THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, .Impossible THE UNIVERSITY'S failure to notify the IFC on its action in the Alcohol Story springs' from the administration's paternal- istic attitude towards students. It has resulted in a student-University game of tit-tat-tae or Can the Cops Catch Us and an underground disregard for reg- ulations. The University's attitude is more author- itarian than educational and student dis- 3atisfaction with the present set-up has been clearly manifested. It would seem that the University's problem here is not one of more and more fraternity raids, with their bad publicity results, but rather one of placing squarely upon the student body the responsibility for shaping a reasonable code of conduct. A previous abortive attempt at student faculty consideration of the liquor problem died for lack of real authority and the status quo was maintained with rules serving no moral or educational function without stu- dent participation. At Amherst College, the alumni have spok- en up in a report which clearly recognizes the developing of responsibility as much a part of education as pouring math formulas and Plato into a hungry mind. These gentlemen, asking for student-fac- ulty decided regulations, said that "the more responsible students will find that certain regulations and prohibitions in these areas are prudential and essential." But they recognized too that "realism requires an honest admission that 'times have changed' and that a somewhat differ- ent set of standards is in vogue in the community as a whole than was prevalent a generation ago." Wholly to ignore the altered attitude to- ward liquor since the dark days when the doors of Joe's and the Orient swung shut for the last time is impossible and undesir- able. Yet the failure to initiate change in our present regulations indicates that the Uni- versity is trying to do just that. -Don McNeil. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. VD RATHER BE RIGHT: Manageable Pieces By SAMUEL GRAFTON gloomy as, excuse the ex MOST PRESS COMMENT on the just- ters in a Russian novel started Conference ofiForeign Ministers T in Paris takes the form of a recital of all These digests of the d the many reasons why it is difficult to make pomi i urtesc peace between ourselves and Russia. position in our times, s In listing these problems we sound as sonnet in the seventeent * * AND TRULY the problem it seems to me that no emphasizing its immensit .A M A expects that the century tween capitalism and com to be resolved and termin NIGHT MUST FALL, with Lucille Wat- men now meeting in the Du son, Donald Buka, and Philip Tonge. rand's pink palace. EMLYN WILLIAMS' gothic bloodcurdler After all, it is the nor "Night Must Fall" opened last night at mankind to live and w the Lydia Mendelssohn, complete with as- ence of enormous, unsolve sorted local and imported talent, and for intelligent human activi some reason did not fare very well. being awed by that fact, Bill Mauldin -.000000, _._ __ ....___ -- ___ . ._.. _ a.. 3.. _- _.. .. . r pression, charac- . ilemmas have be- m of literary com- omething like the h century. m is immense. But thing is gained by ty. Nobody really -old struggle be- nmunism is going nated by the four Uchesse de Talley- mal condition of ark in the pres- ed problems-and ties lies, not in but in breaking manageable seg- aging those seg- ( 1l' " GoAY ght, 4949, N- ,York, StornI",MAc.l It is difficult to say why. None of it was due to any apparent inadequacies on the part of either Lucile Watson or Don- ald Buka. Miss Watson, as the cranky old hypochondriac Mrs. Bramson, steered carefully away from what must have been a tremendous temptation to work her part for more than it is worth. Buka, as the psychotic young handyman, Dan, performed as intelligently as did Miss Watson. Moreover, these two were assisted in particular by Jennifer Howard, who turned in a nice bit as the doltish Dora, and June Madison as the housekeeper Mrs. Ter- ence. But the performance was too long in getting underway. Timing was spotty, par- ticularly in the first act. Certain members of the supporting cast habitually swal- lowed their best lines, and manifested considerable difficulty in making them- selves heard beyond the first row. And perhaps some of the trouble lies in the fact that there have, of late, been too many nightmustfalls. The old devices-the locked trunks (it's a hatbox in this case); the simple, comic country squire; and the tweedy Scotland Yard man-liave worn themselves out. It's hard for an audience to be frightened on such familiar ground. -W. 3. Hampton. those problems down into ments, and then in man ments. NIGHT EDITOR: ROMA LIPSKY f Favor to Labor WILLIE LURYE, a special organizer for the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, was stabbed and killed last week in a New York phone booth. With a wife and four children .to look after, Lurye had given up a $180-a-week pressing job last fall to take on the $80- a week organizing duties: it was appar- ently his only vice. Previous to this, hoodlums had beaten up three other organizers; picketing union gar- ment workers had been slugged. . To all outward appearances this represents an attempt by the remaining unorganized employers in the garment industry to with- stand the labor movement by thirtyish goon squad methods. Should this prove true, it means that the U.S. has still to contend with a motley remnant of the short-sighted 19th cen- tury business men. Surely no reasonably open-minded individual can fail to realize that there are thousands who will rise to take Willie Lurye's place. Obviously, if an employer is responsible, he has indirectly done organized labor a great favor. True, it has cost them a life, but it will undoubtedly gain them a great deal of new support, placing one more smudge on management's side in the already mutually dingy labor-management relations ledger. -Richard Thomas. And this might be the key and motto for the Paris Conference: Work on manage- ment of segments only. To take one small bit of the whole Ger- man problem and solve it-say to set up a unified administration in Berlin-would be a much greater triumph, than for the four conferees to set up the entire problem in all its frightful totality, and then break their heads against it. Let us hope that the four gentlemen will not be too eloquently integra- tive in their remarks and approaches, and that they will be content to work on bits and pieces. For if the conference does become an arena for sweeping proposals aimed at solving nothing less than everything, it will go off the track as a conference, and it will become something else. It will be- come a device by means of which both the East and West will make love to the Ger- mans, while pretending to be talking to each other. Or it will become a mere propaganda gadget, instead of a confer- ence, used by each side to demonstrate to the world the existence of grave moral faults and serious personality defects in the other. All such activity comes under the head of making orations about the height of the mountain, instead of walking a foot or two up the trail. It ought to be possible to make qite a bit of progress up the trail, if we don't let the height of the mountain dizzy us. Maybe we can't unify Germany politically at this conference, but we might very well be able to set up free trade between the eastern and western zone. And after a year or so of such free trade it might be much easier to unify Germany politically. * * * AND IT SEEMS to me that the West should take the lead in trying to break the problem down into manageable segments. The ability to work, patiently and resource- fully, on unresolved questions, without being capsized by them, is part of the essence of the democratic way of life; and the demo- cratic way of life certainly includes, or should include, a sophisticated sense of the changes that time can bring about in solv- ing hard problems. It is in the very nature of democracy to distrust sweeping, offhand solutions, to prefer to let the months and years and education and the impact of reality do their work, and we could with profit apply these democratic attitudes to the very se- vere problem represented by Germany. The thing to fear, then, is that this con- ference will become a battle of the theoret- ical approaches, in which nothing will be ac- complished because it is so hard to do every- thing. Let us take the lead in breaking down the problem into manageable pieces, each one carrying its own plausibiity and its own definite, even if partial, promise. (Copyright, 1949, New York Post Corporation) Looking Back 10 YEARS AGO: The United States Navy completed one of the greatest sea rescues when it saved the lives of 33 men trapped three days in the sunken submarine Squalus. Twenty-six men weren't so fortunate. 5 YEARS AGO: Canadian troops broke through the heart of the Hitler line in Italy as Americans fi- nally burst from the Anzio beachhead and cut the Appian Way barely 25 miles from Rome. --From the Pages of The Daily. A WORD IS NOT a crystal, transparent and unchanged; it is the skin of a living thought, and varies with the time and cir- cumstances in which it is used. -Oliver Wendell Holmes. "Be quiet-I'm stirrin' up the masses." MATTER OF FACT: A Dark Lesson By JOSEPH ALSOP WASHINGTON-There is a simple parallel for the tragic death of James Forrestal. A century and a quarter ago, Lord Castlereagh, the leading member of the British Cabinet that had defeated Na- poleon and brought peace to Europe, died in almost precisely similar circumstances. The Duke of Wellington, his friend and partner, was the first to notice that the gigantic burdens he had borne so long were telling upon Castlereagh. The story goes that when Castlereagh talked strangely during a discussion of government business, the blunt Wellington told him that he sounded unhinged, and that he ought to see a doctor. Wellingtonw arned Castlereagh's staff, but people in those days had no remedy for melancholia. And late one evening, after dining with his friends, the man who shared with Pitt and Nelson and Wellington the chief credit for destroying the Na- poleonic tyranny went into the darkened library of his country house and cut his throat. The episode is worth remembering now as proof from an earlier time rather similar to ours that the burdens of office in periods of great crisis are sometimes too heavy for the stoutest spirits. It is not enough, however, merely to recall Forrestal's great services to this country, and to acknowledge that the strongest man might have cracked under the strains to which he was subjected. The question arises whether these strains might have been lessenee by a wiser Congress, a more restrained press, and a more intelligent public attitude toward our public servants. The truth is that the kind of public service Jim Forrestal sought to give-disinterested, professional, imaginative, and in scale with this nation's great role-is made as unrewarding as possible. And although the American government now has our own and the world's destinies in its hands, the habit has persisted of treating the best men in the government as a set of dubious payrollers and hacks. The second-raters, of whom there are certainly enough to go round, escape well enough. It is the first-raters, with their alarming signs of intelligence and a dangerous tendency to have ideas, that the Congress habitually treats as guilty until they prove themselves innocent. Then the country takes its good public servants for granted, offers them no thanks and makes no complaint about the second and third-raters. And certain kinds of politician, and certain elements of the press, almost seem to scorn to restrain them- selves in their attacks upon men they dislike. It was not only the burden of his responsibility; it was also the pettiness and injustice and ingratitude for a good job well done, thatk illed Forrestal. He was a man who was, above all, serious about the public service, and the improvement of the public service engaged his passionate attention to the end. (Copyright, 1949, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN News." The editor and a represen- tative of the personnel department will be in office Wednesday, May 25. Fillmore Thomas and Co.. Inc., wholesale lumber dealers of La- peer, Mich., are looking for men with a business adm. background and arithmetical ability for sales positions with their company. The Bureau has a request for a librarian to work in a large com- pany in Detroit starting in June. The Bureau has received the following Civil Service announce- ments: U.S.-Booklet on opportunities for career service in the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. MICHIGAN-Announcement for adult corrections trainee. The last date for filing applications is June 15. The Metropolitan Chicago Ford Dealers Association announces openings for college graduates in- terested in the selling phase of the retail automobile business. Further information concerning the above may be obtained at the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Bldg. Summer Work: Opportunity for experienced handicraft counselors, men and women, to work at camps during the coming summer. Several companies have an- nounced opportunities for sales work during the coming summer. Opportunity for man to work as cook and houseman for family of four at their summer home. Filip- pino preferred but will consider others. Toledo Y.M.C.A. Camp, Napo- leon, Michigan, is looking for men counselors in crafts, nature, and riflery. $150, room and board for season. Camp Pinemere (girls, private) Minocqua, Wisconsin, is looking for experienced waterfront direc- tor and small craft director-age 25; and a dramatics counselor at least 21. Opportunity for girls, residents of Grand Rapids area, and expe- rienced as waitresses, to work at summer resort near Cheboygan during coming summer. Opportunity for graduate chem- ical engineer (preferred) or chem- ist with background in physical and organic chemistry and fa- miliarity with synthetic resin field to work in research project during summer months. Opportunity for sophomore or junior mechanical engineers, resi- dents of Rochester, New York area, to work as boiler operators in steam generation plants. For.,further information con- cerning the above call at Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Adminis- tration Bldg. Lecture Hopwood Lecture: "The Respon- sibilities of the Critic." Dr. Fran, cis Otto Matthiessen, Professor of History and Literature, Harvard University. The Hopwood Awards for 1948-49 will be announced at this time. 4:15 p.m., Thurs., May 26, Rackham Lecture Hall. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Joan Morton, Psychology; thesis: "Hu- man Performance in a Walk- through Maze" 7 p.m. Thurs., May 26, 3126 Natural Science Bldg. Chairman, J. F. Shepard. English 212L meet in 3209 An- gell Hall, Thurs., May 26, 2 p.m. Bacteriology Seminar: Thurs., May 26, 8:30 a.m., 1520 E. Medical Bldg. Speaker: Barbara Dewey; Subject: "Anti-immunity Fac - tor." Scandinavian 52: Prof. Willey's class will meet 'Thursday of this week at the usual hour. Political Science Final Examina- tion-Room Schedules. The following examinations will meet in the rooms indicated: Po- litical Science 1, June 8, 2 to 5 p.m. -Room B, Haven Hall. Political Science It, June 8, 2 to 5 p.m. Section 1-Houston, 2-Hous- ton, 2003 A.H. 3-Abbott, 2203 A.H. 4-Lane, 5-Ward, 6-Lane, 35 A.H. 8-Efimenco, 9=-Waldby, 10- Waldby, 11-Leu, 12-Leu, 25 A.H. 13-Peek, 14-Peek, 16-Grace, 17-Grace, 18-Grace, 1025 A.H. Political Science 52, May 31, 9 to 12 noon. Mr. Eldersveld's sections 25 A.H. Mr. Vernon's sections 2054 N.S. Mr. Bretton's sections, 2 Econ. Mr. Abbott's sections, E Haven Hall. Political Science 67, June 1, 9 to 12 noon. Mr. Walter's sections, 1025 A.H. Mr..Efimenco's sections, 35 A.H. Mr. Ecker's sections, 3017 A.H. Concerts Cancellation of Program: The program of Opera Scenes pre- viously announced for Thurs., TO THE EDITOR 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, repet- 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. A pology . To The Editor: E ARLIER this semester I wrote a letter to The Daily in which I quoted from a leaflet whose con- tent I had found in the Congres- sional Record (page A3678, Val. 90, Part 10, 78th Congress, 2nd Ses- sion). This leaflet had been read into the Congressional Record by Congressman Claire Hoffman of Michigan with the following in- troduction: "When this same Maurice Sugar, who is now so actively advocating the re-election of Mr. Roosevelt, was a candidate for city council- man in the city of Detroit, the Communist Party put out a cam- paign document asking the voters of that city to support him. Among other things the document said: . .'.. He then read in the leaflet Ire- ferred to above. This leaflet, which he claimed had been issued by the Communist Party, was a vicious one, which in no uncertain lan- guage strongly advocated the quick elimination of the religious forces in our country, closing of the churches, and revolution. Considering the source authori- tative, I quoted from this same leaflet, stating that Mr. Sugar had used it as part of his politi- cal campaign. Mr. Sugar then replied that the leaflet was not used by the Com- munist Party, but that it had been prepared by the Black Legion, who forged the name of the Commu- nist Party to it and distributed it in their effort to defeat him. This was, of course, a great sur- prise to me. since I did not think that a Congressman would be guilty of such a misstatement. Thus I immediately sent a copy of Mr. Sugar's letter to Congressman Hoffman by registered mail, and patiently awaited a reply which I was sure would be immediately forthcoming. To this date I have received no reply to this letter. My own personal attempts to find any proof of Congressman Hoffman's statements made in the Congres- sional Record have been futile. Thus I offer my most humble apology to Mr. Sugar for my hav- ing associated his name with the circulation of this nefarious leaf- let. I sincerely hope that it will be fully realized on this campus that after careful research on my part I can find no connection -be- tween the printing of that leaflet and Mr. Sugar. -Richard F. Schults Events Today Agenda for Engineering Council Meeting 7:30 p.m., 243 W. Engi- neering Bldg. A. Cabinet Report: a. Treasure's Report. b. Cabinet Policy. c. Room Report. B. Committee Report: a. Power tool craft shop. b. Job placement. c. Activities cards. d. Publicity. e. Mentor system., f. Smoker. C. New Business: Ratification of a constitution for the Honor Council. Sensible Tradition SENDING OUT FINAL grades on post cards -has almost become a tradition at Michigan. But it seems that every year there are a few instructors who can't seem to take the time to send a student his final mark and insist that the students wait for the Registrar's Office to send out official transcripts. Shav ianisms MARRIAGE IS POPULAR because it com- bines the maximum of temptation with the maximum of opportunity. * * * Fortunately for me I have no children or my ignorance would have been exposed to the whole world. * * * Thinking is the bravest of all activities. People will do anything to avoid thought, even go to the source of it to snatch a few epigrams so that they shouldn't have to think. Quotation is the homage paid by the ignorant to wisdom. A man comes to believe in the end the lies he tells about himself to himself. I am the first philosopher to make truth pay, and like Jesus I went among the sinners by getting my articles printed in the Tory and Hearst press . . . The Tories like hear- ing themselves called thieves and liars in the same way as churchmen like hearing them- selves called miserable sinners. -Bernard Shaw. When a student receives unofficial notice of his final mark from his instructor and then an official confirmation from the Uni- versity, he can feel with a certain degree of confidence that a clerical mistake has not been made. But of still greater importance in having instructors mail grades is that a student can get a preliminary picture of his scholastic standing usually before he has left school.. Thus if it had suddenly become necessary to attend summer school, arrangements could be made without unnecessary delay. A University regulation states that an instructor may notify his students of their final grades by posting a list or by mail. However, whether he does this or not is entirely up to the individual fac- ulty member. Though mailing out cards may take up some of an instructor's valuable time, it does not seem too much to ask that he let his students know where they stand in the fastest possible manner. -Herbert Melvin. If Congress will put first things first, it can make a start on a sound health program in this session. More doctors, hospitals, disease-prevention campaigns and the like are needed now. They are prerequisites of any nation-wide insurance plan. The latter can safely wait-at least until the benefits it would provide are generally available. -St. Louis Star-Times. ONE WILL RARELY err if extreme actions be ascribed to vanity, ordinary actions to habit, and mean actions to fear. -Nietzsche. (Continued from Page 3) payroll who have appointments or contracts on a full-time yearly basis; or if on a hourly basis, are full-time employees and have been employed by the University for a period of not less than twelve months prior to the date of appli- cation for the purchase of an Ath- letic Coupon Book. The date shown on the Employees' Univer- sity Identification Card shall be considered as the date of employ- ment. 4. For spouses and dependent children under eighteen years of age of the above groups. Cost of Coupon Book: 1. Faculty and full-time em- ployees (tax included) $12.00. 2. Spouses and dependent chil- dren (tax included) $13.80. Purchase Date: -. At Ferry Field Ticket Office beginning June 1'st. 2. Preference for location ex- pires August 1st. 3. Additional Season Ticket purchase privilege (limit two) ex- pires August 1st. Conditions and Privileges: 1. Coupon books or tickets ob- tained by coupon books are not transferable. 2. Ticket privileges end with termination of employment with game and general admission to basketball, track, wrestling, and baseball, as long as seats are avail- able. The purchase of an Athletic Coupon Book for your spouse or dependents entitles them to a re- served seat at all home football games. To gain admission to bas- ketball, they must purchase a tax ticket at Ferry Field Ticket Office before 4:30 p.m. the day of the game. Tax tickets for track, wres- tling, and baseball may be pur- chased at admission gate. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation: Men students who would like to apply for residency in the Hillel House for the Summer or Fall se- mesters should contact with Miss Goldberg. (4120). immediately. Also, students interested in the Hillel Work-Scholarship for the coming-year, -may get further par- ticulars from Miss Goldberg. The Bureau of Appointments has received "a-request for women and men who will be in Ann Arbor a minimum of 2-3 years to be trained as operators and super- visors in the tabulating field. In addition, various research and sta- tistical studies are carried on. Either background or interest in thpese fields will be considered. A.S.M.E.: Meeting, 7:30 (Continued on Page 5) p.m., AMI - 0? - Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students of athe 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 Al Blumrosen........Associate Editor Leon Jaroff.........Associate Editor Robert C. White ......Associate Editor B. S. Brown............Sports Editor Bud Weidenthal ..Associate Sports Ed. Bev Bussey...Sports veature Writer Audrey Buttery......Women's Editor Mary Ann Harris ...Asso. Wor's Editor Bess Hayes ..... .........Librarian BARNABY Now, don't be depressed, m'boy. Tut! Tut! Patience! Your fairy . U .~ - -. ~LI }.CImOrf.)