THI MICHIGAN DAILY SAT6URDAY , AUG~UST 12, 1944 -anBatt _ KEEP MOVING: _-_- -- Russian Movie Recommended 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 re- publication of all other matters herein also reserved.- Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as recond-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car rier, $4.50, by mail, $25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 194344 NIGHT EDITOR: DORIS PETERSON Editorials published in The Michigan Daly are written by members of The Daily sta and represent the views of the writers only. Veterans Honored S1RVICEMEN stationed at the University are establishing a precedent worth following in giving a dance today at the USO for 200 vet- erans of this war living in town or attending the University. We are apt today, in our interest in the cur- rent battlefronts, to forget that part of the war which has already been fought. As we look toward victory, we cannot afford to over- look the men who have made victory possible. More than 1,000,000 men have been medically discharged from the armed forces and are being slowly absorbed back into civilian life. We cannot forget the debt we owe these men. University civilians are lagging far behind the armed forces in recognition of the sacri- fices discharged veterans have made. The dance being held tonight by servicemen here for war veterans is a fitting recognition of their ser- vices. Much more recognition of these men is needed from all of us. -Doris Peterson Canadian Unity Hit CANADA'S national unity was recently dealt a severe blow when the Liberal party of Quebec suffered a heavy defeat in the provincial elections under the administration of Premier Godbout. The Liberal majority in Quebec's legislature was entirely disrupted, with the vote heavily divided between the two isolationist parties who campaigned against the Federal government's meddling in "provincial affairs." Although the extreme nationalist Bloc Populaire failed to car- ry the province, it is certain that the almost as reactionary Union Nationale Leader Duplessis will be asked to form the next ministry. The appalling defeat of the Liberal party in Quebec came as a surprise for two reasons. First, Quebec has been the traditional van- guard of the party. Second, the liberal govern- ment of Prime Minister Mackenzie King did everything in its power to refrain from offend- ing the province, even resorting to a drastic program of appeasement. Since the French Canadians of Quebec have always been hostile to Canada's entrance into the war ,the federal administration refrained from applying military conscription to for- eign service, even though it was authorized to do so by a general referendum. The policy of appeasement traveled its full circle, until the burden of fighting was disproportionately placed on the English speaking people of the country. ° The Liberal party of Quebec was Canada's last hope for the province's co-operation in post- war planning. With its downfall, the country will be faced with a serious problem of coordi- nation both in the military and in the civil spheres. -Neva Negrevski Argentme Stake COMMENTS by responsible sources in London, like "The Economist," indicate that Britain would be reluctaht to impose economic sanctions to end the rapidly developing fascism in Ar- gentina. This reluctance is understandable, in view of the importance to Britain, especially during the war, of the supplies she imports from Argen- To Make it Run 'Smoothly WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Baruch Inclines to Dewey By ANN FAGAN GINGER THIS is not a blurb, but a recom- mendation. "The Childhood of Maxim Gorky," playing at the Rack- ham Auditorium tonight, is the kind of movie dyspeptic critics abhor. It has a good plot, the characterizations are excellent, the photography and sound track are better-than-aver- age. We saw the movie two years ago, and, although, we remember neither specific lines nor specific scenes, we have a very vivid memory of the feeling and temper of Gorky's home, and the times in which he lived. The violent family arguments and the stern authoritarianism of Max- im's grandfather are tellingly pres- ented, as well as the fact that the primary factor in family living- sometimes unifying, sometimes dis- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SATURDAY, AUG. 12, 1944 VOL. LIV No. 29-S All notices for The Daily Official Bul- tetin are to be sent to the Office of the summer Session, in typewritten forn by 3:30 p. m, of the day preceding its publication, except on saturday when the notices should be submitted by 11:30 a. m. Notices Students, Summer Term, College of Literature, Science and the Arts: Except under extraordinary circum- stances, courses dropped by upper- classmen after today will be recorded with a grade of E. E. A. Walter Varsity Glee Club: There will be an important final meeting, Monday, Aug. 14, 7 p.m. New songs. David Mattern The United States Civil Service Commission gives notice that the closing date for acceptance of appli- cations for Junior Engineer, Salary $2,433 a year, will be Sept. 6, 1944. The closing date forbAssistant Mater- ials Inspector, Salary $3,163, Radio Monitoring Officer, $3,163 and $3,828 a year, Radio Intercept Officer, $2,433 and $3,163 a year, and Radio Operator, $2,188 a year, will be Aug. 21, 1944. Applications must be filed with the United States Civil Service Commission, Washington, 25, D.C. not later than those dates. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information United States Civil Service An- nouncements for Substitute Railway Postal Clerks have been received in our office. Salary $2,464 a year. For further details stop in at 201 Mason Hall. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information Civilian Freshmen in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts may obtain their five-week progress reports in the Academic Counselors' Office, 108 Mason Hall, from 8:30 to 12 a.m. and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. afcording to the following schedule: Surnames beginning A through K, Thursday, Aug. 10. Surnames beginning L through Z, Friday, Aug. 11. Chairman, Academic Counselors Arthur Van Duren Chairman, Academic Counselors By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON, Aug. 11-Friends of gaunt, grey Bernie Baruch are chuckling over how he always has a political anchor out to windward. They describe him as the cat with nine lives- always landing right side up politically. Now it looks as if he were warming up to Dewey. When Franklin Roosevelt was up for nomi- nation in Chicago back in the almost forgotten days of 1932, Baruch fought to the last ditch for the late Governor Albert Ritchie of Mary- land. Bernie was Ritchie's financial godfather. After the convention, he switched to FDR, plunked $77,000 into the Roosevelt campaign chest. One straw was the recent revelation that Bar- uch's long-time economic adviser, Fred Searls, Jr., had contributed $2,000 to Dewey's campaign fund. Searls had been placed in the White House by Baruck as adviser to War Mobilizer Byrnes.. Last week, further persuasive evidence reached the White House regarding Bernie Baruch's next political jump. Gathering for the opening of Darryl Zanuck's new film "Wilson," came ex- Governor James Cox of Ohio, Democratic can- didate for President in 1920 who was defeated by Harding; also Albert Lasker, who managed Harding's campaign but who has been a close friend of Governor Cox's since. Comparing notes on their way to the "Wilson" opening, Governor Cox remarked: "Bernie Baruch has been trying to tell me what a great man Dewey is and what a fine President he would be. I used all the argu- ments on him, asking him to tell me how Dewey would be able to negotiate with Stalin and Churchill. But I couldn't convince Ber- nie. He had almost a fervor in his eye when he talked about Dewey." "Yes," replied Albert Lasker, "that's exactly what Baruch has been trying to tell me." Lumber Hold-Up *** With lumber one of the scarcest commodities in the whole war picture, a situation is boiling to a head inside the War Production Board wherein the lumber division has put obstacles in the path of developing 35,000 acres of choice pine near San Francisco. The peculiar delays have caused tempers to boil inside the Government and may result in some nasty accusations on Capitol Hill. Inside fact is that the Army and the Navy both want the tract developed; the Office of Defense Trans- portation has indicated its okay, also the War effort would not be injured by the proposed embargo, British economic interests would still be reluctant because of their stake in postwar Argentine trade and their rivalry with the United States in this connection. One thing is certain: if Argentina is not stop- ped now, the price of stopping her will be much greater in the end. -New Republic Manpower Commission; and the U. S. Forest Service is ready to throw in some adjacent Gov- ernment tracts. Nevertheless, WPB lumber division officials, some of them previously with big lumber com- panies, continue to hold up approval. Now A. B. Angle, a small businessman, is trying to cut it, and has secured the definite support of the Smaller War Plants Corporation to the tune of $2,100,000. Army-Navy OK Spurned ... However, Smaller War Plants cannot act without the okay of the WPB lumber division, and here Angle has got nowhere. The lumber division is supposed to approve projects okayed by the Army or Navy, and in this case Capt. W. J. Hines, U. S. Navy, San Francisco office, wrote to Philip Boyd, head of the lumber divi- sion, asking him to "give early consideration to this application." Also, Col. Fred G. Sherrill, lumber procurement officer for the Army, Navy and Maritime Commission in Washington, tele- phoned H. E. Holman of the lumber division, telling him he considered the project a good one and was ready to write him a letter to that effect if desired. Holman, however, spurned the Army's okay. Later Holman, talking to an official of the Smaller War Plants Corporation, accidentally dropped a remark which may be the give-away as to why the big lumber boys in the WPB lumber division don't want the Tehama tract developed. "The competition would be too tough," Hol- man remarked, then suddenly corrected him- shelf. "I mean, the competition in getting equipment." Meanwhile, lumber continues one of the scar- cest war materials in the nation, much more acute than steel or aluminum. Break for G.I's . , The War Department finally has decided to give G. I. Joes returning from overseas a real break. For months, the War Department has been deluged with complaints from returning doughboys that they were herded into camps, given brief furloughs, and then shipped out again without even so much as a physical examination. Some vets have protested that, after being overseas for a long time, they couldn't even get furloughs after returning to this country. Now, Gen. Marshall at long last has taken steps to equalize things for the boys who fight on the ground. He has signed an order under which General Somervell, chief of the Army Service Forces, will take over scores of large hotels and summer resorts where returning "dog- faces" can go for rest and rehabilitation. All members of the Army Ground Forces returning from overseas will be eligible for this special care, will also be assured psychiatric advice and reasonable furloughs. (Copyright, 1944, United Features Syndicate) ruptive-was decidedly the economic one. The poverty of life in czarist Russia and the lack of opportunities for youth cannot be missed, even by the most white of Russian-sym- pathizers. The curtain rises at 8:15. * * x We spent a long time yesterday afternoon reading the procedure servicemen must go through if they want to vote. And the red-tape through which county clerks must struggle is even more forbidding. If there were no time limit on the mat- ter, it is quite possible that at least a few servicemen would actually get their ballots counted after all the middlemen involved (from army vot- ing officials to Secretaries of State and mail clerks) had learned their jobs. But you can't apply for fed- eral ballots until October 1st (in order to give the states a chance to send out state ballots), and they must be returned to the precinct where the serviceman lives by November 7th. The worst feature of the federal ballot is not the time element, however. It is the fact that it is a blank ballot. If you want to vote for any official, you have to know his name. You have to know how to spell it, what's more. And in some cases you have to know the initial, so you won't confuse it with another candidate by the same name. Voters who are accustom- ed to voting a "straight ticket," and seldom bother to learn the names of party men, will only be able to write in "Roosevelt" or "Dewey," and perhaps the name of their senator. This might serve to wake up the electorate, to make them more con- scious of candidates and platforms. But in the case of the servicemen Auditorium. The public is cordially invited. On Monday, Aug. 21, Professor Oscar Lange, University of Chicago, will speak on' "The Soviet Union in World Politics" at 4:10 p.m., in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The lecture is open to the public free of charge. Academic Notices Graduate Students ,n Speech: All students in Speech who expect to receive advanced degrees in August or October should come to the Sp'eech Office, 3211 Angell Hall, some time before 4:30 p.m. Monday. Demonstration Debate: The na- tional high school debate question, "Resolved, That the Legal Voting Age Should be Lowered to 18 Years," will be the subject of a demonstra- tion debate sponsored by the Depart- mnent of Speech at 4 p.m. Monday in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Conference in Radio: A conference on the production and direction of radio will be held by Robert M. Shayon, Producer-Director, Colum- bia Broadcasting System, at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building un- der the auspices of the Department of Speech. The conference will be open to the public. Concerts Carillon Recital: Percival Price will devote his Sunday afternoon carillon recital to the music of Bach and Mozart. The program will be given on Aug. 13 at 3 p.m. Band Concert: On Sunday eve- ning, Aug. 20, at 7:30, the University Band, under the direction of William Revelli, will present an outdoor con- cert on the steps of the Rackham Building. In case of rain, the concert will be given in Hill Auditorium. The public is cordially invited. On Tuesday evening, Aug. 22, the School of Music will present a recital of string quartet music. Please note that this date has been substituted for Monday evening, Aug. 14, as has been previously stated. The program will be under the direction of Mr. Gilbert Ross, a member of the fac- ulty. The performers are members of Mr. Ross's String Quartet Class. The recital will be given in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre at 8:30 p.m. Exhibitions General Library, Main Lobby. Mod- ern fine printing. Museums Building : "'What the Ser- viceman May See in the Pacific Area." (Animal Exhibits). Rackham Galleries: Original water colors by Soviet children (50 pic- tures), and Reproduction of Book Illustrations by Soviet Artists. Cir culated by the National Council o American - Soviet Friendship, New York. Open daily except Sunday, 2-5, and 7-10 p.m. Clements Library: "Army News and who intend to vote, since they can't read "The Nation," "The New Re- public," or even "Harper's," the only way they'll know who to vote for is to watch the "Chicago Tribune" and vote for the men McCormick damns, (and, though he tries pretty hard, the Colonel occasionally misses a few.) The assumption that a man loses his ability to reason when he enters the armed forces of a Democratic nation engaged in fighting a people's war against an idea (fascism), as well as an actuality (the Nazi and Japanese armies), is a dangerous one. And one that fits very ill with the theory of early America: that the people should form the militia to protect the nation, and that fight- ing for the right to vote went along with voting to decide when to fight, We hope that servicemen don't get disgusted and disinterested in the procedures of democracy, pri- marily because if they do, postwar America can be turned over to nationalists and petty fascists who are interested in taking over these procedures. And we hope service- men vote also because that is what the reactionaries and Republicans worked so hard to prevent. * * * Our sister is taking a correspond- ence course in anthropology from the University of Texas. Since students don't have to send in photographs on their application blanks, there is a printed statement on the outside of the envelopes: "Negroes not permit- ted to take courses by correspond- prnce." Perhaps the University officials feared that northern postmen would- n't automatically understand, and might think that education was one of the things which should be avail- able to anyone in a democracy. Events Today All Alpha Kappa Alpha Women are invited to attend a tea in the East Conference Room of the Horace Rackham Building today from 3 p.m. until 5 p.m. Company G ad the Judge Advo- cates are invited to attend a dance at Jordan Hall from 8:30 to 11 o'clock tonight. Michigan Sailing Club: Important meeting today at one o'clock in the Union. Absolutely necessary for all members to attend. "Fresh Fields," comedy by Novello, is being presented by the Michigan Repertory Players of the Department of Speech tonight for the last time in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, Tickets on sale in the theatre box office. Box office hours: Monday and Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., for the balance of the week, 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Russian Film: "Childhood of Max- im Gorky" tonight, 8:15 p.m. Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Admission free. This Saturday's Dance is sponsored by Regiment 2, Colonel Norma Cook. The servicemen are entertaining the discharged veterans here in town this evening. The famous quartet from Rumor Has It will sing. Come one, come all. Swimming Parties: Every Satur- day afternoon. Leave for Whitmore Lake at 1 p.m. from the USO. 'Coming Events The Graduate Outing Club will meet Sunday at 2:30 p.m. at the northwest corner of the Rackham Building for a hike. Total hiking distance about ten miles. Bring your lunch with you. All graduate and professional stu- dents and alumni are cordially in- vited to attend. Tuesday, Aug. 15: The Sociedad Hispanica presents Dr. Gabriel Atri- stain of Mexico City, who will speak in Spanish on "Tipos Populares del Mexico de Antano y del Hogano;" and Mr. Glenn D. Curtis of Detroit, who will show and comment on his colored motion pictures of Mexico and Cuba. The meeting will be held at 8 p.m. in the League. The public is cordially invited. Churches The Lutheran Student Association will meet in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall this Sunday afternoon at 4:30. Miss Ching-Wen Hu will be the speaker. Supper will be served at 6. Both Zion and Trinity Lutheran Churches will have worship services at 10:30 Sunday morning. Service- men and students are urged to at- tend these services. University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw, has its Sunday service at 11 a.m., with the sermon by the Rev. Alfred Scheips, "Taking Fare- well." Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student ,. City of Detroit Civil Service An- nouncements for Auto Painter and Striper, Body Upholsterer, Body Up- holsterer Helper and Printing Plant Birdery Helper, have been received in our office. For further details stop in at 201 Mason Hall. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information Recommendations for Departmen- tal Honors: Teaching departments wishing to recommend tentative Aug- ust graduates from the College of Literature, Science and the Arts and the School of Education for depart- mentalhonors should send such names to the Registrar's Office, Rm. 4, University Hall, by noon Aug. 30. Recommendations for tenative Octo- ber candidates should be in the Reg- istrar's Office by noon Oct. 25. Robert L. Williams Assistant Registrar Lectures Aug. 15: Professor Preston W. Slosson. "Interpreting the News." 4:10 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. On Wednesday, Aug. 16, Dr. En- rique Testa of Chile will speak on "How Chile Strengthens the Inter- American Front" at 8 p.m., Kelloggt I BARNABY Mrs. Baxter. Barnaby's bringing his Fairy Godfather here for dinner, And that dopey King of the Sea.. . Such nonsense. If these-imaginary Pixies you and garnaby see are real, why don't t ever seethem? By Crockett Johnson - Y HrL TI ,to - - - L"- - I - A -