A ,7-1 VI V ~ I~4~J~~IL~ ,; Lei r ,y\i. y1i . % _l t. I --_-. Fifty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the Univerity of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the regular University year, and every morning except M033- day and Tuesday during the summer session. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to te 6ie for republication of all news dispatches r4itsW to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein also reserv4. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, MIhchigWat- second-class mail matter. subscriptions during the regular school year by Cftmr $4.25, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Colleg 'ate Press 194243 ,itEPRE9BNTED POR NATION ADVYIJING W National Advertising Service, Inc.; Col/ege Publisher Representasive 420 MADI~tso AvE. NSW YORK. N. '. CHICAGO . SosTOW * L." .oEn4 . SAM FANIS4CO Editorial Staff Homer Swander . . . . Managing Editor Morton Mints. . . Editorial Directo? Will Sapp . . . . . . . City 141tor George W. Sallad. . . Associate Editor Charles Thatcher . . . * Associate E4itor Bernard Hendel . . . . . Sports Editor Barbara deFries . . . . . Women's Editor Myron Dann . . . . Assoctate Sports Editor Riusiness Staff Edward J. Perlberg . . . Business Mange Fred M. Ginsberg . . Associate Business MaegeRP Mary Lou Curran . . Women's Business Mansagr Jane Lindberg. . . Women's Advertising'b$Anlgpr James Daniels. . . Publieations SBs Analyt Telephone 2324441 . NIGHT EDITOR: IRVING JA"E , "That's no way to get Hitlers scalp, bUdd y!" *S?. .' .. nr. t-.,T.?- - -V ~ - .t> "' m; Editorials published in The Michigan Dily, are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writer only. GOV. KELLY: SEESAW: Move to Oust Tugwelt Risk for Vandenberg His Message Indicates An A ble Administration N his first week as Governor, Harry Kelly has gone about his business with a matter-of-fact method that augurs a competent adminstratio. In his biennial message to -the legislature, h di- closed a comprehension of his position urig this emergency which qualifies him as well as Vurray D. Van Wagoner to be "Michigan's War Gover- nor." His broad .request for powers to commandee private property in event of- a war emergency, suspend state laws and, by proclamation, issue orders having effect of law is patterned afte' legislation already intro4duced in New Yorijc and Massachusetts. The fact that he left the speci- fic nature of this wider control to be devisedby the legislature bears out his statement that I am not looking for power merely for the sake of swinging it." ON the proposal for government streamlining, he was specific and concrete in suggesting consolidation of overlapling state funCtions. Former Governor Van Wagoner, in fact, ap- plauded this suggestion and urged legislators. to give Kelly support "to continue the streamlining program and to provide funds for such research as the governor may recommend." His appeal for a more liberalized worImens' compensation law, increased payments to the aged, higher salaries for school teacher in cer- tain areas and particularly, his proposal for the establishment of a $15,000,000.post-war fund, to adjust Michigan to the inevitable crisis in con- version from military to civilian production after the war indicate that Governor Kelly is a prac Uical humanitarian and a man of. great foresight. GOVERNOR HARRY KELLY has come out of his first and hardest task of starting a work- able executive program with a clean bill of sale. The people of Michign as well as their legis- lators are justified in willing more power to him. - Paul Harsha ISOLATIONISM:- McCormick Demands Reactionary Congress THE big black letters on your; yesterday morn- ing's Chicago Tribune, Colonel McCormick; hailed the 78th Congress as the opening of an "attack on bureaucracy" and in the same article rosy predictions were made about the expected 1ll-time greatness of this new edition of our chief legislative body. But, if these two are to be concomitant, Colo- nel McCormick, attempts to end rule by bureaue- racy must not confuse the "bureaucracies" and our really valuable governmental war agencies. If, for instance, you would have a Congress farm bloc shatter OPA price ceilings and open the doors to inflation-if you would let Congressmen badger such agencies as the Lend-Lease Author- ity in attempting to stop shipment of our fac- tories to Russia, a Lend-Lease move you already have bitterly condemned-then the 78th Con- gress, instead of attaining greatness, will only become an obstructionist figurehead. TRUE, some reforms are needed, like slashing a lot of Washington red tape and reducing the number of governmental employes and cut- ting down the confusion in our war. effort. But your line of demarcation between, the gbvern- ment agencies and employes performing a real war.service and those that need eliminating must be-finely drawn. In the event that it is not the ICHIGAN'S Senator Vandenberg is embark- ing upon a game of seesaw with public opinion concerning the removal of Puerto Rico's Governor Rexford Tugwell-a little game which may well tilt the wrong way to the Senator's embarrassment. Thursday, Senator Vandenberg introduced leg- islation which would immediately terminate Tug- well's governorship, a removal which would make happy the hearts of New Deal-haters throughout the Nation. Accompanying the legislation was the statement, "without further delay, the Con- gress should determine whether a change in the governorship is the essential starting point looking toward a solution" of "serious condi- tions" on the island. The Senator is 'certainly right concerning one point, conditions are very serious on Puerto Rlco, bt he has selected a very peculiar action to commence bettering things. WIiEN Rexford Tugwell was appointed to as- sume the governorship of Puerto Rico, he had Just completed a very extensive examination of the conditions on the island. He found that its precarious economic existence is formed around one crop-sugar. Almost all of the pro- ductive land on the island is in the hands of large corporations employing the major part of the native population. "Labor in the fields and, in the millsis very poorly paid, miserably housed, and. generally exploited," is the report of the cohsultant to the Federal Public Housing Au- thority in Puerto Rico. The economic break between what Luis Munoz- Marin,president of the Puerto Rican.Senate, de- scribes as the "buoyant 10 per cent" and the "drowning 90 per cent" has developed bitter political strife on Puerto Rico. Gov. Tugwell, since his assumption of the governorship, has fought continuously for the betterment of con- ditions for the common labor on the island. He has sought to bring higher wages and better liv- ing conditions to the island. Even now Tugwell's proposed $15;000,000 relief appropriation to at- tempt to make Puerto Rico in some meaurea more self -reliant economy, is before the Con- gress of the United States. HOWEVER, these actions and proposals of Gov. Tugwell have not been unopposed. Sugar company owners and others reaping rich profits from the labors of the downtrodden Puerto Ri- cans have created a loud, if not numerically powerful, opposition. Having much space in the press and supporting lobbies in the United States Senate, these interests have been able until re- cently to keep the true desires and needs of the islanders from the American public. They have endeavored to stir up all the hatred against Tug- well that was aroused concerning the New Deal. But this time, as one writer points out, Gov. Tug- well is definitely "on the side of the angels." If Senator Vandenberg endeavors to hold up the passage of the much needed relief bill for Puerto Rico, or makes its ' passage dependent upon the removal of Tugwell, he will definitely be playing politics for all they are worth and seriously penalizing over 2,000,000 people with his actions. However, the Senator is playing with a touchy subject, for the public has been in- formed about the true state of affairs in Puerto Rico. - John Erlewine and if you wish a reactionary Congress to the point, for instance, of repudiating Roosevelt's trade pacts, then the United Nations, our fight- ing allies, will be seriously slighted. They will I'd 'Rather BeRight_ - By SAMUEL GRAFTON - NEW YORK-I do not believe in an inter- national air force to police the world after the war. It is a gadget. The world demands, specifically, at the mo- ment, that the fascists of North Africa be put into jail and the democrats let out. . For any of our government war-aimsthink- ers to skip blithely over that spot situation, and to leap, wheeeeee! into an indefinite fu- ture and. toward an indefinite International air force is another example of the old game called broadening out the issue until you loseit. Better that one fascist in French North Africa be rendered harmless now, than that a hundred be cowed by an international air force ten years hence. SKIP-THE-PRESENT 0O MUCH of our war-aims thinking depends on this- mysterious mental process, which might also be called skip-the-present. A tacky little band of fascists and pro-Vichyites sur- rounds General Giraud this minute. Men of similar mind do the day-to-day governing in almost every Village and town throughout the area. They have dismayed our American mili- tary ,officers and shocked our foreign corre- spondents. They represent an instant, pressing, horridthreat to our war, and to our world unity. There is no official plan, so far as I know, to do anything about these ornamental dregs of French. society. In the absence of such a plan, it is a shocking instance of skipping the nasty, controversial present; and going for a joy-ride in the cool, the blue, the non-controversial future, to talk about an international air force, later on, to save the world from precisely those types about whom we are doing next to nothing right now, THOSE FASCIST BABIES 'VERY decent American correspondent (and particularly CBS's Charles Collingwood) has been recording his horror at the fascist mentality of some of the leading elements around Giraud. Well, two weeks ago, Vice President Wallace, talking about the problem represented by fascist mentality, said that after the war we would prob- ably have to supervise the school systems of Ger- many and Japan; to make sure no more fascist mentalities were bred. I"Say, again, it is a clear case of skip-the- nasty-present to worry about the possible fascist mentality of German and Japanese tod- dlers as yet- unborn, and to leave the present. possessors of that mentality to go on function- ingin positions of power in North Africa. How tough we are about those unknown, un- born fascist babes of the future! And how easy we are on the well-known, middle-aged repug- nant specimens now actually in our hands in the present! I admire Vice President Wallace intensely. It is because of a deep feeling for him that I am compelled to call on him to consider whether this pattern of escape into the easy, non-con- troversial future does not beg the whole question of war aims, and come close to making it im- probable that that future will ever arise. TRY TO LAUGH THIS ONE OFF' IF we render fascism harmless as we come to it, we won't need an international air force-to control it after the war. If we db not; it will nrnhbhv he in a nnitinn in tokee nsfrome WERRY-GO- By DREW :: PEAR SON S - WASHINGTON-Submarine war- fare is not getting into the head- lines as it was a year ago, but un- fortunately this does not mea it has been relaxed. On the contrary, great flocks of U-boats, estimated at around 300, are now concen- trated at four strategic spots-two on this side of the Atlantic in the north and south, two on the other side of the Atlantic around North Africa and on the northern route to Russia. Rebuffed in the Caucasus and on the defensive in Africa, Hitler seems to be gambling everything on stopping supplies from reaching the war fronts. As a result, sink- ings during the early weeks of the winter have been among the worst of the war. This is partly because nights are long, and at night submarines can- not be seen from the air. Furthermore, Nazi methods of destruction have been so much im- proved that ships go down within minutes, sometimes seconds, after the torpedo strikes. The War Ship- ping Administration has estimated that the average time is now only four minutes. Apparently the Germans are us- ing larger torpedoes, with a far greater explosive power. Instead of knocking a hole in the side of a ship, they are blowing the ship in two This has the advantage of pre- venting radio messages from being sent, and thus preventing detec- tion of the submarine. It also has the effect of sharply increasing casualties among seamen. The British estimate that they lose one-third of every crew on &_ torpedoed ship. The Norwegians estimate a 40 per cent loss. U.S. estimates are 35 per cent. The End Of Life Beats This method of sudden destruc- tion has outmoded the lifeboat, and and its old-fashioned counterpart, the cork-filled life belt. A ship that goes down in four minutes has no time for launching boats. In fact, many of the seamen don't even have time to get up on deck. Consequently, lifeboats are being discarded in favor of life rafts, which hang suspended at the side; and can be dropped at once by a single release from the bridge. Then the men who are lucky enough to be on deck when the torpedo strikes leap overboard and try to swim to a raft. The life belts are discarded be- cause they break too many arms. If a seaman, wearing a life belt of hard cork, leaps 20 feet into the water, the belt flies up and wrenches his arms. Belts of a soft- er material such as kopek are be- ing used instead. Shift from lifeboats to life rafts was a slow process, because of the shortage of materials. When the War Shipping Administration was desperately trying to get rafts for merchant vessels, they found a whole warehouse full of them in Brooklyn-but they belonged to the Navy, and were being reserved for Naval vessels now under con- struction. The Navy declined to release them. There's a limit to the number of sinkings a seaman can weather, even though he may not be phys- ically injured. The- Public Health Service finds that many menwho have gone through such. ordeals become mentally deranged, and. suffer hallucinations. They re- quire a rest cure before going back= to sea again. Greek Bond Drive When newsreels showed Speaker Sam Rayburn buying a bond from Steve Vasilikas, the Greek peanut vendor at the White House, it was, Sam and Steve who got the pub- licity but it was a very significant group of American citizens who planned the thing-the Order of Ahepa. The Ahepa is an organization of Americans of Greek descent. And, although most Americans of for- eign descent have' been patriotic,. those from Greece; a country which has suffered probably more than any other, have been intensely- so. Ahepa was among the. first to lead the crusade for naturaliza- tion among immigrants. It was also the first national organization- to denounce persecution of the Jews by Hitler, and among. the first to urge universal military service for all youth. At present, Ahepa is staging a Nation-wide drive to raise $50,- 000,000 in war bonds from Greek- Americans. Ahepa's progressive president, George Vournas, is mak- ink a tour of the country pushing the sale, while Ensign Chris Pet- row, USNR, is making a simul- taneous tour. agree on an- international air 'force; .-.+ n. _lm ftns in en- m- a a DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SATURDAY, JAN. 9, 1943 VOL. LHI No. 71 All notices for the Daily official Bul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the President in typewritten form by 3:30 p.m. of the day preceding its publica- tion, except on Saturday when the no- tices should be submitted by 11:30 am. Notices Faculty Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to members of the faculty and other townspeople on Sunday, January 10, from 4 to o'clock. Cars may park in the re- stricted zone on South University be- tween 4:00 and 6:30 p.m. To Members of the University Council: The January meeting of the University Council has been can- celled. Midyear Graduation Exercises: The Midyear Graduation Exercises fort all students who are candidates to receive degrees at the end of the fall term will be held in Hill Auditorium at 10-:00 a.m., Saturday, January 23. The members of the faculty and of the graduating classes and the audi- ence should be in their seats by 9:50 a.m. in order that the Exercises may begin promptly as scheduled. Aca- demic costume will be worn but there will be no preliminary procession. Further details will be announced later. Ticket Distribution - Midyear Graduation Exercises; Hill Auditor- ium, January 23: The admission tick- ets for the Midyear Graduation Ex- ercises will be ready for distribution on January 12, 1943. Each of those whose names appear on the list as en- titled to receive a degree at tlie end of the fall term should procure one ticket for himself and he may also have two others for relatives or friends. Apply at the Information Desk in the Business Office, Room 1, University Hall. Please present your identification card. -Herbert G. Watkins;, Assistant Secretary Student Accounts: Your attention is called to the following rules passed by the Regents at their meeting of February 28, 1936: "Students shall: pay' all accounts due the University not later than the last day of classes of each semester or summer session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are subject to this regulation; however, student loans not yet due are exempt Any unpaid accounts; at the close of business on the last day of classes will be reported to the Cashier of the University and "(a) All academic credits will be withheld; the grades for the'semester or summer session just completed will not be released, and no transcript of credits will be issued. "(b) All students owing such ac- counts will not be allowed to register in any subsequent semester or sum- mer session until payment has been made." -.Shirley W Smith;~ VicePresident and:Secretary Refresher Courses in Mathematics: The following refresher courses are being offered by the Department of Mathematics and will contin- ue until the opening of the spring term: Trigonometry, Tuesday, 4:00- 5:30 p.m.; School and College Alge- bra, Thursday, 4-5:30 p.m; and Plane Analytie Geometry; Saturday, 4-5:30 p.m.; all these courses will meet in Room 3010 Angell Hall. These courses are-intended for members of the faculty who expect to be available to assist the Department of Mathe- matics in the teaching of freshman mathematics in the spring term. It is suggested that all such persons should plan to attend one or more of these refresher courmes. -T. K. Hildebrandt Applications in Support of Re- search Projects: To give Research Committees and the Executive Board adequate time to study all proposals, it is requested that faculty members having projects needing support dur- ing 1942-1943 file, their proposals in the Office.of the Graduate School by Friday, February 19. Those wishing to renew previous requests whether now receiving support or not should so indicate. Application forms will be mailed or can be obtained at Secre- tary's Office, Room 1006 Rackham Building, Telephone: 372. - C. S. Yoakum Notice to Men Students: Men stu- dents living in approved rooming, houses who intend;to move to differ- ent quarters for the Spring Term; or, who expect to leave the University at1 the end of this Term, must give no- tice in writing to the Dean of Stu- dents before 11:00 a.m. today. Stu- dents should also notify their house. holders verbally on or before this- date. Forms for the purpose of notify- ing the Dean of Students may be se- cured at Room 2; University Hall. The official closing date for the Fall Term. will be' January 30,.1943, and rent for rooms shall be computed, to include thisdante. appointment for an interview with Dean R. W. Bunting. Pre-forestry Students: A meeting will be held in Room 222, Michigan Union, Tuesday evening, Jan. 12, 7:00 to 8:00, for the purpose of talking over a revised accelerated program through which freshmen and sopho- mores whose induction is delayed may enroll in -forestry courses offered in the coming spring term and the com- ing summer. Several-'members of the faculty of the School of Forestry and Conservation will be present. Please attend if at all possible. -S. T. Dana, Dean All Students: Registration for Spring Term: Each student should plan to register for himself during the appointed hours. Registration by proxy will not be accepted. Robert L. Williams, Assistant Registrar Registration Material, College of Architecture: Students should call for spring term material at Room 4 University Hall at once. The College of Architecture will post an an- nouncement in the near future giving the time of conferences with your classifier. Please wait for this notice before seeing your classifier. Robert L. Williams, Assistant Registrar Registration Material: School of Music, Schol of Education, School of Public Health, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts. Students should call for spring term registra- tion materials at Room 4, University Hall, as soon as possible. Please see your adviser and secure all necessary signatures. Robert L. Williamus, Assistant Registrar Academic Notices Pre-medical students: The Medical Aptitude Test of the Association of American Colleges will be given at the University of Michigan on Friday, January 22; Any student who is plan- riing to enter a medical school and who has not previously taken this test should do so at this time. Further information may be ob- tained in Room 4, University Hall, and tickets should be purchased im- mediately at the Cashier's Office. Qualifying Examinations for Di- rected Teaching (Educ. D100) will be given today at 1:00 p.m. in the audi- torium of the University High School. Comprehensive Examination in Ed- ucation will be given today at 1:00 p m. in Room 2432 University Ele- mentary School. Required Hygiene Lectures for Woi- men-1943: All first and second se- mester freshman women are required to take the hygiene lectures, which are to be given the second semester. Upperclass students who were in the University as freshmen and who did not fulfill the requirement are" re- quiredtotake and satisfactorily com- plete this course. Enroll for these lec- tures at the time of regular classifica- tion at Waterman Gymnasium. These lectures are a graduation require- ment. Students should enroll for one of the two following sections. Women in Section I should note change of sec- ond lecture from February 22 to Feb- ruary 24-on account of the legal holi- day. Section No. I: First Lecture Mon- day, Feb. 15, 4:15-5:15, Natural Sci- ence Aud; Second Lecture, Wednes- day, Feb. 24, 4:15-5:15, Natural Sci- ence Aud.; Subsequent Lectures, Suc- cessive Mondays, 4:15-5:15, Natural Science Aud.; Examination (final) Monday, March 29, 4:15-5:15, Natural Science Aud. Section No. II: First Lecture, Tues- day, Feb. 16, 4:15-5:15, Natural Sci- ence Aud.; Subsequent lectures, Suc- cessive Tuesdays, 4:15-5:15, Natural Science Aud.; Examination (final), Tuesday, March 30, 4:15-5:15, Natur- al Science Aud. -Margaret Bell, M.D., Medical Adviser for Women Doctoral Examination for Nathan- iel Grier, Pharmaceutical Chemistry; thesis: "Antispasmodics: Basic-Alkyl Esters of p-Xenylacetic Acid and Substituted p-Xenylacetic Acids," will be held today in 309 Chemistry, at 9:00 a.m. Chairman, F. F. Blicke. By action of the Executive Board, the Chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doctoral candidates to attend the examination and he may grant permission to those who for sufficient reason might wish to be present. -C. S. Yoakum Concerts Concerts: The University Musical Society announces the following con- certs: Josef Hofmann, Pianist, Monday Jan. 18. Jaseha-Heifetz, Violinist, Tuesday, Feb. 16. Gu omar Novaeg,: Pianist, Friday,