THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, AUGUST 14. 1 r - THE MICHIGAN DAILY Daily Calendar of Events T hursday, August 14 4:05 p.m. Lecture. "Progressive Education In Conflict." Raymond Fisher, Assistant Professor of Educ atio, Okerlin College. (University -High School Audi- torium.) 7:15 p.m. Concert on the Charles Baird Carillon. 8:00 p.m. Lecture. "The St. LawrenceWaterway." (Illustrated) Prof. F. N. Menefee, Prof. of Engineering ,Mechanics. (Rackham Amphitheatre.) 8:30 p.m. "The Gondoliers," by Gilbert and Sullivan. (Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.) I w--r Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the Upiversity year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication 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 ecrrier $4.00, by mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADisoN AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. cHICAGO - OSTOL LoSeANGLtEs PrsAR4-F4ANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1940-4 1 -._ ._ _ .._o -- -- Washington Merry-Go-Round By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN ~ Editorial Staff Managing Editor City Editor Associate Editor A sociate Editor Sports Editor Women's Editor " " i Karl Kessler Harry M. Kelsey .William Baker Eugene Mandeberg Albert P. Blaustein Barbara Jenswold Business Staff Business Manager........Daniel H. Huyett Lal .Advertising Manager Fred M. Ginsberg Women's Advertising Manager . . Florence Schurgin NIGHT EDITOR: EUGENE MANDEBERG The editorials published in The Michi- gan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. A Liberal Education For Eng1ineers ... i HIS IS AN AGE of specialiation: ours j.has become a civilization in which each man does one job; he must do that job to excellence, but the scope of his work is therefore strictly limited. This way of life has made possible many of our technological advances, but with these advances have come most of our social problems today. We may be bucking the tide when we say that absolute specialization is neither necessary nor desirable, but at least we do not stand alone. President Hutchins of Chicago is no mean pro- ponent. Perhaps the most flagrant of our specialists today are in the engineering school. We have nothing personal against the engineeers; we have been going to classes with many of them for the past four years, and carry a great deal of respect for the slide rule addicts. But by associating with the engineers without being one of them we have recognized some of their more obvious shortcomings. T° TAKE an illustration: A student comes to the University to study chemical engineering. He learns chemical engineering, and he learns it well-in fact, he is so busy learning chemical engineering during his four years of college that he has little time to learn much else. His days are spent in the classroom or the lab, and at night he works problems until early morning. His social life consists of an occasional movie and perhaps a few dances during the year. His technical training is good, but let us see what will be asked of him when he is out of college and entering industry. He is primarily an engineer, but is considered to be more than a skilled workman. His job, therefore, is to show other workmen what to do; it is his task to supervise the technical work of the plant. For this work his technical training is indespensible, but it is not enough. He must also know how to deal with men, and in this line the socially-secluded engineer has too often proven himself a woeful mis-fit. A prominent industrial engineer, attending a conference on education here recently, at- tributed much of the misunderstanding in labor disputes to the engineer's meager background. The engineer is the one who comes in contact with the worker, whether his function be one of staff or one of direct production supervision, he is the one who will deal with the working man, as well as establish the company's policies which govern the worker, and today he spends con- siderable of his time handling the differences betweeen labor and management. What the individual needs to fulfill such a po- sition is a sound technical background, an under- standing of his fellow men and a good sense of proportions. Too often his education is sadly lacking in the latter two qualities; he has been taught to attack his problems logically, not psy- chologically. A PURELY TECHNICAL engineering training is excusable and expected from a technical high school or institute, but a university engi- neering college should give more than that. It should offer a well rounded education, and a re- quired coursee in Ec. 51 does not fulfill that requirement. The administration can help some in helping the engineer by offering more electives outside the college, but most of the improvement will be ~n + +h anrinPr hmRen HP. mst assoit WASHINGTON-It is no secret that the most anxious diplomacy the United States has at- tempted in Europe for some time has been .the effort to keep France out of the Axis; for com- plete surrender of Vichy to Hitler means that vital African bases would becomee Nazi stepping- stones to South America. BUT IT IS a secret that the chief influence the State Department wielded over Vichy was through Bob Murphy, counselor of the American Embassy, who went to mass daily with Marshal Weygand. Murphy was transferred from Vichy to North Africa especially to nurse Weygand. Ardent co-religionists, they became good friends; and it was upon Murphy's recommenda- tion that vitally important U. S. oil and aviation gasoline was sent to North Africa. Unfortun- ately, this oil and gas-sent despite .British pro- tests-now arrives just in time for use by the Nazis when they take over the French bases. While the State Department and Bob Murphy were right that Weygand and the French Catho- lics have been the strongest opponents to Hitler, they were wrong in one other vital aspect. They overlooked the strength of the Nazi espionage system in France and the underground terrorism established by Hitler to sway French leaders. 'Special Commissioners' THIS BEGAN some time ago under the direc- tion of Alfred Rosenberg, famous Nazi phil- osopher and Jew-baiter. Marshall Petain fought this organization from the start, but many of those around him cooperated. Most active were Jacques Doriot, the former Communist; and Methonier, a sort of KKK leader who wore a hood and who became famous after the bombing of the French Union of Factory Owners. UNDER THIS French Communist-Nazi super- vision, secret agents called "comissionaires speciaux" were appointed, and cells were formed to eliminate forces opposing French cooperation with Hitler. Even high officers of the French Army were arrested when they dared oppose Nazi collaboration. And behind the recent murder of Marx Dor- moy, cabinet member in the Blum Socialist gov- ernment, was the fact that he had tried to expose these terrorist groups. The State Department failed to gauge the strength of this movement and bet its money- and gaasoline-on the nice but impotent old men of Vichy. Slapping Down Pappy ENATOR "Pass the biscuits, Pappy," O'Daniel lost no time in sounding off in the Senate, and the Senate lost no time in slapping him down. The day after he took his seat, the Texas crooner, breaking the hallowed tradition that rookies should be seen and not heard, lectured the Senate at length on numerous matters. The chamber took it in silence. But next day, when he offered an irrelevant amendment to the selec- tees retention bill, the Senate nailed "Pappy" hard. As soon as he sat down, without a further word the Senate threw the amendment into the waste basket. The slap-down happened so fast that for a minute O'Daniel didn't know what hit him. When he realized what had occurred, he started to protest but by that time another senator had the floor. Note-In addressing the Senate on his first appearance, O'Daniel was emulating the late Huey Long, who pulled the same stunt. Like the Louisiana Kingfish, O'Daniel harbors secret pres- idential ambitions. Lewis On The Move NEWS COPY was flowing fast over the desks of telegraph editors last week. But in the space of a few hours came three stories connected with John L. Lewis. On the surface, there was no relation between them. But when put side by side they revealed the tell-tale trail of the bush-browed laborite's maneuvers to rstore himself as a political power and master of the CIO. Story No. 1 bore a Joplin, Mo., dateline. It re- ported a speech by Reid Robinson, head of the CIO Mining and Smelter Workers, attacking OPM Associate Director Sidney Hillman by name. Robinson is a Lewis henchman and thereby retains his job. He was one of the few top-rung CIO leaders who followed Lewis in his bolt to Willkie, and his direct attack on Hillman is the first made by any important CIO executive. INSIDE CIO WORD is that the hand of Lewis was behind the blast; also that other blasts will be coming from key-placed Lewis henchmen as part of his fence-building to recapture the Oe r wztan - - onf.t5 nil onmpntin tisie Munitions Boss THE Gas, Coke and Chemical Division covers all workers in the munitions industry, which of course is rapidly expanding, and the union is keeping step with this growth. So by installing Gassaway and his daughter at the head of this union, Lewis quietly made himself labor boss of one of the most strategic defense industries. He put himself in a key position where the Government must deal with him to obtain gun powder for the Army, Navy and Air Corps. Also, he ensured that the union will vote as he orders at the CIO convention. Story No. 3, the only one that attracted at- tention, was the Lowdon-Hoover-Landon attack on Roosevelt's aid-Russia policy. Lewis was one of the fifteen signers of this blast, and thus disclosed the circuitous political game that he is playing. TO THE RANK AND FILE of the CIO John L. is parading as an ardent defender of their interests. "Labor has no real representation in the defense setup" is his battlecry and his hench- men's. But simultaneously he is lining up with Old Guard Republican isolationists who have opposed the defense program. This juxtaposition charts Lewis' strategy. As president of the CIO, the ally of the GOP Old Guard, and an isolationist leader, he would be at the top of the political heap. In next year's con- gressional elections and in 1944, he could write the ticket, possibly even put himself on it. This ambition is Lewis' consuming passion- second perhaps to his hatred of Franklin Roose- velt. By BILL BAKER THE MICHIGAN Repertory Players climaxed a better-than-average season last night with a better-than-average presentation of the Gilbert and Sullivan comic opera The Gondoliers. Not that I want to discourage you from seeing it: it's really a very enjoyable evening, and well worth the time. But then The Gondoliers is not the best opera Gilbert and Sullivan wrote; and it's not the best thing the Repertory Players have done this season. I don't know where the fault lies. Certainly not in the acting, for with few exceptions, all characters were excellently portrayed. The di- rection was capably handled by Valentine Windt and Claribel Baird, and James Wolfe did a mag- nificent job as musical director and conductor of the orchestra. So the fault must be with Gil- bert and Sullivan; and it's not up to me to crit- icize them. They've been pretty definitely es- tablished for some years. AS I started to say, the cast is well put to- gether. Vernon B. Kellett as the Duke of Plaza-Toro and Duane Crossley as Don Alhambra del Bolero walked away with top honors with magnificent performances: two of the best I've seen in Ann Arbor this summer. Katherine Sarich as Tessa was excellent, Stephney Doranchak was very good as the Duch- ess, and Maurice Gerow and Sam Durance, Jr., turned in more than satisfactory performances as the two gondoliers. (In the second act, they were terrific . . . and I'd challenge any two pro- fessionals in the D'Oyle-Carte Opera Company to do better.) Virginia Moore sang beautifully in her too-few solo appearances as Fiametta, and Fawn Adkins did an adequate bit as Inez. THE OTHER THREE main characters weren't too well cast. At least it seemed that way to me. Margaret Martin as Gianetta, Betty Lou James as Casilda and Ray Steele as Luiz were unimpressive. Their main trouble could,I think, be remedied: none of them could be understood when they sang. The two choruses were very good, showed a lot of pep and vim which added to the general attractiveness of the presentation. One of the biggest hits of the show was the sextette of unnamed dancers. They were really good, and got quite a hand. Dance director Eliabeth Whit- ney rang the bell here. Alexander Wyckoff in his final job for the Repertory Players (he won't be back next sum- mer, worse luck for us) did his usual ingenious job, and Emma Hirsch and Evelyn Cohen put together some costumes that added a lot of color to the show. ON THE WHOLE, it was a good job. The few weak spots weren't too noticeable, and the strong spots more than made up for them. What STUPID By Terence SPOT was just a plain ordinary little white dog. Nothing more. He came to us when he was just a month old. I was five years old. And I remember he was just big enough to -lie down in one of those boxes that spools of thread come in.. But he soon grew up. Not very big, but big enough for a six-year old boy. He used to follow me to school every day. And when recess time would come, he'd come back to play with me at recess. He never missed his timing either. We lived four blocks away, but whenever that bell rang- recess, noon, or dismissal-Spot would be there... PRETTY near every place I went, he went. We drove to Colorado one summer, and stayed overnight at a hotel there where they didn't allow dogs. Mom sneaked him in wrapped up in her arms in a white sweater like a baby.. . Spotwas smart, the smartest dog I ever saw. Not in tricks, cause we never bothered to teach him any of those. But he had life figured out so he could get just about what he wanted. Like when he wanted pet- ting, he'd pick one paw up and limp around on three. until someone took pity and paid some attention to him. We had a cat named Muffy, too. She and Spot used to sleep in the basement. Spot in a basket and Muffy on the floor near the furnace. O NE bitter cold winter night we heard an awful yowling down there. Mom dashed down the stairs, and there was Muffy curled up in the warm basket, and poor Spot, driven from his home, sitting on the cement floor howling his head off... Spot and I always were constant companions. And you know how you get attached to a dog. . . I was a pretty lonely kid, and that little white pup made up for a lot. He was just about all the playmates I had; and all I wanted. TODAY I got a letter from home: TSpothas been chloroformed. It had to be that way: he was blind, and a little stove up with rheuma- tism. I hadn't seen him since Christmas. I remembered him then . . . he couldn't see me at a distance, cause his eyes were already going bad. But when he got close to me, he just about licked my face off. He was sort of pitiful, not being able to see very well. We have a door between the hall and the den that had a mirror in it. He was used to going through that to the basement. . . only this time it was closed. He wasn't hurt, but his pride was . . . and he had a lot of pride. But that' all over. I've lost the best friend I ever had, and that's not just sentimentalism. I'd like to have seen him once more, but with things as they were, I guess i.t's best... Thirty for Spot.... . LETTERS TO THE EDITOR THIS LETTER is in answer to the letter printed in "Stupid Stuff" August 14, and I do mean Stupid Stuff. The author admits that a large standing army is of little use and that is just what the authorities are planning to foster upon the nation. An unlimited army of recruits to serve from thirty months to the end of this emergency. This country needs a highly mech- anized army. It has not got it yet. I am not saying who is to blame but the fact remains that the army is woefully short of tanks, planes, ma- chine guns, and the rest of the mu- nitions that make up the modern army. If all these items were avail- able in the numbers that the army officials have asked for, we need have no fear of any world power even if we disregard the two great oceans that are protecting us. All this seems to be in accord with Leonard. The thing that he and I and army officials disagree on is the time required to master these ma- chinesrofudestruction. Six weeks is all that is required to train the men. That is from the army's own admis- sion since that is the length of train- ing in their schools devoted to train- ing men for their mechanied units. Leonard cannot be very mechanically minded or he would realize this. AS FOR THE DRAFTEES liking the army so much as to devote a year and a half more than they expected to is sheer nonsense. Quite a number of my friends have been drafted. Some like it and then again some do not. The following is a quote from my cousin who is fortunate enough to be in Fort Sam Houston, Texas. "All in all the army is not so bad. I'm used to it by now, after four mnnths sn T Ido not mind it .Bt I'll 't Z 01941. chicago Times. Inc. r Yg U 5. pat Olt, All A P"-R~ A "Aw-I just put ink in my piggy bank, mom!" GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Nor All Notices for the Daiiy Official Bul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the Summer Session before 3:30 p.m. of the day preceding its publication except on Saturday, when the notices should be submitted before 11:30 a.m.. Deutscher Verein. Professor Hans Pick, School of Music will speak on "Einiges ueber Orchester-und Schall- platatenmusik," this evening at 8:00 p.m. in the German House, 1443 Washtenaw. Anyonee intereseted is cordially invited. Professor F. N. Menefee will give an illustrated lecture this, evening at 8 o'clock in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building on "The St. Law- rence Waterway." This lecture is open to the general public. Carillon Recital: Percival Price, University Carillonneur, will present a carillon recital from 7:15 to 8 p.m.r Thursday, August 14, in the Burton Memorial Tower. The program will consist of Flemish sixteenth century folk -songs, compositions by the fac- ulty of the Beiaardschool, the only school devoted solely to the study of the carillon, and Dutch dances. "The Gondoliers" by Gilbert and Sullivan will be presented at 8:30 p.m. tonight through Saturday night at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre by the Michigan Repertory Players of the Department of Speech. Single admissions are 75c, 50c, and $1.00., The boxoffice is open from 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Phone 6300. Zoology Summer Session Picnic this afternoon: For staff students and friends. Cars to leave from Mall at East side of Natural Science Build- ing at 5 p.m. for Dexter Huron Park. East, songs, baseball swimming. The Summer Sessions French Club. The last meeting of the Summer Ses- sion French Club will take place to- night. at 8 p.m. at "Le Foyer Fran- cais," 1414 Washtenaw. Mr. Joachim Lay, Chinese student recently arrived from France, will tell his last impressions of Europe. A group of Faculty members of the French Department and of students will "broadcast" Moliere's "Les Pre- cieuses Ridicules." Charles E. Koella Attention, Hopwood Contestants: All manuscripts for the summer con- tests must be in the Hopwood Room by 4:30 p.m. this Friday. R. W. Cowden Graduate Student Recital: Charles 0. Shrader, Pianist, who is a student tw I of Professor Joseph Brinkman, will present a recital at 8:30 p.m., Satur- day, August 16, in the Rackham As- sembly Hall. This recital is given in partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Maaster of Music andbis complimentary to the general public. Harvest, the well known French film, will be shown Friday night, Aug. 15 at 8:15 p.m. in the Rack- ham School Main Auditorium. Tick- ets for the performance are thirty- five cents and will be available at Wahr's Book Store, the Michigan League and the Rackham School on Friday night after 7:30. Art Cinema. League, "The Cobbler Captain of Koepe- niek will be shown at the Rackham School Auditorium at 8:15 p m. on Saturday night, August 16. All pa- trons of the Art Cinema League are invited to attend this showing of the 'ilm which was originally scheduled for August 3. Those who do not have a series ticket may purchase a single admission for thirty-five cents at the Michigan League or at the Rack- ham School on Saturday night after 7:30. Art Cinema League. Members of the Faculty who wish to attend the breakfast which will be given on Sunday, August 17 at 9 a.m. for candidates for the master's de- gree may purchase tickets at sixty cents each at the office of the Sum- mer Sessirn, 1213 A.H. Louis A. Hopkins Graduate Outing Club will meet in rear of Rackham Building on Sunday, August 17 at 2:30 pm. sharp. A trip to Big Portage Lake in Waterloo Recreation Area is planned including a program of swim- ming, softball, and outdoor supper. To insure satisfactory transportation arrangements, both drivers and pas- sengers are requested to leave twen- ty-five cent supper fee at Rackham check desk as early this week as possible. All graduate students, fac- ulty, and alumni are invited. Faculty Recital: Mr. William Bell- er, Pianist, who is a guest on the faculty of the School of Music for the summer sesion, will present a re- cital at 4:15 p.m. Monday August 18, in the Rackham Assembly Hall. The recital will consist of composi- tions by Debussy and Ravel, and is complimentary to the general public. Student Graduation Recital: (Continued on Page 3) w RADIO SPOTLIGHT WJR WWJ CKLW WXYZ 760 KC - CBS 950 KC - NBC Red 800 XC - Mutual 1270KC - NBC Blue Thursday Evening 6:00 Stevenson News Sports Review Rollin' Home Easy Aces 6:15 Racing-Baseball World News 'Rollin' Home Mr. Keen 6:30 Maudie's News By Smits Club Romanza Intermezzo 6:45 Diary Sports Parade Inside of Sports Harry Heilmann 7:00 Death Valley "Housewarming" Happy Joe Boys Town 7:15 Death Valley "Housewarming' Val Clare Boys Town 7:30 Lewisohn Sta- NBC Feature B. A. Bandwagon Charlie Ruggles 7:45 dium Concert NBC Feature B. A. 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