THE MICIGAN DAILY &1j Sir! ji an &tj THE REPLY CHURLISH By TOUCHSTONE GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty i. I dl NOW I have always observed, in poker games and fist fights-other people's of course- that the cool guy won. Allowing a certain under- standable excitement in the midst of the event, if a man stayscalm, measures what he has to do, and then does it with his head as well as his fists or the ace in the hole, he generally gets considerably farther than the hothead. But apparently I have been wrong, or at least not in the right places. For there is at present arising a growing- school of thought, contagious among the increasingly irritating group of older men who enjoy making threats and waving their fists, which advocates teaching soldiers and Edited and manage 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 or not other$'Ise credited in this newspaper. All rights 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 car- rier $4.00, by mail $5.00. REPRESENTED PFOR NATIONAL ADVERT3NG DY National Advertising Servie, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. iN.Y. c.ICcAGo ' GOSrOI . LOs ANGELES * SAM FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1941-42 Editorial Staff Emile Gelh . . . . . Managing Editor Alvin Dann . . . . . .Editorial Director David Lachenbruch . . . . City Editor Jay McCormick . . . . Associate Editor Gerald E. Burns . . . . . Associate Editor Hal Wilson . . . . . . Sports Editor Janet ooker. . . . . Women's Editor Grace Miller . . Assistant Women's Editor Virginia Mitchel . . . . . Exchange Editor Btta Business Staffs Daniel H. Huyett . . . Business Manager James B. Collins . . Associate Business Manager Louise Carpenter . . Women's Advertising Manager Evelyn Wright . . Women's Business Manager NIGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM A. MacLEOD ReA The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. W.S.S.F. Drive And War Ideals.. .. J MERICA AT WAR is likely to forget certain things-things of which the World Student Service Fund intends to remind us in its drive which begins today. We are likely to forget that, though at war, we students do not have to retreat thousands of miles westward to continue our education and to escape from an invader as do Chinese stu- dents. We are likely to forget that we are not, at least not yet, victims of ,cruel persecution in our own land and do not have to run away to a safer country, as students in Germany have had to do. We are likely to forget that we American students are not yet war prisoners, as are many former students abroad. The W.S.S.F. reminds us that there are ideals at stake in this war. We are not fight- ing the war merely for the sake of military victory or for the subjugation of a group of nations. We learned the bitter lesson from the last war that a planned and a just peace must follow this conflict if there is to be any permanently peaceful order. And the W.S.S.F. is fostering, in its campaign, those very ideals of preserving the leaders of youth throughout the world for the post-war re- construction era and of giving concrete ex- pression to the feeling of world brotherhood by aiding students and war prisoners every- where.A WHEN you buy defense stamps or bonds, you are investing in the winning of the war. When you contribute to the W.S.S.F., you are investing in the concrete expression of the ideals for which the war is being fought and in the justice and peace of the world order to follow this conflict. -Irving Jaffe Poll Tax Laws Must Be Repealed . . ATTACK on one of the real bastions of anti-democratic tendencies in this country opened last week in a caucus room of the United States Senate. Under consideration of the Senate Judiciary Sub-committee was a bill submitted by Senator Claude Pepper of Florida to abolish poll taxes in Federal elections. The poll taxes, existent in eight Southern states, disenfranchise more than 10,000,000 Americans of botlh the white and colored races. They reauire the payment of one or two dollars within a specified time limit before a citizen is permitted the right to vote. To the self-satisfied Northerner this amount may seem reasonable and hardly worth the age-long controversy that has developed over it. In the South, however, a dollar may mean, to more families than it is pleasant to imagine, the difference between the right to vote and the purchase of some of the bare necessities of life. PART AND PARCEL of the racial discrimina- tion that grew out of the enfranchisement of the Negro following the Civil War, the poll. tax is one of the varied methods used by the Southern states to control the vote. Others in- rllui +he fnmnim "grnandfathnreaones" and the L E TTCRS TO THE EDITOR Room For New Ideas? To the Editor: A system as time-honored as this University's method of education should certainly have some defender in the dark hour of R. B. McKinley's bitter onslaught against it. Its deficiencies, we are told, are many, but for the primordial one seems to be that we students are given no room for originality or for doing our own thinking. It seems that we are spoon-fed certain things, and that for the entire period of our higher learning, we are expected to spoon them, unmodified, back into the oracular mouths from whence they came, without the benefit of their being improved at all by our own additional knowledge. Can it be that Mr. McKinley has slipped up on his opportunities for asserting himself? Has he never seen an instructor begging the class with tears in his eyes to please, please come forth with some new idea, just any little idea, no matter how small or how wrong? Has he never heard one ask imploringly for comments on some subject-any comments at all? True, we must learn definitions and laws anj postu- lates, and points one, two and three under point A, but are these not, after all, a more or less necessary medium through which we can feel fairly sure we are all talking about the same thing? Our own definitions, were we allowed to make them, would be very fine indeed, I am sure -as fine as any that were ever put in textbooks, but it would be somewhat confusing to discuss paleontology or the fourth dimension on the basis of original definitions submitted by even one class of thirty. True, we must learn the opinions of accepted historians, even though our calling in life be to write better histories. We must learn how Napoleon won his battles, even though we have thought up much better ways. But your instructor, when he walks into the room, will look around hopefully and say, "Are there any questions?" Now, ah now, is the time for the student of Mr. McKinley's caliber to wave his hand wildly until acknowledged, and then to pour from his troubled soul all the things that have been tormenting him. Now is the time for him to offer his own solutions for the world's problems, or his own theory about the expanding universe if he doesn't like Eddington's. I know an instructor who bore the expression of a wounded animal after reading the brutal accusations of Mr. M.'s editorial. Then he asked what Wordsworth was talking about in a poem. Now we could have said anything, granting that we did not stray too far from nature, immortal- ity, or philosophical reflection. But we did not say anything' at all. Nothing happened. He looked around the room with a sort of despairing futility, a crushed defeat. "You see." he said, "nothing happens." Most of us find many, many more openings for ideas than we have ideas to put in them. Even if some of our "individualism" is stifled and our "breadth of vision" somewhat restricted, are there not still various things which this Univer- sity can teach us? After all, we came here to find out what other people know, and to take advantage of our social heritage, not to air our own little opinions. Perhaps some day we shall promulgate some discoveries about evolution that will blow the lid off all that has ever been written about it. But why'not, while we're here, look into what Darwin knew? Augusta Walker fusal to allow the Negro to participate in its primaries has effectively blocked his deserved share in determining government. Continuance of the poll tax has also furthered the nefarious purposes of local political ma- chines. The machines can buy up poll tax re-. ceipts and distribute them among their sup-. porters. In one machine-bossed county in Ten- nessee, according to Silliman Evans, the pub lisher of the Chicago Sun and the Tennesseean who testified before the sub-committee, there are proportionally fewer "no" votes than there are in Nazi Germany." Official government tabu- lations show that while 76 percent of the eligible voters went to the polls in the states without restrictions in the last presidential ballot only 27 percent did so in the eight Southern states using the tax. MANY Southern leaders have finally seen the lack of any real justification for the poll taxes and have advocated their abolition. Flor- ida, North Carolina and Louisiana have actually removed that voting requirement. That the poll taxes were consistent with the Constitutional guarantee of universal suffrage is incomprehensible. They are the tools of poli- ticians and a disaistinx attemnt at rnadis- civilians alike, to Hate the Enemy. In a news story Sunday Dr. A. J. Stoddard, superintendent of Philadelphia schools, was quoted as urging American educators to take an aggressive stand in the war, "suggesting they 'quit this over- emphasis of tolerance towards the enemy.' " When Dr. J. C. Parker, director of Michigan secoidary school study objected to Stoddard's remarks, which took place at a panel discussion during the State Conference on School Curric- ulum at Lansing Saturday, Dr. Stoddard replied: "I don't see anything undemocratic about shooting rats. We must do without philoso- phizing and rationalizing because it is high time that American schools find a dynamic, virile part in this war." RIGHT HERE I might point out that it is the custom of men of Dr. Stoddard's sort to be- gin insisting on virility in public life after certain personal but inevitable physiological changes have taken place, by some obscure but no doubt just law of compensation. Emotionally the same process may be observed. The non-fighter usu- ally yells the loudest, the little guy defends his principles even when they are no more princi- ples than his insufferable conceit and gall. This sort of banquet bravado leads nowhere, unless there are enough pip-squeaks who feel that stir of martial blood in their varicose veins when they hear Stoddard, or read Ham Fisher, the Joe Palooka one-man-army cartoonist. The en- couraging note in the proceedings at Lansing was the sound thumping Stoddard got not only from Dr. Parker, but from Dr. Eugene Elliott, State superintendent of public instruction. THOUGH there was very little else of interest in the book, Arthur Guy Empey's Over the Top afforded those who can take their trench fighting straight a good example of how much the home guard's hate program amounts to when men are fighting. Come Christmas time, Empeq said, and the boys ir the trenches started paying calls, the Americans leaving cigarettes and choc- olate at a designated spot in no man's land, the Germans accepting the Christmas presents, and leaving beer and sausages in return. Times have changed, the Stoddards say. Not so much. Or- ders, from the brass hats, Empey says, came down next day, and the boys started firing at each other as usual. DON'T EXPECT to read about anything in the line of romantic attachments between our soldiers and those of the enemies. The idea in a war is to shoot the other guy and not get shot yourself. But the guys who are doing the shooting are not, I feel assured, quite so loud- mouthed and positive about the game as the stay-at-home patriots. Maybe, as I- have often heard, a soldier hates the enemy when he has to charge, or in the middle of battle. However, wars are not all battles. Much of the time the soldier sits around, waiting for another battle. It would be wise of the educators if they teach him the positive virtues of what he is fighting for, teach him what the Stoddards apparently are trying to duck, the definition of democracy. It will probably do a lot more to carry on the war than the jingo metabolism of hate. So long until soon. C"? Drew Pecusoi RobetS.Aties . WASHINGTON-It looks as if John L. Lewis is getting ready to do another bolt act. Significant under-cover signs indicate that the miner czar is preparing the stage for a walkout of the CIO, which he took the leading role in founding six years ago. The United Mine Workers, which Lewis rules with an iron fist, has not paid its CIO per capita tax for several months, and he has been sum- moning UMW leaders before him and "ultima- tuming4 them with a blunt demand that they declare themselves for him or Phil Murray, president of the CIO and vice-president of the UMW. Also last Thursday, in Lewis' office, there was a meeting of UMW executive board members that was steeped in mystery. But word of the proposed meeting leaked to newsmen who began asking Lewis questions about it. Thereupon, According to insiders, he hastily dropped his original plan for a head-on showdown and resorted to strategy. At his behest the board voted that a special committee of five be sent to West Virginia to investigate alleged operator violations of the UMW contract and "certain other matters." Insiders say the investigation is a smoke screen to mask the real purpose of the committee, which is to axe Bittner and to torpedo a big state miner rally that Murray is scheduled to address. CIO insiders tell a sensational story of Lewis' tactics in pressuring UMW leaders into line. It is related that he summoned Tom Kennedy, little, mild-mannered veteran UMW secretary-, treasurer, and bluntly demanded, "Tom, you've got to choose between Phil Murray and me., Stunned for a moment, Kennedy finally re- gained his breath and protested. "That isn't fair, John," he said. "You ought not to do that to me. This isn't a question of personalities. It's a question of principles. After all von Phil and I have worked hard together f T j; C . Jr : ***999 dd i. l }.w? Chicago Tmies, tnc i'..;. 41 . F. l:n. (41, All Its. Ri. i e , "_ a _ ;: k k. . : z - 17' "I've thought of enlisting for war work, but I've decided I can do more good by staying home and being on hand when some of the boys get furloughs!" DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1942 1 VOL. LH. No. 120E Publication in the Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices Student Tea: President and Mrs.i Ruthven will be at home to studentsb Wednesday afternoon, March 18,c from 4 to 6 o'clock. Home Loans: The University In-r vestment office, 100 South Wing, willA be glad to consult with anyone con-s sidering building or buying a homec or refinancing existing mortgagesi and is eligible to make F.H.A. loans. Detroit Armenian Women's Clubn Scholarship: The Detroit Armenian Women's Club offers a scholarship for $100 for the year 1942-43 for0 which young men and women of Armenian parentage, living in the Detroit metropolitan district who demonstrate scholastic ability and4 possess good character and who havet had at least one year of college work,1 are eligible. Further information may be obtained from me. Dr. Frank E. Robbins,F 1021 Angell Hall Students, College of Literature,C Science, and the Arts: Courses drop-a ped after Saturday, March 21, by2 students other than freshmen will be recorded with the grade of E. Fresh- men (students with less than 24 hours of credit) may drop courses without1 penalty through the eighth week.k Exceptions to these regulations may' be made only because of extraord- inary circumstances, such as serious or long-continued illness.1 E. A. Walter 1 Prospective Applicants for the Con- bined Curricula: Students of the Col- lege of Literature, Science and thel Arts wishing to apply for admission to one of the combined curricula for September 1942 should fill out ap- plications for such admission as soon as possible in Room 1210 Angell Hall.s The final date for application is Ap- ril 20, 1942, but early application is advisable. Pre-medical students should please note that application for admission to the Medical School is not application for admission to the Combined Curriculum. A separate application should be made out for' the consideration of the Committee' on Combined Curricula. Edward lt. 1Kraus Mechanical, Industrial and Electri- cal Engineering Seniors: Mr. R. K. Williams, District Manager, of the Elliott Company, Detroit, Michigan, will interview Seniors in the above groups, Wednesday, March 18, in Room 218 West Engineering Bldg. Interview schedule may be signed on the bulletin board of the Mechan- ical Engineering Department, at Room 221 West Engineering Bldg. Seniors in, Mechanical, Metallurgi- cal, Chemical, Electrical, and Indus- trial Engineering: Mr. W. S. Idler of Aluminum Company of America, will interview Seniors in the above groups in Room 218 West Engineering Build- ing, Thursday, Mar. 19. He is not interested in interviewing men who have taken advanced mili- tary work. Interview schedule may be signed on the Mechanical Engineering bul- n . * . . letin board, outside of Room 221 W. s Engr. Bldg. Questionnaire and book- t lets are also posted. Academic Notices n Bacteriological seminar will meet o in Room 1564 East Medical Build- ing tonight at 8:00. The subject will be "Dysentery." All interested are I cordially invited. n The Botanical Seminar will meet Wednesday, March 18, at 4:30 p.m. in V room 1139 Natural Science Building. 2 Mr. Thomas J. Cobbe will demon- strate "Airbrush Technic for Botani- cal Illustration." All interested are invited. n Seminar in Physical Chemistry will 2 meet on Wednesday, March 18, in t Room 410 Chemistry Building at 4:15 p.m. Dr. Kasimir Fajans will speakc on "Structure of Benzene.. E Graduate Students in Speech: The a Graduate Study Club will meet at 4:00 p.m. on Wednesday in the East Conference Room of the Rackhame Building.1 1 Physical Education for Women: r Registration for the outdoor season t will be held in Barbour Gymnasium t on: Friday, March 20, 8:00 to 12:00 T and 1:00 to 5:00. Saturday, March @ 21, 8:00 to 12:00. School of Education Students, other than freshmen: Courses drop ped after Saturday, March 21, will be recorded with the grade of E, ex- cept under extraordinary circum- stances. No course is considered offi- cially dropped unless it has been re-I ported in the office of the Registrar,1 Room 4, University Hall. Concerts Carillon Programs. The bell cham- ber of the Burton Memorial Tower1 will be open to visitors interested in, observing the playing of the carillon ' from 12 noon to 12:15 p.m. daily through Friday of this week, at which time Professor Percival Price, University Carillonneur, will present an informal program. Exhibitions Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: City planning in and about Detroit, showing street and medium and low cost housing pro- jects, population and industrial studies, proposed recreation areas. Assembled by the Detroit Institute of Arts. Third floor exhibition room, Architecture Building. Open daily 9 to 5, through March 18. The pub- lic is invited, Lectures Lecture, College of Architecture and Design: Eric Mendelsohn, archi- tect and writer, will give an illustrat- ed lecture on "Architecture Today" in the Rackham Amphitheatre on Wednesday, March 18, at 4:15. The public is invited. French Lecture: Professor Edward B. Ham, of the Department of Ro- mance Languages, will give the sev- enth of the French Lectures spon- sored by the Cercle Francais on Wed- nesday, March 18, at 4:15 p.m. in Room D, Alumni Memorial Hall. The title of his lecture is "Curiositls Med- ievales." The lecture is open to the general public. Events Today The Political Science Journal Cub ill meet at 8:00 tonight in the East onference Room of the Rackham uilding. Dr. Jan Hostie will speak n "Winning the Peace and the Uni- eersiti-s." German Club will meet tonight at :00 in the Michigan Union. Mr. J. V. Eaton will give a talk in English n "Intelligence Work in the Last Var." All interested are invited. Sigma Rho Tau will meet at 7:30 onight in the Union. Hall of fame peech practice will be featured, all nembers being expectedkto attend uepared to give a short talk of this ype. La Sociedad Ilispanica will present La Independencia," a comedy in our acts, tonight at 8:30 at the lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. All seats -eserved. Phone 6300. The regular Tuesday evening pro- ram of recorded music in the Men's ounge of the Rackham Building at :00 tonight will be as follows: Ros- ini: Semiramide Overture, London Philharmonic; Purcell: Four Part. antasia and Fantasia on One Note, String Quartet; Mozart: Symphony in D Major ("Prague"), Chicago Symphony; Handel: Faithful Shep- rd Suite, London Philharmonic. The League House Council will neet today in the League. Nomina- ions for officers will be in order. Orientation Advisors: All men stu- ents interested in serving as ori- ntation advisers next fall report to room 304 of the Union between 3:00 ind 5:00 p.m, today. Episcopal Students: Tea will be erved for Episcopal students and heir friends at Harris Hall this afternoon, 4:00 to 5:30. Christian Science Organization will meet tonight at 8:15 in the chapel f the Michigan League. Michigan Dames Swimming Group will meet at the Michigan Union to- ight at 8:15 p.m. The Bibliophiles Section of the Women's Faculty Club will meet at :30 p.m. today at the League. Coning Events The English Journal Club will meet at 7:45 Tuesday evening, March 24, in the East Conference Room of he Rackham Building. Mr. E. A. Schroeder and Mr. Donald Pearce will discuss aspects of the poetry of Swinburne. Graduate students in English and other interested persons ae welcome. The Society of Automotive Engin- eers will meet on Thursday, March 19, at 7:45 p.m. in the Michigan Union. Mr. Joseph Geschelin, Tech- nical Editor of the Chilton Publica- tions, will present an illustrated lec- ture on "The Future of the Auto- nobile and War Production." All en- ineers are invited. Members are urged to attend as several important announcements will be made. Reser- vations for the dinner preceding the meeting may be made by contact- ing Bob Sforzini at 2-3738. The Institute of Aeronautical Sci- ences will meet in Room 1042 E. Eng. Bldg. at 7:45 Wednesday evening. A paper will be given by Charles Ran- son on "Jet Propelled Autogyros." The public is invited. American Institute of Electrical Engineers will meet on Thursday, March 19, at 8:00 p.m. in the Union. Major Renner of the Military Science Department will speak on, "Ord- nance in the Army." Refreshments. German Roundtable, International Center will meet on Wednesday, March 18, at 9:00 p.m. in Room 23, The leader will be Peter Blumenthal, with the subject "Ich lernte fliegen in- Ann Arbor." Students interested in conversational German are invited. Program of Recorded Music at the International Center on Wednesday, March 18, at 7:30 p.m. The program this week is: Brahms: Hungarian Dances No. 5 and No. 6. Brahms: Songs, including "Alto Rhapsody" sung by Marian Anderson. Brahms: Symphony No. 1. Polonia Society will meet Wednes- day eveningat 7:30 in the recreation room of the International Center. Plans for folk dancing lessons will be revealed. Quarterdeck: There will be an im- portant meeting of all members on Wednesday, March 18, at 7:30 p.m. in room 336 West Engineering building. Episcopal Students: There will be a celebration of the Holy Communion at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday morning in Bishop Williams Chapel, Harris Hall. Breakfast will be served after the service. Michigan Dames Drama Group will meet at Mrs. Roy Cowden's resi- dence, 1016 Olivia, Ave., at 8:00 p.m. on Wednesday March 1R