PAGE- FOUR~ T-HE MUCGHG-AN. D AI LY- WEfNFSDAY, ArmL2, 1941; . . . . . . .... . ...... THE MICHIGAN DAILY FIRE andC WATER By MASCOTTr Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Studen 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 newpaper. All tights 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 the regular school year by carrier $4.00; by mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED 1FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BYC National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO - BOSTON * Los ANGELES * SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Editorial Staff Hervie Haufler . . Alvin Sarasohn . . . . Paul M. Chandler . . . Karl. Kessler . . Milton Orshefsky . . . Howa;d A. Goldman . . . Laurence Mascott . Donald Wirtchafter . . Esther Osser . . Helen Corman . JOusiness Staff Business Manager . Assistant Business Manager Women's Business ]Ianager . , Women's Advertising Manager SPress, 1940-41 Managing Editor Editorial Director SCity Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor . Sports Editor .Women's Editor Exchange Editor Irving Outtman Robert Gilmour Helen Bohnsack . Jane Krause NIGHT EDITOR: JEAN SHAPERO The editorials published in The Michi-. gan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Defe se Delay Not Labor's Fault . . N WASHINGTON, a few days ago, the Senate Civil Liberties Commit- tee reported on its investigation of the "Little Steel" strike of 1937. The importance of the findings of this Committee may be evaluated when they are applied to the existing difficul- ties between the labor unions and management today, "Any company," the report read, "which stands up and flatly refuses to enter into a signed bargaining contract under all circum- starnces, and any employer association which supports and assists it in such a position, are endangering the national security. "Such conduct not only threatens the vital continuity of production, but it challenges the nation's domestic authority, weakens respect of labor fol' national aims, and destroys the sense of unity and common effort." THIS IS PROBABLY AS GOOD AN ANSWER as any to those who maintain that manage- ment is doing all in its power to keep the na- tional defense production moving and that the delay is all the fault of labor. To repeat, a simple, basic fact-the right to strike is labor's strongest weapon. The men who. are out on strike now are unquestionably as interested in keeping production lines moving as the rest of the nation. But industry is making all the profit from defense contracts; labor is not; and industry needs labor, just as much as the nation needs the products of industry. That is the time to strike. A ND HOW HAS THE NATION fulfilled its end of the bargain with labor? The 'Ford Motor Company has violated the National Labor Re- lations Act several times, but has not been prose- cuted for these violations; they continue to get defense contracts from the government; prom- ises have been made by OPM officials as in the Allis-Chalmers strike, but they have not been kept; unions have been threatened with legis- lation which would prohibit striking in defense industries. This does not create "the respect of labor for national aims.'' The blame for strikes and delays in defense production is not all labor's as the report of the Civil Liberties Committee shows, as we can see from the unwillingness of management to bargain with labor and from management's vio- Jation of the National Labor Relations Act. It takes two to make a strike: labor, which strikes that it may get better working. conditions, its own barganing agent and its share of profits from the tremendous government spending pro- gram; and management, which is unwilling to meet the programs of the labor unions. IFCHARGES are made against the unions that they are halting defense production and are putting the United States in a vulnerable posi- tion, the same may be made against manage- ment. It is just as much management's respon- sibility to the national defense program to meet the demands of labor, as it is for labor to pro- duce the arms and materials for the nation's de- fense. -Bernard Dober "WE SEEK FREEDOM FROM WANT, and we impoverish ourselves. We seek freedom from fear, and we terrorize ourselves. We seek freedom of worship and freedom of speech and we suppress them." . . . "we will emerge from this var with a "government scarcely distin- guishable from those which we went forth to fight . . . there will be enormous debt, repudia- tion, inflation, hunger, want and fear. To win this war, we must have peace." Thus last Sunday did the University of Chi- cago's President Hutchins make what we con- sider one of the most penetrating and cour- ageous speeches of our day and era. The com- plete speech is well worth reading, especially by the "liberal" interventionists. "o, to be in England now that April's there"-- Browning, Hitler and President Roosevelt. We may soon be., For April is the dread, sinister month. In Ann Arbor it is the month of alternate sleet and sun- light; in Europe it is ever the month of intensi- fied warfare; in Washington, D.C. it is the month of full bloom for the cherry blossoms and traditional month for a U.S. declaration of war. Although Franklin D. Roosevelt in his more, than eight years of office has broken many traditions, we are afraid that there is one Amer- ican tradition he will not break. In April, 1941, we suspect that the U.S. will again be fully at war. BUT THE GREATEST TRAGEDY is not in the mere declaration of war or in the mere acts of war alone. There is tragedy in our prob-. able entrance into a war for democracy when the people have not been fairly consulted. There is possibly even greater ironical tragedy in our entrance into a war for democracy when we at the 1939 Panama Conference of American foreign ministers. Nine American nations, United States, Brazil, Mexico, Dominican Re- public, Colombia, Nicaragua, Ecuador, Bolivia and Paraguay, signed a convention to set up the bank in May, 1940. Senate ratification of the convention is all that is necessary to make possi- blee the organizing of the bank. UNDER THE PROPOSED PLAN each partici- pating nation will buy, stock in proportion to its foreign trade in 1938. There will be a stand- ing capital of $100,000,000 to which the United States will contribute at least $5,000,000 and the other countries as near an amount as possible, Reports are that the Administration is working on a charter to be enacted by Congress which will grant the bank power to stabilize currency, foster industrialization of the Americas and aid the economic systems of the various nations. S HILE THE BANK will stabilize Latin-Amer- can currency and economy, its chief pur- pose will be to promote Inter-American finan- cial and economic cooperation. It is for thi reason that it is of such importance in making the dreams of hemisphere unity a definite actu- ality. No one disputes the fact that the hemi- sphere will never be united without financial and economic cooperation. Of course, there are other means being tried to bring about economic collaboration. Reciprocal trade trea- ties, loans through the Export-Import Bank to our southern neighbors and a proposed cartel to handle export trade are some. None of these, however, have been as effective as was desired. Reciprocal trade treaties, although seemingly they could be of great benefit and have been as far as they have gone, are continually hampered by the opposition of the agricultural population. The farmer objects strongly and naturally, of course, to the importation of any products which he himself produces. Clearly indicative of this attitude is the dispute over beef imports from Argentina. THE EXPORT-IMPORT BANK, another bene- ficial agency as far as it goes, would be able with the aid of an Inter-American Bank to greatly increase its activities. ,Easier facilities for making loans and other financial agree- ments would be provided. The new bank would also be of some help in handling the huge South American surpluses. The export cartel, much in the news a few short months ago, seems to have been conveniently dropped. This plan would have involved a great expense froln the Ameri- can point of view and was even looked upon un- favorably by many Latin-American leaders. Through the bank, however, some form of x- change control could be developed through which all trade deals could be handled. Basic prices could be set, thus removing the South American nations from the mercy of any possi- ble totalitarian buyers. VERY IMPORTANT. also, is the government,'s plan to give the bank power to promote in- dustrialization of the Americas. There are many products in South America that could be devel- oped to a greater extent and that are vital to our own defense. These include rubber, tung- sten, tin, iron-ore and oil. Industries now oper- ating on a small scale but which could be in- creased by more capital secured through an Inter-American Bank are the Chilean porcelain dinnerware and glassware industry, leather- glove making in Argentina, Brazil, and Chile, and the wines in Chile and Peru. By more indus- trializing these nations will less have to depend on exports to Europe. IT IS APPARENT, therefore, that an Inter- American Bank would solve many of the ourselves are becoming most undemocratic; there is the greatest tragedy when a nation en- ters a war without any specified war aims or specifications for lasting peace. There is also tragedy in our national hypocrisy. WE CAN CONCEIVE of a national policy, practical, democratic, which would enable us to give all-out aid to Britain, in fact, even to participate militarily in the war, without wrecking the democracy which we think we are saving. We could term that program a positive one.It would call for stipulated war aims and war methods in the international sphere; it would call for a definite domestic war or defense program. First, an international program. It can be almost generally agreed that Hitler can win the battle in the Balkans without winning the war, although a successful Nazi invasion of England would probably mean victory for the forces of fascism. But England, probably together with the United States, cannot win the war without a smashing defeat of the German armies on the continent. The allies, U.S. and Britain, could conceivably win this battle on the continent by sheer overwhelming superiority of military strength. That, however, will take years to accomplish, despite the blockade of Europe. Mere military superiority, however, overlooks the greatest ally which Britain and the U.S. could possess in their battle against the Nazi Government: the whole-hearted, active support of the down-trodden peoples in Europe, in the Balkans, in the low-lands, in France, in Scan- dinavia, in Poland, even in Germany itself. But such support cannot be gained by negative promises to these peoples: mere "ridding the world of Hitlerism" or as Laski puts it, "replac- ing a German army of occupation with the suc- cessors of Becks and Ridz-Smiglys, with Sap- iehas and Lubomirskis; the interests they rep- resented compelled the failure they symbol- ized." SUPPORT OF ALL THE PEOPLES of Europe as well as full aid from the peoples of Amer- ica and Britain then depends upon definite war aims, given in good faith, which would chiefly, ask a world federation of nations depending for its strength on economic as well as political ties. These would consist in the sacrificing of com- plete state sovereignty; the end of tariff bar- riers; the end of imperialism and the stimula- tion everywhere to the creation of a social sys- tem which would destroy the forces that germ-' inate fascism. Such a program would mean the end of privi- lege in Europe, in Britain, in the U.S. It would almost amount to a peaceful, social revolution. It would mean a world-wide economy based upon the specialized industrial abilities of each nation; it would mean, specifically, the end of domination by the major powers of such areas as the Balkans and the granting of at least Dominion status to India; it would mean by example and by aid the destruction of the ter- rific inequalities of income and opportunity and the elimination of poverty, insecurity and fear-- the causes of fascism. It would result at last and at least in a clear basis for lasting peace. BUT no such program has been advanced by the leaders of either the British or American governments. In fact, no definite program or war aims have been announced by them. The lone voice of a positive program has been that of Laski in "Where Do We Go From Here?" and he makes the false assumption that his projected policy because of its rationality will be the, ac- cepted program of the British government. No such assurances have been given, however. In fact, American Administration leaders have in- dulged in ridiculing the necessity for such a program, rather than advancing anything more specific than the "necessity of beating Hitler to his knees." YOU DON'T SIGN a petition or contract or letter until you read it. It is also extremely stupid to fight when you are not informed of what you are fighting for. It is tragic to fight for democracy when you have no program that is projected to achieve democracy, when you have no plan for gaining lasting peace, when you have no assurance that you will not be called upon to fight again and again and again since the fundamental causes of war are al- lowed to continue. We'll continue our discussion of a positive American program as well as international in Friday's column. COMMUNISTS "SELF CRITICISM" When a high Soviet dignitary i's removed from office or his position in the Communist party it may well be an ominous sign for his future. But if it is not the first time the thing has happened to him it is rather reassuring than otherwise. It is at the very least a sign that he is still alive, which does not always happen after a man high in Soviet counsels has once lost favor. There may be a good many people to whom the news that Maxim Litvinoff has been expelled from the Communist Central Commit- tee will come as a surprise. They probably wrote him off long ago The frank confession that industrial short- comings at the Communist conference and even franker demotions and expulsions are a part of what has long been known as Communist "self- criticism." In practice self-criticism may be de- fined as a system of publicity under which Jo- seph Stalin always emergest as the greatest man in history. --New York Times. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Stop Wire-Tapping To The Editor: MR .ROBERT MANTHO in his edi- torial of Wednesday, March 25, stated the need for legalized wire- tapping in these threatening days of national tension. Federal officials un- der the leadership of Attorney-Gen- eral Jackson and the FBI-he states -must be free to obtain evidence for cases of espionage, kidnapping and sabotage. If that power is with- held, the result would be "to defeat the purposes of good government" and "would be the same as flashing the green light to spies and criminals, guaranteeing to them safe use of the wire channels.' ' Wire-tapping has been blessed by the common-law rules of evidence: that is, evidence, regardless of the method by which obtained, is always admissable in the court room. That this rule subjects the individual to constant fear and arbitrary govern- mental action and renders his home a castle without walls was apparent to the 'men who drew up the 4th Amendment, which protects the in- dividual from "unreasonable searchea and seizures" of "persons, houses, papers and effects." The men with the black robes have joined to this the 5th Amendment; and, thus, evi-! dence is secured "unreasonably" by Federal officers will never have its day in court. Unfortunately we must add that qualification-"by Federal officers"-for a 1921 Supreme Court decision holds over private persons a socially unwelcome penumbra. J UST WHAT CONSTITUTES an "unreasonable search and seiz- ure" is of course a judicial question for the Supreme Court to answer. And when the Court made wire-tapping the minor premise in its syllogism, it followed the words of Justice Holmes, who has written excellent words on many subjects: " . ..we must consider the two objects of desire both of which we cannot have and make up our minds to choose. It is desirable that criminals should be detected, and to that end all available evi- dence should be used. It is also de- sirable that the government should not itself foster and pay for other crimes, when they are the means by which the evidence is to be ob- tained . .. For my part I think a less evil that some criminals should escape than that the government should play an ignoble part." The mere fact that every story has a moral does not permit the preacher to play with facts just to make them dovetail with his little yarn. Mr. Mantho tells us very strong- ly that the Communications Act of 1934, whose obvious purpose was "to prevent unauthorized persons from intercepting telephone comunications and to punish telephone operators who. may disclose the contents of a message which goes through their hands," was badly, misread by the Supreme Court. Although one gets burned too often holding the torch for the Supreme Court, in this in- stance we can take the chance and spread the light. THE Communications Act of 1934 provides that "no person not being authorized by the sender shall intercept any communication and di- vulge or publish the existence, con- tents, substance, purport, effect or meaning of such communication to any person." Are government officials tied by this statute? No. says Mr. Mantho, it extends only to "unau- thorized persons" and to telephone operators. However, the statute does not say this. It reads "no person" and contains no exemption for govern- ment officials. Were this omission due to negligence alone, the Congress possessed the ultimate power and could have amended the act; however, it did not act. The statute also reads "no person not being authorized by the sender"; so he who dials the num- ber determines who shall listen in. WHAT 'about the proposed law? The answer is a simple one:-it should be defeated. The reasons are simple, too. During World War I, the Wilson Administration took especial care that the telephone and the tele- graph were not tapped; official eavesdropping, it was felt, opened the road to blackmail and even a na- tion fighting a war should not be subjected to this form of tyranny. The second reason is found in the re- actionary and anti-labor personnel of the FBI. Many of its members agree with Mr. Hoover in agreeing with Representative Dies as to the mean- ing of "espionage" and "sabotage." Civil liberties cannot be trusted in the hands of an undemocratic organ- ization; the freedom of men is far too precious. --Newell Malter the £Ccratck dad . .I I T DOESN'T take much, apparently to amuse a Mosher-Jordan girl. The house president received a post card yesterday, and on it some friend of the family, who is also somewhat of a humorist, proposed marriage in a light sort of way. The girls, true to their sex, read the card in the mail- box and have been teasing her ever since. Mlost any night you can walk through the Union tap room and hear red-headed Henry Beale shout to the world that the United States doesn't need war, doesn't want war, and in particular, doesn't require the military services of Henry Beale. Quick-to-excite-Henry re- ceived his questionnaire via U. S. Mail a fortnight ago. STUDENTS who applied may not know that an announcement of winners of most of the campus schol- arships will be forthcoming shortly. DAIL YOFFICIAL BULLETIN 1 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 1941 VOL. LI. No. 131 Publication in the Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to allj members of the University. _ Notices Student Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students this afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock. Vocational Guidance Talk on Grad- uate Studies: Dean C. S. Yoakum of the Horace H. Rackham School of' Graduate Studies will speak on the, requirements for admission to thisj School, and various asects of gradu- ate work, in the Small Ballroom of the Michigan Union on Thursday, April 3, at 4:15 p.m. Students inter- ested in entering the Gradaute School are urged to attend the meeting - The following scholarship appli- eants in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts should appear in 1208 Angell Hall today for an in- terview with the Scholarship Com- mittee at the time specified:' Reserve Officers and Advanced Corps Students desiring tickets to the 1941 Military Ball, to be held Fri- day, May 9, can reserve a ticket in their name by signing a list at ROTC headquarters. Tickets will be aval- able when commutation checks are issued. Sale of tickets will be opened to basic students after spring vaca- tion. Institute of the Aeronautial Si- ences Journals and Aeronautical Re- views for March are now available in the East and West Engineering Libraries. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupations has received notice of the following Civil Service Examinations. Application may be filed until further notice. United States Civil Service Principal Shipyard Inspector (Hull), Salary: $3800. Senior Shipyard Inspector (Hull), Salary: $3500. Shipyard Inspector (Hull), Salary: $3200. Associate Shipyard Inspector (Hull) Salary: $2900. Assistant Shipyard Inspector (Hull), Salary: $2600. Junior Shipyard Inspector (Hull), Salary: $23,000. Shipyard Inspector (Hull, Outfit- ting) Salary: $32Q0. Principal Shipyard Inspector (Ma- chinery), Salary: $3800. Senior Shipyard Inspector (Ma- chinery), Salary: $3200. Associate Shipyard Inspector (Ma- chinery), Salary: $2900. Assistant Shipyard Inspector (Ma- chinery),'Salary-. $2600. Junior Shipyard Inspector (Ma- chinery), Salary: $2300. Senior Shipyard Inspector (Elec- trical), Salary: $3500. Shipyard Inspector (Electrical), Salary: $3200. Associate Shipyard Inspector (Elec- trical), Salary: $2900. Assistant Shipyard Inspector (Elec- trical), Saary: $2600. Senior Shipyard Inspector (Join- er), Salary: $3500. Shipyard Inspector (Joiner), Sale ary: $3200. Associate Shipyard Inspector (Join- er), Salary: $2900. Assistant Shipyard Inspector (Join- er), Salary: $2600. Senior Commodity Exchange Spec- ialist, Salary: $4600. Commodity Exchange Specialist, Salary: $3800. Associate Commodity Exchange Specialist, Salary: $3200. Assistant Commodity Exchange Specialist, Salary: $2600. Inspector of Miscellaneous Sup- plies, Salary: $1800 to $2000. Complete information on file at the Bureau, 201 Mason Hall. Office Hours: 9-12 and 2-4. The Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information has also received notice from the HOLLAND FURNACE COMPANY that they want men for their Sales Organiza- tion Expansion Program. Complete information on file at the Bureau, 201 Mason Hall. Office hours: 9-12 and 2 to 4. Academic Notices $otanical Seminar will meet to- day at 4:30 p.m. in Room 2003 N.S. Bldg. Paper by Ernst A. Bessey of Michigan State College on "A Botan- ist in the Hawaiian Islands." Illus- trated. Chemistry Colloquium will meet to- day in Room 3Q3 Chemistry Building at 4:15 p.m. Mr. A,B. Ness will speak on "Syntheses in the field of sex hormones." Dr. J. C. Sheehan will speak on "Relation between chemical structure and plant hormone activ- ity. Chemical and MVetallurgical En- gineering Seminar today at 4:00 p.m. in Room 3201 E. Eng. Bldg. for grad- uate students and faculty in Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering. Mr. D. J. Girardi will talk on "Equili- brium Between Copper--Copper Ox- ide-Carbon Monoxide-Carbon Di- oxide." Doctoral Examination for Roy Mil- ton Chatters, Botany-Wood Tech- nology; Thesis: "A Study of the Ash (Continued on Page 6) Haskins, Gerry G, ...... . Levine, Milton......... . Levinstein, Henry ...... Miller, Allan C...... Morrison, Edgar C. . . O'Brien, John R. .... Parmelee, Harry S... Petteys, Robert M. ....< Radul, Trian........ Recknagel, Arnold H. . . Rewoldt, Stewart H. ... Rogers, Dexter ...... Rosen, Samuel ........ Roth, Betty .......... Roth, John H. ......... Rude, Arthur M. ....... Schwartz, Muriel ...... Van Aken, John T. ... . Van Aken, Mark J. ... . Warner, Robert M. .... Weiss, Irving J...... Woods, Clifton J., Jr. .. 1:30 1:45 2:00 2:15 2:30 2:45 3:00 3:15 3:30 3:45 4:00 4:15 4:30 4:45 7:30 7:45 8:00 8:15 8:30 8:45 9:00 9:15 p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p~m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p~m. p~m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. P.M. Men's Residence Halls: Present oc- cupants of the Men's Residence Halls may secure reapplication forms for the year 1941-42 from their House Directors. As soon as a form is com- pleted, it should be returned to the House Director, and it should be in her hands by April 25. Captain W. M. Estes, U.S. Army, will be at R.O.T.C. Headquarters to- day and Thursday to interview stu- dents interested in becoming Flying Cadets. Applications will also be taken for those students interested in non-flying training. RADIO SPOTLIGHT WJR CKLW WWj WXYZ 760 KC " CBS 800 KC - Mutuai 950 KC - NBC Ied 170 KC - NBC Blue Wednesday Evening 6:00 News R~ollin' Ty Tyson Bud Shaver 6:15 Hedda Hopper Home Newscast; 'Tune The Factfinder 6:30 Inside of Sports conga Dance Music Day In Review 6:45 Melody Marvels Time Lowell Thomas Baseball Extra 7:00 Amos 'n Andy Happy Joe Fred Waring Easy Aces 7:15 Lanny Ross Val Clare Evening Melodies Mr. Keen-Tracer 7:30 Meet Vogue ranch frolics Down The Lone 7:45 Mr. Meek Shopper Hints South Ranger 8 :0'Ed. G. Robinson Melody Vignettes Tony Martin Quiz 8:15 in 'Big Town' Interlude; News How Did You Meet Kids 8:30 Dr. Christian Memoirs Plantation Manhattan 8:45 News at 8:55 In Music Party At Midnight 9:00 Fred Allen Star of Hope Eddie Yukon Challenge 9:15 Star Theatre; Tabernacle Cantor The 'Old 'Traveler 9:30 Portland Hoffa, Canadians Mr. District Spin '& Win With 9:45 Goodman Orch. All Attorney Jimmy Flynn i