THE MICHIGAN DAILY Si I DANCE 84112-K E'K(~NAuRn r' TeO NBUPmmNKAuMII '1An1MAWe...w.e ...4 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 orrnot otherwise credited in this newpaper. All fights 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 ADVERTISING 9 ' National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADI8ON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO * BOSTON e 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 . Exchange Editor off * Irving Guttman S Robert Gilmour . Helen Bohnsack . . Jane Krause By FRANCES AARONSON ALTHOUGH MUSIC in all its forms is a vital part of several Michigan organizations, the natural complement of melody - dance --has only one mainstay on campus. The Dance Club, one of the oldest such organizations in existence, has succeeded for twenty-five years in making the University conscious of the form and line of dance movement. Under the direction of Miss Ruth Bloomer of the women's physical education department, the club has brought modern dance, ballet, and folk dancing to the attention of men and women interested in the expressive arts. The only recent professional dance group appearance in Ann Arbor was made by the Ballet Caravan last year; it is therefore left to campus groups to be the natural object of dance form admirers. Together with the Play Production dance groups, the ballet group, which devotes part of its time to Spanish numbers, and the inter- mediate dance class, Dance Club will present its annual Winter Program at 8:30 p.m. Friday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. ONE-HALF of the program will be devoted to a presentation of Hansel and Gretel, which will be performed also for the Children's The- atre. Stanley Lock, who arranged the opera music into danceable form, will have a small orchestra under his direction for the program. Complementing the dance interpretation of the famous fairy tale will be three choruses sung by the Women's Glee Club under the direction of Donna Baisch, '418M. A cast of 50 men and women will participate in the rest of the program, which will include eleven numbers, comprised of new arrangements and revivals of previously shown dances. Carl Miller, a young Detroit pianist and com- poser, who studied at Bennington School of the Arts under Louis Horst and Norman Lloyd, will play two of his own compositions to which the Club will perform. AN UNUSUAL ADDITION to the program is Joseph Gornbein's interpretation of John Malcolm Brinnin's "The Evening". Brinnin's poem, already well known to the campus as well as to the literary world, will be read by David Rich. Gornbein will also dance his solo, "Fanfare", to music by Mr. Miller. A long list of composers whose music runs the complete range of emotion will give the program a great deal of contrast. Included in the repertoire will be the two old dance forms of Bach, a polka from Shostakovich's "Age of Gold" ballet, waltzes "Nobel" and "Sentimental" of Ravel, "Berceuse" from Strawinsky's "Fire- bird Suite", with original choreography by Sarah Graf and dances from the sheep-shearing scene of Shakespeare's "Winter's Tale". The last named was performed during the drama series last spring. "Dance to a Yiddish Melody" will be a revival from the program of 1940, while two traditional Negro spirituals are a new addition to the Play Production dance group's repertoire. Two dance programs a year is the maximum offered to students here. Therefore, there is little opportunity to duplicate the enjoyment of Friday's presentation. Tickets for the performance can be obtained at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office starting tomorrow. All seats are reserved. Business Sta Business Manager . . . Assistant Business Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager N1IGHTEDITOR- EMILE GEL 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 Human Side Of War .. . W liENEVER a sentimental writer runs out of anything else to say, he will probably turn to the historians and lambaste them good and proper because they dwell so much on dates and battles and events without ever seeming to realize they are talking about men. It seems to me that the war discussions of the present are taking on an historian's view- point there are long debates on principles, on "preserving liberties," on the numbers of battle- ships and planes, and man himself never seems to' intrude. I believe that if you, when thinking of the European war, will keep the human element in mind, 'it will make a difference in your think- ing. I do not want anyone to react solely upon as emotional a basis as this, but I see a necessity of giving our logic the added dimension of flesh and blood. THERE ARE in America about fifty million families seeking happiness in this life. Whe- ther they are Park Avenue Fraziers or Oklahoma Joads, thee families constantly struggle to keep their small worlds from being broken and ruined. For hours at a time they go along bound up in work, in chatter, in the coffee and bacon and darned socks of every day, without thinking of the war. I condition my reactions with the memory of these families. When I read that five fliers have been shot down in a raid over Berlin or Rome or London, I picture five individual human tragedies. I see five young men like myself - perhaps they speak German, perhaps English, but they are still pretty mach like us over here - five young men suddenly feeling the smash of lead, the sear of flames. I see all the con- comitant wreck of families and friendships. Y OU HEAR a great deal of talk about the economic collapse that America will face should Germany win. Trade will disappear. The living standard will go over a cliff. Inter- ventionists paint terrible pictures of anarchy and starvation, and tell us to go to war or sub- mit to all this. I do not believe their picture is true. I would like very much to see an English victory, dirty as the hands of the English are. But its effect on world trade will not be half so great as the intervntionists would like to make us believe. When war orders cease, the world is going to tighten its belt regardless of who rules the oceans' trade. A destitute England is not going to make things much more paradisaical than a destitute Germany. When I remember the individual families that make up America, it seems to me that there are few family groups that would not rather tighten their belts than to have their sons killed or maimed on the battlefields of Europe. Nothing can compare to the horror of that. The talk of rebellion and anarchy here in the event of a declining living-standard seems ridiculous to me. Americans have tightened, and can tighten their belts, if this must be. They can, and will, sacrifice enough from their personal happiness to keep America so strong that Germany will not dare to attack. IWOULD PREFER TO LIVE with Winston Churchill than with Adolf Hitler, but the difference will not be significant enough to --__ -Ri--alel iiiie o lominie Says IN THE COURSE of a life time, those two or three periods in which one is forced to shift quickly from one set of situations to another group of circumstances, stand out like mountain peaks above a plain. How one acts in such periods will be very significant. The contradic- tory views on affairs which set our extreme bounds were tersely stated on the editorial page of the Daily, Saturday, by Mr. Niketh and Mr. Dober. Now, what attitudes, what abilities, what habit patterns will help us meet the transition before us? Many replies have been given. The great re- ligions have made answer for the millions over long periods of history. We suggest an applica- tion within a slender range of our current ex- perience, namely: he who to date has developed the following four habit patterns will take his transition in stride, (1) Purposeful Behavior, (2) Sociality, (3) Habits of Decision, and (4) Sen- sitivity Pattern. A group of religious educators led by Hugh Hartshorn of Yale, after experi- ments over a period of years, set forth this series as the determining factors in the "school-. to-college" transition. We believe that these four patterns may be the measure of how youth will make other transitions. That is, the boy who, prior to college, was a "four-pattern-person" and went on to any one of the forty-two colleges or universities involved, was a success in the ten areas of our common life, such as home and family, religion, finance, sports, personality, social affairs, studies, moral and discipline, health, and outreach. But in the study of those three thousand boys, of whom nearly half went on to college, it was found that the "no-pattern-persons", those who were not purposely, not socially developed, not able to make wise decisions, and not sensitive to rel- evance, proportions and the potentiality of a situation, tended to fail in some or all of these ten areas of our common life, and were certain to fail as they transferred to college. M1ERE is a practical approach to the tensions before us. The vast difference of attitudes between the students and their elders on the subject of the world crisis needs to be faced and met in educational fashion. If we could declare an armistice, shelve the "apple-polish" psychology for a semester, get youth to confer and seek advice, and by some means make in- formal discussions available to students in the daily work which we are doing together, we could soon reach understanding. Here is a basis for an initial conversation. The student can survey his own personal conduct according to this list of four patterns and ask frankly about the per- fecting of adequate habits. The change of seeing our world plunged into total war should remind us that we constitute a community of great intellectual power. If we can live up to the objectivity for which we have been trained, hundreds of us will reach a new level of usefulness as we approach this transi- ion experience. - Edward W. Blakeman, CourFelor in Religious Education RADIO By DAVID LACHENBRUCH THE GENERAL POPULAR DISGUST with radio dance music of late, as well as the un- availability of enough playable tunes, has forced many dance orchestras to take up the playing of perverted arrangements of the "classics" - from Franck's D minor Symphony to Grieg's Norwegian Dances, and it probably will develop that the public doesn't like to hear Brahms blared out in a sax "ride" - as a result many people will turn to the standard symphony orchestras and become acquainted with the mas- ters as a relief from the dance bands of today, not because of any inspiration they may have provided. Great things have been happening in Car- negie Hall these past four Sundays. Freed from Barbirolli, the New York Philharmonic has been getting along well. Crowds waiting to be admitted to the Hall to hear Mitropolous con- duct the Symphony have been called officially "the biggest crowds here since Toscanini con- ducted the Philharmonic." Though Mitropolous' conducting of the Phil is over for the present, it is our guess that he will be heard again con- ducting the New York Philharmonic in the not- so-distant future. TODAY another truly great conductor-Bruno Walter-will take over the guest director- ship of the Phil, in the first in a series of four guest appearances: (WJR, 3-4:30 p.m.). Because a program called "Children's Theatre of the Air", occupies the 12-1 p.m. spot locally on WXYZ, we can hear only half of the Radio City Music Hall. symphony in the Detroit area. The part of the concert we'll miss will be Shostako- vitch's phenomenal First Symphony. We will however, be allowed to hear (at 1 p.m., when the last half of the program comes on) Miss Rosemary Brancato, soprano, sing two selec- tions and hear the orchestra play Tales From the Vienna Woods, if that's any consolation. It is really disheartening to see how many network musical programs are either cut or skipped entirely by the Detroit radio stations. Taking today, Sunday, for example, here are some of the network concert programs we'll miss: 8-8:30 a.m.-Dr. Charles Courboin in a Men- delssohn organ recital (NBC Red); 10:30-11- The Indianapolis Symphony under Fabien Se- vitzky, playing the radio premiere of Benja- min's Prelude to Holiday, and Moussorgsky's Pictures At An Exhibition (CBS); 12:30-1 p.m. Credo Of ASDL To The Editor: As temporary president of theI ASDL I should like to call the at- tention of all students interested in the problems of the present inter- national crisis to our Credo which ap- pears here. The ASDL hopes that all students, undergraduate and grad- uate, who are actively concerned about the position of our country in the present war, and especially those who agree in general with our Credo. will find it possible to attend the talks and meetings of our group. I should be glad to hear from anyone who desires information about the ASDL. -Frank G. Ryder Credo of ASDL I. Foreign policy. A. We believe that Nazi Germany1 and its allies constitute a men- ace to the economic, political, and physical security of the United States, and that this menace must be resisted, not ap- peased. B. We believe this menace is ser ious and immediate. so that we must prepare ourselves at once for the contingency of war. C. We believe that the defense of the Americas implies a working agreement with the British Com- monwealth of Nations, in the hope of keeping war out of the Western Hemisphere, and in ul- timately crushing Nazi Power. D. We believe that the United States should supply the British Commonwealth of Nations and other nations fighting the Axis powers with all possible mili- tary supplies which can, in the judgment of our government, be spared from the immediate needs of our domestic defense. These supplies should either be given outright or in exchange for raw RECORDS T HAS BEEN called to the atten- tion of this column that, at best, it has been indifferent to the fem- inine side of the record world. To prove that circumstance rather than malice was responsible, today shall be Ladies' Day almost exclusively. With due reverence, then, we wish to present first "just a mere slip of a girl," Beatrice Kay, in Columbia's second edition of its Naughty Nine- ties travesty (Set C-36, four 10-inch records). Miss Kay is listed as a "soubrette," but it is an impertinence to suggest a one-word label for what she does. She pulls your heart- strings ruthlessly in Heaven Will Pro- Itect the Working Girl and in A Bird in a Gilded Cage. She pokes you with roguish intimacy in a plea to Put Your Arms Around Me, Honey. She makes you chuckle at her dialect- presentation of Rufus Rastas John- on Brown's plight (What You Gn- na. Do When the Rent Comes 'Round?) In short, Miss Kaye is a female Tony Pastor with more versatility and more appeal, a Sheila Barrett with a flexible larynx that can sing. No more need be said except that the Elm City Four and Ray Bloch's Orchestra provide appropriate assist- ance. TWO APPLES of Victor's eye-Din- ah Shore and Bea Wain-have indicated once more the basis for their popularity. Miss . Shore this week is offering on one Bluebird Record I Do, Do You? and I Hear A Rhapsody, two lyrics of love peculiar- ly suited to her sheer silk, or "blue velvet," if you will, voice. The orches- tra (unidentified) provides the un- obtrusive background that Miss Shore and these songs require. Miss Wain has chosen to do one smoothie, one novelty. The latter is a sprightly tune with tickling lyrics- Hello Ma! I Done It Again from the- motion-picture "Tall, Dark and Handsome." After two listenings, you will be humming the tune, or at least, making a mess of the words. The reverse side is How Did It Get So Late So Early from this year's ill- fated musical revue "All In Fun." There must be-again through cir- cumstance, not malice-one man in all this. For Nelson Eddy has done for Columbia five of the more or less familiar tunes from Noel Coward's "Bitter Sweet." The tunes: I'll See You Again; Tokay; The Call Of Life; If You Could Only Come With Me and Dear Little Cafe. Eddy follow- ers will accept these without reserva- tion, but this observer was never quite sure whether Mr. Eddy was sing- ing too high in his nose, or too low in his throat. Robert Armbruster conducts a smooth orchestra, and a chorus joins in on Tokay. -M.O. Discouraging Lynchers One more lynching occured during 1940 than in 1939, the total being four, according to reports compiled at Tuskegee Institute, but the brighter side of the picture is the fact that materials, territorial concessions, or the like. II. Domestic policy. A. We believe that all "fifth-col- umn" activities must be vigor- ously and speedily suppressed by legal methods. At the same time we believe that all civil liberties must be maintained to their full extent for pacifists, socialists, and all other minority groups who are not agents of foreign powers. B. We believe that the problem of morale is to reconcile a vigorous defense of America and Ameri- can institutions with continually advancing political and econo- mic reform, the preparation for war with the purpose of peace, and national unity with differ- ence of opinion. III. The guiding aim of this organi- zation is the defeat of Fascist ag- gression. We believe, therefore, in aid to Britain and other nations actively opposing Fascism to the extent which may be necessary to secure this end. BOOKS] C I C f 1 1 I I i 1 i Notices To Faculty, Students, and All Con- cerned: Any one observing reckless- ness by bicyclists using Campus walks or drives is requested to take down and report to the Business Office of the University the license number of the bicycle concerned. Shirley W. Smith Student Accounts: Your attention is called to the following rules passed by the Regents at their meeting of Feb. 28, .1936: "Students shall pay all accounts due the University not later than the last day of classes of each sem- ester or Summer Session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are subject to this regulation; how- ever, student loans not yet due are exempt. Any unpaid accounts at the close of business on the last day of classes will be reported to the Cashier of the University, and "(a) All academic credits will be withheld, the grades for the sem- ester or Summer Session just com- pleted will not be released, and no transcript of credits will be issued. "(b) All students owing such ac- counts will not be allowed to register in any subsequent semester or Sum- mer Session until payment has been made." S. W. Smith, Vice-President and Secretary Letters To The Editor By ALBERT P. BLAUSTEIN ENNETH ROBERTS' latest best- seller. "Oliver Wiswell," is far in- ferior, from a literary point of view, to "Arundel" and "Northwest Pas- sage." Yet, because of the effective manner in which it counteracts much of the propaganda of the American. Revolution which we have been taught, the book is probably the most valuable Mr. Roberts has ever writ- ten. Oliver Wiswell is a young American living during the Revolutionary War pericd who is opposed to the cause of the colonists and who serves valiantly in the British army. During the entire course of the war he is a Tory whose general attitude is that the revolting colonists are the scum of America and that neither their views nor their actions should be approved of by the people of the 'United States today. O US, who have been taught since our first days in elementary school, to believe that the Revolu- tionary War was a good one, the book is something of a surprise and shock. Yet the surprise and shock are good because they serve the pur- pose of making us realize the bad ef- fects of the war as well as the good ones. Such information as the facts that John Hancock had embezzled some £12,000 from Harvard University when he worked there and owed £100,000 to the Crown for smuggling serve a valuable function in giving us an idea of what some of the lead- ers of the revolution were like. De- scriptions of bad treatment of pris- oners and of such actions as "tar and featherings" give us somewhat useful pictures of the revolutionaries to go with the teachings we received in our more chauvinistic history texts. THE BOOK serves approximately the same needed function as did the works of Eric Maria Remarque in the post-World War period. "All Quiet on the Western Front" and "The Three Comrades" and "The Road Back" all gave us ideas of the position of Germany during and af- ter the Great War and helped us discount the propaganda we had been influenced by since 1914. Some have objected to "Oliver Wis- well" because they feel that such a pro-English work will tend to influ- ence us too much toward the British cause today. The book might well do that to some-but it shouldn't. Rath- er, it should reveal the fact that our newspapers and magazines are1 as guilty, if not more, as our history books in dispersing propaganda and it should make us go out of our way to try to learn both sides of every question. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETI SUNDAY, JANUARY 19, 1941 VOL. L. No. 82 Publication in the Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. The Dictaphone Station will be in the Council Room, 1009 Angell Hall, until further notice. Insofar as possible the work will be carried on in the regular manner. How- ever, there will not be telephone service and it will be necessary for all persons to call in person at the office. Repairs to the office necessi- tate this temporary change. German Departmental Library: All books are due January 20. All Students, Registration for Sec- ond Semester : Each student should plan to register for himself during the appointed hours. Registrations by proxy will not be accepted. Robert L. Williams, Assistant Registrar. Registration Material, College of Architecture and Design: Students should call for second semester ma- terial at Room 4, University Hall, at once. The College of Architecture and Design will post an announce- ment in the near future giving time of conferences with your classifier. Please wait for this notice before seeing your classifier. Robert L. Williams, Assistant Registrar Registration Material, College of L.S.&A., and Schools of Education and Music: Students should call for second semester registration material at Room 4, University Hall, as soon as possible. Please see your adviser and secure all necessary signatures. Robert L. Williams Assistant Registrar Senior Aeronautical and Mechani- cal Engineers: A representative of the Bendix Aviation Corporation of South Bend, Indiana, will be in Ann Arbor to interview February gradu- ates interested in aircraft carburet- or world on Thursday, January 23. These positions are not restricted to men who have specialized in inter- nal combustion engines. .Students wishing appointments should report at once to the Aeronautical. Engin- eering Department Office, B-47 East Engineering Building. Interviews with Atlantic Refining Company: Mr. McIlVain of the Re- search and Development Department and Mr. Birch of the Plant Personnel Division will interview the following at the Bureau Monday and Tuesday, January 20 & 21: Chemists, Chem- (Continued on Page 7) C \: Te City Editor's 4cQ*tch lead 1. THIS TERM "military thrown around a lot expediency" is being these days. Whether we should go to war, it is said, depends entirely on the military strategy of the case. But we say, what about "economic expe- diency", "social expediency", "moral expe- diency", and a half dozen others that are involved in war? Up until the last few weeks, war was a terrible thing. It was something to be avoided at any price, save existence itself. Logicians thought of it as an end in itself, not as a means to any- thing. WE WERE TO HELP ENGLAND, not particu- larly to save the heritage of Johnny Bull, but to avoid broken lives, spilled blood, wasted money, thwarted literature, pillaged science, pestilence, corrupted character, shattered fam- ilies, and universified poverty. If England fell, then we would have to rely on our defensive armor, which presumably was to be built strong enough to repel all enemies. If war came to our shores. then we would be forced to throw off the invader. Why is it any different now, just because the war is older? Certain human values retain their worth, regardless of "military expediency". way. Either we pay the cost of keeping our- selves armed - a cost that will probably become very burdensome if our living standards should decline, or we leap in now, sacrificing -our arms nt rnp xudwalth in one throw nf the del. 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