THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1949 t ,. Pointted Pe. by b. s. brown I co-managing editor Lucky in Sing Sing I T HE PICTURE BELOW is of a lucky mug in Sing Sing Prison. Although being "lucky" and being in Sing Sing are an unlikely combination, they fit together well for Louis Boy, 49, who is serv- ing a life term for the 1931 murder of a garage cashier in a New York City holdup. After his death sentence was commuted DR. SAMUEL GREEN, Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan, has been complain- ing recently. He feels that he and his infa- mous organization are being persecuted and discriminated against. Alabama is taking steps to unmask the hooded night riders and a civil rights sub- committee, headed by Reps. Emanuel Celler and William T. Byrne, is in the process of gathering evidence and witnesses to use against the KKK. It isn't difficult to see that men of re- sponsibility are unwilling to allow a re- currence of events which followed the first World War. Green and his masked follow- ers are going to be halted-they will be unable to ride into power on a wave of reaction like they did 30 years ago. Dr. Green's un-American activities are go- ing to be squelched. Southern civic-minded citizens and judicial individuals below the Mason-Dixon line are going to see to that. And Dr. Green knows it. That's why he's crying the blues. There has been an increase in the activ- ities of the Klan recently. There have been Beatings, cross-burnings and threats. Public ire has been aroused. Dr. Green knows that, too. A mass initiation recently netted only 125 persons, many of them wom- en and children. Green is losing his touch. People are awakening to the realization that the hooded mobsters' lynchings and beatings are as filthy a blotch on Americanism as could exist. Green recently said, "God himself seg- regated the races. There is no law that can be passed by President Truman which can ever surpass God's law." May be, Mr. Grand Dragon. But I don't recall God ever saying that one race is superior to an- other. And that's your argument. Nothing would interest me more than to hear Dr. Green explain how it feels to be discriminated against-by discriminating (literal) people. Nothing would be more in- teresting than an explanation of how it feels to be the object of intolerance-intolerance .by those who refuse to tolerate one of the worst forms of un-Americanism this country has ever seen. Faculty Funds IT IS EASY TO see why the legislative ap- propriation of $11,436,315 for the opera- tion of the University during the 1949-50 school year came as a distinct disappoint- ment to top University officials. These officials have as their primary duty the maintenance of the high standards which have caused the University of Mich- igan to be regarded as one of America's greatest institutions of higher learning. The greatness of a University depends to a pretty great extent upon the caliber of its faculty. An institution with out- standing professors is pretty sure to be an outstanding institution. Outstanding 'professors, however, are men who possess qualities of intelligence, educa- tional experience, and personality which are rare in the general run of human beings. In short, outstanding professors are scarce. Men who possess these qualities which make them outstanding have every right to expect a comfortable remuneration for thei' contributions to the universities or colleges they serve. At the same time, leading educa- tional institutions must keep their pay scales high in order to keep and attract first class faculty men. Competition among colleges can be as keen as competition in industry. Other great state universities in the midwest have received appropriations in- creases ranging from 21 per cent to 63 per cent greater than their last year's appropriations. This places them in a much stronger position than the Univer- sity in the competition for top professors, since it has received only a 17 per cent in- crease over its 1948-49 figure. The seriousness of the situation is indi- cated by a statement made by State Sen- ator George N. Higgins of Flint. Sen. Higgins commented that the University is "losing its top rwen to other states; I hope it doesn't lose too many before it's too late." The University is faced with a serious problem because of the appropriations situa- tion. The question of how to maintain high standards within the limitations set by the financial resources available will present a tremendous challenge to University officials. -Paul Brentlinger. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: PHYLLIS COHEN to life imprisonment, he has three times voluntarily risked his life-without any sort of compensation-to aid experimental medicine. Doctors are in doubt whether he will sur- vive the last experiment: submitting to a blood exchange with a small girl with leu- kemia in the hope that his healthy blocOd might save her life. The attempt failed; the girl is dead and prisoner Boys may also die of leukemia. He may have the luck he had in 1942 when the Government was testing atabrine as a weapon against malaria. In order to find out whether the drug was poisonous, Boys volunteered to take it. He saved millions of lives. Then, in 1943, he acted as a guinea pig in tests of a new influenza vaccine. Again he lived. If prisoner Boys can survive leukemia, the way should be opened for his rehabili- tation and eventual freedom. Because he has volunteered for these ex- periments repeatedly, each time without any offers or even the mention of his name until now, it is apparent that he has shown a willingness to aid his fellow men which far surpasses the damage he once did. -Craig Wilson ['D RATHER BE RIGHT: Age. of Deadlock By SAMUEL GRAFTON TWO WEEKS AGO I wrote a piece in which I said that our age was, politically The Age of Deadlock. This is not an age, really, in which great decisions are being made; it is, rather, an age in which forces are so delicately balanced, so neatly adjust- ed, as to nullify each other. This is the age of stalemate, the age of impasse, the age of quandry. The fantastic legislative logjam in Washington is one of the signs. Here we have a Congress which is typical of our Age of Deadlock; it is a Congress which is not quite certain whether it is the last conservative Congress of the postwar pe- riod, or the first liberal Congress of the post-postwar period. And so it is a Con- gress which, on many key questions, simply can't seem to decide. It is a Congress which doesn't want to raise taxes and which, obviously, doesn't wantto cut appropriations. It is a Congress whose lower House has booted around the issue of Taft-Hartley act repeal, and, after several inconclusive votes ending in nothing at all, has given the issue to the Senate, where it has been taken up for apparently interminable debate. * * * * IT IS a Congress which is deeply in favor of the North Atlantic Treaty, but is much more cool to the idea of sending arms to the other pact signatories. It is a Congress which is torn between the notion of cutting Stymied THE GROUP of dissatisfied students, teachers and alumni who seceded from Olivet College last year because of a pur- ported lack of educational freedom were stymied, for the time being at least, in their attempt to set up an independent school at Sacketts Harbor, N.Y. " Dr. Alvin S. Johnson, president-emeritus of the New York School for Social Research, accepted presidency of the proposed "haven" school for educators and students. The school was tentatively named Shipherd College. In denying the group's application for charter, a spokesman for the New York state education department declared that the proposed college did not have the state-required $500,000 in assets necessary for issuance of a charter. No doubt the group is making every effort to raise the required money and begin operations, but meanwhile, the rest of the educational world sits and awaits the result of the experiment. Undaunted, the group has continued in its search for the college site, having applied to the War Assets Administration for ac- quisition of the 101-acre former army post at Sacketts Harbor. It seems that the $500,000 rule was adopted for the purpose of discouraging "quack" colleges from springing up over- night to steal the students' good money. The Shipherd group, however, is formed of bona fide, accredited professors and stu- dents, which fact tends to set it into a different category. Additionally, the pro- fessors are risking their careers on the project. If their plans fall through, however, the sincerity and zeal which has been shown by the instructors, might better be transferred to the finding of positions with established liberal schools. -Alva Sexton the Marshall Plan appropriations and bal- ancing our own budget, or keeping them up, partly in the hope that we can thereby dis- pose of some of our surpluses. It is a Con- gress which has been investigating almost everything and voting on very little and that, in itself, is a sign of how deep its quandaries go. And now, with the end of the govern- ment's fiscal year in sight, making it neces- sary that at least the appropriations bills be quickly passed, we stand in a true crisis of this, our Age of Deadlock. But it isn't the calendar which is making the trouble; the time factor is merely bringing to light the state of deadlock which has existed since Congress convened in January. The time factor is merely a sub-crisis in that state of deadlock which is our real, our continuing and muffled crisis. If we operated our country under some sort of parliamentary system, we would perhaps call a general election, and go to the people for political refreshment and instruction. Since ,we don't we can only wait it out, with a Congress which can't go home without taking up key matters on which action was promised at the last election, and which obviously doesn't in- tend to do much about a number of these even if it stays in session until Christmas. It can't attend to them, and it can't not attend to them; of such is deadlock made. Meanwhile a gathering recession whimpers on the edges of the scene, calling for man- agement and direction from a Congress which, above all, lacks a clear sense of direction. But these few tense and strained weeks will be not without value if they cause us to lift our eyes above the individual issues, and to realize that deadlock itself is the issue. If the President wanted to, he could establish this issue, and go to the people with a demand that the deadlock be broken, so that we could begin to plan our way. He could rise above the role of being merely one of the factors in the deadlock, and try for the role of being the man to end and resolve it. (Copyright, 1949, New York Post Corporation) Looking Back 35 YEARS AGO: Official summer figures reached 1491, 100 more than 1913. The literary department had 611 members, including 12 embalmers. 25 YEARS AGO: A famous 43-carat sapphire-blue diamond, said to have belonged to Emperor Nicholas of Russia, was taken out of hock at Nice, France, where it had been for three years as security to a 200,000-franc loan. The owner said that she had refused an offer of 10,000,000 francs for it. The jewel is be- lieved to have come from a Buddha in a Hindu Temple more than 1,000 years ago. 20 YEARS AGO: Max Schmeling, in his rapid rise to fame as one of the few who ever knocked out Joe Louis, smashed Spaniard Paulina Uzcudun into a bloody pulp in 15 rounds at Yankee Stadium. 10 YEARS AGO: Regular trans-Atlantic passenger service got off to a bang when Pan-American Air- ways' Dixie Clipper, a 41-ton flying boat, took off with 22 passengers, some of whom had applied for passage eight years before. The plane left at 2:12 p.m. and was expected in Europe by breakfast the next day. -From the Pages of The Daily MATTER OF FACT: I\ew Team By JOSEPH ALSOP WASHINGTON-President Tru- man being what lie is, our fu- ture now depends upon the man- agement of our affairs by Secre- tary of State Dean G. Acheson and Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson. Enough time has passed to give an idea of the performance of this new team, put in by the President to replace the great post-war pilots, George C. Marshall, Robert A. Lovett and James V. Forrestal. And Acheson's return from Paris, after a modest but solid and exceedingly creditable success, af- fords a good occasion to take a reading. * * * ACHESON has already shown himself to be what most peo- ple always have known him to be -a man of character and great intelligence, an apt and patient negotiator and a shrewd judge of world issues. Even in this first few months, Acheson has also had some suc- cess in the slow task of bring- ing order out of the immemorial chaos of State Department or- ganization. But with the assistance of Un- der Secretary James Webb, who has wisely chosen to be more ad- ministrator than policy maker, Acheson is getting ahead with the job that was begun under Marshall and Lovett. ASTO ACHESON,. indeed, there can be only one doubt. The area of crisis is now shifting to the Far East. - The policy elaborated by Mar- shall, Lovett and Forrestal spe- cifically excluded Asia-Mar- shall, with his strong dislike for the Chinese National govern- ment, again and again prevented his younger partners from for- mulating a clear Asiatic policy. We have no clear Asiatic policy today, and the National Security Council at the moment is rather nervously trying to develop one. All of this means that in the Far East Acheson has the job of laying down new policy lines in- stead of followiig old ones. Unhappily, he cdmes to his task with the conviction that Marshall was in the right, rather than Lovett and Forrestal. The final test of Acheson will be whether he succeeds in Asia as well as his predecessors succeeded in Europe. * * * AS FOR THE somewhat more or- nate figure of Louis Johnson, he canot be judged unless John- son the moneyman, Johnsonthe American Legion leader, Johnson the politician, is first separated from the Johnson who is also an administrator. To date, as an administrator, although he may have indulged in adgood deal of unnecessary sound and fury aimed at the crowd in the political bleachers, he must at least be credited with a determined effort to make service unification work. Under his prodding and Gen- eral Dwight D. Eisenhower's lead- ership the Joint Chiefs of Staff are at last nearing agreement on a unified strategic concept, and on the roles and missions such a con- cept will confer on each service. The question remains, how far his highly visible Presidential ambitions will influence his ad- ministrative actions. There have been some signs that he regards Secretary Acheson as a potential rival and means to break down the vital State De- partment -Defense Department collaboration so carefully fostered by the previous State-Defense team. * * * IF THE STATE and Defense de- partments are to relapse into their former hostility, or if our strength is to be allowed to go slack, we may as wellabandon hope. There is another danger, however, which is not a future possibility but an existing fact. Consciously or unconsciously, sine the new team came in, the Administration has allowed the sense of urgency, the sense of crisis in the world, to diminish in the country. The Atlantic pact has been de- ferred. Military aid to Europe is being put over to the next session. One of the strong arguments made against a positive Far Eastern policy is that it will be hard to "sell." But in fact the urgency, is no less, the crisis has not become less grave, just because Vishin- sky is smiling instead of hurling insults. The situation is merely more complicated, not better. And if the new team does not accomplish the old team's feat, of making the situation understand- able to the country, we shall run into very bad trouble indeed. (Copyright, 1949, NY Herald Tribune) All notices for the Daily Official Bulletin are to be sent toathe Office of the Summer Session in typewritten form by 3:30 p.m. of the day preced- ing its publication, except on Satur- day when the notices should be sub- mitted by 11:30 a.m., Room 3510 Ad- ministration Building. SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1949 VOL. LIX, No. 4S Notices The Inter - American Schools Service of Washington, D.C., an- nounces vacancies on the elemen- tary and secondary levels, in vari- ous schools in South America. A degree is necessary, also a mini- mum of one year of teaching ex- perience. For further information, call at the Bureau of Appoint- ments. The Board of National Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. announces vacancies in its missionary schools for teachers of the following subjects: Arts and Crafts; Coach; Elementary grades; English; Industrial sub j e t s; Mathematics; Music. There are also positions open for dietitians; agriculturalists; maikiten an c e workers; secretaries; and house- mothers. For further information call at the Bureau of Appoint- ments. Music School Students expect- ing to present a recital during the summer session must appear be- fore a special full-faculty jury be- ginning at 4 p.m., Monday, June 27, in Room 305 S.M., if they have not previously been approved. Graduate students may not elect courses after this week. Courses may be dropped with record after this week, but will be recorded with the grade of E if dropped af- ter the fourth week of classes. Concerts Student Recital: Patricia Hough, graduate student of piano with Joseph Brinkman, will present a program at 8:00 p.m., Monday, June 27, in the Rackham Assem- bly Hall, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree. Her program will include compositions by Bach, Franck, Debussy, and Hindemith, and will be open to the general public. Exhibitions Museum of Art: Michigan Wa- ter Color Society, 3rd Annual Ex- hibition; Islamic Pottery; Alumni Memorial Hall, daily 9-5, Sundays 2-5. The public is invited. Events Today Visitors' Night, Department of Astronomy - Saturday, June 25, 8:30-10 p.m. at University Ob- servatory (Observatory and East Ann Streets, opposite University Hospital) for observations of Sat- urn and star clusters. Visitors' Night will be canceled if the sky is cloudy. Childrenemust be ac- companied by adults. (Other Vis- itors' Nights have been scheduled for July 2, July 16 and July 30.) International Center. Reception for new students. Dance following. 7:30-12:00 p.m., Rackham Build- ing on the terrace. Coming Events The B'nai B'rith Hillel Founda- "Why, So It Is" 50 - I ~- Si'-) [FB So -E ' y pN pX- i VRp Ai vA tfl1 _... SO Qp~z 04- t: -5^ -" w6M M o DAILY FFICIL BUL~ IN tion will hold open house Sunday night, 7:30 to 10:30 at the Foun- dation, 2101 Hill Street. There will be a short meeting of all members, both graduate and undergraduate, of the Omega Psi Phi fraternity on Tuesday, June 28, 1949, at 7:00 p m., at the Mich- igan Union for the purpose of or- ganization during the summer ses- sion. Pi Lambda Theta will hold the first meeting of the summer Mon- day, June 27, at 7:30 p.m., in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Xe ttep4. 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 suchletters which for any other reason are not in good taste will not be published. The editors reserve the privilege of con- densing letters. Alcoholism ... To the Editor: C. R. HILL has came up with the obvious-an alcoholic is un- hinged. The determinalists in psy- chology will say that if the alco- holic hadn't started drowning his troubles in drinks (a slow pro- cedure) the basic conflict would manifest itself in some other way. If the conflict is great enough and he suppressed it enough he would become psychotic. Maybe the de- velopment of an alcoholic psy chosis would be more fun than a plain everyday run of the mill va- riety of psychosis. Keep in mind they are both merely symptoms. Excessive drinking is a substi- tute adjustment and the person who adjusts to small conflicts in this way will be more likely to look for a bigger bottle when he has a strong conflict than to seek proper counselling or figure out a con- structive adjustment. But Hill, C. R., we can't assume that since alcoholism is merely a symptom that fascists run the University and want to deprive social drinkers of their life blood. I can't remember but it was prob- ably a prohibitionist that told me liquor was habit forming and some people drink excessively with no real honest to goodness conflict to back them up (andnnodmuseum to sleep in if they don't dare face their wife). Nor can we assume that drinking is not a contributing factor to crime because a few peo- ple were left in jail during pro- hibition. I contend that removing the regulation will put the University in the position ofhencouraging drinking., I don't have space to address those who think this is small beer and refuse to consider it. Jake: Jacobson and others I've talked to agree that this must be considered. Jake also tells me that it would be better to have chap- erones[d drinking in the chapter house than off campus, unchap- eroned dances and parties. This must also be considered as pro and con arguments are added up. Most comments that have failed to show any thinking haven't failed to be entertaining. Don't be discouraged, Walsh, it's a peren- nial that will aid in a solution. I'd like to ask Melvin Brighton's friends to keep track of him and if he really develops a persecution complex to smuggle a few drinks into his ward. All of which goes to show that you can back an ardent prohibi- tionist up against a wall, a mu- seum wall, and he will still appeal for some real reasons before you tear down that fascistic block to human rights. -Jim Jimerson. Grass Roots .,.,. To the Editor: NOTICED with some surprise that you state the Detroit papers are part of a vast "grass- roots campaign" blowing with the prevailing westerlies toward Washington, D.C. To the best of my knowledge, none of the Detroit editors are aware of grass. Sod, perhaps, or even turf or divots-but not grass. The News is surrounded by bright asphalt laid immediately after Honest Dick Reading's first in- auguration; the Times, it is true, overlooks a small park but thi is generally covered by a thin layer of derelicts from Skid Row; and the Free Press' awareness of grass is confined to the broths of boy-o's serving on its staff. The nearest any of the three editors came to the color was on the fateful morning last Novem- ber when a president of the United States was elected, quite centrary -even contradictory-to the ex- pressed wishes of these three ed- itors who have forgotten what grass roots are. The color was re- flected in their complexions. But I am glad that The Daily has come out against sin. Only one question remains: whose sin are you against? -Leo V. Young. Advice FROM THE TIME of Galileo and before, it has been obvious that loyalty programs hamper the spirit of free inquiry. The Federa- tion of American Scientists na- turally opposes requiring loyalty oaths from government research fellows, as part of a bill to estab- lish a National Research Founda- tion. The scientists' group find the idea dangerous because of the state of mind it reflects and im- poses, but beyond that the fed- eration states that loyalty oaths, in the realm of science, "are valueless as security precau- tions." Galileo had to agree publicly, as a token of loyalty to a medieval church, that the earth really didn't rotate around the sun. But the enforced avowal didn't make him or any other scientist change his mind on the subject. Those Congressmen who are pushing their security motives farther than practicality might seek wisdom from the mouths of undergraduates. A student told a professor who asked him to sign an oath that he wouldn't cheat on an examination, "If I don't intend to cheat, I don't need to take an oath; and if I do intend to cheat, I'd swear to anything." Anyone with truly subversive in- tentions would feel the same way about it. -St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 1Mid.wn &~i tILj -, 4 Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff B. S. Brown ...Co-Managing Editor Craig Wilson. Co-Managing Editor Merle Levin.............Sports Editor Marilyn Jones .......Women's Editor Bess Young.................Librarian Business Staff Robert C. James .....Business Manager Dee Nelson......Advertising Manager Ethel Ann Morrison ... Circulation Mgr. Jame McStocker ......Finance Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. BARNABY The Catskill incident will be n slendid anecdote for "The JBCKmtOr e; Well. A few years ago O'Malley and I were 'ATSKILLLI E invitea to bowl in the Catskill Little Mens I'InflWLIN GO'O ' The Catskill Little Men's Bowling Conclave was the scene of a close contest that year- You couldn't really say he did step over the foul line- And I must admit he did make a perfect strike- I;