THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1947 ,._.._.. I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: SALittle Paradox BILL MAULDIN Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches redited to it or otherwise credited in this news- )aper. All rights of republication of all other natters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michi- gan, as second class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mal, $6.00. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1946-47 Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR MALCOLM WRIGHT Survey Center. LAST MONTH the work of a new division of the University received extensive at- tention from the newspapers and magazines; of the nation. The new unit, the Survey Research Center, had published the results of its national survey on consumer finances, its first major economical report since join- ing the University last fall. The report, released by the Federal Re- serve Board for whom the survey was con- ducted, was a very important item for bus- inessmen, legislators and the general pub- lic. It indicated what the nation had in durable goods (refrigerators, radios, cars, housing, etc.) in 1946, what it planned to buy in 1947 and how it planned to finance these purchases. The American economy, which largely - runs or falters on the eagerness or fears of the public to buy, will be healthy and vigorous through 1947 if the persons in- terviewed in the beginning of the year are a true gauge. Though the survey Indicates purchase of durable goods will be more restrained than in 1946, continu- ing maximum incomes apparently will keep buying at high levels. With the gen- eral rise in prices, however, it is expected that savings and credit will play a larger part in buying than in. the previous year. This report, like a pulse to the doctor, re- veals the condition of his patient to the businessman. Looking forward to the dem- onstration of buying. power revealed in this survey, the businessman won't be hasty in cutting prices, it is true. .Yet knowledge of a willingness to buy will encourage produc-, tion which means jobs, and if carried far enough, will lead to production adequte to supply demand, thus forcing prices down. The accuracy of the survey techniques employed has been confirmed by checking results with certain known totals. Bring- ing out the significance of the reports, a comparision of two surveys taken a year apart shows that people bought almost an identical amount of durable goods as they had expected to at the beginning of the year. Led by Dr. Rensis Likert, director of the center, the staff members came to Michigan from the Department of Agri- culture where they completed many war- time surveys for various government agencies. Among their surveys were: the effect of strategic bombing on the morale of the German and Japanese civilians; people's use of the radio; and attitudes toward the atomic bomb, the United Na- tions and American foreign policy. Working on contract, the center has al- most unlimited survey subjects. It is evi- dent the center will provide the University community and the country with much val. dable and interesting information in the days to come. -Ted Miller By SAMUEL GRAFTON TODAY I WANT TO peddle a little para- dox, if I may, involving our relations with the rest of the world. There runs across this country now, like a grass fire, the tense whisper that we have started back toward inflation entirely be- cause the rest of the world is making such huge relief demands on us. Here we were, MATTER OF FACT: Conservatism By JOSEPH AND STEWART ALSOP THE JUST FINISHED session of the Eightieth Congress leaves behind one big political question: "Just how conserva- tive is the Republican party?" It has been bitterly remarked that on a secret ballot, a good many Republicans in Congress (like a good many Southern Democrats) would cheerfully vote to shoot the poor. But no party is to be judged by its lunatic fringe. The peculiar nature of the Republican strategy makes the problem difficult. Know- ing that the Republican record in Congress would play a large part in the coming elec- tion, the party's Congressional leaders tacit- ly agreed on a decidedly astute plan. This session was to be devoted to legislation desired by business, such as the Taft-Hart- ley labor law and the tax relief bills. The next session was to be (and presumably still is to be) given to measures with a broader-based appeal, such as the Taft housing, education and welfare bills. The Republicans and Southern Demo- crats have whooped through the meas- ures business wanted with loud cries of joy. Now the problem is whether Sen- ator Robert A. Taft and the other Re- publican leaders can shove, drag or other- wise persuade the rank and file to ap- prove the extremely mild program of so- cial legislation. Certain powerful business elements emphatically do not want this social legislation. And judging by the record of these elements' influence in the session just concluded, the outlook for the next session is none too good. In the field of housing, for example, such prospering spokesmen of free enterprise as Morton Bodfish, of the United Savings and Home League, have been exceedingly active. The Taft housing -bill has been partly em- asculated in the Senate committee, and completely blocked in the House. Mean- while the effort of former Housing Admin- istrator Wilson Wyatt has been completely wrecked; the Administration's feeble post- Wyatt struggles to do something about hous- ing have been rendered even feebler; and the so-called voluntary rent hike has been shoved through the Congress. The rent hike did not suit the housing lobby. They wanted all ceilings off. And such warm sympathizers as Senator John W. Bricker, of Ohio, (who once remarked the "Marxists must have gotten to Bob Taft," because of the Taft housing bill) did their best to help the lobby. Another symptomatic episode was the passage of the wool bill, which did such ser- ious harm abroad despite President Tru- man's veto. Byron Wilson and his Nation- al Wood Growers of course control the votes of the wool states. But the rest of the Senators and Representatives who made up the wool bill's majorities seemed to be chief- ly influenced by nostalgia for the happy pasti times of tariff log rolling. The somewhat bemused Representative Pace of Georgia (one of the Republicans' leading Southern Democratic allies) told the House that so far as he knew "there was not a sheep" in his 3rd Congress District. But, he asked, how was he to get help for his peanuts if he did not help wool? Then a well organized group of about 20,000 large Western ranchers have scored a major triumph. Their aim was to enrich themselves from the public lands at the ex- pense of the whole West. They first tried to have the vast Western public lands sold to them outright at bargain basement prices. This grab failed. So the ranchers turned to the always obliging appropriations commit- tees, and cut the gizzard out of the Interior Department's funds for protecting the pub- lic lands from over-grazing. There is no space here to describe the gaggles of railroad lobbyists who have pushed the Bulwinkle and Reed bills and all the other like them. The main point is that this Congress has shown a remarkable responsiveness to special business interests., This responsiveness is deeply feared by such, wise Republicans as Senator Ives of New York. It poses a strikingly difficult prob- lem for such leaders as Senator Taft, who must beat the housing lobby in order to pass his housing bill. And, above all, it raises the question whether Republican conserva- tism is simply to consist of flabby yielding to this type of' pressure, or is to be the gen- uine conservatism which conserves what is good without fear or favor. (Copyright, 1947, New York Herald Tribune) PRELIMINARY FIGURES for the first half of 1947 made public by the Civil Aeronautics Board show that 5.8 passengers were killed on the scheduled domestic air- lines for every 100,000,000 passenger-miles flown. These figures compare with a rate of minding our own business, goes the saying, and settling down to lower prices, when sud- denly Europe went hungry, and disrupted us. And so it is being said, or hissed, that we are not only paying the relief bill directly in the first instance but that we are also paying it a second time through inflation at home because of the resulting scarcities. Marie McDonald is The Body, Frank Sin- atra is The Voice, and the whole rest of the world is The Mouth. The funny thing is that if you were to walk down Wall Street and suggest to a representative leader of the business com- munity that we stop our exports, he would turn a delicate shade of green, contrast- ing admirably with the steeple of Trinity Church. For domestic buying is, in a number of categories, slowing down. The Wall Street Journal reports that expensive vacuum cleaners, console radios and electric refrig- erators can no longer be considered scarce. Dollar value of sales in department stores is up, but that is because prices are higher; physical volume of sales is down. And while higher dollar sales may keep the front of- fice happy, it takes high physical volume to keep the production staff at work. In this juncture, it is our exports which are, to an important degree, keeping us going. Figures bob wildly in this field to- day, so that it is hard to make compu- tations, but our exports are running from at least 15 to 20 or more billions of dol- lars a year. Most of these are not relief shipments; in May (still according to the Wall Street Journal) we shipped only 224 millions of dollars worth of food, and over a billion dollars worth of manufactured goods, and the larger part of this did not go to Europe, but to countries in this con- tinent. So here's our paradox: The rest of the world, which is considered, in the better class poolrooms and smoking cars to be keeping us down, is holding us up. It is an embarrassing and, in some ways, humiliating position in which to find one- self. For the platform on which the for- eign-hating politician mounts to look down upon the rest of the world is built, in par. of foreign orders. If these were suddenly withdrawn, he might find himself complet- ing his speech from an awkward and un- stable position on the back of his neck. It is understandably difficult to concede that one of the reasons we can look down so easily on the rest of the world is that the rest of the world is holding us up. That does violence to the social myth that we are always being put upon by the rest of the cosmos; and it is one of the characteristics of social myths that they can persistently and resolutely blot out fact. It is time we smashed this legnd, which goes back to our barefoot colonial days; it is startling to find that it per- sists so strongly, in spite of. all circum- stantial change, and to smash it will be one of the essential tasks in putting over the Marshall Plan. If we aren't nicer to the rest of the world we may lose that superiority which alone makes it possible for us to be so nice to the rest of the world. (Copyright 1947, New York Post Corporation) RUSSIA'S REFUSAL to accept the Ameri- can suggestion of an eleven-power con- ference to prepare a peace treaty with Ja- pan is not unexpected. It is just another of the Soviet Union's desperate attempts to defend a war-time device. This device is the great power "veto". Or- iginally ismuggled into the organization of UNRRA, it was introduced into nearly all of the international bodies subsequently set up. As used by the Russians it constitutes a precision instrument whereby less than twenty percent of the world's inhabitants can effectively vote down concerted action by the other eighty percent. Within the UN Security Council, the So- viets have wielded the veto hammer no less than ten times. (On one occasion the French were associated with them.) The United States and Britain have in- dulged in just one "questionable veto"- namely, when they voted against the ad- mission to the UN of Albania and Mongolia. But both governments insist that as the vote would have been negative anyway, this was not a true veto, which they define as a deliberate overriding of a majority opinion. -Edgar Ansel Mowrer (Copyright 1947, Press Alliance, Inc.) !1 - SONQUEST jf C30 Cop. 947 by United Feature Syndicate, e. M 4N-All rights reserved "So you're the new owner. I was so afraid they me out to pasture . ." /., ' , -1' . ,; ' .' l i. Letters to the Editor... Iq were going to turn DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the summer session, Room 1213 Angell Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day pre- ceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- urdays). WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1947 VOL. LVII, No. 25S Notices Notice of Regents' Meeting: The next meeting of the Regents will be on September 26, 1947, at 2 p.m. Communications for consid- eration at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than September 18. Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary Seniors: College of Literature, Science, anid the Arts, Schools of Education, Music and Public Health: Tentative lists of seniors for August graduation have been posted on the bulletin Board in Room 4 University Hall. If your name does not appear, or if in- cluded there, is not correctly spelled, please notify the counter clerk. Edward G. Groesbeck Assistant Registrar Fellowships for Research and for Creative Work in Fine Arts, including Music. The John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation offers a limited number (forty to sixty) Fellowships for research and for creative work in the fine arts with an annual stipend not to exceed $2,500. Citizens of the United States, men or women, mar- ried or unmarried, between the ages of twenty-five and forty, who have demonstrated unusual ca- pacity for research or who possess unusual creative ability are eligi- ble to apply irrespective of race, color, or creed. Applications must be made on or before October 16, 1947. For more complete details, consult the Scholarship Division, Office of Student Affairs, Room 205, University Hall. Professors Lemler and Schorling will provide a second showing of the pictures on Teacher Educa- tion at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, July 30, at the Rackham Auditorium. Please carry this message to those who could not be admitted on Monday or to those who had poor seats. Deadline for Veterans' Book and supply Requisitions. August 22,1947 has been set as the dead- line for the approval of Veterans' Book and Supply Requisitions for the Summer Session-1947. Re- quisitions will be accepted by the book 1947. stores through August 23,' Approved Social Events for this Week: Afternoon events are marked with an asterisk: July 30, Brown League House; August 1, AVC, IRA, Michigan Union, Mich- igan League, and Student Legis- lature Dance; August 2, Alpha Phi Alpha, Delta Tau Delta, In- terco-operative Council, Theta Xi; August 3, Michigan Sailing Club Regatta.* General Placement: Victor Chemical Works, Chica- go, will be at the Bureau on Wed- nesday, July 30, to interview grad- uates for Chemical Engineers and Chemists (Analytical, Organic, Bio-chemistry, and Food Tech- nology). Call extension 371 for appointment. Civil Service: Civil Service Commission, Buf- falo, New York announces exam- inations for the positions of I- Assistant Planner, and L-Chief Planner, with the City Planning Commission of Buffalo. Call at the Bureau for further informa- tion. Teacher Placement: San Diego City Schools, San Diego, California has an opening for Music-Coordinator. Call ex- tension 489 for further informa- tion. The Board of National Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. announces vacancies in the following positions: Kitchen & Dining Room Supervisors, Boys' Coach & Asst. Dormitory Super- visor, Commercial Teachers, As- s i s t a n t Dietitian, Mathematics Teacher, Mathematics, Mechani- cal Drawing & Industrial Arts Teacher, Music Teacher, Office Secretary, Elementary Teachers, Girls' Dormitory S u p e r v i s o r s, Laundry Supervisor, Maintenance Engineer, Woman Doctor and 2 Nurses, and Nurses. Call at the Bureau for further information. President Chaffee, Boise Junior College, Boise, Idaho, will be at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall, Wednesday after- noon, July 30, to interview candi- dates for the following vacancies: chemistry, business administra- tion, industrial arts, history, pub- lic relations, economics, zoology, engineering, and business. Any- one interested may make an ap- pointment for an interview by calling 4121, extension 489, before Wednesday noon. Bur. of Appts. & Occup. Inf. La Sociedad Hispanica meets every Tuesday and Wednesday for informal conversation at 3:30 p.m. and every Thursday for tea at the International Center. All those interested in speaking Span- ish are invited to attend. EDITOR'S NOTE: Because The Daily prints EVERY letter to the editor (which is signed, 300 words or less in length, and in good taste) we re- mind our readers that the views ex- pressed in letters are those of the writers only. Letters of more than 300 words are shortened, printed or omitted at the discretion of the edi- torial director. Protest To the Editor: Quoting from the edition of July 24, in re the feature "It So Happens"~ . . . "We haven't re- ceived any letter of protest since we stopped running this colum in the spring, but we still think it's terrific." Why you poor dears! Here's mine, and you may assume all kinds of indignation in my voice: "Hey, what do you mean by discontinuing the column It So Happens'? That and 'Barnaby' are the main reasons I read The Daily. Please reinstate the column immediately or cancel my sub- scription. Icily yours." There now, feel better? -Phyllis L. Turner Communists To the Editor: AM SURPRISED that The Michigan Daily which has done such an excellent job of headlin- ing the exposures of the un-Amer- ican Committee has not even men- tioned the most dastardly and de- ceitful piece of infiltration ever perpetuated by the American Communists. I am referring, of course, to the mass infiltration of the armed services by 15,000 American Communists in the re- cent war. These disloyal elements tried in every way to ary on their subversive work. In their attempts to overthrow our government many of these traitorous agents La Sociedad Hispanica presents Mr. Emiliano Gallo Ruiz from the Romance Languages Department who will speak on "La Estetica de la Pintura Mejicana Moderna." Wednesday, July 30, 8:00 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Building. A Square Dancing Class, spon- sored by the Graduate Outing Club will be held on Thursday, July 31st at 8:00 p.m. in the Lounge of the Women's Athletic Building. Everyone Welcome. A small fee will be charged. The AVC will hold its last meet- ing of the Summer Semester Wed- nesda yJuly 30 at 7:00 p,m. in the Union. There will be an important spe- cial meeting of the University of Michigan Flying Club, July 30, at 7:30 p.m. All members please at- tend or call Marline Riese at 9764. La p'tite causette meets every Tuesday and Wednesday at 3:30 in the Grill Room of the Mich- igan League and on Thursdays at 4:00 at the International Center. All students interested in inform- al French conversation are cor- dially invited to join this group. The French Club will hold its sixth meeting on Thursday, July 31, at 8 p.m. in the second floor Terrace Room of the Michigan Union. Professor Ernest F. Had- en will give an informal talk en- titled: "Les Acadiens dans l'est du Canada." Miss Anne Battley will sing some French songs. Group singing, games, refreshments. All students interested are cordially invited. Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity (Epsilon ,Chapter) will meet on Thursday, July 31, at 7:00 p.m. at the Union. Refunds and invita- tions will be distributed. Lectures Dr. John H. Giese from the Ball- istics Research Laboratory, Aber- deen, Maryland, will give three' lectures on "The Differential Geo- metry of Compressible Flows with Degenerate Hodographs. (Parts I and II: Steady Potential Flow. Part III: S t e a d y Rotational Flow.)" actually went so far as to receive battlefield commissions, medals for bravery, and permanent un- derground resting places overseas. A few examples ought to dem- onstrate just how successful this outrageous infiltration was: Sgt. Bob Thompson, chairman of the Ney York State Commu- nists Party, actually hoodwinked the government into giving him a Distinguished Service Cross merely because he participated in a few battles and was wounded a few times. Capt. Herman Boettcher was a Communist who not only tried to destroy out institutions, but went so far as to try to overthrow the established Japanese government in Burma by sneakily infiltrating behind Japanese lines and dis- rupting normal activities there. When this man, who had pre- viously received a battlefield com- mission and a DSC (on direct orders from Moscow which were transmitted through the White House, no doubt), was killed by a Japanese mortar, some insid- ious forces wrote an obituary about him which appeared in "Yank" magazine. Capt. Alexander Suer was an- other Communist upon whom the War Department was forced to pin a DSC with a cluster. This paratrooper doctor received fatal wounds after he infiltarted behind German lines to administer medi- cal aid to and, of course, indoc- trinated some wounded para- troopers. Many other Communists such as Irv Goff, Johnny Gates, and Hank Forbes engaged in similar attempts to destroy our American Way of Life. I hope that The Michigan Daily will do its utmost to let the American people know the alarming extent to which Communists subversively infiltrat- ed into our armed services. -Edward H. Shaffer The first lecture will be sched- uled for Monday, July 28, at 7:30 p.m., the second for Tuesday, July 29, at 4 p.m., and the third for Wednesday, July 30, at 4 p.m. All lectures will be given in Room 317 West Engineering Building. Dr. Donald D. Brand, Professor of Anthropo-Geography and Head of the Department of Anthropolo- gy, University of New Mexico, and recently Cultural Geographer in Mexico for the Institute of Social Anthropology of the Smithsonian Institution, will lecture on "Sc- entific and Cultural Relations be- tween the United States and Mex- ico," Thursday, July 31, at 4:10 p.m., R a c k h a m Amphitheatre. This is a lecture in the Summer Session Lecture Series, "The United States in World Affairs." The public is invited. Academic Notices History Language Examination for the M.A. degr~ee: Saturday, August 2, at 10 o'clock, Room B, Haven Hall. Each student is re- sponsible for his own dictionary and also must register at the His- tory Department Office before taking the examination. Concerts University Symphony Orchestra, Wayne Dunlap, Conductor, will be heard in its annual summer concert at 8:30 Wednesday eve- ning, July 30, in Hill Auditorium. The program will open with Bee- thoven's Prometheus Overture, followed by Mozart's Piano Con- certo No. 27 in B flat Major,, K. 595, in which James Wolfe will appear as soloist. The second half of the concert includes Faure's Suite from the Stage Music to Haraucourt's Comedy, with Howard Kellogg, Tenor as soloist. The public is cordially invited. Carillon Recital: Percival Price, University Carillonneur, will pre- sent an All Mozart Program Thursday evening, July 31, 7:15 p.m. The compositions will include Romance from "Eine kleine Nach- musik," Sonata (arr. from Violin Sonata No. 18), Ave Verums 1 and 2, Glockenspiel musik from "The Magic Flute," and the Waltzes 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 10, 12. Student Recital: Students of the School of Music from classes in Theory and Musicology will present a Panorama of Secular Music of theMiddle Ages, Renais- sance, and Baroque, Thursday evening, July 31, at 8:30 in the Rackham Assembly Hall, under the direction of Louise E. Cuyler. The program will include compo- sitions for a brass ensemble, di- rected by Paul Bryan, a madrigal group, conducted by Wayne Dun- lap, and a chamber orchestra, un- der the direction of Edwyn Hames. The public is cordially invited. The Regular Thursday Evening Record Concert sponsored by the Graduate School will include Mo- zart's "Hunt" Quartet, Bach Arias and Organ Music. All graduate students are cordially invited. I 44 j 4' A I BARNABY... ECONOMY' IN THE Federal government seems a will-o'-the-wisp'as one pursues it through all the gobbledegook of authori- zations, appropriations,,rescissions, contract authorizations, deficiencies', urgent deficien- cies and emergencies-not to mention polit- ical charges and counter-charges and the pressure of lobbies. Therefore, it is all the more to the credit of the Eightieth Congress that it wound up its first session with econ- omies of about $2,766,000,000 on President Truman's original budget estimates of ap- nvrnintionr vorirer for fiscal 1948 Conn- I forbid you to leave the house, Angelica.. . Stay in your room. You cannot meet Bob tonight ... Butmother, 7-9 How fortunate he's not impulsive and romantic. If he really were she'd never listen to me .. . But then times have changed since I was a girl- Men are so ' prosaic today ... acK mo/e. I i 9 Someone's in the garden singing. Wait--1see a shadow under MY Tee-hee. Is it someone who's 0 i I