THV . MICHIGAN DAILY" SUNDAY, APRIL 23, 1983 + i fi siM. C sANvD ILY a '-' -' THE MICHIGAN DAILY ! M1 4 ' i aFv§ Puishcd every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- tion and the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special rdi patches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, a!> sc.ond class matter. Special rate of postage granted b5 Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail] sl1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mull, $450. Ofices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street.- Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone 2-1214.r Representatives: CollegePublications Representatives Inc., 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylston Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue: Chicago. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR, ..............FRANK B. GILBRETH CiTY EDITOR......................KARL SEIFFERI1 POR TS EPDITOR .. ............... .JOHN W. THOMAS W I'S EDITOR..............M..MARGARET O'BRIEN AsS'TANT WOMEN'S EDITOR ........ MIRIAM CARVER views. We have been charged with making state- ments that are "baseless and full of inaccuracies," and yet not one of these so-called inaccurate or baseless statements has been pointed out to us by Mr. Prockin. Instead, a number of sweeping ;eneralizations unsubstantiated by facts have been advanced as a supposedly effective means of squelching our "high-handed protests." It is our purpose to show Mr. Prockin that his un- scholarly impulsiveness has carried him into deeper waters than he has expected and to take is opportunity to present some further facts ;oncerning the policy followed by the Polish gov- ;rnment in its treatment of the minority peoples within the boundaries of Poland. In the first place, we wish to point out that Mr. Prockin's enthusiasm has caused him to ex- aggregate the figures found in what he calls "the statistics of the Polish government." According to the census of Dec. 9, 1931 (the latest official statistics in our possession) there is not "40 per gent of the population under the Polish yoke =against its will" but 30.9 per cent of the popula- :ion in Poland of other than Polish mother-ton- ue. This percentage includes nearly 3,000,000 jewish citizens of Poland. Furthermore, the num- >er of Ukranians in Poland is not 6,000,000 (even fount Sforza in the European Dictators, p. 133,. places the number 4,000,000) but 4,800,000, which figure includes Ruthenians, who reject the appel- ation "Ukrainian" because of the political con- notation the term has acquired as a result of the activities of the U.W.O. (Ukrainian Military Or- ;anization). For a full statement of the Ruthen- ian attitudes we refer Mr. Prockin to the speech Df Deputy Michael Baczynski, a Ruthenian, de- lvered before the Administrative Committee of the Seym (Diet) on January 21, 1931. Screen Reflections Four stars means extraordinary; three stars very good; two stars good; one star just another picture. no stars keep away from it. OENI : SERVICE I ell =a' ® w w r rf ... + r' r k s I r t t x c NIGHT EDITORS: Thomas Connellan, John W. Pritchard, Joseph A. Renihan, C. Hart Schaaf, Brackley Shaw, Glenn R. Winters. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Fred A. Huber, Albert Newman. REPORTERS: Charles Baird, A. Ellis Ball, Donald R Bird, Richard Boebel, Arthur W. Carstens, Ralph G. Coulter, Harold A. Daisher, Caspar S. Early, Waldron Eldridge, Ted Evans, William G. Ferris, Sidney Frankel Thomas Groehn, Robert D. Guthrie, John C. Healey. Robert B. Hewett, George M. Holmes, Joseph L. Karpin- ski, Milton Keiner, Matthew Lefkowitz, Manuel Levin, Irving Levitt, David G. MacDonald, Proctor McGeachy, Sidney Moyer, Joel P. Newman, John O'Connell, Ken- neth Parker, Paul W. Philips, George Quimby, Floyd Rabe, William Reed, Edwin W. Richardson, Rich- ad Rome. H. A. Sanders, Robert E. Scott, Adolph Shapiro, Marshall D. Silverman, Wilson L. Trimmer. George Ivan Vleck, Philip Taylor Van Zile, William Weeks, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. Dorothy Adams, Barbara Bates, Marjorie Beck, Eleanor B. Blum, Frances Carney, Betty Connor, Ellen Jane Cooley, Margaret Cowie, Adelaide Crowell, Dorothy Dishman, Gladys M. Draves, Jeanette Duff, Dorothy Gies, Carol J. Hanan, Jean Hanmer, Florence Harper, Marie Held, Margaret Hiscock, Eleanor Johnson, Lois Jotter, Hilda Laine, Helen Levison, Kathleen MacIntyre, Josephine McLean, Anna Miller, Mary Morgan, Marjorie Morrison, Marie Murphy, Mary M. O'Neill, Margaret D. Phalan. Jane Schneider, Barbara Sherburne, Mary E. Simpson, Ruth Sonnanstine, Margaret Spencer, Miriam P. Stark, Marjorie Western. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER ..............BYRON C. VEDDER CREDIT MANAGER. ...............HARRY R. BEGLEY WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.......Donna C. Becker DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Advertising, W. Grafton Sharp Advertising Contracts, Orvil Aronson; Advertising Serv- ice, Noel Turner; Accounts, Bernard E. Schnacke; Cir- culation, Gilbert E. Bursley; Publications, Robert E. Finn. ASSISTANTS: John Bellamy, Gordon Boylan, Allen Cleve- and, Jack Efroymson, Fred Hertrick, Joseph Hume, Allen Knuusi, Russell Read, Lester Skinner, Robert Ward, Meigs W. Bartmess, William B. Caplan, Willard Cohodas, R. C. Devereaux, Carl J. Fibiger, Albert Gregory, Milton Kramer; John Marks, John I. Mason, John P. Ogden, Robert Trimby, Bernard Rosenthal, - Joseph Rothbard, Richard Schiff, George R. Williams. Elizabeth Aigler, Jane Bassett, Beulah Chapman, Doris Gimmy, Billie Grifliths, Catherine McHenry, May See- fried,. Virginia McCoinb, Meria Abbot, Betty Chapman, Lillain Fine, Minna Giffen, Cecile Poor, Carolyn Wose. SUNDAY, APRIIL 23, 1933 Drinkers Of Beer Abnormalities.. .. EVERAGES of two per cent alcohol are "rank poison" and those of four per cent are "deadly for boys" according to Mrs. Henry W. Peabody, chairman of the Women's National Committee for Law Enforcement. Mrs. Peabody made her charges before the tenth an- nual meeting of the committee in Washington last week. Immediately preceding Mrs. Peabody's dry ha- rangue, Sen. Maurice Sheppard of Texas had fin- ished a similar speech with an oratorical flourish heartily condemning even moderate drinking. The Senator stressed the age-old danger of "riding be- hind a moderate-drinking engineer" and "being operated upon by a surgeon who is a moderate drinker." As has grown common in such gatherings, the pronouncements of the dries were as unfair and narrow minded as might be expected. Men in general and wet women were classed as abnormal, and responsible for a great deal of wet publicity in the newspapers. "Normal women only receive notices in obituaries" Mrs. Peabody declared to those present, in spite of the fact that reporters and news-reel men stood ready to send her name across the country. The viewpoint of the dries since the birth of "demon liquor" has always been and probably will always be colored by prejudice and disfigured by lack of knowledge. Any person who has ever had a glass of beer can tell Mrs. Peabody that it was neither deadly nor poisonous. Men in positions of great respon- sibility can be perfectly capable, in spite of "mod- erate drinking" of low percentage beverages in their homes. Americans have proved that they will not be dictated to in matters involving per- sonal freedom and the sooner the dries realize the futility of their fight the happier everyone will be. A few fanatics may continue to argue the repeal of prohibition. The overwhelming and ex- pressed sentiment in the nation against them will make no difference. But when Mrs. Peabody and Senator Sheppard endanger the respect of the people of the United States for the Law Enforce- ment committee, they harm an institution which is potentially able to do much good. . Campus Opinion Letters published in this column should not be As to the reasons for changing the name ofs Eastern Galicia to Malopolska (literally, "Polonia1 Ilinor") little need be said to anyone who under-1 stands the connotation of the phrase, "Ty Galic-x oku" ("You Galician"). The term Eastern Ga- licia was used by the Austrian authorities and was equally obnoxious to both the Poles and Uk- anians living there. To regard this change of name as a move on the part of the Polish gov- ornment to stamp out Ukranian national con- sciousness is pure nonsense. The change was but the restoration of the ancient, pre-partition name of this territory. The next wild charge advanced by Mr. Prockin s that "all Ukranian schools were wiped away and . . . Ukrainian chairs at all universities were abolished" by the Polish government. Let us be generous at this point and say that Mr. Prockin is only ignorant of actual conditions. Ignorance, however, does not justify nor excuse such state- ments as his. Naturally enough, the Polish gov- ernment feels that the Minorities ought to know the State language. However, to say that the Polish government wishes to eradicate the Ukran- ian language is false and malicious. Equal oppor- tunity is given to learn both languages. The fol- lowing statistical evidence shows the number and kind of elementary schools existing in Eastern Malopolska in 1929-30: Elementary schools using Polish language . .2,224 Elementary schools using Ukranian language 716 Elementary schools of bi-lingual (Ukranian- Polish) type . ..... . . .. . . . .... . ...... .. 1,794 The statement that the Polish government ha abolished Ukranian chairs at all universities is just a piece of cheap trickery. In what universi- ties were there ever any Ukranian chairs? What the Polish government has done is made prep- arations for the ultimate establishment of a purely Ukranian university at Lwow to satisfy the demands of a certain group of Ukranians. The Ukranian Scientific Institute has been established at Warsaw with the object of preparing professors for the future university. This Institute consists of the following departments: (1) Ukranian Eco- nomic and Social Life; (2) Ukranian Political His- tory with the History of Ukranian Culture and its Present State (its language, literature, and as- pirations); and (3) Church History. Furthermore, the government has encouraged the activities of the two great Ukrainian cultural and educational societies: the "Proswita" society, which in 1928 had 3020 branches and libraries, and the "Ridna Szkola ("National School"). Another gross misstatement by Mr. Prockin is that the Ukrainians are prohibited from holding any government office. M. Felinski in his The Uk- ranians in Poland presents detailed statistical evi- dence which shows that the Ukrainians were in the majority (56.8%) in the local authorities of the communes in Eastern Malopolska. Also ,in 1930 there were 28 Ukrainians in the Seym and 4 in the Senate. (To Be Concluded Tuesday) L. Waskiewicz. B. Zygariowski. W. Zygariowski. NO PIES OR DISTILLED LIQUORS FOR HARVARD COMMENCERS To the Editor: The following is an extract from the records of the meeting of the Corporation of Harvard College on June 11, 1722. "Whereas the Country in General and the Col- lege in particular have bin under Such Circum- stances, as call aloud for Humiliation, and all due mainfestations of it; and that a Suitable re- trenchment of everything that has the face of ex- orbitance or Extravagance in Expenses, especially at Commencements ought to be endeavored, And Whereas the preparations and provisions that have bin wont to be made at those times have bin the Occasion of no Small disorders; It is Agreed, and Voted, That hencefore no preparation nor Provision either of plumb-cake or rosted, boiled, or baked Meats of Pyes of any kind shalbe made by any Commencer, Nor shal any such have any distilled Liquors, or any Composition made therewith; And in Case any aforemencioned shall act Contrariely, He or they shall besides forfeit- ing all and every the before prohibited provisions being found in his or their Chambers or any the dependences thereon to be Siezed by the Tutors, be punished twenty shillings to be paid to the Use of the College. Voted unanimously to be pre- sented to the Overseers." And from the Set. 5th meeting of the same AT THE MAJESTIC "KING KONG" CREDIBLE RECONSTRUCTION OF PREHISTORIC MONSTROSITIES Stumbling through prehistoric jungles with un- 'nown terrors on every side and poling across a weating lake with a dinosour feeding in it, the members of the moving picture expedition to Skull sland push their way through long extinct hor- rors in the pursuit of the gigantic gorilla, Kong, who has made away with the actress of the roupe. Kong, however, unused to the blonde beauty of the actress who has been offered to him as a sacrifice by the native inhabitants of the island, protects her carefully from harm oA that island of death, fighting a carnivorous brontosaur, a pterodactyl and a strange lizard to protect her from harm. And then the 50 foot ape is captured by the director and brought bac to New York to exhibit to a horrified public. He breaks loose, of course, and the last scene in which he stands on the apex of the mooring most on top of the Em- pire State building with the girl in one hand and army airplanes buzzing around him like mos- quitoes, is guaranteed to make you hold your breath. While some of the animal models in this picture move somewhat jerkily at times, the technical end of the production is remarkably well done. Before the picture is over Kong is endowed with a per- sonality and you actually feel sorry for him. The prehistoric jungle is convincing and every log looks like some tremendous beast's tail. Robert Armstrong as Carl Denham, the hard- boiled director who will stop at nothing to get his picture, is well-chosen. While Fay Wray, as Ann Darrell, the little girl who has all the adventures, has little to do but look thoroughly terrified and scream agonizedly, she does it quite acceptably. --B. S. By FRANCIS WAGNER In the Washtenaw county rural school system, there are 131 one-room schools, six with two or three rooms, one consolidated school, and four village schools. Nine schools have been closed dur- ing the depression. 5,209 children are served by the system .All eight grades are taught in each school. Since the recent spring election, the Common Council of Ann Arbor consists of 10 Republicans and 5 Democrats. The Democrats made a gain of two in the election, the inroads being made in the third and fourth wards. Of the children finishing the eighth grade in the county's schools last year, 68.1 per cent went on i ito high school. In the year 1928-29, 58 per- cent continued into high schoql. 474 school offi- cers govern the activities of these schools. Names prominent in the history of the Univer- sity adorn the buildings of the campus. Three are named after University presiddnts-Tappan, An- gell and Hutchins Halls. And there are Yost Field House, and Clements Library. New Eversharp Pencils the roduirgeads Erasers KEEP UP WITH THE NEW BOOKS! This week the Printed Page offers: Noel Coward's "Design for Living." Lewis Gib's "On the Hill." Frank's "The Singers.' Books 5c a day. No deposit World's Fair Magazines for Sale PRINTED PAGE RENTAL LIBRARY" 14 Nickels Arcade " 50C , , 0 . . . lOc 15c Now 39c $7.00 Carter Fountain Pens .. . Now $3.50 EI WAHR' S UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE I U 11 1/.!/f ' /! f ft w +e A I a P STARS _____ & STRIPES By Karl Seiffert NO COMMENT DEPT. Failing of passage in the House, a bill to pro- hibit employment of relatives by State officials was tabled, pending another vote.-News Item. :' * * CLASSIFIED AD: Will share cozy apartment with business girl, reasonable. Depends on what you mean by reasonable. :1 * * HAMS, BACON, RADIO, GUNS TAKEN BY RIFLE BANDITS -Headline All scout cars be on the lookout for touring car containing suspicious strangers and camping equipment, possibly with trailer. Stop only Gentiles. * *- A law has been proposed in Lisbon, Spain, pro- hibiting pedestrians from speaking while they cross the street. Not necessary here. Once you step off the curb you're too scared to talk. * * * GERMANS SEEK LIGHT FROM FAR-AWAY STARS Like Marlene Dietrich? * * * "To clean painted walls," says a home page note, "wipe them first with a cloth wet in kero- sene and wait 15 minutes." Then crawl out on your hands and knees and find another apart- ment. * *: * A local doctor is said to have treated a student recently for injuries received when a prominent football player kicker him out of his room. The injured party was clearly suffering from athlete's foot. A: :1 * An Illinois woman, newly elected mayor of her village, says she is going to run the town "just as I run my house." The chamber of commerce is said to be anxiously awaiting a statement from her husband. I * * * LAST GASP This stuff is rank- I