THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, Fifty-Third Year ed and managed by students of the University of gan under the authority of the Board in Control uident Publications. lished every morning except Monday during the r University year, and every morning except Mon- n1d Tuesday during the summer session. Member of the Associated Press Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the >r republication of all news dispatches credited to otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights ublication of all other matters herein also reserved. ered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as d-class mail, matter. script ons during the regular school year by carrier by mail $5.25. iber, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERT13NG By+ National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO -EBOSTON LOS ARGLES SAN FRANCISCO Editorial Staff HE WHO LAUGHS LAST- .a- M..'' .y . .+k~ .r R P l + i. f x . "a '' ^'.en.. . L""l ' ° x to e 6 Daily Edits Attacked . . To the Editor: T HE READERS of Thursday's Daily were made "pretty pain- fully aware" of not one or two, but three editorializing columnists who harped in a rather sour key about Tuesday's election. In short, many er Swander ton Mintz . LSapp . rge W. Sallad6 ries Thatcher hard Hendel bara deFries on Dann. . Managing Editor . Editorial Director * . City Editor . -Associate Editor - - Associate Editor *. Sports Editor . . Women's Editor Associate Sports Editor taff * Business Manager Business St 'ard J. Perlberg 3 M. Ginsberg y Lou Curran e Lindberg . es Daniels . . Associate Business Manager * Women's Business Manager . Women's Advertising Manager . Publications Sales Analyst Telephone 23-24-1: NIGHT EDITOR:, MARK LIPPER Ptorials published in The Michigan Daily e written by members of The Daily staff - d represent the views of the writers only. iDIA AGAIN: White Man's Burden [s Post-War Solution (OR MANY YEARS Americans and Europeans have heard only that India is a nation of ithy illiterates, that India is a dark-age feudal heocracy. We have heard that India is a smold- ring hotbed of racial hatred. We have heard >nly of unspeakable beastiality, and deplorably ricious sex practices, of everything which makes he Indians an object of mixed pity and disgust. We have heard of Gandhi, who has a fairly absolute religious control over some Hindus, and of a fascist landlord Moslem League. We have heard that where the British policy has not been selfish it has been stupid. We know that when you speak of India you speak of 400 million of the most degraded people in the world. To prove otherwise is the task of anyone calling for Indian freedom on the ground that India is one of the crucial points of the Far Eastern campaign, and that the Indians have contributed little or nothing to the war for world democracy. Mr. Fischer says that the Indian contribution as been negligible because the Indians hate the iritish; that when you ask an Indian what he ,7inks of Britain, he says, "I'm hungry." He ays that the situation in terms of the war could Lot possibly be worse in India, and that the nly way in which we could gain any measure f support from them is to grant freedom now. 'here will be no Moslem problem, he says; Brit- in will suffer no diminution of military control. &s Mr. Fischer sees it, we must win the war, and ie Indians will not help unless they are free. SND TO GET' India free the American people are to write their Congressmen, and America to pressure Britain for this policy. The situation must be looked at from two oints of view, war and post-war. In terms of . the war, we agree that the situation could not be' worse. No one has proved that it could be much better. Mr. Fischer used an Indian amily as indication that the Indian people ao follow Gandhi. We think that is largely rue. But they follow Gandhi not as a political eader, and they follow Gandhi now, because hey want bread. f No one has shown that freedom means uch to the Indian people, and no one has own that they share Gandhi's long-felt and acere nationalistic idealism. Until this is 'oven of the India which we have known, we nnot see that freedom will mean much more pport of the British. Add to this the fact that e Congress party comprises some two millions, very potent and vociferous group, but not a rge fraction of the 400 million Indian people. 'HEN, in terms of the war, the best for which we can hope from India is the support of o millions of the Congress party, and what- er other, Indians are in the Gandhi political bit.i We have no idea how many there are; til someone proves otherwise we canot but lieve that there aye few. Assume we have freed India at a small bene- t to the war, and we have won the war. How ien will we be able to adjust India to a demo- ratic world? [ndia will be free, and British forces will no Lger keep order; the India we have known will ak into the most vicious internecine warfare seen. The India we have yet known is not Gable of social progress. The dominance of a graded religion demands a white man's burden. cept that we think that after the war a white n's burden will mean more than the trouble shipping raw materials hom.e. If the United tes can force the British to grant India free- n, then the United States could force the DREW PEARSON'S MERRY-GO-ROUND WASHINGTON- Very slowly, naval airmen are coming into important battle positions in the Navy. But it has been a long pull and they still have a long way to go. Illustrative of the tough row they have had to hoe is the fact that airman A. E. Montgomery, recently promoted to be an admiral; and Capt. Miles R. Browning, now chief o staff of Admiral Halsey's fleet around the Solomons, only a few years ago were slated for retirement. The baftleship boys in the Navy had passed them over, and they were headed for the naval dump-heap. Now, however, they are doing some of the best work in the Pacific. On Feb. 25, 1939, THE WASHINGTON MER- RY-GO-ROUND disclosed that about 50 aviators, most of them World War fliers, but not Annapo- lis graduates, were on the purge list, because they had reached the dangerous age for flying and were unskilled at commanding a battleship. Publicity on this proposed purge, plus a bill intro- duced by Senator Walsh of Massachusetts, finally saved these fliers. Otherwise they might not be in the Navy today. Here is the list, published by THE MERRY- GO-ROUND in 1939, and showing what became of the fliers after publicity halted the purge: Captain John H. Towers, now vice admiral for air in the Pacific. Commander A. E. Montgomery, formerly execu- tive officer for air at San Diego, now a comman- dant at Corpus Christi, Texas. Lt. Comdr. David Rittenhouse, winner of the Schneider Cup, who got fed up with the battle- ship boys and resigned to turn out torpedo planes for Grumman. Lt. Comdr. Howard Brow, winner world speed record 1922, now inspector of naval aircraft at Voight factory, Bridgeport, Conn. Lt. Comdr. Andrew Crinkley, now naval atta- che in Mexico. , Lt. Comdr. R. D. Lyons, wprld war ace, now executive officer at Corpus Christi. Lt. Comdr. Henry Stanley, racing pilot, now executive officer Floyd Bennett field. Another important naval ace, Comdr. Eugene Wilson, resigned some time ago and is now head of United Aircraft and the guiding genius of Pratt-Whitney. Alaskan Oil Scandal . .. MOST interesting fact behind the whole thing, however, is that more than a year ago, Ickes proposed to Secretary of the Navy Knox that the Navy, in cooperation with the Interior Depart- ment, finance an independent oil operator in drilling for oil in Alaska. The plan was proposed to Ickes by famous Brain Truster Tom Corcoran, who pointed out that geological surveys showed oil just north of the Anchorage naval base. This could be tapped, and in case of war with Japan, would supply. oil to the Navy without a dangerous haul by tank- ers. Corcoran also proposed to Ickes, who in turn, passed the proposal on to Secretary Knox, that oil could be sent by barge down the Yukon River, through Bering Strait, and up the Lena River in Siberia to the Trans-Siberian Railway. Then, in case of war with Japan, the United States would be able to supply gasoline to its cer- tain ally, Russia, for bombing operations against Tokvn I'd Rather L Be Right_ ---BBy SAMUEL GRAFTON - NEW YORK-I note that some are asking for a national Food Director. It is a thoughtless re- quest. That is the way a democracy cries for mother. Find the nice man, and he will fill your coffee cup. it will not work. A Food Director cannot ob- tain men to work on farms, unless the Manpower Director lets him have it. He cannot fill ships with coffee unless the war shipping directors permit it. He can direct from before breakfast until late at night, but he cannot increase our food supply significantly unless he is made superior to all other directors, including the gen- eral staffs of Army and Navy. Each Must Be Boss Each of our national directors is in somewhat the same peculiar fix. Let the armed forces yank too many potential workers, and there goes Rubber Director Jeffers' program. To be absolutely sure of his ability to make rubber, Mr. Jeffers would have to have the power to tell the Army when to stop inductions. Obviously, he cannot be given that power. * Economic Stabilization Director Byrnes can be knocked higher than a kite, if the armed services take too many men from high-pay jobs, and if low-pay workers flow into those jobs, altering the wage average. The metal directors were able to stop the oil director from directing oil last year by refusing to give him steel for a pipe line. (They have just loosened up on poor Mr. Ickes, after a year.) It didn't really matter, on this issue, whether Mr. Ickes was a good oil director, or a bad one, a demon executive or a sleepyhead. The net result would have been the same, no pipe line. Just a Way-Station Actually, the cry for more and more Directors, Czars and Administrators is a cry for miracles, a cry against planning. I think the sudden new emphasis on executive ability as the way out is not a final stage in our war effort, but only a way-station. It may waste much time for us. For if each director cannot really direct unless he can curb all the others, we are forced back to the one director who is in that position, the Pres- ident. He, or one single delegate, must, with heavy but impartial hand, ordain that so many men will go into the Army and Navy; so many others will be reserved for industry and agri- culture; so much metal will go to the Navy, and not an ounce more;so much of our steel will go to war,, and so much will stay home; so much petroleum will be used for rubber, and so much alcohol. Once we had such an over-all pln, handed down from above, we would finally be able to test our executives, and tell whether they are good fpr something or good for nothing. In the absence of plan, it is impossible to tell good exec- utives from bad ones. How can we judge them now? They are not carrying out specific tasks. Each is a broker for his own section of the war effort. The Navy's job is to get as much steel for the Navy as pos- sible. It does so. That is good. But that meant no pipe line last year, and we lost enough steel, in the shape of sunken tankers, to have built more than a third of the line. That is bad. Are our Navy executives good executives? How can We tell? If someone upstairs had said to the Navy: "You get so much steel, take it and see what you can do with it," we would have a way of judging. students feel that such an attitude as displayed by Morton Mintz, "Tor- quemada," and Homer Swander does not represent or even approach the majority thought on our campus. Mr. Mintz cynically doubts the capabilities of American voters. He speaks of the Americans who are ready to die "rather than sit down and honestly reason out an issue"- Mr. Mintz's style. Mr. Swander won- ders at "the complete stupidity, the blind, disgusting, unreasoning ignor- ance of the American people." Those are flattering words to you and me. I've heard a mild tale of woe from some Republicans, in the last ten years, but never have I heard such an out and out statement of lack of faith in America and democracy! And from .a self-styled liberal of the stripes of Homer Swander! Can it be possible that Homer Swander is a liberal and a believer in democracy and free elections just so long as they go his way? The Republicans have complained of vice, machines. macing, and the vote Democratic-or-else-relief vote. But Homer Swander does better than that. "Liberal" Mr. Swander says Americans are blind, stupid, disgust- Domie Sa THE CONSIDERATION of romance, home and family as well as the education of youth in the meaning of life associations comes within the domain of religion. But parents and pastors, apparently being isolated from available knowledge and slow to adapt the findings of medical and social science, have often allowed themselves to be restricted to the final ceremonies and the formal aspects of marriage. Every youth should secure, for himself the thought of a clergy- man on these basic social issues. In the interpretation of the church, marriage is entered into to establish a home, to rear one's own children, to perpetuate spiritual values and to continue the virility of the culture. Marriage is a sacrament celebrated under guidance of the priest, rabbi, or pastor, and is not to be entered into unadvisedly, but "reverently, dis- creetly and in the worship of God." This view presupposes an education in religion and morals, a disciplined be- havior as to soul, mind and body, and a definite dedication of the self to high religious purpose. ROMANTIC marriage in American life, moving far from the parental system of mating, prevails in the mind of many families and self expression takes the place of reverent search for the Divine Will. The results are faulty selection of mates, frequent divorce, growing juvenile delinquency, experi- mentation where consecration should hold sway, and a vulgar attitude bred by well-meaning persons who are re- ligiously illiterate. Not only does this lack of appreciation of spiritual values and a failure to understand the beau- ties of a romantic loyalty injure fam- ily life; it discolors all group experi- ence, for the family patterns tend to determine all other patterns. Unless we can arrest the movemenf toward freedom for its own sake, halt the present trend of war marriages, and challenge youth to commit them- selves to the ideal of the church, the present emergency, speeding up every social trend, may bring America out of the war with family life depleted, education retarded and our national fiber ruined. Religion, whether viewed as the morality of God running be- neath all other reality and forming the basis for human behavior or as the ideal toward which men, by trial and error plus scientific experimenta- tion, grope their way in faith, would seem to have the true perspective for marriage in a democratic society. -Edward W. Blakeman, Counselor in Religious Education ing, ignorant, and without powers of reason. Truly, the "Pointed Pen" jabbed America in the heart in Thursday's Daily. Then Mr. Mintz bemoans the loss of 81-year-old Senator Norris of Nebraska. Everyone will agree that the nation will miss Senator Norris, but weare also missing Abraham Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson due to the ravages of time. The good senator had de- cided to retire. A friend, one Fos- 'ter May, then aspired to his seat; but then Senator Norris changed his mind at the last moment. By this time it was difficult for Mr. May to back out of the contest. The result was a three-way race won by Mr. Wherry; whose only sin known to Mr. Mintz and me is that he happens to be a Re- publican. Mr. Mintz should also remember that Mr. Norris is the senator from Nebraska, and as such he is responsi- ble only to the voters of that state. Nebraskans have in the past ex- hibited excellent ability to choose the best man. Let's reserve our judg- ment and see if Mr. Wherry is a bet- ter or poorer senator. Surely Mr. Mintz will agree that an election is not always a choice between a scoun- drel and a statesman. Too often both candidates are scoundrels, and too rarely both are honest and capa- ble men. Michigan voters had the unusual opportunity of choosing be- tween Senator Brown and Homer Ferguson, both of whom are ex- tremely well qualified for the post. Perhaps the petter man did ; win. At least Mr. Mintz should grant him the opportunity (already given by the Michigan electorate) to prove or disprove his value. And if Senator Brown is such a fine man (and I be- lieve he is), +then there Are other posts in democracy's fence which he can fill. I agree with Mr. Mintz that "Congress itself, by its recalci- trance and stupidity, has increased the danger of a dictatorship." Yet Congress is still' run by the ma- jority party. What party was dom- inant in the 77th Congress? That was 'the Congress that Raymond Clapper and others were condemn- ing. That was the Congress that the American people criticized and nearly condemned in the election Tuesday! How Mr. Mintz can blame such stupidity and inertia of a Congress on the minority party is beyond comprehension. ils arguments are almost laugh- able, yet typical of the arguments of your editorial staff. Mr. Mintz then deplores the en- trance of the racket-busters into the American political scene, such awful men as Homer Ferguson and Tom Dewey. Why, Mr. Mintz, are racket-busters gaining favor? Sim- ply because the public is sick and tired of rackets and political ma- chines like Mayor Hague's of Jersey City (Vice-chairman of Democratic National Committee), -the . Kelly- Nash steamroller, and the now re- cently defunct Pendergast machine in Kansas City. And there are many more. Detroit and Pittsburgh are nearly a's notorious in this respect. Mr. Mintz deplores the fact that "Greece (N.Y.) is always Republi- can." Ah yes, and does he forget that Jersey City and Chicago and Detroit and Pittsburgh and the "Sol- id South" are ALWAYS Democratic? And those of us who do not tol- erate such machines, who did not favor war until we were attacked; but - who are the most vigorous supporters of the war now that we are in it until victory-we are "Dunderheads." That is known as emotional name-calling. Now we'll stoop ,to his level and do some naming of our own.' Let's call his "recalcitrant (Democratic) Con- gress" and the various stumbling czars of production who require nine months of war to make up their minds what ought-to be done to get rubber and oil and raw ma- terials, let's name them Fumble- bugs. America is doing a magnificent job in the war when you consider the bureaucratic Fumblebugs in Washington who dictate rather than .ead the people. Homer Swander and Morton Mintz should read the hand- writing on the pow scribbled wall. -- ohn A. Adams, '43 'Sundown' To the Editor: "HEROIC and heartbreaking," "The effect is as honest as it is over- whelming," "Touched with the eter- nal magnificence of great tragedy," "It is a drama without doubts. It celebrates, vigorously, our cause and our men. It celebrates the lasting virtues of fidelity and courage. It makes these qualities exciting, as es- sentially they always are," "a warm and human document." No, these phrases were not writ- ten of John Lewis Bumm's "Sun- down" as performed last night at the Mendelssohn but by New York critics of Maxwell Anderson's "The Eve of St. Mark," which might have opened the season for Play Pro- duction of the Department of Speech. The Eve of St. Mark was offered Uni- versity theatres all over the country. Dozens have either played it or an- nounced it for production simultane- ously with the New York production and with the production announced to open soon for a long tour. Play Production of the Department of Speech, having a choice between the excellent and the worse-than-medi- ocre, chose the latter. IN TIMES of great crisis the theatre has two choices-to dramatize pertinent material in terms of the magic of which the theatre is so capable, or to present plays which shall give us pause from our prob- lems. Sundown does neither. On the banality, the cheap sac- charine sentimentality, the lack of realistic characterizations, the neg- lect of climax as a dramatic devise, your reviewers have already com- mented. They might, reasonably, have mentioned its defeatist atti- tude. For when the author rushes into the future he succeeds only in' projecting present-day youth into the 1910 world of Galsworthy. Especially regrettable was 'the wasted effort of sincere actors who did their best with Mr. Brumm'sem- barrassing Variorum edition of cli- - ches from every second-to-tenth rate play and novel of the last few decades. The same efforts applied to a more honest script would not, surely, have made a theatre experience be-' low the standard of Play Production's best. WE MAY perhaps expect to see The Eve of St. Mark on Play Produc- tion's program. next semester-the program for the rest of the semester having already been annunced. But events move so fast that what is pertinent today may have only his- torical significance tomorrow. Play Production of the Department, of Speech has so far muffed its chance to show the value of the theatre in a world at war. It has chosen Sundown instead of the play of which Howard Barnes of The New York Herald-Tribune has said: "Maxwell Anderson has writ- ten straight from the heart in The Eve of St. Mark. The result is a war drama of emotional intensity, humor and poetic splendor. "It is simple in design. It is sternly tragic in themfie. These very qualities make it a play which does the stage proud . . . Here is something more than a fine war play, I think. It is touched with the eternal magnificence of great trag- edyy."-X. rug of Gamma Delta, Lltheran Stu- dent Club, at St. Paul's Church,. W. -Liberty at Third. Discussion, "What About the Wartime Marriage?" Trinity Lutheran Church services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Suday, Rev. H. O. Yoder speaking on "Calm- ness and Faith Amid Confusion an Fears." Zion Luthera. Chliurch services will be held at 10:30, Vicar Elmer Chris- tiansen speaking on "Your Biogra- phy." The Lutheran Student Association will meet at 5:30 p.m. Sunday, at the Zion Parish Hall, 309 E. Washington. Dr. C. P. Harry, Secretary of the Board of Education of the United Lutheran Church, will be the guest speaker. First Methodist Church and Wesley Foundation. Student Class at 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship Service at 10:40. Dr. C. W. Brashares will preach on "CommUNITY."' Wesleyan Guild meeting at 6:00 p.m. WillianrMuehl, '44L, will speak on "Enemies of Chris- tianity." Fellowship hour and, sup- per following the meeting. The Michigan Christian Fellow- ship will meet this afternoon at 4:30 in the Fi eside Room of Lane Hall. Topic for the program: "Is Christi- anity Thinkable?" Mr. Leonard Ver- duin will speak. Faculty and stu- dents are welcome. - Unity: Sunday service at 11:00 a.m. led by Frances Way Newton, Young Peoples (student) Group at 6 o'clock. Regular Monday night Study Group at 8 o'clock Monday. All meetings are held in the Unity Reading' Rooms, 1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 3) metal he could have. We could then see, in time, how good Wickard is. But Wickard has to wrestle with -Se- lective Service ; Selective Service has to wrestle with Manpower Director McNutt. In the context of these struggles the quest for demon execu- tives and boy wonders is a pious prayer for miracles. But upstairs, they would have to know what kind of war we are going to fight. It all goes back to that. Ten thou- sand farms may be abandoned in, Minnesotabnext year, for lack of workers, because no decision was Bible Class for University Students at 8:30 a.m. under the direction of Mr. Malan and Mr. Lampe. "A Har- mony of the Gospels" is the topic for study. This is a beginning session. Westminster Student Guild-6:00 p.m. luncheon and fellowship hour. professor Preston W. Slosson speales at 7:00 p.m. on "The Various Types of Protestantism." Unitarian C(~i'm,,v h. d4ii11."hv 1 1 l t 1 t C 1 r a c c F F a Y 1 I I