. THE MICHtIUAN DAILY I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Fifty-Sixth Year x Prices' Raging Verbal War Dominie 11I 6 r _ :^ Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Purlications, Editorial Stafff Managing Editors .. Paul Harsha, Milton Freudenheim ASSOCIATE EDITORS City News.............................. Clyde Recht University..........................Natalie Bagrow Sports .......................Jack Martin Women's................... ......Lynne Ford Business Stafff Business .Manager ...... .............Janet Cork Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of .e- publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, an second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by Car- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. REPRESSNTBD FOR N^ATIONArL AOVERTISING MY National Advertising Service, Inc ^ College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AvE. - NEW YORK. N. Y. CMICAGO - BOSTON * LOS ANGEL6S * SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR: CINDY REAGAN Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Education's Plight DESPITE the fact that the United States dur- ing the war and previous to it has been called a center for great educational institutions and a haven for learned educators, this country is nevertheless in grave danger of not being able to maintain this reputation. That the United States is allowing its edu- cational system to "deteriorate" may be subject to debate on both sides. Yet a study of ex- penditures during the past few years indicates an alarming laxity of attention paid to America's educational system in contrast to the rising at- tention given to those in Great Britain and Russia. At a recent meeting of the National Education Association Dr. Randolph McDonald, the exec- utive secretary of that group's department of higher education, told the members that "Russia spends the equivalent of $13,000,000, or 20 per cent of her national income, for education. We spend less than $3,000,000, or less than 2 per cent of our income, on education." Other reports during the war years have re- vealed that Great Britain, Russia and other countries exempted from the draft students pre- paring for the teaching profession. In contras', the indiscriminate measures practiced in this country by selective service are all too evident in this University alone where the problem of re- gaining a workable faculty-student ratio has been highly acute. Dr. McDonald claims that while "low salaries are helping to drive teachers out of the pro- fession" the immediate problem to - be tackled is -"to build public recognition of the importance of teaching and the need for good schools." Some of this recognition has already been achieved: the thousands of veterans clamoring toy continue or to begin their education in col- leges and universities throughout the country have done much to bring America's educational systems before the public eye. Likewise have the ever-increasing numbers Qf high school grad- uates and financial contributors to educational institutions. There is, however, one aspect of this problem to which more and more pressure should be ap- plied. It is not enough for the interests of citizens and business corporations to be aroused concerning America's education. Government- federal, state and municipal-should also be aroused from its apathy. Though the costs of living, of food, of building and of numerous other items have risen, the government cannot afford to let them serve as an excuse for neglecting the education of future Americans. To do so could easily be a death blow to the United States' future. The various bureaus and departments in this government would do well to examine the budgets of other nations with respect to the percentage allowed for education. -Joan de Carvajal British Bulldog Tactics In spite of the sober language used by Sir Alan G. Cunningham, in announcing the British military drive in Palestine, there is a sharp note of hysteria in the whole operation. To put the By SAMUEL GRAFTON LOS ANGELES - The veto of the ersatz price control bill has started a dozen new propa- ganda battles raging. One of the new lines (which crops up often in newspapers which were most bitter against price control) consists of a warning to the effect that radicals and enemies of the American way of life are going to try to exaggerate price increases in order to give the free enterprise system a bad name. We're off, then, on a new war of words; within a week, the enemies of price control have set up the ethical doctrine that price increases are to be minimized, and that to call undue attention to them is somehow unpatri- otic. This hasty mobilization of attitudes is an indication that the end of price control has not stopped the debate, as its opponents hoped it would, but has only transformed it into another kind of debate, at a different level. The enemies of price control are being led The Adventures of Wesley Jackson by Wil- liam Saroyan. Harcourt Brace, New York, 1946. 285 pages. WILLIAM SAROYAN'S name is not new to the literate American public. A few years ago his novel, The Human Comedy caused quite a bit of comment. It was made into a very heart- rending movie, but a good one. Saroyan is also well known for much shorter fiction and some plays. Two of his better known works are "My Name is Aram" and "The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze." He has recently pub- lished another novel which has aroused critical interest. It is called "The Adventures of Wesley Jackson" and is all about the things that happen to a young man named Wesley Jackson while he is in the army. But it is also about the things Wesley and his friends think, that is, about the things William Saroyan thinks. A great deal happens to Wesley in the book, resulting in his doing a lot of thinking. Unfortunately they seem to happen in order to furnish an.excuse for thinking rather than being the cause of his thoughts. The Adventures of Wesley Jackson is written in the usual Saroyan vein. Its theme is really "There is no truth excepting it is from love." That this is the theme is obvious because he repeats it in those words so many times. There are a lot of characters in the book and a few people. They do a lot of philosophizing about life and the war and the reason for the war, but it all comes down to universal love and no one wants to kill anyone anyhow. A few char- acters get killed in the war and Wesley finally finds the wife who can give him a son so the son can make good where he failed. Making good means finding out who you are. And at the end Wesley concludes that "The world's too sweet for murder ... Human beings must not murder one another. They must wait for God to take them in His own good time." And with that plea for peace, let us wait. All in the turning of time. A few sentences written in the Saroyan style may have a certain effectiveness, but after sev- eral pages, the style becomes monotonous and dull. Some of his characters are rather power- ful and a few of the incidents are genuinely moving, but in most cases both the characters and incidents are too obviously constructed. The philosophy is a little too sweet and there is too much of it. There is something almost appalling about loving the whole world. In short, the book is not really very good, but it is Saroyan at his usual. At his best he can be very good, but he is not at his best here. -Margery Wald * * * * General Library List Brace, Ernest Buried Stream.. .New York, Harcourt, 1946. Hanlin Tom Once in Every Lifetime. New York, V. King, 1946. Lasch, Robert Breaking the Building Blockade. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1946. Walworth, Arthur Black Ships Off Japan. New York, Knopf, 1946. Wolfe, Linnie Marsh Son of the Wilderness. New York, Knopf, 1946. The problems of city and town planning are gradually becoming a matter of wider concern. The planning of satisfactory environments in both urban and rural areas will become a more generally recognized science in the not distant future. In its total implications the matter is one of long .range planning and expenditures of large sums. Meanwhile there is opportunity for most communities to institute immediately clean-up campaigns that will add vastly to the pleasure of traveling. -The New York Times on from error to error. Having weakened price control to the point where one of the meekest Presidents who ever lived could not sign the bill, they are now going further, and attacking nat- ural corrective processes against inflation. For the American press, by and large, is doing a splendid job of keeping the public informed of price increases; it has taken over, to a certain extent, the policing function of government, .using the classical, democratic weapon of pub- licity and exposure. The great question is how long this will continue and how consciously the press will exercise this function, once there has been a subsidience of the initial excitement which makes all new prices news. Suddenly the press itself has a choice to make, between vigi- lantly keeping price increases on page one, as stop news, or muzzily filling its columns with doubtful matter designed to reassure the public that all is well; and now we see that the debate over price ceilings has become enlarged into debates over the nature of the American press and over the future of the free enterprise sys- tem. One thing leads to another; the opponents of price control may have thought they were stuffing the issue into a box, and closing the lid, but, actually, they have, with great recklessness, opened a dozen new controversies to replace and include the one they had hoped to finish. Another new comment line runs to the effect that prices will remain fairly stable, even without controls, if only the unions will behave themselves. The union answer to this, of course, will be that labor was behaving it- self with fair restraint until prices became unstable. This is the kind of talk with which men always seek to pass the time while travel- ling in an upward spiral; and it makes an- other example of the avoidable controversy, which was not avoided. The issue is being drawn in a kind of unpleasant, .naked way, with self-appointed spokesmen for the com- munity challenging labor to save the country, and with labor challenging the economy to keep it fed and clothed. We did not really need a new series of labor controversies, and it is fantastic that this part of the cost of messing price control was not more seriously considered. The enemies of price on- trol forgot that they were in a kind of poker game which no one is ever allowed to leave, regardless of the winnings or losings of the moment. We're off, then, into several new levels of social controversy, having precipitated show- downs of the kind which it is the special genius of democratic government to avoid. This is what those men who can see only price lists couldn't see; and their delight is like the ecstasy of a child pulling a table over on itself to reach a cookie; cookies being, as everybody knows, quite the most valuable and wonderful things in this world. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) cLellerj to the c'o To the Editor: A university is ordinarily a place to which one comes for an education. One's sojourn there usually proves to be an eye opener. This is es- pecially true of the University of Michigan. I have never seen such gross inefficiency and mismanagement as I have seen here since around the first of June. 1. I applied for a room for the summer ses- sion in March., I didn't know whether or not I had one until June 19th-the day I left for home. Many students heard much later. Surely the rooming shortage for the summer session wasn't as acute as that for the fall semester and I was notified two months in advance of my room for the fall semester. 2. I wanted to have my elections approved be- fore exams. There was no summer school catalog and none in sight. No one knew what would be taught and when. The time schedule wasn't even out before I left for home. 3. A deposit was required for one's room for the Summer Session. All well and good-but when I went to pay my room and board for the summer months why couldn't that amount have been deducted. No, I have had to chase from office to office, from person to person attempting to obtain my refund which I very desperately needed. I noted in the Daily for last week that the enrollment didn't reach the high figure expect- ed. No wonder-not everyone can wait until the zero hour to have plans completed. If I did not need the eight hours of University of Michigan credit which I am now striving to earn I would never have returned here this summer. Many people, not regularly students here, became dis- couraged by the way the summer session was managed and went to schools where the stu- dents are shown that they are wanted by effici- ent administration. All this inefficiency tends to pull down the great name the University of Michigan supposedly holds. To my way of, thinking it merely illustrates the need for edu- cation within one of the alleged, "institutions of higher learning." -Grace Petingill Education at 4:05 p.m., Monday, July 8, in the University High School Aud- itorium. The topic will be on "The Place of Vocational Education in Education." Lecture: There will be a lecture on "Do Colleges and Universities Contribute to Human Erosion in the Small Community?" by Howard Y. McClusky, Professor of Educational Psychology, on Tues., July 9, 4:05 p.m. at the University High School Auditorium. Dr. Preston W. Slosson, Professor of History, and radio commentator, will give a series of discussions of current events, each Tuesday, of the Summer Session in the Rackham Amphitheater at 4:10 p.m. under the auspices of the Summer Session. The public is invited to attend. Academic Notices New Registration will be held for all students not previously registered with the Bureau of Appointments on Monday, July 8 at 3:00 in Room 205, Mason Hall. This applies to both students and faculty interested in either 'eaching or General positions. Only one registration will be held during the summer. All students who will want appointments next year are urged to come to this meeting. Concerts (Continued from Page 2) TWO STARVING Czechoslovakians, too weak to walk without the aid of canes, look toward America for help-immediate help-to' save them from death. You have a chance to aid them and millions like them in famine-stricken countries. Give money or food in tin cans to the Emergency Food Collection. Give that they may live. DAILY OFICIAL BULLETIN program and the remaining in the series, scheduled for Monday eve- nings July 9 through August 13, are open to the general public without charge. Coming Events French Club: The first meeting of the Summer Session French Club will take place on Monday, July 8, at 8:00 p.m. in the Michigan Union. Professor Charles R. Koella, of the Romance Language Department, will talk informlally on: "Ou va la France". Election of officers, French songs. Social hour. Allstudents on the campus are cordially invited to our weekly meetings, which are free of .charge. Men's Education Club baseball se- ries on Tues., July 9, 4:00 p.m. at South Ferry Field. Pi Lambda Theta welcome tea on Tues., July 9, 7:30 p.m. in the West Conference Room at the Rackham Building. THE DENVER RESEARCH GROUP recently published a poll which shows that the first two requisites of the people of the United States as to the public schools are know- . ledge and character. Both scored thirty-four per cent. Traditionally, we hold Home and Church, not the Schools, for character. Also, our at- tention has been called to the like- ness and difference between charac- ter education and religious educa- tion by a Workshop which carried both in one title. Many inferred that the program used them synonymous- ly. While not identical, religious education and character education do set similar goals, such as: fair- play, respect for personality, purpose, courage, kindness and loyalty. But the procedures by which School and Church aim to attain such values are widely different.: The Church begins far back in metaphysics or a theory about the universe, while the School begins with the Immediate situation. The former would have parent and child fix attention upon the spiritual elements, eternal truths and hidden causes. These, they hold, are grasped by belief or accepted on faith, How- ever, the School asks the Home to concentrate attention at the point of practice, not faith, and to act so as to attain, in the responses of the child, the attitudes which, if made permanent, would spell Character. Here then, are brought to the par- ent and child the two disciplines es- sential to personal character and social conduct. How are our Ameri- can homes meeting the situation? The very fact that thirty-four per cent of the people call for character as a first product from the Schools would suggest that the Homes need to be supplemented. The juvenile crime increase, also bears out that conclusion, for most of the courts plus practically all who deal with crime, including J. Edgar Hoover of the F.B.I., are appealing to the Home. Thus the problem practically is a phase of Adult Education. The whole learning process for either the child- ren or the adults is in the control of adults, not of children. Hence, the Home as the basic agency for which School and Church, according to our democratic state can be only supplementary agents, is up for re- view,. Homes are in control. But homes are failing. Our own Wash- tenaw County, this location of the parent Normal of the commonwealth, home of the State University, having in its borders the State's largest Mental Hospital, a Federal Detention Home, a great University Hospital, the StatehNeuro -Psychiatric Insti- tute, the headquarters of t0e Mchi- gan Children's Institute and a list of lesser clinics too long to include, makes its reply by admtting that during the past year there werein Washtenaw County as many divorces as marriages. At that rate, the Dome, as ail agency to produce the charac- ter essential to a democratic nation, cannot be called adequate. If the Home is to solve its charac- ter problem, unify its drive for speci- fic goals and lead children and youth forth to citizenship replete with the necessary attitudes both to live suc- cessfully in our culture and to correct the evils inherent in it, Church and School will have to move into a new type of teamwork. Here is the central Home problem of our decade. Should any community convene the parents and begin this teamwork, the Church and the School immediately would find themselves saying, first: the Church is supernatural but School natural; second: the Church seeks unity of belief while School must serve community regardless of vari- ous beliefs; third: the Church has no freedom unless its leaders can think in historical perspective and move by deductive processes but School finds freedom in the contemporary life of science and the focusing of atten- tion on change by inductive proced- ures. At that point, it is customary for the leaders of Church and leaders of School to part company. Really, that is the very place where those leaders begin to agree. Here is dis- tinctiveness of function. That de- finiteness of function will enable each to serve the other if the lead- ers of both institutions can keep their eyes on the goal. The goal to be served is the Home. It is not the child as such, nor the 'com- munity, as such. The Church and the School are supports of the Home. When we admit this, as the courts have decided, particularly in the Oregon Case of 1811, that the child belongs to the Home, and accept the attitude that both the School and Church are agencies to teach parents who in turn teach children, we shall more certainly make progress in our democratic life. Finally, we venture the belief that religious education is the develop- ment of attitudes of loyalty primar- ily. Trust on the part of the children, the basis for faith, is a "given" of human nature. Did not the Master say "Except ye become as little child- ren ye shall by no wise enter into Phi Delta Kappa supper July 9, 6:30 p.m. in the Union. on Tues., Michigan Faculty Chamber Music Program: Rackham Lecture Hall, Sunday eve- ning, July 7, 8:30. Gilbert Ross and Lois Porter, violinists, Louise Rood, violist, Oliver Edel, cellist, Lee Pat- tison, pianist. The program will in- clude Schubert's quartet in A-Minor, Op. 29, Quartet No. 7 for two violins by Quincy Porter, a guest faculty member for the Summer Session, and will close with Schubert's Trio in B fiat major, Op. 99, for piano, vio- lin and cello. Carillon Recital: Percival Price, University Carillonneur, will present a recitalnat 4:1B5 Sunday afternoon, July 7, on the Charles Baird Carillon in Burton Memorial Tower. His pro- gram will include compositions by Handel, Verdi, Kamiel Lefevere, a group of Finnish airs, and four hymns. Student Recital: Beverly C. Queke- meyer,apianist, will present a pro- gram at 8:30 Tuesday evening, July 9, in the Assembly Hall of the Rack- ham Building. Given in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music, M'r. Quekemeyer's recital will include Sonata K. 576 by Mozart, Prelude, Chorale and Fugue by Franck, three piano pieces by Debussy, and Proko- fieff's Sonata No. 4. The public is cordially invited. Lecture-Recital: Lee Pattison, pi- anist, will be heard at 8:30 Monday evening, July 8, in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Building, in the first of a series of lecture-recitals. For his first program Mr. Pattison will play Schubert's Sonata in E Flat, Op. 122, and Four Impromtus, Op. 142. This International Center: The Summer Session Reception to Foreign Stu- dents will be held on Wednesday evening, July 10, in the Rackham Assembly Hall. The informal recep- tion will start promptly at 7:30 o'clock. Foreign students, faculty, and other American friends are in- vited. - Art Cinema League International Film program, first presentation, Heart of Paris, with Raimu, Michele Morgan, four-star comedy. English sub-titles. Rackham Auditorium, at 8:30 p.m., Wed., Thurs. Season tick- ets available at all bookstores, Union and League. International Center: The first in a series of weekly Thursday teas of the Summer Session will be held Thurs., July 11, at 4 p.m. in the In- ternational Center. Language tables will convene. Summer school faculty, students, and others interested are invited. There will be a shortf meeting of Epsilon Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Tues., July 9, at 7:00 p.m. in Room 302 Michigan Union. All members are urged to be present. Churches A list of the Lesson Sermon sub- jects for the Christian Science church services for the quarter of July, August, September, 1946, is as follows: July 7-God July 14- Sacrament July 21-Life July 28-Truth Aug. 4-Love Aug. 11-Spirit Aug. 18-Soul Aug. 25-Mind Sept. 1-Christ Jesus Sept. 8-Man Sept. 15-Substance Sept. 22-Matter Sept. 29-Reality. First Congregational Church: 10:45, Dr. Parr will deliver the first in a series of sermons on "Great Sayings," the subject being "Time Fights for Us." (W. E. Gladstone.) 4:30-6:45, Congregational Disciples Student Guild recreation, singing, picnic and worship at Riverside park. Lutheran Student Association: Bible Study Class will meet at 9:15 BARNABY By Crockett Johnson 17 - - - - Your Fairy Godfather's heart was touched, m'boy. All those people- And so eager to have a roof over their heads. My, my ... How powerful is the human instinct- How relentless its search for protection annins tthe vnonarie J oftheelements-. YOU drew a plan of a house,Mr. O'Malley. STrue. But one custom b uilt mansion seems I On the other hand, the immediate construction of several thousand dwellings-- Cushlamochree! What an historical moment- Note the rdnte. nrnnabv In vour diarv. . . J. J. O'Malley, architect, will launch a vast housing project!