PAGE FO'UU THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 9, 1945 Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: OPA Officials Win Round One DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Ii Ii WW4NIM MM Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Evelyn Phillips Margaret Farmer Ray Dixon . Paul Sislin Hank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy Dick Strickland Martha Schmitt Kay McFee Editorial Staff . . . Managing Editor . . . . Editorial Director . . . . City Editor Associate Editor . , . . Sports Editor . . . Associate Sports Editor Women's Editor Business Staff . . Business Manager . . . Associate Business Mgr. . . . Associate Business Mgr. Telephone 23-241 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights ofrre- 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, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. REPRESENTED FOR NATION AVERTS3ING 8Y National Advertising Service, Inc. college Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO"BGOTON- LSANGELES ..SAK FANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 NIGHT EDITOR: BOB GOLDMAN Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Regents' Meetings REFUSAL by the Senate Rules Committee to pass the Eaton resolution requiring the Board of Regents to open their meetings to the press and public came as no surprise. There were too many good arguments against it and virtu-. ally no popular or official support. It is obvious to even the most casual ob- server that many matters, such as academic discipline and alloting of the University approp- riation, are not fit subjects for general campus and State knowledge. And a great majority of the citizens of the State silply do not care what goes on in Regents' meetings--as shown in the very light vote cast in Regental elec- tions. Taking these factors into consideration it was almost inevitable that the Committee voted as it did. Nevertheless, the' responsibility of the Regents to the State and University is very great and it is even greater in this situation where they are put "on their honor," so to speak, for action taken by them. It is essential that the Univer- sity realize this responsibility and give to the public, through the press, a much more detailed and complete analysis of action taken by the Regents on specific issues. -Ray Dixon Canadian Army A LOT has been said lately regarding the ef- forts of the Canadian government to round up several-odd thousand deserters, most of them of French-Canadian extraction, who went "over the hill" when threatened with overseas service. Stories of the man-hunt now progress- ing in the North Woods have been prominently displayed in American newspapers for the past several weeks. The result of all this adverse publicity has been a general attitude of contempt for the fighting qualities of the Canadian soldier. He is condemned as a slacker who has neither the ability nor the inclination to stand up and fight. That such an attitude should exist in light of recent accounts of the exploits of the Canadian armies on the Western European front is just another of those incongruities of thinking which accompany wartime emotion- alism. It is true that an inordinately large number of Canadian soldiers did desert their posts when threatened with overseas duty, but it is equally true that far greater numbers are performing heroic service in the push to the Rhine-and perhaps beyond. The Canadian First Army was assigned to what is generally recognized as the "hot spot" of'he Western Front, that area in the Northern corner which protects the flank of the whole operation. It, has defended that corner with great valor. In addition, it has slogged ahead against bitter opposition in the Goch sector during the present push, helping to make possi- ble the Cologne victory. And it probably is not through yet. Prior to the current offensive, Canadian troops distinguished themselves at Dieppe, at Caen and all through the Normandy battle. Canadian sailors have performed meritorious service in the Battle of the Atlantic. Canadian contri- By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-OPA, never famous for its tact, recently hit a new low when officials threw three congressmen out of a meeting of the strawberry growers industry advisory com- mittee. Present at the meeting, besides the growers, were Representatives Jimmy Morrison of the Louisiana strawberry district, Harold Earthman, Democrat, and John Jennings, Jr., Republican, both of Tennessee. The three congressmen had been asked by the strawberry growers to attend their meeting with OPA. The strawberry people have been having OPA difficulties-the Florida and Louisiana growers feeling that the ceiling prices imposed last year are not high enough to cover crop loss through poor weather, while growers in other states now ready for planting don't know what their ceiling price will be. Some are convinced that OPA price heads Geoffrey Baker, formerly of General Foods, and John Gismond, formerly of the Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, are out to protect the profits of the processors and handlers of strawberries, rather than the growers. They point to the high retail price for both canned and frozen berries, although the ceiling price deteri,to the (Plt itljN Animated Cartoon ... To the Editor: This is to draw your attention to a short animated cartoon shown at a local theater dur- ing a matinee March 3. The title of the car- toon was "Sunday Go To Meeting" produced by Merry Melodies, Inc., a company which has just received a blue ribbon from someone or other for it. It was a skit portraying Sunday in a small southern village. All the characters were supposed to represent Negroes, who were characterized by the most grotesque and in- sulting stereotypes imaginable. It is impossible for me to exaggerate the repulsiveness and hideousness of the manner in which colored people were represented. The people of the United States, who are now engaged in a costly war to defeat the Nazi doctrines of racial superiority and wipe it from the face of the earth, ought not to tolerate such doctrine anywhere on our shores North or South. -Cornelius J. Loeser Military Training ... To the Editor: In the campus poll reporte in The Daily for February 14, careful readers will note that in spite of the very misleading headline, only "25% favored -military training exclusively" and "16.5% were for Army and Navy control exclusively." Identical bills (HR 515 and S 188) prescribe as follows: "Every male citizen of the United States and every male alien residing therein shall upon attaining the age of 18 years, or within four years thereafter, be subject to military or naval training, and shall be inducted into the Army or Navy of the United States for this pur- pose alone ... " Since "military training exclusively" and "Army and Navy control exclusively" are pre- scribed by the bills now in committees in both houses, the large majority of Michigan stu- dents opposing these proposals should take it upon themselves to write their Senators and Congrepsmen indicating their opposition to these bills. -W. C. Trow ON SECOND YT HOUGHT... DEAN REA informs us that the campus cop not keep you from Red Cross drivipg. The campus goal has been set at $5,500. That should be a minimum, not a maximum figure. We febl hurt because we were left off the list of 52 students who earned all A's last semester. All you've got to have is a four point average and we've got four points-good, bad, blue and pencil. And then there was the discharged ser- viceman ivho never took a bath because he was vet already. We like the story about the fellow who tried out for JGP yesterday. He thought the initials meant Just Girls Playing. they have been working under was 32 cents per quart for most of the season. North Carolina farmers were so angry about the ceiling last year that they let about a third of their crop rot in the fields. Most growers are willing to let the 32-cent price stand, but they have no assurance that it will, and OPA has indicated that this price may be cut. Last week's meeting had been underway for about 15 minutes when Franklin Gindick of the OPA food price division, who was serving as chairman, suddenly. announced, "We have g,,t to stop this meeting- a minute while we ask the congressmen to leave." When the congressmen showed no disposition to leave, "Strawberry Champion" Gindick asked them to step into the hall, where he told them "the law" prohibits their attendance at indus- try advisory committee meetings. To this, Louisiana's Jimmy Morrison replied, "I'm a lawyer and a congressman. but I've never heard of that law. Will you show it to me?" Gindick said he was referring to a ruling by the attorney general, but Morrison insisted upon seeing the ruling or hearing it from the attor- ney general or one of his staff. Finally Gin- dick gave up and called Mrs. Ethel Gilbert, head of the OPA office of industry advisory committees, after the congressmen refused to go to Mrs. Gilbert's office. "You gentlemen will have to leave," Mrs. Gilbert told them. "The attorney general does not want congressmen at industry advisory meet- ings." Again Morrison insisted upon proof that the attorney general had made such a ruling; to which Mrs. Gilbert replied, "You are taking advantage of a lady, Mr. Morrison." Morrison, iowever, stood his ground until Mrs. Gilbert explained, "This is a rule I mad S. I control policy for these meetings, and will not let senators and congressmen attend." "By what authority?" asked the congress- man from Louisiana. "The OPA appropria- tion bill is due to come before the house within a few weeks," Mrs. Gilbert replied. "The auth- ority you congressmen gave me-believe me, I use it." John Jennings, Tennessee Republican, finally gave up in disgust; but Morrison and Earthman returned to the conference. They were followed by Mrs. Gilbert, who announced that so long as the congressmen insisted upon staying, tl*re would be no official action at the meeting, even though the growers had travelled hundreds of miles at their own expense. Finally the two congressmen left. When the strawberry growers met last year at OPA, Morrison and Senator Tom Stewart of Tennessee were on hand-and were permitted to stay throughout the meeting. (Copyright, 1945. Bell Syndicate) - " FRIDAY, MARCH 9, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 90 Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent inttypewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:30 p. m. of the day preceding publication (11:30 a. m. Sat- urdays), Notices Netice: Attention of all concerned, and particularly of thlose having of- fices in Haven Hall, or the western portion of the Natural Science Build- ing is directed to the fact that park- ing or standing of cars in the drive- way between these two buildings is prohibited because it is at all times inconvenient and even dangerous to other drivers and to pedestrians on the diagonal and other walks. If members of your family call for you, especially at noon when traffic both on wheels and on foot is heavy, it is especially urged that the car wait for you in the parking space adjacent to the north door of University Hall. Waiting in the driveway blocks traf- fic and involves confusion, inconven- ience and danger just as much when a person is sitting in a car as when the car is parked empty. University Senate Committee on Parking American Red Cross War Fund: If you have not been solicited in regard to your contribution toward the American Red Cross and wish to make your pledge, please call at the Cashier's Office, 104 South Wing, and receive your membership card and pin. Rules governing participation in Public. Activities: I.y Participation in Public Activities: Participation in a public activity is defined as service of any kind on a committee or a publication, in a pub- lic performance or a rehearsal, or in holding office in a class or other student organization. This list is not intended to be exhaustive, but merely is indicative of the character and scope of the activities included. dents, a Certificate of Eligibility. Participation before the opening of the first semester must be approved as at any other time. Before permitting any students to participate in a public activity (see definition of Participation above), the chairman or manager of such activity shall (a) require each appli- cant to present a certificate of eli- gibility (b) sign his initials on the back of such certificate and (c) file with the Chairman of the Committee on Student Affairs the names of all those who have presented certificates of eligibility and a signed statement to exclude all other from participa- tion. Blanks for the chairman's lists may be obtained in the Office of the Dean of Students. Certificates of Eligibility for the first semester shall be effective until March 1. III. Probation and Warning: Students on probation or the warned list are forbidden to participate in any pub- lic activity. IV. Eligibility, First Year:' No fresh- man in his first semester of residence may be granted a Certificate of Eli- gibility. A freshman, during his second sem- ester of residence, may be granted a Certificate of Eligibility provided he has completed 15 hours or more of work with (1) at least one mark 'of A or B and with no mark of less than C, or (2) at least 212 times as many honor points as hours and 2with no malk of E. (A-4 points, B-3, IC-2, D-l, E-0). Any student in his first semester of residence holding rank above that of freshman may be granted a Cer- tificate of Eligibility if he was admit- I ted to the University in good stand- ing. V. Eligibility General: In order to receive a Certificate of Eligibility a student must have earned at least 11 hours of academic credit in the pre- ceding semester, or 6 hours of aca- demic crbdit in the preceding sum- mer session, with an average of at least C, and have at least a C average for his entire academic career. Unreported grades and grades of X the subject "Minority Groups in the United States" at 8 p.m., Tuesday, March 13, in the Rackham Amphi- theatre, under the auspices of the De- partment of Sociology. The public is cordially invited. Dr. Homer P. Rainey, former presi- dent of the University of Texas, will speak on Problems of Southern Edu- cation in the Rackham Auditorium on Saturday, March 10, at 2:30 p.m. Everyone is invited to attend. No admission charge. Academic Notices College of Literature, Science and the Arts, Schools of Education, For- estry, Music and Public Health: Stu- dents who received marks of I or X at the close of their last semester or summer session of attendance will receive a grade of E in the course or courses unless this work is made up by April 5. Students wishing an extension of time beyond this date in order to make up this work should file a petition addressed to the ap- propriate official in their school with Room 4, U. H. where it will be trans- mitted. Students, College of Literature, Science, and ts Arts: Election cards filed after the end of the first week of the semester may be accepted by the Registrar's Office only if they are approved by Associate Dean Walter:. Required Hygiene Lectures for Women: All first and second semes- ter freshman women are required to take the hygiene lectures, which are to be given this term. Uppercass students who were in the University as freshmen and who did not fulfill the requirements are required to take and satisfactorily complete this course. These lectures are a gradua- tion requirement. Section No. 1, First Lecture, Mon- day, March 12, 4:15-5:15, Hill Aud. Subsequent Lectures successive Mon- days, 4:15-5:15, Hill Aud. Examina- tion (Final), Monday, April 23, 4:15- 5:15, Hill Aud. Section No. II, First Lecture, Tues- day, March 13, 4:15-5:15, Hill Aud. Subsequent Lectures successive Tues- days, 4:15-5:15, Hill Aud. Examina- tion (Final), Tuesday, April 24, 4:15- 5:15, Hill Aud. Attendance is required at all lec- tures. Each student must attend the section for which she enrolls. Lec- tures will start promptly at 4:15. Mathematics 328: Seminar in Sta- tistics. First meeting, Tuesday, Mar. 13, 3-5 p.m., Rm. 3010 Angell Hall. rofessor Craig will speak. The examination for students who wish to begin their concentration in mathematics this term will be held n Rm. 3016 Angell Hall on Tuesday, March 13, from 2 to 4. In case of conflicts, see Professor Fischer be- fore this date. Graduate Students: Preliminary examinations in French and German for the doctorate will be held today from 4 to 6 p.m. in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. Diction- aries may be used. Concerts A I '1 'I I "y 1 7 tt 1 f 1 7 II and I are to be-interpreted as E until Certificate of Eligibility : At the removed in accordance with Univer- beginning of each semester and sum- sity regulations. If in the opinion of mer session everymstudent shall be the Committee on Student Affairs cohclusively presumed to be ineligi- the X or I cannot be removed promp- ble for any public activity until his tly, the parenthetically reported eligibility is affirmatively established grade may be used in place of the X by obtaining from the Chairman of or I in computing the average. the Committee on Student Affairs, Students who are ineligible under in the Office of the Dean of Stu- Rule V may participate only after' ---_ _ _having received special permission of the Committee on Student Affairs. Davis I eW os M. Gomberg Scholarship and Paul F. Bagley Scholarship in Chemistry: 'HE APPOINTMENT of WLB head These scholarships of $150'each are William H. Davis to the position open to juniors and seniors majoring of Director of Economicope Stbiiztinuince is.refeencer w oieg <. CINEMA NEW LIFE was breathed into the Art Cinema N League last night-by way of an old picture, "Le Jour Se Leve"-and a surprisingly large audience observed the resurrection. If this sort of response continues an excellent season may be anticipated. If it peters out, then we alone are to blame. This is a French film-which means that it is technically inferior and artistically super- ior to the Hollywood product. It lacks the smooth, slick, flashy touch-but excels in realism and sensitivity. Jean Gabin plays a murderer who, about to be apprehended by a slightly comic gendarmerie, recapitulates the events leading up to his crime. So, we see something of the fade-out flash-back tech- nique. Somehow, though, it does not seem hackneyed, a fact due largely to superb photo- graphy. Director Marcel Carne lets us view life from the top of a bannister, through the window of a moving car, from a garden. He focusses the camera in such a way as to capture the shades of black and white that play on Gabin's face as he meditates his deed. All night he sits or stalks, jumps and fidgets-until, plunk! in falls tear gas thrown by the police. It ex- plodes with the arrival of dawn and just after Gabin has committed suicide. Then, the final fillip of irony: an alarm clock goes off, runs its course to the very last whimper with that, finis. Those of you who cannot take somber- ness, which is to say, life, in large cinematic of Director of Economic Stabilization, formerly held by Fred M. Vinson, new administrator of the ReconstructionI Finance Corporation, may permit a solution of the long-standing contro-I versy over the Little Steel formula. The required approval of VinsonI on the recommendations of the War Labor Board has been a major ob- stacle in the effective handling of labor disputes. His insistence on rigid application of the Little Steel formula and refusal to limit certain "fringe adjustments" has reduced seriously the authority and prestige of the Board.' Earlier, Vinson's refusal to approve the wage adjustments of the Emer- gency Labor Board appointed to han- dle the railroad dispute of 1943 so prolonged the dispute and threatened the effectiveness of the Boards that Congress ruled that the Boards need not secure Vinson's approval, but need only certify to him that the rec- ommendations were in accord with the stabilization program. Davis' new appointment will per- sit him to apply the knowledged o the issues involved in labor's de- mand for higher wages gained as chairman of the National War Labor Board. It is the hope of labor that the formulation of poli- cies will reflect his superior under-' standing of the conflict between 1 the increased cost of living and the present wage policies. -Betty Roth in chemistr'y. Preference will be giv- en to those needing financial assis- tance. Application blanks may be obtained in Rm. 212 Chemistry Buil- ding and must be filed not later than March 20. May Festival Season Tickets: All remaining season May Festival tick- ets will be placed on public sale, beginning Monday morning, March 12, at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. Choral Union Memberships: Then are a few vacancies in the men's sections of the University Choral Un- ion which will be filled in the order of application by competent singers. Those interested should communi- cate with Professor Hardin Van Deursen, home phone 6621. Summer Registration; A meeting will be held on Tuesday, March 13, at 4:10 p.m. in Rm. 205 Mason Hall, for all students who want. to register for summer employment. This in- cludes applicants for work in sum- mer camps; camp counseling, hotels. resorts, etc. University Bureau of Appointments Extension Division: Opening dates of courses in Ann Arbor are sched- uled to coincide with the campus cal- endar of classes. Persons who would like to have other courses added to the program are asked to list their speci- fic interests with the Extension office. The Los Angeles County Civil Ser- vice Announcements for the follow- ing, have been received in our office. For fprtlhei' information stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bureau of Appoint- ments. SENIOR STATISTICIAN. salary $233 to $288, MUSEUM PRE- PARATOR II, salary $173 to $211, KEY PUNCH OPERATOR, salary $157.20 to $188.40, MEDICAL SO- CIAL WORKER, $198 to $240, and SOCIAL CASE WORKER (TEM- PORARY), salary $157 to $190. Lectures French Lecture. Professor Charles E. Koella, of the Department of Ro- ---T~ rirrc vil oiv f-i fft 4 - doses had better Hope. go drug yourselves with Bob -Bernard Rosenberg S i i ! i ', ', Faculty Recital: The first il a ser- ies of four Sunday evening piano re- citals will be presented at 8:30 p.m., March 11, in Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre, when Ava Comin Case will play compositions by Bach, Chopin, De- bussy, Respighi, and Rachmaninoff. Open to the public. 1Event s oday Geological Journal Club will meet in Rm. 4065 N.S. Bldg., at 12:15 p.m. today. Program : 0. E. Childs will review "Valleys and Parks of the Kai- bab and Coconino Plateaus, Arizona" by Arthur N. Strahler. All interested are cordially welcome. Service of Dedication of Pipe Or- gan: First Unitarian Church, this evening, 8:15 p.m. Mrs. Frieda 0. Vogan, School of Music, University of Michigan, guest organist. Dr. Philip C. Nash, president of the University of Toledo, giving the ad- dress on: "An Adventure in World Order." Rev. Edward H. Redman, minister of the church, conducting the service. Coming Events All School of Music faculty mem- bers and students are cordially in- vited by the School of Music Student Council to an informal party to be held at 8 p.m., Monday, March 12, in the Michigan League. The Roger Williams Guild will have an "Around the World" progressive dinner Saturday at 6:30 p.m. Bap- tist students and their friends will meet at the Guild house for nassports BARNABY Herringbone4s Confidential Newsletter says J. J. O'Malley plans a big postwar industrial expansion program, Joseph. A sound mte. 226 By Crockett Johnson I checked on O'Malley. He's not in the New York phone book and he's not listed in the financial directories- Say' He IS C a bigshot! A -J He's an Argentine billionaire and I figure he's fronting for one of them German cartels- Now. O'Malley got his start in diamond mines. Over in Africa. r Nsor l - rKT o pYri h,54,T wpope. PM. Inc. a r I =, 1 W7 _ -: t- :4