T'AGE TAV6 THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUF,9DAYi-. APRIL 20,4943 PAGE - TWO TUE~4IAY..~APR!L 29, 194$ Fifty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigani 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 republcation 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' 1EPRESENTE FOR NATONL. AL)VPR MA# 4. National Advertising Service, hic. College Publishers Representative 420 MADIsON AVE. NEW YoRK. N. Y. CHICAGO * OSTO% . LOS AGELES * SAI fVRANCISC* B~lackouti ciIICPJ to eth!!&d'to- 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 B~usiness Staff Editorial Director * . City Editor, . Associate Editor . Associate Editor * Women's Editor- Columnist, Local Advertising' . . . . . Circulation, Service' Contracts Accounts . . . National Advertising, Promotion . . Classified Advertising. . Women's Business Manager Ruthless Bandits?' HOWEVER sound and clever his article on Sullivan's unfor- tunate column may be (The Daily, April 15). Jason makes, in the course of his discussion. the fol- lwing remark: "We're fighting a ruthless gang of bandits, not the German people . . ." There the author lets it hang in mid-air, so to speak,-a remarkably flat statement for which he neither has nor can have any justification. I have been confronted with similar statements, equally ridicu- lous, ever since my arrival in this country, and especially so on this campus. Usually. however, they emanate from persons whose broad-mindedness and insight in- to more serious matters is very questionable: therefore, I was ex- tremely amazed seeing such rub- bish among so many ideas that Mr. Conant as a rule displays. I believe that this myth should be brought into the open and once and for all done away with. First, let us view the situation from the military standpoint. Day in and day out, wherever we turn, we hear how important the civilian morale is. This is happening in the U.S., which the war has left unscathed as yet. Is it any differ- ent in Germany? Is anybody try- ing to tell me that Goebbels is running his Propaganda Bureau merely "for the hell of it"? Cer- tainly not. He is trying hard to keep spiritually alive the same German people that the Allies are endeavoring to starve out through the blockade. Why does not even Herbert. Hoover suggest our feeding the poor German people, if we're just fighting "a gang of bandits"? And undoubtedly, according to Jason, the Allies are turning Ber- lin, Cologne, Bremen, etc., asham- bles, only to punish this same gang. The assertion of bombing military objectives exclusively seems rather naive in 1,000-bomber raids. It is the people that bear the brunt of the war. And at last, who was it that conquered most of Europe? Whom do the Russians fight in the East and the rest of the Allies in Africa? Perhaps that choice "gang of bandits"? No, our sol- diers are desperately trying to kill the products of Germany, the sons and fathers and husbands and sweethearts, and so on, of the common people. If all that is not waging war on the German nation, I "wouldvery much Nwelc'Ome some suggestion to the contrar'y. N OW we come to a seemingly more ticklish point which has caused a considerable amount of controversy, although quite super- fluously so. Namely, can we identify the innocent inhabitants of Ger- many with those nasty, cruel Nazis? The answer is a most emphatic Yes. Now I do not propose to be any infallible expert on foreign affairs, even if they are as trans- parent as this question is, but this I do feel entitled to say: I have had the opportunity to see at first hand the spread of'Nazism in Ger- many, having spent almost my en- tire life in Czechoslovakia. I was "privileged" to watch some of the outrages committed by the German army in Prague. (The army is independent of the party's actions and procedures.) This army was composed of typical representa- tives of the German youth, and this army functioned not as a con- quering, but as a protecting force! However, I shall not dwell upon their atrocities, as these are known in this country, even though, un- fortunately, they are usually taken as propaganda stories. These young men did not differ very much from their countrymen in Germany. There is no evidence that the population of the Third Reich (excepting a very small mi- nority) is in disagreement with its government. It would be some- what idiotic to say that 80 million peace- and liberty-loving people have been pushed into an enter- prise like Nazism by a small bunch of gangsters and held there against their will for over ten years. Reporters and other persons who lived in recent Germany concur with my views. Many a good book has been written on the subject. It seems very unlikely that all these people, during their stay in "Wonderland", have been observ- ing only a select "ruthless gang of bandits". George Koeser, '44E Education for Labor Leaders N an editorial dated April 15, Miss Evelyn Phillips proceeded at great length (for a Daily edi- torial) to support her contention that the University, while its School of Business Administration "turns out a goodly number of well-trained, qualified leaders fOr business", fails to graduate men qualified as leaders of labor. Simply because the Alumni of the Uiversity fail to become la- bor leaders is no basis whatso- ever for contendhng that they are not qualified to become labor leaders. One need merely to glance at a catalogue of the School of Business Administra- tion to prove that the University does appreciate the importance of labor and of labor's relations to management. There are at least five courses offered in the School of Business Administration which ought to be required of all labor leaders, espe- cially union business agents. They deal with such important topics as industrial relations, selection and training of workers, promotions, layoffs, work schedules, regular- ization of employment, employe rating, collective bargaining, and job analysis. When Miss Phillips concluded her editorial with the familiar Daily "punch" line, "Why not education for labor here?", she must have been completely unaware that there is plenty of education for labor here. ' The real question to be asked is "Why does labor, especially union labor, fail to educate Its leaders?" The answer to this question is a controversial one, but it appears to this Daily reader that the labor leaders of today are much busier playing "dog eat dog" than they are in learning a few logical arguments to support their insane demands. F John L. Lewis and some of the other labor racketeers could only be required to study a few ele- mentary economics courses (Ec. 52, e.g.), perhaps unity between labor and the capitalist-entrepre- neurs would not appear so remote as it does now. While it is doubt- ful whether many of the present leaders of labor could last long in a school where a "C" average must be maintained, at least we nmight hope that John L. Lewis and his cohorts could grasp enough funda- mental economics (before they flunked out) to realize, for in- stance, that rising wages in war- time bring rising prices which in turn cause inflation, which in turn is desired by neither labor nor capital. Roy D. Rouclher Telephone 23-241 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. WORTHY CAUSE:. 'Share Your Smokes' With Our Fighting Men NEVER will a five-cent piece go so far or be given to a worthier cause than the nickel which the "Share your Smokes" drive calls upon you to contribute in one of its many collection boxes on campus, as well as in all fraternities, sororities and dormitories.- Aimed at sending over a million cigarettes to our boys overseas, the drive will answer the desires of our fighters as Indicated in a recent poll in which over-79% of' them sai' that they regarded cigarettes as their favorite gift. With the goal for the drive set at $500, which, due to the cooperation of a, cigarette company in agreeing to relinquish its profits, will, mean 10,000 packs for our fighters, it's up to us to give not once but again and again to "Share your Smokes", and help meet General Mac- Athur's request, "Send 'em cigarettes". - Monroe Fink RED TAPE: Coitract Negontation Method Is.,Unwieldy O NE EXAMPLE of the much criticized "long way 'round" methods of the government is the present system of the renegotiation of con' tracts with firms engaged in war production. Renegotiation means, essentially, that con- tracts made with firms to retool and produce military necessities such as planes, tanks and guns may be revised after production gets under way, if the estimates of the firm as to the costs of production were inaccurate. Some form of renegotiation. is necessary, in fairness to the government, which otherwise would be overpaying for many needed arti- cles. However, the present system is too long, unwieldy, and too involved for efficiency or speedy renegotiation of the contracts which are keeping the armed forces of this nation fighting. T PRESENT the number of contracts which must be renegotiated. by- the. government runs into millions. This means that until every one of them is satisfactorily adusted-a matter of months-these firms will' be taking excessive profits from the government, or they will be holding up the production of vitally needed war goods. A system of renegotiation which is speedy and accurate is badly needed. Not until one is found will production be operating at full capacity, no matter how many of the other problems which are holding this nation back are met in the meantime. - Jane Farrant iNFLATION: Popular Bond Response 'Points Path for Action, 'F Congress or the Executive hasn't known that the people want something done about inflation, the response to the Second War Loan Drive begun last Sunday seems to be a good indication of the trend of popular thought. Even before we went into war, the problem of increasing inflation hung over the heads of the American people. Its dangers were pointed out and many theories, some economically sound, were proposed to meet the ensuing problem. Now the whole picture has tumbled down as an avalanche without any force being intro- WAR BALLYHOO: Am -rican Freedom of Pess Is Endangered THE American people are in danger ofI losing one of the basic freedoms for which they are fighting-the freedom of the press. Two events which have occurred lately seem to point to dis- tortion of the news by high sources and to un- necessary government restrictions. Along with the OWI's food report last Wednes- day came the admission that this report had been the cause of the resignation of two-thirds of-the publications staff of the OWL Those fif- teen members claimed "it is impossible for us . . . to tell the full truth" because the OWI has become an "office of war ballyhoo". Further- more, they implied that the original report pre- pared' in January was never released for the reason that it was thought the American people were unable to take bad news. If these accusations are true, then the very source and center of our wartime news-the OWl -is guilty of a serious error. It assumes that the citizens must be fed with cheerful, morale-building "ballyhoo" and shielded from any news that is unpleasant or disagreeable. This policy i s nrompted by a misconception of the intelligence, determination and tough- ness of the American people. They not only are able to take bad news on the chin, but they demand to be kept informed of the facts. AT about the same time that the OWI mem- bers resigned, President Roosevelt personally ordered the exclusion of all newspapermen from the United Nations food parley so that the rep-- resentatives would have no "distractions". Ac- cording to Time magazine, the effect will be that "the U.S. will be told only what the Admin- istration chooses to tell". Since the conference is a non-military event and the information has no strategic value, the exclusion of newsmen seems entirely unjustified. Americans have always prided themselves on their freedom of the press. They do not want their newspapers turned into propaganda agen- cies. Rather. they want all the news told com- pletely and truthfully. In the words of Elmer Davis. "the better the American people under- stand' what this war is about, the harder they will work and fight to win it". -Jennie Fitch DREW PEARSON'S MERRY-O-RUND WASHINGTON. April 20.-Confronted with the food shortage, National Zoo Diecto Bill Mann is trying to fool the monkeys. Bananas are scarce, so Dr. Mann has devised a paste made of sweet potatoes, white potatoes, and a little honey-all mixed up together-which he passes off as a substitute for bananas. The soft-billed birds take to it all right, but the monkeys look at him with one eye shut as they eat, indicating they know what tricks he is up to. The meat problem is not as bad as you might suppose, for the lions have been getting horse meat instead of beef for a long time-ever since the price of beef began to rise several years ago. What's more, horse meat comes closer to the lion's natural diet of zebra. have begun to act. Savings and taxation are the answers to the inflation problem. In es- Pd Rather Be Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK. April 20.-BALLYHOO: The State Department obviously has buck fever in connection with the coming Allied food confer- ence at Hot Springs, Va. This conference must be viewed as a rehearsal. It is the first "get- acquainted" meeting of the world of the future. The conference is, actually, little more than ballyhoo for better conferences to come. It should be good ballyhoo. I can see what the Department fears. . It does not fear freedom of the press so much as it fears freedom to make trouble. It fears "anti-global" writers who will come to the sessions with blood in their eye, carrying un- der their arms Colonel McCormick's book of jolkes about milk for the Hottentots. It fears the wandering correspondent, buttoboling the vagrant dclegate and coming out with a horrid scandal about how America intends to give away all its tree-decker sandwiches to Europe, keeoing' only one-decker sandwiches for itself. May I. as an old antagonist of the State De- fpartment, concede that it is quite entitled to have buck fever in these premises? The Department is putting on a play with an unwritten script, a show that will have to write itself as it goes along. Those of us who are for a more stable world have got to help make this conference a success. We have got to come down out of the strato- sphere cf our full-blown visionings of the world of the future, and concentrate on this one little' specific affair. It must succeed. We have to do some routine day's work for democ- racy at Hot Springs. We have to insist, with heat and anger if necessary, that this little conference succeed. We must not tolerate for it to fail. This meeting trumpets the brave new world, and it must be a blast, not asqueak. But the world is full of trumpets, full of bally- hoo, not all of it good. American troops in Tunisia. under General Patton, are given the unspectacular job of "containing" Rommel's army while the British come tp from below and knock it on the head. Instantly the bad bally- hoo begins: Our troops have "disappeared"; our troops have "bungled": "the British want all the glory." MacArthur indicates he needs more planes, and again the bad ballyhoo breaks out. The Pacific campaign is a "mess". We have a "di- vided command". We are "starving the war in the Far East". We are stumblebums. We don't know what we are doing. Similar horrible noises are about to break over Hot Springs. The State Department knows it. It reads the papers. It knows that some w'ritcrs are coming to report the facts, humbly and hopefully, and that some are coming as to a fishing trip. to see what juicy things they can catch and fry. Why dissemble? We know these attitudes exist. I say without fear of successful contra- diction that there are some who would much rather see a big scandal come out of the confer- ence than see it actually settle the food problems of the post-war world. The world is too drawn and tense at the moment for us to be able to afiord to fool ourselves with myths on these matters. Facing this problem, the State Department Lried, at the beginning, to solve it by keeping the entire press away, as far as possible. Fear- ful of trouble, it tried to hide out from both friend and foe. And this dusty answer is, I am DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1943 VOL. LI No. 143 All notices for the Daily Official Bul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the President in typewritten form by 3:30 p.m. of the day preceding its publica- tion, except on Saturday when the no- tices should be submitted by 11:30 a.m. Notices War Bonds: Buy your War Bonds for April at University Cashier's )Office. Or- ders may be sent through campus mail. University War Bond Committee Commencement Tickets: Tickets for Commencement may be obtained on re- quest after May 10 at the Information Desk in the Business Office, Room 1, University Hall. Because Hill Auditorium will be used for the exercises, and because of its limited seating capacity, only three tickets will be available for each senior. Please present identification card when applying for tickets. Herbert G. Watkins, Assistant Secretary Lectures University Lecture: Dn Horace R. Byers, secretary of the Institute of Meteorology, University of Chicago, will lecture on the subject, "Thunderstorms," under the aus- pices of the Department of Geology, on Thursday, April 22, at 4:15 p.m. in the Natural Science Auditorium. The public is invited. Dr. Risieri Frondizi, from Argentina, will give the fifth of a series of talks on Latin America on the subject, "Old and New Argentine Universities", under the auspices of the Latin American Society of the University of Michigan tonight at 8:00 in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Fac- ulty, students and townspeople are wel- come to the lecture, which will be deliv- ered in English and without charge. Academic Notices Bacteriology 312 Seminar will meet today at 4:15 p.m. in Room 1564 East Med- ical Building. Subject: "The Titration of Antigens and Antibodies." All interested are invited. School of Music students expecting de-C grees in May must return the completed toIial h t S is ee applications for such degr'ees to the office tonight at 7:30 in Room 319 West MedicalI aotlcatertan s Failue rto tBuilding. "The Effect of Heat on theI nomate tean toy ailure to corplyat manfa etodelyChemical and Nutritional Properties of Student Recital: Phyllis Robison Wheat- ley, violinist, will present a recital at' 8:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April 21, in Lydi8a Mendelssohn Theatre. A student of Was'- sily Besekirsky, Mrs. Wheatley is giving the program in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music. The public is cordially invited. Exhibitions The twentieth annual exhibition of work by artists of Ann Arbor and vkclnlt7 is being presented by the Ann Arbor Art Association in the Exhibition Gdallerles, of the Rackham Building, through April 23, daily, except Sunday; 2 to 5 after- noons and 7 to 10 evenings. The public. is cordially invited. Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: Townsite projects and housing pians for the Willow Run area showing photo- graphs,drawings, models, and cost data. Both professional projects and. student 1tudies are shown. Third floor Exhibition Room, Architecture Building. Open daily 9 to 5 except Sunday through April-30. rhe public is invited. Events Today varsity Glee Club: Serenade tonight 10:15-11:15., Pictures will be taken. Meet in the glee club room in the Union. Sigma Gamma Epsilon meeting today at t 4:15 p.m. in room 4065 Natural Science. Bldg. Dr. Donald Katz of the Chemical Engineering Department will speak. on. "Experiences in the Petroleum. Industry" with special reference to hydrocarbons under high pressures. Refreshments. Pub- lic is invited. Pre-Medical Society: Dr. Frederick 11. Chard of the Dermatology Department of the Medical School will speak to ,41 ,Pre- Meds tonight at 8:00 in., the 34ichigan Union. Color pictures will accompany the The Polonia Society will meet' tonight at 8i00 in the International Center. A progress report by the political committee. will be given and the next social function will be planned. All persons of Polish extraction are cordially invited. Refresh- ments. E. V. Moore, Director Students who pman to enter one of the following professional schools: Medicine, Law, Dental Surgery, Nursing, Business Administration, Forestry and Conservation at the beginning of the fall term on the Combined Curricuium must file an appli- cation for this Curriculum in the Office of the Dean of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, 1210 Angell Hall, by April 20. After this 'date applications will be accepted only upon the presenta- tion of a satisfactory excuse for the delay tnd the payment of a fee of $5.00. a little, calling, in salty fashion, an h am nylmn nt a.hbette-r w rld Proteins"' will be discussed. All interested are invited. Botanical Journal club will meet on Wednesday, Aprils21, at 7:30 p.m. in Room N.S. 1139. Reports by: Ruth Chou, "Auxin in the soil"; Carmen Guadalupe, "Antag- onistic relations of microorganisms"; Mary Riner, "Cytology of bacteria"; and Dorothy Johnson, "variability in an agar digesting Actinomycete." Doctoral Examination for Eugene Albert Nida, Linguistics; thesis: "A Synopsis of English Syntax," will be held on Wednes- day, April 21, in West Council Room, Rack- ham, at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, C. C. Fries. By action of the Executive Board, the Chairman may invite members of the fac- ulties and advanced doctoral candidates on muse wnu wzt a utt owuj to do two things at Hot Springs, to attend the examination and he may to report the facts, and also to grant permission to those whofor suff - answer the trouble-makers. .ent reason might wish to be present. C. S. Yoakum This is a fight. It must be clearly seen as a fight, or it will be lost. Students in the College of Literature, It is more important that friends Science, and the Arts who are members be heard than that foes be silenced. aOfthe Naval Reserve, Class V-1, or the Who's afraid of the noise? But here M~arine Corps Reserve: th'seartmdentshoedoeBugahnr, Students in these two categories who the Department showed, once again, must write the Navy qualifying examina- its nervous desire to make the brave tion today from 9:00 to 11:00, and from new world quietly. It wants the fu- 2:00 to 4:30, will be excused from regu- ture to come while nobody notices. larly scheduled classes and will be ex- Once again it blockades its own sup- tended make-up privileges. porters, underestimating them, as E, A. Walter always, overestimating the opposi- One-Act Plays: Unger the auspices ot the Department of Speech, a one-hour program of one-act plays, directed and put on by advanced students in Play, Production will be presented tonight at 7:30 in the Lydia.dMendelssohngTheatre. There will be no admission charge. Christian Science Qrganization will meet tonight at 8:15 in Rooms D and E of the