PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1949 _______________________________ m Aged Philosophy JAMES B. CONANT, president of Harvard, has suggested in his new book, "Education in a Divided World," that all men in the nation that are 18 years of age be drafted into a national militia for 10 years. His plan would consist of three or four summer camps of two or three months plus evening drill throughout the school year. Only those with physical disabilities would escape his program. As an educator, it would seem impossible that the president of Harvard should put forward such an unrealistic plan for the complete subjugation of the young Ameri- can male. On the surface there are three excellent objections. The part-time student who is working his way through college, vocational school or even high school, would be robbed of the hours he would spend earning the necessary funds to continue his education. The student that hopes to correlate his education with casual jobs in the field he expects to enter would be thwarted. And even today, education is woefully distant from practical application! Putting the collegian on a drill field nights and between school years will use the hours that normally go to social pur- suits - church, family and friends. Even deeper criticism of Conant's plan can be found when its motivating philosophy is considered. If there are more doctors, lawyers, engi- neers and scientists than the country's econ- omy can support, the result will be "frustrat-i ed individuals with long education and con- siderable intelligence," Conant wrote. So the answer is to eliminate some of the potential professional men! Yet even considering the mass production of in- tellectuals in American colleges, there have Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: AL BLUMROSEN __ _-.-- been NO cries of "too many doctors," es- pecially in the rural South. Repeatedly in- dustry has called for more engineers and scientists to harness a world of atomic en- ergy. And the characteristic high salaries of the lawyer indicate no shortage there. President Conant must feel that a third and possibly a fourth World War is inevit- able - so inevitable that he is willing to suggest his drastic plan of militarism. The future is dismal if we accept his out- look. We must relinguish all our hopes and endeavors for a peaceful world and give up living useful lives to make sure that we will continue to have an eating-and- sleeping kind of survival., The philosophy of an old, old man that belies Conant's 55 years. -Craig H. Wilson Pep Rally OWN at the Union tonight, at 7:15 p.m. sharp, a pep rally will start. It's been labelled "all-campus" and "super-colossal." And it will be, if the people who have been planning it have anything to say about it. They've slated a torch-lit parade down to Ferry Field, led by the Uni- versity Band and the varsity .cheer- leaders. At the field, Athletic Director Fritz Crisler will be on hand to make his first rally speech in three years. Radio notables and the West Quad Glee Club will be at the mike to give this year's championship-material Wolverines a big send-off for the Northwestern game tomorrow. But all the speeches, all the music, all the cheering will be but as tinkling cymbals-unless University students- thousands of 'em-show up, too. We're the only ones who can make this a real all-campus rally. It's up to us to show the team it's got 20,000 loyal, spirited backers. We can do it-but only if you are there. -Mary Stein I'D RATHER BE RIGHT:. Bipartis an By SAMUEL GRAFTON ED SAW MARTIN come striding down the aisle of the commuters' train. He half expected Martin to pass him by, because they had quarreled the last time - on the sub- ject of national unity, he remembered --but Martin sat down beside him amiably enough. "Well," said Martin, "your President sure pulled a boner, wanting to send Chief Justice Vinson to see Stalin." "What's so bad about wanting to send someone to talk with Stalin?" asked Ed. "Why, it was just terrible for bipartisan unity on foreign policy," said Martin. Ed found himself aware of something faintly superior in Martin's manner. "Look, Martin," said Ed. "Suppose somebody, anybody, had a perfectly bril- liant idea on how to solve the foreign af- fairs mess, and suppose the bipartisan leaders turned the idea down, what would you do?" "Do?" said Martin. "Why, I'd be against it. If an idea hurts bipartisan unity, it's dangerous and I'm against it." "Does that mean there are whole sets of ideas we can no longer even consider?" "Politics stops at the water's edge," said Martin firmly. "We need bipartisan agree- ment." Again Ed had the feeling of something new, something definitely superior, in Mar- tin's manner. It iingled with his memories of their many years of bickering about for- eign affairs, and it drove him to return to the fight. "See here, Martin," he said, "if biparti- san harmony is so important to us and the world, would you Republicans wreck it, just because you disapproved of some- thing the President did?" "It'd be his responsibility," said Martin stubbornly. "Everybody would know that." Suddenly Ed understood, and completely, that strange, new, little superior air he had felt in Martin. In the old days, during all their foreign policy wrangling, Martin had had to try to prove that the ideas he enter- tained were good. It hadn't always been easy, because Martin had had some honeys, and often he had squirmed and unhappily raised his voice. Now it was different. Now Martin did not have to prove an idea was good. He had only to prove it was biparti- san. In the old days he had been unable, reasonably, to adopt an idea until he could somehow show it was right. Now he had only to show that it had been adopted, and that made it right. Ed turned back to the window again and it seemed to him the train was roaring through unfamiliar country. Copyright, 1948, New York Post Corporation) Current Movies Operation Vittles, U. S. A. %, Letters to the Editor .. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .t -+- MUSIC + Iw I MARIAN ANDERSON'S justly famous voice was given full display last night in a recital of works ranging from Handel to Griffes. The richness of her tone was a continual source of wonder, despite the slight deterioration her upper register has under- gone in recent years. Unfortunately, most of the singing in the first half of the program, when Miss An- derson made extensive use of mezzo-voce, was obscured by Franz Rupp, whose ac- companiment was too predominant. The Ser'se, Recitative and Aria by Handel was sung with fine feeling for the rhythm and frank spirit of the work. Legrenzi's Che Fiero Costume was especially well done, Miss Anderson realizing all the subtlety of this charming lyric. The Schubert group was an unfortunate selection. Miss Anderson does not project Schubert's Lieder with the proper intensity. Suleika and Wohin, lyrical in nature, were sung well, if somewhat too heavily. Der Doppelganger and Erlkonig, however, which are dramatic, did not have the requisite poignancy. Miss Anderson unduly empha- sized the last section of the Doppelganger without building up the despair in the song sufficiently, so that it lost its impact. In the Erlkonig she emphasized three distinct per- sons to such an extent that their interrela- tion, and consequently the unity of the Lied, was destroyed. Miss Anderson was at her best in the second half, which included songs of Griffes and Quilter as well as the tradi- tional Sweet Nightingale and Yarmouth Fair. The latter especially was beautifully sung. As in her interpretation of Legrenzi and Caldara, there was the utmost realiza- tion of song's inherent charm. The recital ended with a group of spiri- tuals, in which Miss Anderson displayed tre- mendous vocal range and opulence. The low range of Crucifixion was superbly sustained, and Roll, Jord'n, Roll had exuberance, but Miss Anderson marred the others by over- careful diction and a lack of abandon. -R. E. Matlaw. + ACINEM El. A t Hill Auditorium... JENNY LAMOUR, with Louis Jouvet, Suzy Delair, Simone Renant, and Bernard Blier. AMONG THE TOPICS touched upon by the latest Art Cinema importation are the machinations of show business, the in- constancy of women, paternal affection with For AlltEars IT WAS an exciting and rare piece of radio journalism. Commentator Jim Crowley, "breathing fire" through his microphone last Sunday, strongly implied that Governor Kim Sigler "had something to hide" when he refused to appear on an impartial roundtable with Democratic gubernatorial candidate Wil- liams. Crowley-a member of the Detroit News Washington bureau-told the radio audience that the program could have been held any- place, anytime last week; anytime conveni- ent to the Governor. Crowley added that Sigler was "within shouting distance" of the studio at the time of the program. The resulting program was Crowley's questioning of Williams. Two things are satisfying about Crowley's actions. First, he pointed out that whenever any city, state or nation loses the right to a racial angle, the murder of a libertine, the ensuing crime deteption methods, and a few other incidental perversions and emotional crises. I think the procucers thought this was the last movie they were going to make and they wanted to be sure to cover every- thing. The idea was to penetrate the inner lives of each of the characters, and in this, Jenny Lamour succeeds pretty well. The acting and personality sketches are impressive-newcomer Suzy Delair is su- attempt a profound analysis of half a perb as the ambitious showgirl. But to dozen people, and combine it with a plot which insists on concerning itself with every contemporary controversial problem is just a little too much. There is material here for at least half a dozen movies. During the later scenes, Jenny Lamour focuses a little more intelligibly on the mur- der solution and Louis Jouvet comes into his own. As the detective who suspects Jenny and her husband among others, Jouvet's feeling and dry wit are notable. The natural presentation of his mulatto son is but one of the deftly executed scenes. But why, oh why, did they have to scramble in a bit of every aspect of life in our time? At any rate, I don't know where else you can get so much for fifty cents. -Carol Anderson. New Books at General Library At the Michigan.. . "I KNOW WHERE I'M GOING" with Wendy Hiller and Roger Livesey. KNOW WHERE I'M GOING" is a picture produced by people who knew what they were doing. A J. Arthur Rank creation, it is a clinching argument for the popularity of British films in this country. Wendy Hiller, the "Pygmalion" star of several years back, plays the headstrong woman of the title quote. A moneyed mar- riage awaits her on an island off the Scottish coast, but a roaring gale has delayed the final lap of her journey. Im- patiently waiting out the storm, she has for company Roger Livesey, owner of the island. Biology and a stranded couple being the age old formula that it is, too much more will be a summary rather than a review. But the simple plot is enriched with fine photography, unique music, authentic Scotch settings and picturesque folklore, which gives it a classical flavor seldom seen at popular movie houses. The sea sequence, wherein Miss Hiller stubbornly tries to cross to the island before the storm has blown out, is one of the most realistic and well, , just downright wettest of its kind. Authentic castles, in- side and out, and a fabulous thundering whirlpool all have their place in the story, and for once you'll not laugh at kilts nor soon forget the "terrible" curse of the Mac- Neils of Kiloran. -Gloria Hunter. At the State.. . "RAW DEAL," with Dennis O'Keefe, Claire Trevor and Marsha Hunt. THE SCRIPT WRITERS have gummed up the works again. O'Keefe, Trevor, and Hunt do what they can to ressurect the thing, but you can't make somethin' out of nothin'. In short, the story is hackneyed, in- coherent, and-for the most part-very dull. It's about a guy who breezes inex- plicably out of the pen, hell-bent on knocking off a vaguely-presented double- crosser, who somehow gets tangled up with two lovesick females. In the perpetual night-time of B-picture photography, the grim trio speed about in station wagons, hide out here and there, 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 (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1948 VOL. LIX, No. 22 Notices Approved student sponsored so- cial events for the coming week- end: October 15 Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Omi- cron Pi, Alpha Xi Delta, Delta Chi, Delta Sigma Delta,Delta Tau Del- ta, Michigan House, Phi Delta Theta, Triangle, Zeta Beta Tau, Zeta Tau Alpha. October 16 Acacia, Alpha Delta Phi, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Alpha Tau Omega, Chi Psi, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Delta Sigma Delta, Delta Sigma Pi, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Upsilon. East Quad, Kappa Sigma, Phi Alpha Kappa, Phi Chi, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi Sigma Delta, Phi Sigma Kappa, Pi Lambda Phi, Psi Upsilon, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi,'Theta Ci, Theta Delta Chi, Theta Xi, Trigon, Zeta Psi. October 17 Intercollegiate Zionist Federa- tion, Zeta Beta Tau. Northwestern game open houses may be held in officially organ- ized student residences on Satur- day, Oct. 16, between 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. for pre-game func- tions and between 5 and 7 p.m. for the post-game functions. Women Students attending the Esquir'e Ball, Oct. 16, have 1:30 a.m. permission. Calling hours will not be extended. School of Education Faculty: First regular meeting will be held Mon., Oct. 18, 4:15 p.m., U. Ele- mentary School Library. Dept. of Aeronautical Engineer- ing: Mr. C. D. Pence, of the De- troit office of Westinghouse Elec- tric Corp. will be in Rm. 1077 E. E. Bldg. Tues., Oct. 19, to inter- view Senior and Graduate Aero and Mechanical Engineering stu- dents leaving in Feb., 1949 who are interested in jet-engine re- search. Those desiring interviews, please consult the schedule on the Aero. Eng. bulletin board. Ushers for Jazz Band Concerts: will the following please call at the box office, Hill Aud., for their passes for the Kenton concert, between 5 and 6 p.m. today. First Floor: Harriet Adams, Donald Au- tore, Richard Bender, John Car- ter, Nancy Coleman, Ellen Crow- ley, Victor Dunaitis, Mary Ed- wards, Frank Essenberger, Dolores Essenberger, Lester Florant, Elaine Giese, Anne Grainger, Richard Hait, Dorothy Heldreth, Howard D. Johnson, Jackie Koch, Lois Kuengeter, Jean K. Leonard, Ina Jean MacDonald, Jerry Mehlman, Alvin J. Mendelson, Robert Mer- sereau, Arthur Nevins, Wa ren Rahn, W. C. Schadford, Richard Schultz, J. Wenk; First Balcony: Robert E. Baker, Harrold Barrial, Myron J. Craver, Walter Gacek, John Guettler, Gerald Harmsen, Edward L. Hill, Howard Summer, Larry Jeu, Robert S. Kinoshita, Carol Jean Laulis, Robert S. Mil- ler, George Mills, Norton Salk, William Rosnyai, John Russell, Gordon Saxon, Gertrude Scheer, Joseph Simpson, Rosemary Sut- ter, James L. Williams. Second Balcony: Charles Brasch, Max Anthony Gozesky, Bud Hag- en, Leo W. Hauser, Paul Kast, Athena Laskarides, William Lax- ton, John LeValley, Roy McEl- haney, Glenn E. Mencer, Herbert Edward Neil, Mark E. Neville, James W. Rutledge, Murray Sayre, Douglas B. Scott, Roy Slovenko, Sam Stedman, Robert A. Stevens, Paul Stoner, Tom Stuart, Donald Theisen, K. Van Der Kolk, David Charles Weaver. Lecture University Lecture: Mr. A. den Doolaard, Dutch author and jour- nalist, will speak on the subject, "Walcheren-A Chapter in Hol- land's Fight Against the Sea," at 4:15 p.m., Wed., Oct. 20, Rack- ham Amphitheatre; auspices of the Department of Civil Engineer- ing. The public is invited. Academic Notices Astronomical Colloquium: 4:15 p.m., Fri., Oct. 15, at the Observa- tory. Speakers: Dr. Leo Goldberg and Dr. Orren C. Mohler. Title: Re- port on the Zurich I.A.U. meet- ing. Biological Chemistry: Seminar will be held on Fri., Oct. 15, 4 p.m., Rm. 319, W. Medical Bldg. Sub- ject: "Protein - Carbohydrates and Bacterial Polysaccharides." All interested are invited. German 33 will meet in Room 406 Library startingthis Satur- day. Exhibitions Drawings and Water Colors from the collection of John S. Newberry, Jr., and Prints by the Graphic Circle: Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall, daily 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Sundays 2-5 p.m. The public is invited. Events Today German Coffee Hour: 3:00-4:30 p.m., Michigan League Coke Bar. All interested students and fac- ulty members are invited. Wallace Progressives: Impor- tant meeting of Executive Com- mittee, 4:30 p.m., Michigan League. All members invited to at- tend. UWF Publicity Committees: Meeting at 5 p.m., Michigan Un- ion. Anyone interested in any phase of publicity activity is urged to attend. Armenian Students Association Wiener Roast: Meet in front of the sRackham Bldg. at 7:30 p.m. sharp. All students of Armenian descent are welcome. Art Cinema League and Asso- ciation of Independent Men pres- ent "Jenny Lamour," French film with English titles at 8:30 p.m., Fri. and Sat.,_Hill Auditorium. Roger Williams Guild: Home- The Daly accords its readers the privilege of submitting letters for publication in this column. Subnect to space limitations, the general pol- icy is to publish in the order in which they are received all letters bearing the writer's signature and address. Letters exceeding 300 words, repeti- tious lettersand letters of a defama- tory character or such letters which for any other reason are not in good taste will not be published. The editors reserve the privilege of con- densing letters. * * * Another Angle To the Editor: THE RECENT enforcement of the Regents ruling on political speeches and speakers, with re- gard to the gatherings on the Diag, is a logical outcome of the orig- inal ban. One might argue that Dean Walters ruling was extreme- ly technical but it is certainly within the spirit of the Regents' ruling. Mr. Walter is not a policy-mak- er. His job carries the responsi- bility of enforcement and execu- tion of this policy laid down for him and the other officers and ex- ecutives of this University by the representatives of the people of Michigan, the Board of Regents. The above is not to be inter- preted as a support of the Re- gents' ban. I, myself; have taken part in the informal discussions on the Diag. I have also gone emphat- ically on record as opposing the Regents' ban. I shall continue to fight the Regents' ban by every possible means. However, the attack should be concentrated on the Regents and the people who elect them: name- ly, the voters of Michigan. Con- vince them of the necessity of un- trammeled speech, of the long- range stpidity of petty bans. This can be iest done by open forums, on or off the campus, and con- tinual education through public and organizational meetings, not by ineffectual, though interesting, small Diag gatherings. AVC attempted to hold a Forum early this semester to discuss these matters. It was killed by a group who, for varied reasons, felt it were better to fight the Regents' ban by not holding a Forum. A committee, headed by Edward Yellin and Bud Aronson, was set up to fight the Regents' ban. That was three weeks ago. Nothing has come out of this committee yet. At last week's AVC meeting, this same committee was given a man- date by the membership, by a vote of 112 to 8 with 2 or 3 absten- tions, to organize a Civil Liberties Forum off campus. Nothing has come out of this committee yet. If this letter serves to prod the com- mittee into action, it will have served its purpose. This committee, I might add, is currently representative of the rank and file membership of AVC. -Edwar Tumin. Disturbed To the Editor: To PUT it mildly, I was exceed- ingly disturbed by the asser- tion of Messrs. Carneiro, Cook and Abrams that B. S. Brown's visual acuity was not what it should be. B. S. and I have often heard that four out of five girls are beautiful .. . etc., and after care- fully observing the Michigan coeds have come to the conclusion that it is fallacious. We not only consider Michigan coeds beautiful, but we are con- vinced that their beauty is on a Talent Show at the Guild House at 8:30 p.m. Coming Events lBllel. Foundation: Sabbath Evening Services, 7:45 p.m. Forum on "National Student Associa- tion." Social hour-refreshments. Membership Rally, 3:30 p.m. Everyone welcome. Acolytes: The Acolytes will hold a meeting on Mon., Oct. 18, 7:30 p.m., W. Conference Rm., Rackham Bldg. Jacques L. Salvan, Professor of French at Wayne University, Detroit, will read a paper on Existentialism. Meeting is open to the public. IZFA: General meeting, 7:45 p.m. Tues., Oct. 19, at Hillel. Speaker, recently returned from Europe, will talk on "Anti-Semitism in Europe." A film will be shown and refreshments served. Every- body welcome. Graduate Outing Club: Meet at 2:30 p.m., Sun., Oct. 17, N.W. en- trance, Rackham Bldg. for out- door activity. Sign up at Check- room desk before 11 a.m. Sat. All graduates welcome. much higher plane than that of coeds at all of the other univer- sities and colleges we have visited. We will admit that the Purdue lovelies came close to threatening the Michigan supremacy, but we don't think they quite 'made it. Gentlemen, we have never met you, but yours seems to be either a case of delusional psychosis or perhaps simple frustration. You admit that you weren't able to in- duce some of Purdue's comelier specimens to transfer to Michigan. Is it possible that you have had the same sort of luck in inducing Michigan's girls to go out with you? Frankly, we think you owe our lovely coeds an apology. That four out of five statement is getting a little trite, and we are tired of hearing it - especially when it doesn't say a thing. -Mel Marsch. Call the Bluff To the Editor: Sam Grafton and other viewers- with-alarm have been plaintively calling for an American peace of- fensive. Why, they wonder, do we let Russia make the proposals for disarmament. Why don't we call their bluff and make it clear to all the world that we are honestly and whole-heartedly in favor of an end to the cold war, an end to fear and distrust, and a return to a working friendship? Warren Austin knows why: "Disarmament is impossible in a world where the Soviet battle cry is 'wreck and destroy'." The cur- rent Soviet battle cry is for an immediate one-third disarmament. What will that wreck and destroy? Our immediate bi-partisan pro- gram of Marshall Plan, Truman Doctrine, Project X, 70-Group Air Force, and the Draft? Or perhaps a one-third cut in our present multi-billion dollar arms appro- priations--wrecking our booming inflation economy. There won't be a bi-partisan peace offensive because they have too much at stake in the cold war. Our foreign policy has become a policy of economic imperialism; of conquest and control of markets, raw materials and industries. When have imperialists ever been interested in disarmament? No, our Austin's will rant and writhe, but they won't disarm. They'll scream "sabotage" and talk peace to death. Though Aus- tin said "the world situation is too grave to permit further play with words," he declared, "the U.S. will support a British resolution pin- nng blame for lack of control on armaments on Russia, and a Syrian proposal that the U.N. commission for conventional arms get back on the job." -Bill Carter Fifty-Ninth Year l - -- Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staf Harriett Friedman ...Managing Editor Dick Maloy ..............City Editor Naomi Stern........Editorial Director- Allegra Pasqualetti ....Associate Editor Arthur Higbee ........Associate Editor Harold Jackson ......Associate Editor Murray Grant..........Sports Editor Bud Weidenthal . .Associate Sports Ed. Bev Bussey ......Sports Feature Writer Audrey Buttery........Women's Editor Business Staff Richard Hait .......Business Manager Jean Leonard ....Advertising Manager William Culman .....Finance Manager Cole Christian .... Circulation Manager Bess Hayes ...............Librarian Tele phone 2 3-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all newsedispatches credited to itor otherwise credited to this newspaper, All rights of republication 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 Associated Collegiate Press 1948-49 BARNABY [fI've heard of the proposed It won't boher me.aI stick r '- ---"'-- -- -1- - ---- II HMr. O'Malley my Fairy God father] I Uf l I