THE MICHIGAN DAILY TVUESDAT, Tvi.t*r 8, 11.45 Fifty-Fifth Year PROF. SLOSSON COMMENTSQ Allies To Get 'Second Chance DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Evelyn Phillips Margaret Farmer Say Dixon . Paul Sislin Bank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy Ann Schutz Dick Strickland Martha Schmitt Kay McFee Editorial Stafff . . . . Managing Editor . . . . Editorial Director S . . . . . City Editor Associate Editor . . . Sports Editor . . Associate Sports Editor . . . Ass e Women's Editor S Associate Women's Editor Business Staffj . . . Business Manager . . . Associate Business Mgr. . . . Associate Business Mgr. Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of re- publication 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- tier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. ~__RPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERI3ING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADIsON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CICAGO - BOSTON . LOS ARGEI.ES * SAN FRACISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1944-45 NIGHT EDITOR: MARY BRUSH Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Fight for Freedom THE WAR in Europe is ended. The war in the Pacific continues. The war against fascism is a never-ending fight. None of us needs to be reminded that the job is not finished. The battles go on on Okinawa and in Burma. Japan still holds much of the Chinese mainland. There can be no let-up in the war loan campaigns and blood bank drives. We feel a tremendous sense of relief that at least in one hemisphere the killing and the bloodshed are finished, that the lights are going on again in Europe. That is the extent of our celebration. The feelings of the men and women in Ger- many are summed up by the words of Ger-. man foreign minister Ludwin Schwerin von Krosigk: "From the collapse of the past, let us preserve and save one thing-unity, the ideas of the na- tional community, which in the years of war have found their highest expression in the spirit of comradeship at the front and readiness to help one another in all the distress which has inflicted the homeland." Here is proof that the Germans do not inter- pret their surrender as the defeat of fascism but only of their military might. They cling to their 'ideas,' the same ideas which plunged the world into war and they glorify those ideas.- It is these ideas which we must destroy-the racism, the nationalism, and the doctrine of aggression which fascism represent. We mus~t build a world in which there is no room for these concepts. We can chalk up a victory in the sense that we have destroyed and are destroying the cen- ters of fascism-Germany and Italy, indicating the, failure of fascism as a political system. Spain, Portugal and Argentina may continue to share fascist ideas but they can find little com- fort in what were formerly living examples of fascism triumphant. Forced underground, they will nevertheless continue their insidious propa- ganda, but with the rising sun fast setting they may realize how untenable their ideas are. They will, at least ,begin to question. From the military standpoint the war is half over. True victory, however, must wait until there is no longer even a remote possibility of a single man or a group of men dominating other men. The fight for freedom has been with humanity from time immemorial. It does not end with the cessation of hostilities. The truly great mer, of history have been those who made a positive contribution to that fight. From our leaders and fighting men to the most modest civilian who helped in the scrap drive, all have a stake in the fight. With every resource at our command we will continue the war against Japan. We cannot take a holiday until casualty lists from the Paci- fic become curios and collectors' items. When the war in the Pacific is finished, not v+ unil +h f-lhtin- hc ovr The nrnhlms that "THE LIGHTS are going on again-all over the world." This is the burden of a well- known song; somehow it suggests to me the words of Foreign Minister Grey of Britain in 1914: "The lights are going out, one by one, all over Europe." There has been a greater or less degree of blackout of human civilization ever since 1914; perhaps only a "brown-out" in the years of un- easy peace in what- H. G. Wells called the "fatuous 1920's," but certainly a black-out dark enough at all other periods. Can we get those lights burning again this time? That is the question. Probably the historians of the year 2145 A.D. will consider the First and Second World Wars as merely phases of one great struggle, always celtering around Germany, and sepa- rated merely by a truce or armistice. At least it is certain that we have been granted in 1945 what God so seldom grants to anyone, a "second chance." We can now seize the opportunity which was fleetingly ours in 1919 to build a world government strong enough to cope with the aggressions of Germany, Japan or anyone else. If we fail to take this second chance it will be hard for God or history to pardon us, or for us to pardon ourselves. Military Record .. . CERTAIN reflections inevitably occur at this hour of final reckoning. One is that, from the technically military point of view, the Unit- ed Nations have done better than any other wartime coalition in the whole of history. Hit- ler sneered at our "military idiots"; his empire crumbled under blows not only heavy but well- aimed. Since the turning point came in the autumn of 1942 (the Russian stand at Stalin- grad, the British victory in Egypt, the Ameri- can landing in Morocco, the naval triumphs in mid-Pacific) the strategic pattern of the war has consistently followed the plans of our civil and military leaders. Another reflection is the incredible moral depths which our enemies have plumbed. Even the First World War was exceptionally bar- barous, but in the present war Germany has proceeded from the murder of individuals here and there to the deliberate extermina- tion of =nations and peoples. The Germans were no primitive or illiterate peasant folk who "knew no better"; racially, they were of the same stock as most of us, and they had a rich cultural background and high stand- ards of education. That such a people should have given dictatorial power to a gang of sadistic maniacs seems incredible; that tens of thousands of highly educated men, includ- ing scholars and physicians, should have car- ried out their worst orders with a zestful, gloating lust seems even more incredible. Yet such are the facts. Photographs and the accounts of war correspondents on the spot have made it impossible to dismiss the atro- cities of this war, as superficial people did those of the last war, as mere "propaganda." Our feeling is not so much one of ordinary anger as of sheer dismay-if the most highly educated races are capable of doing such things was not Goethe right when he made Mephistopheles declare that man used his intellect chiefly to make himself "more brutal than any beast?" Another dismaying reflection is the incredible folly of the stunned or blinded onlookers of the grim tragedy of the past thirty-one years. Americans who talked of security in isolation, alike in 1914 and in 1940; British and French who tried to appease a burning fire by fresh buckets of oil in 1938; Russians who made a pact with Germany in 1939; Oxford students who took foolish vows never to fight for their country; Michigan students who invited Nye and Wheeler to the campus as the highest ora- cles of wisdom, and derisively chanted "T Yanks are not coming this time!"; American capitalists who talked of Fascist refuge from Bolshevism; American communists who talked of "the Imperialist War" until Russia's own toes were stepped on; Poles who made ten- year peace pacts with Hitler; Lindberghs who saw a "wave of the future" in the Nazi victo- ries; politicians who voted against the lend- lease which saved America from being a front -PAST PREMATURE thunder crackled in the news world Nov. 7, 1918 when an International News Service report carried by the Detroit Times announced the end of fighting four days ahead of time. The Daily was on the streets with an extra proclaiming the news in four inch "railroad" type (unknown to today's paper), but wisely crediting the news to the Detroit paper. The next day, Friday, burst the bubble with "Peace Reports Contradictory." Saturday, the football extra devoted half the front page to a banner announcing that the Kaiser had abdicated. The remaining half !of the page was given over to the evidently almost ' as important report that Michigan was lead- ing 13-0 at the beginning of the fourth period' in a football game with the University of Chi- cago. -Milt Freudenheim trench of battle, by keeping Britain as an armed bulwark for our own shores-what a med- ley of voices, repeating infinite folly, now echo ironically down the years! Moral Iaw Is 1aw.W. . BUT OUR deepest thought is that, after all, the moral law is law. Battles, they say, go not to the righteous cause, but to the strong battalions. But it is also true that unrighteous- ness, in its various phases-pride, greed, arro- gance, cruelty, injustice-rouses against it bat- talions too numerous and too determined to conquer. A reasonable and moderate Germany and Japan could, I think, have conquered the world; partly because of the blindness of other nations and partly by arms and cunning. But that is because people would surrender to them rather than endure war. Where conquest, how- ever, means enslavement and terrorism, the motive to make peace, to make alliance, to sur- render to the inevitable, is taken away. Allies and neutrals are alienated, enemies aroused to last-ditch fury, one's own subjects dulled and brutalized, by such a policy. Hitler lost the war on the day that he determined to wage it ruthlessly; for against ruthless oppression all men that are men will organize, arm and fight. Now all the power is in the hands of the United Nations. The future will be what they make it. If we can avoid the crimes of our defeated enemies, and the follies of our own dazed and ignorant past, the lights may really go up again-this time for keeps! -Preston Slosson I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: V-E Celebration By SAMUEL GRAFTON THERE are more ways than one of celebrating V-E Day. It seems to me that the minority party in, the House last week, celebrated V-E Day well in advance of the event. The issue was President Truman's veto of a bill which would have exempted all farm workers from the draft. President Truman must have thought about the thing deeply before deciding on his veto. It is likely that he talked the matter over with a soldier first, and I don't mean a corporal. The Democrats sustained his veto by a vote of 164 to 30, but the Republicans voted to override him by 154 to 12. The Republicans were guided in this matter by Representative Martin of Massa- chusetts, the minority leader, just a day after Mr. Martin had been present at one of those let's-all-cooperate lunches with the new Presi- dent. I don't see how the Republicans in the House can escape the charge that they were celebrat- ing V-E Day, before it happened, and perhaps over-celebrating it. General Marshall, chief of staff, is deeply worried about a certain demo- bilization of the spirit in termsof citizens get- ting drunk and singing under the lamp posts, to the detriment of the war in the Pacific, But there are more profound celebrations than these taking place, and the vote in the House is one of them, and the danger represented by thee celebrations is rather greater than any peril into which we are put by the spectacle of an individual citizen getting himself boiled. The Wall Street Journal has also begun what seems an exaggerated celebration of V-E Day, starting before the event, by an editorial cam- paign demanding the end of price control. This kind of celebration of the end of the war in Europe is probably more risky than sidewalk ceremonies involving the unlimited use of fire- water. For from the very same issue of the Wall Street Journal, indeed from an article on the very same page (a fact so pat that I hate it, it's too crushing, it's inartistic) I learn that war pro- duction will have to continue at 85 per cent of the present level for at least three months, and will stand at 60 per cent even a year from now. These figures certainly offer no basis for wip- ing out wartime controls. As between the dan- gers of throwing confetti and throwing out the OPA, I'd say let the public throw confetti. We may be in for a wild party with the end of the war in Europe, but a rather different kind of wild party than the sort we've been expecting; I mean a wild party in which the automobile makers, say, will get the green light on producing autos, and will then find themselves short on one item, cloth, perhaps, fer seat covers, and will have to fight the armed services for it, while the armed services fight the Japanese, and while dealers alerted too early cry for stock. Meanwhile the War Manpower Commission would be on its knees in the marketplace, begging for workers to go into war plants, as against taking jobs offered by private industry, suddenly freed of price and wage controls. Can we take price control off the civilian sector of our economy, leaving our millions of soldiers and their dependents to competewith their small government allotments in a market-place gone mad? It seems to me that the least we can do in the presence of death is to be quiet and order- ly, and that as against this kind of continuing wild party, the citizen who merely lets out a shout and a song and maybe fixes himself a hangover for a day or so is behaving in a more moderate, and on the whole, more appropriate manner. (Copyright, 1945, New York Post Syndicate) TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 141 Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 1021 Angell Hall, by 2:30 p. m. of the day preceding publication (10:30 a. m. Sat- urdays). CENTRAL WAR TIME USED IN THE DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN. Notices Student Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students Wednesday afternoon, May 9, from 3 to 5 o'clock. Orchestra Rehearsal: University Symphony Orchestra will rehearse this afternoon in, Hill Auditorium, 3:45-4:45 p.m. (CWT). The Summer Session of the Grad- uate Curriculum in Social Work, which is given at the Rackham Mem- orial Building in Detroit, will open for registration Friday and Satur- day, June 15 and 16, classes begin- ning Monday, June 18. The session will close Friday, Aug. 10. This is a change from original dates set. Choral Union Members will please return all copies of Festival music, and receive their book deposit re- funds of $2.50, on Tuesday or Wed- nesday, May 8 or 9; between the hours of 9 and 11:30, and 1 and 4, at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. After Wednesday no refunds will be made. Representatives from the Michigan Bell Telephone Company will be in our office Thursday, May 10, to in- terview seniors interested in their company. Those interested should call Bureau of Appointments, Uni- versity Ext. 371, for appointment. A Representative from Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc., will be in our office Tuesday, May 8, to interview seniors in the field of Engineering, Applied Arts, Science, and Business Administration. If interested, call Bureau of Appointments, University Ext. 371 for appointment. Bureau of Appointments Junior Play Committee: Junior Play Central Committee will have a picture taken in the League, Thurs- day at 6 p.m. (CWT). Be prompt! Junior Girls Play: Anyone wishing to order pictures from Junior Girls Play may do so by bringing $1 for each picture to Miss McCormick's office in the League today from 2 to 4 p.m. (CWT). This is absolutely the last chance, so order your pic- tures this afternoon. The Annual French Play: The pic- ture of the cast is exhibited in the lobby of the Romance Language Building. Please place your order at once with the Secretary of the De- partment, Rm. 112. Rules governing participation in Public Activities: I. Participation in Public Activities: Participation in a public activity is defined as service of any kind on a committee or a publication, in a pub- lic performance or a rehearsal, or in holding office in a class or other student organization. This list is not intended to be exhaustive, but merely is indicative of the character and scope of the activities included. II. Certificate of Eligibility: At the beginning of each semester and sum- mer session every student shall be conclusively presumed to be ineligi- ble for any public activity until his eligibility is affirmatively established' by obtaining from the Chairman of the Committee on Student Affairs, in the Office of the Dean of Stu- dents, a Certificate of Eligibility. Participation before the opening of the first semester must be approved as at any other time. Before permitting any students to participate in a public activity (see definition of Participation above), the chairman or manager of such activity shall (a) require each appli- cant to present a certificate of eli- gibility (b) sign his initials on the back of such certificate and (c) file with the Chairman of the Committee on Student Affairs the names of all those who have presented certificates of eligibility and a signed statement to exclude all other from participa- tion. Blanks for the chairman's lists may be obtained in the Office of the Dean of Students. Certificates of Eligibility for the first semester shall be effective until March 1. - . Obi MUSIC III. Probation and Warning: Students on probation or the warned list are forbidden to participate in any pub- lic activity. IV. Eligibility, First Year: No fresh- man in his first semester of residence may be granted a Certificate of Eli- gibility. A freshman, during his second sem- ester of residence, may be granted a Certificate of Eligibility provided he has completed 15 hours or more of work with (1) at least one mark of A or B and with no mark of less than C, or (2) at least 22 times as many honor points as hours and with no mark of E. (A-4 points, B-3, C-2, D-1, E-0). Any student in his first semester of residence holding rank above that of freshman may be granted a Cer- tificate of Eligibility if he was admit- ted to the University in good stand- ing. V. Eligibility General: In order to receive a Certificate of Eligibility a student must have earned at least 11 hours of academic credit in the pre- ceding semester, or 6 hours of aca- demic credit in the preceding sum- mer session, with an average of at least C, and have at least a C average for his entire academic career. unreported grades and grades of X and I are to be interpreted as E until removed in accordance with Univer- sity regulations. If in the opinion of the Committee on Student Affairs the X or I cannot be removed promp- tly, the parenthetically reported grade may be used in place of the X or I in computing the average. Students who are ineligible under Rule V may participate only after having received special permission of the Committee on Student Affairs. Lectures Dr. Donald E. Webster: Cultural Attache to the Amerian Embassy in Turkey will lecture on "Modern Turkey" in Kellogg Auditorium at 3:10 p.m. today. The public is cor- dially invited. University Lecture: Mr. R. H. Mark- ham, member of the staff of the Christian Science Monitor and for- mer Deputy Director of the Office of War Information, will lecture on the subject "Post-War Prospects in the Balkans" at 7 p.m., Thursday, May 10, in the Rackham Amphithea- ter, under the auspices of the Depart- ment of Sociology. The public is cor- dially invited. University Lecture: Mr. Flavel Shurtleff, Professor of City Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technol- ogy, will speak on "The Field of Town Planning", on Tuesday, May 15, at 3:15 p.m., in the Rackham Amphi- theater, under the auspices of the College of Architecture and Design. Exhibitions Sixteenth Annual Exhibition of Sculpture of the Institute of Fine Arts: In the Concourse of the Michi- gan League Building. Display will be on view daily until Commencement. Twenty-Second Annual Exhibition by the Artists of Ann Arbor and vicinity: In the Mezzanine Exhibition Rooms of the Rackham Building daily, except Sunday, 2 to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m. The public is cordially invited. Events Today Soph Cabaret: Refreshment Com- mittee will meet at 2 p.m. today in the League. The room will be posted on the League bulletin board. Any- one wishing to work on the commit- tee is urged to attend, as are all present members. A.I.Ch.E.: There will be a meeting of the A.I.Ch.E. at 6:30 p.m., Rm. 3205 East Engineering. All Chem. and et. Engineers are invited to attend. Prof. G. G. Brown will speak on "High Pressure Gas Fields". Refreshments will be served. The University of Michigan Po- lonia Club will meet at 6:30 in the International Center. A program in- cluding songs and a discussion of rel- evant Polish topics is planned. Plans for the forthcoming outing will be completed. Refreshments will be served. All students interested in Polish culture are welcome. A.I.E.E.: The Electronics Group of the Michigan Section of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers will hold a meeting in co- operation with the A.I.E.E. Student Branch today in the Rackham =Am- phitheater at 6:45 p.m. Profesor J. S. Gault of' the Depart- ment of Electrical Engineering will speak on "Servomechanisms." A motion picture and demonstration will accompany the lecture. Guests are welcome. Deutscher Verein: 'Ihaere will be a mpnp+miit a+ the rnmpnT , o Athi+mr I %0 P' tI SUNDAY afternoon's May Festival Concert reached a new high in musical entertainment. Never before in Ann Arbor has the Philadelphia Orchestra been in such superb form. A rare combination of pianistic artis- try and orchestral grandeur made this occasion one that will be remembered for a long time. An exceptionally well-balanced program opened with Mr. Orman- dy's arrangement of Bach's Chorale Prelude: "O Mensch, bewein' dein' Sunde gross." The orchestra's ex- traordinary conception of this pro- found bit of music was almost eth- ereal in its presentation. To say that Mr. Ormandy possesses a thor- ough comprehension of Bach's sac- red compositions is no exaggera- tion. Acknowledgement again should be given to the 'cello section for unusually expressive tone. The reading of Mendelssohn's Re- formation Symphony was indeed a gem. The audience was rewarded with a delightfully refreshing inter- pretation. Clean attacks, precision in technique, and pellucid tone in each instrumental section were but a few of the characteristics of this per- formance. The second half of the concert con- sisted of the playing of Brahms' Con- certo No. 2. It is common know- ledge that Rudolf Serkin is one of our most gifted pianists. There is no limit to his skill in executing the most difficult passages. Yet (and this writer is cognizent of the fact that she is leaving herself wide open to dissension) Mr. Serkin left some- thing more to be desired. He does not strike this listener as being as dy- namic in Brahms as he is in Mozart or Beethoven. When performing Mo- zart or Beethoven Mr. Serkin is a paragon. Nevertheless the concerto was a work of beauty. The Andante Movement was worthy of lofty praise. The enthusiastic applause that followed the Concerto was a manifestation of the audience's thorough approval. By Crockett Johnson What a scandal! I'd give a lot to know the real facts behind this- THE SIXTY-SECOND season of May Festival Concerts was ter- minated Sunday, night with some glorious singing. , The major part of the evening was devoted to Beetho- ven's majestic Ninth Symphony. This final concert began with Bruckner's seldomheard Te Deum. The performance was a thoroughly integrated one. The orchestra was in its usual good form and the Choral Union under the direction of Hardin Van Deursen displayed its excellent capabilities. The four soloists, El- eanor Steber, Hertha Glaz, Frederick Jagel, and Nicola Mascona presented the quartet passages with impeccable skill. Mr. Jagel's solo work was pleas- ingly effective. His low tones con- tained a great deal of power and control. The highlights of the Beethoven symphony lay in the choral singing of the fourth movement. Mr. Or- mandy accomplished almost unbe- lievable effects in choral workman- ship. The various sections of the chorus responded beautifully to his directions. It was a truly inspiring performance. The work of the quartet, surpris- ingly enough, did not attain the per- fection set up by the Choral Union. On the whole the singing of Misses Steber and Glaz was by far more satisfactory than that of Mr. Jagel and Mr. Mascona. Mr. Jagel was guilty of much forcing which resulted in poor tone production. Mr. Mas- cona is the possessor of a big voice but his lack of control weakens his potentialities. The orchestra gave a very ex- pressive performance. The first movement was a trifle disappointing j from the standpoint of instru- mental unity. However the second and third movements were magni- ficent in their mighty depth. The powerful conclusion of the last movement was thrilling in its emo- tional significance. -Kay Engel Buy Stamps. UNIVERSITY students are not ex, pected to pay out $18.75 apiece to h 1c hnnr c fnr hn ..ncrnn- -a , T -- BARNABY Heard the latest on the O'Malley crash? Thappened1 The company's books have disappeared! That happned _ The radio said O'Malley has disappeared, too-