THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 4949 I' a____________________________ U WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-RO] Steel L'obbA By DREW PEARSON A SECRET BREAKFAST took place in the Carlton Hotel the other day to discuss a problem that worries the steel industry just about as much as the strike. A This is the basing-point system, a mono- poly practice whereby steel companies lessen competition between each other by charging the same price whether the steel is made in Pittsburgh, Pa., or Geneva, Utah. Already, in a test case over cement, the Supreme Court has ruled that the basing- point system violates the anti-trust laws, and the Federal Trade Commission is now cracking down on other big industries that use the basing-point system to regulate prices. So, while the headlines have been screaming about the strike, the big steel companies have been quietly maneuver- ing to save the basing-point system. First move was to try jamming through Congress a bill to legalize the system; which, however, was caught and amended by Sen. Fditorials published in The Michigan Daily ire written by members of The Daily staff snd represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: PETER HOTTON UND- yBreakfast Estes Kefauver of Tennessee and Congress- man John Carroll of Colorado, two alert Democrats. Now the steel companies have changed their tactics, are trying to soften the Fed- eral Trade Commission, have sent their best lawyers to work on Trade Commissioner Lowell Mason, usually a friend of business. It was Mason who met the lawyers at a Carlton Hotel breakfast, bringing along FTC counsel Lynn Paulson and FTC examiner Frank Hier, who are helping him on the steel case. The spokesman for the lawyers was Hoyt Moore of Bethlehem Steel, a life- long friend of Mason's. At the breakfast, steel attorneys urged a compromise permitting the steel indus- try to continue using the basing-point system. They wanted the Trade Commis- sion to issue a "cease and desist" order full of fancy words, ordering the steel companies to stop certain minor practices but permitting them to continue syste- matic freight absorption-the nub of the basing-point system. Note-Commissioner Mason can count on, one other Commissioner-Garland Ferguson -to vote with him. Tough Commissioner William Ayres of Kansas will oppose, to- gether with newly-confirmed Commissioner John Carson. Commissioner Erwin Davis would oppose, but is sick. This may mean a tie vote. C uRE iNT 7VE At the Michigan: At the State: COME TO THE STABLE, with Loretta SONG OF SURRENDER, with Claude Young and Celeste Holm. Directed by Rains, Wanda Hendrix, and MacDonald Henry Koster. Carey. W ITHTHE SORT of romanticism and F YOU DON'T mind Enrico Caruso served sentimentality which has been coming up between two slices of Buddy Clark out of Hollywood, this 20th century endeavor this film is not a complete waste of two seems out of place. hours. It is amazingly good. There's the typically happy ending, but the means to the end are It features an able performance by Claude important. No attempt at realism-Holly- Rains as a gloomy New England churchman, wood realism-is made by either the author Brother Hunt, by name, who is definitely or director, and therein lies much of the against sin.. reason for the success of this production. But sin, in the form of a victrola and Since the movie does not purport to be a collection of Caruso records, invades his realistic, none of the nauseating romanti- household. His child wife, Wanda Hen- cism" which has permeated the California- drix, unknowingly aided by outlander bred films is present. MacDonald Carey, picks it up at an auc- In .brief, the story is that of two nuns tion. The Good Brother Hunt censures his who have survived the war, in France, and frau and drives the infernal machine from have come to America to build a hospital his door, which is of course a blunder. because of a promise made to God in the midst of battle. She stashes it in a cave and waits till Old The story moves quickly and humorously Husband Rains goes off on the Lord's bus- as the simple, though faithful and generous, iness, whereupon she plays it so loudly that nuns proceed to accomplish their end. There the entire valley is aroused. At this point are many coincidences and many reforma- outlander Carey wanders back into the film tions of the irreligiwjs which would be Qb- to precipitate the inevitable triangle. jectionable undi"the tdindards of good real- ism, but then this isn't a realistic movie. Love and duty come to grips and virtue Director Koster has a keen sense of show- s of course rewarded, giving Buddy Clark manship and employs his techniques to the a chance to do an encore on the "Song of best avail. Several of the sequences are Surrender.' laugh-provoking; others prompt tears. But Strangely enough this thing is not nearly they are all masterfully done. as bad as it sounds. Rains, Miss Hendrix, The acting is excellent and it must be and Carey, one of the pleasantest personal- admitted that the characters have grasped ities on the screen, are good enough to make the romantic feeling which has been so you forget the plot. messed up by Hollywood these past years. The photography stresses the gloom, pre- This picture is heartily recommended, for sumably as befits the New England Puritan its warmth, humor and sentiment. Really setting, and is as a result, pretty mono- a fine production. tonous. -B. S. Brown. . -Kirk Hampton. MATTER OF FACT: Te IBeria Ilomb---I ROILING STONES ... by Harold Jackson WARM WELCOME NO OVERNIGHT millionaire was ever be- set with the conglomeration of shady salesmen, activities hounds, joiners and well- meaning Dorothy Dix's that descends upon a beginning -freshman. Everything from fake ID to Freshman Pots to a hound guaranteed to be one of President Ruthven's pedigreed boxer puppies is offered to Frosh at special "pre-school prices." And literature that Clifton Fadiman couldn't review in 12 years is heaped upon his arms. The Freshman edition of The Daily, with its catalogue of local advertisers between Chicago and Cleveland, vies for interest with pertinent instructions on how to write damn- ing letters to congressmen when Freshmen become of age-some three years hence. But THESE STONES contend that the prize, the absolute prize, for Orientation In- nocuity goes to a little booklet designed to prepare coeds for rational survival in this 3-1 dating jungle. Warning strongly against promiscuity, advising definite limitations on smooching, it does condone one dating procedure, (be- sides gold digging); cooing thusly to coeds: "Don't be surprised if he grips your hand in his while walking down the street-it's just collegiate courtesy." ** * IN PASSING THIS COLUMN, for the Dean's office rec- ords, is an honest, though unchaper- oned, attempt to corral a few of the side- lights on life on campus which might be otherwise overlooked-or purposely ignored -in the regular news columns of The Daily. It was not originated solely to needle either professors, rah-rah boys, giggling coeds, or militant but misguided liberals, although all these goals will bear investi- gation. THESE STONES will be juggled prin- cipally for the pleasure of YOU whom they , will hit, miss-or rebound from. And they will be ever responsibe to your observations and impressions. EUROPEAN SHOTS: SINCE UNOFFICIAL estimates assert that 2,000 U. of M. students invaded Europe during the summer months, we might in- clude the following excerpts from the post- cards of one traveler, Bob: From the S.S. Queen Mary: "This ship rolls so much, you can fall upstairs. Met a charming English girl last night and tried to strengthen Anglo-American rela- tions, but she exercised the veto power." From Paris: "Three weeks and I still haven't started seeing this town. You see the nicest things walking around here leached on to poodles." And from Greenland: "Stopped here dur- ing plane trip home. This is the perfect spot for a cocktail party. Strictly off campus and lots of ice." SAD LOSS IT IS WITH deep regret that we announce that the one practical-minded coed in this bevy of ethereal women won't be back on campus this fall. You remember, she was the one who said: "I quit algebra because those silly profes- sors just couldn't make up their minds what Xequalled." CIINIEMA' CURIOSITY IS A valuable trait. It will make the simians learn many things. But the curiosity of a simian is as excessive as the toil of an ant. Each simian will wish to know more than his head can hold, let alone ever deal with; and those whose minds are active will wish to know everything. It would stretch a god's skull to accom- plish such an ambition, yet simians won't like to think it's beyond their powers. Even small tradesmen and clerks, no matter how thrifty, will be eager to buy costly encyclo- pedias, or books of all knowledge. Almost every simian family, even the dullest, will think it is due to themselves to keep all knowledge handy ... Simians even believe, many of them, that knowledge is power. Unfortunate dupes of this saying will keep on reading ambitiously till they have stunned their native initiative and made their thoughts weak; and will then wonder dazedly what in the world is the matter, and why the great power they were expecting fails to appear. Again, if they ever forget what they read, they'll be worried. Those who can forget- those with fresh eyes who have swept from their minds such facts as the exact month and day that their children were born, or the numbers on houses, or the names (mere meaningless labels) of the people they meet) -will be urged to go live in sanitariums or see memory doctors. by Clarence Day. READING OVER the statistics of Univer- sity enrollment, we were reminded of DlAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from rage 3) j ances and other functions in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Any student who finds that she may be more than thirty minutes late after the regular closing hour or more than fifteen minutes late over any late permission shall no- tify her resident director of her expected lateness and probable time of return to the house. Any girl who violates the house rules and is brought before the Judiciary Council may be placed on social probation. Office of the Dean of Women Judiciary Council Parking Areas on Campus Student drivers are reminded that their driving tags or "M" stickers secured in the Office of Student Affairs are NOT PARK- ING PERMITS and do not give them permission to park in the re- stricted campus parking lots so designated by means of signs at the entrances. Students violating these parking regulations are sub- ject to a monetary fine and possi- ble loss of driving privileges. Constitutions for student or- ganizations: At its meeting on May 3. 1949 the Committee on Student Affairsadopted the fol- lowing motion: "Every student or- ganization recognized by the Committee on Student Affairs shall file in the Office of Student Affairs a copy of its constitution. Documents are due in the Office of Student Affairs, 1020 Admin., on or before NOVEMBER 1. This regulation applies to graduate and undergraduate organization, including fraternities and sorori- ties. Regents' rules governing opera- tion of motor vehicles by stu- dents: "No student in attendance at the University shall operate any motor vehicle. In exceptional and extraordinary cases in the discre- tion of the Dean of Students this rule may be relaxed." The regu- lation governs the use of a car as well as the operation of one; con- sequently it is not permissible for a student to use his car or his family's car for social, personal, or other purposes when the car is di iven by any person who is not a member of his immediate family. Any act of driving without first securing permission from the Of- fice of Student Affairs will consti- tute grounds for disciplinary ac- tion. Students within the following groups may apply for exemption from the ruling by calling in per- son at the Office of Student Af- fairs, 1020 Administration Build- ing, and by giving complete infor- mation on their cars: a) Those who are twenty-six years of age or older. b) Those who have a faculty rating of teaching fellow or high- er.. C) Married students. It is to be emphasized that ex- emption is not granted automati- cally but is given only upon per- sonal request. All other student drivers must report to the Office of Student Affairs where they may petition for special permits which will en- able them to use their cars for purposes which are deemed abso- lutely necessary. Certificates of eligibility: At the beginning of each semester every student is presumed to be ineligi- ble for any non-athletic extracur- ricular activity until his eligibility is affirmatively established by ob- taining a certificate of eligibility from the Office of Student Af- fairs. Activities for participation in which a student must show proof of his eligibility include: of- ficers in a student organization, participants in a public perform- ance or rehearsals for such per- formance, candidates for and rep- resentatives in student govern- ment groups, members of standing committees in student organiza- tions, staff members of student publications, candidates for class offices, and committee members of major campus dances or proj- ects. STUDENTS ON PROBATION OR WARNING ARE FORBID- DEN TO PARTICIPATE IN ANY EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVI- TY. Certificates of eligibility will be issued in the first floor lobby of the Admin. Bldg. from 1-4:30 p.m. through OCTOBER 7, to those qualified. Each applicant for a certificate is requested to show the blueprint of his scholastic record. Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors: A sophomore, junior, or senior may obtain a certificate of eligi- bility provided he earned 11 hours or more of academic credit in the preceding semester, or 6 hours of academic credit in the preceding summer semester with an average of at least C for the semester's program, and provided he has earned at least a C average for his entire academic career. First Semester Freshmen: - No freshman in his first semes- ter of residence may be granted a certificate of eligibility. Second Semester Freshmen: A freshman in his second se- mester of residence may be grant- ed a certificate of eligibility pro- vided he has completed 15 hours or more of work with at least (1) one mark of A or B and no mark of less than C, or (2) 2%/2 times as many honor points as hours and with no mark of E. Advanced Standing Students: Students entering with less than 26 hours of advanced credit are to be considered as first-term freshmen and as ineligible for ex- tracurricular activities until after they have completed successfully one term in the University. Special Students: Special students are prohibited from participating in any extra- curricular activity. Exception may be granted by the Committee on Student Affairs upon the positive recommendation of the dean of the school or college in which the student is enrolled. Physical Disability: Students excused from physical education because of physical in- capacity are forbidden to take part in any extracurricular activ- ity except by special permission of the Committee on Student Affairs To obtain such permission a stu- dent may be required to present a written recommendation from the Univejgity Health Service. Violations: Cases of violation of eligibility regulations will be re- ported to -the proper disciplinary authority for action. Denial of permission: Whenever in the ,opinion of the Committee on Student Affairs, or in the opin- ion of the dean of the school or college in which the student is en- rolled, participation in an extra- curricular activity may be detri- mental to his college work, the Committee may decline to grant a student the privilege of partici- pation in such activity. Responsibility for Checking Eli- gibility: Presidents of student or-. ganizations, chairmen of commit- tees, and managers of publications and projects are charged with the responsibility of certifying the eli- gibility of officers, committee members, or staff members who serve with them. Eligibility List forms are available immediately in theOffice of StudentAffairs and must be filed in that office not later than OCTOBER 14, in accordance with the following procedure: Before permitting any student to participate in an extracurricu- lar activity, the president, chair- man, or manager of the activity shall (1) require each applicant to present a certificate of eligi- bility, and (2) sign his initials on the back of the certificate, (3) file with the Office of Student Af- fairs the names of all those who have presented certificates of eli- gibility and a signed statement to exclude others from participation. Presidents, chairmen, or man- agers' may be directed to explain to the Committee on Student Af- fairs any negligence in the dis- charge of this responsibility. Standards of Conduct: Enrollment in the University carries with it obligations in re- gard 'to conduct, not only in a classroom but outside as well. Stu- dents are expected to conduct themselves in such a manner as to be a credit both to themselves and to the University. They are amenable to the laws governing the community, to the rules and regulations of the University and of University officials. They are expected to observe the standards of conduct approved by the Uni- versity. Whenever a student, group of students, society, fraternity, or other 'student organization fails to observe either the general stand- gds of conduct as above outlined or any specific ones which may be adopted by the proper University authorities, or conducts himself or itself in such a manner as to make it appareht that he or it is not a desirable member or part of the University, he or it shall be liabte to disciplinary action by the prop- er University authorities. (By- laws, 1948, Sec. 8.03). In interpretation of the forego- ing general standards of conduct, the University Committee on Stu- dent Conduct announces the fol- lowing specific standards: The presence ofw omen guests in men's residences, except for ex- change and guest dinners or for social events orcalling hours ap- proved by the Office of Student Affairs, is not permitted. The use orp resence of intoxi- cating liquors in student quarters is not permitted. Student organizations are ex- pected to take all reasonable measures to promote among their members conduct consistent with good morals and good taste, and to endeavor by all reasonable means to insure conformity with the foregoing standards of con- duct. The following University regu- lations and procedures apply to closed social events sponsored by student organizations: (1) Approval is required for all functions at which both men and women are to be present. Requests for approval must be submitted to the Office of Student Affairs by the social chairman of the organi- zation no later than noon of the Monday before the event is sched- uled. Request forms are available in the Office of Student Affairs. In the case of a fraternity or a sorority, ;written approval from the fipancial adviser of the group must Acciompany the request for approval' for any function for which the estimated expenditure is more than -25. (2) Chaperons: Signed accep- tances of at least two chaperons- preferably two married couples such asfaculty members, parent of students, alumni, or married students of sufficiently mature years-must accompany the re- quest for approval. (3) No intoxicating beverage shall be served or consumed al any student-sponsored function. (4) Social functions held in student residences are restricted to the main floor. (5) Dances shall close not late] - than 12 midnight. Dances may bE held only on Friday or Saturday nights or on a night preceding a University holiday. Dances may not be held on any night preced- ing a University vacation period. (6) No student dances shall be conducted at any time by individ- ual students, or by groups of stu- dents not constituting recognized organizations. (7) Footfall game broadcast entertainments: Men's organized house groups will be authorized to entertain women guests to hear broadcasts of out-of-town Michi- gan games between 2:30 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. on the Saturday of the game. Groups planning such en- tertainment must notify the Of- fice of Student Affairs by 12 o'clock noon of the Thursday prior to the scheduled game.' Chaperons may be a resident house director or one married couple at least 25 years of age. (8) Football game open houses: Open houses may be held in stu- dent residences before and after football games between 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. for pre-game fun-. tions and between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. for post-game functions. Guest chaperons are not required, and registration in the Office of Student Affairs is not necessary. (9) Exchange and guest din- ners: Exchange and guest dinners may be held in organized student residences between 5:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. for week-day dinners and between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. for Sunday dinners. While guest chaperons are not required, groups without resident house di- rectors musa announce these events to the Office of Student Affairs at least one day in ad- vance of the scheduled date. Calling hours for women in men's residences: University Residence Halls, daily between 3-10:30 p.m. Fraternities with resident house directors: Friday, 8 p.m.-12 mid- night; Saturday, 2:30-5:30 . p.m. and from 8-12 p.m.; Sunday, 1- 10:30 p.m. Women callers in men's resi- dences are restricted to the main floor of the residence. Lectures Freshman Health Lectures fo' Men : It is a University requirement that all entering Freshman, in- cluding veterans, attend a serfes of lectures on Personal and Com- munity Health and pass an ex- amination on the content of tnese lectures. Transfer students with freshman standing are .,alsore- quired to take the course ulss theyhave had a similar coue elsewhere, which has been accred- ited 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 Natural Science Auditorium at 4, 5 and 7:30 p.m. as per the follow- ing schedule: Lecture 1, Mon., Sept. 26; Lec- ture 2, Tues., Sept. 27; Lecture , Wed., Sept. 28; Lecture 4, Thurn., Sept. 29; Lecture 5, Mon., Oct. ,; Lecture 6, Tues., Oct. 4; Lecture 7 (Final Exam.) Wed., Oct. 5. You may attend at any of, the above hours. Enrollment will take place at the first lecture. Please (Continued on Page 5) ij~ t t 43 By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP W ASHINGTON-The timetable' of Amer- ican strategic planning has been wholly upset by former NKVD chief Lavrenti Beria's success in perfecting a Soviet atomic bomb. The joint chiefs of staff picked 1952, rather than 1949, as the year in which Soviet atomic stockpiling was likely to begin. This means simply that the timetable must be dras- tically revised, if the strategic balance of power is not to shift disastrously in favor of the Kremlin. Beria's triumph does not mean that the balance of power has already shifted, overnight. There is still some time in which either to achieve an agreement, with the Russians on control of atomic energy, or else to confront the Russians with over- whelming power, despite their possession. of an atomic stockpile. These are, clearly, our only remaining alternatives. How much time we have left depends largely. on how quickly the Russians can overcome two obstacles: This means that there is still some time- At R+Last IT WAS CHEERING news that the New Women's Dorm has finally been named. Some of us, at least, were beginning to sus- pbct that it never would be.; The Regents and the Board of Governors of the Residence Halls have been tossing the matter back and forth since 1946. Lists though no one cares to guess how much- in which Americans can sleep fairly easily in their beds. For the western Europeans, there is not even this consolation. With only a few bombs in his stockpile, Beria could destroy Paris or Rome almost without oppo- sition. Western strategy has been based on the assumption that western Europe could be put in a position of defense by the mid- fifties, when Soviet atomic.stockpiling was expected to get really under way. The whole effort to place Europe in a defense posture must now clearly be redoubled, with heavy emphasis on tactical air de- fense. Otherwise we must be prepared to see mounting pressure in western Europe to settle with the Kremlin on the Krem- lin's terms. Nor is this all. The military organization of the whole western world must be made so strong that the Kremlin will not dare to challenge it, even with surprise attack and atomic bombs. If this is really to be done, the United States must now make a production effort comparable to wartime. Even this, of course, will promise no real security. Indeed, unless the Soviet Union can somehow be brought to agree to effective control of atomic energy, there will be no real security for anyone, anywhere, any more.I (Copyright, 1949, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) THE SUCCESS of color vision tests now being conducted on campus by the Vision , J, I 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 Blumrosen...............City Editor Philip Dawson...Editorial Director Mary Stein..........Associate Editor Jo Misner..............Associate Editor George Walker.......Associate Editor Alex Lmanian......Photography Editor Pres Holmes........Sports Co-Editor Merle Levin .......... Sports Co-Editor Roger Goez..Associate Sports Editor Miriam Cady.........Women's Editor Lee Kaltenbach.. Associate Women's Ed. Bess Hayes Young,...........Librarian Business Staff Roger Wellington.. ..Business Manager Jim Dangli....... Advertising Manager Bernie Aidinoff.......Finance Manager Ralph Ziegler......Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters hereinare also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann - Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. It BARNABY Barnaby, I hate to bring this up, but it's high time your father You wouldn't understand, little girl. A business transaction Gosh, he said a lot of things, but mostly he said the money wasII flflllto stav in the bank--_ -So I can go to col ege- 11 [ Ilp.? O_ Ye. 1 I I