PAGE SIX T HE MICHIGAN DAILY FIVE 'U' DELEGATES: Newcomers Meeting Stresses Role Of Citizen in Foreign Aid By CARA CHERNIAK Five University students, along with 1500 other individuals rep- resenting over 300 national organ- izations, gathered together in Washington last week for what one called "perhaps the most signifi- cant meeting of the year." The National Conference on In- ternational Economic and Social Development was designed to ac- quaint the groups represented with conditions and problems of under- developed areas, and to indicate how Americans can directly aid those in foreign countries. * * * - KEY SPEAKER at the biparti- san meeting included President Truman, Secretary of State Dean Acheson, Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas, Director of Mutual Security W. Averell Harri- man and many other leaders in labor, religion, foreign affairs, business and education. Conference Chairman was FLY KLM TO EUROPE NEW LOW AIR TOURIST RATES Effective May 1st. 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Your skin is left cool as a teen-ager's. FOR USED BLADES 20 fo 594 10 for 394 6 for 254 r . 1in Metal Injectors with vault for used blades. Fit your Injector Razor perfectly. >x President John A. Hannah of Michigan State College. Although students were in the minority at the conference, Avrea Ingram, vice-president of the Na- tional Students Association, point- ed out that students would like to have more of a voice and take more of an active part in assist- ing foreign countries. "Students are anxious to par- ticipate, but find no jobs open for them in this area," Ingram said. "Instead of going into the armed forces, many would like to use their college training for techni- cal assistance in underdeveloped areas of the world." * * * KEYNOTE SPEAKER at the conference was Iresident Truman, who pointed out that the two ideas that guide his Point Four program are "cooperation, freely sought and freely given, and help to those who want to help themselves." "This is not starry-eyed ideal- ism," he continued. "It is just plain, practical common sense. [If we fail to do this job, we will never have world peace. We can- not survive as an island of pros-. perity in a sea of human misery. But if we do the job, the world will be transformed." In his speech to the conference, Justice Douglas called for a "Point Five" to be added to the Point Four program. "That point five," he said, "is the American Revolution, the ap- plication of a few good, simple, old- fashioned ideas based on Ameri- can ideals of freedom and justice." "Put Point Five behind Point Four," Justice Douglas said, "and then we'll begin to see things hap- pen in Asia." Stressing that he believed Point Four had accomplished many useful things, Justice Douglas was nevertheless sharp- ly critical of its operations in many parts of the middle East and Asia. "Why," he asked, "should Amer- dcan taxpayers' money be used to make a handful of landowners in parts of Asia richer than ever while adding little to the welfare of the working people who receive as lit- tle as 5 or TO percent of the crops they raised." "I think," he said, "that we need an entirely fresh point of view else this great civilization of the West may disappear and the hopes of the little people of the world be destroyed." County Men To Inspect MeatSupply Dr. Otto K. Engelke, director of the Washtenaw County Health Department, announced yesterday a renewed effort is now being made to block the sale of unin- spected meat in the county. All restaurants and food sellers have been asked to list their sources of meat supply. Engelke said the names would then be studied to determine whether all meat for human consumption here comes from properly licensed and inspected packers, s * a TWO WEEKS AGO an un- marked truck carrying uninspected meat was found in Ann Arbor. The city has already issued a "John Doe" warrant which will be served on any person found vio- lating a local ordinance against peddling illegal meat. Because there are no state or county laws preventing the sale of unlicensed meat, violators in Washtenaw County outside the Ann Arbor city limits would pro- bably.have to be prosecuted under an existing general health statute, Dr. Engelke said. Doctors To Meet The Michigan Society of Ob- stetricians and Gynecologists will hold its annual meeting here, with about 100 members expected to at- tend the meeting at 2 p.m. to- morrow in the Rackham Amphi- theater. v In the late spring of 1950, the old Art Cinema League faded from the University campus, and a new organization was born-the Stu- dent Legislature Cinema Guild. During the first year of its exist- ence, the Guild had a paid attend- ence of $4,780. Spurred on by this success, SL sponsored six movies last summer, and the ensuing prof- its enabled it to pay for losses sus- Call for Union OperaSeripts With the final curtain barely down on the 1952 Union Opera, the call is out for scenarios for next year's production. "We hope to revert to the prac- tice of performing the opera in December," Jim McGlincy, '52, Mimes president revealed, "but we need scenarios soon in order to produce a mid-winter show." In the 1920's, the opera was an- nually given in December and fol- lowed by a tour that reached from coast to coast, McGlincy related. He emphasized that completed scripts are not needed. The best scenarios will be selected and their authors asked to submit completed scripts for the final judging. The winning script will be chosen be- fore the end of the school year. Scripts may be turned in to the Union main desk. tained by four co-sponsors during the regular year. This year, the movies have net- ted over $1,000, with small losses on only three films. ORIGINALLY TAKEN over by SL to bolster the faltering league, the new arrangement called for the following revisions: (1) A movie would be shown ev- ery week-end during the school year, co-sponsored by SL and a student organization chosen by petition. (2) Any recognized group would be eligible to petition, and the week-ends would be selected by a special SL-Cinema League board, composed of the SL treas- urer, the two members-at-large, chairman of the culture and education committee and one other SL member. (3) The co-sponsor would split the profits, or the loss, with SL, 80% to 20%. Later the profit split was re- vised, with 10% going into an in- surance fund to cover future losses. Dick Kraus, Grad., former Daily sports editor, has managed the SL project since its initiation in 1950. Selection of movies has been left entirely up to him. Read and Use Daily Classifieds SL Cinema Guild Ends Second Successful Year IN THE BLACK: WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1952 Senator Taft To Give Talk Here Today {Continupd from page 1) In November of 1951, a na- tionwide Gallup poll of Repub- lican county chairmen showed Taft a three-to-one favorite over second-place Eisenhower. Taft's long political career had its foundation in state politics with several terms in the Ohio House of Representatives and one term in the Ohio Senate. He has served in the U. S. Sen- ate since 1939. Chairman of the Senate GOP Policy Committee during the 82nd Congress, he has also served on the Labor, Public Welfare and Finance Committees. As a Presidential nomination hopeful, Taft was Ohio's "favorite son" candidate for the GOP Pres- idential nomination in 1936 and 1940. In 1948, he came closer to the Republican nomination as runner-up to Gov. Dewey in the GOP National Convention. Second Cooley Lecture Today Prof. Hessel E. Yntema, research professor of'comparative law, will deliver the second in the Thomas M. Cooley Lecture Series at 4:15 p.m. today at 120 Hutchins Hall. Subject of Prof. Yntema's talk will be "Policies: Considerations Controlling Choice of Law." : WELCOME ADDITIONS-With an eye toward doing something about the existing ratio, these two pleasant Latvian DP sisters, Ziggi (left) and Karman Berzins pose for cameras after arriving in New York. They don't plan to come to the University. Ps ycholo gist Speaks Today At LaneHall Dr. Fritz Kunkel, noted Los An- geles psychologist, will speak at 8:30 p.m. today in Rackham Lec- ture Hall, bn "The Differing Dy- namics of Psychology and Reli- gion." Former president of the German branch of the International So- ciety of Individual Psychology, Dr. Kunkel began his career as a law student, then turned to medicine and received his MD from Berlin University. As.a practicing psychiatrist in Munich and Berlin, he studied with several disciples of the school of Jungian psychology and was the founder of "we- psychology," which draws from religious and philosophical con- cepts. He came to the United States in 1939 where he took up a lecture- ship in the Pacific School of Reli- gion at Berkeley, California. He later began work as a consulting psychologist on the staff of the First Congregational Church in Los Angeles where he has devel- oped independently a small private school for religious counselors and depth psychologists. Extension Course In Typing Opened Opening class of a new Univer- sity Extension course in typewrit- ing will be held at 7 p.m. today in Rm. 276, Business Administra- tion Bldg. Registration for the course, which deals with the basic prin- ciples of touch typing, is $5.00. 3& II NEW ORIGINAL EDITIONS Originally published at $2, $3, $5 and more - or $11 Hundreds of topnotch favorites. Sale starts Wed. Morning - 8:30 Ulrich's Book Store i* i .,. iTi- with any other 1 KING-SIZE cigarette ------------- SENATOR r 3 ..J a. M:. 1 i Aw T FT Y will present his political platform in HILL AUDITORIUM TAR A W '-~1I, IUF I -m3 V~ 11 _ m l- .l./'RJlk J& A T ii .i m