TIl 1WRICGAN DAILY 1944 .. . - . ft Fu tYear Fifty-Fourth Year I i d Rather Be Right By SAMUEL GwrFON 7-7 GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty IS " % . a 71 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 itor 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. Subscriptionsduring the regular school year by car- rier $425, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 Jane Farrant Claire Sherman Stan Wallace-. Evelyn Phillips Harvey Frank Bud Low . . Jo Ann Peterson Mary Anne Olson Marjorie Rosmarin Editoria Sa Staf . . Managing Editor . Editorial Director - . . . City Editor Associate Editor . . . . Sports Editor * Associate Sports Editor * Associate Sports Editor . . Women's Editor Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Wlizbeti A. Carpenter. . . Business Manager Uargery Battarn. . Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: BETTY KOFFMAN Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. RED CROSS: Women's Response to Drive Is Discouraging University men have already topped their Red Cross quota, but coeds are once again demon- strating that they think a minimum donation is sufficient. More than two-thirds of the civilians on cam- pus are women, yet to date they have contrib- uted only about $100 more than the men. This is a shameful record. The women on campus have only two more days to prove that they are keeping faith with. our fighting men by contributing more liberally to the Red Cross. Their reward will not be a recognition night, or anything of that sort; the Red Cross is not that type of a drive. It will lie in knowing that the funds, 90 per cent of which go to the armed forces, are guaranteeing comfort and safety to the men overseas. -Doris Peterson FACTS AIRED: Correction of University Lighting Is Necessity W ITH THE airing of the facts about the bad lighting conditions in the General Library most students who have been squinting over their bopks for years heaved a sigh of relief. $40,000 of the Legislature's recent $175,000 appropriation has been earmarked for lighting improvements and Walter Roth, assistant super- intendent of the Buildings and Grounds Depart- ment, has stated that lighting improvements in the General Library study halls have been placed at the top of the list. During war-time, of course, shortages of ma- terial and men will prevent the undertaking of extended improvements. But the facts revealed prove that every opportunity should be utilized to alleviate the bad lighting conditions. -Kathie Sharfman 13ALLOT BILL: Soldiers' Views Should Be Given Consideration With the question of the President's action on the Federal Vote Bill still up in the air, it is interesting .to note the comment of a U.S. Army man overseas-with an artillery battalion in Italy: "Here's my opinion on voting-I want to Wse my privilege, of course, and so do many of the other soldiers overseas, if they can let us do it without making us go through a mess of rd tape. It seems as if they want to discou'r- age us the way they're going at things at home." It is not the governors in 42 states or news- paper columnists or governmental officials who are primarily concerned about a federal ballot, it is the men who will be assisted or hampered in voting. -Dorothy Potts Test of Democray - - "But the election, along with its incidental and NEW YORK, March 28.-Mr. Dies gets on the radio and trades verbal punches with Mr. Walter Winchell, taking advantage of Mr. Winchell's Crossley rating of 99.9 or thereabouts. Then, having slugged it out with Mr. Winchell, in mike- to-mike combat, Mr. Dies removes his boxing gloves and purple trunks, puts on his quasi- judicial robes as head of a Congressional com- mittee, and investigates Mr. Winchell. These is something a little askew in this pic- ture of one and the same man acting as both gladiator and judge. When Mr. Dies demanded, and obtained, radio time to answer Mr. Winchell, he made the issue between himself and Mr. Winchell a personal one, and, I think, made it necessary that a third party investigate the feud. I do not believe the point needs laboring. Mr. Dies cannot aim a right to Mr. Winchell's chin, and a left to his mid-section, then swing around, change neckties, and hand in an im- partial report on the merits of the fight. Mr. Dies makes the amazing charge that there is an actual, deliberate conspiracy of abuse under way against the Congress of the United States, a kind of verbal Guy Fawkes plot against our parliamentary body. He calls the conspirators a "smear bund." He charges that Mr. Winchell is being used as a transmission belt by these low-lifes, whoever they are. This is an interesting extension of the "dignity of Congress" issue, which has arisen this year OThe Pe n9dan FM ALL FOR dis-interring the bones of the New Deal and breathing political life into them. Mr. Roosevelt has pronounced the death of his advisers' brain child, but Mr. Wallace may yet live to revive it and behold this organism burst forth from its ashes with the fresh vigor of surpressed energy. "Only where there are graves," wrote Nietzsche in Thus Spake Zara- thrustra, "are there resurrections." President Roosevelt's absorption with the war has caused him oftentimes to forget, and some- times to betray, the cause of liberalism. Rarely, within the precincts of Washington, will a man stand up and denounce the forces of reaction these days. The fate of men like William Morse Lovett against whom a bill of attainder was leveled by Congress and the dismissal of Malcolm Cowley from the old OFF and the intimidation by the Dies Committee of government officials who show any markedly zealous anti-fascism have served to make liberals relapse into an un- wonted timidity that forces them to cower from one end of Pennsylvania Avenue to the other. Vurthermore, a regular exodus of professors, idealists, thinkers and "visionaries" has taken place. These men were driven or have fled from our government into obscurity at a pace which can but dishearten and amaze progres- sives even as the poll-tax-Rightest bloc cackles with glee. Thurman Arnold got gently "kicked upstairs" to a judgeship because he threatened to make the anti-trust laws a real weapon of the people. But, one trust was smashed to bits: the Brain Trpst. And what unbounded delight did the Old Guard exhibit at this reversion to Hooveristic idea hatred. So, the compliant Mr. Roosevelt sub- stituted a business man monopoly. This group has' a strangle hold on our government today. They must be given due credit for a good job on arms production. but, if they should become' too firmly entrenched in office, they will danger ously imperil our democracy. IT IS CERTAIN, in any case, that the spirit of reform-without which advancement is im- possible-has, for the time, by-passed the United States. From 1933 to 1942 we put one hesitant foot on the first rung of a dimly apprehended ladder, in an unsuccessful attempt to climb up out of the sloth that smiled upon social inequity, vice, wanton abuse of liesure, malnutrition and scarcity. But, lo! this little governmental step upwards turns out to be the culmination, not just the beginning, of our ascent. And now, happy day, it is time to go down again. The fast disappearing ladder needs to be shaken and chopped up lest it tempt us to mount another rung. Or better still, we need to whack fiendishly at that one foot-drub it and hatchet it-till, by an attrition, it slips off and backs away. Undo the good. All hail King Chaos and his courtier, Laissez Faire. Conservatism, tempered by Harold Ickes, is in the saddle, and liberals stand apathetically by. This comes from a fundamental error they have made in identifying the New Deal insep- arably with the President. The personality of this great man does, to be sure, exemplify a tremendous movement of which he was the tool. However, New Dealism, or the notion that our government should labor for the betterment of society as opposed to Stand-Patism or the notion that we should do nothing at all, transcends any one man or group of men.. It is the upsurge of popular will. Inattention to that will calls for a greater upsurge. The times, in fact, call for a whole re-consolidation of lines calculated to increase the support of men like Henry Wallace. This we must do; for, when progressives retreat (the very terms are contradictory) they cease to exist. -Bernard Rosenberg as a new, separate, distinct issue in American life, like the tariff. The "dignity of Congress" issue was raised by Senator Barkley when he broke with the President for ten minutes last month. The "dignity of Congress" issue flared up again last Friday, when Vice-President Wall- ace let drop an unfortunate remark to the Sen- ate about "parliamentary trickery," whereupon the Senate rose in its wrath and voted to beat out the brains of the Tennessee Valley Authority, just to show him. if the the "dignity of Congress" is a real issue, there is only one way in which Congress can meet that issue, and that is with dignity. I am glad Congress is beginning to think of itself in an institutional sense. Congress, as Congress. suffers from a lack of the institutional feeling about itself. It doesn't bother, for instance, to tell its story to the people, who have only the sketchiest idea of the prodigies of hard work performed by a number of the committees. Self- consciousness may lead to pride, and pride may lead, in time, to self-discipline. A Congress conscious of its dignity, and of its institutional importance, may someday rebuke a Rankin for using words like "kike" on the floor of the House. Such a Congress could rise as one man against an occasional loose-lip com- ment, such as Mr. Winchell's shocking reference to the "House of Reprehensibles." Yet Congress must ask itself if the road to dignity lies in letting one man, Mr. Dies, race to the radio, as a personally aggrieved plaintiff, to plead his own case on commercially-spon- .sored time; then change his clothes, put his finger-tips demurely together, and act as judge, on behalf of the whole House. Con- gress must ask itself if it wants its dignity to stand or fall by Mr. Dies' fancy story of a "censpiracy"; whether it wants to risk the public laughter that must follow failure to prove that eerie midnight tale. Let us have a committee on the dignity of Congress. It should be a committee of dignified Congressmen, to hear both Mr. Dies and Mr. Winchell. At present Mr. Dies stands for "Con- gress" and Mr. Winchell stands for "the Press," and a public issue is being settled in a private war between them, in which most of Congress and most of the press have no part. It is time for third parties to take over, reducing both these men to what they are, feudists and witnesses, not institutions. (Copyright 1944. New York Post Syndicate) DREW' PEARSON'S C T MERRY-GO-ROUND WAHINGTON, March 28.-It hasn't been offi- cially announced, but U.S. Amiassador W. Aver- ell Harriman is coming back from the Soviet, perhaps for good. He has not been the success that was hoped. That is not necessarily a reflection on Harriman, because being a successful ambassador in Moscow is the toughest, diplomatic assignment in the world. However, an ambassador is like a news- paperman. He is supposed to report on what is going to happen in the country to which he is attached and he is not supposed to get scooped. Harriman, however, has been badly scooped on six different occasions. He has failed to notify the State Department in advance re- garding six resounding Soviet slaps. Slap No. 1 was against the British when Prav- da, reported rumors of separate British peace talks with German Foreign Minister Ribbontrop. No. 2 was the Izvestia slap at the Vatican. After this, the President couldn't help com- menting sorrowfully that there are several mil- lion Catholic voters in the U.S.A., and that the Russians couldn't have thought of a better way to alienate them from FDR. No. 3 was Russia's rebuff of Poland's Govern- ment-in-Exile, and the refusal of Allied inter- vention. Here again, there are some 3,000,000 Polish voters in this country, most of whom went down the line for FDR from 1932 to 1940. Other Russian Slaps .. . No. 4 was the Pravda slap at Wendell Willkie, who had fought for more Russian lend-lease, raised the roof because the Red Army wasn't getting enough planes, and was one of Russia's best friends in the U.S.A. No. 5 was the announcement of 16 autonomous Soviet states, interpreted by the Chicago Trib- une and other isolationist enemies of the Presi- dent as being a move to outvote the Allies at the peace table.. No. 6 was the recognition of the Badoglio gov- ernment in Italy just two days after we had made up our minds to ditch Badoglio.. None of these incidents was reported in ad- vance by Harriman. However, the future of Mr. Harriman is not considered nearly as important as the question of why Russia slaps down her friends. Best ex- planation in diplomatic circles is that the Rus- sians wage a new type of aggressive diplomacy d i g .. ti bF 1F(,,,, Q r cefteri 2L f/he e6k0t - Q4, c r 4'- " ! ' 1 I6h3 1.~*.chicav Time. Inc. 3 -' "Oh, that's a congressional committee-studying our methods for a new simpler income tax form!" ._..,_ ; DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN i WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1944 VOL. LIV No. 105 AK 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 Detroit Armenian Club Scholar- ship: Undergraduate students of Armenian parentage residing in the Detroit area who have earfied 30 hours of college credit are eligible to apply for the $100 scholarship offered' for 1944-45 by the Detroit Armenian Women's Club. Applications must be made by May 15. For further details, inquire of Dr. F. E. Robbins, 1021 Angell Hall. Mentor Reports: Reports on stand-j ings of all civilian engineering fresh- men and all engineers in Terms 1, 2, and 3 of the prescribed V-12 curricu- lum will be expected from faculty members at the end of the fifth week and again at the end of the tenth Seek, April 8 and May 13. Report blanks will be furnished by campus mail. Please refer routine questions to Emalene Mason, Office of the Dean, (Extension 575), who will han- dle the reports; otherwise, call A. D. Moore, Head Mentor, Extension 2136. Martha Cook Building: Women in- terested in residence in the Building for the academic year 1944-45 are asked to complete their applications or to call for appointments at once. Mrs. Diekema. Phone 6216. Lectures Dr. James Francis Cooke, Presi- dent of the Presser Foundation, and Editor of "The Etude," will speak at 8:30 p.m., Friday, March 31, in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Build- ing, on "The Fifth Freedom." The public is cordially invited. French Lecture: Miss Helen Hall, Curator, Institute of Fine Arts, will give the sixth of the French lectures sponsored by the Cercle Francais, Thursday, March 30, at 4:10 p.m. in Rm. D, Alumni Memorial Hall. The title of her lecture is: "Daumier et d'autres artistes de la vie francaise." Miss Hall will show slides. Admission by ticket. Servicemen free. Academic Notices Speeded Reading Course: The spe- cial short course in speeded reading will be given for students wishing to improve their reading ability. Those interested call Mr. Morse, Ex. 682: The course will meet twice a week for eight weeks. There will be no charge for this non-credit course. Students who had eye movement pictures tak- en last term may obtain their prints, Rm. 4205 UHS. Biological Chemistry 111: Refund slips are now available. Non-medical students may obtain their refund slips from the departmental store-, keeper today between 2 and 5 p.m. Medical students will receive their refund slips through their class offi- cers. Geology 12 and 65: Fina-Make-Up Examinations for fall term will be given Saturday, April 1, in R9. 2054, Natural Science Building, 8:30 a.m. Make-up examination in Psychol- ogy 31, will be held Friday, March 31, 4-6 in Room 1121 N.S. History Make-Up Examinations for the fall term will be held at 4 p.m., Friday, March 31, in Rm. C, H.H. Events Today President Ruthven will speak for the Post-War Council on Post-War Record Concerts . . . To the Editor: The facilities of the Horace J. Rackham Building are traditionally reserved for the use of graduate stu- dents and servicemen. For obvious reasons its study halls are barred to undergraduates. Every Thursday evening a record concert is given in the spacious men's lounge, to which only graduate students and service- men are invited; all undergrads are decidedly unwelcome. I believe that this restriction is most unfair for these reasons: First of all, very few grads have attended the concerts of late, so that the Thursday evening audiences have been largely composed of servicemen, Imany of whom are now leaving cam- pus. Secondly, it is undemocratic to deprive any. Michigan student of the privilege of listening to a record con- cert of symphonic music in a build- ing of such ample facilities. The last few years have seen many inovations and concessions on the part of the University administra- tion. The opening of the Rackham record concerts to all students would be just such a wartime adjustment, a generous gesture that would win the hearty appreciation of many music lovers. -Madeleine Levenberg Education at 7:30 this evening in the League. Professor Clarence H. Graham of Brown University will speak at 4:15 today in the amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. He will discuss "Some Problems in Visual Psychol- ogy." Professor Graham, in coopera- tion with others, has conducted a number of experiments on visual phenomena. A.S.M.E.: There will be a meeting of the Student Branch of the A.S.M.E. tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 302 of the Michigan Union. Col. H. W. Miller will speak on "Fighting Equipment of This War." Inter-Guild will have its luncheon today at Lane Hall at noon. Dr. E. W. Blakeman, Religious Counsellor at the University, will speak and lead a discussion. The Association Music Hour, con- ducted by Mr. Robert Taylor, will present the last part of Verdi's "Manzoni" Requiem and Giovanni Gabrieli's "Processional and Cere- monial Music" at Lane Hall this eve- ning at 7:30. Everyone interested is cordially invited. Coming Events Tea at International Center is served each week on Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. for foreign stu- dents, faculty, townspeople, and American student friends of foreign students. The A.I.E.E. will meet Thursday evening at 7:30 in the Michigan Union. Movies, from the General Electric Co., will be shown on the "Electric Eye" (phototube) and "Steam Turbines." Our vice-chair- man has left with the A.S.T.P. units, so an election will be held to fill the vacancy. Come and vote for, your friend! Refreshments will also be served. Michigan Youth for Democratic Action will hold an Executive Board meeting at 2:30 p.m. Saturday in the Union. All members must attend. Spies in Fire .. PEOPLE in the democracies which are at war find it difficult to understand the attitude of the Euro- pean neutrals. If Americans would think back to the attitude large num- bers of them displayed before Pearl Harbor, when this was just as much a war for civilized priciples as it is now, and was going even more badly, they might be able to understand. Particularly hard to forgive, how- ever, is the attitude of the Irish gov- ernment, which shares so completely in Anglo-Saxon culture and would certainly have been overrun and de- stroyed by the Germans long ago if it were not for the defensive struggle of. the British. Eire's attitude is probably dictated by the Catholic Church, and by their centuries of hatred for the British, a hatred which caused them to attempt to rebel in the middle of the First World War. On the eve of invasion, the British and Americans have demanded that Eire shall send home the German and Japanese spies who take advan- tageof their diplomatic status in Dublin. The Eire government has refused, as it was expected to do. ".h Allp x-himn isc~nnn completely unfamiliar to genteel U.S.-British diplomats. The Russians know exactly what they want and keep after it. For two years, their chief aim has been the second front. And since Teh- eran, where a definite pledge was given, the Russians have been dis- turbed over rumors that the sec- ond front might not materialize after all. So they have hammered home an aggressive, needling diplo- macy, until they get what they want. This is one of the things Amebas- sador Harriman will be asked to re- port on-if he can. Monarchist Servants . . The Peruvian Ambassador in Wash- ington, erudite' Don Manuel de Fre- yre y Santander, is dean of the diplo- matic corps. As such, he enjoys great distinction among his colleagues. The butler of the Peruvian Am- bassador, a Spaniard named Jose Escribano, is conscious of his mas- ter's distinction and serves him faithfully. Yet he has a distinc- tion in his own right. He is a lead- er among Spanish Republicans in Washington, and an ardent foe of Franco. Escribano's political activities came to the attention of the Spanish Am- bassador, Don Juan Francisco de Cardenas. He scowled and resolved to speak to his colleague, Ambassa- dor Freyre. "Why," he said to the dean of diplomats, "do you countenance these republican activities in your Em- bassy?" With only a trace of a smile, the Peruvian Ambassador replied, "And what would you have me say to Jose? Must one expect one's butler to be a monarchist?" Small Business Organizes A lot of mystery has surrounded the question of who paid for the radio recordings of Vice-President Wall- ace's speech before the American Business Congress. The big radio networks were unwilling to give him network time to broadcast his speech, so more than 500 radio records were made, at considerable expense, and air-expressed all over the country. Who paid the bill has been the sub- ject of considerable speculation. Most people have concluded it- was a labor union. However, here is the answer. The bill was paid by A. L. Blinder, a Chi- cago furniture manufacturer. Incidentally, Wallace's speech be- fore the American Business Con- gress climaxed the most successful small business meeting ever held in the U.S.A. It marked a long dis- tance from the fumbling, frustrat- ed convention of small business- men called by the Commerce De- partment during the early days of the New Deal-which got absolute- ly nowhere. Since then, small business has been I BARNABY The Great O'Malley Dam may never be built, Barnaby. And my nnlitical future hans in By Crockett Johnson Besides, I've already dined. At the home of an old Washington family on Pennsylvania Avenue. One member of the household is named Fala. He's a Scottish Terrier . .. None of the others Yes. Run along and enjoy your repast, m'boy. Leave your old Fairy Godfather