PAGE TWO THE MiCHTGAN, . T)AT.T.' WED * AY. Y 19. 1944 TH1111 C11112AN Ib"TIV WIbi\"- V TYTI .V 10 1 Q~ sss~sl~: atx %F4. aX L7jkX-7 I%% jFi fty-Fou rttiea Fifty-Fourth Year THE PENDULUM: The Pseudontellectuals 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 Weiss Managing Editor . . Editorial Director . . . City Editor . . . Sports Editor . . Women's Editor sLee Amer Business Staff Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 By BERNARD ROSENBERG FRANKLY, this furor over a liter- ary question surprises me. Is did not think it would create such fierce interest. That it does is encourag- ing-and I mean to pursue the point further. Despite all the dissent, I think it demonstrable that the trend in Anglo-American literature is away from the excellence it has sometimes reached. It is the kind of trend that leads Stephen Spender to write in the March issue of "Horizon", a re- view of literature and art, "Iead- Ing the year's poetry, for the third year now, I cannot help wishing that instead of schools of poets, there were schools for poets." The citation of authorities, in itself, is a worthless debate techni- que, and we have here a debate of major importance. Simply because Mr. Spender, who should know, thinks today's poetry inferior is no conclusive reason for accepting that assessment. But, at least you will know I am not alone in this matter. For instance, Edmund Wilson than whom there are few more highly re- puted critics-what does he think? As a matter of fact, the view put' forth in this column has been sub- stantially the same as Mr. Wilson's. If I present it myself, this is called by the untutored "pseudo-erudition". So take it from J. Donald Adams, editor of the New York Times Book Review Section, "Mr. Edmund Wil- son . . . recently expressed the opin- ion that the Nineteen Twenties and the early Thirties provided an atmo- sphere much more favorable for writ- ers than that of today. I must ex- plain at once", Mr. Adams continues, "that Mr. Wilson was not basing his contention upon the fact that we. are now a nation whose thoughts are! largely occupied winning the war, but upon the difference between the intellectual and social climate ob- taining in the years just previous to the Great Depression and that which has since prevailed." p The deeper we probe into the matter, the more indubitable this re-statement of what I reported to you two weeks ago becames. One can select at random and find cor- roboration for it. Look at last week's Saturday Review of Liter- ature. In it Francis Hackett ob- serves, "We have passed From "Crime and Punishment" to the mood of "Arsenic and Old Lace". A tree grows in Brooklyn, complete with drunkenness and abortion, and yet it contrives in some quaint way to have no fruit of knowledge on it." To inject an unauthoritative voice for a moment, may I ask if this is not the case in the drama too? Is it not significant that the Critic's Circle did not see fit to give an award for 1943 in the field of drama? The one play they did consider, "The Skin of Our Teeth" was found to be a plagiarization of a novel by James Joyce begun in the Twenties. 1ET us take Professor Slosson's list of luminaries. How does the Maxwell Anderson who wrote "Win- terset" stack up with the Maxwell Anderson who could perpetrate "The Eve of St. Mark" upon an over-indul- .6 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONkL- ADVENTI.NG Y National Advertising Service, Inc. College Pablisbers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. claCAO ' BOS"ON * LOS AEsILgs * s. nFANCIsCO 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 Aun Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. Memsber, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 NIGHT EDITOR: NEVA NEGREVSKI Editorial published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Mask for i1944 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SOUTH LYON'S DILEMNA: Let's Get on With the War, A T FIRST THOUGHT one would be amazed at what he found in South Lyon. Here was a group of 1,000 or so people -whose families have lived together in the same community for more than 60 years. Families are deep rooted in the city and they feel that close-knit unity of a small American rural society. Then suddenly this peaceful town-as all others-found itself cau'ght in the stresses and atrains that war brings, and the high tension of re-orienting its easy-going life to the enor- mity of a world war has been a difficult job. For one thing, the intellectual activity of the majority of the people, from a national point of view, has been dormant although the aca- demic pursuits of the community have been ex- cellent. There is a new high school supported by a well administered system of elementary schools, but with all this academic background the people lack wide 'perspective. In a broad sense this lack might be ascribed to some ill in our way of life where signs of. prejudice have been ignored instead of faced directly-where action has been predicated on tradition and the fear of breaking prece- dent. In this community there is a disaffection for strangers. We can't call it a hatred exactly because it hasn't resulted in harm. It is rather a dislike for the new, the strange, anything that runs contrary to the everyday life of the town. A newcomer to South Lyon has a difficult task in getting "into" the community. A cursory view of the 200-odd families that have moved into the Federal Housing Project as war workers is proof enough. In this setting it is not unusual to find racial prejudice, but it is difficult to understand it in the midst of the war emergency. T HE PEOPLE in South Lyon have a particular job to do in war production. They must support a vital war industry carried on in the local plant. A striking conflict of interests is now hold- ing up production there. The local industrial union definitely has stated that its members under no circumstances would work with Nisei Japanese. The proposal to bring in these people to eliminate the acute labor shortage has been met with stern opposition. Why? The only answer is that the men don't understand or appreciate the position of the American-born Japanese. 'he union argument runs something like this.: We have heard about the treachery and bestiality of the Japanese. We know that that action is part of their nature. How can we trust them? Aren't their relatives now killing our boys? We don't want to take the chance of working with them. Several members of the Union presented their views. There is William Miller, presi- dent, whose mother and father were born in Germany. Should we put him into a relo- cation camp as we have done the Japanese born here? His answer was no, I am an American citi- Yen. Aren't these Japanese American citi- zens? Yes, he answered, but they are Japs. Aren't you a German? No, American. The tale seems endless. be trusted, that he is a parasite and will lower the standard of life there. They have heard these stories and they take them for Gospel. They don't investigate. They.haven't got time. This is the seemingly unsolvable paradox that the government and management must solve if additional workers are to be brought into the plant immediately. "Both groups are available for war work, yet which group would it be most discrete to send in? There hasn't been too much time for dis- cretion. The urgency of war matters must come first and, aware of the Union's opposition to the Nisei and the town's apprehension over the Negro, the authorities have taken the chance of going ahead, with the recruitment of Negroes. Our immediate reaction would be to brand these people any number of things. Their actions are hindering the war effort. They don't seem to regard the lives of their own fighting men as of much value. They are now concerned over a personal problem and their selfishness' prevails. At the moment the big problem is getting production in that plant up to capacity. A SOLDIER IN A FOXHOLE doesn't bother to wonder whether Negro hands, Nisei hands, or white hands made the hand gre- nade he is about to throw. All he nows is that he must kill the enemy first and his life depends on weapons made by American hands. South Lyon does pose a problem for future education but the .more immediate need is for war production. Negroes are now being recruited to fill in the gap and the proper authorities should take every step necessary to insure their safety. If drastic measures are needed they should be employed without a moment's hesitation. In peacetime, we might have had time to work with these people and straighten out their thinking. Though this is necessary, it is impossible in war time. Let's get on with the war and forget petty talk about protecting somebody's interest when lives are at stake. -Stan Wallace AddConfusion*... THE MOON HASN'T COME UP on the wrong side of the barn for some time now, but there are a couple of other odd phenomena worth not- ing. Earl Browder's son, according to the New York Times, graduated from high school with scholarship awards from the American Legion and the Daughters of the American Revolution, and the New Masses has reprinted a speech by William Witherow, a past president of the Na- tional Association of Manufacturers. We pass these items idly along for whatever pastel confusion they can give to anyone who still likes his world drawn black and white. --St. Louis Post-Dispatch I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Gonvention By SAMUEL GRAFTON CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, July 18-The opponents of Mr. Roosevelt are circling about the con- vention like restless pachydems, pacing, pacing, occasionally stamping and pawing the ground, and wondering what to do. Over at the Blackstone, Jim Farley tries to decide whether to make trouble, or only to make a gesture. He is tentative with reporters, going in for a good deal of "Um!" as his answer to hard questions, a monosyllable which is not in the Farley tradition. Room 1414 Some of Senator Byrd's supporters for the Democratic nomination have taken a small corner suite on the fourteenth floor of the Sher- man Hotel. There is no banner, and no liter- ature, for these are not really headquarters, being just a couple of little hotel rooms, smoke- filled. The Sherman is a good twelve blocks from the Stevens, the convention center, a circumstance which gives this particular Byrd command post an air of being on the outside, looking in. Colonel Robert R. McCormick's Chicago Tribune (circulation, 960,000) oblig- ingly carried the room number, 1414, on page one, all editions, with a broad hint that ene- mies of the fourth term might wander over to the good old Sherman, and see the boys. Only five or six persons seemed to have taken advan- tage of this information during my brief call, and since most of them have had their coats off. I. can only assume that they were not visiting the Byrd room, but that they lived there. As in a Diagram There has been a curious, restless, tentative something in the air here, the first few days of the week; an effort by the opposition to get something started, but an inability to jell on it, to decide what. I get the strong feeling that portions of the American press have over- emphasized the opposition to Mr. Roosevelt within his own party. The great thing about a national political convention is that every tendency in the life of the party has to take a room somewhere, and show itself, and let itself be counted; here it turns out to be Mr. Farley, looking rather lonesome, and unlike himself; some of the Byrd people; a bit ,of noise ambng the Texans, and not much more. It is not im- pressive opposition, in percentage terms. If, there were any less, there wouldn't be any. The oppositional movement within the Demo- cratic party makes a big noise, but stands on a small base. A convention gives you a simplified picture, like a diagram. After a few hours here, you realize that there stands the Stevens, big- gest hotel in the world, or something, and it is filled from cellar to roof with Democrats working for Mr. Roosevelt. THE C. I. O. Political Action Committee is also at the Sherman, like the Byrd group; it is not a part of the Democratic party, and it, too, is in a sense on the outside, looking in. Its rooms are the busiest in town. This 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 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 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 call at the office of the Recorder of the School of Education, 1437 U.E.S. is the only headquarters I have ever seen where they are sometimes too busy working to talk to report- ers. In the average convention headquarters almost everybody drops dead when a reporter comes in, and fair, fiushed ladies, with strangling intakes of breath, dust chairs for him. The Political Ac- tion Committee has only nominal expectations that the big press will ever fall in love with it, so it avoids the floozier aspects of campaigning, and devotes itself to mobilizing its people, and to communicating its ideas to as many consequential politicians as it can reach. The Cool, Withdrawn Figure Its rooms are crowded with delega- tions from many States and indu- stries; it is the liveliest center in Chicago; and its vigorous presence here brings a yeasty something to the Democratic meeting. Love it or hate it, it's alive. I don't know whether the P. A. C. expects to get Wallace, but it fights for him as if it does. Mr. Roosevelt is curiously out of it all, a cool, withdrawn figure. One realizes here the value of such a symbol. Without him this meeting+ might easily break down into riot and dismay; because of him, it willj not. He alone can bring these Am- erican de Gaulles and Girauds to- gether, so to speak; his decision about Wallace is being made from the standpoint of what will bestrdo just that. And that is the picture as of the eve of the big meeting. (Copyright, 1944, N.Y. Post Syndicate) WEDNESDAY, VOL. LIV JULY 19, 1944 No. 11-S Registration for positions is being held and blanks may still be had today from 9-12 and 2-4 at 201 Mason Hall. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational In- formation. To students and others interested in business education: Dr. Godfrey Dewey of New York, author of the Script Shorthand System, will dis- cuss problems in the development of shorthand systems in Rm. 3002, Uni- versity High School, at two o'clock on Thursday afternoon, July 20. - All persons interested in business edu- cation are cordially invited to meet Dr. Dewey and participtate in his discussion. There will be a joint meeting of the Men's and Women's Physical Edu- cation Departments on Thursday evening, July 20, at 7:30 in the Women's Athletic Building. Movies of the P.E.M. program and the Wo- men's Physical Education program at the University of Michigan will be shown. All students, graduate or under- graduate, in physical education and related fields are invited. Margaret Bell, M.D. Fraternity House Presidents: There will be a house presidents' meeting Wednesday, July 19, 1944, at 7:15, in IFC office. Lectures A. Lobanov, visiting professor of Russian History from the University of California, will speak today on+ "Russia and the War" at 4:10 p.m.,1 Rackham Amphitheatre. The public is cordially invited to attend. Mrs. Ofelia Mendoza, delegate of Honduras on the Inter-American Commission of Women, will speak on "Latin-American Women in the War and Post-War World" this evening at 8 p.m., Kellogg Auditorium. The pub- lic is cordially invited to attend free of charge. Tomorrow, July 20, Professor Shih Chia Chu, on the staff, Oriental Sec- tion, Library of Congress, will present his usual Thursday afternoon lecture at 4:10 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre.- Professor Chu's subject this week is1 "Cultural Relations Between China, Japan and Korea." Everyone is wel- come. For Students in Business Education: Clyde Blanchard, editor of The Bus- iness Education World, will discuss trends and developments in businesh education 'in Rm. 2015 UHS, at 1 o'clock on Friday, July 21. All per- sons interested in business educationk are invited to attend the meeting. J. M. Trytten Speech Assembly: Harry Clark,l CBS newscaster and announcer, willt speak at the assembly of the Depart-D ment of Speech at 3 p. m. WednesdayI in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Thee public is invited. Academic Noticest gent public? Where is the Robert Sherwood who wrote "The Petrified Forest". His job with the OWL has not prevented him from writing a series of flops. Molnar? He has been in this country for years, but he has not been as venturesome as Henri Bernstein, the famous French playwright who wrote a couple of failures and gave up. Synge and Capek are dead. Dunsany I do not know, and Shaw has long since ceas- ed to be a fad, good Victorian drama- tist though he was. Now, the exemplification of all that I have been saying can be seen in the person of the greatest playwright the Twentieth Century has produced, Eugene O'Neil, O'Neil has written plays in the past decade, but he refuses to release them because he does not think our age conducive to artistic appreci- ation. Or take Odets. There are oceans separating "Waiting For Lefty" from "Clash By Night". One is almost impelled to repeat the terse criticism accorded a late Odets play, "Odets! Where is the string". Lastly, it would be enlightening if Professor Slosson told us whether he really believes Alice Duer Willer and Edna St. Vincent Millay are poets of great stature. The honest observer must conclude ineluctably that Arthur Koestler (one of the few top-notch novelists of our times) in correct when he says "that pessimism is obligatory". Au- thority: GranvilleHicks in this week's New Republic. But, what the hell, they are all a bunch of pseudo-intellectuals any- how. Pictures Move and Talk, Main Dish (2 reel). Thursday, July 20, 2-3: Milk and Health, Vitamins A, B, C, D (4 half reels). 3-4: Handle with Care (2 reel), Care of Teeth. Make-up examinations in History will be given on Friday, July 28, from 3-5 in Rm. C, Haven Hall. All stu- dents wishing to take such an exami- nation should consult with their ex- aminers' by Monday, July 24. Concerts Student Recital: Paul Bunjes, or- ganist, will present a recital in parti6l 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. Faculty Recital: The second in the series of three sonata recitals to be presented by faculty members, Mabe Ross Rhead, pianist, and Gilbert Ross, violinist, will be held in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Build- ing on Thursday evening, July 20, at 8:30 p.m., rather than in the Assem- bly Hall, as previously announced. The program will be devoted to the music of Mozart and Beethoven. The public is cordially invited to attend without charge. Record Concert tonight, and every Wednesday night at 7:30 p.m. at the International Center, and daily from 3 to 9 p.m. in the second floor con- course, Michigan League. The Regular Thursday Evening Record Concert will be hed in the Men's Lounge of the Rackham Build- ing at 7:45 p.m. The program will consist of some new records which have been purchased recently in an- swer to numerous requests: Mozart's "Divertimento in E Flat Major," "The' Wayfaring Stranger" by Ives Burl, the "Surprise" Symphony of Haydn, and Enesco's Roumanian Rhapsody No. 1 and 2. Graduates and service- men are 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 endnof 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 t-10 p.m. Michigan Historical Collections, 160 Rackham Building. The Growth of the University of Michigan in Pic- BARNABY Ive decided against employing that big salvage corporation... By Crockett Johnson I Especially when I told them all about myself. And about --, Yes. I stressed that point. To show I personally could vouch I gave her the number of the skee ball establishment and I I I