THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, J Li Daily Calendar of Events Wednesday, July 16 - 12:45 p.m. Excursion No. 3-The Ford Plant. Inspection of the various Ford indus- tries at River Rouge. Round trip by special bus. Reservations in Summer Session office, Angell Hall. Trip ends at 5:30 p.m. Ann Arbor. 3:30-5:30 p.m. Dancing. (Michigan League Ballroom.) Free of charge. Come with or without partners. 4:05 p.m. Lecture. THE NURSERY SCHOOL POINTS THE WAY. William E. Blatz, Professor of Child Psychology and Director of the Institute of Child Study, University of Toronto. (University High School Auditorium.) 4:15-5:30 p.m. Mr. Owen Uridge, Assistant General Manager, Station WJR, Detroit. Topic: RADIO AS A VOCATION.- (Rackham Amphitheatre.). 4:15 p.m. Lecture. TECHNOLOGICAL AND SCIENTIFIC RESOURCES. Karl T. Compton, President, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. (Lecture Hall, Rackham Building.) 7:30 p.m. Intermediate Dancing Class. (Michigan League Ballroom.) 8:00 p.m. Medical Lecture. FOREIGN BODIES IN THE LARYNX (Illustrated.) Dean A. C. Furstenberg. (Lecture Hall, Rackham Building.) 8:30 p.m. "The Contrast" by Royall Tyler. (Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.) Washington Merry-Go-Round By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN. WASHINGTON-Details of that long-rumored provides for the evacuation of civilians over cer- defense price control bill are still incomplete, but tain designated roads. In some areas canteens three major provisions have been decided. They have been established and provisioned to facili- would arm Administrator Leon Henderson with tate the movement of civilians from a particu- these far-reaching regulatory powers: lar area." 1. Authority ,to fix price ceilings on all In anticipation of bomb damage to strategic commodities. roads, equipment for quick repairs has been 2. Licensing of all importers and commod- stored at intervals. Pre-fabricated temporary ity brokers, with power to revoke their li- bridges also are on hand. censes if they failed to comply with price Obstructions against the landing of enemy curbs or civilian rationing regulations. aircraft, such as trenches, concrete posts and 3. Creation of government import monop- "trip" cables, have been placed in all open olies. This would prevent dealers from bid- fields. Stone and concrete road blocks have been ding against each other, thus skyrocketing built and bridges cambered at strategic loca- prices. (This system already is in force on tions, so that demolition charges can be placed rubber. The RFC's Rubber Reserve Corpora- quickly should the Nazis gain a foothold on the tion is now the sole U.S. importer of crude coast. rubber and controls both distribution and Labor Pirates price.) The new plan differs radically from the over- The exploitation of defense labor by private all price freezing formula long advocated by employment agencies comes in for severe criti- Bernard Baruch, who was chairman of the old c War Industries. Board under Woodrow Wilson. cism in a confidential report sent to the House Under Baruch's method the Government would Labor Committee by Secretary of War Henry automatically freeze all prices, wages, rents and Stimson. He strongly urges the committee to commissions as of a given "P-Day." get behind the bill introduced by Representative This plan was considered too rigid by Hen- John Tolan of California, chairman of a special derson. He wants more flexible legislation to committee investigating migrant labor, giving deal with increasing hardships in special cases. Also, the basic cause of a number of recent price the Government authority to regulate the fees boosts is of foreign origin-not domestic. and practices of interstate job agencies and to curb piracy of skilled workers by big industrial Foreign Cost Factors plants. a. iStimson charges that much of the shortage in and agriculture come from abroad. Chrome, skilled labor in key defense industries is caused essential in the hardening of steel, comes from by "employment brokers." They get a fee for the Transvaal, burlap from Calcutta; tin from each job placement and therefore encourage Bolivia and the Far East; sugar from Cuba and frequent labor turnover and migration. the Pacific islands; drugs from Asia, Africa, and Note-The extent of labor*piracy is revealed other far-away places. Shipping space to bring in the latest report of the Bureau of Labor Sta- them to the U.S. is scarce, and where obtainable tistics, which shows that 2.08 of every 100 work- is much more- expensive than in normal times. ers on industrial payrolls switched jobs last The freight rate on sugar from Cuba is three month, the highest proportion on record. STUPID Lt/ By Terence (Editor's Note: Dan Behrman, night editor on The Daily during the regu- lar session, takes over the column for the day. I can't think of anything funny to say about him.) SOMEHOW we've always wanted a column. There's something about a columnist that makes him less re- sponsible to his own conscience than the ordinary editorial writer. For example, no politician would dare take offense at the worst libel printed under this innocuous heading. "Stu- pid Stuff" would look ridiculous on a warrant and then too, the process server would have the dubious honor of finding Terence. With this definition of terms, we feel free to unleash our emotions; open the drain(,) so to speak. There are millions of wrongs to be righted, hundreds of officials to act as tar- gets for our muck, scores of pompous hypocrites to be deflated-and Ter- ence tells us, 'Write twelve inches, to be cut anywhere.' May the Lord help the ignorant masses if there's a big D.O.B. today! It's Happening Here LAST SUNDAY we had a too-simple preview of a black-shirted Amer- ica (we is now plural as well as edi- torial, since three other people were involved). The four of us had gone out to a picnic spot about twenty miles from Ann Arbor, where we had spread out our grilles, frying pans and all other civilized accessories which we Yahoos need to go native. But we didn't mind the charcoal- coated franks prepared by us (singu- Iar) in our best Cen'rul Pok cuisine. Older and more matronly heads were busying themselves with the steaks when suddenly our peace was broken by a young boy on horseback with a wolf-like dog at his side. "How'd you get here?" the boy asked. "Through the fence," we naively replied. "Well, you're not supposed to go through the fence. If you go out the gateway and come back up here, I might let you stay." (Going out the gate-way and returning involved a distance of over a mile, mostly straight up and down.) WE PLEADED our ignorance of the fence's purpose, pointing out that we had seen half a dozen other cou- ples going through it and the fact that it was not posted nor were there any signs pointing to the consecrated gateway which would cleanse us of all impurity once we had passed through it. Our embryonic Hitler finally agreed to give us fifteen minutes, since our steaks were already half done. The steaks were disposed of as though they were commuter's cof- fee-and, but we still had some cleaning up to do when young Bou- langer came back-with his father. His father defied description, but it's sufficient to say that Gargantua would have been a big improvement. The man began to order us off, spacing his commands with some of the vilest language we'd ever heard outside the Student Publications Building. AT FIRST, in reviewing the inci- dent, we excused this misguided pair on grounds of environment, but that was a very short-sighted view. Apologizing for a tyrant because his father used to beat his mother for beer money is small comfort when that tyrant is on horseback with a billy dangling from his side. If the two were justified in property rights, then they had no reason to tell us we could return. It was a simple case of someone exercising arbitrary power and enjoying himself im- mensely. Adolf, if you want a cou- ple of Gauleiters, I'll gladly give you references. The Bum Arm-e-e-e PROBABLY the most lucid com- mentary on the military mind ever printed were the dispatches on that golf-course incident in Georgia. A regiment of draftees happened to whistle at some girls on a golf course, a very heinous offense in the eyes of their general, who was swinging a mean mashie in civvies. The soldier boys were severely rebuked and or- dered to retrace their march under a Southern sun. If the offending enlisted men and their officers had been-reprimanded or court-martialed, if the general had not been in the ridiculous posi- tion of giving orders as a golf-playing bon vivant, and if he had not made his command such an obvious act of whimsy, then we would have no right to call his action one of the worst mistakes ever made by a military commander during peace time in a democracy. ness-"if you're not too self-analyti- cal"-and a number of scripts for fortification. She believes any plot GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty "Radio headquarters and tell them fighting in this sector is very serious-our troops have dropped their rifles and are engaging the blue army with their bare fists!" . .. .. DAILY OFFIC IAL BU LLET IN I All Notices for the Daily 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. The Summer Session French Club. The second meeting of the Summer Session French Club will take place tomorrow Thursday, July 17, at 8 p.m. at "Le Foyer Francais," 1414 Wash- tenaw. Mrs. Charles B. Vibbert will speak. The subject of her talk will be: "Etapes psychologiques en France entre 1939 et 1941." Membership in the club is still open. Those interested please see Professor Charles E. Koella, Room 200, Romance Language Building. "The Contrast," by Royall Tyler will be presented at 8:30 p.m. to- night through Saturday night at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre by the Michigan Repertory Players of the Department of Speech. Single ad- missions are 75c, 50c, and 35c. The boxoffice is open from 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. (Phone 6300)., Excursion No. 4-Niagara Falls and vicinity. Two and one-half days. Prof. I. D. Scott of the Department of Geology will accompany the group as lecturer. Round trip by boat and special bus. Reservations in Sum- mer Session office, Angell Hall. Trip starts Friday, July 18 at 3:30 p.m.- trip ends Monday morning, July 21, Ann Arbor. By popular request, the Art Cinema League presents a series of twO Rus- sian films: "Chapeyev" Thursday, July 17, and "The Childhood of Max- im Gorky" Thursday, July 24 at the Rackham School, Lecture Hall at 8:15 p.m. The Series price is fifty cents. No single admissions will be sold. Tickets available at Wahr's, League and Union. Speech Students: Dr. Alan H. Mon- roe, Chairman of the Department of Speech, Purdue University, formerly President of the National Association of Teachers of Speech, will discuss the subject, "Teaching Speech Com- position," at 10 a.m. Wednesday, July 16, in the Michigan Union Ballroom. All 10 and 11 o'clock classes in the Department of Speech will be dis- missed to permit attendance. Graduate Students in Speech: Dr. Albert C. Furstenberg, Dean of the i Medical School, will lecture upon "Foreign Bodies in the Larynx," il- lustrated with motion pictures, in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Build- ing at 8 prn., Wednesday, July 16. The Biological Chemistry Lectures: The third of the series of lectures on the fat-soluble vitamins will be con- cerned with Vitamin A and the caro- tenes. Mrs. Priscilla Horton of the University Hospital and Dr. L. A. Moore of Michigan State College will speak on the physiological aspects of Vitamin A and the carotenes, in Room 151, Chemistry Building on Monday and Tuesday, July 14 and 15, at 2 p.m. Professor Harry N. Holmes of Oberlin College will speak on the chemistry and distribution of these substances in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building on Thursday and Friday, July 17 and 18, at 2 p.M. All interested are invited to attend. School of Education Students (Un- dergraduate): Courses dropped after Saturday, July 19, will be recorded with the grade of E except under ex- traordinary circumstances. No course is considered officially dropped unless it has been reported in the office of the Registrar, Room 4, University Hall. Student Graduation Recital. Bur- ton Page, Pianist, will present a re- cital in partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the Bachelor of Music degree at 8:30 p.m., Monday, July 21, in thegSchool of Music Auditorium. Mr. Page is a student of Prof. Joseph Brinkman. This recital is open to the! general public. A luncheon will be given by the Summer Session and the Faculty Wo- men's Club complimentary to the women members and the wives of the faculty of the Summer Session at tweleve-thirty today in the Ballroom of the Michigan League. Seminar in Pure Mathematics will meet on Wednesday, at 4:15 p.m., in 3201 A.H. Dr. Max Shiffman will speak on "The Minimax Principle in the Plateau Problem." Mail is being held in Room 1, Uni- versity Hall, for the following per- sons: Aldiner, Fikret; Burch, Charles; Deno, Dr. Richard A.; Dwan, Ed- ward; Engerrand, Mr. J. J.; Glasser, Louise; Gregory, Mr. H. C.; Hetting- (Continued on Page 3) RADIO By JUNE McKEE "RADIO AS A VOCATION" will be considered by potential broadcasters and all concerned when Mr. Owen Uridge, assistant general mana- ger of WJR, speaks in the Rackham Amphithea- tre at 4:15 p.m. today. The third of the summer series of assemblies for radio students, this pro- gram promises some interesting insight into the possibilities of professional radio. For those doing dialing at 4:45 p.m., "This and That" may be picked up from campus through WJR, as the second day's offering of the Michi- gan University of the Air. Launching the five- week broadcasting schedule with "Aluminum" yesterday, Professor Abbot's class in radio car- ries on again today, airing a new sort of "talk" program, with Bob Stuart, Bill Schrier, Margaret Fairchild, Tom Sawyer and Charlotte Palmer taking part. Sydney Ritter will announce. Tomorrow "The German Problem" will be dis- cussed by Prof. James K. Pollock, of the political science department, in the 4:45 p.m. broadcast through WJR. It is this sort of "talk" program that has proved most listener-appealing so far, evoking numerous requests for printed copies. When "The Ships of the Spanish Main" sailed the air waves last week, in the New Education Fellowship demonstration that CBS put on, some of the boys from Broadcasting Service were helping uphold the acting end. Along with the performers Jane Waring provided from WJR, Duane Nelson, Bob Standart, Tom Armstrong, Bud Hilliard, and Tom Battin were well in evi- dence. Seeing again Bud Mitchell, chief of WJR staff announcers, recalled those memorable hours we hopefully spent discing Game of the Week for sponsorship . . . . as well as big-time the Vox Popping he announced here last winter. * * * "Practice-constantly!" Geraldine Elliott, con- tinuity editor of WJR, then advised those stu- dents wondering about radio writing. A student at the University six years ago, Miss Elliott, with her husband, Eric Hollett, wields the pen for many of the larger CBS shows, notably "The Hermit's Cave," "News Comes To Life," and "Summertime Melodies." These offerings are I I 4 RADIO SPOTLIGHT WJR WWJ CKLW WXYZ 760 BC - CBS 950 KC - NBC Red 800 KC - Mutual 1270 KC - NBC BIUM Wednesday Evening 6:00 News Tyson Sports Rollin' Home Easy Aces 6:15 Inside of Sports World News Rollin' Home Keen Tracer 6:30 Mr. Meek News by Smits Club Romanza Lone Ranger 6:45 Mr. Meek Sports Parade Serenade Lone Ranger 7:00 Grand Central Thin Man Happy Joe Quiz Kids 7:15 Station Adventures val Clare Quiz Kids 7:3Q Dr. Christian Plantation Air Temple Manhattan 7:45 Dr. Christian Party Interlude at Midnight 8:00 Millions Quizzer College Series Behind the News 8:15 for Defense Base Ball Interlude Old Traveler 8:30 Millions Mr. District Double or Factfinder 8:45 for Defense Attorney Nothing Steele Orch. 9:00 G. Miller's Orch. Kay Kyser's Quartette Mich. Highways 9:15 Public Affairs Kollege of Danger-Business To Be Announced 9:30 Juan Arviz Musical Henry Weber's Kinney Orch. 9:45 Rev. Smith Knowledge Melody Pageant Kinney Orch. I.- - - -s