I t i 4- irt i A. It ,...r _ .. 1 AL = ~------ ---~---- - _______ THE MICHIGAN DAILY 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 Asociated 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 yea by carrier, $4.00; 'by mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL. ADVER-SING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College P,.tblishers Represetative 420 MADisoN Avc. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHIcA"O'* DOsTO' LoS ArGELS E-SAC 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 Fineberg Editorial Staff . . .a . . . . Business Staff Managing Editor Editorial Director . City Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Women's Editor Sports Editor Business Manager Asst. Business Mgr., Credit Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Publications Manager Paul R. Park Ganson P. Taggart Zenovia Skoratko Jane Mowers Harriet S. Levy NIGHT EDITOR: PAUL M. CHANDLER The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. About That April Peace Meeting .. . FOR MANY YEARS Michigan stu- dents have been telling themselves that they will never march off to the ghastly and beastly bloodiness of war to be killed for no reason at all. Today, despite a passionate desire to do some- thing that will help us stay out of war, the typical American youth is bewildered. Political, ecoiomic, :aociai, and psychological causes of war seem to be too complicated and bewildering for any individual to effect a remedy for them. Thus, blocked and helpless, we do nothing. UT, now, Michigan students, still living in peril, are planning one outlet for action. It is true that we cannot stop the bloody massa- cres in China; nor can we halt the dread des- truction which is sweeping the seas. Not only are we too helpless to exert any control over the foreign situation, but also we must live in a world of terror and fright because of the constant threat that the United States may soon decide to send troops to Europe. SHE one thing which we can do-and which will be done this April-is to make it known, together with thousands of other youths, that there is a powerful group of potential soldiers in the U.S. which hates war and which will support the statesmen who are making a real struggle for peace. We students can inform the world that we are aware of the instruments which propagandize war hysteria, and that lie are no longer responsible to them; that we are aware of the selfish interests which precipitated us into the last war, and that we shall be sus- picious of their influece in international or national events in the future. No Michigan student believes that peace dem- onstrations alone stop wars. But most of us do believe that when the students of the University of Michigan, together with half a million other young men and women, announce their interest in peace, it is an expression of force and opinion that cannot be ridiculed, and one that will have a powerful influence upon the thoughts and deeds of those who govern us. Too, peace demon- strations in themselves are a stimulus to thought and discussion by students, and as such can impress the desire for peace even more strongly into the character of Michigan youth. FOR these reasons, we believe that the interests o every student are involved in the peace demonstration which is being planned by the Campus Peace Council. The more solid is the student support of the meeting, the more solid will be the impact upon the American public. If the world gets one small hint that U.S. college youth is united in its intention to remain out of war, the demonstration will have been a success. - Paul Chandler Blasting The SEC Again rv BE Securities Exchange Commission again draws the fire of Wall Street, thus once more focussing the spotlight of public attention on this administrative body which was set up by President Roosevelt to attempt to bring ,.,,,~ .....v #- of f-a ,n +Fo ,- c.7 carry out the intention of those legislators thn who were elected by an American people that was dis usted ith speculation, weak stock issues, the roundabout, secretive methods of many stock manipulators, the practices of hold- ng companies and the issuances of weak stocks and bonds-in short, the American people wanted a job of house cleaning. And so, laws were passed, and the SEC was organi7ed to ook after their enforcement. 1UT Wall Street, Ihat was neer able to con- trol itself so that the best, interests of the American people, or even of that small propor- tion of the people that has the money to invest, were protected, has kept up a continual barrage of diatribes and vicious criticism. The latest instance of this attempt to bring discredit upon a group that is trying to protect Wall Street from itself happened this week as the Invest- ment Bankers Association took up the oppor- tunity that was afforded by the Commission's request for helpful suggestions on a. rule of the Holding Company Act. The SEC asked for help on improving the rule from the standpoint of both the SEC and private business. Several individual letters were sent in, and the sugges- tions they made were constructive and may prove beneficial. But the IBA, in its letter, took another blast at the Commission and asked once more for a Congressional review of its conduct. In place of constructive criticism, the IBA, which represents only investment bankers who have more than $25,000 capital, attacked and reviled the Commission. The IBA took this op- portunity again to state its opposition to the whole line of protection the government has set up for the general public. AND, inthis repeated criticism of a control that must be set up, the bankers present a threat to economic stability. The bankers con- tinually hold that stringent control of the secur- ities market is the main reason for the present stagnancy of the capital market. Perhaps the control is one reason. Perhaps it is no reason. At any rate, there must be control if the abuses of 1929 are not to be revisited upon us. If crashes and bankruptcies and deprivations of the earn- ings of a lifetime are not to be the order once more, control is needed. The bankers, them- selves, never have met this need. The SEC is meeting this need. The country, as a whole, would greatly benefit, if the the bankers would help. - Alvin Sarasohn Civil Liberties At Hlaif Mast . . . T VENTY YEARS ago when the Uni- ted States was yet in the midst of the World War hysteria and most liberals feared to express their real sentiments, a group of progressives banded together to fight for the application of the Bill of Rights. The young American Civil Liberties Union arose in the stormy days of post-war hysteria to raise the flag of tolerance. On Feb. 5 the directors of the A.C.L.U. adopted a iesolution that has led many, of its past supporters to believe that the board is suc- cumbing to a pre-war hysteria. The resolution characterizes it as inappropriate for any person to hold a position on the governing committees or the staff of the Civil Liberties Union "who is a member of any political organization which supports totalitarian dictatorship in any coun- try, or who, by his public declaration and con- nections, indicates his support of such a prin- ciple." URING the past week a group of seventeen distinguished liberals including Dr. Robert M. Lovett, Governor-General of the Virgin Is- lands, Professor Franz Boas, Columbia Univer- sity, Theodore Dreiser and the Rev. Dr. A. T. Mollegan, Alexandria Theological Seminary, selt an open letter to the ACLU condemning its ac- tion. The letter stated, "In the past, loyalty to the Bill of Rights in America has been the sole re- quirement imposed by the Civil Liberties Union on its members and its officers, and this should continue, as always to be its only criterion.--We believe that by the purge resolution the Amer- ican Civil Liberties Union encourages the very tendencies it was intended to fight." The signers go on to characterize the phrasing of the reso- lution as dangerous and its content as vague. THE letter is not the only protest. It has fol- lowed on the heels of many other like ac- tions. Dr. Harry F. Ward. professor of Christia:' ethics at the Union Theological Seminary, has resigned from the national board and the mem- bership of the ACLU. In doing so Dr. Ward, chairman of the Union for twenty years, pointed out that, in adopting the resolution, the National Committee and the board has "surrendered po- sitions vital to the defense of civil liberties, position whose defense under constant attack is the honorable record of the Union." ON March 6, the Michigan Civil Rights Fed- eration which collaborates with the ACLU in many cases requested in a communication to Roger Baldwin that the central body of the Civil Liberties Union reconsider an action which they did not regard as in keepng with the deals for which the Union had fought for two decades. Unless the national committee revokes its action of Feb. 5. the flag of tolerance hoisted so bravely twenty years ago will fly at half mast. There can be no halfway mark for civil liberties. -Marvin Lerner Income Tax 'Returns' The Treasury recently encountered a new in- come tax problem-not underpayments, but overpayments. It seems that in years past many taxpayers sent more money than they owed, and after a year or two put in legitimate claims for repayment, plus 6 percent interest. mrl n m'naiv- ia lly h- -'11 -1z-iin1Q f ani GULLIVER'S CAVILS Iy YOUNG GULLIWER ( ULLIVER doesn't want to add to the mild controversy which has been going on in The Daily columns about the Hillel Players' produc- tion of The Gentle People. He would like, how- ever, to take that controversy as a starting point for a few remarks about student play production. "In the nast four years, the Hillel Players have presented student-written plays. Without going into the fundamental merits of such perfor- mances, it is certainly true that there was a finish to last night's publication that would have been hard to achieve with a student-written play." So ended James Green's Daily review of The Gentle People. Those closing lines were possibly inspired by the program notes, which listed the student-written plays which Hillel has produced in the past four years: "These In- cluded: Unfinished Picture, by Theodore Kane Cohen, '35, winner of the Hopwood Drama Award of 1935; They Too Arise, by Arthur Mil- ler, '38, Hopwood winner; Roots, by Edith G. Whitesell, 1937 Hopwood winner; and Hospital Hill, by Harold Gast, '39. Gentle People marks the return to the production of non-studuent- writtenply" Gulliver would like to take exception to both of those statements. It is especially difficult to find any justification for Mr. Green's closing remarks when you consider the remarkable de- gree of talent which student playwrights have displayed in the last five years. For example, of the plays which the Hillel Program lists. Cohen's Unfinished Picture won a Bureau of New Plays Award, as did Miller's They Too Arise. The latter play was also produced by the Fed- eral Theatre, and was so successful that it was revived twice. Mrs. Whitesell's Roots" won firstj prize in the Federal Theatre national collegej contest and was scheduled to go into production in New York when the Federal Theatre was abandoned. THREE of the four plays were already royalty plays when they were produced here, and were given royalty-freeeby special permission. What Mr. Green is saying is that for some occult reason it is impossible to present these plays in as finished a form as a play which has run on Broadway. What the Hillel Program is saying (perhaps inadvertently) is that these student- written plays were OK, but that they're no great shakes compared to big-time stuff like The Gentle People. The Program neglects to men- tion that three of the plays won awards not only in competition with other Michigan stu- dents, but in competition with young play- wrights all over the United States--the Bureau of New Plays contest is open not only to college students, both undergraduate and graduate, but to playwrights who have been out of school for as long as three years. Incidentally, the only other student-written play that we have had the privilege of seeing in Ann Arbor in the last five years was This Proud Pilgrimage, by Norman Rosten. This Proud Pilgrimage was written here after Rosten had won a scholarship from the Bureau of New Plays for graduate study in Ann Arbor. Rosten, whose latest play has been sought for Broadway production by the Theatre Guild, is well on the way to becoming one of America's outstanding playwrights. A leading New York producer of especially distinguished dramas classed This Proud Pilgrimage with the finest American dramas to date. John Gassner, the eminent New York critic, wrote: "If the Bureau of New Plays accomplishes nothing more than the en- couraging of talent like Norman Rosten's it will have amply justified its existence. It is not too much to say that this poetic treatment of the Haymarket tragedy reveals a new talent on the horizon . . . (the play is) a splendid chronicle, conceived in fire and executed nobly, provocative, and here and there memorable." I N THE past four years student-written plays at the University of Michigan have won eleven national awards, most of which have been for production or publication. Now there can be no question but that there are a lot of talented young playwrights coming to Ann Ar- bor, and the Hopwood Contest is not their only inducement. For the most part, as far as Gul- liver can discover, they have come to the Univer- sity to study under the brilliant Professor Rowe, whose playwriting classes have won him a na- tional reputation. Robert Sherwood, speaking in New York recently as President of the Drama- tists' Guild, referred to Yale, Michigan, and Stanford as the places where our young drama- tists are coming from. All of which should make you pretty proud of the University. But consider this: at Yale and at Stanford, as at the Universities of North Carolina, Illinois. Ohio, California, Western Re- serve, Cornell, Chicago, (and plenty more) the University community has an opportunity to see the new work of their young dramatists regularly.. On some programs, up to ten long plays and thirty one-acters are produced in a single season. The students are provided with encouragement and a laboratory for experi- mentation and development. But at the University of Michigan? Remem- By JAY McCORMlCK JR. GEORGE GALLUP'S Ameri- ican Institute of Public Opinion, oming when it did on the crest of a wave of statistics consciousness in America, has become one of those great, unquestioned institutions whiichexist healthily on the phenom- enon known as headline scanning. Despite objections to the 1940 census questions, there is a crying need for accurate information necessary to both government and business alike. On both factual and attitude ques- tions, polls such as the Gallup or- ganization uses are of great value. Yet the unfortunate thing about such polls is that not only may they be impartial reporters on the Amer- ica beat, but it is also possible for them to become moulders of opinion themselves. Statistics, because they are regarded by the layman as sanc- tified by the inviolable rules of math- ematics, are looked upon as abso- lutely accurate measures of certain things. This is a dangerous point of view, leaves Sir and Madam News- reader stuffed to the gills with what they believe to be the whole truth when in fact it may be only half- truth, or even not truth at all. For statistics as presented by a commercial feature agency, and this is not to be interpreted as a direct accusation, may be handled in a way that entirely beggars the real issues involved, and ambiguously hems and haws, employs terms alternately based on anything except the ingen- uity of the writer of the accompany- ing article. Statistics are dry read- ing in themselves, consequently there is always this problem of interpret- ation for quick reading, but in the popularizing process certain thingsl are stresed and certain things over- looked. and quite often the things overlooked are either important in themselves, or in the way they mod- ify the matter discussed. Any newspaper man looks first in I The headline scanning habit has been mentioned, Now as has baen said, statistics have a certain con- vincing air about them. Knowing that a report, sucl, as that printed weekly by newspapers the country over on the Gallup polls, is based on statistics, casual readers will believe the written material connected with and based upon the figures to be tantamount to Gospel truth. Very well. Now consider the lead on a story released Sunday by the Amer- ican Institute of Public Opinion, and remember that this lead is about the a story for a good lead, a terse, eye- attracting sentence or two which will both sum up the entire story and make the reader go on reading the rest of it for more facts. But a zea- lous reporter often lets his news nose run away with him when it comes to writing such a lead. It is here that editorializing enters into the picture. He picks the thing 1n, the story he thinks most important, and picks it in the only way he can, on a basis of what is important to him and his paper, and the readers of his paper. It is necessary to remember this always when reading even straight news items. Above all, it is necessary to remember it when the materia1 is by-lined conly, for the very exis- tence of a by-line tells that the per- sonality of the writer has consider- able influence on the story. Compare coverage of a conservative paper and a liberal paper on the same story. Unless it is something entirely with- out political significance, such as a fire or a flower show, the chances are the two stories will be very dif- ferent, though both will be printed as straight news. Which is right, or whether there is a right and wrong in such matters, is a valid question, but one which is never considered by newspapers, who are not in the habit of pointing out that their stories are true if you are such and such a kind of reader, but otherwise not. maximum read even by those who get beyond page one in a paper. The story begins: "If you happen to ask your lawyer for political ad- vice this fall in case President. Roose- velt runs for a third tern, the chances today are that he will prob- ably tell you to vote Republicn," This question, according to the story asked only, "If President Roosevelt runs for a third term will you vote for him?" No reference is made in the question to what party will be supported in case a third term is opposed, and no mention is made of any undecided answers. But the lead says that your lawyer. in case you have one, will probably advise you to vote Republican. Where is he basis for that statement? From the figures given, there is none. Where again is the basis for selection of the cross section of lawyers who answered the question? None is given, other than that they were taken from the stan- dard legal directories. No considera- tion of what the party affiliations of the group were, evidently, for such information would not be found in directories. Yet, though 29 per cent of the lawyers, graduates of the country's as a rule conservative schools, many of them no doubt cor- poration lawyers who are well aware of which side of the slice has the butter, were in favor of a third tern for Roosevelt, the lead says,. -the chances are that he will probably tell you to vote Republican," But for the lack of space, other figures could be quoted from the same and other stories to bear out the point of this article, namely that unless Dr. Gallup is taken with quite a strong dose of common sense, and unless he is in- duced to print more figures and facts on his sweeping assumptions, unless, in short, more is learned of the real validity of his polls, they are of very little use to the American public, ex- cept as a convenient means of spreading a mild and subtle propa- ganda in its worst form, the sheep's clothing of facts and figures. Dr. Gallup's Poll Of Public Opinon .I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) 12:00 and 1:00 to 5:00, and on Satur- day, March 30, from 8:30 to 12:00. Academic Notices Business Administration 4: All stu- dents who have not received assign- ments for this course are to make appointments as soon as possible with Mr. Meacham. Exhibitions Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: Photographs of Finnish architecture, by Ernst L. Schaible, '37A, Booth Traveling Fellow in Arch- itecture in 1938. Architectural cor- ridor, ground floor cases, through April 5. Open daily 9 to 5, except Sunday. The public is invited. Exhibit: Rubbings from Han Tombs showing Legends and Life of the Chinese i nthe 2nd Century A.D. South Gallery, Alumni Memorial Hall; 8:30-5:00 one week only, end- ing March 30. Lectures University Lecture: Professor Her- 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. today in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The public is cordially invited. 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. Mr. Louis Untermeyer's Schedule: 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. Lecture 6: "New Rhythms in Music." Rackham Amphitheatre. Thursday, March 28, 4:15 p.m. "In- formal discussion. (New Rhythms in Music). East Conference Room, Rackham Building. French Lecture: Professor M. S. 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. The eighth in the series of Naval Reserve Lecture being given for Reports by: Jose Santos, "Mosses ofn the Philippines." Hazel Halpin, "Theo Bryophyte communities of a Killar- ney Oakwood." Charles H. Griffitts, "Naiadita, A fossil Bryophyte with reproductive organs." Tobias Lassar,e "Flora of Guadeloupe." Rebecca Brnckerhoff, "The classification of the Hepaticae." Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet in Room 319, West Medical .Building, at 7:30 tonight. Subject,o "Uric Acid and Purine Problems."n All interested are invited.I Association Forum: Professor Arth- ur Dunham will lead the discussion on "Is Religion a Necessary Motiva- tion for Service?" tonight at 8:00 in Lane Hall.n Varsity Glee. Club: The following, men are expected to go to Saginawv today. The bus will leave theg Union at three o'clock sharp. Bring full dress suits, ribbons. Kelly, Secrist, Heininger, Scherdt,1 Tobin, Allen, Holt, Barber, Repola,1 Steere, Pinney, Crowe, Tuttle, Peter- son, Erke, Ossewaarde, Stephenson,e Mattern.- Connor, Sorenson, Liimatainen, Landis, Gibson, Haberaecker, Fenni- more, Gell, Mason, Massin, Langford, Rector, Loessel, Penn, Hines, Fromm,i Bergen.t The Future Teachers of Americai will meet today at 4:15 pim. in thef Education Library in U.E.S. Dean Edmonson will speak to the group. All those interested in education are invited. Al-Thaqaf: The Arabic Culture Society will hold its first Round Table Discussion group on the Geographi- cal, Cultural, and Social aspects of the Arab Near East. Three Gradu- ate Arab Students will lead the dis- cussion in the Union at 4:30 p.m. today. All interested are invited. The semester group picture of the o loouoS auq jo lnaeJ put squapn's Hygiene and Public Health will be taken at the West entrance of the West Medical Building at 12:00 noon, today. Student Social Work Club: Meeting today at 1:30 p.m. in Room A, 40 East Ferry St., Detroit. American Student Union meeting at 8 p.m. today in Natural Science Auditorium. Herbert Witt, National Executive Secretary of the ASU, will speak on "Is Roosevelt For Peace?" and will discuss the role of the cam- pus in the fight against war. Congress has selected the follow- ing men for committee postions. A meeting of all committee men will be meet tonight at 8:15 in the chapel of the Michigan League. A meeting of the Conversational ebrew class will be held at the Hill- el Foundation tonight at 7:00. The Bibliophile Section of the Fa- culty Women's Club will meet at Uhe Michigan League today. The Bookshelf and Stage Section of the Faculty Women's .Club will meet today at 2:45 p.m. in the Mary Henderson Room at the Michigan League. Coming Events Seminar in Physical Chemistry will meet in Room 122, Chemistry Build- ing, at 4:15 p.m. on Wednesday, March 27. Mr. Nathaniel Nichols will speak on "Theory of the Polaro- graph." Seminar in Oriental Religions: "Is- lam" will be discussed by Mr. Ismail R. Khalidi at the fifth meeting of the Seminar, Lane Hall, 7:30, Thursday evening instead of Wednesday, as in the past. All interested students are welcome. The Pre-Medical Society will meet Wednesday, March 27, at 8:15 p.m. in the East Amphitheatre of the West Medical Building. The program will include elections of officers, ratifica- tion of the constitution, and the showing of medical movies. All pre- medics invited. Reserve Officers: Major J. W. O'- Daniel, Infantry Reserve, will speak on "Military Intelligence Factors in the Commander's Decision" at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 27, in Room 304 of the Michigan Union. All mem- bers of the Officers Reserve Corps may attend. Phi Tai Alpha: Meeting will be held Thursday, March 28, 7:30 p~m. in the Rackham Building. Prof. Bruno Meinecke will lecture on "Mu- sic among the Romans" in the West Lecture Room (illustrated). Re- freshments will follow in the West Conference Room. All members urged to be present. Prof. Mentor L. Williams of the English department will speak on "M-Day Plans and Preparations", Wednesday, March 27, 8 p.m. at the Michigan Union. A forum will fol- low. This meeting, sponsored by the Michigan Anti-War Committee, is open to all students interested in the preparations for wartime mobiliza- tion. Sigma Xi: Mr. Edward C. Pardon, Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds, will give a brief talk on the "Heating Tunnels" at the Rackham