.., ....... w .wi, u s -, w IT, -t i: U-, i i77 - A,- N , V. -1 lY - .-.~ 9.-. .: Cj--r - - ~t 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 tit 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 "Yes, Fritz-but remember what they did to the old Bastille." The WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND By DRE PEARSON ftepR sbW.VaI v ' irA S Slnn4. x,* " " f National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAG~O - BOSTON r* LOS ANGELES r SAN FAAMCISCO Editorial Staff Bud Brimmer . Leon Gordenker Marion Ford . . . Charlotte Con over. Betty Harveyv.r. . James Conant . . . . Editorial Director . . . City Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor . Womn's Editor . . . Columnist Business Staff Elizabeth Carpenter Pat Gehlert Jeanne Lovett Martha Opsion Sybil Perlmutter Molly Winokur Margery Wolfson Barbara Peterson Rosalie Frank . . . Local Advertising Circulation Service Contracts * . . Acounts 4 National Advertising Promotion Classified Advertising Women's Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: JEAN RICHARDS Editorials published in The Michinan Daily are written by 'members of The Daily staf and represent the views of the writers only. -- PRO-FASCISTS: GOP DIE-HARDS: * Reciprocity Treaties Should Be Maintained TIMES may change, but the Republicans never do. They discovered the issue of high pro- tectionism over a half century ago and they've been riding with the same idea ever since. The higher the walls, the happier the GOP was. And then came Cordell Hull, the New Deal and re- ciprocal trade treaties. These treaties sadly disrupted the GOP theme song for some time. High protectionalism seemed headed to its death bed. 'Economists shouted, "Amen." The idea worked. Cautious members of the opposition party in recent Congresses have wept and wailed, have shouted and cried about Argentina beef and Canadian wheat. Why do they single these articles to rant about? Because the great mid-western farmer, the backbone of the yearly defeated Republican party, has great interest in beef and wheat. Still reciprocal trade treaties, although not perfect, continue to do effectively the work for which they were designed. Relations with other nations were bettered, and South Ameri- cans almost reached the state where they could say "United States" without the words sounding like blasphemy. AND NOW the time has come again when the trade policy of the nation will be decided upon by Congress. Today, the extension of the Reciprocal Trade Agreement Act is before the House Ways and Means Committee. With characteristic inactivity the Republicans are viewing the extension of the bill with "little interest." Standing firmly in front of the bill the party arranges itself to pull out every issue they have ever disliked to prevent this, their pet gripe, from passing. Weary political scientists have worked through a maze of data year after year, won- dering just what makes the mid-western farm- er repeatedly vote for the high tariff issue when it obviously has never aided him. But evidently the mid-western farmer never changes either, because his Congressmen rave on in the same vein as a decade ago. Outstand- ing example of this still flourishing if useless class is the veteran professional politician Rep. Harold Knutson of Minnesota. When he was examining the testimony of one of Hull's assistants recently he brought into the testimony every old issue from the murder of the little pigs, through Mrs. Roose- velt's column and to the old anti-British argu- ments. He is but one of the Republicans who have been tossing political monkey wrenches into the reciprocal trade agreement hearings. Most ridic- ulous charge was Rep. Bertrand W. Gearhart's made that the Aperican reciprocal trade nego- tiators were responsible for the war. DR. FRANCIS B. SAYRE, assistant to Secre- tary of State Hull, was the victim of his ti- rade. After repeating the age-mellowed high tariff arguments, Rep. Gearhart dug deeply into his imagination and came out with the state- ment, "You quarantined the Nazis by encircling Germany with trade treaties." His statment collapses under the facts of the case. The State Department pointed out that there was no German reciprocal trade treaty because the Germans refused to accept the American principle of no discrimination in inter- national commerce. Irish Republican Army Should Be Supp resed T HE IRISH Republican Army must be ruth- lessly suppressed now. (Hugh McAteer, Chief of Staff of the outlawed IRA, :made that clear to Americans on April 24, when he threatened that American troops would before long be involved in hostilities with the Irish Republic. The outlawed Irish "storm trooper" who has a price of 3,000 pounds ($12,000) on his head made this statement in an audacious appearance in a movie theatre in North Irish (British) Belfast, as part of a "fascistic" celebration of the Easter Rebellion. Technically the IRA has been outlawed both in North -Ireland and Eire and is being hunted down by military and civil police. Actually It seems evident that there has been a lot of pussy-footing in the task of suppression, pri- marily for fear of offending the United States. THE FINANCIAL support for the IRA has al- ways come largely from Irish-Americans, and the influence of this group in the American po- litical arena has had the effect of sugar-coating British anti-IRA measures. It is about time that the American public realized the danger to whole anti-Axis cam- paign of these IRA "fascists" -who have been exploiting America's great admiration and sympathy for Eire and Irish for their own "pro-Nazi" ends. American newspaper editors must no longer straddle the fence on this vital issue. Let us urge our British allies to wipe out this menace now, ruthlessly if need be, with our blessings. -Ed Podliashuk INDECISION: Finland Must Decide Between Allies, Nazis THE CAUTIOUS FINNS, who have been play- ing puppets as a buffer nation between both the Axis and the Allies, will have to come to a definite understanding with the Allies concern- ing their foreign policies or completely subjugate themselves to the Nazi regime. America's action in withdrawing the bulk of its legation staff from Helsingfors may well make the Finns pause for thought. Briefly, their problem is this: Should they acquiesce with the Allied proposal and sign a separate treaty with Russia, thus endangering their relations with the ruthless Nazis, or should they fall in line with the Germans by signing Hitler's new "European Charter" and renew offensive operations against Leningrad? Obviously, the situation of the Finns is a ticklish one. A decision one way or the other will lay Finland at the mercy of either the Allies or the Nazis. NEVERTHELESS, the Finns are now almost wholly dependent on the Germans for food. Before they will consider signing a treaty with Russia, they want a guarantee against being ultimately engulfed by Russia and assurance that the Allies can supply them with food. The decision rests with the Finns. They will not be able to listen to the threats of the Nazif' with one ear and the proposals of the Allies with tha nt -hrnuch loner without tkin stn in I'd Rather Be Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON- NEW YORK, April 27.- It certainly was a great day for the Allies, earlier this week. Russia broke off relations with Poland. A newspaper columnist, Mr. Drew Pearson, quoted Mr. Roose- velt directly as quoting Mr. Churchill directly to the effect that de Gaulle could be made to behave because the English "paid him", i.e., financially supported his movement. Then it turned out that we had sent 200,000 gallons of lubricating oil to Franco from Philadelphia, at a time when high-grade lubricating oil is worth its weight in blood to the Axis. Simultaneously, the Chicago Tribune began its new editorial campaign suggesting that Australia, Canada, England, Scotland, Wales, etc., come into our country as additional states, if they really feel so big a yen for international cooperation. . The Nazi radio took the line up at once, warning Britain'that if it continued to fight it would end up as another Kansas In the American system. 0, it was a great day for the Allies, all right. It turned out, too, that Mr. William Phillips, the President's special envoy in India, had asked permission to interview Gandhi, and had been turned down by the "Indian government;" India suddenly developing a government when one is required for such purposes as this. Emergency action is needed to restore order in the house of the United Nations. To start with one of the smaller cases, there should be a prompt repudiation by Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Churchill, both, of any suggestion that either "pays" General de Gaulle. One can see that French turn-coat, Marcel Deat, publishing a gloating piece in his Paris L'Ouevre, or whatever the devil he calls his rag these days, about how de Gaulle is a "paid agent" of the Anglo-Saxon world. De Gaulle's movement may be finan- cially supported by Britain, as it certainly should be, in the same sense in which Mr. Churchill's movement is supported by us through lend-lease, but that hardly constitutes "pay." That ar- rangement would not make de Gaulle a paid agent of Britain any more than lend-lease makes 'Mr. Churchill a paid agent of America, and these points must be made clear at once. It is highly unusual for any reporter to quote the President directly, between actual quotation marks, and one is compelled to ask whether Mr. Pearson was handed this story by anyone within the administration. The Russian-Polish break is the first formal break between any two of the United Nations. This break tells us that Russia will work with the other United Nations, if the other United Nations will work with Russia, but, if not, Russia is fully prepared to follow an indepen- dent policy of her own, and withouit advance warning, or hesitancy, or shyness, or coyness. I would have much preferred to see Russia make a direct appeal to the other United Na- tions to help reshape the Polish attitude, before taking this major decision. If the United States had unilaterally broken off with one of the United Nations, that criticism would certainly have been heard. And Russia has a good case, in the avidity with which the Polish government- in-exile fell upon the German story that Russia had murdered 10,000 Polish officers, and shouted WASHINGTON, April 28.- It seems inconceivable that war con- tractors could conjure up any more devices for swelling the cost of the war than those already being com- mitted under the head of "admin- istrative expenses" in cost-plus contracts. However, the shipping industry has thought up a new one-charg- ing charity contributions to the government. Since last October, shippingj companies have been charging up to "overhead expense" their donations to the United Sea- men'e Service, an organization which maintains rest homes for torpedoed merchant seamen. This "overhead expense" is passed Gn to the government through cost-plus contracts. Amazing fact is that the War Shipping Administration fully ap- proves, even encourages, this prac- tice. On Oct. 7, William Radner, WSA general counsel, sent a confi- dential "Legal Bulletin to all mer- chant ship operators giving his blessing. He said. "Inquiries have been received as to whether contributions made by agents (shipping companies), un- der service agreements, to United Seamen's Service, Inc., are reim- bursable, or may be considered as part of the agent's overhead ex- penses under general order No. 12. "Although contributions by ag- ents to United Seamen's Service, Inc., are not reimbursable under the provisions of the service agree- ments, the amounts of such con- tributions may be included in the overhead expense of the agents in calculating any adjustment of compensation under the provisions of sections 10 and 11 of general order No. 12." One of the companies which stands to benefit by this order is DRAMA. THE EXHAUSTIVE analyses which Barbara Herrinton has already supplied in these columns give your reviewer a sense of re- dundancy. Yet it must be said that the Cercle Francais presenta- tion of Pailleron's difficult play, Ie Monde ou l'on s'ennuie, has more than measured up to advance billing. Professor Koella has again shown that he is a past master in play-direction, let alone the grim task of training his cast to use a foreign language with spontaneous facility. I have been told, with firmness, to save my personal synthesis of French literature for another day: consequently, I shall even skip the play. For that matter, the cast could be dismissed with equal un- concern, as the players must al- ready have awareness of a job well done. Suzanne, the most difficult part in the play, was handled with admirable naturalness by Shirley Robin. Constance Taber gave an intelligent interpretation of a part somewhat less astringent than her skillful acting a year ago in La Belle Aventure; Sally Levy's Com- tesse de Ceran was more subdued than the resolute if unsubtle Mme. d'Eguzon required last spring. Warner Heineman deserves special honors for transforming Pailleron's stuffy male lead into a genuine comedy personage. OUTSTANDING among the other players was Robert Berahya for his able rendering of the pro- fessorial hanger-on Bellac. Helene Sieg and Frank MacLear pulled all the proper stops as the politics- ridden couple; Hazel Batchelor's English girl showed especially well in the final act; Richard Koppitch carried his advancing years effec- tively as the scholar-intriguer; Holbrooke Seltzer gave a masterly outburst of deep dramatic criti- cism. -Edward B. Ham warned the whole world of the United Nations, in the harshest possible terms, that Russia expects her allies to be allies. Some of us may still have a picture of Russia as the great mendicant of this war, cap in hand, still patiently tolerat- ing the little games of the pre-war period. It is a false picture. The country which has beat the Nazi armies has drawn the necessary conclusions from reading of her own exploits. To those who may not want Russia as an equal ally, Russia has given a sharp reminder of her claim to equal- ity. In that claim lies the entire meaning of the break with Poland. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 1943 VOL. Ll No. 150 All notices for the Daily Official Bil- letin are to be sent to the Office of the President in typewritten form by 3:30 p.m. of the day preceding its onubica- tion, except on Satuiay when tbe no- tires 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 cnpis mail. University War Bond ConARittee Notice: It is no longer possible for the storeroom at the University osital to furnish special service for parties, recep- tions, or other special -occaslonis at resi- dence halls or to groups of faculty or stu- dent personnel. The difficulties involved, under the rationing system, in purchasing food supplies, and the impossibility of se- curing personnel 'for distributing and accounting fbr such supplies make it nec- essary to confine the food service here- after strictly to the standard needs of the Hospital, the Health Stvice. the Michigan League, the Residence Halls, and the Elementary School Cafeteria dur- ing such periods only as the Elementary School is in session. It should be uder- stood that this notice applies only to re- quests for special service. The dIscon- tinuance of such service is inade with re- gret and only after every effort to avoid it. It is believed there is no other course open. Shirley W. Smith Seniors: The firm which furnishes di- plomas for the University has sent the following caution: "Please Warn graduates not to store diplomas in cedar chests. There is enough of the moth-killing aro- matic oil in the average cedar chest to soften inks of any kind that might be stored inside them, resulting in seriously damaging the diplomas." Shirley W. Smtith Note to Seniors, May -Graduates, and Graduate Students: Please file application for degrees or any special certificates (i.e. Geology Certificate, Journalism Certifi- cate, etc.) at one if yeu expect to receive a degree or certificate'at Commencement on May 29, 1943. We cannot guarantee that the University will confer a degree or certificate at COnimehcenment upon any student who fails to file such application before the close of business on Thursday, April 29. If application is received later than April 29, your degree or certificate may -not be awarded until next fall. Candidates for degrees or certificates may fill out cards at once at office of the secretary or recorder of their own school or college (students enrolled in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, School of Music, School of Education, and School of Public Health, please note that application blanks may be obtained and filed in the Registrar's Office, Room 4, University Hall). Please do not delay until the last day, as all diplomas and certificates must be lettered and signed, and we shall be great- ly helped in this work by the early filing of applications and the resulting longer period for preparation. The filing of these applications does not Involve the payment of any fee whatso- ever. Shirley W. Smith If you Wish to finahce the burehase 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 miedium of a first mortgage. Such fi- nancing may effect a substantial saving in interest. To Students Graduating at Commtence- ment, May 2, 1943: Diplomas- not called for at the offices of the Recorders of therseerl Schools and Colleges, immediately following the Commencement Exe'cises, or at the Busi- ness Office by June 2, will be mailed C.O.D. The domestic postage payable under these conditions will be 27c for the larger sized rolled diplomas and 36e for the book form. Will each graduate, therefore, be cer- tain that the Diploma Clerk has his eor- rect mailing address to isure delivery b mail? The U.S. Mail Service will, it is expected, return any diplomas which can- not be delivered. Because of adverse conditions abroad, foeign Students 'hould School by July 1, 1943, the enlistee will be considered only for Midshipmen Train- ing and not medical training. If b, V-1 or V-7 medical enlistee finishes his pre-miedical course by July 1, 1943. aid is accepted by a Class A Medical School by July 1, 1943, the enlistee must immediately request that he be commis- sioned in Class H-V (P). A letter of in- strucetions will be sent from the Bureau of Naval Personnel to all Ensigns H-V () telling how to -request transfer. Thbse v-1 and V-7 enlistees finishing Pre-niedical School after July 1, 1943, must request medical training when their pre- medical training is completed. Ensigns H-V (P) have the option of remaihing H-V (P) and completing their schooling on inactive duty at their own expense or resignitg their conimissions as H-v (P) and going to a Naval Training School as Apprentice Seamen. Class V-12. It-V (P)'s may transfer to V-12 even though they are married at the time of transfer. Civilians who took the Navy V-12 test on April 2, 1943, will be assigned to Medi- cal School on the basis of their request for such assignment at the time of enlistment, the test score and the vacancies in the V-12 medical quota. V-12's who are assigned to medical training may be ordered to active duty at some Base Hospital pending a vacancy in the school to which such applicant shall li'e assigned for his medical training. v-i pre-medical students who are ex- cused from taking the Qualifying Exami- nation on April 20, 1943, will be transferred to V-12 upon completion of pre-medical training. PrObationary commissions in the Medi- cal and Dental Corps are still being is- sued as of this date. Since an individual is eligible fo H-V (P) as soon as he has been accepted by a Class A Medical or Dental School he may request transfer to H-V (P) even though he -will not complete his pre-medical training prior to July 1, 1943. It is to be noted that all-acceptances to Class A 1fed- iMal Schools are upon the cfriditIon that the student will meet the prescribed re- quirements for entrance. Pre-medical and pre-dental students will be automatically assigned to medical or dental shools in the Navy College Train- ing Program as vacancies in quota exist. "Pre-miedibal and pe-dental studnts will be assigned to Pre-medical o~ Pre-der tfll Schools inasmuch as such is indicated as their major field of study. - B. D. Thuma Sophomore and Junior Engineering St- dents: All sophomore and junior engi- neering students, subject to selective Service, who wish voluntary induction and assignment to the Army Specialzed Tran- g rogram are asked to leave their names at 1508'Ractham Building as soon as pbs- sible. -- B. 1. Thuma To all staff members and employees: All those who find it necessary to file requests for supplementary gasoline ra- tion for passenger cars ("B" or "0" Book) for either driving to and from work, driv- ing personal car on University business, or to carry on other ocupations, should mail their original applications or renew. als to H. S. Anderson at the Buildings and Grounds Department, University Ext. 317, and not directly to the Local Gasoline Rationing Board. These applications must be approved by the Committee in charge of the Organized Transportation Plan in the University and transmitted b it to the rationing board. Any informatio cohcerning supple- mentary gasoline rationing should be ob- tained by callingrUniversity Extension 317. L. M. Gram, Chairman, Organized Transportation Plan Seniors in Aeronautical Engineering: There will be available in the Departneht of "Aeronautical Engineering for the Sum- mer Term of 1943, two Frank P. Sheehan Scholarships. The selection of cadidates for these scholarships is made very largely on the basis of scholastic standing. Stu- dents wishing to make application should address a letter to Dr. A. M. Kuethe, B-47 East Engineering Building, giving a brief statemenit of their qualifications and ex- perience in regard to both -their scholastic work and any outside experience they may have had. A statement should also be made giving their plans for further study In Aeonauticl Engineering. Appliatins will be received up to May 5, 1943. Juniors and Seniors in Aeronautical En- gineering: There Will be available in the the Matson Line, which operates many merchant ships for the gov- ernment. By -"a pure coincidence, WSA Counsel Radner, who issued the order, formerly was connected with the Matson Line's legal divi- sion. The fate of American fliers in the Doolittle raid has raised the question: What happens to airmen who go down over Europe? Here is the answer from an officer of the U.S. bomber command in Eng- land. If fliers bail out and get down safely over France, Belgium or occupied Europe, their chances of getting back to England are pretty good. They {become pris- oners of war, but in the course of exchanging prisoners, they may soon get back to base. If they bail out over Germany, there's not much chance of get- ting back. But so far as we know, the treatment of air prisoners is similar to that of other prisoners, and varies according to rank. There is one incident, how- ever, that damns the German record-the story of Paddy Finu- cane. Most people suppose that the famous RAF ace lost his life because his Spitfire crashed into the channel after being hit over France. The truth is-though this has never been published-thht -as Pin- ucane was falling, he was strafed by German machine gunfire, and he was already dead when he hit the water. Thus a new meaning comes to Finucane's famous phrase, "This is it, chaps." (Popyright, 1943, United Features Synd.) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN