMMEDAN WAR LORD-The Chinese war lord whom we had hoped might be a bulwark against Communism, has now evacu- ated in a private plane and is seeking haven in the United States. He is Mohammedan General Ma Hung-Kwei, described by Life magazine as "a block of strength in the sagging Nationalist structure. Com- munist agitators and invaders steer clear of Ninghsia," said Life, "mainly because they know that Ma Hung-Kwei's peasant soldiers are tough, well trained and always ready to fight for their homes." ... General Ma, however, did not hang around to fild out how well his peasant soldiers would fight. When the Chinese Communists started marching into his remote domain, he bundled his family, nurse, wife's nurse, secretary and interpreter into a private plane and made a beeline for Hong Kong. There he picked up visitors and transit visas for his party and lit out for the United States. However, unable to get the visas extended, he set up camp in Mexico City, and is pulling strings and spending from his vast treasury chest to get a permanent permit to stay in this country. * *, * * -- WASHINGTON PIPELINE - SENATOR TAFT refused to allow one of his speeches to be broad- cast over the Mutual Broadcasting System recently until the net- work deleted criticism of Taft from the script of Mutual Commenta- tor Frank Edwards, who is sponsored by the AF of L. Thus Taft, who has been critical of labor, was in the position of denying a labor- sponsored commentator the right to criticize him. Taft's terms were delivered to the network by his administrative assistant, Jack Mar- tin. Later, network officials examined Edwards' script, found it wasn't as critical as Taft had thought . . . GOP colleagues are needling Rep. Clarence Brown of Ohio, long considered the leader of Ohio Con- gressmen, about the activities of ebullient George Bender. Bender, they say, is stealing Brown's spotlight . . . . The State of South Caro- lina has bought a sleek new Cadillac for much-loved new Governor Jimmy Byrnes. However, the legislature has not yet imported Byrnes' former speed-demon chauffeur, Joe Anderson, who piloted him aound Washington when Jimmy was on the Supreme Court . . . . Recom- mended reading: Alan Barth's new book "The Loyalty of Free Men." A big boost for understanding how to make democracy live. (Copyright, 1951, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Production . . To the Editor: DEPARTMENT of Truth, Light and Beauty. I read in the Free Press of Feb. 19th an article indicative of .the leaps which modern science is making in guiding man to the "Good Life." It seems that the University of Michigan Institute of Social Research has discovered that a worker who is dissatisfied with his job is more productive than a worker who is content and happy. The Institute came to this edifying conclusion while engaged in research for the Prudential In- surance Company. This sort of vital data is now the common property of mankind and big bus- iness and with it the national economy may be enriched and raised. I cannot quite see what this great scientific conclusion has to do with the Prudential Insurance Company but I will hazard a guess. When management realizes that an unhappy worker is more valu- able than a satisfied worker it will probably, in the interests of society and the war effort of course, do its damnedest to see to it that labor conditions are as unbearable as possible. This will lead to anger on the part of the worker. He will produe more and prices will decline due to increased supply. What a wonderful answer to the present inflationary spiral and just think of it, without those nasty price controls either. As a matter of fact, this may be the spark that sets off a new, revo- lutionary economic theory. It might be called "the theory of infinite production." All manage- ment has to do is to institute a "speed-up," which workers nat- urally get furious about, and they would be sure to work and pro- duce all the more. The harder they worked, the madderdthey would get, the more they would produce ad infinitum in a never ending spiral of increased produc tion. The nation would prosper as it never has before and Amer- ica could build more guns and planes with which to fight SLAVE- LABOR - COMMUNISM. Finally, and here is where Prudential comes in, the insurance compan- ies could jack-up their premiums because workers would be dying like flies due to physical exhaus- tion, thereby increasing the de- mand for insurance policies. 1py God, I never realized the powers of Science! Great going, Michi- gan Social Scientists! Viva el Capitalismo!! ! -Arthur Buchbinder '51 Basketball .. . To the Editor: THE TEXT BELOW is an open letter to Fritz Crisler. Dear Fritz: Basketball is at one of its nor- mal low ebbs at Michigan. It is a blot on the fine athletic tradition of Michigan. Only briefly under a great Eastern coach, Ozzie Cowles, did Michigan attain prom- inence in basketball. We let Cowles get away. That was a mistake. Today the greatest 'student of the game, Clair Bee of Long Island University, has been shamefully deprived of his life's work as a re- sult of the gambling scandals in New York. Nat Holman, great coach, and all-time great player of original Celtic fame, is also left with the ghost of basketball DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Hillel: Graduate mixer at the S.D.T. House, 1405 Hill, Fri., 9 p.m. All grad- uates welcome. Graduate Outing Club: Fri., Feb. 23: Sports Nite, IM Bldg. Meet in lobby, 7:15 p.m. Bring gym clothes and shoes, bathing suit, ID card. Hillel: Friday evening services, 7:45' p.m., Lane Hall, Upper Room; Satur- day morning services, 9:30. a.m. Deutscher Verein: Kaffeestunde, Fri., Feb. 23, 3:15-4:30 p.m., Union cafe- teria, and every Friday thereafter. Acolytes: Meeting Fri., Feb. 23, 7:45 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. Saul Wineman will speak on "Historical Relativism." Hostel Club: Sports and swimming at I-M Bldg., Fri., Feb. 23. Potluck Supper and Square Dance at Presby- terian Church, 6 and 8:15 p.m., Sat., Feb. 24. Call Jae Finkbeiner. 7804. at CONY. Either of these two men might eagerly come West to a school where the game is played honorably. They would labor with a passion to bring about a team of their ability-a winner, and not without honor. Please Fritz, make a bid for these men. They are the best in the business. We could do them a favor, and they in turn could do us a service. -Irwin Deister Al Scafuri Jim Richter Opera in English... To the Editor: WOULD LIKE to express a few thoughts in behalf of those who think that Opera should not be performed in English. Your recent editorial stated that Opera was a "failure" in the Uni- ted States because not many peo- ple could understand what was happening on the stage. Then it asserted that it would be more de- sireable if operas were' produced in English. Opera would be a flop, musical- ly speaking, if English transla- tions were used. An adequate in- terpretation: of an opera demands that it be sung in the language in which and to which it was writ- ten. No translation, however sensi- tive, singable, and faithful to the meaning of the text can 'possibly approach the wonderful combina- tion of music and text, which char- acterizes the composition of an operatic masterpiece. Secondly, opera librettos axe generally very poor from a liter- ary standpoint. In addition to a noticeable amount of absurd dia- logue, there is a great deal of re- peating. I think that an English version of an opera would definite- ly tend to bore the listener more than enlighten him. -Gari K. Ledyard * * * Caduceus Ball ... -To the Editor: COULDN'T HELP noticing that, on February 23rd, the Univer- sity's medical students will pre- sent the Caduceus Ball. While this affair should be a lot of fun for those attending, I would like to see a more appropriate title for this splendid occasion-the Cada- ver Hop or something. -E. S. Sader American Destiny THE preservation of the sacred fire of liberty and the destiny of the republican model of gov- ernment are justly considered as deeply, and perhaps finally staked, on the experiment entrusted to the American people. -George Washington V tI *1 t : i k 4" .. WASHINGTON-At least $2,000,000,000 out ofhevery $10,000,000,000 appropriat- ed for the defense of the United States since the Korean aggression has gone up in inflationary smoke. This simple fact, which should send shivers up the spine of any sensible man, provides the right back- ground for understanding the vitally im- portant issues in dispute between Marriner. Eccles of the Federal Reserve Board and Secretary of the Treasury John Snyder. A few specific examples will serve to show what has been happening to the de- fense dollar. A big bazooka, a recoil-less gun, or a heavy mortar all now cost well over 50 per cent more than before Korea. A pair of combat boots for an infantry- man or a flight jacket for a flyer costs upward of 60 per cent more. It costs 16 per cent more to feed troops-and the expense is increasing rapidly. Army ord- nance-the "hardware" which provides the army with the means to fight-is up 40 per cent overall, and "hardware" for the other three services has increased comparably. Largely because of this sort of thing, the services will shortly go back to Congress for a third supplemental appropriation in this fiscal year. Thus the process continues, with no end in sight; thedCongress appropriates dollars; the dollars do not buy what they were supposed to buy; and the services re- turn to Congress for more dollars. * * * THE SAME PROCESS is at work every- where in the economy. Eccles and his numerous supporters, including many re- putable economists, are convinced that this inflation is essentially a money inflation, deriving from the fiscal policies of the gov- ernment itself. Rearmament has not yet taken a really serious bite out of the whole economy. In the last seven months, more- over, the government has actually been col- lecting more in cash than it has been spending. Plain human greed no doubt ac- counts for part of the inflation, but greed cannot possibly account for all of it. annual budget, can be kept as low as pos- sible. This sounds sensible enough on the face of it. But Eccles contends that the net ef- fect is precisely the same as though the government printed tons of greenbacks, and injected them into the economy. In a time of inflation, with the value of the dollar falling, big bond holders cash in their bonds. This money then goes into the spending stream, adding to total deposits in banks. The banks then loan the money, thus mul- tiplying credit-which is equivalent to cash in purchasing power-by a ratio of about 6 to 1. IN THIS WAY, bank credit has expanded about 20 per cent in seven months-as much as in any seven previous peace-time years. And while the government has been taking in more cash than it has been spend- ing, the total money supply has increased by 8 per cent. Thus there is more and more credit and more and more money in circu- lation, while, with rearmament just get- ting into high gear, there are beginning to be fewer things to buy. Thus the value of the dollar falls, and as it falls, the effort of the government to maintain the price of government bonds becomes more difficult, and a vicious circle is set in motion. Eccles proposes certain rather simple ways of breaking the vicious circle. No man in his senses, least of all Eccles, suggests that government bonds be sim- ply abandoned to the vagaries of the free market. Instead, what is proposed is a carefully controlled and moderate drop in government bond prices, so that the rush to cash in bonds will stop, because the cash will be less attractive, and the interest rate more so. Eccles also proposes a slightly higher interest rate-about 3 per cent-on most government bonds. The mere fact that the government has already lost to the money inflation some' two billion out of every ten billion defense dollars appropriated is enough to demon- strate how false the Treasury's brand of economy is. Quite aside from the effects of inflation on the whole economy, this loss I 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 Editor 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 .lans..........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 Merserean..... 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 crediteo to it or 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. A._ Al '1 4 K A f A-( Looking Back 20 YEARS AGO THE SENATE increased the amount of, funds to aid soldiers by enacting the vet- erans loan bill over the veto of President Hoover. * * * William L. Clements, member of the Board of Regents, said that the University would face an institutional "crisis" if the state administration's proposal to cut the University's mill tax by nearly half a mil- lion dollars, is enacted. * ,' >' BAIRNABY y'gone! 'll run over to - myL house and call the police-I Mr. O'Malley! They were the bank robbrs And- Which way did they go? I'll ring ftherm JbacksAnd retunrn