"1.777. - V ~ ~r ~~1IA 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 ACADEMIC SURVEY REVEALS PROBLEM: E!ducation for the People UtPRESSNTEO FOR NATION,L ADVERTL3?NG BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADisoN AVE. NEW YOk. N.Y. CHICAGO * BOSTON . LOS ANGELS * SAN FRANCIsgo Editorial Staff Bud Brimmer . . . Leon Gordenker Marion Ford Charlotte Conover Betty Harvey James Con ant . . Editorial Director . . . City Editor . . Associate Editor . . Associate Editor Women's Editor * . . Columnist Business Staff Elizabeth Carpenter Pat Gehlert . Jeanne Lovett Martha Opsion Sybil Permutter Molly Winokur Margery Wolfson Barbara Peterson Rosalie Frank . . . . Local Advertising . . ,. . Circulation Service . . . . . Contracts * . . . . Accounts . . . National Advertising . . . . . Promotion . . Classified Advertising * Women's Business Manager (Editor's Note: The following arti- cle, explaining the educational pro- visions of the National Re.ources Plan- ning Board's "cradle-to-grave" post- war security proposal, is reprinted from the recent "Charter for Amer- ica" supplement of the New Republic.) AMONG the founders of our nation, the man with the clearest vision of the place that education would have to have in a successful democ- racy was Thomas Jefferson. He saw that ignorant people could not maintain their freedom. He wanted the educational level of all the common people raised. And he wanted to use the school system as a way of sifting out the talented and honorable from the dull and indifferent, and of building a dem- ocratic elite of ability that would continually renew the vitality of the nation. This was the vision. To an extent America has fulfilled it, but only to an extent. One out of every five men of military age in our country today has not gone as far as the fourth grade in his schooling. There are millions of boys and girls who should be in high school and college, and' who do not have the chance. There are families who cannot afford to put decent enough clothes on their young children to send them to school. There are rural districts in which the schools are inaccessible. There are communities so impoverished that they cannot' support adequate schools. There are children who cannot afford to buy lunches at school. There are adults who missed schooling and who would profit from adult educational work. And, throughout the nation, the teaching staffs tend to be under- paid and overworked, the patterns of instruction have grown rigid without ceasing to be provincial, and the teaching career does not attract enough talent nor offer the freedom and spaciousness without which teaching ceases to have much meaning. Here is an area in which it is es- sential to take a bold, sweeping, overall view of the whole problem, including the economic base of learn- ing, the fiscal base of public support of the schools, the technical and cul- tural levels of instruction. . Such a view is taken by the NRPB report, in a section for which Dr. Floyd W. Reeves seems to be largely responsible. It sees learn- ing as a continuing process, that starts in the pre-school period and continues through adulthood. It sees learning not only as a matter of vocational and professional preparation, and not only as direc- ted toward civic responsibility, but as a matter of training in the cre- ative use of leisure. To put it rather too simply, one must learn to make a living; one must learn to act collectively with one's fel- lows in the community; but one must also learn to live with one's self, and get an inner strength and confidence and sense of creative- ness. Given these premises, the recom- mendations of the report take on meaning. They may be briefly sum- marized as follows: 1. Young children need pre-school care in nursery schools and kinder- gartens. Given their home back- grounds, at least half the children in the age-group of three to five need these services. This means an expansion of some 400 per cent over the present facilities. 2. Attendance in elementary schools and high schools must be assured to all young people. In 1940 there were still three-quarters of a million chil- dren not at elementary school. And there are almost two million pupils of high school age who should be in high school but are not. The margin lies in rural areas, among Negroes and among low-income groups. 3. Forty per cent of our youth of college age should be in colleges, universities and technical schools. That means an ekpansion over the present enrollment of anywhere from 25 to 600 per cent, depending on the type of school and the wo offered. 4. School lunches must be provi ed, and also before and after sch care for children from homes working :nothers. 5. That a program be develope for adult education. corresponden schools, public libraries and forum 6. That those demobilized fr the armed services and war factor ies be given a. chance to contin their interrupted education an expand their training. 7. That the quality of the teachi md administrative staffs be raise6. 8. That a fiscal program be un dertaken, including the use of fed eral funds to reduce the inequali of educational opportunity existi at present, by which the states an local areas that need education facilities most do not provide i because of their poverty and back wardness. This is, at least, something to sta with. It will not provide an educ tional Utopia, but it offers a bill educational rights with which teac ers and students alike may begin ti arduous task of teaching and lear ing. But it would be a mistake t concentrate too much on the tech nical, economic and fiscal featuro of the above program. The esseui1 tial fact to keep in mind Is tha education belongs to the people It is a community responsibilit which must be provided, from nur- sery school through college, to ev ery child that needs it and car benefit from it, regardless of hJI economic ability to pay. For the children are the body any society. And new ideas, whic education can alone provide, are i ifeblood. The tasks of educatio are broadly two: to continue the be elements in the social heritage; obtain the benefits of innovation. education remains a privilege of tl well-to-do groups, a society like ou will grow rigid and die. Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: BETTY KOFFMAN Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff ndrepresent the views of the writers onty TOM HARMON* A Million Hearts Cling To Hope for Old '98 THE SPORTS-LOVING public was this week stunned by the news that Tom Harmon is missing in South America. And yet there was a fervent hope throughout the campus and the nation that "Old 98" and its pilot would be found. It was not like Tom to forsake his team when they needed his support, and it is even less in keeping with his character for him to quit be- fore the final whistle is sounded in this greatest of all battles. Those who followed Tom's brilliant, record- breaking career on the Michigan gridiron ree- ognized him as a great fighter and a true sportsman. The entire country joined with his coach and his teammates in admiration of his fine record and superb spirit. Tom entered the air forces not as "the great Harmon" not as the leading football scorer of all time, not as the man idolized by millions of his fellow-countrymen-but as a simple soldier, de- voted to the ideals of the cause which it was his privilege to serve. But the public reaction to his disappearance reveals that he is more than another pilot-he is and always shall be a na- tional idol whom the public has taken to itself and called its own. - Mel Brown RECIPROCITY: GOP Opposition Spells Pot-War Trade Trouble THE REPUBLICANS, grasping wildly at the few remaining straws of pre-World War II days when selfish national interests were ruling international, trade, are determined to make their stand against a continuance of Cordef Hull's Reciprocal Trade Treaties Program a fight to the finish. In so doing, they might well be sounding their own death knell. Rep. Harold Knutson (Rep.-Minn.) while throwing a few pointed digs at the adminis- tration, recently challenged the statement of Francis B. Sayre that "Economic isolation leads inevitably to lowered standards of living and increased unemployment," contending that the standard of living, years ago, had been higher in Germany under a high tariff program than in England under a free-trade policy. The validity of this statement alone is ques- tionable. If the post-war world is to be a fulfill- ment of the aim of equal rights, opportunities and freedom for all men, will not the standard of living throughout the whole world be depen- dent on the lowest standard existing in any one nation? But even more important is the role the United States will play in international trade after the war if the Repulicans succeed in killing recipro- cal trade. Is this country going to follow the same treacherous path it pursued in the wild twen- ties and raise such high tariff barriers that post-war trading will be virtually impossible, thus jeopardizing again economic relation- ships throughout the world? If this be the policy Republicans advocate the DREW PEARSON S MERRY-CO-ROUND WASHINGTON- Thomas J. Watson, irrepres- sible head of International Business Ma- chines, who has received more foreign decora- tions than almost any man in America, has got himself into income tax troubles. The Treasury has demanded that he pay up around $350,000 for 1937 under circumstances which affect not only Watson's pocketbook, but thousands of U.S. merchant seamen. Watson waited until just a few hours before the deadline, then filed a petition with the Treasury contesting its tax claims. Watson's tax difficulties arose while he was president of the International Chamber of Com- merce in 1937 and was out of the country for what he contended was more than half a year. He spent a lot of his time abroad on Chamber of Commerce matters and on what he told his stockholders were efforts to sell business ma- chines in Europe. Among other things, inci- dentally, he received a medal from Adolf Hitler, which he later asked Secretary Hull to return. When the year 1937 was over, Watson re- ported to the Treasury that he had been ab- sent from the U.S.A. six months plus a few hurs over. He had it all figured down to the last minute. Under Treasury ruling 116 a man who has been absent for more than six months gets a substantial tax reduction. However, when Internal Revenue experts be- gan to probe closely into Watson's operations they discovered some interesting things. In May and June 1937 he took six trips out of the United States, carefully estimating the exact number of hours he was away. Signed Director's Minutes Then after some travel in Europe, he came back to the United States. But in December, 1937, just as the tax year was about to clos,e he reported he went to Canada again. However, when long-nosedvHugh McQuillen, New York's chief Internal Revenue investigator, began to pry into the matter, he found that Watson had signed the minutes of the Directors' Meeting of The Federal Reserve Bank of New York, held at the very same time Watson said he was in Canada. As a result, the Treasury is now collecting for the supposed absence of six months. ANOTHER result is that the Treasury has now changed ruling 116A, so that in order to get a deduction for six months' absence, a taxpayer must be out of the country six months.consecu- tively. He cannot commute back and forth a few days in Mexico and Canada and add them all together. This revised ruling has chiefly hit several thousand seamen, who in peacetimes escaped paying income taxes by working from New York to Galveston or to Los Angeles so many trips that it added up to a total of six months. Note: Though Charles Bedaux generally 'got credit for inviting the Duke of Windsor to the United States several years ago, he is under- stood to have acted on behalf of Thomas Wat- I'd Rather Be Right BySAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, April 17.- Thomas Jefferson be- lieved in man, says the President. Correc- tion, he believed in some men. Alexander Ham- ilton was a man, but Thomas Jefferson did not believe in him. A number of Belgian patriotis have just been shot. They were trapped by Gestapo agents, posing as Allied parachutists. (The European underground must be full of these. swine) Thom- as Jefferson would have believed in the Belgian patriots, but not in the Gestapo agents. Tom took sides. When the French in his day, were going through a revolution for democracy, remarkably like their present one, Thomas Jef- ferson believed in some Frenchmen, but not in all. I know of no one now 'making speeches about Jefferson who is taking sides, in favor of democratic Frenchmen and against some others, to the same extent as did our Thomas. He is still hotter than his admirers, after a century and a half. Watchman, how doth the dignity of man fare, with our Tom long dead and lately become a monument? Not too well. A Representative from Cali- fornia, Mr. Gearhart, has just denounced our reciprocal trade treaties. He says we "en- circled" Hitler Germany, by making trade- treaties with all the countries around Ger- many, but,not with Hitler. He says we denied "advantages and 'privileges" to Germany, which we gave to Belgium and Sweden and France and Finland and England and Turkey and Russia. Mr. Gearhart makes the sugges- tion that perhaps it was not a case of "hap- chance" that we did this, that maybe we didn't like Adolf Hitler. There was no one in the House Ways and Means Committee room to bite off Mr. Gear- hart's waggiig finger, and to answer pertly: "You are quite right, Mr. Gearhart. Hitler is a fascist and we hated him. He meant no good to us. How do you feel about him, Mr. Gear- hart?" I think our Tom would have miade that an- swer. Yeah, man. And yeah, dignity of man. It fareth poorly when all it can say for itself, through the lips of Mr. Secretary Wickard is that the trade treaties, after all, probably had nothing to do with Hitler making war on us. The implication is that if our treaties did hurt Hitler, it was accidental, and please excuse it. What is worse, we know the administration doesn't mean that at all. It has really always hated Hitler. But it has almost always shied at assuming the awful dignity of saying so. NOT ALL is gloom in the capital, however; there is an unofficial. burble to the effect that the expected ousting of the Axis from Tuni- sia will enlarge the scope of Giraud's regime in Africa, and will "increase his prestige." With whom? Obviously, it is hoped, with the French people. We are building the dignity of Giraud, in the name of the dignity of man. We are actually trying to impress the poor and hungry people of France with the rising dignity of our candidate. And Attorney General Biddle speaks to Italian-Americans in New York, and he calls DAILY OFFICIAL, BULLET IN I (Continued from Page 2) 'clock, in the School of Music Building on Maynard Street. Hardin Van Deursen, Conductor School of Music students expecting de- grees in May must return the completed applications for such degrees to the office not later than April 20. Failure to comply may mean failure to graduate. E. V. Moore, Director Nursery Training School of Boston an- nounces a $400 scholarship for a college graduate. Courses are accredited at Bos- ton University, School of Education. A six-week Summer Session starts June 23rd. Regular session opens September 20th. Further information may be had from calling at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall, office hours 9-12 and 2-4. Montana: Clerks, Caseworkers, Inter- viewers, Stenographers are needed for positions In Montana. Applications will be accepted until further notice; exam- inations will be held periodically. Further information may be had from calling at our office, office hours 9-12 and 2-4. MICHIGAN CIVIL SERVICE General Clerk B; April 28, 1943; $115 to $135 per month. Typist Clerk B; April 28, 1943; $115 to $135 per month. StenographerClerk B; April 28, 1943; $115 to $135 per month. Account Clerk B; April 28, 1943; $115 to $135 per month. Account Clerk A; April 28. 1943; $135 to $155 per month. Dining Room Supervisor CI; April 21, 1943; $105 to $125 per month. Steam Electric Operating Engineers; April 21, 1943; $125 to $195 per month. Motor Equipment Repairman; April 21. 1943; $115 to $135 per month, 65c or 85c per hour. Mine Industrial Inspector I; April 28, 1943; $155 to $195 per month. Bureau of Appointments And Occupational Information Academic Notices English 2, sec. 19, will not meet today. M. L. Williams The Provisional Rifle Company will not meet today. Bacteriology 312 Seminar win meet Tuesday, April 20, at 4:15 p.m. in Room 3564 East Medical Building. Subject:"The Titration of Antigens and Antibodies," All interested are invited. Psychology 55: The examination in this course will be postponed one week to April 27. Doctoral Examination for William Thom- as Radius, Greek; thesis: "The Discussion of St. Gregentius, Archbishop of Taphar, with the Jew Herban," will be held today in 2009 Angell Hall, at 9:30 a.m. Chair- man, C. Bonner. By action of the Executive Board, the Chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doctoral candi- Water Safety Instructors: The teacher training phase of the instructors' course will begin on Monday, May 3, at 8:00 p.m. at the Union Pool instead of April 19 as was previously announced. This work is required of all candidates for the cer- tificate of Water Safety Instructor and of all those who wish to renew their certifi- cates. SConcerts The carillon recital by Professor Percival Price scheduled for 7:15 p.n. Sunday, April 18, will include a group of composi- tions by Handel, Carillon fantasy and fugue by Sir H. Harty, and four chorales. Exhibitions The twentieth annual exhibition of work by artists of Ann Arbor and vicinity is being presented by the Ann Arbor Art Association in the Exhibition Galleries of the Rackham Building, through April 23. daily, except Sunday; 2 to 5 after- noons and 7 to 10 eveiiings. The public is cordially invited. Events Today The Public Health Club willIhave an informal party at the International Cen- ter tonight at 8:00. The faculty and stu- dents in the School of Public Health are invited. Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences: Those members of the Institute who have signed to go on the field trip to the Wil- low Run bomber plant today will assem- ble at 12:30 p.m. in front of East Engi- neering Building for departure. A small transportation fee will be collected. All personsrmust bring U.S. naturalization papers or* An American birth certificate. Coming Events Acolytes will meet Monday, April 19, at 7:45 p.m. in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Bldg. Professor Risieri Frondizi of the Philosophy 'Department of! the National University of Tucuman, Ar- gentina, will talk on "Contemporary Latin American Philosophy". Anyone interested in philosophical discussion is invited. Phi Beta Kappa: The Annual Initia- tion of new members will be held in the Michigan League Chapel on Monday, April 19, at 4:00 p.m. Professor Herbert A. Ken- yon will address'the initiates. All new members are expected to attend. Karl Marx Society will meet on Sunday, April 18, in the Union at 3:30 p.m. Every- one is invited. Churches The First Baptist Church: 10:00 a.m.: The Roger Williams Class will meet in the Guild House to study the. Epistles of John. 11:00 a.m.: Sermon: "Hosanna", by Rev. C. H. Loucks. 7:00 p.m.: At the regular meeting of the Roger Williams Guild at the Guild Wt-c M'r 'T.nekq will bAHn a c,,rnn.n Free public Reading Boom at 106 Washington St., open every day edce Sundays and holidays from 11:30 a.m. U til 5:00 p.m.; Saturdays until 9:00 p.m. First Methodist Church and Wesi Foundation: Class for people of stude age with Professor Carrothers at 9:30 a. Subject for discussion: "Living Intell gently When Successful." Morning Wo ship Service at 10:40 o'clock. Dr. C. Brashares will preach on "Ride On." We Ieyan Guild meeting beginning with r freshments at 5:45 p.m. At 6:30 p.m. pr gram. Mrs. Welthy Honsinger Fisher WI speak on the subject: "Can North an South America Unite?". Bach's Oratorio, "The Passion of .0 Lord according to St. Matthew," will presented in the sanctuary of the Fir Methodist Church by the Senior Cho under the direction of Hardin Van Deu sen, with Mary McCall Stubbins, o ganist, on Wednesday. evening, April '2. at 7:30 o'clock. Soloists will be Thel von Eisenhaur, soprano, of Detroit; Mau ine Parzybok, contralto, of Chicago; C14 ence R. Ball, tenor, of Toledo; and Fr Patton, bass, of Lansing. John Challi of Ypsilanti, will play the harpsIchor The public is invited. Lutheran Student Chapel: Sunday at 11:00 a.m. Regular Service I Michigan League Chapel. Sermon by ti Rev. Alfred'Schelps, "Taking an Attitu toward the Crucified Christ". Sunday at 4:00 p.m. Communion Ve per Service at St. Paul's Student Club, f Lutheran Students and Service Men. Sermon by the Rev. Alfred Scheip "Faithfulness". Supper Meeting at 5:30 p.m. Zion Lutheran Church will hold servic at 10:30 a.m. Sunday with the Rev. Fret erick A. Schiotz speaking on "Sir. Would See Jesus". Trinity Lutheran Church services wl begin at 10:30 a.m. Sunday with the Re Henry 0. Yoder speaking on "The Marl of True Christian Fellowship." The Lutheran Student Association wI meet for a fellowship dinner and prograi at 4:30 p.m. Sunday. The Rev. Frederic A. Schiotz, Executive Secretary of Studer Service for the American Lutheran Cor ference, will talk. First Congregational Church: At 10:00 a.m. in the assembly roon Symposium on "What I Think". Colon Ganoe will speak on "What I Think Abo. the Making of Tomorrow". 10:45 a.m. Church service. Dr. L. Parr will speak on "Art Thou 'a King?" At 5:30 p.m. Ariston League will discu "Christian Beliefs." 7:00 p.m. Student Fellowship and Disc pies Guild. Dr. Mary Van Tuyi will discu "Student Attitudes Towards Religion." 8:30 p.m. Luchnokala, "Lighting of t Lights", will be held on Sunday. The pul lic is invited. First Presbyterian Church: Mcrning Worship-10:45. "Out of ti