THE MICHIGAN DAILY %c Letters To The Editor I 'w ' ed and managed by students of the University of gan under the authority of the Board in Control udent Publications. lished every morning except Monday during the rsity year and Summer session. Member of the Associated Press Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the >r republication of all news dispatches credited to not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All, of republication of all other matters herein also ed. ered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as d class mail matter. scriptions during .the regular school year by r $4.00, by mail $5.00. NEPRKSKNTE POR NATIONAL ADVWRT1BWO WV0.Y National Advertising Serviceinc. College Pudbters°Representative 420 MAOISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. mcaaO * BoSTon * Los ANoeLS - SAN RFANCISCO ber, Associated Collegiate Press, 1941-42 Editorial Stafff 3 eld t Speckhard t P. Blaustein 1 Lachenbruch Dann Wilson ir Hill . t Hiatt , Miller , ila Mitchell Managing Editor S. . Editorial Director . . . . . City Editor . . . . Associate Editor . . . .. Associate Editor . . . . . Sports Editor . . Assistant Sports Editor . . . ,. Women's Editor . . Assistant Women's Editor . . . . Exchange Editor Business Stafl H Huyett B. Collins Carpenter Wright . . . Bustfss Manager . Associate Business Manager .Women's Advertising Manager . Women's Business Manager FIGHTEDITOR: WILLIAM A. MacLEOD The editorials published in The Michigan aily are written by members of The Daily aff and represent the views of the writers dy. in 'A Lobbyist ' An, Authority? IF IT ISN'T one Senate investigation committee, it's another. First it was special sub-committee whose attempt to ar Hollywood seems about to die a deservedly y death, and now it's the committee headed Senator Maloney, Connecticut Democrat, :h is making an alleged investigation of the shortage problem.' lthdugh the gas shortage committee has raged to escape the wave of publicity wlich eps over anything concerning Hollywood, ostrich-like antics deserve special notice. Mainly its rapid reassurance that there is need to worry about the petroleum problem he Eastern Seaboard -needs careful examina- aving accepted the statement of John J. ey, President of the American Association lailroads, that there were enough tank cars g idle on eastern tracks to handle any threat- I petroleum transportation problem, the .mittee without further ado announced that problem was solved and that petroleum co- nator Ickes had jumped unnecessarily hard the wrong foot. All this took place three ks ago. JRING THE LAST THREE WEEKS the fol- lowing facts have come to light: not, how- because of ,any industry of the committee. ough Pelley said the'e were over 18,000 cars lable as of last Saturday morning, a sur- quoted by Ickes reveals that there are only 2 cars available for East Coast service, and when the Cities Service company asked for ) cars it got exactly 160. Meanwhile. as s does not hesitate to point out, the ast st continues to consume "1*5,000, more bar- each day than are shipped in to replenish ryes. Id to this the simple and well-known fact Pelley is a railway lobbyist whose interests in seeing that no pipeline to the seaboard ult, and even one of the current crop of sen- s should be able to come out with the ob- s answer. FORTUNATELY those on the committee either could riot understand or are too stub- i to change their hastily made-up minds. erday the committee reaffirmed its findings he basis of evidence presented by a certain John J. Pelley. That actions of this kind on part of the Senate should hinder one of few fore-sighted policies in regard tp our' nse problems is regrettable. We. can only that it will not happen again. -Hale Champion A Decaying Daily To the Editor: THIS MORNING just after a completely sat- isfying breakfast I had the extreme mis- fortune to pick up the Michigan Daily. I say misfortune because everytime I-see the name, "The Michigan Daily", I think of Marraniss, Mayo, Speckhard, Sarasohn and the rest of the Daily men who brightened so many of my morn- ings and oh, so many times stirred to activity my early morn muddled mind. I used to agree and disagree with the above writers who now are either fighting to make the world safe for bureauocracy, or who are getting $20 per week writing fire and police stories on'some small town jerk paper. But one thing was always true. I left their editorials with a respect for the thought and cogency of their expression, whether I was for or against the particular issue. I was one of the many who grieved when the University saw fit to stifle student minds by packing the Board, but rationalized by saying and thinking maybe it's just one of those neces- sary evils. I hoped the Board would be tolerant and once again I could read and discuss with Dailyxmen their sincere convictions. But with the exception of Touchstone's and Tom Thumb's columns which are facetious, liberal, and pro- vocative, I look at the first week's record of this year's Daily and see nothing but a series of vital, fundamental discussions about the deplor- able state of affairs regarding the dearth of cheer, leaders and band at last week's football game, ad infinitum. It's unbelievdble that a paper could so totally disregard the issues of the day in so blithe and uncomprising a manner as the Daily has. We who are about to die (corn is still edible and desirable - at times) are trying desperately to crystallize and formulate a policy in regard t:o the turmoil and confusion that is steadily and surely enveloping us. SHALL WE go along with Roosevelt's policy of hypocrisy in the honest opinion that the end justifies the means in conquering Hitler? Shall those who doubt Great Britain's democ- racy and/her peace aims, and who think that little will be gained by crushing Hitler in regard to solving our vital social and economic problems here in the U.S., accept incipient American home-grown fascists of the Wheeler-Lindbergh ilk? Have Thomas and Hutchins got the answer? And more important than most anything, are Civil Liberties being tossed to the traditional four winds here in America in the midst of th pre-war hysteria, and what are we going to do. about it? Well, I see -what The Daily is doing about it. In the drive to fill up the inches on the editorial page and the plea for all sophomores and jun- iors to get copy in, the staff is lowering their standards till editorials which are a disgrace to any clear-thinking person, be he liberal or con- servative, are filling the once heralded Daily edit page. REFER specifically to the straw that broke the straw that broke ,the camel's back in the form of an editorial by some pedant entitled THATCHER. Granted that the writer was ex- pressing only his own opinion and that the staff is trying to be open minded and are not responsible for all editorials, I think it either a disgrace to the rest of the members of the staff that better work can't be produced, to the editors in their policy formulation, or to the Board who have already laid the ground work for fascism right here on the campus. Fascism isn't too far from reaction and if free thinking and expression are to be stifled, what is to stop the tide that is already sweeping over most of the civilized world. Yes, the Daily once was a stimulating paper, but forces which are either too powerful to be denied or just plain apathy have reduced a once proud paper to the state of a labor baiting, placid college social chatter organ. The cause of labor and the unions is too fu- damental and too complex for the likes of Thatcher to come along and dismiss the move- me'nt and its ramifications by insinuating that the labor leaders were filching and grafting all the dues and suggesting plainly that labor should revolt against it's leaders. Gompers, Debs, and Haywo would turn over in their graves if they were subjected to such tripe, even in a college paper. MANY OBJECTORS to liberal Daily leanings of the past used to say, "all you see in the paper is- articles by liberals and reds." The obvious reason for this was that the conser- vatives by the very nature of their attitudes sat on ideas, while the liberal was out fighting for his." Well, things have come to a change. Thatcher and his kind have come into the fore and we can't help but mourn for the dear dead days' of the Vast when there was no packing. talk, and there were vigorous vital arguments raging pro and con, instead of Professor Slosson's im- mature poetry cluttering up the edit page along with editorials like Thatcher's. But I can hope, and who knows but what Touchstone and Tom Thumb will turn the tide. I doubt if anything else is being read on the Michigan Daily edi- torial page these days. -Gerald M. Schaflander, '42 ( a. p. blaustein's% POTPOURRI II/................ .......... ..\\\\\\\\\ \\\\\\\\\\ \ Confused Thinking To the Editor: At the present time there is a great deal of misinformation.and confused thinking on the subject of labor, a good example of which, I believe, is Mr. Charles Thatcher's editorial in Friday's Daily. Granted that there are many abuses among the labor unions, of which racketeering has been, and is, one. It is certainly something that no friend of labor is happy about or wishes to condone. But a merely negativistic approach does a grave injustice to the labor movement which has brought better conditions to millions of workers, both union and non-union. Nor would I agree that money and power, rather than the interests of the country or the mass of the work- ers, are the motivating force behind the union leaders-although they may be considerations. Has Mr. Thatcher heard of the Murray plan for Industry Councils, or the Reuther Plan?, THE IDEA that strikes are the only business of the unions is a common fallacy. While they are spectacular and make headlines, they represent only a small fraction of union activities. And strange as it may seem to Mr. Thatcher, there are many cases where the union leaders work energetically to postpone or prevent strikes which the rank and file is rushing into. Media- tion is not a new idea, and more often than not a strike occurs only after mediation has failed to produce a settlement. But Mr. Thatcher talks about banning strikes and maybe even dissolving the unions, if they don't play ball according to his notions. He would introduce compulsorary arbitration, which -as has been proven by actual experience in Canada and Australia-has not worked and cannot work. The only way such compulsion can work is when it is combined with spying, con- centration camps, the firing squad-and that sort of system is what we are fighting against, is it not? Morale is as important in production as in the army. What will beleft of democracy for the worker to defend if he is stripped, of his right to organize and his civil rights? Labor- baiting is a Hitler tactic; it can add nothing to national unity and national morale at this critical time, but it can injure them seriously. -Cleora E. Gagnier, Grad. By TOM THUMB * Life And Michigan Ave. 1 There are some aspects of our modern life here in America which are extremely sad. And some- times they make you wonder whether "our American, way of life" is reallyall it's cracked up to be. One Saturday night during the summer I hitch-hiked into Detroit because I had nothing else to do. My ride let me off near the Book- Cadillac, on the corner of Washington Boulevard and Michigan Avenue where the out-of-town hoity-toi rub elbows with the local hoi-polloi. I walked up Michigan Avenue from the Book to Trumbull where Briggs Stadium is. I don't think I've ever passed so many bars in such a short distance. There are bars and hock hops. Bars and hock shops. Is there a connection? Do the men hock their belongings to buy drink, A sociological study should be made. The only location that I know comparable to the section of downtown Detroit known as "Michigan Ave" is New York's Bowery. But even in the Bowery I don't think there is such collection of the humans that the magazines prefer to call "human derelicts," I looked into the bars as I walked. There were young men, old men and older men, young women and old women (on Mich Ave there is no "in between"), all of them drinking their way into the fanciful world. Every other door-a bar. Everybody drink- ing. So many people all drinking themselves in- sensible, belching their way into a world of escape. I don't care what effect liquor has upon the body, upon the mind or even on the morals. I know that it's disastrous, but it's not important. Compared to the cause, the effect is nothing. If all of these people had been going to cowboy movies instead of drinking I should have had the same sinking feeling. It's not the effect, it's the cause. Why do all of these people have to escape? Why are so many people in our country unhappy? Why do they escape to the movies, the cheap novel, the Romance magazine, liquor? As I watched the men and women reeling and tottering down Michigan Avenue, I wondered just how many people in the United States really need escape like this. Probably many more do than achieve it. Where do we fall short? 'What is lacking in these people's lives-what is lacking in our lives-that makes them want to guzzle their way into another world which they never quite reach? Yes, what is lacking in our lives?-I say our lives because they represent us, too. We won't all take to drink-maybe we won't be clever enough to try to escape. But what makes everybody want to "get away from it all?" All life has in it a strain of unhappiness, but this unhappiness should not be stronge than happiness and satisfaction. The only conclusion I can arrive at is that change is necessary-people are unhappy and oppressed. Some of us look to religion for re- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 3) obtained from Professor B. F. Bailey, 278 W. Eng. German 207: First regular meeting in 303 South Wing on Wednesday, 4:00-6:00 p.m. Norman L. Willey German 179: Meeting next Tues- day and in the future in 16 A.H W. A. Reichart Actuarial Students: An organiza- tion meeting for the review classes for the actuarial examinations will be held Monday at 3:15 p.m. in 3011 A.H. Lectures, Lecture, College of Architecture and Design: Mr. Frederick Bigger, City Planner of Pittsburgh and Plan- ning Consultant of the Federal Hous- ing Administration, will speak to ad- vanced students interested in city planning on Monday, October 6, at 4:15 p.m. in the gro'nd floor lecture room of the Architecture Building. He will discuss the present field of regional and city planning. The Department of Naval Science and Tactics offers a series of fifteen lectures on Naval Subjects to be pre- sented weekly, commencing Tuesday, Oct. 7, at 7:15 p.m. in Room 348 West Engineering. The course is designed to present a picture of the Nation's First Line of Defense, its organiza- tion, composition, personnel, cus- toms and operations, and with dis- cussion of naval law and regulations, of ship types on offense and de- fense and of influence and trends in naval armament. The series is open to all interested students and faculty members but is of special in- terest to officers of the Naval Re- serve to whon a certificate of com- pletion will be issued. Election of the series may be made at the Naval R.O.T.C. Headquarters, North Hall, or at the first lecture. Events Today Varsity Men's Glee Club: Try-outs for the University of Michigan Var- sity Men's Glee Club will be held today in the Glee Club Room, No. 315, Michigan Union. All up- per classmen desiring to tryout are urged to meet with returning old members at 4:00 p.m. promptly. Re- turning Club men are warned that no place will be reserved for them un- less they are present for try-outs at this time, or present a acceptable excuse to the Director. Freshman Glee Club try-outs will continue on Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 in the above mentioned place. Open House at the International Center: This evening from 8 to 11 the International Center will hold Open House-an informal reception for old and new students from coun- tries outside the United States and for any others, faculty or students, interested in seeing the Center and meeting the Staff. Graduate Outing Club will meet today' at 2:30 p.m. at the rear north- west door of the Rackham Building. Program will consist of hiking, foot- ball, and supper outdoors, if possible. All graduate students, faculty and alumni interested in outdoor activi- ties and an afternoon's frivolity are welcome. Meetings will be held each Sunda afternoon. Bethlehem Evangelical and Re- formed Students' Guild will have a supper meeting tonight at 6:00. Dis- cussion will be led by Prof. A. Van Duren. The Lutheran Student Association will meet at Zion Parish Hall tonight. supper and social hour at 5:30 and forum hour at 7:00. Coming Events" Junior Research Club will meet on Tuesday, October 7, at 7:30 p.m., in the Amphitheatre of the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies. Program : "Evolution of the Rockies in Northern Utah," by A. J. Eardley, Dept. of Geology. "In Southernmost Mexico," by N. E. Hartweg, Museum of Zoology. German Table for Faculty Mem- bers will meet Monday at 12:10 p.m. in the Founders' Room, Michigan Union. Members of all departments are cordially invited. There will be a brief talk by Mr.! H. W. Nordmeyer. Varsity Men's Debate: There will be a meeting of all undergraduate men interested in first semester var- sity debate on Monday, October 6, in Room 4203 Angell Hall, at 4:00 p.m. Plans for the semester will be explained at the meeting. All reserve officers on the Univer- sity campus, and senior cadet officers of the ROTC, are invited to the regu- lar weekly meeting of the Reserve Officers' Association on Monday, October 6, at 7:30 p.m. at the Michi- gan Union. WII, _ ii ic- - ~" '' 0 F-,5- "It certainly is exasperating to have the reputation of being a nation of dollar chasers, and me not having a dollar!" French fleet at Oran, action and strategy of the Battle for France, America's defense preparations, and important military highlights of the war years 1939 and 1940 will be shown. American Institute of Electrical1 Engineers will meet Tuesday, October 7, at 8:00 p.m. at the Michigan Union. All Electrical Engineering students, sophomores, juniors, seniors, and graduates, are invited. Asst. Dean A. H. Lovell will speak on "Member- ship in the A.I.E.E." Refreshments. MechanicW = Engineers: Welcome to the opening rally of A.S.M.E. on1 Wednesday, Oct.-8, at 7:30 p.m. at the Union. Professors Hawley and Porter will speak and movies will be shown, Refreshments. Graduate Open House: An infor- mal reception for all graduate stu- dents and faculty will be held Wed- nesday. Oct. 8, starting at 8:00 p.m. in the Rackham Building. Short ad- dresses by President Ruthven and Dean Yoakum, followed by informal' social program. Dancing, classical music, pictures of Mich. State and Iowa football games. First World War poster exhibit and refreshments. All graduate students and faculty welcome. Come and get acquainted. Non-Credit courses in Spoken Por- tuigese: The international 'Center an- nounces a non-credit course in spoken Portugese to be given at the Center by Alberto Leao, from Rio de Janeiro. Classes are planned both for begin- ners and for those having some use of the language. Those interested are requested to meet at the Center for organization Tuesday evening at 7:30 o'clock. 'English Classes for Foreign Stu- dents: Special English classes for foreign students will be organized this week at the International Center. All who intend to take advantage of these classes are requested to attend an organization meeting Monday eve- ning at 7:30 o'clock at the Center. Prof. Nelson or Miss Grollman who are in charge of this work will also be glad to confer during their office hours with any one interested. Assembly Board meeting on Mon- day at 4:30 p.m. Be sure to bring your eligibility cards. Theatre Arts Program Committee will meet on Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. in the League. All girls interested in working on this committee will be welcome. Dance Club will meet on Wednes- day evening, October 8, at 7:30 in the studio in Barbour Gymnasium. All women and men students inter- ested are invited. Women's Research Club will meet on Monday, Oct. 6,,at 7:30 p.m., in the West Lecture Room, Rackham Building. Mrs': Priscilla Bonner Hor- ton will speak on "Some Aspects of Vitamin A and Carotene Metabol- ism." Archery Club for Women will have, a tea and meeting on Thursday, Oct. 9, at 4:15 p.m. in the small lounge of the Women's Athletic Building. Any women students interested are cor- dially invited. For further informa- tion, call Eleanor Gray at 2-2539. -Women's Tennis Tournaments: All students interested in playing in the women's singles and mixed doubles tennis tournaments should sign on the bulletin board of the Women's Athletic Building by 5:00 p m. on Monday, October 6. First tennis club meeting on courts on Monday at 4:15 p.m. Everyone interested in tennis is urged to at- tend. You may register at the Student Of- fice in the church or by calling 6881. Bible Seminar: A study of the ori- gin, content, and literary qualities of the Bible, beginning Monday, Octo- ber 6, at 4:30 p.m. in Lane Hall, un- der the direction of Mr. Kenneth Mor- gan, director of the Student Religi- ous Association. Churches First Methodist Church and Wesley Foundation: Student Class at 9:30 a.m. Prof. George E. Carrothers will lead the discussion. Morning Wor- ship Service at 10:40 o'clock. This will be World Communion Sunday. There willbem a worship service fol- lowed by Communion. Dr. Charles W. Brashares will preach on "The Glgry of the Lord." Wesleyan Guild Meeting at 6:00 p.m. Prof. John L. Brumm will be the speaker. Fellow- ship hour and supper at 7 o'clock. Both the class and the Guild will meet in the Wesley Foundation As- sembly Room, Huron Street entrance of the church. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church: Sunday: 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion; 9:30 a.m. High School Class, Harris Hall; 11:00 a.m. Kindergarten, Har- ris Hall; 11:00 a.m. Junior Church; 11:00 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon by the Rev. Frederick W. Leech; 7:00 p.m. High Square Clu (high school students) Meeting, 725 Oxford Road; 7:00 p.m. Episcopal' Student Guild Meeting, Harris Hall. Student speakers. Refreshments. All Episcopal students and their friends welcome. First Presbyterian Church: Morn- ing Worship, 10:45. "The Virtue of Prejudice," subject of the sermon by Dr. Lemon. Westminster Student Guild, sup- per at 6:00 p.m. with meeting at 7:00 p.m. Student led discussion on "Why Pray?" First Church of Christ, Scientist: Sunday morning service at 10:30. Sub- ject "Unreality." Sunday School at 11:45 a.m. Disciples Guild (Christian Church) 10:00 a.m., Students' Bible Class, H. L. Pickerill, leader. 10:45 a.m. Mviorning Worship, Rev. Frederick Cowin, Minister. 6:30 pim., Guild Sunday Evening Hour.' The work of the Student Re- ligigus Association will be presented by Dorothy Bridddn and John Baker. Other campus resources for religious living will also be presented. A so- cial hour and tea will follow the dis- cussion. All students .cordially in- vited. First Congregational Church: 10:45 a.m. Services of public worship to be held in Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. Dr. L. A. Parr will preach on the subject, "Why Be Christian?" 3:30 p.m. The . Religious Educa- tion Committee will meet in the church parlors. 7:15 a.m. Student Fellowship will meet at Pilgrim Hall. Dr. E. W. Blakeman will lead the discussion, "Personality as a Chris- tian Adventure." Refreshments. Zion Lutheran Church: Church Worship Services at 10:30 a.m. with Rev. Hugo Fenker of Ypsilanti de- livering the sermon. Trinity Lutheran Church: Church Worship Services at 10:30 with ser- mon by Rev. Henry O. Yoder on "When Worship is a Privilege and Not a Duty." Society of Friends: Meeting for worship Sunday at 5:00 p.m. in Lane ,Mall, followed by cost supper and in- formal social hour. All interested are welcome. e Of Militarism wing, Slang and Sandwich, the three "S's" lmerican youth, are undergoing changes in light of the National Defense program. ng has become militant, slang reflects the krieg-dive-bomber era and now the sand- i "goes vitamin" in a large, constructive n American doctor, world-famous for his t on pellagra in the malnourished areas of South has concocted a "'Victory" sandwich-- ed, wheat bread andyeasted peanut butter. he peeled wheat bread furnishes more pro- s than white bread, the peanut butter com-