PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~flPRSflaY. M~Y ~, 194$ --- -- -- -Ns_._ IT SO HAPPENS... * The World Is So Full _.. _____ .. No Love Lost Dept. THIS IS ANOTHER ONE of these petty griev- ances which occasionally creep through our intended good nature. We'll hate ourselves in the morning, but the following excerpt from Malcolm Bingay's column seems to call for retaliation. Intercepted Letters L.B. SCUWELLENBACH Secretary of Labor Washington, D.C. Dear Lew: By the way, did you know there was a coal strike on? PIPELINE PETE To which we suggest this answer: Crackpot Correspondence MALCOLM B. BINGAY Detroit Free Press Detroit, Michigan Dear Male: By the way, did you know that the defini- tion of a jerk is now official? LEWIS SCHWELLENBACH Smack Auf Dem Bottom M OST OF THE SIGNS in the Union aren't worthy of much note, but the Deutscher Verein has the right idea. That group posted a notice a couple of days ago worth serious consideration-its Germanic inclination is patent: "Deutscher Verein: Straight ahead zum main zimmer, turn to the link, steigen sie drei flights of stairs und gehen sie into zimmer no. 316! (Or get out of the elevator on 3rd floor.)" Naturlich, Jack, or did we omit an umlaut? NIGHT EDITOR: FRANCES PAINE Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Campus Safety TRAFFIC is not the responsibility of the Uni- versity, an administration spokesman said this week. With almost 2,000 more students driving cars this semester than last, this state- ment might well be questioned. Ann Arbor is a city of 35,000. National Safety Council figures require one policeman per thous- and citizens. Ann Arbor has 33, with a request for two more in the new budget. The city is pro- tecting its own taxpayers, in accordance with safety standards. But when 14,000 University students are added to the city population, Ann Arbor's po- lice force becomes far too small. The regular- ity with which motorists top the city 25-mile- an-hour speed limit around campus tesifies to this. Judging by the degree of responsibility the University assumes in students' private lives, it should not be too much to ask that they be pro- tected at campus intersections. -Milt Freudenheim No Cooperation THE inability of our Army and State Depart- ment to see eye to eye on intelligence matters promises one day to get us in a lot of trouble. Our uncertain policies of reeducation in Ger- many have already indicated the difficulties that such a lack of understanding can involve. The virtual junking last week of a centralized diplo- matic intelligence arm evidences that the Army and State Department still can't cooperate suc- cessfully. The birth of the State Department's intelli- gence arm, at a time when a breakdown of our intellectual rehabilitation policy in Germany seemed apparent, was welcomed by citizens who hoped Army men and career diplomats could square away their difficulties and coor- dinate their policy. The project started off well with President Truman's blessing. Army Colonel Alfred McCormack was appointed chief of this Office of Research and Intelli- gence bringing some of his war-experienced staff to work with and through the State De- partment. BUT subsequent events have proved the inter- departmental strife is as heated as ever. Mc- Cormack has since January managed not only to provoke the career diplomats he is working with but to draw the ire of the House of Represen- tatives which has kept him busy denying charges that the intelligence division contains pro-Soviet sympathizers brought into the department from military intelligence. The trouble came to a head last week when the intelligence arm was nearly lopped off by an unfriendly House Appropriations Commit- tee which refused to vote McCormack more funds. With this show of House disapproval the State Department carved up the functions of the intelligence arm and distributed them among several separate divisions. The Army was neatly eliminated since the offices which took over the functions are manned mostly by career diplomats. With little alternative Mc- Cormack resigned, warning that the new or- ganization was "unworkable and unsound" and wml univent carrving out of long range Hollywood Rejuvenation THIS ITEM is strictly by request. We have an indignant reader with an important problem on his mind, and he asks for public assistance in its solution. It's this: When he was 22, Joan Leslie was 16. Now he's 27 and she's 18according to the caption on her last picture in a flared skirt and peasant bodice. He's also a trifle shaky about Deanna Durbin's arrested development, and thinks that the less said about 36-year-old Barbara Stanwyck's experiences in the Civil War, the better. These People Mustn't Win T SEEMS our whole civilization has turned grimly to the task of making life easier for those who have it the easiest. We learned today from a constant source of joy and new angles that "executives who stick pins into maps to mark location of this or that will throw away their pin cushions if they follow the lead of a midwestern power company." "This utility," our source says, "indicates the location and operating status of line crews on a metal-backed map by little code-colored and numbered magnets which stay put under their own power, yet are easily shifted." What about color-blind executives? ,*'** Simile For The Day IN THE SAME WEEK that the DAR let down the bars to allow the Tuskegee Institute Choir the use of Constitution Hall, national headquarters of Alpha Xi Delta banned the Vermont chapter from rushing or pledging in retribution for that chapter's taking in a Negro member. Racial discrimination sometimes seems like Pinocchio's nose. Other: Local Daily Dept. WE'VE BEEN PRETTY PROUD of that other local daily these last few weeks. They've made some bold forthright stands on the right side of the fence, but apparently it isn't going to be a sustained effort if yesterday's paper is any criterion. We quote the lead editorial: "Once more the May Festival-and a festival indeed! The merrie month of May gives us this bright gift again-a truly bright and shining gift of music to herald the auroras of a new day for a new and, we all fervently hope, a better world. We've taken a staff vote, and it unanimously insists that while it may be all right to have Pollyanna write your editorials, she shouldn't be allowed to read Chaucer during the 48 hours preceding a major effort. God and Miracles To the Editor: rTHISis to John R. Staton. You apparently conceive a god as benev- olent gentleman (no, not a long white beard- they're out of style right now) who swoops down to cushion a train-wreck, deflect a mur- derer's bullet, or hide the disciplinary hair- trush of a tad-temperad mama lest she warp Jumor's personality. In your opinion this kind of god does not exist. God must be relieved to hear it, though He couldn't have been much worried about competition from such an irre- sponsible creature, not in a world inhabited, as you point out, by homo sapiens. Your train-wreck question is as old as all sin- cere religious inquiry. If God can work miracles, why doesn't He? I know of no systematic "scien- tific" study of the laws by which miracles oper- ate (investigators are afraid God will think them impertinent and men will think them mad) but as far as I can discover, one of those laws seems to be that God does not perform miracles all by Himself, but only through people. His "miracu- lous" power acts on the "material" world only in the presence of the catalyst of human prayer, the genuine prayer of people whom God has cap- tured. But Jesus and the God-captured of all cen- turies have been impatient of the publiq's clam- our for miracles. They have preferred that peo- ple should believe in God without this coercion. Though miracles may be God's most spectacular manifestation, do not suppose that they are His most important function or His primary con- cern-He is busy pursuing us people. Many of us have to spend most of our energy dodging that Pursuit! -Helen Mosse On Malone Pledging To The Editor: I FIND THE VARIED REACTIONS to the pledging of Crystal Malone by the U. of Vt. chapter of Alpha Xi Delta surprising though interesting. I am a Negro of sufficient years to have known prejudice for a long time and to find the every- day issue of race no longer surprising-but oc- casionally, despite my years of experience as a "colored woman in a white world," I find my- self still not adequately prepared for the attitudes of whites toward Negroes. 9 Admittedly, the pledging of Crystal Malone by Alpha Xi Delta is news. Why? Crystal Ma- lone is a Negro and Alpha Xi Delta a national sorority of no little repute. The thing that amazes me, however, is not the incident itself (for I don't find it too astonishing=that an o- casional group of white girls realizes that another girl, though black, is a human being just as they are, and just as compatible and congenial and socially eligible as any of them). Rather, it is the reactions of others that amaze me. YES, EVEN THE DAILY surprises and disap- points me. Immediately its editors phrased the issue: Shold white Greek letter societies ac- cept Negroes? In short order they inquired of all the white sororities and fraternities on campus their views on the pledging of Negroes and Jews. There are Negro sororities and fraternities on campus but they were not polled as to whether they would pledge whites or even asked what they thought of the whole situation. Perhaps The Daily did not know there were such things (Negro sororities and fraternities) at Michigan but after all The Daily is a newspaper. Why didn't they ask a Negro girl whether she would want to join a white sorority? (I suppose they presumed she would be delighted.) The Daily along with everybody else considered the prob- lem as one "for whites only." Reduced to its common denominator it was: Should whites accept Negroes? I doubt if anyone has taken time out to con- sider Crystal Malone. As I see it she is the only victim. Overnight she has become a public fig- ure. Some regard her as the colored girl who "didn't know her place," while others look on her with awe, for she must be an exceptional Negro girl to be accepted by a group of white girls as their equal. I look on her with pity, for she is caught in the dragnet of racial animosities from which she will never be freed. Her attempt to be a real flesh and blood person was short- lived. She has been sharply reminded that she is a Negro and that therefore her activities are limited. She will never become a full fledged sis- ter of Alpha Xi Delta, though this is not catas- trophic. What is catastrophic is that she will not be considered an individual in her own right. Perhaps as time passes more and more whites will realize that Negroes are similar to them and regard them as fellow human beings. I am fearful of the consequences if this does not happen. -Mary Elizabeth Spiney (EDITOR'S NOTE: The Daily knows there are negro fraternities and sororities on campus. The news story concerned the pledging of Crystal Malone and the surrounding circumstances, and questions asked were circumscribed by that situation.) ART DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN "HE VISITOR to 'the annual art- ists' exhibition, sponsored by the Ann Arbor Art Association, will find among the 227-odd entries in Rack- hamm's lezanine galleries a show highly interesting because of its dis- play of diverse talents and subjects. Athough water colors and pastels collectively dominate the exhibition, those interested in other media need not anticipate disappointment. En- trants, both professional and ama- teur, have submitted a large number of canvases in oils as well as works of graphic art and a few pencil draw- ings. There is a small showing of ceramics and sculpture is represented. The exhibition has a wide range of subjects, including portraits and landscapes with some still lifes. Some of these paintings present the ama- teur's approach (painting for the pleasure of painting) and others, the professionals, have presented works reflecting various traditions. Individual entries have caught my attention-these range from the portraits executed with sub- dued colors and small, precise strokes to the fanciful landscapes of exotic colors and bold, flowing lines. Without naming specific canvases or works, I would prefer to say that the landscapes im- pressed me most. RANGING from a scene in Flush- ing, New York, to the Rockies, these landscapes are never dull: the artists have depicted houses, moun- tains and public buildings with all the media at their disposal. And it is likewise a good sign to be able to go through the galleries and not be confronted with landscapes of the same general styles (as might occur in a showing with fewer entrants). This is all the more true since the exhibition was not "planned"; all entries are being shown. The water colors are particularly well done when they depict the wide expanses of mountains or lake areas. Both oils and water colors have been used with restrained and careful strokes. Moreover, in the wide range of works submitted one has ample opportunity to study a number of techniques-these range from the so-called conservative style to the abstract interpretations. Among the landscapes are a few that depitc local scenes in Ann Ar- bor. These, I think, warrant special interest, for with them not only can one study the artist's method of painting and interpretation but also evaluate the works by observing the scene which he has painted. -Joan de Carvajal MERRY-GO-ROUND: Wheat Facts By DREW ,PEARSON WASHINGTON-Here are two unpleasant but inescapable facts re- garding the food shortage. They must be kept in mind if the Anglo- American nations are to alleviate worldwide starvation. 1. Only by careful skimping on the part of housewives, hotels and res- taurants, can the United States ful- fill its good promises. There just isn't enough grain and oil to go round-unless we pull in our belts. 2. U.S. officials aren't saying much, but they weren't happyover English and Canadian cooperation- or lack of cooperation-in allocating their grain surplus to Europe. British slowness, however, is con- sidered no excuse for American fail- ure to meet commitments; so U.S. officials will continue their all-out efforts. However, here is what we are up against: Wheat on hand in this country as of January 1 totalled 689,000,000 bushels. Of this, the January-June use of wheat will be 70,000,000 bushels for feed, 23,000,- 000 for seed, 150,000,000 bushels for carryover; leaving almost 450,000,000 bushels for human consumption and export. Agriculture Secretary Clinton An- derson's recent flour curtailment or- der will probably reduce human con- sumption in this country to about 260,000,000 bushels, leaving less than 200,000 bushels for export. Against that, we have a commit- ment of 225,000,000 bushels to bej shipped before the end of June. In other words, unless there is great individual saving there just won't be enough wheat to go round. The same thing is also true of fats and oils. We just won't have them on hand for export unless every house- wife is more frugal than ever. Here is the line-up: On April 1, stocks of butter totalled only 14,964,000 lbs. against 29,833,000 last year. Cottonseed oil totalled 1,492,900 lbs. against 1,756,400 last year. Lard totalled 81,435,000 lbs. against 49,728,000 lbs. last year and 403,151,000 two years ago. (Copyright, 1946, Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 10'I AngelI Hall, by 3:30 p.m. on the d:y preceding puilealion (11 :00 a.11. sat- urdays5). TIIUESDAY, MAY 2, 1946 VOL. LVI, No. 129 Notices Senior Engineers: Orders for grad- uation announcements will be taken 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. Activities sheets for Leag-ue Houses for March and April must be placed in the Undergraduate Office of the League at least by Friday inj order to tabulate recoids for the President's report before Installa- tion Night. As this is the last time hours will be tabulated, please get them in on time. structor in Public Ilealth Nutrition. 2-4 p.m., Conference Room, West Lodge. Friday. May 3: Leadership. Dr. Fred G. SI evens>on. Ext ensioni Staff "low To Get Denocrati iC Group Ac- tion, and Parliamentary Procedures." 8-10 p.m., Conference loom, 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, Ma-y 5: Movies and Lec- ture. "Life in the Antarctic", present- ed by Professor Allen F. Sherzer. 7:30 p.m., Auditorium, West Lodge. Lectures 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. Anouncement of the Henry Russel Award for tlis year will also be made at this time. Seniors in Aeronautical, Civil, Electrical, and Mechanical Engineer- Tau Sigma Delta Lecture: ing: Representatives of The Glen L. Mr. David S. Greer, of the office of Martin Company (aircraft manu- Saarinen & Swanson, Architects, will facturers) of Baltimore, Maryland, give an illustrated lecture on his will interview graduating seniors for award-winning "Chicago Plan." positions in engineering all day Mon- Architecture Building Auditorium; day, May 6. Interviews will be held in 4:00 p.m., Friday. Students and the Room 3205 East Engineering Bldg. public are invited. by by (Items appearing in this column are written members of the Daily editorial staff and cdited the Editorial Director.) UN, Sovereignty BEFORE a world organization can become an effective instrument to coordinate interna- tional affairs, it must have practical power of central control. This means that the nations today must be willing to sacrifice segments of their now individual sovereignty to a larger, all-powerful body and must be ready to acknow- ledge its confidence in that body to regulate world affairs. Great Britain has already taken the first step in surrendering even a small measure of sovereignty to the world peace organization when her House of Commons gave a second reading to a bill, early in April, that would require British nationals to comply with cer- tain decisions of the Security Council. The bill empowers the Government to impose on Brit- ish subjects the duty of abiding by rulings of the Council involving the severance of diplo- matic and economic relations with other countries. THE MEASURE gives effect to the provisions of Article 41, Chapter VII, of the United Nations Charter, signed by Britain, which reads: "The Security Council may decide what meas- ures not involving the use of armed forces are to be employed to give effect to its decisions, and it may call upon members of the United Nations to apply such measures.," Already the Security Council is stronger than the League of Nations. Not only does Britain's action confirm this, the forthcoming negotia- tions with Egypt, the new status of the native states in Indo-China and the progress of the negotiations between the Dutch and the Indo- nesians give evidence to the emerging principle of world cooperation and organization. MORE ACTIONS of this kind must be seen before the policies written into the charter will become reality. Britain took a big step. Be- ing one of the powers of the world at this time, her step should be a signal for the other nations to do the same. Being one of the powers of the world today who has every reason to wish to re- tain her sovereignty, Britain's step should indi- cate that even she is willing to subordinate herself to a consolidation of the nations. What is there, then, to prevent the other world powers from surrendering to the Security Council the few necessary rights that would make a scrap of paper an effective instrument for world control? --Alice Carlson Interested men will please sign the interview schedule posted on the Aeronautical Engineering Bulletin' Board. Application blanks, which are to be filled out prior to the time of interview, may be obtained in the Aeronautical Enginering office. Seniors in Aeronautical and Mech- anical Engineering: C. C. LaVene of the Douglas Aircraft Company, San- ta Monica, California, will interview graduating seniors on Tuesday and Wednesday, May 7 and 8, for posi- tions in engineering. Interviews will be held in Room 3205 East Engineer- ing Building.Interested men will please sign the interview schedule posted on the Aeronautical Engineer- ing Bulletin Board. Application blanks are to be filled out prior to the interview time; these may be ob- tained in the Aeronautical Engineer- ing office. The Board of Education in Detroit is interested in setting up an eligibil- ity list from which teaching vacan- cies will be filled for the session 1946-47. Both experienced and inex- perienced candidates will be consid- ered for positions in the following, fields: Art (Elementary) Commercial (Secondary) Early Elementary (Kindergarten, one through three) Health Education (Elementary) Industrial Arts (Elementary and Secondary) Later Elementary (Three through eight) Library (Elementary) Mathematics Music (Vocal) Science (Elementary and Second- ary) Social Science (Elementary) Special Education Deaf; Orthopedic; Speech Cor- rection; Behavior Classes, Mentally Retarded (Academic, Industrial Arts, and Health Education teachers are needed for both younger and older children.) All candidates for permanent posi- tions must participate in a selection process which includes a psychologi- cal test, speech test, and other tests3 and interviews. A bachelor's degree and a Michigan Elementary Provi- sional or Permanent Certificate are required for intermediate or high schools. Application blanks may be ob- tained from George H. Baker, Chair- man, Personnel Committee, Board of Education, Detroit 26, Michigan. Further information may be ob- tained from the Bureau of Appoint- ments-Extension 489. 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. McClennen History and Orientation Seminar today at 3:00 p.m. in 3001 A.H. Mr. Keeler will conclude his discussion on Geometric Construction. Seminar in physical chemistry will meet today 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. Concerts May Festival Concerts. The sched- ule of May Festival concerts is as fol- lows. The Philadelphia Orchestra will participate in all performances. THURSDAY, May 2, 8:30-Soloist: Jussi Bjoerling, tenor; Eugene Or- mandy, conductor. I FRIDAY, May 3, 8:30-Mozart's "Requiem" with Ruth Diehl, soprano; Jean Watson, contralto; William Hain, tenor; Nicola Moscona, bass; University Choral Union, and Hardin Van Deursen, conductor. Second part: Nathan Milstein, violinist; AlexanderIHilsberg, conductor. SATURDAY, May 4, 2:30-Youth Chorus, Marguerite Hood, conductor. Anne Brown, soprano; Alexander Hilsberg, conductor. SATURDAY, May 4, 8:30-Bidu Sayao, soprano; Eugene Ormandy, conductor. SUNDAY, MAY 5, 2:30 - All- Brahms program, with William Ka- pell, pianist; Alexander Hilsberg, conductor. SUNDAY, MAY 5, 8:30-Salvatore Baccaloni, basso buffo; Rosalind Na- dell, contralto soloist in Prokofieff's "Alexander Nevsky" with Choral Un- ion; Eugene Ormandy, conductor. Exhibitions Michigan Historical Collections. 160 Rackham Building. Exhibit on the "Public Schools in Michigan." Hours: 8:00 to 12:00, 1:30 to 4:30 Monday through Friday; 8:00 to 12:00 Saturday. Events Today Tea at the International Center: The weekly informal teas at the In- ternational Center on Thursdays, from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. are open to all foreign students and their Ameri- can friends. Willow Village Program: Thursday, May 2: Home Planning. The Modern Poetry Club will meet "What's New in Nutrition." Last of tonight at 7:30 in Room 3231 Angell series of lectures and movies present- Hall. The club will meet in seminar ed by Miss Adelia M. Beeuwkes, In-' (Continued on Page 6) Fifty-Sixth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Margaret Farr Hale Champion Robert Goldma Emily E. Knapp Pat Cameron Clark Baker Des Howarth Ann Schutz nnna a,, -n'Qn ner . . . . . . . .... . . Managing Editor .. . . . . . . . . . Editorial Director n . . . . . . . . . . . . . . City Editor S . . . . . . . . . . . . . Associate Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . Associate Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sports Editor . . . . . . . . . . . Associate Sports Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Women's Editor t~~c ~A-ce:rnf n m+ oW.- Rfnr. BARNABY By Crockett Johnson The ief has been stealing food from the Baxters'ceR r77 [don't want to get mixed up w:thI ! hfsdiffrent.What's the I i i I