H P VII i C i4 i i---' it 'IV Pi t I 1. 17 - . : :. , K-" L IV 1U u2lrAlei JIALl Y i TuESDAY~a, r 18 i; 1q4 Fifty.Fourth Yea? !I I'd Rather Be Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON MERRY-G0EO PEARSON GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty 1: I 4 tk I / II Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Stu dent. 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- licatfon 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 mall $5.25. kFRRS8NTED FOR NATkON^.L A0iVERNTIS.4G &Y' National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representaive 420 MADISoN AVE. N e e 4. N. Y. f * CiAGOOA ITeR *Los AN#SLU $" 'SA1N 'AiC#SCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943 44 Editorial Staff Jan1e Parrant. Cla-re Serman stan Wallace . Evelyn Phillips Harvey Frank Bud Low. . Jo Ann Peterson Mary Anne Olson Marjorie Rosmrririn . . Managing Editor * . . Editorial Uietot . . . . City Editor . . . . Associate Editor . . . . . Sports Editor . . AssocIate Sports Editor . . Associate Sports Editor .,'Women's Editor * .Associate Womeh's E~dtor Business Staff Eligabeth A. Carpenter. . Business Manager Margery Batt . . Associate Business Manager Teephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: BARBARA HIRINTON dit/riatls published in The Mibigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. MUSIC BOSS: etrill o's Selish an grings Congress Action AMES C. PETRILLO, who has perhaps aroused more public indignation than any other labor figure except John L .Lewis, has finally over- stepped the bounds of dictatorial power and self- ish greed. The president of the American Fed- eration of Musician's ban on noncommercial ed- ucational broadcasts has resulted in Congres- sional action and a pending bill to put school music programs back on the air. The background of the story is familiar. In July, 1942, Petrillo banned the broadcasting of non-commercial radio programs by the children of the Natiohal Music Camp at Interlochen and in the fall of 1942, he likewise banned the broad- casting of music programs by the students of the Eastman School of Music and the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music by threat of a strike of all union musicians serving radio stations. As asresult of these, and other similar acts, czar Petrillo was able to boast in January, 1944: "in the year 1943 there were no school bands or or- chestras on the networks and there never will be without the permission of the American Fed- eration of Musicians." In this way, Petrillo, with or without the ap- proval of the members of his union, has suc- ceeded in blocking the great cultural avenue of the radio at the very time that the country is experiencing a decided musical awakening and an increase of interest in furthering music ed- ucation. In 1918 there were about half a dozen major symphony orchestras in the United States, 90 per cent of the musicians being foreign born. Last year there were at least 35 such orchestras and fewer than 50 per cent of the players came from abroad, an advance fostered mainly by the growth of music educatiohn in our public schools. IT WOULD seem logical that Petrillo should applaud and encourage this growth in music interest and school music education as a source of increased employment for union musicians. But, either because of ignorance or shortsighted greed, he has been hostile toward school music for years, maintaining that it will only train new musicians to take away employment from union musicians. Petrillo's stand is fallacious because he fails to realize that demands for more music and support for better music will be the inevit- ible result of school music education. The AF of M boss also argues fallaciously when he claims "the more free music the radio stations receive the less need for the profes- sional" because no radio station can afford to do away with commercial professional music, a main source o income. And while Petrillo is thus cutting off his nose to spite his face, he has also presumed to restrict by fiat, the freedom of speech and 'expression guaranteed in the Constitution. One Congressman characterized his actions as a "raid on the school children of America." An Interstate Commerce subcommittee's investi- gation, which called in the aid of University Professor Joseph Maddy and Regent J. J. Her- bert, has finally resulted in the drafting of a bill to curb Petrillo's power to deny education tire use of radio for non-commercial purposes. NEW YORK, April 17.-The war against the OWI has flared up again, and several riewspa- pers are giving Elmer Davis a treatment. Elmer 4ets his hair combed with a piece of broken glass periodically in this fashion. Last summer he got it good, on the theme that the OWI was Communist, because it had quoted somebody's broadcast attacking our deal with Badoglio. The Communists, at that moment, were defending the deal with Badoglio; their line was exactly the opposite of the line taken by the "moronic little king" broadcast; but, of course, few of the experts in sniffing out Com- munist ideology in government quarters ever trouble to find out just what it is the Commun- ists are saying, because that makes too much home work. The OWI isn't being attacked as subversive this spring. The style of attack alters from time to time, and currently the finger is being put on OWI because it is expensive. In eight short months the OWI has been promoted from menace to luxury. Last summer, it was considered dangerous; this year it is being at- tacked mainly as useless. Last summer, in a number of newspapers, Elmer was pictured as' a plotter -against the American form of gov- ernment, this spring he is described as a sort of giddy, heedless good-time-Charley, a big spender and high tipper, all at government ex- pense. Sometimes Elmer must look into his mirror and wonder who the hell he really is. Some of the burble is funny, especially when it is pointed out, in accents of horror, that Elmer not only uses radio in his effort to win friends and influence people on our behalf; but that he goes further, and uses pamphlets, leaflets, transcription, short movie films, match-pads and phonograph records. Elmer, in a word, believes in advertising. His activities may sometimes seem a little flossy, but, by and ltrge, they rire an accurate expression of a national culture in which -advertising plays an enormous part. This is a 250-billion-dollar war, and we are at its climax, and the total Elmer asks for overseas propaganda in connection with it is $59,000,000. That is $16,000,000 less than was spent for commercial advertising with one radio network alone Columbia, last year. NO CHANCE FOR GOP: Support Roosevelt for A Fourth Term in '44 MR. MULLENDORE in his editorial Saturday recommended that it would be to the Re- publican party's best interests to "withdraw completely from the 1944 presidential race and allow Roosevelt's election to a fourth term go unchallenged." This is one of the cases in which we agree with the conclusion but violently object to the arguments leading up to it. Despite the fact the "most economists agree that a post-war depression is almost inevit- -able," there are people, ordinary citizens-in unions, in consumer's organizations, in busi- ness concerns-people who are making plans so that there need not be a depression after this war. And these people are working with President Roosevelt and his post-war planning committees, such as the committee on re-employment of sol- diers. They are making plans which can be carried out only if a progressive person who is conscious that the world is larger than the USA, is acting as President. Another primary problem, a fair chance for minority groups after the war, can be settled only by a liberal, democratic-minded administra- tor. Groups of Americans-labor, youth, wo- men, Jews, Negroes, who have found their places in our America of 1944, are not going to let their jobs and social position and sense of security be taken from them peacefully. AND the fascists now stirring up disgruntled Americans are not going to rest either, after this war. Gerald L. K. Smith, Martin Dies, Col. McCormick and the rest are organizing now with the hope of setting-up a super-Ku Klux Klan after victory. They can be effectively dealt with only if the President is a man who believes in the right of the majority to rule, and in protecting the rights of the minority insofar as those rights do not deprive anyone of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. We agree with Mr. Mullendore that, by any standards, the "GOP's only suitable candidate, Willkie, has been forced to retire." We feel that, at best, the Republicans would have a hard time proving their sympathy with the democratic traditions we-have built in the past 12 years: the right of all Americans not to starve to death in the midst of millions of dollars of unused productive capacity, the right of workers to settle their disputes through collective bargaining, the right to public health clinics, unemployment compensation, to security and self-respect. And it is so much simpler to reach a conclu- sion by going frontward instead of arriving at the same point through the back door, as Mr. Mullendore did. We need a President with cer- tain qualifications; such a man is now President,I he can be urged to run again, and can be re- elected. -Kathie Sharfman There are individual corporations in America which, to push one product, spend almost a quarter of what Elmer says he needs to tell our story to the whole world. The trouble goes pretty deep, however, and, at basis, the attacks on Elmer are due to the fact that he is in the idea business, on behalf of a country which hasn't quite ,made up its mind. Elmer runs America's advertising agency, and he is all set up and ready to go, but we have to wait for the election before we shall know what we're peddling to the world. The agency is functioning, but it doesn't yet really 'know whether it is going to sell soap or coal oil. If isolationism continues to triumph in the Republican party, and then elects its candi- date, the OWI will be caught with its mouth .open in the most expensive "Oh!" in history. And, mostly, it is. those who hate ideas in politics, who also hate Elmer's idea factory. Those earthy characters who think the inter- national ideal is all nonsense also think that international propaganda is nonsense. First they try to get us good and confused, so that we.will have nothing to say to the world, and when that reduces Elmer to dramatizing mail- order catalogs, they then point out he isn't say- ing anything, and should therefore cut his budget. They force us to take as inane a position as possible in world politics, then they rap 1lmer for an inanity which is only a reflection of them- selves. Those who have nothing to say to the world obviously find it hard to understand why we should spend money to say it. Who's Elmer? Why, Elmer Davis, as a man in the -idea busi- ness, is one of the symbols of the better world. And that is why they give him so many dif- ferent names, and fight him so consistently under all of them. (Copyright, 1944, New York Post Syndicate) WASHINGTON, April 17.- The question of the quick-release para- chute harness is still causing con- siderable backing-and-filling inside the armed services, this time in the Navy. Instead of ordering the safer type of parachute the Navy is} experimenting with a breathing instrument which will permit an aviator who drops into the water! in his parachute to breathe under water for about five minutes. Dur- ing this five minutes, he get out of his cumbersome triple-release har- ness. This, in itself, illustrates the dan- gers of the triple-release harness and is why the Eighth Air Force in Eng- land has junked it, using the British single-release harness instead. To get a full picture, it is important to realize that, when a man lands by parachute, he hits at a speed equiva- lent to a jump from a 16-foot build- ing. If he hits the water, he goes under for a considerable depth. When he goes under, he has to cope with 720 feet of shroud lines connecting his harness to his parachute, and it is easy to get tangled up. Also, if he is in the old triple-release harness, he has to undo a buckle under each thigh and another snap at his shoul- der. The single release, on the other hand, requires only the turn of a DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN i i i fi i I i r ii° traveling salesman ~" little box on the chest, following which the entire harness falls off. First developed in the United States, it has been adopted by the British, Germans and almost every Army and -Navy in the world. But the U.S. Navy still holds out. Most tragic fact about the Navy's slowness is that its aviators must come down in water nine cases out of ten, whereas Army airmen prob- ably can avoid water nine cases out of ten. In view of this, a report written by Colonel C. L. Fike, U.S. Marine Corps, on Dec. 13, 1943, is especially inter- esting. It is through Fike's report that the Navy justifies its delay in adopting the quick-release parachute. Col. Fike reported to the Navy's Bureau of Aeronautics that the quick release had been tested 'out "several years ago," and that the men did not like it because it was too bulky, got in the way, was worn in front rather than in the rear, and that sometimes men, slipped through it while in the air. Gen. Longfellow's report was dia- metrically opposed to Col. Fike's statement that aviators sometimes slipped through the harness. Long- fellow said: -There has never been a failure of the box (single-release box) reported." (Copyright, 1944, United Features Synd.) - "We know you have Agriculture's best interests at heart, Senator, but you must realize the farmers' greatest problem is longer the f s, tr/7' ,ing salesmantli" The Pedultn T HE MILITARY were never noted for political enlightenment. There is a similarity, that often becomes an identification, between army strata and social castes. Men cast in the army mold, too frequently extend their narrow views to cover fields outside of their province. In France they led the defeatist factions, and where they did not collaborate, they gen- erally sympathized with fascist groups else- where. The mis-application of army stand- ards to civilian affairs continues. As for our country, a few examples will demon- strate the point: General Marshall's unwar- ranted diatribes against labor; the injection of false military expediencies into the Palestinian question; General MacArthur's anti-New Deal letter-vintage 1936-to a rabid Roosevelt hater. The knife cuts both ways-so that the army sometimes injures itself, as for instance, in its shunning of experienced Spanish Civil War vet- erans. At any rate, it is with these facts in mind that I have been reading W. E. Woodward's biography of George Washington. The hand- some visage of Douglas MacArthur, now being boomed by Col. McCormick and our own paunchy Senator Vandenberg for the presidency, kept bobbing up in my mind. Without trying to draw any sort of parallel between the Father of our Country and the Hero of Bataan, it is borne in on one's mind that the military bent seldom co-exists with the polit- ical bent-and that men peculiarly fitted for generalship are usually unsuitable for directing affairs of state, except in a stagnant fashion, as with Washington, or in a corrupt fashion as with Grant, or in a reactionary fashion as with Petain. In any case, Woodward's appraisal of Wash- ington is intriguing literature. Woodward aligns himself with the self-styldd school of debunking. He unhesitantly applies the acids of reality onto our first president and national myth. TRACING the Washingtons back genealogical- ly, this biographer finds a family composed of plodding, unknown mediocrities-with the sole exception of scionless George whose military repute was to catapult him into world-wide prominence. Washington early became an intimate of Lord Fairfax through whose patronage he first secured a colonial commission. Woodward takes great pains to delineate Washington as a man of "money and action." But, his brav- ery, especially in battle, cannot be gainsaid. This was demonstrated by his conduct in the French and Indian War for which General Braddock highly commended him. One is impressed by Washington's inordinate desire for land. His marriage to the richest wo- man in the colonies appears to have been a purely opportunistic one. His letters to her are cold and dispassionate. From his diary, Wood- ward deduces that George had a dull, unim- aginative mind. It is almost incredible that, in the midst of world-shaking events, Washington could blithely record the latest addition to his number of hogs-and make no mention of other things. --Bernard Rosenberg TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1944 VOL. LIV ,'No. 122 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 11a30 a.m. *Notices Mail is being held at the Business Office of the University for the fol- lowing people: Altman, Peter; Bor- yan, Marie; Gale, Doris; Gaster, Bert jD.; Grimes, Julie; Hockett, Dr. Charles F.; Kahn, Mrs. Alfred; Kel- gen, Louise; Keschman, Hannah; Prill, Paul E.; Sandler, Malcolm; Scheer, Lawrence E.; Taube, Aileen; Wescott, Joan E. If you wish to finance the pur- chase of a home, or if you have pur- chased improved property on a land contract and owe a balance of ap- proximately 60 per cent of the value of the property, the Investment Of- fice, 100 South Wing of University Hall, would be glad to discuss finan- cing through the medium of a first mortgage. Such financing may effect a substantial saving in interest. Medical Aptitude Test: The Medi- cal Aptitude Test of the Association of American Colleges, a normal re- quirement for admission to practi- cally all medical schools, will be given on Friday, April 28, throughout the United States. The test, which will require about two hours, will be given in Ann Arbor in the Rackhamn Amphitheatre from 3 to 5 p.m. Any student planning to enter a medical school and who has not pre- viously taken the Aptitude Test should do so at this time. You are requested to be in your seats prompt- ly and to bring with you two well- sharpened pencils. The fee of $1.00 is payable at the Cashier's Office from April 17 through April 26. Lectures General James S. Simmons, Chief of the Department of Preventable Diseases, Office of the Surgeon Gen- eral, United States Army, will ad- dress an assembly of public health and medical students in the audi- torium of the School of Public Health at 11:00 a.m. Wednesday, April 19. General Simmons' subject will be "Preventive Medicine in Mili- tary Practice." General Simmons' duties embrace the preventive medicine and public health problems of our Army in all parts of the world. Interested guests are invited. Academic Notices Freshmen, College of Literature, Science and the Arts: Freshmen may not drop courses without "E" grade after Saturday, April 29. Only stu- dents with less than 24 hours' credit are affected by this regulation. They must be recommended by their Aca- demic Counselor for this extraordi- nary privilege. Speeded Reading Course: To those who have signed for the short course in speeded reading: The course will meet on Tuesday and Thursday, 5, Rm. 4009, University High School Building. The first meeting will be held Thursday, April 20, 5 o'clock. If you intend to take the course be present at this meeting. Seniors: College of L.S. & A and Schools of Education, Music and Public Health: Tentative lists of sen- iors for June graduation have been posted on the bulletin board in Rm. 4 University Hall. If your name is misspelled or the degree expected in- correct, please notify the Counter, Clerk. Concerts Organ Recital: Frieda Op't Holt Vogan, Instructor in Theory and Organ in the School of Music, will appear in recital in Hill Auditorium _ on Sunday afternoon, April 23, at _ 4:15. Her program will include works of the classic period, and the modern symphony for organ by Sowerby. The public is cordially invited. Student Recital: Virginia Lowery, pianist, has planned a program of compositions by Mozart, Krenek and Brahms for her recital at 8:30 to- night in the Assembly Hall:of the Rackham Building. She is a student of Joseph Brinkman and is present- ing the recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music. The public is cordially invited. Exhibitions Exhibit: Original plans and per- spectives for the proposed civic cen- ter of Madison, Wisconsin, designed by the architect, Frank Lloyd Wright. Ground floor corridor, Architecture Building. On exhibit until May 1. Events Today Bacteriology Seminar will meet at 4:30 this afternoon in Rm. 1564 East Medical Building. Subject: Gly- cerol metabolism by an intermediate of the coli-aerogenes group. All in- terested are invited. There will be a compulsory mass meeting of all Junior USO hostesses of Company X, at 7:30 tonight. The Albion College Alumni Club of Ann Arbor will celebrate Albion- Round-the-World night this evening at 8 o'clock in the Green Room of the First Methodist Church. Dr. Fred- erick S. Goodrich of Albion College will give the address of the evening. All former Albion College students and friends are invited to attend. Those -planning to come call 4121, Ext. 657 in the daytime or 9661 in the evening. Baptiste Lamarck" and Professor John W. Eaton on "Johann Gott- fried von Herder." Botanical Seminar: Volney H. Jones will speak on "Experiments with Cryptostegia Rubber in Haiti," Wednesday, April 19, at 4 p.m., in Rm. 1139, Natural Science. Anyone interested may attend. International Center: The Folk Dancing Club of the International Center will meet ;Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 305 Michigan Union. All foreign students and American friends are invited. The Post War Council will present a panel on "Government in Busi- ness," Wednesday, April 19, at 7:30 in the League. The public is cordi- ally invited. The Stump Speakers' Society of Sigma Rho Tau will present an Ox- ford Debate on "Air power nucleus for world police," this Wednesday night at 7:30 in Rm. 318 of the Michigan Unin. By popular demand, this is the second debate on' this same subject. The public is again cordially invited to attend. Victory Musicale, sponsored by Sigma Alpha Iota and Mu Phi Epsi- lon, will be presented at 8:30 p.m., Friday, April 21, in Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre. The program will include compositions by Jeannette Haien, Philip James, Robert Dela- ney, -Aaron Copland, Dorothy James and Carl Eppert. The general public will be admitted upon the purchase of U.S. war bond or stamps at the door. La Sociedad Hispanica presents "Sueno de una Noche de Agosto," a three act modern comedy by G. Mar- tines Sierra, at the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre on Wed., April 19 at 8:30. All seats are reserved. Phone 6300 for reservations. Box office opens Monday, April 17th at 2 p.m. The lecture tickets of "La Sociedad Hispanica" are good for 25 cents toward purchasing a play ticket. Le Cercle Francais will hold an informal meeting in Rm. 304 of the Union on Thursday, April 20, at 8 o'clock. Foreign students interested in speaking French are especially invited to attend. High School Championship be- bate: The 27th Annual Championship Debate of the Michigan High School Forensic Association will be held Fri- day evening, April 21, at 8 p.m. in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Build- ing. The question for debate is Re- solved: That the United States Should Join in Reconstituting the League of Nations. Kalamazoo West- ern State High School will have the affirmative side of the question and Hazel Park High School will have the negative. Dr. C. A. Fisher, Director of the University Extension Service, will BARNABY By Crockett Johnson I 1Al --- n J 'If .T- %A/60 I .. . ..r .t. ±_ t_