THE MICHIGAN DAILY VMDNE$DAY. JUIX IL W-C THE MCHIGN DALY WENESDY. JLYag;;95 I THOMAS L. STOKES: Talmadge's Victory eWASHINGTON-The forces of modera- tion and moderate progressivism in the South suffered another reversal this week when Herman Talmadge was renominated governor of Georgia. The son of the late Gene Talmadge, like his father a rabid exponent of "white su- premacy," exploited the racial issue in his successful campaign as was done in neigh- boring North Carolina to defeat Senator Frank Graham, outstanding Southern pro- gressive leader, in the runoff primary there a few days previously. This upsurge of racial demagogy, which played its part also in the defeat of Sena- tor Claude Pepper in Florida several weeks ago, is a sad and discouraging trend for the South and the nation. For, aside from its evil effects, it was used, as so often before, by powerful special in- terests to check the advance of social and economic progress so needed in that see- tion. This new and heavily-financed onslaught in the South was not taken lying down. In Georgia, for instance, former Governor M. E. Thompson, Talmadge's opponent, ran neck and neck in statewide popular vote. But the popular vote is not the deciding factor in Georgia. It is county unit votes which decide elections under its antique 3ystem. Talmadge piled up a big majority of county unit votes by concentrating his campaign, as did his father, in the rural counties for which the system is heavily weighted, and where his special type of demagogy appeals. * * * U NDER THE SYSTEM, counties are arbi- trarily divided into three classes by population categories-two unit-vote coun- ties, four, and six, so that the most thinly populated county gets two votes, and the most heavily populated only six. The last includes Fulton county, where Atlanta is located, with 200,000 population and, in the most extreme case of comparison, it takes 122 votes there to equal one vote in sparsely populated Chattahoochee County. When Gene Talmadge, the father, ran for governor the last time-he did not ive to serve-he lost in popular votes, but was elected by county unit votes, thus proving the efficacy of his strategy which he expressed by saying he never cam- paigned in a county which had a street car. That minority election-the first time it had happened in the case of governor-. caused a revulsion in Georgia against the system among the almost disfranchised city voters, including increasingly politically conscious labor. * * * NO RELIEF is possible. in the Legislature, for there, too, the rural counties con- itrol. So to the courts went two successive - cases. They eventually came to the Supreme Court which held, in each instance, that it could not intervene; but in the second, de- cided only recently, there was a vigorous dissent by Justices Black and Douglas which held that the system infringed fundamental rights of citizens, saying, "One of 'these rights is the right to vote, and to have it counted-and to have it counted at full value." The Court's opinion was hailed by the Talmadgeites. Governor Talmadge put through the Legislature some time ago a constitutional amendment, to be voted on at the general election in November, which would extend the system beyond the primary also to general elections. The Talmadgeites raised a howl about another recent Supreme Court decision banning segregation in two specific cases at the University of Oklahoma and the Uni- versity of Texas law school, and immediate- ly Talmadge seized upon this as a campaign issue in his appeal to racial prejudice, as was done likewise in the campaign against Senator Graham in North Carolina. This came fortuitously for him when it had be- come apparent that Thompson was be- ginning to make headway with a dogged, Truman type of campaign from town to town. (Copyright, 1950, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP DAWSON + ART +1 _. ,. THE UNIVERSITY summer session has an open-handed way of pouring out its of- ferings of culture and enlightenment, and this season it has brought us, together with the usual fine concerts, lectures and plays, an art exhibition, or rather a group of them, of unusual brilliance and distinction. As part of its program in Contemporary Arts and Society the summer session has spon- sored a double exhibition in the Rackham Galleries which has a great deal to offer both to the special student and to the lay- man. * * * ONE SECTION of this, entitled Contem- porary Visual Arts, and promoted by the College of Architecture and Design, was organized by Prof. Emil Weddige of the staff of that college. The other, American Painting Since the War, the offering of the Department of Fine Arts, was arranged by Mr. Frederick Wight, educational director of the Institute of Contemporary Art of Boston, for the summer on the staff of the University. Both exhibitions are of great interest, and admirably supplement each other. The tone of the occasion is set by the exhibition of Contemporary Visual Arts, Student View THE SUMMER brings quiescence in stu- dent government and activities and a short time for reflection on current and fu- ture aims and methods. Student government was, we hope, ori- ginally established as an essential feature of higher education for the fundamental purpose of entering the student view- point into the formulation of administra- tion plans. Yet there are those who would support the quasi-Marxian theory that the history of the University is the history of class struggle between the student body and the administration. And to some extent this is a valid analy- sis. Witness the liquor ban, the driving ban, the Phillips ban. There are, of course, certain powers and functions which must be executed solely by the administration. And there is a scope of activities too picayune or far removed for administrative officials to carry on. It is the third area - the middle ground - over which most of the battles are fought. In the fight for this middle ground, the outcome is often determined by the motives of the student participating. And it is dis- couraging to note some of these goals as they really are. There is a constant and ultimately dan- gerous misconception among certain self- styled student "leaders" that the real end in their righteous wars for more student control should be a rather vigorous exercise of the larynx and the resulting publicity which noise inevitably brings. These individuals have shown time and again that they do not function as instru- ments of the students' will. By their com- plete disregard of the most rudimentary rules of diplomacy, they have alienated many administrative officers. Most of them would be the first to criti- cize the tactics of the notorious McCarthy. And yet they are his infantile disciples. Thus great enterprises turn awry, and the student voice is drowned out by the tactless outbursts of the egomaniacs who fallaciously claim a representative func- tion. It is unfortunate that the student point of view is often ignored by the administra- tion. It is even more unfortunate that this continual "oversight" should find its origin in the student body itself. The picture is not completely black, how- ever. The campus is also inhabited by a bet- ter breed of student fighters, though we have to look far to find them. Their theory is that progress toward a happier campus life can best be accom- plished through working with the Uni- versity officials rather than against them. This is a difficult task. It requires insight and intelligence. It necessitates weeding out the campus politicians who are primarily interested in headlines. But it is tremendously important to the progress, and even the survival, of the po- tentially powerful instrument of student opinion. which attempts, within a limited space, to show a small cross-section of the finest products of the contemporary creative artist. These, it immediately and not too surprisingly appears, are typewriters and coffee tables no less than pictures, pots, buildings, gardens, and sculpture. By means of installations of unusual ingenu- ity and rightness, examples of photographs of such objects are presented in ways that dramatize clearly their essential kinship in style. Indeed it is not difficult to be- lieve, in the presence of these admirably integrated groupings of the diverse pro- ducts of the modern designer, that the style which our age appears to be creating may eventually be no less distinct and unified than those of some of the^ great art epochs of the past. Typical of the modern feeling for form is the installation of this exhibit itself. Bare functional steel members based on a system of interchangeable prefabricated parts, cre- ate the framework, provide the background, and carry the load. More often than not the vlls are such as the modern designer calls "virtual," that is planes suggested rather than built out of solid substance, and so affording that titillation peculiar to con- temporary architecture, the sense of being both on the inside and the outside of the same space at the same time. Very interesting are the choices of ac- ual objects. The furniture and textiles are by our best known top-flight designers, and the architecture is by Alden Dow and Walter B. Sanders, the latter now a pro- fessor in the College of Architecture and Design. Various local painters and crafts- men are represented - Kamrowski, La- More, the Lopezes, Valero, Wilt, Gores, Heller, Lahti, Weddige, and in sculpture, McClure - in every case with excellent examples. A rewarding amplification of the sec- tion of modern design concerned with paint- ing is afforded by the exhibit assembled by Mr. Wight in the two end galleries. Here also the selections have been wisely made, and in -a small space a great deal has been suggested. A few of the paintings shown are from a local private collection and gain new lustre when thus displayed in a public gallery, enhanced by, and in turn enhanc- ing, their rightful contemporaries. Most of the painters represented have been seen at *one time or another in local exhibits of American art, but it is a pleasure to pay tribute to such excellent examples of their work as the canvasses by Knaths, Baziotes, McIver, Greene, Tanguy, and Hyman Bloom. The offering by the latter, a major work by a young artist of unusual talent, comes here trailing the breath of the scandal which it recently created when shown in the Virginia Biennial of American Painting at Richmond. In the present setting it'reveals itself as a sound composition and a beauti- ful piece of painting; if there have been any murmurs about its subject-matter, "Female Corpse," none of them have thus for come to the ears of this reviewer. * * * OBVIOUSLY, THE MORE abstract paint- ings here display the typically modern feeling for form more clearly than .do those which are more traditional and descriptive. The relationship between Pereira, Pollock, Margo, Davis, Ghikas, Knaths and the pro- ducts of modern design in the central gal- leries is not too difficult to discover. But the entire collection offers admirable docu- mentation of some of the leading trends in contemporary American painting. Supplementing these exhibits, and bear- ing likewise upon the special theme of Contemporary Arts and Society, the Mu- seum of Art has arranged in Alumni Me- morial Hall a showing of Modern Graphic Art, with materials drawn from its own collections. In one gallery devoted to the Expressionists there are admirable draw- ings or prints by Grosz, Beckmann, Nolde, Dix, Kokoschka, Heckel, Schmitt-Rottluff, Kollwitz and others, some of them recent accessions and here shown for the first time. Another gallery is made up of draw- ings or prints solely by the three great French contemporaries, Picasso, Matisse, and Rouault. The extent of the Univer- sity's holdings in the work of figures such as these may be a surprise to those who have not followed the Museum's collect- ing program. A third display, to include modern paint- ings and water colors together with further modern drawings and prints, and in partic- ular a group of drawings by modern sculp- tors, will open in West Gallery after a slight delay caused by current renovations to the walls. All the exhibitions of the summer ses- sion will continue until the end of July. The Rackham Galleries are open weekdays from 2 to 5 and from 7 to 10 p.m., closed on Sun- days. The galleries of Alumni Memorial Hall are open weekdays from 9 until 5, and on Sundays from 2 until 5. -Jean Paul Slusser "You Weren't Supposed To Be Able To Hit" 1 1 -LA err" IiA -ot i t d INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Korea on the Fourth KoreaBy 3. M. ROBERTS, JR. AP Foreign Affairs Analyst "WHEN A LONG TRAIN of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invari- ably the same object, evidence a design to reduce them under absolute despotism," then, said the American Continental Congress 174 years ago men must fight. TEN FATEFUL DAYS have gone by since Communist imperialism cast the gauntlet of aggression into the face of the United Na- tions and the peace-loving nations of the world. A week since the United States and the United Nations accepted the challenge. Ten days ago the United Nations was saturated in impotence. Washington was pursuing a poorly defined and vacillating course in the Far East and, while still paying lip service to the UN and its ideals, had actually "written off" the world organization as a practical factor in the cold war. * * * * SUDDENLY, as North Korea's Communist army swept into UN and U.S. sponsored South Korea, America had to assume in full fact the responsibilities toward which her program of Communist contain- ment had been carrying her for three years. And the United Nations became a focal point of American policy. Unanimity of world reaction against aggression was given an immediate outlet. The UN, working without the inhibiting presence of Soviet Russia, moved swiftly and cogently. The U.S. moved swiftly, but only committing itself step by step according to the increasing demands of the situation. First came American planes and patrolling warships, then British warships, then American ground forces and Australian planes. As the second week of the Korean war began, 39 nations had aligned themselves behind the policy of the United Nations and of the United States. Some, under the circumstances of the emergency, were expected to do no more than lend their moral support. Others would, as time went on, contri- bute in greater or lesser degree to the actual campaign to put the Com- munist back beyond their boundary and end the fighting. Immersed in its own materialistic viewpoint, Communism could not conceive that America would fight for political principle so far from home. The Kremlin was wrong. * -*.* * TODAY THE UN is mobilized to enforce its decisions. U.S. policy in Asia has done an affirmative and firm about-face. Today, in Korea, American troops move into battle for the pledges of the last three years. Americans are joined by a host of other peoples in saying that for the support of these new-old principles, "we mutual- ly pledge each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor." 0 a i 4 \ - f js 'S ;f t ) i If mo'E 1g ca,., k r DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN i U 1 1 Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructivenotice toall members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Office of the Summer Session, Room 3510 Admin- istration Building, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication(11:00 a.m. Saturdays). WEDNSDAY, JULY 5, 1950 VOL. LX, No, 6-S Noticesj Preliminary Examinations in English: Candidates for the Ph.D. in English who expect to take the preliminary examinations this summer are requested to leave their names with Dr. Ogden, 3230 Angell Hall, at once. The exam- Inations will be given as follows: English Literature to 1550, July 19; English Literature 1550-1750, July 22; English Literature 1750- 1950, July 26; American Litera- ture, July 29. These examinations will be given in Room 276 in the School of Business Administration Building from 9 to 12 a.m. The Bureau of Appointments has had a personnel request for an engineering draftsman for electronic equipment of aircraft. Very good drafting experience is essential. For further informa- tion call at the Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3528 Administration Building. Bureau of Appointments will hold a meeting Thursday, July 6 at 4 p.m. in Rm. 231 Angell Hall for those interested in registering with both teaching and general divisions of the Bureau. Lectures Dr. Leon Brillouin, director of education for the International Business Machines Corporation, will give a lecture on "Statistical Thermodynamics, in Relation to the Theory of Information, as de- veloped by C. E. Shannon and N. Wiener," at 4 p.m., Thursday, July 6, in Rm. 1400, Chemistry Bldg. Open to those interested. Linguistic Institute. "What Is a Language?" Professor Bernard Bloch, Yale University. 1 p.m., to- day, Michigan Union. Speech Assembly. "Levels of Training." Wendell Johnson, Di- rector of Speech Clinic, Univer- sity of Iowa. 3 p.m., today, Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Contemporary Arts and Society Program. Lecture, 4:15 p.m., to- day, Architecture Auditorium. Institute on the Near East. Lec- ture, "Geographical Reconnais- sance of the Near East" (illustrat- ed). Assistant Professor Douglasc D. Crary. 4:15 p.m., today, Kellogg Auditorium. Professor Leslie W. Kindred of Temple University will speak or "Building Better Public Relations' this afternoon at 3 p.m. today ir the Auditorium of the Universit3 High School. Events Today The Corn is Green will open the Department of Speech's summer series of plays tonight at the Lyd- ia Mendelssohn Theater at 8 p.m. The play, a N.Y. Drama Critics Circle Award winner will run throughASaturday night. Tickets for all performances are on sale at the Mendelssohn box office. Sociedad Hispanica: The first meeting of the summer session will take place at 8 p.m. in the East Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. Program: Two Documen- tary Films on Latin America. The public is cordially invited. University Community Center Willow Village. 8 p.m., Wives' Club Refreshment Committee Meeting; and Nursery Board Meeting. Geometry Seminar: 3 p.m., to- day in 3001 Angell Hall. Mr. C. C. Buck will speak on "The inversive group in projective geometry." Michigan Christian Fellowship: Bible Study, "Upper Room," Lane Hall, 7:30 p.m. Topic: I Thesaal- onians, Chapter two. U. of M. Hostel Club: Meeting at League in Kalamazoo Room, 7:30 p.m. First meeting, especial- ly for new members, to discuss summer trip plans. University of Michigan Flying Club: Meeting at 7:30 p.m., Rm. 1042 East Engineering. Aviation enthusiasts welcome to join. Meeting of all Pi Lambda Theta members at 7:30 p.m. in the Lib- rary of the University Elementary School. Planning for summer ses- sion program will be considered. All members are urged to be pre- sent. Chess Club: First summer ses- sion meeting, 7:30 p.m., Michigan Union, Rm. 3A. Non-members are cordially invited. Instruction is available for beginners. Coming Events The French Club will meet Thursday, July 6, at 8 p.m. in the West Conference Room, 3rd floor, of the Rackham Building. Caus- I v erie, songs, games. All students and faculty members interested are cordially invited to join the club. No fees. Graduate History Club: Thurs- day, July 6, 8 p.m., Basement, Cle- ments Library. Topic: Korea. Deutsches Haus, 1101 Church Street, will hold open house on Thursday, July 6, from 7:30 un- til 10 p.m. There will be games and singing, and refreshments will be served. Everyone is cordially invited. Phi Delta Kappa meeting on Thursday, July 6. 6 to 8 p.m. at Michigan Union. Purpose: Busi- ness and pleasure. Go through. the Cafeteria Line at the Michi- gan Union and take your tray to the Faculty Dining Room. Exhibitions General Library, main lobby cases. Contemporary literature and art (June 26-July 26). Museum of Archaeology. From Tombs and Towns of Ancient Egypt. exhibit, American Indian stimu- lants. Exhibition halls, "Trees Past and Present." Fridays, 7:00- 9:00 p.m. Law Library. History of Law School (basement); classics for collectors (reading room). Michigan Historical Collections. 160 Rackham Building. A Century of Commencements. Clements Library. One Hundred Michigan Rarities (June 26-July 5). Museum of Art, Alumni Memor- ial Hall: Modern Graphic Art; Oriental Ceramics; through July 30; weekdays 9-5, Sundays 2-5. The public is invited. I 't F Museums Building. Rotunda A vast, dense cloud is blanketing 1,200,000 square miles of the Pacific, and meteorologists are speculating on where it might have begun" Maybe, they say, wind-blown African desert sands caused it, or maybe an explosive eruption around New Guinea, or maybe even an atomic explosion. Has it occurred to them to check ,on some of Senator Joe McCarthy's latest foggy speeches as a most likely "source? -.. * AT Redlands, Calif., Bishop Alexander P. Shaw of Balti- more is presiding over the South- ern California-Arizona A n n u a 1 Conlfrience of the Methodist Chuich. Tlati's unusual, because Bi- shop Shaw happens to be a Ne- gro. The;.world does move, and dis- crimination d o e s disintegrate, slowly but steadily. -St. Louis Star-Times 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 Philip Dawson........Managing Editor Marvin Epstein........SportsEditor Pat Brownson.......Women's Edto Business Staff Roger Wellington....Business Manager Walter Shapero... Assoc. Business Mgr. 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 Anl Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mai matter. Subscription during regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. 4 ;. -Barnes Connable CURREN MOI' I BARNABY A t The Michigan.. . BRIGHT LEAF, with Gary Cooper, Lauren $acalI, Donald Crisp, Patricia Neal, GARY COOPER is a, tired man. He looks it and acts it as he drags the entire cast under in this second-rate presentation of a private tobacco war. The plot is the old power-and-revenge routine. Cooper returns to his ole Suth- uhn homestead to avenge his stolen land, taken by Donald Crisp, a tobacco tyrant. With the gradual acquiring of power, f+nn .. na.nrr~. rs.. itrah m - . , Carson is treated as more of an outsider than a coordinated member of the cast, and is used only when an occasional bit of hu- mor is needed. Even Donald Crisp falls vic- tim to the picture's mediocrity as he wavers between a Southern accent and a Scottish one. The only worthwhile performance is turn- ed in by Patricia Neal. The cool-eyed, cool- hearted beauty quickens the slow motion pace with her cruel cunning as the anxiety- ridden debutante. In too many stuffy costume pictures, a cluttered setting and expensive cast are Are you in bed, dear? "Yes, Mom. !Good-night. E o a of a s H k V 7-4-50 Barnaby! Here's exactly the kind of mah your Fairy Godfather wants to do business with..,. Listed under "Loans"- Swell, Mr. O'Malley. C---- Ec dae~mrr It looks as though the neighbors have chosen you to lead the-fight against the highway coming through here, John. I'll call that guy Friendly in the morning and make one last appeal to him. If I can get him. to sell his land, the state will build on the other side of town. q4 g Isn't it pretty late to call tonight, Mr. O'Mqjley?, These big shots g4t where they are by hard work, m'boy. Mr. friendly will b& C; at his desk all right. DREW PEARSON: Merry-Go-Round IT WILL PROBABLY BE DENIED, but Governor Dewey does not plan to support Lieut. Gov. Joe Hanley for the New York GOP gubernatorial nomination. Hanley, now 7 n , i vP1ame+gi(afc hX - 1''a .-., . s-. ..] I I _--TT - --- - -,- -- --- I I - Hello. First National Friendly Loan Company?E I wish to speak with This is J. J. O'Malley, the restaurauteur speaking. I'm. fabina a chA.ainf olr. -N Yes. I've prevailed upon the state to drop its plans for I ana sette rtis hianway oroolem- 1 d