THE MICHIGAN DAILY MICHIGAN DAILY 4) Is =:N . II 31 JiLTs mWR - 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 newspaper, 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. REPRES5NTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTIJING BY 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 Emile Gele Robert Speckhard Albert P. Blaustein,. David Lachenbruch . Bernard Dober . Alvin Dann Hal Wilson Arthur Hill Janet rHiatt Grace Miller * . Managing Editor *. Editorial Director . . . . City Editor . . Associate Editor . . Associate Editor . . Associate Editor * . .Sports Editor . Assistant Sports Editor Ast . Women's Editor Assistant Women's Editor Daniel H. Huyett James B. Collins Louise Carpenter Evelyn Wright Business Staff . . . Business Manager . . Assistant Business Manager . Women's Advertising Manager Women's Business Manager NIGHT EDITOR: HOWARD FENSTEMAKER The editorials published in The Michi- gan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Establish Price Limitations . . A SHORT TIME AGO President Roosevelt appointed Leon Hender- son as director of the newly-formed Office for Price Administration and Civilian Supply. Al- though a wise move, difficulties were foreseen then and now they have materialized. In the first place there is the question of au- thority to enforce Henderson's decisions. The President has been reported to be considering some sort of legislation to back up the OPACS. However, Henderson has his priority power and threat of bad publicity to coerce balking manu- facturers. Much more important even than this is the question of 'the general policy of OPACS. Should an over-all ceiling on prices be established or limits be placed merely on certain commodities? At the present time increased industrial capacity is demanded. This can either be obtained by allowing prices to go their way and thus get more capacity by the profit incentive or by lim- iting prices with government encouragement of increased capacity. Bernard M. Baruch, Chair- man of the War Industries Board in the First World War, favors an over-all price ceiling. His theory is that in war-time the government deter- mines demand for goods rather than the price and that the Law of Supply and Demand, which in peacetime is based on prices and competition, takes a holiday. BARUCH'S over-all ceiling recommendation is based on his experience in the First World War. At that time there were complicated com- missions, advisory boards and divided authority. In October, 1916, Woodrow Wilson set up a Defense Advisory Commission to insure a steady flow of war materials and make other drastic moves if war really came. This commission was superseded by the War Industries Board on July 8, 1917. Baruch was made chairman with real power of this board on March 4, 1918. Al- ready, however, inflation, profiteering and ma- terial shortages were prevalent. It is to avoid this that the former War Industries Board Chairman advocates an over-al? price ceiling. So far OPACS has set price limits on only .strategic war necessities, notably steel. Further steps ought to be taken. Civilian consumption will have to be decreased. Price limits should be set on all basic commodities-not only those basic for war but those needed by the civil population. By remaining inactive OPACS is giving rise to more profiteering, hoarding and inflation. Rising food prices are not welcomed by the public. Therefore, it seems that OPACS and Leon Henderson would do wise to adopt Bernard Baruch's advice and establish an over- all price ceiling with Congressional authority behind it if necessary. - George W. Sallade Paging Jack Garner! A LMOST EVERY AMERICAN with a claim to fame has had his say on the peace-or-war issue. We have heard Roosevelt, Lindbergh, Willkie, Hoover, Wickard, Landon, Knox, Ken- nedy, Stimson, Lewis, Conant, Hutchins and now Mrs. Roosevelt. Soon we shall hear, no doubt, from Joe Louis Walter Hagen. Lefty Gomez. :. A Few Facts On Mr. Mascott By TOM THUMB AT LAST REPORT it seems that, the Army willing, Touchstone and his Reply Churlish will be with us for another semester, but the campus will miss-I use the term freely-my pessimistic predecessor, who signs his name "Mascott," just like "Hitler" or "Napoleon." I have often been asked by members of the Mascott Fan Clubs, questions such as "Just what kind of a guy is this Mascott?" and "Is it true that Mascott gets that way by drinking denatured alcohol?" or "If Mascott doesn't like it here, why doesn't he go back to R-----, where he came from?" Well, in this column I shall attempt to answer these and other questions about The Mascott. I believe that I am in a position to write ob- jectively a careful and analytical study of this most complex and yet most simple of human beings, as I have been his roommate for three semesters, and some things about him are actu- ally printable. LAURENCE (JOE STALIN SENDS ME MON- EY EVERY FRIDAY) MASCOTT worships two gods: (1) Morpheus, and (2) Publicatius. Publicatius keeps him happy when his name's in the paper and Morpheus solaces himn when it isn't. The notorious author of Fire and Water is happy to read any type of item in the news- paper so long as his name's in it. He even loves derogatory comment, just so it's not rational. When he received a letter calling him *&X6%, Mascott ran to the Daily office, screaming with glee, asking that it be printed in the letter column. The communication, however, was signed merely "A Better American Than Mascott," and that could have been practically anybody on campus. (Ed. note-The Daily does not print unsigned communications, but will withhold a contributor's name if specified). So Mascott printed it in his own column, rejoicing in his "open-mindedness." BUT A WEEK AGO when The Daily received a logical, well-organized and convincing let- ter condemning Mascott's views on education, signed by a specific person, Mascott, seeing i in the copy basket, removed and carefully burned it. Mascott takes pride in being the campus' prize heel. He has constantly used the editorial col- umns of The Daily in furthering his own ends. Here is a typical example of Mascott's rational- ization (Mich. Daily, Wed., Dec. 4, 1941): "This being a senior is a terrific nuisance. Things were so much easier when we were jun- iors- no 'Ensians or senior pictures to worry about-and we had' already solved the concen- tration problem as well as having learned how to get a C out of a course without too great effort or too consistent attendance. As a senior we don't seem to be able to do the latter. That's why we openly apple-polish with Mr. Palmer and give him free space in The Daily." THIS IS MASCOTT-the same Mascott who condemns our educational system for not shoving learning down his throat. His intellec- tual dishonesty is carried to the point where he laughs off criticisms of his writings, dismissing the efficacious arguments with such comment as "You don't think I really mean that stuff I write, do you?" Mascott cannot make a statement or write a column without using his favorite phrases. Last semester his pet was "terribly, horribly, totally." Recently he had a deep admiration for "as such," and upon being criticized for the continued usage of the term, translated it into the Latin, "per se." His latest is "wholeheart- edly." This self-styled Bolshevik (he has since been repudiated by the Bolsheviki) has his own ideas on education, as implied in his farewell column. The column itself read very well, and expressed ideas with remarkable clarity of thought-for Mascott-but if you were to ask him what his idea of the perfect form of education would be, the answer would again prove his complete in- tellectual dishonesty. Mascott's ideal day in aij. ideal college would probably be something like this: My Day BY MASCOTT 1 p.m.-Arose bright and early this afternoon. The fresh air smelled bad, but I soon becam horribly, terribly used to it, as such. 1:05-Had my afternoon drag of marijuana in the Angell Hall smoking room. 2:00-Attended wholeheartedly my two o'clock class in dishonesty. It was exceedingly interest- ing, per se. We discussed betrayal today. I think I'll try it on my followers. 3:00-In music we learned another verse of My Name Is Samuel Hall, Damn Your Hide. 4:00-Wrote a column for the Volkischer Beo- bachter. 5-8-Alcohol, women, and so to bed to dream of the downfall of free, economic enterprise. That's Mascott, as he prefers to be known. That's the campus heel-that's what he wanted me to write. But Mascott isn't such a bad guy. His col- umns show sound, logical thinking and I know I'll miss him next year. In fact I even like him as a person, somewhat. But the trouble with Mascott is that he won't let you callhim anything but a heel. He pre- fers to be known that way. I guess maybe he is a heel at that. P.S. If Mascott's mother reads this, I'm only kidding. He paid me two bucks to write it. All + 1-, +vwc1'o'i7g, n h cra ,'ncn . -zcn TO THE EDITOR In Re Metraux And Friend W HY must the May Festival bear the brunt of such Quixotic forays as have appeared in the Letters column recently? I certainly find no common ground with Mr. Metraux and very little with his friend, except when he says that some of Europe's peculiar intellectualism turned out to be a chimera. One thing is sure-the sooner we get over writing articles that sound like an apologia pro patria sua, the better. The idea that we are a nation of uncultivated semi- baboons who show a few signs of favorable evo- lution-"more to be pitied than scorned"-has never appealed to me. And I have cherished for some time the notion that I, an unregenerate American, am slightly better than on jump ahead of "the sod." By dint of effort I have cultivated sufficient aesthetic and intellectual agility to listen to a concert that runs all the way from Handel to Ravel and still enjoy it. And I would much rather make the transitions necessary than run the risk of hearing an all-Wagner con- cert (if I may indulge a prejudice), let alone who Mr. Metraux's friend suggests-an all-Wag- ner festival. One has the feeling that the down- fall of continental culture was due in some meas- ure to a surfeit of all-Wagner programs. LET'S REMEMBER and rejoice that America has now (and had before Hitler, too) better orchestras than the continent. Denying that calls for a citation for bravery in the face of facts. And our programs are certainly quite as excellent. The May Festival is just about what any good May Festival of music should be. The only changes we need would be brought about if American audiences in general would realize their own dignity and not feel they have to clap long and loud for second-rate music or inadequate soloists. - R. No American' Culture THE NUMBER OF COMMENTS, approval and rebuke, which followed the publication last Saturday of my letter on the May Festival, has enlarged considerably the scope of the discus- sion. Especially an answer in Tuesday's issue has transformed the whole affair into the eternal opposition of the Culture of the Old World and that of the New World. But more than this tra- ditional struggle, the whole problem of culture in the United States evolves from my letter and the subsequent comments. The friend of mine, who explained so clearly the how's and the why's of the May Festival weak programs, does not seem to realize very important facts of intellectual life and cultural pursuit. The great mistake of many European writers and philosophers has been to nationalize their culture. The day some romantic author spoke about German or French culture, was the begin- ning of the end of thought as a factor in the development of civilizations. Culture is univer- sal and is not bound by continents and bound- aries. Culture exists in America, not as an American product, but merely as a product of the spirit of many thinkers and many poets. Never an American culture will ever exist. We will have American civilization, American stand- ards of living, American conceptions of the world. Those are nearly material things. But culture, the culture which is attained by the "cultivation" of the major arts (music, sculp- ture, poetry, drama) is entirely independent of any material or geographical background. Cul- ture is the pursuit of the highest standards in aesthetics, which nearly automatically rever- berate on the whole understanding of ethics. I KNOW that there have been difficulties in the raising of practice of culture in the United States. I know that some religious tradi- tions were afraid of that rise. Prejudices and misunderstandings were abundant. But this is no longer true. In 1941 America has one of the best educational systems in the world. There are more libraries and literary clubs than any- where else on earth. The most common people (of our generation) can be in contact with the best. Authors, critics, and professors publish every month remarkable books on interesting and vital questions. Newspapers consecrate whole pages to the arts. Yet there are people who seem to think that America has no culture-or merely a culture still in adolescence. This is not true. America has a great culture, it is the culture of five continents and hundreds of countries. That is why I felt amazed to see a responsible society set up a series of concerts which, even according to my friend, were not responding to the high standards art requires. But I doubt that, as a writer puts it, "Ameri- cans are young people . . . there are many prob- lems in the assimilation of many varied cut. tures . . ." There are two grave errors in that remark. Americans are not a young people; they form a young "nation," which is quite different. Then nobody is required to assimilate these varied cultures. The miracle, the supreme excellency, would be to have the cultures in harmony. AM NOT TRYING to bring to America the "full-fledged intellectualism of Europe." First intellectualism is never full-fledged since it has far higher reaching purposes: the better- ment of man. Then I did not come from Europe n hrin+o, nvtia N+ +n M gin wdta n f rom THE PACIFIST, as we all should know by now, con- demns the use of force in the resolution of difference between human beings. In the use of force he finds the contradiction of the finest aspects of human per- sonality-the denial of mankind's highest hopes. Vio- lence is futile and brings about evils greater than those which it is intended to eliminate; war never accom- plishes anything. In the positive features of his philos- ophy, the pacifist loop1s toward a world society constructed on a foundation of completely equitable relationships in the social, economic, and in every other field. What fault can be found in such an ethical system? Admittedly, when at last we are willing to view it with a vision unclouded by nationalistic prejudice, it at first impresses us with what appears to be the shining clar- ity of its utterly convincing logical structure. In fact, each premise is so attractive and can be supported so easily with a quantity of circumstantial evidence, that it is doubtful that any specific part of the logical fabric can be cut down. But at the same time every proposition on which the pacifist builds his case is just enough at variance with the fundamental principles of the architecture of argument that, although nothing will actually come apart, the whole structure carries an air of unreality. Suspect Because Absolute TO begin with, there are certain absolutist doctrines in pacifism, which, as we begin to see how few ab- solute principles there are in human affairs, are sus- pect simply because of their positivism. It can reason- ably be questioned, for example, whether an absolute division can be made between physical force and other compulsive factors in human living. Actually the oc- casions are few when the average man is influenced by physical force or the threat of physical force in de- termining his course of action, and yet how often can he be said to make a free will decision? The merest scraps of his life are left to his unforced judgment - whether he shall go to the show in the evening or in the after- noon - or whether he shall go home by way of Peter or Paul streets. Every significant choice is closely qual- ified by the fear of hunger, by the fear of group dis- approval and by other factors the operation of which is just as terrible and if anything more inevitable than force. What is there to recommend any of these ele-, ments of coercion over physical compulsion? It can hardly be argued that long continued want or ostracism is not just as demoralizing and as destructive of morals as the use of force. All of which indicates some basis for the belief that the distinction is simply one of mechanics. If we become doubtful as to the logic of classifying force separatelW from other coercive factors in society, we are naturally led to question the assumption that the use of force is inherently evil. Many of the pacifists themselves are confused on this point, for they will ad- mit that they would employ violence to defend them- selves from the attack of a madman. This position is upheld by the argument that a person out of his mind is not amenable to those influences of the spirit, the promptings of conscience and so forth, upon which the pacifist depends for the efficacy of his sacrifice. The redemption of mankind, according to the pacifist form- ula, will be gained from the cumulative effect of con- tinuous appeal to the best instincts of human nature - an appeal which cannot be made when these sensibili- ties are blurred by insanity. What weakens this argu- ment is the difficulty of defining insanity. Anyone who has been thoroughly enraged recognizes the kinship between fury and insanity - knows that brief moment that is deaf to all reason and blind to all scruple. May we not question, for example, whether a soldier, over- come with nationalistic passion and inflamed with hat- red for his foreign enemy may not appear to be so nearly demented as to share with an insane man the characteristics which authorize a suspension of the practice of pacifism in restraining or combating him? The unhappy inference which might be drawn from these reflections is that force is totally evil only when employed in that atmosphere of reasoned calm where it seldom appears anyhow. LETTER S Is The Pacifist Position Tenable? As Others NO, says John Huston, '41-declares that absolute principles are suspect-maintains that other 'than physical forces must be recognized, and says that force maybe good. john Huston, '41, in winter issue of Controversy, Student Religious Association Publication. Editor's Note: This is the first of two articles by students on the question, "Is The Pacifist Position Tenable." Today's article is written by the editor of Controversy. Tomorrow there will appear a defense of the pacifist position by Robert Besse, Grad., of the Fellowship of Reconciliation. War May Be Useful AND THUS the shadow of doubt lengthens from one premise of pacifism to another. If violent methods may not always-be mischievous, then perhaps war may sometimes serve as a useful end. It has always been difficult to reconcile the known consequences of partic- ular wars with the theory that force unfailingly contains within itself the defeat of its own purposes and the corruption of the people who employ it. Now we are permitted to hypothesize that the wars of Rome pre- served an ancient civilization from early destruction by the barbarians-that the' wars of Hellenic Greece and of Revolutionary America cleared the ground for the construction of new cultures. Even when we grant that war is horrible, and that it is the virus of many of the worst maladies which can afflict society, nevertheless it remains a fact that when Marius hurled back the maurauding Teutons in 102 and 101 B.C., he guaranteed the growth of maturity of the most brilliant civilization of the ancient world; and it remains a fact that when Washington defeated the British at Yorktown he con- tributed the first essential to the development of what must be the most brilliant society of the modern. This is not intended to hint that war after all may be beneficial to the race or that we ought to slacken our efforts to diminish its extent and forestall its ap- pearance. Taken as a whole, war is evil; this is espe- cially true of the wars of Europe where we see the dissi- dent factions of an inspired but unbalanced civilization scrapping miserably over the tattered remnants of their common heritage. But it is not equally self-evi4ent that war is always evil. Even when, we consider the deleterious effect of war upon the public morals, a ground where the pacifist regards himself unbeatable, a strong case can be made for the argument.that a stout resistance to a threatening foe involves less decay of the human spirit than non-resistance and subsequent submission to tyranny, We may well admit that some- thing happens to the mind of a man who finds him- self killing a fellow being; but we will not be rushed into the conclusion that this brutalizing effect is neces- sarily worse than the slow corrosion of the soul that afflicts the victims of defeat and subjugation. Practices Non-Resistance OF COURSE the basis upon which the pacifist justi- fies the practice of non-resistance even in national terms, is the theory that resistance through the use of force simply forges the link by which future outbursts will be chained to ancient quarrels; non-resistance, though involving great initial sacrifice, will break thw catena of discord, and men will then live in peace. Per- haps we have uncovered here the "be all and the end all" of pacifism: a profound belief in the mutability of human nature. By slow degrees the pacifists hope to shift the compass of our minds and pilot us into the unvisited seas of human concord. And what shall we, say to them? To argue that we cannot change is to confute the very hopes that keep us alive and striving day after day. Nor does the circumstance that we have not changed over the last three thousand years necessarily preclude our improvement over the next three thousand. Still and all, we may find our answer in history. There is something inescapable about a close inspec- tion of our past and a contemplation of our savage present: in every age we find mixed in varying propor- tions the same lust for fighting and the same horror of war-until at last the conclusion forces itself upon us that man is in his very chemistry as much animal as he is divine. He seems foredoomed to scratch over the rubble of this world's ills-and to be able only for brief moments to flap himself into that aerial realm where, breathless, he catches the fleeting feeling of an entirely different life he can never quite attain. War is an aspect of our imperfections and while deplorable in itself is often as purposeful as anythingwe do. If we are told that in the long run it is futile, we may reply that in the long run, anything we do is futile. Whatever is mortal is in vain. :>_. i tion of my friend is that, as many others, he is the victim of the popu- lar fallacy, that art is a kind of amusement with not much effect on our lives. But art, as much as othert less noble crafts, requires precision and concentration and specialization to attain perfection. Medicine and law are highly specialized branches of human activities, so are all other crafts, art comprised. Only concen- tration and attention (progressive and intensive betterment) can bring the dreamed perfection. If a man is capable to do that in the everyday life, why is he not capable to do it when dealing with art? Why not to be precise, sober, discreet, concise, in music when one uses all those qualities in the making of a living? DO OBJECT to the actual setup of the May Festival. It hurts me to see culture spoiled. I realize the difficulties of perfectionment. But difficulties are not an excuse. And I do not excuse America, the Uni- versity of Michigan Musical Society in that case, for not trying to do their best for a great cause, and for culture. - Guy Serge Metraux DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued -from Page 2) Churches Carillon Recital: A special feat- ure of the carillon recital to be pre- sented from 7:15 to 8:00 p.m. Thurs- day, May 15, in the Burton Memorial Tower will be a duet by John Challis, guest carillonneur, and Percival Price, University Carillonneur. They will play the "Second Rhapsody for Two Carillonneurs," composed by Profes- sor Price. The program will also in- clude German and Chinese folk songs and a composition by Debussy. Exhibition: Paintings by Oscar Ko- koschka, May 7-20, at the Rackham Building presented by the Ann Arbor Art Association and the Institute of Fine Arts. the Department of Zoology at 4:15 p.m. on Thursday, May 15, in the Natural Science Auditorium. The pub- lic is cordially invited. University Lecture: Dr. Elmer A. Culler,-Professor of Psychology at the University of Rochester, will lecture on the subject, "The Limiting Form of the Learning Curve" under the auspices of the Department of Psy- chology at 8 p.m. on Thursday, May 45, in the W. K. Kellogg Founda- tion Institute Auditorium. The public is cordially invited. University Lecture: Professor R. B. Mowat of the University of Bristol, England, will lecture on the subject, "Literature and Society in Eighteenth Century England" under the auspices of the Department of History at 4:15 p.m. on Tuesday, May 20, in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The public is cordially invited. Alpha Omega Alpha Lecture: Dr. Henry E. Sigerist, William H. Welch Professor of History of Medicine and Director of the Institute of the History of Medicine- at Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, will give a public lecture un- der the auspices of Alpha Omega Alpha, honorary medical fraternity, in the auditorium of the William K. Kellogg Foundation Institute to- night at 8:15. The public is cordially invited. Lectures University Lecture: Professor Otto Neugebauer of Brown University will lecture on the subject, "Problems and Methods in Ancient Astronomy," (il- lustrated) under the auspices of the Department of Mathematics at 4:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Amphi- thatr. The nhic is cordially in- r r Erma Velber, immigrant from Vienna now working as research as- sistant in horticulture at Michigan State College, is selling personal art treasure to bring her friends from1 Events Today -TMathematics Club will meet this