__Ti MICHIGAN DAILY LE4e £tHr~rtgzrn atti, 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 eofrepublication of all other matters herein also Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class mail matter. Subscriptions dpring the regular school year by car- rier $4,00, by mail $5.00. ftPBESNTd FOR NATIONAL ADVERTIiNG BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADlOON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO . BosTON . Los ANGELES . SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1941-42 Emile -Gelb . Alvin Dann David Lachenbruch Jay McCormack . Gerald E. Burns Hal Wilson . Arthur Hill Janet Hooker Grace Miller Virginia Mitchell Daniel H. Huyett James B. Collins Louise Carpenter Evelyn Wright Editorial Stafff . .. Managing Editor * . . .Editor'al Director S . . .' City Editor . . . Associate Editor . . Associate Editor * . . . Sports Editor Assistant Sports Editor * . . .Women's Editor . .Assistant Women's Editor . . . Exchange Editor Business Stafff *s *e . Business Manager . Associate Business Manager . Women's Advertising Manager . Women's Business Manager NIGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM A. MacLEOD The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. FHA Is Unfair To Negroes . . . APICKET LINE around Sojourner Truth Housing Project in Detroit is the culmination of months of protest by white landowners in the district around the project. Their obstruction has become very vio- lent and dangerous. Protests about the project began when it was revealed that it was destined for Negro occupancy. A decline in property values was given as the reason for keeping the housing project under non-existent Jim Crow laws. The working class district where the project was put up is one of individually-owned homes paid for from the salaries of working men. It is not easy for them to see the values of their dW1lling cut in half. ;'UT THE FEDERAL AUTHORITIES are to blame for the drop in prices even more than the proposed occupants of the project. The PHA r.ofused to loan money to the property holders on anywhere near a fair value basis. This mis- step by the PHA has intensified the falling of market values and has increased the home owners ers' resentment against the Negroes who were promised the new living quarters. The problem must be settled so as to gtop further rioting and cut resentment to a mini- mum. To take the project from the people to whom it was promised will create resentment in that quarter and more than ever the Negro will be left out of the war effort, for Sojourner Truth Project is a defense housing project for Negro workers. There is nothing to be gained by moving the Negroes into Sojourner Truth Project under an armed guard, for this will only make matters worse. The first thing that might be done to- ward the relief of they problem is to set up a joint Negro and white commission to make some settlement. This commission could try to peg the prices of property in the section with government aid. Special problems of mixed sections could be dealt with by this committee. THIS METHOD of settlement will not mean the official segregation of changing the use of the project, it will mean a democratic settle- ment coupled with education of both parties. The basis of the settlement will be under- standing, not foree. A mutual understanding will settle the prob- lem without further riots. Much of the resent- ment already aroused will vanish if the settle- ment is made on an equal basis. There has been too much force involved in the Sojourner Truth Project where understanding is needed. -Leon Gordenker Give The P resident 'Section' Veto Power . . DEMOCRATIC COUNTRIES, by the very nature of their governments, move at a leisurely pace. In time of peace this fact is usually more beneficial than not, for counter-balancing the increased lobbying and hedging, there is more time for due thought and consideration. It is hardly necessary, however, to point out that during a war the time-out, the breathing spaces must be eliminated. We are .~e Drew Pedrso ed kbert S.Alle WASHINGTON-Harold Moskovit, hard-hit- ting head of the New York State Affiliated Young Democrats, went in to see Mayor Fiorello La- Guardia the other day and suggested that the Mayor attend a cocktail party at which Governor Lehman also would be present. "You don't have to put your arm around him," said Moskovit. "Just come to the party and go through the motions of patching up the old campaign wounds." The Mayor turned and looked out of the win- do*. Moskovit, who had worked hard for La- Guardia's re-election, continued to plead for political peace between the two political lead- ers of New York who once had been such good friends. "Harold," said the Mayor finally, "haven't you enough troubles of your own?" "I suppose so "Then why do you take on somebody else's?" Note: Real reason Governor Lehman got sore at LaGuardia, and nearly accomplished his de- feat for re-election, was not so much that La- Guardia called him a "goniff", which is Jewish for "thief", but because LeGuardia insinuated that the Lehman family, with Judge Irving Leh- man head of the New Court of Appeals, con- trolled both the executive and judicial branches of New York government. THE MORNING after his fireside chat, the President fired another shot at "rumor mongers" and "poison peddlers" that wasn't re- ported. This time 'he had a listening audience of one, New Deal Senator James E. Murray of Montana, who called at the White House to discuss a pro- posed expansion of public power facilities and the establishment of aviation training schools in his State. "What did you think of the broadcast, Jim?" the President asked. "It was the most effective speech ypu have ever made, in my opinion," answered Murray. "What you said cleared up a lot of phoney rumors." "It's a serious problem," admitted the Presi- dent. "We've got to nail every whisper that poisons or befuddles the public mind about the war - and nail it hard. But we can't lick this problem unless every man, woman and child in America does his part." The President added that he was convinced that the general public was waking up to the dangers to'morale and unity inherent in false rumors and defeatist whispers. "Yes," said Senator Murray, "the people are going to begin turning, on whisperers who are re- tarding the war effort and interfering with na- tional unity. They are going to begin telling the rumor-mongers to cooperate with you, the Com- mander-in-Chief, or else keep their mouths shut." lation which are laid on his desk. He must either accept the whole bill, or reject it entirely; there is no middle course. That hindrance to the Chief Executive has no place in our government, and the sooer it is eliminated, the better legislation we shall have. NOW it can be argued that this is no time to begin revising laws concerning the staid and traditional powers of the President, especially in regard to his veto power. It can be pointed out that we have done pretty well by ourselves 'with the veto power limited as it now stands. But the inescapable fact remains: The limitations placed upon the President under the existing veto powers have, and will continue to have, a re- tarding force on war legislation. Specifically, we have in mind the riders at- tached to the military appropriations bill, which turned out to be a sectional plan to shoot-up farm prices, and the attempt to choke labor included in a bill intended to broaden the Presi- dent's wartime powers. Neither of these riders had any business being included with the legis- lation proposed. Fortunately, the labor-gagging rider was caught and rejected; but the military appropriations bill was not so lucky. In each case, the amendment added, or the attempt to add it, was definitely party politics, serving the purposes of a small group of Congressmen, their re-election purposes. YET, President Roosevelt must make a deci- sion, in the case of the military appropria- tions bill, on the entire piece of legislation. He cannot reject the parity clauses and still retain the legitimate portions of the bill. If the Presi- dent uses his power of veto, he will be need- lessly delaying some part of necessary military action. If he signs the bill, he will have to do so with the realization that the inflated farm prices will counteract the intended effect of the bill so that it loses its object. Had the labor amendment been tacked on the other bill, the Presidlent would have been placed in the peculiar position of having to veto his own needed broad- ening of powers in order to safeguard labor's rights. Two examples have been mentioned. But there have been hundreds of other attempts, many successful, to put riders on otherwise useful legislation. Clever devises, such as sneak- ing an amendment through when many of the Congressmen are temporarily out of the cham- ber, or, as in the present instance, hanging the rider on an essential bill so that the veto would delay immediately needed legislation. k Please, Henderson Bundles for Bungles By TOM THUMB SOME LETTERS I've been dying to write and now find I have time for. I am in hopes that some of you will clip these missives out and mail, telegraph or present personally to the addressee: Mr. Leon Henderson, Price Administrator, Washington, D. C. Dear Mr. Henderson: I see by the papers that you have put ceilings on the rents in Detroit and 19 other communi- ties, and profiteering landlords must restore rents to their April, 1941, levels. Mr. Henderson-Leon, Leon, dear-we need you out here. Washtenaw County needs a ceil- ing. The world's biggest bomber plant is going up in Willow Run, Mr. Hepderson, and so are rents in Ann Arbor. Ypsilanti, three miles from Willow Run, is out of the question. You cannot rent a gopher hole for $95 plus utilities. In Ann Arbor, the rents have been going up by the week. A dingy, smelly, rickety back room in an old shanty will rent for $45, plus utilities, if the owner will add a 1903 icebox and a sleep- ing bag. Last week an "apartment" like that would rent for $40, and in April, 1941, the land- lord couldn't have forced anybody to live in there for love or money. Please, Mr. Henderson-please, for the sake of the people who just can't even afford to pay the price it takes to live like pigs, and yet would like to maintain some of their self-respect- please Mr. Henderson, slap a ceiling on Ann Arbor before it blows sky high. We all have confidence in you, Mr. Henderson, and it cheers us up to see that you are putting rent ceilings on some communities. We know that you will do your best to stop this merciless profiteering oh our country's war emergency. You see, Mr. Henderson, University employes haven't received blanket wages to keep up with rising rents, and as a result some of them are paying two-thirds of their month's wages for rent. From yesterday's Ann Arbor News classified ads, Mr. Henderson, we read about the following apartments, none of them in bona fide apart- ment buildings: 3 room unfurnished, $50 (adults); 3 room furnished, $60; 3 room fur- nished, "'bus service to town," $55; 3 room fur- nished, $55. Every one of these apartments had been rented by 6 p.m. last night! Compare those prices with the following taken at random from the Chicago Daily News ads (Chicago is supposed to be an expensive place to live in): 6 room furnished, plus sleeping porch, $50; 5 rooms, furnished, free gas, elec- tricity, refrigeration, $50; 4 room furnished, $42; 4 room modern, garage, $35. Mr. Henderson, we have confidence in you. Please; Mr. Henderson, give us a ceiling-or else give us priorities on trailers. Tom Thumb * Y U. S. House of Representatives, Washington, D. C, Gentlemen: MARTIN DIES and his Un-American Com- mittee are asking another $100,000 this year, so my paper tells me. I understand that a bomber also costs $100,000. To beat the Axis, I suggest that the money be appropriated for the purchase of one bomber., Rep. Dies has been named as the most fre- quently praised American on the Axis radio. Instead of appropriating the $100,000 for the Axis, let's appropriate it against them. Last year the Dies Committee's great accom- plishment was proving that Hans Thomsen, German Embassy's Charge d'Affaires, was pro- German. This year's great expose revealed be- yond question that Japan has spies and imperi- alistic ambitions. Let's have no more "bundles for bungles." Tom Thumb EC Good Commercial Tunes In Latest Popular Releases AN IMPRESSIVE LIST of good commercial tunes is scheduled for release this week; Perhaps the top novelty tune is Les Brown's Everybody's Making Money Bit Tschaikowsky, which is a sad commentary on the music-writing racket. It contains a good fragmentary medley of all of Tschaikowsky's tunes which have at- tained the Hit Parade. (Okeh). Horace Heidt has put out his version of Moonlight Cocktail, a ,Sunrise Serenade-ish sort of number, on Columbia, and Tommy Tucker is featuring an Okeh disc of Pretty Little Busy- body and Sometimes, which is smooth and as danceable as Tommy Tucker can be. Somebody Else Is Taking My Place is Claude Thornhill's latest Columbia waxing, and it contains some mighty tricky instrumentation. The reverse side is Ya Lu Blu, lifted bodily from Mozart's Sym- phony No. 40. T. Dorsey has a new whammo version of What Is This Thing Called Love on a Victor disc, back- ed by Love Sends a Gift of Roses. Miller's newest for Bluebird is also an oldie, Let's Have Another Cup of Coffee with Chip Off the Old Block, a rhythm-number, on the reverse side. Artie Shaw and his latest band have put their stamp on two of the latest pop tunes, Absent- Iv, ~ l~Sd~nf. AlCc- Rc ,A GRIN AND BEAR IT i 4 ' By Lichty .... "If they start rationing clothes, I don't do for pants!" know what Otis will v n ti 0 e ti ( DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) weeks, three hours a week. A pre- liminary meeting will be held on Fri- day at 4 o'clock in 3011 Angell Hall. Botany I Make-up final examina- tion will be given Friday, March 6, 4:00-6:00 p.m., in room 1005 Natural Science. K. L. Jones Sociology 51: Make-up Final Ex- amination will be given Saturday, March 7, at 2:00 p.m., in Room D Haven Hall.. Robert C. Angell History 12, Lecture 11, Sections 11 and 13: Mr. Usher. Make-up and examination for Tuesday exam must be taken Saturday, March 7, in Room B, Haven Hall, 2:00-3:00 p.m. Home Nursing Classes: The classes in Home Nursing begin this week, the Wednesday classes on the 4th and the Thursday classes on the 5th. Students are again reminded that attendance at all classes is compul- sory.- Concerts Organ Recital: The public is in. vited to attend a recital by Palmer Christian, University Organist, at 4:15 p.m. today in Hill Audi- torium. The program will include compositions by de Heredia, Cleram- bault, Couperin, Mendelssohn, An- driessen, Williams, Maquaire, and an arrangement by Professor Christian of Debussy's Prelude to "La Demoi- selle elui." Exhibitions Ann Arbor Art Association: An ex- hibition of regional art and craft as represented by the work of Jean Paul Slusser and Charles Culver, painters, and of Mary Chase Stratton and Glover Cole, potters. The Rackham Galleries. Open daily 2-4 and 7-9 except Sunday through today. The public is cordially invited to see this important exhibition. No admission charge. Exhibit of Illustrations, University Elementary School: The drawings made by Elinor Blaisdell to illustrate the book "The Emperor's Nephew," by Marian Magoon of the English Department of Michigan State Nor- mal College, Ypsilanti, are on display in the first and second floor corridor cases. Open Monday-Friday 8 to 5, Saturday, 8-3 through March 14. The public is invited. Lectures French Lecture: Professor Antoine J. Jobin, of the Romance Language Department, will give the sixth of the French lectures sponsored by the Cercle Francais today at 4:15 p.m. in Room D, Alumni Memorial Hall. The title of his lecture is: "L'Epope fran- caise de l'Amerique dans la littera- ture canadienne." Tickets for the series of lectures may be procured from the Secretary of the Department of Romance Lang- uages (Room 112, Romance Langu- age Building) or at the door at the time of the lecture for a small sum. Holders of these tickets are entitled to admission to all lectures, a small additional charge being made for the Annual French Play. These lectures are open to the gen- eral public. Professor Harold Wethey, of the Department of Fine Arts, will lecture on "Christian Art in the Renais sance" at Lane Hall tonight at 8:00 Dr. William Paton, British Clergy- ________________________ Seminar on "The Bases of.a Just and' Durable Peace" at Lane Hall onf Thursday at 7:30 p.m. La Sociedad Hispanica will pre-a sent Professor Ralph Hammett as the fourth lecturer in the current series on Thursday, March 5, at 4:15 p.m. in Alumni Memorial Hall. Thist lecture will be in English, with lan-c tern slides. ___ Professor Adolph Keller, of Geneva, s Switzerland, will speak on "The t Present Religious Crisis in Europe"c at the Rackham Lecture Hall onc Tuesday, March 10, at 8:15 p.m. un- der the auspices of the Student Re-I ligious Association.~ Events Today AnatomyResearch Club Meetings will be held at 4:30 pm. today int Room 2501 East Medical Bldg.t Dr. N. R. Kretzchmar and Dr. H. A. Towsley will present a paper en- titled: "Studies on Foetal Respira- tion," illustrated with moving pic-r tures. Tea will be served in room 3502 from 4:00 to 4:30 p.m. All interestedt are cordially invited. A.I.A.: Tonight at 7:30 in Roomt 304, Michigan Union, there will be a general meeting of the Student Branch. The guest speaker will be Mr. Linn Fry, of the firm Fry andt Kasurin, who will speak on "Thei Relationship Between the Architect and the Client." A.S.M.E. - S.A.E.: The student1 branch of A.S.M.E. will be hosts tot S.A.E. tonight at 7:30 at the Union. There will be an illustrated talk by I Mr. L. R. Twyman of Vickers Inc. on the subject "Design and Application of Oil Hydraulic Controls as used on Production Machinery.' Student League of America will meet today at 5:00 p.m. in the Michi- gan Union. Quarterdeck Society: C. Carnicelli{ will speak on "The Analysis of Sta- tically Indeterminate Frames With Variable Moments of Inertia" at the regular meeting to be held tonight at 7:30 in Room 336 West Engineering Building. All members of the de- partment are invited to attend. Beta Chapter, Iota Alpha: Business meeting this evening at 7:30 in the East Conference Room of the Rack- ham Building. Program of Recorded Music, Inter- national Center, tonight at 7:30. The program this week consists of Strauss, Richard: Don Juan. Rachmaninoff : Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini, with Rachman- inoff at the piano. Tschaikowsky: Symphony No. 6. Polonia Society will meet this eve- ning at 7:30 in the recreation, room of the International Center. Plans for second semester social functions will be discussed. Refreshments. German Roundtable, International Center will meet this evening at 9:00 in Room 23 of, the Inter- national Center. Captain Nevzat Gurbuz will speak on "Mascagni und Cavalleria Rusticana" and will illus- trate his talk with records by the solo- ists, chorus, and orchestra of La Scala, Milano. German Club will meet at 8:00 this evening, March 4, in the League. e Mr. John Ebelke will give a talk in German on "A Bicycle Trip through . Germany." Slides will accompany the talk. All students interested in German are invited. MUSIC 11,03, Sonata ill G; Bach, Jesu, Joy or Man's Desiring;: Busoni, Duettino conertnte, after :Mozart; Rachmanin- ot', Second Site, Op. 17; Bain, Three 1:irc Rhy thmrns.; Saint-tSaens, Seherzo, Op. 8; infante, 1 1itm): Strauss-Babil, W ilt' s froi llr"D I oselk:va ier." hi a beautiully played conlcert. Vitya Vronsky and Victor Babin last ight proved thlems elv es probably the most capable and outstanding two- piano team at present in existence. :ndividually they uphold to the limit the traditional Russian magnificence of technique, for not once during the entire performance was there any apparent difficulty of execution, though some of the most technically taxing of compositions were played. "Perfection" is probably the sole word which can adequately describe their ensemble. At most times it was difficult to distinguish between the two pianos, so perfectly coordinated was their playing in regard to tempi, dynamics, color and style. There was absolute unity in such ensemble dif- ficulties as ritardandi, perfect tim- ing of rubato, and homogeneity of tone color and volume in the ex- tremes of the dynamic range. This last point might seem to be rather difficult to attain due to the differ- ence in sex of the two pianists, yet there seems to be very little differ- ence between the two in any phase of their playing, which is one of the main reasons for their fine ensemble. The opening number, J. S. Bach's Sonata in G, which was in reality a transcription of the Organ Trio Son- ata No. 6,was excellent, Bach. Though the strict classical style was main- tained throughout, real feeling was imparted to the work by well placed and delicately executed shading; es- pecially notable was the vigorous Al- legro, which was given a strength and cohesiveness which must certain- ly have been Bach's conception. In the "Suite" of Rachmaninoff, Vronsky and Babin seemed to capture the exact mood and temhperament of their countryman; and what is an- other evidence of their perfect un- derstanding of each other and en- semble as well as their musical sta- ture was the presence in this music of the improvisatory feeling which is characteristic of Rachmaninoff's mu- sic. Particularly outstanding was Mr. Babin's transcription of the Strauss "Rosenkavalier Waltzes." Frankly, we hardly missed the orchestra at all, so varied was the tone coloring, so fine the shading and balancing of themes between the pianos. This was truly magnificent. Six well chosen and finely execut- ed encores sent the audience home still enthusiastically applauding for more. -Kenneth W. Rhoads through Friday from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. in the Undergraduate Office of the League. "Cavalleria Rusticana" and "The Impresario" will continue tonight through Saturday night at 8:30 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. This is the fourth production of the season by Play Production of the Department of Speech. The bill of opera is being presented in co-oper- ation with the School of Music, the University Symphony Orchestra, and the University Choir. The box-of- fice is open from 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Phone 6300 for reservations. Tickets are $1.10, 83c, and 55c. Michigan Dames Book Group will meet tonight for a pot luck supper at 6:30 with Mrs. L. Thomy,2504 Ged- des Ave. Women'is Archery Club will meet today at 4:00 p.m. in the small lounge of the Women's Athletic Building. Discussion of spring plans. Coming Events Zoological Movies will be shown Thursday, March 5, at 4:10 p.m. in Nat. Sci. Aud. The program includes: The Protozoa; Beach and sea ani- mals; and Fertilization in marine eggs. Open to all interested. Varsity Glee Club: All members are informed that their presence is required Thursday night with no ex- ceptions whatsoever. Any man wish- ing to remain an active member in the future must be present, as matters of utmost importance to the club will be discussed. Failure to see this notice will not be considered an ade- quate excuse in view of repeated warnings. Meeting will begin prompt- ly at 7:30 p.m. There will be no meeting of La Sociedad Hispanica Thursday eve- ning, March 5, due to the rehearsal for the Spanish play "La Independ- encia." Can Can Chorus from the Mimes Opera will meet on Thursday at the Union at 5:00 p.m. The meeting will be short but important. The room number will be posted on the bulletin board. Dream Ballet from the Mimes Opera will meet on Friday at 5:00 p.m. at the Union. , The Facuilty Alumni Dance will be