'THE MICfHIGAN DILTY IRTTVD3AV7ITT, TL ti LI.,.I.i. 9 ±1AId z m._. m.a- i:rA'i. a':,s.a.x. a: Vt'A. A. ". 1:1L3. AC .J:.A J: - .._._ JU1111/EIY, Jl.;LY t), lull Fit-Seventh.ta I Fifty-Seventh Year MATTER OF FACT: Marriage of Convenience BILL MAULIIN uDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN - + . Edited and managed by students of the Uni- versity of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Managing Editors ... John Campbell, Clyde Recht Associate Editor ....................Eunice Mintz Sports Editor .................... Archie Parsons Business Staff General Manager............... Edwin Schneider Advertising Manager..........William Rohrbach Circulation Manager.................Melvin Tick 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 news- paper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michi- gan, as second class mail-naatter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $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 EDITORS: Wright & Pasqualetti By JOSEPH AND STEWART ALSOP IT IS NOT IMPOSSIBLE that, for a cur- ious variety of reasons, an exceedingly important event-a marriage between the A.F. of L. and the C.I.O:-may be arranged in the not too distant future. This union of the two great labor organizations is still, in the opinion of close observers of the labor scene, a long shot. But a whole series of recent developments has measurably reduced the odds against it. The new labor measure, which the A.F. of L. leaders resent at least as bitterly as the C.I.O. chiefs, has acted as a sort of cata- lyst. It has provided the labor leaders with a mutual object of hatred, always an effect- ive means of drawing people together. But the labor act has merely served to set the ball rolling. The other forces making fo'r what labor men call "unity" may be briefly itemized. First, there is the remarkable victory which now appears to be in prospect for John L. Lewis in the coal struggle. Lewis appears in a fair way to win, from most of the coal operators without any pro- longed strike, concessions more than double the national pattern established by C.I.O. president Philip Murray in the steel settlement. Moreover this victory, if it comes about, will have been achieved within a matter of days after the hated labor measure became law. There can be little doubt of the compelling ambition, long nursed in the Lewis bosom, to be- come the undisputed grand panjandrumi of all American labor. A coal victory will mean that Lewis has vastly outdis- tanced all possible contenders for the la- bor throne. Second, Lewis is being backed for the job by David Dubinsky, the able and powerful leader of the immensely rich International Ladies' Garment Workers. The history of the Lewis-Dubinsky relationship has been one of violent rows and amiable reconcilia- tions. A period of reconciliation is now in progress. The men are close on many matters, especially in that they are two of the most effective anti-Communists in the labor movement. Like Lewis himself, Du- binsky has many admirers in the C.I.O., and his backing for Lewis will heavily weight the scales. Third, there is Philip Murray, the C.I.O. president is the big question mark. For years Murray and Lewis worked closely to- gether, when Murray was second in com- mand of the mine workers. But much bit- ter water has flowed under the bridge since those days. Many in the labor movement are certain that Murray could never bear to serve again as a subordinate to Lewis, or to see his beloved C.I.O. merged with the larger A.F. of L. Yet there are others who disagree. Murray is harried and tired. The at- 2 N11 I In Memoriam PROF. DAVID OWEN, of the speech de- partment, died Friday night at his home at the age of 48. Prof. Owen's career included contribu- tions to both the professional and academic world. His work in radio touched almost every phase of the field: actor, director, producer, writer, station manager and an- nouncer, to give an incomplete list. He start- ed the first radio daytime and children', shows. Among the well known radio shows he has directed or produced for the major networks are "Fibber McGee and Molly," "Lum and Abner," "Just Plain Bill," "Scat- tergood Baines," and "Skippy and RinTin- Tin." In the acedemic world, Prof. Owen began his career as an instructor in the speech de- partment of the University in 1926. He. taught at Northwestern University in 1927- 28. From 1929-41, he worked in radio. In 1941 he returned to the University as a Lecturer in Speech. In 1942, he was pro- moted to assistant professor; in 1946, to as- sociate professor. He was recently appoint- ed professor of speech for the 1947-48 aca- demic year. The untimely death of Prof. Owen is a great loss to the University and the radio world. Many of us have for years enjoyed the programs he directed on the radio. His courses were invaluable to speech students. His passing will be felt by all of us who have worked with him and known him. -The Senior Editors mosphere of Borgian intrigue which pre- vails at C.I.O. headquarters, brought on by the constant Communist pressure, is said to exhaust him. Moreover, the Com- munist-engineered attempt to capture the automobile workers, biggest C.I.O. union, has by no means been squashed. If it succeeds, Murray will be in a fair way to finding himself prisoner of the Commu- nists in his own organization. It is prob- able that only the A.F. of L. and John L. Lewis could free him from this bon- dage. Thus it is significant that at a recent closed meeting of the C.I..'s executive board, Murray is reported to have made an important about-turn. Some weeks before Murray had said that it was too late in the day for merger with the A.F. of L., which would only serve to spread confusion in the C.I.O. ranks. On this more recent occasion, however, he reversed himself. He called for unity at almost any price. One price is evi- dent-Murray's agreement to become sec- ond in command with John L. Lewis. The fourth important factor is the Com- munists. Like their bitterest enemy, David Dubinsky, the Communists are working for "unity." At first glance this seems passing strange. For they would appear to be fighting for the privilege of placing their heads in the lion's mouth-with the upper jaw David Dubinsky and the lower John L. Lewis. There is no doubt that if Lewis took first place in a combined organization, he would move farrmore decisively and ruth- lessly than Murray has ever moved to root out the Communists. Various explanations have been offered of the Communist possition-the desire to hide behind the skirts of a massive united organization in the difficult days ahead; the welcome opportunity to bring pressure on the whole labor movement which a merger would offer them. Perhaps the simplest explanation is that, as always, they have been listening to their master's voice. The Moscow line is clear. A re- cent Soviet English-language broadcasts to North America, for example, announced the need for unity in their ranks." All this adds up to a real possibility of an A.F. of L.-C.I.O. marriage. There are enor- mous obstacles to such a union. Intrench- ed interests would be seriously threatened, and labor politicians are as zealous in pro- tecting their empires as any other kind of politician. Yet it is not impossible that a curious by-product of the new labor measure may be a unified labor movement, thirteen million strong, led by the massive power- loving John L. Lewis. (Copright 1947, New York Herald Tribune) T HE EXPECTED recession, for which economists have been knitting little garments for months, hasn't arrived yet. The reason, some say, is that the American econ- omy is being held up by several gigantic props. One of these is our exports, which are now running to about 13 billions of dol- lars a year, or about five times as much as pre-war. It is a funny thing, but the despised and quivering outside world, about which many an American speaks with a certain drop-of- the-cigar-ash disdain, is helping to hold us up in a difficult period. If our exports were to slacken off abruptly, many an Amer- ican would suddenly find himself floating in air, with the oddest, most helpless feeling. We like to think that the rest of the world depends on America's wealth, but it also happens to be true that America de- pends, at this moment, on the rest of the world's poverty, without which the stream of goods flowing out from our shores might come to a sudden halt. Of course we are paying for some of these exports with our own grants and loans, but their effect in holding back a recession remains. Our English credit may be avert- ing relief payments in Brooklyn as well as hunger in Liverpool. You buy more than you know in this business. But of course this prop won't last for- ever. The Wall Street Journal suggests that as foreign counrties run out of dollars (their own, or ours) they will stop buying, and some of our businesses may then get that old feeling. It would seem smart to have another prop ready, against this event. It is for this reason that one suggests a pub- lic housing program. A public housing program, begun soon enough, may support the businesses of a lot of people who don't believe in housing, just as our foreign loan program supports the businesses of a lot of people who don't have much patience with foreign loans. -Samuel Grafton (Copyright 1947, New York Post Corporation BOOKS "Couldn't we call ourselves daughters of something besides the American REVOLUTION? It's such a horrid word." ON WORLD AFFAIRS: Preserving Liberty &. 'ax Veto TO THE REPUBLICANS, tax reduction is the supreme political issue, and it is not surprising that they are both angered and dismayed by the President's veto of H.R. 1. However, their wrath must have destroyed their sense of logic as they would not, in one breath, denounce Mr. Truman's action as "sheer politics" and claim it will insure their own triumph in 1948. Actually, politics can hardly have been a motive for the veto, since tax cuts are always popular, and in this case, while they would have applied on an inequitable basis, they would also have been widely spread. We believe, therefore, that Mr. Truman deserves credit for both courage and sin- cerity in challenging Congress on this issue, although we are not prepared wholly to in- dorse his reasoning. The message accom- panying the veto declared that the bill rep- resented "the wrong kind of tax reduction at the wrong time." We agree with the first part of the sen- tence but are not convinced that this is the wrong time for some reduction in the government's "take" from the national in- come. Mr. Truman cited figures shpwing that we are still on the crest of a boom, with the economy still subject to inflation- ary pressures. But signs indicate that by fall, when tax reduction would begin to have effect, deflationary forces may be gaining the upper hand. In this event, additional effective purchasing power in the pockets of consumeis might prove a useful stab- ilizing factor. That would require, however, a bill very different from the one just vetoed. -The Nation CRITICS AND CRUSADERS: A century of American Protest. By Charles A. Mad- ison. New York: Henry Holt & Co. 1947. 537 pp. LONG, LONG AGO, in the days before pocket size books and beautiful lady novelists, people used to stock up their li- braries with stories of saints' lives. Some- how, this book is reminiscent of that-time and can be read with as much relish as was once derived, strangely enough, from those semi-religious tracts. For in the same sense, this is also a religious tract, the story of the shining lights of reform movements in America. Covering the period roughly between 1820 and 1920, the book is composed of six main divisions, headed, "The Abolitionists," "The Utopians," "The Anarchists," "The Dissi- dent' Economists," "The Militant Liberals," and "The Socialists." Three leaders in each division are treated-their lives, their work. their failures and achievements. The greatest criticism that might be made of this book concerns its undisguised and enthusiastic sympathy with these "critics" and "crusaders." While one can hardly ob- ject to an author's having a passionate pre- judice in favor of his subject, this sort of zeal results, in this case, in producing a book which lacks the necessary cold, im- partial facts to create a more sufficient background than Madison has achieved. The circumstances which provoked these men to devote their lives to a cause, and the opposing forces, are not given in full enough detail to place the rest of the story in its proper perspective. The author's pur- pose was not, however, to write a history book, but rather a series of personality sketches, and in this he does succeed. Each chapter, lively and colorful, never dull, serves as an excellent introduction to an- other of the men "who are most respon- sible for our social and economic freedom," in the author's own words. Those words are a bit too wide in scope, for .only 18 men are treated, on almost all of whom the label "propagandist" may be placed. This neglects a good many others, but that they all con- tributed in some way or other to what is called "the American way of life" is certain. It is interesting to consider the future, ton. By EDGAR ANSEL MOWRER "FOUR SCORE and seven years ago our fathers brought forth upon this continent a nation con- ceived in liberty-" So let us ask ourselves how that nation's liberty can be preserved. For the tide running against lib- erty throughout the world is be- ginning to tug at America. Yet liberty-according to the great English Catholic, Lord John Acton (Lectures on the History of Freedom, 1878)-"is not a means to a higer political end. It is itself the highest political end." Many Americans have forgot- ten this. Some are even urging our people to put security before libetry. "You can't eat liberty," they sneer. And you can't breathe bread. Liberty is like air. Lord Acton said: "A generous spirit prefers that his country should be poor and weak and of no account but free, rather than powerful pros- perous and enslaved." Before our country can really put security above freedom, it will have to erase Jefferson and Paine and Lincoln. Every great crisis brings with it the temptation for weak men to set aside civil liberties on the ground that security comes first. This started after World War I- and subsided. It began again in World War II. It is continuing now, swollen by the corporate trade union tendencies of indus- try, spurred by the double atom- Russia threat. Thomas Paine warned his con- temporaries against just this. In his "Thoughts on the Peace," writ- ten at the conclusion of the Rev- olutionary War, he stated: "It is not among the least of the calamaties of a long-continued war that it unhinges the mind from those nice sensations that at other times appear so amiable. The continual spectacle of woe blunts the finer feelings and the necessity of bearing with the fight renders it familiar. In like man- ner are the moral obligations of society weakened, till thecustom of acting by necessity becomes an apology where it is truly a crime. Let but a nation conceive rightly of its character and it will be chastely just in protecting it. None ever began with a fairer one than America. and non can be under a greater obligation to preserve it." An integral part of this na- tional character is respect for civil liberties. Belittling them can become "an apology where it is truly crime." What is the evidence? Plenty. Small things but significant. The tendency of the American people to allow power to slip into the hands of the military and to widen the area of police investigation and control can- not be overlooked. A correspondent of the English Manchester Guardian finds that "the press attacks on Charlie Chaplin during the last few weeks have revealed an aspect of Amer- ican public life that has frightful possibilities." A recent decision by the Su- preme Court (George Harris vs. the United States of America, May 5, 1947), apparently widened the right of police search to a dan- gerous degree. An earlier decision, "Ex Parte Mitsuye Endo," partially justify- ing the arbitrary removal of Amer - ican ciitzens of Japanese origin from their homes, seemed to dem- onstrate how quickly Supreme Court justices can yield to the theory that public safety is the supreme law. Paine thought that "a consti- tution is the property of a nation and not of those who exercise the government . . ." Our own con- stitution was demonstrably amended to protect popular liber- ties precisely. in times of crisis when people yield to panic. Recently, ten State Depart- ment employes were fired for "dangerous thoughts." Maybe they deserved it. But they were not told of the nature of the charges against them nor giv- en any chance to refute them. Here is the anonymous denun- ciation of the Lion's Mouth at Venice. Here is a revival of the infamous French lettres de cach- et. The House of Representatives is considering a bill that would com- pel the FBI to check the attitude of one million six hundred thou- sand empolyes. These items add up to a trend Can anyone guarantee that un- . less it is stopped-particularly in case of an atomic armament race-the Land of the Free will not become a hateful Police State similar to the Axis coun- tries? Publication in The Daily Officia 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). SUNDAY, JULY 6, 194'7 VOL. LVII, No. 9S Notices Registration Blanks may be ob- tained at the University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information, 201 Mason Hall on Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. Office hours are: 9 to 12; 2 to 4. Those interested in securing posi- tions in the immediate future are urged to register with the Bureau at once. This applies to both the General Placement and Teacher Placement divisions of the Bur- eau. Candian undergraduate stu- dents: Application blanks for the Paul J. Martin Scholarship for Canadian undergraduate students may be obtained at the Scholar- ship Office, Room 205, University Hall. To be eligible a student must have been enrolled in the University for at least one sem- ester of the school year 1946-47. All applications should be returned to that office by Wednesday, July 16, 1947. The scholarship will be assigned on the basis of need and super- ior scholastic achievement. Cancellation of recital: The Faculty Recital previously an- nounced for Tuesday evening, July 8, in Hill Auditorium, has been cancelled. The next pro- gram in the Tuesday series will be heard on July 15, when the Uni- versity of Michigan Band will pre- sent its Annual summer concert. Closing hours for women's resi- dences during the summer session are as follows: 11:00 p.m.-Sun- day through Thursday. 12:30 a.m. -Friday and Saturday. Office of the Dean of Women All summer students in sociology are invited to attend an informal social hour from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m., Tuesday, July 8, in the East Con- ference Aioom of the Rackham Building. Dr. G. S. Delatour, vis- iting professor from Columbia University, will be a special guest. German Club picnic will be held Wednesday, July 9, with swim- ming, games, and refreshments. Students will meet at the Univ. Hall parking lot at 5 p.m. Please make reservations at the depart- mental office, 204 Univ. Hall by noon, Tues., July 8. Teacher Placement: Representatives from the De- pendents Schools Service in Ger- many will be in the office of the Bu r e a u of Appointments on Thursday and Friday, July 10 and 11. The office is screening can- didates for positions in all elemen- tary grades and men candidates for work in science and physical education at the secondary level. We are now being asked to inter- view candidates for superinten- dencies at five thousand per an- num,, and a director of instruc- tion at $7300. Qualified persons who are interested in these posi- tions should get in touch with the Bureau immediately so that ap- pointients for interviews with the visiting representatives may be made. Bur. of Appts. & Occup. Inf. Kakeup Examination in Eco- nomics 51, 52, 53, 54, July 7, at 2:00 o'clock in Room 5 Economics Building. time his lectures will be MWF at 11. Dr. A. Pais, Inst. for Advanced Study, Princeton will speak on Elementary Particle Problems, on MWF at 10 a.m., Rackham Audi- torium, starting Monday, June.30. Dr. James L. Lawson, General Electric Co., will speak on Produc- tion and Measurements of High Energy Radiation, TThS., at 10 a.m., Rackham Auditorium, start- iig Tuesday, July 8. The Graduate Outing Club will meet for a bicycle hike on Sunday July 6th at 2:30 p.m. at the north- west entrance to the Rackham Building. Please sign up before noon on Saturday at the check desk in the Rackham Building. Posture, figure and carriage clinic, open to women students in- terested in improving general con- dition, learning to work more ef- ficiently, and improving their fig- ures. Clinic hours 4 to 5 p.m. Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fri- days, and 5 p.m. on Fridays be- ginning this week. Barbour Gym- nasium. Open Daily Play Hour, men and women students. Athletic Build- ing. 7 to 9 Monday, Tuesday, Wed- nesday, Thursday, and Friday eve- nings. Activities: croquet, deck tennis, badminton, ping pong, shuffleboard, horseshoes, clock golf. Record dancing on terrace. Delta Kappa Gamma, honorary education society, will hold a pic- nic at North Lake on Friday, July 11. All members who are on the campus this summer are invited to attend. Transportation will be provided. Reservations should be given to Miss Sarita Davis, Uni- versity Elementary School, phone 4121, Extension 360, or 5382, by Wednesday, July 9. Deadline for Veterans' Book :ndl Supply Requisitions. August 22, 1947 has been set as the deadline for the approval of Veterans' Book and Supply Requisitions for the Summer Session-1947. Requisi- tions will be accepted by the boo stores through August 23, 1947. La p'tite causette meets every Tuesday and Wednesday at 3:30 in the Grill Room of the Michigan League and at 4:00 on Thursdays in the International Center. All students interested in informal Frenchconversation are cordially invited to join the group. Charles E. Koella The Modern Poetry Club, open to all interested in discussing modern poetry, will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. in 3217 Angell Hall. Subject: The Imagist Poets. Pi Lambda Theta meeting, Tues- day, July 8. Coffee hour 7 p.mn., West Conference Room, Rackham Building. 7:30 p.m. West Lecture Room. Dr. Elzada Clover will give a talk illustrated by film slides on the plant life of Guatamala. Michigan Chapter of the pro- posed Indian Institute of Chemical Engineers--Meeting of the mem- bers on Monday, July 7, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3201 E. Engineering. Lectures Dr. Robin A. Humphreys, Read- er in American History in the Uni- versity of London will givea lec- ture, "Policies and Tendencies in Latin America," Tuesday, July 8, 4:10 p.m., Rackham Amphithea- tre. This will be the second lec- ture inhthe Summer Lecture Ser- ies, "The United States in World Affairs." The public is invited. Professor Walter L. Wright, Jr., Professor of Turkish Language and History, Princeton University, will give a lecture, "A Near East Pol- icy in the Making," Thursday, July 10, 4:10 p.m., Rackham Am- phitheatre. This is a lecture in the Summer Lecture Series, "The United States in World Affairs.." The public is invited. Concerts Concerts: The second in the series of Monday evening recitals sponsored by the School of Music, will be presented at 8:30 July 7, in the Rackham Lecture Fall, when Joseph Knitzer, violinist, 01- iver Edel, cellist, and, Joseph Brinkman, pianist, will appear in a program of chamber music by Brahms. It will consist of Trio in C major, Op. 87, for Violin, Cello, and Piano, and Trio in C minor, Op. 101, for Violin, Cello, and Pi- ano. The general public is cordially invited. Student Recital: Robert Gordon Waltz, Tenor, will present a pro- gram in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music at 8:30 Wednes- day evening, July 9, in the Rack- (. ( Admittedly, there are reasons. The pro-Russian menace is real. The Political Science 2 makeup Big industry incites the workers to exam will be given Monday, July form big unions. Freedom suf- 14 from 2-5 in room 2037 A. H. fers Our answer cannot be the Rus- Summer Symposium in Nuclear sian answer. To win in competi- physics: tion with Russia we shall have to Three courses of lectures on Nu- obtain adequate economic and po- clear Physics -will be given this litical security without sacrifice of summer. basic liberties. Prof. Victor F. Weisskopf of M. Failing here we shall find that I.T. will speak on the Statistical in preserving our country we have Theory of Hevy Nuclei, His first sacrificed what made it worth lecture will be on Tuesday, July preserving. 1, at 11 a.m. in the Rackham (Copyright 1947, Press Alliance, Inc.) Auditorium. Following this first BARNABY... Let me get this straight. You told your parents I'd returned? And they made no comment? How very odd. 0 But wait- There's an explanation. They're speechless with joy. Words fail them at a moment like this-® How thoughtful of J. J. O'Malley, they're thinking, to resume his duties as Barnaby's Fairy Godfather . li --- Words can't ex It's a shock to I believe he's se pixie again- A f< - tt~W~'l'~4Z~ N..pc;.- xpre have eing Afer ss how Ifeel. Barnaby Yes, Ifeel that liffle Terrible, too. rible shock! 77Cush amochree! 0 2 0 ', I L -1 I ____j i