THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1349 l 1 SChance ON THlE Help Tito A TERRIFIC EXPLOSION can be expected in the UN very shortly when Yugoslavia catapults itself into the midst of the cleav- age between the United States and Soviet, Russia. With the Ukraine's term as a non-per-1 manent member of the security council ex- piring at the end of the year, an election will be held to choose an Eastern European successor. Russia is supporting satellite Czechoslovakia for the past. But, to Rus- sia's high irritation, Yugoslavia has an- nounced her candidacy and will be strong- lybacked by the United States. One of the hottest debates in UN history is f or- seen when the issue comes before the Assembly. At the core of the projected fight lies the United States' support of Premier Marshall Tito in his rebellion against Joseph Stalin. Through his defiance of the Soviet lead- er Tito has become a powerful force in weakening the whole front of Moscow- bossed Communism. Russia wants a deep security belt against the West and Tito's Yugoslavia effectively blocks the forma- tion of this belt. The United States could ask for nothing better. Seizing its opportunity, this country has come to the Yugoslav Premier's aid, supplying him with over $20 million in loans and backing him in his bid for a UN seat. Our action puts Stalin in a serious di- lemma. There is little he can do to thwart Tito short of pittingthe Red Army against Yugoslavia's 500,000 troops. And if the Soviet leader does this, he would risk in- tervention from the West in a form which could conceivably lead to full-scale war. Because Stalin isn't ready to risk touch- ing off a major calamity, he finds him- self stymied. Through supporting Tito, economically and in the UN, the United States has dis- covered an excellent means of aiding in the diruption of the Kremlin's plans for im- perialism. This country has found a vulner- able spot in the vanguard of Soviet Com- inunism and ought to make the best of it. -Bob Keith. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent tht views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: ROMA LIPSKY Olds THE FIGHT to block confirmation of Le- land Olds to the Federal Power Commis- sion is just a pinprick to things like the steel strike and the atom bomb, but it sym- bolizes the clash of two worlds. . . . Olds is the man who made your and my gas elec- tic bills cheaper.He's been the sparkplug on the Commission for 10 years. . . . And the great utilities are gunning for him. Why? Because in late years utilities and mo- nopolists have opened a new line of at- tack-exemption from control. With "con- trol" accepted in theory, there have been fights to exempt industry after industry, to cut the railroads and insurance com- panies loose from the anti-trust laws, to pass the tidelands oil-exemption bill, to take atomic energy from the people, and now the bill to exempt big gas producers from the Federal Power Commission. Olds is on trial before the Senate on the charge of having defended the people.... If Olds and what he stands for are re- jected, we feel in our very bones that the utilities will eventually rue the day. This sort of thing can well lead to public owner- ship of all basic natural resources. -From the New Republic Peron' s Gag Law PRESIDENT PERON'S Argentine gag law is the worst of his many offenses against the freedom of the press and in violation of the commitments his government made in) becoming one of the United Nations. Now if any editor "offends the dignity" of any pub- lic official he may be sentenced to jail for two months to a year, and truth is no de- fense... . In the Charter of the United Nations, Argentina pledged itself to encourage and promote "respect for the fundamental freedoms for all."' Freedom of the press is a fundamental freedom, which the Ar- gentine government, duty-bound to sup- port, is trampling... . Argentina's suppression of the press de- serves the most unequivocal rebuke by the United Nations. A special obligation to con- trast the Peron government's performance with its promises rests on the United States, which may recall without pride that it spon- sored the admission of this pledge-breaking1 government to the UN at San Francisco in 1945. 15-St. Louis Post-Dispatch The Military Mind "THE PROFESSIONAL military mind is by necessity an inferior and unimagina- tive mind; no man of high intellectual qual- ity would willingly imprison his gifts in such a calling." -H. G. Wells. Washington Merry-Go-Round "Why Not All Tribes Use-um One Kind Wampum?" - IL WITH DREW PEARSON III 'I! WASHINGTON - When good old Clyde Hoey, the swallow-tailed senator from North Carolina, announced there would be no more hearings on General Vaughan, John Maragon and the five-percenters, it didn't surprise anybody on the inside. For insiders have known how much pressure has been exerted by the White House to shut the investigation up. One month ago it was announced that public hearings would be suspended in order to give the committee staff a chance to do more investigating, also to give committee counsel Rogers a two-week vacation. Since then, however, White House pressure has been terrific with even staff investigators threatened with loss of government pen- sions. Since then also some sensational leads have been glossed over by committee in- vestigators or carefully stowed away in pigeonholes. One of the most interesting figures whom Senator Hoey and his staff have turned their back on is David A. Bennett, the per- fume manufacturer, who sent seven deep freezes to General Vaughan, Mrs. Truman and other bigwigs at about the time Vaughans' friend, John Maragon, was trying to smuggle Bennett's perfume into the Unit- ed States disguised as champagne for the White House. YACHTS AND DEEP FREEZES HERE ARE SOME other interesting things about Mr. Bennett which the public doesn't know, and most of the record is in government files where any Senate in- vestigator could easily dig it out. For instance, Mr. Bennett, at the time' he was giving away deep freezes, acquired four luxury yachts, three of them from the U.S. government. Four yachts are a lot for any one man to have. However, deep-freeze-giver Bennett wasn't satisfied with four yachts and wanted to buy another. Bennett already had the following luxury yachts: "Carnan," 600 horsepower, 121 foot. 221 tons; "Valerie V," 84 foot, 124 tons; "Caroline," 45 foot, 24 tons; "Nedra B," 111 foot, 101 tons. All these, except the "Valerie V," were purchased direct from the Mari- time Commission. And when the Maritime Commission was asked to disclose who else bid on the vessels, and how much was bid, the information was refused. The yachts were used for some of the famed Truman-Vaughan poker parties, and this long-time intimacy between the President of the United States and the President of the Verley Perfume Company may be why Maragon felt that he could with impunity label his perfume as con- signed to the White House and try to smuggle it through U.S. customs. At that time-around 1945-one Bennett yacht was moored on the Potomac, another at Saugatuck, Mich., and another in Florida. Since then-perhaps because he has been less active in lobbying-Bennett has dis- posed of three yachts, but still keeps the Nedra B. (Copyright, 1949, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) - -L.. n " 11 CU RRET MOVJIE 1! u At the Michigan... MR. SOFT TOUCH, with Glenn Ford- and Evelyn Keyes, for the soft-headed. AFTER A CERTAIN number of movies, Hollywood can reach the point of dimin- ishing returns. And they've passed that point in capitalizing on the tough-guy possibilities of Glenn Ford's small eyes and protruding lower lip. For Ford's facial peculiarities have been trusted to put over his characterization of the soft-hearted boy who turns to crime to avenge wrong-doing, Ford re- signedly goes through the stereotyped plot and dialogue; unfortunately, the same can be said for Miss Keyes, the prudent social- worker who sets about to put Ford on the right path. Never noted for her great dra- matic talents, she outdoes her previous amateurishness in "Mr. Soft Touch." Redeeming features to the film are the supporting players, John Ireland, as the sar- donic columnist; Beulah Bondi and Percy Kilbride, as characters-about-the-settlement house; and a bevy of humorous policemen. The various characters spend the film interacting and doing their darnedest to bring the movie to an exciting climax, in speed of action if in nothing else. But just about the time the climax should be reached, the plot harks back to a repeti- tion of the opening action which gives one to think 'this is where I came in.' Then the frenzied activity starts again and Ford quietly achieves Miss Keyes, but loses the money he stole by pouring'it into a new settlement house although not before the audience has been informed via Christmas carols, that it was a thoroughly moral, therefore, good, film. -Fran Ivick. 11 Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices for thesBulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Office of the Assistant to the President, Room 2552 Administration Building, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1949 VOL. LX, No. 11 Notices Colleges of Architecture, Litera- ture, Science and the Arts, Phar- macy; Schools of Education, For- estry, Music, Public Health and Graduate School: Students may not add courses after noon Oct. 8. A-Hop - Intramural Building: Women students attending the A-Hop Oct. 8, IM Building, will have 1 a.m. permission. Calling hours will not be extended. Mail is being held for the fol- lowing students in the Graduate School Office. Abdul Karin Ahmed, Dorthea A. Ammerman, Robert Beck, Loretta Cheong,rWalter B. Cline, Hyman Datz, Cruz A. Cancel Ferrer, Bud Hall, Patricia E. Hungerford, Cor- agreene Johnstone, Howard Klein, Harry Carl Mantle, M. Lee Me- kemson, Henry T. Murphy, Robert F. Reinke, Milton Sherman, Gene M. Simons, R. H. Thompson, Jerry J. Trubow, Alfred K. Zutle. Hansan M. Ali, Manuel Hen- rique Barbosa, Robert Boltwood, Tan Tek Chuan, Thomas A. Dar- dis, James Dent, Harold Goldberg, Robert Holmes Johnson, Lois Anne Johnson, Jerry M. Jones, Gilberta Gomez Laurens, Richard Mason, Alice Mori, Edythe Reed, Marta Sepulveda, Noah Sherman, P. Pritan Singh, Artemus W. Town- ley, Moe S. Wasserman. If mail is not claimed by Oct. 14, it will be returned to the sender. Women's Dorms, League Houses' and Co-ops: Themes and titles of Fortnite skits must be in by Sat. noon, Oct. 8 in order to be ac- cepted. Contact Jani Stephenson, 9388. Presidents of student organiza- tions, chairmen of committees, and managers of publications and projects are charged with the re- sponsibility of certifying the eli- gibility of students serving with them in extracurricular activities. Eligibility list forms may be se- cured in the Office of Student Af- fairs, 1020 Admin. Building, and are due Oct. 14. Certificates of Eligibility are be- nig issued in the first floor lobby of the Administration Building fron 1 p.m.-4:30 p.m. through Oct. 7 Certificates must be secured im- mediately for the following activi- ties: Officers an'd members of standing committees in a student organization, staff members of stu- dent publications, representatives in student government groups, participation in a public perform- ance or rehearsals for such per- formance, candidates for class of- fices, committee members for ma- jor campus dances or projects. College of Pharmacy: All phar- macy students are expected to at- tend a brief meeting in Rm. 1400. Chemistry and Pharmacy Build- ing, Fri., 7:30 p.m., Oct. 7. Follow- ing this meeting there will be a reception for all students and their dates with dancing at the Michi- gan League. Bureau of Appointments: Mademoiselle Magazine is ac- cepting applications for guest edi- torships for the Mademoiselle Col- lege Board in June 1950. Applica- tions are due November 1, 1949. The Detroit Civil Service Com- mission announces an examination for Junior Civil Engineer and for Librarian II. For each of these Women-First Semester 1949-50 It is a University requirement that all entering freshmen attend a series of Health Lectures and pass an examination on the con- tent of these lectures. Transfer students with freshman standing are also required to take the course unless they have had a sim- ilar course elsewhere, which has been accredited here. Upperclassmen who were here as freshmen and who did not ful- fill the requirements are requested to do so this term. The lectures will be given in the Natural Science Auditorium at 4 p.m. and repeated at 7:30 p.m. as per the following schedule: Lecture 1, Mon., Oct. 10; Lecture 2, Tues., Oct. 11; Lecture 3, Wed., Oct. 12; Lecture 4, Thurs., Oct. 13; Lecture 5, Mon.. Oct. 17; Lecturp 6, Tues., Oct. 18; Lecture 7 (Final Exam.), Wed., Oct. 19. Please note that attendance is required and roll will be taken. Enrollment will be held at the first lecture. You may attend at either of the above hours. Academic Notices Astronomical Colloquium: Fri., Oct. 7, 4:15 p.m., at the Observa- tory. Members of the Observatory staff will speak on 'cooperative Projects of Michigan and Mount Wilson and Palomar Observato- ries." Orientation Seminar for Be- ginning Graduate Students in Mathematics: First meeting, Fri., 3 p.m., 3001 Angell Hall. Mathematics Colloquium: Pro- fessor G. W. Mackey of Harvard University will address the Uni- versity of Michigan Mathematics Colloquium at 4 p.m., Fri., Oct. 7, in 3017 Angell Hall. His topic will be "Imprimitivity for Representa- tions of Locally Compact Topolo- gical Group." Concerts Carillon Recital: Continuing his series of Fall Concerts, Professor Percival Price, University Caril- lonneur, will play a program at 7:15 this evening on the Charles Baird Carillon. It will include Cuckoo Prelude by M. Van den Gheyn, five French children's songs, Sonata No. 5 by I. Pleyel and selections from Samson and Delilah by Saint-Saens and Gounod's Faust. Nelson Eddy, Baritone, with Theodore Paxson at the piano, wil open the Extra Concert Series Sun., Oct. 9, 7 p.m., Hill Audito- rium. Other concerts in the Extra Series include the Boston Sym phony Orchestra, Charles Munch Conductor, Tues., Oct. 25; Tossy Spivakovsky, Violinist, Tues., Nov 22; Eugene List, Pianist and Car- roll Glenn, violinist, in joint re- cital, Fri., Jan. 6; and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Fritz Reiner Guest Conductor, March 12. A limited number of tickets fo either the entire series or for in- dividual concerts are on sale a the offices of the University Musi- cal Society in Burton Memoria Tower. Student Recital: Mitcheles Douglas, Pianist, will present program at 8:30 p.m., Fri., Oct. 7 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, i partial fulfillment of the require ments for the degree of Bachelo of Music. It will include compo sitions by Mozart, Brahms, Beeth oven, Debussy and Chopin. Mis Douglas has studied with Mau Okkelberg, and is at present a pu pil of Helen Titus. The genera public is invited. Events Today U. of M. Hostel Club weine roast at the Island; meet at Lan -Hall at 5:15 p.m. Call Mary Ed r wards for reservations (2-2823: Everyone welcome. Canterbury Club: Tea and Ope House, 4-6 p.m., for all student and their friends. - C.E.D. (Committee to End Dig - crimination): 4:15 p.m., Unioi - All representatives of organize t tions and interested individua - are urged to attend. dent Legislature: 4 p.m., Rm. 3K, Union. Roger Williams Guilders: Party tonight will be a "Full-MOON" affair. Meet at' the Guild House, at 8:30. Wear old clothes. Women's Athletic Building Open House: 8-12 p.m., WAB; Every- one invited; bowling, dancing, ping pong, bridge, refreshments. Small admission charge. SRA Coffee Hour: 4:30 to 6 p.m., Lane Hall. Foreign students will be special guests Moonlight Hike and marsh- mallors at the Island. Meet in Presbyterian Chigrch Recreation lallat 8 p.m. Coming Events TV Football and Post-Game Weiner Roast-To those donating their Amy game tickets to some disabled veteran: The Westmin- ster Guild invites you to view the game via television, 2rd floor lounge, Presbyterian Church. Everyone invited to weiner roast at the churdh following the game. SRA Saturday Luncheon Dis- cussion: 11:30 p.m., Lane Hall. Reservation for lunch may be made at Lane Hall before 10 a.m., Saturday. The Economics Club meets Mon., Oct. 10, 7:45 p.m., Rackham Am- phitheater. Prof. Clare E. Griffin, Fred M. Taylor Professor of Busi- ness Economics will talk on "Some Observations on Britain." Gradu- ate students and staff members in Economics and Business Admin- istration, as well as other inter- ested persons, are invited. LeCercle Francais: First meet- ing, Tues., Oct. 11, 8 p.m., League. Election of officers., A short infor- mal talk by Prof. C. E. Koella, Ro- mance Language Departmenta: "L'Europe a vol d'oiseau." All stu- dents invited to become members. "If we apply any other test than competence in determining the qualifications of teachers, we shall find that pressures and prejudices will determine them. . . Teachers mayhbe expected tosobey the law 1of the land. But it is still permis- sible, I hope, to ask whether a law is wise. To discriminate against teachers-to act as though they were all disloyal-and to put them 1 under special legal disabilities seems injudicious if we want able, independent men to go into the teaching profession." -Robert M. Hutchins of the University of Chicago . - lm r - I I 4 'J t MATTER OF FACT by JOSEPH ALSOP _t 11 W ASHINGTON-A good rousing row is al- ways good rousing fun, but it is a bit dangerous to forget that serious issues may be involved. Despite the distracting drama of hole-and-corner passing out of confi- dential documents, serious issues are in- volved in the current tempest in the Navy. Captain Crommelin's blast against serv- ice unification and its various sequels are not merely episodes in the struggle be- tween the Navy and the Air Force. They are also symptoms of a bitter split within the Navy itself, between the sea officers, led by the Chief of Naval Operations, Ad- miral Louis Denfeld, and the naval avia- tors, led by the Pacific Fleet Commander, Admiral A. W. Radford. In war time, the naval aviators met only the inferior Japanese Air Force, and from this experience conceived an exceedingly du- bious theory of the potentialities of naval aviation in land warfare. Postwar, the naval aviators for a time dominated naval policv. To put it bluntly, their plans for extensive encroachment on the functions of the land- baser Air Force offered the best chance of building the vast naval establishment that all admirals, battleship or other, instinctive- ly desire. Thus all admirals supported the aviators. The passage of the service unification bill, and the subsequent brilliant work of General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower, had the effect of forcing the Navy back into its pri- mary mission. The job of controlling the seas looked almost big enough to the sea officers like Admiral Denfeld, who is himself a sub- mariner. But the resulting limitation of their expansive plans enraged the nave: aviators like Admiral Radford, to the point of the rather open insubordination that has now been displayed. The fury of the naval aviators has been directed, not only against the President and Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson, but also against Admiral Denfeld and the other sea officers like him. The thought seems to be that Admiral Denfeld has been criminally weak to accept the fact that the Navy cannot make its policies and develop its strength in total inde- pendence, and even in defiance, of both the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the United States Government. And the motive of the recent outbursts has been as much to embarrass Admiral Denfeld as to build a fire under Secretary Johnson. It must be considered a symptom of shock- ingly low morale, if the requirement that the Navy adapt itself to a national strategic plan can send so many of its officers off the deep end. If morale is in question, it surely cannot be vastly improved by exhibitions of fairly open insubordination by high officers in responsible positions. And open attacks on the more cooperative naval officers like Ad- miral Denfeld and Admiral Forrest Sherman (who was exiled to the Mediterranean for his part in the unification bill) cannot help morale much either. In short, the drama is pleasing, but the facts are not. (Copyright, 1949, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) TrHE RANK AND FILE worker often sees an issue more clearly than his organiza- tion leader. The Illinois Federation of Labor offers an illustration. The resolutions com- mittee at the state convention at Spring- field recommended against a resolution call- ing for complete lists of state payrolls. The committee thought it might "hold up to positions the Residence Rule is waived. The Board of Education, Chi- cago, Ill. announces examinations for teachers of the following sub- jects: Kindergarten; elemqntary grades; art; modern Greek; Ital- ian; Homemaking; Library Sci- ence; Vocal Music; Physics; Pol- ish; and several types of shop work. For further information concerning the above, call at the Bureau of Appointments. The Michigan State Civil Serv-I ice Commission announces an ex- amination for Unemployment Claims Examiner I. There is no experience requirements for col- lege graduates but such graduates are preferred to have courses in economics, labor relations and public unemployment insurance. Applications are due no later than Oct. 12, 1949, and may be obtained at the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Building. Student Identification Cards foi the R-Z group will be distributed today, 8:30rto 5, in the lobby of the Administration Building. Students who were unable to se- cure their cards at the regular time may pick them up Saturday morning 8-12 in the lobby. Satur- day is the last date for the dis- tribution of cards. Lectures University Lecture: "Britain To- day." Lady Violet Bonham Car- ter, former President of the Lib- eral Party Organization of Great Britain; auspices of the Depart- ment of Political Science. 4:1 p.m., Mon., Oct. 10, Rackham Am- phitheater. Freshman Health Lectures fo' Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the' Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Leon Jaroff............Managing Editor Al Blunirosen...........City Editor Philip Dawson...Editorial Director Mary Stein..........Associate Editor Jo Misner...........Associate Editor George Walker ........ Associate Editor Don McNeil..........Associate Editor Alex Lmanian.. Photography Editor Pres Holmes ......... Sports Co-Editor Merle Levin...........Sports Co-Editor Roger Goelz. Associate Sports Editor Miriam Cady.........Women's Editor Lee Kaltenbach.. Associate Women'sEd. Joan King..... ... .. .... .Librarian.i Allan Clamage......Assistant Librarian 'Business Staff Roger wellington.....Business Manager Dee Nelson.. Associate Business Manager Jim Dangi....... Advertising Manager Bernie Aidinoff.......Finance Manager Ralph Ziegler.C.. irculation Manager Telephone 2 3-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all newsdispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Anon Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. 4 j >J . Succoth Holiday Service: p.m., Hillel Foundation. 7:45' r I Citizens Committee of the Stu- ii -, - _ BARNABY Looking Back 1 01 25 YEARS AGO: THREE THOUSAND extra tickets for the coming football game were placed on sale to students. Each student could buy two making a total of four he was eligible to have. "It is our belief that students should have as square a deal as possible," said one athletic official. * * * - 20 YEARS AGO: Reversing past policies, Dean J. A. Bursley announced that fraternity and sorority house dances held on Saturday nights after football games could be attended by non- No use your Fairy Godfather tutoring you for college now, Barnaby. Not if you can't afford to go until 2180... t'd rather 90 when I'm bigger- 09 0 Yes.:You're pretty small for football now. I may want to change your course of study, too. Latin, for instance... Probably won't be many people speaking Latin in 2180. forget f# and have. some fun, huh, Mr. O'Malley? I I Wave your magic cigar. Make something exciting happen- !' like try, m'boy. .. But I've just remembered an important engagement- They've installed a television set at Paddy's Bar and Grill and the ball game will be on in approximately ten minutes- Gosh. r acfCmort e rn3s Cr + keu a-.. , trm,. Ree x R r , a!ae ! t J-1 - , r. Well, Ellen.. .1 bought a television set today. I figure it's a good investment if it makes Barnaby forget that imaginaryj Darned old television! Since Paddy's Bar and Grill put in that set, my Fairy Godfather hasn't been around You're supposed to be the father coming home from a hard day's work and...