-THIR -Mlcufir ,-AN -O-Auv- T ?ii f C1 & tT: _ A/"i ihiMIM esn 4 n atlE' _ i as t-i-i. w-U .. A .Z .. .L l .L .5....L13..5.5.4 A - . V, OUTOBIJ35R 29; 194 I cEttePJto the & o Sound Truck Needed To the Editor: WHEN CLASSES were dismissed eary so that a large portion of the student body could hear the top man in our Navy give an address, there seemed to be a good deal of bitter irony in the situation that existed this morning. I won't tell who was insulted. Everyone knows that both the Admiral and the students were. But here is one idea for a solution. The University should nave a completely equipped truck carrying equipment for Public Address systems at remote points, for such things as pep-rallies, and on-campus events such as what was planned this morning. The days of the Greek Protagonist are long since dead. We need the most modern in amplifica- tion equipment. Makeshift will no longer do. The University must get the correct equipment, and get it now. -Walter Bohn * * * Football Whoopee To the Editor: WhTOOPEE! RAH! RAH! Let's have a football pep rally; get all the students together and soak 'em 50 cents apiece. Where-in the working of this great institu- tion-is the 50 cents the students are paying to attend Varsity Night needed? Seven home foot- ball games and close to 500,000 total attendance pours a lot of money into the coffers. The 'M' club makes a small pile selling programs at the games but who the devil needs the dough so bad that they have to charge the students when they get together on Homecoming Weekend to cheer for the football team? -Dean MClusky * * * Name Confusion To the Editor: PERHAPS THE DAILY will assist me in dis- sipating the confusion raised in some per- sons' minds by the similarity between my name and that of a certain John Houston whom I music ANN ARBOR had the great privilege of hear- ing Miss Dorothy Maynor again last night, and the results were magnificent. Rarely is any one artist able to exhibit the virtuosity, power and control which she dis- played. Particularly by the wonderful taste in her selection was Miss Maynor able to demon- strate her virtuosity. She was in complete control throughout and with apparent efortlessness was able to al- ternately open all stops or reduce her voice to a mere whisper. The greater part of her program was made up of the lieder of Mahler, Schumann, Mendelssohn and Wolf. Especially in the Mahler and Schu- mann selections. Miss Maynor sang with in- finite delicacy, understanding and restraint. In her presentation of Donna Elvira's aria from "Don Giovanni," she gave a fine display of her unbelievable range and emotional change of pace. In the Dvorak aria from "Russalka" and in the showier "As I Ride" by Rathaus, she un- leashed her breadth and power. But it was in the tremendously moving Negro spiritual, "I'm a Trav'lin to the Grave," and*in the encore "Jeannie With the Light Brown Hair," that Miss Maynor achieved her most pro- found effect. I have a suspicion that I will never hear eith- er of them sung so beautifully again. -Harry Levine Later Hours 1THE QUESTION of more liberal hours for undergraduate women has been the subject of coed gripes for many semesters. Finally, a plan has been put forward by dormitory house presidents which will be voted on today. However, the plan that has been suggested has several disadvantages. Primarily, there is the problem of the housemother who may be reluctant to wait up an extra hour for a few junior and senior women. This is especially pertinent in league houses where there may be only one or two upperclassmen. Secondly, the proposal creates a definite bar- rier between underclassmen and juniors and seniors. The groups will tend to split up more if different classes means different hours. A freshman has enough trouble without adding a discriminating curfew. Many freshman wo- men are equally, or more mature than some seniors. These factors and the inconveniences of ad- ministrating the plan in regard to different groups may cause the Dean of Women to withold their approval. There is a more moderate plan of extending women's hours that could easily be instituted, since it has proven its effectiveness and. workability here during the summer - 11 o'clock permission Sunday through Thursday for every undergraduate coed. Any coed who has been here in the summer will support the advantages of consistent 11 o'clock permission. An extra half-hour would not, perhaps, be so objectionable to housemothers and, if uni- understand is frequently mentioned in your columns as the president of an organization called "MYDA." My own name is John A. Hou- ston; I am presently enrolled as a senior in the Law School; I am wholly unacquainted with MYDA, its purposes or any of its membership. I would very much appreciate your publishing this letter. -John A. Houston THE DISCUSSIONS and press reports coming out of the UN Conference tell us that Russia has used the veto power nine times, that this is a flagrant violation of the spirit of the Char- ter, hence, something must be done to curb that power. But who is to say what constitutes too excessive use of the veto? Obviously what Byrnes and Bevin consider too often the Rus- sians consider necessary. Why does a veto power exist for the big Powers? Was it incorporated as a compromise measure to ensure passage of the Charter by our Senate? Was it a protective measure for the big Five? These are partial reasons; they an- swer the negative aspect.-There is another and more positive reason for its inclusion, namely, to guarantee unity between the big Powers. When Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin met at Yalta in February of 1945, they had to find agreement on the one question which had been left unsolved at Dumbarton Oaks, which was the fulcrum upon which any peace organ- ization would rest, namely voting procedure, It was from the American delegation under Mr. Roosevelt that the proposal came for a full concurring vote on important matter. As Churchill stated in his Yalta report, "It is on the great Powers that the chief burden of maintaining peace and security will fall.- Somber indeed would be the fortunes of man- kind if some awful schism arose between the Western Democracies and Russia." Mr. Roose- velt spoke in similar vein to our Congress, em- phasizing the necessity of cooperation between the major powers as the basis for any successful peace organization. He specifically suggested that meetings be held between the heads of the states, and if that was impossible, at least be- tween the foreign secretaries every three or four months," in order that the unity achieved at Yalta might be maintained. As the Charter took form at San Francisco, Article 27 incorporated the Yalta agreement on voting, paragraph three reading, "Decisions of the Security Council on all other matters shall be made by an affirmative vote of seven mem- bers including the concurring votes of the per- manent members." ('On all other matters' here refers to those questions directly affecting peaceful relations. On procedural matters, only a vote of any seven is required.) HAD THE TRUMAN Administration main- tained that unity which had been inaugur- ated by Roosevelt, had Byrnes continued to work within the framework of the five foreign ministers, instead of resorting to bloc vote methods by inviting sixteen other nations to the peace conferences, there would have been a far greater concurring vote within the Security 'Council. The use of the veto would have been negligible. The considerations which are being advanced by the smaller nations, as well as defining pro- cedural questions as opposed to substantive ones (which can be vetoed), are valid. But they are necessarily secondary.-The sovereignty of the smaller nations rests entirely upon the degree of unity which exists between the big Powers, especially the Big Three. As ironic as this may sound, it is futile to speak of the sovereignty and power which a small nation may exercise if the world is divided into two armed camps. If the Truman administration is sincere in its desire to make the UN work as a peace mechanism, then they must return to the Ro- osevelt policy of Big Three unity. It means striking at the cause, i.e., the drawing apart of the big nations into blocs, rather than at the effect, i.e., the use of the veto power by Russia. Without this unity between the western powers and Russia, the raison d'etre of the Charter and the UN ceases to exist. -E. E. Ellis A N ACUTE shortage of draft animals and mo- tor power on the world's farms is speeding up the mechanization of agriculture on every continent. Europe's liberated countries, in which nearly 3 million draft animals were killed during the war, are restoring their farm production on a mechanized basis. South America is following the same trend because inflation makes the old methods unprofitable. Asia will begin using ma- chinery'on 10 to 20 million acres that India and. China hope to open up for agriculture in a few years. The effect now is a severe shortage of trac- tors and motor-drawn .equipment. The even- tual result will be bigger harvests as mechaniza- tion raises the yield per acre and brings more land under cultivation. -World Report VD RATHER BE RIGHT: 'On The Warpath' By SAMUEL GRAFTON THE WEATHER (speaking globally) has not been favorable for conservatism these past few years; but of all the conservatism in the world, American conservatism has certainly been the luckiest. In a world in which social- ism is increasingly a fact, it is nt, in America, even an issue. It is as if a high wind, racing across the planet, had parted to sweep around America; and in these circumstances one might expect that American conservatism would sit quietly on its little chair, good as gold, hoping to continue not to be noticed. But political dynamism does not work out in that way. It is precisely in America, where conservatism has been least challenged, that it is most actively on the warpath. It has just won a tremendous victory against price control, and here again, one might expect it to relax for a bit, and let its victory cool off, and try to en- joy it. But no; it is mobilizing once more, this time for an attack on the Wagner labor relations act; and Washington gossip has it that this will be the next point of pressure against Mr. Truman. The President is being told that un- less we can in some way limit strikes, we shall have a depression; and he may go along, be- cause of his well-known habit of saying no, no, no, no, louder and louder, then suddenly ending with a weak little yes. Whatever the arguments, the drive could hardly be timied more tactlessly. The American workman sees prices going up, as inflation makes almost every seller (willingly or un- willingly) a master of the disappearing coin trick. The workman also sees the beginnings of an attack on rent ceilings. He hears, too, that there is going to be a recession. In these circumstances his labor union becomes his last resource, and when he sees a campaign opened against that, also, he must really have the feel- ing that little men are after him. HEN AGAIN, business has won its victory against price control on the simple and austere ground of freedom. How canit turn around, and, in speaking to labor, alter the slogan to read.: "more freedom for us, more controls for you," without creating a vast moral confusion, and starting ideological Roman can- dles popping in all directions? But the drive is on, and one has a feeling that it is part of a picture which must be painted in dark colors. It is as if American conservatism had absorbed into its body all the aches and sorrows suffered by its fellow-conservatisms abroad, and was fighting back for them, here. Listening to conservative speeches, and noting the strong conservative tendency to relate the most innocent developments in social progress to the world revolution, one hs the feeling that conservatism murmurs, as it advances: "Take that, for what happened in Russia! Take that, for what is happening in France and England!" But this isn't Russia, or France, or Britain; and it is somehow tragic to see America becom- ing the citadel of a world conservatism, fighting here, mainly because it has no other arena, the battles of its lost brothers; mounting a kind of counter-revolution, rather irrelevantly, against a people which has never made a revolution. Conservatism is trying to win back its own, in the one place in all the wold where it has never lost it. (Copyright 1946, by the N.Y. Post Syndicate) Current Movies AT THE MICHIGAN- "The Kid from Brooklyn" (Sam Goldwyn), Danny Kaye, et al. DANNY KAYE is at his best doing Sylvia Fine numbers. Unfortunately there is only one of these in this picture. It is called "Pavlova" and to th'ose connoisseurs of Mr. Kaye's madder moments may well be worth the price of admis- sion. The rest of the musical numbers have the usual average Hollywood lavishness about them -beautiful girls, huge sets, expensive costumes, and beautiful girls. The comedy is carried by Danny Kaye, Walter Abel, Eve Arden, and Li- onel Stander. A better foursome for hysteria couldn't be assembled. The net effect is that the average movie goer knocks himself out, at the same time wondering what's so darn funny. AT THE STATE- BILL MAULDIN Famine Relief REMEMBER those touching pic- tures of emaciated children with their protruding bellies and sunken eyes, those gaunt skeletons whose pictures were used last spring to in- duce you to contribute to the famine drive? Those pictures and those people are justdas real and just as much in need today as they were last spring. We have not solved the problems of the world. We are kidding ourselves if we sit back and refuse to see the spector of famine still running ram- pant. Thousands of people are starv- ing to death daily. To combat this tragedy a "Heifers for Europe" program is now being established on the campus. To pro- vide milk for undernourished, starv- ing children and to restock the bar- ren farms of war devastated Europe is perhaps the most constructive step which we as individuals over here in the land of the meat surplus can do. The Fanine Relief Committee meets at 5 p.m. today in Lane Hall to set up plans for this project. Its chairman, Seymour Goldstein, has asked all interested students to attend this meeting. Our horizons extend beyond the ivy covered walls of Ann Arbor. Our responsibilities are world wide. Here is an opportunity for you to help, -Tom Walsh "I see the F.B.I. cleared up another big postage stamp robbery." i, _. ---- DAILY OFFICIAL ,BULLETIN (Continued from Page 3) Placement and General Placement. The General Division includes ser- vice to people seeking positions in business, industry,and professions other than teaching. Employers are now asking for February and June graduates. There is no fee for regis- tration at this time. The War Department is selecting well qualified personnel to staff our occupation forces in Japan. Indivi- duals chosen for these assignments should have a minimum of three years teaching or school administra- tion experience and should have a Master's degree. Duties will- involve the actual guidance of the Japanese in carrying out the policies estab- lished by the Supreme Commander for thebrehabilitation and democrat- ization of Japanese education. These positions will be established at Civil Service ratings of CAF-10 and CAF- 11. Further information is available at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall. Bureau of Appointments: Wayne County Civil Service Commission an- nouncements have been received in this office for: Medical Technolo- gist I; Medical Technologist II (Bac- teriology and Serology); Medical Technologist II (Biochemistry).; Medical Technologist II (Hematol- ogy); Medical Technologist III (Bac- teriology). Salary range is from $2340 to 2820 for a 40 hour week and $2691 to $4830. Closing date is Nov. 6. For further information, call at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall. Debaters: There will be no meet- ing Wednesday. All debaters are urged to attend the Western Reserve- Michigan debate on Friday, 3:30 p.m. in the Ann Arbor High School. WILLOW RUN VILLAGE West Court Community Building: Tues., Oct. 29, 8:00 p.m., Exten- sion Class in Spanish meeting at Ross School. Students still accept- ed for enrollment. Wed., Oct. 30, 8:00 p.m., Wednes- day Night Lecture Series, Professor Preston W. Slosson, "International issues in the current election." Ste- phensrCollege Alumnae, hostesses. Thurs., Oct. 31, 2:00 p.m., Open class in Prenatal Care. Speaker, Miss Fisher. Discussion of personal hy- giene with emphasis on nutrition needs of the mother. 8:00 p. m., Ex- tension Class in Psychology. Stu- dents still accepted for enrollment. 8:00 p. m. Bridge session for every- body. Fri., Nov. 1, 8:00 p. m., Classical Recordings, Rm. 9. 8:00 p.m., FPHA Staff Party, Rm. 3. West Lodge: Fri., Nov. 1, 8:30 p. m., Students' Dance with Jerry Edwards and his orchestra. Sun., Nov. 3, 6:45 p. m., Official Football Pictures, Michigan vs. Illi- nois. Lectures Dr. Erwin Panofsky, Professor of history of art in the Institute for Ad- vanced Studies, Princeton, N.J., will lecture on Wed., Nov 6, at 4:15 p.m,, in the Rackham Amphitheatre under the auspices of the Department of Fine Arts. His subject will be "Et in Arcadia Ego." The public is cordial- ly invited. Academic Notices The preliminary doctoral examina- tion in chemistry will be held at the following times: Organic Chemistry, today; Physical Chemistry, Nov. 1. Anyone wishing to take these ex- aminations should consult with a member of the Graduate Committee in Chemistry. Education B291: At the class meeting today the topic, "The Col- lege Teacher and Student Counsel- ing," will be presented by Erich A. Walter, Associate Dean of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts. Visitors will be welcome. Class meets in Rm. 110, University Library, from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m.. The Botanical Seminar will meet Wed., Oct. 30,. at 4:00 p.m. in Rm. 1139 Natural Science Bldg. Dr. L. E. Wehmeyer will discuss "Studies in the Genus Pleospora." All interest- ed are invited. Special Functions Seminar: Wed., Oct. 30, 10:00 a.m. in Rm. 340 W. Eng. Prof. Rainvill will talk on Con- tiguous Functions Relations and on Kummer's Transformations. Mathematics Seminar on Stochas- tic Processes will meet at 3:00 p.m., Thurs., Oct. 31, in 3018 Angell Hall. The purpose of the meeting is to or- ganize the seminar and review the literature. Concerts. Choral Union Concert: Eugene Istomin, pianist, will give the second concert in the Choral Union Series on Wed., Oct. 30, at 8:30 p. in., tak- ing the place of Egon Petri; who is ill. Program: compositions by Bach, Beethoven, Brahms, Schubert, Busch, Debussy and -Chopin. Tickets are on sale at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Tower. Exhibitions Art Exhibit: Non-objective, color mono-types by Jeanne de Wolfe, Cal- ifornia artist, and an extensive col- lection of textiles from Guatemala are now on exhibition in the ground floor corridor of the College of Archi- tecture and Design. The exhibit will be current until Oct. 31. Events Today ASCE will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Union. Prof. Bouchard, Dept. of Civil Engineering, will speak on the activities at Camp Davis Survey- ing and Geology Camp. Movies will be shown in conjunction with the topic. Anyone interested in attend- ing this camp during the summer is invited to attend. Membership dues' will be collected. Sigma Rho Tau, engineering speech society, will hold a meeting at 7:15 tonight in Rm. 311, W. Engineer-ing Bldg. There will be a demonstration impromptu speech, a demonstration debate on the ques- tion, "Should the Large Eastern Railroads Adopt Deisel Power for Passenger Locomotives?", and circle training. Famine Relief Committee: All for- mer members of the Committee and all interested in participating in the tion at the University will 'meet at 8:15 tonight in th Chapel of the Michigan League. Students, faculty, and friends are cordially Invited. The U. of M. Chapter of the Inter- collegiate Zionist Federation of Am- erica will hold its weekly study group at 7:45 tonight at the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation. The topic: "Zion- ism during the period of World War I and the breaking up of the Otto- man Empire." All who are inter- ested are cordially invited to attend. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation There will be a meeting of the social committee at 4:30 today at the Foun- dation. Please bring eligibility cards. Russian Conversation Group will meet at the League Grill at 5:30 ta- day and tomorrow. The A.I.E.S.-I.R.E. will hold a meeting at 7:30 tonight in Rm. 348 W. Engineering Bldg. Mr. Charles Tieman of the Engineering Research Dept. will present a talk, "Electrical Equipment Associated with V-2 Rocket Tests." Slides will also be shown. All Electrical Engineering students are invited. Coming Events AfC: University chapter will meet on Wed., at 7:30 p.m. at the Michi- gan Union. All members and persons interested are urged to attend. The Psychology Club will sponsor an open meeting on Nov. 7, at 8:00 p.m. in the Amphitheater of the Rackham Bldg. The address will be given by Dr. Milton H. Erickson, Di- rector of the Psychiatric Research and Training at the Eloise Hospital on the subject, "Hypnosis-Its Med- ical and Experimental Applications." A Social Seminar for Institute of Public Administration Students is be- ing held Thurs., Oct. 31, at 7:30 in the W. Conference Room of the Rackham Bldg. Mr. John Huss, di- rector of the Michigan Municipal League, will speak on "Leagues of Municipalities and Their Work." Your attendance is invited. Fifty-Seventh Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the author- ity of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Robert Goldman.........Managing Editor Milton Freudenheim.....Editorial Director Clayton Dickey.................City Editor Mary Brush...............Associate Editor Ann Kutz...............Associate Editor Paul Harsha...............Associate Editor Clark Baker..............Sports Editor Joan Wilk.................Women's Editor Lynne Ford......Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Robert E. Potter........Business Manager Evelyn Mills... Associate Business Manager Janet Cork.... Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled 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 are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, ,$5.00, by mail, $6.00. Member, "Thrill of Brazil" (Columbia), Wynn, Ann Miller, Allyn Joslyn. Kennan THIS MUSICAL gets off to a flying start, but somewhere along the line it bogs down. It may 'be that my life of sitting in front of the silver screen is making me restless. At any rate, I found myself squirming before the finish. The finale seemed to run a little slow. But the be- ginning is something else again, what with Keenan Wynn carrying on in his own weird way and Ann Miller singing and dancing in an ex- ceptionally sultry style. That Miller kid has grown up. The plot is nebulous, the comedy borders on the raucous at times, the numbers aren't too bad. The whole thing stacks up to not too bad, not too good. It depends on your mood and point of view. -Joan Fiske BARNABY It's our times, m'boy. People are skiftish. Rather than THINK they- But imagine! Your Fairy Godfather spends many weeks preparing a new And what happens? The report finds its way into a trash basket! I don't mind for myself- It's your poor father I'm thinking of... Why ...? If MY findings were discarded, what must have happened to his feeble effort.. ?- p 4ih 96.T arpoS M and A-,¢d -Perm HIS were accepted, Mr. O'MalyJ...