THFE MICHIGAN DAILY FJP~A)6 N WMf2 ~1#43 me"Mo - - m- 1-- 11 1 IT I . .... ... .. . , ............ . 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 SOLDIERS' NEED: Education K.Chila-nge"s Vital R0PRESSNTO POR NATIONAL ADVERT1ING BYI National Advertising Service, Inc. College Pub2lisbers Representative 420 MA PSO sAve. NEW YORK. N.Y. cmiCASO * BostoN * Los AnGELES * SAN FRANCISCO Editorial Staff John Erlewine . . . . . Managing Editor Bud Brimmer . . . . . . Editorial Director Leon Gordenker . . . . . City Editor Marion Ford . . . . . . Associate Editor Charlotte Conover . . . . . Associate Editor Eric Zalenski . . . . . . Sports Editor Betty Harvey . . . . . . Women's Editor James Conant . . . . . Columnist (Editor's Note: The following arti- cle, which poses the problems involved in the post-war relationship of Ameri- can universities to students returning from armed service, is reprinted from the Saturday Review of Literature, Feb. 27, 1943.) W ITH the college year drawing towards its close and the pros- pect of academic halls being given over to training for military pur- poses, the nation is confronted with a situation which will not be settled when the guns of war are silenced. For we will have then a large body of young men who were snatched from the pursuit of learning When they had barely escaped from the adolescent stage, and who will come back to the universities, if they come back at all, men who have faced death and who in gazing on the bright face of danger have undoubtedly found themselves sud- denly aware of values in life which otherwise it might have taken them years of living to grasp. They will no longer be boys whose studies were to be pursued either for the acquisition of a liberal education or as the means to business or a ,pro- fession but youth hardened in the school of suffering, impatient of fripperies, demanding and entitled to their place in the world for which they have sacrificed the nor- mal happiness of young years. If they are to resume their col- lege education at all, it will have to be in universities which recog- nize the transmutation through which they will have passed, whose courses will be adjusted to minds matured by the urgency of a transcendent experience, which can offer them light and leading in meeting the enormous prob- lems for which their efforts were spent, and can make college seem a step toward the consummation of that world- for - which they fought. T HE GENERATION which saw the bright hopes of the Ver- sailles Peace fade into discord and strife, saw too the sapping of the ardor of the young men who had helped to bring it about. The lit- erature of disillusionment which represents the best writing talent of the younger generation of Amer- ica after the First World War was no mere belated development of the' trend toward realism already no- ticeable in the country before the outbreak of the conflict, or post-; poned response to the French nat- uralism which had been spreading outside the confines of its own land, but the sharp realization of the maladjustments and cankers of its -civilization on the part of a youth which had gone to battle ac- quiescent in the common belief that American life was wholly good., They had come back from the war cherishing the vision they had- nursed of a land that was gracious, bountiful; and harmonious, and their sharpened sight had discov- ered it full' -of imperfections and sores. They came back bringing with them a fund of Idealism which, if It could have been canalized, might have prevented the exces- ses of the twenties-and the trage- dy of the depression , and which, what with the Inevitable let- down which followed upon their release from service, and the re- laxation of the national morale, found itself frustrated and was drained .off Into bitterness a- gainst the social America, to which they had returned. The writers were articulate and able to e*press their discontent,; but there were thousands and thou- sands of their fellows who passed through the same'psychological ex- perience without having the cath- arsis of writing. T HERE will be thousands and thousands and thousands more of American youth this time when the guns cease to fire who will have achieved a premature maturity in the crucible of war, who will have lived with dreams while they were away, and who will return to a world which. having saved it, it will be theirs to shape. And vast num- bers of them will be hardly more than boys whose education was ar- rested at the threshold of learning, and who will bring to the resump- tion of their studies an intensity of emotional experience which must inevitably make college living and college work pallid and flat. What an enormous opportunity and what a fearsome task! If the universities can so shape their curricula that these men, can turn their idealism, their dis- cipline, their release into peace- ful living into directed effort to consolidate those values for which the war was fought, if they can see a continuum in their lives, the years of sacrifice lead- ing to unmolested opportunity for the fulfillment of their hopes, they will still be able to find in their universities that intellectual excitement which is the best that the college has to give. They will be the lawgivers and the engineers and the political sci- entists, the teachers and the minis- ters of the future and if their mor- ale can be maintained at high pitch during the difficult years of ad- justment to peace and their spirit communicated to their fellows out- side the college walls, they may go far indeed toward building a brave new world. But it will be up to the universities to' feed them the food that men demand and not the pap which might suffice for untried lads. 4. L. Business Staff Edward J. Perlberg Fred M Ginsberg Mary Lou Curran Jane Lindberg . . . . . . . Business Manager Associate Business Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager. Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: NETTA SIEGEL Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the -writers only. RED TAPE: Inefficiency Increases Eastern Fuel Shortage ANOTHER one of those tales about red tape came out of Washington this week, the saga of the workings of the President's Committee to Investigate the Problem of Supplying Additional Means of Transportation to Satisfy Petroleum Requirements of the Eastern Seabord. Described by Richard L. Stokes writing in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch as "a rival of Dickens Circumlocution Office," the workings of the PCIPSAMTSPRES in tackling the problem of the conversion and construction of wooden tug- boats and barges for the shipment of oil is an epic example of the overlapping of authority and duplication of effort. Between April 1942 and the end of the year, no less' thani 14 government agencies went through a series of examinations, conferences, re-examinations, decisions and counter-deci- sions until by Dec. 31, 1942 according to the recent report of the Truman Committee the 620 proposed barges and tugboats with an indi- vidual capacity of 6,000 barrels, had been whittled down to four barges with a capacity of 15,000 barrels each. The immediate adoption of the President's plan, together with a trans-Florida pipeline, would have moved 150,000 barrels of oil and gaso- line a day from Texas to the Atlantic coast. Instead, however, department after department added its share to the general confusion, each with its own personal recommendation to add and then be ironed out, until Donald Nelson was forced to take the matter into his own hands. HE TRUMAN report described the situation thus, "There has been unnecessary confusion and delay in carrying out a program essential to the national welfare. The delay prior to the recommendations of the President's committee Is most regrettable. That occurring after the mat- ter had been studied by the committee and after its recommendations had been approved by the President is inexcusable. The length and fre- quent conferences which took place among the various agencies produced many arguments but few decisions" "There was simply too much talk and not enough action!" Of course this report ca easily be taken as just one more attack against bureaucracy, but it is more than that for involved in the failure of the PCIPSAMTSPRES to secure effective action are the lives' and health of all the inhabitants of the eastern seaboard. N AN AREA where little or no gas is available for other than essential driving, an area where many homes are underheated, where a shipment of supplies 'tothe North African Front had left the inhabitants for a time with no available petroleum at all, it is not encouraging to read: "If the barge program had been carried out expeditiously, the shortages of both fuel oil and gasoline in the East coast region, par- ticularly in .its southern and western area, would have been much less severe." Although to a large degree through the work of Ferdinand Eberstadt, as vice-chairman of the I'd Rather Be Right BySAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, March 26.- Continuing on the curious story of what has happened to American isolationism, we may set down this point: 1. Isolation finds, increasingly, that it can do business with Mr. Roosevelt. I would not have believed it myself at first glance. But the record is there. Isolation formed the strongest, most vocal area of support for Mr. Roosevelt on the question of our curious political behavior in North Africa. There were laudatory speeches on the floor by Fish, by Wheeler, by Clark of Missouri. There were solemnly approving editorials in the New York Daily News. THEY NEVER USED HIS NAME BEFORE Isolation joined with administration forces to give a verbal slugging to Wendell Willkie when he returned from his world trip, demanding American support of democratic movements in all countries. Isolation, outraged by the Hill-Hatch-Ball- Burton resolution in favor of a United Nations organization, suspected at first that the Presi- dent was behind it. It was beside itself with incredulous joy when it discovered that the President was not behind it. Individual iso- lationist or ex-isolationist commentators have been burbling their happiness at the Roosevelt- Connally brush-off of the four Senators. (There is a wholly new note in the mail I re- ceive from isolationist sources. On the question of appeasing Franco, for example, these letter- writers now ask: "Don't you suppose that the President knows better than you do?"-which he may, indeed. The interesting point is that these people now invoke that name.) Isolation, in point of fact, endorses the whole of the policy of conciliation of Franco, as it endorsed collaboration with Darlan. It is not only ready but ecstatically eager to extend such endorsement in any future instances of ap- peasement as they may come along. IT LIKES THIS, FINE Isolation specifically endorsed Mr. Roosevelt's no-second-front policy of last year. Though on most questions it seems to regard the President as not quite bright enough to shut the windows when it rains, it leaned heavily, during that one special argument, on the plea that "the President knows best." 2. Isolation, pure and simple, is no longer an issue in American public life.* The biggest outstanding issue of American for- eign policy is Russia. The choices are whether to enter into a formal treaty of alliance with Russia, as Britain has done, and wishes us to do; or else to hold out against Russian influence by encouraging every element of conservatism, monarchism, semi-fas- cism or even outright (but not Hitler) fascism disoverable in Europe. American isolation has made itself the party of that second choice. The weird, new collabora- tion between isolation and the administration occurs along the line at which America's foreign policy follows that second alternative. 3. Isolation is no longer opposed to collabor- ation, per se. It applauded collaboration with . . Darlan. It would not 'object to a treaty with BOOKS IT IS always difficult to review a first novel, for the talent displayed in such a work often transcends the estimate of the work itself. This is certainly true of November. Storm. There is no doubt that McCormick is a writer of genuine talent and extraordinary promise. At the same time, it is equally evident that November Storm is a good novel but not an outstanding one. A story of the Great Lakes, "November Storm" appeals primarily to masculine taste. The plot is engrossing and deceptively simple -for it serves as a framework for the com- plicated and extensive pattern ,of the book. That McCormick has been able to weave the diverse elements of the book into such a direct and orderly whole is convincing evidence of his craftsmanship. Characterization, always his forte, Is, again, the substance of "November Storm." The Weasel Sean, and Burgee are superbly drawn, while the brief appearance of Anchor's wife is one of the high points of the book-unforgettable, a bit of brilliantly incisive writing. Even Stella Forester, the least successful of McCormick's characters, is not unconvincing. The structure of the novel is handled with somewhat less skill. On the whole, it is excel- lent, and in certain sections achieves a scope and vigor suggestive of Dos Passos. However, there are two principal weaknesses. The first- and it is not a serious flaw-is a certain uneven- ness of tempo, especially in the early part of the novel. The plot gains momentum rather slug- gishly; the description of the poker hand, in the first chapter, is, in particular, unnecessarily long. However, once the novel gets under way, it picks up pace rapidly, and sustains interest thereafter. Secondly, I feel obligated to criticize the author's handling of the Great Lakes material. Here is presented a rich source of material which he presents insufficiently, at best. A similar reproof can be directed toward the Conrad-like sea sym bolism, which McCormick obviously intended as an important correlative, but which he did not clearly enough point up. THE MATURITY of both the philosophy and the writing style in November Storm is par- ticularly impressive. McCormick has an un- canny flair for precise expression, an ability to discern and accurately state the furtive, yet undeniable undertones of existence. When Sean, inspired by the fog, suddenly remembers his parents, "it seemed as if their period of forget- fulness had been a breaking of faith somehow." As in the characterization of Anchor's wife, this is keen, accurate expression. - And later in the novel, in Sean's discussion of Whitey with Stella, McCormick writes with a truth and frankness unusual in a young author. This maturity is as clqarly apparent in his writing style. It is, as is to be expected, somewhat uneven. However, it is never gauche. He writes excellently and often magnificently. Most important of all, his prose has an in- stinctive ease, an unmistakable originality. This, together with his mature intellect and sensitivity, signifies genuine and substantial "promise". November Storm is a robust and highly enter- taining novel and, as such, well worth reading. As the first work of a writer who seems to pos- sess in abundance those qualities which lead to a permanent place in the literary scene, it as- sumes an even greater significance. DAILY OFFI.C:IAL BUILLETI,,N. (Continued from Page 2) Tentative lists of May. 1943, graduates have been posted in Room 4, U Hall., Please check the list, and notify counter clerk of any discrepancies. Robert L. Williams, Assistant Registrar Seniors, receiving their teaching certifi- cates this year, who are interested in teaching in the Detroit Public School System, are asked to call at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall. Bureau of Appointments and, Occupational Information, Retirement Dinner for Professor J. Ral- eigh Nelson: The deadline for reserva-I tions for this dinner is April 1, and those who received invitations'oor who are friends, inadvertently omitted from the invitation list are reminded that no reservations can be placed after that date. Alpha Lambda Delta: Any woman who is a member of the class of 1945 and who made a half A, half B average both semes- ters of her freshman year is eligiblemfor membership in Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman women's honorary scholastic so- -iety. If you are interested in becoming a member, please call Shelby Dietrich at. 2-5618 as soon as possible. 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- partment of Surgery, University of Mieh- gan; with Dr. Cyrus C. Sturgis, Chair- man of the Department of Internal Medi- cine, presiding; under the auspices of the Medical School andof the Michigan Acad- emy of Science, Arts, and Letters, today at 4:15 p.gi. in the Kellogg Auditorium. The public is invited. University Lecture: Colonel Edgar 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 Tuesday, March 30, at 4:15 p.m. in the Kellogg Foundation Institute Auditorium. The public is invited. Biological Chemistry Lecture: Dr. Gene- vieve Stearns, Research Associate Pro- fessor of Pediatrics at the University of Iowa, will lecture at 8:00 p.m. on Tuesday, March 30, in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Topic: "The Relation of Changes in Body Composition to Food Requirements and Utilization during Growth." Academic Notices L.S.A. Faculty Members in Charge of Large Courses: If you are in charge of a course in which the enrollment exceeds, say, 100 students, please send me imme- diately the name and number of the course, and the approximate enrollment. As far as possible, final examinations in the larger courses will be scheduled dur- ing the first four days of finals. D. L. Rich Freshman 'ealth Lectures (Men): Spring term freshman men and other men, who have not passed, the required health lectures may attend theml in' Room 25 Angell Hall'at either 5:00 or 7:30 p,.m. Lecture No. 1-Aprl 1; No. 2-April 2; No. 3-April 8; No. 4-April 9;' .,,No.-5- April 15; No. 6-April 16.F Warren 4., Forsythe, M. D. Notice to Students 'Taking Freshman Hygiee Lectures:. FINAL EXAMINATION SEATING AnRANGExMZNT All students seated In rows' A through K at the lectures, take their.final examina- tion in Natural Science Auditorium. All those whose seats are +back of, row K take their examinations, In room 165 of the Chemistry .Building. Final Etaminations: Section I .................March 29 Section II................March . 30: Margaret Bell, M. D. Medical Adviser -for Women Psychology 40 will meet today in Room 2042 N. S. The History language examination for M.A. candidates will be given in, Room B Haven Hall -at 4:00 p.m. today.. Students intending to take this examination please report immediately to the History Office, 119 Haven Hall. History 12, Lecture Section 11, mid- semester will be given .at 2:00- p.m. today., The sections of DeVries and Slosson in, 1025 Angell.. Hall; all others in Natural Science Auditorium. Students preparing to enter the Hop- wood contests, shoulO make their requests for records -from' the Registrar's Office by April 1. Rt. W. Cowden All those planning to write the prelim- inary examinations for the Pla P. in Eng- lish, please,.get in .,touch wit mebefore April 1. Norman E. Nelson English 47 will meet in 3231 A.H. Mon-, day night, 8-10. E. S. Everett Riding Classes: Women students inter- ested in elementary or intermediate rid- ing classes may register in Office 15, Bar- bour Gymnasium, before Monday, March 29. Concerts May Festival Tickets:' The over-the- counter sale of Season Tickets (6 con- certs)afor the Golden Jublee 'May Festi- val, at $8.80-$7.70-$6.60" each-will begin Monday morning, March 29, at 9:00 o'clock, at the offices of the Uhiversity Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. The performers are as follows: Fritz Kreisler; Vladimir Horowitz; and the fol- lowing artists.from the Metropolitan Op- era Association: Lily Pons; Stella Roman, Astrid Varnay,' Keratin 'Thorborg, Fred- erick Jagel, Salvatore Baccaloni, and Alex- ander Kipnis. The- Philadelphia Orches- tra, Eugene Ormandy, Conductor, and Saul Caston, ',Associate Conductor; University Choral Union, Hardin Van Deursen, Con- ductor; Festival Youth Chorus, Marguer- Exhibition, College of- Architecturm and Design: Alpha Alpha Gamma, honor so- ciety for wonen in architecture, decor- ative design, and landscape architecture, is showing photographs in architecture, sculpture, and decorative design by prac- ticing members of the society. Third floor exhibition room, Architecture Build- Ing. Open daily 9:00, to 5:00, except Sun- day, through March 31. Open -to the public. Exhibit: Museum of Art and Archaeol- ogy, Newberry Hall. Photographs of Tu- nisia by George R. Swain, Official Pho- tographer to the University of 'Michigan Expedition to North Africa in 1925. Tunis, Medjez-el-Bab, Tozeur, Tebessa, Stax, Matmata country. Exhibition: The Botanical section 'of the Michigan Academy of Science, Litera- ture and the Arts has arranged a photo- graphic display 'of botanists. This exhibit will be open to the public Friday and Saturday mornings, March 26 and Z7. A large number of these prints have been, contributedtbythe Botany Department of Michigan- State College.. Together with this exhibit Dr. Eugene S. McCartney's collection of squirrel figurines will be on display. Exhibition: Professor Shu-chi Chang, of the Fine' Arts Department 1i the Na- tional Central University in Chungking, will present an exhibition of contem- porary Chinese painting and demonstrate his own painting daily until March' 31. Open to. the, public daily, 1:-00-6,'00 P.M.. In the Grand Rapids Room of the Michi- gan' League. -No admission charge. EventsToday The Angell Hail Observatory will be open to the public from 8:00 to 10:00 this evening in case the sky is clear or nearly so. The planets; Jupiter and Sat- urn, and star. clusters will be shown through the telescopes. The Observatory will be closed if it is a cloudy evening. Children must be accompanied by adults. The Chinese Students Club, in coopera- tion with the Interclub Board, Is pre- senting a China Night at the International Center tonight at 8:00. The program will consist of a picture, "We Fly for China", showing the training of Chinese pilots In American camps and a demonstration of Professor Chang Shu-chi's manner of painting. Anyone interested may attend. No charge. All house athletic managers or exercise managers will meet today at 5:00 p.m. in the Dance Studio at Barbour Gym- nasium. Bring participation sheets" for the previous two weeks. If the manager is unable to be present, please send a sub- stitute. Presbyterian Student Guild will-have a special Lenten Bible Class tonight. 8:00- 9:00, led by Mr. Lampe, on the subject, "The Parables of Jesus." Roller skating party afterwards. Leave from the church at 9:00 p.m. Wesley Foundation: Bible Class tonight at 7:30 with Dr. C. W. Brashares lesider. Subject for discussion, "Acts." Party at 9:00 p.m. Coming Events I I