-. PALE F6~R Ta 11 L Ni i 47, -"-a.. a I- A N, 4 a A .SI.I -lt ThAt. At'tLh Z i$44 """ ... ai L 1 a a :i F 1 l;;I L3. 11 ._ .fl tl 1 JJ 1 . _ IIFh r &1w AlrIi4u l&zDal Fift y-Fourth Year I'd Rather Be Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON 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 Asociated 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- licaon 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, 1943-44 NEW YORK, April 20.-What is MacArthur- ism? Is it, perhaps, a cry for father to come and save his child? The world has grown -so strange lately. If you turn a corner smartly, you bump into a Morgan partner soliciting for Rus- sian War Relief. Woe and alas! What has happened to the world? There is a need for a code word, through which the bankrupt little minds can express their sense of dismay and also call upon daddy to come and take them away from all this. The code word is "MacArthur." Are there spots before your eyes? Do you feel dopey in the mornings? Are things moving too fast for you? Then say "MacArthur," and perhaps the gods of irrelevancy and non-sequitur will come and rescue you. One picks up the newspaper in which one has for years cosily read the dear, familiar attacks on Soviet Russia, and, behold, today there is praise instead. It is as if the sky had turned green and the grass blue. And one needs a word, and the word is "Mac- Arthur." Are you frightened of Mr. Willkie'sj One World? Are you startled to find even Mr. Dewey coming out for an alliance with Britain, which is a policy of at least Half a World? Then vote for a candidate who is out of this world, for a curiously unkown figure thousands of miles away. If his candidacy is irrelevant, it is all the more agreeable for that reason. For you, too, sweetheart,. are irrelevant; in a world that in- sists on making sense, to be magnificently ir- relevant has become your dearest wish. home ground. But now, out of the night which covers it, black as the pit from pole to pole, it sees a star, in fact, four stars. It is through with reason, for reason has betrayed it, and the time has come to build a myth and invoke a mystery. For a time it seemed that Mr. Dewey, who says almost nothing about almost everything, might make an adequate mystery. But Mac- Arthur is a better mystery for he is not even here. He is not merely silent; he is also absent; and so we have everything needed to build a great wonder, including splendor and remoteness. Those who have no answers to give us fasten, in part, upon a man in Albany who will not speak, and in part upon a man in the South Pacific who is too far away to be questioned. It does not even matter what this dis- tinguished officer thinks. In fact, they have not asked him. If he once gave us a bill of particulars as to what is in his mind, the magic would go out of his name. He could then be one of only three things, an isolationist, an internationalist, or a man who'parts his hair in the middle. So long as he holds his silence, he is much better than any of these; he is the little pool of light, nine thousand miles away in a dark world, and someday he will come riding out of the golden west, and he will take their hands, and he will lead them out of their troubles, and everybody will be sorry they laughed. Oh, daddy! They say "MacArthur," and in their eyes is the distant look of men who see wonderful things, through the looking glass, in never-never land. And they are quite sincere, for fantasy is always sincere, sincerely bankrupt, sincerely incoherent, sincerely tired of the world as it really is. (Copyright, 1944, New York Post Syndicate) Editorial Staff Jane Farrant Claire Sherman Stan Wallace Evelyn Phillips Harvey Frank Pud 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 S . . . 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: EVELYN PHILLIPS a=a Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. POSITIVE POLICY: Study of Free Port for Refugtees' Plan Urged FREE PORTS for refugees: Americans by the millions have expressed their horror and anger over the bestial treatment accorded help- less minorities by the Nazis. They have wanted do whatever would be effective to help these tortured and driven people while still there was time, while some at least were still alive. Now, in taking up the idea of a system of free ports for war refugees, our government is acting to give flesh and blood meaning to these humane sentiments. If, as we confidently hope, the government authorizes the War Refugee Board to proceed with the establishment of free ports, we shall have at last a realistic and practicable attack upon one of the most pressing problems of our times. It is an idea and an action which the Post warmly supports. It originated in these pages in Samuel Grafton's column on April 5, and we are proud of it. If hereafter it should be known as the Grafton plan, well and good. But we are more concerned with getting the plan in operation, under any name. For each day's delay must be paid for in the blood of men, women and children who need above all a safe place to rest for a while. We say a safe place. We do not say a per- manent or even a comfortable place. A free port need be neither of these: A free port is a place, defined, fenced and guarded, to which people would be admitted much as merchandise is admitted to free ports for goods, such as the one which already exists on Staten Island. A FREE PORT is not an ultimate destination. Goods sent to a free port are merely set own enroute to a destination for processing, packag- ing, sorting and temporary storage. When the time is opportune the goods are transshipped to any country in the world where they may be disposed of. Who says that what we do for merchandise and in the interest of profits we cannot do for people and in the interest of a common hu- manity? The legal technicalities present no difficulties unless we make difficulties of them. In free ports the victims of our enemies' terror could recuperate. And wait for the day when they could go back to their own countries or to other countries willing to accept them as per- manent residents. Entry into a free port would not constitute legal entry into the country, and residence in a free port would not constitute legal residence in the country. It is far from being all that we could do. It is the least we can do-a bare decent min- imum of what we are called upon to do. We do not advance the free port plan as the solution to the refugee problem. But it is some- thing tangible and right that we can do here and now. -The New York Post Hold onto Your Bonds.. .. When you think of cashing in your war bonds, think of this story that has been going the rounds in Army newspapers, and is pretty popu- lar with the soldiers: A G.I. had been planning to cash in his war bonds and mke a trin back t this countrv. He S0 SAY "MacArthur," for that is the way t two plus two make five, which is thec kind of logic that can save you and your tlat only en- gulfed and capsized position. Isolation has lost every argument on the The WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND By DREW PEARSON i tl -i WASHINGTON, April 20.-For months, the Justice Department has been preparing back-. stage a vigorous crackdown. on the Swedish match monopoly, including its American affili- ate, the Diamond Match Company. The Justice Department charge is that the Swedes, plus American affiliates, have conspired to monopolize the match market in violation of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. Amazing evid- ence has been uncovered. The Diamond Match Company, for instance, controls the production of wooden matches in the U.S.A. and has an arrangement with the Swedes whereby they prevent paper matches from being promoted abroad. This situation took a unique turn when Am- erican troops went overseas and the Army pre- pared to buy small cardboard clips of matches of the kind used by many firms for advertise- ments. Those fit into soldiers' pockets more conceniently than bulkier wooden matches. To this the Swedish match monopoly was dead op- posed. The American match people, however, had followed the common U.S. practice of placing one of their men inside the War Production Board. So when the Army proposed buying paper matches, the WPB tip-off man hurriedly, wrote to the match industry advising them to prepare a memo showing why paper matches should not be used by the Army. The industry replied with a memo showing the effect of tropical weather on paper matches. Later, the Swedes also saw the memo pre- pared by their American affiliate and were defin- CENSORSH IP: Guarantees Freedom CENSORSHIP of the press recently caused vig- orous protests by newspapers and students in Sydney, Australia. The Sydney Daily Telegraph last week lef t blanks in a statement to show where cuts had been made by the censors. The paper's galley proofs were then ordered to be submitted to the censors, who eliminated one statement and cut an editorial. The paper attempted to publish the statement and editorial with blank spaces to show censor- ship. Commonwealth peace officers confiscated all its editions. Other papers attempted to chal- lenge what they believed to be political censor- ship. Six were suspended. About 1,000 university students marched to the center of the city, demanded an end to political censorship. The demonstrations were ended only after some of the students had been arrested. This incident is added evidence of how people educated for democracy accept censorship of the press. They would not in Australia-they will not here. .Barbara flerrinton itely of the opinion that the tropical argument was too weak. All of this correspondence was picked up by the Justice Department and will make instruc- tive reading for the American public on how business places its men in strategic points inside the War Production Board to continue monop- olies against American law and the spirit of free competition. Draft Confusion . Out of the confusion over drafting manpower which has so bewildered the American public. here are a few' tangible facts which Congres- sional probers agree are accurate: 1. The size of an Army floats. It. doesn't re- main static. Men are killed, wounded, mustered out because they reach the age limit or because the mental strain undermines them. In the first year of war, nearly one million men were dis- charged from the combined armed forces. Thus, there have to be replacements. 2. Present age of the Army is too high, the average age being 27. In contrast, the average age of the Navy is 22'/2; and of the Marine Corps, 20!. Army chiefs want to bring its average age down to 22 or 23, especially for combat. The Germans largely use 17 to 20- year-olds for combat duty. . 3. More than 4,000,000 draft registrants have been deferred for physical reasons and classified as 4-F. This means that more than one-third fail to pass physical tests. This ratio has been increasing lately, due to the fact that more old- er men were called up until two weeks ago. 4. Selective Service estimates that approxi- mately 1,187,000 men between 18 and 26 have been deferred on farms or in factories. All but the very key men among these will now be taken. 5. The Army is recognized as having done an inexcusably bad job in getting the best men into the best grooves. It has mixed up ages, failed to use a lot of older men in jobs where they could best fit. This is one reason for the sudden call for younger men. Another reason is the approach of the second front, plus reali- zation that air power alone cannot crack Ger- many. Foot soldiers will have to do it in the last analysis, and the younger men now being drafted will be trained as second front re- placements. 1 Note-Drafting older men will vary in differ- ent states. In California, where war industries are thick and many younger men have been de- ferred, older men will not be drafted for some weeks. Capitol Chaff ... Ex-Assistant Budget Director Wayne Coy, who suffered from stomach ulcers while in the Gov- ernment, has written a letter to Harry Hopkins, also suffering from stomach ulcers, at Mayo Clinic. "The remedy for ulcers," advised Coy, I "is to get out of Government. Mine are cured." (Copyright, 1944, United Features Syndicate) cfele Z50.74e 6ditor Poll Tax Arguments.. To the Editor: The people who have been working on the circulation of the petitions for the anti-poll tax bill have been grati- fied to note that over half of those approached have signed the petition. However, when I started helping to circulate these petitions, I was not prepared for the large minority of objectors-a multitude of objectors to a bill that supports the abolition of a monetary qualification added to the democratic qualifications of ex- ercising the constitutional right of a United States citizen-the right to elect his own government. I asked a soldier to sign, and his mellow Southern accent slurped forth as he raced by, "honey, ah woudn't sign that if you-all paid me." That was a bit amusing. But it wasn't amusing to hear a profes- sor tell me that the poll tax kept the Negro held down the way he should be. "Would you like to have a Negro for your next door neighbor?" he put forththe typical question. He stated further that that situation would! force him to move out, since the value of his property. would depre- ciate. Then a science professor stat- ed his theory--that as a scientist he agreed that all people were physio- logically and anatomically the same, but that he doesn't believe that all people are actually equal. An elderly man asserted (about the South) that "they need something like that down there." Still another "favorite argument" is "Would you like to marry a Negro-you, with your ideas of equality?" These are the basic objections which I met. I should like to answer them, for they represent certain types of objection to the proposed bill. First of all, I don't see why one should choose one's neighbors by skin color or by social pressure. Should a whole group of people be denied a right, because a larger group has made an arbitrary deci- sion against it? I agree that all people are not equal-not alike in that some have a certain greater potentiality than others. But I deny, and deny with the scientific support of anthropologists and; other scientists, that that differ-; ence can be set upon a whole group in general or that that difference DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1944 VOL. LIV No. 115 All notices for the Daily official B]- 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 Honors Convocation: The 21st An- nual Honors Convocation today at 11 a.m., in Hill Auditorium, will be addressed by Viscount Halifax, Brit- ish Ambassador to the United States. There will be no academic procession. Faculty members will assemble in the dressing rooms in the rear of the Auditorium and proceed to seats on the stage. Academic costume will be vorn. Reserved seats on the main loor will be provided for students receiving honors for academic a - chievement, and for their parents. To permit attendance at the Convo- cation, classes with the exception of clinics, will be dismissed at 10:45 a.m. Doors of the Auditorium will be open at 10:30 a.m. The public is invited. Men Students Graduating in June: It has been brought to our attention that students graduating in June may still secure commissions in the Navy. All those interested should go im- mediately to the Director of Naval Officer Procurement in the Book Building, Detroit, for application blanks and other information. Those who get their applications in a suffi- cient time before induction may be transferred to Midshipman Schools when their applications are finally approved. However, it is imperative that the applications be what the Navy terms "matured" by the time the student is inducted. As this takes from three to six weeks, any students interested should get things started immediately. Academic Notices Students, College of Engineering: The final day for removal of IN- attei arises from skin pigmentation of a group. Any people, when subjected to the same sort of holding-down oppres- sion that the southern Negroes have been subjected to, would react in a like manner. If they are denied the right to education, the means to bet- terment, any people will fall below the standards of society in intelli- gence. But in one fundamental thing every person is alike-everyone is a human being. With this as a starting point, a democracy is supposed to allow the proof of individual equali- ties by establishing, at the beginning, equal opportunities, a fundamental chance. How democratic is it to start. out with the axiom that a whole' group of people will never develop into being equal in every way? The cranial capacity of a human being has nothing to do with his skin color or with society's acceptance of him. The potentialities are always there, no matter how much people may shun him. But if progress is never made in establishing the basic rights of all individuals, no individu- als will ever be able to prove them- selves alike. And being allowed a voice in his own government, being allowed an equal chance to prove his own worth, has nothing to do with mar- riage. That is a personal matter in a democracy and thus not settled by the government. As such it can- not be governed by law. The anti- GRIN AND BEAR IT 71, "You have the wrong attitude, Herl4imer!-You should consider yourself well up in society if you go to things you don't want to By Lichty ,nd!" poll tax has nothing to do with the forcing of marriage. Such matters always have, aM will still, take care of themselves. We are fighting this war against the belief that some people are super- ior to others. That belief of superior- ity is unsupported by fact and logic, and contrary to history itself. But still, people have been kept from hav- ing equal rights with other people for that same illogical reason. At least, that is the reason felt by the great mass of prejudiced people. But what is really behind this alleged denial of human rights? Brought to light, the facts are not pretty. For scapegoats have been made of minorities by unscrupu- ulous men who have seen the weak- ness of other men to follow, obedi- ently, the crowd. And so, for eco- nomic and political reasons, the poll tax is profitable to the clever, Votes can actually be bought-people can actually distrust a minority, because the "rest of the street" hates it. This is mob rule. And,. in the meanwhile, the minority is exploited more and more, and the profits roll in. The right for all United States citi- zens to vote is on paper. The right to start off with an equal chance is also onl paper. These are the pre-supposed rights of any person living in a democracy. But if barriers to these human rights are set up, we can have nothing but a, hypocrisy-democracy. ---Edythe Levin COMPLETES will be Saturday, April1 29. Petitions for extension of time must be on file in the Secretary's Office on or before Wednesday, April 26. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for DROPPING COUR-3 SES WITHOUT RECORD will bet Saturday, April 29. A course may be dropped only with the permission of3 the classifier after conference withi the instructor. - Seniors: College of L.S..& A and1 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 Counter4 Clerk. Attention Former Students of Ge- ology 12: If you have copies of Hussey's Syllabus, "Geological His- tory of North America," we shall appreciate your turning them in, either for sale or rent, to Rm. 2051, Natural Science Bldg., as soon as possible. These outlines are out of print, our enrollment this term is large, and the need for them is acute., E. Delabar, Secy., Ext. 617.r oncerts 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. Carillon Recital: An all-Schubert program will be presented at 7 6'clock tonight, by Percival Price, University Carillonneur, on the Charles Baird Carillon in Burton Memorial Tower. It will include Allegretto from an impromptu, six songs, German dan- ces, three waltzes and close with Marche Militaire. Student Recital: Betty Sue Lamb, a student of Joseph Brinkman. Wi prcsent a piano recital at 8:30 p.m., tend. All those interested in the council are also invited. High School Championship De- bate: The 27th Annual Championship Debate of the Michigan High School Forensic Association will be held this evening at 8 o'clock in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Building. The question for debate is Resolved: 'That the United States Shouli Join in Reconstituting the League of Na- tions. Kalamazoo Western State High School will have the affirma- tive side of the question and Hazel Park High School will have the nega- tive. Dr. C. A. Fisher, Director of the University Extension Service, will be Chairman of the evening. Judges for the debate will be Professors (. E. Densmore and Carl G. Brandt of the University of Michigan, and Dr. Franklin H. Knower of the University of Iowa. The public is cordially invited. The first meeting of a study group conducted by the education commit- tee of the Inter-Cooperative Council will be held this evening at 7:30 The meeting will take place at the Robert Owen House, 604 East Madison. St. Professor Mentor Williams will de- liver the first of a series of five lectures on Problems of Consumer Co- operatives. The lecture will be de- voted to an evaluation of the Roch- dale Principles. A forum will follow the lecture. Victory Musicale, Sponsored by Sigma Alpha Iota and Mu Phi Epsi- on, and directed by Rose Marie Grentzer, will be presented at 8:30 tonight in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- tre. Admission by purchase of United States war bond or stamps at the door. Dance Symposium: This after- noon, 4-5:15, Dance Studio, Barbour Gymnasium. This program is de- signed to illustrate the way in which individuals use creative dance from elementary age to professional dan- cer. The University Elementary School, Ann Arbor High School, Uni- versity of Michigan Dance Group show how dance is used in education. Louise Lippold and Ann Halprin demonstrate dance on the profes- sional level. The solo numbers are as follows: Fanfare; Lost Moment (Sarabande); Two Primitive Dances: BARNABY By Crockett Johnson No, Barnaby, I rather doubt d the I I I- I wonder what the WPB CROcKETtf JC FtNSC} V "'* " ""l194 ..d "AIl I -, In- Longah Distance. . . Hello. I I I k