THE MICHIGAN DAILY Committee THE QUARTET of congressmen currently saving 140,000,000 Americans from sev- eral thousand Communists had a particu- arly hard time in their Tuedday hearings. After five hours of Lee Romano's glib corroboration.of the presence of Com- munists in Ford Local 600, UAW (CIO), the Congressmen had been softened, ren- dered vulnerable to what was to come in the session's waning hours. For the men who followed Romano, ex- 'ommunist and former vice-president of the giant local, were all accused Party mem- >ers, and now holders of key posts in the sprawling labor organization. They left the witness stand still accused but unproven Communists after demonstrat- ng that more or less accurately thrown mud :ould best be countered by more of the same. The witnesses, working on the assump- tion that "a good offense is the best de- fense," came primed with the most effec- tive material for a coordinated attack on the Committee-the Congressmen's own voting records on key bills involving civil rights, labor and the Negro problem. The Committee, biting hard on the bait, :ollectively exploded. Typical was Rep. Charles Potter (R.-Mich) alustery roar-"THAT'S A DAMNED LIEI," while Chairman John Wood (D.-Ga.), Rep. Jonald Jackson (R.Calif.) and Rep. Francis Walter (D.-Pa.) contented themselves with ess violent expletives but flurries of arm- vavings. Ford Motors employe Paul Boatin, tien Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily ire written by members of The Daily staff %nd represent 4he views of the writer only. 'his must be noted in all reprints. NIGHT EDITOR: HARLAND BRITZ Hearings on the stand, got in the final gibe of the exchange in an innocent aggrieved tone, "Gentlemen, I'm doing my best to answer your questions, but I can't when you're jumping around so." But this was not the worst of the Con- gressmen's ordeal. For Boatin demonstrated that there is a way to stand on the Fifth Amendment, and yet not acquire the onus of being a Com- munist which' previous 'witnesses who've refused to answer on grounds that "it may tend to incriminate me" have automatically incurred. The Boatin technique is this: Asked a leading question, he would be- gin an involved answer which before long would stray close to the bounds of irrele- vancy. Then, when a Committee member or Counsel Frank Tavenner demanded a direct reply, Boatin got self-righteously huffy about not being permitted to answer the American people truthfully." Repeated exchanges over a single point inevitably ended with Boatin "being forced to rely on the Fifth Amendment because you won't let me tell the truth. I'd be glad to tell you anything you want, but I won't let you put words in my mouth." The significant aspect of his method is that it placed the burden of wrong-doing and un-Americanism on the Committee, a situation unprecedented thus far in the hearings. Itwas with a sigh of relief that the Congressmen saw him vacate the witness chair-asked to leave by the chairman who "saw-no reason why he should testify further." But before he left, a Federal Building janitor, who'd slipped into the hearings after finishing work, finally worked out the simile he'd been ruminating over for 20 minutes. "That guy Boatin," he dead-panned, "he, talks just like the Congressmen." -Zander Hollander CIINIEMA 1 BOOKS ASPHALT AND DESIRE, by Frederic Morton. (Harcourt, Brace) TIS BOOK seems aimed at taking its place in the growing line of long, hard looks at the complexities of life in the city. But Frederic Morton's Asphalt and Desire is a weak link in this chain of young authors studying the frustrations of young people. The look is so long, so hard that it sees past the problem. It becomes so superficial that the book turns into a fantasy. Asphalt and Desire is the story of Iris Leavis, a girl fresh from the jungle of a New York City women's college. She faces all the general problems of youth and a few peculiar to herself: ;the problem of getting a job, the problem of being a vir gin, the problem of being Jewish, the prob- lem of parents, the problem of being modern, the problem of love, the problem of being a woman, the problen of the city. Iris is a bright young woman. She knows Tchaikowsky isn't classical. She knows howato talk about Wilhelm Reich, or sym- bolism, or Sibelius. She knows whatshe wants-a job on Vogue or Time. She knows the Real Thing when she sees it. And she knows what its like to detest her common, screaming family; to be jammed in the swirl of concrete and people that is New York; to run into the barriers all around. Morton, speaking through Iris or as he thinks Iris would speak, never pre- sents youth or its problems in a realistic fashion. At times you almost glimpse his idea but it never comes off. The thought behind the picture is buried in such im- posing, minute and superficial detail that the whole thing comes out no different than what we all know. We may sense the problem, but that is no help. Even the city becomes sketchy-a mass of detail more unrelated than it really is., Although the author has been in this country for ten years and has had a seem- ingly brilliant scholastic career, he lacks feeling for the problems he tries to repre- sent and, I suppose, answer. Perhaps this is caused by his style of writing. It is forced to the point of being unbearable, almost unbelievable. Only in widely separated spots does Mor- ton push across, in near poetic description, the combined beauty and futility Iris finds in life as she matures through 282 pages. These spots, however, do not save the book.- It does not leave a promise of beauty, futil- ity or anything else. -Vernon Emerson SL Bookstore WEDNESDAY night Student Legislature voted in support of a University spon- sored booktore. Now more than ever before there is a need for such a bookstore. With the rise of cost in tuition and room and board,, students are finding the high prices of books too much of an added burden. Yet a Regents by-law prohibits the University from setting up any commercial enterprise in competition with local mer- chants. a bookstore falling into this cate- At Hill Auditorium . . . THE INFORMER with Victor McLaugh- lin; directed by John Ford. "IF YOU HAVE never seen this film, to describe it is to do it an injustice," the ad reads, and with that disclaimer as pref- ace, the reviewer tries. On the surface THE INFORMER. is an intensely gripping chase story. But.even this is a false oversimplification for the focus of the hunt is both 'hero' and vil- lain, and ,the chase is the record of his guilt exposing itself. As just plain story- -ignoring its psychological overtones- it is a tense, compact thriller that moves with accelerating speed to a climax that was inevitable from the first, but one that Justifies every step of the crescendo that has led to it. But this movie moves far beneath the surface, not in some esoteric allegory, but in the kind of Everyman allegory that lies beneath every story that creates real peo- ple. Gippo Nolan, ex-member of the Irish Republican Army, who informs on his best friend so that he may run away to America with his girl, is Everyman only in the sense that he comes to a point in his life where he says in truth, "I don't know why I did it!" But that is enough to be meaningful to most of us. The job of making Gippo and his con- fusion honest is perhaps the most master- ful that the screen has even seen. John *Ford has drawn a performance from Vic- for McLaughlin that leaves us as confused about Gippo's guilt ag we are about our own. Gippo's weaknesses are stupidity, good intentions, shortsightedness and op- portunity. Where his sin begins and his weaknesses end is pretty hard to deter- mine-it is made even harder by the pic- ture of society's confusion and evil that serves as background and moving force for the whole Irish Revolution. Ford has achieved intensity without sac- rificing depth in this picture by confiningj the plot to the happenings of one full eve- ning. There is no forced compression, just the precise, iresistable detailing of Gippo's act and consequences for him and those about him. The groupings Ford uses are always subtle enough to point to the irony of the position of Gippo's judges, in the film and in the audience, and the point is made without the bitterness of Swift-making it much easier to see . .. and accept. It is hard to credit McLaughlin's accom- plishment. He is Gippo. Gippo the patriot, Gippo the traitor, Gippo the drunken hero, Gippo the terrified coward. His performance sustains the picture on ever.y level. It is the kind of performance that makes us grateful for the film, because it is one of those per- formances that comes to few actors twice. -John Briley Principles EQUAL AND-EXACT justice to all men, of whatever state or persuasion, religious or political; peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations,-entangling al- liances with none; the support of the State governments in all their rights, as the most comppetent administrations for our domestic concerns, and the surest bulwarks against Blood Drive THE 1,000th pledge mark has finally been reached in the all-campus blood cam- paign. The goal set for March 21 is 3,000 pledges to beat the 2,812 pints of blood ob- tained at the University of Texas. One week is left in which to at least approximate this goal. Student interest has been increasing during the last week but it must increase still further if even 1,500 pledges are to be signed. Perhaps the student apathy in this drive is merely another reflection of the inability of Michigan students to work together ef- fectively for any one purpose. Success in this campaign could be an indication that students have some semblance of a school spirit and know how to direct it for a worthy cause. In a brief talk at the blood campaign rally last week former President Ruthven pointed out that the greatest thing one can do is to lay down his life for a friend, and that by giving blood a donor can actually save a life without any physical danger to himself. In addition, a donor who has a friend or relative who is in need of blood or who owes blood to a hospital may transfer his pint to that person. Whole blood cannot be manufactured by any scientific means. In many cases it it the one way to save the life of a patient -whether he be on the fighting front, or in a veteran of civilian hospital. Each pint of blood used must be replaced by the donation of another individual. On a campus of this size there should be at least 3,000 people willing to give a half hour of their time and a pint of blood to those who need it. -Marge Shepherd Red Restraint THE' STATE Department has finally brought pressure to bear on Soviet dip- lomats and correspondents in this country. The new regulations passed this week, in accord with those of five other Western powers, prohibit the travel of all Soviet personnel and their families beyond a radius of twenty-five miles about New York and Washington except on advance notice. The only exceptions are for those attached to the United Nations. These restrictions, delivered with "reluc- tance" and in the face of drastic travel limitations already imposed on United States officials in the Soviet Union, may be an indication that this country has begun to take a more forceful stand to- ward the protection of its citizens in Iron Curtain countries. Since 1941 Soviet Russia has confined the movements of American newsmen and dip- lomats to Moscow and a few specified sur- rounding areas. While restrictions were re- laxed to some extent during World War II, they have been re-strengthened since then to put various roads and some twenty or more cities on the "off-bounds" list. Now that we are retaliating in somewhat the same manner, Russia and her satellites may find that playing with the rights of Ame scan citizens was not such a good idea. If tese new regulations prove painful enough it is conceivable that they could serve as a bargaining point for easing the travel restrictions affecting our citizens be- hind the Iron Curtain. -Mike Wolff N.H dPrimHariesr 1 THE over-emphasized New Hampshire presidential primaries have served their purpose of deciding the way the state's dele- gates will vote at the party conventions. As an ilhstration of the sentiments of the rest of th nation, however, the results are in- conclusive. From these highly touted primaries we have learned that Robert A. Taft will need more than a well-oiled political machine to gain the Republican nomination this summer. a We have also learned that Gen. Eisen- hower's personality has a great appeal for the people, that he has some important and influential names backing him. On the Democratic side, the votes plac- ing Kefauver ahead of Truman mean even less. The President is the head of his par- ty and if he wants the nomination, pri- maries will not prevent his getting it, but the Southern Dixiecrats might. However, if we accept the perverted pro- verb, "As New Hampshire goes, so goes the nation," then the Republican Party should be thankful that Eisenhower won, for it is helpful if the presidential candidates have names which can be shortened for use by the press, as FDR and HST. Eisenhower can retain his Ike' but what could they call Robert A. Taft? -Jo Levine Draw Another breath THE FEAR OF Communism in this coun- try is not reasonable. It is a phenomenon as old as civilized society, but its wide preva- lence and its possible dominance here imply a radical change of the character of the dominant race and a reversal of all the tra- ditions of civilization. It is :a war with the national common sense, and that may be ON THE Wasingtonl Merry-Go-Round with DREW PEARSON WjASHINGTON-Last week the most interesting economic develop- ment since June 1950 took place. Until last week, government officials in charge of military production had been warning that the second quarter of 1952 would be the tightest of.all. This was the period when industry would really feel the pinch of scarce civilian goods, would be dras- tically curtailed on the manufacture of radios, TV sets, refrigera- tors, autos and buildings. This was the warning that came from the office of Defense Mobilizer Charles E. Wilson and subordinates of Secretary of Defense Bob Lovett. In just 17 days, however, the second quarter of 1952 begins. Yet as it approaches, materials, instead of being tight, suddenly have loosened up. Instead of cutting down on autos, government chiefs last week called in the motor moguls and handed them more materials. Instead of cutting down on building construction, the builders were given more steel. Meanwhile aluminum was available for storm doors, farm gates, civilian window sashes. There were plenty of radio and TV sets on hand. Other civilian goods seemed plentiful. In other words, the dire prediction of Washington military and production chiefs was all wet. -GUNS OR BUTTER- BEHIND THIS has been one of the most important inner adminis- tration debates in all the government. It has been kept so quiet that few people have known about it, but it gets to the bottom of both the nation's security and the nation's economic prosperity. In brief, it's the debate over which to produce-guns or butter. The same debate raged under Roosevelt prior to Pearl Harbor, but was solved in part by a stronger President, in part by the Japanese attack on Dec. 7. 1941. Today the debate is between the Joint Chiefs of Staff who favor guns- and certain production men with long association in private business led by Secretary of Defense Lovett and Defense Mobilizer Wilson, who want both guns and butter. The above, of course, is an oversimplification of the issue. The case is neither black nor white. It is gray, with something to be said on both sides. The leaders of both schools are sincere, patriotic men. Furthermore, the military have helped to defeat themselves by being slow on production. However, the results are inescapable, and can be summarized as follows: 1. The U.S. arms program has bogged down. We are way behind Russia in airplanes, and have fallen far below the military equipment promises we made Europe. This is one reason for the economic and political crisis in Europe today. 2. Because the arms program is so far behind, most defense material -with the-notable exception of copper-is now surplus. Actually the aluminum companies, to use the words of one executive, "have alumi- num running out of our ears." This is the reason why automobile and construction companies suddenly have had unexpected materials dumped into their amazed laps. Bookstore Error.. .. To the Editor: IT WAS erronously reported in yesterday's Daily that at Wed- nesday night's S.L. meeting I spoke against the establishment of a Inon-profit bookstore. This is par- ticularly distressing because I was the Legislator who made the mo- tion last December demanding Im- mediate action on a non-profit bookstore. What I condemned Wednesday night was not the future plans of the bookstore committee but rath- er their past inactivity! In order to meet a dealine for this week's meeting, I believe the committee prepared an inadequate last min- ute report. During the past year little progress was made. A non- profit bookstore can become a re- ality only though the hard work of many Legislators. It is my hope that this committee will give ser- ious thought and effort and im- mediate ACTION on this project which means so much to so many students. -Bob Pery . * .* Canon Bell . . To the Editor: S OMEONE has: sent me a clip- ping from your paper in which a Miss Simon takes me severely to account for what she says I sai din a public lecture in Ann Arbor the other night. I find her letter interesting as illustrating some of the things wrong with American education. The lady has not bothered to quote accurately. I never suggest- ed that is the business of univer- sities "to make sure that their students have faith in a Supreme Being, any more than it is for them to tell (the students) what political party they should vote ' for." It is not the business of a university todeal with any con- vctions; but it is their business to impart such information as is nec- essary for students to have in or- der that they may come of sound convictions. The University of Michigan teaches about political science, and I think maybe Miss Simon agrees that this is legiti- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2y Events Today Canterbury Club: Canterbury House Tea at 4 pam.; Lenten Suj per at 6; Program at S, featuring a graduate stu- dent who will spea on life in modern Greece. ivening Prayer at 5:15 ip St. Michael's Chapel. Wesleyan Guild: Favorite Gane Nite, 8:30 p.m., Guild lounge. r SRA Coffee Hour, Lane Hall, 4:306 p.m. All students welcome. Acolytes will meet at 8 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Building, to hear and discuss a paper entitled "The Hypostatization of Sense-data," by David Luce. Refresanents. Motion Pictures, auspues of the oni- vc-sity Museums, "A.B.C. of Potery Making," "Clay in Actio," and ,"Crafts of the Fire." 7:30 p.m., Kellogg Auditorium. Forum on College and University Teaching. Rackham Amphitheater, 3-5 p.m. "How to Teach by Discussion; How to Lecture well." Panel discussion: Philip J. Wernette, Professor of Busi- ness Administration, Chairman John Arthos, Associate Professor of English; Phillip S. Jones, Assistant Professor of Mathematics; Marshall M. Knappen Professor of Poitical Science; Earl V. Moore, Professor of. Music and Dean of School of Music. This is the third of five meetings of the Forum, same time and place on successive Fridays. Grad- uate students, teaching fellows, mem- bers of the faculty welcome. IZFA. Oneg Shabbat Musicale with a Purim theme. 8 p.m., -Sigma Delta Tau House, 1405 Hill St. A Purim farce will be presented, Hebrew folk music played and hamentachen served. Everyone in- terested is invited. Hillel. Friday evening services, 7:45 p.m., Lane Hail, followed by speaker, Prof. Theodore Newcomb, Professor of Social Psycholpgy, who will speak on his experiences in Europe. Roger Williams Guild: Fri., 8:45-12 midnight, St. Patrick's Day Party. Coming Events Symposium on "Advancing French IArt," Museum of Art; Prof. Chet La More, Prof. Marc Denkinger, Mr. Frank- lin Ludden. Sunday, March"16, 3:30 p.m. West Gallery, Alumni Memorial Hall. Inter-cultural Outing, German Theme, Bruin Lake Camp near Pinckney, Sat- urday and Sunday. Leave Lane Hall, 2 p.m., Saturday, and return 3 p.m., Sun- day. Reservations limited to thirty; phone Lane Hall if interested. Hillel. Anyone wishing to solicit or participate in office work for U.J A. please report to Hillel office in Lane all and ask for Bill Altman any me after 3 p.m. mate. I hope so. Why not bout religion, too, in the same objec- tive way? I might call Miss Simon's atten- tion to several other misrepre- sentations of what I said, and to three lapses in logic; but it seems unnceessary to bore your readers to no purpose. Let me close by reminding her when she lists proper university studies as "sci- ence, the humanities and the so- cial sciences," that one of the humanities is theology. I am, sir, very truly yours, --Reverend Iddings Bell * . * Korean Letter.. To the Editor XE WERE pleased to read in the Daily that the University of Michigan is having a blood dona- tion drive. Let us cite the case of a soldier with a serious lung wound. Upon arrival at this' clearing station his condition was so serious death seemed imminent and the chap- lain was sent for. His level of shock was so acute his blood pres- sure was unattainable and his pulse barely discernable. Follow- ing the administration of only two pints of blood the flush of life re- turned to his face. With shock forestalled he was then safely eva- cuated to a rear area hospital. This story is being repeated time after time over here. We understand that the reserves of blood are now dangerously low. We implore students at our alma- mater to help save lives. You will never miss it - they might die without it! -Cpl. Allen C. Lawson, Jr. Sgt. R. Walter Peterson R. Magrina-Suarez, Capt. Inc. Red Hearings ... To the Editor: P R THOSE who heard the calm, sane testimony of Mr. Lee Romano, former Communist and vice-president of Local 600, UAW, I am sure there can be lit- tle doubt remaining as to the gen- uine value of the proceedings of the House Un-American Activities Committee in Detroit. The Federal Bureau of Investigation can and does investigate subversive activi- ties, and admittedly on a much more detailed scale than the Com- mittee could hope to, but the ap- parent value of these proceedings lies in deterring the growth of do- mestic Communism by the expose to the public of the fallacious doc- trines and ideals, the very basis of which has caused people like Mr. Romano to denounce a movement for which he once stood. It is interesting to note that Radio Station WJR obligated iigelf by making a special announcement in connection with its broadcast- ing of the testimony of the Com- mittee, to the effect that the Com- mittee did not call people up aim- lessly but rather subpeonaed them on documented evidence pro- duced by the F.B.I. Surely all this is not in the note of "hysteria," "emotion" and the condemnation of "most of the peo- ple of the State of Michigan." William L. Mayo Political Dagger ... To the Editor: SPEAKING OF "hiding behind cloaks of constitutional brivi- lege," we might note that the in- quisitorial Congressmen seem quite content to hide behind the cloak of their constitutional privilege of congressional immunity. -Mort Sinlons iL "Nothing Personal, Pal. I Just Want To Impress A. Girl" Xette,'4 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 publicationrat the discretion of the editors. 1 '4 *' 'P f 'r; * _ ;. * -DON'T STRAIN THE ECONOMY- THE FULL STORY goes back to the days right after the Korean invasion when the new arms program was thrown together. At that time the "let's-not-strain-the-economy" advisers urged that re- armament be spaced out over a longer period of time, that if rushed too suddenly it would throw civilian economy out of gear. We should mobilize gradually, they urged, rather than in a sudden spurt which would leave civilian industry starved for materials. In brief, civilian leaders said: "If we take things gradually, we can have both guns and butter." Though the Joint Chiefs of Staff didn't like it, their chief, Secre- tary of Defense George Marshall, himself a General, concurred with this idea and it was adopted. Later, last fall, the situation was reviewed again. By this time it was apparent that the Communists were sending a superior jet fighter force to Korea, and reports from behind the Iron Curtain indicated that the over-all Russian air strength was ahead of ours. Because of this, Gen. Hoyt Vandenberg, Air Chief of Staff, argued inside the Joint Chiefs of Staff that the Air Force must have 143 air groups, and the Joint Chiefs supported him. .* * . -SLOW MILITARY PRODUCTION- IN THE FINAL showdown, however, Defense Mobilizer Wilson urged a slower build-up, and when the matter went to the White House, President Truman backed him up. Instead of building 143 air groups by the end of 1953, they will now be built by the end of 1954. What happened regarding airplanes also happened regarding other military goods. The entire program was stretched out. The ultimate goals remained the same, but the number of years for fulfillment was prolonged. This was partly the fault of the military. Their own slowness of production cut the ground from under the Joint Chiefs of Staff. For, though the Joint Chiefs continued to urge quicker mobilization, their own military production men could not decide on types of planes and tanks. dickered back and forth over bluenrints and did not snend the Sixty-Second Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Chuck Elliott ........Managing Editor Bob Keith ...............City Editor Leonard Greenbaum, Editorial Director Vern Emerson ..........Feature Editor Ron Watts .............Associate Editor Bob Vaughn ...........Associate Editor Ted Papes ................Sports Editor George Flint ....Associate Sports Editor Jim Parker ...'..Associate Sports Editor Jan James............Women's Editor Jo Keteihut, Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Bob Miller .........Business Manager Gene Kuthy, Assoc. Business Manager Charles Cuson ....Advertising Manager Milt Goetz ........Circulation Manager U 4 s