TWO THE MICHIGAN- DAILY ,.,-, . _ Fifty-Fourth Year Id ate Be Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control Df 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 ror 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 $4.50, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 Editorial Staff Marion Ford Jane Farrant . Claire Sherman Marjorie Borradaile Eric Zalenski Bud Low Mary Anne Olson Marjorie Rosmarin . Hilda Slautterback Doris Kuentz . . . . . Managing Editor . . . . Editorial Director . . . . . City Editor . . . . Associate Editor * . . .Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor . . .Women's Editor . . . Ass't Women's Editor Columnist . . . . . Columnist Business Staff Molly Ann Winokur Elizabeth Carpenter ". Martha Opsion Telephon Business Manager Ass't Bus. Manager Ass't Bus. Manager ne 23-24-1 - - NIGHT EDITOR: VIRGINIA ROCK Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. DISCRIMINATION: Students Get Raw Deal On Ticket Distribution PLAYS its last football game of the season today, quite conceivably the last for a long time. This contest, along with the one with Minnesota, is one of the traditional games of the year. And yet, there is one thing * out of place. The University of Michigan student body will be scattered all over . the huge stadium, and in seats which even freshmen do not de- serve, while on the fifty yard line sit the bottle-passers, celebrities, and other fortun- ate individuals who "know someone." We have watched the Wolverines play for four seasons, and were well satisfied with our seats until this year, bait now even the seniors received seats that were formerly given to freshmen and sophomores. Usually one has to go a long way to find even a minor complaint against the University. This issue, however, should receive serious considera- tion by officials of the Athletic Department. Students are playing in these games, bringing in money that pays for all the other sports-why shouldn't their fellow students sit in favorable seats? UST WHAT DO WE MEAN by favorable seats? Certainly not the ones' that the stu- dent body were given this year. Last year most of the juniors sat in section 24. This year that section is reserved for the alumni and general public that buy season tickets, while the seniors were moved over to section 25 (if they were lucky). Just why these season ticket holders should receive preference over students who are going to school here is beyond us. We happen to know that a certain party (an alumnus) was promised between 500 and 700 tickets on the fifty yard line for either the Notre Dame or Minnesota games for the purpose of running an excursion trip to Ann Arbor. Because of transportation dif- ficulties the promotion did not materialize, but nevertheless the tickets were promised him. Why should these people receive pref- erence over students? Something must be done about the ticket situation in the future, and we suggest that the students receive a "square deal." -Bud Low NEW YORK, Nov. 20.-A great fuss is sudden- ly being made about the unorganized worker. The New York Times has discovered that there are 15,000,000 heads of families in this group. These millions have not received the wage in- creases of 15 percent (andIlore) which organ- ized workers have obtained under the Little Stel formula. And the cost of living is up. What to do? ARE THEY RICH OR POOR? Thus the Times gleefully employs this new fact to support its previous contention that the wage level for organized workers is too high. But the Times has also been for a federal sales tax. It has been for a federal sales tax on the ground that "workers" are rolling in money etc. Doesn't the discovery of a group of 15,000,000 workers who are not rolling money call for some revision of past attitudes toward a general sales tx? We cannot have it both ways; we cannot picture the country's workers as rolling in money when it is rhetorically advantageous to picture them as rolling in money, and not rolling in money when it is argumentatively appropriate to find that multitudes of them are not. I use the Times only as an example, for I like the paper, and, in fact, read it every morning. If it were not for some of the Times's writers, I would not fully realize that the way to a brave new world is to keep Russia out of Esthonia, and for us to get new islands; and I would miss much other valuable information. HERE'S ANOTHER GROUP But I cannot get it through my head how it is possible, for example, to be against food sub- sidies to keep living costs down, as the Times is, immediately after having discovered that 15,- 000,000 workers are not enjoying wage increases. The Times makes an earnest effort to meet this issue by proposing that we adopt the Cana- dian system, under which workers earning less than $25 a week receive a 1 percent wage in- crease, for each 1 percent increase in the cost of living. Workers earning :etwen,$25 and $60 receive 25 cents additional each week for each 1 point rise in living costs, and workers earning more than $60 receive naught. But that doesn't solve the thing. For the Times is not alone in discovering new groups in our population The Office of Price Administration recently found a new group, just as big as the Tnes's group of the unorganized. This is that great group of Am- ericans, one-fourth of our people, who live on fixed incomes. - Included are Army and Navy personnel,and their dependents; civil service workers, police- men, firemen, school teachers; men and women who are retired on small, pensions; others living on investments, and on the proceeds of insur- ~~ I PiMInted - (e IF THERE WERE a few more men like Will Rogers, Jr., in Congress, the people of the United States would have little to worry about. Rep. Rogers electrified his audience in Hill Auditorium Wednesday night when he spoke on "The United States in Foreign Affairs." There was nothing half-hearted about his speech. Rep. Rogers has studied the problems that will arise in the post-war world, and he knows that international cooperation after the war is imperative. He did not return from abroad with warped opinions of our Allies and their war efforts as did the five globe-trotting Senators. He is not adding to the:-already un- easy minds of the nation by spreading absurd reports that our Allies are not fighting. Rep. Rogers. is not letting his opinions on foreign policy be colored by selfish, national- istic views, as are many of our "honorable" Congressmen. He is not afraid of post-war co- operation, he is not afraid that such cooperation will destroy the United States as a world power. He knows that the only course through which the United Stateswill remain a world power is through such cooperation. -The City Editor ance policies. The Canadian plan would not reach most of these. The federal government cannot tell municipalities how much to pay their help. (In fact this would be federal interfer- ence with local self government, which is against another of the Times's principles.) So we are back where we started, still facing the need to control the cost of living. HE MAY BE SOMEBODY'S DAD As a matter of fact, the discovery of "groups" is a dangerous business. It is like the quarrel between "the soldiers" and "the workers" which a few Congressmen tried to steam up last year, but have now dropped because of the immin- ence of the Presidential elections. It turned out, after a while, that many soldiers were indisput- ably the sons of workers, or brothers, or hus- bands of same, and did not belong to different groups at all. It is just conceivable that unor- ganized workers, are the sons, fathers, brothers, husbands, or wives of organized workers, and that to cut down the income of the second group, without curbing prices, would not help the first group at all. What good does it do to freeze an opposing economic group, only to find that you have frozen your own father? To keep living costs down still makes more sense than all the group arguments taken together. (Copyright, 1943, N.Y. Post Syndicate) SAWDUST AND OYSTER SHELLS GEE WHIZ, already we got fan mail. Presenting Miss Abby Lewin of Betsy Bar- bour, late of New York's own Greenwich Village. "I do wish Bluepoint had left a little Oyster in the shell. It would be meat, anyway, and maybe even a pearl. But it seems a shameful waste in these rationed times to use a most precious medium of expression-ten inches of blank newspaper-for an Indifferent dedica- tion to Trivia!'" Answer to first charge-Black market activ- ities. Innocent-Oysters aren't rationed. "It presumably makes a lovely satire on a certain type of precious intellectualism, which I thought even Greenwich Village had outgrown by 1929. Of course the nicotine mist and reboil- ed caffein can't compare with the old days of opium but they seem to produce the same ef- fect!" Precisely. We see in Ann Arbor escapism and dabbling artistry the exact cause of Greenwich Village. We are precious intellec- tuals, that what's so wrong. i. e. from "nicotine mist" to opium with perhaps a mediating ad- dition to nembutal or exam-time benzedrine. Plea-Guilty as sin. "T TIS TO BE FEARED," Miss Abby asserts, "that only intimates will be able to consider themselves a parcel of pigeons with any idea of what they mean." We are here inclined to disagree. We be- lieve that nearly every one of college age has been conditioned to pigeons and their frequent recurrance within their environmental sphere. Thus the familiar phrases, "pigeon breasted," "pigeon-hearted," "pigeon-livered," etc., which according to Webster, mean almost exactly what we mean when we say that we (students, now, in general) have become "only a parcel of pig- eons." Objection-being intimate with us has noth- ing to do with imagining one's self a pigeon. If Miss Abby personally has difficulty feel- ing pigeonish, we suggest that she stand in some clear space approximately five feet from any neighboring obstruction, kneel, close her eyes, clasp her shoulders with her hands and flap her elbows violently. We tried this experiment under scientific con- trols in several cases shortly before the first column was written and found that it was high- ly conducive to imaginative freedom of the sort described. In fact, one patient almost complete- ly lost his fear of traffic and was later found kneeling at the curb on State street at the en- trance to the Arcade. Another expressed a new fondness for kernels of corn. NOT TO BE LITERARY about all this, but we were thinking at the time of a little song in "She Stoops to Conquer" which says that books and learning are all "only a parcel of pigeons."~ Apt, eh? Modernists may prefer to imagine themselves the pigeons of "Pigeons on the Grass, Alas." It's allthe same to us. Quoting from us: "Very much known by the bookstores and recognized by the dean of women, there's an English Professor who calls us by our first name," Miss Abby says that we "will probably have the dubious publicity of being quoted in a fourth grade grammar as an example of how the subject of a sentence may be missed." Quoting from a fourth grade grammar: "Sentence subjects may be implied." Impli- cation here-"We Are." Can it be made to read "We are very much known by the book stores, etc. ." Quoting from Miss Abby's letter: "It must be fui to write (neriod). Here (capitol. new sen- ERRY-GO* ROUND .2 By DREW2 PEARSON WASHINGTON, Nov. 20.-Secre- tary Hull's historic appearance be- fore Congress to report on his mis- sion to Moscow was unanimously con- sidered helpful, especially by a group of Senators who long ago urged Hull to be more' cooperative with the Sen- ate. They believe some of the mis- takes of the .war might have been avoided had there been more cooper- ation in the past. Leader of this group is far-sight- ed Senator Wiley of Wisconsin, who, nearly three years ago, saw what might be coming and intro- duced a resolution-February, 1941 -calling upon Secretary Hull to give the Senate the true picture of the international situation, espe- cially in the Far East. But Wiley's resolution was frowned upon by the State Department, got nowhere. Could Hull have been per- suaded to report to the Senate then presumably he would have included the warning of U.S. Ambassador Grew, who had told Hull, in January. 1941, that the Japs were ready for war and that an attack could be ex-, pected anytime. Senate leaders are confident that, if they had had close cooper- ation with Secretary Hull, they could have persuaded Congress- even Senate isolationists-to vote more money for planes, and could have kept the nation much more on the alert. Thus, Pearl Harbor might not have happened. "With knowledge of Grew's report," says Senator Wiley, "we would not have been caught with our suspenders off. With more cooperation between Hull and the Senate, we might now be one year ahead in the Pacific. Hull is making a good beginning, but it is three years late. Let's hope such cooperation will be our constant practice in the future." 'Congresswoman' . Broad-gauged young Representa- tive Will Rogers, Jr., of California gets a lot of correspondence because of his aggressive stand on interna- tional issues, and takes it in his stride. However, a recent letter left him flabbergasted-though not half as flabbergasted as one of Rogers' two-fisted GOP colleagues, Represen- tative Clare Hoffman, Michigan anti- New Dealer, might have been. "I disagree with your views on for- eign policies," the letter read, "be- cause you are too much of an inter- nationalist, like Vice-President Wal- lace. Thank God we still have some members of Congress with backbone enough to speaki out for the other side, including wo fine Congress- women, Clare Booth Luce and Clare Hoffman." Cortiiriue 'r . ... The corn war is on again-to de- termine whether to let the price rise above present ceilings. Last sum- mer's battle on the same issue was settled by holding the ceiling, but the pressure for a rise is now stronger than ever. Basic problem is the growing shortage of feed grains in dairy and poultry sections, especially in the East. That shortage is not acute now, because farmers are using their home-grown grains, but these will r Out soon, and the great stocks of Midwest grain will have to move east if flocks and herds are to be kept alive. As usual, agriculture officials are lined up on one side, OPA on the other. Here is the lineup: Howard R. Tolley, Chief of the Bureau of Agricultural Economics, GRIN AND BEAR IT SATURDAY, NOV. 20, 1943 By Lichty .L ":She's replacing Snodgrass, who was released for active duty!" says flatly that the price of corn must go up, so that corn-hog farmers will find it more profitable to sell their corn than to feed it to hogs. J. B. Hutson, Assistant Director of the Food Production Administration, takes the same view as Tolley, and has more to say about the decision as head of an action agency. Richard Gilbert, OPA economist, says, "The price of corn will go up over my dead body." He contends a price increase would let down the bars to a boost in the price of living all along the line. Economic Stabilizer Vinson has made no commitment, but is known to be opposed. He fears that an in- crease for corn would increase prices of chicken feed and dairy feed and make things tough for all except corn farmers. Note: Real trouble, according to many officials, is that hog farmer Secretary of Agriculture Claude Wickard long delayed in helping to put a ceiling price on hogs, and that even now the ceiling price on hogs is so profitable that hog farmers feed their corn at home rather than sell it. DAILY OFFICIALBULLETIN SATURDAY, NOV. 20, 1943 VOL. LIV No. 17 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 Seniors in Aeronautical and Me- chanical Engineering: Dr. Levin of the Consolidated-Vultee Aircraft Cor- poration, San Diego, Calif., will inter- view graduating seniors on Monday morning, Nov. 22, in Room B-47 East Engineering Building. Interested men will please sign the interview schedule posted on the Aeronautical Engineer- ing Bulletin. Board, near Room B-47 East Engineering Building. Applica- tion blanks are to be filled out in ad- vance of the interview and may be obtained in the Aeronautical Depart- ment Office. Seniors in Mechanical, Aeronauti- cal, Civil and Electrical Engineering:' Mr. Perry Gage, Field Representative, of Lockheed-Vega Aircraft Corpora- tion, Burbank, Calif., will interview Seniors on Monday, Nov. 22, in Room 214 West Engineering Building. Interview schedule is posted on the Bulletin Board at Room 221 West En- gineering Bldg. Blanks are available in Room 221. German Departmental Library hours, Fall Term 1943-44: 1:30-4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday; 10:00- 12:00 a.m., Tuesdays and Saturdays, 204 University Hall. School of Education Students: No course may be elected for credit after today. Students must report all changes of elections at the Registrar's Office, Room 4, University Hall. Membership in a class does not cease nor begin until .all changes have been thus officially registered. Ar- rangements made with the instructor are not official changes. All Students are invited to audition for membership in the University of Michigan Concert Band. Auditions will be held at Morris Hall as per the following schedule: Flutes, Oboe's, English Horns, Bassoons-Monday, Nov. 22, 4:30 to 6 p.m.; E flat Clari- nets, B flat Clarinets, Alto Clarinets, Bass Clarinets-Monday, Nov. 22, 4:30 to 6 p.m.; Saxophones-Tuesday, Nov. 23, 4:30 to 5:15 p.m.; French Horns-Tuesday, Nov. 23, 4:30 to 6 p.m.; Cornets, Trumpets-Wednes- day, Nov. 24, 4:30 to 5:30 p.m.; Bari- tones, Euphoniums - Wednesday, Nov. 24, 4:30 to 6 p.m.; Trombones- Friday, Nov. 26, 4:30 to 6 p.m.; Tuba -Friday, Nov. 26, 5:15 to 6 p.m.; String Bass-Saturday, Nov. 27, 10:30 to 11 a.m.; Percussion-Saturday, Nov. 27, 11 a.m. Students unable to audition at hours indicated will be given other audition periods by calling at Morris Hall any afternoon from 1:00 to 4:30 p.m. Rehearsal schedule will be deter- mined after the membership has been selected and the available time deter- mined. Concerts and radio broad- casts will be presented at appropriate periods. W. D. Revelli, Conductor Concerts Events Today The Roger Williams Guild is spon- soring a Football Party tonight at 8:30. Wesley Foundation: Party for stu- dents and servicemen at 9 o'clock. Coming Events Varsity Glee Club: Special rehear- sal of Michigan songs for serenade. Additional try-outs for new members Sunday at 4:30 p.m. in Room 305, Michigan Union. The Lutheran Student Association will meet in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall on Sunday at 5:30 p.m. Follow- ing the supper Mr. Theodore Mark- wood, a law student, will talk on "Why I Am a Lutheran." Students and servicemen are invited. Christian Scientists on campus are invited to attend a reception in the Hussey Room in the Michigan League on Sunday, Nov. 21, at 4:00 p.m. First Methodist Church and Wesley Foundation: Class for students. and servicemen at 9:30 a.m. Prof. Ken- neth Hance, leader. Morning Wor- ship Service at 10:40 o'clock. Dr. C. W. Brashares will preach on "Un- rationed Thanks." Wesleyan Guild Meeting at 5:00 p.m. Dr. H. D. Bol- linger, Executive Secretary of the Methodist Student Movement, will be the speaker. The Naval-Marine Chor- us will sing. Supper and fellowship hour at 6:00 p.m. First Church of Christ, Scientist: Wednesday evening service at 8:00. Sunday morning service at 10:30. Subject: "Soul and Body." Sunday School at 11:45 a.m. Free Reading Room at 106 E. Washington St., open daily, except Sundays and holidays, from 11:30 to 5:00; Saturdays until 9:00 p.m. Grace Bible Fellowship: 10:00 a.m., University Bible Class. Ted Groes- beck, teacher. 11:00 a.m., Message by Rev. H. J. DeVries on "Five Thousand Fed." 7:30 p.m., Subject "Joseph." Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Midweek Bible Study. The pastor will begin the teaching of the Book of Leviticus. First Unitarian Church: 10:40 a.m., TT;--- ,_ ,..A-0n1 ' WANTED-20000 WAVES: Women 'With University Degrees Are Urgently Needed to Fill Important Jobs in Armed Forces WE GIVE A LOT OF LIP SERVICE these days to words like patriotism, all-out for the war effort, personal sacrifices and responsibilities. We laud the defenders of our country in glowing terms. We speak highly of the American wo- man and the part that she is doing in the war, but usually we try to keep these things as far away from us personally as we can. Never in history has there been such an urgent need for the services of American wo- men. And never in history has there been such an opportunity for women to serve their country in a time of need. Through the wo- men's Auxiliaries, the WACs, the WAVEs, the QPARc an +he Mrine . areat Job in the war might have concerning the WAVEs. It is hoped that University women nearing gradua- tion will begin to think very seriously about service to their country following -graduation. At the present time 20,000 WAVEs are urgently needed to bring the total number in service up to 47,000 by the end of the year. There are jobs that these 20,000 WAVEs can do, vitally im- portant jobs which will release some man for active duty. A WAVE will serve at an important NPivaI Station somewhere in the U. S. A. But work in the WAVEs is not a part-time "glamour" job. Of course, it's fun and the smart uniforms mana . o . sw:.. lut. Cho, u ...us.. ao-.: s . a - All of the girls who signed up to be Choral ion Concert: Yehudi USO hostesses must turn in their two Menuhin violinist, and Adolph Bal- letters of recommendation to Mrs. Ier, aconist, wnd giolhet Burton in the Office of the Social er, accompanist, will give the third Director at the League as soon as program in the Choral Union Series, possible. Tuesday evening, Nov. 23, at 8:30 o'clock, in Hill Auditorium. A limited number of tickets are available for all Academic Notices Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: No course may be elected for credit after the end of the third week of the Fall Term. Nov. 20 is therefore the last date on which new elections may be ap- proved. The willingness of an indi- vidual instructor to admit a student remaining'concerts in the series, ex- cept for the Boston Symphony and the Don Cossack concert, for which standing room tickets only remain. These tickets, as well as those for the "Messiah" performance, Dec. 19, and the Chamber Music Festival on Jan. 21 and 22, will continue on sale as long as they last. at the offices of the Universyv Musical Society in Burton I