PAGE TWO THE MICH IGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JUNE 3. 1944 U, - Fifty-Fourth Year ''? n ' " ,. ,. ," , w : - y.., r z... 1 '' .. , a .a.. ." t ., t :j ' ,. .t >,,.. '. # R r ;' t ' ° _ Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Jane Farrant . . . Managing Editor Claire Sherman . . Editorial Director Stan Wallace . . . City Editor Evelyn, Phillips . . Associate Editor Harvey Frank . Sports Editor Bud Low . . . Associate Sports Editor Jo Ann Peterson . . Associate Sports Editor Mary Anne Olson . . Women's Editor Marjorie Hall . . Associate Women's Editor Marjorie Rosmarin . . Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Elizabeth A. Carpenter . . . Business Manager ' ., IV<. W.. f ' ::. r " 1 [n l ic& Margery Batt . Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1' 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 re- publication 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 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. 4 y M . srl " ' >; :,.:.. ~{ A-r~ \" ':.z r 1.{1 ,A Sprouted! a cation' Wo1rk ANOTHER CHALLENGE has been presented to University women, as well as to women throughout the country who are still trying to find their place in the war effort, in the form of a voluntee' Women's Land Army. This organziation has been set up to aid farmers who are unable to secure sufficient help in harvesting. During July and August the work will be mainly picking cherries and snap beans. The food situation is one that affects all of us, as well as the armed forces, so this job is equally as important as one in an airplane or munitions plant. Pay is ample, depending on your ability to reap, and what could be better than a summer in the country? A goal of enrolling 500 women students has been set and canvassing has already begun. When you toss away your books for the summer, put away all thoughts of idleness and join the Women's Land Army. -Shirley. Heilman Stassen's Platform, DEPITE the fact that Lt. Comm. Harold E. Stassen has been in the Navy for over a year and has thus been unable recently to present his point of view on political topics, still we find that he is the' most enlightened member of the Republican party at the present time. Before he resigned as governor of Minnesota to enter the Navy, he made a series of speeches in which he clearly outlines his political theories which even at that time were far more progres- sive than those which are held at present by Mr. Dewey. When Stassen was a candidate for public office, he scorned at the policy which most candidates follow of "let the public guess what we think . . " He has a program and he is willing to fight for it. He believes that after this war we do not have to go back to our old isolationism, but can take our rightful place in international affairs. Stassen's chances of securing the nomination are not very good. There seems to be little doubt in political circles that Dewey is the man. Dewey seems to have discarded some of his old America first ideas, but he has not yet replaced them with any definite policy for America to follow in in- ternational affairs. Stassen, on the other hand, does have such a policy. From two articles which he wrote for the Saturday Evening Post before entering serv- ice, we get a clear picture of the type of course he desires America to take. STASSEN proposes an international govern- nent developed from the starting point of the United Natior:. It would have an assembly or parliament, which in turn would choose a small council to perform the functions of an executive. This government of limited powers would function in seven major fields. It would be in charge of temporary admin- istration of Axis, backward or disputed terri- tories; maintenance of a police force, regula- tion of international airways, supervision of sea gateways, stimulation of trade, promotion of health and literacy and enforcement through a court of a basic code of justice. From this it can be seen that Stassen has a definite plan. He is not the type of person who waits for problems to arise before thinking of solutions. Seldom in our political history has there been a politician so willing to state what he believes. I'd Rather Be Right By SAMtUEL GRAFTON Voting Apathy F OR ONCE the GOP, in its pre- election campaign, has come out with something that makes sense. John B. Quinn, a supporter of Lt.- Comm. Harold E. Stassen, has de- clared that it is "lamentable" that many people are better informed on the activities of comic strip charac- ters than they are on the "qualifica- tions and opinions of all possible presidential candidates." Quinn believes that there is a lack of interest on the part of voters be- cause presidential candidates have not expressed their opinions on do- mestic and foreign affairs. This is partly true, for a voter must know the candidate's platform before he can vote intelligently. Mr. Quinn, however, failed to mention that the most important reason for this apathy is the lack of initiative on the part of voters to learn the qualifications of the candidates, even before they an- nounce their platform. A candi- date may have a progressive or constructive program, but unless he has the initiative, stamina and courage to carry out his program, he should not be elected president, This apathy on the part of voters has become a tradition in American society. In previous years the Ameri- can people as a whole paid little attention to elections, and to the can- didates, until the election returns started rolirg in. Then, suddenly, all their interests were directed to- ward the elections, but it was too late for it to mean anything. Unless the American people show some interest in the coming elections, the most vital in the history of the United States, all the statements by candidates on political issues will be meaningless and all the platforms will be useless.--Aggie Miller DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1944 VOL. LIV No. 151 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 11:30 a.m. Notices To the Members of the Faculty of] the College of Literature, Science and the Arts: There will be a meeting of the Faculty of the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts in Rm. 1025, Angell Hall, June 5, 1944 at 4:10 p.m. Notices of this meeting and the proposed agenda and reports have been distributed through cam- pus mail. 'Edward H. Kraus Faculty, College of Engineering: There will be a meeting of the faculty of this college on Monday, June 5, at 4:15 p.m., in Rm. 445, West Engineer- ing Building. The purpose of this meeting includes: Nominations for Executive Committee ,member, elec- tion of University Council member, and routine business. / A. H. Lovell, Secretary Students and Faculty, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: The attention of students and fac- ulty is called to the following regula- tions of the College: 1. Students are in no case examined at any other time than that set for the examination of the class in which the work has been done. In case of unavoidable conflicts a special ex- amination "during examination week may be arranged for a class by the instructor, with the consent of the Examination Schedule Committee. 2. It should be noted that a report of X (Absent from Examination) does not guarantee a make-up exam- ination. An instructor must, in fair- ness to those who take the final examination at the time announced for it, give make-up examinaions only to students who have a legiti- mate reason for absence. E. A. Walter, Assistant Dean, College of Literature, Science and the Arts Notice to Men Students: All men students living in approved rooming houses who expect to move from their present quarters at the end of this term must give notice of intention to move in writing to the Office of the B y D R EW E A itS ON WASHINGTON, June 2.-Some of the smart boys inside the Republican party are quietly urging that their strategy during the coming campaign take the line so powerfully laid down by Senator Bridges of New Hamp- shire, the other day, when he empha- sized various deficiencies in FDR's leadership for permanent peace. Bridges is one of the Senate Re- publicans who has a spotless record when it comes to cooperation with the President on the war and on his entire foreign policy. Long before Pearl Harbor, when other Republicans were trying to ham- string the Administration, Bridges was out in front fighting for Roose- velt's main war ideas. For that reason, what he had to say the other day was much more effective. Bridges' main thesis was: "The American people are not go- ing to rest content with any issue out of this present struggle which results merely in a re-shuffled game of balance of power politics. We are not going to welcome any new fangled sort of imperialism-will never ac- claim any outcome of this present cataclysm which merely sows the seeds of another and more horribly devastating war." F.IDI"s Weak Point .. . Senator Bridges then put his finger on what some Republican strategists believe may be the weak point in Roosevelt's war policies, his appar- ent lack of conviction that this war is not just another war, to be followed by more wars and more power poli- tics. "Why is it, Mr. President," asked Bridges, "that you no longer talk about a pease that shall endure? Is this why the New York Times of Dec. 18, 1943, quoted you in your press conference as saying: "The Allied conferences were mo- tivated by the general thought that they did not want another war in the lifetime of the present generation.' "Does this mean," asked Bridges, "that already you have been forced to compromise the ideal of an en- during peace?" Bridges also quoted the Saturday Evening Post's recent articles by For- rest Davis on the Teheran conference -articles supposed to have been ini- tialed by FDR in advance and which represent the President as believing "that hereafter only countries with an abundance of manpower and re- sources plus huge industrial plants can engage in the business of war." Not only GOP strategists, but some of the President's own friends believe this may be a weak point in the President's armor and, even more im- portant,, a weak point as far as the nation is concerned. From the Republican viewpoint, however, it is only a few men who supported the President before Pearl Harbor, such as Senator Bridges, who can effectively criticize. Most other Republicans can't very well throw stones. Polit ica l Propht L :uce .. Every year Harvard University awards the Nieman Fellowships to newsmen for outstanding journalism. A dinner is held when the awards are made. This year's dinner was attended by Harry Luce, publisher of Life, Time and Fortune, and more recently a budding owner of an international airline and of a radio network, and a promoter of embryo Presidents. After the dinner. Luce and others sat around chatting. Among other things, he declared that an anti- Roosevelt trend was sweeping the en- tire country. Then, paraphrasing Henry Mencken's wisecrack of 1936 which he will never live down, Luce opined "Roosevelt could be licked by a one-eyed Chinaman." A few days later, came the Lister Hill-Claude Pepper victories in Ala- bama and Florida; the Starnes, Cos- tello and Dies exits from Congress, and the victory of Wayne Morse, a pro-Roosevelt Republican, in Oregon, Unique Congressan... . Rarely does a Congressman com- plain about getting too many Gov- ernment contracts for his dictrict. But that was exactly what Repre- sentative Richard Welch, California Republican, did the other day dur- ing a Congressional hearing on ship repairs which took place in New York. "It is pretty hard to understand why men should be transferred from here (New York) to the West Coast to build ships," Welch said. "Now if a New Yorker can build or repair ships on the West Coast, he can do it here . . . I always felt that New York did not get its just proportion of the shipbuilding ." Welch is not opposed for re-elec- tion this year. (Copyright, 1944, United Features Synd.) NEW YORK, June 2.- One thing the President has done, and that is to get himself rid of the charge that he is an idealist. The Republicans used to take pleasure in picturing the President as a softy, who just couldn't keep from giving milk to the Hottentots. It was a strange failing, but there it was; every time he saw a Hottentot, he would give him some milk, and a quart here, a quart there, when you some to the end of the week, it mounts up. A change must have taken place somewhere along the line, because now the argument against the President is that he has become a tough fel- low. They say he wouldn't give a small nation the time of day. All he cares for are those big nations he has been going around with lately. From the more idealistic circles in our na- tional life, like the Hearst press, you learn that the President absolutely refuses to break off our affair with Russia, in order to protect Po- land, whereas to risk our national future in order to protect Poland is exactly what the Hearst press has always advocated, or are we both dreaming? Anyway, the opposition uses both versions of ' the life and character of Vranklin Delano Roose- velt, and in one he wears a big smile, and scat- ters flowers out of a basket, and hums a wordless tune, and whenever he sees any foreigner whose name he doesn't know, why he puts him on the WPA first and finds out his name afterward. In the second version, the President is pictured as knocking the heads of the small countries together something fierce, and treating them like dirt, and as for scattering flowers, that is all wrong, because poison ivy is what he gives the small nations, except on Thursdays, when they get arsenic, too. This second picture is building up fast, and we have Demaree Bess saying in the Saturday Evening Post that the President has a "'grand design" of making America the balance-wheel of the world, and. to hell with small countries. The idea seems to be that when Britain is too fresh we will leap over to Russia's side, and when Russia gets funny ideas, we will run like the wind back to Britain. The President will sit there, watching world events, his eyes shining like anything, and when somebody gets out of line, he will crack the ruler, and everybody will have to freeze where they were. DON'T THINK any of this is especially so. Eleven years of observing the President have given me the impression that he has a kind of genius for taking a sound six-month view of the future, that he has a deep instinct for feeling his way to a short-term move that will make later moves possible, but that he does not care for long-range apocalytic visions, because, in the first place, he has too much sense of humor, and they make him laugh. But, anyway, to get back to my first point, this kind of stuff is going around, and it has pretty well killed off the earlier picture of the President as a softy idealist. This is a great blow to the isolationists and to the Chicago "na- tionalists." They wanted so desperately for the President to be another Wilson, so that they could fight Wilson a second time. Well, the President is taking his time about being a Wilson. He is doing what has to be done today, and letting the public lead him on the questions of tomorrow. And so it is the isolationists who have been jockeyed into a kind of sour idealism; it is they who are rais- ing the rights-of-small-nations issue, and be- coming Poland's advocate, etc. In fact Mr. Hearst, when he gets going good on the rights of small nations (against Russia) sometimes sounds remarkably like Mr. Wilson himself, which is another way of saying that he is so og-balance his ear is scraping the side of the road. That is what happens when you tangle with a master, and sometimes, on a clear night, I think I can hear a chuckle reverberating from the White House all the way to here. (Copyright, 1944. New York Post Syndicate) Less than half of the American people own War Bonds. Supposing only half of our army decided to fight? Let's all back the attack with extra War Bonds. Dean of Students on or before noon, today. Students terminating con- tracts must vacate their rooms be- fore 6 p.m., June 24 and rent shall be computed to include this date. Students may obtain forms for term- inating contracts at Rm. 2, Univer- sity Hall. Assistant Dean of Students C. T. Olmsted Tickets - Graduation Exercises: The Graduation Exercises will be held at 2:30 p.m., June 24, in Hill Auditorium. Tickets will be ready for distribution at the Information Desk in the Business Office on and after June 5. Candidates for degrees who will march in the academic pro- cession will need no tickets, but upon presentation of identification cards they may obtain tickets for families and friends. The American Youth Hostels, In- corporated are . sponsoring a bicycle trip to Mexico from July 2 through Aug. 18 at a total cost of $155.00. More detailed information may be obtained from Miss Janina Diedbala, 6957. Petitioning: Positions on the sum- mer Women's War Council, including, the president, personnel administra- tor, secretary, treasurer, Surgical Dressings chairman, and Judiciary Council, will be open to senior and second semester junior women. Posi- tions on JGP, Soph Project, and Frosh Project are open to women in these respective classes and three USO colonels will be chosen from women in any year. Petitioning began Friday, June 2, and will continue until 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 7, at which time all petitions must be turned in to the Undergrad Office at the League. There will be no inter-j viewing. A cademic Notices English 128 will not meet today. A. L. Bader Doctor Examination for Sister Mary Petronilla Francoeur, Latin; thesis: "The Relationship in Thought and Language Between Lucius Annaeus Seneca and Martin of Braga," today, 2009 Angell Hall, at 9 a.m. Chairman J. G. Winter. By action of the Executive Board the Chairman may invite members of the facilties and advanced doc- will include compositions by Weber, Kern, Gould, Sousa, Wagner, Padilla, Holst and Paganini, and will be open to the general public. .Events T oday The Michigan Sailing Club will meet in the Union at 1 today. Formal Fun: The USO does it again with another formal dance! There will be an orchestra for dan- cing, and it's a good one. Junior Hostesses, orchestra, refreshments- who wants more? 'Coming Events Avukah will present "Palestine Night" at its final meeting this sem- ester. The evening will include mov- ies, folk-dancng and refreshments. "Palestine Night" takes place Sun- day, June 4, from 8-10:30 p.m. at the Hillel Foundation. 'Churches Unity: Sunday morning at 11 o'clock at Michigan League a dra- matic reading of man's ultimate quest. Henry Maday, Detroit radio artist, speaker. Subject: "The Ulti- mate Frog." Study group at 8 o'clock Tuesday evening at Unity Reading Rooms, 310 S. State St. University Lutheran Chapel's Sun- day Service begins at 11 o'clock. Trinity Sunday sermon by the Rev. Alfred Scheips. Student's Evangelical Chapel: Rev. L. Verduin, Pastor, 218 N. Division. The regular worship services will be held at 10:30 a.m. and at 7:30 p.m. with the Rev. L. Verduin preaching. The chapel is sponsored by the Chris- tian Reformed Church. Memorial Christian Church (Disci- ples): 11 a.m., Morning worship. The Rev. Parker Rossman will speak on "Non-Essential Religion." 5:30 p~m., Guild Sunday Evening Hour. Stu- dents, servicemen and their friends will meet at the Guild House, 438 Maynard Street, for a social hour and refreshments followed by a vesper service. Wesley Foundation: The group will leave the church today at 1:30 p.m. for swimming and a picnic. Call 6881 for reservations before noon. Small BARNABY Yes... 've done remarkable things since I've taken over at the factory. I dare say the good reports are speeding your dad along the road to recovery.,.. a We11.. . ..0 By Crockett Johnson Pop didn't act so happy when I said the plant is doing better while he's sick, Mr. O'Malley- // Cushlamochree! Oh, how thoughtless of me! Of course! Under the circumstances, he's receiving all this good news with mixed emotions. I've put him under a psychological strain.. . ~' a L 1 i '' r? I And in his rundown condition, Barnaby, anything can happen! Schizophrenia might set in!..,. I must do something!,. .. At once. But, what? oc CE T HNSo ~ I.. CR , a ;a , Hello, m'boy. . .I've fixed things. No longer will your dad suffer I've removed a factor which has gravely complicated his illness. U .r Jr.n {ie a ainv L.. . Don't try to express gratitude for my magnanimity, Barnaby. wt ._ .. ., c.:... r...rs,, . Yes. My "E". .. But when you learn where the prodvction