THE MICHIGAN air4tpan &iIl Fifty-Sixth Year I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Bikini: Test of Humanity ' ti A' FI Vim~«m rral a Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Managing Editors .. Paul Harsha, Milton Freudenheim ASSOCIATE EDITORS City News ............................... Clyde Recht University ............................ Natalie Bagrow Sports .................................... Jack Martin Women's ...................................Lynne Ford Business Staff Business Manager ........................ Janet Cork Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newbpaper. All rights of re- publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.5, by mail, $5.25. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTIBING OY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE., NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO . BOSTON * LOS ANGELIS * SAN FRANCIScO ., ember, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR: WILL HARDY Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Aid for Scientists LEGISLATION to establish afNational Science Foundation was passed Friday by an over- whelming Senate vote and sent to the House. The measure provides for seven departmental administrators under one national director, who would be empowered to make grants for univer- sities, colleges, and other research institutions for the establishment of scholarships to high school and college graduates who show out- standing scientific abilities. Included in the program would be the institution of research fellowships covering seven all-encompassing fields of science and technology: Mathematical and physical sciences; biological sciences; medi- cal sciences; national defense; engineering and technology; scientific personnel and education; and publications and information. It is esti- mated that the financial investment involved will require from 40 million to 300 million dol- lars. If the bilJ is passed by the House and signed by the President, it will render a tremendous impetus to scientific study and research in every qualified education institution in the United States. The bill would assure that no scientific or technological student and no potentially valuable research project would be thwarted or stalemated owing to lack of funds. The measure closely parallels the recommendations contained in the recent report of Dr. Vannevar Bush, di- rector of the Office of Scientific Research and Development. That the Government will supply the neces- sary funds without in any wy dominating, con- trolling, or directing the research, except through the medium of the Foundation, is an especially admirable feature of the prospective law. Presumably, the proposed Foundation would be directed and administered by sci- entists, appointed by the President, rather than by bureaucrats or other politicians. In this man- ner, the Foundation would provide the country with a long-range, politically independent pro- gram for the advancement of science and tech- nology. It would thus perform a genuine ser- vice completely unfettered much as does the National Bureau of. Standards at present. It is to be hoped that the House will grant approval and speed the bill to the President so that the program may begin without unneces- sary delay. This bill will permit American science to keep pace with the technological development of the rest of the world; it will, in the final analysis, raise the standard of American living to a level heretofore, never imagined; it will assure an adequate national defense without the necessity for huge outmoded standing armies; and it will ameliorate the financial stalemate of many re- 'search projects now in uncertain progress. If administered by scientists,, it will prove itself to be one of the most farsighted and significent bills ever to emanate from the Congress of the United States. Richard W. Fink Pre-A tomic Dangers They had no atomic bombs, but other modern ...,.. ..,, ....----------- ,+- O f '-"M a By SAMUEL GRAFTON LOSANGELES-The atomic bomb seems to stir up peculiar reactions in almost every- body, and the test at Bikini Atoll has not failed to produce this characteristic effect. Secretary of the Navy Forrestal has appraised the damage as "relatively unimportant," though five ships were sunk and nine were badly damaged. One seems to remember that in the late war the Navy used to cheer as tremendous victories en- gagements in which it caused the enemy much less damage than this. Fourteen ships, sunk or badly damaged, have become relatively unimpor- tant only since the atomic bomb has become im- portant; and Mr. Forrestal's relief that only this much damage was done is perhaps the greatest. piece of inverse testimony to the power of the bomb on record. Much of this comment follows this course of attempting to deny the power of the bomb. One observer said that the flash of light which came with the explosion was not nearly so bright as that of the sun. And the goats lived; and Navy men have reported with delight that minnows are still swimming in the waters near the test area. A senator called the bomb a "mere fire-cracker." In far-away Berlin the German press chortled that the test was a bit of a flop. The whole affords a rather fascinating study in how men and institutions are moved by their own interests. The atomic scientists rose in quick defense against the bomb-knockers; Dr. Compton said it seemed to him that a number of the ships which had not even been hit had been pushed around a good bit; and several MAN TO MAN R Ole of thePress4 By HAROLD L. ICKES THE COMMITTEE on Un-American Activities has asked the Congress to revise the income- tax structure in order to eliminate tax deduc- tions for advertisements publicizing "subversive propaganda" and "idealogical theories" which "bear no relation whatever to the sale and dis- tribution of the products made or sold by the advertiser." This looks fair on its face, but, as a matter of fact, such a ban is so broad that it could be either meaningless or dangerous. The definition of "subversive propaganda" as used in the past by the Wood-Rankin Committee has been so elastic that a food processor who wants people to eat more of his products than they have been eating could be accused of an insidious plot to change the American way of life and therefore indulging in "subversive propaganda." But be- cause the proposal might be meaningless does not mean that it would remain so, if enacted into law. This latest and most infamous attack upon the civil liberties of the country should not go unchallenged. In effect, the Conunittee seeks to legalize Congressional censorship of public opinion, and endow itself with legislative power to determine what constitutes "un-American or subversive propaganda" and at the same time decide who shall be permitted to buy space for, and publish opinion advertising. The array of institutional and public service advertising provided by various business firms, individuals and non-profit organizations which serve to inform the people and promote public welfare would be placed in jeopardy by any such law. This type of advertising was a strong wartime ally of the government, thanks pri- marily to the planning and coordination of the War Advertising Council. Large sums were ex- pended by business for "save paper"'and "don't waste fat" programs requiring the cooperation of the public. Neither the Wood-Rankin Committee on Un-American Activities, nor any other agency or instrument of the government is qualified to determine what constitutes "subversive pro- paganda" in advertising or "idealogical the- ories." Such a power would constitute denial to the American people of the fundamental Constitutional liberty of freedom of expression. Democracy cannot afford to run such a risk as would be involved. John Rankin must not be given legislative authority to ride herd on ideas that he cannot understand and which are, there- fore, abhorrent to him. The failings of the American press are not due to the opinion advertising engaged in by Amer- ican business organizations, or by various poli- tical and non-profit organizations. By reason of the fact that these opinions appear as an ad- vertisement in a newspaper they are immediately understood to be those of the firm or group that sponsors them. The same is unhappily not so with respect to the suppressions or disguised opinions that sometime color the news or edi- torial columns. Public service advertising has represented a tangible good in the past, and will in the future. It has served selfish interests in some instances, but for the most part it has been in the public interest. It is not the function of the Congress, let alone of a Congressional Committee to deter- mine whether some ox is being gored. Rather, is it the duty of the conscientious editor, or the dis- criminating reader. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) nuclear physicists gave ominous warning to the effect that though the test goats might still be alive, just wait until they tried to walk, and they would fall flat on their front porches. Members of the Senate atomic energy com- mittee (which becomes an /unimportant com- mittee the moment atomic energy becomes un- important) counselled the public not to be lulled into a false sense of security by early reports of the bomb's ineffectiveness. One military man, at least, was sure that the bomb had struck a mighty blow against the Navy's targets, and that the test proved the bomb could knock any coun- try out of a war. He was, of course, not a Navy figure, but a member of the Army Ground Forces, Major General McAuliffe. Most foreign observers, representatives of na- tions which do not have the bomb, came as close to scorn as they dared; one or two even said they were bored by the test; and in this, their atti- tudes were oddly like those of some of our own Navy men, who noted happily that Navies were saved, even before the scientists had a chance to unlimber a single Geiger counter, and be- fore they knew whether the surviving ships wouldn't fall apart if shoved. And it seems to me we are in great danger from the bomb precisely because it rouses our conservative instincts rather than our sense of wonder. On the conscious level, we are duti- fidly aware that the bomb is tremendous; but on the unconscious level we build defenses against the idea, which is easier than build- ing them against the weapon; and our reac- tions to the bomb recapitulate, in little, the whole story of human conservatism. One wonders whether there is any such thing as objective thinking, and suddenly one has the feeling that what happened at Bikini Atoll was not a test of the bomb, but a test of ourselves. The bomb did all right. The people present may have flunked, as, with the wonder of the ages in their hands, they made it a question of whether the goats had survived, and tried to prove hap- pily that Navies still could live, and wars could still be fought, in a defiance of a weapon which says they cannot. The atomic explosion at Bi- kini may have been somewhat srfialler than was expected, but it was our human reactions to the event which really sounded like the fizzling of wet caps in a toy gun. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) _. ,,..._. ..,,, ..,, y , _M ...M , . !:' - ' ' f, . ' Cry t, u1 a iThe LI t E ONCE.AGAIN the undergraduate is abroad in the land, storming the bastions of opportunity. It is a fearful world he has been ushered into-a fearful and a wonderful one. For the years in which his manhood will lie will determine the fate of humanity; either the nations will use the new weapons which science has put into their hands for raising man- kind to a plentitude of living such as it has never known before, or they will go down to destruction. There is one notable difference between the attitude of youth on this morrow of war and that of its predecessors of a quarter of a century ago. The world, they thought, had been made safe for democracy, and the future stretched ahead bright with promise of increasing welfare and happiness for society. The courage demanded by the youth of the present is by the very measure of that first failure so much the greater. For they must preserve despite the knowledge that victory may be lost even in the winning, and they must build their new world un- der the shadow of imminent destruc- tion. It will require everything they have to give of enthusiasm and eager- ness and determination. But they can give it in he knowledge that the will to international peace counts as never before in history. -Saturday Review of Literature -"a0 "Here domes another statistic," L DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN anted--Courage f. COURAGE, that popularly-propounded ideal of the American classroom, is conspicuously lacking in the convictions of the American pub- lic today. A democracy has indeed reached a sad state of affairs when fear and the greed and selfish- ness motivated by fear deny its citizens the abil- ity to withstand and prevent the prejudice, the blundering and the mismanagement which seem to be ruling the main governing body of the- United States. Thus has the American public been plunged into a period of confusion, of scandalous price raises, of shortages of all kinds, which all might have been averted had there been the courage on the part of the people to recognize their responsibilities as citizens of a democracy. For courage is definitely needed to elect law-mgakers who realize that their electors are not afraid to object if their wishes are not carried out to the fullest extent. Obviously, however, there is little use for cour- age if the principles of government lack clear definition. Because the electors do not have the courage to make sacrifices the dread spectre of inflation makes good its threat. This might all possibly be changed simply through a greater awareness on the part of every voter concerning his responsibility as a very real part of the workings of a democracy. Perhaps that can be achieved only through compulsory voting. It is a sad admission to have to make, that the citizens in a democracy should have to be forced to make their will known, the crux on which such a form of government must re- solve, or perish. Another answer to the problem might be the lowering of the age requirement for voters. The practicability of this suggestion is clearly borne out in the evident enthusiasm and sincerity of young Georgian voters in their current election campaign. America is a young country and its forward- looking and liberal spirit cannot be retained if the policymakers are for the majority "past their prime" and leaning strongly toward con- servatism and reaction. Whatever solution is finally adopted, it is clear that neither can be really effective without a thorough going-over as well of the educational system in America. Voters must be taught the weaknesses and defects of the democratic sys- tem, as well as the duties and responsibilities of every single person who enjoys its rights and privileges. Or are we to ignore and forget the phrase in one of America's most popular patriotic songs, that has become almost a cliche, that America is "the land of the free and the home of the brave"? -Natalie Bagrow Publication in the Daily Official Bul, letin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the Summer Ses- sion, Room 1213 Angell Hal by 3:30 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1946 VOL. LVI, No. 6S Notices Summer Session Chorus: Changed to T.W.Th. at 7 p.m., Room 315 Hill Auditorium-back entrance nearest to the Tower. All students on cam- pus are welcome to try out. The Institute of Public Adinnistra- tion of the University offers five re- search assistantships in public ad- ministration. The $500 stipend for the academic year 1946-47 will be given for work on selected projects in the Institute's Bureau of Govern- ment. This work will enable the stu- dent.to satisfy the internship for the M.P.A. degree. Interested graduate students should make application to the Graduate School not later than August 1. New York Civil Service Announce- ment has been received in this office for Dental Hygienists in New York City. There are sixty vacancies. Sal- ary is $1,320 base pay, $1,680 bonus rate per annum. For further infor- mation call at the Bureau of Ap- pointments, 201 Mason Hall. Job Registration material may be obtained at the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 201 Mason Hall, during office hours (9:00 to 12:00 and 2:00 to 4:00) through Friday of this week. This applies to August graduates as well as to graduate students or staff members who wish to register and who will be available for positions next year. The Bureau has two place- ment divisions: Teacher Placement and General Placemenit. The General Division includes service to people seeking positions in business, indus- try, and professions other than edu- cation. It is important to register now be- cause there will be only one registra- tion during the summer sessions. There is no fee for registration, French Tea today at 4 p.m. in the cafeteria of the Michigan League. All students taking French 31, 32, 61, 83 and any course in French litera- ture would profitly greatly by at- tending regularly these French teas, Any student on the campus interest- ed in practicing French conversa- tion is cordially invited to join the group. International Center: The Summer Session Reception to .Foreign Stu- dents will be held on Wednesday evening, July 10, in the Rackham Assembly Hall. The informal recep- tion will start promptly at 7:30 -o'clock. Foreign students, faculty, and other American friends are in- vited. Child Psychiatrist, from the Univer- sity Hospital.r Service Women interested in dis- cussing plans for the formation of aj social organization to serve their in- terests are invited to attend a brief meeting Monday evening, July 15, at 8 p.m. in the Michigan League.1 Interested Service women, unable to attend, may call Anne Dearn- ley, phone 2-4561 if they desire to7 be informed of future meetings. French Club: Bastille Day will be celebrated Monday, July 15, at 8 p.m. in Room 305, Michigan Union. Pro- fessor Rene Talamon, of the Ro- mance Language Department, will offer a reading of known French works. Group singing and a social hour.A special invitation to join the club is made to students in French 31, 32, 61, 83, 153, 159 and in all French courses of literature. Foreign students are also cordially; invited as well as any student inter- ested in improving his oral French. No charge. Art Cinema League International Film program, first presentation, Heart of Paris, with Raimu, Michele Morgan, four-star comedy. English sub-titles. Rackham Auditorium, at 8:30 p.m., Wed., Thurs. Season tick- ets available at all bookstores, Union and League. Women in Education luncheon at the Russian Tea Room, Michigan League today at 11:45 to 1:00 p.m. Men's Education Club meeting in the Michigan Union at 7:15 p.m. to- day. International Center: The first in a series of weekly Thursday teas of the Summer Session will be held Thurs., July 11, at 4 p.m. in the In- ternational Center. Language tables will convene. Summer school faculty, students, and others interested are invited. The Unversity of California has half time teaching assistantships in its nursery school. For details call the Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 489. The Coffee Hour for all students in Greek and Latin classes will be held in the East Lounge of the Rack- ham Building on Friday, July 12, at 4:00 p.m. Flying C}ub: There will be a meet- ing for all iembers of the University Flying Club in room 1042 East Engi- neering Building, Wed., July 10, 1946. Faculty members and students inter- ested are also invited. The meeting will start at 7:30 p.m.-! "Papa Is All", comedy by Patterson Greene, opens tonight at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre as the first play on the summer bill to be pre- sented by the MichiganReperatory Players of the department of speech. A matinee Saturday at 2:30 .is sched- uled and especially good seats are available for this performance. Tick- ets are on sale daily at the theatre bo office, which is open from 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Spanish Club: The first meeting of the summer session Spanish Club will take place on Thursday, July 11, at 8 p.m., in Room 318 of the Michigan Union. The program will consist of elections of officers, Span- ish songs, and a social hour. All students are' cordially invited to at- tend. Spanish Teas: Every Tuesday and Friday, language tables will convene in the League cafeteria at 4 p.m. for informal conversation practice. On Thursdays, the group will meet at the International Center at 4 p.m. All students interestedl in practicing Spanish conversation are invited to attend. Lectures Lecture: There will be a lecture by Charles W. Sanford, Professor of Secondary Education, University of Illinois in the University High School Auditorium at 4:05 today. The topic is "Desirable Changes in the -Per- sonnel Administration of Secondary Schools." Professor Kenneth L. Pike will give a demonstration of the first steps in linguistic analysis when a bilingual interpreter is not available. This is a special lecture in the Amphitheatre in the Rackham Building, today, July 10, 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Professor Thomas A. Sebeek, of Indiana University, will speak at 1:00 p.m., Thursday, July 11, in Room 302 Michigan Union, on the subject, "The Hungarian Vocabulary." On Thursday, July 11, at 4:10 p.m, Dr. Arthur W. Bromage, Professor of Political Science, will speak on the topic "Total War and the Preser- vation of Democracy." This is the first lecture on the special program of Social Implica- tions of Modern Scienee and will be given in the Rackham Amphitheatre. At 8:10 p.m. Thursday evening, Dr. H. R. Crane, Associate Professor of Physics, will talk on "Recent Ad- vances in the Physical Sciences". This is the second lecture of the series on Social Implications of Mod- ern Science and will be given in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Lecture: Dr. Ralph B. Perry, Pro- fessor of Philosophy of Harvard Uni- versity, will speak on Friday, July 12 at 8 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall. His topic will be "What is the Good of Science". The public is in- vited. Colton Storm, Curator of Manu- scripts and Maps at the Clements Library will give three lectures on the Collecting of Rare Books, July 22, 23, 24. In the Rare Books Room, Clements Library, 5:00 p.m. Academic Notices Graduate students: Courses may be dropped with record from July 8 until July 27. By a recent ruling of the Executive Board of the Graduate School, courses dropped after July 27 will be recorded with a grade of E. BARNABY The J. J. O'Malley Housing Project has an exceedingly modest goal, m'boy. Merely a thousand homes for a thousand deserving families. Naturally, construction begins ni nra lmtn.. .nmy na,-enn .,r. a i ..m But wait! We'll need the services of a housing expediter. To relieve your Fairy Godfather of burdensome details. Someone familiar with every nook and