Fifty-Third Year 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 regular University year, and every morning except Mon- day and Tuesday during the 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 otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by carrier $4.25, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 1RSPRBOENTEp FOR NATIONAL ADVERTIaBNG BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative #20 MAwSoN Avi. NEW YORK. N.Y. cmicAaO . SosToU * Los A eats SA FRatcIsCO Editorial Staff Y ._. , . _ .. . . . , . - . V- -- _r. .lL° a - -, -. - .aafl.a..., WA~ VA W1~ T. .+-a.... ..,. a ...+-sa'a s..--s v .a:.m a: s .'.:a .. - _ __ . ... s^ xAar..bL 3,,.i tCdkxx ap ar W:'#' A i . -- "H ows Joe Palooka making out, Bill?" 4y Prof. (Continued from Page 1) Coffey's Position Homer Swander Morton Mintz . * Will Sapp . 'George W. Walade Charles Thatcher -Bernard Hendel Barbara deFries Myron Dana . * S * . * S . . Managing Editor . . Editorial Director * S * *City ditor . *Associte Editor . . . Associate Editor . . * Sports Editor . . . Women's Editor - Associate Sports Editor Business Staff .dward J. Perlberg . . . Business Manager Fred M. Oinsberg . . Associate Business Manager Mary Lou Curran . . Women's Business Manager Jane-Lindberg . . Women's Advertising Manager James Daniels . . . Publications Sales Analyst Telephone 23-24-1t NIGHT EDITOR: WILL SAPP Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. THE BELL TOILS:r Should Fascism Dictate Amrican Movies? POLITICS are again playing their part in Hollywood, with General Franco's objection to the filming of Hemingway's novel of the Spanish civil war, "For Whom the Bell Tolls." The story is of the Loyalists in Spain during the war. General Franco is decidedly against the filming of a book so anti-Fascist in content. Even though the Hollywood version will duck politics completely and concentrate on the love angle, Franco still has visions of the movie caus- ing a huge promotion in the sale of the book, which does not duck the political side. 0, at this date, it looks as though the Ameri- can public is not going to see a screen version of "For Whom the Bell Tolls". Just why Wash- ington is backing up Franco in this matter is a question no one seems able to answer. The only- possible conclusion is that there is still one Fascist government to which the State Department bends an attentive ear. Whether or not "For Whom the Bell Tolls" makes the screen is -immaterial in itself, but whether or not even- our entertainment can be ictated to us by a government which is Fascist in nature and Nazi in sympathy is a point on which the American public has a right to demand an answer. -Jane Farrant A NEW SET-UP: Congressional Changes Provided in Gore's Plan IN KEEPING with the ever increasing trend toward specialization of knowledge and cen- tralization of authority, Albert Gore, Representa- tive from Tennessee, suggests a complete reor- ganization of Congress to enable it to meet the current demands of a changing nation. Gore's plan includes three changes-a staff of specialists in various public welfare fields to act as advisors, complete committee reorganiza- tion and additional grants of power to Congres- sional leaders. At first glance these alterations nmay appear to merely make Congress into a body which would duplicate the functions of other departments, but it is generally apparent that Congress at present is inadequate in its task as a policy-forming group. JANY LAWS passed by that body are not drafted by Congressional committees at all, but by experts in the various bureaus and agen- cies. In order to keep the function of law-making within,'the influence of the directly elected repre- sentatives of the people, it will be necessary for Congress to defend itself with its own board of experts. It is humanly impossible for each indi- vidual to possess the required background of information on all the subjects on which they - are called to pass judgment. The only salvation is a non-partisan staff of highly trained experts whose sole duty it is to possess such information. His second suggestion, that of overhauling the committee system, has long been a much-needed reform. Similar bills are shuttled back and forth from one committee to another, with much dupli- cation of effort and a number of different com- mittees are responsible for like matters. PEARSON'S EMERRY-GO-ROUND WASHINGTON-It now begins to look as if almost everyone knew about how General Doo- little bombed Tokyo except the American people. The Japs long ago had access to U.S. pris- oners taken after that raid. The world has now listened to Jap broadcasts that the airplane carrier Hornet was the vessel from which the bombers took off. Meanwhile, the U.S. Army has been willing to have the public know its part of the bombing story. The Navy also is quite willing to have its side of the story given to the public. And Elmer Davis believes the public should know. Inside word, however, is that the man at the very top is opposed. He once announced that the bombers came from Shangri-la and as far as the public is concerned that is still where they came from. Senate Diuty Linen Here is the real reason why Senator Tom Connally of Texas and other Democrats are so sore at the Senate fight over Boss Ed Flynn's appointment as Ambassador to Australia. They had hoped to railroad Flynn's confir- mation through the Senate with as little hub- bub as possible. Senators, especially adminis- tration Senators, don't like to wash dirty linen in public. But Senator Styles Bridges of New Hampshire upset their plans by bringing the issue squarely into the open. Result is that the Senate will face another wave of public resentment and newspaper attacks, similar to the "pensions" furor, if Flynn is confirmed. Also, every Sena- tor who votes for him will be showered with vit- riolic mail from home. The Republicans aren't worried, because they will vote almost solidly against Flynn. However, every Democrat who votes for him will be on the spot for "playing politics." That is the inside reason why Senator Con- nally attacked Bridges so savagely on the floor. And that, also, is why Senate Republicans are laughing up their sleeves. Secret Committee Row It didn't leak out, but that hot tiff between Connally and Bridges, over Flynn, didn't end on the Senate floor. There was another flareup when Bridges re- peated his charges against Flynn at a closed- door meeting of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. After Chairman Connally called the meeting to order, he gruffly inquired of Bridges: "You have made some pretty serious -charges about Mr. Flynn's alleged associations with a former agent of the Japanese government. Are you trying to attack his loyalty to the United States?" "No, I'm not accusing Flynn of -disloyalty," shot back Bridges, "but I believe that any man who had such associations prior to Pearl Har- bor has disqualified himself for diplomatic service in an area where we are fighting the Japs." "Well, I haven't heard of any objections to Mr. Flynn coming from Australia," drawled Con- I'd Rather Be Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK- The only argument on behalf of Marcel Peyrouton is that he was against Laval late in 1941. For that reason this new ex-Vichy- ite has now been made Governor General of Al- geria with our incredible blessing. But what, pre- cisely, does it prove about Peyrouton that he was against Laval? Democrats are against Laval, cer- tainly; and some fascists were against Laval; but things against the same thing are not necessarily equal to the same thing. Jacques Doriot, the inost cynical of all French fascists, is against Laval. De Gaulle is against Laval. But not equation can relate Doriot and De Gaulle. Who in our State Department is re- sponsible for this shocking, wretched and naive business of making opposition to Laval our touch- stone, anyway? I thought our, touchstone was democracy. A GAME OF NAMES For a long time we were friendly with Petain because he was against Laval. I believe Petain was sincerely against Laval, just as he was sin- cerely against French democracy. His latter an- tipathy was the more important, and because we did not believe this, we were bound to set a crooked course. As to how far off true north we are now, let us remember that Peyrouton was a quite content- ed Minister of the Interior under Petain, and that among his duties was the jailing of French democrats and also the installation of the French variety of the Nuremberg laws. But he was against Lval. What can we say about people to whom these distinctions among fascists are im- portant, except that they are playing a fantastic game of names, picking one after another bright- ly out of a hat, hoping that some day the world will say: "Ah! You're getting warmer!" NO SHIBBOLETH, HE It is assigning too much importance to Laval, to make hating him the shibboleth of democracy. That is a kind of cockeyes tribute to fascism. Whether you do exactly what Laval wants, or the exact opposite, in both cases you.accept him as a guiding star. Don't we have any affirmations and ideas of our own? We have to build a case and a future for ourselves from the ground up. We need a little more sense of direction than to set our course by Laval, or any other fascist, either straight toward him or straight away from him. We have had enough of such mechanical, auto- matic politics. When Peyrouton, who was vir- tually civil administrator for Petain, becomes civil administrator for North African territor- ies we have taken away from Petain, it begins to look as if you get to the same place in the end, no matter how you steer by Laval, so long as you steer by him. '' The question is the old one, of whether this is a war against Hitler or a war for democracy. Fascists can have a place in a war against Hitler, but not in a war for democracy. Choose your partners! I say a war for democracy is easier to fight, and easier to win. Your quarry can't escape from you by changing his name. THESE ARE TWO WARS TTmw.n a ~'ar'f-,. ,,A ,cf.4- ,,n .. artnnrn r suggest that campus news has been left out merely because Daily edi- tors just didn't like particular deans or department heads. A more plausible explanation is that The Daily editors were more interested in their own editorials, for which, strangely enough, space was usually available. Censorship may, of course, act in the reverse. The testimonials in re- cent issues of The Daily may serve as an illustration, although I am sorry to say that when I read this array I thought of Peruna and Lydia Pinkham. Nevertheless, as a member of the Board I was dis- tinctly pleased to find that The Daily had managed so well under the present regime, even though no one thought it necessary to go out of his way to say a good word for the Board, but their opinions are of little weight compared with those of a "Manager of Manpower." My only point here is that The.Daily staff does quite a little censoring on its own account, taking it all in all. Can it be that the issue really is: Who is to do the censoring, and to what end? If a Board member asks a member of The Daily staff not to refer to our Representative in Congress as an insipid mediocrity or an illustrious dunderhead, is this to be regarded as censorship? And if The Daily staff suppresses news, distorts issues, and thus misleads its readers-is this something else? There is on this point a necessity for some clearer thinking than has yet appeared in The Daily. There is no mystery surrounding the election of John Erlewine as managing editor of The Daily, nor in the failure to elect Leon Gorden- ker. For some time the Board has believed that if The Daily is to sur- vive the present crisis it must be taken over largely by women. For The Daily men, those delightful hours spent in the Publications Building, blasting the mighty, set- ting fire to wastebaskets, guiding the planets in their courses,-these hours are about over. The men will soon be in uniform, presumably talking back to their top sergeants. Let us hope that the Army will fur- nish these men with printing press- es and a newspaper so that they can, when necessary, advise their commanding general when and how to pull in his chin. Inany event, the men will soon be going, and women will take up the torch. With this in mind it was a foregone conclusion that some women, without too much regard for past experience, would have to be elected to respon- sible positions. We selected two; and if more qualified women had petitioned, we might have elected as many as five. With two out of five positions preemted by women we had three places for male appli- cants. These places were filed after we had given what attention we could to the applicants' scrap- books, the impression they made in their interviews, recommendations of their advisers, and above all, the recommendations of The Daily staff members. Many factors had to be weighed, and of course not everyone gave the same weight to each factor. Possibly Gordenker should have been picked instead of Erlewine-or Jaffee, or Brimmer. Some members of the Board appar- ently thought so, but a majority thought otherwise. We have made mistakes in the past, and we may have made one here. The Board, no more than Daily editors, can pre- tend to omniscience or infallibility. As the Jewish herring has been dragged into the picture may I state that no question of religion or race entered into our consideation of Mr. Gordenker's application. The appointments actually made to The Gargoyle and The Daily should be1 adequate proof of this ass.ertion-. Minorities like the Americant Communist Party and Jehovah's Witnesses have a way of attribut- ing their failure to get what they want or what they think they de-I serve to the minority stigma. Some even go so far as to assume that: membership in a minority group of itself confers some special compe-l tence. Even though we may join with them in admitting such special competence, this can hardly be the sole criterion in choosing them for1 Daily staff positions, or for any other, for that matter. Good judg-l ment, sound common sense, an ability to get along well with othersI (even members of Boards) are qualities hard to measure and most difficult to Torecast, but none the less important. By implication and innuendo The Daily editors suggest that some great principles of freedom of speech is involved in what they are pleased to call their "controversy" with the Board. Perhaps this is so. One issue that may be involved is whether the attempts to rig last Spring's election were justified. In February the Board hopes that the student body will have an oppor- Daily, owned, maintained, and in part supported by the University be regarded as the private mouthpiece of a few people who happen at the moment to constitute The Daily staff, or shall it be run in the inter- est of the University as a whole- including our ten thousand stu- dents, the faculty, and I suppose even administrative officers and regents. We might even go farther and include the People of the State of Michigan who have made this institution possible, and whose in- stitution it is, in the final analysis. Coupled with this is a subsidiary issue as to who should decide what these broader interests of the whole University are, and how they should be served. These issues I should like (Continued from Page 1) challenging attitude. The Board has done all of these things and has done them with a determination that makes indirect censorship just as sinister as the blue-pencil meth- od. It is true that The Daily has re- mained free during our stay in office, but it has been so because we have fought the Board all the way, because we have refused to bend to its will in any matter which involved the students freedom of expression. That we have been allowed to run the editorials of the past few days is not proof that the Board. has never indulged in what amounts to censorship. After one of the most, open-minded mem- bers, Prof. Merwin Waterman, finally, let the first editorial pass on Sunday, the rest of the Board could hardly demand that we stopi criticizing them. That would have been too ovious a move for even Prof. Densmore. Prof. Coffey has in the past shown a propensity to conjure up tintype visions of smoke-filled rooms and derby - hatted Daily politicos out to pull a Hague on the campus. Nuts. The election in question was one in which there was absolutely no opposition from other pars of the campus. All of the men nominated for the positions of student Board members were nominated by the Publications. There was only one who petitioned, and he was an ex- Da man. Six of the candidates agreed to drop out in favor of the three who were finally named to the Board. Any senior student on the campus could have entered the election and The Daily could not have stopped him - nor would it have tried. Prof. Coffey is a master at mak- ing false accusations in a beautiful, general way when he has no specific proof to sustain him. He claims that "legitimate campus news. . has been frankly suppressed ... " When, Prof. Coffey, when? Prof. Coffey's statement of the "real issue" - "Who is to do the censoring . . . ?" - implies a tacit admission on his part that some- one should wield the blue pencil. We maintain that NO ONE should have that power. We certainly don't want it, but Prof. Coffey ap- parently does. Prof. Coffey lightly throws in a crack about Daily editors "setting fire to wastebaskets." He would probably consider it irrelevant that no such thing has ever occurred. Of course, we've had a few snow- ball fights, but what the hell, Prof. Coffey? The letter also points out that one reason the Board did not ap- point Leon Gordenker was be- cause all the men will soon be in the Army and women will have to run The Daily. If Prof. Coffey had bothered to read Gordenker's petition carefully, he would have found that the latter is in 4-F and, thus, will remain in the University until he gradu- ates. Is this oversight part of the "untiring vigilance" of which the professor speaks? Prof. Coffey's references to the Jewish question are in such bad taste that we hesitate to mention them. We will say, however, that we know for certain race does play a part in the calculations of two Board members. One of the desirable qualities for an aspiring editor mentioned.by Prof. Coffey is the ability 'to .get along with other people. In an all- staff vote before the appointments, the people with whom Gordenker had been working rated him their second choice for a senior position. The Board knew this. We agree that Prof. Coffey's "fundamental issue" is important and warrants discussion. Here is our opinion: The Daily is a student paper and is not an official University pub- lication. Nevertheless, the editors should at mall times be working in the best interests of the Univer- sity. This does not entail blind submission to the views of a Board in Control or of the administra- tion; rather, it implies a duty to offer responsible, constructive crit- icism when needed. In addition, we believe it certain- ly in the interests of the University' and the people of the State that students be allowed to think for themselves and express those thoughts in their own newspaper. We think it extremely unfortunate that a member of the Board in Control believes differently., -llomer Swander; Man. Editor Morton Mintz, Editorial Director Will Sapp, City Editor Editors Answer to see debated a'nd I respectfully invite some of those who contribut- ed to Wednesday's and Thursday's Daily to state their views. While 1 cannot speak authorita- tively for other members of the Board, I suspect that most of them would agree with the general senti- ments of approval expressed in the array of letters from well-wishers in Wednesday's Daily. I am sure they would say (with some slight reser- vations, of course) that Messrs. Swander, Sapp, and Mintz have done a fine job in putting out a most stimulating newspaper. Part of The Daily's success we believe to be due to the interest and untie- ing vigilance shown by our Board. We intend to keep right on. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) through invited. February 6. The public is a series of three-concerts in the Rack- ham Auditorium on January 22 and 23, as follows: Tonight at 8:30: Quartet in D by Haydn; Quartet in D-flat by Dohnan- yi; and Beethoven's Quartet in F mi- nor. Saturday at 2:30: Quartet in D by Borodin; Quartet No. 4 by Quincy Porter; andua ozart's Quartet in B- flat. Saturday at 8:30: Quartet in F, No. 1 by Beethoven; Quartet in C by Shostakovich; and Quartet in F by Dvorak. Series tickets (including tax): $2.75, $2.20 and $1.10; and tickets for single concerts: $1.10 and 55c each-may be purchased at the Offices of the Uni- versity Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower; and one hour before each program in the main lobby of the Rackham Building. -Charles A. Sink, President The University Symphony Orches- tra, Eric DeLamarter, Conductor, will play an 'all-Bach program at 8:30 Sunday evening, Jan. 24, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Soloists will include Joseph Brinkman, pianist, and Wassily Besekirsky, violinist. The public is cordially invited. Exhibitions Exhibition- Rackham Galleries- Mezzanine Floor. The Horace H. Events Today Phi Delta Kappa will hold two membership meetings: today at 4:00 p.m. and on Saturday, Jan. 23, at 2:00 p.m. in room 3206, University High School. All members are requested to be present. Try-outs for Children's Theatre: Try-outs for the second production of the Children's Theatre of the Depart- ment of Speech, "The Ghost of Mr. Penny" by Rosemary Musil, will be held today in the Rehearsal Room of the Michigan League. Boys and girls between the ages of 10 and 15 and any men who are interested in trying out are urged to attend. All students enrolled in any reserve program, including Army, Air Corps, Marine, and Navy "V" classifications, will be permitted to attend the Mili- tary Ball, to be held from 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. today in the Intramural Sports Building. Tickets may be ob- tained at ROTC and NROTC head- quarters or from any member of the central committee. Episcopal Students: Tea will be served for Episcopal students ,and their friends by the Canterbury Club in Harris Hall today, 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. Presbyterian Student Guild: Study .I R