THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDA, 'hg ~ ~ __ A..ia ~ .1 The WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND By DREW PEARSON A' Ill i~nk~tacx rtn.. er r-,..rn.,,, Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the 'authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. The Summer Daily is published every morning except Monday and Tuesday. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or 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 car- rier $4.00, by mail $5.00. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING MY National Advertising Service, Inc. , College Publishers Representative 420 MADIsoN Ave. NEW YORK. N. Y. RIaCAGO BosToN *"LOs ANGELES " SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1941-42 Editorial Staff Homer Swander . . . Managing Editor Will Sapp . ' City Editor Mike Dann . . . . Sports Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS Hale Champion, John Erlewine, Robert Mantho, Irving Jaffe, Robert Preiskel Business Staff Edward Perlberg s s . . Business Manager Fred M. Ginsberg . . Associate Business Manager Morton Hunter . . Publications Manager NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT MANTHO The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. . WASHINGTON-While the Navy is doing a. magnificent, job whenever it gets into action at sea, it is still tied down by Navy tradition ashore. This subservience to hidebound custom may be one key to our failures in combatting submarines along the Atlantic Coast. To illustrate how time-honored naval tradi- tion operates, there are several score men who work at desks in the Navy Department who are classified as being "at sea," and who receive ex- tra pay for being "at sea" even though they sit in Washington. This is not their fault, since most of them would much rather be at sea, but it illustrates how naval tradition works. For they happen to be attached to hard-working, able Admiral Er- nie King, now serving in two capacities-Com- mander of the U.S. Fleet and Chief of Naval Operations. The latter job requires him to be in Washing- ton, and yet as Comander-in Chief of the Fleet he is supposed to be at sea. So by Navy tradi- tion, he and all his staff are rated as being "at sea." And every day when they leave their desks and walk out to Constitution Avenue, they "go ashore." To carry the tradition further, these officers and men are assigned to the Admiral's flagship, normally a battleship. But since a battleship can't be spared, a yacht serves as the flagship, and is tied up at the dock in the Washington Navy Yard. But if all the men assigned to her were to go aboard, it would sink. "At Sea-Ashore" Most of the men assigned to the Commander- in-Chief live safely in apartments in Washing- ton, yet they draw extra pay to compensate them for the hazards of life "at sea." A few live on the yacht, and thus enjoy free quarters and meals, while still drawing the extra pay. In the morning, these men leave the yacht and "go ashore" as far as the Navy building, and when they enter that building, they are "at sea" again. In the afternoon, when they leave the building, they "go ashore" until they reach the yacht, when they "go to sea" again. And on pay day, when the Navy paymaster disburses funds in the Navy Department, he sends a satchel of money to the yacht to pay all the men attached to the Admiral's flagship. But since most of them do not live aboard, the money is brought back by the paymaster of the yacht and paid to the men in the Navy Department. A great part of the work done in the offices serving Admiral King could be done by women, but is done by "yoemen" (male stenographers) instead. Reason for this is that the Admiral is technically at sea, and women are not allowed on board the vessels of the Navy, Still Batty Latest story from Washington's St. Elizabeth's Hospital, largest insane asylum in the world: A former government worker, long confined to St. Elizabth's and apparently cured, was in- terviewed by the medical board before his re- lease. "What are you going to do when you get. out?" a physician asked. "I'll get me a sling-shot and break every win- dow in the hospital," the patient said. He was sent back to his ward, but later came up for release again. "Now, what are you going to do when you go out into the great world again?" the doctor asked. "I'm going to buy me a car and visit my old mother and father." "Why, that's fine," said the doctor. "It will do you good to see them." "And," added the patient, "I'm going to rip a tire off the car, cut up an inner tube, make me a sling-shot and break every last window in St. Elizabeth's." Workers Must Stop Wildcat Strikes . . Letters To The Editor T U THE LIST of stupid and selfish persons obstructing the war effort must be added irresponsible workers throughout the country, labor's contribution to the groups of persons out for themselves who refuse to rec- ognize the obligations placed upon them by a nation at war. Detroit Street Railway workers, piqued be- cause of a delay in arbitration proceedings in- tended to establish a new agreement between the city and the street car union, called a wildcat strike Friday morning, crippling transportation and keeping war workers from their jobs. Only after a threat to place troops on every bus and street corner did the men agree to call off the strike. Work has been completely stopped at the General Motors Fisher plant, manufacturing tanks, because of a company refusal to grant smoking periods to the employes. Men sat down in the Bomber Plant for, an hour because four workers, angry because the company had removed telephone service and closed the union meeting room, ran through the plant shouting "Strike." Vic Reuther of the CIO, apparently voicing the stand of union members, threatened a rent strike if ,ceilings in Detroit were lifted. In every case workers have violated their re- sponsibility to the people, refusing to look at the results of their action1 with anything but a per- sonal and selfish attitude. It is true that union heads have realized that attainment of personal aims must be subjected to the more important job of winning the war. Labor representatives voted against the "Little Steel" decision, but accepted the verdict of the board. And it is true that most strikes have been of the wildcat variety, denounced and broken by union heads with the dismissal of walkout ring- leaders from the union. / But workers have failed to realize that nothing justifies their obstructing production, that the est'ablishment of arbitration agencies establishes a responsibility on the part of both labor and management to use those agencies and accept their decisions. This holds for obeying ceiling rents as well as ceiling prices. The only justifiable strike during a war is one intended to increase production. The strike at Buffalo because the workers wanted the gov- ernment to take over an inefficiently run air- plane enterprise, and the one at the GM Turn- stedt plant protesting the use of critical ma- terials in the manufacture of automobiles, fall into that category, Strikes are no longer to be justified because the complaints of the workers are true, because the things they want are right. A victory effort is no picnic, and producing must remain the first goal, everything else taking a secondary nature. Workers have every right to make their demands to the proper agencies, and to air their views before the public, but they have no right to cut output by striking. Reactionaries are still eager to cripple labor, and seize upon every stoppage as a reason for outlawing strikes. If labor wishes to maintain. its gains, it must continue to prove that it has come of age and that it can be trusted. Workers must live up to union no-strike pledges, must assume the -responsibility-for- us- ing wisely their power to strike, must realize their obligations to the war effort. -Robert Prelskel The Baited Bull IT IS APPARENT under present conditions that neither Mr. Copple nor the high and mighty managing editor can afford to contend with one another in order to settle the Negro- white .problem at this time. -Even if it be argued that the University of Michigan is so far from the actual conflict of greater issues as to render the childish exacerbations of Grad and editor quite unimportant. The objective reader, however, might well pause over this prattle and seek an explanation of it. He would doubtlessly notice the difference In dignity between the two writings. He might speculate on the two degrees of tolerance, of reasoning power, of ease of expression, of depth of view, of seriousness, etc. HE WOULD BE BOUND to conclude that the managing editor comes off second best in all of these. Then, in order to even up his judg- ment, he might very well see that the difference in years, in serious study, and in cultural back- ground would quite logically give the Grad a tremendous advantage. But still there is the problem over which they are contending. An objective criticism by a third party of those items listed above does not con- tribute to its solution. Even if one censured the Grad for his appeal to sectionalism which one of his experience should know would bait a man- againg editor, there would yet be no answer by the third party which would be acceptable to both. IT IS HOPED that these two, both doubtlessly, sincere, as well as misguided, can see that there is no solution. No one who has lived in both North and South and seriously considered the problem has any panacea for this discrep- ancy of black and white. No managing editor with so many fine courses in history, sociology, heredity at his disposal as this really great Uni- versity offers should be so impetuous, intolerant, and with that ingredient which always accom- panies these two, ignorant. No Grad should deliberately bait a bull and knowingly with intent raise an issue which has been a scourge of American civilization during its entire history. No Grad should bait, more- over, a newspaper bull, because he ought to know that all he will get is more paper. And while the paper may be useful, it will not stop the flow. If it happens that the managing editor does not quite see the point, perhaps it would be well to say directly that his youthful exuberance is appreciated but that it is, to say the'least, in bad taste in July, 1942. 4 .A. * * * Ann Arbor Isn't Compl aent Y WHAT YARDSTICK does Mr. Jaffe mea- sure the Ann Arbor "awareness that; a globe- encircling war is being waged?" With whom, does he have contact that he thinks we in Ann, Arborhave a Shangri-La smugness or security, about the war? Does he have any conception of the number of men working hours over-time at high pressure in the war effort? Many of these men are the self-same college professors whom he describes as "strolling leisurely along campus walks." Their efforts are toward the same ends as those of many Ann people, these days, where the war is not dis- cussed with the utmost seriousness and concern, and all these people are doing all they know how to do. If anyone thinks that bombing is a real possibility in our minds for only 15 minutes of black-out time, perhaps the ivory tower ex- pression should be turned away from Ann Arbor toward The Daily. Mr. Jaffe should get around a little. - Edna L. Dow Don't Answer Smith WAS ASTONISHED to see in Saturday's paper that such outstanding men as Profes- sor Shepard and Rev. Marley are now stooping low enough to "answer" Gearald L. K. Smith. "Answering" Gerald L. K. Smith is like ar- guing with Adolph Hitler that all men were created equal. Why should anybody bother with Smith? His record is an open book. Don't bring yourselves down to Smith's level, f ellows. Keep up the good work. We all know what Smith stands for. -David Lachenbruch DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 3) Room 108 Mason Hall, according to the following schedule: Surnames beginning A through K. Wednesday, July 22. Surnames beginning L through Z Thursday. July 2. Arthur Van Duren Chairman, Academic Counselors Students, Summer Term, College of- Literature, Science, and the Arts: Courses dropped after Saturday, July 25, by students other than freshmen will be recorded with te grade of E. Freshmen (students with less than 24 hours of credit) may drop courses without penalty through the eighth week. Exceptions to these regulations may be made only because of extra- ordinary circumstances, such as seri- ous or long-continued illness. E. 11. Walter, Assistant Dean Lectures A War Policy for American Schools, by J. B. Edmonson, Dean of the School of Education-Monday, July 20th, at 2 p.m., University High School Auditorium. The University of Michigan and the War-a. lecture by Dean C. S. Yoakum, Vice President of the Uni- versity and Dean of the Graduate School-Tuesday morning at 10 a.m. -University High School Auditori- um, War and Post-War Educational Finance, by Prof. Arthur B. Moehl- man, Tuesday at 2 p.m. in the Uni- versity High School Auditorium. Weekly Review of the War by Pro- fessor Howard M. Ehrmann, Depart- ment of History-Tuesday at 4:15, in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The public is invited. Lectures on Statistical Methods. Professor J. Neyman of the Univer- sity of California will give the first of a series of three mathematically non-technical lectures on "Methods of Sampling," on Thursday, July 23, at 8:00 p.m., in 3011 Angell Hall. Problems of Public Schools: The third lecture in the series on Guid- ance and Placement will be given Tuesday, July 21 at 7:15 in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Problems of Pub- lic Schools will be discussed and dramatized, covering the following fields: Breaking contracts, leaving the profession, salaries, when to ask for release. Both superintendents and teachers will be represented (signed) University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information. Events Today The Graduate Outing Club is plan- ning a swim and supper at Delhi Sun- day. A deposit of 25 cents is required. The group will meet at the northwest door of Rackham at 2:30. The second concert of the 1942 High School Band Clinic now being held in Ann Arbor will be presented at 4:15 p.m., Sunday, July 19 in Hill Auditorium, under the direction of Prof. William D. Revelli. 122 stu- dents from Michigan and neighbor- ing states will participate in the pro- gram. The public is cordially invited. The Art Cinema League presenta- tion of "The Lady Vanishes" has been postponed and will not be given on Sunday evening as planned. Coaing Events Graduate Students in Speech: A symposium on speech science will be held at 4 p.m. Monday in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. H. M. S. Pinafore: Rehearsals for the chorus of this operetta will begin Monday afternoon 4:30 to 6:00 in the auditorium of the Music School. Members are requested to purchase scores, which may be obtained at Wahr's. Men who are interested in trying out should appear at this time. George L. Scott, Professor of Or- gan at Illinois Wesleyan University, will include works of Bach, Vierne, Franck and Sowerby, as well as one of his own compositions for organ in his recital at 8:30 p.m. Monday, July 20, in Hill Auditorium. The program is given in partial fulfill- ment of the requirements of the de- gree of Master of Music, and is open to the public. Michigan Dames: will have Bridge, Monday evening from 8 to 10:30 at the Michigan League, also on Wed- nesday from 2 to 4:30 p.m. in the Michigan League. Tea will be served in the Rackham Building after the bridge on Wednesday. Math. 300, Orientation Seminar: Will meet Tuesday at 3 o'clock in 3001 A.H. Mr. C. C. Sams will speak on "Transfinite Numbers." Math. 301, Seminar in Pure Math- ematics: Will meet Tuesday at 4 of the League. Present and past members are requested to attend. Phi Lambda Upsilon: First meet- ing of the Summer will be held on Tuesday, July 21, in the West Con- ference Room of the Rackham Build- ing at 7:30 p.m. The Regular Tuesday Evening Pro- gram of recorded music in the Men's Lounge of the Rackham Building at 8 p.m. will be as follows: Beethovent Symphony No. 9 in D Minor "Chor- al," Brahms: Double Concerto in A Minor for Violin, Cello and Orches- tra. Faculty Concert: Arthur Hackett, Tenor, Joseph Brinkman, Pianist, and George Faxon, Organist, mem- bers of the faculty of the School of Music, will present a program in Hill Auditorium, Tuesday eovening, July 21, at 8:30. It will consist of compo- sitions for organ by Handel, Schu- mann and Liszt, and a group of Chopin's works for the piano. Mr. I Hackett haschosen songs by Santo- liquido and Giulia Recli for the con- cert. The public is cordially invited. Women in Education: Weekly lun- cheon Wednesday, July 22, 11:45 to 1:00, Russian Tea Room, Michigan League. Dr. Martha G. Colby, As- sociate Professor of Psychology and Research Associate in the University Elementary School will speak on some aspect of "Contemporary Psy- chological Theories and Modern Ed- ucation." Come and bring your friends. Speech Students: A program of readings will be given at the depart- mental assembly Wednesday at 3 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- ter. All Speech students should at- tend. Delta Kappa Gamma will have a tea Thursday, July 23, from 4 to 6 in Charles McKenny Hall in Ypsilanti for visiting and local members. Any- one wishing transportation may call 2-1635. The Moon will be seen through the Angell Hall Observatory on Friday night at 9:30-11 p.m. Dr. McLaugh- lin will be in charge of the public nights, assisted by the summer term assistant. Children must be accom- panied by adults. The public is in-. vited. "Hay Fever," one of Noel Coward's most amusing plays, will be present- ed by the Michigan Repertory Play- ers of the department of speech Wed- nesday through Saturday nights at 8:30 at the Mendelssohn Theatre. Tickets are on sale at the theatre box office; box office hours are from 10-5 Monday and Tuesday and from 10-8:30 Wednesday through Satur- day. Churches Campus Worship: Mid-day wor- ship-12:10 p.m. each Tuesday and Thursday at the Congregational Edi- fice, State Street at Williams. Daily Mass-7 a.m. and 8 a.m. at Saint Mary's Chapel. Williams Street at Thompson. Jewish Services-7 p.m. each Sunday evening at Hillel Foun- dation, Oakland Avenue at East Uni- versity. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church: 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion; 11:00 a.m. Kindergarten, Harris Hall; 11:00 a.m. Summer Church School; 11:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rev. Henry Lewis, D.D.; 5:00 p.m. Student Picnic supper, and group singing. Cars will leave from Harris Hall at 5 p.m. First Church Of Christ, Scientist, 409 S. Division St. Sunday morning Westminster Student Guld-6:15 p.m. Social luncheon. "Building a New World" topic for discussion. Speaker to be announced. Unitarian Church: 11:00 a.m. Church Service-"Gerald Smith and his 'Million' "--a study in American Fascism by Rev. H. P. Marley. 8 p.m. Discussion-"Our Willow Run Neigh- bors" by Edward Redman, director of the Unitarian work-camp in Ypsi- lanti. Avukah plans picnic for this Sun- day at Saline Valley Farms, The cost will be 50 cents. Meet at 2 p.m. in front of Hillel Foundation and plan to be away until 10:00 p.m. The pro- gram will consist of games, swim- ming, meal and campfire. Only a limited number of reservations can be taken; they may be made by call- ing Netta Siegel at 2-2868. In case of rain, there will be a communal supper at the foundation at 6:30. "Religion and the American Fa- ily" will be the theme of the Religion Forums to be held in the East Con- ference Room of the Rackham Build- ing on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from 2:30 to 4 p.m. On Tuesday the subject will be "Relig- ious Factors in Marital Relations" (Protestant, Jewish, and Catholic participants.) Wednesday the topic will be "Religious Phases of Family Security in the Willow Run Area." (Staff persons active in the area). On Thursday "School-Church Rela- tions in the Normal Michigan Com- munity," will be discussed by school- men and religious educators. Youth Faces the World Tragedy: The Rev. Roy L. Aldrich Th.M. of the Central Presbyterian Church in Detroit will speak on "Youth Faces the World Tragedy" at the Michigan Christian Fellowship meeting this Sunday afternoon July 19 at 4:15 in the Fireside Room at Lane Hall. Rev. Aldrich received his degree of Master of Theology from the Dallas Theo- logical Seminary and is at present a member of the Visiting Faculty of that school. Kindly note the change in time for this Sunday afternoon to 4:15 instead of 4:30. First Congregational Church: State and William. Dr. Leonard A. Parr, Minister. 10:45a.m. Service of Pub- lic Worship. Dr. Parr will conduct the service. The subject of the ser- mon will be "But - Are the Stars Neutral?" On Monday at.3 p.m. Dr. Parr will give the closing lecture in the present series of Monday Book Lectures. These are open to the pub- lic. Summer School students and visitors especially invited. Dr. Leonard A. Parr will give the last of the present series of Monday Book Lectures, on Monday at 3 p.m. in the assembly room. A cordial wel- come is extended to the public. The following books will be discussed: "Mrs. Appleyard's Year" Louise A. Kent, "My American Diary" Sir Wal- ter Citrine, "A Letter to My Son," "Solving Life's Everyday Problems" J. G. Gilkey, "The New Belief in the Common Man" Carl J. Friedrich, "Only the Stars Are Neutral" Quen- tin Reynolds, "The Hour Before the Dawn" Somerset Maugham, "Love, Life and Laughter" Wilfred Funk. Memorial Christian Church (Dis- ciples) 10:45 a.m. Morning Worship, Rev. Frederick Cowin, Minister. 6:30 p.m. Disciples Guild Sunday Evening Hour - Miss Florence McCracken, Director of the choir, will lead a pro- gram of hymns and hymn interpre- tation. The meeting will be held in the Guild room at the church. A social hour and tea will follow. Zion Lutheran Church services will L.. - -77 t*n. .1n m- - r...,-. l I «) GRIN AND BEAR IT ByLichty ~y - - "This war production is serious business. When the boss asked me to stay and work overtime, I never dreamed we'd go' right on making planes!" Dominic Says HE PREACHER during war merits both ap- proval and public support. He should have support because of the importance of eternal truth above that human strategy which must en- gage us, and have approval because he is per- forming an important educational service on a voluntary basis. In freeing clergymen of the United States from military service early in this war, the gov- ernment, meaning to put the stamp of approval upon religious leaders and to emphasize free- dom of religion as a major factor in our Demo- cracy, actually made the work of these men more difficult than before. Critics of religion and irresponsible citizens, ignorant or ill-advised, scarcely appreciate the depth of peace. teaching in Scripture and the idealism of the Jew-Chris- tian tradition. Such critics, failing to share the opinion that clergy should be exempt, frequently become self-appointed censors. The very min- ister who is most conscientious about the relig- ious truth he is ordained to teach, may be the first one attacked. RELIGION ceases to be religion when it con- fines itself to the problems of man without -lifting those problems to the idea of God. Eter- nal truth becomes temporal human strategy when dropped to a political or social level. Un- dying values are enduring just because they can serve a warring society as well as a saintly peace= ful one. Historic religion has come to be mean- ingful not because its votaries lowered the ideal in times like ours, but because great religious spirits in prophetic candor held the standard above every epoch. Scripture begins with God as Creator and ends with the vision of a Holy City. He serves best as a minister of religion who can live eternity in time, cause the love of God to stand opposite the hate of man, make the Kingdom of Heaven I