,G FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1951 Gl~ FOUR WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1951 . top no te ..- By CRAWFORD YOUNG Daily Managing Editor COMMUNISTS -- fascists - bigots -- pseudo-liberalsd -rabble-rousers - de- viates of various descriptions -- these are' a random sampling of the epithets com- monly applied to the ogres that work on The Daily. Inasmuch as the most imposing of monsters loses some of its monsterness when closely inspected, we would like to briefly pass in review before retreating be- hind the anonymity of an occasional by- line. Our senior staff has an average age of 20.7, hails from various stopping points from New York to Chicago, are six-sevenths male, two-sevenths affiliated, five sevenths in support of Stevenson, and probably could not qualifyas 100% American under pres- ent definition. We include four political science majors, with maverick editors study- ing in education, English, and pre-medical programs. In charge of day-to-day functioning of the news columns of the paper are Sid Klaus of Detroit and Zander Hollander of, New York. They post assignment sheets daily, write an extensive and detailed criti- cism of the previous day's paper, and gen- erally make sure that all the news that's fit Editorials printed In The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writer only. This must be noted in all reprints. NIGHT EDITORS: SID KLAUS and ZANDER HOLLANDER to print that will fit finds its way into the columns. Supervising the editorial page is Cal Sam- ra of Flint, originally Khalil Mohammed Najeeb Abusamra Pasha of Syria. His job is to exercise a benevolent supervision over the editorials written, attempting only' to aid the writer present his viewpoint most effec- tively. In charge of training our freshmen and sophomores are Harland Britz of Toledo and Donna Hendleman of Chicago. Over 'the course of three semesters, Daily reporters are trained in the fundamentals of newspaper writing and the various technical aspects of putting out a paper. Rejoining the senior staff a little later will be Barnes Connable of Kalamazoo, temporarily academically indisposed. The seventh member, whose name appears at the head of the column, will in the interests of staff morale not reveal the exact nature of his duties at the moment, except insofar as the title, gives some subtle clues. In toto, over 100 assorted students pool their efforts towards issuing The Daily every morning except Monday while classes are in session-and incidentally maintaining our record as the country's oldest college paper with uninterrupted publication. Space limi- tations unfortunately forbid giving full bio- graphical credit to all those who labor at the Publications Bldg. Over the course of the year, we hope most of you will meet some of us. As a start towards this, we hope as many as possible will drop in on our open house this Thurs- day for a guided glimpse at what we try to maintain as the best college newspaper in the land. WASHINGTON - The forgotten man of this campaign, for the moment, is the occupant of the White House. But Harry S. Truman does not intend to remain a for- gotten man very much longer. For the fam- ous Presidential dander is now up. Truman will keep his promise to Gov. Stevenson to stay out of the limelight throughout this month. But according to those close to him, he can hardly' wait to mount the hustings when this month ends. 'There are two reasons for this Presi- dential eagerness for the whistle stops. In the first place, the kind of campaign Gen. Eisenhower has been waging, espe- cially in the last few days, has thoroughly enraged the President. As Truman has said many times, he has always liked and admired Eisenhower; and Eisenhower's "fighting" campaign, which has so de- lighted; many Republicans, has seemed to Truman Ingratitude "sharper than a ser- pent's tooth." Perhaps Truman expected Eisenhower to wage a lofty, non-partisan "national unity" campaign. Instead, Eisenhower has been slamming the Truman administration as hard as Truman himself used to slam the "do-nothing 80th Congress." What particu- larly infuriates Truman is Eisenhower's criticism of the Administration's handling of foreign policy, and above all Eisenhower's charge that Administration "bungling" led to the Korean war. And now Truman is thirsting for oratorical revenge. In the second place, it is no secret that certain aspects of Gov. Stevenson's cam- paign have not pleased the President. He was so angered by -Stevenson's "mess in Washington" gaff that Stevenson himself, after much burning of the wires between Washington and Springfield, had to tele- phone the President in order to mollify him. Since then, Stevenson's defense of the Administration record seems to Truman, and with some reason, distinctly pallid. While Gen. Eisenhower has been hammer- ing away at "corruption," "the mess in Washington," and "Trumanism," Steven- son has .been calmly remarking that the Administration has made mistakes and that "there will probably be more." This is reportedly not Truman's notion of a spirited defense of the Administration, and he is eager to go to his own defense. Moreover, despite moments of irritation. with Stevenson, Truman is almost as eager to see Stevenson elected as though he him- self were running. And he has certain doubts, shared by other astute political ob- servers, that Stevenson's speeches, for all their brilliance, are really going over with the voters. He believes that he himself, lam- basting the Republicans in his famous "give- 'em-hell" manner, can supply the missing ingredience which will put Stevenson over in November, and thus, in Truman's eyes, vindicate Harry S. Truman for all time. ACCORDINGLY, the chief business in the White House these days is the prepara- tion of the Truman counter-attack, with particular emphasis on foreign policy. Like any President, Truman has the special ad- vantages of his office. There have been hints that certain papers may be declassified to prove that Gen. Eisenhower himself recom- mended the withdrawal of American troops from Korea, over the objections of the State Department. Likewise, the war-time cables and messages of Gen. Douglas MacArthur may be made public, to deflate the Republi- can charge of a "betrayal at Yalta." Mac- Arthur is said to have recommended paying a higher price than any paid at Yalta, in order to get the Russians into the Pacific war. At any rate, Truman is angry enough, according to those close to him, to crack back very hard indeed on the foreign policy issue. As for domestic policy, the Truman line will be that Eisenhower has "surrendered" to the right wing of the Republican party. At his press conference a week ago, Truman refused to comment on Eisenhower's indorsement of Sen. Wil- liam Jenner and on Sen. Joseph McCar- thy's primary victory. This was not be- cause he had nothing to say, but because he was husbanding his ammunition for October. Truman's whistle stop plans for October have now reportedly been welcomed and approved in the Stevenson camp. And it may indeed be that the Truman-Stevenson combination will prove distinctly formid- able, with Stevenson "educating and ele- vating" the voters, while Truman. "gives- 'em-hell." It is a curious political formula- the candidate acting like a President, while the President acts like a candidate-but it may very well work. (Copyright, 1952, New York Herald Tribune Inc.) Polio Cases APOLIO EPIDEMIC hit Washtenaw County last summer, crippling some 150 men, women and children. It was by far the worst incidence of the disease that this area has ever seen, the previous high being about 30. Most of the patients were sent to Uni- versity hospital, where, in spite of over- crowded conditions and a shortage o trained and untrained help, all but 50 have been discharged. Those remaining are the more serious- ly involved patrients, such as respirator cases. The hospital staff, well trained and adequate in normal situations has found it nearly impossible to care for the per- sonal needs of their charges. As a result, the patients have no one to wheel them around, talk to or even to scratch their backs when the itching be- comes unbearable. To help ease the situation the Hospi- tal has issued a call for students to serve as volunteer untrained help. There is no pay. All that is required in the way' of a physical is a chest X-ray. And, according to Hospital attendants there is no more chance of catching polio in.a ward than there is of contacting it on a city street. Volunteers will have an opportunity to bring a little light into the lives of these people by helping feed them, writ- ing their letters, reading or just talking to them. Students who would like to give some spare time to this humanitarian effort may contact Miss Ruth Locher, 3035 Hos- pital Administration Bldg. or call 22521, extension 641. -The Senior Editors 'Reducators'? Editor's Note; The following excerpt is tak- en from an article by Claude M. Fuess, for- mer headmaster at Phillips Academy, writing in the Saturday Review on "An Educator's Balance-Sheet.) IT IS CHARGED intermittently by super- patriots that the faculties and under- graduate bodies of our independent schools are "shot full of Communism," or "tinged with pink." I am not sure that I should rec- ognize a Communist if a met one, although I have conversed with two or three who have been labeled as such by other people. We had on the Andover teaching staff several Democrats-which I know is very bad-even some who voted for FDR- which apparently is worse. I have even heard of some headmasters who don't like Senator McCarthy. But as I have watched teachers through two world wars, as I have listened to their talks in chapel, as I have heard them on the public platform, I doubt whether we have, even in the Senate of the United States, a more genuinely loyal group. In a school not very far from Boston a real, live Communist was invited by an un- dergradate organization to come and speak to them. He delivered his address with a good deal of noisy eloquence. Then the boys bombarded him with questions. They re- futed his arguments, proved that he had misquoted his authorities, and sent him back discomfited, with the remark, "Those damn kids are just like a swarm of mos- quitoes." That's the best way to deal with Communism. or indeed totalitarianism in any form. It cannot long stand up against the truth. DORIS FLEESON: McCarthy NEW YORK-Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhow- er's troubles with the issue of McCar- thyism have only just begun. Recent developments show how he has' failed to satisfy the divergent elements of his own support. The New York Times says frankly it is unhappy. The Chicago Tribune has bolted the Republican Party. Within this range, discor'd and confusion grew as the candidate proceeded from Sen. William E. Jenner's Indiana to Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's Wisconsin to Sen. James P. Kem's Missouri. Democrats are jubilant. They think they perceive an area in which they can make the war hero, whom they neither care nor dare to attack personally, bleed from a thousand wounds. General Eisenhower's misfortune is that Senators McCarthy and Jenner, with their insensate attacks upon Gen. George Mar- shall have posed the divisive issue between Republicans in a form that does not permit his evasion until a happier day when as President he can shape his party into his own image. The nominee is trapped personally be- cause Marshall is more than his mentor. He is the friend who made Eisenhower's career possible. The nominee is trapped politically be- cause McCarthy, Jenner and like-minded isolationist senators are up for re-election in states vital to Republican success. Thus, he is not only under the pressure of his natural ambition to win but of the insist- ence of politicians within those states that 1.. «....4 «.t #.1._ ;o_...lk ._ ,rfn- | (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following letters are selected examples of the kind of correspondence The Daily gets throughout the course of the year.) . SL Must Lead... To The Editor: SEVEN weeks ago, as presidents of the five campus political clubs, we urged the student body to 'Vote Yes'. Two-thirds of the voting students joined us then in opposing the principle and prac- tice of the restrictive authority of the Lecture Committee. We now urge the Student Legis- lature to act on this statement of public will. The SL must join and lead the struggle to remove the Regents rule which empowers the Lecture Committee. We are particularly disturbed over the growing extension of re- strictive authority, loose defini- tions and contradictions evidenced by the Committee's latest actions. We endorse the SDA's appeal to the Board of Regents to reverse the banning of Mrs. Shore from the genocide debate, and we urge full campus support for this ap- peal. We believe that the Lecture Committee's purpose and proce- dure is alien to the University's spirit and that the Committee should be abolished. So long as it i'emains on the scene, the Regents should at least clarify their direc- tives and reverse the dismaying series of hasty and unnecessary bannings by University authorities. -Floyd Thomas, YR Gene Mossner, YD Marge Buckley, YP Joe Savin, CLC Ted Friedman, SDA * * * Barring Speakers . . . To the Editor: LET US EXAMINE some of the arguments used against permit- ing student organizations com- plete freedom in selecting their speakers. First, "No one should be free to advocate the overthrow of the government by force and vio- lence." Quite so. But the question is a rather academic one, as no speaker is likely to do that to a university audience and, if he did, he might need the protection of the police! It is a very different thing to say that no one shall speak on other topics who belongs to an organization which has ever advocated such action. Shelley, Godwin, Tolstoy, and Nietzsche were all anarchists; some anarch- ists have been assassins; would we not like to have heard one of those four discuss some literary or philosophic topic? Why should not a Communist talk on race re- lations or Marxian economics or peace with Russia? Second, students will be led away into communism. That is to imply either that the communist doctrine is so strong that no one must be allowed to hear it, or that students are so weak that they have no power of resistance even 2 tI2 t X OT ^ r; -Dave Leslie "No!" etteAJ TO T H E 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. to the most fallacious arguments. Frankly, I believe that the com-' munist arguments are weak and that the students are mentally much stronger. The proper answer to false propaganda is simply the statement of the truth. Third, that the university might be disgraced by charlatans, dema- gogues, mountebanks, who would be advertised as having spoken on the Michigan campus. That could happen. But it gives such persons fifty times the advertisement to be barred from the Michigan cam- pus, and the resulting publicity has never been of advantage to the university. The university may well be careful as to whom it in- vites under its official auspices; but merely talking to a student group on the campus is a very dif- ferent matter. One is like an edi- torial in a newspaper or magazine, an official declaration; the other is like a letter to the editor to which the paper merely allows space. No sane person holds the Detroit Free Press or News respon- sible for every crackpot letter that appears in its columns. On the whole, the "prestige risk" of bar- ring speakers is much greater than that of letting them appear. -Preston Slosson . * * Convention... . To The Editors: I HAVE JUST returned from the Mid West Young Republican convention where I was a delegate. As a self designated "Liberal Re- publican," I was completely dis- gusted with the reactionary spirit that dominated the entire conven- tion. Here are some prize examples of that extreme conservative spirit. I was told that: (1) Joe McCarthy was a "real" gentleman. (2) Herbert Hoover is our greatest living American, and (3) Democ- racy is anti-liberal because it authorizes lynchings which are controlled by mobs. After three days of this "rattle- trap," I was forced to ask myself the question of whether or not I really belonged to this party. Af- ter much soulsearching, I came to the following conclusions: 1) To preserve our two party system and to restore honesty and sanity to government, without re- verting to the "horse and buggy days," we must overturn the old guard and nominate a liberal Re- publican this July. 2) The liberal wing of the Re- publican party, which descends from Abe Lincoln and Teddy Roosevelt, is best exemplified to- day in the person of that great American, Dwight D. Eisenhower. 3) Only with the nomination of Eisenhower, or a similar liberal Republican, can millions of citi- zens, like myself, regain confidence in the Republican party. In- view of this, I would like to urge everybody to join me in the crusade for "IKE." -Mal Schlusberg Sec. "Students for Eisenhower" WASHINGTON-The Republican command has worked out a high- powered publicity campaign which will be unique in the history of American politics, and is calculated to bring victory in Novem- ber. The plan is to ask national advertisers, most of them friendly to the GOP, to surrender radio and TV advertising "spots" to the Republican National Committee during the last three weeks of the campaign, and then saturate thhe airways with "platters" or transcriptions from General Eisenhower. The "spot" announcements, usually one to two minutes long, would consist of a question asked of Eisenhower by a voter, wth his reply. "The general's answer," according to the GOP plan, "would be his complete comprehension of the problem and his dermination to do something about it when elected. Thus he: s p Aes loyalty without prematurely committing himself to any strait-jacket answer." The high-powered publicity scheme was first evolved by Fred Rudge of the consulting firm of Fisher, Rudge and Neblett of New York, who first sold the idea to Walter Williams and Jock Whitney. It was discussed by various GOP leaders on Aug. 25, and on Sept. 2 Gen. Eisenhower himself gave his personal O.K. He is setting aside half a day when the transcriptions are to be recorded. Republican leaders felt they would have no trouble getting big advertisers to relinquish their radio and TV spots three weeks before elections, since all but two of the big advertising agencies in New York are considered Republican, and most of their clients. The text of the GOP"publicity plan, which speaks for itself, fol- lows: "Getting spots on radio and TV can be accomplished by asking national advertisers to surrender their spots for these three weeks thus throwing their purchase open to the Republican and Democratic parties from the station and the networks. Since the Republican ptan would be organized and the Democratic would not, the Republicans could obtain the lion's share of the good time. "It has been proven over and over in the course of radio-TV experience in this country that spots are the quickest, most ef- fective and cheapest means of getting across a message in the shortest possible time. "It is recommended that $2,000,000 be spent in three weeks on this campaign. This is at the rate of $34,000,000 a year for a national advertiser-an unheard-of saturation campaign in the radio-TV field. Then again when it is remembered that this $2,000,000 would be spent in only 49 counties, the pressure probably increay to that equivalent to spending at the rate of $135,000,000 a year--a tremen- dous message-leverage in key areas. --ONE SPOT PER HOUR-- "These spots will consist of questions raised by people speak ing in the accents of the various areas, answered by the General with all the warmth and charm of which he is capable. They will be aired at the rate of roughly once an hour over the pick of 56 TV and 244 radio stations in these 49 areas. ... "This ties in with a further recommendation that the spots not be made until the first week in October. This permits the greatest latitude in assessing what, the problems are.at that time, rather than risking political changes ensuing after the spots are made." The publicity survey then proceeds to outline the "critical, the key, the indecisive" states as follows: California, Oregon, Colo- rado, Idaho, Nevada, Wyoming, South Dakota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Connecticut, Delaware, Mary. land, New Jersey, Ne wYork, Pennsylvania. "If the Republicans took all these states," the publicity plan con- tinues, "they would end up with 308 votes, more than enough to win. However, they must take a good part of them, and it is the purpose of this plan to suggest those which must be taken, as well as the way in which their taking may be assured. -COMMUNISTS ROLE IN CHILE- 0NE INSIDE STORY on the Chilean presidential election, in which former dictator Carlos Ibanez won a thumping victory, is that the Communists, acting on secret orders from abroad, deserted their own candidate to throw almost,50,000 votes to the authoritarian gen- eral whose nickname is "The Horse." Officially, Chile's Reds were supposed to be supporting Dr. Salvador Allende, a socialist senator and president of the coun- try's medical association. But it was evident months ago that Allende didn't have a chance. On Aug. 12, Communist Party chieftains in Santiago received coded instructions from famed Brazilian comrade Luiz Prestes, Moscow's No. 1 man in South America, to put their strength behind Ibanez. Ballot totals now make it clear that the Red leaders did a thorough job of getting the word around. Although their party has been outlawed for the past four years, President Gonzalez Videla's regime did not crack down on open Communist activity during the campaign, and Stalin's boys were able to line up most of the 60,000 voters they controlled in 1946. The socialists had an of icial registration of 46,000. It is known that this number gave practically 100 per cent support to Allende. Yet his total was only X1,000. Meanwhile, Ibanez got almost that many votes more than his most optimistic backers had privately predicted. In other words, he got about 50,000 Communists votes. A significant repercussion of this timely assistance was the triumphant candidate's declara- CURRENTmOVIE At The Michigan . . THE MERRY WIDOW with Lana Turner and Fernado Lamas. MUST FIRST apologize for an inadequate knowledge of the original stage version of this movies its authenticity will have to pass unquestioned. Franz Lachar, who supplied the music for "The Merry Widow" in its operetta form, still stands out as the leading figure of the rich widow of a Marchovian immigrant, giving her the opportunity to display her classic beauty in .a collection of very be- coming black finery. When the impover- ished Marchovian king learns of her money he sees a chance to pay off the na- tional debt by marrying her to his nephew, supposedly an irresistable wom- an-killer. Fernando Lamas is wholly in- capable of the role. His distinctly equine features and wooden acting mark him immediately as a misfit in just about anything but a Frankenstein-Dracula tion, on Sept. 3, that "Communism does not represent a danger in any country where an effectively functioning government exists." --DICTATORS GET VOTES-- Ibanez, who will be 75 in No- vember, became Chile's president 25 years ago in a one-man election. He soon abolished congress and ruled by decree until overthrown four years later by revolution. He was long a fervent admirer of Mussolini, had Juan Peron's ac- tive backing during the recent campaign, and is a loud critic of "Yanqui imperialism." Perhaps the most important point of all is that Ibanez' vic- tory marks the fifth occasion in the past two years on which South American voters have reg- istered their approval of ultra- nationalist, totalitarian mind- ed candidates. First was Getulio Vargas' amaz- ing comeback in Brazil. Then came the re-election of Juan Peron; then the triumph of Bolivian "strong man" Victor Paz Estens- Sixty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Crawford Young ......Managing Editor Cal Samra ..........Editorial Director Zander Hollander ......Feature Editor Sid Klaus ...... Associate City Editor Harland Britz........Associate Editor Donna Hendleman ....Associate Editor Ed Whipple............Sports Editor John Jenks ... Associate Sports Editor Dick Sewell .... Associate Sports Editor Loraine Butler........Women's Editor Mary Jane Mills, Assoc. women's Editor Business Staff Al Green..........Business Manager Milt Goetz.......Advertising Manager Diane Johnston ...Assoc. Business Mgr. Judy Loehnberg .....Finance Manager Tom Treeger . ....Circulation Manager