THE- MICHIGAN DAILY su 'DAY, ]l"RCH X23 1941 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Letters To The Editor FIRE & WAT E R Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Sessilon. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newpaper. All tights of republication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by carrier $4.00; by mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED (-OR NATIONAL ADVERT3ING BY National Advertising Service, inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CICAG- * BOSTON * LOS ANGELES * SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1940-41 Tory Radicals? To the Editor: MR. WHITE'S APOLOGIA for the radical thinker carried as a guest editorial in the Michigan Daily of March 18 has posed the prob- lem of whom we are to dignify with the term of radical. It seems clear that the impact of the present world conflict compels us to recast our notion? on this problem. Without consciously seeking a definition I had thought of the radical as the exponent of a truth removed from the commonplace and out on the frontiers of popular thought. Any thinker leaving an impact on western history seemed t(J come easily under this rule of thumb test. The best of American thought of the revolution and pre-Civil War era must be regarded as radical. Certainly Lincoln was the leader of the left-wing party of his day and the men who carried the torch in 1776 can hardly be regarded as middle- of-the-roaders. And if we are to dip into the pages of an earlier period, Jesus and Socrates are seen as great radicals of their day. Possibly I am asking a good deal, but with these thoughts in mind I find it impossible to regard the ap- proach of the contemporary radicals as any- thing but spurious. This appears most strongly when we review their outpourings of the past couple of years. SHOULD make no attack when they seek to justify the German-Russian pact of August, 1939, and the subsequent partition of the Polish republic. Whatever we may think of the ethical problems involved, it is at least possible to ra- tionalize the Russian position on a Machiavellian doctrine of expediency. I should not even make a final judgment of the expedition into Finland, whatever I may think of the moral issues in- volved. But however these events may appear in history, the leftist explanation of the pact which precipitated the present conflict-that it evidenced a move by Hitler to the left-must appear as a trifle preposterous. Likewise their assurance in the weeks preceding the attack on Finland: that Russian power politics was no Editorial Stafff Hervie Haufler Alvin Sarasohn Paul M. Chandler Karl Kessler Milton Orshefsky Howard A. Goldman Laurence Mascott Donald Wirtchafter Esther Osser Helen Corman -rr raara aa Managing Editor Editorial Director City Editor Associate Edit'or Associate Editor . . . Associate Editor Associate Editor Sports Editor . . . .Women's Editor . . . Exchange Editor Business Staff Business Manager Assistant Business Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager more than a capitalist myth, will also bear some scrutiny. And when eventually the conflict be- came too obvious even for the Daily Worker to deny, we were treated to the thinnest and most shop-worn of all the imperialist gags-that Rus- sia was protecting her border from the fierce raids of the dastardly Finns. A march on Mos- cow was only in the offing if these chroniclers are to be believed. Finally the whole sordid mess was explained, not as an invasion but as Russian support to a popular uprising within the country. When this was repudiated by the Russian gov- ernment's peace treaty which recognized the validity of the contemporary Finnish govern- ment, I never did hear the official explanation. Recent mouthings of the Ann Arbor boys are equally remarkable. Anglo-American coopera- tion is bad in any form because England is un- democratic and imperialistic, but a Russian entente would be great stuff. Presumably Russia is not imperialistic and the democracy of the bear is in full bloom. Aid to Czechoslovakia, Spain or China would have been collective secur- ity and without attending danger; aid to Britain is fascism and will embroil us in an imperialist war. A classic of their dialectics came during the presidential campaign of last fall and ought to be recorded somewhere for posterity. One of the local saviors of the proletariat explained to me in all seriousness that because I intended to vote for Roosevelt I was opposed to labor unions. I suspect that even Freud might have difficulty in unraveling such finely-spun logic. 1T MIGHT BE POSSIBLE to proceed further but the implications are obvious at a glance. Somehow we may find this line impossible to follow on any theory apart from a temporal in- fallibility of the high lord of the Kremlin-a thesis which I had thought had gone out with divine right of kings. In this background I hope to be pardoned for holding the alleged left-wingers as something less than radical. To me they appear as moth-eaten a crew of moss- backed tories as I would hope to encounter. -- Jesse R. O'Malley RADIO Radio's Moving Day By DAVID LACHENBRUCH NEXT SATURDAY will be radio's moving day. Some 90 per cent of the United States' radio stations-795 out of 883-will change frequency by order of the Federal Communications Com- mission. In addition, stations in Canada, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and Mexico, have agreed in a conference at Havana, to concur with the wave length reallocation plan. This means, in plain words, that most of the radio stations in the United States-all of those in the Detroit area-will be changed in their locations on your radio dial at 3 a.m. next Satur- day, March 29. The following table shows the frequency change in the stations which can be heard in Ann Arbor. On some radios, the dial reading excludes the last zero of the kilocycle rating (thus 800 is read 80 on the dial). Irving Guttman Robert Gilmour Helen Bohnsack Jane Krause NIGHT EDITOR: ROSEBUD SCOTT The editorials published in The Michi- gan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Selective. Service Needs Improvement --- ESPITE the attempts of the National Government to administer the pro- visions of the Selective Service Act both judi- ciously and efficiently, there exists in the present draft setup a large number of evils which have resulted in untold suffering of thousands of young Americans. Yet, although newspapers throughout the country have been showered with unfavorable reports from army camps and draft boards alike, the majority of the press has been unusually silent on this subject. Rightly they maintain that the press should cooperate in the National Defense program, but wrongly they believe that their duty is to withhold news unfavorable to the draft. The main criticism leveled against the army camps has been made against the monotony of army life which, coupled with long hours, has made men feel utter boredom for weeks on end. It is also claimed that the recreational facilities which are being provided are far from adequate and that the quality of the literature, films, etc. that are available is extremely poor. IN ORDER to maintain the religious feeling of those in the draft army, hundreds .of addi- tional chaplains have now come into the service who, quite rightly and righteously, have seen to it that gambling and vice dens in many places were put out of business. However, they have suggested nothing to take the place of these "dens" as yet and some substitute is definitely needed. Because of the great haste in which new army cantonments were constructed, physical com- forts have been frequently neglected. This, we feel, would certainly be permissible during war time when an army was badly needed, but bad sanitation and the like are things which the draftee naturally refuses to excuse. The army's haste has been so great, for example, that the buildings of one camp were constructed of green wood which, due to the effects of the sun, are now falling apart. EACH of the evils enumerated above can be adequately taken care of and all are today in the curative process. The important demand is that they be cured in a short space of time. It is gratifying to note that hostesses have been provided for some of the camps, a date bureau has been created in one community and varied recreational programs have been initiated. The conscription organization itself is alsd far from desirable. Wide powers have been dele- gated to community draft boards and the result has been a wide divergence of policy that has often been harmful. In addition to this, the practice of frequently selecting incompetent men for these boards has resulted in numerous un- wise decisions. It is this divergence of policy which has allowed one board to defer a man because of his position in industry and another to draft a man in a similar industry; it has la to a very inconsistent policy in the attitude taken toward married men; and it has kept men out of service because of the nature of their dependents and conscripted others with similar dependents. Above all, there is an evil in the army which the draftees find extremely hard to describe, the cause of which is unknown. Briefly, it may L.. , .7..7 1n ramrt-e7iiv m fio.--nn - .f n m c >N =/1 t .> The City Editor's : cratc/ Potd THIS IS A STORY so unusual it is difficult to believe. We're just going to repeat to you what we saw and heard, and let you make of the facts what you want. Two days ago we climbed the stairs of a room- ing house on the fringe of the University cam- pus and found in a small, pitch-dark room a totally-blind youth who swears he is hiding away from his parents. With only $21 in his pocketbook he boarded a bus at Minneapolis and came to Ann Arbor to become a lawyer, he says. He ran away from his parents because they wanted him to take a part-time course in the University of Minnesota and because they wouldn't let him earn his way through college. This boy's name is Jerry Hartless. We saw him alone in his room, with a few personal belong- ings, a violin with a broken string, a small port- able typewriter, and a story of his life that runs like weird fantasy. Jerry at the present time is washing dishes in two campus eating establishments, and in that way earning his room and board. He has been moving about the campus for more than a week without a cane or dog, relying entirely on friends and a keen sense of hearing. . UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS have found him in their offices, begging for their approval of his entering summer school next June. By that time he hopes to have earned enough money to pay tuitions. Another part of the bargain that he is insisting upon is that he be permitted to carry a full schedule of work, so that in three or four more years he will be able to graduate from the Law School. Talking to us in that lonely room, Jerry said two things had made his life unbearable at Minnesota. First, he did not want to be taking his father's money for his personal support any longer. Second, the University of Minnesota offi- cials would not allow him the scholastic range he desired. This 20-year-old blind youth insisted that he was able to take care of himself. In high school, he said, he had learned how to operate a riveting machine, and he had been later employed in that capacity. He also claims experience on the assembly line of a mass production factory. fOR ANOTHER THING, he said, he can sell short stories. He says he has retailed 14 stories to scientific-fiction magazines at some- thing better than $25 apiece. Jerry also writes poetry and music, and types more than 95 words per minute. He plays the violin just for diver- sion. One summer he worked on a Great Lakes steamer as a coal-passer, Jerry said, but he quit because the work was "too dangerous." He also claims experience as an orderly in a hospital and as an agent for the FBI. About this FBI incident. When still enrolled in high school, Jerry says, the Federal police hired him to help break up a German-American bund that had been holding meetings. He worked himself into membership in the society, ho ca rn ,nnhn hrahe their nonareona IT IS WITH a great sense of urgency that we write this. It is with a feeling of time that is passing too quickly, with a recquies- cat in pace for an era that is dying unnecessarily, with a realization in good seeds that never did and never will bear fruit that we write this column and will write many of our future columns. 'This generation has a rendezvous with destiny." Thus did Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936 at Philadelphia's Franklin Field inspire a frenzied crowd of 100,000. It is only now that many of us, belatedly, begrudgingly, unfortunately, realize that this "des- tiny" is death--physical, intellectual. WE ARE NOT moved by any spirit of self-martyrdom. We do not believe that we are unduly obsessed with the tragic significance of re- cent events or the unmistakable trends of future events. We are mere- ly made sad by an appreciation of what could have been, what is, and what probably will be. Predominant above all else is the deep sorrow, the sardonic futility of man attempting to gain that which he loses in the very attempt. Perhaps inevitable dis- illusionment is the greatest tragedy. Undoubtedly, Fred White in his "little gem" which appeared in The Daily a few days ago better expressed the same thought. I UT let's be concrete. The 1930's were certainly years of extreme depression, of striking, hor- rible inconsistencies. In those years. however, there was always hope. There was hope in the humanitarian policies of the early New Deal. There was hope in "I hate waaahr." There was hope in the rise of the CIO, in the concerted growth and expres- sion of liberal groups all over the na- J tion. There was hope and faith in progressive democracy. BUT TODAY there seems to be very little basis for any hope. Grad- ually and yet more and more precipi- tatedly we have seen the transition from a peace-time, humanitarian- bent democracy to a war-time econ- omy. We have seen the spirit of our civil liberties vanish under a barrage of "fifth-column" scares and red herrings. We are now even attempt- ing to destroy the law of our civil liberties. Witness the suggestions for "conce1tration camps" for aliens, and labor-baiting bills and acts. We have above all seen the emergence into power of the very two groups that were foes of democracy: Big Business and the Army. And despite all talk of "equal sacrifices" we suspect, to truly, that while youth is sent stand- ing and marching and waiting in mil- itary camps, while labor, faced with rising costs of living as the nation nears full employment of resources is almost forced by "public opinion' and "mediation boards" to accept the same conditions of work, Big Bus. mess, with little real worry of any significant "excess profit taxes," wit plants and contracts whose terms BB dictates, makes tremendous profits and holds tremendous power. AND WHENEVER the wee, smal voices of democratic criticism arise-the expression of those who see the tragic inconsistency of our attempting to fight for democracy while we become more and more un- democratic, who can see the inevi- table calculation: we are going to lose more than we gain-these voices are met with vicious charges of "ap- peaser," "nazi," "communist," "trait- or." The saddest defection is tha of the liberals who have suddenl "got the faith," who think that b going to war, even as we are now and even under the present condi tions and policies of American society a world-wide democratic liberaliza. tion will be accomplished. Presiden Roosevelt is one of these. THE SIMPLE FACT REMAINS that you can't put democracy on ice You can't lock it up in the ice-box and come back ten years later and still find it there, intact, with th same qualities and essence as before Somethings happens to society, new forces become dominant, forces that fear the return of that democracy We lost a great deal of our liber- ties after the last war, (Ku Klux Klan, Palmer raids, the national de- cay of the 1920's, the depression o: the 1930's.) We will probably lose them all after this war. When we return to the ice-box after this war -if we return-we shall find only cold water. THAT IS WHY we write this col- umn-impelled by a sense of ur- gency. When we heard Presiden1 Roosevelt last Saturday night dedi- cate this nation to "aiding democra. cy" everywhere, we sensed that there wasn't much time left for democracy here. Somehow we feel that before American democracy dies, we, in our own humble way, must express our small protest. As the man who know: that he is going to leave life ina year, wishes to enjoy to the fullest that last year of life, we intend tc wak and Singapore, and thus defend- ing the outlying British democracy. It is indeed ironic that we may de- fend democracy by fighting for "dem- ocratic" India. When some of us lose our lives, we will Have all lost our hope. { [ ioininie Says LAST YEAR a group of Yale stu- dents spent spring vacation mov- ing eighty-four tons of garbage, to clean up th'e dump in a Negro sec- tion of New Haven. That was one of the religious replies to the charge I that our generation of young liberals can't take it and won't try. The Cross in human history, a doctrine growing out of the theory of suffering immortalized in the Book Df Job, annually grips the imaging tion and reclaims the devotion of its millions. On Thursday, as guest of the students in the Chapter Houses, we shall sing "The Nicene Creed," "The Lord's Prayer" and excerpts from the prophetic Hebrew scriptures to remind ourselves that "we like sheep have gone astray and God has laid on Him the iniquity of us all." Our Ann Arbor neighbors from modern Greece are asking for three thousand dollars to register, in a small way, our historic appreciation of the people who first fought for the cultural ideal we call Democracy and to encourage a tiny nation, today by fate made the theatre of modern war. Tomorrow the twelfth, and per- haps a thirteenth sovereign people may fall beneath the tanks of con- querors while Athenians with sup- port from Britain will strive tohalt aggressive barbarians equipped with the achievements of our mis-applied science. SUCH ARE THE EVENTS of the Lenten season in the year of Our Lord 1941. World revolution reminds us that man's truggle is always three- -fold: (1) Within every nation domes- tic tranquility can be attained only r by the righting of economic and soc- ial wrongs. (2) Nations as forms of social control are in death grapple over power to be gained or guaran- teed through conflicting theories of government and (3) Beneath both 1 these problems is the inexorable God whose will is sovereign. Can the young liberal keep these in balance? If so the tasks arising within each area may be performed with dis- patch: But isolation is history, 'the public dump to be clearedtis both as wide as the contending nations and as deep as human need. Just as the participant in New Haven by toil and sweat joined in lamentation be- cause innocent men must suffer for sins which others committeed so each worshipper should call out today as - others who beheld Jesus on his cross and cried: "Is it nothing to you all i ye that pass by." 3 -Edward W. Bakeman, s Counselor in Religious Education. SCamp Areas Must Be Clean A bill has been introduced into the United States Senate by Senator Mor- * ris Sheppard of Texas which provides 1. Complete prohibition of any and all sales of intoxicants of any alco- holic content whatever "at or within" any military camp. 2. That the Secretary of War shall have the power to establish a "dry zone" about any camp, and the Secre- t tary of the Navy shall have similar y powers relative to the Navy and y Marine camps. 3. The Secretaries of War and - Navy shall be given control over zones (extent of which is to be de- - termined by them) in which they t shall prohibit prostitution. This is a reasonable and honest bill It would remove from the hands of local authorities the responsibility t for policing camp areas and place it on military shouldels. x ---Christian Science Monitor DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SUNDAY, MARCH 23, 1941 VOL. LL No. 123 Publication in the Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices Students, College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: Courses dropped after Saturday, March 29, by students other than freshmen Will be record- ed E. Freshmen (students with less than 24 hours of credit) may drop courses without penalty through the eighth week. Exceptions may be made in extraordinary circumstances, such as severe or long continued illness. E. A. Walter Asistant Dean Detroit Northwestern High School Graduates: A one-year tuition schol- arship in this University, in honor of Miss Julia E. Gettemy, B.L. '98, for many years teacher of public speak- ing and dramatics at the Northwest- ern High School, Detroit, is being offered byher sister, Miss Winifred Gettemy of East Lansing. The holder must be a graduate of Northwestern High School, preferably a man, and one who is specializing in Englisir or Speech; he must have a scholarship average of at least B. Letters of ap- plication should be sent to B. J. Riv- ett, Principal, Northwestern High School, Detroit, with a transcript of ' the applicant's University record to date, before April 15. Senior Women may get caps and gowns, 1:00-5:30 p.m., Monday, March 24, in the League Ballroom. Prices: caps and gowns together, $4.50 with a $3.00 refund; gowns alone, $3.00 with a $2.00 refund; caps and tassels alone, $1.75 with a 75c refund. Seniors must have caps and gowns to attend Senior Supper, Wednesday, March 26. Bronson-Thomas and Kothe-Hild- ner prize competitions will be held on Thursday, March 27, from 2 -5 p.m. in Room 203 U.H. Aeronautical Engineering Students: There will be available in the De- partment of Aeronautical 'Engineer- ing two Frank P. Sheehan Scholar- ships and probably three assistant- ships, for the year 1941-42. These scholarships, and assistantships are, in general, restricted to upperclass- men and graduate students, and the selection is made very largely on the basis of scholastic standing. Appli- cations for these positions will be re- ceived up to April 1, 1941. Students wishing to make application should address them to Professor E. A. Stalk- er, B-47 East Engineering Building, and should give a brief statement of their qualifications and experience in regard to both their scholastic work and any outside experience they may have had. A statement should also be made giving their plans for fur- ther study in Aeronautical Engineer- ing. Applications may be made for both the scholarships and the assist- antships. The University Bureau of.Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received notice of the following MICHIGAN CIVIL SERVICE' exam- inations. Last date for filing appli- cation is noted in each case: Game Biologist II, salary $200, April 18, 1941. Radio Engineer I, salary $150, April 11,. 1941. Steam Fireman B, salary $105, April 18, 1941. Dining Room Supervisor CI, salary $95, April 11, 1941. Institution Butcher A2, Salary $115, April 18, 1941. Institution Baker B, salary $105, April 11, 1941. Institution Baker A2, Salary $115, April 11, 1941. Complete announcement on file at the Bureau, 201 Mason Hall. Office hours: 9-12 and 2-4. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occuptional Information t has received notice that a chain De- partment store organization is in- terested intinterviewingamen for per- (Continued on Page 6) Station WJR WWJ CKLW WXYZ WJBK WMBC WCAR WKAR Most of changed a Location Detroit Detroit Windsor Detroit Detroit Detroit Pontiac E. Lansing Former Frequency 750 920, 1030 1240 1500 1420 1100 850 New Frequency 760 950, 800 1270 1490 1400 1130 870 were only slightly up. the station frequencies few kilocycles, usually However, CKLW's frequency was changed by the Canadian government from 1030 to 800, a difference of 230 kilocycles. OF COURSE, this change will necessitate the readjustment of all push-button and auto- matic radios, but it has its advantages. The move comes as a result of three years consulta- tion and study by the Federal Communications Commission, and will greatly aid in minimizing interference caused by two stations too near to each other on the dial. The stations will be apportioned more evenly under the new system and as a result we ought to be able to hear more distant stations here in Ann Arbor. One objection many radio listeners have had in Ann Arbor is that it is very hard to pick up Detroit's WXYZ because of interference caused by nearby stations. This condition should, by the new changeover, be alleviated or completely elim- inated. This move can be interpreted as a step in the defense of the present system of amplitude modulation radio, against frequency modulation (FM), the new "staticless" radio. Under the FM 'system, it is impossible to pick up two sta- tions at one time, therefore eliminating the annoying interference of present-day broad- casting. It Mounts Up Berlin once more serves notice that 80,000,000 people fighting for their national existence will never hesitate to take all necessary measures to assure that end. 70,000,000 Germans fighting for their national existence did not hesitate to snatch Austria and Sudetenland; and then they were 80,000,000. 80,000,000 Greater Germans fighting for their national existence plus their control over 8,000,- 000 Czones didnot hesaitaeto strangle Poland. RADIO, SPOTLIGHT WJR WWJ CKLW WXYZ 750 KC - CBS 920 KC - NBC Red 1030 KC - Mutual 1240 KC-NBC Blue Sunday Evening 6:00 Silver Catholic Double or Across the 6:15 Theatre Hour Nothing Footlights 6:30 Gene Autry News The Show News; Silhouettes 6:45 'Dear Mom'-6:55 Dick uimber Orch. of the Week Am'rican Pilgrim'ge 7:00 'Dear Mom' cJack Benny's Dr. M. R. DeHaan, The News 7:15 G. Smith Program -Religious From Europe 7:30 Screen Guild Fitch Talk Pearson & Allen 7:45 Theatre Bandwagon The Tools of War Headline Makers 8:00 Helen Hayes Charlie CKLW Concert Message 8:15 Theatre McCarthy Party of Israel 8:30 Crime One Man's Carry On, Sherlock Holmes 8:45 Doctor; News Family Canada -Basil Rathbone 9:00 Sunday The Manhattan Old Fashioned Walter Winchell 9:15 Evening Hour Merry-Go-Round Revival Parker Family 9:30 Propaganda Album of Hour- The Inner 9:45 With Music Familiar Music Services Sanctum 10:00 Take It Hour of Charm Canadian News Goodwill Court 10:15 or Leave It -Spitany Orch. Britain Speaks -Interviews 10:30 The Hermit's Russell Barnes BBC Radio With Unhappy 1A45 C avnoert Recording Nes reelPel