PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 196 F IT, 1 ff:5 Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Margaret Farmer . . . . . . . Managing Editor Hale Champion . . . . . Editorial Director Robert Goldman . . . . . . . . City Editor Emily E. Knapp... . . ... .. Associate Editor Pat Cameron . . . . . . . . . Associate Editor Clark Baker . . . . . . . Sports Editor Des Howarth . . . . . . . Associate Sports Editor Ann Schutz . . . . . . . Women's Editor Dona Guimaraes . . . . Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Dorothy Flint . .. . A.. Business Manager Joy Altman . . . . . Associate Business Manager Evelyn Mls . .. ....Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of re- publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, a second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by car- rier, $450, by mail, $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR: FRANZ and BRUSH Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. St. Lawrence potentia Vast flETROIT, Chicago, Duluth, and Milwaukee will become world sea-ports comparable to Boston, New York, San Francisco and New Or- leans, if and when Congress approves the vast St. Lawrence Seaway project. At a cost to the nation of 269 million dollars (about one day's cost of war), the project would create a fourth United States coastline with direct access to the highly industrialized and agriculturally prolific Middle West. At the same time, the project would include a dam which would be second only to Grand Coulee in power produced. The St. Law- rence dam would supply cheap power to upper New York State (saving consumers there alone 25 million dollars annually), to parts of New England, and to the Canadian Province of On- tarlo. America's great merchant fleet, paid for by war taxes, would be turned into a tremend- ous asset by the St. Lawrence project. With the construction of dams, locks and canals, some 10,000 merchant ships (2,000 of them under the United States flag) could sail into the Great Lakes. ETIMONY of the undeniable national bene- fit from the project can be found in the en- dorsements of every president from Woodrow Wilson to Truman. In urging Congress to pass the measure, President Truman said it will lead to the "development of international economic co-operation", will "enlarge world commerce" arid through the "increase in the consumption of electricity . . . will mean more jobs, more in- come,.and a higher standard of living". Tru- man also predicted "new and increasing oppor- tunities for production and employment by pri- vate enterprise" as a result of the cheap water transportation. Decreased transportation costs would mean more profits on American exports and cheaper imports. From the more-or-less incidental point of view of national defense, the Army is all for the pro- ject. Army engineers have studied the proposed construction and given it their ok. From the short-range view point of employment during the war-to-peace conversion, the project would employ thousands of workers for from four to six years. From the point of view of New York State, Republican Governor Thomas E. Dewey is on record as favoring state development of the project if the United States does not take over. The St. Lawrence project has been turned down by Congress twice. In 1934, a Canada- U.S. treaty won a majority of Congress, but fell short of the required two-thirds. In 1944, an amendment to the omnibus Rivers and Harbors Bill was rejected on grounds that the project should be considered on its own merits. It is now before Congress in the form of a separate bill. OPPOSITION to the project crosses party lines to represent regional and special private in- torests. Major groups opposing it are the Eastern Seaboard cities, utilities groups, railroad brother- h-frds, both John L. Lewis' United Mine Workers and the mine owners. The project can be shown to be to the interests of all these groups. Eastern cities which fear the loss of foreign trade would be compensated by increased trade with our Middle West at lower transportation costs. TVA records show that after the government power plants forced rates down, private companies made more profits than ever before. Increased sales of power at the low prices led to sales of 250% more coal in the Tennessee Valley, 59% more in the nation a~z aw .nl" th s CCia~m ccvar +heminers' IT SO HAPPENS... What Hollytrood Thinks We Like Strictly From Hunger X-Word Puzzle mat, more stories, a coupla pictures, or you name it. THE FOLLOWING IS, so help us the world's Thanks and a votre sante, various deities, exactly as we received it in George L. Randall the morning mail. We are fully aware that we College Projects serve the writer's nefarious purposes by print- Duel Motive Division ing same in toto, but as carefully plotted a cam- To you so-called public relations men of the paign as that for "Duel In The Sun" is bound Class of 1903 at Pasadena Junior High School, to penetrate eventually; we might as well give in a rousing 23-skidoo. now* * * * April 25, 1946 Tarzan Gored By Dilemma Hello, Journalist: FRIEND of ours who does more reading than We're 27 over-worked tub thumpers here in talking gleaned this item from his recent re- the Selznick flackery - and all for one picture, search, but he won't tell us what it means. In a "Duel in the Sun," that is. Saturday Review of Literature of unknown date Picture cost 5 and a half million tomatoes there is an article called: Tarzan's Realism: How to make. Add another million for pre-release To Swing From A Limb And Beat Around The promotion and still another for promotion Bush At The Same Time. thereafter and you come up with a very fat We suspect it deals with the dilemma of teach- cabbage. at state institutions. But even a big rival here in Hollywood has rs n estimated publicly that with solid promotion, DUEL will gross an easy 30 million potatoes. The Long View And for one motion picture, that, son, is a large W[E APPRECIATE the new and desirable place bucket of clams. of 'Insight' as a campus magazine, but we Now, as drummer boys and girls, how solid suggest that in the future it be printed so as to are we? Well, the Gallup Pollsters advise us that be legible without making its readers squint as of last week 23 out of every 100 individuals through an inverted pair of binoculars. in the U.S. 12 years of age or older have now * * * heard of "Duel in the Sun." Coast To Coast Glow But you might check this for accuracy and let' us know. Ask the next 4 guys if they've WE ARE INFORMED by our usual reliable beard of "Duel in the Sun." According to Gall- source that Yankee ingenuity has removed up, one guy will answer 'yes'. one of the major hazards of night driving-the Our goal, of course, is 4 guys in 4. And as a stalled vehicle that nobody sees. subtle starter, the story attached has tips Our inventors went straight to the heart of on how to become a successful screen writer. the problem and the result is a bus which glows And by the way, did you see in the papers where in the dark as a result of 'thousands of micro- a young writer just sold his second novel to a scopic glass lenses imbedded in every square studio here for 200,000 Brussel sprouts? inch.' (Enough, that is, to artichoke ahore.)Now all we have to do is to work out a system Hmn. Leave us gain a few yds. togethe. to differentiate roadhouses (Items appearing in this column are written Share the screen writer story with your readers. by members of the Daily editorial staff and edited Shoot the enclosed questionnaire back for the by the Editorial Director.) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Danger of Our UN Majority By SAMUEL GRAFTON THE ATTITUDE of the American people toward the United Nations has, it seems to me, und- ergone a number of neat little changes since the San Franciso Conference of a year ago. Some of us were then afraid that America might stay out, as it stayed out of the old League. We felt that our major task was the hard one of reassurance, of bucking Senators up to vote for the U.N. char- ter, etc. But during'the past y/ear a kind of whole- sale acceptance of the U.N. has crept over us. In a most peculiar manner, the U.N. has ceased to be an issue. No one is afraid of it, the nation wears its membership jauntily, and with an air. We are at ease with the U.N.; but when one in- quires into the reasons for this conspicuous de- velopment in our opinion a faint flicker of un- easiness is felt. For there is a possibility that a chief reason for our new American attitude toward world organization may lie, somehow, in our comfortable sense of majority. There is a disturbing sense that we are not afraid of world organization any longer because we know what -.5 Current Movies 'I ., . at the Michigan Claudette Colbert, Orson Welles and Geo- rge Brent in "Tomorrow Is Forever"; an International production. IT WOULD BE a nice gesture on the part of International pictures to turn the profits from "Tomorrow Is Forever" over to Claudette Colbert and Orson Welles, for this newest refurbishing of the Enoch Arden theme owes its substantial success'almost entirely to them. For the current time around Miss Colbert is the classic lady who, believing her hus- band dead (for this occasion in the First World War), marries again only to have the first husband reappear after twenty years. Little original has been added to the telling of the old tale. A topical slant is introduced in that the missing husband is a victim of Nazi persecution, and there is also some talk about the impending Second World War be- ing fought for great ideals. However, Miss Colbert and Welles perform their scenes with great skill and frequently make "Tomorrow Is Forever" an excellent exercise in emotional acting that should appeal to a wide audience. They render the trite dialogue pain- less and consistently make the characters' fami- liar plight affecting and touching. At least, there was a considerable surreptitious blossom- ing of handkerchiefs at Sunday's showing. ... at the State Randolph Scott and Ann Dvorak in "Abi- lene Town"; an RKO production. this particular world organization will do. We are sure the Dutch will always carry Holland. There is much idealism in the approach of the American people toward the U.N. which no one who really knows American opinion could dream of denying; and yet, along with this there can be little question but that the monotonous succession of 8-to-3 and 9-to-2 votes in the Security Council has been duly noted by the American consciousness, and that this has played its part in the reassurance pro- cess. If this be so, a great, paradoxical danger emerges, the possibility that at least a part of our support for world organization is based on anti-world-organization reasons, that we feel cozy with the U.N. not only because of the way in which it unites the world, but also be- cause of the way in which it divides the world. WE FRET about the dangers of power politics, but if the U.N. splits permanently into a ma- jority bloc and a minority bloc, it will inevitably become a power instrument of the majority; and we must deal frankly with the danger that the majority may come to favor it because it is a power instrument, not because it is an instrument against power. It may help us toward clarification if we try to think, in analogous terms of the Supreme Court of the United States, which has, almost since the beginning, been the center of a struggle very similar to that which embroils the Security Council. When state governments are liberal, and the federal government, including the Court, conservative (a situation which existed for a number of years earlier in this century) then conservative American opinion begins sensitively to idealize the Court; it pictures it as the guard- ian of liberty, the only true fount of justice, etc. When a change occurs, as it did with the coming of Roosevelt, and the Court takes a leftward step or two, conservative opinion begins to find new virtues in States' rights, and state govern- ment, and the Court loses friends. At the present momenet, we, with our huge majority on the Security Council, find it not hard to endorse it, to champion it, to ask for more power for it, even to oppose the veto, once so dear to our own hearts. Russia, contrari- wise, takes what might be called a kind of States' rights position; she says she will not talk about Iran any more, a sort of nullifica- tion stand which has its echoes in our own his- tory, and, strangely enough, in precisely those regions of our country in which Russia is the least popular. The issue is not moral, but constitutional. Come into our legal parlor, where the one must yield to the many, says individualistic America. Think we'll stand by the doctrine of minority rights, says collectivist Russia. A paradox, which takes even more solid shape when we hear the end of the veto power being urged by some American who, in his domestic capacity, hates and fears central government, and urges with passion a re- turn to States' rights. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) tieow Jelleri 2h e 6k0lo J . Za pl Student O(pin ion MANY STUDENTS have asked whether student government can be strong. The answer is an unqual- ified yes'. During the campaign for the con- stitutions and now during the cam- paign for Congress. no one has taken the opportunity to present the prac- tical means by which the students can instill their government with con- crte and effectie power There are principally two chief methods by which this can be done. First, student opinion, when ex- pressed cohesively by a large bloc, will and does have an influence on the administration. But the opinion of an individual here and an in- dividual there is not going to affect University policy unless all these opinions are brought together in a compact mamer and presented as the unified opinions of 3,000 or even 14,000 students. There is always power in numbers. This was illus- trated when the administration ex- tended the Christmas vacation upon the concerted demand of the student body. The student govern- ment will act as the receiving center of student opinion and then will present these opinions in a unified form to the administration. This xwill bring action. Second, each student should re- member that the administration, and especially the Board of Regents, who are elected by the citizens of Michi- gan, are and must be responsive to public opinion. And so, another ef- fective way of implementing student government power is by appealing to the students' parents and friends who have votes and influence. These proposals will be successful if the students will have real faith in their government's ability to work effectively instead of adopting the stand-pat or you show me' attitude which is always detrimental to true progress. -Sidney Zilber Sorority Attitude , To The Editor: 1HE ATTITUDES of most of the fraternity and sorority chapters with regard to the Malone Incident as exposed in Anita Franz's article last Friday, was not very surprising or shocking to me. We cannot, if we have any decency or sense of fair play at all, accept the argument of some that what these Greek letter societies do is their own business. This type of attitude is a retreat from the actual issues. If the national office fosters and promotes a policy of exclusiveness which in effect is nothing more nor less than downright bigotry, I belive that the University community has the right to demand an explanation of the local chapter and ascertain what if anything it is doing to combat this type of activity. If the local chapter deems itself a part of this campus, a recognized part, then it should and must open its doors at rushing time to mem- bers of all creeds and all races who desire to pledge. Many will argue that their chapter has no written rule concerning this policy of ex- clusion. Let us not be naive. We know of the unwritten rules and we know of the dearth, if not the com- plete lack, of Negro membership in the fraternities and sororities on this campus and most of the campuses of the country. Right here we have a campus elec- tion issue. Many who are running for office are members of frats and sor- orities. Let's find out who they are, what their viewpoint is on this whole question, what they have done about it and expect to do about it in the future. Here is an opportunity to register a vote against those who would con- tinue to perpetrate other Malone incidents. Here is a chance to make them stand up and be counted. -Jack Weiss Residents Only To The Editor: FIRST THEY RAISE the tuition for out-of-state students entirely out of proportion to that for Michigan residents. Now we read that Michigan students will be given preference for the to-be-constructed married stu- dents apartments. Having spent much money, time and effort in previous years at this institution apparently means nothing. Granted that this is-a state institution and partly supported by state appropriations. But why not give alumni and former students some sort of break? Or put on the back, of your catalog "University of Michigan-for Michigan Residents Only?" -N. M. McClung Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to allnmem- hers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:30 p.m. on the dayg preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat-c urdays).- TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1946 8 VOL. LVI, No. 127 tv Notices r Rutvenwill be at home to studentse Wednesday, May 1, from 4 to 6 o'clock. Men's Residence Halls: Michigan residents, not now living in the resi- dence halls, who wish to live there during the Summer Session shouldT apply at once at the Office of the Dean of Students, Room 2, Univer-t sity Hall.r Senior Engineers: Orders for grad-1 uation announcements will be takent in Rm. 218 W. Eng. Bldg. at the fol- lowing times: Tuesday, 11-12. Wednesday, 11-12, 1-2. Thursday, 11-12, 4-5. These are the only times that it will be possible to order June an- nouncements. Payment must be made in full at the time the order is placed. La Sociedad Hispanica offers three summer school scholarships, both to the University of Mexico and the Uni- versity of H'avana this year. Those interested should apply to 302 Romance Language Building as soon as possible, and no later than May 10. Elizabeth Sargent Lee Medical His- tory Prize: Established in 1939 by bequest of Professor Alfred O. Lee, a member of the faculty of the Univer- sity from 1908 until his death in 1938. The income from the bequest] is to be awarded annually to a junior or senior premedical student in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts for writing the best essay on some topic concerning the history of medicine. Freshmen in the Medical School who are on the Combined Curriculum in Letters and Medicine are eligible to compete in the contest.] The following committee has been appointed to judge the contest: As- sistant Professor John Arthos, Chair- man, Professor Adam A. Christman, and Assistant Professor Frederick H. Test. The Committee has announced the, following topics for the contest: 1. History ofa Medical Unit 2. Medical-Aid Man 3. Medicine in Industry 4. Tropical Medicine Prospective contestants may con- sult committee members, by appoint- ment. (1) A first prize of $50 and a second prize of $25 are being offered. (2) Manuscripts should be 3,000 to 5,000 words in length, (3) the ma- 'uscripts should be typed, double spac- ed, on one side of the paper only, (4) contestants must submit two cop- ies of their manuscripts, and (5) all manuscripts should be handed in at Room 1220 Angell Hall by May 31.. Willow Village Program: Tuesday, April 30: Lecture Series. Professor Wesley Maurer, School of Journalism, will lead a discussion of Democracy Under Pressure. 2-4 p.m., Conference Room, West Lodge. , Tuesday, April 30: Child Safety Course, sponsored by Washtenaw County Chapter, American Red Cross and Federal Public Housing Author- ity will hold its first meeting in the Willow Village Community Building. 8:00 p.m. Wednesday, May 1: Bridge. 2-4 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ten, and Parliamentary Procedures." 8-10 p.m., Conference Room, West Lodge. Friday, May 3: Dancing Class. Be- ginners, couples, 7 p.m.; advanced couples, 8 p.m.; Dancing for all, 9 p.m., Auditorium, West Lodge. Saturday, May 4: Record 'Dance. 8 p.m., Club Room, West Lodge. Sunday, May 5: Classical Music (records). 3-5 p.m., Office, West Lodge. Sunday, May 5: Movies and Lec- tun'e. "Life in the Antarctic", present- ed by Professor Allen F. Sherzer, 7:30 p.m., Auditorium, West Lodge. Lectures University Lecture. Dr. Alice Ham- ilton, Assistant Professor Emeritus of Industrial Medicine in the Harvard Medical School, will lecture on the subject, "The History of Control of the Dangerous Trades in the United States," at 4:15 p.m., Tuesday, April 30, in the Rackham Amphitheater, under the auspices of the Office of the Dean of Women. The public is invited. The Henry Russel Lecture. Dr. Elizabeth C. Crosby, Professor of Anatomy, will deliver the Henry Rus- sel Lecture for 1945-46. "The Neuro- anatomical Patterns Involved in Cer- tain Eye Movements," at 4:15 p.m., Thursday, May 9, in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Announcement of the Henry Russel Award for this year will also be made at this time. Academic Notices English 2, Sec. 11, Mon., Wed., and Fri. at 9:00, will meet hereafter in 104 Economics Bldg. instead of in Lane Hall Basement. J. MClennen The Botanical Seminar will meet Wednesday at 4:00 p.m. in Room 1139, Natural Science Bldg. C. D. La Rue will give a paper entitled "New Additions to the Ancient Technique of Grafting." All interested are in- vited. Seminar in physical chemistry will meet Thursday at 4:15 p.m. in Room 410 Chemistry Bldg. Professor L. O. Brockway will speak on "Electron Diffraction Study of Films on Metal Surfaces". All interested are invited. Events Today Ensian tryouts: There will be a meeting today at 4:15 in the Stu- dent Publications Building for all persons who have worked as 'Ensian tryouts on the editorial staff this year. Please be prompt. Plans for next year will be announced. Art and photo- graphy tryouts are also expected to attend. The Christian Science Organiza- tion will hold its regular Tuesday evening meeting tonight at ,8:15 in the Chapel of the Michigan League. Coming Events Phi Beta Kappa: The Annual Ini- tiation Banquet of the Alpha Chap- ter' of Michigan will be held in the Michigan League Ballroom, Thurs- day, May 16, at 6:30 p.m. Professor William T. Hastings, Chairman of the Department cf English, Brown Uni- versity, will be the speaker. All mem- bers of Phi Beta Kappa, whether. members of this Chapter or not, are cordially invited. Reservations should be made at the office of the Secre- tary, Hazel M. Losh, Observatory, by Monday, May 6. Hiawatha Club: A reorganization meeting of the Hiawatha Club will be held in the Union Wednesday, May 8, at 8:00 p.m. All male students from HO-HUM. --Barrie Waters BARNABY Truly a baffling case, m'boy. One of the strangest of my career. Usually a thief wortI ;s e l tv nresesbe. n ;ntere 1I r But when he steals food from ice boxes instead of cash from a cash box. And rcvca ta n stfonHa In nno a r s nr By Crockett Johnson - = =- = : Your Fairy Godfather could engage a secret agent to help him crack the casewielo nen-There' Mcnovd.