FUUI THE MICHIGAN DAILY $ UNDAY, OCT. 25, 1942 Fifty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the regular University year, and every morning except Mon- day and Tuesday during the 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 otherwise 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 carrier $4.25, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTIING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publisbers Representative 420 MADISON AvE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CMICAGO - BOSTON - LOS ANGELtS . SAN FRANCISCO Editorial Staff WANTED: A GUIDE M4ERRY= GOa By DREW P EA R S ON DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN If .., r:< .. : .- .- >.. 4 "; i . ' , ;. ;yr I ,; Homer Swander Morton Mintz . Will Sapp George W. Salladd Charles Thatcher Bernard Hendel Barbara deFries Myron Dann . Managing Editor Editorial Director . . .City Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor . . . . Sports Editor Women's. Editor . . Associate Sports Editor (Continued from Page 2) :.; ;.; ; ,.. ° . , ,' ;r"," WASHINGTON-It has just leaked out that Controller General Lindsay Warren has been doing some tough talking to theCArmy, the Navy and the Maritime Commission about the way they have been letting private contractors raid the Treasury at the expense of the taxpayer. Warren has taken off his gloves and gone to bat in no uncertain terms, warning that the war agencies scarcely seemed to know the mean- ing of the dollar, and that war debts some day must be met. The cost-plus contract, Warren has told war exe- cutives, will prove a greater scandal in this war than the last, if they are not careful. Among other things, Controller General Warren has discovered that the contractor building a U.S. base in Iceland charged up to the tax- payer more than $1,000 for sending Christmas telegrams back to mem- bers of workmen's families. Furthermore, the War Department not only condoned this expenditure, but wrote a letter to the General Accounting Office stating that these telegrams were necessary to winning the war. Lindsay Warren's economy nose also has ferreted out a case where the War Department signed a con- tract for a certain project to be com- pleted in 40 days-at a cost of $40,000; and if the contractor finished it in less than 40 days, he was to get a bonus of $100 for each day saved. Whereupon the contractor proceed- ed to finish the job in one day. So he was paid not only his full fee of $40,000, but also a bonus for 39 days, or $3,900. Business Staff Edward J. Perlberg Fred M. Ginsberg Mary Lou Curran Jane Lindberg . James Daniels . Business Manager Associate Business Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Publications Sales Analyst Telephone 23-24-1 I 111111-ko NIGHT EDITOR: LEON GORDENKER ..."P h Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. THEY CARRY ON: Denmark Unhesitatingly Resists Nazi Ideology IW HILE THE NAZIS have been suf- fering increasing set-backs in the physical strife in Russia, the makings of a con- plete psychological defeat much closer home have developed in dishonored Denmark. When that land, half the size of Maine and without its mountains, populated by four mil- lion people who accepted their freedom as axio- matic, was engulfed, the people could not light the bright, fast burning torch of martyrdom before the blanket of occupation had settled. Trapped, the government stuck, trying to make the best of the worst that could be any nation's lot. And because the Germans hoped the 'Danes could be induced to fall in line with the Nazi creed, to become a liv- ing example of national satisfaction under the new order, they were left with a measure of sovereignty, limited by the presence of numerous "advisers" and complete Nazi con- trol of press, radio, transportation and inter- national economy. Then the Nazis began to milk the country of its wealth. But they were continually opposed by a govern- ment that fought with scant weapons to preserve some food, some heat and some individuality for its people. And the occupants were unceasingly chilled by people whose only tactic against, the invaders was the frost of complete nonrecogni- tion. THE NAZIS have paupered Denmark. Thou- sands of Danes will freeze and starve this win- ter. But Denmark has not collaborated. Once, when the single Danish traitor in the government forced acceptance of the Anti-commintern Pact by signing it secretly without the knowledge of the other members, the action was followed by popular riots that lasted for days. Huge crowds surged through the streets of Copenhagen, as- serting that they would take the fate of Nor- way before being subjected to such a step again. And the Danish king, a 72-year old sov- ereign, still the complete symbol of the be- liefs of his democratic people, has taken his unyielding stand against the Germans. In answer to German pressure for Danish op- pression of the tiny Jewish minority, the King entered a synogogue in Copenhagen on the occasion of a recent Jewish holi- day, dressed in full uniform, and remained throughout the service. On his birthday he answered a profusely congratulatory letter from Adolf Hitler with the simple message, "Thank you, Christian Rex." The term "Rex" is used by the King only when ad- dressing marked inferiors. Recently, increasing pressure has been put on the Danes, demanding that they give evidences of satisfaction with their German captivity. The demands have been answered with stolid refusal. The Danish stand is positive proof, as strong though less glamorous than bloody battles, that the ideology of the Nazis will never be accepted except by brute force, that no free people can be seduced by Nazi dogma, that the fight against fascism will never cease. -Henry Petersen Help Lichk The Poll Tax HIS CONGRESS, bad as it is, has -a chance to write a famous pge in history before it expires in January. All it has to do is complete the passage of the anti- poll tax bill, which will write into law the major extension of our democracy since adoption of the woman's suffrage amendment. diiAXEto 9iid By TORQUEMADA THIS WEEK, I had a class in the journalism department. The first meeting of the class last week was devoted to a discussion of varying lines of emphasis extant in the field of journal- ism. This week's class discussed the problem of the training of a journalist. The discussion revolved around a carefully preserved clipping from a column by Malcolm Bingay which at- tacked journalism schools as turning out pathetic products. The instructor then presented various other opinions of other men which stated that journalism was a valuable field only if the en- gagee had graduated from a journalism school. Eventually the whole class was bowed into sub- mission by the tremendous quantity of the evi- dence he presented, and Mr. Bing y,remote in Detroit, was probably heartsick from the drub- bing. I don't propose to take sides on the question. But I do think that the whole session was ridiculous, and of a nature which I have seen too often while in the University. SOMANY COURSES begin and end with apol- ogies of one sort or another. This journalism lecture has been the most blatant, but it's hap- pened in English courses I've taken, in Pol. Sci. courses, in Economics, in all the social science courses I've taken. This summer it was a course in the English department, in which the lecturer spent the first two weeks in giving a history of the novel. About the main conception he used in the history of the novel was the correlation between the novel and science. The novelist is good only to the extent that he approaches the objectivity of the empirical sciences; that was the implicit essence of the lectures. Two years ago I took Political Theory and be- ginning Economics at the same time. The first chapter in each book was identical. It proved that political science and economics, though in several minor respects - such as absence of con- trol factors - short of being sciences, were none- theless justifi6d because they were almost like sciences. I could see the writers down on their knees to. a cold and bitter student. Student: Hell, I'm not going to take this stuff. Author: But honest, it's almost a science. DON'T QUITE UNDERSTAND why it is that teachers must go outside of their courses to find justification. I don't see why they must spend time in justifying themselves to students who wouldn't take the course unless it had some value. It is important that a student realize just how a particular study is integrated with other studies and with life, but not through an apology. The several cases presented are not wholly analogous. The journalism lecture was an all-out attempt to justify any teaching of journalism. If its teachers believe sufficiently to devote their lives to it; then surely they need not apologize for it. No amount of evidence they can present will be more convincing of journalism's value than a good course. As for the others, I think that it is perhaps a rather good time for us to take mental stock and see just how, far we are willing to go in accepting the humanities as meaning something in themselves. A novel I think has a value which goes slightly beyond science in exerting a mean- ingful influence on our lives. A course in the social studies need not be prefaced with an apology because it is not a course dealing with the self-styled immutables of a physics depart- ment. .f I'd Rather Be Right_ - - y SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK-I have my own theory as to why the President made his round-the-country trip. I think he wanted to see the factories and the camps. It is true this is an awfully simple sort of theory, but I have some more evidence. You will remember that the President said in his radio speech that many military decisions have been made, including one about new of- fensives. (Don't lose that one out of the brief- case, fellows; that's the hot one.) If you ap- proach events with absolute simplicity, which is sometimes a good thing to do, you might draw the clear inference from the President's speech that some big military decisions have been made. But, then, why would the President want to make a swing around the factories and camps during a period in which major military decisions were being made? A Startling Point Well, if you analyze the situation, you are struck by the point that the President is the Commander-in-Chief of the Army and the Navy. As such he is the executive. It is a natural and simple thing for an executive to want to see his resources of men and machines at first hand before making a decision as to how to use them. This leads us to the startling deduction that the President, on his recent trip, was functioning as the Commander-in-Chief, and, as such, was do- ing a job of work in connection with the war. Now, then, something interesting has hap- pened this last week. The Army has at last said how many men it wants to see under arms next year, 7,500,000. This is the first time in many months that anything like a clear figure has been put on it. Up to now we have been in the period of "unlimited expansion," a period in which we have tried to get all the soldiers, all the sailors, all the planes, all the tanks, all the ships, that we could get, all at once. Every offi- cial has asked for everything, and has ordered it. It has been a period of expansion outward in all directions, simultaneously, as the vanes of a fan expand outward from the handle. Of Course, He Did Say It The analyst is struck by the curious circum- stance that, two days after the President says big decisions have been made, the Army suddenly knows how many men it needs. That would seem to point to the conclusion that the Army knows, at last, just what it intends to do. That takes us right back to the deduction that some big decisions have been made. That, of course, is what the President said, but it is al- ways more fun, in a democracy, to get to the same place some other way. It is an interesting thing, too, that Mr. Willkie was sent abroad to gather information at the same time that the President was planning his own trip to gather information. And Admiral Standley, our Ambassador in Moscow, has been ordered home to report. Now, of course, I have heard many theories as to why Mr. Willkie was dispatched on his trip, including various political stories. But if you approach it in a kind of naive way, and assume that Mr. Willkie traveled abroad to get information, at the same time the President was traveling at home to get infor- mation, it begins to seem clear that the Presi- dent was after a lot of information, in a hurry. And information is something that is used a lot in making decisions. Couldn't Wait Three Weeks? U.S. M1oney In Germany Though not publicly annbunced, the Treasury Department is about to make a survey of investments held by U.S. corporations in Germany and the occupied countries of Europe. (Copyright, 1942, United Features Synd.) Dowinie Says THE WORK of religious training during the epoch we are now en- tering is certain to be conducted along improved lines. Instead of church work in the traditional sense only, we will move toward a religious as social therapy also. The minister, rising above the effort to attain com- plete control, will become one of a series of agencies. He will come down to reality at the human level as a means of more certainly at- taining the divine perspective. He will detect the needs of persons, re- fer the first to a health clinic, the second to a psychologist, a third to the social case worker, a fourth to the psychiatrist, etc., while he as the co-ordinator. and therapist will create confidence and preserve values. Then, with a profile or personality picture of each before him, he will be a healer of souls able to set about social and personal salvation. Why? In the first place, because the various disciplines are needed by each of us or at least by many persons ;onsidered normal. Every man is a subject for the psychologist who can aid him toward integration; for the sociologist who has social values to unfold; for the psychiatrist who deals in behavior response; for the physi- cian whose object is health; for the ethics expert who deals with char- acter, for the philosopher who'seeks to discover meaning. All of these ar- eas of our enlightened culture are phases of salvation. In the second place, a variety of healing agencies will be used because the concentrated life with its speed, its high stakes, its pressure groups, its world reach, its triphammer stim- uli, its vast enterprises of power and danger, its complicated social insti- tutions, its impersonal city existence, and its competitive motivation make the thorough ministry of mental hy- giene a necessity. He who would at- tain equanimity, creative freedom and effective leadership must have an adequate personality. YOU ASK, but why associate a min- ister with all this? Chiefly be- cause religion is the interest, the sym- pathy, the love department of man's existence and of society. The minister is both the custodian of a tradition and the symbol of spiritual hope. No other phase of life cares. Religion, where deepened and given the tech- niques of our enlightenment and where expanded to reach not merely the few who join a meeting house but the whole community can bring ideals within striking distance and set the person in that glory for which he was created when God made man in His own image. Edward W. Blakeman, Counselor in Religious Education of major military decisions have been made. But, you might say, how wouid the 12 ai~rl 19-v~a-ls fiaire in that? At School Library. The meeting will R convene at 4:15 p. m. German Table for Faculty Mem- bers will meet Monday at 12:10 p.m. in the Founders' Room Michigano Union. Members of all Departments n are cordially invited. There will be 1 a brief talk on "Suetonius" by Mr. F Henry A. Sanders.p Phillips Scholarships: Freshman students who presented four units of Latin, with or without Greek, for admission to the University, and whor are continuing the study of eitherf language, may compete for the Phil- lips Classical Scholarships. The awards, of $50 each, will be based on the results of a written examina- tion covering the preparatory work in Latin or in both Latin and Greek,1 as described in the bulletin on Schol- arships, which may be obtained in Room 1, University Hall. The exam- ination will be held in Room 2014t Angell Hall on Thursday, Oct. 29, at1 4:00 p.m. Interested students mayf leave their names with O. M. Pearl,r 2026 A.H., or R. A. Pack, 2030 A.H. Seniors in Engineering & Business1 Administration: General Motors Cor- poration representatives will inter-N view seniors on Tuesday and Wednes- day, October 27 and 28.1 Interview blanks to be brought tot the interview are available in each department office. Sign the interview schedule on the Bulletin Board at Room 221 West1 Engineering Bldg. The Eastman Kodak Company is1 coming to the Bureau of Appoint- ments on Tuesday and Wednesday, October 27 and 28 to interview thej following: Mechanical engineers, industrial engineers, chemical engineers, chem- ists, and physicists. Also, both men and women major- ing in business administration, ac- counting, statistics, and mathematics. Call Ext. 371 for appointments. In- terviews will be scheduled at fifteen minute intervals. Bureau of Appointments and Occu- pational Information, 201 Mason Hall Academic Notices Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet on Tuesday, October 27, at 7:30 p.m., in Room 319 , West Medical Building. "Vitamin A-Chemistry, Deposition and Fate" will be dis- cussed. All interested are invited. .Math. 347, Seminar in Applied Mathematics, will meet Monday, Oct. 26, at 4:15 p.m., in 312 West Engin- eering Bldg. Dr. Thorne will con- tinue his talk on "An Appell Subset with Applications to Thin Plate Prob- lems." German Make-up Examinations will be held Saturday, October 31, 10 to 12 a.m. Students who missed Ger- man 1, 2, or 31 exams for the Spring or Summer terms must obtain writ- ten permission of the instructor be- fore October 29, and sign in the of- fice of the German Department, 204 University Hall. Make-up Final Examinations in Physics 26 and 72 will be given on Wednesday, October 28, beginning at 2:00 p.m. in the West Lecture Room, West Physics Building. Hours for School of Music Library: Beginning Monday, October 26, the School of Music Library, 306 B.M.T., will be open during the following hours: Monday through Friday, 1:00- 5:30, 7:00-9:30 p.m. Saturday, 9:00-12:00 a.m. Students who plan to enter one of the following professional schools, Law, Business Administration, or For- estry and Conservation, at the begin- ning of the spring term on the Com- bined Curriculum must file an ap- plication for this Curriculum in the Office of the Dean of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, 1210 Angell Hall, on or before No- vember 2, 1942. After this date appli- cations will be accepted only upon the presentation of a satisfactory excuse for the delay and the payment of a fee of $5.00. Concerts Lynne Palmer, harpist, will appear in the first School of Music faculty concert at 8:30 tonight in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. A former member of the Philadel- phia Orchestra, Mrs. Palmer is now Instructor of Harp at the University of Michigan. She has arranged a program of the works of Bach, Gluck, Pescetti, Forst, Grandjany, Debussy and Salzedo. The public is cordially invited. Choral Union Tickets: A limited number of tickets for the Gladys Swarthout concert, or for the season, are still available at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. Charles A. Sink, President The Graduate Outing Club will meet at the northwest corner of the Rackham Building today at 2:30 p. m. for a hike. All faculty and graduate students are welcome. Avukah, the American Student Zi- onist Federation on campus, an- nounces as its guest lecturer at Hil- lel Foundation this evening at 8:30, Professor Fuller of the Sociology De- partment, who willspeak on "Fascism and Anti-Semitism." The Robert Owen Cooperative is holding "Open House" at its new home at 604 E. Madison, 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. Faculty members and other friends of the group are invited. Coming Events American Society of Mechanical Engineers: Mr. E. J. Abbott of the Physicist Engineering Research Co., will give an illustrated talk and dem- onstration on "The Profilometer in the War," at the Michigan Union on Wednesday, October 28, at 7:30 p.m. Bring membership blanks to the meeting. Phi Sigma presents Dr. Dow V. Baxter of the School of Forestry and Conservation in a lecture on "Alas- kan Travel" (illus.) in the Rackham Amphitheatre, on Wednesday, Octo- ber 28, at 8:00 p.m. The public is cordially invited. Pi Lambda Theta will meet at the Michigan League at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, October 26. The Post-War Council will meet Monday night at 7:30 in the Union. League Dance Class Committee will meet at 4:30 p.m. on Monday, Octo- ber 26, in the Undergraduate Office of the League. If you cannot attend, call Audrey Johnson at 2-4561. Churches Zion Lutheran Church services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. Rev. Stellhorn will speak on "Christian Patience." Trinity Lutheran Church will hold services at 10:30 a.m. Sunday with Rev. H. O. Yoder speaking on "Things Which Cannot Be Shaken." The Lutheran Student Association will hold its fellowship meeting at 5:30 p.m. First Methodist Church and Wesley Foundation: Student Class at 9:30 a.m. with Mildred Sweet, leader. Morning Worship service at 10:40 a.m. Dr. Charles W. Brashares will preach on "New Light on Old Real- ities-Worship." Wesleyan Guild will meet at 6:00 p.m. Subject: "How I Am Growing." Fellowship hour and supper following the meeting. First Congregational Church: Service of worship-10:45 a.m. Dr. L. A. Parr will preach on the subject: "For Whom The Bell Tolls." At 7:15 p.m. the Congregational Student Fellowship will meet. Lutheran Students: Sunday: Serv- ice in Michigan League, chapel at 11 a. m. Sermon by the Rev. Al- fred Scheips. Meeting of Gamma Delta, Luther- an Student Club, at 5:30 p.m. at St. Paul's Lutheran Church. First Church of Christ, Scientist: Sunday morning service at40:30. Subject: "Probation After Death." Sunday School at 11:45 a.m. Free public Reading Room at 106 E. Washington St., open every day except Sundays and holidays from 11:30 a.m. until 5:00 p.m., Saturdays until 9:00 p.m. First Presbyterian Church: Morning Worship-10:45. "Mean- while"-subject of the sermon by Dr. W. P. Lemon. Presbyterian Student Guild : Sup- per and fellowship hour at 6 o'clock. Unitarian Church: Sunday, 11:00 a.m., Mr. V. K. Bose of Chicago will speak on "Harvests Without Season." 8:00 p.m.-Student meeting-Dis- cussion of the elections and the war. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church: 8:00 a.m.-Holy Communion; 11;00 a.m.-Morning prayer and sermon by the Rev. Richard S. M. Emrich, Ph.D., Professor of Christian Ethics, Epis- copal Theological School, Cambridge, Mass.; 5:00-7:00 p.m.--H-Square Club, Page Hall (business meeting and refreshments); 5:00 p.m.-Can- terbury Club for Episcopal Students, Harris Hall. Speaker: The Rev. Richard S. M. Emrich, Ph.D. Supper to be served. Small charge; 6:45 p.m. -Freshman Discussion Group, Har- ris Hall; 7:30 p.m.-Episcopal Stu- dents' Choral Group, Harris Hall. Memorial Christian Church (Disci- ples): 10:45 a.m. Worship Services, The Rev. Frederick Cowin, minister. 6:45 p.m., Guild Sunday Evening Hour. The Guild Council will lead the group in a discussion on "Thinking Through Christian Cooperation," at the Guild House, 438 Maynard Street. A social hour and tea will follow.