TIE MWICIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, WON Fifty.Sixth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Hoover Had To Be Coaxed ~... . ..,.. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I 9 r 11 Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. Margaret Farmer Robert Goldman Hal Champion Emily E. Knapp Pat Cameron . Editorial Staff Business Staff Managing Editor . City Editor Editorial Director Associate Editor Associate Editor By DREW PEAR SON WASHINGTON-Secretary of Agriculture Clin- ton Anderson had a hard time at first persuad- ing Herbert Hoover to come to Washington for the food conference. Anderson caught the ex- President at Key West, Fla., where he was fishing. "I've promised my family for seven years to take them fishing," Hoover told the Secretary of Agriculture, "and now at last here I am." Anderson, however, emphasized the urgency of the food crisis. "We need your experience and advice, Mr. President," he said. "You can go back to your fishing immediately afterward. But this is a time when your country needs you." Hoover finally consented to come. It was Secretary Anderson who also sold Presi- dent Truman on the idea of having Hoover go to Europe and study the food problems of the neediest countries. Hoover had been asked for advice last fall by the Belgian and Duth govern- ments, and had told them: "Estimate your grain needs now and buy Canadian wheat for the entire year. But insist on immediate delivery." The Dutch and Belgian governments followed his advice, now are relatively well stocked. Note--Many other European governments, of course, did not have the money to buy. Or, if they had, there wouldn't have been enough grain for all of them. There was some unique maneuvering behind the plan to put Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas in Harold Ickes' place as Secretary of the Interior. It began at a cocktail party given oy Congressman Lyndon Johnson of Texas in honor of his 'Texas friend Alvin Wirtz. Toward the end of the party, Speaker Sam Rayburn, also of Texas, got together with Jus- tice Douglas, Secretary of the Treasury Vinson, Tom Corcoran, Johnson and Wirtz. They pro- ceeded to put the bee on Douglas to take Ickes' place. Douglas was not enthusiastic. Perhaps the factor which finally dissuaded Douglas from taking the job, however, was de- lightful, wisecracking George Allen. George had just been confirmed by the Senate as director of the RFC. And-lhe and the President jubilated so much over this event that hard-working, idealis- tic Justice Douglas wondered how he would be able to stand that kind of company for three years. In the end, he declined the job. (Copyright, 1946, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) I'D RA THER BE RIGHT: Dorothy Flint . Joy Altman . . . . . . Evelyn Mills..... ---.. ---- .---... . . . . Business Manager . Associate Business Manager Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: ANITA FRANZ 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, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. An Invitation At Large In the dear, dead days happily beyond recall a between semesters vacation was a little noted, highly celebrated break in the routine of a none too extraordinary campus year. To pretend that an entirely new situation could or would confront a student upon his mid-winter return from Osh- kosh or Detroit was presumptuous, even ridic- ulous. Such is, fortunately, or unfortunately, no long- er the case. Between February 22nd and March 4th the University of Michigan has on a large scale become a different place to go to school, has been charged with difficult and challenging respon- sibilities. The nature of this change is best ex- pounded by a few simple statistics. During the first semester of the 1945-46 academic year there were 11,200 students enrolled in the University, some 2,222 of them veterans. The second semester has the indicated all time enrollment record of 13,841, the startling total of 5,814 being vet- erans. The implication of these figures in terms of University teaching and administra- tion are obvious, but they gain added sig- nificance when it is realized that the present flood tide of tudents into the nation's uni- versities and colleges will not even reach its highwater mark until 1947. As editorial barkers we may well point out that this is only the beginning, that the problems which accompany such swollen enrollments are here for longer than today and tomorrow, that such problems must be solved on a permanent basis. Housing, factory education as opposed to Price Controls The expert economists of the Committee for Economic Development have charted a middle path for price control policies, as pointed out in last week's Time magazine. It might well be studied by both "hold-that-line" Chester Bowles and the "let-er-rip" manufacturers. The Committee's economists propose, first, that price ceilings be maintained until production gets well under way again, and then be removed as fast as possible, so that by June, 1947, there would be no ceilings except on rents. However, the proposed program would stim- ulate production by liberalizing price ceilings and raising by about, one-third the 1936-39 profit level, on which the OPA sets its standards for price relief. Thirdly, the Committee proposes that the gov- ernment's own fiscal policies should be revised, and the budget balanced immediately at the level of present tax receipts. The economists feel that if these policies were followed, there would be a rapid increase in pro- duction within the next three years, and the pur- chasing power of US wages would rise about one- third. The CED's plan represents a reasonable com- promise. Economic Stabilizer Chester Bowles re- gards price ceilings as nothing short of saced, and has made "hold that line" his battle cry against inflation. "The nation's noisiest leftists," as Time says, who like to think of price control as a step toward planned economy, are in agree- ment with him. However, Bowles' program fails to recognize one essential fact; it is PRODUCTION, with its accompanying increase in wages and living stan- dards, which will be the real cure for America's post-war dilemma. Many businessmen feel that the way to clear the channels for post-war pro- duction is to liberalize price controls. At the other' extreme, the NAM (National Association of Manufacturers) demands a "let- er-rip" policy-immediate removal of all price ceilings. Inflation, they say, cannot be licked without production, so price controls would have individual gui tight spirallin are our probl dance, student government, the first ngs of inflation-all these and more ems, the foci of our common cause. And who-beyond the editorial non-entity- are we? Briefly, the members of the University community, teachers and students, veterans and non-veterans alike. All of us, whether or not, we realize it, have a stake in the proper solution of our joint problems. This, then, is an invitation and an appeal to all members of the University community to bring to bear their viewpoints, their backgrounds' of experience, their understandings upon every local, national, and international problem con- fronting us; to do so in the columns of The Michigan Daily. Our community has long needed a common meeting place of opinion where teach- ers, administrators and students can make clear their thoughts and feelings on every subject from J-Hop to the UNO, skipping no references to im- portant University questions en route. The edi- torial page of The Daily hopes to furnish such a meeting place. A good newspaper is in the best sense a public servant. The more contact it has with its read- ers, the better able it is to perform worthwhile service. We will endeavor to be of the greatest possible service; please don't hesitate to recipro- cate. Worried Men Notes on the Imbroglio: 1. Mr. Byrnes' speech, following Mr. Vandenberg's speech, means that opinion is shaping up in both parties and in the administration toward calling a halt to expansion of Russian influence. Both men ask us to be firm, to be definite, to be moral, to be hard. That they are worried men is indisputable, and the degree of concern they show in public is probably a minor fraction of the amount they reveal to their mirrors and their friends. Their alarm is genuine; they fear for the future of the demo- cratic-capitalist way of life; their concern comes up from the very soles of their feet; and it is barren and schematic political comment to de- scribe them merely as plotters against the Soviet Union. In the light of present-day facts, the western world can no more keep from showing this sort of reaction, than men can avoid blink- ing under a lightning flash. 2. But both men are more successful in articulating alarm than in articulating a pro'grai, n Programs (-.tme hard. Mr. Water Lippmann has brilliantiy touched off the difficulties of "defending democracy" on the Soviet frontiers, where it hardly exists. Is it defending democracy to defend feudalism in East Prussia and Hungary, and something very like it in Iran and in China? We do not believe in mechanically bowing to that sort of "independence" and "freedom" in Ger- many and Japan, and the Russians are pay- ing it little respect on their own borders. If the Russians are attacking democracy, they are attacking it where it isn't, and if we are de- fending it, we are defending it where it isn't. If the Russians were to try to impose their system on a clearly democratic country, the issue would be solidly joined; but it is the Russians' secret weapon that they are imposing their system, how- ever unilaterally, not on democracies but on des- perately reactionary, even medieval, regimes. 3. The great danger, then, is that a "defense of democracy" against all Russian moves becomes an undiscriminating defense of the status quo. Into that fight there pours a motley crowd of Johnny-come-lately crusaders, including men who were not much concerned about defending democracy, or the status quo, when Hitler was on the warpath against both. It is among men who still think the war against Hitler was a mistake that we find the most active prognosticators of war against Russia; and some of the most bitter denunciation of Russia for violating international law comes from persons who, on other days, utter sour warnings to the United Nations against dar- ing to set up offices in America. The result is not a crusade, but a con- vulsive tangle, in which men of purity of outlook, whose complaints against Russia are based on their desire for world order, find themselves joined with their own enemies at home, and with a Grand Hotel assortment of odd and often suspect characters from the Balkans abroad. 4. Can there, then, be no affirmative American action for democracy, in competition with Russian moves? Of course there can and must be. Our State Department's current pressure against Franco's government in Spain is precisely and specifically competition of this sort; and who can deny that it has warhed up Mr. Byrnes' case and our case before the world? American pres- sure for democratic reorganization in China and India, where half the people of the world are gathered, could bring about results far more decisive than anything that is happening on the Soviet fringe. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) much of the film is extremely easy to admire. There is nothing to be construed as "sensa- tional." While the film's subject is a sordid one, it treats the story honestly and conscientiously and, as such, it is certainly as valid a piece of work as the mine-run of Lana Turner gaucheries. "Scarlet Street" reunites the quartet of last year's vivid "Woman In the Window"; actors Robinson, Miss Bennett, Duryea and Director Lang. Robinson turns in an excellent portrayal as the aging cashier who engages in an extra- marital affair with a mercenary actress, to the ultimate regret of both. Dan Duryea keeps pace with Robinson as the actresses' heelish accom- plice, and there is the usual sterling bit from Rosalind Ivan, who, when it comes to playing shrews, is unsurpassed. Under the stimulus of the generally interesting script, even the wooden Miss Bennett seems to. have come partially alive. In fact, in the scene in which Robinson is about to stab her to death with an ice pick, I detected a distinct change of expression on her face. Publication in the Daily Official Bul-e etin is constructive notice to all mem-t hers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President,s 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:30 p. m. on the dayI preceding publication (11:00 a. m. Sat- urdays). TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1946 t VOL. LVI, No. 79F Notices1 Notice to Veterans: . The U. S. Veterans Administration is trying to speed up the payment of subsistence allowance. The Adminis- tration wants the names of all veter- ans who were enrolled in the Uni- versity on February 1 but who have not yet received a check for February subsistence. If you are in this group, will you please report to the Veter- ans Administration Office, Room 100, Rackham, on Wednesday, March 6, from 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. This is important. College of Literature, Science and the Arts, Schools of Education, For- estry, Music and Public Health. Stu- dents who received marks of I or X at the close of their last semester or summer session of attendance will receive a grade of E in the course or courses unless this work is made up by April 4. Students wishing an ex- tension of time beyond this date in order to make up this work should file a petition addressed to the appropri- ate official in their school with Room 4, University Hall, where it will be transmitted. Women students wish injg League House accommodations f or summer or fall of 1946 may now file applica- tion in the Office of the Dean of Women. Women students who were not on campus during the fall semester and who wish to apply for dormitory housing for summer or fall should call immediately at the Office of the Den of Women for further particu- lars State of Michigan Civil Service Ex- aminatiois closing date is March 20. Sanatorium Physician III $287.50 to $356.50 Sanatorium Physician IV $373.75 to $442.75 Sanatorium Physician V $460.00 to $575, Sanatorium Physician VI $603.75 to $718.75 We have also received notice of the following City of Detroit Service An- nouncements. Chemistry Aid $2472-$2701 Materials Laboratory Aid $2473- $2701 SanitarydChemist $2857- $3333 Closing date is April 5. Student Technical Assistant (Male) Specialties-Engineering & Busi- ness Administration $1928-2080 Student Technical Assistant (Male & Female) Specialties-General Science, Phys- ical8Education, Social Science $1928- $2080 Closing ate is April 9. Junior Accountant $2625-$3095 Semi-senior Accountant $3413- $4127 Senior Accountant $4365-$5079 Closing date is March 13. Junior Typist $1752-$1980 Intermediate Typist $2169-$2321 Junior Stenographer $2245-$2397 Closing date is April 8. Junior Welfare Investigator $2245- $2760 Closing date is March 15. Electrical Inspector $3492-$3809 Refrigeration Inspector $3492-$3809 Closing date is March 5. For further information, call at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hal. Student, College of Literature, Sci- ence and the Arts: Applications for scholarships should be made before April 1. Ap- plication forms may be obtained at 1220 Angell Hall and should be filed at that office. Undergraduates and graduates in- terested in summer camp or resort work may still register for summer placement with the Bureau of Ap- pointments and Occupational Infor-' mation, Room 201, Mason Hall. Women students interested in paid employment as baby sitters (taking care of children) are instructed to sign up at the Office of the Dean of Women in order to list free hours. Those who signed up for the fall term should do so again for the spring term because of possible change in schedules. Lectures Maurice Hindus, noted author and authority on Russia, will be present- ed Thursday evening at Hill Audi- torium by the Oratorical Association Lecture Course. The subject of his speech will be "How We Can Get Along With Russia." Mr. Hindus will replaceEdmund Stevens, originally scheduled for March 5, and season ticket holders are requested to use the Stevens ticket for admission Thursday. Tickets may be purchased at the Auditorium box office tomor- row 10-1, 2-5 and Thursday 10-1, 2- 8:30. Other speakers appearing on the current course will be Col. Philip LaFollette, March 12; Guthrie M- Clintic, March 15; Leland Stowe, March 21. University Lecture: Mr. John Coolidge will lecture on "Architecture in the First American Industrial Towns" in the Rackham Amphitheater on March 7 at 4:15 p.m. The public is cordially invited. The lecture will be presented under the Auspices of the Department of Fine Arts. Mathematics Lecture: Dr. R. J. Duffin of the Carnegie In- stitution of Washington will give a lecture on Non-Linear Mechanics to- day at 4:15 p.m. in 3011 Angell Hall. Academic Notices Graduate Students: Preliminary examinations in French and German for the doctorate will be held on Fri- Jay, March 8, from 4 to 6 p.m. in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Build- ing. Dictionaries may be used. Individual audiometric examina- ions for students will be given at the (iniversity Speech Clinic, 1007 East hiuron Street today. Appointments from 8:00 to 4:30 may be made by ;alling the Speech Clinic, Extension i8E. iuch an examination is a pre- lminary requisite to enrollment in the University lip reading class, which wi-1 be held at the Speech Clinic at 1:93 Monday, Tuesday, Wednesdy i ld Thursday of the second seme.- ;er. Anthropology 32 will meet in Room 348, West Engineering instead of An- ell Hali. Leslie A. White English 298 students. in my section will meet today at 4 p.m., in Roon .216 Angell Hall to arrange confer- ynce periods. Erich A. Walter Assembly: All students, School of eorestry and Conservation will as- semole indRackham Amphitheater, rhird Flood, Rackham Building, 4:30] today. Important announcements te be made. Attendance required unless you have conflict in non-forestry sub ject. Be in seats promptly. S. T. Dana Dean Freshmen Health Lectures For Men: It is a University requirement tha all entering freshmen are required tc take, without credit, a series of lec- tures in personal and community health and to pass an examination on the content of these lectures Transfer students with freshman standing are also required to take the course unless they have had a simila course elsewhere. Upper classmen who were here a freshmen and who did not fulfill the requirements are requested to do sc this term. These lectures are not required of veterans. The lectures will be given in Room 25, Angell Hall at 5:00 p.m. and re- peated at 7:30 p.m. as per the follow- ing schedule. 1. Monday, March 4 2. Tuesday, March 5 3. Wednesday, March 6 4. Thursday, March 7 5. Monday, March 11 6. Tuesday, March 12 7. Wednesday, March 13 8. Thursday, March 14 Please note that attendance is re- quired and roll will be taken. History 11, Lecture Group IV TuTh, 11:00, will meet in Room 348 Engineering Building, instead of in Room C, Haven Hall. History 12. New sections. Note room changes. Section 3a, TuTh, 11:00, 1018 A H, changed from 231 A H. Section 4a, MF, 1:00, 229 A H. Section 5a, TuTh, 3:00, Rm. E, H H, Section 10a, TuTh, 1:00, 229 A H Section 11a, MF, 1:00 Rm. E, H H. Section 12a, TuTh, 10:00, 2003 N S. Section 17, MF, 1:00, 2003 N S. History 12, Section 13, MF, 9:00 changed from Room 101, Econ. Bldg., to Room 4082 N S. History 50, Lecture, TuTh, 10:00 will meet in Room 1025 A H. instead of in Room B, Haven Hall. History 50, Section 8, Th, 2:00, Room 229 A H. Psychology 42, will meet in the West Lecture Room, West Physics Bldg. Psychology 63, will meet in 348 West Engineering Bldg. ion Concert Series, Monday night, March 11, at 8:30, in Hill Auditorium. Dr. Krueger has arranged the follow- ing program: Symphony in C major, No. 31 (Jupiter) ...............Mozart "La Mer................Debussy Overture, "Fingal's CaveM . lsohn Excerpts from "The Tempest" ... ... Sibelius "Death and Transfiguration".. - ...............Strauss Student Recital: Doris Virginia Lawton, soprano, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Master of Music at 8:30 Wdnesday evening, March 6, in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- ter. A student of voice under Arthur Hackett, Mrs. Lawton's program will include groups of Italian, German, French. and English songs, and will be open to the general public with- out charge. Exhibitions "Ancient Man in the Great Lakes Region." Rotunaa, University Muse- um Building, March 5 through April 30. Events Today The Lutheran Student Association -Continuation of the "Study of the Denominations of the Christian Church" tonight at 7:15 at the Luth- eran Student Association Center, 1304 Hill St. Holy Communion Services in Zion Lutheran Church (East Wash- ington at S. Fifth Ave.) and Trinity Lutheran Church (East William at S. Fifth Ave.) on Ash Wednesday at :30 p.m. Science Research Club Members will meet in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building on Tuesday, March 5, at 7:30 p.m. Program: War-time Research in Anti-malarial Drugs. R. J. Porter, School of Public Health. Some Physiological Problems of High Alti- tude Flying. Emmet T. Hooper, Mu- seum of Zoology. Central Dance Committee of the Feather Merchant's Ball will meet this afternoon at 4 p.m. in the Pan Hellenic office in the League. Coming Events The Faculty Women's Club will be guests of Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven for tea on Wednesday, March 6 from 3:30 to 5:30. Michigan Youth for Democratic Action will hold an organizational meeting on Wednesday, March 6 in the Union at 3:30 p.m. to discuss plans for the semester.nEveryone is cordially invited to attend. The Women's Glee Club will hold tryouts Wednesday, March 6 and Fri- day, March 8 at 4:00 p.m. in the Women's League. Girls must be eli- gible to participate in extra-curricu- lar activities. Michigan Youth for Democratic Action will sponsor a meeting to dis- cuss "fascism in Franco Spain and how to fight it." The meeting will be held Wednesday, March 6, at 7:30 p.m. in the Union. Everyone is ur- gently requested to attend. Association of University of Michi- gan Scientists will hold a business meeting Wednesday, Mar. 6 at 7:30 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Election of officers will take place at this time. All members of the Russian play cast will meet in Room 2215 Angell Hall at 7:30 on Wednesday. Do not fail to attend. Alpha Phi Omega will hold the first meeting of the new semester on Wed., March 6 at 7:30 at the Michigan Un- ion. All members are urgently re- quested to be present. The English Journal Club will meet Thursday, March 7, at 8:00 in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Mr. Robert Hay- den will discuss the poetry of Garcia Lorca. Refreshments will be tolowed by a general discussion. Present condition in Poland, a pub- lic meeting sponsored by the Ameri- can friends of Poland: Motion pic- tures and addresses by four recent visitors to Poland, Honorable Stan- ley Novak, member of the Michigan State Senate, Honorable Vincent Kline, member of the Michigan State House of Representatives, Henry Po- dolski, Editor of the Voice of the Peo- ple, Detroit, and Anthony Kar, of the Hamtramck School System; Pro- fessor Arthur E. Wood, chairman. The public is cordially invited. Thursday, March 7, 8:00 p.m., Rack- ham Amphitheater. Le Cercle Francais will hold its first meeting of the Spring Term Thursday, March 7, at 8:00 p.m. at the Michigan League. Professor Margaret Farmer Robert Goldman Hale Champion Pat Cameron Liz Knapp Current Movies By BARRIE WATERS ... at the Michigan Ray Milland and Jane Wyman in "The Lost Weekend;" a Paramount production, directed by Billy Wilder. To start off the semester's entertainment in the best possible fashion, the Michigan presents the much-discussed film version of Charles Jack- son's novel "The Lost Weekend," the story of five days in the life of a dipsomaniac. To many readers the book must have seemed unfilmable, but it nevertheless been filmed and carried to inordinate success. The real news about the film is that it suggests that someone in Hollywood has finally discovered that, of all things, the motion picture is not a photographed stage play, but a separate art form that, when it uses its materials properly, can equal anything the stage offers. In the delinea- tion of the subject's monumental drunk, per- formances, direction and camera work all bear the mark of a superior cinematic genius, that accepts the motion picture as a separate medium of fascinating, and quite respectable, poten- tialities. , , (at the State Edward G. Robinson and Joan Bennett in Scarlet Street," with Dan Duryea; a Uni- versal production, directed by Fritz Lang. The State also offers unusual fare this week. Since, in New York and points west, "Scarlet Street" has been the victim of this nation's ab- surd motion picture censorship code, I was pre-. pared to find something to like in the opus or die in the attempt. The truth of the matter is, BARNABY By Crockett Johnson Mr. O'Malley, my Fairy Godfather, isn't going to make a movie, Pop. Because he sold his story to a man in Hollywood ... A story is worth a fortune if it's good. But I'm not paying a red cent until the O'Malley CM::r::Wynngold . F rr e _. I I f' I