TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY '~' ,'- - U dif Fif-ogt Yea Fifty-Fourth Year I'd Rather Be Rght By, SAMUEL RVAFTrON GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty c LetterJ 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 rd 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 nwspaper All rights of repub- lication of all other mattes herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Offici at An Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during tie regular school year by car- tier $4.50, by mail $5.25. Meber, 4ssociated Collegiate Press, 1942-43. Editorial Staff Marion Ford . . . . Managing Editor Jane Farrant . . . . Editorial Director Claire Sherman City Editor Marjorie Borradaile . . Associate Editor Betty Harvey . . . , . Vomen's Editor Business Staff Molly Ann Winokur . . . Business Manager Elizabeth Carpenter . . . Asst. Bus. Managers Martha Opsion . . . . Ass't. Bus. Managers Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: VIRGINIA ROCK E'ditorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. 'HATE' PRESS: ckes Den ,unces Foes Of International Uniy A POWFUL attack was hurled out against the enemies of unity amnong the United Na- tions when Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes, denounced the Heart Press and the Pater- son-McCormack Axis for "deliberately fostering ill will among the Allies." This policy of ill will is exactly the one which Dr. Joseph Goebbels is using iu the hope that disunity between the ,nited States, Russia and Great Britain will enable Germany to make a successful negotiated peace.' The method which the Hearst papers through- out the country, as well as the New York Daily News and Chicago Tribune, organs of te pat- terson-McCormack Axis, have used to achieve disunity are simply to play on all the old preju- dices which years of misunderstanding helped to build up. N THE EDITORIAL columns of these papers one still hears how we are being used. as the tools of British imperialism and Russian com- munism while in actuality' it is these nations who have made the greatest amounts of that sacrifice which hurts a nation most, the sacrifice of men. The Moscow Pact proved conclusively that international cooperation, both duing and after this war, is a practical proposition. The history of the last twenty years should bring home to us the fact that such cooperation is a distinct necessity. The petty works of petty meri, who, to quote Secretary Ickes, '"hate Premier Stalin and President Roosevelt so bitterly that they would rather see Hitler win the war," must not be allowed to sway us rom our path. -Monroe Fink 16 YEARS OLD: Confidence in Ability Is Mark of akri? Corps TODAY IS TH~E BIRT.HDAY of the Maine Corps which had already started its brllant career eyen before this country became an in- dependent nation. The spirit of the Corps is portrayed by Lieut. - Gen. T. Holcomb, U.S.M.C., Coi- mandant, U. S. Marine Corps, who said in, a recent speech, "The Marines have conidence in themselves. And contfi ence is grealy dif- ferent from braggdocio. 'Confidence doesn't come from the outside. It comes from, char- accer and discipline, from training and; skill." At the Navy-Citizens Committee banquet which will be held today in Detroit, a moment's silence will honor the memory of University graduate, First Lieutenant George M. Cannon of Ann Arbor,. the first Michigan Mrine to be awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. HE GALLANT ACTION of Lt. Cannon ex- emplifies the spirit of courage found through- out the Corps. The Marines try always to live up to their inotto "Semper Fidelis." The Marines long ago established for them- selves a reputation for courage and daring. In our present confliet, members of the Corps added a new page to the glory covered history of the Marines. The courageous stand at Wake Island, the lk ffl -m Mii av nnt. hf. istmaimar ffn.. NEW YORK, Nov. 10-1 have been collecting all the explanations I can find for the Republi- cans' striking election gains. The Democrats, nationally, say that the peo- ple voted as they did for a variety of local and special reasons. But local Democrats, town by town, explaining why they didn't get out the vote, are excusing themselves on the ground that there is a national Republican swing. Tke your choice. Both explanations are vague, a'd really cancel each other out. Mr. Willkie says the people are tired, very tired, of the national administration. That an- alysis runs into head-on collision with a Fortune poll of last June, which disclosed that 64.8 per- cent of the electorate favored the re-election of Mr. Roosevelt for a fourth term, if the war were still on. If the people have become tired of F. D. R. since last June, they have become tired awfully fast. The analysis just doesn't add up. THEY DON'T KNOW WHY Mr. Harrison Spangler, national chairman of the G. 0. P., says the people want to go back to the American way of life, meaning his way. But the Republican New York Herald Tribune thinks the people want to go forwaard, and that they now regard the Republicans .as the pro- gressive party. Again, check and cancel out. In New York State, Governor Dewey says the victory was local, while Mr. Willkie says it was national. Check and cancel, once more. Of course Mr. Dewey, as Governor, is a local figure, while Mr. Willkie, as titular head of the party, is very national, and each man ma be speaking the piece best suited to his own position. But, more and more, we find ourselves forced to the strange conclusion that while the Republicans certainly won handsomely, they do not really know why they won. WAS MACARTHUR RUNNING? What about the non-Republican Roosevelt op- position? The New York'Daily News, which is isolationist, and non-Republican, thinks the peo- ple showed annoyance at the polls because the administration chose to invade North Africa in- stead of Japan. The News seems so anxious to run MacArthur for president that it can hardly wait for the next election; it therefore injects him into the last one. But the News' explanation simply can't be so. A Fortune poll last June showed that 70.4 percent of the people endorsed the President's conduct of the war, while an American Insti- tute of Public Opinion poll in July showed that 73 percent endorsed his handling of foreign policy. The News is in the minority, and it is trying to saddle the majority with its own minority reasons. Its side won, but it, too, doesn't really know why. Why, then, did the Republicans win? Is the reason statistical, so to speak; based on the fact that nearly 20 percent of the electorate (believe it or not) is in uniform, and did not vote, and that this forced abstention of younger men, and workers, lately turned soldiers, hurt the Demo- crats somewhat more than it hurt the Republi- cans? Or is the reason for the Republican vic- tory the fact that almost 10 percent of the elec- torate has lately changed its address, hunting for war jobs? I donit know. It would take careful statistical studies to find out. I do not think such studies could fully account for a nationwide trend now five years old. WIHAT'$ NEW, IN FIVE YEARS? Five years! That phrase rings a bell. What has been the chief domestic change- of the last five years, apart from the war? (And the polls show that war helps Roosevelt politically. rather than hurts him.) Why, the chief domestic change of the last five years has been a rising income level, 'in all groups. In the case of farmers, we can almost plot on a chart their decline of interest in the Democratic Party, as their financial status improved. Is better economic weather Repub- lican weather?. Is something like that at the bottom of the election, a growing conservatism, now that the income level is high? Were the people saying at the polls that nothing hurts them much, economically? It so, there is something inexpressibly sad at the bottom of the election, a kind of pi'ayer for stability. I would be troubled and thoughtful about that, if I were a political party. Neither party is responsible for the income level, and the income level seems to tell a somewhat clearer story than do the dazzled pundits of both. (Copyright, 1943, N.Y. Post Syndicate) Post-War Planning,. . HOW MANY of you students are interested in post-war planning? Do you care if we have another Ver- sailles Treaty? Do you want the world to have a World War III? I could ask other questions along similar lines, but I know your an- swers, or I hope I do. But may I ask you what you are doing to pre- vent another war and all its recur- ring suffering and hatred. Remem- ber we live in a democracy, and it is the duty of each of. its citizens to take an active part in its policies. Perhaps you have not realized fully how you can help. May I suggest a possible method of find- ing out some of these things would be to come to the first meeting of the Post-War Council. At this meeting, which starts at 7:30 Wednesday in the League, Profes- sors Paton, Watkins, and Willcox will lead in a panel discussion on the foreign policy of the United States. What is it, how has the Moscow Pact affected it, and what would we like it' to be? After this panel discussion there will be a short business meeting at which the proposed program of the 'Council will be discussed. We have plenty of opportunities for any and all people who are interested in the Council to take an active place. So we cordially invite all students to attend this meeting and help us in the discussion to determine just a little better what United States' place is in the post-war world. Re-I member that's the world we're going to have to live in. Lyle F. Albright, Post-War Council --- A l ,t- )i4 'Notice how the kiddies are reading more non-fiction? Current events probably scare them more than the old thrillers!' tack upon the P-Bell that The '1We feel that our opinion is expres- Daily's views are becoming increas- ingly feminine. We feel that Miss Schmitt was rather unfair to the Bell, an institution that plays an im- portant part in what Miss Schmitt calls the "old Michigan spirit." We admit the necessity of a social center aside from the P-Bell. for there is certainly a great variety of tastes on such a large campus. However, there are a great many of us who sincerely enjoy the P-Bell, a unique and defin- itely collegiate institution. To us the P-Bell will never lose its glamour and attractiveness, no matter howI many "wolf lounges" and the like are set up on this campus. sive of the feelings of a great many Michigan students, both past and present, students who we feel really have "that old Michigan spirit." -D. O'Connor -Malcolm Raphael S *. * * (Editor's Note: Feminine or not, there are Daily staff members who "enjoy" the Bell as much as Mr. O'Connor and Mr. Raphael do. How- ever, if one member of The Daily staff feels the need for a social center other than the Bell, far be it from us:.t9 argue with her. Her opinions are her own, not The Daily's.) Enjoyment *.. T IS EVIDENT from yesterday's at- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN i ., 1 *1 The WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND, By DREW PEATSON' - I1 WASIINNGTON, Nov. 10. - Diplomats are watching the Atlantic City food and rehabilita- tion conference opening today (November 10) more carefully than any other international event in this country. They figure that the pat- tern it adopts will set the stage for whatever type of worlpeace organization the U. S. A. may join afte the war. Also they are worried. For the preliminary moves look to small nation diplomats as if the worst features of the League of Nations were being sown all over again. Yesterday, one day before the 44 United Nations and Associated Nations meet at A.t- lantic City, the Big Four-U. S., U. S. S. R., Britain, China-met in Washington and signed an agreement regarding the organization to be created at Atlantic City. In other words, before the 44 nations met, the Big Four decided for them the general structure they would have to OK. This structure provides for a sort of assembly of 44 nations, similar to the League's assembly. Also it providles for a Central Committee of four nations, similar to the League Council. This Central Committee will run things. The smaller nations will meet once or twice a year to approve. Fewer Tires for Allies .,. One thing not discussed at the Moscow con- ference was rubber tires. If the question had been raised, Russia would have been told that tires on Lend-Lease will have to be reduced sharply. Reason is that T. S. trucks and buses are wearing their tires down to the fabric, and Jesse Jones's long ballyhooed synthetic tires are falling behind schedule. There is plenty of new rubber, but a dire lag in tire production. If bus and truck transportation is crippled, the weight would be thrown back on the al- ready struggling railroads. Also, many places would be without transportation, since 54,000 communities have no rail service. The Army. OPA, ODT and the Rubber Direct- or's Office are putting their heads together to find a way out. One solution will be a reduction of tires shipped on Lend-Lease. Russia alone was promised 500,000 this year, in addition to 2,000,000 already delivered, (Copyright, 1943, United Features Syndicate) WEDNESDAY, NOV. 10, 1943 Vol. LIV No. 8I 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 Conservation of Public Utilities: It is urgedthat every member of the University community, aculty, stu- dents, clerks, and other employees, constitute himself or herself a com- mittee of one to contribute in every reasonable way to the end that there shall be no waste of electricity, wa- ter, gas, oil, coal, or of communica- tions or transportation service. This notice is in behalf not only of the University administration but of var- ious United States Government au- thorities. Because of production delays, Fac- ulty Directories will not be available for distribution 'on Thursday, Nov. 11, as promised. There should, how- ever, be a supply on hand by noon on Nov. 12 at the Information Desk in the Business Office. Herbert G. Watkins, Assistant Secretary Lectuf res University Lecture: Professor Rus- sell C. Hussey, of the Department of Geology, will lecture on the subject, "The Parade of the Dinosaurs," (illus.) in the Rackham Amphithe- ater tonight at 1:45 under the auspi- ces of the Phi Sigma Society. The public is cordially invited. University Lecture: Dr. Eugene R.j Kellersberger, former medical mis- sionary in the Belgian Congo, will lecture on the subject, "Trypanoso- miasis (African sleeping sickness) ", illustrated, in the Amphitheater, sec- ond floor of the University Hospital, on' Friday, November 12, at 1:30 p. m. under the auspices of the Hygenic Laboratory. The public is cordially invited. Oratorical Association Lecture Course: -The season ticket sale for lecture course tickets'is now taking place. The Hill Auditorium box of- fice is open daily 10-1 and 2-5. The complete course is as follows: Nov. 18-'Will Rogers, Jr., "The United States in Foreign Affairs;" Dec. 1-Fulton Lewis, Jr., "What's Happening in Washington;" Dec. 13,1 Burton Holmes, "Our Russian Allies" with motion picture's; Jan. 13-Louis P Lochner, "What About Ger- many?;" Jan. 25- Leland Stowe,! "What I Saw on the Russian Front;"I We 22-Burton Holmes, "North Af- all male students in residence in this College must elect Physical Educa- tion for Men. This action has been effective since June, 1943, and will continue for the duration of the war. Students may be excused from taking the course by (1) The Uni- versity Health Service, (2) The Dean of the College or by his representa- tive; (3) The Director of Physical Education and Athletics. Petitions for exemption by stu- dents in this College should be ad-' dressed by freshmen to Professor Arthur Van Duren, Chairman of the Academic Counsellors (108 Mason Hall); by all other students to Assis- tant Dean E. A. Walter (1220 Angell Hall.) Except under very extraordinary circumstances no petitions will be considered after the end of the third week of the Fall Term. The Administrative Board of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts Chemistry Colloquium today at 4:15 p.m. in Room 303 Chemistry Building. Dr. R. K. McAlpine will discuss the C02 Problem in Neutrali- zation Titrations. Make-up examinations in History for the Spring and Summer terms, 1943, will be given on Friday,. Nov. 26, 4:00-6:00 p.m. in room D, HH. Students desiring to take the exami- nation must have the written ap- proval of their instructor and should secure this permission well in ad- vance of the date of the examina- tion. A. E. R. Boak Mathematics Seminars: The fol- lowing seminars in mathematics will be conducted during the fall term by the staff members named: Statistics, - C I-n AXT-A ~ maid t A- corganiization meeting of men and women debaters will be held today at 4:00 p.m. in room 4208 Angell Hall. All members of the student body, including first term freshmen, are eligible to participate in debate. Concerts Messiah Concert: The University Musical Society announces that the traditional annual performance of Handel's "Messiah" will take place Sunday afternoon, ,Dec. 19, at. 3 o'clock. The following will partici- pate: Agnes Davis; soprano (New York) ; Lillian Knowles, contralto (New York); William Miller, tenor (Chicago); Wellington Ezekiel, bass (New York); Palmer Christian, or- ganist; The University Choral Un- ion; a special "Messiah" Orchestra, and Hardin Van Deursen, Conduc- tor. Tickets are now on sale at the offi- ces of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial 'Tower as fol- lows: main floor 60c, first balcony 50c, and the top balcony 30c (includ- ing' tax). Events Today Forestry Club: An organization meeting will be held for the Michi- gan Forestry Club in Room 2039 Natural Science Buildingrtonight at 8:00. Foresters and pre-foresters, whether uniformed or civilian, should plan to attend this meeting for the election of officers. The Association Music Hour will present an:all-Brahms program to- night at 7:30 in Lane Hall. The Merit Committee will meet; today in the League at 4:30 p.m. The room number will be posted on the bulletin board at the main desk. RELIEF ADMINISTRATION: Inited Nations Delegates Plan Rehabilitation Program To Aid People of Occupied Europe LIFE SHOULD LOOK considerably brighter today for the improverished peoples. of oc- cupied Europe as a result of two statements made- yesterday by Allied leaders. Speaking at a ceremony honoring the Lord-Mayor of London, Prime Minister Churchill reiterated his declara- tion that England would not rest until all of the occupied nations have been freed. And 'even more specific cheer came from President Roose-' velt in his address to the delegates of the forty- four nations which are to participate in the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Ad- ministration. In days to come, a lot is going to be heard about the activities of the UNRRA, as the or- ganization is known, so it is well to examine the President's words closely. It is good to discover that the closer they are examined, the more encouraging they become. 'They hold out the promise of an effectively and demo- crtited rhabiliation program craticaily admistered reha .liaton r.ra liberated. The UNRRA will operate in such territories until the people are able to assume the burden of their own support. TH, OCCUPIED countries cannot be expected to take their places as responsible members of the world until their citizens are brought. back to a civilized standard of living. According to the President, the United Nations are aware of that fact and are proceeding to do something about it. In the words of Roosevelt, "it's not only humane and charitable, it's a matter of self-interest and military necessity." One of the best features of UNRRA is that it involves the close cooperaton of all the United Nations, providing that each nation will share in the work in accordance with its resources. This will be the first project of this kind undertaken as a joint action by these United Nations. In French North Africa, the British and Americans carried out such a program with excellent results; now the responsibility Prof. Craig, W ednesctays at 4:;00 p.m. in 3010 Angell; Topological Groups, Prof. Ambrose, Wednesdays C i at 4:00 p.m., in 3201 Angell; Applied Mathematics, Prof. Churchill, Mon- The A.I.E days at 4:00 p.m.. in 319 West Engi- Nov. 11, at 7 neering; Geometry, Profs. Thrall and League. Dea Rainich, Thursdays at 3:00 p.m., in national org 3001 Angell; Topology, Prof. Steen- ties of the rod. Fridays at 4:30 p.m., in 3201 Electrical E Angell; Normed Rings, Prof. Hilde- motion pictu brandt, Tuesdays at 4:00 p.m., 3014 Submarine Angell; Orientation, Prof.1Rainich, Okonite Co. Tuesdays at 4:00 p.m., 3001 Angell. Instituteo German 159, Goethe's Faust, will ences: A sm meet Thursday, 4:00-6:0{, p.m., in day evening room 406 Library. Room 302o ling Events .E. will meet Thursday, :30 p.m., in the Michigan an Lovell will discuss the anization and the activi- American Institute of ngineers. There will be ores on "Laying Another Power Cable," by the of the Aeronautical Sci- oker will be held Thtirs- g, Nov. 11, at 7:30, in of the Michigan Union. German 1, Section 5 'MTThF 10:00. Copley). Beginning Thursday, Nov. 11. this class will meet in 2013 Angell Hall. Anthropology 157, Evolution of Culture will meet in Room 225, An- gell Hall. Leslie A. Whitei Plans for a field trip to the Stinson Aircraft Plant will be discussed. The eligibility requirements for member- ship in the Institute now allow fresh- men, and sophomores to become members. All engineering students are cordially *invited to attend the smoker. A.S.M.E. meeting on Thursday.