_THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. L714r illr4lgau Batty I I1 I Edited and managed by students of the Univrrsity 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 or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all opber 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 carrie' $4.00, by mail $5.00. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTIOING flY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADIsON AvE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHiCAGO * BosTON - LOS ANGELES * SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1941-42 Editorial Stasff Emile Alvin David Gel ]Dann Lachenbruch Managing Editor . . . . Editorial Director City Editor Jay McCormick Hal Wilson Arthur Hill Janet HMt Grace Miller . Virginia Mitchell * . . Associate Sports . Assistant Sports * . .Women's . Assistant Women's . . . Exchange Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Daniel James Louise Evelyn Business Staff H. Huyett . . . Business Manager B. Collins . Associate Business Manager Carpenter . .Women's Advertising Manager Wright - . Women's Business Manager NIGHT EDITOR: BILL BAKER The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Trust Americans o Take It. . W HAT IS TO BE the American policy concerning publication of full details of every military reverse suffered by this na- tion' armed forces in World War II? t Are we to be trusted to take the bad, and1 the good, the bad with resilient strength, the good with moderate calm? Are we to be trusted to stand the shock of tremendous losses like those of Dunkirk and Norway? Are we to be given enough military detail ° to be. able to judge accurately the efficiency our army and navy chiefs? Are we in summation to be treated as in- , telligent, responsible citizens of a democracy? Congressional clamor, OPM rumors, journal- istic whisperings and the unequivocal statements of men whose honesty is beyond question add up. Vincent Sheehan has definitely committed himself. Secretary Knox's flight to Honolulu must have a real purpose. Some newsmen pass the information as confidential, but there can be no question as to its authenticity. We suffered naval losses at Pearl Harbor whih dwarf our ridiculously small wishful estimates. We suffered such a staggering blow in the Pacific that a major portion of our Hawaiian fleet is an almost useless, bat- tered remnant of its former strong, reliant self. The partial concealment of this tremendous blow is a tragic error. Should this attitude to- ward informing the public-the attitude evi- dently supported by President Roosevelt- continue, the results will be disastrous. Things shpuld not be thus. They cannot be thus. We must know and know immediately what has happened. We must be kept from the smug, over-confident complacency already all too ap- parent in the Midwest. We must know definitely what handicaps we have to overcome, what jobs are most important ad how important they are. Only thus can we achieve the greatest pos- sible result, only thus can we realize the Ameri- can people's finest potentialities. T IS FINE to be told of Colin Kelly and all the other heroes, of the 'magnificent' stand of the Marines at Wake and Midway Islands. It is pleasant to hear of successful resistance in the Philippines, of Japanese setbacks all over the Far East, but it is disheartening to hear nothing adverse, to realize that we know only the kind of things that any Nazi state permits its citizens to know. In order to fight as a united people pitched to the highest intensity- of purpose we must-as the British do-understand exactly what our mili- tary status is. This is no comic opera war. This is a bitter x war to the finish and the odds are grimly even. Only an informed America can change those odds in its favor. - Hale Champion Persimmons Time... When winter skies are gray above the Deep South's gardens there's a light as of many Chinese lanterns over the land. It is the per- iirniieSays "LIKE as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear Him. For He knoweth our frame; He remembereth that we are dust." (Psalm 103). Here are joined two significant strains of Christian truth. Here is pessimism; in the words of Calhoun: "Good intentions are not enough. Nor is hard work, nor will power, nor even intel- ligence and moral devotion enough." Current history is driving home this theory with hammer blows of fact. As our own ships get bombed by the engines and steel and scrap which some of us sold to a potential enemy only yesterday, we can see that man, the violator of every sacred contract, must be made over. Here, too, is optimism. The Lord is like a father. Christianity seeks to exemplify God, the personified Universe. He is concerned about man, His child, a creature. The inexplicable Soul of all reality actually 4s interested in me, insig-. nificant as I am. Here is hope. God is intimately allied with and bound in the welfare of every human soul who has faith in Him. Man is always linked with God. Each transac- tion is His, not mine alone. To many this is presumptuous. The only God some persons can perceive is an austere physical uni- verse or impersonal law. The idea of an associa- tion between a free person and a sequence of blind forces, they say, is pure fiction. Correct. But the man who can grasp the Christian con- cept that God is the abiding goal, a configuration of all of man's ideals, unlike the mechanist, has an adequate associate. In this alliance, this fel- lowship with God, this affinity for the All-Good, growth of worth is feasible. Man is lifted in dig- nity and made participant in that which is noble and holy.s A bond of fellowship or league of believers, is made available. Just as the sociologist points to the security which comes from being accepted and tells of a desire, which when satisfied, gives stability; just as the psychologist points out that the ego can acquire persistent force only where it has a function beyond itself and at the same time is brought into subjection by balanced in- hibitions, so Christianity sets down the plat- form that the individual is made free by faith to operate within the requirements of a believing group. It is in the"group that my freedom comes to significance. THE COLD NECESSITY by which a. few na- tional leaders can commit their nations to a course of action which promises to engulf two, three or four other nations and the effrontery, as we see it, of representatives ofaone nation repudiating, by armed attack, the calm confer- ence of envoys, raises the question whether men should ever be entrusted with such power as has been delegated. "He remembereth that we are dust." True of the Japanese leaders, you say. Yes, perhaps. But also true of us and, of our leaders. It is only as persons subject to the will of God, penitents, that we can be relied on or can actually trust in or believe in ourselves. Here, then, is where we are driven to a re- reading of the sacred scripture, particularly the later prophets and the Gospels, where Jesus is living out His sublime thesis of the triumph of good over evil. Every American who would spir- itually and ethically, as well as politically, "en- list for the duration," owes it to himself to begin at an altar, seek forgiveness for having helped to move mankind toward universal war and pay for grace by which he may comprehend the will of God. - Edward W. Blakeman, Counselor in Religious Education RxECORDSW&Ui King Goodman Again; Hildegarde Wows 'Em BENNY GOODMAN is now recording for OKeh records, a fact which should cheer thrifty lovers of good jazz. His release this week features the sextet playing his old standby, Limehouse Blues, and en verso (that's French) If I Had You. This is the old Benny, even if it isn't the old sextet. But it's every bit as good and it's fine and it's hot. Both sides are excellent-,but then, that's King Benny. Then there's Glenn Miller's usual Bluebirdisc this week-two Ray Eberle vocal jobs-and both romantical-like. The B side, This Is No Laughing Matter, is the smoother of the two, which in- clude Humpty Dumpty Heart. There's a little gal named Hildegarde who's wowin' 'em at the Savoy-Plaza in New York. This gal's got a real personality, and so Decca has promptly put it down in a new set of rec- ords. Three records. Sample titles-You Irritate Me So, I Hate You Darling. Incidentally, they're all Cole Porter songs, from the show, "Let's Face It." Sample lyric: "You're the fly in my oint- ment, You're, the frog in my throat, You're the knock in my engine, You're the leak in my boat." Good sophisticated stuff. NOTES SCRATCHED IN AN OLD LOMBARDO PLATTER: The new Artie Shaw job, Solid Sam, is a knockout, reminiscent of his older swing jobs. On the other side, his new wren, Paul Kelly, pleads, Make Love To Me (Victor). '. I may have fallen behind, but Kay Kyser seems to have discarded singing song titles. At least he does in his latest coupling, The Nadocky (Colum- bia), which is all right if you like nadockies. On other side is The White Cliffs of Dover, which Tommy Tucker has also recorded for OKeh. Both records are well performed, though gushy. The B side of the Tucker disc is The train Song, a silly, but attractive, little nothing with an ap- pealing melody. Assorted Comment: Helen Forrest, formerly of Artie Shaw and Benny Goodman, is now on C e Drew Pecrsot RobertS Allen" WASHINGTON-One week ago today those who attended St. Agnes's Episcopal Church in Washington were stirred by a sight they will not soon forget. St. Agnes's is High Episcopalian, and is lo- cated in a Negro section of the Capital. Few members of the congregation still live in the community. And on last Sunday most of those at the serv- ice were children, for it was at 9:30 a.m. Leaning forward in one pew was a tall, gaunt form, which only a few people recognized as Viscount Halifax, the British Ambassador. His Lordship followed the service very care- fully. And when Father DuBois reached that part in the service where he prayed "for guid- ance for all Christian rulers,' Viscount Halifax was visibly and deeply moved. A few hours later he was to learn how much his prayers were needed. For already that morning the Japanese war lords had launched their mis- sion of death upon Honolulu. Japanese Newsmen When war boke, Japanese newsmen in Wash- ington were rounded up by the President's per- sonal bodyguard, Tom Qualters. Purpose was not to detain the correspondents, but to lift their credentials and deny them further access to news sources. Qualters went first to the office of Domei, of- ficial Japanese news agency, in the National Press Building. He was looking for Masuo Kato and Clarke Kawakami, but neither was there. Later, Kato was found in his apartment, and Kawakami was tracked dowh at the Union Sta- tion, about to board a train for New York. What Qualters wanted most from these two, plus two other Japanese correspondents, was the card of the White House Correspondents Association, which is an open sesame almost any- where. Note-The case of Kawakami is exceptional; though a Japanese correspondent, he is an Amer- ican citizen, son of a Japanese father and an American mother, and a graduate with honors from Harvard. When1 newsmen covering the State Department tried their hand at a Foreign Service exam recently, Kawakami did better than all American correspondents except Law- rence Todd, representative of Russia's Tass Agency.- Vanishing Dollars Assuming that on Aughst 1, 1940, your dollar was worth 100 cents, today that same dollar, in purchasing power, is worth only 881/2 cents. This is not an imaginary or scare statement. It is a plain declaration of fact about an ominous problem that vitally affects the welfare of every man, woman and child in the country, although few are aware of it or how serious it is. On August 1, 1941, the cost of living was 5% percent higher than on the same date the year previous. Since last August 1 the cost of living has jumped another 6 percent, making an in- crease of 11%/ percent over what it was August 1, 1940. That is, in four and a half months, the increase in your living costs has more than doubled. Thus your pay has been cut 6 percent since last August 1. And that isn't all. Price Administrator Leon Henderson estimates that at the rate present uncontrolled economic factors are snowballing, the cost of living shortly will begin pyramiding at' the eye-popping pace of 1%/2 percent a month. That is, you will be tak- ing a pay cut every month of 1%i2 percent. That is, you will unless something is done about it. Henderson has been frantically trying to get something done about it since August, when the President sent his message urgently asking Congress for price control legislation. Thanks to a log-rolling combine of Congressional farm and labor interests his results so far are zero. In fact, they are worse than nothing. After stalling for four months, during which the cost of living took a 6 percent gouge out of your pocketbook, the log-rolling coalition passed a measure in the House that in effect legalizes dollar-rifling boosts in living costs. Instead of controlling prices, this bill would force price in- creases and encourage a veritable Pandora's box of economic and social evils-strikes and other labor disturbances over wage demands, profit- eering, inflation and screwball political panaceas. Up To The Senate The sordid House bill is now before the Senate Banking Committee, one of the ablest commit- tees in Congress. In the absence of Senator Bob Wagner of New York, Senator Carter Glass of Virginia, father of the Federal Reserve system, is acting chair- man. If anyone on Capitol Hill is a foe of infla-' tion it is Glass. But Glass and his committee are not the Sen- ate. The same log-rolling elements that massa- cred the Henderson bill in the House also are present in potent numbers in the Senate. And if they can help it, little, if anything, will be done to restore the measure to its original effec- tive form. Meanwhile it will be weeks before the legisla- tion will reach the Senate floor. With a long holiday recess in the offing, the measure couldn't be taken up even if the Banking Committee re- ported it out quickly. That means that it may be February before a price-fixing bill finally is en- acted. Meanwhile, as Congress "fiddles," the cost of living continues to skyrocket and the buying power of your dollar, whether wage earner, busi- _ a ,-crk 1 'fir I ' - = LI®. GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty I . s s. "_ \ 5 i # I l L 4 y\ >. r ' ." F._: (Continued from Page 2) to register at the Office of the Dean of Women. There are many oppor- tunities for employment in private homes. Byrl F. Bacher, Assistant Dean of Women Academic Notices Bacteriological S'eminar will meet Monday, Dec. 15, at 8:00 p.m. in 1564 East Medical Building. Subject, "Tuberculin." All interested are cor- dially invited. Biological Chemistry Semnar will be held in Room 319, West Medical Building on Tuesday, December 16, at 7:30 p.m. "Selenium - Biological Occurence, Distribution and Excre- tion" will be discussed. All interested are invited. Zoology 31 (Organic Evolution): All members of the class should re- turn their recent examination papers at once to the boxes near Room 2091 N.S. for an important change in marking. To Students Enrolled for Series of Lectures on Naval Subjects: Lieuten- ant John E. Fitzgibon, Lieutenant U.S. Navy, Assistant Professor of Naval Science and Tactics, Univer- sity of Michigan, will deliver a lec- ture on "The Naval Reserve" at 7:15 p.m. on Tuesday, December 16, in Room 348 West Engineering Build- ing. Concerts Messiah Concert: The University Musical Society will present Handel's "Messiah" this afternoon at 4:15 o'clock in Hill Auditorium. The Uni- versity Choral Union, the University Symphony Orchestra, Palmer Chris- tian, organist, Marie Wilkins, so- prano, Edwina Eustis, contralto, Er- nest McChesney, tenor, and Doug- las Beattie, bass, will all participate under the baton of Maestro Thor Johnson. Tickets will \be on sale at the box office in Hill Auditorium after 2:30 o'clock today. Charles A. Sink, President Exhibitions Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: Collection of pottery, the work of Mary Chase Stratton of the Pewabic Pottery, given to the University by Dr. Walter R. Parker, is being shown in the ,ground dloor cases of the Architecture Building. Open daily, 9:00-5:00 p.m., through Dec. 19. The public is invited. Lectures University Lecture: Professor G. E. Moore, Cambridge University, Eng- land, will lecture on the subject, "Certainty," under the auspices of the Department of Philosophy, on Thursday, December 18, at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheater. The public is cordially invited. American Chemical Society Lec- ture: Dr. M. N. Mickelon of the De- partment of Bacteriology will speak on "Carbohydrate Decomposition by Microorganisms" at 4:15 p.m. on Wednesday, December 17, in Room 303 Chemistry Building. The annual business meeting will follow the lec- ture. French Lecture: Professor Arthur L. Dunham, of the Department of History, will give the third of the ~'Preneh Lectuirgs spn1srd by th guages (Room 112, Romance Lan- guage Building) or at the door at the time of the lecture for a small sum. Holders of these tickets are entitled to admission to all lectures, a small additional charge being made for the annual play. These lectures are open to the general public. Events Today The All-Campus Carol Sing will be held at the steps to the Main Library tonight at 9:00. Professor David Mattern will lead the general singing, and special selections will be rendered by the University Glee Clubs and a mixed chorus. The Carol Sing is sponsored by the Student Religious Association. All students and faculty are invited to take part. Pi Lambda Theta and Phi Delta Kappa are sponsoring a tea honor- ing the faculty of the School of I Education this afternoon at the I Michigan League, 5:30 to 7:30. All members of these organizations are cordiagly invited. Phi Eta Sigma initiation today at 5:30 p.m. at the Union. Dinner will be served-at 6:30 p.m. The Slavic Society will meet at 3:00 tonight in room 305 of the Mich- igan Union. The evening will be de- voted to Slavic Folk dancing during which instructions will be given. All those interested, both members and non-members, are invited. Polonia Society Sunday night sup- per will be held at 6:00 p.m. in the Russian room of the League. Graduate Outing Club will meet today at 2:30 p.m., west rear door. Rackham School. Program depends upon the weather. Congregational Student Fellow- ship: A party for underprivileged children will be held tonight at 7:30. by the Congregational Student Fel- lowship. Each boy is asked to bring a twenty-five cent gift for a male youngster; the party will be held in the church parlors. Wesley Foundation: The Graduate Group will meet for discussion at 6:00 p.m. today. Dr. Blakeman will lead with the subject "Religious Equipment for Graduate Study." This group will join with the undergradu- ates for Tea at 7:00 and for the pro- gram at 7:30 p.m. Coming Events Botanical Journal Club will meet on Tuesday, December 18, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 1139,N.S. Reports by: Frances E. Wayne, "The Apocynac- eous Flora of the Yucatan Peninsula;" Beth Woolsey, "Studies on the blos- soming season;" Alma Hunt, "Edible Wild Plants;" Robert Lowry, "The development of the peristome of Au- lacomnium heterostichum." The Research Club will, meet in the Rackham Amphitheatre on Wed- nesday, Dec. 17, at 8:00 p.m. The papers to be read are: "Blood Clot- ting Experiments, Old and New" (with demonstrations) by Professor John H. Ferguson, and "The Prob- lem of Inflation" by Professor Arthur Smithies. 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 on "Die wirtschaftiche Bedeutung von Niederlandisch-In- dien." rarrr nrwrwrwwr rw..+n arr rwrw "Junior's not really a total loss, Otis! After all, he's been worth a $400.00 exemption on your income tax for 17 years!" DAILY O"FFICIAL BULLETIN Wednesday, December 17, at 7:45 p.m. in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building, Mr. W. H-. Auden will speak on "lellenic and Hellenistic Scholarship." Graduate students in English and other inter- ested persons are welcome. Alpha Omega Alpha, honorary medical society. will hold its fall ini- tiation on Tuesday, December 16, in the Michigan Union at 5:45 p.m. Dr. Harry Goldblatt, Professor of Experi- mental Pathology of Western Reserve University, will be made an honorary member and will deliver the address at 8:00 p.m. in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Building. His sub- ject is "Experimental Observations on the Pathogenesis and Treatment of Hypertension." The lecture is open to the public. Third session of the House of Rep- resentatives will be held on Wednes- day December 17, at 3:15 p.m. in I 2203 A.H. All members please be pres- ent to approve final draft of Consti- tution. Have some bills ready to lay on clerk's table so they may be re- ferred to a committee. Constitutional Committee meeting of the House of Representatives, new political science organization, will meet in the Union at 8:00 p.m. on Monday, December 15. All members concerned meet at the mai'n desk. Women students: Extra-curricular leadership recreational group will meet in the Dance Studio of Barbour Gymnasium at 4:15 p.m. on Monday, December 15. All women are welcome. Bring gymnasium shoes. Wesley Foundation: Bible Class on Monday at 7:30 p.m. in Room- 214 with Dr. 'Brashares. The subject for discussion in the series "Developing Religious Ideas" will be "Guidance." Faculty Alumni Dance: Second in series to be held Tuesday December 16, at the Michigan Union from 9:00 to 12:00 p.m. Faculty Women's Club: The Mon- Jay Evening Drama Group will meet :n Monday. December 15, at 7:45 p.m., at the Michigan League. Health Rechecks are required for every girl interested in wiorkirg on any committee of JGP. Please make appointments as soon as possible at Health Service. Churches First Baptist Church: 10:15 a.n. Graduate Class taught by Professor Chas. Brassfield in the church. Un- dergraduate Class, taught by Rev. C. H. Loucks in the Guild House, 11 a.m. Sermofi, "Where is He?" 6:30 p.m. Roger Williams Guild. "Christmas in Song and Story." 9:00 p.m. The Guild will attend the Carol Sing in a group. First Methodist Church and Wes- ley Foundation: Student Class at 9:30 a.m. with Prof. Kenneth Hance. Morning Worship at 10:40 o'clock. Dr. Charles W. Brashares will preach on "His Gift to Me." Wesleyan Guild meeting in charge of the Kappa Phi group. Tea and fellowship at 6:30 p.m. Program 'of Christmas pictures and music beginning at 7:30 p.m. Zion Lutheran Church: The church worship service will be held at 10:30 Sunday with sermon by Mr. Clem- ent Shoemaker on "Jesus Judges The Deeds of All." Trinity Lutheran Church: The service of worship will be at 10:30 on Sunday with Rev. Henry 0. Yoder using as his theme, "'The Greatest Trust Ever Given to Man." First Church of Christ, Scientist: Sunday morning service at 10:30. Subject: "God, the Preserver of Man." Sunday School at 11:45 a.m. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church: Sunday:. 8:00 a.m. Holy Commun- ion; 10:00 a.m. High ,School Class; 11:00 a.m. Kindergarten, Harris Hall; 11:00 a.m. Junior Church; 11:00 a.m. Litany, Ante-Communion and Ser- mon by the Rev. Frederick W. Leech; 4:00-6:00 p.m. High Square Club Meeting, Harris Hall; 6:00 p.m. Chor- al Evensong and Address by the Rev. John G. Dahl; 6:45 p.m. Christmas Party for Episcopal University'Stu- dents at Little Whitewood Lake. Leaving Harris Hall at 6:45 p.m. (after "The Messiah"). Supper, car- ols, games, compline. Bring 10c gift toy to exchange and later give to Toy Library. 'IR ansportation provided. Reservations requested-call 8613. First Presbyterian Church: Morn- ing Worship, 10:45, "The Divine:Ex- periment" subject of the sermon by Dr. W. P. Lemon. Westminster Student Guild: Sup- per at 6:00 p.m. The Dramatics Committee will present "The Dust of the Road." This will be the last meeting before Christmas. All are cordially invited. The Church of Christ will meet for Scripture study Sunday at 10:00 a.m. in the Y.M.C.A. At 11:00 a.m. Gar- vin M. Toms will preach on the theme "I Am Debtor." The evening serv- ice is to be held at 7:30 p.m., at which time the sermon topic will be: "Not Far From the Kingdom of God." Midweek Bible study will be held at "I