THE MICHIGAN TI A TT.V TmTvt.QnAv Tm.v 94 1041 THT~ MI('TITI2AN IIATTV ~I'~TT'D ~ .~ ~ TilT '~ a a ~ AR ~ .5. .5..U. .R.J.L~.U. Z. ~4 .L.L .5. '.9 .CU~ .~ i .5.7 tU~ .1 Li .1. ~ .5345.41 *Q'*, .L~'*5. I U _______________________________________________ 1 ~. - I I nmr-w i -m ArT!'sT-r'1r.-, " -. HE .M IUC.AN DAILY Daily Calendar of Events Thursday, July 24 - DRAMA GRIN AND BEAR IT By .Lichty _,, 2:30 4':00 4:05 p.m. T 1 4:15 p.m. p.m. "Religious Education Forum," Rackham Building, East Conference Room. Lecture. "Trends In Educational Supervision." George C. Kyte, Professor of Education and Director of the University Elementary School, Uni- versity Elementary School, University of California. (University High School Auditorium.) Lecture. "Christianity In a World at War." Professor Basil Mathews, Professor of Christian World Relations in Boston University and Andover-Newton Theological Institution. (Lecture Hall of Rackham Building.) Concert on the Charles Baird Carillon. Bridge Lessons. (Michigan League.) "The Little Foxes," by Lillian Hellman. (Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.) Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Puilished every morning except Monday during the University 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 ,thePostOffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by carrier $4.00, by mail, $4.50. REPREBENThD FOR NATIONAL ADVERTIaING BY National Advertisiig Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO * SOSTON * LOS ANGRLES SAN FRANCiSCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1940-41 7:15 8:00 8:30 p.m. p.m. p.m. Washington Merry-Go-Round i By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN. Managing Editor City. Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Sports Editor Wome's Editor Editorial Staff . Karl Kessler .arry M. Kelsey .William Baker Eugene Mandeberg Albert P. Blaustein . Barbara Jenswold Business Staff Business Manager . .... Daniel H. Huyett Local Advertising Manager . . . Fred M. Ginsberg Women's Advertising Manager . . Florence Schurgin Y -T 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. Truth And The Absolute... HEY TOLD US in school that truth is only relative. They said that there is no such thing as absolute truth, beauty, or absolute anything. Our standards of right and wrong too, are only man made, with man made faults, and man made comparisons. But since the majority have accepted these standards, the whole must accept them and bide by them or face the consequences.' We were born into a world where the good had already been distin- guished from the evil, and we must acquiesce, for the decision has been made. BUT, being bred in these standards, we have accepted them without much question. We have said, yes, you are correct, that is good, and that, on the contrary, is bad. Together with those who have gone before us we have con- demned those whom they condemned, and cheered those whom they hailed as heroes. How- ever, they too accepted truth as relative, and nothing as absolute. They too were aware that human frailty entered into ideologies and the laws that govern us. And we were grateful for this, for we still believe that there can be noth- ing which is absolute. Because they, and we, have accepted the be- lief that truth is comparative, we have been taught our standards of truth by the only com- patible method under this belief. We have been shown the truth by comparison, and by the same token, that which we consider evil. They said to us, this is the good, because that has caused bad effects, it has ground out what we believe in. So we learned the good, the truth, by lining it up with the evil, the false, and appreciated it accordingly. BECAUSE OF THIS, we have always had the bad among us. We have always been cog- nizant of the fact that we are accompanied by the untrue, but we have appreciated the true all the more just because we did have our compara- ble close at hand. Though we labeled it bad or evil, we recognized the fact that there were les- sons to be learned from this association, that it was not all bad, and that our good was not all good. But now they are telling us that our good is absolute, that our ideology is the one true form of government. Drive out the evil from our country, they cry, and from our minds. Instill the spirit of true "Americanism in our children that they may appreciate the government under which they live. Remove the foreign evils that our children may be pure in mind and action. Make democracy absolute, for it is the only truth, and, though it will not falter if placed by the side of the evil, why take the chance, why sub- ject our children to the temptations of the bad forces so prevalent outside our country. In doing that, we shall make the false also absolute, and thus assure the perpetuation of our democracy, and the happiness of future generations in America. Our insurance.will be democracy, and we shall pay our premiums by aiding in the suppression of the absolute false, as our truth is absolute good. BUT the truth is still relative, and there is no such thing as absolute beauty, or absolute anything. This they told us, and this we be- lieve. We believe it because by this belief we have appreciated our good, and we have dis- dained the evil. Because we could compare our standards with theirs, we have maintained our own. We compared and we judged and we .un a r1 , n ra ir aA +1 ,ha . ri,.,,+ nc i nr WASHINGTON-Those present are keeping mum about it, but Administration leaders almost had to call out the riot squad to get the Senate military affairs committee to report out the War Department's "draft property" bill. The compromise bill was approved only after what one Senator privately described as the "wildest committee meeeting I have ever attended." He wasn't exaggerating. FOR A TIME, while debate was at its hottest, the closed-door session seemed like a water- front brawl. Members threw senatorial dignity to the winds and all but slugged it out over the Army's demand for authority to draft property for defense. Two Democrats, Sheridan Downey, Califor- nia's "yes and noes" on foreign affairs, and "Happy" Chandler, militant anti-isolationist Kentuckian, almost did throw punches. It started when Wayne Coy, head of the Office of Emergency Management, came from the White House with a draft of the property-seizure bill, which, it developed, was a virtual facsimile of the War Department's, drastic original bill. There was a brief pause after the bill was read- and then the battle began. ALL THE REPUBLICAN members and three Democrats, including Downey, jumped from from their chairs hotly charging that the War Department was trying to put over a fast one, and demanding that Coy take the bill back to the White House. Ordinarily reserved, Senator Warren Austin of Vermont, a strong supporter of the President's foreign policies, wrothily de- clared that he would not "go along" on this legislation, "giving the President blanket powers to seize property." 'Fighting Words' SENATOR STYLES BRIDGES of New Hamp- shire, another GOP anti-isolationist, ex- claimed: "If the President wants national unity and support from Republicans, he'd better give this bill back to the War Department." DOWNEY and several others also joined in the attack. Meanwhile Chandler, in charge of the legislation, kept shouting at the top of his voice : "Property is no more sacred than human life. If the President has power to draft men for the Army, he also should have the right to draft property." The big blowoff came when Downey yelled, "This bill means revolution." I'M SURPRISED," shot back the truculent Chandler, "that a responsible member of the Senate would make such a wholly irresponsible and absurd statement. It don't think a man of your position should be loosely predicting revo- lution. Such remarks stir up unrest, and there's already too much agitation in the country." "I'll say what I please," screamed Downey, blazing with fury, "and I'll have you know that I have the interests of this country at heart as much as you." "You haven't when you make statements like that," retorted Chandler. FOR A MOMENT the stocky, square-jawed Kentuckian and the mop-haired Californian glared fighting mad at each other. Then Downey sat down and the committee voted out the com- promise bill favored by Chandler. Note-Senator Downey is the Senate's chief advocate of the Townsend old age pension plan and was elected with considerable Ham-and-Egg support, a movement charged with the indirect conscription of property. Rooming Lewis E VIDENCE continues to pile up that John L. Lewis has his cap set for a comeback as CIO president. Latest incident to set CIO insiders buzzing oc- curred at the state convention of the Indiana CIO at Muncie. Ora Gasaway, former president of District 8, (Indiana) United Mine Workers, and now a Lewis henchman at the UMW head- quarters in Washington, was making a speech. Suddenly he startled the gathering with this crack: "The time has come for us to have a native- born American for president of the CIO." Note: CIO President Phil Murray was born in Scotland. FOR A MOMENT you could have head a pin drop. Then almost to a man the 700 delegates for selection. Good that appreciation of democ- racy shall be drilled into them as a lesson in multiplication. broke into a roar of angry boos. With a hasty gulp, Gasaway changed the subject. U.S. Bases In South America jT HASN'T LEAKED OUT yet, but through diplomatic negotiations with Latin America, the way is being paved for our possible entrance into the war as a belligerent. In an earlier day we were thinking only of neutrality, and to- gether with the other American nations we laid down rules to prevent th belligerents from using the facilities of our ports more than a certain time. But now, if the U.S. becomes a belligerent, we would be barred, by, our own Inter-American regulations, from using the ports or landing fields of Brazil, Uruguay, Argentina, including cost, as announced by General Marshall last the very ones which we are building at' great week. These fields, of course, remain the integral territory of the country where they lie, and we have no claim to them. Uruguay has already taken the initiative to solve this odd situation by yielding rights to the U.S. As a matter of fact, the United States foresaw the difficulty and discussed the matter with the Uruguayan Government. In. reality Uruguay was selected for this first move because of her traditional liberal position in such matters. By BARBARA JENSWOLD With strong material in their grasp, and with definitely difficult person- alities to portray, the Michigan Rep- ertory Players gave a more than ade- quate performance yesterday of Lil- lian Hellman's "The Little Foxes." Stellar portrayal of the ten was without a doubt that of Richard Hadley, whodplayed Horace Giddens the dying man. Strength of charac- ter, a great deal of restraint and the confused emotions of an individual in the uncertain grasp of death were plainly noticeable. Ada McFarland, who always seems to turn out splendid acting, came through as well as Regina Giddens the money-hungry and cruel wife We have seen Miss McFarland only in roles of this general type, how- ever, and we begin to wonder if cast- ing has something to do 'with it. Only one thing we noticed-there was evident in no part of the play any semblances of a bond between Regina and her brothers. Since we don't know the technicalities of act- ing and can speak only from the standpoint of the audience, we can't tell her. anything more specific than this, but it does seem that when three have grown up together and stayed close for so many years, there must be something there. We did enjoy Miss McFarland's offering, however. Of the two brothers, we select first Donald Clark's Benjamin. We feel that even though the two characters were not so finely drawn in the script, Clark outshone Norman Ox- handler to quite an extent in charac- ter portrayal. With regard to the character of Birdie Hubbard, we think that after a rather poor start, which appeared too mechanical and deliberate, Doro- thy Hadley grew into the part beau- tifully. Especially brilliant were the scenes with her husband and with Horace and Alexandra. Clever di- recting is what carried her through the first scene. Margaret Brown's Alexandra was generally true to character, though in a few instances she pushed her part. The character is a difficult one no matter how one looks at it, and it was well done. a, s >x e I e s' e ,, T i 1 C r'a -10> -r Reg U.$ Pa LOff, All Rc. Re. "Well-he says he loves me, but I've seen enough movies to know love when I see it!" DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 1 IT IS HOPED that the UruguayanE be followed by other countries. followed, the United States will be the southern continent. example will If it is not shut out of STUPIK~u By Terence (Editor's Note: In the face of "extenuating" cir- cumstances, I was unable to produce one of my consistently excellent columns. Hence Moitle, the girl friend, takes over the stuff for the day. I'm not responsible for anything she says. She isn't responsible either.) TERENCE just went over to get a coke and, since the women's desk is between here and there, and the deadline is just around the corner, guess I'll have to write his column for him. This is my first shot at anything of this sort. Usually I get relegated to the lower regions, to "pie" all the type or put the corrected slugs in upside down. Only thing I get to do up here is write slugs: Mr. Jones Will Talk Here Today or Germans Claim Advances; Reds Say Nazis Trapped (So they don't count, Kessler?) Or when I'm not writing heads, it's proof reading trying to catch some of those. slips in the type that Ter- ence is always talking about. Then there's that new college indoor sport that takes up my spare time: balancing coke bottles on top of each other. Farthest I can get is four. One upright, one on top of it lying down, then two upright on top of the second bottle. Try it sometime, to keep you awake after curfew. It's a fad that ought to prove that the average intelligence of college students has increased in the past few years. You'll have'to admit it takes more brains than swallowing gold fish. Another job around here is tearing off the AP. It comes in on the teletype machine, from four in the afternoon to one in the morning, on paper about as wide as typing paper and as long as ticker tape. It just goes on and on, and it has to be torn off and separated into four different piles of news-state, national, foreign and sports. It starts off with the stock reports and ends upI with "30 goodnight." (Add freshman remarks on first seeing the machine start, with the mar- ket reports: "What's this thing saying anyhow? It's all in code.") AM LOOKING FORWARD to seeing The Little Foxes. Get a chance to watch Ada McFarland emote again. Wouldn't be a bit surprised to see her really go places, treading the boards. Guess the Drama Season people felt the same way, as she was right in there with Conrad Nagel and Ruth Gordon, doing as fine a job as any of them. Saw her first as Trelawney and then as Beatrice, and it was hard to believe that the same person played both roles. She does pretty well off stage, too, as anyone who attended the Speech Honors Banquet can testify. Made a real entrance, half an hour late, wearing a white wrap-around turban, and a black dress. A noticeably good bit of support was offered in Robert Reifsneider's handling of Cal. Though the charac- ter is an insignificant one, it re- ceived just the right amount of ef- fort. We cannot say as much for Fawn Adkins' Addie, which was somewhat stiff throughout. The part of the son, portrayed by Robert Standart, was overdone. His best bits were in the line of emo- tional outbursts, whereas the Leo acting only in support was too tense to be real. Only remaining player is Duane Nelson, whose part, since it meant literally nothing to the play, could call forth nothing brilliant. Suffice it to say that his Marshall was what it should be. As for mechanics, the very begin- ning of the play did not come across the footlights at all, which difficulty improved very shortly. Lighting was well placed, but not enough in evi- dence, even for a 1900 scene. Taking the play's inherent difficulties into consideration, we say that the per- formance as a whole was a strong one, and just short of the peak set by previous ones given by the group. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 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. Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Students whose records carry reports of I or X either from last senester or (if they have not been in residence since that time) from any former session, will receive grades of E unless the work is com- pleted by July 30th. Petitions for extensions of time with the written approval of the in- structors concerned, should be ad- dressed to the Administrative Board of the College, and presented at Room 4 University Hall, before July 30th. Dancers for The Gondoliers. Any- one interested in dancing in The Gondoliers report at the ballroom of the Michigan League Thursday after- noon at 5 o'clock. The Childhood of Maxim Gorky will be shown at the Rackham School Lec- ture Hall July 24 at 8:15 p.m. Tickets are available at Wahr's, League and Union. Art Cinema League. Carillon Recital: Percival Price, University Carillonneur, will present a program composed entirely of Itali- an songs from 7:15 to 8 p.m., Thurs- day, July 24 in the Burton Memorial' Tower. One-Act Plays: The ILaboratory Theater of the Department of Speech will present two separate bills of one- act plays Friday, July 25, at 3:00 p.m. and Saturday, July 26, at 10:00 a.m. in the auditorium of the Ann Arbor High School. These plays are direct- ed, acted, produced, costumed, and the sets built by students in the act- ing, directing,band technical theater courses of the Department of Speech. All students of the School of Educa- tion, the Department of English, the Department of Speech, and of Ann Arbor High School are cordially in- vited to come. Admission is free. Whatever seating room remains is open to the public. Thursday, 11 a.m. "Perversions of Religion by Wishful Thinking," Pro- fessor Leroy Waterman, East Con- ference Room, Rackham Building. Lectures on French Painting: Pro- fessor Harold E. Wethey, Chairman of tl e Department of Fine Arts, will_ give the second illustrated lecture on French painting on Monday, July 28, at 4:10 p.m. in Room D, Alumni1 Memorial Hall. The subject of hist lecture will be "Post-Impressionism." The lecture, which will be given in English, is open to all students and Faculty members. The third lecture will take place on Monday, August 11th. These lectures are sponsored by the Department of Romance Lan- guages. Phi Delta Kappa will hold its final membership meeting tonight at 7:30 in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. All members are urged to attend. Graduate Students in Speech: On Thursday, July 24, at 4 p.m. in room 4203 Angell Hall, Professor G. E. Densmore will discuss the teaching methods and techniques used in public speaking classes for adults. Graduate Students in Education de- siring to take the preliminary ex- aminations for the .doctorate to be held on August 25, 26 and 27, should sign up for these examinations in Room 4002 University High School at once. "The Little Foxes" by Lillian Hell- man 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 box office is open from 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. (Phone 300). Clinic Band Radio Broadcast. The 1941 High School Clinic Band, Wil- liam D. Revelli, Conductor, will pre- sent a broadcast over radio station WJR from 4:45 to 5 p.m. on Wednes- day, July 23 and Thursday, July 24. The program will originate from Perry School, Ann Arbor. Wesley Foundation. A group will be leaving the First Methodist Church at 5 p.m. for a swimming party and picnic. Please make reservation by calling 6881 before 1:30 p.m. today. Small charge for food and transpor- tation. Excursion No. 6-The Cranbrook Schools. Inspection of the five schools of the Cranbrook Foundation. Bloom- field Hills, Christ Church, and the Carillon. Round trip by special bus on - Saturday, July 26. Reservations in Summer Session Office, Angell Hall. Trip ends at 4:00 p.m., Ann Arbor, trip starts at 8:30 a.m. Prof. Arthur S. Aiton of the His- tory Department will present the sec- ond of his lectures on the "relation (Continued on Page 3) A To The Editor: I see in the papers that the war is coming nearer the United States. I think that's the best news I've had for some time, believing, as I have from the beginning, that our war- mongers will squirm around until they get their own way eventually. I hope there are not many of you who are callous enough to want to send our boys to Africa or Siberia to fight, if fighting should be nec- essary, in order that we might enjoy a minimum of inconvenience at home - and a maximumaofprosperity. We might at least afford our de- fenders the privilege of dying on our own doorsteps instead of neatly bun- dling them off. And even merely from the standpoint of efficiency it would be better to let the enemy try to cross while we sank 50 to 75% of them in mid-ocean than vice versa. Some people say that our national economy is geared to wartime pro- duction and without a foreign war they predict a civil war. The Tech- nocrat who announced that there was only 2/3 hours of work.per work- ing person per day in peacetime economy was ousted from Columbia University several years ago. Reports circulated, from, people who ought to know, last fall, while politicians were making their campaign speeches, that the country was 98% in the war then. Yet the people didn't want a war then - nor do they now for that matter. Why can't people who are elected to office keep their campaign pledges? Do what they are hired to V-I i RADIO SPOTLIGHT WJR WWJ CKLW WXYZ 760 KC - CBS 950 KC - NBC Red 800 KC - Mutual 1270 K C - NBC Blue Thursday Evening 6:00 Stevenson News Sports Review Rollin' Home Easy Aces 6:15 Inside of Sports World News Rollin' Home Mr. Keen 6:30 Marriage Club News By Smits Club Romanza Intermezzo 6:45 Marriage Club Sports Parade Evening Serenade Harry Heilmann 7:00 Death Valley "Housewarming" Happy Joe Boys Town 7:15 Death Valley "Housewarming" Val Clare Boys Town 7:30 SPBSQ NBC Feature B. A. Bandwagon Charlie Ruggles 7:45 SPBSQ; News NBC Feature B. A. Bandwagon Charlie Ruggles 8:00 Major Bowes Music Hall Canada Answers T. Dorsey Orch. 8:15 Major Bowes Music Hall Canada Answers T. Dorsey Orch. 8:30 Major Bowes Music Hall News; Music World News 8:45 Major Bowes Music Hall Dell Concert Ted Steele Orch. 9:00 Glenn Miller Rudy vallee Echoes of Heaven Wythe Williams 9:15 Prof Quiz Rudy Vallee Echoes of Heaven Industrial News 9:30 Prof. Quiz wWJ Playhouse Musical Headline Front 9:45 Melody Marvels WWJ Playhouse Your Job and Mine Drama d