Two I THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1952 _______________________________________________ I U I mm!m - 1952 Issues "Welcome Home" w I YESTERDAY'S political panel discussion at Rackham Lecture Hall was an inter- esting prelude to the fall campaign. The issues emphasized-corruption, government waste, foreign policy, the drift toward "so- cialism" and current economic conditions- seem likely to be the chief questions which candidates will stress. Republicans will view the growth of gov- ernment power with alarm, while Demo-, crats cry "you've never had it so good." Probably the Democratic argument is the more telling one, despite growing gov- ernment centralization. By the oldest of political axioms, the party in power is granted the edge if times are good. There- fore, the GOP will try to divert the peo- ple's attention from prosperity to Korean and corruption. While the issues, mentioned by the four debaters were significant, the questions which they ignored in the opening remarks were of greater import., Four years ago President Truman used the civil rights issue as a campaign cornerstone. Yesterday nei- ther Neil Staebler nor John Dawson dis- cussed the party program on civil liberties until questioned from the audience. Then Staebler tried to explain that John Spark- man, who would not back up the President on his civil rights program, was a liberal of the new Southern type. Staebler public- ly professes that Sparkman does not repre- sent a negation of the ultra-liberal Truman doctrine, but from all reports Michigan Democrats are seriously worried about los- ing -the powerful Negro vote in Detroit be- cause of him. The Taft-Hartley Law received light treatment from the Democrats - Staebler echoed the party platform by commenting that Democrats would start all over again in their labor law revisions. There was no mention of Truman's failure to use the powers granted to him under the act to de- lay the costly steel strike. This will be one issue that Democrats will want to forget. On the other hand, Republicans will not havetoo much to offer in the way of for- eign policy change, and efforts to develop a separate policy would be futile. Though some revisions may be in order for our Asia policy, the European situation is not likely to be changed drastically. Efforts will be made to cut down waste and dup- lication in the armed services if either Stevenhon or Eisenhower is elected. All in all, it was good to see opposing party leaders debating the issues of the day with some sincerity and knowledge. More panels of this type would be desirable before the fall campaign, and it would be extreme- ly encouraging if candidates representing major and minor parties alike could have the opportunity of speaking here. To facili- tate appearances of various public figures, consideration might well be given to re- vision of Lecture Committee policy which has in the past hindered "the great debate" through its red tape and bannings. -Harry Lunn CURRENT MOVIES At The State.. . IVORY HUNTER with Anthony Steel, Dinah Sheridan. THIS UNPRETENTIOUS little film fol- lows close behind last year's King Solo- mon's Mines and, in its quiet way, succeeds where the former fails. Put together by various hands under the aegis of Ealing Studios, the picture says what it has to say smoothly and succinctly. The plot is con- cerned with the attempt to establish the game sanctuary in Kenya against preda- ,tory hunters and ivory poachers. The actors are little known but competent. Filmed almost entirely in the bush and veldt country, the photography has an au- thentic sheen without being startlingly so. This is in no way pure spectacle. The story and the action are nicely integrated, trying to form a satisfying ecological whole. The elephant wallow and the water hole cede place to the dry plain of the gazelle and giraffe as a dominant theme. Over all are the ubiquitous vultures wheeling raucously against a background of Tanganyika's snow- capped Kilimanjaro. The incidental se- quences (a racing mamba, a rhinoceros charge, a five-minute old giraffe nuzzling the game warden's forelock) contribute ad- mirably adjuncts to the zoological pattern. The superb cutting reflects the sensitive appreciation of a naturalist. We feel obliged to mention the appalling nature of the cartoons presented in recent weeks at this theater. The exhibitors are attempting to fob off crudities of antique vintage of the unsuspecting audience. If nothing else is available except these mon- strosities they should be jettisoned alto- gether. -D. R. Crippen -Curt R. Schneider The Founding Fathers Had the founding fathers foreseen this year's campaign they would have shaken in their boots. They feared that factions would divide the Union; they would be see- ing the country divided into two major fac- tions called parties, and each of these di- vided in turn into factions formed around MATTER OF FACT Byg JOSEPH and STEW'ART ALSOP WASHINGTON-"No man could be nom- inated," wise old Sen. Arthur Vanden- berg used to say, when he himself was be- ing promoted for the Republican nomina- tion in 1948, "without conniving." He meant, of course, that no man can get his party nod without some sort of prior commitment to his party's key chieftain. The Vandenberg. rule held true in his own case, as it almost always had before. Did Gov. Adlai Stevenson of Illinois nive" in order to get the Democratic nom- ination. This seems a good time to ask this ques- tion. A good many people are saying that Stevenson won the nomination in a particu- larly wily maneuver, and a good many more people are likely to say so before the Presi- dential campaign ends..Sen. Paul Douglas, for example, has pictured the Stevenson draft as an exercise in "planned spontane- ity," and Republican national committee chairman Arthur Summerfield charges that Stevenson is the "hand-picked" candidate of President Truman. In short, the Stevenson draft was supposedly put over, with Steven- son's knowledge, consent and secret coop- eration, by Truman and a handful of pow- erful professionals. In fact, this is so far from the truth that both Truman and the professionals, like Col. Jacob Arvey of Illinois, actually gave up on Stevenson before the convention was called to order. Tremendous pressure was brought to bear on Stevenson by these men, not to become an active candidate, but simply to pass the word that he would run if nominated. Almost tearfully, Arvey pleaded with Stevenson to allow him to pass this word. When Arvey's efforts were unavailing, Tru- man dispatched Democratic chairman Frank McKinney to Illinois to try again. Various other leaders, like Gov. Paul Dever of Mas- sachusetts and Mayor David Lawrence of Pittsburgh, also tried to get Stevenson to make this simple commitment. And finally, shortly before the convention, Samuel Car- dinal Stritch of Chicago, saw Stevenson in order to assure him that his divorce was no bar to his candidacy. ** * * ALL THIS EFFORT was absolutely un- availing. As a result, Truman and the key leaders like Arvey reasoned-with plenty of historical precedence-that no convention was goin gto nominate a man who might turn the nomination down. Truman there- fore let it be known that Vice-President Al- ben Barkley was "acceptable" to him. Ar- vey, Lawrence, and the other leaders also turned to Barkley. Arvey even telephoned Barkley in Kentucky a few days before the convention, to promise the Vice-President his support. The plain fact is that Truman and the "bosses" who are supposed to have ma- neuvered the Stevenson draft were them- selves caught flat-footed when it became clear that the convention wanted Steven- son and nobody else. In effect, the profes- sionals simply rushed to the head of the Stevenson parade which was already form- ing, and began frantically waving their banners. The only shadow of substance in the charge that Stevenson "connived" lies in the fact that he could have taken himself straight out, and that he never did so. In fact, he came very near to doing so on at least three occasions. The first time was just after President Truman's withdrawal, when Stevenson wrote out in longhand his own version of Gen. Sherman's famous statement. He was only barely prevailed upon to keep it locked in his desk. The second time was shortly before the Republican convention, when W. Averell Harriman's manager, Franklin D. Roose- velt jr., almost persuaded Stevenson to issue the withdrawal statement, and throw his whole weight behind his old friend Harri- man. And the third time was on the second day of the convention, after the Illinois dele- gation had infuriated hi mby defying his express wish not to support his nomination. Stevenson telephoned Roosevelt ad serius- ly discussed taking himself out even then. * * * * ' THE FIRST two times, Stevenson's friends dissuaded him on the grounds that his withdrawal would strengthen Robert A. Taft. The third time, Stevenson was persuaded that his withdrawal would help, not Harri- man, but Estes Kefauver, whom Stevenson did not want to see nominated. Yet these were really only surface reasons for Steven- son's failure to take himself right out. Stevenson is, after all, a politician, and although he did not want the nomination this year, he is by no means unambitious politician. He knew that a politician signs his own death warrant when he flatly re- fuses to accept his party's nomination, and Stevenson has no political death wish. This is the real reason, one strongly suspects, why he never made puble his hand-written Sherman statement. In short, Stevenson did not want to be drafted, and he did everything possible, short of committing political suicide, to prevent a draft. But he was shrewd enough to know that he might be drafted anyway, and in this case he wanted to be nominated on his own teriks-an "honest draft," with no strings tied. Stevenson got the nomination he did not want on precisely the terms he did want-no mean achievement. But cer- tainly the answer to the question "did he connive?" is an emphatic "no." (Copyright, 1952, New York Herald Tribune Inc.) 1 t f', ,/ .. . ,3 pti GHQ .- t1t , ti cost . I fi® { / -. ON THE WASH IN(ITON MEt R1RY40--R0UND WITH DREW PEARSON NF. « JJL CS 4 r -#&Gltw - 44 XetteP 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 fot any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. Student Trial .. - To the Editor: IN HIS EDITORIAL, "The Can- didates," (August 3) Mr. Wie- gand has displayed an overenthu- siasm, in an attempt to defame some of the city officials and a candidate, which has resulted in at least two misrepresentations of the facts. He commentshbriefly that the conviction in the case of Felix Mielczynski was obtained at the expense of a deal made with another offender, who turned state's evidence. This other offend- er, Wiegand claims, was the ring- leader. I was present at the pre-trial discussion between the prosecutor and the "other offender" and can state with certainty that no deals were contrived. I also was a witness of the burglary and testified that Mielczynski was one of the men who attempted the robbery. This, again, was no "deal," but a mere statement of what I saw. In the case of the second un- truth, Mr. Wiegand should recall, lif he was present at the trial, that the evidence showed completely and convincingly that the "other offender" was not the ringleader. Because my knowledge is lack- ing in the other cases mentioned, I cannot comment on their veri- ty, but, if I were a consciencious voter, reading the column for a true picture of present affairs, the two absurd statements would cast a shadow of doubt over the entire editorial.Editorials should be of a constructive nature devoid of falsehoods resulting from exces- sive zeal. -Thomas H. Roderick '52 Editor's Note: In the Mieczknski case, the fact remains that "the other offender," although guiltyof the identical crime, received pro-. bation after he testified against Mielzynski, while the latter went to prison. Opinions apparently con- flict as to who was the ringleader there is, however, no conflict in the law, which provides that a plea of guilty never serves to mitigate the severity of the offense committed. * * * Sidney Hook... . To the Editor: SIDNEY HOOK'S lecture last Wednesday got somewhat but- chered in the process of being re- ported in The Daily. First, he was quoted to the ef- fect that Bolshevism constitutes a greater threat to peace than any "imminent developments of west- ern economies." The implication made is that Hook was anticipat- ing some later-i.e. not-so-immi- nent-developments in the West which indeed come to constitute the chief threats to peace. But this isn't what Hook said; the word he used was "immanent-i.e. inherent -a reference to Marx's concept of the "inherent contradictions" of Capitalism. Second, a more glaring error than this failure of hearing was contained in the story's last para- graph which began: "Prof. Hook had no use for the Marxist social philosophy." Now this is a mani- fest absurdity. What Hook was at- tacking was not Marxism, but dog- matic Marxism; this is made clear several times. Long a scholar of Marx, Prof. Hook is obviously aware of Marx's great contribu- tions to social science; indeed he indicated in his lecture that to explain great chunks of the his- tory of many eras, the economic interpretation turns out to be the most adequate. As a monistic and then neces- sarily mystical philosophy of his- tory, Marxism is as invalid as any other monism. However, in the form of an empirical hypothesis, subject to revision, as one among several such complimentary the- ories, Prof. Hook maintained, the Marxist theory is a fruitful one. -Arty Goldberger WASHINGTON-Word has been passed inside the Chelf Committee that the investigation of the Justice Department is to be quietly tapered off. Chief reason: pressure from certain big distillers who have contributed to both parties in the past. Already three committee investigators have been given notice and orders are out to start writing the final report. Republican members are expected to object, but some of them may not be too vigorous, because the liquor companies have also been gener- ous to the GOP. The Chelf Committee was set u as a subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee for the special purpose of probing the Justice Department. Congressman Frank Chelf, its chairman, appeared anx- ious to do a good job. However, Chelf, who comes from Kentucky where bourbon is sometimes said to be king, has not called his com- mittee together since Seagrams admitted paying $30,000 in cash to ex-attorney general Howard McGrath on behalf of the Democrats, and $20,000 to Harold Talbot on behalf of the Republicans. Various heavy contributions were admitted by other liquor companies, together with the claim that an antitrust suit against them was dropped, NOTE-The Chelf Committee will meet in August to probe the law firm of Peyton Ford and Herbert Bergson, two former Justice De- partment officials, and then plans quietly to fold its tent. Actually the operations of the Ford-Bergson firm are not important compared to some of the other things left untouched. REWARDING THE BUREAUCRATS DURING THE WAR, Nelson Rockefeller, who did such a good job improving our good-neighbor relations with Latin America, once remarked to me: "When I first came to Washington I had the idea that I could bring in private business executives and reform the govern- ment overnight. However, I've been here about a year, and the longer I'm here, the more respect I have for the average gov- ernment servant. "Running the government," Rockefeller added, "is a lot harder than operating private business. You can't fire a congressman who cuts your appropriations. And you have to do business with Senators whether you like them or not. "In addition, I have found that the average government servant is very conscientious-some of them remarkably efficient." That statement, coming from the son of one of the biggest businessmen in the nation, may cause surprise. However, Nelson's brother, John D. Rockefeller 3rd, has followed it up this week with hard cash.. He has put up a quarter of a million dollars through Princeton University to give an award each year to the 10 or so most deserving "bureaucrats." As a reward for their service to the government, they are to be given free educational travel or study for about six months. EMBALMED EVITA PERON DICTATOR PERON'S plan to have his wife embalmed to lie in state permanently is a shrewd move to continue the hold he had, through his wife, on Argentine organized labor and the unorganized Argentine poor. Keeping their support, yet at the same time winning back Peron's greatest original source of strength, the military, is his real problem. Peron came in power through the Army. But when his wife tok over the Labor ministry and as her unique power over the under- privileged increased, the military became restless and rebellious. It was because of Evita's "undue prominence" that military dis- affection reached a climax last summer and some ariy units revolted. While the attempt failed, distrust remained, and it took the secret police at least five months to catch even the secondary figures in the revolution. The No. 1 revolutionary still remains unknown to Peron. Now that he is alone, Peron has been making overtures to the army. He wants to win back his old military friends. But the problem is to do this without alienating labor. That is why Peron sent to Hamburg, Germany, to obtain the best embalming experts of Europe to preserve the remains of the ex- cabaret entertainer as a permanent shrine like that of Lenin in Moscow. WASHINGTON PIPELINE JUAN TRIPPE, head of Pan American Airways, slipped into England last week for secret negotiations to buy British commercial jet planes. However, the British have so many advance orders that Pan American won't be able to buy any for some time . . . . The Com- munist Party is so regarded by the strong hand of the major political parties against Communism that orders have gone out to all party members to affiliate with right-wing political groups, trade unions, and civic clubs, in order to bore from within. Party members were also instructed to place more people inside the Republican party. . The American military mission in Iran has cabled the Pentagon that it does not expect to get kicked out of the country. The American mission is on good terms with the powerful Iranian army . . . . The government will soon remove all price controls from shoes-including baby shoes and work shoes which I ' x4 DORIS FLEESON: The Driver in the Front Seat WASHINGTON-Gov. Adlai Stevenson's Springfield plan for winning the presi- dency is beginning to take shape. It is de- signed to make the candidate better known and to stamp the Stevenson brand firmly upon the Democratic party. The first step has already been taken in the decision to establish campaign head- quarters in the Illinois capital with Wil- son Wyatt, a close personal friend, in charge. This eliminates at one stroke the Washington dateline, the Washington old-school-tie atmosphere, and the hover- ing presence of the White House. Under consideration are plans to trans- form August into a continuous visitors' day. A large number of Democrats are among the larger number of Americans who have heard that the candidate is an admirable fellow but don't know him very well, if at all. Certainly their leaders and other Demo- cratic candidates can count on invitations to drop by. With Springfield so centrally located and handy to Chicago, the accept- ances should be numerous. Reinforced by a better acquaintance with to the hustings after Labor Day for an in- the party. stalwarts, the nominee will take .revolt in Spain THE ONLY UNEXPECTED featuretin the Spanish situation-and outside Spain it has caused an immense amount of misun- derstanding-is that among the parties on the Government side the Communists stood not upon the extreme Left, but upon the extreme Right. In reality this should cause ,no surprise, because the tactics of the Com- munist Party elsewhere, especially in France, have made it clear that Official Commu- nism must be regarded, at any rate for the time being, as ananti-revolutionary force. The whole of Comintern policy is now sub- ordinated excusably, considering the world situation) to the defense of U.S.S.R., which depends upon a system of military alliances. In particular, the U.S.S.R. is in alliance with France, a capitalist-imperialist coun- try. The alliance is of little use to Russia tensive campaign. This year the itinerary will include the South, especially Texas with its 23 electoral votes. Governor Stevenson can afford to take time for handshaking since he does not need to bone up on the issues. Democrats are confident he can hold his own with General Eisenhower on foreign policy and leave the General at the post on domestic questions. They have worried because so little time remains to make him better known. A new chairman of the National Commit- tee is in the cards, again a Catholic with ex- perience in dealing with the big-city ma-, chines, labor, independents and minority groups. He will have a large task of fund- raising and organization to do. The astute old bosses are fading from the scene; in some big states, as California, the party is badly disorganized. The West, therefore, is a problem. Prob- ably Governor Stevenson will turn to Sec- retary of the Interior Oscar Chapman, as President Truman did for help there. In New York, Averell Harriman is coun- ted upon to infuse fresh hope and vigor into a once-invincible alliance of the big city with the smaller cities of the largest state in the union. Harriman, who surprised everyone by the force he put into his campaign for the presidential nomination, is keeping the or- ganization he knit together for that pur- pose. Many Democrats hope this means he will run for the Senate against the incum- bent, Irving M. Ives, a Progressive' Eisen- hower backer. They want Harriman for many reasons. His campaign gave him useful advertising; it also dramatized his advocacy of minority rights. With an Alabaman, Sen. John J. Sparkman, on the ticket to lure the South, New York Democrats have been glum about their prospect for holding the Negro vote. By demanding an end to segregation in the District of Columbia during the D.C. pri- mary,, which he won handily, Harriman became something of a hero to that race. Admittedly, the question of how Gover- 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 University. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3510 Administration Building before 3 p.m. the day preceding publication (11 a.m. on Saturday). Notices Concert Tickets: Season tickets for the Choral Union Series (10 concerts) and for the Extra Concert Series (5 concerts) are now on sale over-the- ounterat the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. The following major concerts are an- nounced for the coming University Year:t Choral Union Series Richard Tucker, Tenor..........Oct. 8 Yehudi Menuhin, violinist......Oct. 22 Danish State Symphony Orchestra.. .~Nov. 13 vladimir Horowitz, Pianist . ..Nov. 19 Bidu Sayao, Soprano............Dec. 1 Vienna Boys Choir..............Jan. 16 Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra.... ....Feb. 12 Gershwin Concert Orchestra... Mar. 2 Artur Rubinstein, Pianist.....Mar. 12 Boston Symphony Orchestra....May 19 Extra Concert Series Rise Stevens, Mezzo Soprano.... Oct. 17 Cleveland Orchestra........... Nov. 9 Caudio Arrau, Pianist .....Nov. 25 Heifetz, Violinist................Feb. 17 Boston "Pops" Tour Orchestra..Mar. 23 By purchasing season tickets a con- La Petite Causette: All students and summer residents who are interested in speaking French are invited to join this very informal group every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon between 4 and 5 o'clock in the Tap Room of the Michigan Union. A table will be re- served and a French-speaking member of the staff will be present, but there is no program other than free con- versation In French. Attention August Graduates: College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, School of Education, School of Music, School of Public Health: Students are advised not to request grades of I or X in August. When such grades are absolutely imperative, the work must be made up in time to allow your instructor to report the make-up grade not later thai 11 a.m., August 21. Grades received after that time may defer the student's graduation until a later date. Edward G. Groesbeck Assistant Registrar All Applicants for the Doctorate who are planning to take the August pre- liminary examinations in education, to be held from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 N, Au- gust 18, 19, and 20, 1952, will please no- tify the chairman of the committee on graduate studies in education, room 4019 University Hhigh school, immedi- ately. Harlan C. Koch, Chairman Committee on Graduate Studies, School of Education Personnel Requests The Buffalo Forge Company, Buffalo, New York, is interested in receiving ap- plications from recent graduates or Aug- ,,st gradnates i MechanicEngneein are in short supply and bound to shoot upward when the ceilings are removed .... Congratulations to Great Britain for setting up new Marshall scholarships enab- ling 12 American students to study each year at British Universities. The program is to say "thank you" for the Marshall plan aid and is another step forward to the im- portant goal of people-to-people friendship. COMMUNIST PROPAGANDA THE ITALIAN Communist news- paper Unita has distorted some remarks of mine to make it appear that the American Ambas- sador in Rome, Ellsworth Bunker, was cosying up to the new Fascist leader, Marshal Graziani, and cooling off on Premier De Gasperi. Not only did I not say this, but nothing could be further from the truth. De Gasperi rates ace high with the Ambassador, with the State Department, and with the White House. I have known him personally, and regard him as one of the most courageous leaders of Western Europe. Unfortunately, both the Com- munists and Fascists to some ex- tent are playing ball with each other in Italy, and the lattei, es- mto~tal71Bll Sixty-Second Year Edited and managed oy students of the University of Michigan under the authority o1 the Board in Control of Student Publications EDITORIAL STAFF Leonard Greenbaum Managing Editor Ivan Kaye and Bob Margolin .........00-sports Editors Nan Reganall ...;....... Women's Editor Joyce Fickies. .............Night Editor Harry Lunn............. Night Editor Marge Shepherd ..........Night Editor virginia Voss ...........Night Editor Mike Wolff. .........Night Editor BUSINESS s'[ AFP rom rreeger...... Business Manager C. A Mitts .......Advertising Manager Jim Miller . Finance Manager 4