PAGN TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 1951 I __________________________________________________ I ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round WITH DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Senators are finding it novel and refreshing to have a news- paperman as a colleague. However, the new Senator, Blair Moody of Michigan doesn't always follow the "club" rules, and some Senators don't like it. For instance, it's against the unwritten Senate code for one Senator to expose another in a bald-faced lie. Yet that's what happened when Senator Homer Capehart, Indiana Republican, tried to vote with the meatpackers in secret, and pretend he was on the side of the housewives in public. Under the "club rules," Capehart's col- leagues would have excused this decep- tion as politics and let him get away with itsHowever Michigan's Moody was still too much of a newspaperman. What happened is that Capehart voted behind closed doors to kill all price controls. Yet posing as the housewives' friend, he de- livered a political speech on the Senate floor blaming President Truman for not freezing prices sooner. "A situation has developed through an al- most unpardonable sin on the part of the Administration, because the Administration did not freeze prices. as of September 8 last year," proclaimed the Hoosier Senator. However, Moody had sat in the Banking and Currency Committee when Capehart battled secretly against price controls. So he stood up and challenged : "I should like to ask the Senator from - Indiana whether he feels now that it is advisable or feasible to remove all price and wage controls." "I have never advocated it," blurted Capehart. "Then why did the Senator from Indiana vote to do so in committee a few days ago?" Moody shot back. "That is not correct," Capehart denied angrily. "The Senator from Illinois, Mr. Dirksen, made the motion to strike title IV (price and wage controls) from the bill. The record shows that four votes were cast in favor of the motion. The Senator from Indiana and three other Senators voted in favor of the motion," reported the ex-newsman. "Let us say for the sake of the argument that I did vote as the Senator says," sput- tered Capehart. "Let us say the Senator did, period," snap- ped Moody. Then, in keeping with his newspaper training to double-check the facts, the Michigan Senator phoned the Committee clerk, and a minute later reported back to. the Senate: "I have just consulted the clerk, and he says the vote was 8 to 4, and I remember very clearly that the Senator from Indiana did vote for that motion . . . the Senator from Indiana held up his hand, and I think that was an indi. cation of a vote." "The Senator from Michigan says that I Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: SID KLrAUS held up my hand. I do not know why the Senator brings up that matter on the floor, and whether it is necessary to have persons snooping to see whether a Senator holds up his hand," fumed Capehart. "I wish to say that I do not like such tactics, and I do not think the Senator should make such state- ments. I think it is out of order for him to do so." "I do not believe it is out of order," re- torted Moody. "Why should a Senator's po- sition .on a matter of this importance be secret?" BEHIND THE PEACE TALKS-Reason Jacob Malik was so "sick" after his truce proposal that he could not see UN dip- lomats was because he hadn't received in- structions from Moscow on what to do next. Moscow had okayed his peace feeler but hadn't told him what the next move should be. So Malik was "very sick." (He would have been sicker if he'd made the wrong move). Reason for President Truman's coolness toward the Malik proposal was a secret re- port he'd received that Communist China is training 1,000,000 for a new Korean drive. The report told of conferences between Mao Tse-Tung and the Russians at Mukden at which Mao argued that his troops were too lightly equipped, demanded heavy equip- ment, more planes and better training. As a result it was agreed to send 2,000 Rus- sian planes to China.. . . The leak to Mali; of the UN truce talks has now been traced to the Egyptian foreign office in Cairo. This was how Malik was able to scoop the U.S.A. and the UN with his truce proposal. U.S. diplomats had been talking with UN diplo- mats for ten days about a truce plea to be made June 25, and word of the talks leaked to the Russians through Cairo. * * * QTORY BEHIND the Republican drive to 0 recommit--or pigeonhole-the tax bill in the House last week is that GOP leaders were all set to propose a national sales tax if they were successful in recommitting the bill. This would mean saddling a large part of the tax burden on lower-bracket taxpayers -for the benefit of those best able to pay, including big corporations now bulging with an estimated $48,000,000,000 of excess profits from defense contracts. One reason the Republican strategy failed, and the motion to recommit the tax bill was defeated by a narrow margin, was because 15 GOP congressmen refused to go along with their party leaders. Here are the names of the 15 courageous "Re- publicans who voted against recommitting the tax bill: Claude Bakewell of Missouri, John Byrnes of Wisconsin, Clifford Case of New Jersey, Glenn Davis of Wisconsin, Hal Holmes of Washington, Clifford Hope of Kansas, Jacob Ja'vits of New York, Leroy Johnson of Cali- fornia, Thruston Morton of Kentucky, Wal- ter Norblad of Oregon, Winston Prouty of Vermont, John Saylor of Pennsylvania, Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, Lowell Stock- man of Oregon and Thor Tollefson of Wash- ington. (Copyright, 1951, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc$) MATTER OF FACT By JOSEPH ALSOP BELGRADE-There used to be a children's game akin to twenty questions, in which "it," the possessor of the secret, employed the omnious formula, "Heavy, heavy, what hangs over?" Guessing the Kremlin's future purposes is a bit like playing this game. But it is at least possible to discern the heavy and increasing threat that hangs over Europe as a whole and this country in par- ticular. The rearmament of the Soviet Union's Eastern European satellites is what has con- vinced the Yugoslav leaders that war within twelve months is at best decidedly possible, if not downright probable or unavoidable. As stated in a previous report in this space, the chief men here believe that the Master of the Kremlin, instead of plan- ning any immediate attack, are now seek- ing to open the way for easy conquests by splitting the Western alliance. This is of course the explanation of the strange Parisian comedy concerning the pro- posed Big Four Foreign Ministers meeting. The facts about satellite rearmament are enough to show why the Yugoslav leaders are also convinced that a period of the most acute danger will begin before another twelve months have passed, even if the Western alliance remains firm and united in the meanwhile. In brief, the serious build-up of satellite strength was significantly started shortly after the American response to the chal- lenge in Korea. At the same time, the Sov- iets also launched their program to put their own armies in Eastern Germany, Po- land and the Carpatho-Ukraine on a footing of immediate offensive readiness. Of these two efforts, the satellite build-up, at first too inconspicuous to cause alarm, has now emerged as the more important. * * * What has happened already, is the transformation of ill-armed, ill-led and ill- trained satellite armies, which formerly served essentially as local police, into com- bat-ready forces. What is still going on, is the strengthening of these satellites armies both by provision of great quantities of ad- ditional heavy equipment, and by increasing the number of divisions available. THIS whole vast process, which is going forward all over Eastern Europe, is uni- formly directed by high Russian officers assisted by Russian training missions. To provide this direction was the primary pur- pose of the dispatch to Poland of that' great "Polish patriot," Field Marshal Rokossovsky. In the other satellites, the Soviet command- ers are more carefully disguised as military attaches. But the true function of these "attaches" is revealed by their rank-Col. Gen. Gusev is in command in Czechoslovakia, Lt. Gen, Boiko in Hungary and Lt. Gen. Kalagnov in Romania. And the true purview of their work is shown by the mere size of their staffs-in Czechoslovakia alone, Col. Gen. Gusev has over 2,000 Russian officers and NCOs serving under him. Bulgaria, relatively the most fully pre- pared of all the satellites, is now credited with ten divisions, including at least two armored, and there is evidence that two more Bulgarian divisions are being added. Romania is given fourteen divisions, prob- ably including three armored. Hungary and Czechoslovakia, where the training program is most retarded, are be- lieved to have today five and eleven divisions respectively, but Hungary is creating five more divisions, while Czechoslovakia is pre- paring at least two additional. Finally, Po- land is credited with a minimum of sixteen divisions, of which two are armored already and two more are being converted. This, gives forty-six existing satellite divisions, including a substantial number of armored divisions, without counting either the Bereitschaf ten in East Germany or any forces in Albania. The expansion of satellite armies already detected will provide a total of fifty-five di- visions by next spring, and no one will be surprised if sixty divisions actually appear in the field. Of these armies, thirty-six di- visions in Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria will stand upon Yugoslavia's borders. And these are cautious Western estimates. The Yugoslavs think their neighbors alone al- ready have more than 800,000 men under arms. Intensive training programs, with heavy emphasis on the replacement of older and less reliable officers and NCOs with Russian- schooled Communist activists, are being car- ried on in all the satellites. Among Yugo- slavia's neighbors, air force candidates are also being sent back to Russia for jet pilot training and border fortifications and air- field nets are being constructed. Other striking signs are the reported program to expel the gigantic total of 250,000 "non-military" citizens from Budapest, and the building of a great highway for military transport from the forbidden Black sea ports of Burgas and Varna across Bulgaria to the Yugoslavj border. All this activity further appears to be keyed to a time schedule calling for the satellite armies to be fully organized and trained, with all their heavy and other equip- ment and reserves in hand and their sup- nortin- fmaiitie ,emnlti, hu Anril nrav "This Would Be A Perfect Time For You Guys To Shut Up" N . ;i-. INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Iran Mistaken in Counting on U.S. Men to Replace British By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. Associated Press News Analyst IF PREMIER MOSSADEGH thinks he can drive the British out of Iran and man her oil wells with technicians from the United States or anywhere else, he has another think coming. Mossadegh's letter to President Truman, expressing hope for Am- erican support in Iran's nationalization aspirations, carried a hint that he might have this in mind. Gustav Egloff, Director of Research for the Universal Oil Products Company, a non-profit organization under the American Chemical Society which carries on all sorts of joint enterprises for the entire oil industry, tells me there is such a shortage of trained men throughout the world that none could be persuaded to enter the disturbed Iranian situation. Apparently, if the 3,000 Britishers in Iran leave, they will be quickly absorbed in the industry elsewhere, and Iran would have no chance of swapping them for nationals or other countries in suffi- cient numbers. EGLOFF DOUBTS THAT THE Russian sphere is in any better shape than the rest of the world in this respect. Oil production in the Russian satellites has dropped since the war, while Russia's own yield is only slightly larger, as compared with tremendous pro- duction increases in the rest of the world. This suggests that the Russian sphere is not only short of technicians, but also that those who are available are so badly needed in Russia that she may have stripped the satellites. The entire Russian sphere is producing 900,000 barrels of o# a day, Egloff says. The Middle East alone produces more than twice as much. So the Iranians may be facing the prospect of going out of busi- ness, of economic and social unrest, while directly under the shadow of a country which is always prepared to exploit such situations to the limit for its own benefit. The world, on the other hand-and in this Egloff confirms state- ments made throughout the oil industry generally-is in a position to replace the 700,000 barrels daily which Iran produces, and go on about its business. [DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETINI I. 4 /ettei' 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 1. libelous letters, and letters which fora be condensed, edited or withheld from editors. Foreign Reaction . . . To the Editor: AS ONE who has just returned to this country after spending nearly two years abroad (England, France, The Netherlands, Ger- many, and Italy) as a civilian and as a student, let me state some of my impressions. First of all I was astounded by the rapid (and seemingly un- checked) rise and spread of the Communistic philosophy in each and every one of the above coun- tries. Especially was this true of the young people. In one class which I attended (in France) at least three quarters of the students seemed openly sympathetic to Communism, if not downright members of the Communist party. Nor could one honestly say this class was not representative of French students. Indeed every- where one;went one could always note howoverwhelmingly popular Communist periodicals and litera- ture seemed to be with them." Next I was worried by the utter cynicism-the utter lack of re- spect for the United States. Al- most every official pronouncement of our nation with respect to some international question was vulgarly derided in the cinema houses and superiorly scoffed at by students in their "bull-sessions". Especially was the latter true, when it was learned that I, an American, was in their presence. The most embarrassing thing that occurred to me took place just prior to my taking leave of France for my return to this country. I was heatedly engaged in an argu- ment defending the democratic character of America, when I was asked what part of the states I came from. I said Michigan. I was then immediately confronted with a newspaper (French) quot- ing our President as condoning discrimination in fraternities be- cause of the inherent rights of property. When I became flus- tered and tried to tell them this was not true, I was hastily re- assured-told not to take it per- sonally-for Michigan students, the newspaper went on to say were overwhelming opposed to Presi- dent Ruthven on this matter. In fact, I gained some sort of be- lated respect-Michigan students, are for some reason-regarded as being more democratic than most other American students. Before leaving, I faithfully pro- mised that I would send copies of the Michigan Daily abroad, so that any reason are not in good taste will apublication at the discretion of the they would continue to have a fa- vorable and realistic impression of Michigan student life, and in this way spread a little of the truth about our beloved Country. -Doug Oldershaw * * * Car Subscription. To the Editor: IT has come to. my attention, not by way of a subscription, that two distinguished administrative officers of the University have been honored by the gift to each one of a Master Automobile. Rec- ognizing that the real businessof the University is teaching, in- structing the young idea how to shoot, or to bear shoots, it would seem to be eminently fitting if as a beginning, one automobile, may- hap a more modest one, a Mistress or a Junior type, could be allocated to some worthy professor whose life has been spent directly in teaching, the real work of the Uni- versity. Such an individual comes to my mind. The man selected should be typical of the "run of the mine" professors, married, retired, hav- ing children (preferably a half- dozen) and grandchildren (ap- proximately 11 would do). The children should all hold degrees from the University. The man whom I have in mind fulfills all these requirements. Florida residence is for him es- sential, on account of occlusions and age. The 1947 Dodge which the professor acquired for cash, in April, 1947, has covered 75,000 miles. The professor really need- ed a new car a year ago but one of the above obligatory progeny, a son, needed a car. He got it, not the said professor. Subscription lists are open at The Daily. A prominent ex-ad- ministrative officer in New Mexico, in the presence of a waitress, said to the aforesaid professor, "Put me down for 50," but didn't add the necessary word. Marked copies of The Daily will be sent to the administrative offi- cers of leading Michigan automo- bile manufacturers and, it is hoped, one of them will come through with a reduction that will assist the subscription list. Let it be further stated that for 47 years, this professor has fur- nished almost yearly refined amusement for the Ann Arbor campus, often at the expense of the administrative officers and never at the expense of his col- leagues. -Louis Karpin'ski , 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, JUNE 30, 1951 VOL. LXI, No. 4-S Notices Judiciary Council announces the fol- lowing closing hours for undergraduate women in the Summer Session: Sunday through Thursday, 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 12:30 a.m. Calling hours for men start at 1 p.m. Monday throughFriday. These hours are decided by the in- dividual house on Saturday and Sun- day. French Club La T"tite Causette, a group of students interested in speaking French infor- mially, will meet regularly through the summer session on Mondays and Wed- nesdays in the cafeteria of the Michi- gan Union (South Room) from 3:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. All French-speaking students are invited to attend. Enroll- ment in French courses is not required. Carillon Recitals Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, 12:00 noon, informal recitals, Professor Percival Price, University Carilloneur. Christian Science Organization testi- monial meeting, every Tuesday eve- ning 7:30, Upper Room, Lane Hall. Events Today Intercultural Outing: Sat., June 30, Silver Lake. Leave Lane Hall, 10:00 a.m., return, 6:00 p.m. Cost $1.50. Mdake reservations at Lane Hall by Friday afternoon. Reception for newly arrived foreign students, auspices of the International Center. 8:00 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. Coming Events Hostel Club Sunday canoeing, July 1. Meet at League at 8:00 a.m. with food for cook- out. Call Mary Rowley by Friday, tele- phone 3-8687. New members welcome. Tues., July 3- "English Surnames." Ralph L. Ward,I Associate Professor of Classics, Yale University. 7:30 Rackham Amphitrea- tre. Thurs., July 5- "P h o netics and Pronunciation Tests." Robert Lado, Assistant Direc- tor, English Language Institute, Uni- versity of Michigan, 7:30 p.m., Rack- ham Amphitheatre. United States in world Crisis lecture. Harold H. Fisher, Chairman, The HoOV- er Institute and Library, July 5. Student Recital: Warren Simpkins, tenor, will be heard in recital at 8:30 Monday evening, July 9, in the Rack- ham Assembly Hall. The program will be sung in lieu of a thesis for the re- quirements for the Master of Music degree, and will be open.to the pub- lie. Mr. Simpkins studies voice with Harold Haugh. Student Recital, auspices of the School of Music. Sieglinde Sauskojus, pianist. 8:30 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. Mon., July 2. Student Recital, auspices of the School of Music. Wendell Nelson, pi- anist. 8:30 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. Tues., July 3. Topology Seminar: Tuesday, July 3, at 3 o'clock in Room 3011 Angell Hall. Dr. S. T. Hu will continue speaking on "CohomologyTheoryin Topological Groups.,, ,gaff c I Controls or Catastrophe WITH THE Defense Production Act sche- duled to expire on June 30, Congress has bickered and stalled to the very dead- line. Members who profess the greatest hor- or at the war casualties and the most in- tense enmity toward communism are fla- grantly maneuvering for partisan advan- tage in their struggle to avoid a clear-cut grant of power to the Administration. The same members who last summer in- sisted on giving the President authority to impose direct wage-price controls when Mr. Truman said it was unnecessary are now hesitating about his request for greater au- thority in the future. The anti-labor bloc, which used a national emergency last year to try to hamstring unions, is now seeking some way to undermine the progress toward workable wage stabilization achieved by means of Presidential directives. The Ford Motor Company's interven- tion in the fight over renewed controls, though not completely objective or dis- interested, was a welcome relief from the efforts of the otherwise almost solid spe- cial-interests' lobby in favor of business as usual. The Ford Company came out flatly for continued wage and price controls, contin- ued allocation of scare materials, and bal- anced credit controls. The automobile in- dustry feels injured by present cutbacks of materials for motor cars and the impact of credit controls on its dealers, but Ford un- derstands that we can ruin ourselves by un- checked economic inflation almost as easily as by losing a war, hot or cold. Few other business spokesmen have had a kind word for the stringent controls the times demand. The National Association of Manufacturers' lobbyists have sent one set of witnesses to protest against direct wage- President was able to develop a feasible program by ignoring one section of the law, in which Congress unwisely undertook to write policy, and proceeding under an- other section, using the constitutional pow- ers of the Executive. Now the anti-union bloc is protesting that Mr. Truman's pro- gram is illegal if not unconstitutional. The chairman of a House labor subcom- mittee considering the Defense Production Act, Wingate Lucas of Texas, worked hand in glove with conservative Republicans three years ago to scuttle the wage-hour law while maintaining that he was liberal- izing it. Only the public members of the Wage Stabilization Board are available to try to explain the facts about wage con- trols to a Congress fundamentally hostile. A few truisms should be recognized by the business-as-usual boys. If people don't have enough money to buy meat, the livestock lobby will not benefit by forcing Michael DiSalle to cancel roll-back orders. If soaring living costs force marginal families over the financial brink, agita- tion for higher wages and salaries will be intensified. If Congress thought last year that wage-price controls were desirable, it can have no excuse for pretending that such controls will not be needed in the future. Shortages of civilian goods will become much more stringent in 1952 and 1953, and a rounded program of direct and in- direct controls will be even more essential than now. The longer Congress .delays in writing a new Defense Production Act, strengthened in the general public interest, the more dangerously will our economy be thrown out of balance. And the people know it. They cannot be fooled this year- ... -.-ee . .«. - .& - 1-U.1. -4-. .. 4 .- 4 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 Pross The Associated Press isrexclusively 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 mal, 57.00 XC A BARNABY Barnaby's Fairy Godfather won't be a problem to us, Mrs. Baxter. A nature study canp isn't conductive to fantasy. Fine... i a a md'mor b 8 1. Good-kye' Good-bye.Are'we AlS Barnoby, leavng? Usually kids forget their imaginary playmates the minute they leave home-' Before ! forget; Mrs. Tyler, stop by at the haunted house where Gus the Ghost lives. Mr. O'Malley, my Fairy Godfather, is going with use moo Nuh? 1C t =CAMP TMO *4 #LUW"Wft% 100 R ! f e mm rjrreial I A Here's the haunted house, Mrs. Tyler, Don't forget to stop for Mr. O'Mallev, my , Ye.There Th re.!%^