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Henry a Wallace — Part 4
Page 233
233 / 543
38
N. E. Dodd estimates there is a 36-mil-
lion-ton grain demand for the current
fiscal year and that there are only 26.5
million tons of export supplies. With-
out government control, wheat will not
go where it is needed. Private traders
and governments would come into our
market and undoubtedly bid the price
up so that our people would have an
enormous sum added to their already ex-
cessively high food bill. This is not
mere idle speculation. At the present
time Sweden has placed an order for
20,000 tons of wheat for July 1, the
date of expiration of the Export Act.
In other words, Sweden is betting that
the law will expire. Sweden, not being
a “starvation” country, was not allo-
cated whéat, but becatise she has money
she ‘plans to buy it as soon as control is
lifted. If we were to remove export
controls, other countries would undoubt-
edly set them up. And inevitably we
would be unable to: get what we wanted
and needed from them, while they
‘could come into our market and buy
what they ‘pleased.
Res controls would mean_ the
end of the International Emergency
Food Council’ and would be equivalent
to by-passing the United Nations. The
furiction of the IEFC is to channel com-
modities which are in short supply into-
areas where they are needed. Member
nations exchange information about
their food and other commodity needs.
They also exchange information about
production, capacity and supplies in the —
various countries. Then a general plan
is worked. out so that each country can
get what it needs.
Senator Taft is finding out that it is
not so easy to get rid of controls. And
he may be beginning to see that uni-
lateral and selfish action by the US
will hurt his own country.. He may even
be beginning to suspect that we are not
self-sufficient; and, in fact, in the long
run até more dependent on the rest of
the world than it is on us. This admit-
tedly is a rosy view of Taft.
At any rate, whether Taft likes it or
not, he lives in one world, as do the rest
of us. And he will inevitably find out
that he can’t sink the international boat
without drowning a lot of good Repub-
lcaris. : ANGUS MCDONALD
“Trial,”
Battle of the Books
UST. a year ago, two justices of the
g New York State Supreme Court .
enjoyed a lesson in the language of
radio criticism as practised by the en-
tertainment industry's “bible,” Varzety.
At issue were an injunction suit; then
a four-day trial, in which the contes-
tants were Martin Stone, Plaintiff, and
Station WHN, New York, Defendant.
Plaintiff alleged that Defendant, by put-
ting on a program called “Books on
was engaging in unfair competi-
tion as well as violating the law of
confidential relationship. Over a six-year
period, Stone had built a program called
“The Author Meets the Critics,” which
he had just moved from WHN to a
competing station in New York City;
and WHN had promptly come out
with another version of literary radio
called “Books on Trial.”
~ Mr. Justice Eder, who denied. the in-.
junction Suit, ruled that" ‘time ist of -
the esserice”and remanded the case for
speedy trial. Mr. Justice Botein listened
for four ‘days, and dismissed: the action.
In both instances; a prominent tole was
played by Variety's verdict, which had
already weighed both shows critically.
Variety's judgment that “a guy’s hep”
was relevant became a matter for jurid-
ical determination. The court had to
tule, with a straight face, on the com-
petence and materiality of a Variety
decision that “with the plug cut down to
kneepants, show should move smoothly
to well earned Hooper.”
The case is about to pay off as far as
radio, and radio’s relationship to litera-
ture, are concerned. For next month,
“The Author Meets the Critics’ moves
into the big time. Up to now, it has
been heard only in New York (for the
last year on WQXR) and over one-
third of the Mutual network’s string of
one-lung transmitters. In May the show
goes to NBC. At a very good time for
this type of show (Sundays, 4:30-5
p.m.), large blocs of listeners will be
able to hear prominent authors battle
toe-to-toe with their critical peers. And,
ébecause of the lessons learned in Stone -
v. WHN a year ago, Stone and. NBC
are preparing to make this new big-
league book show an exciting pack-
age.
Stone had lost the WHN action be-
cause, among other considerations, the
court had accepted the trade reviewer's
‘ judgment that “The Author Meets the
Critics” was “‘essentially a round-table
discussion, while ‘Books on Trial’ [was]
a dramatization.” Now the new show
will combine the forum and drama
techniques. Some scenes out of the book”
under consideration will be dramatized,
so that the listener may have his appe-
tite whetted and at the same time know
what the shooting is about. Then the —
critics will shoot. The critics will be
not only from New York, as has mainly
been the case until now, but from any-
where NBC’s lines can reach—and
that’s most of the USA..
Ress of some’ “of the people and
books that have appeared: on- both
New York shows in the last year may
give you a better idea of what’s in store..”
Stone’s show has featured author Bled. 5
nor Roosevelt (If You Ask Me), John’
Roy Carlson - (The Plotters), Theodore
White and Annalee Jacoby (Thwnder’
Out of China), and Charles Jackson...
(The Fall of Valor). Among the critics
have been John Mason Brown, ‘Lewis:
Gannett, Irwin Edman and Bennett:.
Cerf. “Books on Trial’ has tackled
Howard Fast’s The -Amierican, with
Hamilton Fish attacking and» Louis
Nizer defending; Louis Fischer’s The
Great Challenge; with Earl: Browder
lined up against Edgar Ansel Mowrer;
and Russell Lord’s The Wallaces. of
Iowa, which was attacked by Washitig-
ton Times-Herald editor Frank C."Wal-
drop and defended by Stetson (South-
ern Exposure) Kennedy.
If the new show jells (they don't
always sound as planned, alas!) this one
should be as exciting as “Information
Please’’ was some nine years ago when
its cock first crowed to sloganize, “Wake
Up, America!”
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