PAGt "TWO' THE MICHIGAN DAILY- IVEBNrSDA-14v. MAILCIi 17, IJ43 PA_. __ T.E _ .. _.UC _17_1M 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 repub- lication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier $4.25, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 When the war clouds roll away THE PLIGHT OF THE HUMANITIES: Liberal Arts in Wartime RCE#ISĀ¢rNBO PORNAotl4H. L AwDVERTIING. 48 National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. C'ICAGO * BeSTOW . LOS AGELEs * SAN FRANCIsCO Editorial Staff John Erlewine. Bud Brimmer . Leon Gordenker Marion Ford Charlotte Conover. Eric ZIensci. Betty Harvey James Conant . Edward J. Perlberg Fred M. Ginsberg. Mary Lou Curran Jane Lindberg , Managing Editor . . . . . Editorial Director . . . . . . City Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Sports Editor . . . . . Women's Editor Columnist Business Staff (Editor.'s Note: The following arti- cle by Irwin Edman is reprinted and condensed froi the March 6, 1943. Nation magazine.} -HE LIGHT of the humanities in the war has reached the con- sciousness of the general public in the form of nrews about the draft of eighteen-year-olds and its effect upon the liberal arts colleges. The law drafting eighteen-year-olds, as soon as it is in full operation, will have removed for. the dration prac- tically the whole undergraduate male population of American colleges. All those fine projects and dis- cussions of higher education-the Chicago plan, the St. Johu's pro- gram, the humanities course at Columbia; all the arguments over the decline of the classics and the possibility of their revival in trans- lation; tL.e "education of the whole man' versus the "discipline of the. mind--all these things .. . have been given a quietus for the dura- tion. It has been repeated almost ad nauseam that educators thenselve, students and even that small section of the general public interested in questions of higher education are, sadly content that this should be so. There is, indeed, a suspicion that. administrators and pro essors, supposedly the guardians of the liberal arts tradition, have been al- most too willing to agree with the notion, not unfamiliar in peace times, that the liberal arts do not count very much, that' in sacri- ficing education in these fields the country is "sacrificing very little. THERE have been two general rea- sons for the lack of concern over the abandonment of the liberal arts studies for the duration. The first is that the humanities in this coun- try have always been regarded as a polite veneer . . . The second reason for the absence of concern over the collapse of liberal arts education in this country i that many persons both in and out of the academic world, and persons once in it as stu- dents, have been suspicious that the colleges were not strictly by virtue of giving a B.A. degree centers of seri- ous light and learning. The "ends" of the "college edu- cation" have been vague. The pre-medical,vthe Pre -engineering. the pre-law student has at least known what he wyas headed for. The liberal arts student has felt himself destined to anything from bond salesmanship to membership in the Book of the 1onth Club. All this has been true and has been sometimes melodramatically overemphasized; yet the colleges have prospered, I think, because there has been a residual feeling on the part of the interested public that at college young men and women have been able to acquire some sensi- tive responsiveness to the best that has been thought and said in the world some realization of their hu- man situation and of their place in history, and some intellectual disci- pline. Out of the discussion and experi- ient of the last quarter of a century, the colleges were gradually evolving a kind of training that was calcu- lated to produce, educated men and women, persons with a sense of the best and a trained capacity for en- joying and judging it; citizens aware, too, of the social consequences and responsibilities of intellectual train- ing. It would be calamitous if the eolleges at their best were to be so w.uch out of the picture by the time the war was over, if the whole idea of liberal education were at such a discount, that state legisla- tures, boards of trustees, and stu- dents themselves were committed to the robot education of purely technical studies . . We should then have a generation that would have no use for political freedom because it had lost a care for and a~ Oisclplirie in those arts and in- terests which constitute the free mind. During this war faculties may dis- integrate-this is no less true be- cause it is a cliche to say that men make a college-and a faculty is not to be reassembled overnight. Mean- while there will have grown up in this country what is always nascent, a public temper that will tend to dis- miss a purely intellectual and imagi- native education as trivial. A col- lege generation is only four years, and four years is time enough to impose a philistine barbarism on a society: Hitler did it in less. THERE are some redeeming ele- ments in the picture. All over the country university adirinistrators and leaders in dif- ferent fields will be forced during this interim-they may soon have little else to do-to reconsider what that college can do . . . During this period of convulsive disloca- tion teachers of the liberal arts will engage in heart-searching and re- searchings of the fundamentals and functions of the teachings of these liberal arts. The wise teachers of the humani- ties know well that philosophy and literature were often dying in our colleges before the war. They were dying of anemia, of routine, of arch- aeological hardening of the arteries. English literature was taught in a compartment separated from all oth- er literature . . . Philosophy was fre- quently a hand-me-down of dialecti- cal double-talk. This tragic interval may have this much of educational good: all over the country the serious uses of the "useless" subjects are being explored. Meanwhile the liberal arts con- tinue to be taught in the women's colleges and in the large state uni- versities. Learning and the spirit of learning survived the Civil War. They will survive this one, and pos- sibly be more living for the shock they have received. These changes will be far-reach- ing, but they will be in the interest of a changeless tradition older far than this Republica (as old as Plato's)- the training of young minds to time- less values and to public responsibil- tity. . . . , .. . Business Manager Associate Business Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: MONROE FINK iv -C nNn E4itorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of. The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. - - - $25,000 TOO LOW? War Congress Quibbles Over Salary Limitation THE SEVENTY-EIGHTH Congress does not yet realize that this nation is at war, with no place for squabbles between them and the Presi- dent. Last week the House of Representatives voted to nullify President Roosevelt's order limiting wartime salaries to $25,000, and also authorized the raising of the national debt to $210,000,000,- 000. In their eagerness to prevent executive "usurpation" of Congressional powers they ig- nored both the need for unity within the nation- al gpvernment, and the well-being of the Ameri- can people as a whole. Without a harionious working together of the executive and legislative branches of the govern- Ment, we will never attain an efficiency suffi- cient to crack the Axia. Without a sane attitude on the part of Congress toward the national debt, not only our children but our grandchildren to the fifth generation will still be paying for this war. The present legal limit of the national debt is $125,000,000,000. The House has now raised it to $210,000,000,000. If the Senate passes this measure, our national debt can almost double itself legally. It has to be raised if the $25,000 salary ceiling is lifted, but why should the limit be lifted? An all-out war is surely no place for peacetime high s4aries, even with the House provision that only salaries which were above $25,000 before Pearl Harbor can climb that high again. After the war, some sort of governmental ad- justment will be necessary. But not now. There isn't time for anything but an effort toward victory, with our government leading us, not fighting with itself. The present Congress has demonstrated while in office that it cares more for its own authority over the Chief Executive than it. cares to cooper- ate with him to win the war. When the govern- ment, of the United States degenerates into a struggle for authority by the elected represen- tatives of the people; when those representa- tives demonstrate that they cannot or will not do the job for which they were elected, what sort of confidence can America, and the whole world, have in ouir ability to carry this fight through to a successful finish? - .Jne Farrant DREW PEARSON'S MERRY-GO-ROUND WASHINGTON, March 17.- Inside fact about Vice-President Wallace's Good Neighbor pil. grimage to South America is that he was invited to take the trip a year ago, but the State Depart- ment frowned it down. In February, 1942, Chile first extended its in- vitation to Wallace. But it was not until Feb- ruary, 1943, that he accepted. In the interim, the State Department didn't say yes or didn't say no. One reason was the obvious one that we were waiting for Chile to break relations with the Axis. But another undisclosed reason was the fact that Wallace wanted to take his trip without any official trimmings. He wanted to do what he did in Mexico more than a year ago when he and. Jim LeCron and their wives drove round the countryside in their own car like any tourists, and nobody knew he was the Vice-President-elect of the United States. Wallace still would like to do this on his pres- ent trip. He talks about having a good visit. with "the boys," meaning the personnel of the BoaM of Economic Warfare of which he is chair- man. But the State Department has diplomatically warned him that he won't have much time for that, and some top-hat formalities will be neces- sary. The State Department also is worried over Wallace's becoming involved in some of the intricate political problems of Latin America. Should a leader of the Apristas (Peruvian Indian Party) slip up beside him while a pho- tographer snapped their picture, it would al- most cause a revolution in Peru. Or should he inspect the Bolivian tin mines where labor is ground down to less than starvation wages, the Bolivian government would suffer spasms. So Henry, who loves people, who likes to see things first hand,' may have to walk the chalk line. To help him walk it the State Depart- ment is sending along its best adviser on Latin America, erudite Larry Duggan. (Copyright, 1943. United Features Syndicate) I'd Rather Be Right -BySAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, March 17.- General Giraud's speech at Algiers must be accepted without re- serve. He has not only said he is against racial laws. He has abolished them. He has not only said he is for democracy. He has reinstituted the municipal assemblies and Conseils Generaux of North Africa, to be elected by the people. When they merely say it, one is entitled to doubt. When they do it, one is not, For democrats to refuse the hand thus of- fered would be irresponsible beh vior. But now, having taken the hand, and shaken it firmly, we ask: "When will areel Peyroton be dismissed, and General Bergeret and Gov- ernor-General Nogues of .Morocco?" It may be considered ungrateful behavior to raise these questions, after a fine speech, and several fine actions. But we are not in the gratitude business, we are in the democracy bus- iness. That is a hard business. It is not to be conducted like the shoe business, or the fish business, so much for so much. In the democ- racy business, it is fair to ask for everything, and to choose to give nothing. We need not In other words, swap our opposition to Pey- routon-Bergeret-Nogues in exchange for abo- lition of racial laws. We are entitled to ask for no racial laws, and also for no Peyrouton- Bergeret-Nogues. By abolishing various vicious decrees, General Giraud has given admirable proof that he choos- es to be on our side. But those who move over to our side obtain no special privileges thereby, except the privilege of doing more. It was a splendid speech the General offered, there at the Alsace-Lorraine Club in Algiers, with Marcel Peyrouton sitting on the platform. Bravo! It was so good that it gives us the right to ask for even better speeches, and without Peyrouton on the platform. What! Is it fair to ask more of French Afri- can officialdom, after it has given us these re- cent blessings? That is what is wrong, this cold pattern of bargaining, asking and giving. On Sunday there was a parade in Algiers, just before Gir- aud's speech. American, British and French troops marched. Surely, the democratic por- tion of the populace should have been con- tent. But a group of young men shouted "Vive de Gaulle! Vive la Republique!" and they broke through the police lines and marched, singing, behind the soldiers. Note the sight well. It is the answer to the chants of the organized wolf-youth of fascism. It would have been much more reasonable of these young men to keep their mouths shut. But if North Africa had been reasonable, there would have been Darlan and no speech last Sunday, instead of Giraud and a speech. ,The democracy business is a young business. with limitless horizons. It is under no compul- sion to follow the customs of the vegetable mar- ket. to be content with a good bargain. French seamen in New York have been desert- ing Giraud ships, brought here for repairs, and have been joining de Gaulle. These men are, clearly, unreasonable. They are. after all, out of the hands of Vichy. They are free, fighting men again. They are in America. They will soon make contact with the enemy. Isn't that DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN wEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 1943 VOL. LIII No. 114 All notices for the Daily Official 4ul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the President in typewritten form by 3:30 p.m. of the day preceding its publca- tion, except on Saturday when the no- tices should be submitte# by 11:30 a.m. Notices Credit for Men Entering Armed Serv- ices:By, action of the 'faculty 'of' the College of Architecture and pesign, stu- dents leaving for active dxxty with the armed forces will be 'granted general credit In proportion to the 'number of Weeks of the term attended 'incourses elepcted, up to the time of withdrawal. Forms for students withdrawing will be mailed to instructors in all courses, re- questing an immediate report as to the student's attendance and tentative grade up to the time of withdrawal. Each stu- dent's case will be reviewed 'as to specific credit and grade in any given course at such time as the student may return to the University. Partial credit in specific courses is not being recorded at this time. Wells Beniett, Pean 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 property, the Investment Of- fice, 100 South Wing of University ,Hall, would be glad to discuss financing through the medium:of a first mortgage. Such fi- nancing may effect a substantial saving in interest. Freshmen in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts mlay obtain their five-week progress reports in the Aca- demic Counselors' Office, Roorn 108, Ma- son Hall, from 8:30 to 12:00 a.m. and 1:30 to 4;P0 p.m. accprding tp the following schedule: Surnames beginning N through Z, Thursday, March18. Surnames beginning E through M, Fri- day, March 19. Surnames beginning A through D, Sat- urday, March 20. Arthur Van Duren, Chairman, Academic Counselors Students: A list qf graduates and former students now in Military Service is being nompiled at the Alumni Catalogue Office. This list already numbers approximnately 6.000. If you are entering Military Service, please see that your name Is incudedin this-list by reporting such information to the Alumni Catalogue Office. This cour- tesy will be greatly appreciated. Lunette lHadley, Director Alumni Catalogue Office Choral Union Members: Members of the Chorus in good standing. :will please call for'their courtesytickets to the e- son Eddy concert today between the hours of 10 and 12 and 1 and 4 at the offices of the University Musical Society In Bur- ton Memorial Tower After 4 op'ck no courtesy tickets will be Issued. Charles A. Sink, President pronson-Thomas Annual German Lan- guage 'Award 'offered juniors and seniors in German. The contest will be held from , to 5 o'61ock Thursday, March 25, in room 203 University Hall. The award, in the amount of $32, will be presented to the student writing the best essay dealing with some phase in the development of Gerinan literature from 1750-1900. Students who wish to compete and who have not yet handed In their applications should do so iminmediately in room 204 University Hall. Kothe-Hildner Annual German Lan- uage Award offered students in Courses 31 and 32. The contest, a translation test (German English and English-German), carries two stipends of $20 and $30, and Will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. Thursday, March* 25, in room 203 University Hall. Students who wish to compete and who have not yet handed in their applications should do so immediately in 204 Univer- sity Hall. Senior women are requested to obtain caps,I gowns and collars from Moe's Sport Shop, 711 N. University, March 17-20, from j:00 a.m. to 5:00' p.m. Senior women must wear caps and gowns in order to be admitted to 'Junior Stunt Night at Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- tre. A five-dollar deposit fee is required, of which three dollars will be refunded ivhen cap and gown are returned. Lectures University Lectures: A Symposium on Traumatic Shock will be conducted by Dr. Carl J. Wiggers, Professor of Physiol- ogy, Medical School, Western Reserve Uni- versity; Dr. Roy D. McClure, Surgeon-in- Chief, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit; Dr. Frederick A. Coller, Chairman of the De- prtmuent of Surgery, University of Michi- gan; with Dr. Cyrus C. Sturgis, Chair- man of the' Department of Internal Medi- cine, presiding; under the auspices of the Medical School and of the Michigan Acad- emy of Science. Arts, and Letters, on Fri- day, March 26, at 4:15'p.m. in the Kellogg Auditorium. The public is invited. University Lecture: Dr. Merle Curti, Professor of History, University of Wis- con0n, will lecture on the subject. "The Impact of American Wars on Education", under the auspices of the School of Edu- cation and the Department of History, on Thursday, March 25, at 4:15 p.m. in theI Rackham Amphitheatre. The public is ivited. University Lecture: Colonel Edga;r Ers- kine Hume, Medical Corps, U.S. Army, will lecture on the subject. "The* Health Activities of the U.S. Army in Wartime," under the auspices of the Medical, Dental, Public Health and Pharmacy Schools, on TuesdayMarch 30,at 4:15 pnm. inthe I French Lecture: Dr. Abraham Herman of the Romance Language Department wiil give the seventh and last of the French Lectures sponsored by the Cercie Francais entitled: "La Culture Francaise en Amerique", today at 4:15 p.m. in Room D, Alumni Memorial Hall. Academic Notices Seminar in physical chemistry wiil meet today in Room 410 Chemistry Building at 4:15 p.m. Mr. Robert Livingston will speak on "Structure of Organic Fluorides". All interested are invited. English 32, see. 1, will not meet today. G. D. Helm School of Education students, other than 'freshmen: Courses dropped after Saturday, March 20, will be recorded with the grade of E except under extraordinary circumstances. No course Is considered officially dropped unless it has been re- ported in the office of the Registrar, Room 4, University Hall. Sociology 157 and Sociology 62: Dr. Carr will not meet these classes today at 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m., nor his afternoon conference group, 3:30-5:30 p.m. History 12, section 24 (WS at 9 o'clock), which formerly met in Room 2014 Angell Hall, has been changed to Room 406 Li- brary. -Harry DeVries Physical Education for Women: Regis- tration for physical education for the outdoor season of the spring term will be held in Room 14, Barbour Gymnasium: Friday, March 19, 8:00-12:00 and 1:00- 5:00. Saturday, March 20, 8:00-12:00. Graduate Students in Speech: The March meeting of the Graduate Study Club of the Department will be held at 4:00 p.m. today in the East Conference Room (third floor) of the Rackham Building. Students in. Speech: Motion pictures of Lhe National Speech Improvement Camp at Northport, Michigan, will be 'shown at 3:15 p.m. today in the East Lecture Room (mezzanine floor) of the Rackliam Building. All studentsrin Speech are In- vited. Con certs Choral Union Concert: Nelson Eddy, assisted by Theodore Paxson, pianist, will give the tenth Choral Union concert this evening at 8:30 o'clock, in Hill Audi- torium. A limited number of tickets are till available at the offices of the Uni- versity Musical Society in Burton Me- morial Towver. A limited number of standing room tickets will also be placed on sale the evening of the concert. Charles . Sink, President Exhibitions Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: Italian majolica loaned from col- lection of Detroit Institute of Arts- pitchers, bowls, plates and tiles of 14tb & 15th centuries; also fragments typical of several phases of majolica technique. Glrondrfloor coridolr. A rehIta.4','.rp Rfl'A- ARGENTINE POLITICS: U.S. Must Fight Fascist Tendencies AN IMPORTANT event has been brewing down Argentine way menacinig Amterican safety. Preferring to be king-maker instead of king, President Castillo has named Rubustiano Patron Costas, well-known Fascist as the National Democratic party incumbent in the coming September election. This gesture presents a serious threat to the safety of the United Pan-American front. The election of ambitious and dictatorial Costas will greatly augment Argentina's stand as the sole country in the Western Hemisphere main- taining relations with the Axis. Meanwhile, the death of General Justo has removed the chief obstacle to the election of Castillo's proxy, and the outstanding exponent of the United Nations' cause. This has greatly policies. This courageous journal has neglected no opportunity to awaken and direct the public attention to the danger that faces their democ- racy under Castillo's rule. The Argentines have proved their willingness to aid the Allied cause through organizations of physicians, nurses, and technicians who are turning out surgical supplies for. Britain and Russia. The Argentine people have indicated that they want a free society of democratic states in America all working together. They want Hitler and his dynasty ended. They want free speech, free press, free elections, honest ad- ministration, and profitable relations with the world. In other words, THEY WANT WHAT ANY AMERICAN WANTS. But America hasn't played fair with the Ar- officials, who have already given so much? We want them to give everything, all at once, to give It passionately, Kellogg Foundation Institute Auditorium, The public is invited. It. R. Ybarra, authority on Latin Ameri- can affairs and author of "Young Man of Caracas," will speak Thursday night at 8:15 in Hill Auditorium as the closing