THE ;MICHIGAN D'AILY THURSDAY, SEPTE1VIBER 26, 1946 - _ Fifty-Seventh Year IT SO HAPPENS ... " Back by Popular Demand ... Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Robert Goldman.................... Managing Editor Milton Freudenheim.................Editorial Director Clayton Dickey ............................ City Editor Mary Brush ........................... Associate Editor Ann Kutz .......................... Associate Editor Paul larsha.......................Associate Editor Clark Baker............................Sports Editor Joan Wilk......... ............ Women's Editor Lynne Ford.................Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Robert E. Potter ..................... Business Manager Evelyn Mills .............. Associate Business Manager Janet Cork ................Associate Business Manager 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 toitor otherwise credited in this newspaper. Al rights of re- publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Offcie at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by car- rie, $5.00, by mail, $.00. M ember, Associated Collegiate Press, 1946-47 NIGHT EDITOR: STUART FINLAYSON Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Below the Belt SOMETHING WILL HAVE to give way, and it looks like it's going to be OPA price ceilings on meat. As ingenious housewives contrive to disguise the lack of meat on the nation's dinner tables, the more serious aspects of America's latest shortage come to the fore. The primary result of the crisis is that what little meat there is on the market is being sold at prohibitive prices to those customers who have "pull." This is especially true in the East. Scondly, a severe drain on supplies of other essential foods such as chicken and fish has re- sulted. Abnormal use of these commodities will eventually result in a more dangerous food shortage. The obvious disadvantages and dangers of an all-over food shortage do not need to be illus- trated. Such a situation would bring the coun- try to a state of absolute ruin quicker than any other weapon. Food, contrary to the idealist's notion, is obviously the one thing man cannot do without. In Ann Arbor, the lack of meat on restaurant and lunch counter menus has not been too no- ticeable, although one downtown restaurant is considering a temporary shutdown if the short- age persists. Most of the women's dormitories have not served meat this week, but this affects only a small portion of the student body. However, a persistent food shortage, especial- ly in restaurants, would be especially hard on the University since a large portion of its stu- dents must eat out. Thus it appears that those who fought against reinstatement of OPA have not failed. The present situation results from the fact that meat in large quantities was sold to a greedy public at inflated prices during the brief respite from price control late last spring. Now even with OPA back in effect, this faction has control of the most potent weapon that could possibly be used against it. The American people have been hit right below the belt. It's a blow that is bound to have the desired results. -Phyllis L. Kaye Criticswanted..* Students wishing to write reviews of books, phonograph records (classical and jazz), movies and plays, as well as those wishing to write editorial columns for The Daily, should submit not less than two samples to the edi- toral director before tomorrow. See Here .,.. Many a youthful World War II veteran, be- deviled by a social conscience, threw up his hands in horror at the notion of joining the stuffy, conservative American Legion, trooped over to the American 7eterans Committee in- stead. Not so one group of reform-minded Man- hattan newspapermen. Last spring they organ- ized bhe Duncan-Paris Post (named for two war casualties from the staff of Yank). They elected left-wing Marion ("See Here Private") Hargrove as their first commander, imperti- nently began to heckle their Legion elders. Last week the Legion, awakening to the fact that it had a group of leftists aboard, slapped the upstarts down. A New York State execu- tive committee, denying the Duncan-Paris Post a permanent charter, charged that many of its EDITOR'S NOTE: Last spring, The Daily edi- torial staff came out with a column of comment under the heading '"It So Happens." The fea- ture met with almost universal disfavor. How- ever, it has come to our attention that one Eng- lish prof. and an elderly couple (grad students) given to frequenting the austere hostelry around the corner were enthusiastic about the column. Consequently we are reviving it as a bi-weekly feature this year. * * * CERTAIN PROFESSOR of philosophy (re- utedly an importation from Yale) has been having troubles. It seems that the room origin- aly assigned his eleven o'clock was taken over by a geology class and his next best bet, in An- gell Hall, turned out to be one of the innumer- able English I sections. One of the class members who loyally fol- lowed the philosopher during the Search claims the prof. took it hard toward the end. Accord- ing to our man, he distinctly heard him mutter something about retiring to the Taft Hotel to "think this thing out." * - * . THE FIRST-DAY intensity of our psychology class was broken yesterday after the profes-, sor had dictated an imposing list of terms to identify - capitalism, totalitarianism, socialism, fascism, communism and the like. An unnamed hero in the back row raised his hand and asked "Which of those terms are spelled with capital letters?" S * * W E'VE ALWAYS had our hats off to the University of Illinois' DAILY ILLINII, but we're stoppedt short by their latest claim. In addition to publishing the largest college yearbook, printing the first college newspa- per to publish Associated Press reports, and being the first school to inaugurate the idea of an alumni homecoming, Illinois now proud- ly asserts that they are "the first to identify type-C botulism as the cause of limberneck in poultry." NL * NOTE: Contributions for this colt mn come from all members of The Daily Staff and are the responsibility of the editorial director. aw Editor's Note The Daily will print all letters in good taste on subjects of interest which do not exceed 300 words. The editorial director reserves the right to print excerpts from letters which are repetitious. Skeptica~l 'auper' To the Editor:- SO THE malodorous ticket situation was caused by unscrupulous underclassmen. Pollyanna though I am, in reference to those alleged for- ty yard line seats seeing is believing., Also how fortunate that the books were already printed so as to facilitate this "last minute" switch. If along with the rest of idyllic Ann Arbor the school is money-mad, may heaven bless them all. But why be hypocritical about such a whole- some desire as money. As the Little Flower would say, who do they think they are kidding? An expectant pauper, Eli J. Schleifer, S. * * Third Party System To the Editor:- BILL MAULDIN Tm. -Rog- - S. Pot- 06--All r '**t * ;, ve "It's for the president of the Consolidated Broadcasting Company. , He wants us to weave in a couple of commercials." DA ILY OFF IC IAL BU LLET IN t t ['D RATHER BE RIGHT: Angry Stampede The Attack against Wallace and his position is becoming too much of a stampede for our own gd'od. It is too nearly unanimous, on the surface, to be altogether sound. If there really were as much unanimity of feeling against Wallace as a reading of the na- tion's press, and a few hours spent with a ra- dio, superficially indicate, then the anti-Wal- laceites would not be nearly so excited as they are; they would laugh him off. If the anti-Wal- laceites are right, then Wallace is only a mouse; but if he is only a mouse, they shouldn't scream so. One has the impression that some of the opponents of Wallace don't really believe that there is an overwhelming majority feeling against him, and that an obscure effort is un- derway to convert surface unanimity into a real unanimity through the hysterical contagion of a stampede. But the manners and morals of a stampede are not very choice. The fine arts of civilized discussion, and of careful weighing of the facts do not flourish during a stampede; it is a hard to think clearly while one shouts and runs. The removal of Wallace from office was significant enough; but this has been followed by the re- moval of Wallace and of Senator Pepper from the official national list of Democratic cam- paign speakers; and this is a sign that we are really knocking ourselves out what with our panting and running and screaming. Is a menagerie like the Democratic party real- ly going to make a try at setting up an ortho-, doxy? One thinks of those fierce anti-Roose- velt and anti-Truman buckaroos, who have been permitted to retain positions of honor and pro- fit in the party, all these years, without serious question. They stay, while the effort is made to cut Wallace and Pepper down from below, like trees. It is true that Wallace, in a hot mo- ment last spring, suggested that some of the anti-Truman Senators be, in some way, read out; but the point is that they have not been molested, while he has been. And now one thinks of Litvinov, and of his recent disappearance from the Russian sur- face; and of the successive little purge stories that are coming across from Moscow. Are both we and they doing 'it? Can it be that both coun- tries, after having assumed fierce postures in international affairs, are now turning some of that fierceness inward, with similar effects? But the feature of the Soviet system which Americans, including American liberals, dis- like most is precisely this doctrine of punish- ment for deviation, the concept that one must necessarily and properly lose status in society for heterodoxy. Do we fear Russia so much that we have begun to pay her the timorous compliment of beginning to do as she does? Have we tared at her with such concentration, so long, that we are beginning dimly to reflect her? If so, then we are really running, and leving be- hind as we run some of our best possessions; those amiabilities and tolerances which are not only pleasant in themselves, but good for the good they do, and for the truths they help us to see. The worst of the Wallace incident is that one hears in its overtones the thin cry of "Faster! Faster!" as angry men pound down the road, hoping, perhaps, that by speed alone they can create the impression that they know precise- ly where it is they are going. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) H enry Wallace's Commerce in resignation as Secretary of President Truman's cabinet must not provide impetus for formation of a third national political party, if progressive po- litical action is to go forward without delay. True, Mr. Wallace tentatively removes from the administration with him the increasingly important bloc of liberal votes that has con- tinued to tolerate, if not actively support, Mr. Truman's diluted progressive program and his once-hailed but now admittedly medi- ocre political methodology. But Mr. Wallace, amore a symbol of the New Deal than its ef- fective leader, will hardly provide a strong rallying post for liberals' formation of a third party. Instead, the Democratic party-the tra- ditional party of political progressivism, how- ever erratic may sometimes have been its course-must remain the core of applied po- litical liberalism. the Democratic party pro- vides an established- and recognized channel for liberal political action. The method of attack, then, is for liberals to work tirelessly to rescue the Democratic party from its starvation for capable, inspiring lead- ership and from its growing tendency toward workaday expediency and opportunism and to return it to the hands of hard-hitting, pro- gressive leaders with an integrated program for both national and world betterment. Third parties in republics are seldom major- ity and sometimes not even plurality parties; they are frequently unsuccessful (as were Theodore Roosevelt's Bull Moose effort in 1912 and the Lemke-Coughlin rightist ticket in 1936) and they result in a precarious balance of power (as in Italy and France today) that never provides the degree of political stability requisite to democratic achievement of a lib- eral social and political program. In these co- alitions, goals must be undesirably compro- mised and the main effort is dissipated in at- tempting to hold together majority support rooted in at least two of the parties. The controversy surrounding Mr. Wallace is significant not only with respect to our relations with the Soviet Union. As was the January 1945 uproar surrounding his appointment as Secre- tary of Commerce, it is crucial in the implemen- tation of progressivism within the United States. Liberals must not weaken their position by for- mation of an effort-absorbing but unpromising third party designed to accommodate M Ir. Wal- lace and his circle. -Robert Copp S * * Correspondents Wn ted To the Editor:- WOULD appreciate it very much if you would insert this plea in the school paper. A lonely trooper wishes to correspond with some of his future schoolmates. I am from De- troit and will attend the University in the fall of '47. Pvt. D. McDonald 16166139 Co. D, 508 Parachute Inf. Regt. A.P.O. 757, % Postmaster New York, New York 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 iorm to the office of the Assistant to the President, Room 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:30 p..n on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 VOL. LVI, No. 3 Notices RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS The Deans of the several schools and colleges, President, and Provost call attention to the greatly enlarged opportunities provided for students by the authorization of several en- tirely new units in the advanced courses of the R.O.T.C. for the com- ing year. It is now possible for a stu- dent in most divisions of the Univer- sity to enroll in a unit whose program is closely allied to his own field of specialization. The authorized units, and the divisions of the University most intimately concerned in each case, are as follows: FIRST TWO YEARS COURSE IN MILITARY SCIENCE Students from all schools and col- leges eligible. BRANCH UNITS PREVIOUSLY AC- TIVE-THIRD AND FOURTH YEARS INFANTRY . . All schools and colleges ENGINEER CORPS . ...Engineering ORDNANCE DEPARTMENT Engineering SIGNAL CORPS............ Engineering (Electrical, Mechan- ical) L.S.A. (Physics majors) QUARTERMASTER CORPS Business Administration; Engi- neering; Law; L.S.A. (Economics ma- jors) NEW BRANCH UNITS ADDED THIS YEAR- THIRD AND FOURTH YEAR, OR GRADUATE STUDENTS AIR CORPS . All schools and colleges MEDICAL CORPS .......Medicine and colleges MILITARY POLICE ........ All schools and colleges TRANSPORTATION CORPS Business Administration; Engi- neering; Law; L.S.A. Students in the first two-years' course, pursue a common course of instruction. It should be understood that this course is strictly one of training for officer candidates. Veterans with twelve or more months' service in the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, or Coast Guard are eligible for selection to be directly admitted to the advanced courses, with thle approval of the Professor of Military Science and Tactics and the President. Those who hold commissions in the O.R.C. or the National Guard may not enroll in the R. . T. C. but are welcome to visit its classes. Students interested in the R.O.T.C. who have not yet enrolled may still do so during the week beginning Sep- tember 23. This statement is issued with the approval of the Deans' Conference. Alexander G. Ruthven, President James P. Adams, Provost Salary Payments for the University Year 1946-47 1. Payments will be made in ten equal installments. 2. The first salary check will be issued on Oct. 18, for all those whose Request for Appointment have cleared the Office of the Provost by October 2. 3. A supplementary salary check will be issued on Oct. 31 for all those whose Request for Appointment have cleared the Office of the Provost after Oct. 2 and before Oct. 17. 4. The second salary check will be issued on Nov. 22. 5. The third and all subsequent salary checks will be issued on the last day of the month starting Dec. 31, the June salary check being a double payment. Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary Student Football Admissions: Stu- dents who have not yet received their football admissiontickets must have presented their physical education couponsrat the Administration Build- ing, Ferry Field' before 5:00 p.m., Thursday, September 26. No student admission tickets will be available after that time. H. O. Crisler Director of Athletics Faculty, College of Engineering: There will be a eineting of the Fac- ulty of this College on Monday, Sept. 30, at 4:15 p.m., inRoom 311, W. En- gineering Bldg. STUDENTS, COLLEGE OF LITERA- TURE, SCIENCE & THE ARTS Students are reminded of the fol- lowing regulations which became ef- fective with the beginning of the Fall Term, 1946-47: 1) Students are expected to attend classes regularly. 2) When the instructor considers the number of absences excessive, that is, when a student's absence from a course endangers his satisfac- tory progress, the instructor should send a written report on the case to the Administrative Board for action. Freshmen and sophomores should be reported to the Chairman of the Aca- demic Counselors, Associate Dean, 1220 Angell Hall, FOR ALL STUDENTS: Counselors in Religion are provided in two areas of experience; 1. Regardless of affiliation or the lack of affiliation, the Counselor's of- fice at 215 Angell Hall, 11-12 or 3-4 daily, is open to any student or group. 2. According to your church af- filiation, you will be served through the S.R.A. at Lane Hall or at the Ann Arbor worship center of your choice. Your search for religious values among the many values will have'-im- mediate attention by trained Coun- selors. Lectures 1946-47 LECTURE COURSE of 8 outstanding speakers presented by the University Oratorical Association will open Oct. 17, in Hill Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. The schedule includes Gov. Ellis Arnall, Oct. 17, "The South Looks Forward"; Randolph Church- ill, Oct. 29, "Socialism In England"; Louis P. Lochner, Nov. 7,"The Nur- emberg Trials"; Brig. General Roger Ramey, Nov. 21, "Air Power in the Atomic Age"; John Mason Brown, Jan. 16, "Seeing Things"; Mrs. Ray- mond Clapper, Feb. 20, "Behind the Scenes in Washington"; Col. Melvin Purvis, Feb. 27, "Can We Lessen Crime in the U. S.?"; Margaret Web- ster. Mar. 22. "The Adventure of Act- French and German for the doctorate will be held on Fri. Sept. 27, 4:00 to 6:00 p.m. in the Rackham Amphi- theater. Dictionariesay lbe used. Anthropology 31, M.W.F. 9:00 will meet in 348 West Eng. Debaters: All students who desire to participate in debate this year should meet today at 4:00 p.m. in Room 4208 Angell Hall. English 300H, Seminar in American Literature, will meet today from 2:00- 4:00. in 308 Library. J. L. Davis Geography 151. This course will meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 2:00 in Room 18 Angell Hall. Political Science 107: Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 10:00 will meet in Room 1025 Angell Hall hereafter. E. S. Brown Coir certs CARILLON RECITAL: Percival Price, University Carillonneur, and Sidney Giles, his assistant, will pre- sent a joint recital at 7:15 tonight, on the Charles Baird Carillon in Burton Memorial Tower. Program: Mr. Giles' Prelude, Minuet by Bocherini, Home to our Mountains by Verdi, Suite by Nees, and Largo from the New World Symphony by Dvorak, played by Mr. Giles. - Mr. Price and Mr. Giles will follow this group with a duet, Fantasy II, composed by Mr. Price. The program will close with Mr. Price playing his Rhapsody II. Events Today SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMIN- ISTRATION: A convocation for fac- ulty and students will be held today at 3:30 p.m. in the large lecture hall in the Rackham Building. Dean Stev- enson will speak. A coffee hour will follow from 4 to 6 o'clock in the assembly hall on the third floor. The Geological Journal Club will meet today at 12:00 noon on Thurs- day, in Room 3055, Natural Science Building. Tea will be served; bring your own sandwiches. The speaker will be Dr. John F. Caley, who will talk on the activities of the Geologi- cal Survey of Canada. The Regular Thursday Eeikg Record Conert sponsored by the Graduate School will begin tonight. Program: Mozart's Divertimento in E-flat Major, Dvorak's In Nature's Realm, Mozart's Concerto for Flute and Orchestra, and Strauss' Tod Und Verklarung. All graduate students are cordially invited. ALPHA PHI ALPHA: All members are urged to attend a meeting to- night at 7:00 in the Michigan Union, Room 305. Important business will be discussed. Pledge Club members also are invited to attend this meet- ing. TAU BETA PI: All graduate and undergraduate members who desire to take an active part in the chapter during the Fall Semester are cor- dially invited to, attend a dinner meeting at the Michigan Union to- night. Members will please assemble in the South lounge of the Union promptly at 6:15 p.m. International Center: The first in the series of weekly teas will be held today at 4:30 p.m. in the International Center. Senor Can- tuaria Guimaraes, Director of the Immigration Service of the Republic of Brazil, will be the special guest. All Brazilian students are urged to attend. A cordial invitation is extend- ed to all Foreign Students and their friends. Coming Events ATTENTION ALL VULCANS: There will be meeting on Sunday, Sept. 29, at 7:30 p.m. in the Union. All old Vulvans on campus should at- tend the meeting. Ice Cream Social sponsored by the Wesleyan Guild on the lawn of First Methodist Church following the Pep Rally Friday evening. Anyone wish- ing Ice Cream and Cake is invited. The Lutheran Student Association will hold open house at the Student Center, 1304 Hill (corner of Forest and Hill ( Friday evening from 8:00 to 11:40. Legislatuzre (Continued from Page 1) and sophomores who turned in tickets will receive new seats. Must Furnish Evidence Upperclassmen will be required to furnish blueprints or other evidence of their class standing and additional proof that the person submitting the ticket is the person who owns the evidence. Upperclassmen without adequate proof may obtain certification of class standing in the Office of the Dean of Students. Students desiring adjacent seats must report to the booths in groups. Davis also announced that students who obtained preferred tickets 4 ._ i BARNABY A triumph of graphic documentation! My compliments, gentlemen. But come- We s have recorded our personalities-- And 'j accomplishments. In black and white- W