TA 'PM~rr T " _. [app]{ _ XA T ---.- ' ..r asle M TTaas a Y L TT_;~ _V vv mm"m ,TM, Xn A ; ?3 9, 142 Fifty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of student Publications.1 '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. Entfered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptions duringthe regular school year by carrier $4,25, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 REPRESENTEDF FOR NATIONAL ADVERT13ING BYj National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative S420 MADISON AVE. NEW YoIm. N. Y. cicAo - BosTon . Los AGELES " SAN FRANCISCO Editorial Staff "What's all this about American rationing, Hans?" } S -- 'A,' -A, ~ : 3onier Swander Morton Mintz . tobert Mantho Gieorge W. Ballade 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 .r. Business Staff Edward J. Perlberg Fred M. Ginsberg Mary Lou.Curran Jane Lindberg . Janes Daniels.. Te Business Manager . Associate Business Manager . Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager . Publications Sales Analyst elephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: MARION FORD Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. ___ ' ,r~ t:.. ;.. .vn; ...,...,..,., n 4 .. . s .4 ;' ! ri"fir .. rS 1 T : 1 V' I . .. t R . .. ". -.. R aa AGy, 7 ^r Af"r .;i 4 .a+ff 'ory,,. . '. .", ' r .,. I". I, ,_ ITS ALL OVER: Ending Of Enlistments Is Democratic Step THE FUTURE OF COLLEGE MEN was made much more definite last week when the Pres- ident ended enlistments in the'armed forces. No longer is there -the worry and hurry to get into officers' training programs to stay in school, and there is no need to decide between the Army and the Navy. College men like everyone else in the na- tion will, be drafted. And they like every- one else will go into officers' training in the armed forces if they have the stuff for it. Many men in uniform will be sent to colleges for extra training and may receive academic credit for their work. Education will not be ended in the Ariny. The injustice .of allowing men who had money enough to attend colleges and auto- matically become officers is now ended also. In the future the best men will become of- ficers, as they should in a democratic army. -Lee Gordenker WILLKIE-ITE:. Republicans Are Urged TO Drop Party Issues T HE REACTIONAR Y ELEMENT of the re- publican party has failed in its latest at- tempt to regain control of the organization. In the defeat of Werner Schroeder for the :national chairmanship, brought about by the progressive forces under the leadership of Wen- dell Willkie, one more step has been taken in removing from the party those elements whose negative attitudes and policies resulted in the democratic landslide of 1932 and 1936. But the Republican Party must bear in mind that while these forces have been defeated in the election of Harrison Spangler, they still maintain con- siderable power. Schroeder, a notorious isola- tionist, came dangerously close to achieving the national chairmanship. The liberal Republicans must take it upon themselves to continue to remember the words of Wendell Willkie's Lincoln Day Address of 1941, when he stated that the CONTRAST: Uruguay Election Fervor Shames U.S. Laxity THIS IS THE STORY of two elections held last month. They were held in two different countries, each on the American continent. In one of these elections, a 70-mile storm swept through the nation on balloting day. Nev- ertheless, 60 percent of the electorate showed up at the polls. And the result was a landslide for the liberal, democratic, distinctly pro-United Na- tions presidential candidate. In the other nation, election day in most parts was an ordinary day. There was no storm. It didn't even rain in. most areas. But only about 35 percent of the eligible voters bothered to go to the polls. That 35 percent sent to the national legislature a number of the country's outstanding re- actionaries and recalcitrants. Yet people in that nation still talk with bland assur- ance about fighting the war for the sake of democracy - even those who voted for men who don't particularly care about democ- racy, one way or the other. The nation whose people seem so thoroughly aware of their suffrage and safeguard it as a privilege not to be taken for granted, is little Uruguay. If you don't know what the other nation is, just ask Clare Hoffman, Ham Fish or Curly Brooks. They'll be glad to tell you. They have good reason to relish the memory of that election., -Irving Jaffe role of an intelligent oppdsition is not simply to oppose everything which the party in power favors, but rather to take a constructive stand attempting to put forth a better program of its own. NOW THAT THE REPUBLICANS have core into a position where, through their power- ful forces in the House of Representatives, they can greatly influence legislation, they must remember Mr. Willkie's words not only for the benefit of their party, but as a responsibilityj to the entire American people. -Monroe Fink DREW Ch PEA RSOWS MERRYGO-ROUND WASHINGTON- Backstage, the battle of the peace after the war, similar to the battle which took place over the League of Nations in 1920, is already getting under way. Republican isolation- ists very cleverly are now laying the groundwork for the fight they expect to wage after the war is over. First skirmish in the fight -is now taking place over the most beautiful woman ever to come to Congress, Clare Boothe Luce, author of "The Women," "Kiss the Boys Good-bye," "Margin for Error," and wife of the Time, Life and Fortuna publisher. Mrs. Luce, Republican Representative-elect from Connecticut, aspires to sit on the House Foreign Affairs Committee. An ardent interven- tionist, Mrs. Luce long advocated this country's entry into the war, has travelled all over the world, knows foreign affairs intimately. However, Republican isolationists on the House Foreign Affairs Committee do not wel- come Mrs. Luce. On the Committee are such well-known isolationists as Ham Fish of New York, Karl Mundt of South Dakota, Mrs. Fran- ces Bolton of Cleveland. They do not say that her anti-isolationism is the reason they don't want Mrs. Luce on the Committee. They put it on the ground that there are already two women members-Mrs. Bolton and Mrs. Edith Nourse Rogers of Massachusetts--and they don't want three. Real reason, however, is that the fight over the peace treaty after the war already is start- ing, and Republican isolationists want to stack key committees with members who believe as they do. For in Congress, the Committees domi- nate. Note: Republican members of the Foreign Af- fairs Committee who favor Mrs. Luce include "Doc" Charles Eaton of New Jersey and Foster Stearns of New Hampshire, son of Frank Stearns, Boston °merchant and intimate friend of Cal Coolidge Capital Chaff Suggestion to book publishers: Try to per- suade Mark Thistlewaite, former secretary to Vice-President Marshall, to publish his book on Tom Marshall. Now in a safe deposit box, the book contains the inside story of how various senators tried to persuade Marshall to take over Woodrow Wilson's duties as president when he became ill, and how Marshall refused . . . War- ner Brothers' screening of Ambassador Joe Da-- vies' book "Mission to Moscow" is going to give some of the real lowdown on how seeds of war sprouted, and on the Moscow treason trials, re- garding which Stalin was right after all. (Copyright, 1942, United Features Syndicate) recommend a revision which might lead to trage- dy? Which brings up our third question: Why hasn't the building inspector issued public re- ports on ,the condition of buildings other than the Majestic Theatre which, after all, is not in use at present and constitutes only a poten- tial menace to the lives of Ann Arbor citizens? iWuhv should lives h endanre fo lev m one DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, DEC. 9, 1942 VOL. LIII No. 56 All notices for the Daily official Bul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the President in typewritten form by 3:30 p.m. of the day preceding its publica- tion except on Saturday when the no- tices should be submitted by 11:30 a.m. Notices Student Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students this afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock. Protection of University Property Against Theft: Whenever it becomes known that property has been stolen or is missing, noice should be given with utmost promptness at the Busi- ness Office, Room 1, University Hall. This applies to articles owned by the institution or owned privately. For the protection of property it is important that doors and windows be locked, inside doors as well as out- side doors, when rooms are to be left unoccupied even for a brief period. The building custodians cannot be responsible for conditions after the hours when they are on duty or when persons with keys to buildings un- lock doors and leave them unlocked. It is desirable that department heads make a careful check two or three times a year of all keys to quarters under their charge, to make sure that keys have not been lost and are not in the hands of persons no longer re- quiring their use. It is strictly con- trary to University rules to have duplicate keys made or to lend keys issued for personal use. A reward of $50 is offered to any person for information that directly .or indirectly leads to the apprehen- sion of thieves on University prem- ises. Shirley W. Smith Applicants for Enlisted Reserve: All' students between the ages of 18 and 38 who have filed applications for any of the enlisted reserve programs on or before Dec. 5, 1942, must com- plete their enlistment before Dec. 15. Any such students who have yet to obtain papers or documents necessary for enlistment should do so as quickly as possible. The War Board Enlist- ment Office, The Health Service, the ROTC and NROTC will exert every effort to accomplish these enlistments before the 15th. -B. D. Thuma Armed Forces Faculty Adviser If you wish to finance the purchase of a home, or if you have purchased improved property on a land contract and owe a balance of approximately 60 per cent of the value of the prop- erty, the Investment Office, 100 South Wing of University Hall, would be glad to discuss financing through the medium of a first mortgage. Such financing may effect a substantial saving in interest. University offices and libraries will be closed at Thursday noon, Decem- ber 24, for the remainder of the week.t Choral Union Members whose rec- ords of attendance are clear (no un- excused absences since the last con-t cert) will please call for their passes1 to the Boston Symphony Orchestra concert, today, between 10 and 12, and 1 and 4 o'clock, at the office oft the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. After 4 o'clock no passes will be issued. Charles A. Sink, President Varsity Glee Club: There will be no meeting Thursday evening. t Students: A list of graduates andt former students now in Military Ser- vice is being compiled at the Alumni Catalogue Office. This list already numbers approximately 6,000. If yout are entering Military Service, pleaset see that your name is included in thist list by reporting such information to1 SAMUEL GRAFTON'S NEW YORK- I can't imagine Pro- fessor Harley L. Lutz of Princeton, delivering a speech last December calling on business to fight a 'desper- ate civil war" against government controls. He did it this December, before the; National Association of Manufactur- I ers, using a phrase which would have made a national scandal had it popped up at a labor convention. We are feeling better now, partly because of the recent North African successes. As war prospects improve, current speech slips back into the in- vective patterns of peace-time. If Butter Were a Dollar SOMETHING of the same situation obtains in the field of bickering over price controls. I put it to several business men in the dairy line: "What would the price of butter be tomorrow if there were no ceilings?" The consensus was that a great deal of butter would be selling at $1 a pound. One man, who has sold but- ter for twenty years, said he was sure it would be possible to get $1.25. If butter were selling at $1.25, price controls would be a lot more popular. Leon Henderson would be receiving Christmas cards, and there would be public prayers for his health. As it is, under the protection of the ceilings, we can enjoy the luxury of cussing out the regulatory devices on which they depend. The Mood Changes k IMILAR ebullience is showing up in England, where, as here, every- body feels much better. Mr. Churchill's tart phrase about not desiring to "preside over the liqui- dation of the Empire" would not have been uttered the day after Singapore fell. No, then the talk was about work- ing out a plan to free India, and Sir Stafford Cripps was sent on his way. In England, as in America, when prospects are dark we hear that this is a people's war; when chances brighten we are more likely to hear that "we are not fighting to give a quart of milk a day to every Hotten- tot." This forward-and-backward move- ment shows up most amusingly in thei field of rubber. Last summer, when we were a bad- rBe Right ly frightened nation on the rubber crisis, every commentator in th' country was on his knees asking gov ernment to do something instant drastic, terrific and colossal, abou rubber. What's Washington Doing Here ONCE we started on a rubber pro gram the mental climate changed Now we hear that it is a hell of note to make a man fill out a lon questionnaire in order to get a ney truck tire. One Senator even put it qui bluntly, wanting to know what gov ernment was doing, poking its n into a man's private business, any way9 As we begin to get out of. trouble the spirits of those who want to wi the war meaninglessly begin to ris sharply. The pale, pastel hope, held by some that nothing further will have to b done to rout unemployment and wan and colonialism out of the world be gins to take on more vivid colors. Old Gag THE OLD American dream of get ting along with little or no govern ment sits up in bed again, and call for a hearty breakfast. It was a shock, last week, to hea a man say that he wasn't fighting t "put a TVA on the Danube." It brought a laugh, being precisel as funny as M. Flandin's remark to the French, in 1939: "I don't want t die for Danzig." A section of public opinion is livin from day to day, from hand to mouth in a happy-go-lucky, skylarking man- ner. It will deduce the whole futur of the world for -you from one day' cheerful headlines. Yet this is only a kind of vacation We shall one day have to find peace- time jobs for 15,000,000 soldiers and war workers. The wise man will swallow some of his gags. The higher he gets now, the lower he'll be then., This war cannot end meaninglessly,' in a gale of laughter, because while statesmen can be defeated with the ridicule treatment, problems can't be solved thereby. It's a pity that a problem will not respond to a mood; it would be such fun to sneer the world out of countenance. (Copyright, 1942, N.Y. Post Syndicate) Hill Auditorium. The program will consist of Haydn's Symphony No. 88 and the much discussed Shostakovich war symphony No. 7. Tickets will be on sale at the office of the Uni- versity Musical Society in Burton Tower until five o'clock, and after 7 o'clock at the Hill Auditorium box office. the Alumni Catalogue Office. This courtesy will be greatly appreciated. ---Lunette Hadley, Director Aluimni Catalogue Office Bowling for Women: The bowling alleys at the Women's Athletic Build- ing will be closed until after the Christmas holidays. Lectures Frank N. Wilson Lecture: Dr. Emmanuel Libman, Cardiologist of New York City, will give the annual Frank N. Wilson Lecture in Cardiol- ogy, for the faculty and members of the Junior and Senior Classes of the Medical School on Monday, Dec. 14, at 1:30 p.m. in the University Hos-' pital Amphitheatre. The subject of the lecture will be "Libman-Sacks Disease." Lecture: Miss Miriam Rose, Secre- tary of the British Council, will give an illustrated talk on "British Arts and Crafts" on Thursday, Dec. 10, at 1:30 p.m. in Room 346 Architec- ture Building. The public is invited. Medical Lecture: Dr. Charles Bren- ton Huggins, Prdfessor of Surgery of the University of Chicago Medical School, will speak on Thursday, Dec. 10, at 8:30 p.m. at the Rackham Graduate School on "The Physiology of the Prostate Gland and its Rela- tion to Tumors." This talk is under the auspices of the Alpha Omega Al- pha honorary medical society. All in- terested are. invited. La Sociedad Hispanica announces a lecture, "Lazos de amistad entre los mejicanos y los estadounidenses," by Dr. Hirsch Hootkins of the De- partment of Romance Languages, on Thursday, Dec. 10, at 4:15 p.m. in Room D, Alumni Memorial Hall. Tickets may be obtained at the door, from any Spanish teacher, or from the Office of the Secretary of the Department of Romance Languages. A cademic Notices Chemistry Colloquium will be held today in Room 303, Chemistry Build- ing, at 4:15 p.m. Professor F. F. Blicke will speak on "Development of Synthetic Local Anesthetics." Concerts Choral Union Concert:The Bos- ton Symphony Orchestra, Serge Koussevitzky, Conductor, will give the sixth concert in the Choral Un- ion Series this evening at 8:30 in Charles A. Sink, President Events Today- Interviewing for Orientation Ad- visers will continue from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. today, Thursday and Friday in the Undergraduate Office of the League. Today, Service through Ul- rich; Thursday, Underwood through Zumack, and Friday, anyone who was unable to be interviewed at her ap- pointed time. The Faculty Women's Club will meet today at 3:00 p.m. at the Mich- igan League. Each person should bring a sharp knife or scissors to cut greens. Coming Events Graduate History Club Meeting on Thursday, December 10, at 8:15 p.m. in the East Conference Room, Rack- ham Building. Refreshments and election of officers. All student and faculty members of the School of Public Health are invited to attend the Christmas party given by the Public Health Club on Friday, December 11, at 8:30 p.m. in the Rackham Building. The University "Pops" Band wil meet Thursday, December° 10, at 7 :30~ Pam. in Morris Hall. This is for or- ganizing the band and will end by 8:30. Please attempt to be present. The Inter-Racial Association will present Leonard B. Troutman at tha Michigan Union on Thursday at 8:00 p.m. He will talk on "Twenty Cen turies Behind the Veil." All inter- ested people are urged to attend. La Sociedad Hispanica will mee on Thursday, Dec. 10, at 8:00 p.m. in the Michigan League. Program: Sr. Jose Perdomo will speak on "Col ombia: aspectos culturales y sociol ogicos"; Sra. Roberto F. Olmedo o Paraguay will sing popular Spanish songs, and poems will be recited by Mary Ellen St. John and E. McCarus. Everyone interested is invited. Graduate Party on Saturday, Dec 12, 9-12 p.m. in the Rackham Build- ing. All graduate ;and, professiona UNFINISHED BUSINESS: City Council Failed To Junk Ordinance Revision Reopening Majestic Theatre, Hotel, Firetraps S ' ' The Pointed' UESTIONS and rumors pile ever higher on the proposed revision of City Ordinance 145, Section 10, which will have much to do with whether or not such officially labeled fire traps as the Majestic, Theatre will reopen, perhaps to provide a local sequel to the Boston holocaust. In as neat a- rendition of the old Army game as we have ever seen the Common Council Monday night again tabled the measure, this time until Dec. 28. The revision, which would allow frame-constructed theatres and hotels to remain open, was declared unfinished business by Prof. John D. Waite, of the Law School, who is chairman of the Ordinance Committee. Pro- fessor Waite later told this reporter that he released the matter because "it was no longer a matter of committee report." When the ordinance was later brought up as airing of the whole matter in The Daily edi- torial columns? Several aldermen answered this question by saying that it was too late in the evening to act on the measure, while others said that necessary reports by the building in- spector were lacking. DO THE gentlemen of the Council, then, con- sider the safety of hundreds of the citizens whose interests they are elected to protect sec- ondary to the loss of an hour or so of their own sleep? And why wasn't the building inspector's report available? Why wasn't Maulbetsch asked to appear? He doesn't know and neither do we. Major question number 2: Why was a re- vision of the existing ordinance-which would close structurally dangerous theatres and iho- tels on Jan. 1, 1943-recommended in the first DlaceP T_ 1 Pen ROGER BABSON has a queer no- tion of the Midwest state univer- sity. Now he's talking about those wild-haired radical economics profes- sors spouting a lot of nonsense in all the Midwest state universities. And, 'since his statement was all-inclusive, we guess he must have meant Smith- ies and Watkins and Sharfman here at Michigan. Yes, and next Sunday he'll probably have Indians popping out at you from a tree and pointing arrows. Prof. Carleton Wells of the Eng- lish department is reported to have dubbed Samuel Grafton the Thom- .4. Hoarders All