THE MICHIC-AN' 'TIAI't-V I SATURDAY. JAN. 13 1945 R. 11UTC -lt2A l lAI V AAT1VAVLN l"._Ar L.E V Ilk KJ~L1T1\ XL7.H. XJ.IJ K]f - A. Si Al"fLA, 11 L111. A0, A7'10 7 WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Arnall Presents Georgia 's Case T he Pend ulum "k f By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON, Jan. 13-Georgia's young go- getting Governor Elis Arnall was standing at the Peachtree Railroad Station, outside At- lanta, waiting for a northbound train. Sud- denly a southbound train passed, a door flew open and a voice said: "Governor, here's the government's brief on your railroad case." The other train pulled out. Governor Arnall never kne who it was that shouted at him, but in a puddle of rai on the station platform lay an amicus curial brief later presented by the U. S. Justice Department before the Su- preme Court of the United States. This was' the opening incident in one of the most unusual cases ever argued before the Supreme Court, the only case where the Governor of a state appeared on behalf of his state to ask the U. S. Supreme Court to sit as a trial court. Governor Arnall's suit is against the Penn- sylvania Railroad and other roads, which, he charges, conspire to fix freight rates so high that Georgia and the South generally are un- able to develop industry. Although the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion is about to hand down a decision forcing a reduction of some southern freight rates, Governor Arnall points out quite rightly that this is no real remedy. "The railroads will follow the ICC ruling for a time and then show reasons why their rates should be increased. As long as the rail- roads operate together with rate committees and rate pools, agreeing completely among themselves as to what their rates will be and that they will not compete against each other," Arnall claims, "The State of Georgia is powerless." Justice Department Concurs ... THE DEPARTMENT of Justice emphatically agrees with Governor Arnall and submitted a brief, as a friend of the court, asking the Supreme Court to hear Georgia's case. (This was the brief thrown at Arnall on the station platform.) The hard-hitting Governor of Georgia ex- pounds some interesting philosophy in support of his suit. "I figure," he says, "the South should quit crabbing about being poor and downtrodden. Not long ago we were a con- quered people. But nobody's going to help us unless we help ourselves. In the last war Georgia had a high proportion of veterans. But after the war, we also had a high proportion of veterans who moved out of the state. They were looking for better opportunities. "We can't afford to have the same thing happen after this war. In this war, Georgia has helped to train more soldiers than any other state in the union. Hundreds of them married Georgia girls. We like the soldiers. We want 'em to come back here and live after the war. But we've got to provide opportu- nities for them. "So I've had some experts studying the prob- lem to see how we could provide more opporu- nities in Georgia, and all the studies we've made boil down to one thing-we have to be- come an industrial state. We can't continue merely on an agricultural economy. "That," says Governor Arnall, "is why I start- ed this suit against the railroads. You can't have industry in the South as long as it costs 40 per cent more to ship over Southern roads. Nobody is going to move factories down here when they have to overcome that handicap. The big banks of the East just don't want indu- stry to develop down here. They own the rail- roads, and there is nothing we can do about it until we thresh this thing, out before the Supreme Court." Note - Governor Arnall argued the case himself before the Supreme Court, not using the government's brief, but his own. The Court was asked to hear original testimony as a trial court. It has not yet decided whether it will do so. Stettinius Sherman Tanks . .. DEBONAIR Secretary of State Stettinius is reasonably frank and forthright at his press conferences. On the whole he does a good job. Sometimes he gets in a tough spot, however. The other day a newsman asked him whether the U. S. A. still retained title to lend-lease material after it was shipped overseas. This is a subject which Stettinius as former lend- lease administrator really knows something vI t about. He gave a long discourse, brightly show- ing how everything sent overseas under lend- lease still technically belongs to the U. S. A. and can be recalled at any time if we think it's being misused. "Mr. Secretary," observed a newsman, "I suppose that also applies to the Sherman tanks the British got on lend-lease and are using against the Greek civilian population." Stettinius smiled, said nothing. Senator Caraway's Wife .'.. THE ATTENDANT of the Senate gallery re- served for senators' wives was puzzled last week to see a totally unfamiliar woman seated in the front row. Thinking she might be the wife of a new Senator, but not quite sure, he stopped her as she returned to the reserved sec- tion after having stepped out for a few moments. "Madam, this section is reserved for the wives of senators," he began. "But, of course, I know that," the lady said gently, preparing to pass through the door. "Are you the wife of a Senator?" persisted the attendant. "Why, certainly I am," the visitor said. Still suspicious, the guard asked which Sen- ator. Without batting an eye, the lady declared: "I am the wife of Senator Caraway of Arkan- sas." That ended the matter-sheawas barred. (Copyright, 945, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: War Morale By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, Jan. 13-The administration seenis to believe that the way to buck up the morale of the American people is to frighten them. It gives us each day our daily shock. Many meats are put back on rationing; it is an- nounced that shoes will be scrce; it is said that New York may be bombed. A small dose of horror' is administered each morning; not big horror, but little horror, such as the ban on horse-racing; and one might almost guess that there must be some official in Washington in charge of spacing these petty horrors out, so that no day may be without one. But fear is not morale. Jumpiness is not morale. Morale, curiously enough, is confi- dence; confidence that we can solve our prob- lems. To build up this special type of confi- dence is a hard and intricate business, but it must be done; and the administration does not do it by simply putting on a voodoo mask and going "Boo!" at the populace each morn- ing. From the viewpoint of morale, the best step the administration has taken recently has been to announce the President's support of a na- tional service act. Liberal and labor opinion in America has fudged badly on this issue. It demands unity in the prosecution of the war; it flushes angrily when it spies a business man who defies the war-time government, such as Mr. Sewell Avery; but it has a tendency to smile a secret smile and to stare out of the window when a national service act is men- tioned. Labor cannot demand unity without offering unity. The attitude of some of its lead- ers proclaims that, while they call upon all other elements in our economy to trust the gov- ernment, they alone do not trust it, and, in fact, need not trust it. The isolationist press, which has little love for labor unions, has joined gleefully in the attack on the national service act; a cir- cumstance which tends to prove that the real issue here is not coercion of labor, but confi- dence in the administration. ONLY A FEW deserting -workers would be directly affected by a national service act, and forced to go back to their war jobs. But all of us would be indirectly affected. The soldier in the field would know that all that can be done for production was being done. The essential worker, tempted to leave his post, would stay, in the confident knowledge that no one else could leave, either, and gain an unfair advantage. The world would begin, then, to make sense; and the world must make sense if there is to be morale That is what morale is, not fear that things are going badly, but confidence that things do add up; that problems can be solved, and are, in fact, being solved. To. try to build morale with fear alone is too thin a program; it is like trying to make bread. with yeast alone. Morale is a complex of the knowledge that we do have a problem, and the confidence that it can be solved; morale rests on the feeling that there is some order and hope in the universe. We should go easy on the use of the fear technique; for things seem to cease to make sense when we are told, after three years of ardent effort, that we have failed. That strikes a blow at morale; just as the wailing of those who complain that the Allies have utterly fallen apart also strikes a blow at our morale, and for the same reason; with such pronouncements the world seems to cease to make sense, and morale cannot be based on such a premise. It is interesting that the isolationist press is convinced that both the President's production program and his political program make no sense; and liberals should be sure of what they are doing to American morale before they lift their voices in these two tunes. (Copyright, 1945, New York Post Syndicate) By BERNARD ROSENBERG We live in an age that likes to pride itself on acceptance of ethical relativism according to which what is good here is bad there and noth- ing can be intrinsically good or bad anywhere. Our ancestral ways are gone-and with them the certainty that Western Man has established a tradition applicable to modern life. The blacks and whites of value judg- ment have gone by the board and the frantic search in philosophy today is for a new rationale to replace the old. Exact science has contributed one such rationale through its meth- od of experimentation and observa- tion. Auguste Comte introduced this approach to human problems for the first time in sociology, a branch of learning he more or less founded by way of what has come to be known as 'positivism.' But, it seems to me, the stand- ard social science has since set, and it prevails at the moment, is more absolute than many of us like to believe. Adjustment has become the touchstone for that which is good, mal-adjustment for that which is bad. Carried to its logical conclusion this is a very dangerous theory. It represents a relapse into the old absolutism- with a few new twists. To take a particular case, most aesthetically or intellectually-mind- ed people were revolted by the Hitler regime from its inception. Rare in- deed were the Knut Hamsuns and the Gerhart Hauptmans who could breathe the foul air of Nazism. For the most part disdaining the Hitler- ian "kultur" they scurried to Amer- ica, to France, and to Switzerland. These men did not obey or follow the specifications of the New Order. But, observe, they were mal-adapted, out of step with the Prussian march to world conquest, ill-suited for the rigors of bludgeoning and brutality. These members of the intelligen- sia-which is a word, as Arthur Koes- tIer has pointed out, appertaining to the group in a society that main- tains independence of thought- would not stoically accept enslave- ment. They were there to defy the herd instinct that was overpower- ing Europe. Sigmund Freud did as much as any single social-psychologist to shape the contemporary view. The founder of psychoanalysis gave up laboratory research in the 1880's so that he could help neurotics adjust themselves with greater ease to society. Yet, he led a life that itself makes a good study in mal- adjustment vis-a-vis the society that always fought him. More- over, Freud favored sublimating our antisocial drives into construct- ive channels. Therefore, it is a ser- ious mis-application of Freudian- ism to call for adjustment as the great goal of life, adjustment asj such that is, adjustment to any-I thing and everything no matter what it represents. If there is any comfort to be de- rived from their status for the writer like Thomas Mann or the artist likeE George Grosz, who are marginal men half immersed in two cultures and not wholly a part of either, it is this: that they were constitutionally unable to become cogs in the ma- chine of social injustice. Long ago, in grade school, a French teacher had us record this dictum of hers, "All success in life is in direct proportion to the emo- tional rapport. we set up between ourselves and others." Which means actually that adjustment and an attendant happiness are all that matter in the determina- tion of how worthwhile we are as human beings. I rejected the no- tion then, being somewhat rebel- lious even in my minority, and do so more emphatically now that I know enough to see a few of its sources. For instance, Stoicism - which gained a foothold in Greece shortly after the whole Peloponnesus was conquered by Roman legions. A good reason for its widespread popular- ity in those days, one may rightly infer, is that such a slave philoso- phy impressed people who had to salve their pride and go on living somehow even though they were sub- jugated. Be impassive, resign, sub- mit, accept, and oh, yes, adjust your- selves to degradation: this is the quintessence of Stoicism. It does not generically differ from Twentieth Century models which stem from the same decadent spirit. Nor does that spirit differ in any significant way from the one that _ held sway in medieval days when every serf knew his position, every seigneur his, and so on through the various castes. Some thinkers like Lewis Mumford and Mortimer J. Adler are, admittedly enamored of the medieval synthesis. Social scientists usually decry this atti- tude. It is interesting and para- doxical that they should have fal- len prey to it. t ~ DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SATURDAY, JAN. 13, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 57 I Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mren- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typiewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:30 p. m. of the day preceding publication (11:30 a. m. Sat- urdays). Notices Members of the University Coun- cil: There will be a meeting of the University Council on Monday, Jan. 15, at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. All members of the Senate may attend. The agenda is as follows: Approval of the Minutes of Nov. 13, 1944. Report on Government Contracts-Vice-President M. L. Nie- huss. Report on Special Services- Dean C. S. Yoakum. Statement About the Library-Director W. G. Rice. Memorandum from the Inter- national Center-Dr. E. M. Gale. Subjects Offered by Members of the Council. Reports of Standing Com- mittees: Educational Policies-W. C. Olson; Student Relations-C. H. Stocking (Four Reports); Public Relations- ,K. K. Landes; Plant and Equipment -J. H. Cissel. Louis A. Hopkins, Secretary 'Fashion Fellowship awards, for Sen- iors. For further information and registration blanks, stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bureau of . Appoint- ments. Miss Gertrude Bruns, representa- tive from the GIRL SCOUTS OR- GANIZATION, will be in our office interviewing girls who are interested in Organization work, Wednesday afternoon, Jan. 17, and Thursday, Jan. 18. Call University Ext. 371, Bureau of Appointments, for ap- pointment. Withholding Receipts for 1944 Income Tax: Numerous requests have been received by the Business Office for withholding receipts showing total wages paid and total income tax withheld (Form W-2) from indi- viduals desiring to make final income tax returns by Jan. 15, 1945. The work involved in preparing several' thousand of these receipts renders it impossible to have them ready by Jan. 15, but the Payroll Department will gladly give any individual the figures his or her receipt will contain when finally prepared. The deadline for having these completed forms in employees' hands is Jan. 31, 1945 but it is anticipated that those for Uni- versity employes will be sent to them a few days earlier. H. P. Wagner Admission to School of Business 10 Important Notice in re Rationing Administration Spring Term: Appli- of Certain Materials for Research: cations should be submitted prior to Stricter rules and regulations govern- Jan. 15. Application blanks available ing the rationing of "Processed in Rm. 108 Tappan Hall. Foods, Meats, and Sugar" have now --- gone into effect. This applies to all Choral Union Members: Choral laboratories and departments manu- Union members whose attendance facturing or carrying on research records are clear, will please call for work, and to the feeding of animals their courtesy tickets to the Horo- for research which use rationed items. witz concert Monday, between the In order that the University may be hours of 9:30 and 11:30 and 1 and 4, properly registered with the Local at the offices of the University Musi- Ration Board, it is requested that cal Society in Burton Memorial Tow- you report to Mr. W. W. Buss, Rm. er After 4 o'clock no passes will be B124, University Hospital, by Jan. 22 issued. the quantities of rationed foods you -____ anticipate using from Jan. 1, 1945 Attention all members of Phi Eta through Dec. 31, 1945. Sigma! Pictures will be taken for the The points are granted by quar- Michiganensian Jan. 14, at the Mich- terly periods of three months each. igan Union at 3 p.m. Therefore, please indicate the quan- tities you need for each quarter^^ under the following classications: A cademic Noicd 1, Processed Foods. 2. Meat, Fats, Seniors: College of L. S. & A.; Oils and Canned Fish. 3. Sugar. Shos of . s. ad Laboratories or research projects Schools of Education, Music, and failing to make this report may Public Health: Tentative lists of expect to find themselves denied March graduates including candi-- their necessary supplies. Health Nursing have been posted on ,,le .the bulletin board in Rm. 4, U.H, If Whe Cook County Bureau of Pubic i your name does not appear, or, if Welfare, Publc Assistance Division, included there, it is not correctly is accepting applications for Case spelled, please notify the counter Aides for its Public Assistance Pro- clerk. gram (Old Age Pension, Aid to De- cek pendent Children Service and Blind Assistance). For further information University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower, and at the Hill Auditorium box office after 7 o'clock on the night of the concert. Charles A. Sink, President i* Exhibtionas Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: Twenty Lithographs, by prominent artists, loaned through the Museum of Modern Art, New York City. Ground floor corridor, Architecture Building. Open daily 9 to 5, except Sunday, through Jan. 29. The public is invited. Society of Women Engineers: There will be a meeting today at 1:15 p.m. at the League. Pi Lambda Theta will hold a guest tea this afternoon, from 3 to 5 in the West Conference Room of Rackham. All members are cordially invited to attend. Wesley Foundation: Groups will leave the church tonight at 8:15 and 8:45 to go to the roller skating rink. The Lutheran Student Association will have a sleigh ride tonight and all members who wish to attend are asked to meet at the Parish Hall, 309 E. Washington St. no later than 9. Reservations must be made by calling Emil Hahn, 4348. The regular Sunday afternoon meeting of the Association will begin with the program at 5 and supper following at 6. Mr. Charles Will- mann, Vicar of Zion Church, will speak on the Liturgy, Coiii mg Events Initiation to Phi Eta Sigma will be held Jan. 14, in Rm. 302 Michigan Union at 1 p.m. Any initiates- inter- ested in running for office please report at 12:15 p.m. Michigan Christian Fellowship: The Sunday meeting will be held at 4:30 in Lane Hall. The speaker will be Dr. Seibers who has been a mis- sionary to India. She will show mdv- ies on medical work done in India. A cordial invitation is extended to all. Come, and bring your friends. International Center: "Michigan on theMarch" will be the feature of the Sunday evening program at the International Center, the time 7:30. This will be followed by tehe snack. Miss Isabel du Bois, director of libraries, U.S. Navy Department, will address students in Library Science on Monday, Jan 15, 4:15 p.m., in Rm. 110 Library. She will speak on library services in the Navy. A beginners class in social dancing will be held. in the Grand Rapids Room of the League from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. b)eginning Tuesday, Jan. 16. The class willbe for civilians only as servicemen are taken care of by the USO. The charge will be l a i t I i t available sources are found in those men under 26 deferred for essential farm work, those in industry and the Merchant Marine; those be- tween 26 and 30 deferred in industry and on farms; and those men between the ages of 30 and 38 deferred in industry and on farms. If the total of men in our armed forces is increased, the amount of supplies needed must also be increased. However, since most of the new draftees will be taken from industry they must be replaced by older men so that the supplies from the homefront will equal the needs on the battlefront. Congress has shirked its duty before, but it cannot do so now. The only solution to this present problem is the passage of the Na- tional -Service Act. Enough has been said in its favor. Congress must act, and act soon, for the bill must be passed immediately with- out further quibblings and loose talk. -Aggie Miller ,; stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bureau of Appointments. Tobe'-Coburn School for Fashion Careers announcements of Annual By Crockett Johnson Organ Recital: Bernard Piche, Or- ganist of the Cathedral of Trois- Rivieres, Quebec, will appear as guest organist in Hill Auditorium at 4:15 Sunday afternoon, Jan. 14. He has arranged a program to feature com- positions by Bach, Franck, Gigout, Rameau, LeBegue, Vierrre, Widor, Dupre and Tournemire, and will play r i BARNABYt I . . . , .. .. _ 1 y -I [' -ti 1 pointed out that the sicht I ,r__tt The Elves. Leprechauns. Gnomes I -( %A/ - L -.- - - -- L - . 1( 11 ii