THE C MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1941 A ir'tiitau at~ i i v bed 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 $4.00, by mail $5.00. REPREsBNT9 FOR NATIONAL ADVBRTI.NG BY National Advertising Service, Inc. , College Publishers Reresentatlve 420 MADIsON AVE. NEw YORK. N.Y. rC04S@ - .BOSTON . Los ANGELES - SAN FlANcIsco ber, Associated Collegiate Press, 1941.42 Edi le oe16 In Dann id Lachenlruch McCormick Wilson hur Hill. et Hiatt ce Miller :inia Mitchell torial Sta f . Managing Editor . . . . Editorial Director * . . .City Editor * . . . Associate Editor . . . . Sports Editor . . Assistant Sports Editor . . ^ . . Women's Editor . . Assistant Women's Editor . . . . Exchange Editor Business" Staff iel H. Huyett es B. Collins ise Carpenter yn Wright . .. . Business Manager . Associate Business Manager *Women's Advertising Manager . Women's Business Manager IGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM-A. MacLEOD ' he editorials published in The ,Michigan )aily are written by members of The Daily taff and represent the views of the writers only. 1 o Attempted Dupe i Aluminum Drive N .0 . 9 U NDER THE TITLE "The Aluminum Drive Has Done Its Work" an edi- rial by H. J. Slautterback appeared in these lumns Tuesday, attacking the decent govern- ental effort, to divert idle consumers' alumin-- n to. the aid of the defense- program. The aluminum drive, Miss Slautterback says' ad as its basis the "colossal lie" that used alum- rm could be melted and recast into bombers. ccording to two metallurgical engineers, whom iss Slautterback interviewed, used aluminum nnot be so melted and recast but can be con- rted only into consumers' products. The Amer- an public was duped, Miss Slautterback charges, id "now there's the devil to pay." / O ONE will contest Miss Slautterback's con- tention that the teakettles and frying pans 1llected in the drive will never find their way in- the fuselages and wings of bombers and fighter aanes. In fact, Mayor LaGuardia, whom Miss autterback describes as "publicity-wise, super- lesman Mayor LaGuardia," who "put over" the uminum drive, world be one of the first to pree with her. In an address at LaGuardia .eld July 16, five days prior to the opening the drive, the mayor, as reported by The New ork Times, " . . . explained that the Office Production Management had asked the Of- ce of Civilian Defense, which he directs, to llect used, scrap, and obsolete aluminum all er the country so that primary aluminum uld be used for defense." The purpose of the aluminum drive, there- re, clearly was not to collect scrap aluminum r direct use in aircraft production, but to re- ase primary, aluminum ?ordinarily used in con-. :mers products. According to Dr. Francis C. rary, .director of the Aluminum Company of merica's research laboratories, "The used alum- uum utensils would serve very well for other irposes, such as cast cylinder heads and pistons' r automobiles and trucks." The' primary alum- uum, thus released, can be used to expand air- aft production. Every American housewife who >nated a frying pan was indirectly building )mbers for Britain and for defense. ISS SLAUTTERBACK makes the final error of turning her attack to the support of iso- tionism. According to her, the purpose of the uminum drive was to lead the American people wards war. "At the time of its initiation tie nerican people ere still whole-heartedly :ainst intervention. 'Something was needed to vaken them, to arouse the war frenzy which akes war conditions bearable." Fortunately, such gross misrepresentations of ct are not typical of the appeals of thoughtful olationists; and Miss Slautterback's campaign their support will bring forth no words of com- endation from them. For they, like the inter- ntionists, recognize that unfounded statements n do nothing but defame themselves and their LETTERS TO THE EDITOR ASU Replies To Swander To the Editor: HOMER SWANDER believes that Hitler It a menace to America and will not be defeated without all-out American aid. He could have made a constructive contribution to anti-fascist student sentiment and action by devoting Wed- nesday's editorial column to hard cold facts about the menace of Hitler and those who would appease Hitler in America. Instead, he pre- ferred to write a hysterical, confusing attack on one of the foremost anti-fascist organizations on the campus and entitled his orgy of red-baiting: The ASU Changes Its Tune. Mr. Swander treated the American Student Union as a Communist organization, which he knows is not true. He justified his name-calling by the accusation that we follow a "Moscow line". A less superficial examination of our' progress will reveal that it has always been an anti-fascist program in tl e interests of the American people. T WAS NpT ONLY with words that we sup- ported the heroic battle of the Spanish loyal- ists against the fascists. Three of our members fought in Spain; one died there. Most people to- day realize that the Munich appeasement policy was disastrous for America and the world. Yet the ASU was the only organization, to hold a rally protesting Munich in 1939. We led the demand for collective security qparantining the aggressor by mutual assistance pacts between the democracies, a policy which would have pre- vented the outbreak of thepresent war. The sabotage of the policy of collective secur- ity led directly to the outbreak of the second World War, During the war the policy of Munich was continued: the policy of bargaining with Hitler in the hope that he would turn his attack against the Soviet Union. The phony war, the support of the Finnish bandits, the collapse of France were all parts of a policy of appeasement. In the interests of the American people we advocated neutrality in the war and cooperation with the Soviet Union and China, not because we endorsed the Soviet Union's form of govern- ment but because she was a powerful nation and a nation at peace. By such cooperation we could not only have ensured our security but also could have influenced the entire course of the war and constituted an insurmouptable barrier to Hitler's plans for conquering the world. WHEN HITLER ATTACKED the Soviet Union, . however, the warring nations could not seize the opportunity for which they had been working. Through their own gifts to him, Hitler has become so strong that a peace with him today would make Britain or America a puppet nation. In addition, the peoples of Britain and America are so strongly anti-fascist that they would not allow their governments to betray them again. The belligerent countries were forced to abandon their Munich policy and fight for their very existence. This, then is now a war for national inde- pendepce of our country and all others. Every class, every age group has an interet in victory for the allies. Today we cannot afford to be complacent about the outcome of the war. Britain and the Soviet Union will win only with American all-out aid. For this reason the ASU has supported every measure toward campus unity. A move- ment embracing not only SDD and the ASU, but also all other groups on the campus would be an effective answer to the appeasement forces who claim the state of Michigan for their own. O SABOTAGE such unity is to follow the course of some Chinese "liberals" who fear the "left" elements more thanthey fear Japan. We may have differences about our past, or other differences. To discuss our past policies at great length is to divert attention from the main issues of today. We may have differences about how to attain a better America in which to lie. But to argue endlessly about these dif- ferences is to allow Hitler to make up our minds for us. We have a war to win and red-baiting will not help us to win it. -Executive Committee American Student Union destroyed-not reformed." He also says, "I be- lieve that this nation requires a biological purge if it is to check the growing numbers of the physically inferior, the mentally ineffective, and the antisocial . ." WHEN HOOTON gives the German's ruth- less slaughter as an example of their degeneracy and therefore 'advocates their complete obliteration, isn't he condemning his own idea? And who will be the final judge of who should be purged and who should not? On this shaky foundation, last Thursday in front of the public, which is ignorant of the ins and outs of physical anthropology, Hooton came to a number of startling conclusions. For ex- ample, he seemed on the verge of fantasy when he gave physical degeneracy as the reason the French didn't pay their war debt (the French war debt would also seem a little out of Hooton's field). And can this French degeneracy really be explained by the fact that they were "dragged" into World War I by the ruthless Germans. Was- n't Hooton getting a little dogmatic when he con- tinued by laying the blame for World ' War I (which also might be considered a little out of his field) on the Germans? It is generally accepted that the Germans were a cause of the war, and perhaps/ even a major cause, but to say they un,,n FTrVL .ro r-cpa ncrhf ha d1x, narffln+rnJf C& Drew Pedrso ad Q Robert S.Atlen WASHINGTON-There will be plenty of fire- woks at the CIO convention opening in Detroit Monday, but not over foreign policy if anti- Lewis leaders can help it. John L.'s opponents are gunning for bigger game than rebuking the grandstanding miner chief's isolationism. The anti-Lewis forces will concentrate all their efforts on plans to revise the CIO constitu- tion to wrest from Lewis the powers by means of which he has been able largely to control the organization even though not in the driver's seat. Specifically, the antis will press for three charges: 1.-To strengthen the authority of President Phil Murray; 2.-Create a permanent, elective office of secretary-treasurer at $7,500 a year; 3.-Put the selection and control of subordinate department officials directly in the hands of the President. Also, the antis will try to eliminate several Lewis henchmen from the ranks of the vice- presidergts and the executive council. JAMES B. CAREY, former head of the Elec- J trical and Radio Workers and a vigorous anti-Lewisite, is now secretary-treasurer by Mur- ray's appointment. Because he is an appointed officer, Carey's authority is limited and he has no power over department officials. The anti- Lewis forces propose to give him this control by making the office elective and then electing Carey.' The purpose of giving Murray greater control over ,subordinate CIO officials is to open the way for getting rid ,of Lee Pressman, general counsel, and several other close Lewis henchmen who owe their jobs to him. It will be brought out at the convention that Pressman is getting $10,000 a 'year-a salary fixed by Lewis. Murray Will Run MURRAY definitely will be a candidate for re-election. He is still convalescing from his recent heart attack, but 'is greatly improved and is willing to take , another term provided his authority is strengthened and Carey is elected secretary- treasurer to handle the burden of administra- tive details. Outwardly, relations between Lewis and Mur- ray are friendly, but privately they are not. In- siders say that when Lewis visited Murray d'ur- ing his convalescence, Lewis remarked as they parted: "Well, so long, Phil. It was nice to have known you." While the strategy of the anti-Lewisites is to avoid raising an issue over his isdlationism, or any other extraneous question, they are pre- pared to fight him on it if he injects the matter into the convention. There is very bitter feeling within the CIO against 'Lewis' isolationist stand anq if he touches off this bombshell he'll be in for a hot battle. Rude Awakening In Mexico . THE TEETH OF PROGRESS are grinding a most cherished institu- tion in Mexico. Suppression of the aesthetic soul of the Mexi- can began last January when consternation was spread among government employes by an order that they must work right. through the day without stopping for their regular afternoon siesta. And now the Chamber of Commerce of the City of Mexico has asked all department store clerks to eschew the siesta also, in order to per- mit' an earlier closing of stores. THUS FAR, apparently, store clerks have been too stunned to reply to this order which strikes at the very roots of the siesta, sybaritic slumber of sunny southern afternoons. For the siesta is to the Mexican what air is to a bird-it frees him from the mundane realities of life. It is the oldest of Mexican institutions-older than the first Spanish conquistadores, older, than Montezuma and the legend of Quetzacotl. But it is a waster of time. Previous attempts to abolish it have failed notably. Perhaps Presi- dent Avila Camacho can succeed where others did not. For no subscriber to the siesta is this newest of Mexican leaders. In fact, he is the very antithesis of that lethargic frame of mind, arising at 6 a.m., despising those conservatives who sleep in the daytime and frequently working far into the night. APPARENTLY he has succeeded in instilling into his subordinates some of his own fire, for no report from Mexico has carried news that the ban on the siesta in government offices has failed. But putting it into effect among private citizens-that is a far different thing. For, among other things, the siesta has be- come a tradition. And the leader of one of Mexico's neighbor nations has found that tradi- tion is a difficult thing to monkey with-even when it is such a simple tradition as having Thanksgiving on the fourth Thursday. -Bill Baker by a people so crazy with violence and hatred? Of course, any scientist like Hooton, as every American. still has his right to freedom of sneech. i 0 Get Hep, Jitterbugs By TOM THUMB AMERICA is a funny animal. One aspect of American culture that strikes me as being peculiar is the nonsensical words of her songs, both popular and standard. There is no American word which is more standard than Ihome on the Range. Have you ever stopped to analyze the meaning of the lyric to Mr. Roosevelt's favorite song? Well, shut up and listen: OH. GIVE ME A HOME WHERE THE BUFFALO ROAM, AND THE DEER AND THE AN- TELOPE PLAY. Is it possible to imagine Fanyone, much less the President of the United States, wanting a home with animals walking all over it? If you've ever awakened with a horse in your bed, you'll know that's bad enough, but to have deer, antelope and-yes, buffalo messing up your good carpets and stampeding your furniture-egad! WHERE SELDOM IS HEARD A DISCOURAGING WORD It may sound good. but try to imag- ine a society in which nobody ever di:ccurage- anyone. For instance, the baby decides he's going to eat Papa's salary check. Don't discourage him. Go right ahead. Chauncey, Papa'll get another one in two weeks. Positively Freudian! AND THE SKIES ARE NOT CLOUDY ALL DAY What day? Cheer up, Frank. There are very few days anywhere when the sky's cloudy all of the time. Now, don't you worry your little head bald' about the clouds. You're not asking much there, and I think we can grant your request, but the buffalo and the antelope-well, I don't know. * * * ' 0UR NEXT analysis is of a typical popular song, obviously penned by a reformed incendiarist. I DON'T WANT TO SET THEf WORLD ON FIRE. Now look. All of Europe and Asia going up in smoke-sabotage over here, the interventionists and the iso- lationists all going up in smoke-and along comes a guy who says he does- n't want to start any fires. O.K., you're too late anyway. I JUST WANT TO START THE FLAME IN YOUR HEART Oh, so that's your game, is it? He wants to give somebody a severe case of heartburn. Electrocution is too good for guys like that. IN MY HEART THERE IS BUT ONE DESIRE, AND THAT ONE IS YOU, NO OTHER WILL DO. Look. bub, in your heart there are two auricles and two ventricles, thick muscular walls, tricuspid, mitral and semilunar valves, and blood. That's all. Nothing else. LET'S SKIP to a ballad popular several season ago which lends itself particularly well to analysis: OUT OF THE DARKNESS YOU SUDDENLY APPEARED Black magic! First you see it then you don't. Or vice versa. Science is grand, ain't it? YOU SMILED AND I WAS TAK- EN BY SURPRISE, N Why the surprise? Did she have green teeth? Or a yellow tongue, maybe? I GUESS I SHOULD HAVE SEEN RIGHT THROUGH YOU, Isn't it sort of cold to be going without a slip, kid? BUT THE MOON GOT IN MY EYES. Neatest trick of the week. Paging Mr. Ripley. The moon's diameter is 2,160 miles. The average diameter of the human eye is about one inch. Figure it out for yourself, folks. I WAS SO THRILLED WITH THE LOVE YOU VOLUN- TEERED, I GAVE MY HEART WITHOUT A COMPROMISE, He: Who will volunteer? She: I. He: Wow! Here, have a heart. With your low blood pressure, you need it more than I do. I THOUGHT A KINGDOM WAS IN SIGHT THAT I WOULD HAVE A FIGHT TO CLAIM, This is too silly. Figure it out for yourself. BUT. WITH THE MORNING'S EARLY LIGHT, I DIDN'T HAVE A DREAM TO MY NAME. What's happened here, is obviously this: The babe. whose name is "Too bad Joe and Ed couldn't come-they got some cracked ideas about preferring warm fires and easy chairs to this." DAI LY OFF I CIAL BULLETIN. i o FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1941 VOL. LII. No. 41 'Publication in the Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all 1henbers of the University. Notices Public Health Assembly: An assem- bly of ,all students in Public Health will be held on Tuesday, November 18, at 4:00 p.m. in the Auditorium of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation Insti- tute. Dr. Haven Emerson, Professor Emeritus of Public iealth Practice, Columbia University and Lecturer in Public Health Practice, University of Michigan. will speak on "Uniformity of Procedure in Communicable Dis- ease Control." Students are expected to be present. School of Music Freshmen may have their grades for the five-week period by calling at the office of the School of Music today. Bronson-Thomas Prize in Ger- man. Value $32.00. Open to all under- graduate students in German of dis- tinctly American training. Will be awarded' on the results of a three- hour essay competition to be held under departmental supervision in the latter half of March, 1942 (exact date to be announced two weeks in advance). Contestants must satisfy the Department that they have done their reading in German. The essay may be written in English or German. Each contestant will be free to choose his own subject from a list of 30 offered. Students who wish to com- pete must be taking a course in Ger- man (32 or above) at the time of the competition. They should register and obtain further details as soon as possible at the office of the Ger- man Department, 204 University Hall. Candidates for the Teacher's Cer- tificate for February and June 1942: A list of candidates has been posted ,on the bulletin board of the School of Education, Room 1431 U.E.S. Any prospective candidate whose name does 'not appear on this list shuld call at the office of the Recorder of the School of Education, 1437 U.E.S. Certificate of Eligibility: At the be- ginning of each semester and sum- mer session every 'student shall be conclusively presumed to be ineligible for any public activity until his eli- gibility is affirmatively established by obtaining from the Chairman of the Committeeon Student Affairs, in the Office of the Dean of Students, a Certificate of Eligibility. Before permitting any students to participate in a public activity, the chairman or manager of suc activity shall (a) require each applicant to present a certificate ofeligibility, (b) sign his initials on the back of such certificate, and (c) file with the Chairman of the Committee on Stu- dent Affairs the names of all those who have presented certificates of eligibility and a signed statement to exclude all others from participation. Blanks for the chairmen's lists may be obtained in the Office of the Dean of Students. Faculty, College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: Midsemester re- ports are due not later than Satur- day, November 22. Report cards are being distributed to all, departmental offices. Green cards are being provided for fresh- men reports; they should be returned to the office of the Academic Coun- registered in other schools or col- leges of the University should be re- ported to the school or college in which they are registered. Additional cards may be had at 108 Mason Hall or 1220 Angell Hal. E. A. Walter, Assistant Dean }RCA Interviews: ;E'o representa- tives of RCA Manufacturing Com- pany will be in this office today from 9 to 5 to interview students from the following departmepts: Mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, physics, chemical engineering and in- dustrial engineering. This includes both February and June graduates and graduate stu- dents. Kindly call at the Bureau of Appointments and Occupational In- formation, 201 Mason Hall, or tele- phone 4121--extension 371 for ap- pointments. Application blanks are also to be filled out in advance. Registration for Permanent Job: Students are reminded that today is the last day registration blanks can be obtained from th Bureau of Ap- pointments without payment of $1.00 late registration fee. This is the only registration to be herd during the year, and February, June and August graduates, as Well as graduate students desiring the assistance of the Bureau, should reg- ister at this time. Both Teaching and General Divisions are registering students. Candidates for teaching certificates are required by the Uni- versity to register with the Bureau. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information League House Presidents who have not called for Red Cross materials, please get them in Miss McCormick's office at the League immediately. Academic Notices Master's Candidates in History: The language examination will be giv- en at. 4:00 p.m. today in Room B, Haven Hall. Candidates must bring their own dictionaries. Copies of old examinations are on file in the Basement Study Hall of the General Library. Political Science 85 v/ill not meet today. H. J. Heneman. Political Science 51, Section 2, will not meet today. H. J. Heneman. Mathematics 6, Section 1 (Dr. Kap- lan's section) will not meet Satur- day morning. Upper class and graduate women: Instruction will be given in ice skat- ing, badminton, beinning swimming, plays and' games for children, and body conditioning. Students inter- ested in joining these classes should register today and Saturday, Novem- ber 15, in Office 14, Barbour Gym- nasium. Concerts Choral Union Concert: Giovanni Martinelli and Ezio Pinza will give a joint program of songs, arias, and duets, in the Choral Union Concert Series, Tuesday, November 18, at 8:30 o'clock, in Hill Auditorium. A limit- ed number of tickets for this concert, and succeeding concerts, are avail- able at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. Charles A. Sink, President Student Recital: On Sunday, No- GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty ~& " & C ~ 'C -Clayton Dickey H ootdn's Argumrent Raises Questions . HARVARD'S eminent Professor Hooton giving scientific sanction to blood