THE IICHIGAN DAI1LY TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 1948 ........... I .. .. .. .. .. .. ... I .. . .. .. ... .. . .. .. Keep Off the Grass MPUS needs is a new I literally nil, the new orgaization should WHAT THIS CA student group with wide appeal. We've been around here long enough to watch the vast majority of the students on campus founde'r in the alphabet soup of campus politics. We've noticed that prob- lems in addition to bluebooks and cafeteria lines are frowned upon. Now we are happy to announce that a new club is being organized here which threatens to eclipse all previously formed campus groups. Called the Student Apathy Club (SAC),,the new organization has minimum requirements for membership and continued participation. We feel that the new group will achieve peculiar success here. Certainly almost every student is eligible to join-the im- portant membership requirement is to in- tensify your present activities. As these are Editorials published in The Michigan Daily ate written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only.- NIGHT EDITOR: HAROLD JACKSON have wide appeal. Only deterrent to the plan is that many students may be too apathetic to join. We plan to circumvent such an eventuality by making no effort to enlist members. The following students are specifically ex- cluded from the new SAC: 1. Anyone who signs or passes- petitions of any sort. 2. Anyone who votes in any campus elec- tion. 3. Anyone who belongs to any campus or town organization, except the honorary societies. We are setting up a special committee to handle the flood of applications for the new SAC from the other 15,000 students on campus. If you do not hear from us, you're in. If we do not hear from you, you will be considered "extra - apathetic" and promptly enrolled. No one can lose. With an eye to the success of similar groups on more forward-looking campuses (Harvard), we have decided that participa- tion by this University is long overdue. Join us-if you care to become involved. -The Senior Editors. Overweighted Tradition TIRADITION, in its place is a fine thing, but when it becomes more important than the institution itself it's time some- thing is done. The Union has come to regard its "For Men Only" tradition as the most important reason for its existence and as a result most of its services are in deplorable condi, tion. Only a week ago the Union administration woke up to the fact that The Daily had a woman reporter covering the bowling league. She was asked to leave and not return, (this after about eight weeks on the beat.) The Administration explained that the Union bowling alley and the billiard room were both "men's clubs," places where a man could go and not have to worry about his language, where he could relax and enjoy himself. He would probably enjoy himself much more if the Union paid as much attention, to the condition of the equipment as to de- fending the frontiers from a female inva- sion. In the billiard room there are seven ping- pong tables, not one of which is in good con- dition. They are all chipped and scarred. Most of the pool tables are equally run down. The felt has worn off the rails and the pockets are stuffed with rags to keep the billiard balls from falling through. And many of the balls themselves are chipped, while a great many of the cue sticks are crooked or without tips. Downstairs at the main desk, chess sets may be checked out by anyone with a Union card. Some of the sets have pieces missing, so instead of getting new sets, pennies are dropped in with the chessmen to be used in place of the missing pawns. In addition to this there are the many little things that reflect the Union's lack of consideration for the student. One ex- ample is the Union's placing of its radios. The baseball season will begin shortly. Many students like to drift over to the Union to listen to the ball games. They may listen at one of two places, the billiard room, where they can not sit down and hear the radio, or the cafeteria where the rattle of dishes makes listening difficult. There are two rooms on the main floor. Certainly one of them should have a radio or at least a speaker in it. The other could still be kept quiet for study. .So the Union, as it is now, offers a sanc- tuary from feminine society, some battle scarred equipment, and of course a sixty cent slice of roast beef. It may not be the best Student Union in the country, but it sure has its tradi- tions. -Dick Kraus. The City Editor's SCRATCH PAD "HE DAILY is frequently under fire from certain quarters for its antagonistic attitude toward the University Administra- tion., Critics charge that we too often go around with a chip on our shoulder, and never stop to congratulate anyone for a job well done. Don't get us wrong, The Daily figures that this is a mighty fine place. But it does make us mad when University bureaucrats lose their perspective and pass some kind of an unworkable rule. When something like that happens we holler about it, hoping that it will do some good. According to information we received last week evidently our hollering does accom- plish something once in a while. A new group has been set up in co- operation with the famed Survey Research Center to poll student attitudes on questions concerning them. University administrators, realizing that some of their past actions have backfired, are now going to utilize this polling group before instituting new rules. The administration is to be congratulated for this realistic step in attempting to tap student opinion on a rule before putting it into effect. S w PEAKING of unworkable rules we hear that the University is trying to find some face-saving method of backing out of last year's "liquor ban." Representatives of the Student Conduct Committee have been calling on campus organizations for sug- gestions in amending the rule. Perhaps legal drinking will return to the University of Michigan-who knows? 'i * * As long as we're talking about drinking there is a problem that has been bothering us in that regard. A couple of months ago an alleged "private" drinking club was formed with headquarters at Smith's Cater- ing. A complaint brought police investiga- tion of the "club" and a subsequent warrant for the owner of the establishment. The case got to court, but has not been completed as yet. What we can't understand is how the "club" has been allowed to operate for two week-ends unmolested by police while the case is pending in court. * * * WE HAVE ARRIVED at another solution to high prices at the Union Tap Room. This one might work better than our prev- ious suggestion that students use the up- stairs Dining Room at lunch time since prices don't differ much from th Tap Room. We hear that a move is underway to bring beer into the Tap Room. If ap- proved this move should solve all the Un- ion's financial problems. Profits from a Union bar could pay off the debt in a few years and probably help build a badly needed addition as well. "" so ITS HAPPENS . S SLike a ,Loi No Charge THOUGHT a rarity already! A friend reports that Truman's recent UMT- Selective Service Speech has been neatly clipped out of the newspapers in the files at the General Library. It wasn't in the Times, the Herald-Trib, the Post Dispatch, the Plain Dealer, The Post, the Chicago Trib and other big papers. Looks as if you'll have to write the White House, buddy. ' ** * IN A \ a \ \' \ ' } 4 ^! \ I "I canYt help it, Comrade Judge. The more decadent Proko- fieff gets, the more he sends me. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ._ s . C b L i~~ ll C ^ Tr r / yTV V i C A7 1 1 f 1 i r X G f c t Suipport for Fascists To the Editor: THE DETROIT FREE PRESS. March 28, 1948, Page 1: "Spain and Portugal are quietly seeking to transform the Iberian peninsula into a citadel against Communism. " "Chief reliance is being placed on the Portuguese Legion and Spanish Falange." "Cooperation between American military representatives and their Spanish 'colleagues' was to be par- ticularly close." "Strategic mili- tary values . . . Mediterranean ports . . . Spanish airfields." Do Americans know that the Portuguese Legion and Spanish Falange are the official Fascist organizations? That Franco was the selection of Herr Von Fau- pel, disciple of Hitler and organ- izer of the Pan-Germanic-Iberian Institute? That General Jose Mos- cado, "hero" of the Toledo-Alca- zar siege, was aided by Stukaf bombers of the Nazi Luftwaffe? That the Falange was trained by Mussolini's agents and that the Spanish "Gestapo," called the Fa- lange, was organized personally by Himmler and his personnel? Is this the "democracy" we pay lip-service to? While many Amer- icans were undisturbed by this news, the La tin -American world, particularly the Mexican people, were disgusted and dismayed. Partly because they themselves fought 27 bloody and costly rev- olutions against the same authori- tarianism, absolutism, intolerance, and militant force. And partly be- cause they sympathized with the Spanish Democrats who endeav- ored in vain to establish a democ- racy in 1936. As you'll recall, German-Italian bombs and men thwarted this endeavor. While' these refugees fled Madrid, Mex- ico was honored to receive them. a n r u b t i t " .. Great Good Huort ONE CANNOT HELP but admire the great good humor that the legislators of the State of Mississippi are displaying in this time of international tension. Contrary to the distastefully sober mood in other parts of the nation, recent news dispatches bear- BILL MAULDIN Letters to the Editor CURRENT MOVIES Atthe Michigan... CALL NORTHSIDE 777, with James Stewart and Helen Walker. CALL NORTHSIDE 777 sounds like the preliminary line to the old gag, "if a man answers, etc.," but in this case there is a $5,000 reward for the right phone mes- sage. Based on an actual case, it is the story of a innocent man serving 99 year sen- tence for the murder of a policeman during Chicago's prohibition days. His pharwoman mother has struggled to offer a reward for information about the real killer, and Chi- cago Times reporter James Stewart plays up her sacrifice and the case for its human interest value. Convinced at first of the man's guilt, Stewart gradually comes to be- lieve in him, and fights his crusade with all of the zeal, but much less of the rhetoric displayed in many of his earlier roles. Aside from touching up phone and street num- bers and the actual names, there is a gen- uineness of people and settings that im- parts a newsreel or March of Time quality to the film. Call Northside 777 is a worthwhile addi- tion"to the growing list of semi-documen- tary pictures, and especially recommended to Chicagoans, who will have a heyday pick- ing out familiar landmarks. -Gloria Hunter. *r* At the State ... THE SWORDSMAN, with Larry Parks and Ellen Drew. LARRY . PARKS has dropped the Jolson drawl for a clipped Scotch accent in this colorful drama of the 17th century. It is a Scotch version of the Hatfields and Mc- Coys-the brawl here is between the Clan McArden and the Clan Glowan. From the ing a Jackson, Miss., dateline give the im- pression that the legislative crowd there is having one helluva gay time running its little commonwealth these days. In defense of this point of view, the fol- lowing excerpt from a United Press item of last week is quoted: "A measure making it a crime to play or sing the 'Missouri Waltz' in Mississippi was introduced in the state house of representatives yesterday." More mirth must have been provided that very same day when, according to another release that appeared on the same news- paper page, a measure was introduced re- quiring voters to be able to "understand" as well as read the state constitution. Previously, however, a somber note had been injected into the festive proceedings when a bill requiring prospective voters to "sustain a good moral character" had to be killed since it might have been "dangerous to whites as well as Negroes." Earlier in the year these same fun-loving souls had created, in a moment of whimsy, a secret police-force, known as the Missis- sippi Bureau of Investigation, which was responsible only to Gov. Fielding L. Wright. The force was designed to ferret out vio- lators of a series of laws passed by the sly legislature. The laws were meant to curb a bus strike that waa probably inter- fering with the comedy in the legislative chambers. Even so, the laws managed to reflect something of the dry humor of Mississippi's three-ring legislative body by providing for' a number of new penalties ranging from five years' imprisonment for stoning buses to capital punishment for leaving bombs in bus terminals and elsewhere. Perhaps these few scenes from Missis- sippi's Opera Comique suffice to illustrate that, while these legislators may not be the shrewdest assembly of citizens in the coun- try, they must be the merriest throng of madcaps that's been around since the Key- stone Cops disbanded. -Kenneth Lowe. [ Lookig Back Fronh the pages of The Daily 50 YEARS AGO TODAY: Hundreds of University students staged Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all. members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the Assistant to the President, Room 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00l a.m. Saturdays). " s Notices; T1UESDAY, March 30, 1948 VOL. LVII, No. 1271 Faculty, College of Literature,l Science and the Arts: Midsemester reports are due not later than Friday, April 2, Report cards are being distrib- uted to all departmental offices.t Green cards are being provided for freshmen and sophomores and white cards for reporting juniors and seniors. Reports of freshmen] and sophomores should be sent to 108 Mason Hall; those of juniors and seniors to 1220 Angell Hall. Midsemester reports should name those students, freshmen, and upperclassmen, whose stand- ing at midsemester is "D" or "E," not merely those who receive "D" or "E" in so-called midsemester, examinations. Students electing our courses, but registered in other schools or, colleges of the University should; be reported to the school or col-, lege in which they are registered. Additional cards may be had. at 108 Mason Hall or at 1220 Angell Hall. Approved organizations: The following organizations should be added to the list of ap- proved organizations for the sec- ond semester 1948: Association of Internes and Medical Students, Chinese Insti- tute of Engineers, Michigan Crib, Pershing Rifles, Philippine-Michi- gan Club, Quarterdeck, Social Research Group, Symphonic Swing Orchestra, Toledo Club, Ullr Ski Club, Wallace Progres- sives, Wired Radio Association, Young Republican Club. Faculty, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: All stu- dents in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts who have from 45 to 59 hours of academic credit, inclusive, are required to take a series of examinations on April 20. These examinations are of value to the students and to their advisers, and in order to give them at all it will be necessary to excuse these students from their classes on that day. Additional details concerning the testing pro- gram will be given at the April faculty meeting. Students, College of Literature, Science, and The Arts: Except under extraordinary cir- cumstances, courses dropped after' Friday, April 2, will be recorded with the grade of "E." Seniors: College of L. S. & A., and Schiols of Education, Music, and Public Health: Tentative lists of seniors for June graduation have been posted on the bulletin board in Room 4 University Hall. If your name is misspelled or the degree expected incorrect, please notify the Count- er Clerk. &aa Engineering College Students: Scholarship applications for the coming year must be in Rm. 412, W. Engineering, by April 3. , Women students in Leaguet Houses who wish to remain in thet same residence for next fall may request fall contracts from the housemothers immediately.n 1 Applicats for Combined Curric- ula: Application for admission to a combined curriculum must ber made before April 20 of the final preprofessional year. Application forms may be obtained at 1220 Angell Hall and should be filed1 with the Secretary of the Commit- tees at that office. Summer Jobs: Mr. Lear, Ferry- Morse Seed Co., will be at the Bureau of Appointments on Tues., March 30, 4 p.m., to meet with men interested in dealer contact work for the coming summer. Men must be at least 23 years old. Car,< expenses' furnished; salary about $150 per mo. For further infor- mation call at 201 Mason Hall. University Community Center,J Willow Run Village. m s Tues., March 30, 8 p.m., Wives' Club meeting. Mr. Kenneth Cav- anaugh, General Housing Man-i ager at the Village, will speak( on "Why Willow Run." Everyone; invited. The Community Center will be open as usual during spring va- cation. Lecture University Lecture: Theodore Roethke, American poet, reading from his poems at 4:15 p.m., Tues., March 30, Rackham Amphithe- ater; auspices of the Department of English Language and Liter- ature. The public is invited. UniversitydLecture: Carl M. Saunders, editor of the Jackson (Mich.) Citizen Patriot, will ad- dress students in the Department of Journalism on "The Newspaper- man and his Newspaper" at 3 p.m., Wed., March 31, Rm. E, Haven Hall. Coffeee hour will follow. The public is invited. University Lecture: Prof. P. Sar- gant Florence, Dean of the Fac- ulty of Commerce and Social Sci- ence, Birmingham University, England, will speak on the subject "Present British Con*Itions of In- dustry and Labor" 4:15 p.m., Thurs., April 1, Rackham Am- phitheatre; auspieces of the De- partment of Economics. University Lecture: Dr. Erwin Edman, professor of philosophy and chairman of the Department of Philosophy at Columbia Uni- versity, will lecture on the sub- pect, "The Discipline of Taste" on Thurs., April 1, 8 p.m., Kellogg Auditorium; auspices of the De- partment of Fine Arts. Academic Notices Political Science 366: No meet- ing March 30. Physical - Inorganic Chemistry Seminar: Wed., March 31, 4:07 p.m., Rm. 303, Chemistry Bldg. Mr' But why do we aid international Neo-Fascism? As a bulwark .gainst Communism? Were these ot the aims of Fascistic canning? And if there are com- nercial interests at play, under whose sleeve will we find the ace? Has not our democratic sentiment een usurped by something other han democracy? Then why the ro-Fascism, Mr. and Mrs. Amer- ca: a Peron in Argentina, a dic- ator Trujillo in the Dominican 'Republic," three airline hours away! Military strategists take note. --Manuel Guerra. 4tcks Polic y To the Editor; oUR BI-PARTISAN foreign pol- icy is something of which every thinking American should be ashamed. While Truman creates a war hysteria with his message to Con- gress, and Marshall and Forrestal rave about the need to arm against the spread of Communism, we do a complete about face on Palestine and Trieste-all of this in a period of seven days. Truman and Forrestal are at- tempting to create the impression that a victory at the polls in Italy on April 18 for a combined Coi- munist-Socialist slate is an act of Russian aggression. Who can doubt the insincerity'of this war- mongering? Are Russian troops in Italy? No. Are there Russian ships in the Mediterranean, lying at an- chor off the coast of Italy, with Marines ready to debark? No. There are American ships off the coast of Italy, however, with thou- sands of Marines ready to step ashore if the Truman Administra- tion can create enough sympathy at home for its war program by April 18. The question must be asked very simply-is this Russian or American aggression? It is no secret that big industry in the United States has tremen- dous holdings in Italy, especially in basic industries of that nation. Is it an act of Russian aggression if the people of Italy should vote to run their own industry and to settle the claims of American in- dustrialists by arbitration? Or is this the democratic right of peo- ples throughout the world? -On the other hand, is it not an act of aggression, an undemocratic move, for the bi-partisan Admin- istration to threaten the Italian people against voting for nation- alization of heavy industry, and for planning their economy as they see fit? Can any individual who calls himself "democratic-minded sup- port this artificially created hys- teria as a subterfuge for American aggression? Ernest Ellis, Student Director, CP of Michigan. Fifty-Eighth Year Bernard Brown will review "Appli- cation of Radiocarbon to Reaction Mechanisms," and Mr. Dennis Turner will discuss "Measurement of Reversible Overvoltage." Results of the foreign language reading tests for M. A. candidates1 have been posted in the History Office, 119 Haven Hall. Studentsj wishing to do so may consult their advisors regarding the results. Concerts May Festival Tickets: Begin- ning, Thursday, April 1, all unsold season tickets will be broken up and placed on sale for individual concerts at the following prices (20% tax included): main floor $3.00, first balcony $2.40 and the top balcony $1.80 each, at the of- fices of the University Musical So- ciety in Burton Memorial Tower. University of Michigan Women's Glee Club, Marguerite Hood, Con- ductor, will be heard in its annual spring concert at 8 o'clock tonight, March 30, in Hill Auditorium, in- stead of 8:30 as previously an- nounced. The program will in- clude semi-popular songs and fea- ture guest performers -from the major dance class of the Physical Education Department. The public is invited. Student Recital: Joanne John- son Baker, Pianist, will be heard in a recital at 8:30 Wednesday evening, March 31, Rackham As- sembly Hall. Mrs. Baker is a pu- pil of Joseph Brinkman, and pre- sents the program in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music. It will include compositions by Bach, Schubert, Chopin, and Hindemith, and will be open to the public. Exhibition Museums Building rotunda, Chi- nese Porcelain-Celadon and Blue and White Wares. Through April 30. Events Today A Laboratory Bill of One-Act Plays will be presented at 8 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, by speech department students who are taking advanced courses in theatre. Admission is free to the public and no tickets are required. The bill includes "The Intruder," by Maurice Maeterlinck; "The, Florist Shop," by Hawkridge; "Neighbors," by Zona Gale; and "Corridors of the Soul," by Evre- nov. Theatre doors open at 7:15 and close at 7:55 promptly. No one will be seated during the run of any of the plays. Film: 'The V-2 Rocket in 'the United States," 7:30 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. This film covering operations at the White Sands Proving Ground, is (Continued on Page 4) 4 ,l ,} i i a i 1 Odeur MacArthur EVERYONE IS GOING all out for the hero of the Pacific. In a local drugstore a perfume display contains a vial (at $1.65 per dram) of "Je Reviens" which means, according to Lu- cien, "I Will Return." Subject to Change THE RALPH NEAFUS CLUB, local organ of the Communist Party, makes it a point to keep us informed of their activities. So far we haven't got the word on their latest publicity release which came thr'ough headed "Ralph Nephus" Club. The Final Word ONE OF OUR FRIENDS reports seeing the following words written in the dust covering one of her classroom win- dows. "God said 'let there be light' The janitors said 'no.'" Repercussions MAYBE "Operation Haircut" was effective after all . . . It seems even the barbers aren't patronizing one another these days. At least the other morning on our way up State Street when we came out of our pre-8 o'clock fog long enough to glance into a barbershop window, there was the lone bar- ber, standing uniformed in front of a mirror, Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff John Campbell .......Managig Editor Dick Maloy .............. City Editor Harriett Friedman .. Editorial Director Lida Dailes .......... 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 Bess Hayes ................. Librarian Business Staff Nancy Helmick' .......General Manas." Jeanne Swendeman.....Ad. Manager Edwin Schneider .. P?.tance Manager Dick Halt.......Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24.1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatched credited to it o 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 ;ssociated Collegiate Press 1947-48 / .Y BARNABY .. 11 i i I (_ AAr C) "r flov my Frtirv re-,t4fmthPf_ hris F I Tell me aou vour imanpnarv Fairy Godfather some I IDi yo~u hear that,. Rarnabv? The-1 1 !