THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, NOV Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Farming Easier than Columning DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I , -. , ' WI lited and managed by students of the University ichigan under the authority of the Board in Control tudent Publications. Editorial Stafff lyn Phillips a Wallace' tDixon Ot Mantho e Loewenberg ris Kennedy Managing Editor City Editor Associate Editor Sports Editor * . . Associate Sports Editor Women's Editor Business Staffj Business Manager Amer Telephone 23-24.1 pEpREOMNTUD FOR NATIONA'L ADVERT13BNG BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO " BOSTON . LOS ANGELES - SA FRANCISCO 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 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- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. 1fember, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 NIGHT EDITOR: DOROTHY POTTS . an _.,_, _: Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members u4 The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. otilng Duty COLLEGE STUDENTS all over the nation, are a now organizing to urge all qualified voters io appear at the polls on Tuesday. The students of the University of Michigan, with the exception tof a handful of undergrad- uates, however, cannot be included among the several thousand stuents from this country's Jolleges who are canvassing voters to get them to the polls. 1 Seven hundred students from Metropolitan New York colleges have cooperated with the 01O Political Action Committee to get people to register and to vote. Squadrons of door-bell ringers, telephone bri- gades, baby-mindings services for voting moth- drs, and automobile pick up services, where gas pationing will permit, have been organized b students at colleges in the East, West, North, and South. Nothing like that has been done here. Stu- dents parade the campus flashing Roosevelt or Dewey buttons, which is fine. But none of these students are going out to get people to vote in the most crucial election this country has ever faced. Everyone knows, or should know, the im- portance of the election to be held this Tuesday in every city, town, and municipality in the country. The outcome of the election can not be considered the desires of the people, if every person qualified to vote does not go to the polls this Tuesday. In New England, students from Wellesley,. smith, Radcliffe, and Havard will explore the countryside in search of the apathetic or lazy voters. Girls from Smith College will drive a hay wagon through rural Northampton to pick up voters and take them to the polls. In southern Ohio, students from Wilberforce and Antioch Colleges routed out 500 persons who would otherwise have passed up their vot- ing privilege and got them to register on the last day of registration. Other students can do it, why can't the stu- *ents here en masse, bring in the voters on election day? An hour a day campusing by each student can't hurt anyone of us. The PAC and other organizations in Ann Arbor have pleaded repeatedly for volunteers. They don't care if you are a Democrat or a republican, or qualified to vote. Here is an excellent opportunity for civic minded students to do their bit for their country. It is up to every student to see that all qualified voters are at the polls Tuesday to elect the next President of this UnitedStates, -a country now at war, but looking forward to a lasting peace after hostilities cease. -Aggie Miller Homeeoming Day HIS YEAR the annual Homecoming celebra- tion has been revived and it is going to be interesting to see how such a project will succeed during war time. A traditional get-together time for alumn td come to Ann Arbor and renew old school ties, it has been sorelymissed by those of us who fee Michigan has lacked a certain sparkle lately which used to pass for "school-spirit." Coming, as it does, on Armistice Day, there will be a definite effort to emphasize the won- derful job the University is doing to aid in the By DREW PEARSON (Lt. Col. Robert S. Allen now on active service with the Army.) (Editor's Note:-Drew Pearson's column to- day takes the form of a letter to his sister Mrs. Gordon Lang at Swarthmore, Pa., after he had spent some time on his farm in Mary- land.) WASHINGTON, NOV. 3-My dear sister: 1 have been out on the farm, where you can think about a lot of things more important than politics, and where we have finally finished bringing in the Lespedeza. You know, Lespedeza is one of the good things the Japs brought to this country-an excellent type of hay. I'll bet this was the latest hay crop ever harvested in this part of Maryland, and it was all Mr. Roosevelt's fault. We got delayed first of all by the new silo. The only place I could get a silo was in Kala- mazoo, Mich. They promised to send it in a hurry, but it didn't come, and didn't come. Meanwhile, the corn was getting ripe, and I was cussing out the railroads and the way Mr. Roosevelt was handling things. Finally, the silo tiles arrived, but not the silo hoops. Somehow or other, the bureaucrats held the hoops out on me for three more weeks, so we didn't get the silo built until late August, by which timethe corn was almost bonetdry. Despite that, we started cutting it. That is, we tried to start. But by that time, the labor which had promised to help had gone off to other jobs. So I brought part of the office force out and put them to work in the cornfield. Mrs. P. drove a truck. Hal Horan of Time Magazine, who thought he had come down for a vacation, found himself working two inches off his waistline. Even his wife cut two acres of corr. Well, we finally got the corn in the silo, by which time it was already late for the hay. Then it rained some more-and kept on rain- ing. Every time we'd get some hay cut and all raked, it would rain again. At long last, however, the hay is in the barn, but now Henry is going to quit and I have to find a new dairyman. Farmer Versus Columnist ... ALL OF WHICH makes you realize how tough it is to be a farmer-especially during the Roosevelt Administration. Tough as it is, how- ever, I sure would a lot rather be a farmer than a newspaper columnist at election time. Sometimes I almost think the British are right, and that it's cheaper to have a king. Actually, of course, it's a great tribute to our democracy that it can pull through all this name-calling, and it will--even if read- ers do call a columnist all the names in the phone book before it's over, and even if editors, usually most tolerant, do get jittery and temperamental. I dropped in to chat with an editor out in Ponca City, Okla., some time ago. At the time I went into his office, I considered myself no amateur critic of Mr. Roosevelt. At least, I knew that Mr. Roosevelt considered me no ama- teur. I had watched him close-up for twelve long years and thought I knew a lot of the things that were wrong with him. But before I had talked to that Ponca City editor for fifteen minutes, I found I didn't know anything. He knew more about what was wrong with Roosevelt than all the news.men in Washington put together. In fact, there wasn't anything right with him. Criticism of Administration , . . LOOKING BACK over the years, I can re- member a whale of a lot of criticism I have leveled at the Roosevelt Administration-day-in- and-day-out exposes, beginning with Jimmy Roosevelt's insurance deals even before the 1933 inauguration and the kit bag deal just after the inauguration, exposes whiah sent some lead- ing Louisiana Democrats to jail until the White House stopped the prosecution; also how Mr. Hull was letting airplanes be shipped to Ger- many in violation of a treaty even in 1938; and the tragic fumbling of the Spanish Civil War; the shilly-shallying on scrap iron; Roosev's long-time refusal to recognize de Gaulle, and his knuckling under to Churchill on India. However, it seems to me that one of the very important things in this election is study- ing all the qualifications of all the candidates. We have now had Roosevelt under the most searching microscope in the world, the Ameri- can press, for twelve long years. But when newspapermen try to hold the microscope up to Dewey, it isn't so easy. Take, for instance, two illustrations. When you -ask Dewey's draft board in New York for the facts regarding his reported agricultural deferment during the period after he was District Attorney and before he became Governor, you run up against a blank wall of silence. It seems to me that the public is en- titled to know all such things about any candi- date as important as one for President of the United States. Likewise, when you inquire as to how Governor Bricker came out of an athletic career in Ohio State University in 1917 to be suddenly ordained a minister and an Army chaplain by a little 7The Pendulum 11 THERE ARE extra-curricular activities on this campus besides those generally recognized. Amorous dalliance is, I suppose, necessary and natural. But a few nights of the week not spent gazing into the opalescent eyes of your lover, or for that matter, poring over musty text books or sitting in stupefaction at one of the local movie houses or sipping watery beer, could also prove valuable. Freshman presumably are not corrupted yet. Perhaps they can best energize student movements that might overwise die of inat- tention. So listen, kiddies, don't believe what the stuffy cranks tell you about not being old enough to deal with serious problems. You have more chance for unprejudiced reas- oning today than at any other time in your life. It is criminal to waste that time by delay now in fond expectation of some "fu- ture maturity," There is an organization in Ann Arbor known as the Michigan Youth for Democratic Action. You will hear the members of this group are Reds. Some of our leftist brothers may even be in MYDA. I don't know. I do know that it is independent and can be welded to any sort of representative student agency. The composition of its membership will determine that. If you are of conservative persuasion and the group strikes you as being too radical, the fault is yours for not joining it and chang- ing things. Students have more than once protested vehemently against the pro-Roosevelt editorials in The Daily without availing them- selves of the opportunity of writing anti-Roose- velt editorials. But the columns, like the organization and unlike the fraternities, are open to everyone. Never has student interest sunk so low as this past year. A Post-War Council functions here. Created in order to present intelligent discussion, of problems the resolutions of which will chart our lives for an unpredictable number of years, this Council has succeeded in cham- ing only the same circle of individuals into its precincts week after week. However, if you are so deeply embroiled in your work, that you have only an occasional free night, a good place to spend it is at an Inter-Racial gath- ering. There is no reason .why everyone in the University should not become an active parti- cipant in the Inter-Racial Association. There has seldom been a more crying need for com- prehension. The Swedish scholar Gunnar Myrdal, having made an exhaustive study of the Negro in America, has concluded that the basic obscession of Southern Bourbonism is in- ter-marriage. Last month I spoke to an edu- cated woman from Texas who could not say a good word for "Othello" though she had seen it in the finest presentation of our times on Broadway because Paul Roveson, a colored man, was in the lead. Next she said she was from the south and did not approve of micegination "Madam," I said, "-temporarily curbing my anger, "Mr. Robeson's married to a Negress." No matter, why should he appear in a New York play production. "Lady," I said, a bit more curtly, "the role calls for a person with dark skin." She countered with the suggestion that a made-up white man might have been used-so it goes. The Negro, the Mexican, even the American Indian, the Jew, the Japanese and Chinese are all persecuted in our land whether or not they are brothers under the skin. If we could take one person who had no prepossessions and convince him of the need for improvement in this realm or could dis- suade a single bigot, we would justify our- selves as human beings. This is the task of Inter-Racial Association should undertake in- stead of bringing together already sympathetic people and providing them with information they have already long since possessed. Awake, ye prisoners of intellectual starvation, Look around, taste a few cultural delicacies. Forswear the sensuous for a while. Leave your tux in mothballs another week. Lay that foot- ball down, try some mental gymnastics. -Bernard Rosenberg church at Mt. Sterling, Ohio, without one single day of theological training, again you run up against a blank wall of silence. Governor Brick- er lists himself in Who's Who as a "first lieu- tenant, U. S. Army, World War." Maybe there was a good reason for all this, but you can't get any explanation as to why Bricker suddenly deserted law for the ministry, when unmarried, just at the beginning of the last war. Well, these are just some of the things that the people who are fighting this war probably would like to know-certainly have a right to know-about the men they are going to vote on for the highest office in the land. I started this letter by telling about the trials and tribulations of farming. But I still say that farming is easier than columning-- especially during elections, when both edit- ors and readers bite off your head practically every day. Your brother, Drew. (Copyright, 1944, United Features Syndicate) 1,. FRIDAY, NOV. 3, 1944t VOL. LV, No. 3t All notices for The Daily Official Bul-i letin are to be sent to the Office of the Assistant to the President, 1021 Angell Hall, in typewritten form by 3:30 p. m. of the day preceding its publication,1 except on Saturday when the noticesS should be submitted by 11:30 a. in. Notices Faculty, College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: There will be a meeting of this Faculty in Rm. 1025, Angell Hall, Nov. 6, 1944 at 4:10 p.m. Notices of this meeting and the proposed agenda and reports have been distributed through campus1 mail. Edward H. Kraus Notice to all Faculty and Staff Members: New Tax Exemption cer- tificates are required from every in- dividual for the purpose of figuring withholding tax on salaries begin- ning Jan. 1,1945. These certificates must be filed in the Payroll Depart- ment of the Business Office, Rm. 9, University Hall not later than Dec. 1, 1944. Blank certificates may be ob- tained either at Rm. 1 or Rm. 9, University Hall. Pleaseyattend td' this at once to expedite clerical work involved. Freshman Health Lectures for Men: Fall Term-1944. It is a Uni- versity requirement that all entering freshmen are required to take, with- out credit, six lectures in community and personal health and to pass an examination on the content of these lectures. Transfer students with freshman standing are also required to take the course unless they have had a similar course elsewhere. These lectures will be given in Rm. 25, Angell Hall at 5 p.m. and repeated at 7:36 p.m. as per the following schedule. Lecture No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Please note quired and Di ._._ I _ _ __. _ Day Date Monday Nov.6 Tuesday Nov. 7 Wednesday Nov. 8 Thursday Nov.9 Monday Nov. 13 Tuesday Nov. 1.4 that attendance is re- roll will be taken. Varren E. Forsythe, M.D. )irector, Health Service 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 others from participa- tion. Blanks for the chairmen's lists may be obtainedin the Office of the Dean of Students. Certificates of Eligibility for tpe first semester shall be effective until March 1. 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 semester of residence, may be grant- ed a Certificate of Eligibility pro- vided 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 21/2 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. VI. Special Students: Special students are prohibited from participating in any public activity except by special permission of the Committee on Stu- dent Affairs. VII. Extramural Activities: Students who are ineligible to participate in p.ublic activities within the Univer- sity are prohibited from taking part in other activities of a similar na- ture, except by special permission of the Committee on Student Affairs. VIII. Physical Disability: Students ex- cused from gymnasium work on account of physical incapacity arc forbidden to take part in any public activity, except by special permission of the Committee on Student Affairs In order to obtain such permission a student may in any case be re- quired to present a written recom- mendation from the Universit y Health Service.. IX. General: Whenever in the opinion of the Committee on Student Affairs or in the opinion of the Dean of the School or College in which the stu- dent is enrolled, partcipation in a public activity may be detrimenta to his college work, the committee may decline to grant a student th privilege of participation in such activity. X. Special Permission: The specia permissionnto participate in publi activities in exception of Rules V VI, VII, VIII will be granted by th Committee on Student Affairs onl upon the positive recommendation o the Dean of the School or College t which the student belongs. XI Discipline: Cases of violation o thesesrules will be reported to th proper disciplinary authority fo action. XII. Officers, Chairmen and Managers Officers, chairmen and managers o committees and projects who violat the Rules Governing Participation i Public Activities may be directed t appear before the Committee o Student Affairs to explain their neg ligence. Men's Glee Club: A first get-to gether sing, smoker and tryouts fo new members will be held at the Gle Club Rooms, third floor, Michiga Union, Sunday, Nov. 5, at 4:30 p.m All men on campus including fresh men and all men in service ar welcome. Women's Glee Club: All eligibl students are urged to try out for th Women's Glee Club on Friday No 3, from 4 until 5:30 in the Kalamazo 'Room of the Women's League. Eligibility Certificates: Certificate of eligibility for extra-curricular ac tivities can be issued at once by th Office of the Dean of Studentst each student will bring with him th latest blueprint or photostat copy his record. Social Chairmen are reminded tha requests for all social events must b filed in the Office of the Dean o Students on the Monday before ,th event. They must be accompanie by written acceptance from two set of APPROVED chaperons and in th case of fraternities and sororities, b approval from the financial advise Approved chaperons may be 1) par ents of active members or pledge 2) professors, associate professors o assistant professors, or 3) couple already approved by the Office c the Dean of Students. A list of th third group may be seen at any tim at the Office of the Dean of Stu dents. General Library Hours: Until fur ther notice, the General Library wi be open -from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. dail3 except Sunday. Sundays hours wi be 2 to 9 p.m. Over-night books ma be returned without penalty unt 9 a.m. daily. Issuance of Keys: On and aftP Nov. 15th the Key Officenatath Buildings and Grounds Departme as follows: Nov. 16, Hon. Francis B. Sayre, "Our Relations with the Phil- ippines"; Nov. 22, Hon. Carl J. Ham- bro, "How To Win the Peace"; Nov. 30, Lillion Gish, "From Hollywood to Broadway"; Dec. 12, Osa Johnson, "The Solomons", with color motion pictures; Jan. 11, Mme. Wei, "China After the War"; Jan. 23, Eliot Jane- way, "New Horizons for Democracy"; Feb. 6, Ruth Draper, "Character Sketches"; March 15, Joe Fisher, "Land of the Maharajahs", with color motion pictures. The box office is open daily (except Saturday after- noon and Sunday) from 10-1 and 2-5. Academic Notices To All Male Students in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: By action of the Board- of Regents, 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 Counselors (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. Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Election cards filed afternthe end of the first week Af the semester may be accepted by the Registrar's Office only if they are approved by Assistant Dean Walter. e Graduate Students: Preliminary examinations in French and German for the doctorate will be held on Fri- 1 day, Nov. 10, from 4 to 6 p.m. in the e Amphitheatre of the Rackham Buil- e ding. Dictionaries may be used. Anthropology 157, Evolution of Culture, will meet in Rm. 2054, Nat- I ural Science, today. Thereafter it will meet in 35 Angell Hall. e English 211c will meet Tuesday at Y 1:30 in 3217 A.H. f English 211f will meet Tuesday at 0 4 in 3217 A.H. English 31, sec. 4 (MWF, 9), will meet in Rni D, Alumni"Memnoral f Hall e English 71, sec. 1, will meet in 1035 r A.H. English 71, sec. 2, will meet in 1009 A.H. f English 197: Students who have e been accepted for English 197 (Sen- n ior Honors Course) will meet in 3217 o Angell Hall today at 5 p.m. n W. R. Humphreys English 211g, the Pro-Seminar in American Literature, will not be - offered this year. Students who elec- r ted this course should see me about e changing their programs. n N. E. Nelson. n. - English 297: Students in my sec- e tion of this course will meet to arrange hours today at 4:15 in Rm. 3216, Angell Hall. E. A. Walter e _________ e History Courses: The following . Sections have been added in History: History 11-Section 12, Tues., Th., 1, "G" HH; Section 13, Mon., Fri., 10, 101 Economics; Section 14, Mon., ,S Fri., 1, "G" HH; Section 15, Tues., - Th., 11, 35 Angell Hall; Section 16, if Tues.,Th., 1, "E" HH. History 41-Sec. 3, Wed., 11, 103 e Economics. History 49-Sec. 3, Th., 9, 21,6 HH. Note new room assignments for the it History 11-Lec., III, Tues., Th., 9, e 231 Angell Hall; Sec. 1, Mon., Fri., 9, f 101 Economics; Sec. 9, Mon. and Fri., e 9, 216 HH; Sec. 11, Mon., Fri., 11, d 216 HH. ts History 12-Sec. 1, Mon., Fri., 9, ie "G" HH. y History 37-MWF, 10, "D" HH. r. History 41--Sec. 2, Wed, 9, 229 - Angell Hall. z, History 347, Sat., 10-12, 408 r Library. s History 50 Omitted. of ie Spanish 197: This class will meet le on Monday, Nov. 6, at 4 p.m. in Rm. - 106 Romance Languages Building, to arrange hours of future meetings. N. W. Eddy r- ll Y, Concerts ll Choral Union Concerts: Helen y Traubel, distinguished Wagnerian so- prano of the Metropolitan Opera, will open the season in the annual Choral Union Concert Series, Satur- er dayinight, Nov. 4, at 8:30, in Hill te Auditorium. She will present a pro- at gram of songs and arias, and will be 6 r,4 r'. rf V I. i BARNABY By Crockett Johnson No, Barnaby. Our meeting's not over. I stepped out for a day or so. The Ex-Senator Publisher Wurst is strong for Education. Up to the third grade ..._ But the Ex-Senator He wants all schools abolished. Claims they're subversive... An investigation he headed found You see, hewas Sdefeated in the ,,,