.... . _ ..amr .._ e : N DAILY of ed and managed by students of the University of gan under the authority of the Board in Control of !nt Publications. dished every morning except Monday during the rsity year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the >r republication of all news dispatches credited to not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All of ,republication of all other matters herein also red. ered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as. I class mail matter. scriptions during regular school year by carrier, by mail, $4.54. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL. ADVEKrtStNG BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO *'OSTOs LOS ANGELES r SAN FRANctSco iber, Associated Collegiate .Press, 193940 M. S in L. an A Is P N. C; Vicar 'ineb' Editorial Staff sen . . . raniss winton . Linder . . . . Schorr . anagan . anavan . erg . . . Business Staff Managing Editor Editorial Director . City Editor . Associate Editor . Associate Editor . Associate Editor . Associate Editor - Women's Editor . Sports Editor . Paul R. Park Ganson P. Taggart Zenovia skoral.ko Jane Mowers Harriet S. Levy Mana . ... mess Mgr., Credit Manager Business Manager Advertising Manager ms Manager t NIGHT EDITOR: MILTON ORSHEFSKY The editoials. published in The Michigan Daily are written by memnbers of The Daily staff Band -represent the views of the writers Census11 Beolnes More Irnimate ..e T HE CENSUS is causing people to complain loudly and lengthily. The c1iizens of this country, it seems, object not to to letting the government know who and where tbey are, b t to revealting, intimate little items abut their income and how it is spent. The 1940 census is the first in the history of the United State that has attempted to delve into the private economic set-ups of the people. It is setting a precedent, perhaps. Again, it may be doing something which is vitally necessary- but, though necessary, distasteful and contrary to, the rights of private individuals. Certainly, no one likes to let his private affairs become public, to publicize what he does with his income and how he does it. From the stand- point of the individual, therefore, objection to the questions of the 1940 census is justified. But we should consider the government's mo- tives and methods in conducting such a complete survey of the nation before we condemn the cen- sus. During the past ten years this country as been through what is considered by many au- thorities as severe an economic depression as any country has ever experienced. Our govern- ment leaders have, in all probability, seen the need for a complete knowledge of how, where and why economic resources are used-in the very narrowest sense of this' utilization. Thus, it appears that the census is the .means the government is attempting to utilize for they at-. tainment of this end. If this suposition is true-and it must be realized that its truth is a strong probability- the deep-probing queries of the census are really for the good of the people who answer them, f"r the, good of everyone in the country. No one should object to aiding the government in a fight against the old bugaboos of unezploy- ment, depre sion and general economic slack. The very personal information demanded by the census-takers need cause no blushes-it will all btcoxi6e a mere part of a vast amount of neces- sary stadetics. Every bit will help every individ- u.l and the nation as a whole. William Newton . oegesCa- .Train T HIS COUNTRY is a democracy. The students in this University will be t tizens of this country and all of them are expected to become a part of that broad body of electors that presumably run the nation by ciecting representatives and executives. There- fore the students here should be taught what constitutes being a citizen. It is to this 'end that any form of student government is directed. But it is important that the form of student government be of a demo- (*atic nature- On this campus we have the fol- lowing student "government" bodies: the staff of the Michigan Union, not popularly elected but -appointed; the staff of the Michigan League appointed; the officers of the Interfraternity Council--appointed; the officers of the Pan- h*llenic Association, the members of the Wo- men's Judiciary Council, the members of the men's Judiciary Council, and all members of the three student publications, all these ap- pointed; the members of the Student Senate- popularly elected by the campus-at-large on a on campus had an opportunity to vote in its elections. What is the matter, then? .Wy is the student, body apathetic? Simply because it regards the Senate as an idealistic, but powerless body. It has no power to do anything, ergo, the students are not interested in it. But if it had, if it were to be established with a sound constitutional framework with definite jurisdiction and power, a large part of the student body would look at it with favor and interest. They couldn't help being interested if they encountered its rules and suggestions at every hand. Well, say some of the pessimists, that is all right, but it won't work-it never has here at Michigan. The students are too radical, or too idealistic, or too young, or too almost anything. But it can work. It has worked and is working right now on at least 600 other campuses, large and small, the country over. Vacation, the an- nual Spring Parley wil convene is usual, but this time it will consider that very problem- student government on this campus. And, more- over, the proposals resulting from that Parley will be prut before the .campus in form of refer- endum for their rejection or approval. There- fore, it is the duty of every student, as future citizens of this democracy, to come to the Parley and make their .demands felt. If they do so,. Michigan. can be assured a high place in the rolls of schools with student government; it has the potentialities. -William B. Ebner Ango-Japanese T WO DAYS ago "in Yokohama wa- ters" a British warship surrendered nine German seamen whom it had snatched Enr .a Japanese vessel. A minor crisis had devel- oped between London and Toyko previous to the "surrender," with each side vehemently protesting that it was in the right. This incident, while important in itself, is nevertheless only one aspect of a much larger struggle, the rivalry between Britain and Japan for mastery of the seas. Those nine German sailors very probably didn't mean the price of their "keep" to either nation. Yet the Japanese, come what may, weren't going to stand for such piracy, and the British seemed just as determined to maintain their gain. Britain undoubtedly wanted to establish a precedent for similar actions in the future, a precedent which would go far in enhancing the value of the Empire's sea power; while Japan, seeing just such an intention, wasted no effort to prevent further "piracy."Y Another evidence of this rivalry is the recent British statement announcing that contraband stations would be set up along the Western boast of Canada. The reason for this step can be seen when it is noted that Japanese ship- ments to the Siberian port of; Vladivostok are ultimately bound for Germany. The British mean to halt such shipment (and here the United States might also be affected), and Canada's west coast is the part of the Empire nearest to Vladivostok, and therefore more ad- vantageous for "picketing" that port. The European war fronts have pushed the Far-Eastern scene from the headlines lately; yet the two areas of conflict-as seen from such incidents as these- are easily combined, to pre- sent a kind of "world war front." Events in this sphere will bear increasingly closer watching in the near future. - Howard A. Goldman Drew Pea so Robrt .Aleii 47GO$ WASHINGTON-Discussing the presidential outlook with several friends before his death, Senator Borah remarked, "I have no idea who the candidates will be, but I have no hesitancy in making one prediction, Mrs. Roosevelt will be a very important factor in the election-and the Republican Party doesn't want to forget it." He was right. The campaign battle is still months off, but already the First Lady has be- come a major problem to at least one GOP candidate. It's a Taft camp secret, but at the moment Mrs. Roosevelt is the subject of more inner dis- cussion of strategy among them than her hus- band, the President. The reason for this is as extraordinary as the lady herself. Possessor of the real political "It" in the Taft family is not the Senator but his wife Martha. Charming, unaffected, quick-witted and a gifted speaker, she is that rare phenomenon in public life, a woman who is a genuine vote-getter. Mrs. Taft played a very decisive role in her husband's senatorial victory in 1938, and she has been a trump card in his presidential drive. Her vivacity and sparkling personality have done much to offset his rather colorless charac- ter. And while he is a dull and uninspiring speaker with a harsh voice, she invariably brings down the house with her charm and vivid ora- tory. She has been aptly described as her husband's greatest political asset. Also, and inevitably, as Mrs..Roosevelt's only rival. This is exactly where the rub comes in, and the, reason why the First Lady has become a major problem to the Taft camp. The Senator has decided that it is unwise campaign strategy 22ZIe DITOR To the Editor: Upon reading the letter which appeared in the Daily Thursday one cannot help wondering just how its ideas were developed and just why they should be put into effect. England, it was stated, is the opponent of democracy-the world's worst opponent of de- mocracy-because of her maintenance of the partition of Ireland, her holding of Gibraltar and her policy of "protecting a corrupt lot of petty despotisms" that hold India "in slavery." According to the Americans principles of De- mocracy, the letter continued, we should not support England, we should take the initiative in removing her menace from the international scene and we should form an alliance with Japan, Russia and Germany to do this. One must agree with the statment that "po- litical liberty is the right of any people to deter- mine by what form of government it shall be ruled," and that "any movement which attempts to restrict the right of the people to choose its awn government is a movement which threatens, political liberty." This very statement contains one of the most apparent faults of the letter. An alliance with Germany is advocated, among other nations, on the grounds that Britain is anti-democratic and that the Nazi regime in Germany rules by the consent of the people. But is the Nazi regime truly representative of the will of the German people? According to every report received in this country, Germany is ruled-not governed-by a dictatorship which .remains in power through the will of the people as expressed in elections. These reports, anti-Nazi propaganda, press dis- patches and hearsay evidence, are well corrob- orated by first-hand reports by former German citizens who have left the country. Britain may be justly criticized, perhaps, for her policy in India. She has been too iron- handed in her rule over the people of that gigan- tic, undeveloped country. Yet England has always been cited for bungling colonial policy which almost invariably "comes out all right in the end." Furthermore, Germany is notorious for her persecution of minority groups, especially the Jews.. This amounts to persecution, not merely depriving them of local autonomy. Japan and Russia, two nations included as prospective allies for America, are both engaged in wars of conquest today. In neither case can a sound defense be made for the war policy. Finland and China are being invaded-for the sole benefit of Russia and Japan, respectively; Thus one is led to a consideration of whether it is quite logical to call for an alliahce with Germany, Japan and Russia-in the name of democracy. Do we want to play on the team of the lads who persecute minorities, hold far- cical elections and engage in wars of conquest? Do we want to continue our Anglophile Rela- tions, remembering that England is withholding home-rule "from her colonies until they are ready for it? Do we want to weaken our neutral-' ity with any alliance with any warring power today? These questions and many others must be answered by all of us before this nation allies itself with the democratic nations of Ger- many, Japan and Russia. - William Newton eminence, he has personally, and emphatically, issued a ukase to his headquarters: "Soft-pedal the Eleanor stuff'." This does not mean that Taft's Martha is to be pushed in the background or silenced. Not at all. She will continue to be as active as before, but not in the same role as Roosevelt's Eleanor. No longer are they to be billed as "Bob and Martha." Hereafter, she will be listed as "Mrs. Taft." And her speeches will. be straight cam- paign talks, avoiding anything that smacks of the chatty intimacy of Mrs. Roosevelt's "My Day." The feminine personality angle, to which Mrs. Taft lends herself so effectively, is to be eliminated. Dave Ingalls, Taft's cousin and manager, has heartily agreed with him about this, but others, including Mrs. Taft, have not. Privately, she was slightly piqued, but being a good soldier and a good sport, she readily conceded that her husband was the boss and promised to campaign along the lines he ?aid, down as best she could. Oh, Yeah? Forrest Davis, crack newsman recently em- ployed as publicity director, argued vigorously against this policy, but when he got nowhere, sighed deeply and shrugged his shoulders. It was interesting to note, however, that shortly thereafter, despite Taft's orders, the advance press release sent out by Davis on the Tafts' campaign tour through Illinois and Minnesota began as follows: "The campaign team of 'Bob and Martha' . . . " Apparently Davis quietly used his own judgment where he thought it was better than his boss's. -And so did the newspapers. Taft's efforts to prevail upon them to follow his "no Eleanor stuff" theories have so far been unavailing. A leading Midwestern Republican paper no- tified the Taft headquarters that it was sending one of its women writers to accompany Mrs. Taft on her trip through Minnesota, her home state. Ingalls hit the ceiling and rushed Davis post-haste to see the managing editor, an old personal friend.. "y %YQung Gulliver GULLIVER'S DAILY OFFICIAL BULLET CAVILS (Continued from Page 2) GULLIVER has, been reading the papers again. The papers have the same effect on Gulliver as his columns have on you-they raise the blood pressure. Take last Thurs- day's New York Herald Tribune for example. There's a big story in the middle of the front page about the 1940 census. Accompanying the story is a picture of Senator Charles W. Tobey, Republican, of New Hamp- shire, with the caption, Assails Cen- sus 'Snooping'. The Senator, it seems, is a little sore about all the personal questions that the census takers are going to be asking. In fact, accord- ing to the United Press report: "YE GODS," HE SAID, THUMPING THE TABLE, "STALIN AND HITLER MAY PLAY THE GAME THIS WAY, BUT NOT IN THIS COUNTRY. SHAME ON OUR COUNTRY!" So you get all excited about the invasion of peoples' homes and you decide to dash off a postcard to your congressman. Then you turn oaver to page 16 and findan interview with Mr. Gerald Ryan of Washing- o . M .R a is assa tt h ton. Mr. Ryan is assistant to the Director of the Census. The reporter asked him about Senator Tobey's at- tack on the census and he answered: "All the questions in the 1940 census were asked last August in South Bend, Ind., to test public response to them, and nobody kicked about them. Nobody from the public has objected yet, because the census takers don't start out until April. I'm a Republican myself and I know what the bos are up to. They're trying to make politcal capital." OFFHAND this might be taken as just another sample of that non- sense which seems to be continually oozing out of Washington, D.C. But Gulliver thinks that it is pretty good proof that the Republicans are going to fight the forthcoming Presiden- tial elections on such issues as whe- ther or not there should be a cen- sus, whether or not the date of Groundhog Day should be changed, and whether or not the President should throw out the first baseball on Opening Day. What a spectacle the campaign is going tq provide! With President Roosevelt now faith- fully carrying out all them ajor planks of the Republican platform, the Republicans have no recourse but to raise fake issues and shout themselves hoarse trying to prove that they are better fitted to get this country into war than President Roosevelt. Yes, it's going to be a great campaign; the ten million un- employed should get a great laugh out of the whole thing. THAT ISSUE of the Herald Tribune certainly made pleasant reading. There were the usual quota of sui- cide stories: "Employing the know- ledge of electricity he had acquired while a student of refrigeration en- gineering, Edward W. Talbert, Jr., twenty-nine years old, a Negro, com- mitted suicide early yesterday ... by electrocuting himself with an elec- tric conductor he had built . . . Tal- bert's father told police that his son was despondent because of his fail- ure to obtain a job in the last two years... " "Joseph Costronovo, fifty- four years old ... waa found dead in his home . . . of a self-inflicted bullet wound in the head ... Costro- vono was unemployed." -And so on. Thenews from Europe is very sim- ilar. Take the little story from Athens: For nsubordinatioxi inafor- eign ports since the start of the war 1p Greek merchant marine seamen today were sentenced to from six to twelve months in exile on various islands in' the Aegean Sea. The men . were accused of. refusing to con- tinue their voyages becausec of wa dangers ..." NOW supposing we turn from the Tribune to the Kiplinger Wash- ington News Letter for January 27. The News Letter is subscribed to for the most part by New York business- men who want to know the score. "Pressure for credits to Allies is in- creasing. Congress is sour on such .credits now, but many sophisticated Congressmen privately admit that the move to expand Export-Import Bank and lend to Finland is a step towards some sort of financial aid to the Allies at some later period.' Gulliver submits that each quota- tion above is indirectly and intimate- ly connected with each of the othei quotations. FROM the Mailbag: Each contestant will be free to choose3 his own subject from a list of at least 30 offered. The list will cover six chapters in the development of Ger- man literature from 1750 to 1900, each of which will be represented by at least five subjects. Students who wish to compete must be taking a, course in German (101 or above) at, the time of the competition. They should register and obtain directions as soon as possible at the office of the German Department, 204 Uni- versity Hall. IKothe-Hildner Prize in German: Two prizes, of $30 and $20 respective-, ly, will be awarded to students taking German 32 in a translation compe-. tition (German-English and Eng- lish-German) to be held March 21, from 2-5 p.m. in 203 U.H. Students who wish to compete and who have not yet handed in their applications should do so immediately and obtain directions. Varsity Glee Club will sing in Dear- born on Sunday, Marh 3. Everyone who signed the list will be expected to report at the Union front door at 2:00 p.m. The concert will be infor- mal, dark suit, white shirt. Bring "Trial" costumes. Return to Ann Arbor at 8:00. Aeronautical Engineering Students: There will be available in the Depart- ment of Aeronautical Engineering two Frank P. Sheehan Scholarships and probably three assistantships, for the year 194-41. These scholarships and assistantships are, in generalshre- stricted to upperclassmen and grad- uate students, and the selection is made very largely on the basis of scholastic standing. Applications for these positions will be received up to March 15, 1940. Students wishing to make application should address them to Professor E. A. Stalker, B-47 East Engifieering Building, and should give a brief statement of their qualifica- tions and experience in regard to their scholastic wok and any outside experience they may have had. A statement should also be made giving their plans for further study in Aero nautical Engineering. Applications may be made for both the scholar- ships and the assistantships. Academic Notices Physics 196: I shall be unable to meet the class this morning. E. F. Barker Botany I make-up final exalna- tion for students who were absent from the examination the first sem- ester will be given March 8 from 7-10 p.m.,in Room 2033 N.S. Make-up Final Examinations for all Geology Courses will be given from 9-12 today in Room 2054 Natural Science Building. Sociology 51: Make-up Final Ex- amination will be given today at 2:00 p.m., Room D, Haven Hall. Mathematics 30 (b) (Short Course), Functions Defined by Second Order Differential Equations, by Pro- fessor Laporte. Preliminary meeting to arrange hours, Monday, March 4, at 3:00 p.m., in 30211 A.W This course rwill meet three hours a week for five weeks. give the third lecture in the series on "The Existence and Nature of Re- ligion" at the Rackham Lecture Hall, 8:00 tonight. Sigma Xi Lecture: Professor J. W. Beams, Department of Physics, Uni- versity of Virginia, will give an ad- dress on the subject "High Speed Centrifuging" at the Rackham Am- phitheatre on Monday, March 4, at 8:00 p.m. The meeting will be open to those who are interested. The third in the series of lectures being presented by Dr. Wilbur M. Smith of Chicago on the subject "Christ, Natural or Supernatural" will be given on Sunday, March 3, at 4:00 p.m. in the Grad Rapids Room of the Michigan League. The public is cordially invited. Today's Events Suomi Club: Meeting tonight at the International Center. All student's of Finnish descent and their friends are invited. Graduate Students and other stu- dents interested are invited to listen to a radio broadcast of Verdi's Opera Aida, today in the Men's Lounge of the Rackham Building at 2:00 p.m. Assembly Ball Decorations Com- mittee meeting today at 1:00 p.m. in the League. The Avukah is sponsoring a social hour at 4:00 p.m. this afternoon at the Foundation. Community singing and refreshments. The Avukah study group will meet at 2:00 p.m. this afternoon at the Hillel Foundation. Coming Events German Table for Faculty Mem- bers: The regular luncheon meeting will be held Monday at 12:10 p.m. in the Founders' Room of the Michi- gan Union. All faculty members in- terested in speaking German axe cordially invited. There will be a brief informal talk by Dr. W. F. Striedieck on, "Was man beim Hausbau lernt." Biological Chemistry Seminar an- nounced for Monday, March 4, will be omitted in order to permit stu- d dents and staff to attend the Sigma Xi lecture by Professor Beams, "Ul- tracentrifugation." The subject as- signed for March 4 will be discussed March 26. Seminar in Bacteriology wil meet in Room 1564 East Medical Building Monday, March 4, at 8:00 p.m. Sub- ject: "Microbiological Problems of the Near East." All interested are invit- ed. Graduate Education Club will hold an open meeting in the University High School Auditorium on Tuesday, March 4, at 4:15 p.m. Significant issues raised at the recent meeting of the American Association of School Administrators at St. Louis will be discussed. Speakers: Supt. O. W. Haisley of Ann Arbor, Professor Ra- leigh Schorling, Dean Edmonson, Dr. Carrothers and other staff members. Junior Research Club: The March meeting will be held on Tuesday, March 5, at 7:30 p.m., in the amphi- theatre, third floor, of the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies. Associate Professor W. J. Nungester, Department of Bacteriology, will speak on "Problems Involved in the Treatment of Infections with Ini- mune Serum," and Associate Profes- sor E. J. Ash, Department of Metal Processing, will speak on "Centrifug- ally Cast Cannon." Forum on Latin American prob- lems, sponsored by the Foreign Rela- tions Commission of the Michigan Anti-War Committee, will be held in the small ballroom of the Michigan Union Tuesday, March 5, at 8:00 p7m. Prof. Arthur S. Aiton will speak; and Professors Preston E. James, Julio del Toro and Dudley M. Phelps will assist in the discussion. All students in- vited. Cooperative Course in Electrical Engineering: Junior and sophomore electrical engineering students in good standing, interested in this course in connection with the Detroit Edison C9mpany, are invited to meet Monday, March 4, at 5 p.m. in Room 273 West Engineering. Concerts Orchestra Concert Cancelled: The concert announced for the University" Symphony Orchestra for March 4, has been cancelled. Graduation Recital: Jack Herman Ossewarde, of Kalamazoo, Mich., will give a recital on the Frieze Memorial Organ, in partial fulfillment for the degree of Bachelor of Music, Sunday afternoon, March 3, at 4:15 o'clock in Hill Auditorium. The general pub- lic is invited to attend without ad- mission charge. Dear Gullible: We are not particularly inter- ested in upholding the integrity of the English 'Department, nor do we wish to challenge the men- tality of the Gargoyle editors, But the story in the current issue of Gargoyle about the student re- ceiving a postcard, postmarked before the time of the final exam leads us to the inescapable chal- lenge mentioned above. The logic is irrefutable; for, if the student handed in his blue book, with postcard enclosed, any time after Exhibit Its The original painting by Dean Cornwell entitled ."Beaumont and St. Martin," owned by John Wyeth and Brother of Philadelphia, is being ex- hibited in the second floor corridor of the University Hospital until March 2. Lectures - University Lecture: Dr. Alfred Tar- ski will lecture today at 11:00 a.m. in 3011 A.H., on the subject, "An Elementary Fixed-Point Theorem. and Some of Its Applications." University Lecture: Dr M. S. Pi- All Engineering Smoker is to be held Tuesday, March 5, at 7:30 p.il, in the main ball room of the Michigan uion. Colored motion pictures. He- freshments. All students and faculty of the Engineering College are invit- ed. Cercle Francais meeting on Mon- day, March 4, at 7:30 p.m. in 408, R.L. Tat Beta Pi dinner meeting Tues- day, March 5, Michigan Union, 6 :00 p.m. International Center: Sunday eve- ning at 7 o'clock, technicolor films will be shown in Room 316, Michigan Union, showing the colleges of the Near Eastern College Association): Robert College and the Women's Col-