. PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, 1951 DORIS FLEESON: Foreign Aid Bill ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round WITH DREW PEARSON jI "No Use Taking Any Chances These Pa hL WASHINGTON - None of the interested parties seem to be very happy over the present secret hearings on the Foreign Aid Bill. Senators of differing allegiance, both po- litical and ideological, are squabbling over who is getting the best news breaks, organ- izations interested in the program, but to- tally uninterested in partisan politics, fear that the public will not understand the bill unless it gets the fullest possible publicity. The few relatively impartial observers contend that the public ought to hear all the evidence, except that which should be deleted for security reasons, on any project which will mean so great a sacri- fice for the taxpayer. When the Democratic leadership-and it is not an Administration leadership, but far Inore representative of the conservative coalition which is. running the Congress- approved closed hearings, the idea was to save time. Chairman Connally of the Sen- ate Foreign Relations Committee was one who argued that closed hearings offered the best chance to prune the list of witnesses to those really informed about the situation. The leadership, whose senior members es- pecially have been flagging this unusually hot summer, accepted the argument. Sen. George of Georgia, a Democratic member of Foreign Relations, and Chairman of Fi- nance, which has a tax bill to bring out, warned that he intended to return home on Oct. 1, what'ere betide. The fact is that he went home immediately afterward in an effort to recover from a nagging virus infec- tion which has been giving him a daily above-normal temperature. gINCE then Senators certain to take dif- ferent sides in floor debate have been arguing over various publicity leaks and channels. Sen. Brewster, (R., Me.), said that to release Administration witnesses' prepared statements without the Senators' questioning loaded the news columns for Mr. Truman. Democrats retort that they only wish they could develop the salient points through public interrogation of wit- nesses. Sen. McMahon, D., Conn.), has argued in favor of the MacArthur hearing method of releasing a daily transcript which had been censored for security. This is expensive, and a little bit clumsy; it is possible some form of it may prove the eventual solution. Bipartisan backers of Foreign Aid are hoping that President Truman will not make an issue of his proposal to give the State Department the controlling voice in the operations of the program. They fear that the President will be inclined to do so as another gesture of defiance toward the critics of Secretary of State Acheson. There is no dbubt that some backers of the move for an independent agency have little else in mind than further chastisement of Mr. Acheson, but others don't, and they can point to the successful operation of the Marshall Plan under the independent Eco- nomic Cooperation Administration as a pre- cedent. ECA's success, of course, was due, in large part, to the superior talents of Paul G. Hoffman, whose successor, William C. Foster, for reasons not clear, obviously is in disfavor witr Sen. Connally. It appears certain that unless some fast and sincere efforts are made to put first things first, and get the best bill possible, no time will be saved after all, and a hot floor fight rendered inevitable. PRIORITY for air power in the national defense could easily become an issue in the 1952 Presidential election, influential Senators believe. Various angles account for this opinion. 1. "Supremacy in. the air" is a slogan with popular appeal. 2. A persuasive case can be made for it to which Senators sincerely devoted to mak- ing America strong already subscribe. It also tends to obviate unpopular measures ike the draft. 3. Present and former isolationists with a vested interest in their old failures to help prepare America can beat the drums for the new technique of victory through air power as a cover-up for their past votes against Army and Navy projects. Odious comparisons can still be made, but much less forcefully. 4. From the standpoint of partisan poli- tics-and partisan politics will attach to every major issue from now until November, 1952-it gives Republicans a security hook on which to hang their hats. The former artillery captain who is now Commander-in-Chief and probable Democratic candidate f o r President, Harry Truman, is committed to the so- called balanced defense, a more or less equal division of funds between the serv- ices. Mr. Truman's favorite military man is another Army officer, Gen. Marshall, Secretary of Defense, who is unlikely to pet the Air Force. The President is already reported to have admonished the Joint Chiefs of Staff that they must keep the argument over Air Force vequests for a major expansion "in the fam- ily." This is a good trick if they can do it. But the argument is already busting out al lover. Truman opponents, not all of whom are Republicans, expect him to maintain his 1k WASHINGTON-One of the most inter- esting aspects of Congress is to see what inspires a speech or who influences a vote. Most of the time the public has no idea what backstage factors are responsible. Frequently not even other members of Con- gress know. For instance, a rash of speeches broke out in the House of Representatives the other day attacking the Voice of America and State Department propaganda. In fact, seventeen speeches were made, one after another, bitterly critical of the Voice of Am- erica. The public, of course, had no idea that these speeches were all mimeographed on the same mimeograph machine or large- ly written by one man and his staff. Congressmen are supposed to represent the people of the United States and make duly considered speeches which represent their own conviction - not rattle off the canned opinions of a ghost writer as if they were phonograph records. However, copies of the canned mimeo- graph speeches were sent up to the press gallery, sometimes even before the Congress- man began to make the speech on the House floor below. It was like automobiles coming off an assembly line-17 speeches all attacking the Voice of America or Acheson, all de- livered by Republicans, and all done on the same mimeograph machine. The ghost writer who dished out this flow of words obviously was unfamiliar with the poll-parrots who were to mouth them, for he didn't even know how to spell their names. GOP Congressman William Ayres of Ohio he misspelled "Ayers," and GOP Congressman Karl Stefan of Nebraska he misspelled "Steffan." * * * -AN OLD GRUDGE- THIS BACKSTAGE business, of course, was known to the Congressmen, though not to the public. But what not even the Congressmen knew was that the man behind all these canned speeches probably would not have had them written had he not been eased out of his job by the man who now heads up the Voice of America. Assistant Secretary of State Ed Barrett, now in charge of State Department pro- paganda, was formerly editor of Newsweek magazine, and as such had serious differ- ences with a member of his staff, Robert Humphries. So much National Association of Man- ufacturers propoganda began creeping into Newsweek columns through Hum- phries that Barrett was about to ease him out, when Humphries beat him to it and resigned. Humphries then took a $25,000 job as chief ghost writer and researcher for the Republican Congressional Committee. As such he has a ritzy suite in the George Washington Inn just across from the Capi- tol where a group of writers grind out th speeches for Congressmen who are elected to think for themselves instead of parroting the views of a spitemonger with an axe to grind against his former boss. Those are some of the backstage factors the public doesn't always know about when it reads weighty speeches delivered on the floor of Congress or learns of a campaign being waged against the Voice of America. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN BRILEY I, I -MAKING DEMOCRACY WORK- S OME PEOPLE talk about communism, others do something about communism. In the long run, the doers are a lot more im- portant in preventing communism than the talkers. Here are some people who have gone out and done things rather than just make General Federation of Women's Clubs Senate speeches: Mrs. Hiram Cole Houghton, livewire prei- dent, and her colleagues have sent radio sets to Iran to help get the Voice of America heard; have organized five and a whalf mil- lion members in foreign countries, thus ce- menting closer understanding with the U.S.A.; and are inspiring several thousand friendship letters to women abroad. Inter-American Congress of Free Trade Unions-This is a group of North American and Latin American unions which are fight- ing against Communism in Latin America. Francisco Aguirre of Cuba, George Meany of the AFL and Jake Potofsky of the CIO Amalgamated Clothing Workers are among its leaders. Most people don't realize it, but communism has begun to creep in our own front Latin American door, and these labor men are doing a skillful organization job to check it. ECA's Pen Pals--A lot of individual Am- ericans wonder what they can do about communism abroad. Here's one small step. The individual touch sometimes counts more than government contacts, and the ECA in Washington has arranged for letters from individual Americans to be sent to in- dividual Europeans, especially from work- ingmen to workingmen. It's among the la- bor classes that communism has made greatest inroads, and letters similar to the "democracy letters to Italy" during the Ita- lian elections, help a great deal. A letter sent to "Pen Pals, Washington, D.S.," will be translated and sent to any country you designate, or you can leave the designation up to ECA. 'C* -TEXAS LONG TOM- GRUFF OLD Sen. Tom Conally, the color- ful Texan, is not one to conceal his im- patience over long-winded orators. The other day, Sen. George Malone of Nevada, who can turn a simple question in- to a filibuster, was pestering Connally on trade agreements. With a sigh that could be heard all over the chamber, Connally answered a Malone question, to which the Nevadan replied eag- erly: "I am very happy to be informed of that fact." "I hope," grumbled the gentleman from Texas, "the Senator stays happy." ** A ONE SENATOR, George of Georgia, didn't show up for a single vote while billions of dollars were being dished out for post of- fice, treasury, and agriculture departments. George had the excuse that he was writing the nation's tax bill. However, some Sena- tors also think it's important to gee how the tax money is being spent . . . . Congressman Furcolo of Massachusetts, Democrat, is planning to run against Sen. Cabot Lodge, Republican. Lodge may even have trouble inside the Republican Party from Sinclair Weeks, the National GOP Treasurer, who is thinking of running, too . . . Senator Lyn- don Johnson of Texas, who has done such a valuable job of exposing poor military hous- ing, will next crack down on rent gouging around naval and marine bases .. . Price enforcement chief Ed Morgan has ordered his price G-men to make a thorough inves- tigation of the high price of baler twine. Black marketeers have been selling baler twine to farmers from trucks at night. * ** * THE TAX GRAVY passed out by the Tru- man Administration for building defense plants is so juicy that even the anti-Tru- man Chicago Tribune wants to get in on it. The Tribune, believe it or not, has applied to the National Production Authority for special tax benefits for building a $2,022,- 285.17 enlargement of its composing room, engraving room, pressroom, and circulation room. This seems to be a long way off from mobilization. Yet a request was made to amortize this new addition to the Tribune plant in five years-the same benefit given to manufacturers of guns, tanks, airplanes, and war goods. In a way you can't blame the Chicago Tribune for trying to horn in on this tax gravy. So many companies have applied for it-and got away with it-that it's be- come one of the biggest giveaways of mob- ilization. However, the Tribune's reasons are in- teresting. It stated in its official justifica- tion for the tax gravy that the newspaper industry has been accorded a special po- sition relative to other industries since 1789; that newspapers were considered essential industries in the last two wars; and that the press is the only daily medium that can be used to explain and interpret complicated governmental regu- lations. Finally, the Tribune justified its proposed tax benefits by stating that each day it carries a large number of classified help- wanted ads, and, by so doing, it is, in effect, maintaining an active labor market in its columns, thus helping the defense effort. I i I -, r "AALI !'? 3 - 4r 'ef I. A 1 /l~r+?e INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Tour of U.S. by Russtans Would Aid World Peace By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. Associated Press News Analyst SEN. McMahon of Connecticut has the idea that if you could send enough Congressmen to Russia and bring the Politburo over here, you could convince both the Russian government and the Russian people that America has no warlike or aggressive intentions. Aside from the fact that the Russian government already knows it, but withholds the information from the Russian people for its own purposes, the idea has some intriguing possibilities. Sen. McMahon, as chairman of the Atomic Energy Committee, could do quite a job himself of showing Stalin & Co., around. It should be most salutary to take the visitors to Nevada or to the Atomic testing grounds and hold nothing back. Show them every- thing except the formulas. A quick look at Pittsburgh and Detroit, the bomber factories and bases out west ,and one of the atom bomb stockpiles might prove pacifying. IT might be possible, after his visit had lasted some weeks, to con- vince Stalin that all the factories in the United States don't pro- duce automobiles-it just looks that way because the workers fill sur- rounding parking lots with their personally owned cars. I'd like to take Joe down South. I'd tell him now in my boyhood the tenant farmers, who never saw any cash the year around, were moving to town to work in the textile mills, only to find that the company store had replaced the landlord as a means of keeping them broke. And I'd let him see for himself what happened in one gen- eration-people in good clothes, with their own cars, their own electric ice-boxes and all sorts of other easy-living gadgets, in their own one- family homes. From one standpoint, sending a troup of American Congress- men to Russia might prove dangerous. It would have to be very carefully selected. Just let a bunch of those fellows get a glimpse of those beautifular pyramided Russian bureaus, with all their opportunity for patronage, with their myriads of controls reaching not merely down to fourth class postmasters, but to every human activity. The fascination might prove too great. We might never get some of those fellows back. * * * * ; I i I . DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the Uni- versity. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3510 Administration Bldg. at 3 p.m. on the day preceding publication. SATURDAY, AUGUST 4. 1951 VOL. LXI, No. 28-S Notices Women Students -Barbour sium lockers. Lockers in the Gymnasium and the women's Building should be cleared Friday, August 10. Personnel Interviews: Wednesday, August 8- Gymna- Barbour Athletic out by Granite City Steel Company, Granite City, Illinois, will be interviewing Civil and Architectural Engineers for posi- tions ashstructural engineer, assistant project engineer, and assistant architec- tural engineer. The assistant architec- tural engineer should have an interest in advertising, as his work will be con- cerned with standards and publica- tions. Thursday, August ' Maryland Casualty Insurance Com- pany, Detroit office, will be interviewing men interested in their training pro- gram. This is not a sales program, but the men will receive training in all of the departments. These positions will be in Detroit, primarily. For appointments for interviews please call at the Bureau of Appointments 3528 Administration Building. Personnel Interviews: Wednesday, August 8- Kaiser-Frazer Corporation will be in- terviewing Mechanical, Industrial, Chemical, Aeronautical, Civil, Electri- cal, and Architectural Engineers. Thursday, August 9- Dow-Corning, Midland, Michigan, will be interviewing men with a Bus- iness Administration background who have had coursesintBusiness Law or Law School students who have a business background. The position will be in the Purchasing Department and will entail writing contracts and expediting materials. For appointments for interviews please call at the Bureau of Appoint- ments 3528 Administration Building. Personnel Requests: we have had a call from a company in the Ann Arbor area for a draftsman to work full time this summer and part time during the school year. Timken Detroit Axle company is look- ing for Mechanical Engineers for their Supervisory Training Program. If enough men are interested, they will come to the Bureau for Interviews. For further information please contact the Bureau of Appointments 3528 Adminis- tration Building. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Earle Lewis Kent, Electrical Engineering; thesis: "A Method for Changing the Fre- quency of a Complex wave," Saturday, August 4, 2511 East Engineering Bldg., at 9:00 a.m. Chairman, L. N. Holland. Doctoral Examination for Michael Patrick Cava, Chemistry; thesis: "Stud- ies on the Degradation of Neoergosterol and Related Substances". 3aturday, August 4, 3003 Chemistry Bldg., at 10:00 a.m. Chairman, A. S. Dreiding. Doctoral Examination for Coragreene Johnstone, English; thesis: The Liter- ary views of Oliver Goldsmith," Mon- day, August 6, 65 Bus. Adm., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman. L. I. Bredvold. Doctoral Examination for Earl Joseph Janda, Psychology; thesis: "On the Relationship Between Anxiety a n d Night Vision," Monday. August 6, 3121 Natural Science Bldg., at 2:30 p.m. Chairman, E. L. Kelly. Mathematics Colloquium Tuesday, August 7, at 4:10 p.m., in Room 3011 Angell Hail. Professor Emil Artin will speak at the Mathema- tics Colloquium on the subject: "Ring Extensions and Hilbert's Nullstellen- satz." wednesday. August 8, at 4 p.m.. in Room 3017 Angell Hall. Professor T. Nakayama, visiting Professor at the University of Illinois, will speak on the subject, "On Idele-class Factor Sets and 3-cocycles in Class Field Theory." Doctoral Examination for Newton Edd Miller, Jr., Speech; thesis: "The Effect of Group Size on Decision-Making Dis- cussions," Tuesday, August 7, 3213 An- gell Hall, at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, w. M. Sattler. Events Today U. of M. Sailing Club: Racing Sat- urday to pick skippersfor Put-in Bay regatta, Aug. 11, 12 and 13; treasure hunt Sunday afternoon. Even plumb- ers can find the prize. Roger Williams Guild: Sat. Swim- ming and Supper. Cars leaving at . and 5. Michigan Christian Fellowship picni and swimming. Meet at Lane Hall; 2:00. Transportation provided. Coming Lectures Monday, August 6- Biophysics Symposium. 1300 Chemis try Building. "viruses: Structure, Re production, and Origin" (cont.), S.mE Luria, University of Illinois, 4:00 p.m.; "Phage Activation and Reproductioi Excitation of Sensory Cells," M. Del bruck, California Institute of Techno logy, 7:30 p.m. Biophysics Seminar. "Explorator5 Work with Infra Red in Bacteriology. Prof. H. M. Randall, Dr. E. Fowler, 1 a.m. 2038 Randall Laboratory. Tuesday, August !-- Biophysics Symposium. 1300 Chemis try Building. "viruses: Structure, Re production, and Origin" (cont,), S. E Luria, University of Illinois, 4:00 p.m. "Structure of Proteins," J. L. Oncley Harvard University, 10 a.m., 2038 Ran dall Lab.' Linguistic Program. "The Presen Stage of Romance Linguistic Geogra phy," Henry R. Kahane, University o Illinois. 7:30 p.m., Rackham Amphi. theater. Concerts Student Recital: Vivien Milan, mez zo-soprano, will be heard at 4:15 Sun day afternoon, August 5, in the Archi tecture Auditorium, in a program sung in partial fulfillment of the require ments for the Bachelor of Music de gree. It will include compositions b5 Stevens, Storace, Respighi, Massenet Poulenc, Ravel, and Mahler, and wil . 3 -. - i a I, 1 - ' t Y 1 l- .y "2 1 - i- t, Li NAVAL MATTERS THE question now seems to be not whether Britain will get the Su- preme Allied Naval Command in the Atlantic, but whether it will go to Admiral McCormick or to no one at all. You will recall that the North Atlantic Pact Organization agreed, a long time ago, that there should be a joint naval command just like General Eisenhower's supreme land command. It was agreed, with full approval by the British admiralty, that the command should go to the commander of the United States Atlantic fleet. That was Admiral William M. Fechteler, who has now been promoted to Chief of Naval Operations succeeding the late Ad- miral Sherman. McCormick .is the new commander. Britain's top officials knew that by getting an American com- mander they were also getting assurance that the United States would provide him with the strength to do the job, of vital importance to the defense of Britain. But traditional pride of sea power stirred up a political hotbed in Britain, and the business has been rocking along without action. First reaction to President Truman's promotion of Fechteler was that, besides appointing a man who had not been too much involved in the Navy-Air Force fight which has been going on for several years, the President was also permitting the reopening of the Atlantic com- mand case. Some observers even thought that Mr. Truman might be paving the way for a British commander. On second thought, it would seem that an American commander is just as important to the British as ever--if there is to be a commander. : be open to the public. Miss Milan is a pupil of Harold Haugh. Faculty Concert: Ava Comin Case and Mary Fishburne, members of the School of Music faculty, will be beard in a program of contemporary music for two pianos at 8:30 Sunday evening, August 5, in Hill Auditorium. The pro- gram will open with Hindemith's Sona- ta for Two Pianos (19421, followed by Moy Mell by Arnold Bax, and Quasi una Siciliana (1937) and Veloce (1936) bJ victor Babin; the second half of the program will feature Bela Bartok's Sonata for Two Pianos and Percus- sion. stanley Quartet: The final concert in the summer series by the Stanley Quartet wi11 be heard at 8:30 Tuesday evening, August 7, in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The program will in- clude Haydn's Quartet in G minor, Op. 74, No. 3, followed the first perform- ance of by Quartet in , No. 6, by Ross Lee Finney. During the second half of the program the Quartet will play Schubert's Quintet in C major, Op. 163, for two violins, viola, and two cellos, in which the group will be joined bye Jerome Jelinek, School of Music senior majoring in cello. The general public is invited. Student Recital Cancelled: The pi- ano recital by Robert Dumm, previous- ly announced for August 6, in the Rackham Assembly Hall, has been post- poned until Thursday. August 16, 4:15. Truth Though all the winds of doc- trine are let loose to play upon the earth, Truth is in the field. Let her and falsehood grapple; who ever knew Truth put to the worse in a free and open en- counter? --Areopagitica P ix. t MYt t Il CIINIEMA Sixty-First Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications Editorial Staff Dave Thomas........Managing Editor George Flint ,..,.....Sports Editor Jo Ketelhut...........Women's Editor Business Staff Milt Goetz ....... ,.,Business Manager Eva Stern........Advertising Manager Harvey Gordon ...... Finance Manager Allan Weinstein ...Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor. Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during regular school year: by carrier, $6.00; by mail, $7.00. .t || Architecture Auditorium MY LITTLE CHICKADEE with Mae West and W. C. Fields. MOST of the members of my generation upon seeing Mae West in the late thir- ties thought of her as the fat blonde dame who acted as if she thought she had as much to offer as say, Alice Faye. Upon re- examination some 10 to 15 years later it is surprising to see how much Miss West has changed. Teamed in this Cowboy-Indian epic with the great W. C. Fields, Miss West obscures even the horses. Shrugging her shoulders and shaking what she shakes, she swipes the show from Fields. She takes the honors because she hand- les the great man as he has never been handled before. Fields, ordinarily the master of his fate, the man who maintains that anyone "who hates kids and small dogs can't be all bad," is unable to cope with Mae West. As a lover he is a won- derful juggler, and while this is no news to anyone who has ever seen the man, his own realization of this damages the char- acter he has created. As always he is the con man, the magni- ficent sharpers' whno gtshimself into ner BARNABY Mr. O'Malley, my Fairy Godfather, is coming to our campfire party- He /SYes, er, to insure its success-- 6 .ci' II..........- - . .. U And I'll bring along another fine campfire raconteur. If he returns from his visit with a friend who's got a summer job wailing in the pines over at Lovers' Leap Lodge- Gus the Ghost? Huh? , . .... , .. . Yes, Mrs. Tyler will be delighted, wonI she? As, over the dying embers, all her little charges thrill to the terror of a night of bloodcurdling Ghost stories!... Told by a real Ghost' Gosh! Wah a S ;; On . .w. " . .P. .,,Ot,.. A I ) . Affor Yvm Gunn "FrnnWa and Jnhnnv" to ifs