THE MICHIGAN DAILY WUDANUSDAY, mtg 1'1ituu Dai y Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Senate Has Its Own Feuds 'WANDERING MINSTREL': U.S., Russia Need No Third Party . r 9 . By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON, NOV. 8-One of the hush- hush family feuds of the Senate flared un- blushingly into the open during the closing days of the campaign when Powell Glass,-son of the venerable 86-year-old Senator Carter Glass of Virginia, in effect called Justice Byrnes a liar and said his father was not for the fourth term. The White House previously had said that Senator Glass had telephoned Byrnes to con- gratulate him on his speech and to say he, Glass, was supporting the fourth term. Unwittingly in the center of this family feud is the second Mrs. Glass, a modest Virginia school teacher, formerly Mrs. Mary Scott Meade, who married the Senator in 1940 when he was 82 years old and who is very much for Roosevelt. The Glass sons, on the other hand, are very anti-Roosevelt and also very anti the second marriage of their father. And the cleavage has Edited. and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editoriil Staff Evelyn Phillips . . . . . Managing Editor Stan Wallace . . . . . City Editor Ray Dixon . . . . Associate Editor Hank Mantho . . . . sorts Editor Dave Loewenberg . Associate Sports Editor Mavis Kennedy . . . . . Women's Editor Business Staff Lee Amer . . . . . Business Manager Barbara Chadwick . . Associate Business Mgr. June Pomering . . . Associate Business Mgr. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERT13%IG BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publisbers Representative 420 MACDlsON Ave.. NEw YORK. N.Y. CHCAGo BOSTON * LOS ANGRUS - SAN FRANcISCO Telephone 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-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 NIGHT EDITOR: RAY DIXON 77he Penduluan w ^ Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staf; and represent the views of the writers only. World Army.. PREMIER Marshal Stalin, naming Japan and Germany as typical aggressors, yesterday urged the creation of a special international post-war armed organization to avert or sup. press aggression. This international army has long been urged by advocates of a world court, for they have been long agreed that to make any international law effective, the power necessary to punish aggres- sors must also be present. Apart from reality Stalin's plan cannot be questioned, but there are many practical diffi- culties that must be eliminated, if possible, be- fore any such proposal could be put into effect. First, the problem of where the army would be situated would arise. The reluctance of any single country to send its own armed force to join with another at the specific time it was needed, together with the time needed for such a move, would make it eompulsory for the entire army to be stationed in one country or vicinity. What country is going to volunteer t9 house an international army, even if all other countries chip in for the food? Secondly, one must think of the constituents of a standing post-war army. In order to be sure that such an army would work its person- nel must, be made up of men from the small as well as the large countries of the world, including the aggressor nation. In order to do this, an estimate of the number of men necessary for such an army must be compiled. After that is done each country faces the problem of recruiting men for this army. Citizens of every country will be against another "Draft" after hostilities cease. If members of this post-war army are to be obtained on a volunteer basis, it is doubtful whether very many men will volunteer. Most soldiers today, regardless of their nationality, are anxious to get back to their families as soon as possible, and put the war and their experi- ences on the battlefield behind them. The returning servicemen cannot be blamed for their attitude. It is only human to err. . The proposal of a standing post-war army, is one of the best that have been discussed so far. However, there are too many loopholes. A United Nations conference in the very near future meeting for the purpose of filling up those gaps would put this excellent pro- posal on a realistic rather than an idealistic basis. -Aggic Miller All Ainerican HERE'S ONE for the skeptics. The Associated Press reported yesterday: "A 'lost battalion' of the Seventh Army in France, which was cut off by the Germans for a week in the St. Die area, was relieved by Japanese- American troops who fought brilliantly in Italy, it was disclosed." "The Japanese, who fought their way to the trapped men late on the afternoon of Oct. 30, were of the 442nd regiment." One 48-man patrol of the rescued batalion returned with only six men after its seven days of isolation. KK'4R7Lxn nr+, 4 Her 1.... .hj.s ii iIn 1 THE GREAT American novel has never been written, and I daresay it never will be. Too much diversity exists in the United States for a single work of art, however panoramic, to en- compass it. Yet, various myths have arisen about this country which, upon examination of its litera- ture, are wholly inadmissible. For instance, it is commonly asserted that we are an optimistic people. No less a person than Professor Odell Shepard of Trinity College said so in a recent essay. Now, many of us are Pollyannas. Many of us are not. The greatest American thinkers have been just the opposite. Surely any gener- alization is unwarranted. Could an overwhelmingly cheery culture pro- duce men who spent most of their lives in the Cave of Despair? Consider Herman Melville. His novels have been granted a new recognition in recent year and "Moby Dick" is one of the few undisputed American classics. That book, noth- ing more than the dramatization of evil in all its. nakedness, revealed as tortured and despondent a soul as the world has ever seen. "All the powers of darkness fought over him, all the devils plagued him," writes Vernon Louis Par- rington of Mellville, "and if they did not con- quer, they left him maimed and stricken." Is Melville to be denied his status as an American because he would not let the sunny side of life blind him to the malignancy under- neath it? Shall we now give Edgar A. Guest precedence over Herman Melville even though the former's work is to poetry what "Little Goodie Two-Shoes" is to fiction. Shall we for- get the all-pervasive gloom in "The Education of Henry Adams" so as to appease Bernard De Voto and those other critics who as Mal- colm Cowley has stated "demand that Ameri- can literature should be affirmative, opti- mistic, uncritical, and truly of this nation." Wherever shall we exile Henry and Brooks Adams for their un-American intellectual activi- ties? Perhaps Congress could create a literary' Dies Committee for the purpose of determining whether an author has run afoul of the national canon: Thou shalt not be a pessimist." Such lines as: "Life seems a jest of Fate's contriving, Only secure in everyone's conniving, A long account of nothings paid with loss Where we, poor puppets, perked by unseen wires After our little hour of strut and rave, With all our pasteboard passions and desires, Loves, hates, ambitions, and immortal fires, Are tossed pell-mell in the grave- These lines, I say, from James Russell Lowell's "Ode Recited at the Harvard Commemoration (July 21, 1965) will have to be deleted in favor of the more promising passages that follow. But then Lowell, after all, was not a repre- sentative American-whatever that may be. Too cosmopolitan, in common with Henry James, that other gloomy man, he was really of the Old World. WONDER how our hypothetical committee would dispose of Mark Twain, the writer William Dean Howells pronounced "the sole, the incomparable, the Lincoln of our literature - . the very marrow of Americanism." Parrington says the following comment throws a white light on the man. Look at him in it. "I have been reading the morning paper," he said. "I do it every morning-well knowing that I shall find in it the usual depravities, and basenesses, and hypocrisies and cruelties that make up civilization, and cause me to put in the rest of the day pleading for the damnation of the human race." The older Twain became, the more pessimistically deterministic he became. Thus the marrow of Americanism. And so with many another who troubled to tear off the mask of surface benignance and look below into the mire of reality. The greatest figure in really American letters, Walt Whitman who appreciated all that was young, vitalizing, and democratic could yet write, "Shift and turn the combinations of the statement as we may, the problem of the future of America is in certain respects as dark as it is vast. Pride, competition, segregation, vi- cious wilfulness, and license beyond example brood already upon us." Whitman, the by- become deeper and deeper as Mrs. Glass has turned out more and more a New Dealer. Ill and old, the Senator seldom goes out but fre- quently he is paired in the Senate in favor of Roosevelt legislation. Glass Statement Withheld... Meanwhile, the Senator's sons, publishers of the prosperous Glass newspapers in Lynch- burg, Va., have become more and more anti- Roosevelt and not at all happy about Mrs. Glass. How much the future disposal of the Glass million-dollar estate is involved is not known, but it is known that, just before the Virginia Democratic Convention in Roanoke last sum- mer, Powell Glass threatened to take drastic measures if his father came out for Roosevelt. At that time, it was reported that the Senator planned to announce for a fourth term, despite the fact that the convention was called to boost Senator Harry Byrd. So Powell Glass in Lynch- burg served warning on Rixey Smith. his father's secretary in Washington, that if any pro-Roose- velt statement was made, he would declare the Senator too ill to make such a statement. In order to avoid family embarrassment, Mrs. Glass and Rixey Smith withheld the statement. But last week, when Justice Byrnes let drop the fact that Senator Glass had telephoned con- gratulating him on his speech' and supporting the fourth term, Powell Glass finally carried out his threat. Declaring his father's health such that the Senator himself could not talk to Byrnes, Powell virtually called Byrnes a liar, and brought the Glass family feud right out into the open. Stilwell's Troubles in India . .. INSIDE STORY of General Stilwell's prob- lems in India has just come to light in a' hitherto unpublished report written by John P. Davies, State Department adviser on Gen- eral Stilwell's staff. In addition to his Chinese troubles, Stilwell's biggest job was operating against the Japs in Burma. Here he largely used Indian troops, which, according to the secret report made by Ambassador William Phillips to Roosevelt, would not resist the Japs and were largely mercenaries. Mr. Davies' report to Stilwell is even more detailed and revealing. Stilwell's troubles in China were chiefly responsible for his recall, but the situation in India was considered largely responsible for his failure to make progress in Burma. Davies did not paint a very happy picture. His official report said: "Unless steps are soon taken to provide for a prompt and orderly relin- quishment of British rule in favor of an Indian national government, we run the risk of facing in our time chaos in India, which may provide the fuel for another great war." Report Criticizes Briish.. . T IS NOW known that General Stilwell had a lot of squabbles with Lord Mountbatten, but the real story of his troubles because of the Indian political set-up has only been hinted at. Davies, reporting on this, said: "The underlying unrest, hatred of the British and sympa.thy for the enemy are productive of the most unsatisfactory situation from the mili- tary point of view. Bad as these conditions are, they are no worse than, if as bad as, those which confronted the Japanese Army in Manchuria when, using 'Manchukuo' as a base, it carried on operations against North China. "The British, of course, protest against any suggestion that they deliberately seek to use any one faction or community against the other. They have played the Indian colonial game so long that, as they acquired their Empire through fits of absent-mindedness, so now they practice a policy of divide and rule almost unconsciously." Davies also shed revealing light on the famous mission of Sir Stafford Cripps and Col. Louis Johnson, former U. S. Assistant Secretary of War, to try to work out a compromise in India. "British officials maintained that the Cripps proposals demonstrated good faith," Davies informed General Stilwell. "But when it seem- ed an agreement was imminent, Cripps was overruled and succumbed to the imperialists who now control the British Government." "So India is our problm," Davies said, near the end of his long report. "What hap- pens now and later in India affects us. It is therefore of very great concern to us whether Britain attempts to perpetuate its domination over 350 million Indians, who may be expected to draw the sympathy of the Soviet or China, or both." Those were some of the things Stilwell bucked up against. (Copyright, 1944, United Features Syndicate) product of Manhattan who extolled the vir- tues of America with all his thunderous verse, never allowed the clouds of self-deception to hide truth from him. He, like Emerson and Thoreau, was capable .of the most scathing denunciations, the most ghastly predictions, and the most misanthropic statements-all made while acknowledging the glory of an oversoul, a transcendental God. Such belief did not pre- vent Whitman's mention of "this multifarious mad chaos of fraud, frivolity, hoggishness- this revel of fools and incredible make believe and general unsettledness-we call the world. -Bernard Rosenberg PERHAPS the largest single prob- lem of our post-war future is how the United States will get along with Russia, and how the Russians will get along with us. This calls for a clear under- standing on our part of the areas of agreement between us and equally important, of the areas in which we have not yet adjusted our concepts of ultimate national interest and hence have had no meeting of minds. In reaching this essential common denominator of mutually satisfac- tory policy, it is of the utmost impor- tance that Washington deal directly with Moscow without the interven- tion of a third party, no matter how experienced the interpreter might be. Winston Churchill's report to the House of Commons of his latest exploit as a "wandering minstrel" (as he whimsically potrayed his role) needs to be considered in the frame of reference of this fundamen- tal need. The Prime Minister was at his Britsh best in his speech. Witty, discerning, revealing, he put the best foot forward concerning the sessions recently concluded at the Kremlin, in which Britain saved her face as to prestige in Southeastern Europe but accepted the primacy of the Soviet in all areas, except Greece and Tur- key in Europe, to which British sea power has direct access. He pointed out candidly the prin- cipal hope remaining to the enemy: "That division will arise between the three great powers by whom he is assailed and whose continued union spells his doom." To prevent any such disastrous division, he pointed out, "We must disperse misunderstanding, fore- stallthem before they occur," be- cause "the future of the world in these next few years depends upon the united action of our three countries." JHIS is no easy task, and there is very real point in the Prime Minister's statement that "at Que- bec, the President and I felt very much the absence of Russia. At Mos- cow, Marshal Stalin and I were deep- ly conscious that the President was not with us." It is of the utmost importance that the heads of state of the three most puissant nations meet frequently, frankly express their points of view and seek to find common ground for rebuilding our war-shattered world. All of which is so basic that it cannot be pointed out too often. Likewise, it must continually be em- phasized that the three who must, associate in this united action have certaindifferences in national status and need. Both the United States and Russia are continental empires whose economic interests, broadly speaking, have fewer overlaps than those of any other major industrial powers of the world. Economists of as varied attitudes as Alvin Hansen, Sumner Slichter, J. Maurice Clark and Calvin Hoover are found in agreementvon the thesis that we face no such inevitable econ- omic battle with Russia for world trade as bothathe British and the Germans felt ahead of them at the turn of the century. Today's danger is not a dog-eat- dog struggle for resources, markets or trade-it is on the psychological front; whether or not we will see so many ghosts and hobgoblins that we will refuse economic friendship because we prefer a war about words. On Second Thought THERE is a rumor going around the campus that Michigan has more men enrolled this year than any other school for girls in the country. Tom Harmon claims in his new book, "Pilots Also Pray," that Ann Arbor is the most beautiful spot in the world during the fall season. If the University ever decides to start the fall semester any later, we students would never know. Norman Anning, The Daily's friendly critic, notifies us that "Mr. Handel's football song, 'Freeze Where You Sit,' would be very ap- propriate by Nov. 18th." That's the date Guy Lombardo is going to play the five favorite Michigan songs. * * After the Wolverines lost Bobs Wiese and Nussbaumer, Ann Arbor was watched by political dopesters all over the nation to see what hap- pened after changing horses in the middle of the gridiron. We note that what the gridders did to Purdue is what FDR hoped to do to purdewey. ** * And Saturday the team went liter- ary-taking Penn in hand. -Ray Dixon WEDNESDAY, NOV. 8, 1944 VOL. LV, No. 7 All notices for The Daily Official Bui- 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,l except on saturday when the notices should be submitted by 11:30 a. m. Notices To Deans, Directors, Deprtment' Heads and Others Responsible for. Payrolls: Payrolls for the Fall Termc are ready for your approval. Please call at Rm. 9, University Hall, begin- ning Nov. 6 and not later than Nov. 11. Issuance of Keys: On and after Nov. 15th the Key Office at the Buildings and Grounds Department will be open between the hours of 1 to 4:30 p.m., Mondays through Fri- days, and from 8 to 12 a.m.- Satur- days. Fraternity Rushing. Anyone wish- ing to register for fraternity rush- ing may do so by coming to the In- terfraternity Council office, 306 Mi- chigan Union, Wednesday through Friday from 3:00 to 5:00 p. m. Orientation Advisers: Please pick1 up enough assembly booklets to dis- tribute to each girl in your group at your meeting to discuss assemblyt and panhellenic organizations. Book- lets should be obtained between 2:00 and 5:30 p. in., Thursday, November 9 in the new assembly office (Kala- mazoo room) in the League. The Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information wishes to make the following announcements: We have received notice from the1 Board of Education, Newark, N. J.,3 that examinations for Elementary Art, Elementary Home Economics, and Elementary Vocal Music will be held at the Central Commercial and Technical High School, Newark, N. J., Nov. 24, 1944. There is a very urgent need for civilian chemists, chemical engineers, physicists, and mycologists (both men and women), in the laboratory of the Materials Branch of the Engi- neer Board, Fort Belvoir, Virginia, where development and testing of materials and equipment for the Corps of Engineers is done. State of Michigan Civil Service An- nouncements for Budget Examiner, Salary $230 to $270 per month, and Housekeeper, Salary $120 to $143 per month, have been received in our office. State of Michigan Civil Service Announcements for Laboratory Tech- ician A, B, and C, salary range from $110 to $150 per month, and Boys' Supervisor B, salary range from $125 to $145 per month, have been receiv- ed in our office. Detroit Civil Service Commission announcements for Senior Govern- ment Analyst, salary $4,002 to $4,416, washman, salary $1,932 to $2,064, and Nutritionist, salary $2,282 to $2,547, have been received in our office. The United States Civil Service Commission gives notice that Novem- ber 20, 1944, will be the closing date for acceptance of applications for Apprentice Dietitian, $1,752 a year, and Staff Dietitian $2,190 a year. Applications must be filed with the United States Civil Service Commis- sion, Washington 25, D. C., not later than that date. We have received notice from the Division of Teaching Personnel, Cin- cinnati, O., that they are interested in having applications from teachers in the kindergarten-primary and physical education fields. Anyone interested may receive further information by calling at the Bureau, 201 Mason Hall. A cademic Notices Mathematics: There will be a meeting of those who are interested in seminars which have not been organized in mathematics so far, to- day at 4:15 p.m. in Rm. 3011, Angell Hall. The true tragedy for us-and man- kind-would be our retreat from reason because of the legends ofl Bolshies under every bed. All of which makes it imperative that we come to direct grips with the mind and aspiration of Russia, rather than depend qn Britain (or anyone else) to interpret America to the Soviet, and Russia to the United States. Any such two-way brokerage of national interest involves a double possibility of misunderstanding. Fur- thermore, an "honest broker" char- ges fees, often from both parties to a bargain. Britain possesses a notable equip- ment of skill in international bar- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN gaining-it is one of the best assets she will retain at the end of the war. But our future relations with Russia are far too important to be conducted other than directly and at first-hand. So speed the day, as Mr. Chur- chill said, when Anerica's chief of state, whoever he may be, can re- establish direct personal contact with the monolithic man in the Kremlin. The "wandering min- strel" sings a fetching sang, but it is to Britain's long-run self inter- est, and to that of peace and plenty for all men, that we speak directly to Russia, in the fullness of our own heart and hope. -St. Louis Post Dispatch Mathematics 327 will meet Tues- day and Thursday at 9 in 3201 Angell Hall. Engineering Aptitude Tests: All first-term civilian Engineering fresh- men will meet in Rackham Lecture Hall at 8 o'clock on Thursday morn- ing, Nov. 9 for the purpose of taking the Engineering Aptitude Tests de- veloped by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. There will be no make-up opportun- ity. Freshmen will be excused from classes on that day. Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Election cards filed after the end of the first week of the semester may be accepted by the Registrar's Office only if they are approved by Assistant Dean Walter. Graduate Students: Preliminary examinations in French and German for the doctorate will be held on Fri- day, Nov. 10, from 4 to 6 p.m. in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Buil- ding. Dictionaries may be used, Concerts Percival Price, University Carillon- neur, will be heard in a recital on the Baird Carillon in Burton Memor- ial Tower at 7 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 9. His program will include University of Michigan songs, a group of folk songs, and four compositions written especially for the carillon at Arnhem, Holland, by Frans Althuisen. Events Today Botanical Journal Club: Professor W. R. Taylor will discuss methods of collecting Algae this afternoon at 4 in Rm. 1139 Natural Science. The talk will be illustrated with colored movies. University of Michigan Section of the American Chemical Society: A meeting will be held today at 4 p.m. in Rm.r151 of the Chemistry Buid- ing. Dr. Charles C. Price of the University of Illinois will speak on "Substitution and Orientation in the Benzene Ring." The public is cor- dially invited. Mortar Board: Will meet at 5:00 p.m. Anyone who cannot attend should contact Bette Willemin at 21528. International Center will hold its annual reception for foreign students in the Rackham Amphitheatre, 7:30 p.m. this evening. Mr. Robert Taylor will resume his popular seminar in Religious Music in the bane Hall Library this evening from 7:30 to 9. This week's Associa- tion Music Hour will feature excepts from Wagner's "Parsifal," including the Prelude, Duet from Act II, and the Good Friday Spell. All students, servicemen, and faculty members are cordially invited. The Stump Speaker's Society of Sigma Rho Tau will hold its first fall membership meeting tonight at 7:30 in the Michigan Union. Engineers and Architects interested in improv- ing their speaking habits are cor- dially invited to come and join the fun. Midweek dance at the U.S.O., to- night. Refreshments and junior hos- tesses. Coming Events John Muehl will lead a new semi- nar in Social Ethics, featuring Ber- trand Russell's What I Believe, Thursday evening, Nov. 9. This Asso- ciation Seminar begins at 7:30 in the Lane Hall Library. Students, servicemen, and faculty are welcome. Graduate Record Concerts at 7:45 p.m. in the Men's Lounge of the Graduate School will begin again on Thursday, Nov. 9 with a, progra~m including the Brahms Double Piano Concerto. Beethoven's 7th Sym- phony, and the Don Juan Tone Poem by Richard Strauss. Gradu- ates, Servicemen and their guests I 1 BARNABY I. --am r We're back in the Nineteen-Twenties now, O'Malley, by A.A.'s watch. Stop worrying about politics. Everything's dandy. . . And Il Imaginer, m'boy! We're back in the Twenties once more! I wonder if Tony's is open- By Crockett Johnson It's Election Day ELECTION Tony's isn't open. BOARD Against the law- 3 MEETS - I