PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRAY. JULY 9. 194. aI .w + . vvui, v av. V I' Internecine Strife STRAIGHT from the elephant's mouth comes the most revealing account of the Republicans' Philadelphia fish-fry. Colonel Robert (How Reactionary Can You Get?) McCormick's Chicago Tribune ran an edi- torial last Monday which summed up Tom Dewey's triumph more neatly and precisely than any of the many liberal "exposees." "What Dewey had and his opponents lacked," says the Trib, "was a single-mind- ed devotion to the task of corralling dele- gates. "Dewey went into a few preferential pri- maries and nailed a certain number of dele- gates. He and his political organization, a cohesive professional group which had been in power six years in New York and had profited by the experience of lining up dele- Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily stafff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: CRAIG WILSON gates at two previous national conventions, knew how to trade and make deals. "They had cabinet jobs, ambassadorships, posts in the bureaucracy, and plenty of postmasterships to offer, even if these re- wards were not quite yet theirs to dispense. They could also play on fear and ambition among politicians who must risk being listed among the 'outs' when the 'ins' are running the show." There it is, folks. In order to become President of the United States, via the GOP route, you simply "devote your mind to the task of corralling delegates" and recruit a "cohesive professional group of politicians" who can promise postmaster- ships faster than any one else's stooges. And this by the admission of Bertie Mc- Cormick's editorial hacks. Tch, tch, Bertie, let's not carry this in- ternecine strife too far! It's alright, of course, to get disgruntled because our boy Taft didn't make it-but to tell the truth about a convention that we had previously labelled "Democracy in Action"-how utter- ly unGO Psh! -Ivan Kelley. "THE LATE George Apley," second in the Speech Department's summer drama series, got a brilliant send-off last night as a remarkably able cast headed by Robert Thompson scored a direct hit in the Mar- quand-Kaufman satire on the last of the Boston Brahmins. Contrasting sharply with the more ambi- tious "Of Thee I Sing" production, the cur- rent offering did much less, much more intelligently. Thompson, as Apley played his role with taste and subtlety. He portrayed the old Bostonian as somewhat senile, with gestures that suggested rather than advertised senil- ity. His performance was supplemented by ex- cellent support. John Cottrell, as Roger New- comb, Clara Behringer, as Amelia, and Pa- tricia Ann Ingraham, as Eleanor, were par- ticularly effective. Larry Ruben, as John Apley, seemed ill at ease. As the anguished young lover he was much too melodramatic. He did much better in the play's epilogue. For a first performance the timing of the cast was fine. Once or twice lines were lost in prolonged audience laughter, but on the whole the play went off as if it were in the middle of a long run. Claribel Baird's direction was more than competent and she managed one or two neatly satiric effects. In one scene she ma- neuvered three of the Apley women onto the divan, where they sat waving fans, posing remarkably like Grant Wood's "Daughters of the American Revolution." Oren Parker contributed one of the best sets seen in many a moon. He somehow managed to incorporate five huge portraits in the Apley livingroom without making the set look like an art gallery. Taste and restraint marked the entire production. Without careful vigilance "The Late George Apley" could have been turned into a burlesque, the satire lost, and Mar- quand's well conceived character dissipated. -Dick Kraus. WHAT A DIFFERENCE A FEW YEARS MAKE ., . US'OMI~r jDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN V v NG . to I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Derocratic Paradoxes By SAMUEL GRAFTON W HY IS MR. TRUMAN so unpopular with so many of the delegates to the coming * Democratic convention? The answer to that is easy enough; it looks as if he couldn't win the election. If it looked as if he.could win, he'd be popular enough with the convention; they'd like him then even if he had two heads. Many of the delegates to previous Demo- cratic conventions used to hate Mr. Roose- velt, but it was noticed that they did not organize widespread revolts against him, on civil liberties or any other issue. It is an interesting point that though Mr. Truman is much closer, in size and thinking, to the bulk of the delegates than Mr. Roosevelt ever was, they lack confidence in him and don't really want him. Here we begin to get into paradoxes, for Mr. Truman has spent three hard years trying to please exactly the types of Dem- ocrats who make up this convention. No man could have worked harder at the task. He has led crusades against what were alleged to be radical elements in the gov- ernment; he has fired almost every leftover New Dealer who was displeasing to the standard, or professional, type of Democratic party functionary. He has gone to innumer- able Senate luncheons, and has hung around the Capitol, playing the part of being still one of the boys, who got into the White House accidentally, but whose heart was really elsewhere. In every way he has tried to reverse the practices which made Roose- velt so unpopular with Democratic bigwigs, in and out of Congress. The odd result is that a party which used meekly to nomi- nate and renominate Roosevelt, mutters and hisses at the name of Truman, and wants a change. Oh, how those delegates would like to have a Roosevelt now, whom they didn't like; oh, how they are searching now for the indispensable man, who, they have al- ways wanted to believe, does not exist! Perhaps we are hovering here on the brink . of a great truth. Or maybe it's only a medium-sized truth, but it would go like this: If you try to win favor with the politicians, you will lose favor with the people, and then, in the end, you will lose favor with the politicians, too. And here we come to the best paradox of all: The convention, in shying away from Mr. Truman, and in seeking for someone else who will be utterly pleasing to all fac- tions, is, in the large sense, seeking for .. a Truman. Led by a blind tropism, it still hunts on for approximately what it would reject. If it finds such a man, from the pros- pects still available, it won't in the end, like him very much, because the public won't vote for him very much. Maybe the delegates had better give up the search, and nominate a man most of them do not really like, say Douglas, in the hope that, as in other hu- man relations, fondness will come later, in its own way, in its own time. (Copyright, 1948, New York Post Corp.) Current Movies J MATTER OF FACT: Tlrez Feels the Whip A t the Michigan ... IF YOU KNEW SUSIE, with Eddie Cantor, Joan Davis, and Alan Joslyn. O QUOTE one of the advertisements of "If You Knew Susie": "It's the show with that glow that makes you wanna go!" They didn't say where. Eddie Cantor, who must be crowding seventy by now, continues to amaze me with his vitality and bounce. But what could anyone do with material like this: First Joke: Davis: I think I hear a mouse squeaking. Cantor: What do you want me to do-oil it? Second Joke: Davis (talking about a convict): He's been up the river so many times he's learning how to spawn. This is another one of those films in which people give money away-seven billion dol- lars, this time. Eddie and Joan give it away because they feel it will upset their home life. Which is another reiteration of that fa- mous Hollywood maxim, "Money Isn't Everything." Some of the dance routines weren't half bad, and I kept waiting for the film to take a turn for the better. It never did. - I Ann Arbor News ... 'eriod of Disunion' WATCHING with glee and vulture-like anticipation our present pre- "election squabbling and battlings are those of hostile minds who may see advantage to themselves in the differences that divide us. Therefore it behooves us in these days of political bitterness to make sure that we are first and foremost Americans, and then possibly Re- publicans or Democrats or even Wallaceites. Our country and its wel- fare are paramount; our party's particular interests are secondary. In the present world situations, it is important that we present a clear-cut majority front-regardless of party-on vital issues involv- ing our relations to foreign countries: * * * * TIS important that we present a clear-cut majority front against aggression-against aggression of presently powerful or potentially powerful totalitarian dictatorships upon the freedom of smaller na- tions; against aggression within our own borders by those who would by force overthrow our American form of government to substitute the virtual enslavement now suffered by the peoples of certain areas who have been robbed of the right to govern themselves. ..- * * * * BETWEEN now and the inauguration in January of the administra- tion that is to conduct our national affairs for the next four years comes a critical period. Those of other lands who do not understand our methods of government nor the character of our people may mis- interpret political happenings. Thus if Truman should fail to be nominated by the Democrats, the people of Europe, and even of England, iynight take this as a repudia- tion of our government and might consider that for the rest of the year we would be without a sound "government of the people." Or if Truman should be nominated, and then should fail to be re- elected President, the same mistaken view might be taken of the situa- tion covering the period from November 2 to January. .. Such interpretations would, of course, be wrong. We in the United States retire presidents, or congressmen, or senators, as we think best but the government goes on. The people still rule. They will stand united against anyone who would mistake change for collapse. That we should make clear in these months of political tui'moil. Wie will not be weakened by the tempests raging in our midst. Rather the air will be cleared by the storm and we will emerge stronger and more united than before. * * * * Washtenaw Post-Tribune ... 'Cooperation, or Else?' O NE OF THE publications which comes regularly to our desk has as it's motto, "Cooperation beats any problem," which has the same meaning as Kipling when he wrote about-"the everlastin' teamwork of every blooming soul." We would say at this. point that Benjamin Franklin said the same thing in effect, when he talked about "the choice between hanging together, or hanging separately," though he wa talking about revolution, and that of course is anathema at the present moment. We cooperated with other nations during the war, including Russia, which is very anathema at the moment! Wouldn't it be possible to cooperate with other nations to have peace. If, we say if, Russia has turned crook, wouldn't it be possible to sort of gang up on her with the peaceful nations, there being enough of them to make a dent in the iron curtain, even if we have scared the Kremlin into taking action which in turn has scared us! And spent about twenty times as much for defense because of it as we do for educaton.i ** * * W HY, YES, there's the United Nations, which was formed only for peace, in San Francisco, in 1945. It furnishes the groundwork for cooperation. Of course, the war was still on at the time. That makes a difference; the same kind of difference as in a toper who is very easy to convince, they say, while he is going through the tremors of a hangover!ne We listened rather intently to the Republican Convention and we didn't hear a word about the UN. Perhaps they had something to say while we weren't listening; though if they did, they said it very low indeed. We know that the Republican platform carries a paragraph about the international situation, but it is very general and safe, as every paragraph was intended to be this being a political platform... * * * * THE SALVATION of the United States and for all nations is the UN. The salvation rather comes through the peace which will come to us if the Charter of the United Nations is followed. Maybe the charter has to be amended. Our Constitution was, a score and more times! Provision was made for amendment, as is the case with the Charter. What we need more than anything else is a desire for peace, which of course most of us have, plus a desire to cooperate. "Cooperation beats any problem"? Let's try it on peace. Publications in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of theniversity. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in type- written form to the Office of the Sum- mer Session. Room 1213 Angell Hal, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publi- cation (11:00 pm. Saturdays) Notices FRIDAY JULY 9, 1948 VOL. LVIII, No. 181 Veterans enrolled under Public Law 346 are reminded that they will, automatically receive sub- sistence for an additional fifteen days beyond the close of the Sum- mer Session. Consequently, fifteen days of eligibility time will be de- ducted from their remaining en- titlement. It should be emphasized that this procedure is automatic and that payments will be made and entitlement reduced accord- ingly unless a veteran notifies the Veterans Administration in writ- ing thirty days prior to the close of the Summer Session that he does not desire the extension of subsistence benefits. Veterans who desire the fifteen days extension are not required to give any no- tice. The following form is suggested for notification: "This is to no- tify you that I do not desire the fifteen days extension of subsist- ence benefits following the close of the Summer Session, 1948. Signa- ture, "C" Number, Reference 29R7AA." The notice should be sent to Registration and Research Section, Michigan Unit, Veterans Administration, -Guardian Build- ing, 500 Griswold Street, Detroit 32, Michigan. The second Fresh Air Camp Clinic will be held Fri., July 9, 1948. Discussions begin at 8 p.m. in the Main Lodge of the Fresh Air Camp located on Patterson Lake. Any University students in- terested in problems of individual and group therapy are invited to attend. The discussant will be Dr. J. N. P. Struthers, Director of the Huron Valley Children's Center, Ypsilanti. Women students wishing to re- main for the post-session at the end of summer school should get in touch with the Office of the Dean of Women regarding housing at once. Women students in Astronomy 31 and 32 have late permission until 11:30 p.m. either on Tues. or Thurs. evening in accordance with written slips being mailed to them by the Office of the Dean of Wom- en. Approved Social Events for the coming week-end: July 9, Stockwell Hall July 10, Delta Tau Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Intercooperative Coun- cil, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Bureau of Appointments and Oc- cupational Information Immediate applications are in- vited for the position of Principal of the Kindergarten Training Col- lege, Adelaide, South Australia. Special training in pre-school work is required. For further in- formation, call at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall. Bureau 'of Appointments and Oc- cupational Information The Mene Grande Oil Co., Bar- celona, Venezuela, is in need of teachers of the following subjects for its school: Music-Art; Kinder- garten; Early and Later Elemen- tary Grades.These positions are open in the company's school for" its American employees. For fur- ther information, call at the Bu- reau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall. Bureau of Appointments and Oc- cupational Inf ormnation The Young Women's Christian Association has many interesting job openings in various parts of the country for experienced per- sonnel and well-qualified seniors. A background in Health or Physi- cal Education or Recreation is highly desirable. For further in- formation, call at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall. Notice Re Faculty Concerts: Since the Monday evening faculty concerts presented in the Rack- ham Lectures Hall are broadcast over WUOM, it is requested that the audience be seated before 8 p.m., or as quickly as possible be- tween numbers, never during the actual playing. Elementary Golf, Women Stu- dents-A short course in golf for women will begin today at 2:30 p.m.' at the Women's Athletic Building. Bring balls. a .Lec tures Concerts The third lecture, in the series of special lectures sponsored by the Department of Engineering Mechanics, will be given by N. M. Newmark, Research Professor of Structural Engineering, Uni- versity of Illinois. Professor New- mark will discuss, "Iteration Methods of Vibration Problems" Fri.; July 9, 3 p.m., Room 445 W. Eng. Bldg. Sat., July 10, 11 a.m. Room 445 W. E. Bldg. Professor Newmark will discuss "Step-by- Step Methods In Vibration Prob- lems." Student Recital: Grayson W. Brottmiller, organist, will present a recital at 4:15 Fri. afternoon, 4 July 9, in Hill Auditorium, in par- tial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Master of Music. His program, open to the general public, will include com- positlons by Dupuis, Bach, Franck, Paul De Maleingreau, Vierne, and Sowerby. Mr. Brottmiller is or- ganist and choirmaster of Em- manuel Lutheran Church, Fort Wayne, Indiana. Events Today Radio Programs 3:30 p.m., WUOM About Books 4:30 p.m. WUOM Student For- um 6:45 p.m. WUOM Music from Interlochen Coffee Hour will be held at Lane Hall at 4:30, Friday. Dr. Nicholas Arseniev of St. Valdimer Orthodox Seminary will be the guest of hon- or. (Continued on Page 4) 1 X The University Musical Society announces the following concerts for the University year 1948-49: CHORAL UNION SERIES: Eileen Farrell, soprano, Oct. 6; French 'National Orchestra, * Charles Munch, conductor, Oct. 25; Cleveland Orchestra, George Szell, conductor, Nov. 7; Ezio Pin- za, bass, Nov. 18; Clifford Curzon, pianist, Nov. 27; Boston Symphony Orchestra, Serge Koussevitzky, conductor, Dec. 6; Ginette Neveu, violinist, Jan. 8; Vladimir Horo- witz, pianist, Feb. 11; Nathan Mil- stein, violinist, Mar. 4; and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, r Fritz Busch, guest conductor, Mar. 27. EXTRA CONCERT SERIES: Marian Anderson, contralto, Oct. 14; Cincinnati Symphony Orches- tra, Thor Johnson, conductor, Nov. 15; Rudolf Serkin, pianist, Dec. 3; Jascha Heifetz, violinist, Feb. 19; ' and the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, Fabien Sevitzky, con- ductor, March 13. Orders for season tickets are being accepted and filed in se- quence; and tickets mailed Sep- tember 15. Address: University Musical Society, Burton Memorial + Tower. By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP W ASHINGTON-A few weeks ago, some- thing happened secretly in France which has a parallel significance to what has happened so publicly in Yugoslavia. At a secret meeting of the top leadership of the French Communist party, Communist leader Maurice Thorez received the same sort of tongue-lashing from the Kremlin as Marshal Tito was enduring at about the same time. The difference is that whereas Tito has now boldly defied Moscow, Thorez knuckled un- der. Yet it is believed that the episode in France may have much the same meaning for Communist leaders in the non-Soviet world as the Tito revolt has had for the Soviet Union's satellite chieftains. The charges leveled at Thorez were pre- cisely the same as those hurled at Tito be- fore he decided to defy the power of Mos- cow. He had been pursuing a hateful, un- Marxist policy, which, if not corrected, would make the French Communist party a "bourgeois" party, a tool of imperialists. Above all, he had been consistently and dangerously "nationalist"-which of course means simply that he had been too indepen- dent of the Kremlin, too much a Frenchman and too little an obedient servant of his masters in Moscow. The Kremlin emissary then .issued an ultimatum. Either Thorez must confess the error of his ways and henceforth give adequate proof of his loyalty to the Krem- lin, or he would be cast into outer dark- ness and replaced. Thorez obediently performed the required Communist rite of confession of sins and promised his colleague and the Kremlin to follow the path of true righteousness in the future. Unlike Tito, with his thirty-six di- visions, Thorez had no real choice. The Communist parties outside the Soviet sphere are tightly controlled by Moscow's power of subsidy and by the whole party "apparatus." Groveling submission was thus forthcoming from Thorez, and he has been allowed to continue as titular head of the French Com- munist party. The significance of the Kremlin's denun- the words of a leading Kremlin emissary to Bulgaria, Chervenkov, in a significant recent speech addressed to all loyal Com- munists: "One cannot warmly love one's own country if this love, no matter to what extent, is opposed to love for the Soviet Union." The mission of the Communist leadership in all countries, according to this interpreta- tion, will now be to build an absolutely loyal Communist hard core, rather than a mass base. This hard core must act, first, as an entirely reliable instrument of Soviet policy, and second, as an effective fifth column in case of war. If this interpretation is correct, it would seem clearly to suggest that the Kremlin is now consolidating its forces against the possibility of a final showdown with the West. (Copyright, 1948, New Yort Herald Tribune, Inc) DODSWORTH, with Walter Huston, Ruth Chatterton and Paul Lukas. J1JIX SINCLAIR LEWIS' ultra American characters with three Continental fops and an Italian divorcee and the result is the love triangles, squares and hexagons of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Dodsworth, Zenith's re- tired industrialist and wife. The plot, with the typical Sam Goldwyn touch, slips ro- mantically from Zenith, Minnesota, to Lon- don, to Paris, to Vienna and finally Naples, and rests heavily on Mrs. Dodsworth's at- tempts to maintain a facade of youth with petty amors. Walter Huston, who deserves the highest possible praise as Sam, follows her from apartment to apartment extricat- ing her from one love after another until he discovers that he too seeks to retain his youth, but by living rather than acting. As a re-release, Dodsworth is a fine ex- ample of many lessons movieland has learned in the past decade. The photography lacks depth; sunlight appears as a white glare; and composition is uniformly poor. 1rg £idt jwu Fifty-Eighth Year There's also one asramount short Animals"-to add the story. of those incredibly inane subjects-"Speaking of to the general pallor of -Jack Sokoloff * * * Atthe Sttee.. . HAZARD, with Paulette Goddard and MacDonald Carey. "HAZARD" starts out to do for gambling what "Lost Weekend" did for drinking, but it doesn't get very far. A series of im- probable incidents is strung on the spoiled- debutante-meets-unspoiled-he-man theme, with Miss Goddard doing rather a poorer job as the deb than MacDonald Carey does as the man. Aside from the too-too-cute she- nanigans that always embroider this partic- ular set-up, the picture is bolstered with a good bit of melodrama and a fair share of slapstick. The former reaches its height when Carey, suffering third degree burns in the process, drags Paulette from a blazing automobile. The latter approaches a Laurel and Hardyquality during a brawl in which Paulette beans the wrong man with the usual outsize vase. The story, briefly, is this: Paulette's fiance was killed in the war. Paulette's father died leaving her a modest ($300,000) fortuhe. Paulette becomes a gambling "bug" (psy- chological mechanism explained by Carey) and winds up staking herself on a cut of the cards in preference to entering goal for having written a bad check. She loses, and the chase is on. Carey, who, in addition to being a he-man, is a "welcher-hating" pri- vate detective, trails her from New York to California. Love is born on the trip back and Carey, bandages streaming (the burn- ir~r o. -cno cl -- a ,tP ,rr ,mitr t Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Lida Dailes.........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 r r r r r r 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. All 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 BARNABY .. # te_ ______ .!._ _ ___x L_. __ L_!_... _ x_