THE MICHIGAN DAILY L P . tx t. Mlt tt L The WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND By DREW PEARSON DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN vl q i i 4 gg W-_ 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 ie 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 secod-class snail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier $4.00, by mail $5.00. RBPRE85NTED FOR NATIONA.L ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADIsON AVE. NEW YORK N. Y. CmICAGO'"* BOSTON + LOS AJIOBE.S SAN FRANCISCO fember, Associated Collegiate Press, 1941-42 Editorial Staff mer Swander E . . Managing Editor Will Sapp . . . . . City Editor Mike Dapn . . . . Sports Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS Jale Champion, John Erlewine, Robert Mantho, Irx.ing Jaffe, Robert Preisltei B isxe Stall WASHINGTON-The other night U. S. infan- try troops were swimming a river in North Car clna in a practice commando"raid. As they reached the other side, one officer remarked: "I'll bet this is the first time in history that a Justice of the United Supreme Court ever swam a river at night with a pack on his back." He was referring to Lt. Col. Frank Murphy, now on temporary vacation from the Supreme Court, who turned up in Washington for the spy trial last week looking very bronzed, and singing the praises of the U. S. Army. Justice Murphy has been living in the field for seven weeks, go- ing on long marches, once spending three days and two nights without sleep, and coming to know intimately the American soldier. As a result, he reported to high Washington officials that in his opinion the American soldier was the best-looking in the world, the best fed, and Vith the best hygiene. He also paid tribute to the type of young officers the army has been putting in high positions. "In this war," Murphy said, "our tough young generals will be giving orders from the field, not the background. They are out leading their troops with knives at their sides and Tommy guns strapped on their shoulders: We are devel- oping some great young officers." Murphy also praised Secretary of War Stim- son and Chief of Staff Marshall for the vastness of the war program and the way it had been en- ergized. Note:-Justice Murphy goes to Ft. Knox Aug. 10 fdr five weeks of tank training. He is paying for his own transportation and food. Queen Wilhemina's Pancakes Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands has learned the joys of American pancakes. Coming south through New England on her special car, she went into the diner for breakfast, scanned the menu. A State Department official accompanying her ordered hot cakes and maple syrup. "What is that?" inquired the Queen. "Your Majesty should try them," suggested the offici , and he placed two orders. When the hot cakes were brought, he gave the Queen careful instructions in the art of placing a pat of butter between two hot cakes. Then he suggested she try a few bites first with- out syrup, then with syrup. The Queen was delighted, and, like any house- wife tasting a new dish, she asked if she might have the recipe. 'Vage Stabilizatioln Inside reason for holding up the vital question of stabilizing wages is a hot backstage row over who will do the stabilizing, although all presi- dential advisers agree Vlat wages must be stabil- ized if the cost of living is to be kept down, The row has almost reached the proportions of the one which threatened on Capitol Hill if the President had followed his first plan and asked Congress to pass wage legislation. When the President changed his mind regard- ing legislation and d'cided to act by Executive Order instead, OPA's General Counsel David Ginsberg prepared the necessary papers for establishing a Wage Policy Commission. This was to have been headed by Gov. Lehman of New York, with j wer to issue directives on wag- es to all Government departments. But immediately half a dozen other agencies bobbed up with the idea that the wage stabiliza- tion issue should be turned over to them. And the legal staffs of the Treasury and War Manpower Commission got together and wortced oat a sub- stitute executive order by which the Wage Policy Commission was to be headed by able Wayne Coy of the Budget Bureau. Meanwhile members of the War Labor Board hinted that they would resign en masse if any other agency started issuing wage directives to them. That's where the matter stands today, with. N. Y. Judge Sam Rosenman, intimate friend of the President, and Supreme Court Justice Byrnes, equally trusted friend, delegated by FDR to see if they can work out some plan on which all warring factions will agree. pusni Edward Perlberg 'Fred M. Ginsberg Morton Hunfer ess . . . . Business Manager . Associate Business Manager ..Publications Manager NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT MANTHO I The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only., Second Front Up To Roosevelt . . T HERE have been enough 'grand- stand' generals in the past month handing out free information on how to go about establishing a second front to form an army by themselves .. . and we are not excep- tions. But to these back seat tank drivers, one thing fhould be made clear: The commander-in-chief of the United States Army and Navy is still the President. Thus, the person who ultimately d- termines whether or not we invade and when, is also the President. This man whom we have entrusted to direct our war effort is not to be considered a dupe of the brass-hats, but rather a reasonably well- informed man, who to all purposes appears to be interested in aiding the Russians and winning the war. Certain facts must be collected when we ask ou.rselves what the goverinment is doing about establishing a second front. 1.) In maintaing relations with Vichy, Pres- ident Roosevelt chose Admiral Leahy, a man hfot groomed for the Homburg hats of the State Department and apparently of the Pres- ident's own choice. Thus it must be allowed that Mt. Roosevelt had some hand in main- taining relations with Vichy. 2.) This sante Leahy has been chosen by the President as assistant Comrnder-in-Chief of the Army and Navy and iis to be pre- sumed that Admiral Leahy gained some infor- mation of the terrain during his brief stay in France. The point we wish to make is this: There is much criticism of our withholding from inva- sion, but there is every evidence of preparations r invasion, even to the probable choice of bat- tle ground--France. The people, then, are criti- cizing the type of invasion we intend, rather than the actual question of invasion itself. The question has come u before our states- men whether we shall have a 'sacrifice invasion' comparable to a Dunkirk, or whether we shall roll up momentum letting the Russians take a beating in the meantime and eventually strike with top force ourselves. The latter course appears, to have been chosen. But in all events the credit or blame for the decision is President Roosevelt's and all arrows aimed at brass-hats e-r silk-hats are simply misdirected. Raymond Clapper, one of the 'inside' colum- nists in Washington, freely admitted in yester- day's column his own lack of knowledge. "And the second front? What point is there tn civilians trying to give advice? Roosevelt and Churchill want a second front as soon as it can hb opened. Only they and the military know the facts sufficiently to make an intelligent deci- sion." We don't ask for blind acceptance, but along military lines a certain amount of faith must be ha.d in our elected statesmen if not our generals. The fact remains that most of the people who are clamoring for a sacrifice' front would be the first ones to criticize the administration for its unnecessary loss of American blood, and for its inefficient prosecution of the war. - Will Sapp Women Follow The Crowd College women smoke "because everyone else does," a survey at Bowling Green (Ohio) State AS OTHERS SEE IT 9 Roosevelt'g Choice Welcomed In New York Gubernatorial Race NE of the most important developments of the summer, war news notwithstanding, was the President's decision to take an active part in the New York gubernatorial campaign. His endorsement of Sen. James M. Mead following a series of conferences with New York political leaders was a hopeful sign of renewed interest in donestic politics. It is an interest the Presi- dent needs to maintain, short, of course, of spending time here that should go to the war effort. Domestic politics are his forte. They are solid ground under his feet. They are his pipeline to the moods and thinking of the American people. Some of the most astute among the men around the President hadc be- come concerned about his total preoccupation with the strategy of worldwide war. They thought he was losing touch with the country and that this loss accounted for his unnecessary hesitancy about imposing the controls necessary to keep' the domestic economy geared to the requirements of war. They felt that he. was underestimating the extent of his victory over the former isolationists, the solidarity of public support of the war effort and the eagerness of the people for strong and exacting leadership. Political Plunge Good For Mead A plunge into the hurly-burly of politics, even if it did not extend beyond the confines of his home state, would be good for him. The admin- istration's stake in the New York contest, while a secondary consideration, was well worth play- ing for. Primarily it was control over the state's Democratic organization-the organization that will in turn control New York's big delegation at the Democratic national convention of 1944. Former Postmaster General James A. Farley, who is still Democratic chairman of New York, had made his bid for this control by lining up what he claimed was a substantial majority of delegates picked by local leaders to attend the state convention in August and pledging them to State Attorney General John J. Bennett for Governor. Bennett had been neither fish nor fowl in the pre-Pearl Harbor fight over fore; n policy, More important, he was Farley's man. Mead, by contrast, had a clear record of New Deal support both in the House and the Senate on foreign as well as domestic policy. And he was Roosevelt's man. Nineteen forty-four is a long way off at the rate world events are marching. But it is not too soon to think about it. If by that time the war isnot yet won, or if the war has been won but the peace not yet made, then some people will begin to demand another term for President Roosevelt. If such a demand should arise, it will come from the people and not the politi- cians. Jim Farley is only one of many politi- cians who could be relied upon to fight it bitterly. Farley Misunderstood Ignoring this issue and returning to the pres- ent: Jim Farley is today one of the most mis- understood men in public life but the misun- Since then Farley has been as bitter as he pre- viously was sweet. He used every trick in the bag in his effort to prevent a third-term nomi- nation. Since Chicago the sharpness of his mal- ice against the President and the endlessness of his supporting complaints have shocked and annoyed even some of Roosevelt's severest critics. Farley's Removal Necessary Depriving Farley of what remains of his po- litical bower has become a desirable and, per- haps, a necessary chore. The nomination and election of Jim Mead would do it. Mead himself may be no ball df fire, but his record is unim- peachable and his bent is honestly liberal. As to sature, he does not suffer by comparison with neither Bennett or Thomas E. Dewey, the probable Republican nominee. Barring some sudden change in the temper of the voters, there seems to be little question that Mead, bolstered by the prestige of the New Deal downstate and his own political standing upstate, can lick Dewey without any trouble. He is the only Democrat with the asset of upstate acceptability who can have the support of the American La- bor Party. Mead is an excellent candidate by any measure. The setup is almost perfect for the President's purposes. He must be getting some chuckles out of it by way of dividend. T]pe political pundits, as if reciting a nursery rhyme in unison, warned at the first sign of nresidential concern with the New York situation that people would prop- erly resent White House interference in local politics, that the President was wasting time he should be devoting to the war and that a Roose- velt-Farley split in the Democratic Party might elect Dewey. Mark Sullivan, David Lawrence and Frank Kent all got easy columns out of this thesis. The New York Daily News, after making it plain that'it would support Dewey in any case, started campaigning for Bennett. When its position was used by the Mead followers as an argument against Bennett's nomination, The News came through with a suggestion that the Democrats draft Governor Lehman for another term. As a reward to the Democrats if they fol- lowed his advice, Captain Joseph Patterson prcmised that his paper would give Lehman a fair break in its news columns in a Lehman- Dewey campaign. Obviously The News, like the rest of the Deweyites. preferred anything to a campaign against a Roosevelt-endorsed liberal and pre-Pcarl Harbor interventionist. FDR Interference Not Resented The alarums of sullivan, Lawrence and Kent had about the same, alert substance as yawns frcm Wynken, Blyken and NOd. New Yorkers are accustomed to hear from Franklin D. Roose- velt, fellow New Yorker, at campaign times. They don't consider his political opinions inter- ference, as the people of certain Southern states did in the so-called purge campaign of 1938. As for the President's time, the New York campaign has occupied about as much of it as his cigarette smoking. The solicitude bf Roosevelt's critics WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1942 VOL. L1 No.36-S 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. Notices The University Bureau of Appoint- ments has received notice of the fol- lowing United States Civil Service Examinations. Applications will be accepted until the needs of the serv- ice have been met. Junior Metallurgists, $2,000 per year. Junior Physicists, $2,000 per year, Rate Clerks: Freight and Pas- senger, $2,300 and $2,600 per year. The United States Civil Service Commission calls particular atten- tion to Junior Professional Assistant positions at $2,000 per year. Closing date is August 27, 1942. This exam- ination is being given for the benefit of Seniors graduatng in September. There are no options, but students are particularly desired in the fields of Public Administration, Business Administration. Economics, Library Science, Statistics and Mathematics through Calculus. Further information may be had from the notices which are on file in the office of the Bureau of Ap- pointments, 201 Mason Hall, office hours 9-12 and 2-4. Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information The Storehouse Building will act as a receiving center for scrap rub- ber and also metals. Ary depart- ment on the Campus'having metals or rubber to dispose of fdr defense purposes, please call Ext. 337 or 317 and the materials will be picked up by the trucks which make regular campus deliveries. Service of the janitors is available to collect the materials from the various rooms in the buildings to be delivered to the receiving location. E. C. Pardon If you have urchased improved property on a land contract and owe a balance of approximately 60 per- cent of the value of the property, the Investment Office, 100, South Wing of University Hall, would be glad to discuss the possibilities of refinancing- your contract through the medium of a mortgage. Such re- financing may effect a savings in interst. Consumer Education Exhibit may be seen daily at the Michigan League. Hours-11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Academic Notice Freshmen, Summer Term, College of Literature, Science, and The Arts: Freshmen may not drop courses without E grade after Saturday, Au- gust 8. In administering this rule, students with less than 24 hours of credit are considered freshmen. Ex- ceptions may be made in extraordi- nary circumstances, such as severe or long continued illness. College of Literature, Science, and The Arts, and Architecture; Schools of Education, Forestry, Music and Public Health: Summer Session stu- dents wishing a transcript of this summer's work only should file a re- quest in Room 4 U. H. several days before leaving Ann Arbor. Failure to file this request before the end of the session will result in a need- less delay of several days. Faculty, College of Literature, Sci- ence, and The Arts: Midsemester reports are due not later than Saturday, August 8. Report cards are being distributed to all departmental offices. Green cards are being provided for fresh- man reports; they should be re- turned to the office of the Academic CounselorsF 108 Mason Hall. White cards, for reporting sophomores, juniors, and seniors should be re- turned to 1220 Angell Hall. Midsemester reports should name those students, freshmen and upper- class, whose standing at midsemester is D or E, not merely those who re- ceived D or E in so-called midsemes- ter examinations. Students electing our courses, but regihteredl1n the other schools or col- leges of the University, should be reported to the school or college in which they are registered.. Additional cards may be had at' 108 Mason Hall or 1220 Angell Hall. Seniors: College of Literature, Science, and The Arts, School of Ed- ucation, School of Music, School of Public Health: Tentative lists of seniors including tentative candi- dates for the rCertificate in Public Health Nursing for both the Sum- mer Session and the Summer Term have been posted on the bulletin board in Room 4, University Hall. If your name does not appear, or, if included there, it is not correctly spelled, please notify the counter clerk. Points Of Refuge . . . World history shows that return to the "eternal verities" is always an Exchange Fellowships and Profes- sorships Leaflets and other informa- tion pertaining to the Exchange fellowships and professorships in Latin-America provided by the gov- ernment of the United States under the convention for the promotion of inter-American cultural relations can be obtained in the office of the In- ternational Center by anyone inter- ested. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for removal of incom- pletes will be Saturdayo August 8. Petitions for extension of time should be filed in the Secretary's Of- fice at once. The final day for dropping courses without record will be Saturday, August 8. A course may be dropped only with the permission of the classifier, after conference with the instructor. Candidates for the Teacher's Cer- tiflcate for August or September, 1942 are requested to call at the office of the School of Education be- fore August 10 to take the Teacher Oath which is a requirement for the certificate. Exhilition of Chinese Painting: Water-colors by Professor Chang Shu-Chi; Rackham Building Gal- leries; Tuesday, August 4, through Saturday, August 8; 2 to 5 and 7 to 10. All Teachers in the summer school who do not have any job for next year please come to our office at once. The State Department would like to have this information. (201 Mason Hall, hours 9-12 and 2-4). University Bureau of Appoint- ments & Occupational Infor- mation Civilian Pilot Training: Learn to fly! Applications are now being made for the next program of Ci- vilian Pilot Training which starts approximately September 1st. A full ten weeks course is given in eight weeks. Detailed information mnay be secured in Room B47, Engineering Building. See Mrs. Fischthal. Lectures Senor Ezequiel Martinez Estrada will offer a public Spanish lecture on Poesia Popular in the Kellogg auditorium at 4:15 p.m. Thursday, August 6th. "Conflicting Ideologies" is the sub- ject of Prof. R. W. SeVars' Leture in the Rackham Amphitheatre, Thursday afternoon at 4:15 o'clock. Today's Lecture-"School Library Service in Michigan-An Analysis of the North Central Association's Sur- vey," Edgar G. Johnston, Associate Professor of Secondary Education and Assistant Director of the Bureau of Cooperation with Educational In- stitutions. (University High School Auditorium.) 4:05 p.m. Lectures in Statistics: Professor Neyman will give the last of his series of lectures on "Methods of Sampling," on Thursday at 8 p.m., inl 3011 Angell Hall. All persons interested are cordially invited , Dr. Willard C. Olson of the Uni- versity Elementary School will dis- cuss "ElementaryrEducation" at 4:05 p.m. Thursday, August 6, in the Uni- versity High Auditorium. Public in- vited. Events Today Women In Education; Miss Rhoda Reddig, Professor of Nursing and Di- rector of the School of Nursing, will be the speaker at the luncheon to- day. Miss Reddig's talk on "Op- portunities in the Nursing Profes- sion" will be especially interesting to those who are interested in the guidance of high school girls. Lunch- eon will be in the Russian Tea Room, Michigan League, from 11:45 to 1:00 o'clock. Bridge this afternoon from 2:00 until 4:30 at the Michigan League. Coffee hour at 4:30 in the Rackhan Building. Speech Students: The activities of the Speech Clinic will be the sub- ject of the departmental assembly at 3 p.m. today in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Movies of the Clinic will be shown, and typical cases will be reviewed. All Speech students should atttend. Final Graduate Coffee Hour at 4:30 in the Men's Lounge of the Rackham Building. All Graduate Students, Faculty, and friends are invited. The A.S.M.E. will not meet as stated. Episcopal Students: Tea will be served for Episcopal students .and their friends this afternoon at Har- ris Hall, 4:00 to 5:15. Evening Prayer will be said at 5:15 in Bishop Wil- liams Chapel. land. All electricals are invited. GOet your tickets from student officers today. "Misalliance," provocative comedy by G. Bernard Shaw, will be pre- sented tonight through Saturday evening by the Michigan Repertory Players of the department of speech. Tickets are on sale daily at the box office, Mendelssohn Theatre. Wesley Foundation: Tea will be served in the student lounge today from 4:00 until 5:30 for students and their friends. Come in for relaxa- tion and conversation. All Education Students: A joint 'meeting of the Men's Education Club and Women in Education will be held tonight at 7:15 at the Michigan Union. Mrs. Mendoza will present a program of music and talk by Latin American students. Refreshments wil be served. Come and bring a Coining Events Phi Eta Sigma will have its first summer meeting Thursday evening at 7:00 in the Michigan Union. ,The meeting will be short, though impor- tant, and will start precisely at 7 o'clock. Professor Percival Price will p)ay one of his own compositions in the carillon recital at 7:15 Thursday eve- ning, August 6, when he presents Sonata for 43 bells, The program will open with Iptermezzo from Cav- atlleria Rusticana and also include English harpsichord pieces, songs by Richard Leveridge and American popular airs. Beethoven Sonata Series: The second and third programs of the series of Beethoven Sonatas by Gil- bert Ross, violinist, and Mabel Ross Rhead, pianist, will be.givei in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Build- ing instead of te Assembly Hall, as previously announced. The larger hall will enable the School of Music to admit the general public withdut tickets. The second of the series will be given at 8:30 p.m. Thursday, August 6, as announced. Inter-Guild will hold its weekly luncheon at 12:15 in the Fireplace Room of Lane 6a, and those who atend the Univrsity Worship Ser- vice areurged to come at 12:30. All members of student 'religious groups are invited to attend; it is desirable to phne reservations to Lane Hall, 4121. Pi Lambda Theta: Honors Day Re- ception at the Woman's Lounge, Rackham Building, Thursday, Au- gust 6th at 8 p.m. Methodist Students: Reservations for the wienie roast at the Island fire-place Fridayrnightat 8:00 p.m should be in by Thursday night. Call 6881 or sign up at the student office. "Post-War Germany" will be the topic of a panel discussion led by Professor J. K. Pollock. The meeting will be held Thursday in the Grand Rapids Room of the Michigan League at 7:55 p.m. Cercle Francais: The next regular meeting will be held at the Michigan League, Thursday at 8 p.m. Mlle. Jeanne Rosselet will read some let- ters from France and Professor Ar- thur L. Dunham will give an illus- trated talk entitled "Illustration de l'opinion publique francaise a l'egard de l'Allemagne pendant la premiere guerre mondiale." Students and fac- ulty are cordially invited. Members of the Cercle who plan to attend the picinic at Portage Lake on August 12 will please notify Mrs. Morris, Miss Olthouse or Mr. Jobin. Math. 347, Seminar in Applied Mathematics, will meet Thursday at 4 p.m. in 312 East Engineering (in- stead of Friday). Professor Wojtas- zak will speak on "Deformation of Plates and Shells." This topic will be continued by Professor Wojtaszak the following Thursday at the same hour. Maurice Gerow, Tenor, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music at 8:30 p.m. Friday, August 7, in the Assembly Hall of the Rack- ham Building. A student of Professor Arthur Hackett, Mr. Gerow will be accompanied at the ,piano by Miss Joan Stevens. The public is cordially invited. Star Clusters and double' stars will be seen from the Angell Hall observ- atory on Friday night, August 7th, from 10-11 o'clock. Blair McClosky, baritone, will pre- sent a recital of songs at 8:30 p.m. Monday, August 10, in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Building. This recital was previously announced as scheduled for the Assembly Hall but the Lecture Hall is now available, and the general public will be admitted without tickets. it