PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY', 1FFABU Air Disguised Discrimination? NIGHT THE Ann Arbor City Council will go to bat on an issue which may well decide the fate of several student housing groups-the proposed "Double A" zoning restriction. 'Under this plan all campus clubs, re- ligious groups, League houses and affili- ated groups would be prohibited from building new houses in the area bounded by Hill St. on the south and Oxford Rd. on the west. On the surface the proposal seems to have some merit. It is true that such houses occupied by University students have al- ways been frowned upon by local residents, partly because of the noise and late hours kept by students and partly because it is claimed that such residences tend to lower the value of the surrounding properties. But a closer scrutiny reveals that some of these arguments do not hold water. Although student groups who had planned to build in the area would possibly cause some dis- turbance, the land on which they propose to build new homes is generally concentrated in one small area which is fairly well iso- lated from private homes. It should also be pointed out that in areas where League Houses, fraternities and sororities are already located, the value of the surrounding property has not fallen. In several instances it has ac- tually risen, according to some local real estate men. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: FREDRICA WINTERS An even nastier rumor as to the motives behind the proposed ordinance has been re- ported. According to some sources, the plan is distinctly aimed at various religious groups such as the Hillel Foundation who might possibly plan to build student homes in the area at some future date. Clothed in the very respectable dress of an attempt to protect the property rights of individual land owners, the ordinance might conceivably be an attempt by a group of bigoted individuals to discriminate against minority racial and religious groups. The constitutionality of such a move would certainly deserve careful scrutiny. But regardless of the motives behind it, the ordinance is unfair in other respects. At least two fraternities are definitely known to have purchased future building sites in the restricted region, which, if the new rul- ing is passed, would be completely useless to them. It is argued by proponents of the ordi- nance that student groups should expand their housing facilities in an area closer to the campus-nearer to the center of ac- tivities. This, of course, is to be highly desired. But exactly where, might we ask, should they expand? Nearly all of the land in the vicinity of the campus is already filled or owned by the University and very few student groups could afford to tear down existing buildings and -con- struct new ones. If the ordinance is passed, a number of existing student groups face a dismal fu- ture. A future crammed into one small, over crowded area. And for some groups who as yet do not have houses, there isn't much of a future at all. --Jim Brown Edifice Complex SAN FRANCISCANS have at last hit upon a way to beat the infamous California fog: They might rebuild their city-above it. A San Francisco architect has finished preliminary plans for a building a mile high, a celestial structure that would con- tain living quarters for 400,000 persons, 1,000 stores, 50 schools, 50 theatres, 20 churches and a museum. Though the building might solve many a housing problem, Mayor Elmer E. Robin- son refused to comment on its possibilities, and the architect sadly admitted that his dream structure would probably never ma- terialize. Just what life in the mile high city would be like is hard to imagine. Very probably, some of its inhabitants would pass their lives never once stepping out of the third dimension. The busy executive will rise in the morning, walk a few steps into the hall, press a button and zzip!-step into a small, de-pressurized cubicle. "Market Story," he would say to the hack operator, and in a few minutes he would be in the midst of the financial district, 400 floors above the ground. In the evening, Busy Executive could ride an omnielevator to Central Park, up on the 20th floor, or drop down to the restaurant district on the strato-cumulous level. Life for inmates of the building would be- come only a series of ups and downs, though, complicated by the peculiar problems of the Skyscraper Age. What if the elevator operators struck? What third floor businessman would think of climbing each day to his 400th story office? And what about the 10,000 m.p.h. rockets? Say the pilot of the New York-San Francisco express leveled off to land at a mile instead of a mile and a half. Residents of the top stories would have to accustom themselves to a gentle swaying when the winds were strong. Skyscraper sickness would be a common ailment. Little children would grow up with a sort of curious attachment for the build- ing-what psychiatrists would probably call an edifice complex. And at the thought of another San Fran- cisco earthquake, we shudder. No-give us the wide open spaces of New York, Detroit, and conventional cities. Man was never made for such high living. -George Walker. The Little Foxes That Spoil The Vines CIO S 1 gi- DOAL ~( o: . T~(\71 ~ (Continued from Page 2) AMA Propaganda Letters to the Editor - IF ONE LISTENS long and deeply to the propaganda of the American Medical As- sociation, he is liable to develop insomnia nights because of the fear of impending dictatorship in the United States. He is told that if the Murray-Dingell bill passes we will have "Socialized" med- icine. (Quotes around Socialized for em- phasis) They expect, of course, that all the bogey man stories we've heard since childhood about Socialism will be enough to scare us out of two weeks growth and Mr. Dingell out of too many votes. But right here at Michigan we have a very good example of the way in which the Murray Dingell Bill will work-the Univer- sity Health Center. You'll hear all kinds of jokes about Health Service especially from people who've never been there, but when the humor is tossed aside you find a smooth working organiza- tion which keeps more people on their feet than the' average doctor manages to do. As for the Socialistic threat, we can't help noting that among those who have decided to rely on the old family doctor for medical care there hasn't been a one of them compelled to attend our local health group. That leaves the prerogative pretty much with the students, as the Dingell Bill would. do with the people. You WON'T HAVE to go to a Socialized lhalth center for care. You won't even be thrown in a concentration camp for not doing so. When it comes right down to it, the AMA hasn't been able to find any real grounds on which to base their fight. They are so unsure about that fight in fact, that a lot of the local groups are having trouble getting the doctors to contribute $25 dollars to the propaganda fund-an indication that perhaps not all of our MD's are with their organization in this drive. It is going to take a lot more than cliches to keep the poorer class families which have seen their children die of Tuber- culosis, their fathers of heart trouble and their mothers of cancer, from backing an effort to give them security at least from the bodily troubles of this old world of ours. We wonder if bureaucracy will be any worse than the AMA faux pas of last week in announcing an Ann Arbor death by salt poisoning and scaring half the local lithium chloride users out of their wits, when no death was known and the AMA didn't even have the name of the doctor who reported it. -Don McNeil. ART 5 d I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: A If LA a -fIr p By SAMUEL GRtAITON MENTIONED BEFORE this Navy veteran who lives, with his wife and two children on the fourth floor of a lower East Side tenement. Their rent is $'18 a month. But the poor get only expensive bargains. This man doesn't want to spend $18 for a vermi- nous flat; he would like to spend $43 in a housing project. The difference in rent would be made up, in part, by the fact that he wouldn't have to buy ice for an old ice- box, and that electricity and gas would be thrown in. Most of all, he says, he would feel more like coming home at night, and sitting in the place, and having friends over, which aspirations, do not seem to him un- reasonable on an income of $60 a week. But he can't get a sixty-dollar living standard for his sixty-dollars. It isn't for sale. The result is that for the last three years he has been forced to live in his eighteen-dollar bargain which isn't a bar- gain. He is rather bewildered by the fact that at $60 a week in New York a man can look up from his radio of an evening to see a parade of mice, and maybe rats, cross- ing his living room floor. $ * * The apartment is indescribable, so I won't describe it, except to say that it is so small you don't believe it, and that everything in it has peeled and flaked to so dingy a uniformity that it is a little hard to tell where the walls end and where the floors and ceilings begin. The rooms seem to have lost their square shape, in sheer decay. One child, a boy of not quite two, spends his time climbing, up bedposts, on tables, chairs, even the walls; never having had enough space in which to Jearn to play horizontally IA . -GdA.r 11 .A ! d. 141 ..1ed in Ill a~ ber - a feeling that here you work hard, you stick to your job, you get up to sixty per, which isn't so bad, and then, because of the housing shortage and high prices, you find you don't get the things that all your life you had understood came with sixty dollars a week. I've heard this particular kind of disappointment expressed more than once during the last few days. One family I looked in on lives on the edge of the lower East Side. Their house is an elevator building, and they pay $48.50 for an apartment with one bed- room, which their child occupies. Hus- band and wife sleep in the living room, which has a daybed, and two chairs. These articles of furniture touch the walls and each other. One chair gets sunlight part of the morning. The husband is in a field connected with decorating; his great interest is in the arts. And among the economies he has had to make is to give up the occasional purchase of art books and magazines, to cut out visits to the theatre, and entertainment of friends of like mind. When a family of culture finds itself being cut off from the cultural life of our age, something, I think, is hap- pening to living standards. It is not horror cases I have been invest- igating, just normal families, with normal incomes and normal problems. I think we have long owed ourselves such a look around, as a fill-in for those moments when we are tempted to talk a little too loosely about living standards, and about what we mean to do with and for the rest of the world. In that spirit I am to go on with the story. (Copyright, 1949. New York Post Corporation) THROUGH THE efforts of the National Student Association, a collection of art- work by college students from all over the country is now on view in the main corridor of the Architecture School. The preparation of this travelling ex- hibit shows the NSA's recognition of art as one of the "common meeting grounds" for college students. It is a reflection, too, of the increased appreciation of art by the present college generation. Local manifestations of this have been seen in the greatly increased enrollment in fine arts courses in the last year and in the huge demand for University-rented art prints. With a willing organization and a "ready" audience then, it is disappointing that the art work does not at all come up to even amateur standards. The exhibit includes a few prints, a number of temperas and water colors, and a drawing or so. None of the works is particularly impressive; some are really very poor. Lack of originality is one of the worst fea- tures of the collection, marring all but a few of the works. There is "Harlequin" by an Iowa State student, remarkably similar to a Picasso of a similar title. The influence of Cezanne is very apparent in "Berkeley Landscape" by a University of California student. Technical deficiencies likewise mar the exhibit. Best example of this is probably "Her Mind's Eye," a pastel drawing which attempts the surrealistic, but achieves the ridiculous. "Weekend" is equally inept.. Excellent technically, but without any real feeling for the subject is "Negro" by a La Crosse State Teacher's College student. The very detailed "Market Place" is also rather superficial. It would be fine for a travel booklet illustration perhaps. A few of the sketches are somewhat more successful. "Rain in Colorado" is nicely handled by a University of Colo- rado student. There is a central tree, however, which interferes with an other- wise excellent arrangement. Two Concordia College students are in- cluded with somewhat similar works. "Tracks, Poles and Fall Sky," although a perfectly adequate sketch, does not come up to the more loosely executed "Spring Eve- ning," notable, too, in color and design. Of the abstract works in the show. "Boxer" by a University of America student is most satisfying. Etchings by Mt. Mary College students show a good realization of the medium. There is a complete lack, however, of anything outstanding in the entire ex- hibit. This blame can hardly be put on in the office to interview students Monday and Tuesday, February 28th and March 1st. They are in- terested in engineers, physicists, chemists, and mathematicians. There is a greater demand for graduate students than for sen- iors, but both will be interviewed for further information and ap- pointments at the office, 3528 Ad- ministration Bldg. Summer Employment: Oppor- tunity for men with B.S. in Elec- trical Engineering, or B.S. in some other field and experience in elec- tronics, to work in abstracting and classifying of electronic patents during this coming summer. For further information call at Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Adminis- tration Bldg. The Michigan State Civil Ser- ice announces the following ex- aminations: Forester 1: Seniors with one summer's experience. Account examiner 11: Account- ing majors. Additional information may be obtained at the Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3528 Administration Bldg. Lecture Mathematics Lectures: Profes- sor K. Kuratowski, Visiting Lec- turer of the American Mathemati- cal Society for this year, will lec- ture today and Friday, Feb. 24 and 25, 4:15 p.m., 3017 Angell Hall. Topics: Thursday: "The Modern Concept of Infinity." Friday: "Topology of General Function Spaces." Cornelia Otis Skinner: Tickets are on sale today from 10 a.m.- 8:30 p.m., Auditorium box office. This is the 4th number on the 1948-49 Lecture Series. School of Forestry Lecture: Mr. H. F. Nixdorf, of the No- Sag Spring Company of Detroit, Michigan, will speak on "Springs in Modern Furniture Construc- tion," 7 p.m., Feb. 24, West Lec- ture Room, Rackham Building. All furniture students are ex- pected to ~attend and other stu- dents, particularly those following the Wood Technology Curricu- lum are welcome. Concerts Student Recital: Norma Swin- ney Heyde, Soprano, will present a program at 8 p.m., Thurs., Feb. 24, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, in partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music. Mrs. Heyde is a pupil of Arthur Hackett, and her recital is open to the general public. Events Today Prof. Kirk Bryan of the Dept. of Geology, Harvard University, will deliver two addresses: The first, entitled "The Antiquity of Man in North America," will be presented in the Natural Science Audito- rium, 4:15 p.m., Thurs., Feb. 24. The second "Polygenetic Soils and Climatic Changes," will be deliv- ered at the Geological-Minera- logical Journal Club meeting, Fri., Feb. 25, 12:00 noon, 3054 N.S. All interested persons are invited. Gilbert and Sullivan Society: Rehearsals for all chorus mem- bers and principals for "Patience," women at 7 p.m., Michigan League; men at 8 p.m., Michigan League. Stage construction work- ers are especially needed, and are requested to attend the 7 p.m. re- hearsal. Please bring eligibility cards. Forester's Club: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Natural Science Auditorium. Prof. V. H. Jones of the Anthrop- ology department will speak on "The Woodslore of the American Indian." Short business meeting and a discussion of plans for spring. Refreshments. American Chemical Society Stu- dent Affiliate: Organizational meeting, 1300 Chemistry Bldg. Michigan Crib, Pre-Law Socie- ty: Meeting, 7:45 p.m., Architec- ture Auditorium. Mr. Edmund Le- vine, Assistant Prosecuting Attor- ney, Washtenaw County, will speak on "A Prosecuting Attor- ney at Work." International Center weekly tea for all foreign students and Amer- ican friends, 4:30-6 p.m., Interna- tional Center. Hostesses: Mrs. Ruth Buck and Mrs. Arthur Hack- ett. U. of M. Sailing Club: Business meeting, 7 p.m., 311 W. Engineer- ing Bldg. U. of M. Rifle Club: firing, 7- 9:30 p.m., ROTC range. DCM Qualification match at 8. Pershing Rifles Meeting: 7 p.m., R.O.T.C., State Street. Matters of organization and administration will be dealt with. Be in uniform. U. of M. Radio Club: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., 1084 E. Engineering Bldg. Business meeting and issu- ing of membership cards for spring term. U. of M. Theater Guild: Organi- zational meeting, Michigan League. Bring certificates of eli- gibility. La p'tite Causette: 3:30 p.m., Grill Room, Michigan League. Alpha Phi Omega: Meeting for members, 7 p.m., Michigan Union. Pledge smoker, 7:45 p.m.; all in- terested students invited. It is es- sential that all old members ap- pear promptly at 7. S.R.A. Electorate will meet at 7 p.m., Lane Hall. U. of M. Young Republican Club: 7:30 p.m., Michigan Union (check board for room). 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 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 foraany other reason are not in good taste will not be published. The editors reserve the privilege of con- densing letters., * * * Pot vs. Kettle To the Editor: REGARDING the gibberish that was spread all over your pages last week by Bud Weidenthal, your associate sports editor, who seems to have acquired The Daily's habit of talking and not saying anything: Mr. -Weidenthal, with all the righteous dignity that an under- graduate associate sports editor can muster, hurls the charge that the State News and the Detroit Free Press have "been engaged in a concentrated effort to defame the dignity and purposes of the Michigan athletic department. and Fritz Crisler, its director ..."I "Tht University of Michigan., screams Bud in hurt rage, " . . has been famed for its purity and high standards." Bud slyly men- tioned our long-defunct Jenison scholarships and accuses our ath- letic office of directing the verbal barrage against Michigan. How old Bud can deduce that our athletic office is behind it all from his ivory tower down in Ann Arbor, I don't know. In fact, while working as a representative for the State News and the Free Press, I was refused comment by anyone in that office on the U. of M. situation. Blustering Bud, for all his verb- iage, doesn't come right out and deny the U. of M. is mercenary in its football .dealings, He's just mad at the S$ate News and the Free Press for telling everybody about it. Bud mutters about the Spar- tan's ingratitude to the "school that has carried them under their wing. Uh huh, just like an old vulture.The only reason that you scheduled MSC in the past is be- cause we can fill your stadium, and not for any altruistic motives. Incidentally Bud, I've always paid when I went to MSC-M games, despite your bland statement that Spartans get in free. Let's not have the pot calling the kettle black. Who do you think you're kidding? -David A. Rood. Distasteful Answer To the Editor: IT HAS BECOME both proper and necessary, with the hys- teria such as it is today, that peo- ple of the sincere conviction that peace with tht Soviet Union is possible and imperative defend themselves against stupid and vi- cious attacks by those who have become pawns in the game of hate. Thus I find that, distasteful though it may be, I am forced to answer David W. Peterson's letter in which charges and insinuations were leveled at myself and two others. First of all, Mr. Peterson states that I ridiculed President Tru- man's refusal to talk peace with Premier Stalin outside the United States. Ridicule is not the correct term Mr. Peterson; mockery would be more appropriate; mockeryof the entire concept, which is our foreign policy today, that peace and agreement with the Soviet Union is an evil that must be fought off in the name of "democ- racy." Yes, it is mockery of the characterization of any attempt f, Easy Entry To the Editor: ,OH, TO BE Clifton Keen'. daughter! For there at th Minnesota -Michigan basketba game amidst the hordes of stu dents brandishing their I.D. card emerged C. K.'s daughter. Upo announcing her identity, she wa respectfully permitted by the Littl Caesar of. the ticket gate to sa past the throngs of waiting stu dents. It hardly seems fair that at Uni versity sponsored athletic even crowds of students are turne away while general admissio ticket holders and privileged char acters are admitted. By the way, who is Clifto. Keen? -Doris Norman. (EDITOR'S NOTE: Clifton Keen L the coach of the wrestling team an of 150 pound football. Faculty -em bers and their families are entitled to reserved seats at sports events.) A.I r9 by the Soviet Union to enter into discussions and peace talks as a "peace offensive," as if peace were a detestable and undesirable thing-! Of course it must be realized that an agreement with the Soviet Union would be,. to certain inter- ests in this country, a disastrous turn of events, for if peace were to be achieved tomorrow, millions of dollars invested in the Cold War and the armaments program would be lost. And is Mr'. Peterson aware of what a halt in our military pro- gram would mean at this time? Aside from all the profits that would be lost, the country would have to face an unemployment situation that would add to the already alarming rolls of three million jobless. As Dr. Harry F Ward pointed out the other night our foi'eign policy can pass th point beyond which there is n turning back, beyond which ther is not even a chance or a hope fo peace, and we are fast approach- ing this point. We will create situation in which we will hav to go to war in order to forestal economic chaos at home and th cessation of profits here anc abroad that are being derived fro the Cold War. As for your contemptible snip ing as to vhat side I would figh on in a new war. I would like t point out to Mr. Peterson tha most scientists are of tht opinio that death is imminent to al who take part in any future war on any side. As for myself, I wil fight when my conscience permi me, when I know that I am figth ing for something I believe.r my country right or wrong; m country right! -Al Fishman. Young meeting, ion. Democrats: Business 7:30 p.m., Michigan Un- porte, on the Parker Collection of Japanese Prints, the Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall, Sun., Feb. 27, 3:30 p.m. The public is invited. German Coffee Hour: Fri., Feb. 25, 3-4:30 p.m., Michigan League. All students and faculty members are invited. Young Progressives: Member- ship meetinfi, Tues., Mar. 1, Mich- igan Union. All members are asked to attend. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation: Sabbath Evening Services, 7:45 p.m. Rabbi H. Lymon conducting. Westminster Guild of the First Presbyterian Church: "Hoe Down" party, 8 p.m., Fri., Feb. 25, social hall, church building. Round and square dancing. Wear jeans and plaid shirts. Refreshments. Small fee will be charged. Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students the University of Michigan under t authority of the Board in Controly Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harriett Friedman .....Managing Edit Dick Maloy ................City Edit Naomi Stern ........Editorial Direct Allegra Pasqualetti ...Associate Edit Al Blumnrosen.......Associate Edit Leon Jaroff ..........Associate Edit Robert C. White ......Associate Edit B. S. Brown ............Sports Edit Bud Weidenthal ..Associate Sports E Bev Bussey .....Sports Feature Writ Audrey Buttery ......Women's Edit Mary Ann Harris Asso. Women's Edit Bess Hayes ..................Librarl Business Staff Richard Halt.......Business Manag Jean Leonard ....Advertising Manag William Culman ....Finance Managi Cole Christian ... Circulation ManaE Telephone 23-24-1 va Member of The Associated Pres The Associated Press is exclusive entitled to the use for republicati of all news dispatches credited to it otherwise credited to this newspap All rights of republication of all ot: matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Kl Arbor, Michigan, as second-class i matter. Subscription during the regul school year by carrier, $5.00, by mi $6.00. ADA: Discussion of issues in- volved in coming Regents' election and formulation of plans for par- ticipation in campaign. Members of ADA, persons interested in joining and working actively in the campaign are urged to attend. 7:30 p.m., Michigan League. Coning Events Gallery Talk, by Dr. Otto La-' BARNABY I- -----W.UWAUM