PAGE w° THE MICHIGAN DAILY WED NESDAY. NOVEMBER 28, 1945 WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Congressional Sit-Down Strike Business Staff Dorothy Flint . . . . . . . Business Manager Joy Altman . . . . . . . Associate Business Mgr. Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication 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 Offlee at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular schoolyear by car- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTJING 0Y National Advertising Service, Inc. College Pblisbers Representative 420 MADisSoN AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO *BOSTON . -OS AGELES * SAN FaNCIsco Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR: CLAYTON DICKEY Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Christmas at Hoe WE SAT DOWN at the typewriter yesterday prepared to present arguments from the University administration standpoint on why this year's Christmas vacation should not be ex- tended. However, an item in the Daily Official Bulletin caught our eye. The notice said that the University Council had passed a resolution stating that the exam- intion period at the close of the spring term be advanced to permit the Alumni Association to hold a Victory Reunion preceding Com- mencement Day, June 22, 1946. Then all our arguments concerning the rigidity of the University calendar and how the extension of the vacation now would mean that much shorter a summer vacation, seemed rather trite. We are all for alumni reunions. We think the scheduled reunion would be very appro- priate. But Christmas at home is more important- more important to 2,000 World War H veterans now attending the University. The vacation was shortened in 1943 following a special request by the Office of Defense Trans- portation. It was done to ease the holiday loads which over-taxed railroads were forced to carry. There has been no such request this year. The Calendar Committee drew up the schedule for 1945-46 on the assumption that the war would continue. Fortunately, this assumption proved false. We cannot see why the vacation should not be extended. There are a number of good reasons for the requested four-day extension. Student opinion .certainly favors the extension. If the Deans should decide today to main- tain the schedule, they should have good reasons fordoing so. It's going to be difficult to explain to a vet- eran who has been away from home for two or three years. -Ray Dixon Bob Goldman Better A.Bomb ATOMIC BOMBS can now be made at less expense and at a much faster rate than the original bomb, says Dr. Leslie W. Ball, who worked on the bomb project at ,Hanford, Wash. This apparently indicates progress. Extensive research must have been carried on to discover that the use of plutonium instead of the rarer uranium would drastically cut the time of makng the bombs and reduce their cost. America is all out for improvements. She'll spend her man-hours and resources to get ahead. She'll work for perfection, even if it's the per- fection of a terribly destructive instrument. But the whole world races side by side with her in her efforts to attain the ultimate. Nations attempt to reach her and surpass her. The race seems endless. Yet we have reason to wonder, perhaps even fear, should the end be reached. We can not know whether inter- By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Clearest call for congression- al action on reconversion was voiced last week in a little-noticed speech by the ex-Min- neapolis street-kgweeper, Representative William J. Gallagher. Without any hestitation, h pinned responsibility for the congressional sit-down strike right where it belongs-on the leadership of important House committees. Gallagher, a member of four committees (Census, Indian Affairs, Mines and Mining, and Pensions), pointed out that only the Indian Af- fairs committee has been at all active. "I might just as well not be on a committee at all," he remarked. The bent, white-haired former supporter of Henry George called for an end to the long delay in stalling off the St. Lawrence Seaway project. He called for action on the full em- ployment bill, the 65-cent minimum wage bill, and other important measures bound up with reconversion. Reason for the long delays in committees, he said, is that "leaders on both sides of the House do not trust the members. If they are not in complete agreement on the objective of these measures, at least they should permit them to come before the House for a vote. "Why should we sit here day after day doing nothing but talk, talk, criticize, and fight bat- tles that are past, in place of having our eyes to the future for the benefit of our country and for the benefit of the soldier boys? . I want action and sane thinking." It was one of the sanest speeches Congress has heard in weeks. NOTE-As long as reactionary Southern Congressmen are chairmen of committees they can bottle up legislation and prevent its coming to a vote. Lewis Comes Home OFFICIALS on both sides publicly deny reports that John L. Lewis and his United Mine Workers union will rejoin the American Federa- tion of Labor. However, privately the deal already has been made. Lewis will be returned to the fold at the next AFL executive council meeting in Miami, January 21. Furthermore, the tempestuous mine leader will be granted his No. 1 demand, a seat in the executive council for his 600,000 mine- workmen. Biggest immediate barrier to be overcome was the lack of vacancies on the executive council. However, Green ,nd his associates have now worked out a neat little plan to remedy this- the ouster of Harvey W. Brown, president of the International Association of Machinists. Brown has been in hot water with AFL bigwigs for a long time because of non-payment of per .capita taxes, growing out of a dispute between him and Hutcheson over unionization of mill- wrights. Only about 5,000 millwrights (they install machinery in industrial plants) are in- volved, but Brown and Hutcheson have been battling furiously as to which shall collect dues from them. Russian Red Tape MARSHALL MCDUFFIE, deputy to Overseas Property Liquidator Tom McCabe, has just returned from a trip through conquered Europe. Anxious to go from Warsaw to Prague early in October, he checked with U. S. military head- quarters to see if an army plane was scheduled to cover this mountainous route. None was. He was also advised he would be wasting his time if he tried to hitch a ride from the Russians. Next McDuffie checked at the American Embassy, where he was told it would be useless to go to the Russians. Even if they were willing UNERAJugling THE Administration-requested appropriation of $550,000,000 for UNRRA is being played with by various Congressmen ever eager to thwart efforts to help the world's liberated peo- ple to live through the winter. The bill, as it emerged from the House, car- ried with it Rep. Herter's "free-press" rider which stated that no American contributions to UNRRA could be spent in any area where rep- resentatives of the American press were not per- mitted to observe and report freely on how the relief money is spent. But juggling the contents of the bill has not stopped with the House. Now in Senate hands, the bill has been further changed. The Senate Appropriations Committee has struck the "free-press" rider from the bill and has substituted an innovation of its own-a parity amendment, stating that no part of the $550,- 000,000 UNRRA appropriation could be used to buy farm products outside of the United States if these were available here at parity or below, and that none could be bought here at less than parity price. The split between the two houses of Congress on this bill necessitates further delay in voting the appropriation, for the bill must first be given over to conference committee to settle differ- ences and finally must be passed by both houses in the same form. Perhaps if Congress waits four more weeks it will be appropriating money for tombstones instead of for food. ---Lynn Shapiro to help, he was told, Russian red tape would take him ten days to get started. However, lunching with an American UNRRA worker, MDuffie revealed his predicament. Lunch was over at about 2:30. At 3 P. M. McDuffie received a call from Red Army head- quarters offering him a ride on a plane expected to go to Prague from Moscow the next morning. The Moscow plane was delayed, however. so MDuffie was put on another Russian plane, with a crew composed of two Russians and three Poles. He was charged 265 rubles for the 400-mile journey over the mountains, and was permitted to pay in Polish Zlotys. Thus, the total trip cost him 97 cents in American money. From Prague, McDuffie drove to Bratislava and Vienna, thence to Frankfurt. With his Rus- -sian-Czech pass and an American flag on the car he had no trouble so long as he was in Russian-controlled territory-being stopped only twice for a reading of his pass. Between Vienna and Frankfurt, however, McDuffie was stopped six times by American G.L's and finally was arrested and fined by an American military policeman for speeding, on an eight-lane autobahn, or highway. With no traffic in sight in either direction, his chauffeur had been traveling at 55 miles per hour. (Copyright, 1945, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) 1'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Semantic Garden BY SAMUEL GRAFTON MR. ATTLEE, Mr. Bevin and Mr. Eden have addressed the House of Commons, each in accord with his own lights. Their speeches are wonderfully characteristic; Mr. Attlee's is on a high, almost abstract, moral level; Mr. Bevin's is on a rumble-bumble, rather belligerent plane; Mr. Eden's is fastidious, precise, neat. Yet the speeches are remarkably alike, too, in that all three men reveal themselves to be seriously troubled by the break in confidence between the Western Powers and Russia, and all three make specific suggestions for\restoring confidence. Let us look at these suggestions: 1. Mr. Attlee proposes that the United Nations Organization shall set up a commis- sion on atomic energy, which will work, by easy stages, to explore the problem of exchanging information in this field; it will try to build world confidence to a level at which all secrets can be shared. He says that only the United Nations can do the job, because the atomic bomb is a world problem, and that no single nation, such as Britain, Canada, or the United States can take the lead in solving the problem. At this point one has a faint feeling that Mr. Attlee is begging the question; for until there is world confidence, the United Nations Organiza- tion is a kind of nothing; and he asks an organi- zation whose very start is threatened by lack of confidence, to solve the problem of confidence. It is differences among the great powers which disturb confidence; the great powers can hardly expect their child to pass a miracle, and send confidence flowing backward .to the parent or- ganisms. If there were world confidence, Mr. Attlee's plan would be splendid; but if there were world confidence, it would not be needed. 2. Mr. Bevin, with much vehemence demands "frankness;" he says we must build confidence through frankness. That is a kind of semantic horror; for frankness and confidence are- closely-related concepts, and Mr. Bevin. comes almost, if not quite, to the point of saying that we ought to build. confidence through confidence. He wants every nation to say exactly what is in its mind in regard to terri- tories and bases. If there were world confi- dence, there would be no barriers in the way of such an exchange of data; but, we perhaps need more confidence before we can establish this plan for confidence. 3. Mr. Eden also seems to stumble into the same verbal trap; not once, but twice. He sug- gests that the great powers give up the right of veto on the Security Council; but it is precisely lack of confidence that has produced the veto power, and not vice versa. It may be questioned whether it adds to confidence for the western nations, which have a clear majority on the Council, to urge that the minority member shall give up its veto. Mr. Eden also proposes that Russia shall open her gates freely to foreign correspondents, and let them roam and write as they will. Russia's exaggerated love of secrecy is distasteful in the extreme; every free Englishman and American will sympathize with Mr. Eden on this count, and will agree that there is something hateful (and old-fashion, and bizarre) in Russian nar- rowness on this point. But here, too, we run into the same check; a revival of confidence must probably come first. We must not forget how proud Russia is of her success in misleading German intelligence as to the extent of Soviet power. She is not likely to give up any security device until she has what she considers security. Again and again we feel ourselves being led thus up the semantic garden path; that in- tricate verbalisns are being sought out as a substitute for a return to the old .system of Big Three unanimity. It is impossible to say whether we can return to that system; but it used to work; and it is hard to believe that we will get very far with our present effort to cure an aspirin with a headache. (Copyright, 1945, N. Y. Post Syndicate) Cetter JQ f7he 6itor Longer Recess . . To the Editor : 1. There are no more travel restric- tions. 2. The Navy V-12 program adjusts itself to the schedule of each institu- tion (according to Dr. Robbins, Asst. to President Ruthven). 3. Veterans home for their first real Christmas in several years want to have a real holiday. Under these conditions, and be- cause of these conditions, we urge the Deans' meeting tomorrow to permit a prolongation of the Christmas holiday.-, Signed: Fay Ajzenberg, Winifred Barr, Patricia Judson, Marion Good- man, Jeanne Aehoofast, Marion Riegel, Jane Dittrich, Norma Craw- ford, Jacqueline Gatit, Mary Holt- man, Jean R. Crandell, Marilyn Has- ilswerdl, Sue Curtis, Eleanor Good- rich, Frances Goldberg, Claire Ma- cauiley, Elaine Bailer. * * * Real Holiday .. . To the Editor: IT SIOULD be made evident- that the veterans are not alone in want- ing an extension of the Christmas holiday. They are supported by the over- whelming majority of students. These students feel that after years of wartime acceleration they too should have a real holiday with their families. Signed: Barbara Armstrong, Renee Kaire, Joyce Siegan, Blanca Slvarez, Catherine Sauer, Eunice Fraser, Jean Harvey, Helen Perry, Lois Smith, Rika Drewes, Emily Minthorn, Caro- lyn Melsheimer, Harriet Hartesvelt, Dorthea Mountz, Margaret Nichoe, Lucretia Dell, Tupper Clarks, Joan Jerwin, Marion Willard, Elizabeth Adams, Lenore Olson, Lucille Sheetz, Marian More, Ingen Glasius, Mary Pinney, Laura Manthei, Katha Knode, Ann Malper, and Mary Quiott. * * * MUS IC Per pieta ...................Stradella'during which her performance was Se tu mami ........... . .... .,.. Pergolesi technically irreproachable but in Chi voul la zingarella .......... Piasello general uninteresting. Until after Rondo from "La Ceneretola"... Rossini intermission her voice lacked rich- Trotsisionchansons de Bilitis ...... Debussyhrvielcdrc- Romance de l'etoile...........Chabrier ness. seeming too much on one lev- Toujours .........................Fuare el, with overly apparent effort when O Cease Thy Singing Maiden Fair.... greater power and volume was at- -......... .. Rachmaninoff tempted. Hopak ..................... Moussorgsky Lullaby. .............Gretchaninoff The second half of her program Pano murciano .... . ........... . ... Nin could not have been better. With El Vito ..........................Nin its unwavering tones, clean-cut light- Air de Lia from "L'Enfant prodigue" ness, and clear diction, Miss Tourel's .Debussy voice is perfectly suited to the sing- I wonder as I wander ing of Debussy. Her middle tones ..American White Spiritual were lovely, having richness, precis- I Hate Music TFive Kid Songs) ion, and other admirable qualities of .Leonard Bernstein good mezzo-sopranos, but they ex- * * * celled by far those of her outer range, SAST ngtteUiestMuia which tended toward thinness. L A night the University Musical On the whole Miss Tourel sang best Society presented another first the French and Russian numbers, performance in the Choral Union probably because of greater familiar- Series, that of Jennie Tourel, mezzo- ity with the languages. Her interpre- soprano. Throughout the concert her Live ability was apparent throughout. voice was excellently controlled and Prblytemsenhiaic flawlessly pitched even in the diffi- Probably the most enthusiastic- cult recitative of the Rossini, al- ally received number on the pro- though it was not until the second gram was Leonard Bernstein's "I half of the program that it was dis- Hate Music," which climaxed the played at its full richness and ex- concert. hiss Tourel sang it with pressiveness. tional claity, Making for a presen- Except for the Debussy, which tation to which the audience was was excellent, the first half seemed highly responsive. to serve as a warming up period -Paula Brower DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Extend Vacation .. . To the Editor: THREE cheers for the veterans-we want a longer Christmas vacation too! We don't know all the objec- tions to this change, but if a "tight schedule" is the main one, we don't see why it needs to be an objection. We would be very willing to have less time between semesters, if necessary, for we'd much rather go home for Christmas than in March. The kids we know are more apt to be home for Christmas for different colleges run on different schedules so that their spring vacations would come at dif- ferent times. So instead of two hec- tically short vacations, let's have Christmas vacation long enough to enjoy! Signed: - Joan Shively, Nancy Shenck, Florence Garritsen, Sylvia Meier, Charlotte Wood, Faith Simp- son, Helen Dauid, and Tony Lloyd. :* * * Christmas Reunion .. . To the Editor: WE'D like to add our plea to the veterans' that Christmas vaca-I tion be longer. We've had Christmas at home right along, but this year lots of us have brothers or friends who are home for the first time in years, and we'd like time to do more than say hello and goodby. Signed: Barbara Hootson, Virginia L. Mast, Mary Ellen Baker, Elizabeth Woodward, Nancy Loud, Heather Clarke, Carolyn Newberg, Ruth Adaire Humphrey , Elizabeth A. God- bout, Charlotte Hilarides, Marilyn Austin, Janice Carter, Barbara Gib- son, Charlotte S. Hoyt. Holiday Spirit YESTERDAY saw the city's streets decked out in Yuletide finery. Lo- cal merchants' donations to the Chamber of Commerce have made possible the most extensive deco- rations in city history. Making up for war restricted bleakness, and providing returning veterans with the traditional holi- day atmosphere, the decorations reflect the Christmas spirit in the city. For many Ann Arbor young-. sters, this year will be a first experience of Christmas in the good old American tradition. -Milt Freudenheim Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 1021 Angel Hall, by 3:30 p. m. of the day preceding publication (11:00 a. m. Sat- urdays). WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1945 VOL. LVI, No. 21 Notices Attention, Pre-Medical Students: The Medical Aptitude Test, sponsored by the Association of American Medf- cal Colleges, will be given at the Uni- versity of Michigan on Friday, Dec. 14. The test is a normal requirement for admission to nearly all medical schools. It is extremely important for all students planning to enter a medi- cal school in the fall of 1946 to take the examination at this time. If the test has already been taken, it is not necessary or advisable to repeat it. Further information may be ob- tained in Room 4, University Hall, and fees must be paid at the Cash- ier's Office by Dec. 1. The W. J. Hammill prize of $100 will be awarded for the best essay concerning the pertinence and mod- ernity of ideas found in classics of thought and literature in the fields of history, economics and political sci- ence. The contestants for the prize may choose any one of the following topics: 1. Theories of relationships between human ecology and political systems; . 2. Relationships between political systems, ethical values, and the concept of personal property; 3. the individual and the state. Lists of books that shall form the basis for the discussion of these topics will be supplied contestants. The essay is to be between ten thousand am'd twenty thousand words. The contest is open to any undergraduate of the Univer- sity of Michigan, and essays must be submitted by March 15, 1946. Con- testants are requested to consult with any member of the committee on awards before writing the essay.. Joseph E. Kallenbach William B. Palmer Palmer A. Throop Eligibility Certificates for the Fall rerm should be secured before Dec. 1, from the Office of the Dean of Stu- dents. Students are reminded that all blanks taken out for registering with the Bureau of Appointments, must be returned a week from the day tak- en. Friday is the last day,for returns during the registration period. To All Heads of Departments: Please notify the Information Clerk in the Business Office of the number of Faculty directories needed in your department. Delivery will be made by campus mail. Staff members may have a copy of the Directory by applying at the In- formation Desk in the Business Of- fice, Room 1, University Hall. The Directory will be ready for dis- tribution Nov. 28. To save postage and labor the practice of mailing di- rectories is discontinued. k Herbert G. Watkins Secretary All Student Organizations desiring space in the 1946 Michiganensian should contact the Michiganensian business office between 2 and 5 p.m. or 2-4561, line 338, after 7 p.m. This must be done this week. All organi- zations that have already received the Oratorical Association as the second number on the 1945-46 Lec- ture Course. Mme. Pandit will speak in Hill Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. on the subject "The Coming Indian De- mocracy." Tickets are on sale today from 10 a.m.-8:30 p.m. in the audi- torium box office. Lecture: Paul Hagen, former Ger- man and Austrian trade union labor leader, and author and lecturer on the subject, "European Labor in the Post-War World," on Friday, Nov. 30, 4:15 p.m., Room 101 Economics Building, under the auspices of the Workers Educational Service. The lecture is open to the public. Academic Notices Seminar in History of Mathematics Room 3001 Angell Hall; Wednesday, Nov. 28, 7-8 p.m. The discussion of the Development of Complex Numbers will be contin- ued. Make-up Final Examination in Economics 51, 52, 53, and 54 will be given Friday afternoon, Nov. 30, in Room 207 Economics Bldg. at 3:00. Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet on Friday, Nov. 30, at 4 p.m., in 319 West Medical Building. "Gastro- Intestinal Factors in the Utilization of Fats" will be discussed. All inter- ested are invited. Exhibitions Exhibit of Paintings and Sketches by Various Japanese-American Ar- tists, On Relocation Centers, From Nov. 26 to Dec. 16. Sponsored by Stu- dent Council of Student Religious As- sociation, Inter-Guild, Inter-Racial Association, All Nations Club. Office of Counselor in Religious Education, Michigan Office of War Relocation Authority, U. S. Department of In- terior. Exhibit: Museum of Art and Arch- aeology, 434 South State Street. His- torical Firearms and other Weapons. Nov. 25 through Dec. 9. Weekdays, 9-12; 1:30-5; 7:30-9:30; Sundays, 3-5. Events Today Hillel Foundation will hold a meet- ing, today at 4:00 p.m. for all those people interested in preparing or serving at the Channukah party on Saturday night. Botanical Journal Club today at 4:00 p.m., Room N. S. 1139. Reports by Barbara Bowen Weed-killing Chemicals Robert Lowry The Genetics of Bryophytes Norrine Mathews A review of literature on Taraxacum Kok-saghyz Rod, Chairman-W. C. Steere Anyone interested is cordially in- vited to attend The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation Library Committee will hold a meet- ing today at 4:15 p.m.. Those who are interested in becoming members of this committee are urged to attend the meeting. S.O.I.C.: There will be a regular bi- monthly meeting of the Executive Council of the Student Organization for international Cooperation today at 4:15 in the Union. Special atten- tion is called to the Newman Club, Veterans Organization, Inter-Frater- nity Council, and Engineering Council BARNABY By Crockett Jolrnson r KMr..O'McIey, my Fairy Godfather, is opening 3 i ml communication from the Department