THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1950 HOMAS L. STOKES: Semantics W ASHINGTON-Mere words often take on meaning far beyond their original sense and become disturbing facts in the minds of men. Much evil can flow from that-even to wars. It is about time now to look at a couple of phrases composed of ordinary Anglo-Saxon words from the standpoint of semantics. There is first "iron curtain." Winston Churchill coined it in his Fulton, Mo., speech five years ago and thus lowered a barrier figuratively across Eastern Europe. Cartoon- ists illustrated it for us so we could see it. All of us on this side of it became righteous folks and all on the other side became un- righteous. That was the first division of one world into two worlds-by semantics. We long have accepted the phrase and it has be- come an ominous fact. It has affected our behavior in ways of which we are not Conscious. Then along came another-"cold war." That, too, hp, affected our thinking arid behavior. It has created a state of mind, a rather grim one. Unfortunate and unhealthf Is the constant repetition of the word "war.,, TF YOU TRAVELED eastward across Eur- ope, you would not see an "iron curtain," of course. What would you see? You'd see people working in the fields, trying to raise something to eat and something over to sell, and the country and the people would look about the way they do in Iowa or Ne- braska, and if you could speak the language you'd find their daily problems about the same as those of folks over here. You'd travel also through cities like Des Moines and Lincoln or bigger ones like Pittsburgh and Cleveland, and you'd find people there going about their jobs, just as we do here, trying to make a living and 'make ends meet. In city and on farms, also, you'd find them worrying about another war-they know what it's like, too-just as we worry. 'VERY PROPERLY President Truman re- buked Russia for her "willfull flouting" of the UN in current walkouts, and at the same time emphasized the "common sense attitude" of the UN in the face of this dis- play, "of proceeding with its business as usual." Emphasizing that the power of UN is "that of moral face," he said: "No nation, member or non-member, at- tending or non-attending, can avoid ac- countability before the United Nations for actions affecting the peace. The aroused opinion of mankind, when brought to sharp and immediate focus as it often is in the United Nations, is not lightly to be dismissed, even by a nation that has strong battalions." Through making the UN work we can get rid of our semantic troubles-"iron curtain" and "cold war." (Copyright 1950, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff end represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: NANCY BYLAN The Weekend In Town LECTURE ARTS AND SOCIETY. Carl Maas will speak at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Architecture Auditorium. DRAMA ANTIGONE ANIt THE TYRANT, second production in the speech department's sum- mer series, at 8 p.m. today through Saturday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The play, written by Jean Anouilh, is based upon the ancient Greek tragic legend. See review on this page tomorrow. MOVIES LOUISIANA STORY, by Robert Flaherty, at 7:30 and 9 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Audi- torium. This film classic is being shown in collaboration with the contemporary arts and society program. Admission is free. See review on this page tomorrow. THE SKIPPER SURPRISED HIS WIFE, starring Joan Leslie and Robert Walker, to- morrow at the Michigan. - * * * STORY OF MOLLY X, with June Havoc tomorrow and Saturday at the State. * * ' ANNIE GET YOUR GUN, including a number of Irving Berlin songs from the Broadway musical, starring Betty Hutton as the cowgirl. Saturday at the Michigan. Wire-Tappgin RECENT OCCURRENCES in regard to the motivation of the Communist Party it- nation-wide Communist hunt are com- self-i.e., the justification of ignoble means forting to those who have been appalled by by noble ends. It was such a doctrine the overt infringement of Constitutional which played havoc among many anti- rights by self-styled patriots. Decisions of Shit disyers in US y an Stalinist dissenters in the U.S.S.R. and led the Supreme Court and the Justice Depart- to the infamous Trotsky trials of 1936-38. ment are a blunt answer to the careless Un- Of course, not all U.S. courts accepted American Committee, the malicious Mc- such evidence, but a large number of them Carthy, and those who, when their vitriolic operated on this principle and welcomed charges fail to reach the crux of the matter, "any" evidence with open arms. turn to wire-tapping. Wrong Number Three months ago, the Supreme Court upheld the validity of New York laws which permit wire-tapping, however with one exception-that it be done under ju- dicial supervision. This in itself signifies a tendency to put an expedient check up- on police power and to preserve a basic civil right-freedom from irrational searches and seizures. Indeed, in the past the nation's highest tribunal held a narrow viewpoint towards these rights. In one case, for example, (Olm- stead vs. U.S., 1928) the Court openly sanc- tioned wire-tapping and also the admission of evidence in court secured through such stealthy means. In the words of the chief justice: "The common law rule is that the admissibility of evidence is not affected by the illegality of the means by which it was obtained." One cannot help but notice the similar- ity of that statement to the doctrine of DREW PEARSON: Washington Merry-Go-Round W ASHINGTON - Serious-minded Senator Estes Kefauver of Tennessee today opens up a big probe of Florida gambling, including the third of a million dollars pumped into the political kitty of Fuller Warren to elect him governor of Florida. Warren is a Democrat and so is Kefauver, but the senator isn't letting that hamper the investigation. So far this year more big money pumped into senatorial primaries most any other year in history, Democrats and Republicans. * * * has been than al- by both WHO ELECTS GOVERNORSi DOWN IN MIAMI, Senator Kefauver's in- vestigation, beginning today, goes to the root of how the 'gambling rackets have be- come political rackets. I haven't talked to Kefauver's investigators, but I have made a study of Florida gambling and here is the general picture he will find: Gambling in the lush winter sporting- land around Florida has been divided among three gangs: 1-The old Capone mob under William H. Johnston ofaChicago and Jacksonville controls the dog races of the entire state. 2-The S. and G. Syndicate, a group of local businessmen, control. the bookmaking in Miami and Miami Beach. 3-The New York mob, under Meyer Lan- sky, an associate of Frankie Costello, oper- ates in Broward County, north of Miami Beach. In order to preserve the millions in pro- fits raked in from these areas, the gangs subsidize the sheriffs of their local count- ies and even the governor of Florida him- self. In fact, when the Chicago gang told the S. and G. Syndicate to move over and let them in on part of the Miami bookmaking, the S. and G. Syndicate immediately ap- pealed to the man it had helped elect to office, Dade County Sheriff Jimmy Sulli- van. *, * * DOG-RACER ELECTED GOVERNOR WHEREUPON, the Chicago gang also fell back on the man it had helped elect' to office, Gov. Fuller Warren. Dog-racer William Johnston, it developed, had con- tributed the amazing amount of $154,000 to Warren's primary campaign, despite the fact that it was against the law at that time to contribute more than $5,000 per person. After Warren was elected to office, of course, he got the law changed. Another $154,000 was given and loaned to Warren by Louis E. Wolfson of Jack- sonville, also in violation of the $5,000 limit. Governor Warren has now found himself betwixt and between in the war of gamblers, and the Kefauver crime committee wants to find out what the gamblers get in return for their stupendous campaign gifts. * * * PENNSYLVANIANS NO PIKERS MEANWHILE, in another part of the U.S., other sizable campaign gifts have been revealed in the good old Republican state of Pennsylvania. This time gamblers were not the contributors, but big manu- facturers. Joe Grundy, the famed GOP high-tariff advocate, contributed $94,000 to the Jay Cooke-John Kunkel campaign in Pennsyl- vania to defeat Governor Jim Duff, also Republican. Mason Owlett put up $52,000; loaned another 45,000, while his wife gave $3,000. W. T. Wright also loaned $156,135 Another heartening report is the Justice Depaitment's behavior in the celebrated Amerasia case. Less than a month ago, the Republicans were shouting blatant accusa- tions and demanding that those involved in the Amerasia mystery be prosecuted, even though nearly all the incriminating evi- dence against the editor of the magazine and his associates had been procured through wire-tapping and illegal search. New York grand jury machinery was set into motion; but the Justice Department remained silent, seemingly proposing, "prosecute, if you must, but make sure your evidence is legal." Since then, the jury ended its investigation by deciding that the government's prosecution of the case had been above reproach. * * r IN 1945 one Frank Blieaski, through means of wire-tapping and unwarranted search under the auspices of the OSS, succeeded in obtaining evidence of espionage against the government by Philip Jaffe, the editor, and others. The Justice department immediately rushed to the aid of the suspects and pigeon- holed the evidence secured by Bielaski. Con- sequently, the defendants got off with minor fines. It was obvious that the Justice Depart- ment was sacrificing pragmatic results for democratic principles. Besides, the De- partment knew that any evidence oitained by such methods would not be admissible in court. Bielaski himself is a notorious profession- al wire-tapper. According to Drew Pearson, who tracedBielaski'sssneaky escapades, he tapped several phones under the sponsor- ship of thegovernor of Rhode Island in 1940 and offered the conversations as evidence. to an investigating grand jury. The grand jury brusquely rebuffed the wire-tapper with these memorable words: "We condemn most emphatically the surreptitious practices, the unethical methods and highly un-American actions of Bielaski . . . who would emulate the vicious Gestapo of Germany and the ab- horrent GPU (political police) of Russia." We can only say Bravo to these recent developments and hope that in the near future the U.S. Supreme Court will recog- nize more strongly the words of that Rhode Island grand jury in 1940. Indeed, a far-sighted policy appears to have been adopted, a policy which recognizes the fact that such practices in the long run would tend to drive the CP underground, a situation which would be highly undesirable. Actually, even Governor Dewey (or shall we say, Attorney Dewey) can comprehend the latent danger of an underground CP. What has recently happened indicates an inclination on the part of both Court and Administration to protect the people from irreasonable and unwarranted search an seizures. -Cal Samra MUSIC IN AN EXACTING PROGRAM the Stanley Quartet gave eloquent evidence Tuesday of the mature musical understanding which goes beyond technical proficiency and inter- pretive competence. Indeed, no musical event in Ann Arbor has pleased us so much since the visit of the Budapest Quartet. The high point of the evening was the Beethoven Quartet, Opus 59, No. 1: this difficult and moving music was played with such sympathy, warmth, and know- ledge that one overlooked Mr. Ross's wiry tone and Mr. Raab's reticience to assert his second fiddle. Particularly well-played were the scherzo and adagio of the Bee- thoven: the scherzo appropriately rough and sharp; the adagio with deep feeling, although somewhat sentimentalized. Less well played was the Mozart Quartet K-V 575. Here the first violin dominated be- yond the requirements of the music - even in those passages when another in- strument carried the principle part and the first violin played accompanying fig- ures. The quartet itself is an amazing composition, especially the finale with its brilliant concertante opening and its ef- fortlessly contrived contrapuntal effects. Mr. Finney's Quartet in A Minor pleased us as little the second time we heard it as it did the first. This music is conceived in the shriek-and-thud school of modern quar- tet writing : a nervous rhythmic drive, and a lot of insistent fiddle beating culminating in unison climaxes. There is violence with- out heat; dissonance and clash without real conflict. Derived from Schoenbergand Bar- tok, this music lacks the fierce intellectual- ity of the former and the genuine barbarism of the latter. From Schoenberg there are the wide-spaced distortions of romantic melody; from Bartok the primitive (but so academic) rhythmic effects. There is also DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN r r 0 Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all 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). THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1950 VOL. LX, No. 11-S Notices Graduate Students expecting to receive the master's degree in Au- gust, 1950, must file a diploma ap- plication with the Recorder of the Graduate School by Friday, July 14. A student will not be recom- mended for a degree unless he has filed formal application in the office of the Graduate School. The S. S. Kresge Company will be interviewing students interest- ed in their management training program at the Bureau of Ap- pointments on Tuesday, July 18th. Application blanks and booklets may be attained at the Bureau. Please call at the Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3528 Administration Building, to make appointments. Veterans who are now enrolled under the G.I. Bill, or who have been enrolled under the Bill, are reminded to make application for a supplemental Certificate of Eli- gibility for their next registration if: (1) any change of training in- stitution is planned; (2) any change of course is planned, al- though, the veteran remains in this University; (3) any degree is received at the end of Summer Session. Application for a supple- mental Certificate of Eligibility is made through the Veterans Service Bureau, 555 Administration Build- ing. Regents' Meeting: S a t u rday, August 19, at 10 a.m. Communica- tions for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than August 10. Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary "Law School Admission Test: Application blanks for the August 12, 1950 Law School Admission Test are now available at Room 110 Rackham Building. Applica- tion blanks are due in Princeton, N. J. not later than August 2, 1950." Michigan Sailing Club: There will not be a meeting this week. Races will start at 2 o'clock Sun- Jay. All those desiring to race in Wisconsin Regatta should compete. Lectures Lecture. "Individual Behavior and Classroom Learning." W. Ro- bert Dixon, Assistant Professor of Education and Co-ordinator of Directed Teaching in Secondary Education. 3:00 p.m., Auditorium, University High School. Public Policy and Atomic Ener- gy. Lecture, "The Industrial Uses of Atomic Energy." Burke Fry, New York Office, United States Atomic Energy Commission. 3:00- 5:00 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Building. Contemporary Arts and Society Program. Panel Discussion, "In- terrelation of the Arts." Partici- pants: Professor Henry Aiken (Harvard University), John Ciardi (Harvard University), Ross Finney (University of Michigan), Edward W. Rannells (University of Ken- tucky), and Charles Stevenson (University of Michigan) ; and Carl Maas (Design Consultant, Standard Oil Company of New Jersey). 4:15 p.m., Rackham Lec- ture Hall. Symposium on Physiology and Chemistry of the Cell. Lecture, "Metabolism of Acetates." M. D. Kamen, Associate Professor of Chemistry, Washington University. 4:15 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall. Linguistic Institute. "The Aims of the Survey of the German Spok- en in Wisconsin." Professor Lester Seifert, University of Wisconsin. 7:30 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Eve- lyn Pease Tyner, Biological Chem- istry; thesis: "The Antilipotropic Activity of Cystine," Friday, July 14, 317 West Medical Bldg., at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, H. B. Lewis. Doctoral Examination for Ver- non S. Sprague, Education; thesis: "Performances C o n t r a s t e d to Measures as Precise Estimators of Strength in Physical Develop- ment", Friday, July 14, West Al- cove, Assembly Hall, Rackham Bldg., at 10:00 a.m. Chairman, B. 0. Hughes. Concerts Student Recital: Colette Jab- lonski, pupil of Joseph Brinkman, will be heard in a piano recital at 8:30 p.m. Thursday July 13, in the Rackham Assembly Hall. Pre- sented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree, it will include compositions by Ravel, Hinde- mith and Chopin, and will be open to the public. Carillon Recital: 7:15 p.m. Thursday July 13, by Percival Price, University Carillonneur. Se- lections from Grieg's Peer Gynt Suite I, five German folk songs, four Latin-American airs, and Strauss' Blue Danube Waltzes. Exhibitions General Library, main lobby cases. Contemporary literature and art (June 26-July 26) Rackham Galleries: "Contem- porary Visual Arts" and "Ameri- can Painting Since the War," July 3-22. Museum of Archaeology. From Tombs and Towns of Ancient Egypt. Museums Building. Rotunda 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. Tourists in Michigan, yesterday and today. Museum of Art, Alumni Memor- Korea & U. S. Economy By STERLING F. GREEN WASHINGTON-()-The shooting war in Korea, as it draws closer to American farms and factories, finds them better able than ever before to feed, arm and fuel a fighting machine. Relying on its ability to turn the peacetime boom into war strength in a hurry, if necessary, the government for the moment is riding this unspoken policy: To save Korea's freedom, if possible, without using the wartime controls which would deprive American housewives, workers and businessmen of some of their own freedom. * * * * OFFICIALS VOW they have no present intention to order "freezes," rationing, price ceilings, or plant conversions. So far, they report, there has been no wave of speculation or panic-buying which would make controls necessary. But many admit that inflation again is a looming hazard. That manpower could become a scarce commodity. That some basic industries are hard put, right now, to take care of booming civilian demands. In many a government office you will be told privately that, if the Korean fighting becomes prolonged and costly, some home-front "mobilization" is inevitable. Obviously, it will be if the conflict flares into full-scale war with mightier enemies. * * * * ON THE MANPOWER FRONT, President Truman broke the line recently. He called for recruits, and authorized the drafting of as many additional men as may be needed to drive the Communist in- vaders from South Korea. Under the present law, the limit on "authorized strength" of the armed forces, set at 2,00'5,882 men, would permit the taking of not more than 547,482 more. Some 2,250,000 national guardsmen and reservists are subject to call from their jobs and farms. Military spokesmen say they presently plan no compulsory callup of reservists, but will welcome volunteers. If military setbacks occur later, or if the warfare spreads beyond the borders of Korea, Congress could increase the "auth- orized strength." Nevertheless, Mr. Truman said last week that the country's mobilization plans are ready if needed. The planning is always kept up to date, he told his news conference. JUST HOW MUCH MORE military buying can the country stand without adopting controls to prevent bottlenecks, shortages, hoard- ing and runaway inflation? Some increase is inevitable. The draft announcement alone, means paying, feeding, equipping, training and transporting more men than the budget now provides, and hiring new draft clerks to induct them. The administration hopes that the increase will be moderate. It so, it can be absorbed without undue strain in a national production which, this month, probably is hitting an all-time peak rate of $270,- 000,000,000 a year. Industry is vastly better prepared for war than it was when, war broke out in Europe. Steel capacity is almost one-fourth larger. Aluminum plants can turn out four times as much. Electric power output is half again as large. The business let-down which some economists predicted for second-half 1950 now is discounted. High economic activity is fore- seen into 1951; military spending will help keep the boom alive. * * * * AS FOR FOOD, American agriculture has so vastly improved its equipment and technique in ten years that it could, by official esti- mate, supply a population twice as great as today's 150,000,000. It is now producing 40 per cent more food and fiber than in prewar years. Furthermore, the surpluses of cotton, corn, wheat, butter and other products which now embarrass the Agriculture Department would become a military asset. IN A NUMBER of important fields, therefore, the impact of all-out war would be cushioned by the nation's unparalleled growth in productivity during the past decade. That's one reason officials feel they can afford to watch and wait a while before even starting to turn the civilian economy into a war economy. 4 r '4 I ial Hall: Modern Graphic Art; Oriental Ceramics; through July 30; weekdays 9-5, Sundays 2-5. The public is invited. Clements Library. One Hundred Michigan Rarities (June 26-July 5). Events Today French Club: Bastille Day will be celebrated today at 8 p.m. in the Michigan League. A special program will be offered. Miss Grace Hampton will sing. A spec- ial invitation is extended to all French citizens. Community Center, Willow Run Village: Thursday, July 13, 8 p.m., ceramics, choir. The Seminar in Applied Mathe- matics will meet Thursday, July 13 at 4 p.m. in Room 247 West Engineering Bldg. Professor Paul F. Chenea of the Engineering Me- chanics Department will speak on "Numerical Methods in the Solu- tion of Shells of Revolution." Deutches Haus 1101 Church St. will hold open house Thursday, July 13, 7:30-10 p.m. There will be games and singing, and re- freshments will be served. Every- one is cordially invited. Seminar to be held in East Con- ference Room of the Rackham Building-Thursday, July 13, at 7:30 p.m. Dr. J. W. Linnett of Queen's College - Oxford. "Force Constants of Chemical Bonds." Classical Studies Coffee Hour: Thursday, July 13, at 4 p.m. in the West Conference Room of the R a c k ha m Building. Professor Clark Hopkins will talk informally on the early migrations in Greece, and Italy. Anyone interested in Classical Studies is invited to at- tend. Coming Events The University Museums will have a program on next Friday (Continued on Page 3) Ajjg ill1 I r 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 Peter Hotton............ .City Editor Marvin Epstein........Sports Editor Pat Brownson.........Women's -Editor Business Staff Roger Wellington.... Business Manager Walter Shapero . .. Assoc. Business -Mgr. Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The AssociateduPress 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,. assecond-class mal matter. Subscription during regular school year by carrier, $ 5.00, by mail, $6.00. EXHIBITS CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE1 ART. Showcases of the general library. AND CONTEMPORARY VISUAL ARTS. In the Rackham Galleries. AMERICAN PAINTING SINCE THE WAR. Also in the Rackham Galleries. r R . nw APHm ICART -T AbimniM Tur BARNABY-4 FI thought I'd remind yov tcall that Mr. Friendly, - ;7! I , But he didn't answer =Hello. - -' The new highway i Highway? Oh- going to rn mthrougih Heh, heb,. Would