THE MICHIGAN DAILY Palestine Rally i PEOPLE ARE MORE important than oil. . Yet because some individuals place oil first, the chance to live for the 200,000 Jews of the Displaced Persons Camps in Europe and Cyprus is in doubt. Whether or not they will live as free men in their own land where they may make a garden grow in the desert depends upon an American decision to adhere to solemn commitments made for the partition of Palestine. Because a danger exists that the admin- istration may sacrifice partition rather than risk the loss of Arabian oil concessions, the University chapter of the Inter-collegiate Zionist Federation of America will sponsor an all-campus rally tomorrow in conjunc- tion with a hundred similar groups through- out the country. While the British obstruct partition and embarrass the UN, American opposition to partition has adopted a cynical line. Anti- partitionists allege that in view of our dif- ficulties with Russia, it would be poor policy to jeopardize our sources of Arab oil. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily stafff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: ARTHUR HIGBEE But Sumner Welles, former under-Secre- tary of State ably squelched this view in a column in the New York Herald Tribune. He wrote: "If a new war breaks out, the Middle Eastern oil resources would certainly not be available to western Europe nor to the United States. Should peace be pre- served, since the Arab governments depend. upon the royalties from their oil conces- sions, they are hardly likely to oppose their exploitation." The Alsop brothers in a recent column declared that Ibn Saud, the ruler of Saudi Arabia, assured the American government that its oil needs will be filled regard- less of present difficulties. Opposition to partition also neglects the consequences of reneging in terms of the UN. Palestine could well become the Man- churia of the UN. As students, the only way we can demon- strate our disapproval of attempts to sab- otage Palestine Peace, and the UN, is by supporting tomorrow's rally. Anything less is to condone such actions as Sunday's massacre in which forty people were killed when Arabs disguised as Brit- ish police exploded two truckloads of am- munition in the heart of Jerusalem. -Jake Hurwitz. I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: The Liberal Defined By SAMUEL GRAFTON ED WOKE AT SEVEN, and, as usual, looked around for something to read. It was too early for the morning paper to be in, and he picked up some of the evenings of the day before. A phrase in an editorial caught him, as he sat, wrapped in his robe, in the solid early morning quiet which seemed to point up all ordinary things. It was a sneer about "hot-headed liberals, who want to reform. the world overnight." That must mean me, thought Ed. I guess I'm one of those. I wonder why I am, he thought. He could not remember any moment when he had consciously decided to be one. Yet he was a liberal, as definitely as a French- man was a Frenchman, or a plumber a, plumber. He meditated for a few moments on the mystery that divides the world and its people into species. At breakfast, his wife said, as she poured coffee: "We liberals ought to do something about pushing the consolidated high school plan." So she's one, too, thought Ed. And she, too, knows it. When did she decide to be a liberal? Best. he could remember, it must have been during the depression, when she had helped organize the school hot breakfast thing. He took an earlier train to town than usual, because of an appointment. There was, of course, only one empty seat, and it was, as he had half-feared, be- side Martin. Ed hesitated. His last meeting with Martin had not been a happy one. But Martin waved him in, and seemed genuinely happy to see him. CURRENT MOVIES At the Michi an ... "GOOD NEWS," with June Allyson and Peter Lawford. A 1947 REMAKE of a 1927 musical, "Good News" comes complete with block-long convertible, model 'T' jallopies, flappers, a gold digger and lots of the old rah-rah col- litch spirit you like to think characteristic of the roaring twenties. De Sylva, Brown and Henderson's famous songs, with the ex- ception of the title numbers are all there just as in the initial version, but "Pass That Peace Pipe" has been added for the modern touch, along with a very fine tech- nicolor job. Lawford plays the big football hero, and June Allyson is the Cinderella to end all Cinderellas. By contrasting them to present day conditions, the audience got some good laughs out of Hollywood's inter- pretation of college life two decades ago -Also, Pluto shows you how to play the horses. -T. A. Hunter. At the State .. . "THUNDER IN THE VALLEY," with Lon McAllister, Edmund Gwenn and Peggy Garner. TOOT THE BAGPIPES, break out the clan plaid, and roll yourself an "r"-Bob, Son of Battle woofs again, and there's drama in the highlands. In Scotland they tell of sheepdogs that thirst for animal blood just as some men hanker for their liquor, and our story con- cerns one of each-a killer dog and a drunkard. A fine bit of acting is done by Edmund Gwenn as the flinty old shepherd "Hi, Ed," said Martin. "Hoping I'd run into you. When are you lefties going to start a Wallace movement in the village?" "I'm not a Wallace man," said Ed. "Hope you do it," said Martin. "Start a good one, and we Republicans'll get the town back. Did you see what happened . in that Bronx election? They killed those Democrats." Ed flipped his paper open, but Martin chose to ignore the commuters' code, and went on. "We're in, this year, for sure," he said. "Those Wallace fellows will take just enough from Truman to do it. Even give us New York. It's the best break we could have had." Ed refolded his paper. This one had to be talked out. "Look, Martin," he said. "You know the Wallace platform. Any success for him means that people are against everything you and your party stand for( high prices, Taft-Hartley, the tough anti-Russia busi- ness. A Wallace movement means organiz- ing people in our country against you, and all your ideas. It may hurt the Democrats, but you don't really think it's good for conservatism in the end, do you? How can a conservative party welcome that?" "Yes, but we'll win," said Martin, hap- pily. Almost pleadingly, he took Ed's arm. "You are going to start something like that, aren't you?" Ed looked at Martin, wonderingly. What an odd world the other lived in, he thought, one in which you were glad to win by an accident, even if the accident wasn't any good for you in the end. One in which you even welcomed the fact that people were bitter, and disappointed, and hated you, so long as their hate was framed up politi- cally in a certain way that gave you a temporary advantage. I want to live in a world that makes more sense than that, thought Ed, and t he thought was like a shout inside him.. Suddenly he knew why he was a liberal. (Copyright, 1948, New York Post Corporation) Cold Cold War TURN THE GLOBE upside down, examine it closely, and you will see what might possibly be the site of a new "cold war." A few days ago the penguins which in- habit the bleak islands fringing Antarctica looked up from whatever penguins do, and watched in wonder as the British cruiser Nigeria steamed formidably by. Thus began the battle of another "last frontier," a dispute over boundaries separ- ating ice from ice, nothing from nobody. Maybe because the South American sum- mer had become too hot, maybe for lack of anything better to do, Chile had sent a small ship to Grahamsland, set up a base, and claimed a pie-shaped slice of Antarctica extending to the pole. But this land, stormed the British, belonged to Britain, for hadn't Cook landed there way back in 1775? So with due pomp and circumstance they promptly sent the Nigeria to "show the flag," and were later joined by a third claimant, Argentina. Already it had been suggested that the matter should be turned over to the Security Council or the International Court of Jus- tice. All this brings to mind a cartoon appear- ing in a London paper in the heyday of British imperialism. It pictured two ragged tramps sitting on a park bench and exam- ining a map. "Look-," said one, "See all this red? That's ours. See the green? That's theirs. Soon it will all be red!" The comic aspect of the -situation is mir- The City Editor's SCRATCH PAD SEE THE PROPOSED student wired ra- dio system has already been saddled with a "Board in Control." Eager faculty members, always afraid to let the student do anything on his own hook, have advanced a measure which will effectively take operation of this inter- dorm radio station out of the hands of students. This move will defeat the entire purpose of the proposed station, designed to let students actually manage every phase of a broadcasting set up. All that's needed in this proposed station is a couple of microphones, a low power transmitter to send the shows over power lines and a cubbyhole to house the an- nouncers and their turntable. It can be started on a financial shoestring and per- petuated by selling -short commercials to campus merchants. But, as always, It appears that students are unable to undertake anything of this sort where they might conceivably be al- lowed free expression, without a faculty overseer. It is this kind of thinking which led to the various "Boards in Control" which hamstring about half of the college news- papers on the nation's college campuses. The Daily-sponsored collegiate news- paper convention held this weekend was very enlightening on this subject. Control ranged from complete censorship of every piece of copy by faculty members at Ohio State to complete autonomy at Harvard. About half of the papers represented, including The Daily, had some type of faculty dominated control group. Amazingly enough the remaining papers with student control bodies or no control have managed to operate successfully for years without defaming the fair name of their college. But the others, including The Daily, reported a series of frustrating exper- iences, and continual rows which have re- sulted in their paper assuming a good, grey, inoffensive appearance. During the sessions The Daily spokesmen frankly admitted that to get ahead on the. paper they were forced to steer clear of controversial issues rather than run the risk of incurring the Board's wrath and losing the chance of advancement. It was pointed out that just last semester one of the most capable junior assistants who fool- ishly persisted in speaking his mind edi- torially failed to receive an appointment to a full junior position. No matter what the makeup of a fac- 'ulty-dominated control board over organ- izations allowing student expression, fric- tion of this type will crop up. It is for this reason that the proposed student wired radio station should steer clear of anything that smacks of outside con- trol. music THE DETROIT Symphony Orchestra kept to the straight and narrow last night with an unexpected, but well received, "pops" concert at Hill Auditorium. Starting the parade of the better known shorter classics, Dr. Karl Krueger led the orchestra in Mozart's "Marriage of Figaro" Overture-played with no unusual life, but with passable skill and interpretation. Beethoven's Symphony No. 8, the only seldom performed work of the evening, con- tinued the concert in the leight vein. Al- most-twin to the widely known Seventh Symphony, the Eighth is also a "dance" symphony. However, the orchestra's per- formance was too often heavy and uneven to show up the charm and warmth of the work. A skillfully done clarinet-horn duet, though, immeasurably brightened the sym- phony's latter portion. Wagner's sensitive and emotional "Sieg- fried's Rhine Journey" and "Funeral March" from "Der Gotterdammerung" were well performed for the most part, although its power was sometimes sacrificed to a rather brassy volume. The last three numbers. Strauss' "Till Eulenspiegel," Tchaikovsky's "Romeo and Juliet" Overture and George Enesco's "First Roumanian Rhapsody" completed the con- cert in the well-worn popular-classics tradi- tion, with all played in enjoyable "pops" fashion, but with none of the lifted far above the realm of the hackneyed. Altogether, the concert was pleasant-if uninspiring, but the Bach-Castro chorales listed on the program, and omitted in the concert itself, would have made for a more interesting evening. -Naomi Stern. "It's hard to choose between the royalists and the rebels. It's a question of whether you prefer American officers or Russian officers." DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN EDITOR'S NOTE: Because The Daily prints every letter to the editor re- ceived (which is signed, 300 words or less in length, and in good taste) we remind our readers that the views expressed in letters are those of the writers only. Letters of more than 300 words are shortened, printed or omitted at the discretion of the edi- torial director. . . * . . Discrimnmiion To the Editor: DUE TO A MISUNDERSTAND- ING at my rooming house, many of the students who called in answer to my letter on discrim- ination in the Michigan Medical School, found that no one at my house was aware of my having written the letter. Please send your namesand telephone numbers to Box 62 at the Daily. It might be of interest to you to know that approximate- ly twenty students called. This response was indeed both grati- fying and encouraging. -Bob Walker Confusion To the Editor: SEVEAL DAYS AGO we found that the latest issue of the Stu- dent Directory lists a "Hoyden House" in the East Quadrangle. Whipping out our trusty diction- ary we found: hoy-den (hoi'dn),; a rude, boisterous girl: v.i. to romp roughly and indelicately. Our work is suffering because we spend several hours a day looking for the place. Does any- one know where it is? Jack Gellman, Andrew Georgia, Hayden House, East Quad. * * * Political Mvusic To the Editor: THE RECENT pronouncement from Moscow on Soviet and Bourgeois music seems to have called forth much merriment with the righteous indignation of the American press. I agree that the subjugation of art to political cen- sorship is a deadly thing, but I cannot go along with the notion, so curiously. prevelant, that the rulers of Russia are stupid in sup- posing that music can be politi- cal. Whence came this idea that art is some special sphere not subject to moral interpretation? The marble columns and God- ly sculptures of Ancient Greece were not only works of abstract beauty, but in every line they sug- gested and cemented the moral and political philosophy of the times. Again, what fourteenth century peasant, looking upon Mont Saint Michel. could doubt the eternal glory and truth of x the medieval church? As a building needs no storied frieze to carry, its message, so does not music need the words of Lincoln - or Lenin - to carry political implication. Music can induce in the hearer a sense of unity and purpose, or a feeling of a maudlin despair, or profitless sen- tinientality. It can b evil and it can be moral. It is in part a re- flection of the tires, and it can again react on the times. The rise of Nineteenth Century nationalism carried in its train schools of nationalistic composers, as well as artists of other kinds, who did much to further that movement. Wagner was a con- s spicuous example, and one might cite Rimsky-Korsakov and Dvor- ak. The history of music is full of examples of music's ability to express the culture and to influ- ence it, from the Gregorian Chants to Handel's apotheosis of the English Court and country- side and respectable Georgian dig- nity, to Beethoven's revolutionary outburst. Modern music is varied and in violent flux, trying to find the answer before the world does, and' in some measure affect the course the world is taking. Now the rulers of the Soviet Un- ion don't want to leave this sort of thing to chance. They think they can order the music that will give the people the sense of the justice of the cause, the stern- ness of the struggle, and the glory of the outcome. Such music can be written, and if a Russian writes it, is it not surely proof that it is the Russian cause which is just, the Russian struggle which is stern, and the Russian destiny which is glorious? The men in the Kremlin know what they are about. There can be such a thing as Soviet music, and they are determined to get it. -Ralph A. Raimi BILL MAULDIN Letters to the Editor... 1 4 (Continued from Page 3) Academic Notices Business Administration 123: Dr. Angus Campbell, Assistant Direc- tor of the Survey Research Center, will address the class today at 3 p.m., Rm. 220 Temporary Class- room Bldg. Subject: "Survey Re- search Center's Statistical Analy- sis by PuncheddCard Methods." Anyone interested is invited to at- tend the class. Chemistry Colloquium: Wed., Feb. 25, 4:15 p.m., Rm. 303, Chem- istry Bldg. Dr. Rondestvedt will speak on "The Mechanism of the Sulfonation of Styrene." Economics 51, 52, 53, 54: Make- up Final Examination. Thurs., Feb. 26, 3 p.m., 102 Economics Bldg. Each student who appears for this examination must have received permission from his instructor. English 129: Mr. Thorpe's class will not meet at 9 a.m. today. History Final Examination Make-Up: Sat., Feb. 28, 2 p.m., Rm. B, Haven Hall. Students must come with written permission of instructor. Graduate Students: Those stu- dents, who have taken the pre- liminary examinations in French and German, may present them- seves at the office of the Exami- ner at any time during office hours, Mondays and Thursdays -2:30-4 p.m. Tuesdays, and Fri- days--10:30-12 noon. Concerts Student Recital: Dolores DiL or - enzo, Pianist, will present a pro- gram of compositions by Franck, Beethoven, Mozat, and Harold Triggs, at 8:30 p.m., Tues., Feb. 24, Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Given in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music, the recital will be open to the general public. Miss DiLorenzo is a pupil of Joseph Brinkman. Student Recital: Noah Knep- per, oboist, will present a program at 8:30 p.m., Wed., Feb. 25, Rack- ham Assembly Hall, in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music in Music Education. He will be assis- ted by Merrill Wilson, playing the French horn, and David Hildinger and Jean Farquharson, pianists. Mr. Knepper is a pupil of William Fitch, and his recital is open to the public. Exhibitions Architecture Building:. Student work in Architecture from the Universities of Michigan and Min- nesota. Through Feb. 27. Rackham Galleries. Exhibition: work of members of the faculty of the College of Architecture and Design. Through Feb. 28. rial Hall: 26th Annual National Exhibition of Advertising Art. Through March 7. Tuesday through Saturday, 10-12 noon and 2-5 p.m.; Wednesday 7-9 p.m.; Sunday 2-5 p.m. The public is in- vited. Events Today Radio Program: 5:45-6 p.m., WPAG, The Ger- man Series. Messrs. Otto Graf and Walter Rickhoff Films on Public Opinion-World Trade, auspices of the Audio-Visu- al Education Center, Kellogg Au- ditorium, 4:15 p.m. - "Does It Matter What You Think?" and "Round Trip-The U.S.A. in World Trade." Journalism Society: 7:30 p.m., Michigan Union. Sigiva Rho Tau, ' Engineer's Stump Speaker's Society: Spring Organization Night, 7:15 p.m., small ballroom, Michigan Union. All technical students invited. NSA Committee: Time of Meet- ing has been changed to 5 p.m. Michigan Union. Students inter- ested in working on the Commit- tee are invited. La Cercle Francais: 8 p.m., Rm. 316, Michigan Union. Prof. E. B. Ham, of the Romance Language Department, will present and com- ment upon a film entitled "Toward Tomorrow in France." French songs and social games. New mem- bers accepted. Quarterdeck: 7:15 p.m., Rm. 311, W. Engineering Bldg. Prof. L. L. Carrick will speak on "Marine Points." Open meeting for all En- gineers. Young Progressive Citizens of Michigan: 7:30 p.m., Michigan Union. "Implications of the Third Party," by Dr. S. J. Eldersveld, Political Science Department. Women of the University Fac.-. ulty: 8 p.m., Women's Athletic Bldg. UJ. of M. Flying Club: Board meeting, 7:30 p.m., 1300 E. Engi- neering Bldg. Latin American Society: 7:30 p.m., Rackham Bldg. The public is invited. Intercollegiate Zionist Federa- tion of America: 8 p.m., Hillel Foundation. Dr. Max Weinreb, of Tel-Aviv, will speak on the sub- ject, "Inside Palestine." Dancing and refreshments. All welcome. Polonia Club: 7:30 p.m., Inter- national Center. Refreshments and entertain- ment. Faculty Women's Club: Play1 Reading Section, 1:45 p.m., Mary B. Henderson Room, Michigan1 dent William W. Whitehouse of Albion College will speak on "The Place of the Small College in the American Educational Pattern" at 4:15 p.m., Thurs., Feb. 26, Rack- ham Amphitheatre. The public is invited. Members and their guests will lunch informally with Presi- dent Whitehouse at 6 p.m., Facul- ty Club dining room, Michigan Union. Social Seminar, auspices of the University of Michigan Chapter, American Society of Public Ad- ministration; open to interested persons. Address by Prof. Leonard D. White, University of Chicago, National President of the Ameri- can Society for Public Adminis- tration, 8 p.m., Wed., Feb. 25, West Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. Alpha Chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota, National Professional Music Fraternity for Women, will pre- sent a Contemporary American Musicale, Wed., Feb. 25, 8:30 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Pro- gram: Vocal solos and instru- mental solos and ensembles. The public is invited. Phi Sigma: Joint open meeting with Sigma Xi, 8 p.m., Mon., Mar. 1, Rackham Amphitheatre. Di". Bradley M. Patten, Chairman of the Department of Anatomy, will speak on the topic "The First Heart Beats and the Beginning of the Circulation in Living Embryos as Recorded'by Micro-moving Pic- tures." Sigma Gamma, Epsilon: Wed., Feb. 25, 12 noon, Rm. 3055 N.S. Mr. Henry Zuidema will splak on "Field Aspects of the Belt Rocks of Glacier National Park." Delta Sigma Pi, Professional Business Fraternity: Smoker, Wed., Feb. 25, 8 p.m., Michigan Union. Postponement. Union Opera Committee meeting scheduled for Wed., Feb. 25, will not meet in order that all the judges may read the manuscripts. Tentative date for forthcoming meeting, 4:30 p.m., Wed., March 3. Inter-cooperative Council Edu- cational meeting Pri., Feb. 27, 8:15 p.m., Robert Owen House. Professors Gault and Dickinson will speak on "Cooperatives and Private Enterprise." Refreshments. Public invited. American Society of Mechani- cal Engineers: Open meeting, Feb. 25, 7:15 p.m., Natural Science Au- ditorium. Movies: "The Making, and Shaping of Steel" and "Steam Progress" (color film). U. of X. Flying Club: Open meeting, 1042 E. Engineering Bldg., 4 7:30 p.m., Wed., Feb. 25. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation: Rabbi Herschel Lymon will speak on "The Outlines of Jewish His- tory" at 4 p.m., Wed., Feb. 25, Hillel Foundation. All students in- vited. La p'tite causette will meet in the future on :Mondays and Wedies- days at 3 p.m., Michigan League. Sociedad Hispanica: Wed., Feb. t 25, 8 p.m., Michigan Union. Square Dancing Class, sponsored by the Graduate -Outing Club: Wed., Feb. 25, 8 p.m., Lounge, Women's Athletic Bldg. Everyone welcome. Small fee charged. Fifty-Eighth Year ;, i it '4 League. Museums Building, rotunda, "Art of Melanesia." Through Feb. 29. E Coming; Events ' Edited and managed by students the University of Michigan under t authority of the Board in Control Student Publications. Editorial Staff John Campbell.......Managing Editor Dick Maloy...............City Editor Harriett Friedman .. Editorial Director Lida Daimes .......... Associate Editor Joan Katz........... Associate Editor Fred Schott ........Associate Editor Dick Kraus............Sports Editor Bob Lent....Associate Sports Editor Joyce Johnson....... Women's Editor Jean Whitney Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Nancy Helmick........General Manager Jeanne Swendeinan ......Ad. Manager Edwin Schneider .. Finance Manager Dick Haltp......Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 . Museum of Art, Alumni Memo- Michigan Chapter AAUP: Presi- BARNABY,. .. _w -1 I can't understand why. -I Mr.O'ally!Mom nvited~ Excellent!...& rnaby I must show how much t Member of The Associated Press