PAGiE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, XOVElfttlt 2$, 194 Speakers Ban H ALL the divergent opinion express- ed about most issues that the campus gets involved in, there is one area where al- most everybody agrees. That is in opposition to the Regents' Ban on political speakers. This whole year has been devoted to petition drives pro- testing the restriction, the formulation of committees to fight the ban, and sugges- tions for getting around the limitations placed on students by the Regents. Throughout the year, the Student Legis- lature has constantly fought for the lifting of the ban, by passing motions against it, by supporting the actions of the Committee Against the Ban, and by working on the proposal to form the Oxford Union where freedom of debate would be allowed. At present, the SL cabinet is formulat- ing a proposal which will be presented to the Regents at their next meeting in December. The plan will, request lifting Editorials published in The Michigan Daily ire written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: DON McNEIL of the ban. SL has done as much as any organization, with the possible exception of the CAB, to keep the fight against the ban at a high pitch. The membership of the Legislature which will hold its next regular meeting in two weeks will not be the same as that which has consistently protested the Regents' rul- ing, because of the coming campus elections. To insure that the next legislature will continue the fight, the student body must elect representatives who are pledged to that purpose. It is your responsibility to elect represen- tatives who will stand up for your rights. Tuesday morning, the first day of elec- tion, The Daily will publish the statements of the candidates for SL office. One of the questions that is asked of the candidates is, "If elected, would you take an active part in working on the lift- ing of the political ban." It is in the best interests of the student body that the fight against the ban be con- tinued. Therefore, it is only common sense to cast your ballot for those candidates who have pledged themselves to fight the re- strictions on free expression and discussion set up by the Regents. I -Al Blumrosen i O HAPPENS... " Turkey Soup Immortality... CHORAL UNION PROGRAMS list most performers by first and last name, but Jascha Heifetz is catalogued, simply and starkly, by his last name only. Thus, in its own sober and unobtrusive way, has the Choral Union bestowed upon the not- ed violinist the mantle of greatness. Chewed Nails.. .. A BUDDY of ours has been seeking 10 these many moons to establish rapport with a certain lovely blonde. He's glimpsed her several times on campus but still doesn't even know her name. And, ever mindful of the amenities of civilized college life, he dares not introduce himself. "Some things," he argues with in- controvertible logic, "are just not done, al- beit one's heart is breaking." MATTER OF FACT: aGood Newvs By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP HE DECISION is now apparently up to Secretary Marshall. If he yields to the President's urging to stay on at the State Department, it seems likely that the high command of our foreign and defense policy, including Under-Secretary of State Robert A. Lovett and Secretary of Defense James V. Forrestal, will remain unchanged. But Mar- shall is known to be intensely anxious to lay down the gigantic burdens he has borne for so long. And if he will not consent to withdraw his resignation, changes may be in order all along the line. Such is the simplest way to state the uncertainties of the situation as it is re- liably reported to stand after the Presi- dent's meeting with the Secretary. From this meeting, however, has emerged cer- tainty on a very different kind of point, that is perhaps almost as important as the staffing of the second Truman adminis- tration. There is of course not a word of truth in the innumerable stories that Lovett has spoken slightingly of the President, that Secretary Forrestal refused to contribute to the Democratic National Committee,. and so on. The sources of these stories either aspire to Lovett's and Forrestal's offices, or wish to see them replaced by more pliable officials, or desire to undermine the bi- partisan foreign policy. At Key West, the President was there- fore urged to pass over Dulles, and to name Mrs. Roosevelt or some other dele- gate to replace Marshall. But he did not hesitate. He saw at once that larger issues were involved, and re-asserted American unity by naming Dulles. On the other hand, if Secretary Marshall will not forego his hoped-for retirement, even for ,a few months, the whole question of the foreign and defense high command will still be open. The President must also solve the problem of injecting badly needed energy and progressivism into the domestic side of his administration (by the simple expedient of appointing a few officials who genuinely agree with his own announced views). And while the news of Truman's mood is good, the future of the second Tru- man administration will remain in doubt until its makeup has been officially deter- mined. Copyright, 1948, New York Herald Tribune, Inc. CHIEF JUSTICE Fred M. Vinson is the latest of the persons to bob up in Wash- ington speculation as a probable new secre- tary of state. The suggestion is not one to inspire enthusiasm. Vinson has some undoubted talents. He was a shrewd and capable legislator, an ef- ficient administrator. But as chief justice hi 1nohannt hr. ,nynnaaa . . w __t- The other day, with his eyeballs peeled and his heart in his mouth, he saw her again. Only for an instant, for she quickly melted into the throng, but long enough for him to absorb the bitter irony of the motto emblazoned on her gaily-printed kerchief: "Cherchez la femme." Surprise!.. . A COUPLE of our more vaguely intel- lectual friends were all set to trip downtown for an evening of arty cinema, when a kindly someone informed them that the currently-featured "The Counter- feiters" is, to quote the ad, a thrill-pack- ed tale of "U.S. Secret Service and Scot- land Yard on the Job," and not, as they had supposed, the film version of Andre Gide's famous novel. * * *, They Got Told .. STUDENTS of high finance and business administration must occasionally shud- der to realize that the daffy coeds who dec- orate the Diagonal today will be the house- wife and their future customers of tomor- row. Take for example the large-eyed senior and -the systematic wary she solved ,her ac- counting problems. "I wrote so many bad. checks that I just got good and mad at that old bank and withdrew all my money," she explains. * * * Who, Me?... OVERHEARD ON THE Library steps: "Oh, he's not a hard guy to have a good time with. He's just a hard guy to have a good opinion of." Reactionary ... A LOT OF PEOPLE want to escape, now- adays, but we think that it can be car- ried too far. We refer to the subscription blank we found the other day on one of our noted professor's desks-to the "Renais- sance News." On Headstands WITH THE ZEAL of a Tuesday afternoon women's club campus pseudo-sophisti- cates have raised their battle cry against a proposal to revive school spirit. These embryo Calvin Coolidges rail against such horrendous evils as freshman "pots," tugs of war and competitive talent shows. As a result of the suggested soph-frosh rivalry they foresee scholars scurrying: 1. To the Health Service for the repair of mangled appendages and deranged fea- tures. 2. Away from lectures and other cultural projects. 3. Not any further than their thresholds on student election days. The more temperate of this faction mere- ly mutter, Gibbon-like, about the decline and fall of an educational empire. Many will doubtless be surprised to learn that this monster which so ominously threatens our cultural existence is merely one week in the fall set aside for construc- tive rivalry between the freshmen and sopho- more classes. Student Legislator Bill Gripman ex- plains that the plan which he will submit to the Student Affairs Committee for ap- proval is designed to revitalize lethargic school spirit by acquainting incoming freshmen with all the aspects of campus life. The "pots," tug of war and vaudeville competition, while providing amusement and an outlet for excess energy, are mere- ly the means to a greater end - the reviv- al of constructive school spirit. Gripman wants no repetition of the cur- rent peitition imbroglio, nor the fiasco of a few weeks ago when a cheerleader and a brass band could induce only 65 students to see the nation's number one team off to Minnesota. He envisions the day when or- ganized classes will lend greater spirit to all campus activities from football to student elections and worthy fund drives. The wholesale campus support of the Marching Band for the Ohio trip is proof that there are at least a few spirited un- dercurrents in our "utilitarian" campus society. The over-matured veteran with no time for anything but sophisticated pursuits befitting his exalted position is the vanishing American of today's college campus. The time has come for the revival of the constructive type of school spirit which contributes so much to a well- rounded education. As for the present staid dissenters, they must realize that there is such a thing -as taking oneself too seriously. Someday with the wisdom which is regrettably acquired only too often with age, they will realize that self-righteous pompousness has cheat- ed them out of half the joy of youth. Lewis Carroll's Father William was trying to remedy the same shortcoming of his youth when he explained, while practicing a head- stand: "In my youth," Father William replied to his son, "I feared it might injure the brain But now that I'm perfectly sure I have none, Why I do it again and again." Those college students who are so serious- minded that they cannot let their hair down for one week a year for such a worthy cause, belong on an educational conveyor belt and not on a campus. -Dave Thomas World Morals IN WHAT may be an understatement, UN officials have termed the World Bill of Rights, now nearing completion, as "one of the great landmarks of civilization." This document will mean that every hu- man being, from the curly-headed kid down the block to an aged, sthrving Chi- nese can lay his hands on something con- crete and say "these are my personal rights and freedoms." Undeniable personal freedom is a rather simple concept which has taken only a few thousand years to get international ap- proval. In more specific, if hackneyed, terms, it is vital to point out that here is a place where all the nations have gotten together and found something so supreme and funda- mental that they could not help but reach some agreement on it even though bitter ideological battles stood in the way. Concepts from the American, British, French, Russian and Oriental constitu- tions and cultures have been thrown in one cauldron to mold the precious docu- ment. At its beginning, the World Bill of Rights will have only moral authority, and only in respect to the individual. Thus, while it will be morally wrong for any government to persecute an individ- ual for his religious beliefs or race, nothing is mentioned concerning the moral impli- cations of a nation's helping itself to a portion of its neighbor's territory, even if It does so in the name of the new Bill of Rights. This point is raised not to criticize the document but merely to indicate that fur- ther work in international morals remains to be done. Work on the present Bill was begun two years ago by an 18-nation human rights commission under the command of Mrs. . Franklin D. Roosevelt. Next, earlier this year, the declaration was brought before the ,8-nantin TN nocial conmittee for final "Birds an' bees I know. Teach me seven card stud." DAILY -tOFFICIAL BULETIN, BILL MAULDIN Council of Churches will speak on ecumenical movement. Lutheran Student Association: Choir Rehearsal, Zion Parish Hall, 4:30 p.m. Supper meeting, 5:30 p.m., student participation pro- gram. Coming Events Women's Research Club: 8 p.m., Mon., Nov. 29, Rackham Amphi-, theatre. Dr. Louise Cuyler will -peak on "Problems in Transcrib- ing 16th-Century Music." Intro- duction of new members. The D eailyaccords tsreadersthe privilege of submitting letters for publication in this column. Subject 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 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. Only Aims To the Editor: TO THE "WHEELS" of Michi- gan: Your altruistic aims of voting only for the best man, re- gardless of affiliation, are excel- lent. But they are only aims. For instance, exactly where do we learn whether the candidates are good or bad. From their state- ments in The Daily-ridiculous; from personal contact-certainly not feasible. The only source of information left seems to ber he aim of the organization or group supporting the candidate. So far you have given us no- thing conclusive to aid us in using our vote, that is besides guessing Letters to the Editor which man is best. How many of you gentlemen in the Student Legislature, who are writing these letters, got into office solely on your own? How many of you re- fused independent or fraternity support? Yes, the idea is good-but give us some method to work it. Maybe, the Student Legislature can show enough interest to print a list of their candidates' views and qual- ifications in an unbiased state- ment. But for Heaven's sake, don't tell us to vote for the best man-we don't know who he is. -George Meyer, Robert Lamb, and others Religion Attack To the Editor: . PARNELL THOMAS and his Un-Americans have now at- tacked the Church. They throw up their usual blind and spream that Communists want to use the churches for subversive purposes. But don't let them fool you. In many cases the churches in America lead the fight for equal- ity and for peace . . . against the peacetime draft, for the abolition of Jim Crow and discrimination, for international understanding. This is in the beat tradition of the Judeo-Christian principles of brotherhood. But br the estab- lished criteria of Parnell Thomas and John Rankin, leading lights of the committee, this is :,dbver- sive. In other words, if the churches take a progressive stand, counter. to the beliefs of the Un-American Committee . . . blame the Comn- munists. The only kind of church the committee will sanction is one which believes in the kind of Americanism (or Un-American- ism) Rankin and Thomas them- selves stand for. And what will be the effect of the attack? How many people connected with religious institu- tions will now hesitate and per- haps decline to work for the pro- gressive objectives in the fear that they will be placed on the Thomas- Rankin list? This fear is not a static thing. It is a growing pattern which be- gan with the first attacks by the Un-Americans against the Com- munists. It now envelops all Amer- icans. It is a part of the same pattern that brings to trial 12 Communist leaders for teaching and advocating the principles of Marxism-Leninism. Can it be that the trials will be extended to in- clude all who teach and advocate the principles of Christianity and the brotherhood of man? In a free America there is no place for fear. We must demand the abolition of the Committee with its inquisitorial methods. -Alfred Millstein (Continued from Page 2) Building. Sign interview schedule posted outside the same office. Bureau of Appointments an- nounces the following interviews for February graduates: December 1. The U.S. Rubber Co. will have a representative here to interview candidates for positions as junior credit men, sales correspondent, production control, accountants, office methods, sales production coordination, footwear salesmen, production, industrial engineers, chemists or chemical engineers, and mechanical engineers. The J. L. Hudson Company will have a representative here to in- terview men and women for their executive training program. December 3. The American Sugar Refining Co. will have a representative here to interview primarily for accoun- tants and a few positions in sales. The General Electric Co. will have a representative here to in- terview men for their business training program, including such positions as personnel, employee relations, production, and market research. Further information and ap- pointments may be obtained at 201 Mason Hall by calling Ext. 371. University Community Center Willow Village Sun., Nov. 28, 10:45 a.m., Inter- denominational church' program: church service, followed by coffee hour. Nursery; 4:30 p.m., Discussion; 5:30 p.m., Pot-luck supper. Mon., Nov. 28, 8 p.m., Sewing class; Art Group-business meet- ing. Tues., Nov. 30, 8 p.m., Bridge night. Everyone welcome. Sat., Dec. 4, 8 p.m., Faculty Wives' party for members and hus- band Lectures The William W. Cook Lectures on American Institutions. Fifth series, "Characteristically Ameri- can." First lecture, "The American Cast of Mind." Dr. Ralph Barton Perry, Emeritus Professor of Phil- losophy, Harvard University. 8 p.m., Mon., Nov. 29, Rackham Lec- ture Hall. A cademic Notices English 149 (Advanced Play- writing) will meet in Rm. 2019 Angell Hall, Tues., Nov. 30. Mathematics Colloquium: 4 p.m. Mon., Nov. 29, Rm. 3201 Angell Hall. Dr. Dorothy Maharem Stone, University of Manchester, will speak on "The Representation of Abstract Valued Measure Func- tions." Orientation Seminar: Mr. Charles Carr will discuss The Ir- rationality of Pi on Mon., Nov. 28, 2 p.m., Rm. 3001 Angell Hall. Physical Chemistry Seminar: 4:07 p.m., Wed., Dec. 1, Rm. 303 Chemistry Bldg. Mr. Larry Bartell will discuss "The Rotating Sector in Electron Diffraction." Political Science 366 will meet Nov. 30. Concerts Student Recital: Emil Raab, student of violin under Gilbert Ross and concertmaster of the University Symphony, will pre- sent a recital at 8:30 p.m., Mon., Nov. 29, Rackham Assembly Hall, in partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the degree of Mas- ter of Music. The program, open to the public, will include compo- sition by Locatelli, Bach, Ives, and Lalo. Student Recital: Patricia Shields DeLoof, organist, will present 'a program at 4:15 p.m., Tues., Nov. 30, Hill Auditorium, in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music. It will include compositions by Clerambault, D'Aquin, Bach, Wi- dor, Clokey, and Vierne, and will' be open to the general public. Mrs. DeLoof is a pupil of Frederick Marriott. Student Recital: Marie Haefli- ger, pianist, will be heard in a re- cital at 8:30 p.m., Tues., Nov. 30; Rackham Assembly Hall. A pupil of Joseph Brinkman, Miss Haefli- ger will play Bach's Toccata in D Major, Schubert's Sonata in E-flat Major, Op. 122, Brahms' Varia- tions on an Original Theme, in D Major, and Ravel's Le Tombeau de Couperin. Presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree, the recital will be open to the public. Events Today Gilbert and Sullivan Society: Full rehearsal with orchestra for all chorus members and princi- pals, 2 p.m., Pattengill Auditorium (Ann Arbor High School). Ticket sales to cast members. U. of M. Hot Record Society: 8 p.m., Michigan League Ballroom. Program on "The Revival of New Orleans Style Jazz." Every- one is invited. UI.W.F.: Informal discussion, 7:30 p.m., Kalamazoo Room, Mich- igan League. Everybody welcome. Student Religious Groups: Evangelical and Reformed Stu- dent Guild: Supper meeting, 5:30 p.m. Wesleyan Guild: Meeting, 5:30 p.m. Fred Kraye, recently return- ed from Germany, will speak on "Others' Needs Now." Supper and fellowship, 6:30 p.m. Congregational-Disciples Guild: Supper, 6:00 p.m., Congregational Church. Rev. William Henderson, Presbyterian Student Work Direc- tor will speak on "Fundamentals of Christianity." Unitarian Student Group: 6:30 p.m. Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stu- , dent Club: Supper and program, 5:30 p.m. Roger Williams Guild: Dinner, fellowship and program, 6 p.m., Guild House. Mrs. Andresen, Ex- ecutive Secretary of Ann Arbor Graduate Education Club: iness meeting, Tues., 4:15 Elementary School Lounge. dents and faculty invited. Bus- p.m., Stu- Movies, presented by Phi Lamb- da Upsilon for chemistry and chemical engineering students, Tues., Nov. 30, 4:15 p.m., Rm. 1400 Chemistry Bldg. Movies: 1) Colloids, 2) Magnesium Metal from the Sea, and 3) Oxidation- Reduction. Chemistry and chemical engi- neering undergraduate students in- terested in forming an American Chemical Society affiliate chapter are invited to meet with Prof. Peter A. S. Smith, Rm. 1400 Chem- istry Bldg., 4:15 p.m., Tues., Nov. 30. Tan Kappa Epsilon: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Mon., Nov. 29, Michigan Union. Le Cercle Francais: Meeting 8 p.m., Tues., Nov. 30, Hussey Room, Michigan League.* Songs and games. All members are re- quested to attend as the group picture for the ~Michiganensian will be taken. La p'tite Mon., Grill gue. causette: 3:30 p.m., Room, Michigan Lea- MUSIC Clifford Curzon opened his program last night with Haydn's Andante and Variations in F minor, and made it evident immediately that he is not only a pianist with tremen- dous technical profficiency but also an in- terpretive artist of the first order. The clar- ity and crispness necessary to bring out the sparkling mock-seriousness in which the va- riations are steeped were supplemented by exquisite tone graduations to give the work a rarely heard balance and charm. Mr. Curzon next turned to Beethoven's Rondo a Capriccio (the rage over a lost penny) and played it in a tempo consid- erably faster than is usual. This was com- pletely effective in heightening the "rage," and the disappearance of the wisp of a fugue near the end was an additional humorous touch that was most welcome. Schumann's Sonata in G minor, op. 22, increased admiration for Mr. Curzon's play- ing. In this sonata he showed his true lyri- cal ability. In the legato Andantino, when his expression of feeling was limited by good taste, the sentiment was never overbearing. The last movement of the sonata brought this out even more clearly, when the presto and the slower lyrical section alternated to increase the contrast and reinforce the bal- ance between technique and expression. If there were any remaining doubts about Mr. Curzon, they were completely dispelled in the Four Impromptus, op. 90, of Schubert. Mr. Curzon played with a great range feeling and wonderful pre- Sociedad Hispanica: Social hour, 4-5 p.m, Mon., Nov. 29, Interna- tional Center. Sigma- Rho Tau, Engineering Speaking Society: 7 p.m., Tues., Nov. 30, Rm. 2084 E. Engineering Bldg. The first round in a series of tournament debates between the various circles within the or- ganization will be featured. All members will participate with the finalists squaring off two weeks hence. Topic for debate: "Resolv- ed: That the Taf t-Hartley Law Should Be Repealed." The public is invited. U. of M. Young Republicans: 7:30 p.m., Tues., Michigan Union. Student Religious Association: Mon., Nov. 29. Easy Chair Grout: 7:30 p.m., Lane Hall, Fireplace Room. Dis- cussion of "Preservation of Wild Life.". Student Peace Fellowship: Meet- ing, 7 p.m., Lounge, Lane Hall. Weekly Bull Session: 7:30 p.m., Lane Hall. United World Federalists: Exec- utive Council Meeting, 4:15 p.m., Mon., Nov. 29, Michigan Union. Written committee reports re- quested. General Meeting, Wed., Dec. 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 Director 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 Business Staf Richard Halt.......Business Manager 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 otherwisen credited to this newspnaper., Fifty-Ninth Year All rights of republication of all other U. of M. Dames Interior Deco- matters herein are also reserved. rating Group will meet at 8 p.M., Entered at the Post Office at Ann Tues.,GNo. 30, et Conferen., Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail Tues., Nov. 30, West Conference matter. Room, Rackham Bldg. Mr. Harold subscription turing the regular Barrett, owner of the House of school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail Beautiful Furniture, Ann Arbor, *e.00. will speak on "Floor Coverings." BARNABY The Swami can't get rid of Gus with this old magic stuff, can he, Mr. O'Malley? Well. No. Its effect can be only cr~fi: Dear! The Swami did dace that potted mandrake in a bad place. But I don't want to irritate him- j Gus! Your attitude toward