TfIRE MUI iAN- 1DAILY Clink Will Direet Study Of Heredity Pairing up of males and females in American cities will be of top interest to the Heredity Clinic for the next five years, thanks to a $100,000 gift from an anonymous donor. The research program, to be directed by Dr. Lee R. Dice, head of the Heredity Clinic, will be to study human mating selection in the urban community. * * * IT IS SLATED to get underway in the middle of September, Dr. Dice announced. The unknown donor's grant will finance the entire project, which will be set up as a sepa- rate section of the Institute of Human Biology, the newly-ap- proved name for the laboratory effective July 1. "The purpose of the research is to determine, assortative mating patterns in the city," Dr. Dice ex- plained, "or to explore the ten- dency of like persons to mate with like." "THE RESULTS of this pro- gram will be an aid in predicting the trends of population in here- dity in future years," he said. "We will have to develop new techniques of study to carry on this program," Dr. Dice said, "which promises to be the most extensive of its kind yet under- taken." A random sampling of a city population will probably be used for the investigation, ac- cording to Dr. Dice, with Ann Arbor tentatively designated as the sample community. Petitions Due For WSSF Jobs Petitions for the 12 committee chairmanships of the World Stu- dent Service Fund drive are now available at the Office of Stu- dent Affairs and Lane Hall. The positions include general chairman, vice-chairman, secre- tary, treasurer, Student Legisla- ture and Student Religious Asso- ciation representatives, and chair- knen of the following committees: blood drive, fund drive, dormi- tories, houses, program, and pub- licity. Continuous from 1 P.M. Last Times Today - Filming in Berlin .. ,. "-"" er BUSINESS SERVICES -Courtesy Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. BERLIN MOVIE MAKERS-The crew of "The Big Lift," which was produced at the request of the Air Force, prepares to shoot a scene amid the ruins of Berlin. Since only a minimum of Hollywood equipment could be brought, the camera mount was devised from a dentist's chair and baby carriage wheels. Director George Seaton stands at right; his wife, Phyllis Seaton, '28, third from right. *e e * * * * * * ProblesBestBri oi imn --- SYLVIA STUDIO of Dance - Ballroom, Tap, Acrobatic, Ballet. Over Michi- gan Theater. Phone 8066. )9B WANTED-Laundry to take in. Very reasonable? Call 2-9494. )35B SHIRTS - Nine hour service (by re- quest), three day service (regular ser- vice). Ace Laundry, 1116 S. Univer- sity. ) 7B VIOLA STEIN-EXPERIENCED TYPIST -Master's and Doctor's manuscripts and legal work. Phone 2-9848 after noon. )30B rYPEWRITER3 AND FOUNTAIN PENS Sales and Service MORRILL'S-314 S. State St. )11B DELICIOUS hardy picnic lunches for groups numbering fromr25 to 1,000 persons. Let us take care of all the details. We deliver. J. D. Miller Ca- tering service. 2-8315 phone. )13B HILDEGARDE SHOPPM - 109 E. Washington Expert Alterations Custom Clothes by Established Tradition )3B WASHING, ironing done in my own home. Also rough dry and wet wash- ing. Free pick up and delivery. Ph. 2-9020. )1B EAVE YOUR typewriter repaired by the Office Equipment Service Company. 215 E._Liberty. )_4_ VACATION DAYS will soon be here. Mother and Dads-enjoy yourselves. Responsible sitters for the children. CallKiddieKare 3-1121. )10B 4 FOR SALE ANY TYPE Foot Locker - $7.99, $9.99, $10.99 al taxes included; Army type duffle bags $2.99; Furlough bags $2.49 with zipper; Open til 6 p.m. Samns Store,_ 122 E. Washington. )5_ A $10 STEAL. White double-breasted shawl collar DINNER JACKET. 36 Med. Bob , Wagner, 2-4274, after 7. )177 AMERICAN Radiator Gas Furnace unit and thermostat. $100. Phone 25-7881. )178 LIGHT WEIGHT Motorcycle Harley 125, excellent condition. Reasonable Price. Jim Trumbo 2-7303 after 7 p m .. R~)1 7 9 MOTORCYCLE - 1940 Indian, 74, Good condition, call 5806 after 7 p.m. -- - - --. .180 i93 FORD, runs good. New top, bat- tery. $55. Ph. 9879 )181 200 SETS of 78 r.p.m. records, like new, from private collection, mostly be- low ?2 list. Unusual bargains. Many rare and new items, also a few LP's and 45's. 118 N. Thayer, Apt. 2. Tel. 2-9185. _ )182 BICYCLES-Men's Schwinn lightweight $20. Girl's Elgin $30. Phone 3-0275. )175 GOLF SET-Ralph Guldahl autograph- ed matched clubs. 5 irons. 2 woods, brand new, never used. Price $29.95 Ph. 2-8692. )171 MOTORCYC LISTS ! If you are interested in a motorcycle, you should see these before you buy. They are priced right. India M/C Sales, 207 W. Liberty. Ph. 2-1748. Open evenings. )170 Read Daily Classifieds FOR SALE 1938 PACKARD SEDAN-Radio, heater, new tires, battery, muffler, and shocks. 2-2080. )168 MUST SELL-'37 Chrysler Imperial. Clean, sound and solid throughout. Good tires, htr., overdrive. Lots of room for that trip home. $130.00. Call 2-4591, 304 Prescott. )173 ALL COLOR PARAKEETS, Canaries, Finches, Cocketiels. Bird supplies and cages. 562 S. 7th. Ph. 5330. )2B 1949 ENGLISH FORD FORDOR - A-1 condition new last August, low mile- age. Priced for quick sale. See any evening at 615% W. Huron or Satur- day and Sunday. Phone 2-8770. )148 WOMAN'S riding boots size 81z. Ex- cellent condition. Phone 8539 after 5:00.- )80 CUSHMAN SCOOTER 1950. Auto trans- mission. Used three weeks. Wind- shield, speedometer. Priced to suit. Call 3-4592. )126 DIAMOND engagement and wedding rings. Large discount. Jay Angle, wholesale representative. Ph. 2-4481. )9 . TRANSPORTATION A WANTED - 3 riders to Chicago, north- side, leaving Friday. Call 2-0673 after 5 p.m. )29T DESIRE ride ao Mexico City after June 17, share expenses and driving. Call Mary 9388. )30T FLYING (Commercial) TO BOSTON- Early July? May our three-year old ride with you? Remuneration, of course. Ph. 2-6221. _____ )28T FLYING TO CALIFORNIA June 8. Have 2 seats, $75 each. McElroy Fly- ingService, 9335. )27T ALASKA TRIP in 1950 Chevrolet Su- burban carryall. Want 2 or 3 passen- gers, references. Leave about May 20. For information, call Detroit T080376 about 6 p.m. )26T PERSONAL TO THE MEMBERS OF FIJI: Crying in our beer are we. Since Sunday our mugs you took. We can't give our books a look. Please return our mugs so fancy. Two tearful coeds-Suzie and Nancy. ) 77P STUDENT RATES on TIME and LIFE still available. Only $4.75 a year. Through Student Periodical Agency. Phone 2-82-42. )2 NOW IS THE TIME! Get your room for this summer or next fall now! ! You will get very satisfactory results from a cheap, efficient DAILY CLASSIFIED AD. 2-3241. )2P STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY Never advertises on Sundays. 2 LEARN TO DANCE Jimmie Hunt Dance Studio 209 S. State Phone 8161 )iP SENIORS-Your last chance to take advantage of the Student rates on TIME and LIFE. Only $4.75 a yr. Phone Student Periodical Agency, 2-82-42. )2 EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES MEDICAL PERSONNEL for medical and dental field. 408 Park Ave. Bldg. WO 3-5789 DETROIT, MICHIGAN )1E , : . . :r , HITCHHIKER leave a green plastic raincoat in your car? Pleasecall Ypsi 792-M. Thanks. )150L LOST ==-": May 17, Man's horn-rimmed glasses, brown leather case. Reward Call . Rellenga, 2-0070. )106L LOST -':'Parker '51 Pen. Silver and blak. Call Room 309, Cooley E.Q. 2-4591: Reward. }107L LOST-Bunch of keys near Groomwell Beauty Shop or vicinity of State St. Ph. 5896 or 5126. )98L LOST--Black and pink rim glasses. Ap- ril 25th, campus. Ph. 3-1561-4506 Palmer Hse. )85L LOST-Racine wristwatch with metal band. Call 250611. )64L WANTED TO RENT THREE ROOM FURNISHED APT, by graduate student and working wife. Must have private bath. Will be in Ann Arbor at least 3 years. Write T. D. Kowalski, 9205 A St., Apt. 11, Hayward Calif. )30N WANTED TO RENT-Furnished kit- chenette apartment for the Summer Session. Graduate student and wife. R. C. Davis, University of Akron, Mathematics Department, Akron, O. )15N WANTED-TO-SUB-LET: Wife and hus- band, both teachers, desire to sub- letnapartment for summer school session. Write Mrs. June D. Kelly, Box 181, Galien, Mich. )11N FOR RENT FURNISHED-Near Law School. June 1 to July 25. $60. Ph. 2-0438. )36F DOUBLE ROOMS, SUITES - Available for men, summer session. Near cam- pus and Union. Shower, continuous hot water. $5.25. 509 S. Division near Jefferson. )29F FOR RENT-June 16 to Sept. 1-Small apartment near campus. Reasonable rent. 2-5269 after 4. )32N ROOMS FOR RENT-Rooms for Sum- mer School, $4 per week. Fraternity House. Kitchen privileges. 514 E. Univ. Corner of Hill. Phone 2-9341. 34F WANTED TO TRADE IF OUR TASTES AGREE, let's swan classical record albums. 2-7981. )17'1 LOST & FOUND HELP.WANTED WANTED-Part time secretary-steno- grapher for executive office. Hours to be arranged. Dr. Rector. Phone 2-0978. )23H BOOKKEEPER WANTED - Permanent position for bookkeeper to handle full set of books, good salary, interesting work. Interviews on 2nd floor Fol- lett's Bookstore, 322 S. State. ) 18H DO YOU need any help? If so, you will get good results from a DAILY HELP WANTED ad. Try it and see. )7P ROOMS FOR RENT CLOSE TO CAMPUS-Large, pleasant double room for male students, fall or summer. No smoking. Phone 5372. )82R. COOL ROOMS for summer session for mature men. 4 blocks from campus. Twin beds, shower, cooking and laun- dry privileges. Continuous hot water. Shown Tues., 12:45 to 4:30. Fri. 9-4. 415 Lawrence. )83R MEN-Inexpensive rooms for summer. Some with bath. Call 2-2202. )80R ONE SINGLE room. Man preferred. 2-4239. 836 Brookwood Place. )79R. PLEASANT singles & doubles for men. Campus. Summer rates $5. Ph. 6876 evenings. )77R% SUITE-Private bath. Private entrance. Suitable for three men. 603 Lawrence. ) 76R MEN'S ROOMS, summer and fall sin- gles and doubles. 1346 Geddes, 2-7044. ATTENTION MEN STUDENTS.-Secial summer rates. Some fall reservations available. Twin-bed rooms, air-con- ditioned, showers, continuous hot water. Unusually attractive accom- modations, just three blocks off cam- pus. Call 7632. )30F MEN - Spend the summer in AIR COOLED LUXURY. Carpeted rooms with baths. TELEVISION. Sundeck. Near campus. Kappa Nu Fraternity. Phone 2-8809 or .2-8813. 81R WANTED TO BUY WANTED TO BUY--Small house for occupancy by September. Write .john Carnes, 3(Y7 N. State, Ann Arbor, or phone 2-9483. 16W MODEL A or B Roadster. Call 2-0227 Ask for Con. )17* ,A By JOHN DAVIES The Russians and the weather were only two of many reasons why writer-director George Seaton had a difficult time filming "The Big Lift," which is currently be- ing shown in Ann Arbor. Seaton, who won an "oscar" for his screenplay of "Miracle on 34th Street," spent over nine months in Berlin making the picture with a crew of only 12 Americans. WITH THE EXCEPTION of Paul Douglas and Montgomery Clift, the actors were either air force personnel, German civilians or German actors, Seaton explain- ed in a recent West Coast inter- view. Judd To Speak At Round Table Mrs. Dorothy Judd will speak on "A Citizen-Action Program - Grand Rapids as an Example," before the Political Science Round Table at 7:30 p.m. today in the Rackham Amphitheater. Long active in Grand .Rapids' civic affairs, Mrs. Judd organized a Citizen-Action group two years ago which is credited with run- ning machine politics out of the Grand Rapids city government. The meeting will be open to the public. The Russians proved to be a nuisance in several ways. "While we were shooting a scene at the border of the Russian zone, they set up loudspeakers and played music all day, forcing us to shoot the scene silently and add sound to the picture later," Seaton complained. * * * AND THE Russian-inspired rail- road strike forced Seaton, his wife, two small children fnd the crew to wait in a railroad car for over 72 hours before finally arriving in Berlin. The run usually took about six hours. The weather proved a big hin- drance to Seaton and his crew. "Often we would get all our equipment set to make a certain shot and it would be too cloudy - or in some cases too sunny - to get what we wanted," Seaton ex- plained. LANGUAGE problems were an- other headache to Seaton. "When we first arrived in Berlin. we had a very incompetant in- terpreter and assistant directors who didn't understand English.f This resulted in the German ac- tors being told to do the wrong thing more often then not," Sea- ton said. "Eventually, the situation was cleared up by getting a better in- terpreter," he added. * * * TYPICAL of many of the small- er problems which arose was the fact that crowds would gather every time shooting was attempt- ed on what should have been an empty street. "We solved the problem by using the old trick of setting up a dummy camera, complete with an active 'cameraman,' at the other end of the street to divert the attention of the crowd," Seaton explained. "Then, of course, we set up an inconspicuous camera to do the real shooting," he added. featuring BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND DINNERS prepared by ANN ARBOR'S WELL KNOWN CHEF FOR 30 YEARS VIRGIL LANG DAILY STUDENT SPECIAL to fit your budget Open: 7:00 A.M. to 7:30 P.M. Closed Sundays MI E.WE'S Coe A'IKE120 E. Washington St. 1 #PftEC IA-L .1 FISH and CHIPS (filet) (French fries) Rolls and Butter 65c Prompt Fountain Service LIBERTY 9,A40aid cAivh4 301 E. Libeftrty - 11i t i i I i i Ui mammmmmmme I -w I No. Main-Opp. Court House C4 STARTS TODAY Thru Friday 40c (PAID ADVERTISEMENT) THE REAL STORY ,itk Fuzz KNIGHT' Raymond HATTON AI : 1 / 1 Added Cartoon "PAYING THE PIPER" ' THE ANN ARBOR DRAMA SEASON NOW PLAYING John Alexander, John Morgan in "BORN YESTERDAY" By Garson Smith with SCOTT McKAY and CARROL ASHBURN Curtain 8:30 LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATER 1 i * NOTE SCHEDULE " INTHE FLESH A PAUL GRAETZ PRODUCTION ENDING TODAY M"G' PICTURE with CYD CHARISSE-" NANCY DAVIS * PLUS * i -i a Vif "This film is plainly for starting impassioned discussion. For not only does it have forebearance for the youthful principles in an adulterous romance, but it lays bare the merciless irony in certain conventional attitudes. Perhaps the finest, most mature picture from post-war France." -Bosley Crowther, N.Y. TIMES Fri. and Sat., at 8 P.M. I Like all of our basic freedoms, freedom of ex- pression is precious to us beyond calculations. A measure of the sincerity with which it is cherished is the care with which it is treated. That care must necessarily involve decency, dignity, good taste, high moral purpose and above all, responsibility. When that "freedom" is perverted by a failure to distinguish it from corruption, infamy, slander and lies, it be- comes transformed into its very opposite: license. A democratic society has its responsibilities as well as its freedoms. The Student Legislature assumed none of the democratic responsibility of exercising dis- cretion, when, without any investigation at all on its part, it approved by a small majority the showing of the film Birth of a Nation. HAD THEY INVESTIGATED THE BACK- GROUND AND CONTENT OF THIS FILM, THEY WOULD HAVE FOUND THAT AC- CORDING TO BOTH ITS WRITER (Rev. Thomas Dixon, author of "The Clansmen" from which the movie was taken) AND ITS PRODUCER (D. W. Griffith), THE SOLE PURPQSE OF THE FILM' WAS TO "CREATE A FEELING OF ABHOR- RENCE IN WHITE PEOPLE TOWARD COLOR- ED MEN." Had they investigated, they would have found that the film "identified Negroes with cruelty, super- stition, insolence, and lust. It judged the Negro unfit for freedom and civil rights and argued that his liberation was a grave error." At one point it bluntly editorialized that the South must be made "safe" for the whites. Had they investigated, they would have found that the film thrillingly and gloriously justified the rise of the Ku Klux Klan, which was "deified as the savior of white womanhood." Had the Student Legislature investigated before making a rash and unpardonable decision, they would have discovered that the producer-director, D. W. Griffith, "employed every resource of movie magic to stimulate his audiences to frenzied hatred of the often advertised as "calculated to whip into a frenzy . . . it will make you hate. * * * * Ever since the film's appearance in 1915, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, representing 15,000,000 and more Americans, has been waging a ceaseless struggle to have this vicious and insulting film withdrawn from circula- tion. At this very moment in New York City, the NAACP, the Urban League, The National Council of Arts, Sciences and Professions, Labor unions, Civic organizations, Church groups; all are staging a mass protest against the recent re-release of this picture. 'Walter White, a recognized leader among the Negro people, has stated: "It is inexplicable why any- one should revive a film like "The Birth of a Nation" at this critical period of human history. During recent months in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and Europe, I have seen American prestige sinking lower and lower because of the foul propaganda of pictures like Birth of a Nation.' No decent theater owner who has any regard for the future of America would show such a film nor should any decent American pay money to see it." We at the University of Michigan are at this moment in a position of immense moral responsibility. To withdraw the film now, once and for all, is to serve notice to the entire nation that we, student and faculty, Negro and white, Protestant, Catholic, and Jew stand immovable in our complete rejection and repudiation of all racist ideology in whatever form and under whatever pretension it masquerades. To withdraw this film is to prove that we are mature people, that we understand fully our responsibility to democracy; that we can intelligently distinguish between liberty and license. This would not simply be an act of good faith, a hand of friendship extended to the Negro people; it 'is the profoundest service to the American People, to their democratic institutions, and to those free- doms, free from all taint of slander and insult, which audiences I. crhned On t ue ""'- j :1 # I i ,I , , , .