PAGE TWO THE MICHIG A N'fiA 1IN A Ax 1.:1 1TJL.E lu l.r..[ l1 ,L'i. k11 "tV1LX WEDNESDAYT, SJVLY 12, 1944 Fifty-Fourth Year KEEP MOVING; T Ihe Need for a Practical Freedom t ._ Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Jane Farrant Betty Ann Koffman Stan Wallace hank Mantho Peg Wess . Managing Editor . . Editorial Director . . . City Editor . Sports Editor *Women's Editor Ilk~ ".' 1 If, Y *r " 14 33 I ~ ' k;y .;: _: : . Lee Amer Business Staff Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 REPRESENTED FOR NATION^L ADVERTieiNG BY National Advertising Service, inc. College Publishers Representative 420MAo iasoN Ave. NEW YORK. N. Y. CiflsO * BOSTON " LO* AiskLris Si N FRANcisco 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- pubiication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mall matter. Subscriptions durlg the regular school year by car- rier, $4.25, by mail, $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 NIGHT EDITOR: NEVA NEGREVSKI Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. I' .s j i Back to 1940? 'Und Stay There! You Are Sick with RETREAT FEVER!' I'D RATHER BE RIGHT WHEN Thomas Dewey's picture was shown on the screen of the Michigan Theatre last *eek, he was greeted with a salvo of applause nhd a chorus of hisses. The hisses were one of the most shocking evi- dences of the immaturity of some in that audience. We realize that the majority of the Univer- sity students do not have the reslect for and cohfidence in Dewey that is exhibited in out- state Michigan. But for some of them to show iheir dislike of him and what he stands for by hissing is totally uncalled for. Nor was Dewey the only Republican to be hissed. Warren, Hoover, Bricker, Mrs. Luce all came in for their share of hissing whenever they said something to criticize the present adminis- iration. It would appear that the young Demo- crats on campus are afraid to take sanely any criticism which might embarrass their idol. WE ARE NO LONGER in the days of whisky- barrel voting, wherein a voter cast his ballot for the man whose supporters would be most likely to punch him on the jaw if he didn't. Our electoral system does not put a man in offige solely because he gets the fewest catcalls and hisses. Those who do not like Dewey may say so in a dignified fashion at the polls next November. They may express their views in a sane man- her in the public columns of The Daily, which more than welcomes student "Letters to the tditor." they have a chance now to show that they are capable of exercising a little in- telligent thought through the medium of those columns. We do not ask anti-Republican students to like Dewey. We do not ask them to change their political views in his favor. But certainly they can show some sort of temperate respect for the leader of his majesty's loyal opposition. It is no feather in the cap of the Democratic party if its supporters' only method of expres- sibn is throwing eggs at the rival candidate as in 1940, or hissing the present nominee whenever his picture appears on the screen. - Perry Logan Russia's New Policy NUNDAY the Supreme Soviet, legislative body of the U.S.S.R. made some sweeping changes in their internal laws concerning family relationships. According to an Associated Press dispatch these changes included "revised family taxes to encourage births." Family benefits, "for- merly given only to mothers with seven or more offspring," now begin for mothers with two or more children. The dispatch con- tinues: "The new decrees also put additional emphasis on big families by enacting new taxes for both the man and wife who have fewer than three children." In finding reasons for this most people will agree that the Soviet Union, as a young, ex- panding country which has lost more of the cream of its manhood in this war than any other country, needs an expanding birth rate to strengthen its economy and expand it and to bring to fruition its promise for a better life for all of its citizens. It must be remembered that the Fascist na- tions which promoted higher birth rates were Misgu ided, Criticisma By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORR July 11.-I notice an outbreak of short temper among military commentators, some of whom are pointing out heavily that our generals ought at once to drop whatever they are doing in Normandy, and undertake a "war of maneuver." Well, a swift-moving "war of maneuver' is certainly a nicer kind of war than the current hand-to-hand slugging in the barnyards of Norman farms, and the back alleys of Norman towns. And in a "war of maneuver," the sol- diers ride, which is better than walking, and far better than crawling. But, like other nice things, such as breakfast in bed, a "war of maneuver" is not always to be obtained whenever and wherever you want it. We have nothing to 'be disappointed about in Normandy. Between Two Stones The swift-moving northern Russian front, and the slow-moving but intensely active Norman front are, strategically,'parts of the same drive, whose intention is, not to gain territory, but to divide, disperse, and, finally, to destroy the Ger- man armies. The German army is being pound- ed between two stones, and it does not matter which 'ioves the faster; both are equally neces- sary. The Norman front is just as much a part of the Russian drive into Latvia and Poland, as is the comparatively quiet Rumanian front; Loose Logic.. . E HAVE PLEDG.D ourself to a non-parti- san editorial policy for the next four months, reserving the right to speak sharply to Republican and Democrat alike. We will tee off by noting that Representative Clare Luce's con- vention speech about G.I. Jim made it difficult for us to keep anything on our stomach for twenty-four hours. To hint that the American war dead died because the majority of us voted wrong in the last three elections is a palpable misstatement of fact as well as a staggering breach of taste, and we must in charity assume that the lady did not understand the implica- tions of what she was inspired or advised to say. The Americans died from the same world sick- ness that killed the English, the French, the Poles, the Danes, the Norwegians, the Dutch, the Belgians, the Russians and the Chinese-a sick- ness which none of us knows muchabout except that it certainly could not have been cured by staying at home with the doors and windows shut. Moreover, we doubt that the dead have any politics. - The New Yorker great experiment in a new form of social and economic organization will find that in these new laws there is more of an expression of at least the latter half of the communist slogan of "From each according to his ability; to each according to his need." - Kathie Sharfman but no one says the Russians are moving too slowly in Rumania, or expresses tearful dis- appointment because the Balkans are not be- ing taken at the same rate of speed as is other territory. The fact that the Germans are resisting furi- ously in Normandy does not make our drive a failure; it makes it a success; for it is the pur- pose of that drive to engage, entangle, use up and wear out, as large a part of the German army as possible. They Want Real Estate Those who are demanding a "war of maneu- ver" in Normandy are really falling victims to the old territorial delusion. They would be happy if we gained a few more miles per day, or week. They want more real estate, though this war has abundantly proved the unimpor- tance of strictly local territorial gains. Actually, this is a "war of maneuver." But it is a world-wide war of maneuver; maneuver in the east made more possible by local attack in the west. What the critics are asking for is not a war of maneuver; they are asking for a local battle of maneuver, in an area of small fields, bounded by ditches, rimmed with wire and mines, which does not lend itself to mobile tactics. SEEM TO HEAR one GI, crawling on his belly through mud, across points pre-marked for German mortar fire, saying to another: "Hey, Joe! They want us to maneuver." Expressions of disappointment over the Nor- man campaign are premature. They reveal a lack of grasp of the continental strategy which our military leaders are obviously following. It is wrong to purvey such disappointment to a home front which has a right to know that the Norman campaign is fulfilling its military purpose, Other landings, in perhaps far-separated parts of France, or the lowlands, will come in due time. These will relieve the Norman front, and enable it to move faster. These are the true "maneuvers"' of this continent-wide "war of maneuver.". We are maneuvering on a continental scale, to destroy a mighty army; not on a county scale, to gain a few miles. We're All Going to Berlin No local campaign need do more than its share. No local campaign is required to win the war, by itself; no local drive need necessarily end in Berlin, We have seen large sections of the Russian front halt, and remain quiet for months; but other sections immediately became active. It is "maneuver" on this scale that is tearing the Nazi army apart, not local end runs or drives through center. Miles per day gained in Normandy do not tell the story. We shall win in Normandy by what we do on fronts yet unnoted, hundreds of miles from Normandy. This is one war, in one world. Remember? Let us lift up our eyes and, once again, try to see our enterprise in its true dimen-, sions. (Copyright, 1944, New York Post Syndicate) - By ANN FAGAN GINGER PERHAPS it is superfluous in a college newspaper in one of the largest state-supported educational institutions in the country to write about freedom, but it is something which people need to think about quite constantly during the closing months-years of this world war. For most of us the only kind of freedom that has any reality is the ZZ~ f/It Ckor Defense of Literature Shave read Mr. Rosenberg's com- ments on life and literature with much interest and admiration, and usually with agreement. But his ar- ticle on "The Failure of Current Lit- erature" suggested some doubts. Have life and literature descended quite to such depths of worthless- ness? I grant that the Second World War has not yet produced such a flock of songbirds as the First (in- deed, the critic might have added to his all too brief list of "the verse of Graves and Spender and Cummings" the work of Rupert Brooke, Allan Seager, Joyce Kilmer, Siegfried Sas- soon, W. W. Gibson and several others); but when I read "What has World War II given us beyond Mair- zy Doats?" I reached out a casual hand to the nearest bookshelf and lifted down in immediate sequence Alice Duer Miller's "The White Cliffs." Edna St. Vincent Millay's, "Make Bright the Arrows," Joseph Auslander's, "The Unconquerables." If they are not poetry, I am in my Mairzy Dotage. Still stranger was the apparent approval of Brooks Adam's dictum "the drama has died." As a mat- ter of fact, the twentieth century drama has been more brilliant than that of any other period, with the possible exceptions of Peri- clean Athens and Elizabethan Eng- land. The Americans Maxwell Anderson, Eugene O'Neill, Robert Sherwood; the Irish Shaw, Dun- sany, Synge; the Hungarian Mol- nar; the Czech Capek, and many others come to mind. Perhaps the critic is too hasty in other fields as well. He is right in saying that "villainy abounds;" in- deed, the shameless and wanton character of the War of the Dicta- tors surpasses by far the more de- cently veiled aggressions and chi- caneries of the last few centuries. But heroism abounds too. The no- blest year in British history was 1940; the most heroic chapter in Russia's tragic history was 1942; Confucius would be proud of modern China; and what is there in the past history of Poland, Norway, Belgium, Holland, and the other subject peo- ples which shines more brightly than the way in which their "under- ground" dares death and torture for freedom today? Nor need we with- hold a meed of approval from our own country. American valor and devotion has been tested by land, sea and air in every corner of the world and at no time or place has failed to meet the test. MR ROSENBERG would grant this, I think; but he might say, "All this heroism, all this devotion, is but wasted; cynical politicians will spoil the peace." So they may. They certainly did in 1920. But it is too early for defeatism. There is still time to win the peace, as well as the war. The first step in fighting the "cynicism very deeply embedded in America" is not to be cynics our- selves, "If the salt hath lost its savor, wherewith shall it be salted?" If -the idealists, the intellectuals, the reformers become pessimists and cynics what shall other men do? I believe that is what De Voto meant in his protest against the decadents of the 'twenties. It is the cheerful, indomitable striver against odds who wins all the battles, in civic life as well as in military; the cynic, the defeatist, the pessimist, is merely an impediment to progress. I am no great admirer of either of Mr. Rosen- berg's pet dislikes, the matter-of-fact Lloyd Douglas or the willfully ob- scure Saroyan (we have had greater; prophets in our time-Stephen Vin-; cent Benet, for instance); but in our. modern world which is, in every sense, a world of battle, I would rather have the American spirit typi- fied by such courageous men than by the T .S. Eliots and Ezra Pounds who wailed so drearily a score of, years ago. Yours sincerely, -Preston Slosson feeling on Saturday nights of choos- ing between a movie and a glass of beer and a hot band. Freedom then means relaxing and enjoying your- self. Few people even consider the possibility of freedom on their jobs and in their thoughts. They let the foreman run their bodies and minds eight to twelve hours a day, and then they let newspaper editors, movies and radio commentatorsrun their minds the rest of the time. This isn't a voluntary arrange- ment, but who ever heard of being free on a job? Of helping make decisions and running machines instead of being run by them? And how often do we remember that our thoughts are not self-made? That the men who control editorial policy and slant radio news copy are the same ones who lobby in Washington against the Murray- Wagner-Dingell Social Security plan, and who are quoted as "au- thoritative sources"? How can we know that these men censor our thoughts before they can even be formulated, or, once considered, that they present false evidence to smear them? Some people say that the average citizen isn't ready for freedom. That he wouldn't know what to do with it if he had the real article. That peo- ple must be led. If this were true, ordinary citizens would be incapable of voting or organizing or fighting in this war, which involves ideas of things like freedom. If this were true, censors would be the most im- portant officials in the government. But, we don't believe in a hierarchy of "the rich, the wise and the good." So how could these censors be cho- sen? Censorship involves the idea that there are superior people who know what's best for the rest of us, who know how to find the Truth. Innate in the idea of censoring thoughts, is the idea of censoring actions, and innate in both is the theory that there should be a rul- - ing group to make decisions. Par- ticularly in war time, when we can see that people of all sorts can work together to reach decisions about complex problems, does the doctrine of regimentation and cen- sorship of ideas-from-above seem out of place. There are as many kinds of censor- ship as there are kinds of freedom. It might almost be said that there are almost as many people busy de- veloping new ways of throttling free men as there are people freeing en- slaved ones. Censorship can be subtle or obvious, it can stop knowledge at the source, or it can wait until the ideas have gained a little foothold and then malign them. It can even let them grow large, and then cut holes in them, making them appear obviously untrue. It can appear in the guise of more freedom, or in the admitted garb of fascism. But its function is always and everywhere the same: to keep people from think- ing new thoughts and committing new acts of freedom. To continue the status quo, to keep people and society from moving. IN COLLEGES, the freedom which seems most important is free- dom of thought. Knowing the re- strictions on other kinds of liberties in the rest of the world, perhaps it is naive and idealistic to assume that we should be allowed complete intellectual liberty at the univer- sity. But this is not quite accurate. 'This is an institution of higher learning where students are being trained, not only as scholars for their personal satisfaction, but also as citizens to satisfy the desires of the state and its taxpayers who want an enlightened citizenry. Censorship of ideas automatically blocks human progress by limiting the fields of research and scholarly inquiry. There are so many professors and so many texts and so many reference books which exercise the subtle sort of censorship that many students never discover the walls and fences in which their minds are stored dur- ing their four years' stay here. We learn that there was a civil war in Spain, that John Pierpont founded the House of Morgan, that there is such a thing as economic slack-but we are never shown the connections. We get a false picture of what is going on, or no picture at all. And seemingly the things we drag out of dark corners, we mustn't mention in class or in discussions. The students here now are sup- posed to be learning about the future-their personal futures and the future of freedom. They can- not learn it if both their sources and their opportunities for expres- sion are" bounded by restrictions. Browsing in unorthodox pamph- lets can be a very productive pur- suit, and so can writing down new ideas, testing them out on paper. We have to discover freely for our- selves why things are happening and failing to happen; it isn't suf- ficient that someone tell us the reason (as they see it) and say they prefer we not poke in that corner. Perhaps a course in Freedom vs. Censorship might be instituted, for students and faculty members alike, a study in the comparative values (in terms of human progress) of the two, and their relation to democratic pro- cesses. It might be difficult to find someone free enough to be able to conscientiously teach such a course, but this lack of "academic freedom" must be attacked in some way, and if this is impractical, we can only suggest that all departments start practicing freedom of thought, in choice of references, statement of opinions, discussions. f DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1944 VOL. LIV No. 6-S All notices for The Daily Official Bul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the Summer Session, in typewritten form 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 Sociedad Hispanica: The club will meet every Tuesday and Wednesday at 4:00 in the Grill Room of the Michigan League for informal con- versation in Spanish. All inter- ested students are urged to be pres- ent. Students, Summer Session: College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Courses may not be elected for credit after the end of the second week. Saturday, July 15, is there- fore the last day on which new elections may be approved. The willingness of an instructor to admit a student later will not affect the operation of this rule. E. A. Walter To all Male Students in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts: By action of the Board of Regents, all male students in residence in this College must elect Physical Educa- tion for Men. This action has been effective since June, 1943, and will continue for the duration of the war. Students may be excused from taking the course by (1) The Uni- versity Health Service, (2) The Dean of the College or by his representa- tive, (3) The Director of Physical Education and Athletics. Petitions for exemption by stu- dents in this College should be ad- dressed by freshmen to Professor Arthur Van Duren, Chairman of the Academic Counselors (108 Mason Hall); by all other students to Assis- tant Dean E. A. Walter (1220 Angell Notice to Summer Term Students: Students registered for the Summer Term (16 week period), who have not already had their pictures taken, should do so at once. Picturea will be taken at Room 2, University Hall, between 3:30 and 4:30 every afternoon this week (July 11 to 14) and other hours by appointment. The International Center is form- ing a soccer team for the summer. All those interested in playing please contact Geo. Hall at the Interna- tional Center. Americans and for- eign students are welcome. French Club: Bastile Day will be celebrated tomorrow, Thursday, July 13, at 8 p. m. in the Michigan League with an appropriate program. Pro- fessor Rene Talamon, of the Ro- mance Language Department, will speak. Group singing and social hour. All students of the Summer Session and the Summer Term as well as all servicemen are cordially invited to the weekly meetings of the French Club which are free of charge. Charles E. Koella Open House for Servicemen, Wives, Families: The USO is open at all times to the servicemen and their wives and families and especially on Sundays. There is plenty of room to visit, write letters, read, play cards or just relax. If you like classical music, there is a very com- plete Classical Music Library and a quiet music room with a radio-vie combination where you may enjoy good music. Lectures Dr. Raul Olivera of Cuba will speak this evening at 8 o'clock on "Cuba Leads the Way". The lec- ture will be in the Kellogg Audito- rium, and under the auspices of the Latin-American Society and the BARNABY What did you want f nA - r'nltv r vr e sse L x1- . A treasure? O'Malleyt.. . How /rn i -nild1 :tf n :-c ts By Crockett Johnson I thought that club of yours wo hai anoth,~aer chowdr