FA.Cr THIE MICHIGAN DXIi1Y i TH E MICHIGAN DAILY t RAIOTOA Co-ops ... And How They Grew: COOPERATIVE MOVEMENT Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; lby mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERI.S1NG BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO BOSTON * 1.08 ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1939-40 Carl Petersen Elliott Maraniss Stan M. Swinton Morton L. Linder Norman A. Schorr Dennis Flanagan John N. Canavan Ann Vicary Mel Flneberg Editorial Staff . . . . . . . . Business Staff Managing Editor Editorial Director . City Editor * Associate Editor . Associate Editor SAssociate Editor *Associate Editor *Women's Editor * Sports Editor . Paul R. Park Ganson P. Taggart Zenovia Skoratko . Jane Mowers *Harriet S. Levy Business Manager . . ... Asst. Business Mgr., Credit Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Publications Manager NIGHT EDITOR: HARRY M. KELSEY The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. University Professors And The Hatch Bill .. . CLOSE SCRUTINY of recent Senate discussions on the "Extension of the Anti-Pernicious Activities Act," otherwise known as the Hatch Bill, will reveal little publicized de- bates on a very vital public issue. These debates concern only one phase of the Hatch Bill which, taken as a whole, is designed to bar. from political activity those state em- ployes whose salaries are provided at least in part by the Federal government. The particular cate- gory of state employes in question is that of college professors in universities under the Morrill Land Grant Act. Michigan's Senator Brown argued that the bill as then written was a "sword," forcing col- lege professors to choose between political and academic careers. He claimed that there are few men who would risk the comparative security of a teaching job for the faint possibility of success at the polls, and that therefore many state governments would lose the valuable services of specialists whose salaries are paid by those very states. Senator Brown contended that the bill was really a violation ,of the right of free speech, and that-carried to its logical conclusion-it gives professors a choice of "starve or speak." KENTUCKY'S Senator Chandler argued, on the other hand, that the bill was a "shield." He said that college professors didn't want to participate in politics, and that the bill was merely protecting them in their desires. And even if they do want to enter politics, he added, they shouldn't be permitted to do so. The issue, in short, was this: Should college professors (always referring only to those in colleges affected by the Morrill Act) be per- mitted to engage in political activities, other than casting their ballots and attending public meetings as spectators? Throughout the debates Senator Brown cham- pioned not only the right of free speech but the logical privilege of the states to utilize their own employes for their own benefit. After he had tried vainly several times to insert amend- ments eliminating the possibilities he attacked, a last minute amendment finally was accepted. This contribution permitted state and county officeholders to "take a leave of absence" from their official positions if they desired to run for elective office. ANOTHER accepted amendment, proposed by Colorado's Senator Adams, stated specifical- ly that the bill does not prohobit any worker from seeking public office so long as he does not use the influence of his job to promote his candidacy. These two amendments embody logical re- strictive conditions, they made some progress in attacking the problem. One final amendment, however, was needed to clinch the point. This appeared in the final bill as Section 20: "Nothing in this act shall be construed as in any way affecting educational, religious, elee- mosynary, philanthropic, or cultural institutions, establishments and agencies, together with the officers and employees therof." Now, if the Hatch Bill becomes law, college professors will not be muzzled, but will be free, to take their normal parts in our governmental and educational system. -Howard A. Goldman 6 a.m. to 7 a.m.-PORTIONS of Palestrina's great "Missa Papae Marcelli" are sung by the Vatican Choir before the voice of Pope Pius XII is heard blessing worshippers in the square be- fore St. Peter's at Vatican City. Other liturgical music to be sung during the ceremonies includes "Tu Es Petrus" by Perosi. . 7 a.m. to 7:30 a.m.-A choir of several hundred voices under direction of Walter Eddowes sings from Temple University stadium in Philadelphia. Florence Kirk is soloist. Dr. Ross H. Stover, pastor of Messiah Lutheran Church, will de- liver the sermon. My Faith Looks Up to Thee (hymn)..Palmer-Mason The Old Rugged Cross (hymn)......George Bennard Prayer and Lord's Prayer, by Dr. Stover and audience The Omnipotence...............Schubert-Spicker A Choir led by Walter Eddowes; Florence Kirk, soloist Sermon: "Alive Forevermore" Christ the Lord Is Risen Today (hymn)...Wesley Jesus Means Everything to Me(trio). . . Barnett-Loes My Jesus I Love Thee (hymn) Hallelujah Chorus from "Messiah".........Handel Choir 7:30 a.m. to 8 a.m.-FOURTEENTH season of Easter sunrise services under auspices of Metropolitan Church Federation is given at Municipal Theater, Forest Park, St. Louis. Male chorus of 100 ulder direction of Edgar L. Mc- Faddin; Divisional Staff Band of Salvation Army, Major Herbert Hill, conductor; Douglas Schlueter, pianist; Frank Anderson, music di- ei/ EDITOR N HIS review of Irwin Shaw's "The Gentle People," presented at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre by the Hillel Players, Mr. James Greene asserts that because of a fundamental incon- sistency between Goff and the problem presented in the play, "two sets of conflicting evidence about him (Goff) arise and the revolt itself becomes meaningless." To prove this Mr. Green declares that "in the character of Goff the prime fault of the play is manifest. Shaw, in his attempt to impersonalize and generalize the forces of oppression, makes Goff himself a victim of a system in which vio- lence and oppression are implicit. He is evil because he has known only evil. But in the lives of Jonah and Stella Goodman, and Phillip Anag- nos, Goff is all evil. Thus we are given two sets of conflicting evidence about him and the revolt itself becomes meaningless. Goff himself is a victim. The triumph of the little people is not triumph at all. Whole armies of Goffs menace them. All social philosophies may be in their nature a mixture of optimism and irony, but the mixture in "The Gentle People" produces a dif- fuse, and at' times, a sprawling effect." F TO present people or larger issues as Shaw attempts to do here, in the light in which they have arisen is to produce a "diffuse and at times a sprawling effect," then Mr. Green's criticism is a just one. But it remains apparent that Goff, an allegorical character, was spawned by the very society he threatens. There are "whole armies of Goffs" and they are engendered from the same matrix from whence come the gentle people. In the play itself Goff tells of striking in Oregon, of being beaten by a rubber hose until he went back to work. From this he resolves to live the hard way, a business way and though he well realizes that he'll end up with a bullet in his belly, the short life and a merry one is for him. Is this then confusion? Is this a diffuse and sprawling philosophy? Goff is a victim, just as Jonah and Stella and Phillip are victims. There is no inconsistency in Shaw's criticism. The fault lies in the society he describes. - Milton Fineberg Dear Editor: A NOTE on French democracy: Forty-four Communist deputies, representing over a million Frenchmen, are now on trial behind closed doors. This star-chamber secrecy is what some people may hail as French democracy. I consider it in the same category with Nazi persecution. Even during the last world war political trials were not conducted secretly. If these men are guilty of treason as the French rulers claim, why not expose their treason to the public? What have these rulers to fear that they bar the people from the trials? These deputies are on trial because they disagree with the present rulers. That is their right. But this right is no longer recognized by a French ruling class bent on destroying the gains of the Peo- ples Front and plunging the French people into bloody war. -G. M. To the Editor: IN VIEW of the letter from the executive com- mittee of the American Student Union which you published, I feel the following clipping would be of interest: France Denies Refugee Order WASHINGTON, March 15. -(AP)- The French Government has denied ordering Spanish war refugees in France back to rector. The Rev. Clark Walker Cummings, ex- ecutive secretary of the federation, presides. Song service; Trumpet Call Invocation All Halthe Power of Jesus' Name (hymn)..Holden Scripture Reading Alleluia, Christ Is Risen................Kopylow Prayer; Offering Unfold Ye Portals from "The Redemption"..Gounod Address by Rev. Dr. Trueman B. Douglas, pastor of Pilgrim Congregational Church, "The Eternal Now" HolydHoly, Holy ! Lord God Almighty (hymn)...Dykes Benediction 8 a.m. to 8:30 a.m.-BRIGHAM YOUNG Uni- versity's 80-piece orchestra, Prof. LeRoy J. Rob- ertson conducting, and choir of 150 voices led by Dr. Franklin Madsen, participate in rites from College Hall on the campus at Provo, Utah. 8:30 a.m. to 9 a.m.-HELEN JEPSON, Metro- politan Opera soprano, is soloist with the Los Angeles Philharmonic 'Orchestra under ditec- tion of Albert Coates in the 17th annual Easter dawn observance in Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, Calif. A flock of doves will be released from the Tower of Legends as a salute to the day. William Farnum, reader; Gaylord Carter, organist; Glendale Community Chorus, Joseph Klein, director. Organ Prelude-Gaylord Carter Trumpet fanfare: "Flight of the Doves" All Hail the Power of Jesus' Name............Holden Congregation, led by Art Baker Invocation Easter Morn .......................Rimsky-Korsakoff Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra Alleluia ..................................... Mozart Open the Gates of the Temple ..............Knapp Miss Jepson William Farnum;~ annual reading of Emma A. Lent's Easter poem, "The Master Is Coming" Since by Man from "Messiah"............Handel Glendale Community Chorus Beginning at 3 p.m.-NEW YORK Philhar- monic-Symphony Orchestra, Albert Stoessel, guest conductor; Ernest Hutcheson, piano solo- ist. Deems Taylor is intermission commentator. Introduction and Ballet from "Ramuntcho" ................Deems Taylor Tone Poem, "Pohjalo's Daughter............Sibelius Suite from 'the opera "Garrick"..........Stoessel Concerto in C minor for Piano and Orchestra ....................Beethoven Ernest Hutcheson 9 p.m. to 10 p.m.-MASSED church choirs of Detroit join Ford Sunday Evening Hour audience. of 5,000 to sing Handel's "Hallelujah" Chorus with Richard Crooks, tenor, guest soloist, and the symphony orchestra and chorus directed by Victor Kolar. W. J. Cameron, speaker. By WILLIAM 11. ROCKWELL and HERVIE HAUFLER In 1934 a student, Eldon Hamm, '37, moved into a basement room in the Maynard Street Home of Rev. Harry L. Pickerill, had a wagonload of food shipped in to him from the farm and proceeded to live for ap- proximately 50 cents a week. When two other students who were in col- lege on a shoestring wished to join Hamm, there was established in the minister's basement the first cooper- ative on the campus. Since that time the cooperative principle has continued to offer to students the same low-cost advant- ages that Hamm had demonstrated. In 1935 Hamm and eight other stu- dents moved from their basement quarters and organized a cooperative house. In 1937 the first women's co- operative was formed. By 1939 there were six houses and 125 cooperators, and three more houses were estab- lished last fall. Along with this rapid increase in numbers and importance, there arose a need for some form of intercooper- ative planning and organization. It was felt that the spirit of cooper- ativism that existed within the houses should be carried over into the rela- tions between the individual units. In addition, the cooperatives saw that there were some problems with which individual houses could not adequate- ly cope. As the cooperatives expanded, there was between the houses an in- formal exchange of suggestions and plans for improvement in manage- ment and economy. In 1937, how- ever, these mutual relations were formalized into the Associated Cam- pus Cooperatives, a loosely knit or- ganization with no power outside of suggestion and general recommen- dation. It met seldom and was ofl little actual importance. But in the fall of 1938 the num- ber of houses rose sharply, and the, ACC assumed more positive func- tions. The first issue of the "Cooper- ator", mimeographed newspaper, was published. Exchange dinners between the various houses were initiated in" order that the members could become better acquainted with each other1 and each other's problems. Last fall representatives from the nine houses met to discuss a more' powerful central body, with more complete functional representation. The result was the Intercooperative Council as it now stands. The Council incorporated two im- portant improvements: it provided for a democratic assembly and for centralized planning of such activi- ties as purchasing and personnel. To insure the first point, the Coun- cil was made representative. Each house sends two delegates, official voting representatives, these two give their house's opinion on the various questions that the Council considers and carry back to their houses the Council's decisions. In addition, each house elects re- presentatives to a number of cen- tralized functional groups. That is, each cooperative has a purchasing agent who, instead of working entire- ly on his own, meets with the pur- chasing agents of the other eight houses and follows the unified poli- cies that the group adopts. The chair- man of this purchasing division re- presents his group on the Council. The same method is carried out for the personnel, social, management and education functions. By means of this centralized or- ganization, the purchasing commitee has been able to work out mass-buy- ing plans by which the houses may secure better prices on their pur- chases. The social committee has been working on a series of exchange dinners, and sponsored a successful dance last fall. The personnel com- mittee is planning to handle all ap- plicants for vacancies within the var- ious houses through a central body. The education committee is now sponsoring a lecture series in co- operative living, with noted leaders of the cooperative movement as speakers. Despite the fact that the great majority of the members of the cooperatives are working outside in addition to doing their share of work within the houses the scholastic average of the members is well above average. With all its improvements, however the Intercooperative Council still lacks effective legislative and execu- tive power. The great problem facing the cooperatives on campus today is to formulate some method of in- creasing the efficiency of this cen- tral body, for only through it can the houses continue and expand. A new constitution is now being drawn up that will enable the Intercooperative Council to come into its own as a guiding and synthesizing unit. To quote from the preamble: "In order to form a more perfect union, the student cooperatives of the Univer- sity of Michigan hereby intrust in the hands of their democratically elected representatives the adminis- tration of their common interests, and invest them with the power to legislate and execute such acts as they shall deem necessary." MUSIC EJ By JOHN SCHWARZWALDER It strikes us that our colleague, Gulliver, has been unfairly maligned by several who would criticize his harmless little satire on the latest effort of the Metropolitan Opera Assoc. to milk an all too gullible public. In our humble but con- sidered opinion Gulliver pulled his punches in- stead of telling all. The whole truth is even worse than what he told of the present campaign. To begin with there is some doubt that the present campaign for funds is ridiculous. Any enterprise expecting to realize a million dollars by radio advertising in these so cautious days must choose its method carefully; and the Met- ropolitan's advertising is no worse than that for a number of cereals and tootn pastes and pos- sibly should be subjected to no more ridicule. In addition, the opera, while expecting a return of a million dollars has been able to create the impression that it is a charitable and cultural institution worthy of the contributions of the public. This is a real achievement, and one of which ace advertisers and agencies might well be proud. But the real point is not whether the methods of the Met are praiseworthy, but whether the institution is worth saving. And it is here that we find ourselves in greatest accord with Gulli- ver. Taking points up as they occur let us first examine the charge that the Met is owned body and soul by the box holders. That this can be denied is an impossible proposition. It is the boxholders who built the opera, it is they who insisted on its present size and shape with deplorable vision (except from the boxes) and lamentable acoustics (almost everywhere). It is the boxholders who refused to sell one box to a comparatively recent millionaire for the price of one year's cost of running the whole place. It is they who keep prices so high that even in the Family Circle students and any but the comparatively well to do cannot afford ad- mittance except on bargain nights. It is the boxholders who have hired broken down singers to manage the opera and have allowed them to present nothing but the traditionally worthless succession of 19th century Italian opera, while contemporary works went begging at the gate. It is they who by their reactionary policies have discouraged native composers to the point where no American operas are being written, and have disheartened American singers so that they can- not be sure of earning their bread. They have permitted what few selections of native singers are made to be dominated by two .very wealthy music schools. They have insisted upon an out- worn technic of both singing and acting, and have utterly divorced opera singing from the musical life of the young. Above all, they have fostered the view that music is a thing apart, a "cultural ideal," in- stead of a living force and a necessair ne iin Of ALL Things.'.. ---y MOR TY Q-- AS MR. Q. predicted a few weeks Men" (which is worth at least The play was wonderful; the ago, the Hillel Players' "Gentle six "Gone With the Winds") acting was excellent; the direc- there were lummoxes in the the- tion and technical points were People" was very much worthwhile atre who laughed at Lennie. Here very fine. But the audience was and, as Jim Green pointed out yes- was this big, childish, harmless, lousy. terday, Herb London and Norm Ox- imbecile, with not a bit of mali- handler, as Jonah, the oppressed, ciousness in him, and some peo- SPEAKING of those Predictions and Goff, the oppressor, respectively, pie thought it was funny, that were made here a short were outstanding. But Jim made a C0, last night, these same ig- while ago, you will remember, that mistake by reviewing the play; he norant goofs, who should Mr. Q. (with Mr. F.) also predicted should have reviewed the audience have been off somewhere, play- the Wayne-Michigan swimming score instead, and it might have gone, ing the nickelodeon or in a card something like this: game, made it miserable for as 53-31 (it was 54-30) and now with those who were there to see a this Hillel ,success, it makes it two The Hillel Players put on their play, a very serious and signifi- for two in the clairvoyant depart- major production of the year last cant play. When Eli, the young ment. The other two oraclings were night in Lydia Mendelssohn and man who was "good for Stella," that Michigan would win the Nation- the audience once more made as opposed to Goff, the racket- al Collegiate swim title at Yale next perfect fools of themselves. eer, mentioned he went to Boy's week, and that, if FDR ran, he would Keeping up their amazing ree- High School in Brooklyn, those win. The second one can wait for a ord, established in "Grapes of in the audience who lived within while, but if looks as if Matt Mann Wrath" and "Of Mice and Men," i 600 miles of that establishment or the Board in Control of Athletics the audience maintained their thought it was a sign to start a or somebody is conniving to make amateur standing by laughing good old Boy's High cheer. DMr. Q.'s forecasting look bad, for in the wrong places, talking out When Flatbush Ave. or President the latest report has it that Mich- loud during tense scenes, and, St. or Steeplechase Pier was igan's great tank team is making the in general, conducting them- mentioned, again there were 750-mile trip by bicycle or kiddie-car, selves like a pack of kids at a roars and shouts and guffaws. depending on the weather. So. Mr. Saturday matinee. Now granted that Shaw intended Q. suggests that the Finnish Relief In the "Grapes of Wrath," these things to get a reaction Committee tak~e some of that dough (and those of you that didn't from the audience, he did not, they took in last night at the Field see it, ought to be ashamed) the expect them to create such an House and appropriate a few bucks audience laughed at Muley, the audience fuss that many of the so that the Maize and Blue swimmers dispossessed sharecropper who choicer lines in the play were won't have to spend all day Wednes- would not give up his land, and lost in the din, day and Thursday on the road. (See they laughed at Casey, the erst And again granted that there Mel Fineberg's Corner for a few while preacher, who found he was feeling of camaraderie be- more needles). did not have "the call" anymore tween the audience and the ac- and who discovered he could help tors, because they knew them or REWARD Department: Mr. Q. of- men more by trying to find a they went to class with them or fers a reward of six sets of Fin- better way of life on this earth, whatever it was, but Mr. Q. be- nish skis for anyone giving informa- they laughed at Casey, the erst- lieves the acting was of a high tion leading to the capture of a cer- a thing to laugh at: they were enough calibre so that it was not tain skunk family that has decided pitiful and admirable characters, necessary to make it like a lodge to spend the spring in the shade of not comic. And, in "Of Mice and meeting or a social. the Michigan Union hospitality. DAILY' OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Lecture 6: "New Rhythms in Music." Rackham Amphitheatre. bert Davis, Chairman of the English Department, Cornell University, will lecture on "Swift and the Pedants" under the auspices of the Depart- ment of English at 4:15 p.m. on Tues- day, March 26, in the Rackham Lec- ture Hall. The public is cordially invited. Mr. Louis Untermeyer's Schedule: Monday, March 25, 4:15 p.m. Lec- ture 5: "The Painters Discover Amer- ica." Rackham Amphitheatre. Tuesday, March 26, 4:15 p.m. "In- formal discussion (The Painters Dis- cover America). East Conference Room, Rackham Building. Wednesday, March 27, 4:15 p.m. the difference being that the hat company pays for its time on the air and when you give them a contri- bution you get a hat as well as the thanks of society. Our pen is not as heavy as Cato's but we give it as our primary propo- Thursday, March 28, 4:15 p.m. "In- formal discussion. (New Rhythms in Music). East Conference Room, Rackham Building. University Lecture: Dr Richard P. McKeon, Dean of the Division of Humanities, University of Chicago, will lecture on "Discovery and Proof in the History of Logic" under the auspices of the Department of Phil- osophy at 4:15 pm. on Friday, March 29, in the Amphitheatre of the Rack- ham Building. The public is cordial- ly invited. University Lecture: Professor C. H. Behre, Jr., of the Department of Geo- logy at Northwestern University, will lecture on "The Role of Minerals in the War" under the auspices of the Department of Geology at 4:15 p.m. on Thursday, April 4, in the Rack- ham Auditorium. The public is cor- dially invited. American Chemical Society Lee- Pargment will give the seventh lec- ture on the Cercle Francais program, "Quelques opinions de la jeunesse Francaise sur l'Amerique et la France", Wednesday, March 27, at 4:15 p.m., room 103, Romance Lan- guage Building. Today's Events International Center: Tonight a Symposium on International Edu- cation will be presented at 7 o'clock by the following students: Mrs. Fran- cesca Thivy, Madras Women's Col- lege; Miss Ruth Ciu, Hwa Nan Col- lege, China; Deogracias Borlongan, University of the Philippines; Fak- hri Maluf, American University, Sy- ria. Graduate Outing Club will meet today at 2:30 p.m. in the rear of the Rackham Building. Pro- gram consists of a hike to the Ann Arbor water softening plant, and skating for the last time of the sea- son at the Coliseum. Supper at the club rooms. All graduate students,