THE MTiCfiiGAN lDAf1Ai v & 1)~aY, tRUARY fl,. II I MeMm- ir rig tn ti1 Senate Must Reject Van Nuys Proposal . 0 ij~ R1' .w4 'I 1' KlMAWAEOt ewr-- --..wed dited and managed by students of the University of chigan under the authority of the Board In Control Student Publications. ublished every morning except Monday during the Diversity year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press 'he Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the for republication of all news dispatches credited to or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights republication of all other matters herein also erved. ntered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as ond class mail matter. $bscriptions $during.the regular school year by car- r $4.00, by mail $5.00. . I.PR-al Ufk ruR NATIONL.L ADVERTIJING Y National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADION AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CICAGO - BOSTON + LOS ARGUES " SAN FRANCISCO ember, Associated Collegiate Press, 1941-42 Editorial Stafff ile Gelb . AIn Dann vid Lachenbruch McCormick ald E. Burns ." 2Wilson hur Hill . iet Hiatt ace Miller ginia Mitchell . . . . Managing Editor . . . . Editorial Director . . . . City Editor . . . Associate Editor . . . . Associate Editor sports Editor . . Assistant Sports Editor . . . , Women's Editor . . Assistant Women's Editor - - Exchange Editor niel H. Huyett nes B. Collins uise Carpenter lyn Wright Business Staff Business Manager Associate Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Women's Business Manager NIGHT EDITOR: CHARLES THATCHER The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers . only. Deatherage Should Be Discharged ... G EORGE E. DEATHERAGE cannot be fired from his position as execu- tive engineer at the Naval Operations base at Norfolk, Va. A statement by a navy spokesman to that effect was issued a few days ago. The reason given was that "a man's job is at stake. He is an American citizen. Moreover, he is not on the navy payroll, but an employe of Doyle and Russell, a contracting firm. We may not be able to say anything about it." Deatherage is the former commander of the Knights of the White Camelia, which has been mildly described as a "fascist-like organization" in the protest of the Tidewater Industrial Union Council. One of his latest ideas is to put all war workers in uniform. According to a story in PM, "that would make it impossible for the unions to stir up trouble about long hours and increase workers' pride in what they were doing." Dea- therage suggested a semi-military labor organ- ization with every last worker wearing a uniform. This, he said, would make every man work twice as hard because it would produce emotional thinking and thereby build morale. T HERE is no reason why the navy cannot get rid of Deatherage. Aside from his fascistic notions about labor, the navy has adequate grounds for dismissal on his past record and present ideas. The excuse that he is not working for the navy, but for a private concern, is so obviously flimsy that we wonder how the navy thinks it will slide by. COMMUNIST SUSPECTS have been sys- tematically eliminated from the govern- ment and from government work. Joe Lash was turned down by the navy because he was investigated by the Dies Committee and found to have leanings towards the Com- munist Party. And by the same criteria, George E. Deatherage is a man of proven fascistic tendencies and should be removed from any position where he is in contact with government work. F the navy is excluding Communists from its ranks and works, surely there is just as much reason to exclude Fascists. There is no under- mining to which one can point at the Com- munists that cannot be equaled by this country's Fascist organizations. There is no Communist purge that has not been equaled or bettered by a Nazi "putsch" or Italian housecleaning. There is no line of Communist thinking which has not been paralleel or improved upon by the Fascists. Communist Party members have been thrown out of government work. The Knights of the White Camelia is one of many Fascist organiza- tions in the United States. And George E. Dea- therage, condemned by his own statements and former position as commander of the Knights, Is just as dangerous a man to democracy as any Communist. Perhaps more dangerous, because he appeals to a group who believes that democ- racy can be maintained while labor is bound and gagged and dictatorship takes over the government. The mere fact that Deatherage does not advocate the overthrow of the present A TO NE5-GENERAL Francis D. Biddle entered office with a reputa- tion as one of America's progressive thinkers. Liberals, the nation over, ought now to recon- sider their previous estimate of him. Last week at the request of the said Attorney- General, Senator Frederick Van Nuys introduced into the Senate a bill making it a crime to dis- close "confidential" government information. Anyone who may "willfully and knowingly furn- ish, communicate, divulge or publish confiden- tial government information, whether in whole or part," can be "fined not more than $5,000 or imprisoned for not more than two years, or both." Furthermore, the proposed measure would make it a crime to release not only "copies 'or content" of official documents but to disclose the "substance, purport, effect, or meaning of any file, instrument, letter, memorandum, book, pamphlet, paper, document, manuscript, map, picture, plan, record or other writing." Crim- inal penalties can also be exacted where the material has been declared secret by statute or a departmental regulation. The excuse offered by Biddle for this sweep- ing measure, which would affect every inde- pendent newspaper in the nation, is that "it would be advisable in the best interest of the pub- lic business, and particularly in the interest of national defense and internal security." Unfor- tunately, the brillcan apply to both non-defense and defense matters. It was reported Thurs- day that a Justice Department official had ad- mitted that it had been under consideration for several years prior to the war emergency. NO ONE DENIES, of course, that certain in- formation, which could be of possible value to the enemy, should be repressed. Under its wartime espionage powers, however, the federal government already has the right to convict newspaper reorters who reveal any militarily- important facts. The danger in the Van Nuys proposal lies with the potential suppression of any reports that might necessitate criticism of the government. The power of the press to keep the American public awake to the national emergency and critical of the prosecution of the war effort could be effectively stifled. If the Van Nuys measure were enacted into law, it would be possible to prosecute the na- tional papers who exposed the shipments of fuel oil to Axis Spain. Reporters who revealed the oil and scrap shipments and the exporting of iron ore from the Philippines to Japan that continued even up to last October, would also be liable to imprisonment, especially after the State and Commerce departments had agreed to make commodity export figures "confiden- tial." It is disheartening to see certain government officials take advantage of the present crisis to repeal one of the main freedoms for which we are fighting-freedom of expression. Even in the England that has undergone the horrors of war for more than two years, freedom of the press is still a welcomed actuality. That press only a few days ago forced the reorganization of Prime Minister Churchill's war cabinet. EQUALLY IMPORTANT are the two war aims of an enlightened America: to win the battle for democracy 'abroad and to guarantee the future of democracy at home. Americans are dying all over the world to accomplish these purposes. They will not permit a victory in one, only to lose the other. The United States Sen- ate must reject the Van Nuys bill. - George W. Sallade Bring The Negroes Into The War Effort. . ANY of the white listeners walked out of a Kansas City auditorium when Paul Robeson stopped his concert to pro- test against Negro segregation in the audience. He told his listeners that he would continue un- der protest. And continue he did, by singing the Jim Crow song, a song of protest against discrimination. And what did the culture-absorbing intellec- tuals do? They walked out in even greater numbers. With them is walking a whole country. All over the nation, the nation fighting for democ- racy, we are walking out on the problem of Negro discrimination. We are running away from the protests of the Negro workers who want to work for the defense of the country. We are sneering at Negroes who want to join the armed forces. IRONICALLY, a great heavyweight boxing champion, Joe Louis, fought in defense of his title before some 20,000 persons. When the fight was over, Louis gave his winner's share of more than $40,000 to the Navy Relief So- ciety. Louis could join the navy, for which he gallantly donated his purse, only as a cook. Personnel managers at great defense plants politely tell Negro workers that there are no positions open while, at the same time, they publicly decry the shortage of labor. In the South we make Negro citizens pay poll taxes to vote. We beat them. We have gover- nors who brag about their prowess at slashing Negroes with whips.. WE CLAIM to be fighting fascism with all our strength, but we still see fit to keep 10 per- cent of the nation out of the fight. We expect them to buy defense bonds, to sing patriotic songs, to support defense against fascism while we reiect them from the defense effort. While 'we leave the Negro out of the nation, we ask him to fight for it. We take the franchise from him and tell him that he is part of Amer- ica; we are building guns, tanks and planes for victory and we ask the Negro to find work somewhere else than in war industry; we need men for our armies and we refuse to give the Negro naval commissions and segregate him in Drew Petmsos c ° ad RobertS.Alle WASHINGTON-Those who are on the inside regarding the report which Ambassador William C. Bullitt gave President Roosevelt regarding the Near East say there is only one slight ray of sunshine in it. Bullitt told his chief that there was absolutely no chance of Russia making peace with Germany. Coming from Bullitt, who served as Ambassa- dor to Russia and who spent considerable time there in the early days of the Revolution in 1917, this means a lot. Bullitt has been vigorously critical of the Soviet regime in recent years and probably would lean over backwards against any overly-optimistic appraisal. However, after his special tour of the Near and Middle East on special assignment from the President, he re- ported that the Russians were so irate against the Nazis that there would be no surrender or compromise. Bullitt is not so optimistic about the Russian, army, which he thinks may fail badly when the Germans are able to get their airplanes in the air again, which they cannot do in sub-zero weather and with snow on the air fields. Politi- cally, however, Bullitt is convinced that Russia will stand with the United Nations to the last ditch. Against this, Bullitt goes further than anyone else around the President regarding Allied losses. Not only does he believe that Japan will take India, but he feels that Australia will be lost to the British Empire. If he is right, this will be the worst blow which the United Nations can suffer; especially inas- much as American troops are now stationed in Australia and New Zealand. Note: Not all war observers agree witlg Bullitt on this latter point. They point out that Aus- tralia is chiefly a desert country, and it would take weeks and months for a conquering army to envelop these vast areas. Patriotic Indians As in the last war, thousands of American Indians again are demonstrating their patri- otism. The desk of John Collier, able chief of the Office of Indian Affairs, is stacked with letters from every tribe in the country, pledging aic and offering to make fresh sacrifices for the war effort. Here are a few examples: Immediately after the declaration of war, the Crow Indians of Montana voted $10,000 of tribal funds to President Roosevelt to "use as you see fit." The also voted to place in the President's hands the entire resources of their 2,000,000-acre reservation, including mineral, oil and coal de- posits, plus all available manpower for combat service. The Creeks of Oklahoma have set aside $400,- 000 of tribal funds for the purchase of defense bonds. Other tribes voting large sums for the same purpose include the Jicarilla Apaches and Pueblos of New Mexico, the Euchee and Semi- nole Indians of Oklahoma, and the Navajos. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) cards are being distributed through the departmental offices. Instruc- tors are requested to report absences of sophomores, juniors, and seniors to 1220 Angell Hall, on the buff cards which are now being distributed to departmental secretaries. Green cards are being provided for report- ing freshmen absences. All fresh- men attendance reports should be made on the green cards and sent directly to the office of the Academic Counselors, 108 Mason Hall. Please note especially the regula- tions concerning three-week absences, and the time limits for dropping courses. The rules relating to ab- sences are printed on the attendance cards. They may also be found on page 52 of the current Announce- ment of our College. E. A. Walter Assistant Dean Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Election cards filed after the end of the first week of the semester may be accepted by the Registrar's Office only if they are approved by Assistant Dean Walter. Students who fail to file their elec- tion blanks by the close of the third week, even though they have regis- tered and have attended classes un- officially, will forfeit their privilege of continuing in the College for the semester. If such students have paid any tuition fees, Assistant Dean Wal- ter will issue a withdrawal card for them.3 Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Studentsj whose records carry reports of I or X either from the first semester, 1941-42, or (if they have not been in residence since that time) from any former session, will receive grades of E unless the work is completed by March 9. Petitions for extensions of time, with the written approval of the in- structors concerned, should be ad- dressed to the Administrative Board of the College, and presented to Room 4, University Hall, before March 9. E. A. Walter Seniors in Engineering and Busi- ness Administration: A representa- tive of Bethlehem Steel Company, Bethlehem, Pa., will interview Sen- iors of the several Departments of Engineering and the School of Busi- ness Administration on Tuesday and Wednesday, February 24 and 25, for prospective positions in steel produc- tion, mechanical and electrical plan- ning, coke and by-products, fabri- cated steel construction, shipbuild- ing, research, development, manage- ment. Descriptive booklets and 'applica- tion forms are available in eachrde- partment office. Interview time schedules are posted on Mechanical Engineering bulletin board. Interviews will be held in Room 218 West Engineering Bldg. May and August Graduates in Aeronautical Engineering: Dr. New- man A. Hall and Mr. Reed C. Banks, reprsentatives of Vought - Sikorsky Aircraft, Stratford, Connecticut, will interview May and August graduates in Aeronautical Engineering on Tues- day, February 24. Interested stu- dents will please sign the interview schedule posted on the Bulletin Board near Room B-47 East En- gineering Building. The room to be used for the interviews will be an- nounced, on the Bulletin Board, early Tuesday morning. Househeads, Dormitory Directors, and Sorority Chaperons: Closing hour for tonight is 12:30 a.m. and for Monday, February 23, is 10:30 p.m. Jeannette Perry, Assistant Dean of Women The American Association of Uni- versity Women Fellowship, in honor of May Preston Slosson, is to be awarded for 1942-43. Open to women for graduate study. Application blanks may be obtain- ed at the Graduate School Office, and must be returned to that office, together with letters of recommen- dations, before Monday, March 2, 1942. Phi Kappa Phi Fellowships: The National Phi Kappa Phi Honor Soc- iety each year awards a certain num- ber of Graduate Fellowships with stipend of $500 to be devoted to study in some American College or University. Undergraduate members of Phi Kappa Phi of the University of Michigan, elected during the first semester of the present year are eligi- ble to apply for one of these fellow- ships. The closing date for applica- tions to be received by the local chap- ter is March 7. Further information and application blanks may be se- cured from the secretary, Mary C. Van Tuyl, in Room 3123 Natural Science Building from 2 to 5 daily, February 24 to 27. Information regarding require- ments and examinations for teach- ing positions in the Toledo, Ohio, public schools is on file at the office of the Bureau of Appointments. All >,; ' .n ' i ifi s51 I < c-- r',. GRIN AND BEAR IT Dominic Says "WOMAN, we will have to be moving on," said Boone to his wife, the day he met two trappers who said they were camping seventy miles away. Civilization was about to encroach upon his independence. This became one of the dominant characteristics of American life. In a degree it typed education. Each valley had to have its college. Its typed religion. If you really were a man of conviction, you would come out from among the people and make a new sect. It typed business. Mr. A. learned of a human need and started satisfying it only to discovei' that B, adopting this pattern with some slight turn to it, was about to start competing. Rural Americans all became separatists. But also there has taken place the rapid work of applied science which has thrust us together. We are overtaken with cities, rapid transit, telephone, radio, and news of the whole world beating on our ears hourly. America is experiencing the collision of these two trends. He only reconciles these two tendencies who can "create community." To increase commu- nity, one must understand others, enjoy sharing, see life as persons interwoven, get satisfactions in altruistic behavior not egoistic, know sacri- fice, find security in the group, exercise domi- nance by means of rules of -the game jointly agreed on or kept as sportsmen play a game, and have imagination for the family, the neigh- borhood, the whole human race. This consti- tutes a type of civic religion. THE CONTRIBUTION of the University man to the solution of this cultural conflict will be (1) a grasp of the'historic religions, and their ethical counterpart in modern biological and social science, (2) a discriminating knowledge of the God-Man thesis plus the codes of behavior which attend them, (3) full participation in some one religion so that its practice of devotion and value selection becomes habitual, (4) loyalty to the ideal, with the attendant self-discipline imposed by the religion embraced and, (5) part- nership with the weak, the ignorant, the unfor- tunate by heroic leadership in a cause which de- mands courage, perseverance and risk even unto death for the common good or possibly the su- preme sacrifice, as the guiltless struck down for By Lichty "Certainly someone cut up one of your inner tubes-but look at my figure!" Academic Notices Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet on Tuesday, February 24, at 7:30 p.m., in Room 319, West Medi- cal Building. "The Essential Amino Acids-Utilization of Amino Acid Mixtures" will be discussed. All in- terested are invited. University Oratorical Contest: The University Oratorical contest will be held on April 3. The preliminary contest will be held March 13. This contest is open to all sophomores, juniors, and seniors. Further in- formation may be had at the Speech Office, 3211 Angell Hall. All interested are cordially invited. All music history, music literature, and musicology students are required to attend the recital of Yves Tinayre on Monday, February 23, in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre at 8:30 p.m. Glen D. McGeoch Economies 51 and 52: Make-up ex- aminations in Ec. 51 and 52 will be held Thursday, February 26, at 3:10 p.m. in Room 207 Ec. Bldg. Biological Chemistry 111: Refund slips may be obtained at the Stock- room on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday, 4:00-5:00 p.m. Each student must call in person to receive his refund slip. M.E. 36: Assignments for Wednes- day, February 25, Barnes, Chapter 4. Notice: All University women en- rolled in Volunteer Defense courses must have eligibility cards, signed in women's League, between the hours of 3:00 and 5:00 any day this week or next. Graduate Students in Speech: All applicants for advanced degrees in Speech will be required to take the qualifying examinations in Speech on Friday, March 6, starting at 3:00 p.m. in room 4203 Angell Hall. Concerts Alec Templeton, Pianist, will be heard in a special concert Thurs- day, February 26, at 8:30 in Hill Auditorium. Before intermission the program will consist of numbers by Handel, Bach, Chopin, Franck, and Debussy. After intermission five numbers composed by the performer will be included. The program will be supplemented by humorous and satirical contributions, for which the public address system will be utilized. Reserved seat tickets may be pur- chased at the offices of the Univer- sity Musical Society in Burton Me- morial Tower, at the following prices: main floor 95c, first balcony 75c and the top balcony 55c (including tax). Charles A. Sink, President Faculty Recital: Miss Thelma Newell, a member of the faculty of the School of Music of the Univer- sity of Michigan, will present a vio- lin recital at 8:30 Wednesday eve- ning, February 25, in the Assembly Hall of the Rackham Building. Miss Helen Titus, Instructor of Piano, will assist Miss Newell in a program to include works of Beethoven, Mozart and Hindemith. Although the recital is open to the public, small children will not be admitted. Faculty Concert: Paul Van Kat- wijk, Dean of the School of Music of Southern Methodist University, will appear as guest pianist in a reci- tal at 4:15 p.m. on Thursday, Febru- ary 26, in the Assembly Hall of the Rackham Building. The program will include compositions by Brahms, Bee- thoven, Chopin, Rachmaninoff, De- bussy and Liszt, and will be open to the public. M/7i 7t~li? represented by the work of Jean Paul Slusser and Charles Culver, painters, and of Mary Chase Stratton and Grover Cole, potters. The Rackham Galleries. Open daily 2-4 and 7-9 except Sunday through March 4. The public is cordially invited to see this important exhibition. No admission charge. Lectures University Lecture: Yves Tinayre, noted authority on vocal art, will be heard in "Confessions of a Musical Treasure Hunter" at 8:30 p.m. Mon- day, February 23, in Lydia Mendels- sohn Theater. His lecture is spon- sored by the School of Music and is open to the general public. Tickets can be secured by calling at the office of the School of Music. University Lecture: Dr. A. I. Lev- erson, of Tulsa, Oklahoma, Past President of the American Geologists, will lecture on the subject, "Petroleum Reserves and Discovery" (illustrated), under the auspices of the Department of Geology on Tuesday, Feb. 24, at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphi- theater. The public is cordially in- vited. University Lecture: Professor Lau- rence H. Snyder of Ohio State Uni- versity will lecture on the subject, "Heredity and Modern Life," (illus- trated) under the auspices of the Laboratory of Vertebrate Genetics, on Tuesday, February 24, at 8:00 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The public is cordially invited. University Lecture: Dr. Carl G. Hartman, Professor of Physiology at the University of Illinois, will lecture on the subject, "Two Decades of Pri- mate Studies and Their Influence on Gynecological Thought and Prac- tice" (illustrated), under the auspices of the Department of Anatomy and the Medical School, at 4:15 p.m. on Tuesday, March 3, in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The public is cordially invited. American Chemical Society Lee- ture: Professor Albert Henne of the Ohio State University will speak on "Aliphatic Fluorides" on Wednesday, February 25, at 4:15 p.m. in Room 303 Chemistry Building. The public is invited. Lecture: Dr. Rufus Jones, Chair- man of the American Friends Service Committee, will speak on "Construc- tive Service Across a World in War- time," in the Rackham Lecture Hall on Wednesday, February 25, at 4:15 p.m., under the auspices of the Stu- dent Religious Association. Lecture: Dr. Ernest Scheyer of Wayne University will give an illus- trated lecture on "Chinese Art in the Middle Ages" on Wednesday, Febru- ary 25, at 7:30 p.m. at Lane Hall, under the auspices of the Student Religious Association. Events Today Varsity Glee Club: All glee c 1, men are reminded that rehearsal will begin at 3 o'clock this after- noon. Usual informal dress for the Hill Auditorium appearance. international Center Program: The Sunday evening program at the In- ternational Center will be directed toward commemmoration of George Washington's Birthday. Supper at 6 o'clock. There will be a community sing at 7 o'clock. Professor Verner Crane will speak at 7:30 on "Some Unusual Aspects in the Life of Geo- rge Washington.") After the speech a gift just received by the Center will be disclosed. Graduate Outing Club will meet today at 2:30 p.m., northwest door, Rackham. Program of winter sports. w