i'ris; i ri :.; % iA.I L~ a~zCioz,; ..: 1'jit-Fourth Year 7-- Editednd znsa 'd yv studients of the University of MIchian nuder Ibe autority of the Board In Contro) of Student Publicatons. . P>!n : bed mrn -n- ug execpt, MonTay during the regulnr UO;.i y , ni every morning except Mon- day and '1 e dn Lumte summer session. Mem ber of The Associated Press The /ssor inen I 're. is exclusively entitled to the use ror re pubnic ion ofall news dispatches credited to it or otherwi:- creditin((I is n ewspaper. All rights of repub- licavio : 1 l e ; ters herein also reserved. Ent erd t t Pot Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-ciaos-i ;"-il matr. SEscr itiosnsduringthe regular school year by car- rier $450 by amli 2 Member, Assocrated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 Editorhal Staff I'd Rather Be Right By SAMUEL GaRTON Marion Fo. . Jane Iiarrant . Claire ? e liaii Marjorie ilraa Eric Z alonski Bud Low Mary Anie l Mrjorie Rowisit H}-Ilda i n Iii is litk Doris K e Bu Molly A n WiORr EtizelrlE 'rpener Martha Opsion Telep . . . .Managing Editor . . . . Editorial Director * . . .City Editor Associate Editor . .Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Women's :ditor Ass't Women's Editor Columnist Columnist siess Staff . . Business Manager . . . Ass't Bus. Manager Ass't Bus. Manager phone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: BARBARA HERRINTON Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are wvritten by members of The Daily staf and represent the views of the writers only. POS TWAR PLANS: StudentiGroups Offer Chidn cefor discussion AST NTGIT'S discussions by members of the Speake rs'Bureau and Post War Council at two womn's dorms marked the beginnng of these ormanizatioons' 1943-44 aim to stimulate interestin. and to acquaint students on campus with pos- -mrlx )li iC. At ot Helen Newberry and Mosher, mem- bers of the iefilers' Bureau spoke on post- war nuns and conducted open forum discus- sio s.Alt mh these discussions were fairly well atde. it seems that most of the spec- ta tor car me cause they thought they had to, and net because of their interest in this Th, sdents on college campuses and in the cities of 1is country who now have the power to vote or s0o nwill have, are the ones who will play reat role in post-war plans. If interest in sun policies is not developed now, when the time eones for the decisions to be voted upon and carriod out, no one will know whether or not f'.l plins presented are sufficient to rebuild the worlrd sond prevent further chaos. Now s lie time for all the citizens to start think inb about post-war planning. How soon the time for us to inaugurate such plans will cone, is lard to say, but we must be pre- pat(I \\ I-hnc ocasion does arise. Even if one is iwiajori ii il mnsic, art, or liberal arts, and his mainijeres s ai e not i politics, as a future citisen of this country, most of his spare time shouldhbev oted to thought and research on this impotant problem. The Speakers' Bureau and PostWar Council are offering an invaluable opp1or tuntyforstudents to become acquainted with poU-N ar aims -Agatha Miller IN( JMIRENDER: f r b' g of Nazi Cities WaiI NollIEnd- War Soont S I L, U 1 I devastating raids on Berlin, five nif'Al s in a row. force the German leaders to an e b srrender? Yes, inswer those who believe ,000 planes every night over Berlin and oher irrai ant cities of Germany will bring captulat ion very soon without costlier land The force of this "second front: air strfnmth" is shown by eyewitnesses' state- ients oa t quarter destruction of Berlin, 8,000 casualties, and the homelessness, sleepless- ness and nerve-taut condition of the people in the evpia . And important too, the residences of Hth lmniler and Goebbels are reported badly damged and perhaps destroyed, this emphasizna the Allied side of total war to the enemy leaders. LL ThESE facts, coupled with the Nazi re- t~re' in Russia, have led enthusiasts to pre- dict the earlycollapse of Geramny. But on the other side of the ledger it is found impossible to estimate the damage caused since Goebbels had revioush ordered the evacuation of sectors of Berlin inw iding many governmental depart- ments and of ies. Defenses will probably be stroftenii Ic by additional fighter planes and .,..s.: ni-iovitQ AC+.npri nlp fT n nn NEW YORK, Nov. 30-There are a number of recent developments on the double-talk front which I have not yet covered, so perhaps I had better catch up. I have in mind a metropolitan newspaper which fought like blazes not long ago for free postage for servicemen. It won., The same newspaper is fighting like blazes against food subsidies, today. If it wins again, the cost of food for servicemen's families (and all other families) will go up at least 7 percent It would take a great many three-cent stamps to make up for that. The net result of both campaigns will be to allow any serviceman to send a free letter home to his hungry family. AS WITH A CORKSCREW I call it double-talk. Are subsidies moral if used for mail, and immoral if used for food? Or is it right to subsidize a soldier's letters and wrong to subsidize his child's porridge? Where WE REMEMBER how we always used to decide what books to read by how much conversa- tion they had in them. We wouldn't have any readers of this column at all if other people felt the same way. So today we're putting in plenty of quotes, to rectify the situation. ,r. Lewis Carroll, talking about how he wrote " 'Twas brillig, and the slithy toves did gyre and gimble in the wabe," said: "Take the two words 'fuming' and 'furious.' Make up your mind you will say both words, but leave it unsettled which you will say first. Now open your mouth and speak. If your thoughts incline ever so little towards 'fuming' you will say 'fuming-furious.' If they turn, by even a hair's breadth, towards 'furious' you will say furious-fuming'; but if you have that rarest of gifts, a perfectly balanced mind, you will say 'frumious.'" Perhaps this next one won't strike you as it did us. Anyway ... Herbert Hoover said, as soon as he was elected president in November, 1928: "We in. America are nearer the final triumph over poverty than ever before in the history of any land. Given a chance to go forward with the policies of the last eight years, we shall soon, with the help of God, be in sight of the day when poverty will be banished from this nation." Somehow we can't get excited about Mr. Hoov- er's predictions for the future of Europe. * * * * O YOU REMEMBER the O. Henry story "The Cop and the Anthem" about the tramp who was trying to commit a crime bad enough to put him in a nice warm jail all winter, and not serious enough to keep him there all summer? "In Soapy's opinion, the Law was more benigh. than Philanthropy. There was an endless round of institutions, muncipal and eleemosynary, on which he might set out and receive lodging and food accordant. with the simple life. But to one of Soapy's proud spirit the gifts of charity are encumbered. If not in coin you must pay in humiliation of spirit for every benefit received at the hands of philanthropy. As Caesar had his Brutus, every bed of charity must have its toll of a bath, every loaf of bread its compensation of a private and personal inquisition. Wherefore it is better to be a guest of the law, which though conducted by rules, does not meddle unduly with a gentleman's private affairs." m k* * 91 This next is a favorite of ours, probably because it reminds us of a few of our Tory relatives. It's from Somerset Maugham's "The Outstation." "For Mr. Warburton was a snob. He was not a timid snob, a little ashamed of being impressed with his betters, nor a snob who sought the in- timacy of persons who had acquired celebrity in politics or notoriety in the arts, nor the snob who was dazzled by riches; he was the naked, un- adulterated common snob who dearly loved a lord. He was touchy and quick-tempered, but he would much rather have been snubbed by a per- son of quality than flattered by a commoner." AND THEN there's Christopher Morley's "K. Foyle," a "business sharecropper": "1 here's nobdy who gets such wonderful dark rings under their eyes like the Irish." "We called her Sanka because probably she never kept any- one awake." "Men have so much more time for thinking. They have sort of time between times, what a woman never has. Men don't have to tuck a dress under their knees every time they sit down in a windy subway car, or figure if they'll have a pair of fresh gloves for lunch." The more we get mixed up, I mean race mixed-up, the better. We got no time here for race prejudice." do you draw the philosophical distinction and what do you draw it with? A corkscrew? Still on the double-talk front, I call attention to the renewed campaign against Mr. Willkie in Republican ranks, on the ground that his foreign poliey ideas are too much like Mr. Roosevelt's. The odd thing is that exactly the same wing of the G. 0. P. which is against Mr. Willkie, for this very reason, is most enthusiastic about the plan to have both parties adopt identical foreign policy planks next year. THE SAME, BUT NOT QUITE It wants both parties to have exactly the same foreign policies, but it apparently wants the candidates to have different ones. Isolationist policy is firming down into two chief demands, one, that Russia must give us bases in Siberia from which we could attack Japan, and two, that we must form a military alliance with Britain to protect ourselves against Russia. In other words, Russia must give us bases be- cause we are her ally, and also we had better form another friendship elsewhere. because we are not. IT'S NOT BASIC ENGLISH That is to say, Russia had better hurry up and work with us, while we work against her. It might also be described as a policy which holds, first, that we can't do without Russia, and, second, that we don't need her. If that can't be called double-talk, it can't be called basic English, either. Of course, there are some items of double- talk so ornery and common that I won't allow them in my collection, like the theory that while high wages are inflationary, high food prices are not. I don't keep those, I ust throw them away. What I like are the neater items, such as the discovery that we can't raiseincome taxes because 15,000,000 white collar workers have had no pay increases, and also that we must institute sales taxes because American workers are rolling in money. Those I cherish, and mount in little cel- lophane bags at night, after the town has gone to sleep, and all is quiet, except for a few bar- room arguments. (Copyright, 1943, N.Y. Post Syndicate) ART THE EXHIBITION on the main floor of the Architecture Building offers an excellent op- portunity to reevaluate the importance of tech- nical surety in creative expression. Th pitfalls and transcendent successes inherent in preoc- cupation with formal structure are admirably illustrated by the divergent approaches to Ab- straction both of Mr. Eugene Dana, graduate stu- dent in design, now on campus, and of Mr. Louis Schanker, of New York., Covering a period of six years' intensive de- votion to the subtle relations between space, pigmentation, texture, and the dignity of form, Mr. Dana's work reveals the rewarding of that devotion with secrets of expression that faith- ful intent alone will divulge. It is not streth- ing the point to compare Mr. Dana's persever- ance in the struggle for spacal understanding with the long apprenticeship that led the Baroque master up the long path from crats- man to artist. In fact, in such a work as his large beige-ground oil (1939) which hangs by itself at the left end of the exhibition, there is a sure human nobility as profound In its spacious and controlled beauty as an intimate Bach chorale. Although some of his work has the inevitable, cruel clarity of experimentation, one need not fear for coldness in this kind of abstraction. When the release from formal concern manifests itself, as it must in Mr. Dana, the richness of purpose in his painting must appear as a firm human search. The seeds of freedom are already apparent in the small brown oil (1938), the re- cent black, blue, and white tempera (1943), and the mauve-brown and black, unframed collage (1942). A LIVELY FOIL for Mr. Dana's serious and inevitable movement to abstraction, Mr. Schanker's colored block-prints are, at best, an exciting and colorful mixture of the expression- ism of Paul Klee and George Grosz. At worst, they give the impression of uncertain objectives through too hasty a utilization of abstraction as a tour-de-force. It is quite clear, nevertheless, that when Mr. Schanker serves his medium hon- estly his art reaches a high level, Certainly the warm decisiveness of his "Conversation," "Two Figures," "Man at a Piano," "Aerial Act," and the beatifully textured "St. George and the Drag- on" creates little masterpieces, difficult to im- agine in another form. A final word about the delightful companion- ship between Mr. Dana's huge blue oil and a fine piece of Renaissance wrought iron which hangs above it cannot be resisted. The exhibition, open to the public, will be up through December. -R. Lippold Q2..i7h e6dCottlI betters to the Editor must he type- written on one side o the paper only and signed with the name and address of the writer. Requests for anonymos publication will be met. Shady' Imon, Formal? T E MEMBERS of the Michigan Union who were turned away from the ticket window Friday, Nov. 26, would like a statement from those in charge as to the method of distribu- tion of tickets for the Union Formal. Do those in charge of this ticket distribution have the courage to tell publicly that, if 350 tickets were available, 25 were given to ten mem- bers of the Union committee to dis- pose of as they saw fit-to friends, fraternity brothers-or to the highest bidder? The persons who might find it especially difficult to accept these facts are the many servicemen who have had to pay a special fee to become Union members this fall, and then were deprived of the chance to attend the Union Formal "for members only" because the committee members feel that as "hard Union workers" they are de- serving of some compensation. They might be reminded that the jobs they hold are honorary, and not supposed to carry any reward. The Union Formal was billed as an affair for Union members. However, many of the limited supply of tickets have been sold by committee-men to non-member friends. When one Union life-member appealed to the ticket chairman for a ticket, he was told to go out and look for a scalper -he might be able to get one that way. -John Doe No Pull, No Ticket! "OX THURSDAY, Nov. 25, 1943, it was announced in The Daily that 350 tickets were to go on sale for the annual Union Formal. On Saturday it was announced that only 150 tickets were made available for student purchase. Now the question is, what has happened to the remaining 200) tickets? And is the Annual Union Formal a "private affair" or can anyone go provided he has "friends" or "influence" in the proper places? It is not my intention to attack Mr. Rupert Straub but I do wish that he, as ticket chairman, make a public ex- planation about the whole affair to throw some needed light on this rath- er "shady" and "obscure" Annual Union Formal. -Constantine Stamatakis Useless Column? R IS THAT your name. I am writing this on the run out of town. Somebody saw me reading that dear column in your paper ... What GRIN AND BEAR IT ._ , , ;ifs: xY _ _... M ~ ,., _, . ; . "If you kids were really hungry, you'd eat some of this cake- you wouldn't have to have butter on bread!" is its Name? Oh, well, let's call it Bluepoint, but I can think of a lot of other things you wouldn't print. Facsimile-I was walking-or was I running, down the street, can't remember the name. It was gravel and didn't really have a name, I suppose. We were together-me friend and I-I can't remember her name. But then again, it might have been a fellow, but what's his name and I don't get along togeth- er. His shoes are too tight, don't you think. Facetious, perhaps, but no self res- pecting newspaper has the right to force any more of that Bluepoint on the reading public, because the public will soon stop reading. A newspaper columnis a medium through which ideas can be ex- pressed, topics of general interest can be discussed, and valuable in- formation can be published. Bluepoint yesterday didn't fill, or came even close, to any purpose. The space might better have gone empty for the benefit of doodlers. If Bluepoint isn't run out of town by now, it's because it was hiding. -Disgusted GI Post-War Planning.. . THE AVERAGE GI soldier is con- cerned about his couniry today, the towi he will come back to, the world he will live in tomorrow. It is my suggestion that a dynamic pro- gram of enlightenment, the American way, be undertaken to give the men in the camps, and overseas where possible, the opportunity to know the facts and problems of both domestic and foreign affairs. The program must go beyond the narrow orienta- tion bulletins and lectures. Suggested fields: 1. problems of world peace; 2. problems of intol- erance and group dislikes-Adams, Latkovic, and Sanzetta are fighting in adjacent foxholes; 3. potential solutions to domestic problems;4. post-war occupational fields. This program. might be put across by the following methods, among others 1. Pamphlets on these and other related and timefy subjects pre- sented in eye-capturing form. 2. A planned series & lectures and discussions by prominint pub- lie officials and inforned private citizens. 3. InitIation of group projects along these lines by the men them- selves, wherever practicable. Home-coming veterans will number close to ten million men. As an edu- cated electorate they can aid im- measurably in formulating a just world order and a stabilized national economy. Unprepared, conceivably hapless without the opportunities such a pro- gram envisions, they will merely con- stitute another powerful but self-in terested pressure bloc, perhaps more dupes for machine bosses. They will have fought for the life of the na- tion; in vain, if they have not thought of her welfare. It's a big order, but our citizen- soldiers must have the opportunity to "Think to Win"-a better world. -A Serviceman By Lichty - DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN __ TUESDAY, NOV. 34, 1943 VOL. LIV No. 24 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 21:30 a.m. Notices General Faculty Meeting: All mem- bers of the several faculties are in- vited to attend a meeting to be held at 4:15 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 2, in the Rackham Lecture Hall, at which President Ruthven will report upon the results of his recent visit to Eng- land, especially as it related to plans for post-war and adult education. School of Education Faculty will meet today in the University Ele- mentary School Library. The meet- ing will convene at 4:15 p.m. V o All Faculty Members and Oth- ers Interested: 1. Old Age Annuities. Since 1918 it has been a condition of employment as a Faculty member of the University of Michigan, except for instructors of less than three years' standing for whom the provi- sion is optional, that such Faculty member shall purchase an old-age annuity from the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association. The object of this annuity is provision for the teacher after he shall have passed the retirement age. The annuity premium payment required from each Faculty member is 5% of any annual salary not exceeding $5,000, or thus a maximum premium of $250. Faculty members may devote as much more of their salaries to annu- ity premium as they desire. The Uni- versity matches the annuity prem- ium up to an annual sum not in excess of $250, thus within the 5% limit doubling the amount of the annuity purchased. 2. Any person in the employ of the University may at his own cost pur- chase annuities from the Association in any amounts. The University it- self, however, will contribute to the expense of such purchase of annui- ties only as stated in (1) above. 3. Life Insurance. Any person in the employ of the University, either as a Faculty member or otherwise, unless debarred by his medical exam- ination, may, at his own option and expense, purchase life insurance from the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association at its published rates. All life insurance premiums arerborne by the individual himself. The Univer- sity hakes no contribution toward life insurance and has nothing to do with the life insurance feature ex- cept that it will if desired by the insured, deduct premiums monthly and remit the same to the Associa- tion. 4. Monthly Premium Payments. The University accounting offices will as a matter of accommodation to faculty members or employees of the University, who desire to pay either annuity premiums or insurance pre- miums monthly, deduct such premi- ums from the payroll in monthly in- stallments. In the case of the so- called "academic rolls" premiums for the months of July, August, Septem- ber, and October will be accumulated by the Payroll Department by deduc- tions from the salary of the preced- ing eight months of 50% more each month than the premium due for each of those months. 5. The University has no arrange- has been placed in the hands of the Secretary of the University by the Regents. Please communicate with the un- dersigned if you have not arranged for any and all annuities required under your appointment. Herbert G. Watkins Civilian students who purchased student tickets for the Michigan- Minnesota football game and have not yet presented their Deposit Re- ceipts for refund are asked to do so immediately. Refunds will be made at the Ticket Office in the Adminis- tration Building on Ferry Field from 8:30 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. daily until Dec. 1. All deposit receipts become void after that date and no further refunds will be made. H. 0. Crisler, Director Faculty of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: The five-week freshman progress reports will be due Saturday, Dec. 4, in the Academic Counselcirs' Office, 108 Mason Hall. Lectures University Lecture: The Rev. Stan- ton Lautenschlager, M.A., of Cheng- tu, China, will lecture on the subject, "The Students in Free China," under the auspices of the Department of History and the International Cen- ter, on Thursday, Dec. 2, at 8:15 p.m. in the Kellogg Auditorium. The pub- lic is invited. Change of Date--Fulton Lewis Lee- ture: The date for the second Ora- torical Association Lecture has been changed to Dec. 15. This change in schedule has been made at the re- quest of Mr. Lewis. Tickets originally issued for Dec. 1 will be honored on the new date, Dec. 15. The Hill Audi- torium box office will be open on 5saturdav. Dee. 11. for the sale of BARNABY Gosh, Mr. O'Malley!... You're back from Congress already! Thanksgiving recess.) um restina ua before By Crockett Johnson While performing the duties of the Committee on Disposition of Executive Papers; I came upon a documeat which apparently had been approved by Congress some I r When Gus returned from the Potomac where he'd gotten rid of a pile of old letters from a fellow named Button Gwinnett, i showed it to him. Gus stood 1~1~ Con you imagine, m'boy! A postofflice for a myth! A legendary character! -7--71 ~( .- --- I f