PAGE FOUR THE IICHIGAN DAILY r AY. NOVEML 797 g:1X n - - -U .-. .. . . y .. v. a.ra asi +a . a.y s.. sa w W, Hail Tradition "AR^RAH' r"ay be coming back to Ann Arbor. After several enjoyable decades of exile, this "spirited' manifestation of nonsense" can easily banish forever the present feeling of scholarliness that has given the campus an air of intellectual respectability. However it's all still the brain-child of Bill Gripman, member of the Student Legislature, who has assumed the toga of investigator and with shovel in hand unearthed this long abandoned skeleton. His plan for a "Frosh-Soph Week" is a pretty watered down version of the riots of olden days, but it still stands as the opening gun in a revival of adolescence that could easily get out of hand. Without benefit of pollsters, let us as- sume that John Q. Average-Student has found the fountain of youth and grown younger. We can predict the following: More struggling freshmen will be be- deviled by other things than bluebooks and the percentage of flunks will grow propor- tionately. Spiritedness between small groups of Freshmen and Sophomores will get out of hand and the victors and vanquished will compromise over in Health Service. Constructive school spirit-which has sent the Marching Band to OSU, opposed the speakers' ban, created Michigras and con- tributed to such campaigns as the support Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members. of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR; LEON JAROFF of our sister University in the Philippines- will give way to useless outbursts of energy. Residence athletic teams will be neglected as scholars confine themselves to tugging on ropes, bowing to each other and paddling Freshmen. The present attendance at guest lec- tures, which is at best pathetic, will drop to new lows. Speakers will be able to accommodate their audiences in telephone booths. Student groups, already under attack for representing only thin slices of student opin- ion, will find themselves ever lesser repre- sentatives of the campus. In general, the august air of intellectual- ism will give way to rowdyism. But don't think these will be the only results. Far deeper, but of much more sig- nificance will be the general changes in phi- losophy that militant school spirit engenders. Danger of creating a vigorous class sys- tem exists. Too great a distinction is placed on school rank and other factors. This often results in intolerance and snobbery among our supposedly better educated classes. And the whole precept of utilitarianism on which modern philosophy is based would give way to foolishness, wasted time and last of appreciation of modern values. What we do here-the good ideas we develop and support, and the pre-con- ceived notions we harbor in our minds- will go with us for the rest of our lives and become the things the nation does over the next half-century. Evidently there is no place for traditional campus rowdyism in a changing and pro- gressing world. -Craig H. Wilson. + CINEMA + At Lydia Mendelssohn filmed. Perhaps the pacing of the action and the perennial agitation of some of the char- CARMEN, with Charlie Chaplin. THE acters may seem dated to modern eyes, but GHOST GOES WEST, with Robert Donat, this only serves to add to the hilarity. Jean Parker, and Eugene Pallette. THE GHOST GOES WEST takes the antics of a vengeful Scotch ghost as its HUMAN PRETENTIOUSNESS becomes the initial theme. From there it broadens its target for the jibes of both the film scope to poke fun (if in a more restrained classics making up the Art Cinema bill this fashion than CARMEN) at quite a variety week. of institutions. Such things as dissimilar The deathless Chaplin comedy makes as Scottish feuds and American bour- great sport of the Bizet opera and al- geoisie become objects of merriment. though some opera-lovers may feel this is The plot concerns the sale of a haunted treading on sacred ground, I think the ma- eastle fated for transportation abroad, and jority will be much amused by this hilari the ensuing complications. We also receive ous nonsense. for once the catharsis of being able to laugh The great pantomimist and his team of at the English stereotyping of Americans in- equally apt burlesquers perform with great stead of vice versa. Good for the soul and relish, and, for the most part, their cari- for the post-midsemester blues. catures are as funny now as when they were -Carol Anderson. CU.RRENT .MOVIES At the Michigan . .. At the State ... HOLLOW TRIUMPH, with Paul Henreid MAN-EATER OF KUMAON, with Sabu and Joan Bennett. and Friendly Tiger. (. HENRY would be right proud of the 1HATE TO BE a wet blanket-but this popularity of his ironical denouements is a DAMN DULL PICTURE! with today's overworked script writers. And Nothing happens! this one is done quite well, if like a good It's not that Friendly Tiger doesn't carry little movie fan you will hang on patiently his end of the deal. He is a fine, big Friendly and credibly through the myriad of incidents Tiger, who does everything his trainer tells that are contrived to get Paul Henreid into him to do. And he doesn't maul anybody theto .Ainaldoen'cornery.dy the final corner. onthe set but the cloth dummies. It's a double identity job, with Paul as the hunted "hero" who encounters his Yes, indeed, he is a fine Tiger. He deserves respectable double and decides to change a big hunk of rare director. character rather than trains the rest of Unfortunately, I can't say as much for his rather perilous life. It ain't easy to Sabu. The Elephant Boy has put on some change lives in middle age, in fact, one of weight since we saw him last, but has not my smaller ambitions is to see it done changed otherwise. In this vehicle, he does outside the cinema, but Paul is smart, oh most of his acting with his big soulful eyes. so smart. This is nice-because he sounds like Peter Neither scars nor brothers nor blondes can Lorre. halt his shifty shift, but secretary Joan Bennett introduces the love element, which The rest of the cast is unimpressively is bigger than both of him. If you have adequate, and the set is crammed full of willingly swallowed all the coincidences and scenic backdrops and potted plants. But contrivances along the way, you will feel nothing happens. It's just a mess of trumped that the end justifies your diet, but Miss up emotion, endless bungling, and misery. Bennett doesn't quite deserve so many tears The camera caught one swell shot of the on her mascara. If here is a typical case it's Tiger looking hungry, which is used and re- a wonder most career girls don't start look- used until one thinks of dinner . . . which ing for a double to move in on. provides a fine excuse to escape. -Gloria Hunter. -Bob White. + MUSIC + Please sign rny- HE NEVER SAW you before aid-from his brusque manner - he apparently cares not whether he ever sees you again. But a numbered page is thrust in front of you with an abrupt "Are you in lit school? Please sign my petition." More often than not, you sign. You haven't the foggiest notion of what he stands for or against, but you've gotten rid of him with no muss, no fuss and very little bother. But in doing so you've helped defeat the very purpose of petitioning: to make sure that the candidate is actually representative of those who have signed his petition. There's no point in being obnoxious about signing. After all, each candidate in the up- coming student elections has to go out on his own and round up from 75 to 150 sig- natures, and he can't oblige every crank who wants an individual ten-minute campaign speech as the price of his signature. So if you know the candidate well enough, directly or indirectly, to think he'd make a good office-holder, by all means sign his petition pronto. But if you've never heard of him before, you might ask him for a one-minute sketch of his background and of what he proposes to do if elected. And, of course, you're well within your rights in simply refusing to sign a petition. If more of us-a lot more of us-had this attitude, we'd eliminate the cavalier care- lessness in handling petitions that has re- sulted in the recent postponement of stu- dent elections, and our ballots wouldn't be quite such a bewildering welter of unknowt names. In short, we'd have a more represen- tative, more responsible student government. -Art Higbee. VD RATHER BE RIGHT: Dec"isi By SAMUEL GRAFTON I DO NOT BELIEVE any great public pas- sion will develop around the question of whether the Republicans are going to ap- point some liberal to be their voice in Con- gress, in place of Senator Taft. A few weeks or months ago, this would have seemed a matter of great importance. The naming of a liberal Republican as party spokesman would have been a great victory for the people. But a dynamic change has taken place as a result of the election. As matters stand now, if the Republicans do not name a liberal spokesman, they will lose out; the people will not lose. It is the Republican, not the popular, future which hangs in balance. If they don't want to do it, they don't want to do it, as the saying goes. And the pop- ulace will not wait for bulletins nor will it shed tears. The choice is entirely up to the GOP. If it prefers to remain in the glue in which it found itself stuck on election day, that is on the whole a private choice of the party bigwigs, invested with only faint, if any public interest. If the Republican liberals, such as Sen- ator Aiken, of Vermont, really wish to transform their party (and I repeat that this is a matter of rather more import- ance to them than to the people) they will have to behave a little bit more as if the iron had entered their souls. For the plain truth is that, regardless of what decision the Republican party takes, whether to have liberal or conservative leadership, the people will not lose. The public is just not on the receiving end any more. And it must be a hard thing, I feel, for the strategists of the GOP to understand this shift that has taken place. For the mistake the Republicans made during the last election was not just the surface one of guessing wrong as to how the totals would come out. It was a mistake of a much deeper order; it was like a mistake in noting which way a stream flows, or a wind blows. It was a mistake in orientation. or years it must have seemed to the GOP that the center of national events lay within its councils, that events moved outward from this center as from a control room, that here the signals were given and the dials twisted to produce the national future. It now turns out that this wasn't the control room at all, that the dials were dummies, that events really flow the other way. What was supposed to be the center of the circle turns out to have been only a point on the circumference. The really woeful figure in the last election was the dogmatic Congressman, full of the certainty that he was telling the world what life was going to be like in years to come, only to find in the end that he wasn't telling anybody anything, but was in fact merely learning of his own fate, by telegraph. And so the question of what sort of lead- ership the Republican party is to have is no longer even a national question; it isa pri- vate question. It may determine what hap- pens to the nation. And it is not altogether a bad principle for a democracy to set up, that, within reasonable limits, a mistake made by a public figure, shall, so far as possible, hurt only himself and nobody else. (Copyright, 1948, New York Post Corporation) A S COMMUNIST strength rises in China, "As A Last Resort We Could Try Decent Government" k' as h J " - , - h i" - " .'J ' umI Ni y.~ V h ;?))y^ [DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily accords its readers the privilege of submitting letters for publication in this column. Subject to space limitations, the general pol- icy is to publish in the order in whichj they are received all letters bearing] the writer's signature and address.- Letters exceeding 300 words, repeti- tious letters and 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. , , , Re: Amherst To the 'Editor: AS A GRADUATE of Amherst . ,College I was interested in your story on the revocation of the charter of the local Phi Kappa Psi chapter there because it pledged a Negro. While not a member of Phi Psi, I know the fellow involved and cannot help but feel that he would be an asset to any group. It is disappointing to find that the Michigan chapter defends the action of the national group, which seemshplainly discrimina- tory. I understand that there are fraternities for Negroes here, and Mr. Tennent seems to feel that this is good reason 'for backing' the national. At Amherst, how- ever, there are no fraternities based" on either race or religion, and a Negro must join a regular fraternity or be an independent. With only about eight Negroes in the College there is no other an- swer. The fact that Michigan has another set-up (whether good or bad) is no reason for prohibiting a Negro in the national frater- nity when the local decided unan- imously that he would make a good member. This is hardly an isolated case since this type of thing has hap- pened at other colleges (the Uni- versity of Vermont, for example). In fact, Phi Kappa Psi is the sec- ond Amherst fraternity since the war to leave the national over questions of race or religion. The other was Delta Tau Delta. The action of the national fraternity is to be condemned as are those who approve such action. Support of discrimination in a case such as this by the supposed future leaders of our nation should cause all Americans to consider what their country's future is to be. -Richard D. Andrews. To the Editor: T HE NERVE of the Amherst chapter of Phi Kappa Psi. Don't you agree with me Mr. Ten- nent? Why should they want to pledge a Negro when there are SPECIAL fraternities for them. Why should a Negro be dissatis- fied with Jim Crow rules when there are special places provided for them. Like the back of a bus, last row in the theatre, the other side of the sidewalk and even the rear door of restaurants. So what if we have lost our con- science, Mr. Tennent, by restrict- ing Phi Kappa Psi. We can always rationalize. -George Krell. Serenades To the Editor: MOST OF THE East Quad men more-or-less enjoy serenading, and on behalf of our less-appre- ciatives we apologize for past dis- turbances. However, perhaps the decrease in appreciation has been caused by an increased amount of off- the-cuff caterwauling by wander- ing groups that has several times gone on all night. Two discourtesies add up to nothing but discourtesy, however. Caterwauling, no. Serenading, yes. We'll attempt to improve things here. -Frank Whitehouse: * * * f * 4 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 Presient, Room 1021 Angell Hal, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Satur- days.) , Notices FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1948 VOL. LIX, No. 51 "Messiah" Stand-in Quartet Tryonts: Members of the Choral Union who desire to try out for the stand-in solo parts for the "Messiah" performances, will please confer with Conductor Les- ter McCoy in Room 111, rear of Hill Auditorium; or make appoint- ments at the offices of the Uni- versity Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. Over the Thanksgiving Holiday women students will have 12:30 permission on Nov. 24 and 11 p.m. on Nov. 25. Football-game broadcast par- ties for the Ohio State game have been authorized for Sat., Nov. 20, from 2-5 p.m. for the following houses: Acacia, Alpha Kappa Psi, Del- ta Kappa Epsilon, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Psi Upsilon, Sigma Chi, Theta Delta Chi, Win- chell House. Students intending to apply for admission to the College of Liter, ature, Science, and the Arts, for the Spring Semester on transfer from any other school on campus must have their applications and all necessary transcripts on file in the Office of Admissions with Ad- vanced Standing, 1209 Angell Hall, on or before January 1, 1949. Women Students wishing to be away Thursday night, Nov. 25, must secure permission from the Office of the Dean of Women. Housemothers may grant over- night permission for Wed., Nov. 24. Approved social events for the coming weekend: November 19 Deutscher Verein, East Quad, Jordan Hall, Phi Sigma Delta, Stockwell Hall. November 20 Adelia Cheever House, Alpha Delta Phi, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Alpha Sigma Phi, Beta Theta Pi, Delta Sigma Delta, Delta Tau Delta, Hillel Foundation, Lloyd House, Michigan Christian Fel- lowship, Phi Kappa Psi, Philip- pine-Michigan Club, Phi Sigma Kappa, Stevens House, Theta Delta Chi, Theta Xi, Triangle, Winchell House, Zeta Psi November 21 West Lodge Dorm 8 Mr. W. H. Nance, of North American Aviation, Los Angeles, California, will be here Nov. 23 to interview Aeronautical, Mechani- cal and Civil Engineering grad- uates in the February class (B.S. and M.S.). Obtain application forms from Rm. 1079 E. E. Bldg. The Public Schools of the Dis- trict of Columbia, announces ex- aminations for licenses to teach in the District's schools. Examina- tions in several elementary and secondary fields will be given Dec. 15-17. For further information, call at the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 201 Mason Hall. Lectures University Lecture: Dr. Fran- cisco Curt Lange, Director of the Instituto Interamericano de Mu- sicologia, Montevideo, Uruguay, 8 p.m., Mon., Nov. 22, Rackham Lecture Hall. Sponsored by the School of Music, the Department of Romance Languages and the Latin-American Student Society, the lecture on "The Evolution of Latin-American Primitive, Folk, Popular, and Art Music," will be open to the general public. Fol- lowing the lecture Dr. Lange will be guest of honor at a public re- ception at the International Cen- ter. Economics Lecture: Dr. David McCord Wright, professor of eco- nomics and lecturer in law at the University of Virginia, will speak on "Freedom and the Administra- tive State,"kTues., Nov. 23, 4:15 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre; auspices of the Department of Eco- nomics. The public is invited. John Mason Brown, noted critic, author and lecturer will speak to- night at 8:30 p.m. in Hill Audi- torium as the third number on the 1948-49 Lecture Course. Tick- ets may be purchased today from 10 a.m.-8:30 p.m. in the audito- rium box office. Economics Club Lectwe: Dr. David McCord Wright, professor cf economics and lecturer in law at the University of Virginia, will speak on "Toward a Coherent Anti-Trust Policy," Mon., Nov. 22, 7:45 p.m., Kellogg Auditorium. Note change from the usual meet- ing place. The public is invited. Sigma XI: Dr. Joseph Kaplan, national lecturer, will speak on the topic "The Upper Atmosphere of the Earth," Rackham Amphi- theatre, Mon., Nov. 22, 8 p.m. This meeting is open to the public. Academic Notices Biological Chemistry Seminar: 4 p.m., Fri., Nov. 19, Rm. 319 W. Medical Bldg. Subject: "Growth Factors Associated with Protein- Strepogenin and the Animal Pro- tein Factor (Vitamin B12?)." All interested are invited. Exhibitions Elements of Design from the Museum of Modern Art, New York; through Dec. 3, Lobby, Architec- tural Bldg. Events Today History Department Tea 4-6 p.m. p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall for faculty and graduate students of the department. Faculty and stu- dents' wives are cordially invited. Hawaii Club: Meeting, 7 p.m., Rm. 3A, Michigan Union. .Student Religious Associatio) Coffee Hour: 4:30 p.m., Lane Hall. Wesleyan Guild: Daniel Boone party, 8:45 p.m., Social Hall, First Methodist Church. Letters to the Editor ... Roger Williams Guild: "Open House" 8:30 p.m., Guild House. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation: Sabbath Evening Services, 7:45 p.m. fQllowed by a talk on "The Undergraduate and Social Respon- sibility" by Dr. Roger Heynes of the Psychology Dept., 8:30 p.m. Delta Epsilon Pi, Hellenic Club: Finail n ieating before the Conven- tion to beheld Thanksgiving week- end In Ann Arbor, 7 p.m., Rm. 3-B Michigan Union. All students of Greek descent and Phil-Hellenes are invited. Art Cinema League presents Charlie Chaplin's burlesque on "Carmen" and "The Ghost Goes West" at 8:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday, Lydia Mendelssohn Mendelssdhn Theatre. All seats reserved;, phone 6300. Coming Events Gallery Talk, by Prof. Jean Paul Slusser, Director of the Museum of Art, on Contemporary Paint- ings from the Albright Art Gal- lery; Museum of Art, Alumni Me- morial Hall, 3:30 p.m., Sun., Nov. 21. The public is invited. Graduate Outing Club meet Sun., Nov. 21, northwest entrance, Rackham Building for ice-skating. Sign supper list at Rackham checkroom desk before noon Sat- urday. All graduates welcome. Hiawatha Club: Meeting, Mon., Nov. 22, 7:30 p.m., Kalamazoo Room, Michigan League. All stu- dents from the Upper Peninsula are urged to attend. Inter-Guild Council: Lane Hall, Sun., Nov. 21, 2:30-4 p.m. Agenda: the reorientation of policy. I.Z.F.A.: Regional Seminar, Nov. 26 through Nov. 28. For infor- mation and reservations call John Hofman 2-7786. Hillel Foundation: Dogpatch Stomp, Sat., Nov. 20, 8-12 p.m. Blue Jeans. Members free. Fifty-Ninth Year 1 To the Editor: TO THE residents of 1108 Hill and surrounding sororities: Congratulations to your recent- ly pinned sister.'We of East Quad are so heavenly pleased! And we too glory in the ivy-covered tradi- tions that prevail between frats and sats. But gods of Olympus! Must we be subjected to "beauti- fully sung music" at one and two o'clock in the morning? (And, yea, sometimes at three!) Be reason- able, oh ye fun-loving sorors. We at the Quad are here primarily-- believe it or not-to attend classes at the University of Michigan. And somehow being roused from study or sleep in the. wee hours of the morn by a group of well- meaning frat boys 'is no pleasant occurrence. And let me add that on more than one occasion have we been disturbed at 3 a.m. by a group of drunken students making sad attempts at serenading you lovely damsels. Please girls, give us a break. Let us sleep. Let us study. By all means have your fun, your gay times, your joyous tradi- tions, but let's limit them to week- ends, or at least conclude them by midnight on weekdays. Hmmm? -Martin Lee, Carlas Meding, and Other East Quad Residents. H ARRY S. TRUMAN appears to be more indebted to the farmer than to labor for, his elec- tion to the Presidency. Without the aid of the farmer, labor was able to give the electoral votes of only two states-Rhode Island and Massachusetts to Mr. Tru- man. -U.S. News. E 1 Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harriett Friedman ...Managing Editor Dick Maloy ................City Editor Naomi Stern.......Editorial Directo Allegra Pasqualetti ... .Associate Editor Arthur Higbee ........Associate Editor Murray Grant.........Sports Editor Bud Weidenthal ..Associate Sports Ed. Bev Bussey ......Sports Feature Writer Audrey Buttery........Women's Editor Bess Hayes ..................Librarian 1$usiness Staff Richard Halt......Business Manages Jean Leonard ....Advertising Manager William Culman .....Finance Manager Cole Christian ....Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reerved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class matl matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, X6.00. ., EZIO PINZA sang last night before a large and wildly enthusiastic audience. Becoming increasingly dependent upon his prepossessing appearance and his beautiful enunciation of Italian to carry him through his repertoire, Pinza uses mezzo-voce much more frequently than he has in the past, and frequently quite unjustifiably. Thus, when he interjected it for no apparent reason in Randall Thompson's "The Velvet Shoes" he marred a good interpretation. The same difficulty arose earlier in the program, when he sang two songs similar in subject, Da Gigliano's "Dormi, amore" from Floridante and a Pasquini aria. The first was an ex- come Mr. Pinza's standard interpretation, and while it may be highly amusing, leaves much to be desired musically. His mugging, however, was extremely successful in con- veying Legrenzi's "Che fiero costume" (which is just as enjoyable when sung ar- tistically) and the three Piedmontese folk- songs arranged by Sinigaglia. Most of Mr. Pinza's best efforts were in non-Italian music, since he then frequently has to consider the music. Faure's "La prison" and Forsyth's "The Bell Man" were rewarding, because Mr. Pinza, after due con- sideration of the works, emerged with an understanding and effective interpretation. BARNABY I The floor of the room disintegrated 1 from under you? You were-doused by invisible water? And hit by a brick x It won't be easy to drive a malicious Ghost like that out of your house, Mr. Merrie. As I told the reporters, he'll be'very-tenacious! If Mr. Morrie had only just TOLD me (j he didn't want me here! ... Goodbye-