PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'I'll URSDAY, PEA LAMPUR, 1:,, 1945 PAGE FOUR ThURSDAY, 1)ECEMBEIL 13, l94~ Fifty-Sixth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Tr bute aid to Syndicate Chief - ,= . . . : -V II , « -s Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Ray Dixon . . Robert, Goldman Betty Roth Margaret Farmer Arthur J. Kraft Bill Mullendore Mary Lu Heath Ann Schutz Dona Guimaraes . . . . . . Managing Editor ... . . . . . . . . City Editor . . . . . . . . Editorial Director . . . . Associate Editor c. . . . . . . . . soiate Editor .~Sports Editor .Associate Sports Editor .Women's Editor Associate Women's Editor 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 Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- tier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL AVERTSING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADSON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. ' CHICAGO * BOSTON . Los ANGELS . SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITORS: BRUSH & FREUDENHEIM Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. University Needs IN CONNECTION with Gov. Kelly's statement Tuesday urging state-financed building to enable the University to keep its position as one of the "most distinguished institutions of higher learning in the country," certain facts should be brought out. Long range University estimates anticipate 18,500 students as the peace-time complement, but recently, interested unofficial observes have placed the figure at 20,000. Figures from a New York Times Survey re- ported on Sept. 15, 1945, show state and land- grant institutions leading in building plans. The Times investigated a cross-section of 40 colleges and universities, including Michigan; they did not include plans of junior colleges and profes- sional schools. The University of California . head the Times' list with 30 million dollars ear-marked by the legislature for buildings; of this, $1,100,000 has already been appropriated for use in preparing plans! In the mid-west, 16 million dollars has been appropriated for the University of Illinois, and nine and a half mil- lion has been appropriated for Ohio State. Northwestern has 20 million dollars for its 80 million dollar program; Notre Dame has 10 million. Here at Michigan, the accumulated needs of the past 20 years plus new buildings and equip- ment made necessary by scientific advances are piled on top of the requirements of a soon-to-be doubled enrollment as a result of the GI Bill of Rights. Students in the School of Business Admin- istration which conducts classes all over cam- pus, or those in aeronautical engineering who work with a wind tunnel useful only in testing barns will be the first to applaud Gov. Kelly's statement. -Milt Freudenheim League Debates CARRYING ON the American tradition of the town meeting, the Ann Arbor League of Women Voters is one of our prize examples of democracy in action. By presenting the pros and cons of today's controversial issues in public debates and discussions, the League is making a valuable contribution to the University and town community. They deserve credit for their splendid work in stimulating public attention to the current and pressing problems of our nation. Beginning last January with a discussion of Dumbarton Oaks, the League sponsored num- erous talks and lectures before community clubs and organizations. Their services proved so valuable and aroused so much public commend- ation that the League soon grew into a state program sponsored by the State Experimental Program of Adult Education with headquarters in Lansing.. This fall the Ann Arbor League of Women Voters has brought before the community a panel discussion on reconversion and a debate on unrestricted Jewish immigration into Pal- esine. We annreciate the effoits of the League By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON.-The other day in New York a man known to almost every newspaper edi- tor in the country, yet almost unknown to the ,eneral public, quietly departed the "Merry-Go- Round" and the "My Days" he had helped to develop and went on to a more peaceful world. He was George Carlin, guiding genius of the United Features Syndicate, who cracked the whip over the greatest conglomeration of star syndicated columnists the world has ever seen and who, for better or for worse, served as mid- wife, patron saint and godfather to this column when it first started, 13 years ago today. When I indicate George Carlin was a whip- cracker, perhaps I give the wrong impression. George could and sometimes did crack the whip. But on the whole he was the mildest-mannered man I ever knew. Perhaps that was the secret of his ability to get along with such a motley assortment of performers as Westbrook Pegler, Pearson and Allen, Mrs. Roosevelt, Heywood Broun, Ernie Pyle, Raymond Clapper, Marquis Childs and Tom Stokes. Outsiders marveled at how one man could keep this circus of trained seals performing in one ring with no visble evidence of cannibalism. Yet he did. He even kept Mrs. Roosevelt happy, while Pegler, in an adjoining column, was holding her feet up to the hot coals almost every other day. In fact, George was the only man I ever knew who could censor and edit the first lady, yet be invited to the White House continually. Came the day when his children went off to other things and George, like many parents, wilted. Two of his greatest writers, Ernie Pyle and Ray Clapper, were war casualties. That zestful tilter of lances, Westbrook Pegler, had Roy Howard trouble (Roy was George Carlin's over-all boss on United Features). So did the Merry-Go-Round. We went off to other booking agencies, as had Heywood Broun before us. Gradually, through no fault of his own, George Carlin's performing circus disintegrat- ed. He took on new performers - top perform- ers-though they didn't snarl so much at each other. Perhaps it was because they didn't cause him as much trouble as his earlier prima donnas, or perhaps it was because he loved his first children best; anyway the excitement, the turmoil, the hurlyburly passed out of George's life. And the other day he quietly passed on to an- other world, where I like to think of him with Ray Clapper, Ernie Pyle, and Heywood Broun, pounding out masterpieces for a new public truly appreciative of their great genius, a world free of wars and bloodshed and the puny pettiness of mankind. Merry-Go-Round ERIC JOHNSTON came Within an inch of re- signing as president of the, United States Chamber of Commerce over the issue of con- tinued price control. Johnston believes in main- taining price control even beyond June 30 of next year. But, last week, U.S. Chamber of Commerce directors voted to issue a blast calling for imme- diate suspension of price control. Johnston fought it. Finally he won out only after price chief Chester Bowles addressed the board of directors at a hush-hush luncheon in the Hotel Statler. American troops will be kept in China for at least another 10 days, Secretary of State Byrnes told a secret meeting of congressmen including DeLacy of Washington, Patterson, Healy and Douglas of California and Biemiller of Wisconsin. Byrnes said about 3,000 Jap soldiers are being shipped home from China daily, with about another 300,000 yet to go. He admitted that American lend-lease supplies are still being sent to Chiang Kai-Shek to be used in the Chinese Civil War. General Eisenhower has approved a directive permitting thousands of starving, persecuted Jewish refugees from Poland to enter the Ameri- can zone of Germany. Other thousands are flock- ing to the U.S. zone from the British area, where the treatment of -displaced Nazi victims is still something the British Empire should be ashamed of. Pat Hurley's attack on the State Department has back-fired so badly that Byrnes and Tru- man are now reconsidering their entire Chinese policy. Result: General Marshall is going to China with clear-cut orders not to intervene on behalf of the Chungking government, but rather to put strong pressure on Chungking and the Chinese Communists to get together. Marshall will inform both factions that the United States plans to use every influence to end the Chinese Civil War. This is a reversal in fact, though not in name, of administration policy under Hurley. GENERAL MARSHALL'S letters to Governor Dewey regarding the Japanese code were made public only after a stiff protest by General Marshall, who wanted his reference to coopera- tion with the British withheld. Marshall knew the Russians would read between the lines and figure that we were also intercepting their code messages. The Pearl Harbor committee met in execu- tive session in Senator Barkley's office to listen to Marshall's plea, but before Marshall could open his mouth, Republican Senator Ferguson of Michigan and Democratic Senator Lucas of Illinois got up and walked out. Both absolute- ly refused to listen to Marshall or any other witness in executive session. "This investigation is strictly an on-the-record public affair," they insisted. After they left, Senator Brewster of Maine pro- posed that the committee make the sole decision regarding publication of the letters and that Marshall not be permitted to remain. So the former chief of staff went outside and warmed a chair with Ferguson and Lucas in Barkley's outer office. Only Representative Clark of North Carolina and Murphy of Pennsylvania had any doubts about making the entire letters public. They did not insist upon a vote, however, and the committee finally agreed to ignore Marshall's secrecy plea. When the letters were put in the public record, Marshall's pencil marks to indi- cate what parts he wanted withheld were not left on the text. (Copyright, 1945, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Political Shifts By SAMUEL GRAFTON LARGE FRAGMENTS of support are falling away from the Democratic party, and it does not seem too early to begin to wonder whether the structure put together by the late President Roosevelt is not coming apart. As he built it, it rested on four legs, the South, the big-city political machines of the north; labor; and that great miscellaneous body of citizens of good will who were, and are, concerned with making this a somewhat better world. The last two groups are the most disaffected. If they ever leave in a body, the Democratic party, at least nationally, will become a two- legged chair, which is an unstable apparatus by any calculation. Let us take the final group first: it consists of a large number of Americans, of no conspicuous economic bias, either right or left; the one worldlings, who hailed both Mr. Willkie and Mr. Roosevelt, with almost equal enthusiasm and who have for some years con- sidered that it is the prime business of our age to build world collaboration. This large group takes in most intellectuals, both academic and commercial; it includes the old League of Nations crowd; it embraces most of the cultured, the traveled, the well-read and the klowledge- able, and it certainly includes at least some of the leaders of every community in the country. And it seems to me that this is the group which could be most easily detached from the Democratic party by, say, a Stassen. This group takes an almost completely ideal ap- proach to politics; it does not look very far below the surface of abstractions; it is pecul- iarly sensitive to the appeal of personality, to candidatorial flavor. It is to be doubted whether it would trouble itself too much over the question of whether a Republican Con- gressional majority would be better fitted than a Democratic majority to carry us toward one world. If a Bricker opposed a Truman in 1948, this group might merely lose enthusiasm for politics, and might sit the contest out (a development which would hurt the Democrats more than the Republicans;) but should a Stassen oppose a Truman, and should present trends continue, it could go over in a body. THE OTHER FOCUS of defection is labor; and here the causes are economic, and go deep. The basic facts are that while industry has been granted relief from excess profits taxes, and has been given useful tax refunds, and while farmers have been promised price support for at least two years, labor alone has been told to live off its fat during reconversion, and to accept a lower price per unit (at least per week) for its commodity. It is the one interest which has not received Congressional conciliation. Labor votes, as such, will probably not go Republican; but labor may lose interest and, to a degree, sit out the next election (which, again, would hurt the Democrats more than the Republicans,) or else go into a third-party by-path, which would have the same effect. As to what magic it is that Mr. Truman lacks, and that Mr. Roosevelt had, and that enabled him to keep the four legs of his party more or less firmly planted under his chair, it is hard to say. It seems idle to accuse Mr. Truman of being an imperialist in foreign affairs, and a reactionary at home; he is neither. But the odd complaint that does come to mind is that he lacks a certain seriousness, in the deepest meaning of that grave word; that he is more concerned with superficial symbols of party unity, on the Washington level, than with making sure that the deep undercurrents are flowing straight; just as, in foreign affairs, his occasional glib reversals produce the feeling that he has somehow failed to listen for the great, low murmur of American aspirations, and has let himself be startled by loud surface noises. We are just beginning to realize what a serious man Mr. Roosevelt was, and how intently he listened for the meaningful rumble from below; how he lived in a world of values, not signs. Whatever the reasons, Mr. Truman must face the possibility that he is letting the Demo- cratic party undergo a structural change, that, perhaps, something new in our politics has already begun its slow, molecular buildup. (Copyright, 1945, N. Y. Post Syndicate) DRAMA P LAY Production fires the opening shot of the campus drama season with a revival of "What A Life," the portrait of high school life that start- ed, God help us, the Henry Aldrich plague. The group has lavished upon ita smooth, skillful performance that is rapidly becoming typical of them. The strong cast and, to a lesser ex- tent, the durable farce values of the play, combine to carry the evening on an adequate laugh level. While the group can chew considerably more than it has bitten off here, the cast has imparted complete freshness to a trivial vehicle that nine-tenths of the audience must have been familiar with beforehand. Dorothy Murzek, always the most scenic of Play Production members, is on hand for the visual side of things. Her considerable light com- edy talents have not been called into action this time, but her por- trayal of an efficient, tweedy sec- retary is nicely done. The evening largely goes to Annette Chaikin as one of those music teachers that are standard school equipment. The scene in which she shows Serene Sheppard just how to use her dia- phragm should be preserved for posterity. Ethel Isenberg and Larry Darling also score as two of those hyper-thyroid cases allegedly com- mon to that certain age. Henry Aldrich is played, inevitably, by Byron Mitchell. As always, Mit- chell leaves you with that feeling that you've spent two hours with stark, staring poise. .He moves God-like among Miss Murzek and colleagues without a flaw, delivering his lines in easily predictable cadences: be- ginning with a joyous gush, contain- ing a well-thought pause in the mid- dle, and then a neatly clipped end- ing which tells you Mr. Mitchell knew what he was going to say all along. It is a performance far removed from any breath of life, but an invaluable lesson in the control of muscle re- flexes. In so long a cast it is impossible to express admiration for all the supporting players. Frank Picard, Harp McGuire, Jim Bob Stephen- son and Janine Robinson might be singled out for special praise. And a player listed as Jean Bechtel mustn't be overlooked; for, al- though on stage only a half-min- ute, she has provided one of the better exit lines in recent years. It must be heard to be appreciated. -Barrie Waters By WILLIAM S. GOLDSTEIN ( { - B h "By Bob Chapin TWhere's somebody here to see our dramacrt. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Daily Official ilul- 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 Angell Hall, by 3:30 p. m. of the day preceding publication (11:00 a. m. Sat- urdays). THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1945 VOL. LVI, No. 34 Notices 1946 Withholding Tax Exemption Certificate. Government regulations require that, if any change in the number of exemptions to which you are entitled under the withholding tax laws has occurred since you last filed an exemption certificate, a new certificate be filed immediately. If it is necessary for you to file a new form, it may be obtained at the Pay- roll Department of the University, Room 9, University Hall. This should be done immediately. Faculty College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: Midsemester re- ports are due not later than Friday, Dec. 21. Report cards are being distributed to all departmental offices. Gteen cards are being provided for freshmen and sophomores and white cards for reporting juniors and seniors. Re- ports of freshmen and sophomores should be sent to 108 Mason Hall; those of juniors and seniors to 1220 Angell Hall., Midsemester reports should name those students, freshmen and upper- classmen, whose standing at midsem- tIron Microscopy." The public is cor- dially invited. The Remance Language Journal Club will hold its first meeting today at 4:15 p.m. in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Professor W. F. Patterson will give "Some Impressions of French Can- ada," and Professor C. N. Staubach will speak on "Teaching and Learn- ing in Bogota." All those interested are corditlly invited. Fellowship of Song: This sing sponsored by Inter-Guild at 4:30 Thursday, Dec. 13 in Lane Hall is open to everyone. Faculty Womens (ub, Music See- tion will have A pot-luck supper to- night at 6:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Marshall Snyder, 615 Oswego Street. New members will be guests of the section. Prescott Club Members meet in room 316-20 of Union, 7:00 p.m. sharp, Thursday, Dec. 13, to have Michiganensian pictures taken. Hobbie Night: AYH Folk Dancing, with Iola Derille as leader will be held at 7:30 on Thursday, Dec. 13 at Lane Hall. Town Hlall will discuss the Pro and Con of Student Government on our campus this Thursday, Dec. 13, at 7:30 in Lane Hall. This topic which concerns every student of Michigan promises lively discussion and all are invited to participate in offering helpful suggestions. Bible Seminar: The second session of the Seminar under the leadership of Mr. Littell will take up discussion of Hosea. Meditation Room, Lane Hall 7:30 p.m. tonight. Forestry Club Meeting-Prospec- tive Foresters are particularly urged to attend the meeting of the Fores- try Club this evening at 7:30 in room 2039, Natural Science building. Two new logging films will be shown and refreshments will be served after the business meeting. Please be prompt! La Sociedad Ihisranica will have its 'Ensnan picture taken today, at 7:30 p.m. in 316 Michigan Union. Following, at 8 p.m., Mr. Staubach's talk on "Life in Bogota As Seen by A Yankee Professor" will be given in Kellogg Auditorium that sane eve- ning. Comng E 1vents EDITOR'S NOTE: The author, if given ester is "D or"E, not rely those C free reign, would in all probability de- who receive "D" or "E" in so-called vote the entire column to encomiums of midsemester examinations. the "Gargoyle." As a natural conse- Students electing our courses, but quence, it has been necessary to curb his registered in other schools or colleges natural flair for publicity, We shall notreitednohrscolorolgs mention the fact, therefore. that "Te of the University should be reported Gargoyle" is on sale at all campus news- to the school or college in which they stands today. Although it has been are registered. rumored that "The Gargoyle" would not Additional cards may be had at 108 be sold to minors, the General Manager Mason Hall or at 1220 Angell Hall. has assured us that no attempt will be made to restrict the sales. WE were working in the Garg office Veterans World War II: A tutorial section has been organized in English late yesterday when we were ap- Composition. This section is for be- proached by an individual looking ginners, and meetssTuesday, Thurs- very much like the first act of "To- day and Friday at 7:30 p.m., Room bacco Road," carrying a sickle and 3209 Angell Hall. Mr. John O'Neill hammer in one hand and an infernal will be the instructor. machine in the other. "I have been sent," he whispered confidentially in our ear, "by Comrade Molotoff who L. S. & A. Civilian Freshman Five- .up the Ann Arbor Week Reports will be given out in the wants you to headupheAnAbr. Fund for Freezing State Department Academic Counselors' Office, .108 Officials. Phooey on Hoover." Mason Hall, in the following order: Suspecting chicanery by John onday, Dec. 10, A through F' Rankin or Senator Bilbo, we re- Tuesday, Dec. 11, F through K marked cannily, "Oh yeah?" in our Wednesday, Dec. 12, L through R very best south Russian brogue, and Thursday, Dec. 13, S through Z. we went on eating our borscht. - "Look here," our visitor obviously a cademic notices an imposter, said impatiently as his false mustache fell off, "we Russians Seminar in physical chemistry will (he pronounced the word with great meet on Saturday, Dec, 15 in Room difficulty) are really concerned over 410 hemistry Building at 10:15 a.m. your State Department's staff." Here Mr. Lawrence G. Edwards will speak lhe put on a pair of glasses and pro- on "Electronic Structure of Some ceeded to read from a prepared script. Compounds between Nitrogen, Phos- The authors of the harangue were by phorus and Chlorine." All interested this time quite obvious. All the iso- are invited. lationist sentiments of the last fif- rn . -- teen years were written into the com- ForestryService E nployment Sem- munique as cleverly as in a Republi- inar--Professors Craig and Ramsdell can party platform. will discuss the U. S. Forest Service . [T SEEMS that Pat Hurley had been and aspects of employment in that off on a State Department bust in organization. The meeting will be ionor of Generalissimo Chiang, and held in the Natural Science building, had awakened the next morning to room 2039, at 4:30 this afternoon. survey himself in the nearest mirror. "I see RED!" he screamed as he History 11, Lecture Section 2-Mid- looked at his eyes. As a result of the semester, Monday, Dec. 17, 2:00 to incident, a great cold wave has swept 3:00 p.m. Discussion sections 7, 8, the State Department, and some of and 9 meet in 1025 Angell Hall; all the larger sticks have been badly others in Natural Science Auditor- chilled. It was our visitor's sugges- ium. Bring blue-books, tion that we organize a campaign to-ok. provide the cooled-off statesmen with1 RED underwear. After three hours Mathematics Orientation Seminar: of haggling with the intruder we ac- Today at 3 p.m. 3201 Angell Hall. cepted his proposition with tongue in Mr. Robson will finish talking on willk.spedakicosewPentaguo T cheek. Quadratic Forms. Miss Burroughs 1t The Geological . ournal Club will meet on Friday, Dec 14, at 12:15 p.m. in Room 4065, Na. Sci. Bldg. Program: P'ofes or Emeritus W.' H. Hobbs will speak on "The Scab- land and Okanogan Lobes of the Cordilleran Continental Glacier and their Lake Histories." All interested are cordially invited to attend, The Angell Hall Observatory will be open to visitors on Friday night, Dec. 14, from 7:30 to 9:30, if the sky is clear, to observe the Moon. Chil- dren must be accompanied by adultsi Le Cercie Francais will hold its Christmas meeting on Monday, Dec. 17, at 8:00 p.m. in the Assembly Room of the Rackham Building. On the program: a Christmas short story by Daudet tobe readt by Professor Charles 'Koella, gr'oup singing of Christmas Carols, one or two French songs sung by B. Elizabeth Moore, re- freshments and informal social danc- ing. .Any student on the campus in- terested in speaking French may be- come a member of the club regardless of whether or not he is taking a course in French. Inter-racial A1-ociation: Social . z s BARNABY F A lias. the Menfal Giant, found By Crockett Johnson will speak on Skew Pentagons. Tea at 4:00. 4 Events Today -- i 11 i 7-How'd you figure 3,965,724? --] I T7 ITT Gosh. Dd you chanm.1 ' _ I