PAGE TWO, T~~~HE _M_.HTCT-.__T UICAN DA TT A SATURDAY, TULY 253 1950 +1.V111V1'f l\ LL'11L1 S ...AURD...A. JULY 15 1950y'.a rv I CORNER..., Two Primary Elections OREA, AND THE pronouncements the fighting there has brought, has beer variously hailed as a turning point in our foreign affairs, an occasion for a change ir attitude toward the Far East, and a majoi departure from our policy of the past fev years. A lot of people, in other words, have be- come very excited-too excited-about the whole toing. Naturally, the fact that we are fighting again, only five years after World War II, is disturbing, to say the least. But the kind of excitement which has developed in some quarters about Korea, though natural, per- haps, is also dangerous-especially so since certain events give it a kind of sanction. R * R WITH PRESIDENT TRUMAN'S announce- ment of the U.S. policy toward the Kor- ean conflagration-a determined attempt to end hostilities by defeating the North Kor- eans-a new and united support for the President seemed suddenly to have mater- ialized. At first, the only opposition stemmed from such Communist-line newspapers as the Daily Worker and the Chicago Tribune -joined, briefly and foolishly, by Sena- tors Taft and Wherry. Almost everyone else apparently felt, and still feels, that the decision to send U.S. troops to Korea was simply an unfortunate necessity. With this sudden near-unanimity, there appeared a sort of lightening of the atmos- phere. It was as if a burden fell from the shoulders of the plain civilian. A genuine feeling of relief is evident even now, when American troops are holding only precari- ously. At last, something tangible and spe- cific and understandable happened-at last, after months of vilifications from Russia, counter-blasts from the U.S. (and under- neath them all implicit threats)-someone has struck and we can strike back. ONE MIGHT THINK, from all this, that Truman's action represents a major de- parture from U.S. policy of the last two years -something really to get excited about. But this, I think, is a dangerous misapprehen- sion. The unity of the country behind the President is only a seeming, temporary unity. And the sort of relief which so many people evidently felt is a specious, irresponsible re- lief. At bottom, our problem in dealing with the Russians is the same as it was two months ago, or two years ago. It is, briefly, how to aid in the spread of democratic ideas and practices while at the same time preserving the basis for negotiation with an anti-democratic power at the earliest real opportunity. The fighting in Korea has not changed the essential nature of this problem-it has sim- ply made it more difficult. The sudden de- velopment of united support for the Presi- dent ought not to disguise the fact that there are numerous people in this country who do not recognize and are not prepared to deal with this problem. They do not believe in our announced policy and have attempted to sabotage it at every turn. Senator McCarran, for example, un- doubtedly still believes that we should, sup- port any government that is sufficiently anti-Communist-without regard to what it stands for-including the Franco regime. Congressman Rankin, and men of his kidney, is probably more strongly than ever convinced that we should shut off all communication with the Kremlin-as he suggested by saying that Trygve Lie was trying to betray us to the Communists on his trip to Moscow. Opposition of this sort has only been tem- porarily silenced, not persuaded, by Tru- man's action in Korea. A CTION DISSIPATES the tension of wait- ing, and frees the mind from worry- temporarily, at least. And this is the effect that Truman's action undoubtedly had. Still, unless we are prepared for World; War III, it is not the state of mind that should be cultivated. The action to which we are committed is to be strictly limited. It should not require us to plunge bodily into a great struggle. We are not ready, psychologically or militarily, to take on the Russians. It isn't even clear that this will ever be necessary. But the kind of relief which evidently was felt, at the prospect of fighting in Korea, was pretty clearly an ah-action-at-last feeling-the last thing, at this point, that we need. What is needed, and what fortunately seems to be developing, is nothing more than grave concern, and a sober determination to do what must be done to carry out our policy. With this, the idea that we have suddenly embarked upon a new course-the notion that Truman has somehow reversed himself in Korea~-is r'nmn1l1ehiv inonn~haf South Carolina .. By THOMAS L. STOKES WASHINGTON-There was both good and bad news for President Truman in the South Carolina primary result. The presence of any good was a consoling change after fair deal setbacks in Florida and North Carolina on the tempestuout Southern front. Naturally pleasing to the President was the defeat for the Senate of Governor J. Strom Thurmond, Dixiecrat symbol who bolted and ran for President on the inde- pendent States Rights ticket in 1948, there- by carrying four states and splitting the South. The President consequently has unchar- itable feelings toward the South Carolina governor. He has seized appropriate oc- casions to express them since the 1948 election. He happened, for example, to be looking the other way when the gov- ernor rode past the White House reviewing stand at the inaugural parade. Subse- quently, the Democratic National Commit- tee, on his instructions, kicked out Na- tional Committee members who had sup- ported the Dixiecrat ticket. Only recent- ly, the President pointedly snubbed Gov- ernor Thurmond by not including him in a luncheon here for Democratic gover- -nors, explaining that the South Carolina executive and his 1948 running mate, Gov- ernor Fielding Wright of Mississippi, were omitted because "only Democrats were in- vited. So Strom Thurmond's defeat by Senator Olin Johnston was good news from South Carolina. * * *R HOWEVER, IN THE SAME election a po- tentially more formidable anti-Truman leader emerged in the South when James F. Byrnes was elected governor to Succeed Mr. Thurmond. While Jimmy Byrnes has not divulged his future plans, saving only that he wants to be a good governor of South Carolina, it is suspected that he has bigger aims, that he will capitalize his position to try to assume leadership of the anti-Truman Southern forces. Because of his standing and prestige, he can give that anti-Truman movement a respectability that it lacked in the mongrel Dixiecrat rebellion and remove the taint of racialism.. He has kept dis- creetly away from the racial issue and pit- ches his opposition to the Fair Deal on eco- nomic grounds.j His desertion of the administration, which he signalized several months ago by his attack on the Truman Fair Deal as "the road to statism," carried weight be- cause of his former close association with Harry Truman in the Senate and as the President's No. 1 cabinet officer, Secre- tary of State. It carried weight also be- cause of the high position he held in the previous New Deal administration - as a Senate leader and confidant of Frank- lin D. Roosevelt, as Supreme Court Justice, and as chief of the top civilian command for World War II in the White House. While Mr. Brynes' renunciation of any as- pirations to be President on any ticket is accepted at face value - he is 70 years old - it is believed that he may manipulate Southern forces - either at the next Demo- cratic convention or afterwards - in an effort to influence the 1952 Presidential election, and not in Harry Trumap's favor. He is a very skillful politician and an adroit maneuverer. * * * T HE SOUTH CAROLINA election was a rebuff to the President's civil rights prc- gram, of course. Nothing else is possible in that sector. That was accepted routine. Senator Johnston and Governor Thurmond vied with each other in condemning the program. Senator Johnston, however, in con- trast to his unsuccessful opponent, ha;, kept a foothold in the Democratic Pa'ty - slip- pery and precarious at times, it is true. A former textile mill worker, he supports a number of Truman objectives, especial- ly in the field of labor. He voted against the Taft-Hartley act. Labor support un- doubtedly contributed to his re-election. It is presumed also that he got a larger share of the Negro vote as the less ob- jectionable candidate of a duo in which there was not much choice for the race. though this is not ascertainable. In protest against the civil righ',s program, Senator Johnston had absented himself from the Jefferson-Jackson Dinner in early 148, the empty table set aside for him and his party a gaping reminder a few feet in front of the President at the head table. At the subsequent Democratic e-Titional con- vention, he was a loud-talking Geneial Dwight D. Eisenhower booster, sporting the biggest button seen at that gathering, But, when President Truman returned rium- phantly to Washington after the election, no one was quite so conspicuous in the wel- coming crowd at Union Station as the bulky South Carolina senator. He was among the first to rush forward and congratulate the President, a ludicrous spectacle for those who take their politics with a dash of cynicism. (Copyright 1950, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Oklahoma . . . By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-One of the most signifi- cant senatorial primaries took place in Oklahoma the other day, where Congressman Mike Monroney forced elderly Senator El- mer Thomas into a run-off for the Demo- cratic nomination. Monroney actually won a healthy lead over Thomas, but didn't have a majority due to the presence of other can- didates. What broke Thomas' quarter-century hold on the state was that Oklahoma vot- ers got wise to his speculating activities. For years, Thomas had been using his fa- vored position as a senator and as chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee to get advance information about commodity prices which other taxpayers could not get, to influence prices, which other taxpayers could not do, and to speculate in commodi- ties for his own personal profit. * * * GETS CAUGHT ON COTTON SOME PEOPLE might not worry too much about a senator's buying commodities if it were not for the fact that Thomas used his official position and his inside informa- tion to influence the market. For instance, the senator's family and friends were "long" on cotton in 1946. They were holding for a further rise in price. But in October, 1946, instead of rising further, the cotton market broke, causing Mrs. Tho- mas to lose her contemplated profit of $12,- 000. Immediately there came a cry of pain and anguish from the Senator from Okla- homa. The drop in the price of cotton, he said, must be officially investigated. Hit where it hurts most, his pocketbook, Thomas sent indignant telegrams to the heads of the cotton exchanges and the Secretary of Ag- riculture, claiming a "bear raid." "There has been a definite and well- laid plan among cotton exchanges, cot- ton brokers and their clients," Thomas protested. And since he was chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, his word carried weight. Thomas also threatened further legisla- tion to control cotton prices. But in none of his indignant telegrams did he breathe a word of the fact that his wife, his secretary, his campaign manager, and his own personal brokers had lost heavily in the break in the cotton market. Actually there was no bear raid, nor any- thing else wrong with the cotton market, ex- cept that the price had soared too high and the Thomas group got caught. , * * * TEN CARLOADS OF EGGS SINCE THEN the Senator from Oklahoma has tried to tell farmers that he was only trying to keep their prices up. What he has not told them is that he also speculates on various other commodities-wheat, beans, eggs, even silver-and that sometimes he has worked just as hard to bring prices down. In the fall of 1949, for instance, the Sen- ator from Oklahoma wanted the price of eggs to drop. Infact, he wanted eggs to come down just as ardently as he had previously wanted the price of cotton to go up. There was a good reason for Thomas' position on eggs, though he did not tell anyone in Oklahoma about it. His broker, Dyke Cullum, had bought 10 carloads of eggs-short. In brief, he was committed to deliver 10 carloads of eggs on the fu- tures market, and if the price went down, the senator and his broker made money. So the senator proceeded to bombard the Agriculture Department with letters and ideas for bringing down the price of eggs; also wrote a letter to Sen. Clinton Anderson of New Mexico, chairman of an Agriculture subcommittee, asking him to investigate the price support of eggs. "I am taking the liberty of referring two bills to your subcommittee for consideration and report," Thomas wrote Anderson. "These bills are S 1751, a bill to amend the Commodity Exchange Act and S 2482, a bill to repeal the mandatory price support auth- ority for Irish potatoes and eggs for the bal- ance of the current year, 1949." Thomas went on to give his own ideas on eggs, but at no place in his letter did he intimate that he and his broker had a personal, pocketbook interest to the tune of 10 carloads of eggs. In brief, what the senator was doing was using the investi- gative machinery of the U.S. Senate and his prestige as chairman of the Senate Ag- riculture Committee to influence a com- modity in which he had made a personal investment. He knew, of course, that the mere an- nouncement of an egg investigation by the Senate was likely to send down the price of eggs, following which he and Dyke Cullum could deliver their 10 carloads at a profit. Thus has the Senator from Oklahoma, despite 25 years in the highest legislative body in the U.S., used that body for his own personal pecuniary profit. (Copyright, 1950, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Casualty ( <'4' (?3)Z~~\~ 1 I .t DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN' r; JI I/tteP TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any ;eason are not in good taste will be condensed edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. Movie criticism .. . To the Editor: JACQUELINE GREENHUT'S re- view of "Samson and Delilah" in Wednesday's Daily is the best piece of movie criticism that I have ever seen in your paper. Why not give her the job permanently. We live in an age when mature minds alone should be entrusted with lighting the lighthouses, even if the light shed is only that of The Daily movie section. -Constantine G. Christofides, '49 * * * Music Criticism, -.. To the Editor: IN HIS CRITICISM of Ross Lee Finney's string quartet in the music column of The Michigan Daily, July 13, Harvey Gross cheer- fully availed himself of the pro- noun "we." Now, another "we,, express ourselves in regard to his manner of reviewing the quartet. Not attempting to clash judg- ment with Mr. Gross, we condemn his misuse of the gift of free opinion. Mr. Gross might better insure his status as a critic by suppressing his personal convic- tions unless he is certain that they are infallible. Surely they cannot stand alone unless they are cast in experience, open-mindedness, and imagination. Surely they should not be flouted as violent, colorful adversity if there is any flimsiness wallowing between the lines. Our notion of flimsiness has two sourc- es: 1-The quartet has already been recognized as a commanding, ma- ture work by people of authority. Much as we hate to deprive Mr. Gross of his stance as a lofty, em- bittered champion, we question his presumption to the title of lone sage. We do not say that his opin- ion is wrong, but deem his ex- travagant, erratic assertion of it' a misdirected plunge. Extreme in- dividuality is fine, but it needs a compass. 2-Mr. Gross' descriptions of the' music were bewildering. "Disson- ance and clash without conflict" (just think; "clash means "peace"), and "primitive, but so academic" seem to be word plays. We are also looking forward to being "irritat- ed" again by the scherzo move- ment.' Perhaps we have only succeeded in being as narrow-minded as Mr. Gross, but our supreme wish is that student critics would have enough concern and love for art to regard any manifestation of it with temperance, respect, and flex-i ibility of mind. And from now on,; we hope that Mr. Finney's music will be allowed to speak for itself.E -Mary Helen Snow c I Korean Policy .. . To the Editor: ACCORDING to the latest AP dispatches, the UnitedI States military in Korea under General Hodge is appointing Japanese po- lice and army officers to rule South Korea. This was done de- spite vigorous protests by South Korean officials. It seems that these Japanese police have mowed down a couple of hundred South Koreans who were supposedly on their way to welcome U.S. troops! There is mounting evidence that the South Korean government un- der Syngman Rhee was as rotten as they come, that Rhee has in- stituted a terrorist police state under former Japanese Army offi- cers and with American approval, that all Koreans, north and south, hate the United States for its policy of support to Rhee and thwarting the peaceful unification and national independence of Kor- ea (see the Detroit Free Press, Tuesday, July 11.) I think it should be made clear to the American people that the prime desire of all Asiatic colonial peoples is for national indepen- dence, for political and economic unity, and for a complete reform of the land system which now is largely feudal in character with extreme oppression of the peasants by a few wealthy landlords. But the tremendous movements of the colonial peoples for inde- pendence and unity in Asia and Africa must inevitably run up against the established interests of the British, French, and Ameri- can imperialists (we have $1.25 billion invested in Korea alone, largely Morgan and Dupont inter- ests)-and imperialism never gives up without a fight. Russia keeps gaining allies among the colonial peoples especially in Asia because of its support for their demands, while the United States keeps los- ing them because of our support for the most unpopular militarist cliques in these nations-witness Chiang Kai-Shek in China and Syngman Rhee in Korea. Let us not assume the mantle of the "white man's burden" anywhere in the world. Let us stop the war on the Korean people. And for heaven's sake, let's have more dis- cussion on the whole business! -Al Lippitt Informal Poll NEW YORK-(OP)-Hangover can be cured by anything from fer- mented mare's milk to bird's nest soup, according to an informal poll of 18 countries taken at the Unit- ed Nations bar by a representative of the United Bartender's Guild. 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). SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1950 VOL. LX, No. 13-S Notices The Lane Bryant organization of New York, New York has openings in their executive training pro- gram for young men and women interested in entering the retail field. For further information please call at the Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3528 Administration Building. The United States Civil Service Commission announces an exami- nation for Engineering Aid and Scientific Aid for positions in Illi- nois, Michigan and Wisconsin. No closing date. For further informa- tion call at the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 3528 Administration Build- ing. Lectures Naval Research Reserve: Mon., July 17, 7:30 p.m., 18 Angell Hall. Dr. R. L. Kahn: "A Universal Bi- ological Reaction in Health and Disease." All naval reserve officers and enlisted personnel engaged in advanced work in the sciences and engineering are eligible for mem- bership in the Research Reserve. Interested reservists (including Waves) are invited to attend a meeting of the Unit to discuss membership application with the commanding officer. Seminar Series-"Living Alter- native to Christianity"-4:00-5:30 p.m., Monday and Tuesday after- noon. Chancellor T. R. Milford, Chancellor of Lincoln Cathedral, London and legal custodian of the Magna arta will conduct this series. Informal - everyone wel- come. Mathematics Education Lecture: Miss 'Ava Mae Seedorff of Battle reek High School will exhibit and discuss student-made mathemati- cal models and tools, Tuesday, July 18 at 2:00 in Room 146 Busi- ness Administration Building. The lecture is for students in Educa- tion D234 and others who are in- terested. Lecture, Alumni Memorial Hall, July 17, at 8:00 p.m. "The Art of Edvard Munch" by Frederick S. Wight, Associate Director, Insti- tute of Contemporary Art. A lecture illustrated in color on the Norwegian painter and gra- phic artist, Edvard Munch. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Eric Newton Rackham, Education; the- sis: "The Determination of Cri- teria for the Evaluation of Student Personnel Services in Institutions of Higher Learning," Monday, July 17, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 4:00 p.m. Chairman, H. C. Koch. Doctoral Examination for Elea- nor E. Maccoby, Psychology; the- sis: "Acquisition and Extinction of a conditioned Response under Three Different Patterns of Par- tial Reinforcement," Monday, July 17, 3121 Natural Science Bldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, E. L. Walker. Doctoral Examination for Her- bert Frederick A. Smith, Educa- tion; thesis: "A Determination of Principles and Experiments Desir- able for a Course of General Sci- ence at the Junior High School Level," Tuesday, July 18, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 7:00 p.m. Chairman, F. D. Curtis. Concerts Willard MacGregor, Guest Pian- ist, will be heard at 8:30 Tuesday evening, July 18, in the Rackham Lecture Hall, in the first of two programs to be played during the summer session. The first will in- clude compositions by Mozart, Bach, Bartok, Faure and Ravel; the second, scheduled for August 1, will be an All-Chopin program. Both are open to the general pub- lic without charge. Composers' Forum, under the di- rection of Ross Lee Finney, Pro- fessor of Composition in the School of Music, 8:30 Monday eve- ning, July 17, in the Rackham As- sembly Hall. Elaine Brovan, Ann McKinley, Digby Bell, and Anita Bassett, pianists, Leslie Eitzen, so- prano, and Joan Bullen Lewis, cellist, will perform compositions by Grant Beglarian, Robert Cogan, Frederick Don Truesdell, and Les- lie Bassett. The program will be open to the public. Student Recital: Elizabeth Tho- mas, Organist, will present a pro- gram at 4:15 Sunday afternoon, July 16, in Hill Auditorium, in partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the Master of Music de- gree. Her program will include compositions by Buxtehude, Bach, Franck and Vierne, and will be open to the public. Miss Thomas is a pupil of Josef Schnelker. The recital was previously announced for Sunday evening. 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. R o t unda , exhibit, Fossil Flora of the Mi- chigan Coal Basin. Exhibition halls, "Nature's Balanced Eco- nomy." 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. Oriental cera- mics (June 26-August 18). Mo- dern graphic art (July 2-30). Clements Library. American Colonial Culture. (July 5-August 1). Events Today Congregational - Disciple-Evan- gelical & Reformed Guild. 438 Maynard. Informal discussion with (Continued on Page 3) _~1 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 Philip Dawson......Managing Editor Peter Hotton .-........City Editor Marvin Epstein.........Sports Editor Pat Brownson.......Women's Editor Business Staf 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 Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. 4 BARNABY Cushlamochree, Barnaby! Picking up with strange men the minute your Fairy Godfather's back is turned! He just wanted to see where the new highway is going- 'I r He looks exactly like an Ogre f used to know. Lucky your Fairy Godfather came along just in time to save you- s - - r Gosh, Mr. C T O'Malley- fit. L ' O m o Crortett Johaeoh. Re s AAt. (fft<. We'd better get back to the house, Barnaby. That nice Mr. Friendly probdbly called about fiiancing my chain of Iourist's palaces- ~. Yeah.. . This is Friendly. Some brat kid who tagged along with the surveyors showed me where the road is going. Find out who owns that section of woodland, Jim, and call me back- ® 4 cQ A rlington Inscription Ellen, I wasn't able to reach thalit ouvn Frie~ndJlyj .Iall day- Huh? What do you know I Barnaby! Leave your Fairy TI--p~l #h^,-., -4 L;, rt.- '1 r~ohn? Schultz calling, 1 just I I - ---- --- -- - - -- - Ib