AGE R 1 THEMIIGNfIL FRIDAY, NOV. 6, 194 I ~~ I - - a .. ,,. 1 «; a A Fifty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority pf 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 AND WE'LL SEE HIM IN THE SCRAP PILE rti '.. T'" .. _. 1' r { Lf . .. , 1 y~rr/ d REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publisbers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO * BOSTON . Los ANGELES . SAN FRANCISCO Editorial Staff Homer Swander Morton Mintz . Will Sapp George W. Sallad . Charles Thatcher Bernard Hendel Barbara deFries Myron Dann. . . . Managing Editor . . . Editorial Director . . . . . City Editor . . . . Associate Editor . . . . Associate Editor S . . . Sports Editor . . .A s W omen's Editor * . Associate Sports Editor Edward J. Perlbe Fred M. Ginsber Mary Lou Curra Jane Lindberg James Daniels . Business Stafff erg . . . Business Manager g . . Associate Business Manager n . . Women's Business Manager . . Women's Advertising Manager . . Publications Sales Analyst Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT MANTHOl Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff._ and represent the views of the writers only. ..- 7 ~. LIERRY' GO* ROUNDn PEARSON WASHINGTON-Naval officers who have returned from the Pacific summarize the Japs' naval tactics as similar to those Hitler used on the land when he first went into the Low Countries. It's a combination of air and surface sneak attacks. Furthermore, the Japs have de- veloped small air bases all over the Pacific, so that almost every little island is a stationary airplane car- rier. Meanwhile, the American Navy has been operating on the old-fashioned rules of warfare, the equivalent of the French tactics when they still put their faith in the Maginot Line. Naval officers back from the Solo- mons point out that if we could once get the Japs out in the old-fashioned line of battle, with all our battle- ships, cruisers, carriers and destroy- ers operating as a unit, the enemy would be licked. However, the Japs don't fight in this antiquated Battle of Jutland style. The last thing they want is to face our fleet in full formation. Their tactics are to iso- late small groups of American ves- sels, pop them off before help can come, thus gradually whittle down the U.S. fleet. First Solomons Defeat For instance, when the Japs dodged into the Solomons on the night of Aug. 9 they had only two cruisers and four destroyers. This was such an insignificant force compared with the American armada which lay guarding our transports that the U.S. commander never dreamed they would have the nerve to attack. Yet they did, and sank about three times their weight. They did it by perfectly timed, perfectly executed strategy. Their airplane flares lit up Tulagi Harbor at exactly the right minute. Their ships closed in on ours and opened firing at exactly the right minute. It was their clockwork precision, plus nerve, plus our stu- pidity, which caused our defeat. In contrast, American senior off.i- cers are accustomed to operating with big fleets and according to long es- tablished rules of warfare. Peacetime naval maneuvers were largely a mat- ter of routine. Evereyone knew pretty well what the "enemy" fleet was go- ing to do; and if the "enemy" com- mander made an unexpected move, frequently he was criticized among his fellow officers. Merry-Go-Round The President, always an optimist,{ will make one more attempt to bring the AFL and CIO together by invit- ing Bill Green and Phil Murray to the White House. Labor leaders say pri- vately, however, that there will be no agreement. Both sides will patch up a jurisdictional truce and agree to re- frain from membership raids for the duration, but that is all. (Copyright, 1942, United Features Synd.) Scrapping Mad . . To the Editor: W EDNESDAY in The Daily ap- peared a letter deploring the very evident waste and carelessness con- nected with the recent scrap drive. Mr. "I.Q." pleaded for "a little judg- ment before the enthusiasm of the scrap collectors runs completely amok." He advocated turning a cop- per kettle over to a museum, utiliz- ing discarded beds, and perhaps let- ting some deserving music student use the old piano now gracing the junk heap. Personally, and I think I speak for the majority, I would rather see a copper kettle on the way to the munitions factory than gracing the shelves of some museum. And then, fro'm what I have seen of the discarded beds contributed to the drive, I think the floor would be far more comfortable. As for the piano, if someone had been using it, perhaps there might be some cause for complaint. But I can hardly see why, when it was not in use, probably entirely forgotten, it should suddenly be hailed as a crime to destroy it. Why didn't someone use it? Why didn't some- one donate it to a music student? Why, when it starts on its way to Berlin, should it suddenly be called wasteful to scrap such an instru- ment? After Mr. I. Q. criticized scrapping such articles, he went on to say that "in the last extremity, such articles and many more should be sacrificed." ALL WEEK-END I rode with boys collectig scrap as far away as twenty miles from Ann Arbor. Farms were canvassed within a 20-mile ra- dius of Ann Arbor. Mr. I. Q. talks of collecting 150 pounds of scrap. I wonder if he has looked at the piles of old metal covering the lawns of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, of Theta Delta Chi fraternity. These two fraternities, together with Thet Xi, collected well over 40 tons o scrap. And that means 80,000 pound of metal! Mr. I. Q. suggests that w would do better to sell the scrap, an then use the money to purchase mor scrap. Instead of selling the scra we donate it to the school, the mone from the scrap going to the Bomber Scholarship Fund. We can get the scrap, and we can get it FREE! We have manpower, and the will to go out and collect anything that moves. I have seen two-ton trucks lifted bodily onto salvaging trucks. I have seen whole automobiles added to the scrap pile. I have seen fellows working late into the night collecting scrap from factories surrounding. Ann Arbor. I have seen a score of boys smashing tin cans in dumps be- hind the University Hospital. To climax his article, Mr. I. Q. de clares that a more "Intelligent pro cedure" would be to buy second-han cars and in turn use the cars fo collecting more scrap, rather tha junking the cars. I defy Mr. IQ.t' drive these cars. I defy anyone t drive these cars. Nothing on th face of this earth would make thos automobiles run again. They weren second-hand cars. They were junk! And then, Mr. I. Q. states that before the fall term got underway Ann Arbor had its own scrap drive. This is quite true, but it is amaz- ing what was missed by the stu- dents and townspeople! Whole automobiles lay in vacant lots, waiting to be scrapped. Huge piles of old tin cans lay in fields, dumps, waiting to be smashed into flat sheets, ready for the blast furn- aces. I wonder where Mr. I. Q.was when that drive was going on. He certainly must have taken a lot for granted. There still remains plenty of scrap in Ann Arbor, scrap waiting for the chance at Hitler. Allen A. Raymond, Jr. oete g 2_ 4&Aor TRAGIC LOSS: Senator Norris' Defeat Shows Violated Trust HEY beat a courageous old man to his knees in Tuesday's election, beat him, stepped on him -and broke him. And even in heart-breaking defeat Senator Norris proved himself a magnificent man, a quality often-times hidden when politicians be- come veteran statesmen. Stunned by the defeat, Senator Norris still refused to turn away from his long policy of facing an issue clearly and honestly. There was no bitterness as he was pre- paring to leave Washington. There were only tears in his eyes and a sadness in his voice. "Righteousness has been crucified," was all he had to say, "and the people I love have con- demned the things I held most sacred." It was as simple as that with the straight- thinking Senator. "Righteousness has been crucified." Nothing the people of Nebraska can do will change the truth of this statement. Read into it what you like and it will still be tragically clear that the peoile of Nebraska have violated the trust of a man who has de- voted his whole life to championing their cause-the cause of democracy as he thought it should be. WHAT does it take to convince the people of Nebraska that they have made a tragic mis- take? Does it do any good to point at Norris' rec- ord of 40 years of service and tell them that no man could have done more to correct the evils of government in our country? That no man has loked at every piece of legislation with the long- range vision necessary to carry democracy for- ward, to make democracy progressively decent, than Senator Norris? Does it do any good to tell them that Norris is one of the too-few politicians who places honesty above party politics? But all this was said before the election and now the election is over. The people of Nebras- ka will never be able to un-vote their answer. "I have done my best to repudiate wrong and evil in government affairs," Norris told reporters as he was sadly preparing to go back home for the first time in almost a life-span.."But I have to admit I have utterly failed." N0, YOU HAVE NOT failed, Senator Norris. Be- cause your record stands. Your philosophy of government has not been wrong. What you have done in the Senate is there in the books. You said, "Righteousness has been cruci- fied." These are prophetic words. Whatever path our nation takes in the future will be judged by your words. You have left the Sen- ate. But in your place you have left a terrible indictment. We shall remember-after the war -and we shall regret. - Robert Mantho A MANDATE: Republicans' Victories Repudiate War Errors YESTERDAY'S Pointed Pen column lambasting the voting public seems to some of us acutely off key and out of tune with the times. We incline toward the more realistic Detroit Free Press comment on the election: "Michigan has spoken and there is no longer time nor occa- sion for recriminations." Many of us will agree that all the best men were not re-elected, but assailing the voter as "party-minded" seems to us a specious com- I'd Rather Be Right_ - By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK- For four years, most Congres- sional leaders of the Democratic Party have been working overtime to make their party indis- tinguishable from the Republican. The results showed up on Tuesday. When there is little to choose, Americans will take their conservatism from the GOP. The great mass of committee chairmen in both Houses have been nuzzling the Republicans, and working closely with the Republicans, and, in effect, endorsing Republican policy for the last two sessions. So it is a little wrong to say that in a number of Congressional and other elections the people have turned away from the Democratic Party. Actually they have followed it, toward the Re- publican Party. \ Pretty, but Impractical The Democrats in the bi-partisan anti-Roose- velt bloc have taken the most complicated politi- cal position ever seen or heard of in this country. It is the desire of the Byrds and Tydingses to follow the policy of the other party and yet have the people vote against the other party in elec- tions. The leading Congressional Democrats want to go Republican, but have the country stay Dem- ocratis. That is cuteas a bug's ear, but it just can't work. It could be said that some of the Southern Democrats, of the anti-Roosevelt, or Cox & Smith variety, have played a rather mean trick on their Northern and other Democratic colleagues. Theirs seats are safe. Protected partly by poor election laws, they can afford to go ideologically Republican. They will stay in office, whether the Democratic Party loses its glamour or not. The Northern, mid-West and Western Democrats en- joy no such privileges. They still need something to sell. When the party becomes an anti-Roose- velt Party, and its glamour goes, and the great days of the New Deal end, these other Democrats pay the price. They'll Buy the Old Goods at the Old Stand It is not that the people consciously decide: There's not much difference between the parties any more, and so we might as well vote Republi- can. It is, rather, that the people lose interest in the election. They either don't vote (almost 20,000,000 fewer voted in this election than last) or else they do vote, but don't talk about it eagerly with friends, in barroom or living room. Boredom is a way of voting, too. Sometimes the people render a verdict merely by sitting on their hands, and yawning. Indifference to lame and pedestrian appeals is also part of democratic pro- cess. I think this election dashes any hope among Democrats that they can catch a conservative swing by the tail, by astutely going conservative ahead of it. That merely damps whatever fire there may be in an election. The maximum conservative Demo- cratic strength that can be elected has probably already been elected. If conservatism grows, it will grow with the other party, as voters who once left the Republican Party precisely because the Democrats were different either come back home or stay home. Black and White Becomes Gray and Gray I'd Rather Be President By TORQUEMADA I AM SO SORE at being misunderstood I could tear down Angell Hall. When I try to be funny three-quarters of my readers laugh. When I try to be sincere, three-quarters weep with me. In the meantime the vociferous minority is organizing lynch campaigns, and the tar boils high. I write a column about pipe courses, in which I explain carefully that every course I list is a valid contribution to scholarship in one form or another. And the next day I walk down campus, and people come up to me and tell me how interesting these courses are, and I should never say they are worthless, and that they have to have them for people specializing in the field. Which is what I said. OR PROFESSOR HUSSEY of the Geology de- partment pulls a very beautiful gag on me, which gag I think is very funny. So I write a column about Prof. Hussey's funniness, how good it is, and point up Hussey as being a good guy - because I think people with real senses of humor are good guys. And people come up to me and say, "You shouldn't have written that about Doc Hussey; he's really a good guy; besides he's an eminent geologist." Which is what I said. Now I can't understand how any one compara- tively coherent person can be so completely mis- understood. I guess nobody loves me. In the event that this is because nobody reads my col- umn carefully, I would advise a careful reading: it will well repay the effort. In the event that I am unintelligible, please tear off the tops of three Republicans, and mail me a letter telling me so. In the meantime I'd rather be president. (This column is not to be construed as an attack upon the university.) IDLE IRON: Majestic Theatre Is Big Cache Of Scrap THAT STORY in yesterday's Daily about the tons of metal fixtures which now serve only phantom audiences in the old Majestic Theatre was written because we think those tons should be added to the rapidly growing war scrap piles already donated and collectedby patriotic Ann Arbor citizens. The building, which has been condemned as a hazard by the State Fire Marshal, has been idle since its door closed last March. The But- terfield circuit, which holds the lease, has been refused permission by city authorities to re- model it because it does not conform to Ann Arbor building codes. ATTORNEY FRANK DEVINE, who represents the owners in Ann Arbor, said yesterday that he had no information about plans for future use or disposition of the theatre. We urge that a decision as to its fate be made immediately by the owners, the Butterfield circuit, and city au- thorities. If the house is no longer to serve as a theatre, there is no reason why its tons of poten- tial scrap should not be donated to the war effort as an effective patriotic gesture on the part of its owners. n-Dick Collins DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETI s The Pointed lip ?),)) JIL> Pen will interview seniors graduating in January and May, 1943, on Wedneq- day, November 11, in Room 3205 East Engineering Building. Interested men will please sign the interview schedule posted on the Aeronautical Engineer- ing Bulletin Board. Application forms may be obtained in Room B-47 East Engineering Building. Seniors in Aeronautical, Mechanical and Industrial and Electrical Engi- neering: A representative of The Glenn L. Martin-Nebraska Company, located at Omaha, Nebraska, will in- terview seniors graduating in January and May, 1943, on Thursday and Fri- day, November 12 and 13, in Room 3205 East Engineering Building. In- terested men will please sign the in- terview schedule posted on the Aero- nautical Engineering Bulletin Board near Room B-47 East Engineering Building. Approved Organizations: The fol- lowing organizations have been re- approved for the Fall and Spring Terms of tipe year 1942-43. All other groups which have not submitted the names o their officers to the Office of the Dean of Students will be ccn- sidered unapproved: Abe Lincoln Co- operative House, Alpha Kappa Delta, Am. Society of Mechanical Engineers, Assembly, Athena, Avukah, Cercle Francais, Christian Science Organi- zation, Delta Omega, Disciples Guild, Engineering Council, Episcopal Stu- dent Guild, Gamma Delta, Graduate Student Council, Hillel Foundation' Inter-Guild Federation, Inftr-Racial Association, Iota Alpha, Karl Marx Society, La Sociedad Hispanica, Lu- theran Student Association, Men's Glee Club, Michigan Union, Phi Delta Kappa, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Eta Sigma, Phi Kappa Phi, Phi Lambda Upsilon, Phi Sigma, Phi Tau Alpha, Philip- pine-Michigan Club, Pi Lambda The- ta, Pi Tau Pi Sigma, Polonia Society, Post-War Council, Rochdale Coopera- tive House, Scabbard and Blade, Scalp and Blade, Senior Society, Sigma Alpha Iota, Sigma Eta Chi, Sigma Rho Tau, Sigma Xi, Slavic Club, Soc. of Am. Military Engineers, Soc. of Women Engineers, Student War Board, Theta Sigma Phi, Triangles, Zeta Phi Eta. Lectures University Lecture: Dr. L. T. Hal- lett, Eastman Kodak Company, will speak on the subject, "Industrial Ap- plications of Micro-analysis" (illus- trated with slides and colored mov- ies), under the auspices of the De- partment of Chemistry on Wednes- day, Nov. 11, at 4:15 p.m. in Room 151, Chemistry Building. The public is invited. Marriage Relations Lecture: The enlisted and attending the Univer sity. Program will start as soon as vacancy in quota is filled. Furthe details may be had in room B-47 E Engineering, or call 4121, Ext. 2113. School of Education Students, oth er than freshmen: Courses droppe after Saturday, November 7, will b recorded with the grade of E excep under extraordinary circumstances! No course is considered officially dropped unless it has been relorte' in the office of the Registrar, Room 4, University Hall. Concerts Faculty Concert: Gilbert Ross, vio linist, and Mabel Ross Rhead, pianist, members of the faculty of the School of Music, will present the first of a series of three recitals at 8:90 Monday evening, November 9, in Lydia Men delssohn Theatre. Other programs in the group will be given on the eve nings of November 16 and 23. Th public is cordially invited. Exhibitions Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: Two sequences of colored multiple wood block prints by Harry Bartoia, Cranbrook Academy of art; glass cases, ground floor corridor Architecture Building. Open daily, 9 to 5 except Sunday through Nov. 14 The pub';e is invited. Events Today All League House Presidents wil meet today at 5:00 p. m. in the League. Attendance required. Mortar Board will meet today a 5:00 p. m. in the Council Room of th' League. Women's Glee Club rehearsal wij be held in Morris Hall at 4:00. p. m today. Attendance compulsory. Presbyterian Student Guild: Ope house tonight at 9 o'clock. Episcopal Students: Tea will b served for Episcopal students an their friends this afternoon by th Canterbury Club, 4:00 to 5:30, i Harris Hall. Presbyterian, Students : There w'~ be an informal tea for Presbyteria women students, 3:30-5:30 p.m. toda in the church parlors. Coming Events International Center: Because the concert by the Cleveland Syn phony Orchestra on Sunday evening the usual Sunday program will b omitted. The "Snack Hour" at 6.:3 p. m. and the sing at 7:30 p. m. wi be held 'as usual, and the Center wi FROM Clifford Prevost's election story in -yesterday's Detroit Free Press: "We approached an old-line Demo- crat today to ask what the people were so mad about. Picking up two newspapers, he read headlines- 'Henderson's ire aroused by traffic,' 'Wick- ard demands control over all food.' "'Those head- lines tell the story,' was the } reply. 'Who in hell ever elect- ed Henderson to anything? Who ever elected Wickard as the Food Czar? Don't you realize that the people of this country don't give a damn about czars or the edicts of two-by-four economists ,theorists and, well, just jobholders who figured out the fu- ture of the country. That's What the home folks said yesterday. They want to get back to an orderly form of government, and they will.'" About that editorial on the Pen in a nearby column: "Many of us will agree that all the best men were not re-elected . ." That's true, Paul, that's true. *% *