un, THE MICHIGAN DAILY 0 SUNDAY, FED. 11, 1i15 Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Nazi Dispute Gives Reds Success DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN mU PlIENROCI -i mivl7rv]w--l6- - !a --- MMX . Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board In Control 69 Student Publications. Evelyn Phillips Stan Wallace Ray Dixon Hank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy Lee Amer. Barbara Chadwick June Pomering Editorial Staff . * . . . Managing Editor * . . . City Editor . . . '. Associate Editor . . . . . Sports Editor . . . Associate Sports Editor . . . Women's Editor Business Staff Telephone Business Manager Associate Business Mgr. Associate Business Mgr. 23-24-1 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-clas mal matter. Subscriptins during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.50; by mail, $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 NIGHT EDITOR: AGGIE MILLER Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Educati Germany N HIS ARTICLE, "Another Prescription for Post-War Germany," which appears in the latest addition of the Quarterly Review, Prof.- Emeritus George E. Myers proposes a re-educa- tion of Germany by respected German leaders, an education based upon a positive and con- structive program focusing on "building under- standing, tolerance, good will, and a co-opera- tive attitude rather than on-breaking down the master race' obsession directly." It is his hope that a constructive plan of re-educating the Germans will, in time, lead to a dissolution of the concept of "herren- volk"-the master race. When such a disso- lution takes place, Germany can again resume her place in a world of "peace-loving" nations. I do not know whether or not Prof. Myers believes that such a self-restoration of Germany to the family of so-called "peace-loving" nations will result in the elimination of the majorob- struction to world peace. There are many per- sons among the ranks of authorities on problems of education, however, who do believe that war will disappear with the re-establishment of a peaceful Germany. Those who hold this view assume that the fundamental cause of warfare is adherence by aggressors to some warlike morality, such as that of Nietzsche's "will to power", so conveniently misconstrued by the Nazi leaders to fit their "herrenvolk" philosophy. The German people, they further believe, are the only advocates of such a warlike philosophy. According to their calculations, and to those who propose the mass destruction of all Ger- mans, war would disappear with the elimination of the evil German morality or, in the 'latter case, the German people. In the seclusion of the ivory tower, the champions of education-as-a-panacea-for-all- social evils, neatly forget that the basic causes for war and other social evils are not moral, but economic. Moral justification Vor war follows only after lack of economic stability has established itself as the cause. If every- one on earth, or since people act in political groups, if every nation on earth were guaran- teed freedom from want for all its inhabitants (to quote Franklin Roosevelt), then, and only then, will war disappear and the hopes of attainment - of a brotherhood of man be realized. So we see, the problem of war is international in scope; every nation is a potential threat to peace. Education toward liberality of mind. (Germany was once a center of liberal thought), unless occurring in an economically stable world, is of , doubtful and certainly negligible value toward securing peace. - Arthur J. Kraft Reconstruction THE SITUATION in the reconquered Philip- pines presents a tremendous problem of re- construction. For three years the islands' six- teen million people have not had enough to eat. Imports, upon which they depended for fifteen per cent of their food in peacetime, were cut off. Part of the small crops the Filipinos were able to raise was exported to the Japanese main- land or used to feed Jap garrisons in the Philip- pines. As the Japs retreated they set fire to remaining crops. As a result, thousands of Filipinos are- no* without homes or food or seed for. new crops. Not only in Manila but all through the islands immediate assistance is needed. The New York Times proposes that, at least for a few weeks, shipments of reconstruction material and seed and food be given top pri- ority space over war material. It sounds like By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON - Uncensored diplomatic dis- patches from the eastern front now reveal several significant reasons for the Red Army's success in the drive on Berlin. These advices disclose that the German High Command and Adolph Hitler have had another serious battle over German strategy. The Fuehr- er's famous "intuition" led him to order an all- out defense of untenable East Prussia and every inch of the German homeland. Hitler argued that his troops would fight more valiantly at the very gates of the fatherland. So he over-ruled Marshal Guderian, German commander-in-chief on the eastern front, who wanted to defend a line running from Danzig in the north to Poznan and Breslau. This would have meant giving up East Prussia to the Red Army in a planned Nazi retreat. However, Hitler wanted to defend East Prus- sia, home of the Nazi Junkers, and repeatedly argued that the loss of East Prussia would be a death blow to German morale. As usual, the Nazis and the German military compro- mised, with the result that the Russians have been able to smash to the gates of Berlin in a series of lightning-like blows. Hitler's Blood Purge,. ANOTHER important explanation for the Red Army's success is the German blood purge of July, 1944, following the attempt on Hitler's life. At that time, more than 100 important German military tacticians and technicians-the men who had successfully stalled off the Red Army during the battle of Poland-were executed by Hitler. Hitler then appointed Marshal Guderian, a competent tank expert and a moderately good administrator, as commander-in-chief in the east. But Guderian did not have the experience which some of his purged predecessors had gained the hard way in fighting the Red Army. These chickens have now come home to roost. Although the Russians are fighting some 2,500 miles from their main supply base in the Ural Mountains, east of Moscow, they have not run into any severe supply problems, despite terrible weather and strange terrain. One reason is that Stalin waited until the last possible moment be- fore launching his offensive. When the Red Army drive began, every piece of equipment was in place. Although Red Army dispatches didn't say much about it, Stalin also hurled a terrific amount of air power into the opening phases of his offensive, has managed to use the Red Air Force most of the time throughout the drive. The Red Air arm flew as many as 12,000 sorties a day during the opening phase of the offensive, has managed to strike several thou- sand times daily since. Secret Red Weapons .. HIlE Russians are also way ahead of both the United States and Great Britain in the use of rocket guns, have employed them with deva- stating effect in the lightning drive through Po- land, and particularly in the offensive against the Nazis in East Prussia. One new and very important weapon which Stalin unveiled in the new drive is the 100-ton tank named after himself. The Stalin tank is superior to the German Royal Tiger tank, and our own Sherman heav tank. It carries a 4.8- inch gun as against the 3-inch gun carried on our Sherman. So long as the ground remains hard, the Stalin tank is capable of resisting any but the largest point-blank German shells. On the other hand, the mobile gun on the Stalin tank can pierce most of the German secondary fortifications so far encountered by the Russians. Under the IDine ... OPA nerves are still sensitive over cancellation of the extra red and blue points accumulated by housewives just after Christmas. It never leaked out at the time, but Ivan Burdick in charge of the food rationing division, resigned in protest. He felt the OPA was breaking faith with the housewives in canceling the points . . . Higher-ups inside the OPA including Justice Byrnes office, argued that there was simply not sufficient meat available and points would have to be cancelled . . Friends of Henry Wallace were slightly miffed over the fact that Senator Wagner of New York was not on hand to help in the Senate fight for his confirmation. When Wag- ner faced a tough battle for re-election last fall, Wallace went into the state and campaigned per- sonally for the Senator. Wagner was paired with Senator Red of Kansas when the vote on Wallace came up so his vote counted, but he was not present in Washington to help . . . Lecturer Don Bolt put in eight long-distance calls to the Army and Navy offering to give orientation lectures at the Army and Navy hospitals free. He had al- ready done a swell job for veterans in various Texas hospitals. But the Army and Navy didn't even bother to call him back. LON SECOND By Ray Dixon Over-Age Servicemen . . GREATEST hardship on men in the Army probably is with enlisted men over 38, now too old to become officers but who can't resign as officers can. Typical case of how this hardship works is that of Corporal Alexander C. Sioris, age 45, who has served in the Army three years, most of the time overseas. Cpl. Sioris is not only a college graduate, but holds a doctor's degree. Twice he was recommended for Officers' Training School, but each time his unit moved overseas and he had to sail with his unit. Now he is too old to be commissioned, too old for combat, yet under present Army rules must be kept on--doing menial jobs. There are thousands of similar cases. What the Army needs is a good overhauling of its man- power, especially of older men who have been in the Army a long time. Chinese Labor Puzzles . . . FOR a long time foreign labor groups have had trouble understanding the bitter feud between the American Federation of Labor and the CIO. Now, however, U. S. labor leaders are experienc- ing the same headache with rival Chinese labor groups, in which two famous Chinese sisters are also involved. One is Madame Sun-Yet-Sen, widow of the famous founder of the Chinese Republic, who has been urging American labor leaders to support the equivalent of the China CIO. The other sis- ter is Madame Chiang Kai-Shek, wife of China's Generalissimo. (copyright, 1945, Bell Syndicate) liominie Says ("RANTED that morality must obtain, that the r integrity of the universe has first claim on all human behavior, and that the finding of what is moral is a major aim in education, what has all that to do with religion? Or granted that ethical action is the goal of social living, what has belief in a God and the idea of responsibility to our fellows to do with it? Such questions should en- gage every university student. If you are in engi- neering, this is the way the issue is phrased: Can I violate the law of mathematics and get away with it in construction? Since I cannot violate the exactness of mathematics and have the con- struction good, might I not learn that integrity from religion's "Love God and treat man as brother"? In business affairs, since production, distribution and consumption are for persons not merely for me, might I not learn the basic eco- nomic law from religion's "Whatsoever ye would that others should do to you, do ye also to them?" The strange contradictions dramatized by Wilder in "By the Skin of Your Teeth" may be too subtle for many an auditor just because he has never learned the primer lessons on this universe at mother's knee or in Sunday School. It is this integrity which must prevail among persons who have a measure of freedom as certainly as it prevails inrthe basic law of the universe itself. Now, there is a fierce debate always going on in religion as to how to make religiousness universal. First there is a differ- ence as to the goal of religious education. One view makes religion an end, the opposite makes it a means. Allow us to make certain that we have religion itself in mind. We mean man's consciousness of being bound back to all origins, or God. It means that as God or this universe loves His (or its) most highly developed result, Man, so man comes to love God. That is religion, not all of it, but in essence that is what religion is. Now those who treat religiousness as an end, labor to make converts, to get men committed to a creedal statement or to take men out of the world and receive them into the church, presumably the home of the redeemed. To make certain that that church is always the home of integrity, is often neglected. Transparency of action, such as that of Barnabas or Assize and other saints, may receive only incidental attention just because the end in view is religion for its own sake. Evan- gelicals, generally, unlike the critical scholars who claim that the Gospel must animate democ- racy if we are to arrive at a secure freedom, are getting men, saved out of and away from world situations and trying to bypass all ethical and social problems. Extremists even say if you be- lieved you would leave reform to the Deity. On the other hand, those who accept re- ligiousness as a means not an end in itself, insist that to fully worship God men must practice justice toward fellow men. This view leads a man to keep his eye on the far away Kingdom of God on the earth, when that type of behavior or integrity shall prevail every- where and be preferred by all persons as surely as the stars. You see, this thrusts each of us up against such disconcerting problems as car- tels and government, labor-and production, full employment and markets, access to raw ma- terials on the part of all of God's sons, milk, health and education for all children and gen- eral family stabilization in every country. For this view religion is not primarily a way of life but an adequate dynamic. Well, here is one reason why we maintain that if in our decade you expect to be educated you must be religious. Counselor in Religious Education Edward W. Blakeman, SUNDAY, FEB. 11, 1945 a VOL. LV, No. 82r Publication in the Daily Official Bul-r letin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Notices for thec Bulletin should be sent in typewrittenI form to the Assistant to the President,2 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:30 p. m. of the dayl preceding publication (11:30 a. m. Sat- urdays). Notices Faculty, College of Engineering:I There will be a meeting of the Facul-l ty of this College on Monday, Feb. 12, at 4:15 p. m. in Room 348, West Engi- neering Bldg. Student Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students Wednesday afternoon, Feb. 14, from 4 to 6 o'clock. Identification Cards. All identifica- cards which were given out during the Summer or Fall Terms must bej validated by the Dean of Students for the Spring Term. All cards out- standing will be collected during registration and redistributed after being validated. Cards which are not so processed will not be honored for the Spring Term by University of- ficials. Attention February Graduates: College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, School of Education, School of Music, School of Public Health- students are advised not to request grades of I or X in February. When such grades are absolutelydimpera- tive, the work must be made up in time to allow your instructor to re- port the make up grade not later than 4:00 p.m., Mar. 2, 1945. Grades received after that time may defer the student's graduation until a later date. Robert L. Williams Assistant Registrar To the Members of the Faculty, College of Literature, Science and Arts: There will be another special meeting of the Faculty of the Col- lege of Literature, Science, and the Arts at 4:10 p. m. on Monday, Feb. 12, in Room 1025 Angell Hall, to continue the discussion of the Coi- bined Report of the Curriculum Com- mittee and the Committee on Con- centration and Group Requirements. A large attendance is desired. Edward H. Kraus Midyear Graduation 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. Honor Societies. The attention of honor societies is called to the fact that the date of Honors Convocation has been set for April 20. It is re- quested that all societies hold their elections as early as possible after the beginning of the Spring Term so that the names of new members may be included in the Honors Convoca- tion program. Dean of Students A Representative from Filene's De- partment Store, Boston, will be in our office Wednesday, Feb. 14, interview- ing girls who are interested in de- partment store work. If interested, call Bureau of Appointments, Uni- versity ext. 371, for appointment. The United States Civil Service Commission anrounces that ther ex- amination for junior professional as- sistants, salary $2,433 a year, is open to all Senior students, with an ap- pointment to follow graduation. Also Last Effort The German high command has at long last decided to treat its Rus- sian prisoners of war a little less like dogs, the reports relayed from Stock- holm by Nat A. Barrows indicate. A confidential circular has been sent to all prison camps forbidding guards to strike Russian prisoners. Marshal Stalin and his aids have made no bones about their plan to take millions of Germans to Rus- sia to rebuild devastated areas. Maybe this is a last-second effort to temper the bitter Russian mem- ories of the way their prisoners of war have been abused. -St. Louis Post-Dispatch announcement for public health rep- resentative, salary $2,433 a year, has been received in our office. Office, record, and supplementary work in public health offices. Does not re- quire any courses in public health. For further information, stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bureau of Appoint- ments. City of Detroit Civil Service An- nouncement for Battery Repairman, salary $1.31 to $1.41 per hour, has been received in our office. For further information, stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bureau of Appointments. State of Michigan Civil Service An- nouncements for the following exam- inations have been received in our office. Child Welfare Worker I, and II, $205 to $295 per month, Child Welfare Administrator, II, III, and IV, $255 to $420 per month, Institu- tion Dairy Farm Superintendent I, and II, $180 to $276 per month, and Sheet Metal Worker Al, $166.75 to $189.75 per month. For further in- formation, stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bureau of Appointments. Choral Union Ushers: Please re- port at 2:15-pm. for the concert to- day. Lectures University Lecture: Lieutenant General Sir William Dobbie, com- mander of the-British forces during the Battle of Malta, will lecture on the subject, "The Defense of Malta" (illustrated with motion pictures) Tuesday, Feb. 13; at 8:30 p. in., in the Hill Auditorium; auspices of the De- partment of History and the Michi- gan Christian Fellowship. The public is cordially invited. Dr. John Hope, Franklin, Profes- sor of History at North Carolina College, will deliver a lecture, "The Negro and Post-War Readjustments: An Historical View." This lecture, sponsored by the Committee for the Study of Negro Life, assisted by The Inter-racial Association, will be giv- en at the Rackham Amphitheatre on Feb. 12 at 7:30. The public is cor- dially invited. Academic Notices English 1 and 2. Final Examina- tion Schedule for Tues., Feb. 20, 2-4 p. m. English 1 Abel........... . ..... E Haven Anderson ............... C Haven. Bertram...............2003 AH Bromage ..........3209 AHl Calver................D Haven Davis.................2215 AH Eisinger..............G Haven Everett . ................3011 AH Fletcher ................3017 AH Fogle.. ............B Haven Greenhut ...............4203 AH Hawkins...............C'Haven Hayden...............2235 AH Ogden .................3217 AH Pearl ..................2014 AH Prescott ................2203 AH Rayment ................1035 AH not fulfill the requirement are re- quired to take and satisfactorily com- plete this course. Enroll for these lec- tures at the time of regular classifi- cation at Waterman Gymnasium. These lectures are a graduation re- quirement. Students should enroll for one of the two following sections: Section No. I First lecture Monday, March 12, 4:15-5:15, Hill Aud. Subsequent lectures successive Mondays, 4:15-5:15, Hill Aud. Examination (final), Monday, April 23, 4:15-5:15, Hill Aud. Section No. II First lecture, Tuesday, March 13, 4:15-5:15, Hill Aud. Subsequent lectures, successive Mondays, 4:15-5:15, Hill Aud. Examination (final), Tuesday, April 24, 4:15-5:15, Hill Aud. Recommendations for Department- al Honors: Teqching departments wishing to recommend tentative Feb- ruary graduates from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and the School of Education for depart- mental honors should send such names to Registrar's Office, Room 4 University Hall, by noon, Feb. 26. Robert L. Williams Assistant Registrar. Concerts Concert. The Westminster Choir, Dr. John Finley Williamson, Con- ductor, will give the ninth program in thge Choral Union Concert Series, this afternoon at 3 o'clock, Feb. 11, in Hill Auditoriunf. A limited number of tickets will continue on sale until noon Saturday, at the offices of the University Musical So- ciety in Burton Memorial Tower; and after 2 o'clock Sunday afternoon in the Hill Auditorium box office. Exhibitions College of Architecture and De- sign: Two-man exhibition featuring domestic architecture by Alden B. Dow, Midland, Michigan; and school buildings by Ernest J. Kump San Francisco. Rackham Mezzanine. Open daily except Sunday through Feb. 17; 2 to 5 and 7 to 10 p. m. The public is cordially invited. Exhibit: Museum of Art and Arch- aeology, Newberry Hall. Glass, sculp- ture and Textiles from Egypt. Events Today The Lutheran Student Association will meet. this afternoon at 5:00 in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall. The Program will consist of student pres- ented questions and answers by Rev. Yoder and Rev. Stellhorn. Supper will be served at 6:00 and the fellow- ship hour will follow. Regular Sunday worship services in Zion and Trinity Lutheran Chur- ches at 10:30 a. m. Prof. Charles Koella will lecture on "The Role of Switzerland During this War," at the International Cen- ter, at 7:30 p. m. Coming Events The Romance Languages Journal Club will meet on Tuesday afternoon, Feb. 13, at 4:15 in the West Confer- ence Room of the Rackham Build- ing. Professor Marc Denkinger. will speak on the subject "A Specific Ap- proach to the Study of French." Graduate students and all inter- ested are cordially invited to attend. Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet on Wednesday, Feb. 14, at 4:15 p.m., in Rm. 319 West Medical Build- ing. "Factors Affecting the Insulin Content of the Pancreas" will be dis- cussed. All interested are invited. Institute of the Aeronautical Sci- ences: Meeting to be held on Wed- nesday, Feb. 14, at 7:30 p.m., in Rm. 318 of the Michigan Union. Professor L. C. Maugh of the Department of Civil Engineering will illustrate with slides his talk on "Structural Features in Performance of Rigid Airships." The first group of student written plays to be presented this year by the Department of English in collabora- tion with the Department of Speech will be given Monday evening, Feb. 12, at 8 o'clock in the auditorium of the University High School. All in- terested are cordially invited to at- tend. Michigan Christian Fellowship Concerning General Dobbie's coming, there will be a special prayer meeting Monday evening at 8 o'clock in Lane Hall. Please attend if possible. Sigma Xi. At the February meet- ing Dr. Jerome Conn will report on some of his significant and highly important studies on human metabol- ism. The title, "Salt Requirements under Conditions of Hard Work in a Tropical Climate." Rackham Amphi- theater, Wednesday, Feb. 14, 8:00 p. m. Anyone interested is welcome to come as your guest. r 6 Stevenson.......... Vanderbilt .......... Van Tyne .......... Walker ............. W arner ............ Weimer............ Wells............ .....2231 AH .....1035 AH .. B Haven .....2225 AH .....4003 AH .....2029 AH ....2225 AH .2013 AH Williams Abel ... Boys ... Engel Nelson Taylor Weaver English 2 ........ NS ...........N S .................N S ..NS .................N S .......... ...... NS Aud. Aud. Aud. Aud. Aud. Aud. Final Examination Room Assign- ments,German 1, 2, 31, 32: Friday, Feb. 23, 2:00-4:00 p.m.: German I: Gaiss, Willey and Eaton: D Haven Hall German I: Philippson, Reichart and Naumann: 205 Mason Hall German I: Winkelman (both sec- tions) and Pott (both sections): 101 Ec. Bldg. German 2: All sections: C Haven Hall German 31: All sections: B Haven Hall German32: Both sections: B Hav- en Hall Sociology 157-Social Conflict and Readjustment. This course, which will be given during the Spring term deals with social movements and the problem of violence and revolution in social groups. It does not deal with war, and the description to that effect in the annual announcement is, there- fore, in error. Sociology 156 - This course, which was given dur- ing the Fall term dealt with the prob- lem of war. Math 157 will be given in the Spring Term: TTS at 8 in 21 East Hall. Professor Rainville. English 149 (Playwriting). The laboratory production of one-act plays will be at 8:00 o'clock Monday evening, Feb. 12, University High School Auditorium. The class will not meet on Monday afternoon. JUDGING by the reviews, "TheE Teeth" shouldn't be brushed off. Question of the Week: "How "Oh, it's brown out." Skin of Our is it out?" BARNABY By Crockett Johnson 4 I1 P. What's delaying that shipment from the Gurgle Soap Company? ... Here I've taken orders and- That came for you in today's mail- "Gurgle Perfume Company." Fn .r m o -sm. r r , ,,, "... As you see by our new letterhead, we are out of the soap business. We are cli-. niu1 a ruam n R a..# Mr. O'Malley! ia 1 i i kL I