THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JULY 30, mmommomm"Mmmmo Fifty-Fourth Year .1 . --v / ,, vi Edited and managed by students of the University Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control Student Publications. Editorial Staff e Farrant ty Ann Koffman r Wallace r Mantho IA ,Amer . ". Managing Editor . . Editorial Director . SCity Editor * . Sports Editor £ £ A 5 I'4 ry 1 cLJ DUAND YER Well, I'll Tell You - It Was Like This" Business Staff Business Manager The Undeveloped Skeleton Telephone 23-24-1 By STAN WALLACE STUDENT government is dead to an intents and purposes on the Michigan campus. This fact de- mands our attention. Long have there been students who, like an indifferent citizen who only votes when his fifth cou- sin is a candidate, have viewed campus life apart from academic pursuits with little interest. These in a cursory calculation of the campus are, or should be, a neg- ligible number and don't demand our attention. But never have there been so many apathetic students here as in recent years, students who have crawled into their own shells and remained aloof from all that goes on about them. In this self-sufficiency lies defeat, and defeat in every campus ac- tivity is what we are enduring. Student government completely collapsed on the campus in the spring of 1942. The Student Sen- ate was originally designed to be the only all-campus legislative body, and it took as its task the translation of the will of the cam- pus into action. The body was organized on a democratic basis, annual elec- tions were held, but soon the plague appeared. Factions de- veloped, the student boIy became disinterested, the Senate worked for itself without campus sup- port and attempted to approach University officials with student problems without student back- ing. After the original fire of the or- ganizing leaders disappeared with their graduation, the Senate in a mysterious fashion disintegrated and sang its swan song to a "dead" campus. THE STORY of fraternity gov- ernment follows the same sad pattern. The house presidents were organized into the Interfra- ternity Council under authority of the Student Affairs committee. Every project of the IFC came to naught because the enthusiasm; for student government lost its force when programs got down to individual members. The IFC though still intact, has lost much of whatever force and influence it had in campus affairs. The same may be said of Con- gress, independent men's organiza- tion, the Men's Judiciary Council, and all the rest. The form was there but the impact of war brought the fallacies to light and student government of an active nature yet remains a dream on the Michigan campus. The fundamental explanation is lack of student enthusiasm and participation in its own govern- ing bodies. We seemed to be content to accept policies and programs handed down from the University when the necessity for action was pressing. Yet we were the first to complain that we had no voice in our own af- fairs. But wasn't that a voice we ourselves didn't seem to care enough about to support? This is all of the past. The im- pact of the war is forcing nations to re-orient their thinking. The world is moving to new heights and the Michigan campus still stands stuck in the mire disinter- est and indifference. Further reflection on the prob- lem has revealed something even more deplorable and that is op- position. To be successful any at- tempt at student government must have the full and unqualified sup- port of the entire student body. There must not even be an un- conscious effort on the part of one student to hinder the program. Thesethings have happened and in part tell why the Michigan cam- pus is now stagnant. Cheating has been rampant in many classes. The moral fi- bre of some students has seemed to decay, to disintegrate, to com- pletely disappear. Some of us don't look with earnest purpose at what we are doing; we try to "just get by" with a minimum of effort. That old sense of American fair play has almost been eclipsed by personal ,elfish- ness that has transcended any group action. Our attitude, or lack of it, has been the same for all situations. We just get by in class, we don't consider the other fellow, we don't cooperate in worthy projects-we have no student government, THOSE WHO would ascribe this malignant illness to the fact that the generation of our fathers "sold us down the river" would evade the issue. We aren't living in the past. Our time is now, our future is before us to make or break as we see fit. That is what I mean when I say we ought to look over our own campus situation. We must make progress-standing still means going backward. The whole stream of life has passed us by. Michigan will be eclipsed by other schools unless thie stu- dents can show their whole hearted determination to help themselves. We must make our own way, chart our future course now. We can't wait any longer. We must make this campus ready to ac- comniodate great numbers of returning war veterans. There are big jobs ahead of us and we can't fail to meet them with full steam and determination. The time is now. We have broken with the past, we have scrapped all tlat those who have gone before worked so industriously to build up. Our position is one of moral disinte- gration. Call it what you will but the fact remains that we are dissatis- fied with our present position and yet we haven't raised a finger to aid our own cause. What we need is a re-awakening of our spirit, of our fervor to fight, to work for what we want. It must come now, we must face the issue. Either we work together now or continue complaining of a condi- tion directly traceable to ourselves. Which shall it be? REPREVNTRD FOR NATIONAL ADVERTIBING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADtsON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CNICAGO - BOSTON . LOS ANGELES . SAN FRANCISCO Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or therwise credited in this newspaper. A rights of re- ublication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as econd-glass mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- ter, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. W ember, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 NIGHT EDITOR: DORIS PETERSON Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. [ RATHER BE RIGHT: I New Political Pattern Emerges By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, July 29-Don't look now, but Senator "Cotton Ed" Smith of South Caro- lina has just lost his first election in 36 years. He resembles a bale of his favorite commodity falling off a 'truck. This forces trend-spotters, like myself, to ask how it can happen that ohe of the most bitter of anti-Rooseveltian Southerners can take his first licking in a generatiqn, in a Democratic primary, within less than a week after Henry Wallace, the pro-Rooseveltian, was defeated in Chicago. Is the Democratic party racing madly off in all, directions, clipping both liberals and reaction- aries indiscriminately? Is it sore at everybody? Is it out of control? Has it stopped making sense? Or is there, perhaps, some sort of unifying trend underlying these apparently con- tradictory events? The Jazz Babies of Reaction The problem is made the more fascinating by the fact that South Carolina and Texas have been linked in the public mind as the twin cen- ters of anti-Roosevelt revolt in the South. If South Carolina is the center of anti-Roosevelt feeling in the South, and if "Cotton Ed" Smith is the center of anti-Roosevelt feeling in South Carolina, then how does it happen that this champ of champs is lying on his back with a daisy in his hand? I begin my analysis by venturing to suggest that an entire group of American politicians is on its way out. This group might be described as consisting of the jazz babies of reaction. This group is not in trouble merely because it is against Roosevelt; lots of good Americans are against Roosevelt, and lots of them are winning primaries. But this is the group of the violent ones, of those who have made a kind of smirking, screaming, slapstick vaude- ville act of their opposition to the President. These are the men who have run shouting into the lower House, like Mr. Dies of Texas, yammering about some non-existent Guy Fawkes plot to destroy the national legislature. These are the men who have thrown every- thing they could at the President, including the "white supremacy" issue; like "Cotton Ed" himself, stalking spectacularly out of the 1936 convention because a Negro mini- ster was scheduled to deliver a prayer. These are not men who have opposed the President with dignity, and on lofty grounds, but men who have tried to undercut him, like Mr. Starnes of Alabama, by proving that he and his uncles and his cousins and his aunts were all Communists. They Have Swung it Out These men have not merely sung the song of opposition to the President, and to liberal- ism; they have swung it. They have made a routine of it, with tall story, funny joke and swaying hip. Their performances on the floors of Congress have become as routinized as the buck-and-wing. And the public, after watch- ing this act for several years, seems to have decided that it is pretty corny. POR, WHILE some of the jazz babies of reac- tion are left, "Cotton Ed" is out, and Dies is out, and Starnes is out; they have joined "Gene" Talmadge of Georgia, and other prede- cessors in defeat; men of whom the South has had enough. These are men who danced on Roosevelt's grave without taking the precau- tion to bury him. We might say that with the gradual political extinction of this group, a major ultra-reactionary drive has reached its strange apogee, and is actually declining. Yes, Something is Happening Now, to hot-foot it back to Chicago: In Chi- cago we saw Wallace defeated. But the liberal Mr. Wallace Was defeated by the liberal Mr. Truman. He was defeated by a compromise pitched at a high level. He was not defeated by one of the jazz babies of reaction. He was defeated by a moderate and reasonable man; and the jazz babies had to stand behind this moderate man, to get any house for themselves in Chicago. Just so, "Cotton Ed" has been defeated, not by a rootin' tootin' liberal, exactly, but, at least, by a sober and moderate liberal, Governor Johnston. Can we not see a pattern in all this? Is it not a pattern of defeat for violent opinion and bitter irreconcilability; a pattern of compro- mise and moderation? Something important is going on in the Demo- cratic party. But it is not at all what the sulky choristers of riot and dismay think is going on. (Copyright, 1944, New 'York Post Syndicate) Dominic Says "T HE CHURCH can render no greater service to modern youth than to make the mean- ings of science, philosophy and religious experi- ence interchangeable in a consistent and rational universe of meanings and discourse," (Bower). All of which is true, but what of that particu- lar youth whose church and elementary school have failed him just there? Annually a few freshmen, called upon to assume Evolution in their science classes in the University, come to emotional disturbance during semester examina- tions. These isolated instances, due not to the facts of science nor the nature of religion, indicate a persistent conflict between certain spokesmen in two fields of learning. The science lecturer who knows that by many the Bible is taught as the infallible word of God, can readily obviate the difficulty. If such a lecturer understands that some homes fail to re-think childhood concepts with adolescent youth; that the high school teacher frequently evades the work of re-orientation which such homes impose on the public school, and that our church leaders in many cases hold tenaciously against any approach of the scientific method to the historic claims of Scriptural infallibility, he also will understand that an orthodox youth may have become the pathetic victim of a social situation. Serious cultural lag frequently de- stroys the freedom and retards the intellectual and spiritual growth of our youth. Other things being equal, it is the most creative who are most sensitive and thus most apt to suffer. Here we are in an age where thesciences of bacteriology and biology are changing the daily life of humanity, performing mir- acles in every hamlet, and serving our men in remote parts of, the globe, and yet many men now the responsible cus- todians of the sacred traditions of religion, persist in given antagonisms which presumably were resolved during previo s generations. The result is that some students tach the University before they are ready for that "rational universe of meanings" to which Dr. Bower refers. A youth reared on a religion accepted as a dogma never to be re-examined can be intro- duced to Medicine and the sciences only by a re-study of his own faith in terms of his new learning. Whether done in the secondary school or the college, that re-study amounts to the salvation of a soul, the unifying of a person not isolated and set off from society to function in prayer and beyond the grave, but to act now within the dynamic life of a university where mind is supremely central and mental integrity is sacred. "Put off thy shoes. The place where thou standeth is holy ground." Ex. 3:5. -Edward W. Blakeman, Counselor in Religious Education W HEN American news agencies were demand- ing more reporters at the front, and when one hysterically exclaimed, "This is the biggest story since the Crucifixion," an official at SHAEF replied: "I understand that that event was fairly adequately covered by only four re- porters." e-In Fact DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Quijote" at 8 p.m. in the League. The meeting is open to the public without charge. Tuesday, Aug. 1: University Lec- ture. "What Language Do You Speak?" Fred S. Dunham, Associate Professor of Latin and of the Teach- ing of Latin. 4:05 p.m., University High School Auditorium. Auspices, School of Education. Wednesday, Aug. 2: "China and America Face the Future." The Hon- orable Walter H. Judd, M.D., repre- sentative from Minnesota and former medical missionary in China. 8:30 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall. The' public is cordially invited. Wednesday, Aug. 2: University Lec- ture. "Brazil, Steppingstone to Al- lied Victory." Dr. Egberto Teixeira of Brazil. 8 p.m., Kellogg Auditorium. Auspices, Latin - American Society and the International Center. Thursday, Aug. 3: Professor Shih Chia Chu will not lecture on this date, but will lecture, as previously scheduled, on Aug. 10. Thursday, Aug. 3: "Interpreting China to the West." Dr. Arthur Hum- mel, Chief, Division of Orientalia, Library of Congress. 8:30 p.m., Rack- ham Lecture Hall. The public is cordially invited. Friday, Aug. 4: "China Hopes and Aims." Dr. Y. C. Yang, President of Soochow University. 8:30 p.m., Rack- ham Lecture Hall. The public is cor- dially invited. Exhibitions Exhibitions, College of Architec- ture and Design: "Look at your Neighborhood"; circulated by Museum of Modern Art; consisting of drawings, photo- graphs, and plans illustrating hap- hazard building and need for good play. Ground floor cases, Architec- ture Building. Student work continued on dis- planning. South end of downstairs corridor, Architecture Building. Open daily, ,9 to 5, through July 30, except on Sunday. The public is invited. low to Liberalism only) photographic exhibit circu- lated by the National Council of American - Soviet Friendship, New York. Open daily except Sunday, 2-5 and 7-10 p.m. Rackham Exhibition Rooms: Each afternoon during the Conference on China, beginning Wednesday this week, there will be on display from four to six p.m. an exhibit of Chinese objects of art, with a collection of articles in everday use, which have been loaned for this occasion by the Museum of Anthropology of the Uni- versity and by private collectors. The Institute of Pacific Relations will have on display books, publications and educational materials of particu- lar interest to teachers planning a China program in the school cur- riculum. Michigan Historical Collections, 160 Rackham Building. The Growth of the University of Michigan in Pic- tures. Legal Research Library: Fine bin- dings by William C. Hollands, Lower corridor cases. Museums Building: Celluloid rep- roductions of Michigan fish. Loaned through the courtesy of the Institute of Fisheries Research, Michigan De- partment of Conservation. Events Today Your USO has a genial habit of having Open House come Sunday afternoons. From 2:30 to 3:30 there's the music hour in the lounge. Always comfortably cool. Refreshments? Help yourself. USO Brunch on Sunday, every Sunday. Sleep late and amble over to the Club for Sunday breakfast. We're going to have--well,, come on and see for yourself. Find out what the other half does. The tour of the Willow Run Bomber plant leaves the USO at 1 p.m. Twelve lucky men can see the inside of one of the largest bomber plants in the world. Sign up at the USO. 'Coming Events Sociedad Hispanica: The adenda of the Sociedad Hispanica for the coming week will include four events. There will be a meeting at 8 p.m., Tuesday, in the League, at which time Mr. Emiliano Gallo will speak on "La Tragicomedia de Don Qui- jote." The entertainment will also include a program of Spanish violin music and a social hour. In addition, those interested in practicing their Spanish informally will meet for con- versation and refreshments on Tues- day and Wednesday in the League Grill Room at 4 p.m. and on Thurs- day at 4:15 in the International Cen- ter. All meetings of the club are free at the Rackham Building from 10 a.m. next Wednesday, Aug. 2, through Saturday evening, Aug. 5. There will be special panels, luncheons, lectures by renowned speakers and Chinese exhibitions. A complete program for the conference may be secured by anyone interested at the Summer Session Office, 1213 Angell Hall, or in the Rackham Lobby. Play "Journey to Jerusalem" by Maxwell Anderson, will be given next week, Wednesday, Aug. 2, through Saturday, Aug. 5, by the Michigan Repertory Players, Department of Speech, at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are on sale at the box office daily except Sunday. Dr. Elzeda Clover, Assistant Pro- fessor of Botany and Assistant Cura- tor in the Botanical Gardens, will conduct a discussion and show a film "Shooting the Rapids of. the Colo- rado River" in the Mary Henderson Room at the Michigan League on Wednesday, Aug. 2 at 7:30 p.m. This event is sponsored by Women. in Education and is open to all who are interested. All women interested"in Education are invited to luncheon, Russian Tea Room, Michigan League, Wednesday, Aug. 2, from 11:45 to 1 o'clock. Speaker will be Miss Margaret Moye, Teacher, English Language Insti- tute, who will discuss the topic "The English Language Institute and Lat- in-Americans." Come 'and bring your friends. French Tea: Tuesday, Aug. 1, at 4 p.m. in the Grill Room of the Michigan League.'Charles E. Koella French Club: The fifth meeting of the Club will take place Thursday, Aug. 3, at 8 p.m. in the Michigan League. Miss Lois M. Gunden, Grad., will speak on "Mes experiences en France de 1941 a 1943." Group sing- ing and social hour. All students of the Summer Session and the Summer Term as well as all servicemen are cordially invited to the weekly meet- ings of the French Club which are free of charge. Charles E. Koella Concerts Carillon Recital: On Sunday, July 30, at 3 p.m., Percival Price will pre- sent 'a carillon recital which will in- elude original carillon arrangements of folk songs, as well as piano pieces by Schumann and Couperin. Student Recital: Miss Jacqueline Bear, soprano, will present a song- recital on Thursday, Aug. 3, at 8:30 p.m. in the Assembly Hall of the Rackham Building. Her program will include compositions by Verdi, De- bussy, Brahms and Rachmaninoff. Miss Bear will be accompanied by Miss Mary Evans Johnson, pianist. PROGRESSIVISM received another major blow last week when Laurence Duggan of the State Department, one of the few remain- ing liberals in that body of arch-conservatives, resigned, a victim of the Berle faction in the Department. Duggan was among the first to fight fas- cism, actively supporting the Spanish loyal- ists in their struggle against Franco. More recently he has advocated fair and concrete cooperation with Russia, has consistently op- posed the Vichy and Darlanism sympathies of his superiors, and has recognized the danger of the Falangist movement in Latin America. Barle's antagonism toward him arises out of Duggan's friendship for former Under-Secretary of State Sumner Welles, who resigned over the issue of appeasement. The State Department is earning a malodorous reputation for purging itself of competent men whose only fault lies in their refusal to com- promise their belief in popular government with the wishy-washy policy of the Department. LIBERALS, who approved Berle's appointment because of his early idealism, have lost their faith; for Berle has rejected all pretense to progressivism, substituting for it what he con- siders a hardboiled realistic approach. Of him, Robert Bendiner in his book "The Riddle of the State Department", says: "The man, who, by his own admission, went into the Department 'on condition that I could do some dreaming' before long became the overly shrewd diplomat who fully endorsed Clements books. Library: AssociationI Rackham Galleries: "Scenes and People of the Caucasus," (this week BARNABY r f,. I can tell you what we'll find, Barnaby. We'll find your boat floating off shore because the string has been taken off .. 1 See. No Leprechaun nor anything else is sailing that boat. And- ' -I; By Crockett Johnson Gee. How did your father know your1 Fairy Godfather wouldn't be here?. .. I. If', ,.,:-a,,,ane. i I I