- *re . ~ - - AW, ~, ~ 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 6therwise 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 NATON-L ADV4RTI.AG Y National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADIsON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO - BOSTON - Los ANGESa . SAN FANCISCO eCeteri lo the &cllOrt Bud Brimmer Leon Gordenker Marion Ford Charlotte Conover Betty Harvey James Conant Elizabeth Carpenter Pat Gehlert Jeanne Lovett; Martha Opsion Sybil Perlmutter Molly Winokur Margery Wolfson Barbara Peterson Rosalie Frank . Editorial Staff Business Staff . Editorial Director . City Editor . Associate Editor . Associate Editor Women's Editor Oolumnist . . . Local Advertising Circulation * . . .Service . Contracts . . . . . Accounts National Advertising Promotion . . Classified Advertising . Women's Business Manager v.-'-, .4'N~ -~ *- - Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: NETTA SIEGEL Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Harvey Protelsts Herrinton Article HAVE READ with amazement the article published in your issue of Wednesday, March 31st, under the signature of Barbara Herrinton. That article is so un- fair and untrue that I must pro- test against it. The author writes: "Harvey's liberalism advocates the use of only the English language in Canada." Never in my life did I advo- cate the exclusive use of the English language in our country. Miss Herrinton must have a strong imagination or be very badly informed. I pretend that everybody in North America should be able to speak English, but I was always and am one of the most energetic defenders of the French language and cul- ture. The author must have read some of our Canadian newspapers who have accused me of everything without any consideration to truth or justice. In the same article I read the following paragraph: "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 the group Harvey represents. Another small group favors separation from England and the creation of a French coun- try called "Laurentia"; a policy which, even if it were in the realm of possibility, would serve no use- ful purpose. But neither of those last groups has appreciable influ- ence." HAVE never favored any sub- serviency to the English ma- jority. As the owner and editor of the weekly Le Jour for the past six 'years, I have always ad- vocated good understanding be- tween races in Canada, unity with equality of rights and duty for every Canadian. That is the main article of our program, and it is the reason why our liberal group has encountered the most violent opposition from the so- called nationalists, which are more or less "separatists" and do not wish any union with the other racial elements of our country. The nationalistic ele- ments in French Canada are a minority. Their patriotism is more provincial than Canadian at large. They are recruited mostly among young students, priests, nuns, and the various religious congregations and as- sociations. The mass of the peo- ple is more Canadian at large and loyal to the Canadian fed- eration. Miss Herrinton seems to have been informed by our various na- tionalists and furthermore she does not know anything about the Province of Quebec. Jean-Charles Harvey, Editor of Le Jour, Montreal Chairman Extends Thanks . . WISH to express my sincere appreciation to all the men and women students of the University for their unselfish devotion to the work of the War Fund Campaign of the American Red Cross which has just been completed. To the leaders and workers of all the Campus groups, I extend my con- gratulations on the splendid job of participating in this grand work, which I think is a proof of your patriotism and belief in our demo- cratic structure. At the date of this communi- cation, the women students have raised over $2,500, and the men students have exceeded $1,600, or a total of $4,222. This is a commendale showing. On be- half of myself and the General Committee, I wish to express my sincere thanks. I am only sorry that it is not possible for me to congratulate each individual worker separately who has done his part in this Drive. Chas. R. Henderson, Campaign Chairman * * * Congratulations on (Can adian Article.. ONE WORD to congratulate you on your article, "Canadian War Attitude", which a friend has sent me. We should have more of these straightforward and objective arti- cles in American papers to better inform our American friends on the so-called "Quebec Problem." Jean d'Auteuil Richard, S. J., Editor of Relations, a Monthly Review, Montreal 'Tennessee Johnson' /4 Menae ... THE release of the movie "Ten- nessed Johnson", now playing in a local theatre constitutes a threat to national unity in a world at war. It is one of the most dan gerous pictures ever to come ou of Hollywood because its majo theme, the Reconstruction peri in American history, is represente merely as the coming together o those forces which were in conflic during the four years of the Civi War. "Tennessee Johnson" is the story of a man who succeeded Lincoln and upon whom the re- sponsibility for the rebuilding of the nation was thrust. The mov- ie is supposedly the story of this reconstruction, the entire per- formance leading up to the final sequence where elderly Johnson stands in the Senate addressing his final words to his august "reunited" body. This reunited body is the sam as that of the pre-Civil War days The Southern rebels are back i their places. There is no indica tion that there are any new-o remains of the old-liberal forces who represented the poor white and Negroes who were elected to the Senate during this period. There is no picture of the great Negro Senator, Hiram R. Revel of Mississippi, who was elected at that time. There was no indica- tion that there might have existed any of the democratic successor of Thaddeus Stevens, who cham pioned democracy and the righ of the Negro long before the Civi War. No, we see none of this. We see only the mechanical welding to- gether of a nation which had just gone through an unfortunate per- iod in history. We see the vindica- tion of the actions of Jefferson Davis and Robert E. Lee, and the vindication of the blundering poli- cies of Andrew Johnson, who faile as a builder and as an appeaser. THE PICTURE is dangerous because it suggests what could happen today. It shows that America today could also be mechanically mended and re- vert back to its position In the pre-war world. For the movie puts over the thought that al- though the progressive forces won the war, they completely and correctly lost the peace. Although it is true historically that the tasks of the Civil War and Reconstruction remained un- fulfilled, it is a repudiation of th cause in which we fight today to portray on the screen that it was "right and just" for the slave- owning class to be returned to power at the expense-not only of the Negro people, but of the poor whites as well. ALLIED HOPE: Ball Resolution Would Allay Post-War Fears THE NEWEST development in Congress with the Ball-Burton-Hatch-Hill resolution indi- cates that United States senators aren't taking any chances on being committed to presidential plans or proposals for post-war collaboration. Proponents of the resolution last week finally consented to an amendment advanced by Sen. Raymond E. Willis, Indiana Republican, which makes it clear that the Senate is not surrender- ing any of its prerogatives. The real fear, it seems, among Congressional leaders and the American public, is that the President might mis- interpret any peace declaration passed by the Senate as a blank check. This amendment, in reality, is a compromise with some of the isolationists and more conserva- tive representatives who are still haunted by the bogey of "too much government control will lead to a dictatorship." However, if this compromise is enough to enlist the support of a majority in the Senate it will be worthwhile. The real issue on this proposal will probably resolve itself to this: Can we fight and win the war while making plans for a post-war world? This issue places everyone in one of two groups. Either you will belong to the school which holds that planning, definite blueprinting must begin at once and be worked out by the United Nations while they still stand shoulder to shoulder in fighting the war, or you will hold that we must devote all our energies toward winning the war, and forget about drawing up plans for a post-war world till that world has taken a definite form. The Ball resolution, of course, proposes that the United States start making definite plans at once. Should this resolution pass the Senate, it will have important repercussions. For one thing it will reassure our Allies and allay the fears of other nations that the United States might refuse to participate in a post-war organi- zation to preserve the peace. It hasn't been easy for Americans to answer the queries of other nations when they ask just how much we will cooperate in post-war planning. And it hasn't been too simple to decide just what we are fight- ing for in the way of definite participation in reconstructing a world shattered to bits. E UROPE and Asia are in much the same posi- tion of a small boy who burned his fingers once. They haven't forgotten Versailles yet, where Wilson, in good faith, promised that the United States would join the League of Nations. This time they will want more than mere prom- ises, more than empty words. They will want definite assurances from the people and groups who are in a position to give them. The Ball proposal places the responsibility right where it belongs-in the hands of the Senate. It is this body which must ratify the peace treaty; it is this body which will have the final say-so on whethe e will join in an inter- national organization to preserve the peace. This resolution has the support of both the Democrats and Republicans-a hopeful sign. It also has been heartily endorsed by fifteen Uni- versty of Michigan professors in the fields of history, political science, education, economics, English, and philosophy. DREW Ce PEARSON'S MERRY-GO-ROUND WASHINGTON, April 9.- Cabinet members who talked with Foreign Minister Anthony Eden during his visit were more impressed with his vision and grasp of world problems for peace than those of any other British statesman who has been here in years. Churchill has never seemed to worry much about peace, concentrated on winning the war. Eden, however, had one great worry. He didn't say so outright, because every British diplomat remembers the Sackvlle-West inci- dent in 1888 when a British minister was re- called from Washington for favoring the elee- tion of Grover Cleveland. However, reading between the lines of Eden's conversation one could see that he was definitely worried over the possibility of an isolationist Republican victory which might scuttle the peace after the war. This was one reason he took such pains to talk to leading Republicans. British-Russian Alliance To get the full significance of Eden's conversa- tions it is important to remember that before 1940 the pillar of British foreign policy was close cooperation between the British Navy and the French Army. The French were tp dominate the Continent and the British the high seas. To strengthen this, the French had built up a series of alliances, or buffer states-Czecho- slovakia, Poland, Jugoslavia, Rumania. But when Hitler chopped out the weakest link, Czechoslovakia, the entire structure fell, and with it the French army. It is no secret therefore, that Britain, since the fall of France, needs a new ally in Europe and that new ally will be-in fact already is-Russia. The 'B-H'Resolution (Editor's Note: To eliminate uncertainty prev- alent about the provisions of the Ball-Burton- Hatch-Hill resolution now pending before the Senate. we reprint here the "B-H" resolution in full.) "Resolved, that the Senate advises that the United States take the initiative in calling meetings of representatives of the United Nations for the purpose of forming an organi- zation of the United Nations with specific and limited authority: "(1) To assist in coordinating and fully utilizing the military and economic resources of all member nations in the prosecution of the war against the Axis. "(2) To establish temporary administra- tions for Axis-controlled areas of the world as these are occupied by United Nations for- ces, until such time as permanent govern- ments can be established. "(3) To administer relief and assistance in economic rehabilitation in territories of mem- ber nations needing such aid and in Axis ter- ritory occupied by nited Nations forces. "(4) To establish procedures and machin- ery for peaceful settlement of disputes and disagreements between nations. "(5) To provide for the assembly and maintenance of a United Nations' military force and to supnress by immediate use of such force any future attempt at military 1Id Rather Be Right BySAMUEL GRAFTON NOTES FOR A SPEECH TO THE GERMANS: Germans! You are now on the defensive. Your Fuehrer has told you so. You are trying to recruit 100,000 Frenchmen to build a wall around the coast of Italy. That will be part of a wall you will try to build along the entire Mediterranean, a "Mittelmeer" wall from the Turkish frontier around Greece, Italy and the southern shores of France. But look here, Germans! Do you really know what it is like to be on the defensive? Well, we know. We, the Allies, have been on the de- fensive. Let us tell you about it. It is not good, Germans. It means that you must have enough materials and enough men at every point, at all times, while we need have only enough for the points of attack. Oh, Germans, how well we know what it means to be on the defensive! It means that you will never have enough goods and you will never have enough men, from this moment on. The defensive is a hungry strategy, Germans. It absorbs all the goods and all the men that you can supply, and then it cries out ravenously for more. We know. We lived through it. We wrote and read books about it. One was called "Defense Will Not Win the War." It became a classic in Amer- ica. It spoke the simple truth (taken from your own generals!) that those who are on the defensive must scatter their weapons at a hundred points, where they lie, rusting uselessly, while those who are on the offensive need only choose the weakest point, and marshal the most of their power there. Germans! What a strange turn has taken place in the events of this war! You, who proved that walls are good for nothing, must now build a wall and hide behind it. You, who made a joke of the Maginot, must now hide behind the Mittelmeer! You are condemned to adopt the same strat- egy that you, yourselves, have proved to be unsafe. You are forced to play the game of the other side, after having completely demonstrated its disadvantages. Germans! How can an army fight when it is compelled to give up its own strategic conceptions, those on which it was built, and to adopt the strategic conceptions of the very armies it has defeated? When you defeated those armies, you defeated their ideas You Germans have talked much of that. You have made a mystic conception of the offensive; you have made it the military expres- sion of the Nazi political idea But can Wotan hide behind a fence, Germans? Can the light- hing lie in a box? Germans! Your generals try to comfort YoU. They tell you that every town in Europe is a "fort," impassable, unconquerable. But Germans, that is Polish talk of the summer of 1939, that is French talk of early 1940. Your Dr. Albert Speer, building the Mittelmeer Wall, is the Andre Maginot of 1943! Your blitzkrieg has become the sitzkrieg, and you turn for comfort to the philosophy of your own victims. When you quote your own slaves to prove your- selves safe, how safe can you be? Oh TGrmn there is onur ntmil tfell 1- Ted King DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN -1 (Continued from Page 2) petition, and bring eligibility card to the interview. To Hopwood Contestants: All manu- scripts must be in the English Office, 3221 Angell Hall, by 4:30 p.m., Monday, April 12. R. W. Cowden May Festival Ushers: women students are needed to usher for all five perform- ances for May Festival. Rate of pay will be the same as for men students. Any- one interested may sign up in the Under- graduate Office of the League. Interviewing for the three positions on the Executive Committee of the Person- nel Administration of the Women's War Council will be held today from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Undergraduate Office of the League. Women who will be seniors next year are eligible for the Committee. The Angell Hall Observatory will be open to the public from 8:30 to 10:30, Saturday evening, April 10, if the sky is clear. The moon and the planet, Jupiter, will be shown through the telescopes. In case the sky is covered or nearly covered with clouds, the Observatormy will not be open. Children must be accompanied by adults. Seniors and Graduate Students, who have been invited to be guests of honor at the Twentieth Annual Honors Convo- cation, are requested to order caps and gowns at the Moe Sport Shop immediately. It is necessary that they be ordered this week to be delivered in time for the Con- vocation on April 16. Ira M. Smith, Secretary, Committee on Honors Convocation The Women's Personnel Committee of the Inter-Cooperative Council announces that there will be an information booth in the lobby of the League for the pur- pose of acquainting students with co- not do! 'The defensive means that the other side chooses the battlefield, and, naturally, he chooses the one best for him." We used to say to each other: "There are not enough weapons in the whole world for a complete defensive." And it was all true, and we operatives and taking applications for membership. 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 23, at 4:15 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheatre. The public is invited. The University Lecture by Dr. George Sarton, of Harvard University, arranged for Friday evening, April 30, has been indefinitely postponed. Academic Notices Physics 196: Class will not meet today. E. F. Barker Doctoral Examination for Charles Orrin King, Chemical Engineering; thesis: "The Solvent Extraction of Soybean Flakes," will be held today in 3201 East Engineer- ing, at 2:00 p.m. Chtirman, D. L. Katz. By action of the Executive Board, the Chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doctoral candidates to attend the examination and he may grant permission to those who for suffi- cient reason might wish to be present. C. S. Yoakum Doctoral Examination for Robert A. Gregg, Chemistry; thesis: "The Synthesis of Analogs of the Sex Hormones,",will be held today in 309 Chemistry at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, W. E. Bachmann. By action of the Executive Board, the Chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doctoral candidates to attend the examination and he may grant permission to those who for suffi- cient reason might wish to be present. C. S. Yoakum Doctoral Examination for Fred Ray Ca- gle, zoology; thesis: "The Growth of the Slider Turtle, pseudemvs scripta elegans," will be held on Saturday. April 10, in 3089 Natural Science, at 9:00 a.m. Chairman, N. E. Hartweg. By action of the Executive Board the Chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doctoral candidates Sunday through April 10. The invited. public i The twentieth annual exhibition work by artists of Ann Arbor and vicinit Is being presented by the Ann Arbor Art Association in the Exhibition GallerieE of the Rackham Building, through April 23, daily, except Sunday; 2 to 5 after noons and 7 to 10 evenings. The publc EventsTo-da Surgical Dressing Unit will be open thil afternoon from 1:00 until 5:00 in th Game Room of the League. All wome interested in helping the American Red Cross by making surgical dressings are urged to come. Wesley Foundation Bible Class with Dr C. W. Brashares at 7:30 p.m. Oo-part with the Presbyterian students at 9 o'clock in the Wesley Lounge. Presbyterian Student Bible Class from 8:00 to 9:00 p.m. "The Parables of Jesus" 3ubject for Lentenstudy. The Guild joins with the Methodist group for the Friday evening party. Hillel Foundation: Conservative'servicei will be held at the Foundation this eve- ning beginning at 7:30 p.m. instead of 7:45. Coming Events The English Journal Club will meet Tuesday, April 13. 7:45 p.m.,in the East Conference Room of the Rackhain Build. Ing. Mr. Ralph Eberly will read a papei entitled "A Critical Test for Poetry: Is1i Truthful?" Graduate students and mem- bers of the faculty are cordially invited, Dinner in honor of Professor A. H. White's 70th Birthday: Reservations foi this dinner must be made through Pro- fessor G. G. Brown's office by April 15 Any friends inadvertently omitted froni the invitation list are cordially invited and may obtain particulars by caflinE extension 454. Choral Union Members: There will be , full rehearsal of the Chorus on Mondaq evening, April 12, at ' o'clock at th' School of Music Building, instead of Tues. day evening as originally scheduled.