PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY; APRIL 4,144 .. - _ _ w...... _ a .._ ._ , _., ... A . a _ .... -- Fifty-Fourth Year I'd Rather Be Right By, SAMUEL GRAFTON Holy Week Message 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 mal $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 NEW YORK, April 3.-Izvestia, the Russian government newspaper, now comes out and says it is by no means in love with Badoglio. It adds that the Soviet recognition granted to him is not full recognition. All this is bad news for those whose complete foreign policy it is to point out, once a fortnight, that Russia has just committed a unilateral action. Thus they have been shouting for weeks that Russia loves Badoglio more than we do, that she has unilaterally lifted him up to a high place, etc. So long as Russia misbehaves, this crew has a foreign policy, which consists entirely of polnting ait that Russia is misbehaving. This is a very narrow basis for a foreign policy, for when Russia (probably with malice afore- thought) fails to misbehave, this group is left without any foreign policy whatever. The anti-Russia commentators need a mis- behaving Russia in their, business, for then they can glow about the need fof' unity. But when Russia makes motions toward unity, they switch the glow off. They never love world unity so much as when they have the perhaps agreeable feeling that prospects for it are impaired. When unity ac- tually arrives, and sits on their doorsteps, and smiles wanly at them, they somehow fail to pick it up, hug it. or otherwise make it feel it has friends and a home. THERE is a fine chance to establish unity now, for Izvestia makes the suggestion that we do not have to wait until Rome is taken before broadening and liberalizing the Badoglio gov- ernment. In fact Izvestia seems at a loss to know how Rome ever got into the discussion in the first place. The Italian people are equally at a loss, for to them the phrase: "Wait until Rome" has begun to take on the coloration of the equally dusty" promise: "Wait until Christ- mas." The amazingly frank Izvestia editorial raises the broad question of whether our foreign pol- icy actually has any substance, or whether it is degenerating into a sort of comedy of man- ners, a querulous business of complaining about unilateral action as a cover for never recommending positive action of any kind, uni or multi. As the situation now stands, Britain has de- clared for the King of Italy. Russia has declared for a broader regime than now exists, and we are saying nothing, but only standing by, wait- ing until somebody does something, whereupon we can denounce the offender for taking uni- lateral action. That will give us something to do, and we will then happily be able to prove that we have a foreign policy, said policy consisting of pointing out that somebody else has taken unilateral action. As to how long our foreign affairs officials and the commentators who take from them can make a living by this negative approach, it is hard to say. For there can be unilateral sins of omission as well as of commission, and our not doing anything is a kind of unilateral negative. It has pretty much the same uncooperative over- tones as a unilateral affirmative. In Italy, we insist that all action be joint action, but that no action be taken. We stand four-square for harmonious do-nothingism. In practice, our concept of multilateral action is becoming something like that one-third-plus- one vote in the Senate, which can block any- thing. We are laying ourSelves open to the charge that we insist on complete agreement, in order that there may be none. (Copyright, 1944, New York Post Syndicate) [jOLY WEEK is concerned with the fact that the Son of God suffered and died for our sins. It was the Person Who died for the reason for that death that separated this Death from every other. The figure of Christ on the Cross has become a glorious symbol of our Redemption but there was nothing glorious in the scene that presented itself to the casual onlooker at Calvary. He could see only the dirt and filth and blood that were to be expected at such an execution. Only the loving eyes of His Mother and the few faithful fol- lowers saw our Redemption being ac- complished. Suffering and pain are the com- men lot of man and visit every life. We can spend our lives trying to dodge them, or we can try to un- derstand them and find their pur- pose in our lives. A calm consid- eration of the lessons that Holy GRIN AND BEAR I Week teaches is the beginning of an understanding of the purpose of e suffering in the Divine Plan. Christ suffered horribly during that Holy f Week which became a preface to aHis glorious Resurrection. Our reaction to pain and disap- e pointment and suffering of every e kind will depend upon how well we understand Christ's suffering. In a dlittle book called "The Rainbow of eSorrow,"Monsignor Sheen observes: "The world today is full of those who see no meaning in pain. Knowing - nothing of the Redemption of Our Lord they are unable to fit pain into a pattern; it becomes just an odd patch on the crazy quilt of life. Life becomes so wholly unpredictible for them that 'a troubled manhood fol- lows their baffled youth'." Frank J. McPhillips Rector at St. Mary Chapel tT By Lichty . IN vr el .. I . Editorial Staff Jane Farrant Claire Sherman Stan Wallace. Evelyn Phillips Harvey Frank Bud Low . . Jo Ann Peterson Mary Anne Olson . Marjorie Rosmarin . . . .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 Elizabeth A. Carpenter . . . Business Manager Margery Batt . . . Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: NEVA NEGREVSKI Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. WISCONSIN TEST: Domestic Policies May Kill Wilikie Nonination FOR A MAN who has insisted that he is not seeking the presidential nomination, Gov. Thomas E. Dewey is doing well-and stands a good chance of doing even better in today's pri- maries in Wisconsin. With 106 pledged and claimed delegates to the Republican National Convention to Willkie's ten in the claimed class, Dewey is leading the field. And Wendell Willkie, who has little chance for the nomination unless he can demonstrate a strong popular following, has staked his imme- diate political future on the Wisconsin primaries. Wilkie pioked Wisconsin for his showdown because the primary is open to al voters, and the rank and file of the party-where Willkie Pan lay claim to his greatest strength-can vote relatively free from pressure by party leaders. Dewey's chance to pick up a few more votes, however, lies in the fact that Willkie has in- vaded Wisconsin and made more than 40 speeches in the traditionally isolationist state. He has talked constantly for the need for inter- national cooperation (which was convincing enough even in a state where the Chicago Trib- une holds sway) and the need for a liberalized Republican party. It was on his second point that ie went astray. A fence-straddling position with gen- eralizations about security for workers and social advances on the one hand and individual initiative and opportunity for the average man on the other was rather too reminiscent of the reactionary Republicans. Dewey, on the other hand, has said nothing about anything. Willkie has said just enough so that the voters may not be convinced. Today's vote will tell. -Margaret Farier EXIF' FASCiSM: Supreme Court Ruling ay Mean End of Dies TEXAS po'-taxer Martin Dies, who for the past few weeks has been carrying on a vicious campaign to discredit anti-fascist Walter Win- chell and the progressive CIO Political Action Committee, may find re-election for a ninth term impossible when his constituents go to the polls this November. In 1942, Dies received support from only five per cent of the voting population of his district, and won the election. Because of the "lily- white" primaries and the poll tax restriction orn voting, Dies, labor baiter and Roosevelt hater, was thus chosen to "represent" a district of about 330,000 people. However, the forces of democracy are at work-re-election will be harder for Dies this year.. The CIO in cooperation with many AFL groups is campaigning to get people out to pay their poll taxes. Poll tax payments have al- ready risen 25 per cent, and among the Negroes in Dies' district, 40 per cent. Plainly this has Dies scared, and has caused his smear tactics against the CIO. Yesterday, an even more ominous note for Dies was sounded when the Supreme Court, reversing le 9 1; = > 144 eg meIc -i The LABOR UNIONS, having made great and rapid strides forward since the defeat of Herbert Hoover, are now met with something like an im- passe. As Professor Mentor Williams pointed out in a recent speech,, the super-conciliatory knuckling under policy of the AFL during the last war extended itself into the 20's and hampered the advance of labor until around 1935. Now, with the growing alienation of militant laborites like Walter Reuther and George Addes from President Roosevelt, or vice versa, that advance is again arrested. Labor-baiters have fanned the flames of middle class dislike into a raging animosity towards organ- ized labor. To that group has been added a substantial number of sol- diers. By careful distortion and subtle implantation newspapers managed to give labor an unde- servedly black eye. Congress has already passed discriminatory la- bor legislation and waits eagerly, between torrents of hot air, for a chance to revive the dear dead days of industrial despotism. Labor has its back against the wall. Con- gress threatens momentarily to snatch collective bargaining away from the laborer and, at the slight- est provocation, to scuttle the Na- tional Labor Relations Act that legalizes it. What to do? Well, being young and brash, and having been severely criticized for "negativism," I will herewith outline the ideal procedure Phil Murray, Will- iam Green and their fellow union mogols should follow to save labor from the legislative hatchet that hov- ers over their heads. First, it must be conceded that a germ of truth underlies the false- hoods of those who fire their cannon- ades against organized labor. No group in so disadvantageous a spot can afford to have any blots on its escutcheon large enough to be capit- alized upon by its would-be destroy- ers. From there, in order to wipe out the blots, the formula reads: incor- poration and consolidation. Unions must not fight against one another under any circumstances, for by so doing, they lose sight of the common foe against whom every bit of energy must be directed. *1 i WASHINGTON, April 3.-This column recent- ly reported certain flagrant cases of war plant loafing. It should also be pointed out that no- where has loafing become a finer art than in the Congress of the United States. In all fairness, it should be noted that this is not true of the great majority of Congress- men, who work hard, earn more than their salaries, and are a credit to the nation. But a rabid, fabble-rousing minority spoils the repu- tatibn of the majority. Also, there has developed more quibbling and daWdling over major issues than ever before in recent years. War has speeded up the nation's production but not its legislative machinery. For more than three months, the House and Senate hemmed and hawed over a tax bill, only to bring forth a mouse. An almost equal amount of time was frittered away in passing a soldiers' Vote bill which did not give servicemen as much voting privilege as they had before. Walk into the gallery of the House of Repre- sentatives almost any afternoon and you will find men like Clare Hoffman of Michigan and John Rankin of Mississippi bellowing by the hour on picayune political matters far removed from the issues for which U.S. troops overseas are giving their lives. Sample Afternoon in the House. Almost any afternoon it is the same story. Take the afternoon of March 27. The House met that day at 12 noon and adjourned at 4:22 p.m. During ,more than half of the four-hour and 22- minute session, members were forced to listen to a gum-beating contest betwgen Representative Hoffman, who was delivering a tirade against Walter Winchell, and Representative Ralph E. Church of Illinois, who was making a political stump speech against the Kelly Democratic ma- chine in Chicago. Several times, Representatives Herman Eb- erhaiter of Pennsylvania and Adolph Sabath of Illinois, chairman of the Rules Committee, broken in With appeals to the chair and to Hoffman to desist. But Hoffman roared them down. "We are wasting the time of all members of this House on the floor, when important legisla- tion is coming up," Eberharter implored. "Why don't we get on with the business of the House?" But Hoffman bellowed on. Time is no object to the jabbering Michigander, nor does he worry about the $45 a page paid by the taxpayers for printing his outbursts in the Congressional Rec- ord. Hardly had Hoffman finished, when his windy colleague, Congressman Church, took up the cudgels. Church and Sabath clashed violently over whether the Kelly machine was "stealing pennies" from widows. Hoffman, who by this time had his second wind, also horned in. As the time-wasting, political debate con- tinued. most members in disgust left the floor for more important work in their offices. Con- .e gressional courtesy, for some archaic reason, prevented their shutting off debate and protect- ing their own reputations. Farley Fears Being Ousted,. .. The other day, big Jim Farley dropped a re- mark which didn't attract much public atten- tion, but packed powerful significance among the politicoes. "I don't discuss politics on bus- iness trips," said Jim when queried by newsmen. This apparently innocent remark meant one of two things-or probably two things wrapped into one. First, it may be true, as previously rumored, that the Coca Cola people (for whom Jim works) are getting worried about Jim arousing too much political animosity. After all, you can't have too many political enemies and sell soft drinks at the same time. Second, Jim may be lying low until after the next New York State Democratic meeting, at which time the O'Connells of Albany and other Roosevelt forces threaten to unseat Farley as chairman of the Democratic State Committee. Despite his pipe-down, however, Roosevelt Democrats in New York are determined to de- pose Jim as State chairman. They say it would be absolutely disastrous to let him go to the Chicago convention as head of the New York delegation and oppose a fourth term. Meanwhile, it has become more and more apparent that Big Jim is the man really behind Harry Woodring, the little gentleman from Kan- sas whom Roosevelt finally ousted as Secretary of War. Harry claims that he has either raised or has pledged $1,050,000 to put a separate Dem- ocratic candidate in the field. Politicoes credit Jim Farley with having raised the lion's share, ably assisted by Eugene Stetson, president of the Guaranty Trust Company, who, like Farey's business backers, also hails from Georgia. Note-Big question in political minds is: If Jim defeats Roosevelt by backing Woodring's third party, would he accept a Republican re- ward by taking a Cabinet post in a Republican Administration? Some say Jim would do any- thing to get rack at his old friend and boss, the President. SBaruch Turns Cheek ... Gaunt. grey Bernie Baruch, elder statesman of the war administration, never objects to public criticism, especially when it comes from such a source as rootingtootin', riproarin' Representa- tive Rankin of Mississippi. The other day, Rankin got off' another of his many speeches. In it, he tore the hide off Baruch regarding war contracts, claiming that,in 1921, Baruch single-handed had upset the entire stock market. Newsmen later got Baruch on the phone and asked him to comment. Bernie, who has a great sense of humor, replied: "You know I would not deny doing anything as important as that." (Copyright, 1944. United Features Syndicate) .04 "It ain't that I don't wanna play with you fellas, it's just that I prefer psychological warfare!" DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN { TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1944 VOL. LIV No. 110 All notices for the Daly 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 Student Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students Wednesday afternoon, April 5, from 4 to 6 o'clock. To the Members of the University Council: The April meeting of the University Council has been can- celled. Louis A. Hopkins, Secretary Automobile Regulation: Students possessing driving permits who have not reported the 1944 license num- bers of their cars to the Dean of Students' Office must do so at once. Failure to comply with this request; will result in the loss of driving privileges. If you wish to finance the purchase of a home, or if you have purchased improved property on a land con- tract and owe a balance of approxi-I mately 60 per cent of the value of the property, the Investment Office, 100 South Wing of University Hall, would be glad to discuss financing through the medium of a first mort- gage. Such financing may effect aI substantial saving in interest. Faculty of the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts: The five- week freshman reports will be due Saturday, April 8, in the Academicj Counselors' Office, 108 Mason Hall. Ilopwood Contestants Attention: The deadline for the Hopwood man- uscripts has been moved forward to 4:30 on Monday afternoon, April 17. .Lectres La Sociedad Hispanica presents Sr. Francisco Villegas who will lec- ture on "La Vida /cademica De un Estudiante en Costa Rica" (a stu- dent's life in Costa Rica) on Wed- nesday, April 5, at 8 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Admission by ticket or uniform. Mathematics Lecture: Professor Paul R. Halmos of Syracuse Univer- sity will give a lecture on "The Alge- bra of Measure" on Wednesday, April 5, at 4:15 p.m., in 3011 Angell Hall. Academic Notices Dr. Litchfield's Class will meet on April 8 at 10:00 a.m. in the same room. This is in place of the class that was to meet -on Thursday. Concerts Organ Recital: Palmer Christian, University Organist, will present the annual hour of music on Good Friday afternoon, April 7, at 4:15. The pro- gram will include compositions by Frescobaldi, Bach, Karg-Elert, Wag- ner, Mulling, Bossi and Dupre, The general public is cordially invited. Events Today Junior Research Club: The April meeting will be held at 7:30 tonight in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. The program will be given by Elmon L. Cataline of the School of Pharmacy and by Frederick H. Test of the Department of Zoology. Bacteriology Seminar will meet today at 4:30, Rm. 1564 East Medical Building. Subject: "Current Inves- tigations of AntibioticdSubstances." All interested are invited. G ALLUP'S polls have repeatedly shown that a commanding major- ity of workers favor the consolida- tion of the CIO and the AF of L whose inexcusable jurisdictional disputes weakened the position of labor in general beyond measure. The most ardent friend of labor cannot con- done an inter-union strike which has nothing to do with wages or hours or working conditions, but only satis- fies the aspirations of competing un- ion bosses. Consolidation would ef- fectually eliminate this evil. Those who hate labor, and they grow more raucus by the day, point an accusing finger at the unions and say, "See, they are irrespon- sible." Many unions, it must be admitted, do not have their books open to public examination-and the charge of irresponsibility can be made with some safety-though most often it is groundless. If a union obtained a state charter, thus changing its status from that of a fraternity to that of a corpora- tion, its books would be open books. Honest unions would have, nothing to lose and dishonest unions who denigrate the name of the whole movement-could be exposed with dispatch. Let one strong, responsible, incor- porated union represent all of organ- ized labor. Cries of monopoly may be raised, but not if this labor union, serving the best interests of society, is regarded as a public utility and analogous to a monopolistic gas com- pany that functions better on a non- competitive basis. So regarded, a labor monopoly- is justified-with the proviso that like all allowable mon- opolies, it be immediately subject to government regulation, so that such a body could not abuse its new pow- ers. e'Simple, isn't it? -Bernard Rosenberg Isolationist Hoffman.. . Isolationist Rep. Clare Hoffman inserted into the Congressional Rec- ord copies of letters he had received from Michigan inductees who were addressed by a/Navy chief petty offi- cer: "You have an isolationist rep- resentative up there . . . Let's see, what's his name? Oh, yes, Clare Hoffman . . . I understand he's al- most ready to declare war on Hitler." In a speech prepared for delivery in the House, Hoffman said that "no oficer has the right to attempt to influence the political views" of men in the service. PM o'clock, Mrs. George G. Brown, 1910 Hill Street, Wednesday, April 5. Cerele Francais: There will be a meeting of the Cercle Francais Thursday evening at eight o'clock, April 6, in the Michigan League. Stu- Michigan Youth for Democratic Phi Kappa Phi: The pins and cer- Action will meet at 8 tonight in ll- tificates for new Phi Kappa Phi 16 of the Union. Dr. Francis Skill- members have been received. Please man Onderdonk, author and lectur- call for them some time this week in er, will discuss "From United States r ,,t~ ?o~oalTihar hI[7P to United Nations." Motion pictures 2 Rm. 5 general Lrary eween 2 and 5. Telephone Ext. 763. BARNABY I _ _ _,~ A F7 By Crockett Johnson and lantern slides will be shown, and a discussion period will follow. Pub- lic is invited. Comin oEvents Haydn's -Oratorio *Creation" will ------ Doln't fell .stores like fthat, son. /- toi-7i{L. .. The invisible leprechauns I { I