rAG ' 1'WO THE MICHIGAN DAILY .IVEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 190 ?AGE TWO WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1~4~ Fifty-Fifth Year AVERY HOPWOOI) AWARD WINNER: Maple's 'Family Tree' Reviewed Ij.,, .r 91 ,_ ,. Edited and managed by students of the University of Miohigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Evelyn Phillips Margaret Farmer Ray Dixon . Paul sllin Hank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy Ann Schutz Dick Strickland Martha Schmitt Kay McFee . " . . Managing Editor Editorial Director . . . City Editor Associate Editor S. . Sports Editor , Associate Sports Editor . , . .. Women's Editor Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Busiess Mpnager . , "Associate Business Mgr. : . , Associate Businems gr. 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, 4s second-class mail matter, Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- iier, $4.50, bymail, $5.25. National Advertising Service, Inc. College Pablishers Representative 420 M ADImON AVE. NEW YORKIN. Y. CRICA O "10TR"Lo d Q~APIGELsS *SAN FRANCICO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1944-45 NIGHT EDITOR: ANNETTE SHENKER Editorials published in] The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. New Attem pt BECAUSE the previous attempt to keep the peace through the League of Nations did ,not prevent this war, many people view the pro- posed United Nations organization with skepti- cism. At this time it would be well to review the ways in which the planned organgation differs from the League. In the first place, the United States was not a member of the League. Without the sup- port and power of the United States behind it, it is doubtful if this organization would succeed. Second, in contrast to the League Covenant, this new organization does not require unanimity of all the members of the General Assembly and of the Security Council. Those member nations having the most manpower and raw materials at their disposal must face the respon- sibility of their position. This means that the Big Five will be given permanent positions of authority and control from which they can more effectively act to prevent wars. It is equally important to note that the Security Council would be in continuous session.. Third, we and all other nations would make special arrangements to supply certain types and qualities of armed forces to back up the deci- sions made by the General Assembly and Secur- ity Council. The League had neither armed force at its disposal nor a military staff com- mittee. FAMILY TREE by Florence Maple. Knopf, New York, 1945. $2.5. "HIS FIRST NOVEL won a major fiction award in the 1944 Avery Hopwood Contest," the jacket blurb announces proudly, although it must have been a mood of unwarranted lib- erality in which the judges bestowed a fourth prize upon "Family Tree." Miss Maple has had the misfortune to fall victim to the great but evil temptation confronting most beginning nov- elists--that of undertaking too complicated a plot peopled with too many characters each having problems which are far too complex for her to manage proficiently. "Family Tree" is the story of a newly- orphaned circus rider who returns in lost bewilderment to her mother's home only to find herself about to be cast into the same state of dissatisfaction and confusion into which the other members of the famnily have been thrown by the peculiar provisions of a wealthy relative's will. Her arrival magically resolves the tentatively considered actions of the discontented, victimized men of the family by jarring them out of their characteristic inaction, and as the bonds of selfishness and perversion that have abnormally knit the fan- ily into a miserable, antagonistic whole are broken, the ancient sycamore, symbol of the lost family happiness and unity, obligingly carries out the metaphorical title by being demolished in an electric storm. A PPARENTLY somewhat overwhelmed by the task of portraying all eleven members of the family in addition to the numerous circus and townspeople, Miss Maple has settled by skim- ming lightly over them all, especially 'the hero- ine, who is inadequately sketched, unsympa- thetically presented, superficially drawn. The book might well be a children's story, for all the human understanding and analysis it contains. Completely at loose ends, her father's death only a few weeks past, the heroine descends upon her unknown relatives, but all she feels is fatigue and the normal interest one experiences upon meeting new people. Inspired by the added complications of a lover with a loose-moralled wife, a mother-dominated cousin, a second cousin ruled by his disreputable habits, a girl of gll repute, the maladjusted child of an unfor- tunate marriage, Miss Maple follows the blurred pattern which leads to the ill-defined climax. In handling the varied and complex problems of her troubled characters, Miss Maple works on a simple theory of direct causation. Merely by renouncing the women who are making them miserable the problems of the men are solved, and whatever personal inadequacies there were which led them into their unhappy situations miraculously vanish also. The heroine is a little perturbed about the choice with which she is faced: to accept her legacy and go to college, to go back to the circus, or to continue to live on as the guest of her hospitable relatives. We know about her distress because she mentions it briefly in a few conversations. She also has one quick case of hysterics. Although the forming of her decision is the main theme of the story, this is all the reader is told about it. Miss Maple shows particular lack of facility in her frequent attempts to project herself into the minds of her subjects. She is at home only when dealing with people of her own class, whom she handles fairly easily, but her por- trayals of chillren and the so-called working class seem the products of limited experience and insufficiently grounded imagination; hence somewhat clumsy and unconvincing. IN GENERAL her style is straightforward and simple, although decidedly ordinary and fre- M---d~for~~~II LAST MONDAY. Rep. John Robsion, Ken- tucky Republican, prevented the House from awarding Franklin D. Roosevelt the Congres- sional Medal of Honor posthumously. By this action alone, the House was forced to change the bill to award the late president with a "special medal of honor" and the elimination of a direct mention "as Commander in Chief." Robsion's action is a new low in political maneuvering-. Roosevelt deserved the Medal of Horor as no other man in the history of this war. He was, more than any ofher man, directly responsible for the successful completion of the European war and the beginning of the end of the Japa- nese war. Yes, the generals fight the war, the farmers feed the soldiers, the politicians control the government, and the industries produce for the war, but it took Franklin D. Roosevelt to unite these forces into one single coordinat- ing fighting unit. He was also the leading figure in the development of the United Na- tions and th things it stands for. Ile was the link between Churchill and Stalin. smoothing out the differences and promoting the agree- ments. For all this. Roosevelt did deserve the Congressional Medal of Honor. But it was not his to receive, for, as presi- dent, le, as every president has had to play the political field. And politics make friends-but just as many enemies. And it was only a political foe who prevented the late president from receiving the highest honor a devoted nation could have bestowed, --Phil Elkus quently tinged with an air of women's-magazine romanticism: "Judelle raised her eyes from the near to the far and saw, beyond the field of gold, trees and hills. The quiet and the light lay gently on her heart and she remembered that she was not alone, that he was here beside her. When she turned, she found him looking down at her, the light reflected upward on his face, his eyes searching hers. This. then, was why she had come. It was for this that she had been made lonely and homeless. . . . For a little while they stood side by side without speaking, then he took her by the hand and led her along the edge of the wheat field, but she saw it now as a dazzling haze, for a new world had sprung into being since she had seen it first." It is too bad that in her first novel Miss Maple should have given herself an assign- ment which she is so painfully incompetent to handle. Her superficial treatment of a problem that demands deep and thorough examination deprives "Family Tree" of any importance it might have had, and leaves tli; reader with nothing but the question of how the book ever happened to be published at all. -Paula Brower I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: IN JUSTICE to the memory of Pro- fessor Joseph Ralston Hayden as a distinguished scholar, a correction ought to be made in the Michigan Daily's story of his career. In that story it was stated that Professor Hayden's best-known publication was "The Senate and Treaties 1789- 1817". Reference was also made to his editing of Dean C. Worcester's "The Philippines:Past and Present", While both of these books were schol - arly contributions to knowledge in their respective fields, The Daily ne- glected to mention Professor Hay- den's most important boob, "The Philippines: A Study in National De- velopment", which was published in 1942. This book was the culmination of years of study and active partici- pation in Philippine government. It is the most detailed and authoritat- ive account in print of our adminis- tration of Philippine affairs. No sketch of Professor Hayden's schol- arly career would be complete with- out mention of this monumental work. -Everett S. Brown ANY BONDS TODAY? Illustrated by Eric Erico d ; By Kay yser; riti r i wr ri r i .wWMrMlll c, ;';;, . h1., r*11 TI'S . . "'Well, don't Just sit there. Do something. Buy a War Bond, anyway." k# Transition Blues By SAMUEL GRAFTON YOU CAN TALK as if we're at peace; you ca talk as if we're at war; you can talk out either side of your mouth. It's that kind of period. We are selling war bonds as hard as v can, but auto dealers are taking orders for ne cars. (Some dealers are asking a $200 dow payment, says the Wall Street Journal, so th the more agitated would-be purchaser won'tt tempted to leave orders with every dealeri town. $200 would buy approximately $266.66+ war bonds and stamps.) You can walk down war road, or peace alley take your pick. There isn't any meat; that' war. There isn't any curfew, that's peac The price of steel scrap is going down, you ca buy steel scrap now pretty cheap, that's peace Try and get sugar; there's a war on. These are the transition blues; there has nev been so confused and mingled a period in Ame ican life. Experienced soldiers are being dem bilized, and they've earned it; that's for peac 18-year-olds are being taken out of school f training and combat, that's for war. This curious business of winning half th struggle at a time even gives us the privileg of making a bad peace if we want to, whil still fighting a good war. Usually the firin stops before the diplomats take over. But i this war the boys in the foxholes can rea about the Battle of San Francisco while dodg ing bullets. Everything has run together so. THE REPUBLICANS on the House ways a, Means committee vote in a solid bloc again reciprocal trade treaties, and against reduci tariffs. They would set up tariff barriers again the world at a time when our boys, warm hum exports, are still far off in foreign lands. O those transition blues! To begin an isolation uncurling now, to begin now to plan how to ke foreign goods out, to set up walls, before o boys have even come home, makes a flami study in incoherence on a global scale. But you can go either way. That's the ki of time it is. You can help sell war bonds; t government needs the money. Or you can p President Truman's sleeve, and ask him to c taxes. Both are being done. You can talk for your own interests; you c go down to the House Appropriations committ and demand that manpower controls be thro away. That would make it possible for civili business to out-compete war factories for lab Or you can talk for all of us, by pointing out t sober truth, that we're in for a hard Pacific w You can switch from role to role; you can vibra between your private and public capacities; th is one of the characteristics of this period. In a way I'm glad its so mingled and mixed Let Congress kill Bretton Woods now, and th act will be reported in newspapers which sti carry casualty lists. Raise your hand, neigh bor, and declaim that America has no rea interest in the welfare of the rest of the world But don't look out the window, you might se a boy on his way to induction. Either you o he is in the wrong place. Oh, those transitio blues. We have to make our decisions whil the world is still making its points. Mayb President Roosevelt planned it that way. II was a good teacher. (Copyright 1945, New York Post Syudicate) By Ray Dixon EI r'RE'S one thing about this campus e demic of German measles. It should he students taking polysci and ec courses on th spot quizzes. Going into a restaurant these days and orde ijg one meat ball is not only not plural, but i singular if you get it. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN e Publication in the Daily Official Bul- 1w letin is constructive notice to all mem. vn bers of the University. Notices for the at Bulletin should be sent In typewritten be form to the Assistant to the President, be 1021 Angell ail, by 2:30 p. ,m. of the day in preceding publication (10:30 a. m. Sat- of urdays). CENTRAL WAR TIME USED IN ' THE DAILY OFFICIAL s BULLETIN. c. e WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 154 er Totl Notices - To the Members of the University Ie; Senate: There will be a meeting of 'or the University Senate on June 11 at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphi- e theater. e - le To the Members of the University g Council: The June meeting of the n University Council has been can- celled. All Students. Registration for Sum- nd mer Term and Summer Session. Each ist student should plan to register for s himself according to the alphabetical ng schedules for June 28 and 29. Regis- 1st trations by proxy will not be accept- an ed. )h,- ist Registration Material, College of ep L.S.&A., Schools of Education, Music: ur Students should call for summe ng registration material at Rm. 4, Uni- versity Hall. Please see your adviser and secure all necessary signatures nd before examinations begin. he ull Registration Material, College of ut Architecture: Students #should call for summer material at Rm. 4, Uni- versity Hall. The College of Archi- ee tecture will post an announcement tCe in the near futur'e giving time of wn conference with your classifier. Please an wait for this notice before seeing or. your adviser. he- - - ar. Registration Material, School of te Forestry and Conservation: Regis- at tration material should be called for at Rm. 2048, Natural Science Bldg. . American Red Cross, Detroit: Mis e ormran, home Service, will be in it our office Thursday, May 24, to . interview all senior girls with majors 1 in Sociology, Social Work, and Psy chology. Those who are interested should call the Bureau of Appoint- Ce ments, University Ext. 371, for ap- r pointment. n - e American Red Cross: Columbus, e 0., Home Service are interested in e June graduates for case work aide. Further information can be obtained1 at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Maso Hall. Chrysler Corporation, Drot Mr Au" will be in the Bureau on i hursday. May 24, to interview stu- dents fromn any school, with a con- mercial, mechanical or engineering background, for their College Train- pi- ing Program. For appointment call lp the Bureau of Appointments, Uni- ir versity Ext. 371. a cr cdemic Notices Eng, 104, (Beowulf) will not meet- today. By Crockett Johnson I an~~n~t-~- Concerts Student Recital: Ruth Wolkowsky, Wianist, will be heard in a program of compositions by Bach, Schubert, Milhaud, and Brahms, at 7:30 p.m.,l CWT, Thursday, May 24, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. She is a pupil of Joseph Brinkman and presents the recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bach- clor of Music. The public is cordially invited. Student Recital: Marian Cole Sieg- fried, contralto, will be heard in re- cital at 7:30 CWT, Friday evening, May 25, in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- ter. A student of Hardin Van Deur- sen, Mrs. Siegfried has arranged a program of songs by French, Italian, German, and English composers. The public is invited. Exhibitions Sixteenth Annual Exhibition of Sculpture of the Institute of Fine IArts: In the Concourse of the Michi- gan League Building. Display will be on view daily until Commencement. "Krishna Dancing with the Milk- maids" an original Rajput brush drawing with studies of the hands in crayon. Also ekamples of Indian fab- rics. Auspices, the Institute of Fine Arts, through May 26; Monday-Fri- day, 1-4; Saturday, 9-11, CWT. Al- umni Memorial Hall, Rm. B. Exhibition under auspices oftCol- lege of Architecture and Resign: Architectural work of William W. Wurster, Dean of School of Archi- tecture and Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and former prominent architect of San Fran- cisco. Mezzanine Exhibition Rooms of the Rackham Building. Open daily except Sunday, 2 to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m. through June 2. The public is cordially invited. Evets Today Friends Service Committee: Stu- dents interested in the work of this organization are invited - to meet Harold Chance of the Philadelphia office who will be in Lane Hall today and, tomorrow. There will'be a lun- cheon meeting with Mr. Chance Thursday at 11 (CWT) for which reservations should be made by phone today if possible. The Botanical Journal Club will meet in Rm. 1139 Natural Science Building at 3 p.m. (CWT) today. Papers will be reviewed by Margery Anthony, Rita Schoenfeld, and Bet- ty Raymond, under the direction of Professor C. A. Arnold. Inter-Racial Organization execu- tive council recommends that mem- bers.of the I.R.A. attend the meeting of the Hindustan Association at 7 p.m., CWT today in Lydia Mendels- sohn Theater. Prof. Muzumdar of William Penn College will lecture on "Modern India". Music Lecture: The last of a series of lectures in sacred music will be presented by the Student Religious Association in cooperation with the School of Music in Kellogg Auditor- ium this evening at 7 (CWT). The Reverend Frank J. B. Flynn, assisted by a student choir from Sacred Heart Seminary, will speak on "The Gre- gorian Chant". Coming Events Tea at the International Center, every Thursday, 3-4:30 p.m. Faculty. foreign students, and their American friends are cordially invited. Chemistry Club will meet Thurs- day, May 24, at 6:45 p.m. (CWT) in Rm. 303 Chemistry Bldg. Dr. L. 0. Brockway will give an illustrated talk cn "Electron Diffraction and Indus- trial Surface Problems". Interested faculty members and men in chem- istry and chemical engineering are invited. Refreshments will be served. Architecture and Design School Party: Friday, May 25, from 8 to 12 p.m., Women's Athletic Building. Univeyrsity of Michigan Concert Band: William D. Revelli, Conductor, will present its 32nd Annual Spring Concert at 3:15 (CWT) Sunday af- ternoon, May 27, in Hill Auditorium. The public is cordially invited. These three vital points are establishing a lasting peace. League failed at the job for created, it succeeedd in giving today a sharp awareness of and situations that may arise The solution for these problems paramount in Although the which it was the people of the problems in the future. is provided for in the machinery of the international or- ganization being drafted in San Francisco. The chief weaknesses of the League have been remedied and although comparison between the League and the proposed United Nations Organization, is wise, the comparison must take account of these clear-cut differences, With continued cooperation in peace as in war, the United Nations have the opportunity to free the world from the tyranny of oppression and create a new cra of peace and prosperity. -Alice Jorgensen, German Leaders P UrSTBLE future leaders of a democratic gov- erumnent in Germany have been discovered in the Buchenwald prison camp. According to Time Magazine, a group of two thousand men of com mmunist, Catholic, socialist, Protestant, Jew- is. and other beliefs, have formulated a plan for a liberal, anti-fascist German government. Pla.us of this group include establishment of a modified form of the Weimar Republic, close economic cooperation with Russia, federaliza- tion of Germany to prevent domination by Prus- sia, and educational reform. This is an indication that we may still hole for future democratic leaders to come UNIVESITY OF MICIIAN College of Fnginteeriulg SCHEDULE OF EXAMINATIONS June 16 to June 23, 1945 NOT'E: ,For courses having both lectures and quizzes, the time of exercise is the time of the first lecture period of the week; for courses having quizzes only, the time of exercise is the time of the first quiz period. Drawing and laboratory work may be continued through the examination period in amount equal to that normally devoted to such work during one week. Certain courses will be examined at special periods as noted below the regu- lar schedufe. All cases of conflicts between assigned examination periods must be reported for adjusO"nt. See bulletin board outside of Room 3249 East Engincering Building between June 1 and June 7 for instruction. To avoid misunderstandings and errors, each student should receive notification from his instructor of the time and place of his appearance in each course during the period June 16 to June 23. No date of examination may be changed withoutI ication Committee. the consent of the Classi- EWT !CWT (at 8 (7 (at 9 (8 (at 10 (9 (at 11 (10 (at 1 (12 (at 2 (1 (at 3 (2 Monday Tuesday } Saturday, June 16 Tuesday, June 19 Monday, June 1i ) Thursday, June 21 ) Friday, June 22 ) Wednesday, June G ) Saturday, June 16 ) Monday. June 10i ) Friday. June 22 Thursday. June 21 ) Wednesday. June 20 "Tuesday, June 19 EMWT 2-4 2-4 10:30-12:30 10:30-12:30 8-10 10:30-12:30 10:30-12:30 8-10 2-4 2-4 8-10 8-10 CWT (1-3) (1-3) (9:30-11:30) (9:30-11:30) (7-9) (9;30-11:30) (9:30-11:30) ('7-9) (1-3) (1-3) (7-9) (7-9) '4 BARNABY (at 8 (at 9 (at 10 (at 11 (at 11 (7 (8: (10 (12 r _ . rrnr°1 thu nn =r nur ?rfs [ «rrn r r Ah# Thic cinr=v rriinfae my Mei fritxrgd AAr_ Onrr r nf I i