IT17 M-1CW1IG-. N -D A-1LN" FRIDAY, APRL -11, 1941 I- - - - -.._.. THE MICHIGAN DAILY + DRAMA -+- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ttD4 Ti M - 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 Session. 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 rights 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 FOR NATIONAL ADVERT3ING 9V National Advertising Service, Inc, , College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO - BosToN . LoS ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1940-41 Editorial Staff Hervie Haufler Alvin Sarasohn Paul M. Chandler Karl Kessler Milton Orshefsky Howard A. Goldman . Laurence Mascott Donald Wirtchafter Esther Osser Helen Corman . . . Managing Editor . . . Editorial Director . . . . City Editor . . . Associate Editor . . . Associate Editor . . . Associate Editor . . . Associate Editor Sports Editor . . . .Women's Editor . . .s Exchange Editor By M LTON ORSHEFSKY (Special to The Daily) NEW YORK, April 9.-It almost seemed to this theatre-goer after last night's Broadway performance of the recently opened stage-ver- sion of "Native Son" that Producer Orson Welles had simply pulled another one of his tremendous artistic hoaxes, this time on the drama critics of the New York newspapers. IN HIS STAGING of the Paul Green-Richard Wright dramatization of the latter's novel he, aided by an imaginative set-designer, James Morcom, has uncompromisingly rejected ordin- ary stage conventions. There are no acts, no curtain; the ten scenes follow one another con- nected by the varied sounds of Chicago traffic, by the fierce roar of the death-furnace in the Dalton home, by a wisp of piano-playing from the preceding scene, etc. During those ten scenes Mr. Welles makes the entire theatre his directorial province. There are shouts from the rear of the audience, shots from all over, and almost as much acti'on in the front rows as on the stage. In a word, Mr. Welles has exer- cised his unique dramatic sense exuberantly, but, for the most part, discriminatingly, and the result is some of the finest, most original theatre New York has seen in a very long while. Because of that-and apparently for little else-the New York critics have individually given "Native Son" the only four-star rating on Broadway, labeled it for every kind of stage award this year, and pointed to it with almost relieved pride as an example of what the theatre is really capable of. But the unfortunate fact is that the play per se is not a very good play, and often not even an exciting one. For Mr. Green and Mr. Wright, in compressing and re- stating the essentials of the Bigger Thomas story into dramatic form, have written just so many incidents. There is the incident of the killing of the rat in the opening scene, of Bigger's terror- izing of his pal Gus, of the unintentional murder of Mary Dalton, etc., but where in the novel these incidents gained their significance only, because they were connected as parts of a unity by a subtle but clear psychology and introspec- tion, here in the play, even though stated in the most obvious terms, the relationship between the incidents is not so clear, and infinitely less moving. AND SO the incidents of the play come to have almost an independent existence: some are dramatically effective, some are not, but they do not add up to anything of significance as an artistic whole. The full psychological story of a Negro who was at once an individual of concentrated hate and a symbol of an op- pressed race has become almost completely a bare melodramatic treatment of one man's mur- der in Chicago and the inevitable tracking-down process. That is why the defense attorney's plea in social terms, which in the novel had some point and validity, becomes in the play a Business Stafff Business Manager . . Assistant Business Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Irving Guttman Robert Gilmour. Helen Bohnsack Jane Krause NIGHT EDITOR: ALVIN DANN The editorials published in The Michi- gan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. The Fight Must Not End At The Shore-Line ..-. THE BRITAIN that would be victori- ous over the forces of totalitarian- ism would be in a critical condition. Its state could be compared to that of a nearly drowned man, cast up on a beach, but still in danger of being caught in the tide unless he moves up- land. If he has heart and determination, he will climb up to a point where tides will never reach him, where he will become strong and vigorous. If the war is won, British democracy will be in a like situation; either it will stagnate on the beach in danger of being caught in the tide of totalitarianism which it fought so hard against, or it will struggle away from the beach and buck the steep, tough terrain of building a better society. T0TAKE THIS SECOND alternative it will need a strong heart. Today, in Britain as in America, the heart of democracy is in the labor movement. It is to strengthen this heart not only in Britain but in the United States that is so urgent. It must be strengthened if national defense is to be genuinely equated with demo- cratic defense. - The actual effect that an intrenched Amerit can labor movement would have in a world dom- inated by Hitler is dubious. Its very survival would be doubtful over a long period: it would have to confront the death of free movements throughout the old world; it would have to face. an ever-declining standard of living as the price of physical defense; it would be in lasting fear of both economic and armed aggression; its future would be only uncertainty. BUT IN EVENT of British victory the basis for progress will have been formed. A vigorous labor movement in this country would be a potent inspiration to the British and free peoples the world over, peoples seeking a positive program after their release from the burden of merely negative resistance. George S. Counts, president of the American Federation of Teachers and professor of educa- tion at Teachers College,, Columbia University, has well grasped the situation and has present- ed a comprehensive plan for American labor which is broad enough, however, to apply to all free labor movements. "The first and most fundamental point in such a program," he writes, "is the strengthening of organized labor as a free and independent force in American society. "(2) It calls for an increased share by labor in the shaping of all public policies and particu- larly all policies pertaining to defense. "(3) . . . maintenance (and raising) of decent living standards for all the people. "(4) The forces of democracy must insist on the full employment of labor, on the release of the productive energies of industrial technology, on the direction of these energies to the im- provement of the lot of the common man. "The fifth point in the program is the framing of a system of taxation deliberately designed to prevent the further concentration of wealth. "The maintenance and extension of public education and all public services constitute a. sixth point in the program. , "(7) . . defense of civil rights and liberties for all Without the guarantees of free serch patch-work expression of social values that has little or no connection with the rest of the play. It is perhaps not entirely fair to judge the drama by the novel, but even for those who have not read the novel, the drama is likely to be dis- appointing. There may well be an intellectual awe at Mr. Welles' doings, but it is difficult for this observer to see how an audience can remain at the "emotional pitch" the New York critics wrote about. Pitch implies, above all things, a certain evenness, and whatever else the play, "Native Son", is, it is certainly not even. D" Pern RcbrtS Atles GO$ WASHINGTON - In interpreting war news from the Balkans the basic thing - the amount of advance scored by the Nazis in the extreme south of Serbia and in Greece - has come off as planned. Advances in northern Yugo- salvia, on the other hand, mean nothing. In fact, the border between northern Yugo- slavia and Hungary was not even fortified, and the Yugoslav army always planned to evacuate that area immediately if its own counter-at- tack were rolled back. This part of the country - Croatia and Slovenia - once under the Aus- tro-Hungarian Empire, consists of broad, roll- ing plains, among the most fertile in Europe, and similar to the corn belt of Iowa and Kansas. IN THIS SECTION, the Yugoslav general staff did not even build pill boxes; and before the war started, the bulk of the army was evacuated south except for a skeleton force to fight a rear- guard action or stage a lightning raid on Hun- gary. But in Serbia proper, which is in the south, the army worked feverishly to strengthen fort- ifications along the Bulgarian border. The Greeks also were extremely active. CHIEF ALLIED WORRY was that the Greeks would be forced to fight on two fronts, and with a much smaller army than the Yugoslavs. This is the point where the greatest shock strength of the Nazi army has been thrown - in an effort to cut through Greece to the south of the Yugoslav army, thus getting behind it, or to force the Yugoslavs to withdraw, thus expos- ing the Greek flank. This has now been done. Mich To Adriatic . ., ANOTHER PART of Yugoslavia to watch is Montenegro and along the Albanian fron- tier. For years, Serbian officers have been itching to march as victors down to the Adriatic. Once in 1915 they marched there defeated. And having no great love for the Albanians and even less for the Italians, they are throwing an important part of the Yugoslav army into Albania. Note - Yugoslavia, or "Land of the Southern Slavs," is made up of Serbia Croatia, Slovenia, Montenegro, Dalmatia, Bosnia and Hercigovina - where, at Sarajevo, the last war started. All except Serbia and Montenegro were under the Austro-Hungarian Empire before 1918. Montenegro, or "Land of the Black Mountain," maintained its own king for centuries, never was conquered by the Turks. But in 1918 it joined Yugoslavia, much to the disgust of more inde- pendent Montenegrins. The language of all is about the same. Allis-Chalmers Peace FOR 19 HOURS last week-end, five members of the Defense Mediation Board sat with labor and employers behind closed doors, battling to- settle the Allis-Chalmers strike. The conference began Saturday morning in an atmosphere of undisguised hostility between company officials and strike leaders. There has been over 70 days of. labor war, climaxed by street fighting and tear gas. The outlook for agreement was anything but bright. All that day, into the night, again all Sunday the mediators wrestled with the two groups. Sunday the elevators shut down, conferees climbed five flights to resume deliberations. An- gry shouts occasionally punctuated the proceed- ings. Then, suddenly, at 7 p.m. there was a loud burst of laughter, and 15 minutes later everyone was beaming. An agreement had been reached. ACTUALLY the peace accord came about 6:30 p.m., at which time.Eugene Meyer, publisher of The Washington Post and one of the med- iators, drafted a resolution commending William H. Davis, chairman of the mediators, for his execeptional leadership. Meyer showed the pro- posal to the company officials and they approved it. He then put it up to the union men. "Did the company officers accept the resolu- tion in toto?" inquired Ed Hall, international representative of the union. "Well, practically," said Meyer. "They quib- bled over one word." IT WAS THIS STATEMENT that brought the burst of laughter, in which Allis-Chalmers of- ficials joined. Both sides recalled that quibbling over words had characterized most of the, two days' negotiating. }dote --- Striking illustration of goodwill after the agreement occurred when the union nmen had to charter a ulane from Washington to Mil- (Continued from Page 2) to call at the office of the School of Education, 1437 UES, during the week of April 21, between the hours of 1:30 and 4:30, to take the Teacher Oath which is a requirement for the cer- tificate. Junior and senior premedical stu- dents in the College of Literature, Science,. and the Arts are eligible to compete for the Elizabeth Sargent Lee Medical History Prize, an award for the best essay submitted on the history of medicine. The essays should be from 3,000 to 5,000 words in length and must be delivered to 1208 Angell Hall by noon on Thurs- day, May 1. Househeads, Dormitories, Sororities and League Houses: The closing hour for wonens residences today will be 8:00 pm. Martha Cook dormitory will close at 7:00 p.m. To Students Who Have Submitted Questionnaires for Selective Service: The Ann Arbor Local Draft Board is advised by the State Selective Service Headquarters to recommend that all students who have submitted ques- tionnaires arrange for physical exam- ination with their local draft boards during the period of the spring re- cess. Such examination will deter- mine the question of exemption be- cause of physical condition. This examination does not effect any de- ferment or reclassification which may be made at any future time. If stu- dents are not examined by their own local draft boards, an unnecessary hardship might be placed upon the local Ann Arbor board, and delay and confusion may result. Charles M. Davis, Adviser Library Hours, April 12-19: During the Spring Recess the General Li- brary will be open as usual from 7:45 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. daily, with the following exceptions: the two study halls, in the building will be open from 10:00-12:00 a.m. and 2:00-4:00 p.m. Monday to Friday, and 10:00- 12:00 a.m. Saturday, and the Grad- uate Reading Rooms from 9:00-12:00 a.m. and 1:00-5:00 p.m. Monday to Friday, and 9:00-12:00 a.m. Saturday. The hours of opening of the De- partmental Libraries will also be 10:00-12:00 a.m. and 2:00-4:00 p.m. Monday to Friday, and 10:00-12:00 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR (The following is a letter from the Alumni Association of Robert College in Athens, Greece. Robert College is the American university in Greece and is intimately connected with the Uni- versity of Michigan. Over the years it has had a significant influence on the culture of the Near East. PUBLIC OPINION in Greece is deeply touched by the sympa~thy aroused among the American people for our country at this momentous hour in her long history. The gener- ous support which is being given for our cause is concrete evidence of American concern for our struggle. To us, the Greek alumni of Robert College, that great American educa- tional institution of the Near East, this practical expression of interest in our lives is still another reason for gratitude. We are in the midst of a war which we have done our best to avoid but which we have resolved to fight with unrelenting determination to the last man because we believe that we are right. Just as our fathers died to preserve for the world the ideals of beauty, justice and freedom, so have we felt that it is our duty now to be loyal to this heritage and to carry on the strife against the forces of evil. THIS IS NOT merely a struggle to preserve our national independ- ence, our honor and our human right to live freely. It is a world-wide cru- sade against the dark practices of intolerance and oppression. In this supreme effort in defence of the values of the spirit we need your help You of the academic world are the ones who are best qualified to en- lighten public opinion in the United States of America and guide it to a full understanding of the righteous- ness and the vital significance of thi struggle. Greece is a small and poor coun- try which is fighting successfully against an adversary who is vastly superior in numbers and in wai equipment. Every man and womar in Greece is at this moment doing his or her share but we know that the struggle will be long and hard and that the drain upon our humar and material resources will be enor- mous before final victory is won. Thit war is not ours alone. It is a wai in which every thinking man and woman who wants to live freely and decently inevitably has a share. I -.- n 1 . ,a4pra.n;. ,C1.Q a.m. Saturday. They will be closed Saturday afternoons.1 Sunday Service will be discontinued during this period. Wm, W. Bishop Librariant Staff Positions In the Residence Halls: Students who are interested in applying for staff positions in the Men's and Women's Residence Hallse for the coming University year will find application blanks available int the office of the Director of Resi-i dence Halls, 205 South Wing. Appli- cations will be received for Women'sr Residence Halls assistantships fromf graduate and professional students,C juniors and seniors. A limited num- ber of graduate counselorships and undergraduate staff assistantships will probably be open for the comingt year. Applications will be receivedl for Men's Residence Halls assistant- ships from graduate and professionalc students, and from men who will be seniors during the coming University2 year. Present Staff Assistants, AssistantI Resident Advisers, Resident Coun- selors, and other student members ofE the Residence Halls staffs for men and women should inform their House Directors or Resident Advisers at the present time if they wish to be reappointed to their Residence Halls staff positions for the University years 1941-42. Karl Litzenbergs School of Education Freshmen: Courses dropped after Saturday,s April 12, will be recorded with the6 grade of E except under extraordin- ary circumstances. No course is con- sidered officially dropped unless it has" been reported in the office of the Registrar, Room 4, University Hall. Prospective Applicants for the Com- bined Curricula: Students wishing tot apply for admission to one of the combined curricula for September, 1941, must fill out applications forc such admission in Room 1210 Angell Hall before April 20. As this date comes during the vacation period, students should make such applica- tion before leaving the city.C Faculty, College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: Midsemester re- ports are due Saturday, April 12. E. A. Walter, Assistant Deant Freshmen, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Freshmen may not drop courses without E grade after Saturday, April 12. In administering this rule, students with less than 24 hours of credit arep considered freshmen. Exceptions may be made in extraordinary cir- cumstances, such as severe or long continued illness. E. H. Walter, Assistant Dean School of Education, School of Forestry and Conservation, School{ of Music: Midsemester reports in- dicating students enrolled in these units doing unsatisfactory workhin any unit of the University are due in the office of the school April 12 at noon. Report blanks for this pur- pose may be secured from the office of the school or from.Room 4, Uni- versity Hall. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received notice of the following United States Civil Service Exam- inations. Last date for filing appli- cation is noted in each case: Principal Engineer, salary $5600, June 30, 1942. Senior Engineer, salary $4600, June 30, 1942. Engineer, salary $3800, June 30, 1942. Associate Engineer, salary $3200, June 30, 1942. Assistant Engineer, salary $2600, June 30, 1942. Senior Architect, salary .$4600, May 7, 1941.- Architect, salary $3800, May 7,1 1941. Associate Architect, salary $3200, L May 7, 1941. Assistant Architect, salary $2600, May 7, 1941. Junior Architect, salary $2,000, May 7, 1941. Complete announcement on file at the Bureau, 201 Mason Hall.. Office hours: 9-12 and 2-4. The Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information has re- ceived a notice from the California State Personnel Board at Sacramento that they have scheduled an exam- ination for Actuary on April 15th. This examination is open to non- residents.' Complete information on file at the Bureau, 201 Mason Hall. Office hours: 9-12 and 2-4. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Informa- tion has received notice of the fol- lowing MICHIGAN Civil Service Ex- amination. Last date for filing appli- cation is noted in each case: Social Worker B, salary $105, Apiil 28, 1941. Tabulating Clerk B, Salary $105, April 25, 1941. Tabulating Clerk A2, SalIry $115, April 25, 1941. Tabulating Clerk Al, Salary $140, April 25, 1941. Tabulating Machines Supervisor I, Salary $150, April 25, 1941. Fisheries Research Technician C, salary $80, April 25, 1941. Fisheries Research Technician B, salary $105, April 25, 1941. Fisheries Research Technician A, salary $130, April 25,, 1941. Aquatic Biologist I, salary $150, April 25, 1941. Motor Equipment Repairman B, salary $105, April -25, 1941. Motor Equipment Repairman A, salary $130, April 25, 1941. Barber Inspector A2, salary $115, April 25, 1941. Complete announcemjent on file at the BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS AND OCCUPATIONAL INFORMA- TION, 201 Mason Hall. Office hours: 9-12 and 2-4. Academic Notices Sociology 141: Bluebooks for re- cent quiz in Mr. Landecker's section can be had at Sociology Office, 115 Haven Hall. Arthur E. Wood, Philosophy 140, the History of Aes- thetics will not meet at 11 a.m. today. Prof. Parker Exhibitions Exhibition: John James Clarkson- Oils, Water Colors and Drawings: Ex- hibition Galleries of the Rackham School, March 28-April 26. Daily (ex- cept Sundays) including evenings. Auspices: Ann Arbor Art Association and Institute of Fine Arts, University of Michigan. Exhibition: Water color sketches from the interior decoration studios of Marshall Field and Company, Chi- cago. First floor corridor display cases, Architecture Building. April 4-19. Lectures The Alexander Ziwet Lectures-in Mathematics will be given this year by Professor Saunders MacLane of Harvard University on the subject "Extensions of Groups and Their Applications," beginning April 21 and extending for' two weeks. The first lecture will be on Monday, April 21,' at 4:00 p.m. in 3011 A.TL, on the topic, "Group Extensions and Factor Sets." Notice To Lecture Course Patrons: The Oratorical Association wishes- to call attention to the fact that the ticket issued for the Dr. Beebe lec- ture is to be used for admittance to all four of the Julien Bryan illus- trated lectures. Mr. Bryan will speak Monday, April 21, on "Argentina"; Tuesday, April 22 "Peru and Chile"; Wednesday, April 23, "Turkey"; Thursday, April 24, "The Siege of Warsaw." The box office, Hill Audi- torium, will be open the evening of (ontinued on Page 5) Put Up Or Shut Up. Every real thinking Texan and true American will agree with and applaud Doctor Homer Rainey for his ringing challenge to the patrio- teers to "put up" or "shut up." If there be any such evidence prepare to show it now, or forever keep 'quiet, and permit those others to do the speaking who do not have to tear and rend the character of others in order to prove their own virtuosity. Can't we be truly patriotic without attempting to tear down the character of others? We do not know anymore of what is in their minds than they know what is in ours. We should have the same faith in them that we'd like them to have in us. Doctor Ruthven, another great educator, president of the University of Michigan, told a group of Michigan alumni two years ago in Houston, that it was not the students they feared for, but those outsiders who imagined the things that the students neither thought nor did. He further stated that at Ann Arbor they encour- aged students to study Communism and all the other isms in order to compare those forms of government with that of our own, their life and living conditions with ours. "Indeed we invite comparison of all other forms of government and society with ours, so that they may, and will know how superior ours are compared with all other forms. We need not fear the result." Dr. Ruthven went on to say that there was less hypocrisy, more searching after truth among college students today, than ever before in the history of America. Two thousand years ago Christ had another name for the patrioteer of his time. He called him a Pharisee. One who was sanctimonious in manner and hypocritical in character. As for us, we choose to believe in the students at the University of Texas as well as all the other student bodies of the U.S. and their cour- ageous leaders so well typified by the challenge of homer Rainey "To put up" or "shut up." We hope it is the latter, because we know it cannot be tne former. -The Austin Daily Tribune tion to meet the economic dislocation following the war." C(OUNTS HAS LAID OUT a system olf demrio- cratic defense which is correct in every es- .n~ i .I T on . morv . . , a r.,. k ..:u..2. a 'nv ..: t 5 i x -1 RADIO SPOTLIGHT WJR CKLW I WWJ WXYZ 760 KC . CBS 800 KC Mutual 950 K - NBC Red 1470 KC - NBC Blue Friday Evening 6:00 Stevenson News Rollin' Ty Tyson Bud Shaver 6:15 Hedda Hopper Home Newscast; Music The Factfinder 6:30 Inside of Sports Conga Dick Himber Orch. 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