- t 1I1flL 11 Ltn1 Ai i Axu ..diw 4. 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 repub- lication 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 car- rier $4.25, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 Making him jump out of his boots. i NEPREOENTED FOR NATIONIk. ADVERT13ING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK.. N.Y. CHWCAGO BoSTON . Los ANGELES * SAN FRANCISCO Editorial Staff John Erlewine . Bud Brimmer . Leon Gordenker Marion Ford . Charlotte Conover . Eric Zalenski Betty Harvey James Conant . . . Managing Editor . Editorial Director . . . City Editor Associate Editor . . . . Associate Editor . . . . Sports Editor Women's Editor Columnist 4ERRY- GO- ROUND:, By DREW P EARSON WASHINGTON, March 5.- Franklin Roosevelt this week be- gins his eleventh and probably toughest year in office. It will be tough not because of the war, which is in good shape, but because of increasing battles on the home front. Nothing can ever detract from the long-view record of Roose- velt as a great war leader. But in winning the war, Roosevelt's greatest danger is that he may lose the battle at home-not for himself, not for the Democratic Party (which are not important), but for the hopes and ideals of the American people. There is nothing so dangerous as repeated disillusionment. And if the American people were to suffer the same shattered hopes again as after the last war; if they were to see their permanent peace dreams go up in smoke; if they were to experience the anguish of another depression, and the hatreds of vio- lent internal wrangling, then our political system might not weather the strain. That is why some of the Presi- dent's friends wish, and have tact- fully suggested, that he follow Abraham Lincoln's example of de- voting more time to domestic prob- lems. The war, they feel, is well under way. The main spade-work has been done. It is no longer nec- essary to watch all the details- Meanwhile a lot of disagreeable politics has been going from bad to worse for lack of Roosevelt's masterful touch. Lincoln, faced with a tragic war and a difficult home front, divided his time between them. He lis- tened patiently to almost every disgruntled politician with an axe to grind, struggled to keep his po- litical support. Actually, the President is re- living his old days as assistant sec- retary of the navy, days which he loved, days when he could afford to take time for ship design and admirals. But now a political em- pire is disintegrating around him, with a foreign policy necessarily so difficult that its intricacies may sour a naturally isolationist Amer- ican people. (Copyright, 1943, United Features Synd.) Business Stafff £?lerJ 2Izf 2hc &diior R Edward J. Perlberg . Fred M. Ginsberg Mary Lou Curran Jane Lindberg . . . . . . . . Business Manager Associate Business Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Reply to Podliashttk .. . Amicus Plato, sed magis amica veritas. THE WORLD would be very nice and simple, indeed, were only Germany totalitarian, only Poland reactionary, and were Russia a paragon of virtues and freedom. In such case, I am sure, even patri- otic, but Leftist, Poles would agree to become after the war a part of an all-embracing European Soviet Republic, with Moscow as capitol. As it is, however, I feel compelled, having been an eye witness of the Russian invasion of Eastern Poland in 1939, and as a member of Polish democratic circles, to protest sol- emnly and emphatically against the misrepresentation of facts in Mr. Podliashuk's article in the February 27th issue of The Michi- gan Daily. The truth is, that just those Pol- ish and Jewish elements in Poland who were opposed to the last semi- Fascist Polish government (and I emphasize that there had been nothing like "twenty years" of "little but ultra-nationalistic prop- aganda from . . . fascistic govern- ment") became more and more anti-Sovetic with every day of Rus- sian occupation. Their desire to come to an understanding with the occupants, in view of the still greater German . threat to Polish independence and culture, was too severely tested by Russia's atti- tude. Those who had been, up to the outbreak of the war, leaders of a progressive wing of public opin- ion of Poland, more consolidated than in many other formally demo- cratic countries, were faced with a suppression of free speech, free press and free participation in pub- lic and social life, exceeding all that which they had known in Poland. Socialists, Trotzkyites and liberals filled the prisons of Soviet Russia, as their predecessors had filled those of Tzarist Russia. The great leaders of the Jewish Social- ist Party in Poland (the "Bund"), Atler and Ehrlich, could tell the whole disgusting truth were they not still held in prison despite the protests of the "Fascist" Polish government in exile (in which are represented socialists, peasants and Jews) THE "HARDSHIPS," imposed "at TIMES" on the population of the Russian occupied section of Poland, consisted besides the above imprisonment of leaders, Mr. Pod- liashuk, in the deportation in the middle of winter, in unheated cars, of about two millions of Poles, Jews and Ukrainians-mostly peasants. More often than not, members of families were separated forever. Seven thousand Polish Army Re- serve Officers of Polish and Jewish nationality, who had never fought against Russia, were exterminated (not to use the "ugly" word) after a year of detention in concentra- tion camps. At the present time the Soviet government, which through the Polish-Russian agree- ment of July, 1941 voided the pre- vious Russo-German pact concern- ing the western boundaries of Rus- sia, has deprived all citizens exiled to Russia, who were born in the eastern territories of Poland ex- tending almost to the vicinity of Warsaw, of their passports and has compelled them to become Russian subjects. It is not Poland which became anti-Russian or imperialis- tic; the truth is just the opposite. As to Poland itself, it would lead us too far to analyze all the half- truths and misstatements in Mr. Podliashuk's editorial. Even peo- ple who, like I have been bitterly opposed to some recent trends in Polish life-incompatible with its deep traditions and culture-can- not help wondering why the same instances of fascism, anti-Semit- ism, military tendencies which are passed over in silence or tolerantly explained, when it is a question of other countries, are in the case of Poland generalized or grossly exag- gerated. For twenty years this method of treating Poland was wounding only the pride of Polish people and, if anything, hampered the development of Polish democ- racy and developed nationalistic xenophobia; it has greatly helped "poor Germany" to achieve her aims. Now, far from helping the Polish minorities, it lends support to reactionary, imperialistic trends lurking more and more behind the communistic screen of Soviet Rus- sia. The penalty for this misguided attitude of American progressive circles may be paid once more, not only by Poland. -Helena Landau r Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: MARY RONAYh Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. 1942. Chicago TimesIn 1, 1 APPEASEMENT? Welles' Defense of Aid To Spain is Inadequate THE.FORCES of appeasement gained another potential ally when in a statement Monday night Sumner Welles, Acting-Secretary of State, defended the shipment of oil and food supplies to totalitarian Spain. He based his argument on the fact that Britain herself was sending supplies there and that in addition "assurances" had been given by the Franco government and the Spanish shippers to both the Allies that the goods received would not be trans-shipped. All these "assurances" in the light of the ex- perience.of the last few years seem a bit naive. aWe should certainly know by this time that ,not much faith can be placed in the promises of the Fascist dictators, and, if it is true that England is also shipping goods to Spain, this, far from compensating for our own actions, makes the situation seem even more ridiculous. T IS GENERALLY believed that one of our aims in this war is the abolition of the evils brought about by the Axis. And yet right at this yery moment we are dealing with the first and foremost prodigy of the Axis. In his statement Welles made no mention of any sort of agency which we have established to make sure that our goods are not being sent across the Pyrenees. Any food which is allowed to pass through to the continent, of Europe relieves Hitler of just so much responsibility toward feeding his willing and enforced allies. When at the beginning of the year the State pepartment published its white paper on the history of our diplomacy from 1931 to 1941 from the evidence stated it openly revealed the failure of that policy of appeasement which it evidently still continues to follow. - Monroe Fink QUOTA - "53,000": Red Cross Drive 'Needs Coeds' Aid to Succeed WEDNESDAY a new war program was adopted for Michigan coeds. It requires no work, no time, support alone will make it succeed. The plan is to make every coed a member of the American Red Cross for one year. The drive was laid before the Women's House Presidents meeting by Mrs. Merle Malin, executive secretary of the Washtenaw branch. It was adopted by the women house heads. This means every sor- ority, dormitory, league house, and cooperative house head is responsible for collecting one dollar from each girl in her respective house. Full support of this newest campus war drive would result in approximately $3,190 toward Washtenaw county's quota of $53,000. Of this, $20,000 will'go toward the national quota of $125,000,000 to carry out the Red Cross' three- .fold war program: (1) acting as a disaster ser- vice, (2) recruiting Army and Navy nurses, and (3) serving as official communication agency between members of the armed forces and people at home. iHIS YEAR it has been asked to supply 4,500,- 000 pints of blood, 5200,000 surgical dress- ings, 65,000 nurses, send clothing to families evacuated from occupied areas, and send food to prisoners of war interned in hospitals, prisons, ,TakeSt Or f1eadefit By Jason AS EL GORDO, taking his final bow as a Daily columnist, pointed out, there has been a kind of a tradition about Daily last columns. You take your books, throw them at Angell Hall, spit a couple of times, and move on to a place where people don't grind you under their heel. Ever since I got this job, I've been wanting to answer the bitterness and disillusionment of the last installment of my predecessor's "An Axe To Grind." "I know that the basic educational system as set up here is wrong, almost tragically wrong." In those words Torquemada, last month, ap- praised the University of Michigan. rfO RQUEMADA isn't alone. Two years ago, Mascott, author of "Fire and Water," began his last column with one of the most savage in- dictments of the University of Michigan you will ever read. He quoted it from the last column of a Daily writer two years before: "ON FIRST IMPULSE I would like, on gradu- ation day, to pick up my textbooks and throw them as powerfully as I could, right smack at the center of the center door of Angell Hall. In that gesture I should finally be able to express my disgust at the failure of the University to turn out thinking students. In that futile, foolish pitch I would articulate my contempt for an edu- cational system which swallows adolescent chil- dren from the high schools and disgorges them unspoiled and unchanged after four years of so- called higher training.". Of course, we have to remember the circum- stances of Mascott's last column. It was writ- ten as the University, without consulting the editors of The Daily or the student body, with- out even announcing its intentions ahead of time, proceeded to add two faculty members to the Board in Control of Student Publica- tions, and to give the vote to the two then non- voting alumni members. Torquemada's column, this January, was writ- ten under somewhat the same circumstances. Torquemada, I'll admit, had a right to be bitter, and so did Mascott. As far as The Daily set-up goes, that is. BUT THE DAILY isn't everything: when it comes to the "basic educational system" of the University, that's something else again. The classes I've been in have been good. The profs have been good. If you wanted to slide through on no work and no knowledge, you could, in a lot of cases; there have been times when I have. But the profs teach the courses, by and large, for the people who are interested in them. That's part of the total picture which Tor- quemada neglects. I'd call it Michigan spirit, except that Torquemada would probably laugh and tell me to go and see "The Male Animal" if I wanted to know the truth about college spirit. SO I WON'T call it anything. I'll just think of a track meet I saw once, between Michigan and Ohio State. I'll remember a two-miler who finished second for Michigan in the time of 9:50. When he reported for track his freshman year, this two-miler was one of the most unlikely pros- pects ever to turn out for track. He was too I'd Rather Be Right_ By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, March 5.- ON STYLE: Congress is about to defer all farm workers. It wants to solve the food problem. It selects a moment at which the Russian offensive in the south has slowed down, to write a message to Russia, saying that as between a larger army and a larger food supply, we choose a larger food supply. This is a letter to Russia, a special delivery letter to Russia. It does not even matter if the Congressmen involved have never even thought about the relation between this bill and, say, the second front. That is merely another mes- sage to Russia. It says that as between the second front, and food, we think about food. If we do so automatically, innocently and even instinctively, that only makes it worse. Congress may fondly believe itself to be legis- lating merely on an internal issue, food. Doesn't make any difference how we solve it, or when we solve it. Our own business. And that becomes just one more message to the world, revealing our profound inability to see ourselves as our allies see us. It would be one thing to introduce a bill that is really a bill for a smaller army after our invasion of Europe had been established, after we had convinced our allies that we are fully fighting with them. To do so now adds doubt to existing doubt, and may confirm doubt. Is Congress really so innocent as to believe it makes no difference when it does these things; that issues in this war can be kept sep- arate each from each, and each wrapped in cellophane, as if each had nothing to do with the other? When Congress takes up such a bill, a bill for a smaller army, at such a time, just before the invasion of Europe, it is not operating in the field of food, but in the field of foreign affairs. It will actually be passing an unwritten joint resolution poclaiming it as the sense of Congress that the invasion of Europe is not the most pressing prob- lem of the year. It will be passing another un- written joint resolution putting our allies on notice that even strictly military promises made by our government are cancelable without notice, by men who do not even know what the promises are. They can knock out the second front acciden- tally, like a man jogging a vase off a table with his elbow. Worst of all are the formlessness and lack of style revealed both in the timing of this legis- lation and in its terms. If the Russians had had such a law in effect, any man who was tending a bed of asparagus would have been exempt from the defense of Stalingrad. No other American industry, not even avia- tion, has this type of blanket deferment. Even airplane makers are sorted out; those who can be replaced by women, or by men unsuited to military service, are inducted. This bill, which would have us stagger through the war in a kind of blind and beautiful automatism, does not even draw the line between one type of agriculture and. another. It lumps all types together and calls them all blessed. The pimento and the garlic are rated above DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1943 VOL. LIII No. 105 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 a.m. Notices Students entering the armed services: It would be advisable for all students enter- ing the armed services to take with them a transcript of their college record. In view of the large number of transcripts which will be called for, it is necessary that a student make application at least three days in advance of the date when he expects to withdraw. B. D. Thuma, Armed Services Representative If you wish to finance the purchase of a home, or if you have purchased improved property on a land contract and owe a balance of approximately 60 per cent of the value of the property, the Investment Of- fice, 100 South Wing of University Hall, would be glad to discuss financing through the medium of a first mortgage. Such fi- nancing may effect a substantial saving in interest. The American Association of University Women Fellowship: 'The Ann Arbor-Ypsi- lanti Branch of the A.A.U.W. is again offering a fellowship for the year 1943- 1944 in honor of Dr. May Preston Slosson. This fellowship is open to women students for graduate study in any field. Applica- tion blanks may be obtained now from the Graduate School Office and must be returned to that office no later than March 15 in order to receive consideration. The American Association of University Professors is sponsoring a dinner, followed by an Open Forum, on Monday, March 8, at 6:30 p.m. at the Michigan Union. Forum subject: "The University and Its Public Relations." Dean Edmonson will preside and the four panel members will be Pro- fessors Harold Dorr, Wesley H. Mauer, Shirley W. Allen and Norman E. Nelson. Send reservations to C. N. Wenger, 33 East Hall. Choral Union Singers: There are a few vacancies in the men's sections of the Choral Union. Applicants should consult Professor Hardin van Deursen, Conductor, at once. Charles A. Sink, President Members of the Choral Union whose rec- ords are clear will please call for their courtesy tickets for the concert by Guio- mar Novaes today between the hours of 10 and 12, and 1 and 4, at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. After 4 o'clock no tickets Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: In connection with the numerous re- quests whichhave come to this officefrom students who are in the Enlisted Reserve Corps and who anticipate early orders for active duty, the policy of the College in general is not .to attempt any prorating of credit for those who are withdrawing up to the end of five weeks. Studentsi who remain in residence beyond five weeks may petition forproratedtcredit ifthey are in good standing in their 'courses at the time of withdrawal. In the case of graduating seniors who can remain in residence for at least eight weeks, special arrangements will be made to allow them to complete as much of their work as possible. All requests for the adjustment of credit by students who are being in- ducted into the Armed Forces should be made through this office (Room 1220 An- gell Hall). E. A. Walter German Table for Faculty Members will meet Monday at 12:10 p.m. In the Found- ers' Room, Michigan Union. Members of all departments are cordially invited. There will be a brief talk on "Aus der Imkerel" by Mr. Werner F. Striedieck. Lectures University Lecture: Sir Bernard Pares, English historian and diplomat, will lec- ture on the subject, "Russia Now," under the auspices of the Department of His- tory, on Tuesday, March 9, at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. American Chemical Society Lecture: Dr. Carl R. Addinall, Director of Library Serv- ices, Merck and Company, will lecture on the subject, "The vitamins; their Indus- trial Development and Importance," under the auspices of the University of Michigan Section, American Chemical Society, on Friday, March 12, at 4:15 p.m. in Room 151, Chemistry Building. The public is invited. Lecture on China: Professor L. L. Wat- kins of the Department of Economics will lecture on the subject, "Inflation in China." This lecture, sponsored by the Michigan Chinese Economic Society, will be given on Saturday, March 6, at 5:00 p.m., in the East Lecture Room, Rackham School. Academic Notices Remedial Reading: Students interested in improving their reading ability are in- vited to. attend a meeting at 5 o'clock to- day in room 4009 University High School. At this meeting plans for a special non- credit course in remedial reading will be discussed. the instructors concerned with students who are entitled to them. Doctoral Examination for Pieter Jacobus Rabie, Latin and Greek; thesis: "Evidences of Foreigners in the Trades and Profes- sions of Ancient Italy (Based on the. In- scriptions)," will be held on Saturday, March 6, in 2009 Angell Hall, at 9:30 a.m. Chairman, J. G. Winter. By action of the Executive Board the Chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doctoral candi- dates to attend the examination and he may grant permission to those who for sufficient reason might wish to be present. C. S. Yoakum Concerts Choral Union Concert: Guiomar N- vaes, distinguished Brazilian pianist, will give the ninth program in the Choral Union Concert Series this evening at 8:30 in Hill Auditorium, This concert takes the place of the Detroit Symphony Orches- tra previously announced for March 2. Ticket holders will please present for ad- mission ticket No. 9. A limited number of tickets are still available at the offices of the University Music Society, Burton Memorial Tower. Charles A. Sink, President Faculty Concert: Mabel Ross Rhead, pianist, and Gilbert Ross, violinist, mem- bers of the School of Music faculty, will present the first in a series of three Sun- day evening recitals at 8:30 on March 7, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, The pro- grams will be devoted to the complete group of sonatas for violin and piano by Beethoven, and will be open to the gen- erai public. Exhibitions Exhibition under the auspices of the In- stitute of FinenArts: Metal Work from Is- lamic countries (Iran, Egypt, and Syria). Rackham School, through March 11. Every afternoon, except Sundays, 2:00-5:00. Events T od.ay Wyvern meeting in the Undergraduate Office of the Michigan League today at 5 o'clock. All members who cannot ,be present are asked to contact the president. Episcopal Students: Tea will be served for Episcopal students and their friends by the Canterbury Club this afternoon in Harris Hall, 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. Presbyterian Student Guild social eve- ning beginning at 8:30 tonight. University students cordially invited. A-r 0 T