PAGE TWO THE IMCHIfG.AN D AITV T, .DAY. 3'Tl VV it- 1.444 R Ei JU Fifty-Fourth Year i{ yse'C lG( S p 1V Edited and mniaed by students of the Un of Michigan under the authority of the Board In of Studest Piulilleaons. Editorial Staff Jane Farrant Betty Ann Koffman Stan Wallace Hank Mantho Fed Weiss Lee Amer Managing Editorial D . , . . City . . W Sports Women's iverlsty Coutcoi Editor Director Editor Editor Editor anager the use to it or of re- ved. g4n, as by car- 14344 N aily taff ~nty. ee v $ 'b 4 r b rP- t -f fYY rc^h+ d , r t" ,'- ' ;i '= " Y 4', 4 '" :r te'' t r"'-' " Y A ._ . - _F c .. '...y iS+> t ,7 :; ._ _. .: r, r . x. i r. ;s "'! :: a ' 3 -r' ':< r . , "'wt., tt .tit Y. a 1 x k a' z '4 .tip} . 9 4 rL Ln t: ,!a >.: r Y",, - i ....: .. t , F , r rr rr: - 3 a - - a ,, . - F Irk : , -. - y t -: . 1, J YiA , , --> '' ,r -" . ?' k 5 f Z . Business Staff By BERNARD ROSENBERG HAVE GIVEN sober thought to Professor Slosson's letter. He ob- jected, you will remember, to the view expressed in this column con-, cerning the parlous state of Ameri- can letters. That letter, cogent as it was in many respects, contained no de- nial of "the cynicism very deeply imbedded in America" but it did suggest that the first step in fight- ing cynicism "is not to be cynics ourselves." Granted. The question then becomes: how best do we prevent ourselves from becoming cynics? I cannot subscribe to the theory that cheerful indomitable souls win all the battles or that cheerful indomitable artists are the most useful, Aristotle asked himself in "The Poetics" why it was that civilized man enjoyed seeing tragedies per- formed on the stage. How could he take pleasure in viewing the thea- trical presentation and amplification of his own woes. Did he not suffer enough in real life? This phenom- enon could be observed not only in the Periclean Age but in the Eliza- bethan Era and in our own times as well. Are we sadists that we revel in the portrayal of some one else's doom? No, said Artistotle, what happens is that through the depiction of tra- gedy we, in some measure, purge our own lives of it. In this way, Ar- istotle, evolved the psychological principle of "catharsis"-the purga- tion of pity and fear by means of experiencing these emotions in the u , THE PENDU LUM: No Time for Happiness Fl*% theater. This doctrine profoundly impressed Sigmund Freud, and it be- came the cornerstone of psycho- analysis. IT IS ALSO THE KEY to this question. For the greatest reality in the world today is tragedy. Who can say nay to that statement? Out of this tragic chaos there may come a better world community. Who knows? Maybe all of us will be beautiful people after the millenium. But right now we are brutes fighting other brutes in a cess-pool of blood. War reduces everyone engaged in it to a common brutishness. It means the temporary suspension of human- ity. We have had to fight; we do not like or want to fight; the masses of mankind would rather have peace. But fight we must--and this is a tragedy of such staggering proportions that none dare calcu- late it. Whatever else exists in the universe, tragedy and an ac- companying cynicism are here. My complaint against current litera- ture is that because it sidesteps these realities (going A. J. Cro- nin-wise into a citadel of sweet- ness and light) it prevents us from curing ourselves of their in- evitable effects. Prof. Slosson says, "Heroism abounds, too." Yes, but of what sort? Walter Lippman's new book "U. S. War Aims" presents the inter- esting thesis that we have engaged in two wars with Germany over a span of twenty-five years for the reason that in each case our Atlantic seaboard was threatened. What, did Business M Telephone 23-24-1 t EPiRNSE1NC PQk NATIONAL Hta .Tid, i i National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MAaneom AvE. NEW YORK., N. Y. CaICAeO* "805100*"LOS ANtecLs o SANl FRAI4SO Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled tot for republication of all news dispatches credited t otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights publication of all other matters herein also reser Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michi ",cond-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year k rier, $4.25, by mail, $5,25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 19 NIGHT EDITOR: DORIS PETERSO Editorials published in The Michigan I are written by members of The Daily s and represent the views of the writers o R' *" td4j GettingCloser to theNest DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Willkie-An Enigma NOW THAT THE REPUBLICANS have gone through the formality of naming Dewey as their candidate and President Roosevelt has officially announced that he will allow himself to be drafted by the American people, the political stewpot is ready to boil. There are only a few problems remaining to confound the student of American politics, one is choice of a Democratic vice presidential nomninee and another revolves around the curly head of Indiana's Wendell Willkie, the forgotten man of 1944. As to the first, it is relatively a cut-and-dried issue. Although there has been some talk of boosting Willkie for the vice presidency when the Democrats convene in Chicago, it is understood that Roosevelt favors the incumbent, Wallace, and it is inconceivable that the party would turn against the wishes of its leader. But Willkie remains something of an enigma. The same man who skyrocketed to prominence in 1940 only to fizzle and fade out when the chips were down today finds himself turned out by his adopted party, the Republicans, and scorned by his former bed-fellows, the Democrats. IN SPITE OF THE RELATIVE IGNOMINY of his position, Willkie remains a forceful fig- ure in the national spotlight. A large number of Americans still look to him as a leader while columns are devoted to speculation on his future actions. The Republicans would like to have him around because of the votes he controls; the Democrats would welcome his allegiance for the same reason. Some want him to - start a third party, comprising the more liberal ele- ments of the GOP and the anti-Roosevelt Democrats. Others think he would make a fine vice-presidential nominee on Roosevelt's ticket. But despite a wide divergence of views, there is one thing they all have in common: Seemingly, the whole nation wants him to do something, to take some stand with one of the parties or to declare his independence. Did it ever occur to these observers that Will- kie might decide 'to remain just where he is as a sort of free lance crusader, sniping at the evils of both parties but making no active move to secure the defeat of either one? It is a possibility, and one which gains more favor as the days go by and the great enigma makes no move toward either party affiliation or active opposition. -Bill Mullendore I"D RATHER BE RIGHT: Nazi Morale By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, July 14-What is "morale"? Did the many hundreds of Japanese who hope- lessly attacked fixed American positions on Sai- pan, and who let themselves be blown to bits, have "morale"? According to the only definition which is psychologically sound, morale is confidence in one's ability to solve his problems. It's Impressive, But Is It Morale? And, by that definition, the Saipan Japanese did not have "morale." They had other quali- ties. They had courage. They had fanaticism. But they did not have morale; for if they had had morale, they would have had confidence, and they would not have launched that final, crazy, suicidal charge. They would have re- mained in their own positions, and fought it out to the last bullet, confident that they could win. But the Saipan Japanese were confident that they could not win. It is by this test that we must approach the questiop of the present state of German morale. MORALE IS CONFIDENCE, an individual's, an army's or a nation's, confidence that all pressing problems can be solved. Morale is the knowledge, deep inside a man's heart, that there still remains a way out of his predicament, that he can still see daylight. Morale has lit- tle to do with bravery, or, even, with character., A coward may have good morale, if he believes that his leaders are good and wise leaders, and are capable of solving his problems; whereas aj brave man may be without morale if he be- lieves that there is no solution to his problems. The behavior of the two will be affected accord- ingly, and the confident coward may sometimes even be a more useful soldier than the hope- less brave man. Morale is Confidence The question is not whether the Germans are still fond of Hitler, nor whether they are still resolved to fight to the last man, but whether they still believe they can solve their problems. If they have lost that belief, they have lost their morale, in the only meaningful sense of the term; and, sooner or later, their actions will show it. They may, and indeed will, still fight brave- ly, but without that high style, that indescrib- able dash, that bold and imaginative grasp of the problem in hand, which is possible only to those who are confident of success. Their judgment will be subtly affected, subtly distorted, because their actions will be moti- vated by irrelevancies, such as pride, and desperation, instead of being guided by hope and confidence. They will begin to do strange things; indeed, they have already begun to do strange things, such as leaving their garrison at Cherbourgi to be virtually annihilated, rather than with- drawing it, coolly and knowledgeably, to fight again another day. A skilful, confident retreat would have shown a higher morale than did the bitter bravery of the hopeless last stand. So, always, we come back to the same point: morale is hope, and oetter to t/2e &dtor A Hisser at Heart... W ELL GRACIOUS SAKES! Perry Logan, you Republican, you! I must have seen the same movie and heard the same hissing that you heard. But, it didn't upset my old Irish blood and it didn't make me ashamed of my fellow men. In fact, it left me with a warm sense of at-one-ness with the universe. It re- minded me that one can still hiss whom he pleases and object to something he doesn't like. If it is immaturity, many people as old as you and I together are guilty. I would call it an indication of the "nuts-to-you" spirit that lurks, usually unseen, in us all, with perhaps one Logan exception. My dear friend, in your quiet retreat haven't you come across something that impressed you unfavorably? Isn't there something that just drives you wild? If not, isn't there something that annoys you a little, or some one who bothers you the least bit? If and when such a condition appears, do you go to your little room, pull the shades, lock the door, and then say, "Well, fudge to you, old thing."? That's the spirit, Logan. Keep up the good work. Don't let immaturity get the better of you. Fight it, sir (or miss, or madam), fight it.' Did you hear the speech made by Mrs. Luce? Did you approve? Shame on you. I imagine even the Republicans have been sorely tempted to give that lady a great big BOO. I doubt that Mrs. Luce was paddled enough when she was a child. I hiss that honorable lady only because I am unable to do anything else. Do you also consider, dear Logan, that the rowdy Democrats have a corner on the hissing market? Double shame on you. Shall we keep count and match totals after the Democrat con- vention? You understand, of course, that I am writing this only because a Democrat is threatening to punch me in the nose. Sssssssssssssss to you, Logan. -Mathiel Brice there are no substitutes for it, not bravery, not fanaticism, not even pride. Shut the Doors, One by One If we can close the doors of hope, we can destroy German morale, in spite of the tales of naive or interested travelers concerning the special ruggedness of the German character, or the depth of German fondness for Hitler. The Normandy invasion banged shut one door of hope; German morale will never recover from that blow. If we press on, to further landings, to further demonstrations of politi.- cal unity among the allies, such as Peter's rapprochement with Tito, we can close more. doors of hope. It is not necessary to prove anything about Hitler to the Germans except that he cannot solve their problems. It can be done, syste- matically and scientifically. It is not a mystical operation. (Copyright, 1944, New York Post Syndicate) SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1944 VOL. LIV No. 9-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. in. Notices To Those Who are Saving Dailies for the men in service: Please con- tinue sending them to Ruth B. Bu- chanan at the University Museum. College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, Schools of Education, For- estry, Music and Public Health: Stu- dents who received marks of I or X at the close of their last semester or summer session of attendance will receive a grade of E in the course or courses unless this work is made up by Aug. 3. Students wishing an ex- tension of time beyond this date in order to make up this work should file a petition addressed to the appro- priate official in their school with Rm. 4, U.H., where it will be trans- mitted. Robert L. Williams Assistant Registrar Students, College of Literature, Science and the Arts: Election cards filed after the end of the first week of the semester may be accepted by the Registrar's Office only if they are approved by Assistant Dean E. A. Walter. Students who fail to file their election blanks by the close of the third week, even though they have registered and have attended classes unofficially, will forfeit their privilege of con- tinuing in the College. 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, Chairmanrof the Academic Counselors (108 Mason Hall); by all other students to Assis-. tant Dean E. A. Walter (1220 Angell Hall.) Except under very extraordinary circumstances no petitions will be considered after the end of the third week of the Summer Term.' The Administrative Board of the College of Literature,' *Science, and the Arts. University of Michigan Men's Glee Club: Important rehearsal Monday, 7 to 9 p.m. Third floor of Michigan Union, in preparation for public ap- pearance to be announced. All men on campus and all servicemen are cordially invited. David Mattern Registration for the Hospital Vol- unteer Service: You may still sign up in the Michigan League Lobby today, 2 to 5 p.m. Golf and Tennis Tournaments: There has been an extension of time for signing up for Golf and Tennis tournaments. The sheets for entries will be posted in Barbour Gymnasium and the Women's Athletic Building until Wednesday, July 19th. Dept. of Phys. Educ. for Women Students, Summer Session, College of Literature, Science and the Arts: No courses may be elected for credit after today. E. A. Walter There will be interviewing' for Judi- ciary Aides, central committee for Soph Project, and central committee for Surgical Dressings from 4:30 p.m. until 6 p.m. Monday and Tuesday in the Undergraduate Office. Sign up for interviews in the Undergraduate Office. Lectures Monday, July 17. Dr. Haven Emer- son, Nonresident Lecturer in Public Health Administration in the School of Public Health and Professor Em- eritus of Public Health at Columbia University, will speak to public health students and other interested individuals from 4:00 to 5:00 o'clock, in the School of Public Health Audi- torium. The title of Dr. Emerson's address will be "Civilian Health Needs in Wartime". Henry F. Vaughan, Dean Tuesday, July 18, Professor Preston W. Slosson. "Interpreting the News." 4:1Q p. m., Rackham Amphitheater. The public is cordially invited. Wednesday, July 19. A. Lobanov, visiting professor of Russian History from the University of California, will speak on "Russia and the War" at 4:10 p. m., Rackham Amphi- theater. The public is cordially in- vited. Academic Notices School of Education Students, Changes of Elections in the Summer Session: No course may be elected for credit after Saturday, July 15; no course may be dropped without penalty after Saturday, July 22. Any changes of elections of students in this school must be reported at the Registrar's Office, Room 4, Univer- sity Hall. Arrangements made with the instructors are not official changes. Candidates for the Teacher's Cer- tificate for August and October: A list of candidates has been posted on the bulletin board of the School of Education, Rm. 1431 U.E.S. Any prospective candidate whose name does not appear on this list should, someone say we fought last time to save the world for democracy, and we fight this time to universalize the Four freedoms? Mr. Lippman knows better, and says so in his keen ob- jective way. HE BOOK WAS PUBLISHED last week. I have read a number of reviews dealing with it. Malcolm Bingay ranks Lippman's treatise with the Federalist Papers. Some :ritics are. mildly surprised, but none seem to be abashed at the revelation that our heroism is a simple reflex response to the primeval instinct of ;elf-preservation. If we should lose this war we lose supremacy in the Atlantic and the center of power would shift to Germany. This, un- derstand, is a good reason for fight- ing a war, but it is not the reason our creative writers give us. The heroism of the underground is based upon patriotism which is a virtue, though a mean and a pet- ty one compared to brotherhood, but a virtue nevertheless to be treasured. Now see how it can be cheapened in the movies, on the stage, and over the air in gim- crack displays of slopy senti- mentalism. Scenario and scrip writers are no better than the average novelist feeding pap wholesale to the American public. The artist who sees the artificiality of our world, who exposes it, who clears the air, is anything but an impediment to progress. Cynicism is not to be uprooted by shaking one's head and denying its existence. Evil will not be eliminated by a million Benets protesting the omni-presence of good people. This is no time for happiness. Happiness today is a snare and a delusion. This is a time for con- templation and determination on the intellectual side; for pity, com- passion, and anger against injus- tice on the emotional side. In the words of Upton Sinclair, hardly a defeatist, "Folly, weakness, and wickedness must be explained." Building, 2 p.m. Chairman, M. H. Soule. By action of the Executive Board the Chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doc- toral candidates to attend this ex- amination, and he may grant per- mission to those who for sufficient reason might wish to be present. C. S. Yoakum Graduate Students in Speech: A symposium dealing with the theory and practice of public address will be held by the Department of Speech at 4 p.m. Monday in the West Confer- ence Room of the Rackham Building. Speech Assembly: Harry Clark, CBS newscaster and announcer, will speak at the assembly of the Depart- ment of Speech at 3 p.m. Wednesday in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The public is invited. Concerts Student Recital: Harriet Porter, soprano, will present a recital in par- tial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music, at 8:30 p. m., Sunday, July 16, in the First Methodist Church, State and Huron Streets. She will be accon- panied at the piano by Ruby Kuhl- man, and at the organ by' Howard Chase. The public is cordially invited. Student Recital: Paul Bunjes, or- ganist, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music, at 8:30 p.m., Wednesday, July 19, in Hill Auditorium. Mr. Bunjes will play compositions by Bach, Sowerby and Vierne. The public is cordially 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 planning. South end of downstairs corridor, Architecture Building. Student work continued on dis- play. Ground floor cases, Architec- ture Building. Open daily, 9 to 5, through July 30, except on Sunday. The public is invited. Clements Library: Association books. Rackham Galleries: "Labor and Industry in the U.S.S.R." and "Col- lective Farms in the U.S.S.R.," pho- tographic exhibits circulated by the National Council of American-Soviet Friendship, New York. Open daily except Sunday, 2-5 and 7-10 p.m. Michigan Historical Collections, 160 Rackham Building. The Growth of the University of Michigan in Pic- tures. Legal ResearcU Library: Fine buil- dings by William C. Hollands. Lower il i. __, . _. , r4 r. S e - The 11 ('i' ted Pe)n -~A . J1 r THE FACT IS QUITE SIMPLE but the indict- ment that has fallen on the heads of Michi- gan civilian students is damming, The same urgent call that went out to civil- ians Wednesday to pick cherries was issued to servicemen yesterday. After two days of an intensive campaign, 13 girls went Thursday and 12 students picked yesterday. After one announcement to the Army boys 1"I BARNABY Mom... You know the grocery man who told us about that By Crockett Johnson I wonder if Ellen and the kids have been lonery... The cottage - -- - \ wrrt"1Y4$ f o ~aeuw r (ROCK tII