rAGE FOUR T HE MICHIGAN DAILY !to- 1r Strlgau Dail. 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 Breath of spring stT r T. -y. ti _z, a ( ' Adm kl qw sr ."nae . .A5 N A 11)N- AOVEHTLJING "y Natiomal Advertising Service, Inc. ,o/vls.e Publishers Representative 420 MADisoN AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO * BOSTON * LOS ANGELES -"SAN FRANCISCO heCr--- Red Cross News From Africa THE following quotation is from a recent letter from my brother, a field director in the American Red Cross in Africa: "I liked your expression about 'not suffering from anything except the shortages of things we shouldn't have anyway.' Much to the point! You can imagine how some of the soldiers over here in the desert re- act to a letter complaining of the shortages of coffee and other sac- rifices-especially if they've just missed eating for a couple of days or have had a week on beef and biscuits. The complainers should have visited a hospital with me, where a boy who had just lost an eye said he was going to learn to shoot with his left eye and join the infantry. No mention of sacrifice there!" * * * "The soldiers I've met from the time we barged ashore have been unanimously agreed on one subject: that the U. S. Army Red Cross club in Cairo is about the best thing that ever happened for a soldier on leave." These remarks seem to me to be particularly appropriate during the present Red Cross fund campaign, and in view of increased rationing here at home. -K.L.C. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 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 Business Stafff Edward J. Perlberg . Fred M. Ginsberg Mary Lou Curran Jane Lindberg . . Business Manager Associate Business Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: STAN WALLACEa Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the 'writers only. PAY-AS-YOU-GO: Expediency of Plan Should Decide Shift WHILE each passing day makes the proposed shift of payment of income tax to a pay-as- you-go basis more difficult to carry out, riled Congressmen are making their stands of support or opposition to the proposed plans more vio- lent. Congress is making a veritable bottleneck out of the proposals. If many more days elapse be- fore the decision is made, the whole knotty problem will have to wait another year. The opposition to the much discussed Rumi plan, the most logical one yet offered when coupled with the withholding levy idea, has been in the form of statements such as these: 1. That it will skip a year in tax revenue to the government. 2. That it will "mushroom 100,000 or more war millionaires," as was stated by Rep. Ber- trand W. Gearhart (Rep.-Calif.) Clarification of the issue involved is necessary. Detailed and careful study of the points mentioned above reduce them to absurdity. Rather, the question of whether or not to have a pay-as-you-go tax evolves in the end to a matter of expediency. There is no basis whatsoever for the first argument that a program such as the Ruml plan will cancel out a year of income tax to the gov- ernment. Income taxes were collected last year, the year before and the year before that. They will be collected this year and they will be col- lected next year. The issue at question is merely a change in the method of collection of the tax a year after the income is made to collection on current income. IF THE OPPONENTS of the Ruml plan succeed in putting across their idea of payments on '42 income plus a withholding levy on this year's income, rather than meaning that the govern- ment is not being cheated out of a year's taxes in the shift to current payments, it will. mean that the taxpayers will be making double pay- ment. They will be paying two years' taxes in one year. If this idea of double payment is the secret basis of these men's aims in view of the govern- ment's dire need for revenue, wily do they stab the Ruml plan in the back with false state- ments? Why don't they come out and admit their purpose? But regardless of the motive of such an act, even if it be to provide two years' revenue in place of one, it will place an added burden on the people. This burden could easily prove to be far too heavy for aver- age income. The second point of opposition involved is more complicated. It embodies the ' problems that will arise in connection with deaths and incomes that will be smaller this year than they were last. In connection with the latter idea, there is a point for argument. Obviously, some incomes received this year will be smaller than those earned by the same individuals in 1942. As far as this angle is concerned, the government will lose the taxes on such differences in income. However, it is perfectly feasible that a provision could be added to the bill that would cover such losses. The same holds true for taxes that would be lost through deaths. MOREOVER, the newcomers to the income tax group must be taken into considera- tion. A continuation of the old plan would mean that the taxes on these incomes would not be collected until 1944. On the pay-as- you-go basis, these taxes would be collected +th. vpny. Take ~9t Or /eave ,fit By Jason I' -0 DAVE was from Grosse Pointe, Mich.; and a classmate of mine at Phillips Exeter Acad- emy. A native of Massachusetts myself, I was thinking of going to a midwestern college, so I thought I'd ask him about Michigan. "Michigan? It's probably a good enough school, but I certainly wouldn't ever go there myself." I asked him why. "Well, I don't know ... It's just that people . . . I just wouldn't go there, that's all." He didn't. He went to Princeton. My English teacher, born in Texas, told me the same story. "You live next door to the only place where real culture . .. The Middle West, barbaric in comparison . . . you don't want to throw yourself away . . ." He was completely sincere; for him, the East was "it." I went to Michigan, anyway. Since I've been here, I've wondered how Dave and my English teacher got that way. I've wondered why so many people raise their eyebrows in admiration when Harvard or Yale or Princeton come into the conversation. "WHY, you can get a better education at those Eastern schools. They pay more for their profs." That's one answer, with an element of truth in it. The private schools of the East, with their large endowments, can, in some cases, hire ("call," the trade terms it) good men away from less wealthy state-supported institutions. When people talk in hushed tones of Har- vard, they're not thinking of one of the few Sanskrit experts in the world, Professor Clark, or even of Dean Landis of the Law School. When father and mother scrape up those extra dollars to send Junior East, or when Junior self- pityingly wishes they had, they're all thinking of more worldly things than Law or Classical Lang- uages. They're picturing Culture, not as some- thing that you get first from books and then from professors-at any university-but as some- thing you get exclusively at Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Dartmouth, Williams, or Amherst. Something which the Morgans and the Vander- bilts pay good money for which may give you a chance to join an "exclusive club." Prestige, if you want to call it that-that's what the Eastern schools really offer. It's what Middle Westerners mean when they say they wish they could have gone to Harvard. PERHAPS you think that all this is prejudiced -that you actually get something in an Eastern school that you don't get here. You do get, in your specialty, certain high-salaried pro- fessors. But for a general education, or an in- teresting and pleasant four years, I don't think you get anything more. When that does happen, Washington won't be swarming with Harvard men, but rather with alumni of Michigan, California, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Texas. At this University, people won't shrink from unorthodox thinking and free expression "because it's a state school." Rather, they'll be saying that Michi- gan encourages men to search, unafraid, for the truth-because it is a state school, because it is paid for by the people rather than by the tuitions or philanthropies of the very rich, There may still be a few left, even then, who will worship an A.B. from Princeton, confident that it mnakes vonr blnd blue and Your skin Pd, Rather L Be Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON ' NEW YORK, March 13.- Some Democrats in the House are showing a tendency to take a long walk during important votes. They have become the little men who weren't there. As these few Democrats vanish, sidling out the doors, the House becomes a Republican House, for the official Democratic lead, 222 to 208, is slim. I, have talked much about obscurantism, but this is the choicest obscurantism of them all. You don't vote yes, you don't vote no; you merely go for a stroll. Democrats who suddenly feel the need of fresh air thus avoid voting against their own administration, and avoid voting for it, merely at the price of marking themselves down as men who have nothing to say during a world crisis. Democrats have thus let the Republicans pass at least four measures, by straight partly- line voting. One measure would prevent many govern- ment departments from sending out free mail. It passed 204 to 201, all but two Republicans voting for it. Another measure took $3,800,- 000 from the Federal Home Loan Bank Admin- istration. Two other amendments cut two other bureaus in the same way. One really wild proposal, which would have left the Fed- eral Communications Commission without a penny (even for policing the air against ille- gal short-wave transmitters) was halted only by desperate efforts. One correspondent says prominent Democrats have been seen on the floor just before one of these key votes but not during. Another writer, Mr. Charles van Devander, who has been compil- ing these instances, cites, as a typical House vote on an important appropriation amendment, such figures as 84 to 36, all 84 being Republicans and 36 being Democrats. The balance of power was outside having a smoke. It had found the perfect device for hitting what happens to be the war- time administration while seeming only to, be waiting for a street car or to be engaged in some other innocent activity. Before I forget I should like to list some other murky and obscure Congressional devices which have come along since the last time I tallied them. They all have the same characteristic feature of indirection, the oblique push, the sidewise, crabwise walk. HERE'S one: A great to-do is being raised in Congress against "destroying the banks" and thereby keeping them from being able to go on selling war bonds, as the banks have been doing, patriotically and without profit. If anything menaces the banks and their war work, we ought to know of it. What is this menace? It turns out to be a vital Department of Ag- griculture plan for lending $225,000,000 to small farmers, in $2,500-$7,500 bites, to enable them to increase their food production. This modest scheme, particularly important to farmers who are furthest from capacity op- erations for lack of capital, is dressed up to look like sure death to our war loan program; it will complete with and finish the banks; thus they will not be able to sell war bonds; the war will go to the bowwows. All done with $255,000,000 of small loans to small men. Some obscurantists take a walk and leave the administration in danger of doing without com- munications control; and others make irrelevant - .rnv..- hnnl Qnonh - nn cciic flci+ air a n Dominic Says AN Christian Smuts, that master- statesman who emerged during' World War I, recently said of the Jews: "Protests today might prove, availing and the senseless butchery continue, but at any rate, we shall have placed on record the retribution which surely awaits its perpetrators." As we come to a place in the slow hard way of war where post-war set- tlement must become a part of war effort, the scape-goat tragedy should have special attention and construc- tive thought beyond mere retribution. In ancient Israel, the priest killed a perfect lamb and burned it as a sym- bol of expiation, the hope and effort of the worshippers ascending as thanksgiving to God. The goat that symbolically bore the confessed sins of those worshippers away to Ge- henna, where he perished. Today the Jews of the world are led off to a "gehenna" which is worse than any desert of starvation. The symbol has turned to reality as if to curse the in- tellectual arrogance which cuts short our spiritual growth within that mod- ern enlightenment of which Israel has contributed so generously. And what can we do about it? We can restudy our heritage and initi- ate the truth. Through the Jews came our Commandments, the basis of western legal codes; came Jesus of Nazareth, the founder of our Christian religion; the altar and its sacrificial element in com- mon life; and the Bible, now the very core of both our religious as- piration and our ethical perspec- tive; as well as customs, symbols and attitudes too numerous to list. IF the schools of the United Nations would incorporate in their curricula and teach to all children and youth for the next one hundred years these basic cultural facts, we would be on our way toward expiation. The sins of the Nazi against the Jew will never be adequately recompensated until Israel is honored. THE Inter-Cultural Bureau of Re- search, under the authorship of William E. Vicery and Stewart G. Cole, has just published a book for American schools which may well be- come a significant beginning. How- ever, eventually and that speedily, this problem should engage the best minds and the ablest institutions of learning. War and the tensions which indicate unrest in India, in Latin countries, in Europe, in Africa and in the United States can not be torn up by the roots lest peace be torn up also, but those tensions can be overcome by grace from Almighty God. Only a deep and persistent magnanimity on the part of those great majorities which enjoy prestige, control the re- sources of mankind and can cling te- naciously to a distant social purpose will be equal to the task. -E. W. Blakemore Counselor in Religious Education in the wholly unexceptionable ac- tivity of promoting the sale of war bonds. A man is absent. His absence is bel- ligerent and meaningful; it has direc- tion. A man makes a sudden, irrele- vant speech for war bonds. He is kill- ing an important part of the farm program. These indirections color the Congressional approach to the politi- cal campaign of next year. Obscur- antism is riding high. These devices go with such pleas as to leave the rnn+frv nnhangPA for whn ohav SUNDAY, MARCH 14, 1943 VOL. LI No. 113m 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 publia- . tion, except on Saturday when the no-L tices should be submitted by 11:30 a.m. Notices Credit for Men Entering Armed Serv-L ices: By action of the faculty of the College of Architecture and Design, stu- dents leaving for active duty with the armed forces will be granted generalw credit in proportion to the number of H weeks of the term attended in coursesb elected, up to the time of withdrawal. Forms for students withdrawing will be mailed to instructors in all courses, re- questing an immediate report as to the student's attendance and tentative grade up to the time of withdrawal. Each stu-t dent's case will be reviewed as to specific 8 credit and grade in any given course at such time as the student may return toA the University. Partial credit in specific t courses is not being recorded at this time.r Wells Bennett, Dean9 German Table for Faculty Members willv meet Monday at 12:10 p.m. in the Found- ers' Room, Michigan Union. Members of all departments are cordially invited.a There will be a brief talk on "Pflanzen,g die Gummi produzieren" by Mr. OttoN Laporte.C Kothe-Hildner Annual German Lan-I guage Award offered students in Coursesr 31 and 32. The contest, a translation test1 (German English and English-German),C carries, two stipends of $20 and $30, and will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. Thursday, March 25, in room 203 University Hall, Students who wish to compete and who have not yet handed in their applications should do so immediately in 204 Univer-1 sity Hall. Bronson-Thomas Annual German Lan- guage Award offered juniors and seniorsr in German. The contest will be held from 2 to 5 o'clock Thursday, March 25, in room3 203 University Hall. The award, in the amount of $32, will be presented to the student writing the best essay dealing with some phase in the development of German literature from 1750-1900. Students who wish to compete and who have not1 yet handed in their applications should do so immediately in room 204 University Hall. The American Association of University Women Fellowship: The Ann Arbor-Ypsi-I lanti Branch of the A.A.U.W. is again offer- ing a fellowship for the year 1943-1944 in honor of Dr. May Preston Slosson. This fellowship is open to women students for ;raduate study in any field. Application blanks may be obtained now from the 3raduate School Office and must be re- turned to that office no later than March 15 in order to receive consideration. Registration for summer jobs: The an- nual registration for students looking for summer employment is being held this week at the University Bureau of Appoint- ments, Room 205 Mason Hall. Any stu- dent interested in camp work, camp coun- selling, educational advising, and all types of summer jobs are asked to call at the office for a registration form to enroll. Registration forms will be gien out through Tuesday of next week. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information Lectures University Lectures: A Symposium on Traumatic Shock will be conducted by Dr. Carl J. Wiggers, Professor of Physiol- ogy, Medical School, Western Reserve Uni- versity; Dr. Roy D. McClure, Surgeon-in- Chief, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit; Dr. Frederick A. Coller, Chairman of the De- partment of Surgery, University of Michi- gan; with Dr. Cyrus C. Sturgis, Chair- man of the Department of Internal Medi- cine, presiding; under the auspices of the Medical School and of the Michigan Acad- emy of Science, Arts, and Letters, on Fri- day, March 26, at 4:15 p.m. in the Kellogg Auditorium. The public is invited. University Lecture: Dr. Merle Curti, Professor of History, University of Wis- consin, will lecture on the subject, "The Impact of American Wars on Education", under the auspices of the School of Edu- cation and the Department of History, on Thursday, March 25, at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The public is invited. Change in Date of Lecture: Dr. Dow v. Baxter, Associate Professor of Silvics and ForestPathology at the University of Mich- igan, will lecture on the subject, "Alaska," under the auspices of Sigma Gamma Ep- silon and the Geology Department, on Tuesday, March 23 (instead of March 16 as previously announced), at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The public is invited. French Lecture: Dr. Abraham Herman of the Romance Language Department will give the seventh and last of the French Lectures sponsored by the Cercle Francais entitled: "La Culture Francaise en Amerique," on Wednesday, March 17, at 4:15 p.m. in Room D, Alumni Memorial Hall. Academic Notices Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, March 16, in Room 319 West Medical Building. "Nutri- tive Value of Butter and the Margarines" will be discussed. All interested are in- vited. All sections of M.S. 1 (Conference) will meet in the Natural Science Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, March 16. -Capt. Swyler and Lieut. Reizman Bacteriology 312 Seminar will meet Tuesday, March 16, at 4:15 p.m. in Room 1564 East Medical Building. Subject: "The inactivation of the Eastern Equine Encephalomyelitis virus by chlorine and by penicillin B." All interested are invit- Eng. 2, see. 7 (MWF. 9-200 SW) will move to 408-9 Lib. beginning Monday. R. G. Walker Eng. 2, See. 6 (MWF. 8-3231 AH) will meet in the Basement Seminar Room of Lane Hall beginning Monday. R. F. Haugh Eng. 33, sec. 1 IMwF. 9-3231 AH) will neet in the Basement Seminar Room of Lane Hall beginning Monday. N. E. Nelson --e- History 12, section 24 (WS at 9 o'clock), which formerly met in Room 2014 Angell Hall, has been changed to Room 406 a brary. -Harry Deries Concerts Faculty Concert: Four Beethoven sona- tas for piano and violin will be heard at 8:30 this evening in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, when Gilbert Ross, violinist, and Mabel Ross Rhead, pianist. will present the second in a series of three Sunday eve- ning recitals devoted to the complete group of sonatas by the composer. The programs are open to the public without charge and without use of tickets. Choral Union Concert: Nelson Eddy. assisted by Theodore Paxson, pianist, will give the tenth Choral Union concert Wednesday evening, March 17, at 8:30 o'clock, in Hill Auditorium. A limited number of tickets are still available at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. A Limited number of standing room tickets will also be placed on sale the evening of the con- cert. -Charles A. Sink, President Exhibitions Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: Italian majolica loand from col- lection of Detroit Institute of Arts- pitchers, bowls, plates and tiles of 14th & 15th centuries; also fragments typical of several phases of majolica technique. Ground floor corridor, Architecture Build- ing. Open daily, 9 to 5, except Sunday. until March 26. The public is invited. Events Today Mortarboard Members will meet at 6:30 this evening in the Undergraduate Coun- il Room. The Graduate Outing Club will meet at 2:30 p.m. today at the west entrance of the Rackham Building on Huron Street for a Camera Hike. All graduate and pro- fessional students, with or without cam- era, are welcome. A series of Sunday evening movies on war activities will be presented by the University Extension Service and the Michigan Union at 8:15 to 9:15 p.m. be- ginning today in the auditorium of the Kellogg Foundation Institute. Program: "Campus on the March"; "Negro Colleges in Wartime"; "Manpow- er", and "Battle Is Our Business". The Lutheran Student Association will meet today at 5:30 p.m. Miss Ann Keil, social worker for the Lutheran Church in the Willow Run area, will be the speaker. Coming Events The Romance Language Journal Club will meet at 4:10 p.m. on Monday, March 15, in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Professor Michael S. Pargment will speak on "The Training of College Teachers in Modern Foreign Lan- guages." The English Journal Club will meet Tuesday, March 16, at 7:45 p.m. in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Mr. Cecil A. Blue will present a paper entitled "White Authors and Black Subjects," dealing with the sub- ject of the Negro as pictured by non- Negro writers. Faculty members and grad- uate students are invited. Attention, Marine Reservists: There will be a meeting of the Marine Reservists at 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday, March 16, in the Union. Be prompt! Sigma Rho Tau will hold a meeting for all Engineers interested in Engineering speech traming Tuesday, March 16, at 7:30 in the Union. Freshmen and Trans- fer Engineers are especially welcome. Sigma Gamma Epsilon business meet- ing will be held at 4:15 p.m. on Tuesday, March 16, in the Rusell seminar room. Meeting will be short; members please attend. Post-War Council Meeting: "Post-War Japan" will be the subject of the Post- War Council's program to be held Mon- day, March 15, at 4:30 p.m. in the League. Speakers on the panel will be Edward W. Mill of the Political Science Department and Dr. Joseph K. Yamagiva of the Japa- nese Department. Service men are espe- cially invited. Refreshments. Churches First Congregational Church: 9:30 a.m. Junior and Intermediate Depts. Church School. 10:30 a.m. The Primary and Kinder- garten. 10:45 a.m. Service of Public Worship. Dr. Parr's subject will be: "Your Heri- tage: The Beautiful and Good." 3:00 p.m. Religious Instruction Class. 5:30 p.m. Ariston League. Professor Knott will speak on "Our Chief Source of Information-The Dictionary." 7:00 p.m. Joint meeting of the Student Fellowship and the Disciples Guild in the Congregational Church. Prof. Peter A. Ostafin will speak on "The Problem of Fellowship." St. Andrew's Episcopal Church: 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion (Corporate Com- munion of Confirmation class ); 11:00 a.m. Junior Church; 11:00 a.m. Holy Com- munion and Sermon by the Rev. Henry 1