PAGt"TO T HE MICHIGAN DAILY ?AGETWO1 tDESDX~ M~t~l 31 10 0r 3tAti an Duit 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 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVER II3ING by National Advertising Service, Inc College Publisbers Representatift 420 MAD1ON AVE. New YORK N. Y. CHIMAO - oSTOn'. LoU At US * SAN FaUISCO Editorial Staff John Erlewine. . . . . . Managing Editor Bud Brimmer . . . . . . Editorial Director Leon Gordenker . . . . . City Editor Marion Ford . . . . . . Associate Editor Charlotte Conover . . . . Associate Editor Eric Zalenski . . . . . . . Sports Editor Betty Harvey . . . . . . Women's Editor James Conant . . . . . . . Oolumnist Business Staff Edward J. Perlberg . . . . , Business Manager Fred M. Ginsberg . . Associate Business Manager Mary Lou Curran . . Women's Business Manager Jane Lindberg . . . Women's Advertising Manager Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: BETTY KOFFMAN Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Still figuring it out FRENCH ARE ANTLVICHY: Cartnadji By BARBARA HERRINTON FROM time to time a suggestion is made that the French in Can- ada are isolationists, unpatriotic or even pro-Vichy. Life said that the children in French Canada still admire, Petain. J. V. McAree in the Toronto Globe and Mailtlast week praised Jean-Charles Harvey for being "closest in spirit to lib- erals in other parts of Canada." That is another way of saying, says McAree, that he is the most unpopular French-Canadian news- paperman of any standing in Que- bec. Harvey's "liberalism" advo- cates the use of only the English language in Canada. These French-speaking people form a distinct grogp lh4 Cana- W.ar A tijiudes. I Employees or managers of sub- sidiaries of two of the largest steel and copper companies in the United States have been accused of faking tests which have resulted in our government being furnished with defective wire and steel plate. Whether or not these accusa- tions are founded on fact remains to be seen; but if they are true, will the penalty consist of a can- cellation of war contracts and judgments for money losses suf- fered, or will those responsible be criminally tried for treason? To my way of thinking the Ger- man citizen who makes his way into this country-for the purpose of committing sabotage is an angel compared to an American rat who would endanger the lives of our boys in service for a monetary consideration. -Charles Richards dian culture-and in Canadian government. This was quite clear in 1942 when they opposed the bill for conscription for over- seas duty. But one could hardly claim that this indicates an un- patriotic or isolationist policy. At that time the Mackenzie King government wanted the power to conscript men for overseas service should such action be necessary in the future, but at the same time admitted that the volunteer system was working satisfactorily. The French-Canadian also found the Canadian effort adequate without" resorting to conscription. At the same time they were not willing to grant any additional power to the English-speaking majority. And what is the basis for this racial distrust? The French in Canada are a minority group. They have had to struggle to main- tain their language, their customs, their limited representation in Dominion government. They are also painfully aware of an attitude of social supremacy assumed by the English-speaking majority. HOWEVER, this does not mean that they are not patriotic. Quite the conti-ary-they are per- haps more interested in a unified Canada than the English are, in spite of fantastic schemes sug- gested by political opportunists of minority groups in French Canada. The French-Canadians may be divided into three groups. The great majority wish to mind their own business in their own way-as loyal subjects of the British Crown entitled to social and political equality with other Canadians. The second small group favors ex- cessive subserviency to the English majority. It is this group that Harvey represents. Another small group favors separation from Eng- land and the creation of a French country called "Laurentia": a pol- icy which, even if it were in the realm of possibility, would serve no useful purpose. But neither of these last groups has appreciable. influence. Thus, it is the first group-those who uphold and are loyal to the Crown and the Dominion govern- ments, but who expect to be con- sidered on an equal basis with the. English in Canada-that really represents the spirit of French Canada. And these people, French- Canadians in general, are very much interested in the intelligent prosecution of the war and prep- aration for the peace. Their inter- est in the war may be seen in the. fact that there are now 150,000 French - Canadians in Canada's armed forces. Since the French in Canada only number a bare three million, this contribution to the war effort denotes clearly a real backing of what they believe is not an imperialistic war. They, too, are thinking of the peace, and of Canada's part in the peace. Vice-President Wallace's words may often be found trans- lated into French and quoted In Montreal and Quebec newspapers. Post-war suggestions in Ottawa are quite as numerous and varied as those suggested here. They are, in fact, quite similar to those made in the United States. John P. Humphrey, Professor qf law at McGill University in Mon- treal, says in his explanations of Quebec sentiment, "A people can have at the same time a national and an international feeling, Just as a man can be at the same time a good citizen of his village and of the larger national community." And this spirit of internation- alism and patriotism is not lim- ited to the French-Canadian lead- ers; it is also the typical outlook of the "habitant" population. Indeed, this minority of French- men in English-speaking Canada is anything but the isolationists and pro-Vichyites that their oppo- nents would have us believe. They can and do have at the same time a national and an internationlal feeling, and they are making a genuine contribution to Canada. y'GOLD COAST': Grosse Pointe Retains Pre-War Conventions THE BATTLE raging over the Grosse Pointe zoning ordinance reached its climax yester- day when Mrs. Pearl Adams, the mother of two soldier sons, appealed for a reconsideration of her conviction and jail sentence. Mrs. Adams has been told in so many words by the socially elite that she ca't rent a few empty rooms in her 22-room house to Detroit war workers. Saturday she was found guilty by a Grosse Pointe jury, who sentenced her to 15 days and $135 fine. Her tenants have been threatened with eviction by force, and all because she ignored a Grosse Pointe law which bars the use of any of its mansions as rooming houses. Said Justice of Peace Joseph V. Uvick, who sentenced Mrs. Adams, "it doesn't matter' if there is a war on; we can't change the law be- cause of the war." It's about time some people realized that this war can take exception to all rules. The job of defeating the Axis is yet to be done. But we can't expect to win, we won't win, if the nien who produce the tanks and guns and planes can't find decent living quarters for themselves and their families. T HE GROSSE POINTE area is reasonably close to the Briggs, Packard and Hudson plants where war workers are employed turning out munitions. Housing in the Detroit area, even of the poorest kind, is practically impossible to ind without weeks and months of careful searching. PM recently declared that, "Even a cursory survey of Grosse Pointe indicates that there must be several thousand vacant rooms?' Winning the war requires sacrifices-not only from the factory worker, the college stu- dent, and the business man, but also from the socially elite, the "upper crust." Is it too much to ask that they rent out a few of their unused rooms to those who have no place to live? Is it too much to hope that they might allow at least one of the more patriotic Grosse Pointe women to do as she feels she should- whether there is a zoning ordinance or not? - Virginia Rock WAR WORKERS: Class Consciousness Is Growing in Ann Arbor THERE is a new brand of class consciousness that's being fostered and carefully nurtured in this community-a peculiar antipathy against the Willow Run war workers. The workers have complained about an absence of housing, but more bitter to them than not beig able to find a room was the crowning in- dignity of being forced out of their rooms by irate landladies who claimed that "They were dirty." Several householders when interviewed by a Michigan Daily reporter seemed to associate the workers with the worst kind of blight. Their statements about the employes were far from flattering and revealed an absolute antagonism toward them One student who is working six hours a day besides her school work suffered the indignity of hearing a beauty operator comment about her slacks, "She is a girl from the Bomber so eharrp her &1 .M.n Th, avp and G whmma DREW' C$ PEARSON 'S MERRY-GO-ROUND WASHINGTON, March 28.- Friends of Henry Wallace are not anxious to have him run for President in 1944. They want him to be vice- president again with FDR in the White House for a 4th term. There are several reasons for this strategy. First, they figure that Wallace.could not be elected president in 1944. In fact, most Demo- cratic politicos are resigned to the fact that there is only one Democrat who could win the election, the man already in the White House. Therefore, their strategy is to have Roosevelt run again, with Wallace as his teammate, on the ground that it's bad policy to swap horses in midstream. Presumably, they figure, the war would end shortly after the 4th term begins. Roosevelt would then be free to lay aside his domestic re- sponsibilities and concentrate on the interna- tional job of winning the peace. He might then lay the mantle on Henry Wallace. Proponents of this strategy point to many a case where men have made their mark on the nation after getting into the White House through' the vice-presidency. Outstanding examples are Coolidge and Teddy Roosevelt. Coolidge was re- garded as unelectable, and was scheduled to be dropped as Vice-President at the 1924 election. (Copyright, 1943, United Features Syndicate) MUSIC'S LOSS: Radchmaninoff's Deathl Ends Great Career W ITH the death of Sergei Rachmaninoff early Sunday morning, Ann Arbor felt the loss of a great favorite, an artist who was beloved as both composer and virtuoso. Those who heard his performance of his own second concerto here last May will not soon forget the tall, majestic Russian who played with such pathos, beauty, and depth of feeling. To many the loss of such a great artist and his music, much of which was still to be written, may seem inconsequential when one considers the all-important issues of the day. But for years to come, we shall increasingly regret that so little of his music was left behind him. No Inatter how little his death may be known or no- ticed today, it will mark in musical history the end of a golden age. For Rachmaninoff was of the old school, the only remaining link between this era and the preceding one, and with him has gone much beauty that may never return. -Jean Athay the community must change before workers at Willow Run are treated as they should be. Students, likewise, will have to mend their ways and stop making the loose statements of one sorority women who said that she would not live in the same house as a factory worker. This community is in a transitional period. Workers have replaced students as the bulk of the population, and for business reasons as well as plain democratic Americanism the people of I'd Rather Be Right BySAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, March 31.- Obscurantism is rife again, as thousands scream. A great big fight is being steamed up once more against the Farm ecurity Administration. This is being attacked one of those radical New Deal ideas. What does the Farm Security Administration do? It enables small farmers to buy farms. If they have farms. it enables them to hold on to them, and avoid being foreclosed out. It promotes pri- vate ownership of property among small people in a big way. The Mississippi delta is dotted with hundreds of one-family farms, and new farm houses, built with the help of the Farm Security Administra- tion. What's radical about the one-family farm? But the most conservative wing of the farm bloc, that which prefers the one-sided collec- tivism of the large plantation, and the shared crop, to the capitalism of the family-owned, one-family farm, is out to wring the neck of this bureau. It is time city slickers began to understand what is going on here.- This thing is being dressed up as fight between conservatism and radicalism. It is actually a fight between large property and small property. It is a struggle to which city populations are ex- hibiting an almost total indifference. Yet it bears directly on that agitated march of city dwellers from market to market to find a bit of butter for their bread. The Farm Security Administration, at present, has credit arrangements of one sort or another with 7.6 per cent of the nation's farmers. It lends them money for feed, seed and fertilizer, or machinery, and sometimes for doctor's care. These little farmers last year increased their milk production by 1,419,000,000 pounds, which was 36 per cent of the total increase of milk production by the whole country. I know the average reader is not fond of figures, but he is going to swallow these if I have to ram them down his throat: These small farms, only 7.6 per cent of all the farms in the country, produced one-third of the total milk increase of the whole country. The Farm Security Administration made 1,- 419,000,000 additional pounds of milk blossom last year, where only stinkweed bloomed before. Dry beans are one of our shortest food items. The whole country increased its output of dry beans by about 110,000,000 pounds last year. The small farms helped by the Farm Security Admin- istration produced 30,000,000 pounds of that grand total. These dry figures about dry beans ought to be of almost miraculous interest. For we've all been talking about "releasing the democratic energies of the people for total war." And here it's been done. In terms of beans, too! What could be more beautiful? Not in terms of mass-meetings alone, or resolutions, but in terms of beans. And milk. And eggs and beef and chickens and Peanuts. Now, it is hard to obscure a result like that, but the drive to obscure it is on. Representative Cooley of North Carolina, who is about to conduct an investigation of the Farm Security Administration, backed by Mr. Clare Hoffman of Michigan, has already de- scribed this program as "Communistic." He has written the dirty word on a handkerchief, and he holds it up and tries to hide this moun- tain of new food with it. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Wee.-ilim, o -e, Wanr ---- WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 1943 VOL. L1II No. 126 All notices for the Daily Official Ilul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the President in typewritten form by 3:301 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 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 flI- nancing may effect a substantial saving in interest. Abbott and Fassett Scholarships: Can- didates for the Emma M. and Florence L. Abbott Scholarships (for women, any school or college) and the Eugene 0. Fas- sett Scholarship (men or women, any undergraduate school or college) are ad- vised that their applications should be submitted before April 5 'through the Dean'or Director of the school or college in which they are registered. Students: A list of graduates and former students now in Military Service is being compiled at the Alumni Catalogue Office. This list already numbers approximately G.000. If you are entering Military Service, please see that your name is included in this list by reporting such information to the Alumni Catalogue Office. This cour- tesy will be greatly appreciated. Lunette Hadley, Director Alumni Catalogue Office Martha Cook Building: All women inter- ested in living in Martha Cook Building next year should complete thefr applica- tions at once. The list will soon be closed. Mrs. Diekema Lectures University Lecture: Professor W. Carl Rufus of the Department of Astronomy will lecture on the subject, "Copernicus, Polish Astronomer; 1473-1543" (illustrated) In commemoration of the 400th annivers- ary of the death of Copernicus, under the auspices of the Department of Astronomy, on Thursday, April 8, at 4:15 p.m. in Rack- ham Amphitheatre. The public is invited. Lecture: Dr. Eduardo Guidau da Cruz, of Rio de Janeiro ,Brazil, will give the second of a series of talks -on Latin America on the subject, "An Outline of the Political Situation in Brazil, and President Vargas' Main Accomplishment, Social Insurance," under the auspices of La Sociedad Latino-Americana of the University of Michigan, tonight at 8 gram, perhaps because they would rather have more farm labor than more family farms, will appear before Mr. Cooley and they will drag every- thing from the spirit of the Kremlin to' the spirit of Alexander Hamilton into the debate. Thp artLo'nincr n t v tn hire the o'clock in the Rackham Amphitheatre. rhe public is invited. American Chemical Society Lecture: Dr. Frederick D. Rossini, of the National Bureau of Standards, will lecture on the subject, "Chemical Thermodynamics of Hydrocarbons", on Wednesday, April 7, at 4:15 p.m. in Room 303 Chemistry Build- ing. The public is invited. Academic Notices ROTC Drill: Today all Companies will 'Fall In' on Hoover Street, in front of the IM Building, in uniform with street shoes. First Sergeants will be in charge of their Companies and Platoon Sergeants will be prepared to give instruction in extended order. Students, College of Engineering: The final -day for REMOVAL OF INCOM- PLETES will be Saturday, April 3. Peti- tions for extension of time must be on file in the Secretary's before that date. A. H. Lovell, Secretary Students, College of Engineering: The final day for DROPPING COURSES WITH- OUT RECORD will be Saturday, April 3. A course may be dropped only with the permission of the classifier, after confer- ence with the instructor. A. H. Lovell, Secretary Freshmen, College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: Freshmen may not drop courses without E grade after Satur- day, April 3. In administering this rule, students with less than 24 hours of credit are considered freshmen. Exceptions may be made in extraordinary circumstances, such as severe or long-continued illness. -U. A. Walter, Assistant Dean School of Education Freshmen: Courses dropped after Saturday, April 3, will be recorded with the grade of E except un-' der extraordinary circumstances. No course Is considered dropped unless it has been reported in the office of the Regis- trar, Room 4, University Hall. Graduate Record Examination: This ex- amination will be given for all senior students in the University and for new graduate students at 7:00 p.m. Monday, April 12, and at 7:00 p.m. Wednesday, April 14. The examination is in two parts, one part to be given each evening. It is nec- essary that every student planning to take the examination fill out an information schedule and obtain an admission card. This must be done within the next twen- ty-four hours at either the Office of the Dean of the Literary College, 1210 Angell Hall, or at the War Information Center in the Michigan League. The test results to be furnished each student will be of great value to men and women entering either the armed forces or civilian services as well as to students who are seeking further prepara- tion in graduate school or elsewhere. The University is paying the fee for this exam- ination. Freshman Health Lectures (Men): Spring term freshman men and other men who have not passed the required health- lectures may attend them in Room 25 Angell Hall at either 5:00 or 7:30 p.m. Weber. Williams, Holmes, Wagner, Rim- sky-Korsakov. Bloom, Falla, Gould and Sousa, and will be open to the general public. Organ Recital: The first of a series of organ recitals will be played by Palmer Christian. University Organist, at 4:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Other programs will follow on the afternoons of April 7, 14, and Good Friday, April 24. The gc eral publicIs invited. Exhibitions Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: Alpha Alpha Gamma, honor qo- ciety for women in architecture, 4dcqr- ativeN design, and landscape architectufre, is showing photographs in architecture, sculpture, and decorative design by prax- ticing members- of the 'society. Third floor exhibition room, Architecture Build- ing. Open daily 9:00 to 5:00, except Sun- day, 'through March 31. Open to the public. Exhibit: Museum of Art and ArchAeQl- ogy, Newberry Hall. Arts and crafts 'of a Roman provincial town in Egypt. Exhibition: Professor Shu-chi Chang, of the Fine Arts Department In the Na- tional Central University in Chungking, will present an ciibition' of contemn- porary Chinese painting and demonstrate his own painting daily until March 31. Open to the public daily, 1:00-6:00 -p..m., In the Grand Rapids Room of the Michl- gan League. No admission charge. Exhibition: Examples of Landscape Ar- chitecture and Planning furnished .by ,the Michigan Department of Conservation, State Parks Division; Michigan State Highway Department, Huron-Clinton Met- ropolitan Authority, Michigan State Plan- ning Commission, Detroit City Plan Com- mission, Department of Parks, etc., will be on exhibit in the Exhibition Hall, third floor. Architecture Building, through Sat- urday of this week. Events Today A.S.M.E.: "Waterpower" and "Gaso- line" are the titles of the two sound mo- tion pictures that will be sho n at the next meeting of the A.S.M.E. tonight at 7:30 in the Michigan Union. All engineers are invited. Michigan Chorus and Women's ,Glee Club: Rehearsal tonight at 7:30 in .the Kalamazoo Room of the League. Attend- ance compulsory. Sociedad Hispanica presents Professor Irving A. Leonard, who will lecture on "Los Estados Unidos vistos por dentro" ("Inside the United States"), today at 4:15 p.m. in Room D, Alumni Memorial Hall. The general public is invited. "Caste", a comedy of mid-Victorian life, by T. W. Robertson, will be presented by Play Production of the Department of Speech tonight through Saturday at 8:30 in the Mendelssohn Theatre. Tickets are on sale daily at the theatre box office. Red Cross canteen class, that ordinarily