LGE W THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1949 i (Editor's Note is written by Co-Managing Editor Craig Wilson.) I had a telephone call a few days ago. It was a woman calling. She wanted to know "how much that advertisement for Club 211 on Page One cost." (Edition of June 26.) I told her it wasn't an advertisement-it was a newsstory. I said that when a student- .organized cafeteria maintains its business revenue despite a more than 60 per cent drop in the size of the student body-that is news! I also cited the uncontested Club 211 claim to the lowest food prices in town. "Our prices are lower," she said. I promised to send a reporter over right away and said we would run an article right away. "I'll write you a letter and you print that on Page One," she demanded. I explained that we would be willing to accept the letter but if we were to write a story we would have to send out a reporter to interview her. She agreed and hung up without giving her name or place of business. Well, here it is, July 7 and still no letter, which is too bad. * * * * A price war that would reduce food prices everywhere in Ann Arbor would be extremely welcome; I get tired of eating in the same place every day-even if it is student-oper- ated. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: PAUL BRENTLINGER L AGO: Back] 35 YEARS AGO: 'The Ann Arbor swimming pool, located at 725 South Fifth Avenue, offered swimming every day from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. and swimming for ladies only on Tuesday and Friday forenoons. The pool was fed by cool spring water. The ad was also a coupon good for one "looker" at the pool-good for summer students only. With the driving ban not yet in effect, dreamers were thinking up poems thatwent; FORD The summer student grumbles at his toll, And swears at fate, and cusses, too, I ween. While he, poor boob, is burning midnight oil, Some other guy is burning gasoline. 25 YEARS AGO: Governor Al Smith of New York, a wet candidate for the Democratic nomination, had a campaign manager named Franklin D. Roosevelt. Prof. Fielding H. Yost, of the Athletic Department, will give a lecture on "Athletics in Relation to Endurance and Public Health." 20 YEARS AGO: The meanest man in the world, according to the Daily was going around cutting off a farmer's cow's tail. This, The Daily went on, is very harmful for without a tail, bossy is at the mercy of countless flies and mos- quitoes. The farmer is offering a $100 re- ward for the meanie's capture. 10 YEARS AGO: The House passed the controversial Neu- trality Bill after overriding Administra- tion wishes and including a small arms embargo clause. The vote was 200 to 188. The bill still has to go through the Senate, where diehard Republican isolationists are determined to stay in session all summer in order to defeat more of-the administra- tion's hopes. Congress pulled a second coup on the Administration by keeping power to deval- uate the dollar to itself, overriding Pres- ident Roosevelt's wish to have that power himself. The bill made the national debt more than 40 billion dollars, largest in his- tory. * * * 5 YEARS AGO: America's top air ace, Lt. Col. Francis Ga- breski, shot down his 28th victim, a Messer- schmidt 109, over France. The $16,000,000,000 Fifth War Loan was reported within four per cent of its goal, with $15,364,000,000 subscribed., * * * 1 YEAR AGO: Yugoslavia, under Marshal Tito's Com- munist regime, declared itself independent from Moscow, but at the same time asked for West support and cooperation with the Soviet Union. Sixty-three University faculty members were promoted, 16 to professor, 22 to asso- iate professor, and 25 to assistant professor. BARNABY I I'd Rather Be Right BY SAMUEL GRAFTON r) (With today's column, Samuel Grafton discon- tinues the writing of the daily "I'd Rather Be Right." The Daily will continue to carry syndi- cated columns by Drew Pearson and Stewart and Joseph Alsop.) IT SEEMS VERY strange to be writing a farewell column. I have been doing this, man and boy, for ten years-ten years to the day, really-and what the rhythm of the days is going to be like without it, I have no idea. But somewhere a bell has rung for me and announced that I must get on to other work. I am not retiring, in any sense. I shall work as hard as I have ever worked, though in other forms. I hope that some day soon you will hear from me again, in those other forms. I'll miss it, all of it, the reading and the traveling, the morning doubt, the after- noon necessity for getting it done, the final period and the daily reprieve when it is reached. But mostly I'll miss the feeling of writing something for somebody out there to read tomorrow. I don't know who that somebody is. It could be the man who once sent me some four-leaf clovers, just because he wanted me to have them, or the great lady of eighty-two who used to jack me up with her sharp comments, or the next passenger on the subway bench reading my pieces. To him-no, let me put it another way-to you, whoever and wherever you are, my many many thanks, my very best wishes. I shall be working somewhere, as you will be, and I shall always remember you. In stop- ping the column I feel as if I were breaking a chain letter. feelings. I have tried to use these internal imperatives as a guide in writing my col- umn, and I must use them as a guide to action, too. I shall be working with deadlines months instead of minutes away, but I shall be working on very much the same ideas and materials I have worked on here. I shall work, too, I hope, with a sense of that other deadline, the planetary dead- line, which tells me that we had better be quick in solving some of our problems. I HAVE BEEN cleaning out my desk, and I don't like that very much. There are newspaper clippings from 1944, and a slide rule I once bought. I never got very many answers from it. The answers that amounted to anything came in other ways-many of them in the form of letters from those of you who, in that strange, mixed-up, wonderful decade, wereA not ashamed of your emotions, and believedin the emergence of a better and safer world, and wore your hearts on your sleeves. The morning mail will not be the same for me again. AND IT DOES seem strange; 'strange to be leaving my home paper, the New York Post Home News, and my downtown office. I was allowed to develop my column as I pleased, to push on as I could, and in ten years no word or thought or idea of mine has been questioned here. The regret at parting is, I think and hope, real and equal on both sides. Wherever I am when I pick up my daily copy, I will, for a moment, remember a particular building, its rooms, and corridors, its offices and its people. (Copyright, 1949, New York Post Corporation) AI I that TO WHY I am going on to other work, can only say that I have a clear feeling I must, and I am a respecter of clear DRAMA LIFE WITH FATHER, by Howard Lind- say and Russel Crouse, presented by the Department of Speech. At the Lydia Men- delssohn.I "FATHER," having survived a record run on Broadway, an endless number of road show performances, and translation into a motion picture, seems now destined for another lifetime in high school and col- lege productions. All of this should be very well, for it's a fine play indeed, and con- ceivably ought to come to an end only when everyone in the world has seen it. The old gentleman, who already mani- fests strong and certain signs of becoming the Grand Old Man of the American The- atre, opened last night at the Lydia Men- delssohn, and had the devil's own time of it in competing with the weather for the audi- ence's attention. The performance, like the weather, ran warm-and-cool; hot-and-dry, and some- how failed to make the impression it should have. The fault, I think, was a matter of individual performances, rather than of total effect. Donald Kleckner, as the irascible elder Day, went into gear immediately as a boom- ing and bombastic household terror, and stayed there. The (result was that Father emerged as a man full of sound andjury, signifying little else. This was unfortunate because, as everyone knows, by now, Father is also a sly and sarcastic wit, a mere piece of putty, and an old softie. I missed these things in Kleckner's performance. The jitter-brained Vinnie was played by Margaret Pell with, I think, more felicity. Miss Pell continues to look and act like Billie Burke, a fact which, in this case, does her no harm. She rendered her part withI competence and clarity, and an awe-inspir- ing illogic. Best performance was William Brom- field's as young Clarence. Carefully steer- ing away from the unpleasantly stereo- tfped young man, Bromfield did Clarence with a proper mixture of confidence and bewilderment, and with a strong sugges- tion of the paternal influence. The high spot.of the evening's performance came as he, in a horrified tone, described his total inability to misbehave while wearing Fa- ther's suit. The other, and younger Days, were played by John Waller, Ronald Muchnick, and Teddy Riecker, all with varying degrees of effectiveness. Also present were a series of housemaids, all with short names, and none of whom lasted very long. A special graph to Oren Parker and Har- old Ross, who put together as fine a set as I've seen since "Summer Solstice," and to Helen Forrest Lauterer, costumiere, for Vinnie's magnificent black-and-white last- act gown. -W. J. Hampton. AH, BUT a man's reach should exceed his grasp, Or what's a heaven for? -Robert Browning. SOLITUDE is as needful to the imagination as society is wholesome for the char- acter. -John Dryden. STONEWALL JACKSON, wrapped in his beard and his silence. -Stephen Vincent Benet. h e* 4 S S -Daily-Bi Hampton "Why, son that's RAIN - a thing that used to be quite common in Ann Arbor a long time ago . . " By DREW PEARSON WSA.HINGTON-It has been exactly 10 years since this column exposed the Louisiana scandals, resulting in the imprisonment of Gov. Richard Leche and various members of the old Huey Long gang. Today, the Long family and friends have staged an amazing comeback. Huey's brother, Earl, is governor of the state. Huey's son, Russell, is U.S. Senator from Louisiana. So the other day I went back to Louisiana--just 10 years after writing the first column on the Louisiana scandals-to see how the rebuilt Long machine is handling its comeback. Things have changed a lot in 10 years. The name in the governor's mansion is still snelled "L-O-N-G," but the atmosphere is much different. It's calmer, less spectacular and far more serious. Earl Long is giving the state such an even-keel administration that it's almost humdrum. The city of New Orleans, under young Mayor De Lesseps Morrison, is still rowing with the Long machine, but the row lacks the melodrama and bellicose pyrotechnics of Huey's day. Most interesting development is the way many of the old Huey Long crowd have staged quiet comebacks. Seymour Weiss, former Democratic National Committeeman, who went to jail for income-tax evasion, is now back running the Roosevelt Hotel in New Orleans and going out of his way to be a patriotic citizen. Everyone respects Seymour's quiet comeback. Governor Leche, who got 10 years for taking bribes, is living on his farm near Covington and raising flowers. His garden is so unique that tourists pay 75 cents to visit it. Dr. J. Monroe Smith, former president of Louisiana State Univer- sity, who got 30 years for embezzling university funds, is dead now. But before he died he was given a chance, as rehabilitation officer at the state penitentiary at Angola, to help others who had suffered his misfortune. Gov. Long was criticized for giving Doc Smith this job, but when Doc got out of jail he was refused a real estate license, found himself unable to make a living, and pled with the governor to .j. send him back to the penitentiary where he could help rebuild others. Dr. Smith knew something about the difficulty of staging a comeback, and thought he was qualified for this job, so the governor appointed him. He died, however, before very long in office. Then there was George Caldwell, who went to jail for stealing WPA materials and padding WPA payrolls. He is now the leading building contractor in Baton Rouge. Abe Shushan, who built the New Orleans airport, is now back in the bus iess of being an honest man. Monty Hart, of all those convicted, failed to stage a comeback. He committed suicide. It was always my belief that Huey Long-and I knew him well -was honest. He soaked the big oil companies, taxed the utilities and squeezed campaign contributions out of all sorts of people. But the money went back into free schoolbooks, better roads and a network of bridges that have left a lasting mark on the state. Huey's brother Earl is a quiet, easygoing farmer, just the opposite of his brother's high-strung, ripsnorting bundle of nerves which once made Louisiana the most spotlighted state in the union. Earl also has followed a soak-the-rich policy, induced his legislature to pass a heavy tax against the oil companies, put through free lunches for all school children regardless of their means, and has increasedNegro schoolteachers' pay from $70 to $200 a month if they have a B.A. degree. "The only way to have compulsory education is with free books and free lunches," says Governor Long, who has no children of his own. "Kids can't study when they're hungry, and an awful lot of kids down our way just don't get enough to eat." Earl Long discusses his late brother quite frankly. "The oil companies hated Huey." he says. "He taxed 'em and they hated him. I have taxed them too, but they have taken it out more on Russell than on me." "In fact, every mistake I make Russell gets blamed for," continued the Senator's uncle. "Russell's going to make a good Senator. He has all of Huey's good points and none of his bad. "Huey wanted money for power," explained Earl. "He never wanted it for himself. As for me, I don't need money because I don't care about power, and I'm retiring from this job when my ternt is up." Those who know Governor Long say he means it, that he would rather be on his farm than in the governor's mansion and that even now he spends every spare minute he can slip away from Baton Rouge on his farm. (Copyright. 1949, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN All, notices for the Daily Official Bulletin are to be sent to the 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. THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1949 VOL. LIX, No. 1S Notices "The Graduate Aptitude Exam- ination is required of all graduate students who have not had the Graduate Record Examination or the Graduate Aptitude Examina- tion before. The examination will be held 7 to 10 p.m. in the Rackham Lec- ture Hall, Thursday, July .7. Examination fee is $2.00. Candi- dates must buy an examination ticket at the Cashier's office. Vet- erans will have a supply requisition signed in the Graduate School of- fice before going to the Cashier's office." The Michigan State Civil Service Commission announces an exam- ination of Blind Services Place- ment Counsellor. Additional infor- mation may be obtained at the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Building. Student Organizations planning to be active during the summer session are requested to submit to the Office of Student Affairs, Rm. 1020 Admin., not later than July 8, the following information: (1) a list of officers and members, (2) the acceptance of a member of the faculty willing to act as adviser to the group. ORGANIZATIONS NOT SO REGISTERED BY JULY 8 ARE ASSUMED TO BE INAC- TIVE FOR THE SUMMER TERM. Forms for reporting the required informationmay be secured in Room 1020 Admin. History Language Examinations -French, German and Spanish language examinations to be given in 1035 Angell Hall, Saturday, July 16, 10-11. Master's candidates in- tending to take this examination must register immediate in the History Office, 119 Haven Hall. Overseas Positions: Representa- tives of the Department of the Army will be at the Bureau of Ap- pointments Thursday, Friday and Saturday, July 7, 8, and 9 to in- terview people interested and qualified for the following teach- ing positions in Dependent Schools: In Japan-men with math, science, physical education combination; physical education men to teach basketball and base- ball; combination French and Spanish teachers; music and art teachers; first grade teachers with MA to also be building principal. Also, librarians, assistant librar- ians, and school nurses. In Ger- many - elementary teachers to handle four grades in two-room schools. Age limits: 22-40. Two years' teaching experience required. For further information and appoint- ment, call at 3528 Administration Building or call extension 489. The Department of the Army is also recruiting recreational work- ers (women) for Army Service Clubs in the Pacific Theatre (Japan, Okinawa, Guam, Korea). Qualifications: Assistant Service Club Director-graduateion from college and experience in adult education; age limits 30-40. Rec- reational Director - graduation from college and practical knowl- edge of arts an crafts, dramatics or group recreation. Interviews will be held the latter part of this week. For further information call at 3528 Administration Building. Lectures An informal talk entitled "Strength of Materials in the 18th Century, including the work of J. Bernoulli, Euler, and Coulomb" will be given by Professors S. Tim- oshenko and R. V. Southwell, Thursday night, July 7, from 7:30 to 9:00 p.m. in Room 311, West Engineering Building. All who mare interested are invited to attend the meeting. This is my house bird might see it. This is my porch (z). The round circles are bushes which get very wet when it rains. I have found my Daily in the places marked X. Once I even found it on the porch, but that was a dry, sunny morning. Whenever it rains, it is always under the bushes where it gets wet and cannot be read. I also get wet when I try to get it. When I get wet, I get mad. When I get mad, my wife gets mad and our happy home is disturbed. I am sure that you do not want to break up a happy home, so will you please have your paper boy deliver my Daily on the porch. I will be glad to show him where it is. (It is on the front of the house.) He tried to locate it all last term, but only hit it a couple of times by accident. In spite of my com- plaints, his aim has not improved this summer. Really, the porch is pretty tig. -Leo T. Dinnan. of the University of Michigan." James P. Adams, Provost of the University. 3:00 p.m., Auditorium, University High School. Summer Session Lecture Series "Soil and Food." Charles E. Kel- logg, United States Department of Agriculture. 4:15 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Students enrolled in Forestry 1945 and City Planning 200S are expected to attend this (Continued on Page 3) 1 ettep4 TO THE EDITOR The Daily accords its readers the privilege of submitting letters for publication in this columntSubject to space limitation, 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- tius letters and letters of a defamna- 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 con- densing letters. Complaint ... To the Editor: AM A DAILY subscriber. This is my house. and yard as a No Room for Complaint COMPLAINTS are a usual procedure around the Michigan campus. We com- plain about the teachers and the teaching. We complain about the spirit and the lack of spirit. But our favorite gripe seems to be the prices of things-especially the prices of meals. Unlike the weather, which, as we all know, everyone complains about but no- body does anything about, there have been answers to the high cost of food in Ann Arbor. One answer was the Club 211. Another answer is one few people seem to know about although it has been on cam- pus long before the Eating Club. It's the boarding system run by the Inter-Coop Council. The history of the whole Co-op movement on campus is a fascinating one. Based on the principle that the living, working and playing together of people of all races, re- ligions and nationalities -is a good way to bring about world peace, the Co-ops have been noted for being among the most active organizations on campus. Above all, it's been noted for the economical living and eating arrangements it has been able to provide for students. For about eight dollars a week, students have been able to eat and live at one of the six campus houses-and live and eat well too! For those who don't care to live at a co-op, three meals a day at phenomenally low cost are available. The price of a decent meal in Ann Arbor may be exorbitant but the means of beating the restaurants at their own game has been made available to students if they wish to take advantage of them. And when the meals are accompanied by cooperative fun and practical experience in living with all types of people, it is a wise student indeed who takes advantage of the golden oppor- tunity. -Phyllis Cohen I Seminar in Applied Mathema- tics will meet Thursday, July 7 at 4:00 p.m. in Room 1504 East En- gineering. Lecture and Demonstra- tion by Professor L. L. Rauch of Department of Aeronautical En-, gineering on "The Electronic Dif- ferential Analyzer (Analogue Computer)." Please note the change in the room. Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students of the University o, MichigEM i lnder the authority of the Board in Cbntrol of Student Publications. Editorial Staff B. S. Brown ......Co-Managing Editor Craig Wilson ...C..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. James Mc~tocker .... 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 mal matter. Lecture: "The History of Egyp- tian Adjectives." Professor Wil- liam E. Edgerton, University of Chicago. 7:30 p.m., Rackham' Am- phitheatre. I Lecture: "Educational Policies , 1 "' Mr.Van Ess! So nice to see you again- * Ii~ ~ 4o~.o.. R.~ V.6 ~ ~"~' -. mom- - i II II ,- r' Thirty thousand in pearls;' Baxter, and she I s wu c: xeu soa +4 n Re4 t S Pu ortice U/i 1..,.t/.. 1 .. i That crash-Somebody ! I " I From outside... - MR. O MALLEY! fC~mr f There's nobody here- II i I ®1