. UN~ "DAI V I RATHER BE RIGHT: L I' Fifty-Sixth Year BILL MAULDIN ;, The Desperate Race A'. 14Giq N r1 I 1 I 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 itor Otherwise credited in this newipaper. 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- fier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. RaPNKSBNTE0 FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON Avil "' lEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO " BO67ON *8 LS os LS * sAn FRANCisco H ember, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR: NATALIE BAGROW, Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. G.B.S. TODAY THE most conventional heretic in the. world celebrates his ninetieth birthday an- niversary. George Bernard Shaw, sometimes called "the last of the optimists," now has only 210 years to go to reach full adult maturity, according to his own caluculations. The Irish-born dramatist gave his views on longevity in an interview this week with Hayden Church of the Saturday Review of Literature. As usual, he came through with the sort of characteristic statements which have made him so well-known and so well-beloved all over the world. A lifetime of three centuries is essential for "political maturity," he said, adding that "mor- tality should be confined to murder, suicide and fatal accidents." There are few who will deny that the world would not benefit by 210 more years of George Bernard Shaw. One could be sure that he would continue on the path he has followed all his life, never losing faith, ever striving to instill in the mind of his readers his ideas on life and human- ity.R He has used every trick to accomplish his purpose, as S. Winsten, editor of the Shaw Anni- versary Volume noted last week, pointing out that Shaw "has irritated and soothed, has whip- ped and tickled, has laughed at us anid with us, and is still hopeful, looking far ahead and know- ing, that he is right." GBS, as he is commonly known, has said some things which will remain as sharply true and. applicable in the far future as they were when he first uttered them. Or, if his opinions do not coincide with our own, we can nevertheless laugh at them and enjoy them for what they are, the personal opinions of an irascible, irrepressible and truly great writer. How characteristic and unforgettable are h's. remarks about America! He said, "I myself have been particularly careful never to say a civil word to the United States. I have scoffed at their inhabitants as a nation of villagers. I have defined the 100 per cent American as 99 per cent an idiot. And they just adore me." School children will appreciate GBS especially for his determination to "lay my eternal curse. on whomsoever shall now, or at any time here- after, make schoolbooks of my gorks and make me hated as Shakespeare is hated." A'3out Shakespeare himself he had this to say: "With the single exception of Homer there is no eminent writer, not even Sir Walter Scott, whom I can despise so entirely as I despise Shakespeare when I measure my mind against his. Shakespeare was a volcano from whom plays bur t like lava. I am, by comparison, a tidy old maid.', Not even education has escaped the Shavian pen -work. In a terse, matter-of-fact way, he onc., wrote, "In a prison, they may torture your bor. But they do not torture your brains, and they protect you against violence and outrage from your fellow-prisoners. In a school you have none of these advantages." As a music-lover Shaw remarked, "There is nothing that soothes me more after a long and maddening course of piano recitals, than to sit and have my teeth drilled by a finely skilled hand." On love and marriage, the irrepressible Shaw commented, "The ideal love affair is one con- dieanr byli, mvail." oand. " a~,ria-aP isrnnniilmr' hp-. By SAMUEL GRAFTON LOS ANGELES--There can be little doubt that a desperate armaments race is in the mak- ing. Though the air is not yet filled with missiles, it is certainly filled with talk of missiles, so that it now takes columns of newspaper space merely WITH U.S. LABOR:. EDITOR'S NOTE: The following column replaces Harold L. Ickes' regular column for today, which was canceled at the last minute. Ickes' column will ap- pear as usual in The Daily Wednesday. By VIC RIESEL They'll tell you the South is all hill-billy and cracker. It isn't. The war has changed that-the war and high production pay. Certainly, you can go into the back hills and see pig-filled streets which are nothing more than mud-ruts. There, too, are thin-legged, bare- footed kids wearing patched. hand-me-down clothing. And they live in shaky shacks which seem to grow out of pools of stagnant, turgid water. You can see all that, but the South lost its hill-billy lethargy when its men left the cotton fields and meager farms for top-scale pay in the 400 gun, plane, auto and munitions plants spread through Dixie. Now the glory road is ended and the wartime camps are.,gone! ; The natives return, but glistening new ma- chines pick cotton and the textile mill owners again are thinking of the days when girls earned four and five dollars a week and were told to hit the .streets if they thought their pay enve- lopes were runt-sized. Into all this the CO is moving one of the tightest unionizing machines ever devised. Once more the CIO will crusade-organizing the unorganized. Once more the CIO seeks 1,000,- 000 new members. It will be 1937 all over again- sitdowns, mass picketing, demonstrations, citi- zens committees and soup kitchens as the CIO goes after the textile, chemical, lumber and other Southern industries in search of members, who until recently were war workers. Some have called it Operation Dixie. Officially, it will be the CIO Organizing Campaign. Call it what you will, it's "the greatest social pheno- menon of the. decade," in the words of one of Philip Murray's lieutenants. Behind it are the shrewdest CIO brains, Mur- ray, the late Sidney Hillman and Emil Rieve (textile workers president) have lent the South- ern committee their top aides-Jack Kroll of the clothing workers; George Baldanzi of textiles, and Sherman Dalyrmple, formerly of the rubber workers. It hasn't been lost on observers that the CIO's Left Wingers were not placed on the top strategy board. It will be run by hardy little Van A. Bittner, who learned the South during 30 years' activity in the miners' union. You get an inkling into the kiil of crackling campaign Bittner will run when you recall that he helped direct the 1937 Little Steel strike in which the CIO beat the toughest anti-union eA- ployers in American industry. Bittner is well financed. Tfe CIO steel workers and Clothing Workers tossed $200,000 each into the war chest. The textile union handed over $125,000. The CIO and Walter Reuther's auto union gave $100,000 each. There are some who ridicule this much-trum- peted CIO drive. A survey of Southern business- men discloses that they are contemptuous of the CIO "invasion." The attitude is "we'll take care of them when they come. " The old-line gun-toting sheriffs, county offi- cials and town judges remember the bloody days of Gastonia and Harian, where men died on picket lines-and these officials are ready to guard Dixie in the good old-fashioned way. Nor is the AFL any friendlier. One top AFL official said the other day: "The net results of these sporadic invasions in the past have been raids upon AFL unions and picnic junkets of Northern radicals and parlor- pink intellectuals bestirring hatred to the trade union movement as a whole." Apparently the CIO is in for a three-cornered battle and the country is in for some front page labor news. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) Guilty Electorate{ It is common nowadays to read editorials de- ploring the recent election victories of Talmadge in Georgia, and Bilbo and Rankin in Mississippi. However, these men are not causes; they are results. Whether we like it or not, they were elected by a part of our population that vigor- ously supports race-hatred, white primaries, and the Ku Klux Klan. The disgrace, therefore, lies not in Talmadge and his Mississippi cohorts, but in the electorate that voted for these men and in their race-hatred which we have pam- pered and allowed to flourish. We deplored Hitler and denounced his super- race theories, but we never took the trouble to find out why he had a following. Instead of de- nouncing Talmadge for his white supremacy stand, let us find out why so many voted for him. Certainly there must be something radically wrong, either in the system of education or in the economic conditions of the South. Let us search hard for this answer, for only then can we root out this blight on our democracy. -Walter Hoffman to catalogue the enchanting types which scien- tists have lately dreamed up. Over and above the talk of missiles there hums the dreadful threat (which has already been put ' into words by some observers) that the atomic bomb itself has been superseded by new germ sprays and by radioactive gases, both of which, it is said, can kill without destroying valuable property, thus representing an advance over earlier and cruder methods which neces- sitated knocking down a building in order to get at the human beings inside. Another, almost equally alarming sign is the sudden increase in volume of talk about dis- armament, for such talk always attends an armament race, just as thunder goes with lightning, and squeaking with new shoes. There has never been an armaments race which was not contrapuntally decorated with disarma- ment talk. Many an earnest American keeps the two issues in entirely separate compartments of his mind, saying on Tuesday that what the world needs is an agreement to give up these dread- ful weapons, and on Thursday that America must make itself strong, with the latest and the best. Our newspapers are filled with disarma- ment plans and, with projects for new weapons. Disarmament talk and armamet talk march together, twin spouts, often cancelling each other out. What is the position of the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission in this picture? It is certainly a limited one. For, at first it concerns itself with only one weapon out of many; i. e. it operates at the thin, high level where the symptoms are, and stays out of the basement where the causes lie. Second, the Russians have chosen to interpret our plan for a world atomic with the veto eliminated. As a bid for world monopoly over the atom, they feel we would be in the majority; and a writer for "Soviet Russia Today" makes the observation that the Russians may prefer to wait for a couple of years, and discover the secrets of atomic energy for them- selves, rather than agree to our scheme. This amounts to a charge that the current atomic conference is provoking, rather than curbing atomic rivalry.' As one studies these results, one feels, more sharply than ever, what a strained and unhappy business it is to try to build peace by setting up formal rules regarding the use of weapons, and how necessary it is to dig deeper. It becomes clearer every day that, when peace deteriorates, it is not to be rehabilitated on this formal and superficial level; that it is idle to try to teach weapons to behave, when nations will not. One wonders how either side, Russia or the West, can look at the atomic energy conference without unhappiness, with- out some distress at this melancholy dueling between legalistic proposals. Yet to dig deeper seems beyond the power of either side; it would require a reordering of basic attitudes, which neither seems to have enough energy or will to attempt. For if (to rehabilitate the peace) the West must give up some of its pessimism regarding Russia, the Russians, equally, must give up some of their pessimism regarding the West. Russia, no more than any other country, is excused from responsibility for the ultimate consequences of its policies; and it is for the Russians to decide whether the casual manner in which they have consigned the West to a future of disintegration and war has not evoked policies in them, and reactions in us, such as are likely to make the prognosis come true. The event follows the expectation, for the ex- pectation unrolls as carpet for it and the atomic energy conference poses an embarrassing ques- tion to both sides, each of which is equally under the obligation to make do with the world as it is. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) CINEMA Art Cinema League patrons who see the Rus- sian screen version of Anton Chekov's plays "Jubilee" and "Marriage" will spend a somewhat painful evening watching the pathetic caracoles of a stageful of hopeless characters. Bitter real- ism cloys the comic in these plays, and humor gives way frequently to human pain. The situa- tions in each play are humorous enough, but the frustrated, vapid Chekov characters mingle the humor with depression. English titles are provided, and the action is readily understandable by movie-goers who don't know Russian. The phctography in these two movies is gener- ally inferior to American productions. Little photographic craft is in evidence. Much of the simplicity of the original plays, is retained by making few scene changes. An agreeable introduction to the two movies is an excerpt from Tschaikowsky's opera, "Christ- mas Slippers." More short adaptations of operas would not be amiss in our own motion picture industry. -Paul Harsha "Clannish, aren't they?" DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication In the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletn should be sent In typewritten form to the office of the Summer Ses- sion, Room 1213 Angell Hall by 3:30 p.m. on the .day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1946 VOL. LVI, No. 17 Notices Notice to Faculty and Veterans: Requisitions for Veterans' books and supplies will be honored only through Wednesday, July 31, for Summer Session. Art Cinema League presents "Mar- riage" and "Jubilee" Anton Chek- ho's plays filmed with artists of the Moscow Art Theatre. English sub- titles. Friday, 8:30 p.m., Rackham Auditorium. Tickets available at- Wahrs and Ulrich's Book stores and in the lobby of the League 45 min- utes before the show. State of Michigan Civil Service An- nouncements have been received in the office for: i 1. Student Psychiatric Social Work- er A, $170-$190. 2. Psychiatric Social Woker Al, $180-$200. 3. Psychiatric Social Work Admin- istrator I, $200-$240. 4. Psychiatric Social Worker Ad- ministrator II, $250-$290. Closing date is August 14, 1946. For further information, call at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall. City of Detroit Civil Service Com- mission Announcements have been received in this office for: 1. Occupational Therapist, $2,591- $2,936. Closing date is Aug. 9. 2. X-Ray Technician, $2,373-$2,- 769. Closing date isA Aug. 8. 3. Trained Nursing Attendent, $2,- 315-$2,385. Closing date is Aug. 8. 4. Nutritionist, $2,657-$2,930. Clos- ing date is Aug. 7. 5. Student Technical Assistant Specialties: Engineering, Business Administration, General Science, Physical Education, Social Science, $1,928-$2,080. Closing date is Aug. 7. 6. Student Social Worker, $2,109- $2,295. Closing date is Aug. 6. 7. Social Case Worker, $2,475-$2,- 835. Closing date is Aug. 6. 8. Medical Social Case Worker, $2,898-$3,312. Closing date is Aug. 6. For further information call at "the Bureau of Appointments and Oc- cupational Information, 201 Mason Hall. 4 University Women Veterans As- sociation: Ther'e will be a meeting of all service women at 8:00 Monday evening, July 29, Michigan League. Because By-Laws for the organiza- tion are to be submitted for adoption, it is requested that all women vet- erans be present in order to partici- pate- in this and other features of the program. Lectures Lecture: "Probable Developments in Education." Panel discussion by Raleigh Schorling, Eugene B. El- liott, George Kyte, Howard Y. Mc- Clusky, and Charles Sanford Friday, July 26, 11:00 a.m., University High School Auditorium. There will be a lecture by Profes- sor Ralph L. Beals, Department of Anthropology, University of Cali- fornia at Los Angeles on Friday, July 26 at 4:10 p.m., held in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The topic will be "Modern Indian Problems in Latin America." rhe public is invited to attend. Academic Notices History Language Examination for the. M.Q.. Degree : Saturday, July 27th, 10 o'clock, Room B, Haven Hall. Each student is responsible for his own dictionary. No other language examination to be given this summer. To Graduate Students in Educa- tion. The preliminary examinations for the doctorate in the School of Education will be held on August 26-27-28. Anyone desiring to take these examinations should notify my office, 4000 University High School o nor before August 2nd. 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. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for dropping a course without record will be Saturday, July 27. Courses may be dropped only with the permission of the classifier after conference with the instructor in the course. Graduate courses dropped after the fourth week of the Summer Session will be recorded with a grade of E, by a recent action of the Executive Board of the Graduate School. Candidates for the Teacher's Cer- tificate for August: A list of candi- dates has been posted on the bulletin board 'of the School of Education, Room 1431 University Elementary School. Any prospective candidate whose name does not appear on this list should "call at the office of the Recorder of the School of Educa- tion, 1437 University Elementary School. Doctoral Examination for Dorothy Irene Marquart, Psychology; thesis: "The Pattern of Punishment and Its Relation to Abnormal Fixation in Adult Human Subjects," Saturday, July 27, at 10:00 a.m. in Rmi. 4128 Natural Science. Chairman, N R. F. Maier. The Preliminary Examinations for the doctorate in English will be given during the 1946 summer session ac- cording to the following schedule: July31, American Literature. August 3, English Literature 1700- 1900. August 7, English Literature 1500- 1700. August 10, English Literature-Be- ginnings to'1500. The examination will be held from 9:00 to 12:00 on the days indicated. Candidates should report to 3221 A.H. for instructions. Anyone desir- ing to take the examinations should see Professor Marckwardt immediate- Holland's recital will include songs by Mozart, Chausson, Brahms, and Besley. The public is cordially invited. Lecture Recitals: Yves Tinayre, baritone, Sunday, July 28; Lee Pat- tison, pianist, Monday, July 29. Vronsky and Babin, distinguished performers of music for two pianos, w ill be heard in a special summer concert Thursday night, August 8, in Hill Auditorium.- They will be pre- sented under the auspices of the Uni- versity Musical Society. Tickets may be purchased at the offices of the University Musical Society, Burton Memorial Tower, at popular prices. Ushers . for . Vronsky-Babin . two piano concert (August 8): Students wishing to usher for concert may apply at Hill Auditorium on Friday, 'July 26 between 4:00 and 5:00 p.m. Former Choral Union ushers report 4-4:30, others 4:30-5. University of Michigan Summer Session Band: The University of Michigan Summer Session Band, con- ducted by William D. Revelli, will present a concert in Hill Auditorium, Tuesday evening, July 30, at 8:30. The program will include March. Dunedin by Alford, Jesu Joy of Man's Desiring by Bach, Overture to La Dame De Coeur by Gagnier, Stars in a Velvety Skay by Clarke, Entr' acte from Orestes by Taneyev, Trop- ical by Gould, Newsreel by Schuman, Spanish March Bravada by Curzon, First Movement from Second Sym- phony by Borodin, Percussion Melee by Ganz, Symphonie Moderne by Steiner, Marcho Poco and Rhyth- metic by Moore and March of the Free Peoples by Darcy. The public is cordially invited, Faculty Concert Series: Yves Tin- ayre, baritone, will present his second program, Sunday evening, July 28, at 8:30 in the First Presbyterian Church. Washtenaw Avenue. Mr. Tinayre's program will include Chancon, "Ver- gine bella" by Dufay, Motet for East- er, "Confitemini Domino" by Gom- bert, "Mit ganzcem Willen" by Pau- mann, Sinfonia and Motet "Erbarm dich mein" by Schutz, Salve Regina by Porpora, and Kirchenkantate No. 4, "Die Engelein" by Kriedel. By request Mr. Tinayre will perform, in addition to the announced program, an unknown work of de Pres. The public is cordially invited. Faculty Concert Series: On Mon- day evening, July 29, in Rackham Lecture Hall at 8:30, Lee Pattison, pianist, will present his fourth pro- gram in the current series of lecture recitals. Mr. Pattison's program will include: Barcarolle, Op. 60, Polon- aise in F-sharp minor, Op. 44, 'six Etudes, and Sonata in B-fiat minor by Chopin. The recital is open to the public without charge. Events Today International Center: The Inter- national Center anounces its second weekly tea dance to be held today, July 26 at 4 p.m. in the Rec Room of the International Center. For- eign students, their friends, and all interested American students are cordially invited to attend. Former and present cooperative, members and their guests are invited (r- THE OUTCOME of a struggle over new constitutional structures, now at a critical point in both France and Poland, will do much to determ- ine the future political balance of Europe. The issue in each country involves something similar to our own American system of checks and bal- ances. The people of France and Poland must decide whether they want their laws made in a single legislative body, unrestrained by any other control, or in a two-chamber legislature, where proposed laws may be subject to consideration, com- promise and adjustment. Back of this question, of course, and fundamental to its solution is the effect of the Communist party to establish minority rule through dem- ocratic forms. It consistently advo- cates the unicameral legislature. It believes that in nations where there is a multiplicity of parties a disci- plined legislative minority, voting as a bloc, can shatter the ranks of an undisciplined and divided majority or exercise a paralyzing veto. Such a condition would provide the first es- sential for a party dictatorship. Op- ponents of Communis:m see this clear- ly. They demand a bicameral legis- lature, supported by an executive and administrative set-up, which can resist such disruption and guarantee majority government. --The New York Times BARNABY By Crockett Johnson Sure. We can get delivery on a thousand tents pretty fast. We can also ram a bill through the Council. Approving the idea .. That ought to satisfy Mr. O'Malley and his friends. hope so-Say. And what does he want ...? 1 Glory? Power? Z YO Qi a r 'Twos ever thus with politics, m'boy. Our friends on the Council will need a day or two to get behind the O'Malley plan. To i build a stately city of canvas-1 want I III Hi