THE MICHIGAN DAILY S 52 Members Of University Listed In County Officers' Reserv DAY, JANUARY 12, 1941 ~ orp ; _ Infantry Arm Proves Biggest In This Region Bursley And Crawford Are Highest Ranking Men In Officers' Reserve Although 52 of the 136 Washtenaw County members of the Officers' Reserve Corps are in the various Un- iversity faculties, it is quite unlikely that more than a few of them will be called to active duty in the near fu- ture to aid in the nation's defense program. According to Capt. Paul C. West- erman, Inf.-Res., president of the Reserve Officers' Association here, only the younger men in Ann Arbor are expected to see active duty in the field. "Most of the Michigan profes- sors are in special branches of the army," he explained, "and will pro- bably be of more service to the coun- try in the classrooms."l Branch Has 42 Men Statistics on the Reserve Officers in this district revealed by the ROA yesterday indicate that the infan- try arm of the service, with 42 men, is the largest branch in this vicinity. The Medical Corps is next with 39 members followed by the Ordnance with 14 men and the Corps of En- gineers with eight. There are six men here in the Field Artillery, five Specialists, five in the Signal Corps, four in the Coast A tillery, three each in Chemical Warfare and the Veterinary Corps, two each in Quartermaster Corps and the Sanitary Corps and one each in the Dental Corps, Cavalry and Med- ical Administration. Highest ranking officers in the re- serve here are Dean Joseph A. Burs- ley of the mechanical engineering de- partment, Dean Ivan C. Crawford of the College of Engineering, Prof. Henry W. Miller of the mechanism and engineering drawing department and Prof. Albert H. White of the chemical engineering department. All have the rank of colonels and, with the exception of Dean Craw- ford who is in the Corps of En- gineers, all are in the Ordnance Branch. Others Hold Commissions Of the other. reserve officers there are three lieutenant colonels, 11 are majors, 10 are captains, 65 are Ist lieutenants and 43 are 2nd lieuten- ants. Seven of the faculty members who are eitler assistant professors, as- sociate professors or full professors are connected with the Ordnance branch, five are specialists, three are in the Corps of Engineers, and one each are in the Infantry, Med- ical Corps, Dental Corps, Coast Ar- tillery, Sanitary Corps and Signal Corps. Reserve officers in the University with the rank of lieutenant-colonels are Prof. Albert E. White of the met- allurgical engineering department, Ord., and Prof. John S. Worley of the transportation engineering depart- ment, Spec. The list of majors includes Prof. Clark Hopkins of the Latin and Greek departments, Inf.; Prof. Her- bert W. Emerson, of the bacteriology department, Med.; Prof. Martin J. Orbeck of the mechanism and engin- eering drawing department, CA.; and Prof. Reuben L. Kahn of the bacter- iology department, Sn. Engineers Represented Others are Prof. Ferdinand N. Me- nefee of the engineering mechanics department and Prof. Walter C. Sad- ler of the civil engineering depart- ment, Engr., and Prof. John C. Brier of the chemical engineering depart- ment, Prof. Walter E. Lay of the mechanical engineering department and Prof. Claire Upthegrove of the metallurgical engineering depart- ment, Spec. Highest ranking officers in the re- serve corps of this area outside of the University are Lieut.-Col. Don- ald D. Duncanson, real estate agent, and Maj Lee Davisson, veterinarian. Captains in the University are Prof. Charles B. Gordy of the mechanical engineering department, Prof. Frank H. Smith of the mechanism and en- gineering drawing department, Lloyd R. Gates, instructor in hygiene, and Stanley G. Waltz, manager of the Union. Most of the other officers, 21 in number, who are connected with the University are in the Medical Corps and are either instructors in the Development Of Pan-Human Culture Will Destroy Racial Divisions, Create Social Unity, Adamic Says It was several years ago that I first read Louis Adamic. I remember that his My America had won my en- thusiastic approval. I knew that Mr. Adamic was not a great writer, but I believed that he could be rated a top-rank observer of the American scene. His studied attempt to probe deeply into the matrix of American life, his implied refusal to confine himself to the intellectual framework of a particular ideology, his evident sincerity: all these I admired. To me the vast, sprawling, disorganized character of the book tended to cre- ate the unpleasant impression that My America was nothing so much as the jottings in a thoughtful man's journal., Now Louis Adamic has written a new book. It marks what we may accurately call his "coming of age." For with the publication of From Many Lands, Louis Adamic becomes a man with a specific purpose and with a well-planned program to put his program into action. He conceives his purpose in these words: "My purpose, as you know, is to begin exploring our American cul- tural past and to urge the culti- vation of its many common fields, not nostalgically, or historically, or academically, but imaginatively and creatively, with eyes to the fu- ture, until as a people,we find and dare to sink pur roots into our com- maon American subsoil, rich, sun- warmed and well watered, from which we still may grow and flow- er." Later he writes a figurative ex- pression of his purpose: "I am trying to work toward an intellectual-emotional synthesis of old and new America; of the Mayflower and the steerage; of the New England wilderness and the social-economic jungle of the city slums and the factory system; cf the Liberty Bell and the Statue of Liberty." He favors, in short, lasting effec- tive racial assimilation. 1 Throughout the post-Civil War period America was the Land of Promise to thousands of immigrants, School of Medicine, resident physi- cians and surgeons, internes or as- sistants. As far as is known by the Reserve Officers' Association, only 10 men are now on active duty and only one, Dan J. Bulmer, instructor in surgery, was on the faculty. The others are Ransom S. Haw- ley, Jr., John S. Cole, Otto H. Donner, Eliseo Rosa, Thomas H. Blair, Law- rence C. Barden, Cecil E. Hammett, Paul W. Deason, and Chase R. Tea- boldt. The only member of the staff of the Reserve Officers' -Training Corps here who has a higher commission in the army reserve, is 1st Lieut. An- ton H. Halaska, MA., who is. a ser- geant in the ROTC at the present time. Forty-two reserve officers are members of the ROA, the official or- ganization of military reserve men here, which sponsors various con- ferences to help instruct those who may possibly be called to active duty in the coming months. especially from southeastern Europe.I They sought not merely economicl security. They hoped to become welli integrated into a "socially creative"1 society: a society whose highest val-i ues were human dignity and self-I realization. But somehow that Amer-I ican dream was never realized. The' high hopes, the buoyant optimism ofI the immigrants were lost in the im-i personal clatter of the industrial ma-I chine. The desired integration never became a reality. The immigrants,i cut off- from the fulfillment of their precious Dream, were forced to seekj compensation by forming compact,i ethnocentric groups. These groupsi were denied psychologically satisfy-" ing "sense of belonging." They felt that they were not a part of their larger environment. They were baf-a fled by continuous manifestations ofI suspicion and prejudice. To Mr. Adamic this mass frustra- tion was a major national tragedy.I He was appalled by the cultural waste implied in the refusal of the ascen- dant social groups in America to recognize the validity of the immi-, grant contribution to the national' mores. And Mr. Adamic was con-' vinced that the contribution was an important one, that it provided a means for preserving all that was good in the various national and3 racial cultures of the dying Old World. He also realized that the im- migrant contribution would help to give us "deep tap roots in a cultural past." The resultant cultural con- tinuity and stability would be a} splendid antidote to the prevalent rootlessness and bewilderment in our, national character.' From Many Lands is essentially a series of sketches. The sketches are in general quite well executed. They are the work of a keenly observant man. The style of writing is quietly impressive. Only occasionally is it a little stilted. And we come to know a few of the "figures in the American maze." Curious Old World names - like the Meleskis and the Tashjians - lose their strangeness, as Mr. Adamic tells us something of their living, their thinking and their feel- ing. Their story is an important and neglected part of the great American Saga: a moving and dramatic story which has been largely overlooked in the emphasis on the assumed "su- pericrity" of the Anglo-Saxon or the so-called "native" stock. Of these sketches perhaps the most sensitively drawn is that of. Dr. Eliot Steinberger. Surely his was the most complicated personality in the book. His problem of adjustment and as- similation was doubly difficult: his family were immigrants, and he was a Jew living in the modern world. His father had been fabulously suc- cessful as the organizer of a great meat-packing concern, which in the early nineteenth century developed into a far-flung corporate structure. But young Eliot had no permanent interest in the Steinberger fortunes. He was determined "to find himself," to establish himself in his own world. This determination was severely tested by his hiring out as boundary rider in the Australian sheep country:? the job demanded the most flexible adaptation to the stringent, exact- ing requirements of nature. He sur- vived that test, but he knew that he! had not solved the vastly more com- plicated problem of his social adjust- ment, as a member of a minority race. He solved this phase of his problem in an unsatisfying external way: he became a noted dermatologist, pos- sesing all the outer symbols of ma-f terial success. But he knew that the internal problem of full social ad- justment had never been effectively solved. In a hundred social situa- tions-for example, in consultation with other doctors-he intuitively recognized that he was not wholly accepted on his own intrinsic merits as an individual. To his searching, critical mind, this failing was chal- lenging. In a penetrating analysis of that failure, he says: "One becomes an ant running around on the upper link of the hobble chain. Below are the links of one's other predicaments and weaknesses: clannishness, greed, sheepishness, etcetera, all tied to- gether by the instinct to live on, somehow, and breed . . . Perhaps one way to state the human prob- lem is: how to stop the vicious circ- ling on the top link of the hobble chain and do away with the rest of the chain-the prejudices, the im- positions-that keep us from reaching our goals? We are tangled up in one another's purposes, drives compulsions and lack of them ... How to be free and strong in a world of others who also would be free and strong, but who. ike one- self, are weak and pulling and clawing at one another. In other words, how to end this pointless struggle?" Although his own imperfect self- realization and his own failure to attain his potentialities were of course significant to him, Dr. Stein- berger was not most concerned with the merely personal aspect of the problem. The whole demoralized ef- fect of incomplete racial adjustments on the highest possible human ful- fillment was thoroughly dishearten-4 ing to Dr. Steinberger. "What are our prejudices, our contradictions and quandaries do- ing to us all? Why do we physi- cians labor and sacrifice our strength, and then see that others no different fundamentally from ourselves devote their minds and energies to the creation of suffer- ing? Why are we, humanity in gen- eral, sick with hate, stalled, held back from creativity? What would be our possibilities-here in Amer- ica, here in the world-if we freed ourselves from them, all of us? What if we ceased to be primarily Jews or X-ians and become pri- marily men? What if we got off the hobble chain and became free agents, free to tackle the mys- teries? Man - humanity is a great possibility." Mr. Adamic's suggested solution for what Dr. Steinberger called the "human problem" is presented in the valuable Appendix. It is in brief an ambitious program of long-term ed- ucation, to be carried out by the re- cently established Common Council for American Unity, whose chief or- gan of expression is to be the new magazine, Common Ground. The Council plans to work through the press, the radio, the cinema, the schools, legislative bodies and social service agencies in order to overcome a number of the undesirable re- sults of continued racial divisions and oppositions. Its program is in essence an attempt to present a rea- sonable statement of its case on all the key fronts of communication. The importance of From Many Lands is readily apparent. It states a major social problem, which has been gravely accentuated by the rev- olution of nihilism. Its program of social action, as expressed in the Ap- pendix, is primarily an attempt to foster 'unity within diversity" and thus create a great pan-human cul- ture, which will give America a sub- stance that it has never before had. I hope that Mr. Adamic realizes that the effectiveness of his program will necessarily be limited by the inevi- table results of a particular approach. He may at times underrate the sig- nificance of the economic phase of this complicated "human problem" (for many of the maladjustments he describes arise from economic con- ditions). But he may be reassured by realizing that he is engaged upon one of the few constructive programs of social action in a destructive world at war. -- Chester Bradley Franck To Lecture Here Dr. James Frank, a winner of the Nobel Prize in Physicsyand Professor of Physical Che mistryv at the Uni- versity of Chicago. will deliver a lec- ture on the "Fundamentals of Pho- tosynthesis" under the auspices of Sigma Xi, honorary research fra- ternity, Wednesday, January 22 in the Rackham lecture hall, Prof. Franklin L. Everett announced. Office and Portable Models, New and Used of all leading makes, Bought, Sold, Rent- ed, Exchanged, Re- paired and Cleaned. STUDENT and OFFICE SUPPLIES 0. D.. Morrill 314 S. State St. Since 1908 Phone 6615 14 1 2 ~ :_t . ,, r PERK UP YOUR WINTER WARDROBE with a RAINBOW PASTEL DRESSES in melting pastels that are a boon to jaded winter spirits and dull wardrobes. 9-17, 12-20. from $7.95 SUITS in those slick, long lines that make for ultra-chic . . . in yummy pas- tel shades. Sizes 10 to 20. from $16.95 Our January Clearance Continues .. . Dresses, Suits and Coats at 1/2 price and less the SHOP round the corner on State JAMES HAMILTON, Tenor TEACHER OF SINGING PRIVATE AND CLASS INSTRUCTION A member of the voice Department of the University School of Music for twenty years, is now teaching two days a week, Monday and Thursday, in Ann Arbor. Mr. Hamilton was the originator of Voice Class Instruction at the University School of music, 1933-1937. During that period of four years he had more than four hundred students under his guidance. Beginners accepted. Auditions free. S/udio: BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL Cituicii, 423 Fourth Ave., South For further information, please address JAMES HAMILTON, 831 Tappan Court, or Dial 8389, Ann Arbor, Mich. x$ >4+ 4. 2 1 ' iir Ii I i {,___________ _____ "JAN UARY SPECIAL " i II 11 SU'NDAY SupPEnl Sunday, January 12, 1941 Bowl of Chili Con Carrie Head Let/tuce, French Dressing Orange Sherbet or Layer Cake Beverage 50e III Pecan Waffle with Maple Syrup Grilled Canadian Bacon Apple Pie or Ice Cream Beverage 50e Fresh Mushroo in Omelette French Fried Potatoes Fresh Lima Beans Lady Baltinore Cake or Double Chocolate Sundae Beverage 60e fruit Cocktail Grilled Cubed Steak Potatoes an Gratin Chef's Salad Strawberry Sundae or Custard Pie Beverage 75e * GOOD FOOD Excellent Service 6 to 7:30 o'clock MAIN DINING ROOM any plain (Less than four pleats) MCrocleaned and Pressed for only C .4nnouncinq A REPLACEMENT OF OPERATORS MRS. MAURINE SMITH BEAMESDERFER Formerly a teacher of Cosmetology in Toledo, now an accomplished stylist. extra pleats, lc each Gireen e's Ii I