THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, AUOUST 1, 1948 ...,, A Checkered Past tl if Irons in the Fire IF THEY MUST HAVE OUR OPINION- 0J7IE ANNOUNCEMENT by National Com- mander James F. O'Neil that the Ameri- can Legion will hold its'annual convention in Miami this year brings to mind the en- tire past record of that vigilant organization. It is not a record to be proud of. Inasmuch as the Legion will soon occupy a prominent place in the newspapers and magazines across the country, it is perhaps just as well that some of the details of its record be pointed out at this time. In the first place it should be noted that the American Legion, as mentioned above, is a vigilant body. A little too vigil- ant, it would seem. For instance, Legion- naire officials have long been preoccupied with supposedly subversive activities. They have compiled lists of suspect individuals, published literature on Un-American ac- tivities and incorporated an Americanism Committee within their body politic. It is noteworthy, however, that there is evidence of connections between Legionnaire officials and such men as George Deather- Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: CRAIG WILSON Farben Trials UPON THE CONCLUSION of World War II, the leaders of the victor nations made an astounding, precedent-shaking de- cision. They decided for the first time in his- tory to try as criminals those persons who played key roles in the aggressive acts of the defeated nations. A giant international war crimes trial was set up at Nurnberg. Death was meted out to high political and army personnel. The sad- ists that ran the notorious concentration camps likewise were sentenced to death. These men, camp commandants, guards and SS men-despite the fact that many were volunteers-acted under orders, fearful and dreadful as they were. And then the victor nations did a dar- ing thing. They said it was not enough to assign guilt to those who carried out the deeds of terror, nor was it sufficient to call to account the political leaders only. They went one step further. They put up brains, without whose financial support *or trial, the business and industrial and backing, war would never have come about. Among those brought before the bar were the board of directors of the vast I. G. Far- ben chemical industry. Just three days ago several of them were convicted and sent- enced, not of plotting aggressive war, but of spoiliation and plundering or of exploitat- ing and mistreating slave labor. Sentences ranged from eighteen months to eight years. Many of those sentenced have already i spent a considerable amount of time in con- finement, so much so that they are now free because this time was considered as part of the sentence. These sentences were the mildest yet im- posed in a war crimes trial. Why? Why was the commandant of the Au- schwitz murder factory put to death and the men whose planning and executive de- cisions caused that murder factory to be, let off free or sentenced at a maximum to eight years For that matter, why was Col. Kilian, commander of the infamous American Army l itchfield stockade, only fined, while his subordinate enlisted men were imprisoned? There has been a miscarriage of justice. The tune sounds familiar-power, money, influence, business take precedence in the court room. There is no question that war, aggressive or defensive, cannot be waged without the aid of the might of the industrialists. Equal guilt for war should be shared by these white-collared demons with the politicos and the military. -Lida Dailes age, leader of the Knights of the White Ca- melia, and James True, who has been in- dicted by the federal government for sedi- tion. Presumably these names do not appear cn the organization's list of subversives. As for the Legion's prose, the official text of the group contained three pages on Fascism, 15 on Nazism and 255 on Com- munism. This appears to fit neatly with a statement made by Alvin Owsiey, former national commander, who once said: "Do not forget that the Fascists are to Italy what the American Legion is to the United States." In regard to the Americanism Com- mittee, it should suffice to say that that body is composed of investigators who are without training and who are little enough responsible for the accuracy of their statements. Along these same lines one might also mention that the American Legion has been extremely active in urging the passage of the absurd Mundt Bill and that on the other hand, it has not been pleased with such progressive measures as the Montclair, New Jersey Audit, a program which seeks to investigate racial discrimination on com- munity levels. Other counts against the Legion will not be mentioned here. It should be enough to say that, by aiid large, there will be slight cause for rejoicing in the spirit behind the spectacle scheduled for presentation in Mi- ami this fall. -Kenneth Lowe - -o J-x VERY INTERESTING NOTE on the stockmarket has come our way which emphasizes the importance of President Truman's message to Congress asking for :nflation controls. Curiously enough in these days of prosperity, stocks dropped more than one billion dollars on Friday. The reason for the drop is attributed to the nervous condition of the men on Wall Street over the President's warning of a de- pression unless something is done inimed- lately to curb inflation. At the end of 1946, economists were pre- dicting a "recession" sometime in 1947. That the expected recession failed to make its appearance seems to be purely a matter of luck. We have blithely gone our spiral- . idden way despite all warnings. Men whose profit outlook made them allergic to any kind of price control insisted that full scale production was THE answer to inflation. But it is these same men who had the in- fallible answer that are shaking in their respective boots albeit on Wall Street. On the same side of the fence as the Wall Street men are our Congressmen who sulk in their capitol corners and cry to the President, "Politics!" or "You have the power, why don't YOU do something about it?" One thing in their unconscious favor, they thereby admit that something has to be done. The question of different philosophies of the Congressmen and the President seems to be purely academic. Neither of their phil- osophies will be reelected in any fall election if a depression hits us again. Price controls, excess profits taxes, wage controls and installment buying curbs can- not be a question of philosophy in this year of spiralling prices-it is a matter of neces- sity which Senator Taft and his cohorts c annot dismiss as politics. SIR OLIVER FRANKS, Britain's Ambassa- dor, and Henri Bonnet, Ambassador from France, have been engaged for several weeks in talks with top U.S. officials on the basis for a new conference with Russia on the future of Germany. The idea is that Western nations should be fully prepared before going into any new talks with Russia on peace settlements. Past conferences were very loosely prepared for. -U.S. News and World Report. SINCE EVERY OTHER columnist in the country has had a stab at assessing the third party convention (literally a stab in many cases), here is another reaction: The convention had considerably more vitality than those of the two major politi- cal parties. The only real excitement at the Republican gathering was in the trackside atmosphere of the Presidential Handicap; the only fervor exhibited was the common burning desire for federal patronage and power. There was a great deal of genuine emo- tional pitch in the Democratic convention. Pathos filled the auditorium as New Deal- ers grown paunchy sought to rekindle the old battle spirit. There was something macabre about the whole affair, as if a dead man were pronouncing his own fun- eral oration. The words were noble, one felt deeply touched, yet all the sombre eloquence of the deceased served only to emphasize the sad fact of his death. In sharp contrast the Progressive Party conclave shook with the exuerance of a re- vival meeting. The delegates sang, cheered and booed with wild abandon and a strong sense of mission. Taken purely as spectacle, the Shibe Park scene was worth considerably more than the admission the canny Pro- gresives charged. Yet, through the real en- thusiasm of a largely honest gathering, staging of the Communists. American pro- loomed the unmistakable direction and gressives (with a small p) had seen it all before. Everywhere that Communists and pro- gressives had joined in organizations, the former, by superior determination and drive, succeeded in seizing the wheel. They had plausible issues, rousing slogans, effective demonstration techniques and the energy to be out getting petitions signed while pro- gressives were home soaking their feet. A long procession of alphabetical schisms ex- cmplified the process, ASU, ALP, PCA. The wide-awake progressive, like Ray m on d Walsh and Frank Kingdon in PCA, gets out. The "all ashore" whistle is blowing shrilly for the non-Communist remnants in the Progressive Party. The platform gives several tipoffs. One is the straight denunciation of the Marshall Plan, with- out the least saving qualification. Another is the explosive denunciation of the Demo- crats, as contrasted with the mild treat- ment meted out to the Republicans. Com- munists always save their most savage attacks for the moderates. The Democratic Party is indeed in its death throes. The string-pullers of the Pro- gressive Party are keenly aware of this, as the frequent parallels drawn with the found- ing of the GOP show. Then the new Repub- lican Party strode onto the national scene over the prostrate body of the moribund Whigs, to gain the presidency four years la- ter. A Third Party is indeed needed now, so that the two party system may continue to function when the Democrats are finally interred. But not a phony party, which can't even get the backing of the CIO. Not a party which seeks the support of Zionists, Town- sendites, etc. with an incohesive bundle of promises, a party whose sole purpose now is to advance the fortunes of the U.S. Com- munist Party. -David Saletan Wallace Platform HENRY WALLACE and his Progressive Party forgot to pack a few pairs of bi- focal spectacles in their suitcases when they went to Philadelphia for their first National Convention. Bi-focals, properly adjusted on the eyes of the third party leaders, would have helped them in viewing both the national scene (reading distance) and the international scene (long distance vision). The final Pro- gressive Platform, for all its forthright ap- proach to the crisis in civil rights, need for New Deal economics and a "New Look" in politics generally, has neglected to see the necessity of a realistic international plank. Blindly, the Progressives promise to work for international security and har- mony by: 1. Pulling American troops out of Berlin. 2. Blasting American "imperialism" with- out even a word on Russian self-aggrand- i.ement and diplomatic sabotage. 3. Giving Russia substantially what she wants in Asia, as well as Europe. 4. Attacking the draft law, armed forces expenditures and the Marshall Plan aid. (Minimum liberal criticism calls for some revisions of these three, but hardly drop- ping them.) 5. Failing to charge Russia with main- taining armed might and dominating neigh- bor nations. 6. That done, the Progressives would fin- ally work for permanent peace through the United Nations. Such a policy, if it ever could conceivably be carried out, would indeed leave "Billions" for domestic issues, as Wallace said in his acceptance speech, but it would also wreck the UN, advance the Russian curtain of c omination and probably result in a world arbitrarily run from Moscow. Russia would see no need to continue supporting the UN if she knew that Americans would crawl back into the isolationist coccoon again and let the rest of the world drift. The U.S. \would also lose her influence as a democratic force in the world and the small nations would inevitably fall to the strong leader- TPluMwE t 'pT 1ri.~kr SLJ fk, -a Ifa .. . ,. g>". a WILL IT COmE TO A FIGHT? i6 ka ii' j i WIHAT Po YOU 'THINK AO3OUTV 1 tr-5PEFGjAL 5s510N ? Ith5 ATOM'1 tor A ,r '/ a , t(kNEW I)W.^F T -) ~ r , 'J q .-. i . vl f ' (- t , - 4A Editorial Rounds 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 ina typewritten form to the office of the Assistant to the President, Room 10)21 Angell Hal, by 3;00 p~. ona the day preceding publiation (11:00 a u, Saturdays). * * * Notices SUNDAY, AUGUST 1, 1948 VOL. LVIII, No. 198 Business Administration: Clas- sification for the fall semester will take place during the week of August 2-6. Please see the bul- letin board in Tappan Hall for in- structions. Bureau of Appointments and Oc- cupational Information, 201 Ma- son Hall: The Proctor and Gamble Com- pany, Detroit Office, will have a representative her on Thursday, August 5, to interview men for sales positions. Men interested should call Extension 371 for an appointment. Symposium on Theoretical and Nulear Physics: The following lectures will be given in Room 150, Hutchins Hall, during the week beginning August 2. Professor H. B. G. Casimir will continue his discussion of "Theo- retical Aspects of Low Tempera- ture Physics" at 10 o'clock on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. The concluding lectures on "Re- cent Developments in Quantum Electrodynamics" will be delivered by Professor Julian Schwinger at 11 o'clock on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Physics Colloquia: On Tuesday evening, Dr. W. A. Nierenburg, University of Michi- gan, will discuss "Recent Develop- ments in Molecular Beam Meth- ods" The speaker for the Thursday evening meeting will be announced later The colloquia are held in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building at 8 p.m. The Russian Circle will meet in the International Center on Mon- day, August 2, at 8 p.m. Professor Lobanov Rostovsky will be the guest speaker and his subject will be, "The Russia I Knew." Lectures Mathematics Lecture: Professor H. Davenport, F.R.S., of University College, London, will give a lecture on "Recent Progress in the Geom- etry of Numbers" on Monday, Aug- ust 2nd, at 4:15 p.m. in Room 3011 Angell Hall. Linguistic Institute Forum Lec- ture. "A Notker Concordance and Dictionary," by Professor Edward H. Sehrt of George Washington University, Tuesday, August 3, 7:30, Rackham Amphitheater. Linguistic Institute Luncheon Conference. Lecture on "The Na- ture of the Tocharian Language" by Professor George S. Lane of the University of North Carolina, Wednesday, August 4, Union Buil- ding. Luncheon 12:10, Anderson Room; lecture 1:00, Room 308. Concerts Carillon Recitals: Another pro- gram in the current series of sum- mer carillon recitals will be played by Percival Price at 2:15 p.m Sun., August 1. It will include four Welsh Airs, groups, of com- positions for the harpsichord and the carillon, and three selections from operas, Intermezzo from Mascagni's Cavaliera Rusticana Offenbach's Barcolle from Tales of Hoffmann, and Rossini's Finale from The Barber of Seville. Student Recital: Kathryn Karch Loew, organist, will present a pro- f gram at 8 p.m. Sun., August 1, in Hill Auditorium, in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music. A 1 former pupil of Palmer Christian Mrs. Loew is now studying with Carl Weinrich, Guest Lecturer ir Organ in the School of Music. Her recital will include compositions by Vivaldi, Bach, Karg-Elert Vaughan Williams, and Dupre and will be open to the public. Chamber Music Program: The String Quartet class under the di- rection of Oliver Edel and Ber- nard Milofsky, will present a pro- gram at 4:15 Mon., August 2, it Rackham Assembly Hall. The pro. t gram will include Haydn's Quar- tet, Op. 64, No. 6 in E-flat major Beethoven's Quartet, Op. 18, No a 4, in C minor, and Haydn's Quar- e tet, Op. 33, No. 3, in C major. Th( e general public is invited. Piano Recital. The sixth pro- e gram in the Monday Evenini D series of faculty recitals will fea- s ture Webster Aitken, guest lectur. I er in piano in the School of Music o Scheduled to begin promptly al Xette4 TO THE EDITOR The Daily accords its readers the privilege of submitting letters for publication in this 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 other reason are not in good taste will not be published. The editors reserve the privilege of coa- densing letters. * * * Def/eis Aist ps To the Editor: My commendation on "Wal- lace's Little Group," written by Joseph and Stewart Alsop in last Sunday's edition. It is one of the most provocative articles ever pre- sented in The Daily. To condemn it because a viewpoint is presented is foolish. What does its critic, Mr, Defendini, want-an endless chain of dry facts? Why did he not tear apart the "Red Badge of Courage" editorial written directly above this article? Perhaps it was slant- ed to coincide with his views. The critic's article is petty. May- be it was "quite obvious" that the convention was managed by the C.P. If one is familiar with the "Radio Moscow Line" as it is heard over the air and then at- tends a meeting of the "Com- mittee for Academic Freedom" or AVC, only to hear the line repeat- ed by the speakers, is it then too much to infer that the Communist minority "stage-managed" that evening? I had this experience at a polit- ical meeting last term. After. con- cluding that the meeting was directed largely by the far left, I learned that the chairman was a Communist sympathizer and the most prominent discussion leader a member of the C.P. I do not im- mediately doubt the statement that the convention was "quite ob- viously" managed by the C.P., just because the details are not given. There is not room for many de- tails in a survey article of this type. The point that I have 'dis- cussed exemplifies the petty stand of the critic. Another point quoted from the criticism: Does being chairman of a committee mean that one is its dictator? No! But I should think the chairman (Mr. Tug- well) would be in sympathy with the objectives of the committee. If Mr. Tugwell is an exponent of the Marshall Plan and chairman of a committee which condemns the plan, is he not in a ludicrous position as the Alsop Brothers stated? We have here an obvious fact, hardly a conclusion. Why try to twist Mr. Tugwell's position in- to something else? The original article was well- written throughout. The concise depiction of -John Abt as a "kind of cut-rate Pressman" exempli- fies the terse, animated style which made the article unusually good. -R. E. Zwickey August 3, Hill Auditorium. The program will include compositions 'by Vaughan Williams, Bennet, P Bilings, Brahms, Beethoven, Hin- demith, Weinberger, Piket, and a group of spirituals. Open to the s public. Special Concert: Sigurd Rascher, saxophonist, assisted by Philip Duey, baritone, and Joseph Brin.- man, pianist, will present a pro- gram in the Rackham Lecture Hall i at 8:00 Wednesday evening, Aug- ust 4. A concert and recording art- ist, Mr. Rascher has appeared as soloist with symphony orchestras and in recitals throughout the United States and abroad. His pro- gram for Wednesday will include (Continued on Page 5) Fifty-Eighth Year , ,' '9 t t + BOOKS + DerotFre* 1.0s Unfinishied fBusiness ATTENTION may now be turned to those items in President Truman's message which he plac- ed before the special session which come under the heading of unfinished business. . . . For the most part, the rest of his program merits no more consideration than he gave it. Ev- erything which could possibly be an issue in the fall campaign was dredged up. Nevertheless there are some things that Congress could and should do during its short session that would be in the public inter- est. The Taft - Ellender - Wagner Housing Bill for example, is just where Congress left it when it adjourned in June. It has approv- al of the Senate and is being held up in the House by Jesse Wolcott. Housing, both public and pri- vate, is a national emergency at the moment. And, like foreign relations, it requires non-parti- san action. This can be accom- plished. Republican leaders of stature have approved it. Sen- ator Taft is one of its sponsors. And the President has advo- cated its passage. It requires no more hearings, no more studies. The House can and should dispose of this important piece of legislation without delay. It is at least a step in the right direction. Another matter which Mr. Tru- man called for action isa revised Displaced Persons Bill, That which was passed is butS the shadow of the substance of I what is needed. It should be in accordance with the great American tradition of humanity in providing sanctuary for the liberty loving, the worthy and oppressed. That from the beginning has been the essence of our political morality. Furthermore, at this desperate time of world crisis it is but the fulfilling of an obligation we have assumed as an important adjunct to our foreign policy. All this the Free Press said em- phatically when the phony bill was passed and signed as a stop- gap measure. In the same connection, a bill aut~horizing a loan of $65 million to the United Nations for construc- tion of its headquarters in New York is only a symbol of our con- As for such other matters as in- uation control, civil rights, aid to education and other social meas- ures, the time to decide them is Nov. 2. As Arthur Krock writes in the New York Times, these issues are fundamental dixerences be- tween the President on one hand and Congress on the other. Both represent an indeterminate public opinion that cannot be crystallized in Washington. There are at issue heretwo basic doctrines of government. Their settlement transcends immediate partisan considerations and should not be viewed in that light. These are questions for the Country to decide, and that op- portunity will come on election day. Until then, it is the course of wisdom for Congress to keep its hands oq new problems and con- fine itself to clearing the slate of matters already before it. * * * C hri ii. Sceice Xhlior Civil Rights Orders For President Truman to issue at this point the executive orders on civil rights in the armed forces and in federal jobs seems both politically logical and personally consistent. Once he cast the die in the form of his now-famous civil-rights message,developments have led directly and at last inexorably to such a move. First, the northern wing of the Democrats gave that die a jet-propelled boost by writing it into the platform in boldly spe cific terms. Then came the bolt of the Dixiecrats, which made clear where the center of gravity of the Democratic Party now rests. The executive orders themselves add up to something less earth- shaking than early headlines have made of them. As to federal em- ployment, the President appears to be doing no more than to re- affirm long-standing policies and to fix responsibility for seeing to it that those policies are observed. As to the armed forces, he takes account of the consequences t military efficiency and morale which any revolutionary change would bring. The first step pre- scri ed is a study of possible meth- ods by a presumably prestig board. Mr. Truman makes n mention of segregation. This would seem to allow the armed forces latitude in continuing t h A THE BLOOD OF OTHERS, by Simone de Beauvoir (292 pp., Alfred A. Knopf, $3.00). ALTHOUGH THIS is allegedly an Exis- tentialist novel, the new Sartre phil- osophy is such a dynamic force in the lives of the principal characters that the book takes on the quality of being the philosophy of a novel. As a work of art, the finest thing about the book is the sombre mood it creates-the mood of Europe in the early thirties, a feeling of endless tomorrows without hope and without the chance of finding anything for which to hope. Miss de Reauvoir's greatest skill lies in the way she aepicts these intangible forces in the lives of her characters. Her- hammering on the philosophies by which her young men and women live is less effective. The lhives of her characters are ruled by Existentialism-they perceive all the events in their lives according to it. Many chapters in the book are concerned with abstruse, ethical problems which the characters strive to harmonize with the ruling principles of their lives. I think the average reader would feel more kindly to- ward Existentialism if he were allowed to every page or two. The result, at any rate, is not monotonous. When we are able to sort out the people in the story via the piecemeal acounts of their lives, we find excellent characterization. The overt actions and general inter-rela- tionships of the principals are well-drawn and quite believable. It is only their pre- occupation with difficult moral concepts to a neurotic degree that prevents our having a complete sympathy for them. The hero, Jean, is forever deciding laboriously and with many qualms on the course he must take, taking it, and then regretting it for chapters and chapters. For example, after he decides he does not really love his fiancee and tells her so, we have the following: " 'Good-by,' she said. She walked to the door. A devastating impulse threw me to- ward her: I loved her. But already the door had slammed and she was going downstairs. I loved her for her sincerity and her courage. I loved her because she was going. I could not call her beck." The hero through all the story is beset by guilt complexes. He feels responsible when he acts, when he does not act, and for the aggressive actions of all the people in the Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control ot 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 Mayerfed. Circulation Manager Telephone 23.24-I 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 o-the.rwisecredited1 ithis newsnanr. - I A ?a