THE MICHIGAN RAITY SUTNAY. MAY 25. 1OA1 ,, 111!11 wiz} 1 7Y'L -66-*' ", E MICHIGAN DAILY i . * A Letter To 4,350 Students By TOM THUMB Modern Science Discovers God As Others Cites refutation of mechanistic approach; energy is the See It .common denominator and the dynamic aspect of the Uni. versal Mind-science and religion can bury the hatchet. Edward J. Bing, Ph.D. in the American Mercury, June, 1941 i itad and managed by students of the University of hilgan under the authority of the Board in Control Student Publications. ublished every morning except Monday during the versity year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press he Associated Press is exclusively :entitled to the for repub ication of all news dispatches credited to r not otherwise credited in this newspaper. AU ts of republication of all other matters herein also rved. itered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as nd class mail matter. ibscrlptions during the regular school year by ,er $4.00, by mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING SY National Advertising Service, Inc. ,0College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. eicAe o"BOSTON LoS ANGELES rSAN FRANCISCO !tmber, Associated Collegiate Press, 1940-41 Edit'orial Staff lie Ge6 . . ert Speckhard ert P. Blaustein 'id Lachenbruch, nard Dober in Dann Wilson hiur Hill et Hiatt te Miller . . . . Managing Editor Editorial Director * . . . . . City Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor . . . . Sports Editor Assistant Sports Editor . . Women's Editor . . Assistant Women's Editor (The opinions of this, writer are his own, and in no way reflect the views of his mother, father, grandparents, Political Science prof. Joe Stalin, or Adolf Hitler.) An Open Letter to 4,350 Students: A COUPLE OF DAYS AGO we of the Daily, Garg and 'Ensian staffs came around with neatly-printed petitions and asked you to sign on the dotted line if you wanted The Daily to continue to be a student publication. In the two and a half days we canvassed, we obtained your signatures-much more than one-third of the student body. In another two days We prob- ably could have gotten eight or nine thousand. We presented your signatures to President Ruthven and they were, in turn, presented be- fore the Board of Regents. And what happened? Read the front page of yesterday's Daily, REGENTS STAND PAT ON BOARD INCREASE. And the lead: Disregarding the expressed oppo- sition of more than 4,350 students, the Regents Iof the University went ahead yesterday in their determination to increase faculty control of the Board in Control of Student Publications. O.K.-You wasted your fountain-pen ink. YOU SHOULD HAVE KNOWN that the stu- dents have nothing to say in this University. You should have known that the students don't know what's good for them. You should have known that there are certain things you shouldn't know. We're sorry. We're sorry, we can't return your fountain-penrink or your pencil lead. The Uni- versity, we are told, is run for and by the citi- zens of the state. The students are guests of the state and if they don't like it they can very well go back where they came from. Apparently education no longer includes de- mocracy. Apparently they don't wish to let us practice this thing called democracy. Maybe it's un-American. I can't figure it out. All of the reasons for the Board change seem spurious. First, it is said that the enlarged board will be more mature than the present one. But it has been pointed out time and time again that decisions of the Board are very rarely -along faculty-student lines, and that some faculty men side with some students and vice versa. ANOTHER ARGUMENT advanced, is that The Daily property is University-owned and therefore the faculty should have more say in the running of the University. I was of the impression that the University was composed of students and faculty and perhaps alumni, no one faction representing the University, but all sharing together in the University. Can it hon- estly be said that the University should not rep- resent the 11,000 students who compose it? Isn't the University's first duty toward the students? Or can the Regents merely do as they like, completely disregarding these students, who supply the school's raison d'etre? Another reason for enlarging the Board is that new faculty members would "achieve additional Ael H. Huyett ies B. Collins ise Carpenter !ln Wright ' Business Stafff S. . . Business Manager Assistant Business Manager. Women's Advertising Manager * .Women's Business Manager. NIGHT EDITOR: CHARLES THATCHER The editorials published in The Michi- gan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. There Is A Difference . AVERY COMMON ARGUMENT ad- vanced by those opposed to inter- vention in the present conflict is that Britain's record is as bad as Germany's and that therefore the United States should aid neither country. Such a conclusion is certainly not the product of serious, rational thought. Everyone realizes that both nations have at times engaged in unscrup- ulous ventures; but history makes Britain's worst crimes appear to be very minor when they are compared to certain deeds of the Third Reich. The issue in itself may seem relatively un- important at this stage of events. But many of those who oppose intervention still resort to a ;comparison of Britain's and Germany's records in their arguments, and as long as they continue to do so, clarification of the issue will be de- sirable. The story of India holds what is probably the blackest page in the hitory of England, and the conquest and subjugation of Poland holds what is probably the corresponding position for Germany. Both acts are, in the least, subject for criticism. A comparison of the circumstances involved re- veals that German's venture was much more in- famous than was Britain's. EESTINGfacts are disclosed by consider- ing the two countries, India and Poland, as they were at the time of conquest. The natives of India, in light of Western culture, were uncivilized, uneducated and undemocratic; they were not, as has been claimed, a helpless, unarmed mob; historical records 'proved that those natives re- slsted~the British with cannon supplied by French troops in India. The country itself was little more than "a medley of jealous, warring petty states, the broken fragments of the once great Mongol Empire." The Poles, on the other hand, were highly cultured, very religious, one of the most respected peoples of Europe, and their cou~Atry was an independent nation which showed increasing tendencies toward democracy. The most important factor to be considered in this comparison is the results of British and 1erman activity in the two respective countries. India,, although still striving for independence, or at least, dominion status, is nevertheless a much more educated, religious and generally useful country than she was before the coming of Ro- bert Clive and the East India Company. If' England had not conquered India, France most eertainly would have. And it is important to note that the British have permitted a vigorous move- ment for independence to be carried on in India, whereas any such activity in a Nazi-dominated country would be ruthlessly suppressed. HE APPEARANCE of Hitler in Poland has meant the disappearance of not only personal liberty, but also culture, religion and freedom of thought. Senator Wheeler admits that the British rule which has been forced upon various colonies has been, not a destructive, but a stab- ilizing influence; surely he cannot say the same for Nazi Germany! At no place in the whole realm of German colonization can be found one example of government which can even approach Canada or Australia as products of just, effic- ient administration. Britain has committed crimes, indeed; but the conquest of India cannot be compared with he subjugation of Poland! Such a comparison viewpoints." Pardon me while I snicker. I just can't understand why six faculty men are needed to represent the viewpoints of the school's 800 faculty members when the committee is willing to let three student members represent all 11,000 students. Does The Daily express the views of one "clique" and does it need this compulsory adopting of other "viewpoints?" Well, inr case you didn't know it, anyone who can write well and is willing to put in some hard work can get an appointment to the Daily editorial staff, no matter what his political views. The present Board in Control is not supposed to examine the political viewpoints of applicants for Daily jobs. Ability and effort are supposed to be the deter- mining factors. O what would this new Board do? Will it make appointments on the basis of "view- points?" Or does it intend to enforce these "additional viewpoints" upon us in some other manner? Would enforced views help to give The Daily additional viewpoints or would it lead to insincere regimentation of thought? But logical reasoning doesn't seem to work in questions like these. The Regents are elected by the citizens of the state and the students are guests of the state as I've said before. If they don't like it they can go back to Russia or Kala- mazoo or East St. Louis. Why should the stu- dents have anything to say about running their own enterprises? - I'm sorry you had to waste your pencil lead and fountain-pen ink on those petitions. The students, you know, have no right to express any opinions on how student enterprises are to be run On Leaving The%; CadmpusooHaufle r IN EVERY UNIVERSITY there is a struggle-varying in its intensity, but apparently always present-between the students to rely upon their own minds and the older generation to pull them into the molds of convention. The fight over the packing,of the Board in Control of Student Publications is an instance of that struggle. It is an attempt of a smug older generation to bring the younger willfully into line, forcing them to conform de- spite their loud-and very reasonable-protests. The University of Michigan student body is losing, step by step, its right to think for itself. This University is making rapid progress toward that type of institution in which any thinking professor lives in fear of his promotion and his .job, in which the textbooks are scoured with the good strong soap of Americanism, in which the students are afraid to say what they think, and in which the student newspaper is nothing more than a sterile house-organ. The University of Detroit is such an institu- tion. Michigan State comes close to the ideal. The University of Michigan is taking long strides toward catching up. A LOT OF US REGRET THIS. Most of us are saying nothing, for there is already a horri- ble 'fear on this campus of antagonizing the powers that be. Any instructor looking for advancement does not dare to speak. Many students in high positions express their sympa- thy for those who get stepped on; but they do it off the record. Others allow their names to be used, but they are nervous about it. That this is an unhealthy situation is realized by others than us of The Daily. the fight that has just ended has not been a fight restricted to a few hair-pulling liberals, a couple of irate Daily editors. The staffs of other publicatons opposed the measure to a man. There were Betas and Dekes, Tri-belts and Kappas who signed their names and who began to feel hot under their collars for the first time in their college careers. Students who never questioned the dismissal of the thirteen students or the banning of the American Student Union have begun to wonder why it is that students can be pushed around, their protests overlooked, their petitions un- heard. Students are beginning to wonder what sort of a role students play in this University. NOONE seems to know what to do about this latest action of the Regents. The packing of the publications board is generally considered to be a closed incident, another bit in a very black year of University history. I regret that this passive attitude has been adopted. I do not believe I could have taken it so calmly, for I believe that the administration must be shown in some way that this pell-mell rush toward complete subordination of student interests must be stopped. A vigorous fight might have made the pack- ing proposal the last incident in an unwholesome series. - Hervie Haufler Skim ings - by the edit director NO ONE feels more deeply that the Regents have flagrantly disregarded student and fac- ulty opinion in their decision to reaffirm the Publications Board change. We believe they, have. shown a very shallow conception of the function of a university. * * * Tf two fplt thsat nnvthino- Pnnnid hi dnna fn THE TUMULT OF WAR and social change is eclips- ing temporarily another revolution at least equally important. Science has become God-conscious. Be- hind this epoch-making upheaval in scientific thought, which will inevitably have profound repercussions in practically every branch of human culture, are no dreamers or fanatics, but the ranking physicists, as- tronomers and mathematicians of the Twentieth Cen- tury. In their objective observation of the universe, these hard-headed research men have reached a point where science and religion meet, at last, in the master concept of a universal mind, one great Cosmic Intelli- gence of which everything is part. To understand this revolutionary change and some of its. tremendous implications, let us first look back- ward. When Napoleon asked Pierre Laplace, the great astronomer and mathematician of his time, why God was nowhere mentioned in his works, the famous scientist replied, "Sire, I do not need that hypothesis." Laplace's remark summed up the scientific attitude of the eighteenth century, and of the nineteenth, in which the purely rationalistic, mechanistic approach to the problems of the Universe became general. Basic in this older type of scientific thought was the Law of Causation-the doctrine that in principle every happening in the Cosmos is predetermined by "laws of nature." Even today, dogmatic rationalism still dominates almost every field of Western thought. Refuted By Quantum Theory YET just one generation ago, the approach to nature in terms of airtight determination, rationalism and materialism got its first shock through the Quantum Theory, enunciated by Professor Max Planck, famed Nobel Prize winner in physics. Planck's Theory of Radiation has culminated in the assertion, now generally accepted by science, that the operation of the Universe is not one sustained, uninterrupted process .... The original form of the Quantum Theory was mere- ly the first rumbling of the earthquake which was to shake scientific thought to its foundations. In 1917, Albert Einstein showed that the Law of Causation did not entirely guide the operation of the Cosmos. Soon afterward Prince Louis de Broglie, member of the French Academy and another Nobel Prize winner in physics, published his theory of Wave Mechanics. In this theory, de Broglie tried to explain the reason for the apparently erratic, behavior of electrons in joining protons to form atoms of no particular ele- ment, as distinct from atoms of another. The only possible explanation of that erratic behavoir seemed to be that, as various physicists expressed it, "the elec- tron chooses to make one partiular jump and not an- other." Let's call a spade a spade. To say that an electron "chooses" to do anything is to attribute free will to the electron. BUT this development in physical science merely set off the avalanche of amazing discoveries that followed . . . . In a lecture entitled- "What is a Law of Nature,", Schrodinger refers to the former belief that the behavior of the molecules is determined by absolute causality. The widespread conviction that anything else would be unthinkable, he pointed out, arose from our age-old habit of assuming a cause for everything. This inherited custom of "casual think- ing" made the idea of undetermined events-of abso- lute, primary casualness-seem complete nonsense, a logical absurdity. But actually, the famous physicist went on: ..from what source was this habit of casual thinking derived? Why, from observing for hun- dreds and thousands of years precisely those regu- larities in the natural course of events which, in the light of oUr present knowledge, are most cer- tainly not governed by causality . . . Therewith this traditional habit of thinking loses its rational foundation. Doom Of Mechanistic Approach' THEN, five years' after Schrodinger, another inter- national celebrity, Professor Werner Heisenberg, published the modern form of the Quantum Theory. It officially sealed the doom of physical science's tra- ditional mechanistic and deterministic approach to Nature. -Its most important aspect is the now gener- ally accepted Principle of Indeterminacy. We used to visualize Nature as a kind of factory operating with hundred per cent precision. Yet, as Sir James Jeans, one of the world's greatest physicists, expresses it, Heisenberg's Principle of Indeterminacy "now makes it appear that nature abhors accuracy and precision above all things." .. . Heisenberg's discovery has demonstrated that the future of the universe cannot be foretold under any circumstances. Contrary to hitherto sacrosanct scien- tific belief, it is impossible to foretell what a particular electron will do at a particular moment. All that sci- ence is able to predict is what is most likely to happen. The determinism of physical science, applied to the past and future of the universe, has been superseded by the Theory of Probabilities .. In other words, "exact" science now frankly admits that it is not exact. This admission is a sign of great- ness, just as the absence of self-criticism is a symptom of pettiness ... Energy Is Common Base MODERN PHYSICISTS consider energy to be the common denominator of the Cosmos. Jeans calls energy the fundamental entity of the Universe. And Professor Carl Gustav Jung, the world-famous Swiss psychologist and thinker, writes, "We might be tempted to call energy God, and thus blend into one spirit and nature." A book published last fall by the dis- tinguished astro-physicist, Dr. Gustav Stromberg of Mount Wilson Observatory, echoes the scientists' af- firmation of that statement. Stromberg writes in his latest work, The Soul of the Universe:" The (present) study leads to the inevitable conclusion that there exists a World Soul or God." What is this? What has come over the leading ;physicists of our generation? What has happened to scientific thought? A revolution. That revolution has remained practically unnoticed. Yet, it is many times greater, and liable to be more far reaching in its effects, than the French Revolution. In its scope it may dwarf. the communist, fascist and Nazi revolu- tions. It is no exaggeration to say that in cultural significance this spiritual revolution is paralleled only by the Reformation. We are witnessing the birth of the Scientific Revolution. Pure Thought And Energy WE HAVE SEEN that various contemporary scien- tists conceive of the Universal Mind or Logos as pure thought. Others, like Professor Jung, define it as energy. It is important to note that this is only an apparent contradiction. In this connection I wrote in my autobiography, Of the Meek and the Mighty: During the past ten or twenty years the physi- cists of the, Western world have' arrived at the recognition that there is only energy and no mat- ter . . . In other words the latest Western scien- tific conception of the Universe is one of energy, in the form of electro-magnetic vibration. Energy is merely a vehicle-the vehicle of which creative and perceptive thought, existing both within and without the ganglions of the brains of living creatures, avails itself. Energy is the dynamic as- pect of the Universal Mind. Aid conversely, the Universal Mind, which manifests itself through energy, and through energy alone, not only movs the Universe; it is the Universe; it is the spiritual aspect of energy, that is, of the Cosmos. In my opinion, this conception of the one and indi- visible Universal Mind, with its twin aspects as pure thought and as pure energy, can fully satisfy the modern scientist, the philosopher and the religious thinker. It can serve equally well the mystic's urge for spiritual at-one-ness with the Deity. I realize, of course, that many people feel they ob- tain greater spiritual support and ethical guidance from a belief ,in a personal God who is distinct from the Universe and therefore from themselves. In this connection I wrote in the book already referred to: Those who prefer to believe in a personal God, distinct from the Cosmos, will find it quite com- patible with their convictions to look upon the Universal mind, i.e., upon the Cosmos, as the manifestation, the active principle, the dynamics, of the Godhead. *t*i* We are facing the significant fact that scientific and religious thought, in their higher aspects, now can be brought down to a common denominator. The new era is characterized by a return to the highest metaphysical concepts of the ancient past, and by the fundamental readjustment and reformation of sci- entific thought. That is why I am inclined to call the birth of the new era in science the Scientific Reformation. Bury The Hatchet SCIENCE AND RELIGION, I believe, can now bury the hatchet. They benefit alike from science's discovery of God. The man of science can no longer be looked upon as an "unimaginative agnostic." On the other hand, his discovery of the new, and yet old, all-embracing, key hypothesis of the Universe as pure thought, as a divine thinking force, leads him out of the impasse in which his dogmatic mechanistic ap- proach had landed him. The concept of Universal Mind in its twin aspects-pure thought and pure energy-is not merely the common denominator of religious and scientific thought. It is also the "Open Sesame" to new triumphs of scientific research. ART By JOHN MAXON THE CERAMICS DEPARTMENT of the Col- 'lege of Architecture is /now holding in the main corridor of its building an exhibition of its year's work done under the supervision of Mary Chase Stratton; the direct instruction has been given by Grover Cole, instructor in ceramics. Be- sides the students' work are show pieces by var- ious faculty members and a large group of Mr. Cole's own work. The show demonstrates con- clusively that the University is sponsoring ceram- ic work of the first order upon which it may pride itself.'It is an exhibition that should prove inter- esting to educators from outside Ann Arbor. The students' wares show a large measure of individual capacities, including that most prec- ious one of teachability. There are various bowls, pots, and ornaments of good quality. And, while one may seriously question the ultimate advisa- bility of showing student work alongside that of the teacher, thus placing each at a disad- vantage, the show hangs together very well, in- deed. Among individual potters are some worthy of note: Betty Dice shows neatness of taste in forms and glazes; Lois MacDonald has a feeling for the potentialities of materials; Walter Lok presents sturdy craftmanship; and there are others. T IS Professor Walter Gores who takes prime honors in the faculty group. His choices of shape, the pleasantness of his glazes, and the extreme care bestowed on them reward both eye and hand. Ernst Mundt, also of the faculty, dem- onstrates the application of both feeling and in- tellect to the potter's problems. His tea-set in' deepest brown is eminently appealing. But the show is really Mr. Cole's. It is ob- viously the result of his efforts, and his work constitutes the impressive part of the exhibition.; From the terra cotta horses to the potter's traditional creation, wares thrown on the wheel, Mr. Cole provides continuing delight. In the matter of color and glaze texture, he is most ingenious. His shapes are obviously those from the mind and hands of the potter, not from the 'designer' who does not practice the craft. And the work is blessedly free from artiness, show- ing a substantial wit. This potter communicates a love for his work and materials that is re- freshing. ONE FEELS THAT, between them, Mrs. Strat- ton and Mr. Cole have done a major deed in making the ceramics department significant this year. In addition, the exhibition they hold is the only one held this season in Ann Arbor - i Donine Says ONE of our ablest theologians, Ro- bert L. Calhoun of Yale, calls attention to the fact that "individuals and minority groups from time to time consciously oppose the dominant social currents, and become growing points through which new habits and new ideas arise." The Quakers prowl- ing about war-torn Europe just now, evacuating the homeless vic- tims; those lost missionaries going to. Africa across lanes of the war; Dr. Robert Ellsworth -Brown returning from the Michigan Med- ical School to establish public health centers in West China; or Dr. Paul Harrison from our University Hospital staff just now arriving at Busra to continue his missionary hos- pital in Arabia in spite of the war; like the Quaker Service Camps con- ducted as a method for teaching stu- agencies as statesmen manage state affairs; and those physicians who keep abreast of science and go to re- mote countries to study disease, and serve where doctors are scarce. For them to be crossing the ocean now causes one to say, "Those -- mis- sionaries should remain at home so the war can go on." The pacifist would say, "Why not stop the war so the good work can go on?" If these points of view and others relat- ing religion to civilization, to free- dom of the seas, to the destiny of man and the goal of human striv- ing, get discussed and millions learn because of the strange actions of these missionaries then the "growing point" referred to by Calhoun will have been served. BUT WHAT has that to do with re- ligion? Is not religion a sort of decorum? Should we not think of re- ligion as what is proper? Should not the devotee attend his church but let politics, economics and state af- fairs alone? That depends upon your idea of religion. If you make no dis- tinction between morals and religion was ideal. Religion of this high type is on the outs with everything which dulls the ideal, or hides the goal, 'or belittles perfection, or obscures one's belongings for the best, or weakens the valor, or compromises the soul. HE WHO CAN become a growing point in our heavy, complex, highly technical, over associated and under differentiated life, has to stand out from the crowd, think better, be habitually thorough, know more about a certain problem than any other living being knows, understand the forces about him as others do not. While he stands apart, lives aloft, dwells alone on the one pri- Imary' thesis, he will know the joy of leadership, and understand the serenity through which our men of research, explorers, greatest poets and saints have passed enroute to im- mortality. Edward W.,Blakeman, Counselor in Religion Educati n Laxity In The House When the roll was called in the na-