T HE MICHIGAN DAILY &j~mlSr~tgat rte~ ________Fift y-Sixth Year MAN TO MAN: Saving the Dead -OPA/ - .~ ,. : Er' " + ! , .,. ,.v. ...__ _ !L I i Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Stasf 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 newopaper. All rights of re- publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, #a- second-class mail matter.. Subscription during the regular school year by c0r- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. ErPRE9ENTUC, POR NATIONAL AOVERTllNG " National Advertising Service, mnc. o College Publisbers ReP resentativ" 420 MADISON Avs. 'NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAO 0BOSTON - LS ANosEIS - SAN P m"Auce-, afember, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR: ELINOR MOXNESS Editorials published in The Michigan Daily, are written by members of The Daily stafg and represent the views of the writers only HnEt HE MEXICAN PEOPLE have elected a new president, but won't officially know who he is until late this week. Both candidates are claiming success. Miguel Aleman, the Government party candidate, is in fact so sure of it that he has already thanked the people "for the great honor they have con- ferred" upon him, While Dr. Ezequiel Padilla, candidate of the Mexican Democratic party, has stated he believes the actual popular vote to favor him overwhelmingly.; Aleman has been expected to win, for, backed by the big, entrenched Government party ma- chine, he has done extensive and expensive campaigning on a platform of industrialization, continuing the progress made .since the revolu- tion, and a cleanup of the Government party administration of the country. He has followed a middle-of-the-road policy on the whole, and is reported to be smart, hearty, and popular. Dr. Padilla, former foreign minister, is, on the other hand, more of an individualist.' He. ran more on his own personality and merits as a successful diplomat and a critic of the machine Aleman represents. He is known to favor inter- national cooperation and, during the war, inter-- American cooperation. His opponents have thus been able to criticize him as a U.S. supporter, which is not a very complementary name to have= in Mexico. But one of the most important problems of this election, candidates aside, is that of honest voting. Mexico is putting to test for the first time its new election law, which pro- vides for registration of voters and the super- vision by government and party representa- tives of the polling places. This should re- place the irregular voting of the past years, with its practical policy of "might makes right" at the polls, and may the strongest man win. But with this new law, the 3,000,000 who voted Sunday were to be given the right to free choice of one of the four candidates running. Early reports indicate it was not too successful an ex- periment, for Dr. Padilla has already charged that the election in Mexico City and its- sur- rounding federal district was "stained by the gravest frauds," that the Army, which main- tained order at and guarded the polls, did not have facilities to avoid fraudulent maneuvers. One would expect Mexico.City to be the best policed of any spot in the country. The election results, as well as the test of Mexico's democracy, in voting, remain to be ascertained. They are important because, with Mexico's proximity to us and position as a link with the capitals of Central and South Amer- ica, it is important to us to have a govern- ment which is, if not favorable, at least will- ing to be friendly with us. Even more import- ant is the actual practice of democracy in a country whose government has promised it democracy and peaceful free choice of the representatives of that government. -Elinor Moxness Poland's Unicameral Victory In the first election held in Poland in eleven vesars the lfin 7en alition has won what an- By HAROLD L. ICKES "tPA" WILL BE SAVED but price-control will be abandoned. And politics will be served. The compromise "price-control" bill which has the blessing of the Administration in place of the one that the President vetoed is a fake. It is a masterpiece of deceptive double-talk. It will no more hold the price line than a colander willhold water. Price Administrator Porter's statement that the new version is "workable" is accurate in only one sense. It is workable as a device with which it is hoped to gain a political advantage. Ac- cording to the President, the Taft amendments would have meant a sharp upturn in prices; al- though how he could ever have proved this it is difficult to see since, as the Republicans took occasion to point out, prices had been increasing generally under the act that the President want- ed continued. The best that can be said is that the country was already suffering from a crip- 'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Ide rgialWr~ By SAMUEL GRAFTON LOS ANGELES--Our thoughts are fixed on price control this week, but price control is only a straw in the wind. The plain truth is that Congress is dismantling as many of the govern- meit's social and welfare activities as it dares and price control is neither the beginning nor the end of the story. The Fair Employment Practices Committee, for example, was allowed to die quietly last week, with a few sticks of type for its tombstone. The President had asked for a permanent Fair Em- ployment Practices Commission to protect mem- bers of minority groups in the job market. He had asked this at a time when the national con- science is extremely sore on this point; at a time when books on the Negro problem are national- best-sellers, and when a play on this subject outruns musical comedies on Broadway. He had asked this during our debate with Russia, when we are setting ourselves up as the World's chief spokesman for minority rights, and for the doctrine of equal justice under law. Yet Congress allowed the committee to die, deliberately knock- ing the national hat askew, and having us turn a blowzy face to the world. Maybe there is a swing to the right, but Congress is running a couple of miles ahead of that swing, capering and doing a high-kick. A- few days ago, too, the President presented to the House a meek little plan for merging a number of government bureaus, thus consoli- dating government activities under fewer heads, and rationalizing government operations. The plan had been carefully worked out over a period of months; it had no special implications, left or right (except the implication that government is here to stay, which is considered a radical idea in some quarters); but the House voted against it, with almost no discussion. It did so in a kind of mean, bored, pettish way, but a casual voice vote. It was like tearing something up without reading it. And in that vote could be felt all of Congress' hostility toward the administrative side of government, an antipathy operating at so high a level of passion that it no longer thinks in terms of arguments, but only of opportunities. It is this feeling which has slopped over into the field of price control, and the argument could be offered that Americans are being' made the helpless victims of an ideological war. Conservative opinion has sold itself on the theory that business can be safe only if government is helpless and the mutilation of price control is only one chapter in the long story of the implementation of that theory. If cupidity is not the explanation for the messing of price control (and we are assured that no one important intends to raise prices, or to make an extra nickel) then the only remaining explanation is the grimly ideologi- cal one, that Americans have been given the fright of their lives, and have been sent spin- ning off into a strange adventure, as the anost identical result of a clash between two theories of government. We are off, into whatever the future holds, un- der a strategic plan which prohibits the use of a national strategy, whether for the protection of minorities, the control of prices, the taking of precautions against unemployment, or what- ever. Price control is only one issue among many and conservative thinkers are well aware of this, for they always take care to state and re- state their anti-government philosophy in ex- plaining their legislative aggressions. It is a strange thing that it is the liberal leaders, like Mr. Truman, who fail to accept the challenge on this wide front, and who treat each incident, like price control, as if it were a single, separate thing; as if it had no connec- tion with a conflict that it as deep as our lives and as wide as our futures. (Copyright, 1946. N.Y. Post Syndicate) If the United States had taken as long to de- cide to help Britain in war as it is taking to de- cide whether to help Britain in peace, things would have gone better for Hitler. Aid to Brit- ain now has many political, as well as economic, justifications similar to those which prompted Lend-Lease in 1941. -The New York Times pling inflation which the Taft amendments might have accelerated. With the passing of each day it becomes more and more apparent that the whole show-. the debate in Congress, the Presidential veto and the rewriting of the bill-has been a polit- ical maneuver designed to win public support for Mr. Truman and to discredit the Repub- licans. It was not clever on the part of the Republicans, or of Senator Taft in particular, that they permitted themselves to be jockey- ed into a position where the President could bash their brains out with a veto messae and then give his blessing to a bill which will hold the line no better than Mr. Taft's pro- posals would have done and may, in fact, re- sult in less production. The President is in a position where he can now go to the people in the November election exclaiming, "I saved the OPA." And so he did, but he did not save price-control. He caught hold of a drowning man and hauled a corpse aboard the water-logged boat. The virtual elimination of subsidies means that the cost of milk which, since June 30, has jump- ed from two to four cents a quart in most cities will not be reduced. This increase of from ten to twenty per cent has been due almost entire- ly to the termination of subsidies. The provision of the bill which makes the Secretary of Agiculture, rather than the Price Administrator the final authority on what farm commodities can be kept under control is a crip- pling blow. The Secretary of Agriculture, who- ever he may be, is peculiarly susceptible to pressures from farm lobbyists. The incumbent, Secretary Anderson, is predisposed to sneeze when the well-organized farmers take snuff. He has borne little resemblance to a Rock of Gibraltar against the pressures that have been brought to bear upon him. Moreover, the new bill sets up a commission of three which will have the power; upon ap- peal, to overrule any order of either Paul Port- er or the Secretary of Agriculture. Of such shoddy material is the newOPA made. The abolition of the maximum average price order which required manufacturers to pro- duce a certain amount of low-priced clothing is of course another victory for higher prices The elimination of the provisions requiring dealers i automobiles, household appliances and similar reconversion items to absorb part of any price increase means soaring prices. The provision that price ceilings for Mnanu- facturers must be based on an industry-wide average will tend to limit production. Industry- wide ceilings tend to crowd out the manufactur- ers whose costs are high and thus limit produc- tion to those whose costs are at or below the average. In addition, ceilings based on industry- wide averages generally favor the big against the small producer. The only thing that the bill does is appar- ently to restore ceilings on rents yet Mr. Porter, in arguing for the extension of the OPA bill, said that unless the price line were held, rents would have to go up. In effect the Congress has given notice to the employes of the OPA, so that every em- ploye will be out job-hunting. The good ones will get jobs. The poor ones will not. Thus we will have an unworkable law in the hands of incompetents. It requires no seer to fore- tell the result. In effect, OPA is dead and nothing remains except to take its death mask leaving President Truman and Senator Taft in the center of the stage putting on the act of the pot calling the kettle black. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) CINEMA FRENCH FILMS are unpretentious and inex- pensive. They also have a flavor all their own which, however much it may be peculiar to France, is also universal. The Art Cinema League provided us with ample evidence as to the truth of this thesis last night when it presented "The Heart of Paris." The title is an inept translation. But, though the heart is not that of Paris, there is one in this movie-big and warm. It belongs to Raimu whose superb performance in "The Bak- er's Wife" cannot be forgotten even by an Ameri- can audience jaded with Hollywood's artificiality. This time Raimu is the owner of a bicycle shop. But, he is still the lovable, generous, effusive bourgeois. Selected to serve as a juror, he takes a personal interest in the pretty young defend- ant whom he does much to save. The courtroom scenes are best. In them there are subtlety and depth such as cannot be attained where the prac- tice of "typing" prevails. Each witness possesses some unique quality that sets him off as human and believable. Michele Morgan plays the role of Natalie Rocuin convincingly and even bears up under a plot that grows increasingly attenuated with every reel after her trial. So does the cast as a whole. Yet, it is Raimu's picture and if it is not his best, it is still better than the Bad Buncombe with which we are being bombarded. -Bernard Rosenberg BAI NAABY By Crockett Johnson r ?..I.Ie r . r r . i I ._ ! . - t "ttrt l __ _.t N / fNn ""w..r C.-i. r.i