PAGE TWO I aE IiCHIGAN DAIIN 14W'E \C7I~I~ lI" i'E : Ii 4 ! . . ....___ .......... . ........... - -,---,- ------- - -------------- ...........------,------- -- M1F Lidift ti Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: The Army ChangesIts Mind 'Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board In Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Evelyn Phillips . . . . . Managing Editor Stan Wallace . . . . City Editor Ray Dixon , Associate Editor Hank Mantho . . . . Sports Editor Dave Loewenberg . . . Associate Sports Editor -*avis Kennedy . . . Woien's Editor Business Staff hed Amer . . A Business Manager Barara Chadwick * Associate Business Mgr. June Pomering . . Associate Business Mgr. Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use fort republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of re- puiblication of al 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. w~eynE9£NT' , O N N.i4ryL A. V N'11:JIR National A dvertising Service, lac olge Palis/ers Reprewntlive 420 MAMo9N AVE. New YoR. N.'Y. rWCAGO . Poston " LS A M91E. SAN FRANcCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 NIGHT EDITOR: RAY SHINN Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Campus Election FRIDAY'S senior class election in the literary school should provide a good means of test- ing the recently revised campus election rules. Adequate manpower at the polls and sufficient publicity for the candidates is assured, according to Jim Wallis, president of the Men's Judiciary Council. The rest is up to the members of the senior class itself. It is essential that the high per- centage of ballots cast in the election for V-Ball candidates be carried over to this ele- tion in which only a limited number oL stu- dents will be eligible to vote. The Council has decided that a preferential ballot would provide the fairest method of choos- ing class officers under the theory that designa- tion of candidates for specific offices might mean that a next-best candidate would be left out of the running altogether. In order for this system to work fairly, it is essential that each voter cast his ballots for four candidates. Therefore, each potential voter should fa- miliarize himself with all of the candidates, either through personal acquaintance or through statements of the candidates which will be printed in The Taily tomorrow. Ray Shini Labor Quarrel M UCH criticism has been leveled against the Federal Government for its inability to cope with the labor situation both democratically and effectively in the long standing quarrel be- tween labor and management. If one were to examine the situation, he would discover that one of the outstanding reasons is that regula- tory agencies mushroom without responsible co- ordination of activities and responsibility in a single head. The National Labor Relations Board whose function is to administer the Wagner Act, for example, is a commission independent of anyone. Then there is the National Mediation Board whose arbitration in labor disputes is of prime importance, but an agency with no strings gt- tached. And sprawlin elsewhere is a War Labor Board for the same purpose as the Mediation Board. Also, there is a separate board for rail- ways. These are but a few, Clearly such a division of labor regulation is like a man without a head, and paves the way for confusion and irresponsibility. It seems that when the reorganization plans were passed out, labor regulating agencies were con- spicuous by their absence. Consequently, laws for the promotion of collective bargaining and fair labor standards have too often left them- selves open to misadministration which has frequently thrown these valid Congressional acts into disrepute by labor, capital, and the public -at large. As the war comes nearer to an end, both labor and management are mustering forces to achieve what they believe to be their just prerogatives. And if government cannot serve as an effective referee, all parties concerned will be standing short in the long run, and anarchy by either management or labor is likely to result. It is quite' clear that both labor and wan- .o eri1 nn xp toisar einen roduactin nlanningr By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON, Feb. 7.-If the U.S. Army has any friends left on the Senate Military Af- fairs Committee when the Work-or-Fight Bill is finally passed, it will not be the fault of the brass hats. Senators and even a lot of Congress- ! men are boiling mad over the way the Army has said now-we-want-it, now-we-don't-want-it, re- garding vital amendments to the Work-or-Fight Bill. The climax came in a closed-door session of the Senate Military Affairs Committee last Sat- urday, which featured the stormiest debate seen in any committee for years. On the lay previous, the committee had adopted an amendment iwich the Army favored (or least so it said in a formal letter) which would put the administration of the Work-or- Fight Bill under War Mobilizer Byrnes. This meant that Byrnes would delegate the adminis- tration to Paul McNutt's War Manpower Com - mission, since Byrnes favors the WMC. The original bill, as passed, by the House, placedl Work-or-Fight administration in the hands of General Lewis Hershey's Selective Service. Because of the small number of Senators present at Friday's committee meeting when the Byrnes amendment was adopted, a second meeting was held on Saturday, with a full quorum present. Forthright Senator Joe O'- Mahoney of Wyoming opened the secret ses- sion by delivering a sarcastic attack on the Army. He pointed t all the tragic mistakes of the War Department, and their repeated demands for centralization of authority. Time after time the Army has demanded this or demanded that, O'Mahoney charged, only to ehange.its mind and find it was wrong. Now, he concluded, how can we tell whether they are not equally wrong in demanding this bill? Following this, Senator Chan Gurney, South Dakota Republican, announced: "I have had a communication from the War Department, which desires a further amendment to the bill." The War Department, he went on to say was opposed to the Byrnes amendment adopted the preceding day (though it had gone on record as favoring it). At this point, Chairman Thomas of Utah rose hallway out of his chair. He was formerly a Mormon missionary, but when he becomes indig- nant his voice becomes as vibrant as the bass notes of an organ. "Do you mean to tell me," boomed the Utah Senator, "that at this late date the War De- partment, having already agreed to this bill, now is demanding another amendment?" "Yes," meeky replied the gentleman from South Dakota "I demand to know who in the War Depart- ment wants this amendment," boomed out Tho- mas again. "The War Departneit," evaded Senator Gur- ney. "I demand to know who in the War Depart- ment wants this amendment," repeated Senator Thomas. "Well," hesitated Senator Gurney, "it came from General Persons' office." (General Wilton B. Persons is head of the Army's lobbying 9'geny on Capitol Hill.) At this, Senator Thomas nearly hit the ceil- ing. "The lord knows that I'm out of harmony with this bill," he stormed. "But I've gone along with it, regardless. However, I'm not going to he short-circuited. This committee has already adopted one amendment which it thought was approved by the War Department. If the War Department now wants to take hack its amendment, it can come to the Chair- Yuan of this committee." Rejection of the amendment would have put the Work-or-Fight Bill under the draft boards instead of the War Manpower Commission. This touched off another diatribe from hard- hitting Senator Ed Johnson, Democrat, of Col- orado. "I'm absolutely fed up," he said, "with the War Department's double-crossing and their go- ing through the back door." "I object to being called a back door," shouted Senator Gurney. "I want it understood that I am not a back door, and I resent the inferences drawn from the Senator's statement." "I meant no personal reflection on you' re- plied Senator Johnson. "My criticism was aimed at the War Department. Thb( Senator need not consider himself a back door." Public He ings Proposed . THIS set off a free-for-all, with almost every member of the Committee participating. Fin- ally Senator Bridges, Republican, of New Hamp- shire, tried to pour oil on the troubled waters by making this observation: "It seems to me that it serves the Commit- tee right for trying to short-cut this important legislation without having full public hear- ings," Bridges said. "Here is a bill affecting all the men of this nation from 18 to 45. The least we could do would be to permit the heads of business firms and the heads of labor unions and other important organizations to express their views before the committee." Finally, the Committee adjourned its secret session for the week end, with no agreement except that regarding the vacillation of the Army. This was unanimous. This criticism was also shared by various members of the House Military Affairs Committee, who experienced the same shilly-shallying when the bill was before the House. Here is the background to the Army's remarkable series of somersaults: On Jan 6 after the May Bill was introduced in Congress, it was referred to all interested agencies of the Government, including the Army, Navy, War Manpower Commission, Selective Service and War Production Board. Their rep- resentatives held a meeting under Justice Byrnes, at which it was agreed that the new Work-or- Fight Bill should not be administered by Selec- tive Service, since its operation under- the many different draft boards throug hou the country would lead to confusion. Accordingly, Colonel Francis V. Keesling r., representing Selective Service, was instructedl to present the amendments of all the agencies to the House Military Affairs Committee. How- ever, Committee members say that Keesling talked for four hours in a closed session of the Cemmittee but never took the proposed am- endments out of his pocket. Later, however, they were presented by Congressman John Sparkman of Alabama, and .adopted. After adoption, however, the Committee, under se- cret pressure from the Army, mysteriously re- versed itself, knocking out the Byrnes amend- ment and putting the administration of the Werk-cr-Fight Bill back under Selective Ser- vice and the local draft boards rather than under the War Manpower Commission. (Copyright, 1945, by the Bel Syndclhme. 10(4 I' RATHER 1E RWI17: By SAIiUL GtAFTON NEW YORK, Feb. 7.-We must learn to under- stand Russia, and one way to understand how the modern Russian mind works is to try to understand the great Russian otfensive. One military thinker has let drop the comment that there may be something "Oriental" about Rus- sian battle psychology; a word which brings up images of hordes of faceless men, plodding for- ward in disregard of death: winning as ants do, by force of numbers. But, as someone once said, when the word "Oriental" is used, it is well to specify what kind of Oriental one means. Does one mean Oriental, like the pacific Chinese, or Oriental, like the Indians, who also hate war, or Oriental like the Filipinos, with whom we rejoice this week, or Oriental like the Japanese? No, this is that speial kind of Oriental whom one invents when one needs an Oriental in his argunent. The success of the Russian offensive is iysti- f'ying to the West; but, no raeil explanation will account for it, if the liussians are Orien- tal, they were just as Oriental in the last war, when they did poorly. Russian success is based on the boldest kind of realistic military think- ing, which has shown itself in a long line o1 innovations, starting with 'the invention of the winter offensive. To make friends with winter, as the Russians have done for three years, is a conception repre- senting a departure from centuries of military theory. It must have started with somebody in the Kremlin saying to somebody else in the Kremlin: "Say, is it really impossible to fight during the months between October and May?" Somebody perhaps made a little list, of wha t's good and what's bad about winter. It's cold, of course, but then also rivers freeze over, and you don't need so many bridges. Mr. Volney Hurd, in the Christian Science Monitor, has traced the ensuing developments: "Ski trOops and sledges, fast-moving cvalry, white-clad soldiers . . . special lubricants to op- erate in below-zero weather." The logical climax came when the Russians actually launched one of their major pushes during a blizzard; they did it because it is so notoriously hard to fight during a blizzard; hard, that is, for those who have never looked at a blizzard with a fresh eye. AGAIN and again one has the feeling that some Russian, high up, has looked at something old and familiar with a fresh eye. Pravda, on Jan. 24, told of "a large enemy tank force" which tried to stop the advance of Soviet troops. "The Russian command," says Pravda, "made a dar- ing decision: To strike at the enemy, force a way through his dispositions, and leave it to the sec- ond echelon troops to conclude the battle." The Soviet advance forces broke through and went on about their business, leaving the German tanks to fight a hot, but irrelevant, battle in the rear. Another Russian development has been the use of separate forces to give battle by day and by night on the same front; one section fighting while the other rests; and both working against German troops not geared for a two-shift opera- tion. This is waging war by factory methods, and again, one has the uncanny sense that some Russian thought about the dark familiar night, in a fresh way. Overriding all these conceptions has been the Soviet use of the long front, compelling all the Germans to fight against all the Rus- sians, and since there are more Russians, the advantage is clear. It is an advantage not obtained in local battle or in limited opera- tions. We Americans have always been proud of our own fresh view of old things; it seems to me that along this line we can make a beginning toward understanding the new Rus- sian mind. We shall not understand it at all on the basis of seedy racial theory. (copyright, 1945, New York Post Syndteat') "The By BERNARD ROSENBERG Godand whether we accept the no- ARWIN, Marx, and Freud-whose tion that it was His handiwork or influence upon Western thought that it was an accident of nature, is incalculable-had at least one pos- what remains indisputable is that tuiate in common: determinism. They man himself in nowise managed the could not see man as the master of affair, his fate in a world governed by un- Circuinstanccs that explain his controllable laws, survival are external to him. An- To be sure, each accentuated one other glacial period, a sudden cool- factor with what we may now look ing iof the sun, or some other such upon as undue emphasis. Thus, catastrophic phenomenon would. Darwin thought the biological end our stay on earth. A recon- struggle to be wholly determina- struction of human history is noth- tive: Marx gave centrality to eco- ing more than the saga of natural nomnics; and, Freud conjured only laws at work-allowing some to with the pyche. Over and above live on here because they are well the mionomaniia that dominated adapted and other to perish there themn, thre" isa good deal that is because they are not. dubi~ous in thteir theories. For in- Recent embryological experiments stance, no one any longer serious- have shown that the foetus four ly believes in the inheritance of months before birth responds to stim- acqired characteristics although uli-and is capable of reflex action this was a basic Darwinian prem- from then on. So, one's personality, ise. Marx's prophecies have been which psychologists look upon more far from accurate-and psychoan- and more as a bodily matter, begins alysis is assailable at many points. to form in the pre-natal stages. ,However, the noteworthy fact about Whereafter, infancy marks and scars these men is their ultimately con- and builds up into what we become., sistent rejection of free will. If we Oftentimes, then, when a man con- make a composite picture of the three. + mits an apparently implausible crime according each factor a rightfully im- ;n his fiftieth ycar, the cause may b portant place, the human species i found in his fifth. seen in something like a true per-jSeewat this does to herighteous spective. Take from all that which who, assuming holier than thou at- is most valuable, pieced together with titudes, point the condemnatory what other sciences have taught us finger at criminals for whom they and an operative social philosophy should feel naught but the profound- ean be adducede st sympathy. Genes, environment. fate, Providence; kismet, the Furies. The anthropological vie'w is some- 'ali htyupes-um times useful in this regard. Con- stands or crawls or cringes or mar- sider man's emergence, the fact that ca . .t whalyo ples-umar a million or so years ago-due to :hes fnproportion as he is driven by physical conditions which caused t forces from within and without. shrinkage in forest space, he aban- Civilizations spring up near river doned his arboreal existence some- basins--like the Nile and the Tiber where near the Himalayas, stood un- --not merely by happenstance, but: naturally on two feet, developed a because these areas provide better forebrain, and, in time, the power to [ransportation and more fertile soil, communicate ideas. Presently, there Here geography is at work and man he was-homo sapiens! Our forbears ; militates accordingly. By such adapt- attributed this wonderful process to ive means do species preserve them- --selves. S.Now, many of us feel that man is headed for extinction, his pres- OX SECND ent supremacy in the animal king- ,roJOfrT - dom notwithstanding, unless he recognizes certain resistless move- By tay Dixon i r ments extant all about him. Just as the forests once shrank physic- ally, so now has the whole world ANKS walked into Philippine soda shrunk politically. If man once fountains on Sunday and said, had to re-arrange his life to cope "I'll lake Manila. with a treeless milieu, lie will soon Those who went to the band coil have to re-arrange his life to cope cert in hill Auditorium Sunday with a stateless world. The belief could tell there was Gould in them that one group is isolable from an- there iot's, other and that all can live in mu- tual exclusion, must go-or we are Final fever is gripping the cam- in for a series o' violent convul- pus as stuidents are beginning to sions and sanguinary revolutions realize there are only 11 more daze. that could wipe us out.$ retary's office, Rm. 1o) Rackham Building, telephone 372. 1o(toral Examination for John Robert Bracken, Landscape Arhi- tecture; thesis: "Planting Design: Principles and Problems in the Use of Plants by the Landscape Archi- tect," this morning at 9:00, 209 Angell Hall. Chairman J. G. Winter. By action of the Executive Board the Chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doctoral candidates to attend this examina- tion, and he may grant permission to those who for sufficient reason might wish to be present. Dotoral Examination for Lester Henry Phillips, Political Science; thesis: "The Impact of the Defense of Canada Regulations upon Civil Liberties," Thursday, Feb. 8, 3:00 p. m., East Council Room, Rackham Building. Chairman, H. M. Dorm. By action of the Executive Board the Chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doc- toral candidates to attend this exam- ination, and lie may grant permission to those who for sufficient reason might wish to be present. Exhibitions Exhibit: Museum of Art and Arch- aeology, Newberry Hall. Glass, sculp- ture and Textiles from Egypt. Events Today Varsity Glee Club: Full rehearsal followed by rehearsal of quartets. An- nouncements of second semester ap- pearances The Fine Arts Club invites all stu- dents interested in Fine Arts to a meeting from 4:00 to 5:30 in fTm. D, Alumni Memorial Hall. Travel mov- ies about England, France, and gypt will be shown, after which a short business meeting will be held. Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet at 4:15 p. m. in 319 West Medi- cal Building. Doctor Richard J. Por- ter, Associate Professor of Protozool- ogy in the Department of Tropical Diseases, of the School of Public Health, will speak on "Biology of Malarial Parasites in Relation to Chemotherapy." All interested are invited. Beethoven's Ninth Symphony will be presented in the weekly Lane Hall Music Hour at 7:30 p. m. Scores will be provided and refreshments served. Graduate Students: A coffee hour will be held from 7:30-8:30 in the West Conference Room of the Rack- ham Building. All Graduate Students are invited to attend. A. S. Nu. E. Student Branch: Mr. C. A. Chayne, Chief Engineer of the Buick Motor Company will present a 48-minute sound movie, "Buick on the Job," at 7:30 p. m. in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. This film deals with the production of tanks, tank destroyers, aircraft engines, etc. Pub- lic invited. La Sociedad Hispanica will present the third lecture in the annual series at 8 p. m. in the Michigan Union. Professor Arthur Aiton will speak on "Relaciones entre Latino-America y los Estados Unidos." Because this is the last meeting of La Sociedad for the present secester, all members and friends are especially invited to be present. Tickets for this lecture and for the series will be on sale at the door. "The Skin of Our Teeth," comedy by Thornton Wilder, will open this I evening for four performances only, tonight through Saturday night, in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The play will be presented by Play Pro- duction of the Department of Speech and all performances will begin at 8:30 p.m.eTickets are on sale daily at the theatre box office, ph~one 6300. Coming Events Post-War Council: There will be a business meeting Friday at 4:00 at the Michigan Union. There will be a discussion of plans for next seme- ster and an election of officers, Geometry Seminar: Thursday at 4:15 in Room 3001 Angell Hall. Mr. Williams will speak on "Four-Dmen- sional Geometry." Tea at 4. Tea at the International Center, every Thursday, 4-4:30 p. m. Faculty, foreign students, and their American friends are cordially invited. Dance Program: An informal dance program will be presented by students in the women's physical education dance classes on Thursday, Feb. 8 at 4:30 p. m., Barbour Gymnasium. All those interested are invited to attend. The Regular Thursday Evening Record Concert will be held in the Men's Lounge of the Rackham Build- ing at 7:45 p. m. The program will include Waltzes (No. 1-6) by Chopin; Concerto in D Minor by Sibelius; Parsifal-Prelude and Good Friday Spell by Wagner; and Roumanian Rhapsodies by Enesco. All Gradu- ate Students are invited to attend The Geological Journal Club meets . .,,, r ii 4, DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN - WEDNESDAY, FEB. 7, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 78 lihiVcation in the Dally Official Bul- letin, is constructive notice to all mem- hers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin shmould e sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 10'1 Angel lHall, by 3:30 p. m of the day preceding pu ilication (11:30 i mn. Sat- lfiays). otices Student Tea: President and Mrs Ruthven will be at home to students this afternoon, Feb. 7, from 4 to 6 o'clock. MidyeartGraduation Exercises will be held at 10:30 a. in., Saturday, Feb. 24, in the Rackham Lecture Hall The address to the graduating clas- ses will be given by Professor Camp. bell Bonner. Assembly at 10:00 a.m as follows: Graduates in the middle sections of the Lecture Hall as di- rected by ushers; faculty in the office of the Graduate School; regents officers, deans, minister, and speaker of the day in Executive Board room; color guard and honor guard in the outer lobby. Participants will .wear academic costume. The public is cordially invited; no tickets are re- quired. Washington's Birthday: Washing- ton's birthday, Feb. 22, will not be observed as a University holiday. State of Connecticut Civil Service announcement for Child Welfare Supervisor, salary from $2,500 tc $3,000 per year, has been received in oui office. For further informa- tion stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bu- reau of Appointments. Seventh United States Civil Service Region, Chicago, Ill. announce exam- inations in Marketing and Allied fields, at salary from $2,433 to $3,828 per year. For further information, stop in at 201 Mason Hall. Bureau of Appointments. By Crockett Johnson Lectures University Lecture: Dr. Gustav E. von Grunebaum, Professor of Arabic, University of Chicago, wil lecture on the subject, "The Arabian Nights and Classical Literature" at 4:15 p. m. today in the Rackham Amphitheatre; auspices of the Department of Ori- ental Languages and Literatures. The public is cordially invited. University Lecture. Captain Pet- er Freuchen, Danish PolarExplorer, s will lecture on "Epic of an Explorer 6 in the War," at 8:00 p. m., Thurs- day, Feb. 8, in the Rackham Lecture Hall; auspices of the Department of I Geography. The public is cordially invited. French Lecture. Professor Marc Denkinger, of the Romance Lan- . guages Department, will offer a lec- ture Thursday, Feb. 8, at 4:10 p. m. in Rm. D, Alumni Memorial Hall. His lecture, which will be illustrated with slides, is entitled "Queique activities francaises de'entre less deux guerras " University Lecture: Lieutenalt Gen- eral Sir William Dobbie, commander of the British forces during the-Bat- te of Malta, will lecture on the sub- ject, "The Defense of Malta" (illu- strated with motion pictures) Tues- day, Feb. 13, at 8:00 p. m., in the Hill Auditorium; auspices of the De- partment of History and the Michi- gan Christian Fellowship. The public is cordially invited. Academic Notices Notice to Students Planning to Do Directed Teaching: Students expect- ing to do directed teaching the spring term are requested to secure assign- ments in Room 2442 University Ele- mentary School on Thursday, Feb. 8, according to the following schedule: English, 8:00-9:00. Social Studies, 9:00-10:00. Science and Mathematics, 10:00- 11:00. All foreign languages, 11:00-12:00. All others, and any having con- flicts at scheduled hour, 2:00-4:00 or by appointment. *1h -+ A I BARLNARY of course, I win the pony. T he pony? Yes."Mildred'.. And -,,s Cre sr ntrxa frV H mrm. There isn't room (or two ---;6t ~ 5,trta '-a rm uc r: i