FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, APR.h 26, F O U R T ~ l ~ D----------2 0 From the Ieside "R1AH-RAH'S" return, more than anything else, seems to indicate that Michigan students want to return to that old Mich- igan Spirit that, up to the war, was so closely linked with the University. Specifically, the Wolverines voted to bring the freshman-sophomore rivalries back to town-all but the beanies. High school seniors can eagerly look forward to a week of traditional freshman-soph- omore rivalry, to king-sized pep rallies, a tug of war across the Huron and a frosh- soph talent show of unprecedented pro- portions to climax the whole thing. But the students probably were not vot- ing so much for these definite- things as they were for a come-back of school spirit itself. The worn-out phrase "school spirit" has at least one meaning for each student on campus, and two or more for the alum- nae. In the end, though, the term boils down to a positive approach to the University, the adoption of an attitude that doesn't auto- matically assume that everything coming out of the Administration Building is de- signed to poison somebody or something. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: DON McNEIL Rather it means the students will begin to talk of "Michigan, the greatest Univer- sity in the world" and begin to be proud of things connected with it, even to look for them. Further it will mean more de- votion to the University as a whole, rather than just a small group, such as a fra- ternity or club, which makes up the cam- pus community. However, it must be pointed out that only a third of the students voted, and not all of these on the rah-rah proposals, indi- cating that one can't expect everybody to be dressed in maize and blue overnight. The third who vote, too, are usually the third who have the most school spirit anyway. It is interesting to note that the one pro- posal that discriminated towards freshmen, the "beanies," was outvoted. So it seems that as the seasoned, ma- ture veterans, who remember tug-of-wars across the Rhine and would just as soon have nothing to do with those across the Huron, become numerically smothered by the younger students, that "old Michigan Spirit" will come back. The rah-rah proposals show that there is a revival in positive attitudes towards Michlw igan; yet they are an indication rather than the thing itself. You can't turn school spirit on and off like a dam by passing a few measures, as some seem to think. Michigan loyalty must come from inside each student himself.. -John P. Davies. At the State ... At the Michigan -. - LETTER TO THREE WIVES, with espe- THE WAKE OF THE RED WITCH: John cial acclaim for Paul Douglas, Kirk Doug- Wayne and Gail Russell. las, Ann Sothern, and Sadie. ITH LESS EFFORT The Wake of the CALL ME POLTROON if you like. Say I Red Witch could have been an absorbing am untrue to the ideals of non-Hollywood sea yarn. In its present state, the movie is movie reviewers. Claim I am off my feed a labored recollection of incidents from every if it please you, but for the life of me I am sea story I've ever read or seen on the unable to find anything wrong with "Letter screen, done with as little mind to original- To Three Wives." ity as possible. The result is painless but It is hilariously funny, conceivably real, exhausting. convincingly human, and extremely well Involved in the proceedings are five told. The refreshing and novel plot, ad- million dollars worth of gold bullion, mirably handled by Hollywood, illustrates pearls as big as goose eggs (or so report once again that the best movies are those had it, though none materialized), an whose origins lie outside the movie colony, underwater struggle with an octopus (I It is no secret that Hollywood produc- blush ih admitting it), the prying of a tion is technically supreme, and often little boy out of the clutches of a giant wasted on trash. It becomes worthwhile clam, native rituals, etc. from island to only when it is given a halfway decent island in the Pacific. The spectator would story-idea to work on. Joseph Klempner's have to be as valiant as the hero to wade novel was good, and the movie, conse- through all 'that guff, is my private con- quently, is even better. tention. Most important, I think, is that this Unfortunately, I've never been able to movie is sufficiently mature and adult t4 disassociate John Wayne from a horse and insult nobody's intelligence. It has a num- prairie; this makes his present role as a ber of elements, calculated to appeal to any swash-buckling adventurer inadvertently attitude anyone in the audience cares to comic. When not fighting the elements, take, blended into a complete and satisfy- drinking gin, or seducing native women ing whole. For those in Philosophy 139, it (This was only implied, I'm sorry to say.) has "levels of significance"-it is first a the hero was waging an illogical and para- comedy, second a fascinating story-incident, doxically inactive feud with a wealthy mer- third a moral message about marriages, chant, whom I would have thought too and fourth, an honest portrayal of the fact preoccupied with finance for this game of that human beings are not always storybook cat-and-mouse. I was mistaken. ideals, and that each person carries his own Gail Russell appears on one of the islands good and bad individuality into any real- long enough to stage one of the most ex- life situation. cruciating death-bed scenes I've seen. The By all means, find the wherewithal. You'll incident does little to enhance Miss Russell's be amply rewarded by "Letter to Three already dubious stature as an actress. Worse, Wives." it absolutely paralyzes the movie. -Perry Logan. -Jim Graham. MATTER OF FACT: American Japanr Ready Solution THAT ALL THINGS turn out for the best appears evident, now that the decks of the proposed vast housing program have been cleared for action. It was with a great sigh of relief that readers welcomed Michigan Representa- tive Wolcott's statement to the press, "I don't think we will be able to stop it now." Rep. Wolcott represented one of the more formidable obstacles to passage of the hous- ing bill. But by virtue of a Senate approval, 57 to 13, he practically admitted defeat to his most emphatic anti-housing bill stand at last year's 80th Congress sessions. Pending house ratification, the much- debated bill should now pave the way for a sorely needed devastation of slum areas, on a national scale. It also provides for an expanded six-year construction of more than 800,000 low-rent public housing units. And if the battling House members, who have already issued storm warnings as a precedent to a forthcoming showdown at the next House session, actually have the interest of dollarwise citizens at heart, they will pull the program safely over its hurdles. Here's hoping they realize the true worth of a housing program destined to alleviate ugly slum conditions and spell finis to this seemingly perpetual housing feud. For when the bill becomes law, thousands of Amer- icans in the lower income bracket can an- ticipate a ready solution to their home- seeking worries. -Don Kotite. VD RATHER BE RIGHT: Spirit Is There By SAMUEL GRAFTON I ATTENDED the funeral of Rabbi Stephen S. Wise the other day-or tried to, rather, because the area around Carnegie Hall was so packed I couldn't even get close. "That was one man in a million," said my cab driver, an Italian. "He was for all of us." In an age in which we puzzle desperately over the question: What moves the minds of the people? a part of the answer, I think, was to have been found in the neighborhood of 57th Street and Seventh Avenue, in New York, on Friday afternoon. They were there, staring up silently at the building in which the services were being held, because they loved him, and they loved him because he had been a great lib- eral. He had been unafraid, he had never tried to win favor, and, as a result, you couldn't get through the street. He had taken up all the supposedly unpopular issues -he had been against racial discrimination, he had been for progressive labor laws, starting half a century ago, he had been for Zionism in the earliest days, he had been for so many of the things that to the respectables seem sure roads to disfavor, and here on the streets was the answer. Here was the reality. A billion words of cant shriveled in the light of that afternoon, and you knew again that the American mind does not reserve its warmest places for the timid, but for the bold, not for the self- enslaved, but for the self-enfranchised. You knew, as I say, that here was the reality, and that the rest was talk; and you knew that whatever opponents it has to face, the liberal spirit in America will in the end win, because reality must win over that which is not real. And on the way back to the office, I read the statement which Chancellor Robert M. Hutchins of the University of Chicago had made to the Subversive Activities Commis- sion of the Illinois Legislature. The Com- mission has been inquiring into "subversive activity" on the campus of the university. Such inquiries as these have become a stand- ard feature of American life lately, as the great wave of political heresy-hunting has crept over us. But this hearing was different. For Dr. Hutchins, while declaring that he and the University were against Communism, abso- lutely refused to let himself or his institu- tion be swept up in the wave. Calmly, he told the Commission that the University of Chicago is a distinguished one precisely be- cause it guarantees complete academic free- dom. He was not afraid of thought and dis- cussion, he said; he would not counten- ance represssion; he was for patience and tolerance, even in the face of provocation; he would not exclude Communist students ("If we did how would they ever learn better?"); he believed that those who had a real opportunity to study all forms of government would prefer democracy; he felt that existing laws could control sub- versive acts, if any should ever occur, but he knew of no subversive acts, and he was opposed to any attempt at control of thought. He said: "The danger to our in- stitutions is not from the tiny minority who do not believe in them. It is from those who would mistakenly repress the free spirit upon which those institutions are built. The miasma of thought-control that is now spreading over the country is t he greatest menace to the United States I i nn TI 1r "YouR d B k Eli ,,1 -j- I JEFERSON DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN j (Continued from Page 2) Thursday, April 28, a represen- tative from the Peoples Gas, Light, and Coke Co., of Chicago, Ill., will be here to interview students for accounting, engineering, and gen- eral business trainee positions. The Terryberry Co., from Grand Rapids, will have a representative here the evenings of April 26th and 27th to interview men inter- ested in sales of fraternity and school jewelry. Salaried positions. Representatives of North Star Camp for boys will be at Bureau of Appointments, W ednesday, April 27 to interview men for posi- tions in crafts, camp craft, water sports, and fencing. Camp Positions: Representative of Camp Tyrone (Flint YWCA) will be at Bureau of Appointments, Tuesday, April 26, to interview counselors for waterfront, land sports, and handicraft. For fur- ther information and appoint- ment, call Ext. 371 or stop at Bu- reau of Appointment, 3528 Ad- ministration Buildingg The Detroit Civil Service Com- mission announces open competi- tive examinations for Social Case Worker, Medical Social Case work- er, Student Social Worker, Junior Publicist, Intermediate Publicist, Head City Planner, Semi-senior Accountant, and Senior Accoun- ttan. Additional information may be obtained at the Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3528 Administration Building. Employment interview demon- stration: Mr. L. Cloyton Hill, Pro- fessor of Industrial Relations, and Lou Woytek, President of the In- dustrial Relations Club will pre- sent the proper and improper methods of conducting yourself in an employment interview 4:00 p.m. in Room 130, Bus. Ad. Bldg. There will be a period for ques- tions following the demonstration. Academic Notices Sociology 132 and 160: Dr. Wood will not be able to meet his classes Tues., April 26. Physical Chemistry Seminar: April 27, 4:10 p.m. Room 1300 Chemistry. Dr. E. F. Westrum, Jr. will discuss "The Nature of the Hydrogen Bond in KHF2." Calculus of Variation Seminar: Tues., April 26, 1949, 3:15 p.m. Prof. Maxwell O. Reade will deliv- er his 8th lecture on "Type num- bers of Stationary Points." Aerodynamics Seminar, Aero. Eng. 160, Wednesday, April 27 4-6 p.m. Room 1508 East Engineering Bldg. Topic: Theory of hyper- bolic flow equations. Lectures "Sdial and Emotional Relations of Parents and Children," is the subject of a lecture by Dr. Ralph' L. Patterson, Professor of Psychi- atry, on Tuesday, April 26, at 8:00 p.m. in the Rackham Amphithea- tre. Open without charge to all students. University Lecture: Mr. Ken- neth Macgowan, of the University of California at Los Angeles, will lecture on Wednesday, April 27, at 4:15, in the Rackham Amphi- theatre. His lecture, which is spon- sored by the Fine Arts Depart- ment, will be, "Masks and De- mons; The Birth of the Theatre from the Magic and Rituals of Primitive Peoples." There will be slides. Law Lecture: Under the aus- pices of the pre-Law Society, The Michigan Crib, Judge Edward M. Sharpe of the Supreme Court of Michigan, will speak on the Con- stitution' of the United States. Kellogg Institute Auditorium, 8:00 pim., Thursday, April 28. Open to the public. Concerts Student Recital: Phyllis Force, pianist, will present a program at 8:00 Wednesday evening, April 27 in the Rackham Assembly Hall, in. partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the Master of Music de- gree. Her program, open to the public, will include compositions by Beethoven, Schumann, Mozart, and Bartok. Miss Force is a pupil of Helen Titus. Exhibitions Museum of Art: Max Beckmann, Some Recent Accessions; Alumni Memorial Hall, through May 1. Daily, 9-5, Sundays 2-5. The pub- lic is invited. Museum of Art: Alexander Col- lection of Masks, through May 8; Max Beckmann, Some Recent Ac- cessions, through May 1. Alumni Memorial Hall; daily, 9-5, Sun- days 2-5. The public is invited. College of Architecture and De- sign: Architectural work of San- ders and Malsin, New York City; sculpture of William Talbot, New York City. First floor, Architec- tural Building until May 9. Events Today Women of the University Facul- ty: Annual dinner meeting at 6:15, in the Hussey Room of the Michi- gan League. Election of officers. Miss Helen W. Dodson, Assistant Professor of Astronomy, will give an illustrated talk on "The Sun- at Home and Abroad. RecentI Solar Research 'at the Me-Math-; Hulbert Observatory of the Uni- versity of Michigan and the1 French Sola r Observatories." There will be no Tea this week. University of Michigan Dames1 Interior Decorating Group: : 8 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Building. Mrs. H. K. Smith of Milford, Michigan, will speak on "Furniture Refinishing." and will demonstrate the refinish- ing process of a piece of furniture step by step.1 United Nations Council: UNESCO organizational meet- ing. 7 p.m., Student Lounge (Room 2435) Education School. Planning of scope and structure of campusr council. Also state-wide Council for UNESCO. Committee on Student Affairs will meet in Room 1011, Angell Hall. Mathematics Colloquium: 4:00 p.m., 3201 Angell Hall. Professor' C. L. Dolph will speak on INTEG- RAL EQUATIONS AND STO- CHASTIC PROCESSES. Sigma Rho Tau, Stump Speak- er's Society, Meeting: 7:00 p.m., 2084 E. Eng. Bldg. Program: Prac- tice in After Dinner Speaking; Completion of plans for Conven- tion, and also preparations for Tung Oil Banquet, May 13. NSA MEETING, Tuesday, April 26, 4 p.m., Cave, Michigan League. Those planning to apply at dele- gates to the National Congress are asked to attend also. IFC Glee Club Meeting: Room 3D, Michigan Union, 7:30 p.m. Flying Club: Open meeting to- night at 7:30 in Room 1042, East Engineering Building. Undergraduate Physics Club: 7:30 p.m., Room 2038 Randall Lab. Polonia Club: Meeting: Interna.- tional Center. 7:30 p.m. Refresh- ments. Plans for coming of Lira Society. Gilbert and Sullivan Society: rehearsal of the Maidens, 7:00 p.m., Michigan League. Canterbury Club: 7:30 p.m., Seminar on "The Meaning of the Christian Faith" Wednesday, 7:15 a.m., Holy Communion followed by Student Breakfast. Christian Science Organization: Testimonial meeting, 7:30 p.m., Upper Room, Lane Hall. Square Dance Group, Lane Hall, 7:00 p.m. Coming Events Mr. L. W. Byrne, Chief, Port Promotion Bureau of the Port of New'York Authority will speak on the various aspects of "The Port Authority," Wednesday, April 27 at 4:00 p.m. in Room 130 of the Bus. Ad. building. All students are invited. Education Lecture Series: "Re- ligion and Public Education," J. B. Edmonson, Dean of the School of Education. 7 p.m. Wed., Univer- sity High School Auditorium. Pub- lic invited. UWF: General Meeting, April 27, 4:15 p.m., Michigan Union. Sigma Gamma Epsilon: Rm. 3056 N.S. on Wednesday, April 27, 12:15 p.m. Joe Kerr and Daniel Bradley will speak on "The Geol- ogy of Newfoundland." ASCE: Meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 27, Rm. 3-G of the Union. Speakers are Mr. C. A. Weber, Road Engineer, and Mr. C. J. McMonagle, Director of the Planning and Traffic Division, Michigan Stae Highway Depart- ment. They will speak on High- way and Traffic Engineering. Library Science Class, 1948-49: Tea, Wednesday, April 27, 4:30- 6 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Building. Students and faculty invited. Mrs. Elizabeth B. Beard of the Fish and Wildlife Service will pre sent an illustrated talk on water fowl management at the Sen National Wildlife Refuge in th upper peninsula of Michigan, a 7:30 p.m.. Wednesday, April 27, Ile Botany Seminar Room, 113 Natural Science Building. All wild' life students a rc expected to a tend any. anyone else interested i cordially invited.I AIEE-IRE: joint meeting witl the Michigan Section of AIE Wednesday, April 27, 8:00 p.m. ii Rackhamn Amphitheatre. Th meeting will be a panel discussiot on "The Engineerin Graduate First Job" by Professor A. H. Loy' ell, Mr. H. E. Crampton, and M1 W. H. MacDuff. Open to all En gineers. UWF Panel Discussion: Wednes day, 7:30 p.m., Michigan Leagut Topic: Garry Davis, Realist o Dreamer. Speakers: Dr. Efimene and Miss Pamela Wrinch. Delta Sigma tPi, Prof essiona business administration fratei nity: Business Meeting, Wednes day. April 27, 7:30 p.m.. Chapte House, 1212 Hill. Graduate History Club: We. nesday, April 27, 8:00 p.m. i Clements Library. Professo Charles L. Stevenson of the Dc partment of Philosophy will spea on "History and Empathy." Th public is invited. The Westminster Guild of th First Presbyterian Church wi. have an informal tea and talk o Wed., April 27th, from 4 to 6 p.iia in the Russel parlor of the chre building. Everyone is invited. Flying Club: Open meeting o Wednesday, April 27, at 7:30 p.ir in Room 1042, East Engineerin Building. Coed Folk and Square Dancin Club Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., W.A.1 Phi Lambda Upsilon: Will pre sent an educational film, "High lights in Steel Making" by th Bethlehem Steel Corporatiol Thursday, April 28, 4:15 p.n Room 348 West Engineering Buil ing. Bacteriology Seminar, Thur day, April 28th,. 8:30 a.m. in Room 1520 E. Medical Building. Spe er: Robert C. Backus. Subject Electron Microscopy of Viruses. * * 9 Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students 4 the University of Michigan under U authority of the Board in Control Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harriett Friedman ....Managing Edit Dick Maioy ...............City Edit Naomi stern........Editorial Direct Allegra Pasqualetti ...Associate Edit' Al Blumrosen ........Associate Edit Leon Jaroff ..........Associate Edit Robert C. White ......Associate Edith B. S. Brown...........Sports Editd Bud Weidenthal ..Associate Sports E Bey Bussey .--Sports Feature Write Audrey Buttery.......Women's Edit Mary Ann Harris Asso. Women's Edits Bess Hayes ..................Libraria Business Staff Richard Hait ......Business Mana" Jean Leonard ....Advertising Manag Winiam Culman ....Finance Manag Cole Christian ...Circulation Manag Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Pres The Associated Press is excluSITt entitled to the use for republio.&t1c of all news dispatches credited to it otherwise credited to this newspap All rights of republication of all oth matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at An Arbor, Michigan, as second-class ma matter. Subscription during th re" school year by carrier, $5.00. by ntai $0.00.1 By STEWART ALSOP TOKYO-This sleazy oriental shantytown gives the traveler the odd sensation of being dragged back through five years in time and thousands of miles in space. For Tokyo is still remarkably like a big wat- time city very far behind the battle lines- , I s' T OSIA MUNDSTOCK and her group of modern dancers played to a full house Saturday night at the Sarah Angell Audi- torium in Barbour Gymnasium. The group, Detroit's first resident com- pany, presented a group of original dances which unfortunately showed little orig- inality. Although the solos were announced as the work of the individual dancers, the choreography throughout consisted of a very limited number of movements and combinations. Each piece was repititious within itself, and the group numbers had almost no precision. The best group patterns occurred in Spir- itual, and the most effective costuming in New Perspectives. The latter contained some good dancing, and- even managed to be ex- citing at moments. By far the best and most distinctive dance of the evening was Ritual, to DeFalla's well- Algiers, say, after the fighting had moved up beyond Naples, or Naples after the fall of Rome, or Paris well after the Battle of the Bulge. The United States Army, in its rear echelon capacity, is everywhere. Here are those dimly remembered, om- nipresent, officious Army signs come back to life-"Off Limits," "For General Offi- cers Only," "For Military Personnel Only." Here are the familiar mimeographed forms, which everyone fills out in tripli- cate, and no one ever looks at again. Here are the well-pressed G.I.'s and the pink- faced military police in their white hel- mets, trying to look Prussian but never quite succeeding. The visible evidence of the army's hold on the city is confirmed by the invisible facts. There are American civilians here, thousands of them, from bobby soxers to experts on the migration of fish. Some of these civilians have influenced the course of the occupation-but only at second remove. For no civilian (except occasional visit- ing firemen) has direct access to the su- preme source of all power in Japan, Gen- eral of the Army Douglas MacArthur. General MacArthur is tightly surrounded by his old subordinates and intimates of the Bataan days. The rare newcomers t this charmed circle wear a uniform and usually a West Point ring. The charmed circle makes certain that civilians are kept in their place. All this is partly understandable. A mili- tary occupation is by definition run by the BARNABY --- __ _ The-article I'm writing for the Child Psychology Gazette shows how real an imaginary playmate can seem to be to a child-. 4-E5-49 I want to include in it the f of some routine psychologi and P'll ask Barnaby some to determine his mental de fif indings cal tests, questions, evelopment. see, Miss Dixon. Miss Dixon, this new secretary of. yours-. Shorthand and typing good? You have given her the routine tests, how many words per minute and so on?'Seems intelligent, eh? r J p ".,, O 311 Cotkat Jtnw "^"r " "' 0 l Now Barnaby, which of those Which would you rather have, What do we do II find Barnaby a briahter-than-averael