THE MICHIGAN DAILY Whither Civil Rights? RESIDENT HARRY S. TRUMAN'S ex- ecutive order to the armed services was one of the most distinct fizzles he has con- cocted so far. If Congress is to measure the amount of civil rights action expected of it by the extent of the action Truman has taken in dealing with racial bias in the armed forces, it doesn't have a very large job to do. Congress might just as well settle down for a two-week snooze. By saying nothing and achieving as much, the President has only entrenched even more deeply the vice he somehow hopes to eliminate. The strongest statement he can muster enough courage to make is: "Equality of treatment and opportunity for all persons in the armed services without regard to color, race or national origin." The qualifying phrase, "Putting it (the equality principle) into effect as soon as possible" leaves a gaping loophole through which the white supremacy advocates can escape as soon as they see the word "equality." This might be 100 years if military minds have their way. (Gen. Dwight Eisenhower declared recently that "separate units for Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: FREDRICA WINTERS the races are better for the efficiency of the armed services as well as for both races.") One cute restriction tied onto the tail of the executive order is that the racial equal- ity provision is to be put into effect only where "efficiency" and "morale" are not im paired. The remaining five sections of the Presi- dent's order outlines the organization of an advisory committee to be known as the President's Committee on Equality of Treat- ment and Opportunity in the Armed Serv- ices. The committee will have power to ex- amine the present military setup in regard to the application of the "equal treatments" clause and make suggestions only. * The end of segregation and favoritism that has been demanded by liberal lead- ers and especially Negro organizations, is nowhere to be found. The Negro divisions and special sleeping quarters in camps and ships will continue. The President's statement appears to be just a thin and poorly-constructed fish net thrown out for the votes it will garner. And because few people read the texts of ex- ecutive orders, Truman is probably quite safe in assuming that it will be successful. The only voters who will be pleased with the text of the President's orders will be the "Dixiecrats" who will probably welcome Truman back to the fold. But those who conscientiously hope for an end to segregation in the armed services and unwritten military class laws will iden- tify Truman with the class of petty vote- seekers. -Craig Wilson. MATTER OF FACT: Price Fight By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON-Washington is a city of angry men. The Republicans are furious to a man. Southern blood is boiling. And President Harry S. Truman, the cause of it all, is angry too. His special message to Congress was a good deal less shrill than his acceptance speech in Philadelphia. But the mood of that speech persists. Truman's advisers asked him casually last week when he intended to send his message to Congress. Truman replied irritably that he did not intend to send it at all-he was going to take it himself, and the Republicans could boo till they were blue in the face. The President is, in fact, spoiling for a fight, and what he mostly wants to fight about its prices. He made that quite clear at last week's Cabinet meeting, when he laid down the law with unaccustomed fire. The special session program had, in fact, already been worked out in broad outline before the Cabinet met. Most of the preparatory work on the price control measures, which are the heart of the message, was done by Paul Porter, former O.P.A. Adminis- trator, with the advice of Presidential Counsel Clark Clifford and Economic Ad- viser Leon Keyserling among others. Some consideration was given by these men to a much more drastic program than that the President has now presented to Congress. This involved the absolute freez- ing of all prices and wages at present levels, on the simple theory, as one Presidential adviser put it, that "this thing has got to stop." This idea was soon discarded as un- realistic especially since it was believed that it might give the impression that the Ad- ministration was preparing for war. Pressure from labor leaders to eliminate all references to wage controls was also resisted, largely on Porter's advice. What finally emerged was something very like the Administration price program which received short shrift from the Congress last autumn. The Administration can be expected to present the special session program to the Congress and the electorate with a good deal more force and discipline than was the case nine months ago. Porter will be the Generalissimo of the whole operation. Chi; witness for the Administration proposals will be Secretary of Commerce Charles Saw- yer, Secretary of Agriculture Charles F. Brannan, and Secretary of the Interior Jul- ius Krug. At a Monday caucus of Republican lead- ers, the House contingent expressed senti- ment for an immediate adjournment. It was argued that this move could be justified on several grounds-that the calling of the special session was a purely political ma- neuver, that the proposed measures could only be administered by an efficient execu- tive; that a prolonged squabble would dis- astrously undermine American prestige be- fore the world. Most of the Senators dis- agreed. As one of them said: "Something just has got to be done about prices." How- ever, obviously politically motivated the Administration proposals, and however, angry all concerned may be, it is hard to dis- agree with that remark. (Copyright, 1948, New York Herald Tribune, Inc) IT'S UP TO THE MAN IN THE TOWER.. ~t Letersto the lEditor.. "Yl SESSION 'S4 qqrru ~ f 1 A _C" Lt d r 4) POOT \ L. I :' . - .;. it / " Et 'S". 7 s ', :J FDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Gray Reality By SAMUEL GRAFTON I FIND MYSELF a little amused at the absolute horror displayed by some of the more bitter critics fo the Wallace party over the fact that that party blames Russia for having done anything to injure the peace, and yet blames the United States, always and constantly, in bulk and in detail. For these same critics, if they are truly faithful to our bipartisan foreign policy, do much the same thing in reverse; they always blame Russia, never blame the' United States; they find that every Russian move has been sheer provocation, every American' move a merely necessary counter thrust, forced upon us. Their stand may be more acceptable, on the nationalistic level, but it would be hard to show that it is any more acceptable, or even very different from the other, on the philosophic level. I suppose that this opposition of two rather extreme stands is the best we pan hope for. But it is a little sad. A real peace party, a party that didn't hate anybody, might, I think, be willing to concede that the Russians have quite unnecessarily paint- ed themselves into a corner by their morbid theorizing about the nature of capitalism, and that we have on occasion been hyster- ical, undiplomatic and, in our own way, quite provocative. There is no such party. And that is very odd because, in private conversation, one finds scads of people who seem per- fectly able to entertain both ideas at once, the idea that we have sometimes been at fault, and that the Russians have also sometimes been at fault; they seem to be able to handle the two ideas com- fortably without bursting open, or falling apart into fragments. I have mentioned to persons who take strong anti-Russian positions that we have done a bit of unnecessary sabre-rattling, and they have agreed; they have been perceptive and knowing about it, though they would rather perish, I think, than carry any of this sensitivity to the platform. I have found Wallaceites who have had long gloomy moments over certain belliger- ent Russian statements and over Russian incomprehension of America, but, again, these are persons who would not want to say in public what they quite definitely feel as private characters. This is the century of the set face. It's like a youngsters' game in which the first one to break into a smile loses the prize. Reality is almost always a gray, not black nor white; but the only way we can seem to get a gray politically is by pitting clean blacks and whites in fervent opposition to each other. Nobody will say in a platform what so many will say at the dinner table. It is a mark of our frightening times that public character must be so much more intransigent than private character. Many will speak for America, with passion and eloquence; some will present justification of the Russian course, but the result is not quite true ratiocination. It is hard to think sol- idly and massively when the second part of the syllogism lies in somebody else's head. On the philosophic level, it is not alto- gether bad to have a Wallace movement, to present .at least a small touch of contrasting color, in a setting which would otherwise have all the monachromatic charm of a hospital operating room. The question is how much mingling of ideas is produced by this head-on opposition of ideas, and the answer is, darn little. Peace waits for a movement that can argue with itself, one that allows dissimilar ideas to be properly introduced to each other, in the hope that they can get along. (Copyright, 1948, New York Post Corp.) 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 Assistant to the President, Room 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). Notices WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1948 Vol. LVIII, No. 194 Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information, 201 Mason Hall. State of California Department of Corrections has openings for men as Senior Clinical Psychologists in the Guidance Center at the Cali- fornia State Prison at San Quen- tin, 20 miles from San Francisco. Minimum qualifications include: Education-Equivalent to a Mas- ter's degree with major work in clinical psychology-Experience- Two years of full-time, paid ex- perience in the practice of clinical psychology involving the examin- ation classification, diagnosis, and treatment of individuals at various age levles. Salary is $376 to $458 per mo. Complete information is on file at the Bureau. August, 1948, Graduates in Mechanical, Industrial-Mechani- cal, Aeronautical with Power Ma- jor and Metallurgical Engineer- ing: Mr. H. G. Bigler of GENEV- AL MOTORS CORPORATION, Detroit, will interview students in the above groups, Friday July 30, in Room 218 West Engineering Building. Students may sign the interview schedule posted on the Bulletin Board outside of Room 225 W. Engr. Bldg. Aplication Blanks and a Faculty Rating Blank are available. The School of Business Admin- istration announces an opportun- ity for students to take the Strong Vocational Interest Test on Thurs. July 29, 3 p.m. in Room 102 Arch- itecture Building. The American Institute of Accountants' profile blank for accountants will bepfur- nished with the report of the test to those who care to use it. The fee of $1 is payable at the time of taking the test. The fourth Fresh Air Camp Clinic will be held on Fri., July 30, 1948. Discussions begin at 8 p.m. in the Main Lodge of the Fresh Air Camp located on Patterson Lake. Any University students interested in problems of indi- vidual and group therapy are in- vited to attend. The discussant will be Dr. Norman Westlund, Director of the Saginaw Valley Child Guidance Clinic. Approved Student Sponsored Social Events. Weekend July 30, 1948 July 31 Delta Sigma Theta Delta Kappa Epsilon Phi Rho Sigma Sigma Alpha Epsilon Zeta Psi Lectures Linguistics Institute Luncheon Conference. Lecture on "Sounds and Prosodies" by Professor J. R. Firth of the University of Lon- don. Wed., July 28, Union Build- ing. Luncheon 12:10, Anderson Room; Lecture 1:00, Room 308. Linguistic Institute Forum Lec- ture. "The Strategy of Linguistics" by Professor W. Freeman Twad- dell, Department of Germanic Languages, Brown University. Thurs., July 29, 7:30, Rackham Amphitheatre. Academic Notices Botany: Seminar,. 1139 Natural Science, Wed., July 28, 7:30 p.m. Report of Dr. E. B. Mains: "In- heritance in Squash and Gourds." Anyone who is interested is cor- dially invited to attend. Applied Mathematics Seminar: The Applied Mathematics Seminar will meet on Thurs., July 29, at 4 p.m. in 247 W. E. Bldg. Dr. R. F. Clippinger of the Aberdeen Prov- ing Grounds will talk on High Speed Computing Instruments. Concerts Stndent Recital: Richard So- katen, pianist, will present a pro- gram at 8 Wed., July 28, Rack- ham Assembly Hall, in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music. A pupil of Joseph Brinkman, Mr. Sokatch will play compositions by Bach, Mozart, Marko Tajcevic, Debussy, and Brahms. The public is cordially invited. Carillon Recital: 7:15 Thurs., July 29, by Percival Price, Univer- sity Carillonneur. The program will open with a group of five songs, followed by a composition for carillon by Timmermans en- titued A Dutch Holiday. It will close with Wagner's Prelude to Logengrin and the March of the Meistersinger. University Symphony Orchestra, Wayne Dunlap, Conductor, will present its annual summer con- cert at 8 p.m., Thurs., July 29, in Hill Auditorium, with Mary Fish- bure, guest instructor in piano, as soloist. The program will con- sist of Handel's Suite from "The Water Music," Beethoven's Eight Symphony; D'Indy's Symphony on a French Mountain Air, Op. 25, for Piano and Orchestra, and Deems Taylor's Suite, "Through the Looking Glass," Op. 12. The concert is open to the gen- eral public without charge. Events Today English Teachers' Summer As-l sembly (final)-Wed., July 28, 41 The Daily accords its readers the privilege of submitting letters for publication in t~is column. Subject to space limitations, the general pol- icy is to publish in the order in which they are received all letters bearing the writer's signature and address. Letters exceeding 300 words, repeti- tious letters and letters of a defama- tory character or such letters which for any otherreason are not in good taste will not be published. The editors reserve the privilege of con- densing letters. Student Vote To the Editor: I have read your editorial in The Daily of July 23 about the problem of determining place of residence for students who want to vote in Ann Arbor. I am a stu- dent at- the U. of M., although I am not enrolled this summer. I have been very much concerned about this problem for a long time, and I believe that under present conditions the student is virtually disfranchised. But one part of your editorial attracted my atten- tion and got a~ line of thought started which may help a little. You mentioned that lawyers' fees are beyond the means of a student. But they are not beyond the means of large numbers of students, and the obvious place to start getting some clarification about the thing is to get a large group of students to inteest themselves in the prob- lem as a service project. I am thinking of the AVC, or several of the campus organiza- tions working in cooperation. Hav- ing been closely connected with p.m., in Assembly Room, Rack- ham. Subject: "Principles in Teaching Literature,' from the pamphlet Preparation for College English (1945). Moderator of the panel will be Professor Arno Bader. Questions, discussion, re- freshments. All graduate and un- dergraduate students who teach English are urged to come. English Journal Club: The Jour- nal Club, composed of Graduate Students and Faculty members of the English Department, will hold its summer meeting at 8:15 p.m. Wed., July 28 in the East Con- ference Room of the Rackham Building. Mr. Donald Pearce and Mr. Hosmer Swander will discuss Communication and Belief in Poertry. Yeat's "Second Coming" and other poems will be criticized. Copies of the poems are avail- able in the English Department office. Undergraduate students and members of other departments are invited. ,Refreshments will be served. Speech Assembly: Professor William M. Sattler of the Uni- versity of Oklahoma will discuss "Free Competition in Ideas" at 3 p.m. today in the Rackham Am- phitheatre. Open to the public. The French Club will meet Thurs., July 29, 8 p.m., 2nd floor Terrace Room of the Michigan Union. French songs, games, re- freshments. All students of French are particularly invited at well as all those interested. La p'tite causette meets every Tues. and Wed. at 3:30 in the Grill Room of the Michigan League and on Thurs., at 4:30 in the International Center. Sociedad Hispanica. The next meeting of the' Sociedad Hispan- ica will be held on .Wed., July 28, 8 p.m., West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. There will be an informal panel discussion on American customs by three Span- ish-American students, Roberto Gordillo, Fabio Gomez and Pedro Sacio Arriz. The audience is in- vited to participate in the discus- sion. Group singing will follow. Young Democrats: Will meet Thurs., 8 p.m., Michigan Union, to discuss campus political rallies. All interested persons are invited. Flying Club-Open meeting, Wed., July 28, 7:30 p.m., Room 1072 East Engineering Building. (Continued on Page 4) the cooperative movement on the campus, I have a good idea of what students can do cooperatively once they get started. If these groups would agree to sponsor a campaign to clarify the whole vot- ing procedure, hire a competent lawyer to wade through the red tape and by-pass the petty offi- cials who take satisfaction in put- ting obstacles in students' way to build up their own ego, and then top it with a serious effort to get every student on campus who is qualified out to vote on election day, they would be rendering a vi- tal service to the whole commun- ity. The matter of getting all peo- ple to take advantage of their vot- ing privilege is one of the most vital things that we have to face as citizens. If you think that this is at all workable, I would certainly appre- ciate it if you would refer this let- ter to AVC, the Young Democrats and Young Republicans, the Wal- lacites and Slossonites or whom- ever you can contact. This thing may be a rather long range project, but with a deter- mined lawyer on the job it might really get somewhere. The whole picture of who can vote where is so slip-shod in most communities, and there are so many more stu- dents of voting age on the campus than there has ever been before, thaat it gets more interesting all the time. I hope that I will be hearing more in The Daily about this matter before the summer is over. -Jerry Rees, Green Lake, Wis. * * * Wallace Convention To the Editor: STUDENT DELEGATE PARTY OF SIXTY MICHIGAN YOUTHS AT PROGRESSIVE PARTY FOUNDING CONVENTION RE- TURNING. ON ARRIVAL SAT- URDAY WHOLE FLOOR IN UP- ROAR WITH SPIRITED DEMON- STRATION. PARTICIPATED IN MASS SNAKE DANCES GREET- ING WALLACE, AND TAYLOR ACCEPTANCE SPEECHES BE- FORE THIRTY THOUSAND IN SHIBE PARK. SUNDAY, MON- DAY HELPED FOUND YOUNG PROGRESSIVES OF AMERICA AT ENTHUSIASTIC SESSION. WE ARE TRAVELING. -JACK A. LUCAS PHILADELPHIA Fifty-Eighth Year . I 'V I Current Movies + MUSIC + 'HE FIFTH PROGRAM in the current Faculty Concert Series was presented this past Monday evening at Rackham Lec- ture Hall. Fine music well performed and cool 'breezes from the air-conditioning sys- tem, combined to make this a very enjoy- able evening for the large audience present. One extra-musical diversion was created when an especially strong gust of air blew the music off of Mr. Milofsky's stand. This unexpected difficulty was as successfully coped with as many others inherent in the music performed. Beethoven's Trio in E-flat major, Op. 70, No. 2, was the opening work of the concert. An ensemble consisting of Gilbert Ross, vio- lin; Oliver Ed.el, cello; and John Kollen, piano, gave this work a spirited reading, es- pecially notable for its vigorous rhythm and accurate intonation. The over-all balance was good, though at times the cello line tended to become so faint as to be inaudible. This good performance, enthusiastically re- ceived, set the pattern for what emerged as the best concert in the series to date. Emil Raab, violin, and Bernard Milof- sky, viola, joined Mr. Ross and Mr. Edel for the performance of the next work on the program, Leroy Robertson's American Serenade. This work of a 52 year old American, once again indicates that con- temporary composers are capable of writ- ing music, and are writing music, that performance by the ensemble in this work, was again very good. The reading reflected a sure understanding of its musical style. After the intermission, the concert con- cluded with an exceptionally fine perform- ance of Beethoven's Quartet in F major, Op. 135. A momentary slip in the cello was gracefully bridged, and detracted not a whit from the finely polished reading given by the ensemble. Much about this last "complete" work of Beethoven's life, written in poor health and with presentiments of death, invites one to programmatic conjecture. The '"Must it be? It must be!" that he inscribed beneath the theme in the introduction to the finale, seems to suggest the invitability of fate and death. In purely musical terms, its setting creates suspense and drama. This tension recurring at the end, is finally dispelled through the medium of a happy and confident coda based on a subordinate theme. In this buoyant ending, one sees justifica- tion for the authority who stated that "Beethoven, like Paul, knew what a crown of glory the future held." The many mem- bers of the audience who left the auditorium whistling, singing, and humming this theme, must surely agree. -Martin B. Bernstein PERHAPS IN A WORLD of fast-extin- At the State... LADY FROM SHANGHAI, with Rita Hayworth and Orson Welles. POSSIBLY IT IS an outright confession of my bourgeois taste, but this latest of Orson's outputs leaves me just the least bit confused. This is either a very good or a very bad picture, and despite the arguments of its fans that have tried to explain as art what I considered corn, I'm inclined to side with the disapproving team. I like murder mysteries, and I'm a sucker for undying love, but when Orson takes on an Irish brogue and plays naive sailor boy following Rita around the world on her rich husband's yacht, the whole thing began to smack of Bogart and Bacall at their worst. Which may be an unfair comparison, for I rather doubt that even they would be caught mouthing such strained phrases as "I love you, my be- loved fool," and "Say hello to the sunrise for me." By most male standards Rita is probably worth chasing a sunrise or two for, but her acting in a really rather meaty role runs a poor second in her heavy concentra- tion on looking mentally anguished, deeply mysterious and being dressed and draped at all times for any stray Vogue photographers that might be lurking about. The plot is much too complex a potpourri of involved murder motives and alibis, snak- ey characters and pithy snatches of philos- ophy to try to preview here, and confiden- tially I'm rather glad I just have to review it and not explain it. The photography is superb, with many clever Wellesian touches, which in combination with the excellent minor roles and a tendency towards rapid action gives it some saving grace. -Gloria Hunter IN A PERIOD when prices are soaring be- cause not enough goods are being pro- duced, nobody cannot object because the country's productive capacity is being in- creased. One wonders, however, what is go- Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Lida Dalles.........Managing Editor Kenneth Lowe ...,....Associate Editor Joseph R. Walsh, Jr. ....Sports Editor Business Staff Robert James.....Business Manager Harry Berg......Advertising Manager Ernest Mayerfeld .Circulation Manager 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 newspaper. A rights of re-publication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. Member Associated Collegiate Press 1947-48 iV BARNABY I'm not going out in that sun again, O'Malley. I'm not an outdoor type- Wait in the parlor. Grandma keeps all Tsz, tsz. the blinds closed. FF1 had just glided into the parlor Gus seems to develop a new fear every day. Now, it's freckles! oAnd everybody knows nothing can happen ''s to a Ghost anyway- cx io That's Gus! Gosh! Something HAS happened to him, Mr. O'Malley! 0 =t (. 1I Gus, cheer up! You've helped me decide what Alas, poor Yorick. J knew him, Horatio- i