w; . THE MICHlIGAN DAILY- VA Goobleygook more foolish stunts of 1947 As an expedient for raising veteran Y the Veterans Administra- scholastic standards the order is futile- en it enforced the rule that since it doesn't alter existing regulations ent veterans to report the which already provide that student vet- rs missed. erans will not be eligible for government the ruling, made in June, help unless they are doing satisfactory rill deduct the number of work. is absent from class from Saving money can't be the object of the ave to which he is entitled. I have two effects: ruling, since the tremendous cost of en- financial slap on the wrist larging the VA clerical staff throughout the o cut classes, by docking nation in order to handle the increased heir leave pay. paper work will be more than offset by the vn clerical staff.(On Dec. 12 revenue gained by docking students who seventh of the University's cut classes. Students will cut classes very. terans had not yet received seldom if it costs them money. checks for September.) The senselessness of the ruling is illus- trated by the fact that a cut on a day when a student has five classes counts for one- hed in The Michigan Daily fifth of a day's subsistence, while for cut- nembers of The Daily staff ting the only class on another day a veteran e views of the writers only. will be docked a whole day's pay. -- a~ The next thing will be Saturday morn- ing inspections. [ORS: Levy and Recht . -- -Stuart Finlayson Battle of T eories RS to be the usual argu- includes the removal of many of the pres- roposed tax changes prom- ent controls from the business scene in or- into a full-scale battle der to encourage industry, and to make ting economic theories. possible the tax reduction. ration's opposition to the rms PROGRAM is not without merit. The ram for slicing income and eam uerstacing nabme wind present scale of business activity can- eadily understandable with not be called "normal" because of the arti- [eral debt clouding the pic- ficial stimulus given by accumulated war Truman has taken the stand savings. But this level must be maintained rtax level must remain if if we are to have lasting prosperity and repayent ofithiebngtHe continue the current price level. The way inther with retaining the to accomplish this is via the good, old Am- tic controls that have beenpast 12 years erican capitalism, they feel, and they ap- deficit financing included pear determined to see the policy through. the idea that money spent The task of repaying the federal debt has pression should be repaid not been forgotten in this plan, but merely ods of prosperity. Accord- postponed until that time when we shall er time than now to fulfill have reached a permanent basis of pros- we imposed on ourselves -perity nd during the war repre- With a Republican majority in both cratic view. Houses, it would seem certain that their hand, the Republicans are final tax revision plan will be adopted, re- ig at giving the country a gardless of its nature. For those who hold they talk of lower taxes, true to the American tradition, there could n the manner in which the be no better time than now to show the ;creasemay come. The low rest of the world that you can attain both do not stand to gain ap- prosperity and freedom, permanently and a revised tax program, but simultaneously. If the Republican goal can arning upwards of $10,000 be reached, we shall have forged the strong- est defense possible against the attack of ran feeling is that these foreign economic influences upon our way osed during the war, rep- of life. sing influence on the group --Ken Herring A NEW book, BETRAYAL IN THE PHIL- IPPINES, by Hernando Abaya, with an introduction by Harold Ickes, brings out from under the rigorous censorship of Am- erican doings in the Far East, the callous- ness of our imperialism. Mr. Abaya, a Filipino journalist, and a former confidential secretary to the late President Quezon, has presented a factual account of the growth of the people's Huk- balahap army, their resistance against the Japanese, the development of their agrarian land reforms, the treatment they received at the hands of the American puppet, Roxas. In short, here is a complete record of what MacArthur chooses to call "the mantle of American sovereignty"; which in reality is a vicious exploitation of a subject people, no less destructive in its ultimate manifes- tations that the British or Dutch treatment of the East Indians. There has been a popular notion in this country, introduced and reiterated by the apologists for American imperialism, even down to the level of the high-school history books, thatourusurpation of the islands from Spain in 1898 was a Godsend, that the peo- ple of the Philippines would profit from the benevolence of the American capitalist. Whatever has accrued to the material growth of the Islands, in the way of roads, sanitation, public health, etc., was the by- product of American rule, by no means the essence of it. Since Mark Twain wrote in 1901, in an article, "To The Person Sitting in Dark- ness," while the American armies were trying to subjugate Andres Bonifacio s people's army, "There must be two Amer- ica's: one that sets the captive free, and one that takes a once-captive's new free- dom away from him, and picks a quarrel with him with nothing to found it on, and then kills him to get his land," the American capitalists, who have been the real rulers of the Islands, have kept the people in the same feudal-colonial state in which they were found. Nor has our official position changed. The recently passed Bell Bill (the Philippine Trade Act) assures the American capitalist complete control of the Philippine economy for another twenty-eight years. By this in- famous piece of legislation, the Congress has granted to all of us the right to equal cit- izenship with the Filipino in his own land. That the Filipinos had to accept the bill goes without saying; the threat of the with- drawal of rehabilitation resources was held over their heads. ASIDE from the Islands being so necessary to replenish the coffers of the sugar and hemp interests, they are an integral part of the Pacific "Mare Nostrum" idea. Paul Mc- Nutt, in a Colliers article, destroyed the myth that the islands were being maintained for defensive purposes. They are now our first line of offense. "We are already committed to the maintenance of naval and air bases in the Islands. These are not designed mere- ly for the protection of the Philippines, nor even for the defense of the United States. These bases are expected to be secondary supporting installations for supply, repair, and staging activities for all our armed forces in the Far East." The year before, he put everything even more succinctly. "Manila, Tokyo, and Shanghai . . . those three cities form a triangle comprising the heartland of the Far East. Within the boun- daries of this triangle the future of the Far East will be decided." This is the sentiment which is guiding the Truman Administration in a policy of which every decent American must be ashamed. If the men who control American foreign policy are at all interested in bringing to the world some of the "lasting peace" of which they so often speak, they can begin by cleaning our own house. -E. E. Ellis Some people along radio row are saying that the news commentator is on the way out. But what is taking his place . . . is that the liberal commentator . . is being pushed out . . . Many radio executives argue they are in business not in order to present ideas, but chiefly just to provide entertain- ment. But radio's resistance to ideas seems mainly opposition to liberal ideas. -New Republic W E HAVE enough scientific knowledge to allow us to nourish properly the three- quarters of the earth's population -1,500,- 000,000 people - who never get enough to eat, Dr. Charles F. Kettering, General Mo- tors research head, told the American As- sociation for the Advancement of Science in Boston in his retiring presidential address. -Science News Letter SENATOR Robert F. Wagner of New York, in the midst of a congressional scramble to rewrite the rights of labor, has proposed a constructive approach to labor-manage- ment relations. Wagner favors an expansion of the existing US Conciliation Service into a stronger agency with greater prestige, the better to assist management and labor -New Republic BILL MAULDIN p PRo y ~ . ~Tm. 3'. U. S. at. Off.-...All rghts reserved "Poppa is only a scientist, Junior. The SMART men decide how to use my inventions." Letters to the Editor. EDITOR'S NOT: No letter- to the editor will be printed unless signed and written in good taste. ILetters over 300 words in length will be shortened or omitted; in special in- stances, they will be printed, at the discretion of the editorial director. * * * Answer on Spaint To the Editor: OUR issue of Jan. 15 contains a communication by Associate Professor F. Sanchez y Escribano about the report of a talk given by me before the Knights of Col- ,umbus on the Spanish Question. The report was printed earlier in the Ann Arbor News. The com- munication is written with more heat than light and displays com- plete misunderstanding of the na- ture of my remarks. It is also, un- fortunately, the vehicle for a bit- ter and partisan attack on the Catholic Church. It is ordinarily customary for scholars to discuss what another scholar said rather than the report of his remarks, necessarily brief and incomplete, as carried by a newspaper..Briefly Professor Sanchez can be an- swered as follows: 1. Professor Aiton (the writer) did not say that the Communist P a r t y dominated Republican ~F~ICI~A~BULLETIN (Continued from Page 3) Everett. 3011 AH; Gram., NS Aud; Johnston, E Haven; Jones 1121 mean China's total intellectual' NS; Murry, NS Aud; Needham, surrender or the birth of a new 2231 AH; Park, NS Auditorium; synthesis? Perkins, 2003 AH; Rich, 225 AH;Savage, 2231 AlH; R. Shedd, ~~ 2. Gallery, AMH; E. Stan- Academic Notices h;, 4003 AHl; P. Stanlis, W Gal- Doctoral Examination for Henry lry, AMH; Swift, W Gallery, Levinstein, Physics; thesis: " AMH; Wolfson, W Gallery, AMH. Study of the Growth and Structure IT SO HAPPENS * Brightening Dark Week of Thin Metallic Films," at 3 p.m., Thurs., Jan. 16, East Council Rm., Rackham. Chairman, H. R. Crane. . Doctoral Examination for Wil- liam Walsh Hagerty, Engineering Mechanics; thesis: "A Study of the Motion of a Viscous Fluid in a Bounded Annulus of Variable Length," at 4 p.m., Thurs., Jan. 16, Rm. 406, W. Engineering Bldg. Chairman, R. A. Dodge. Physical Chemistry Seminar: 4:150p.m., Thurs., Jan. 16, Rm. 151, Chemistry Bldg. Prof. E. F. Westrum will speak on "Thermo- dynamics of potassium bifluoride." All interested are invited. Sociology 90: The hours listed for this course in the Time Sched- ule for the second semester are in- correct. Section 1 will meet MF at 8 in 307 H.H. and W at 8 inj 3003 A.H. Section 2 will meet TTh at 8 in 307 HH and S at 8 in 3003 AH. Zoology Seminar: 7:15 p.m., Thurs., Jan. 16, Rackham Amphi- theater. Mr. Richard Manville will speak on "A study of Small Mammal Populations in Northern Michigan." Mr. Sidney Shapiro will speak on "Variation and Dif- ferentiation, as Correlated xvith Distribution, in tie Fish Fuindui-r lus diaphanus." English 85 final examination will be in 2014 AH, Thursday p.m., January 30. English 149 final examination will be in 2014 AH, Monday p.m., January 27. Room Assignments for German 1, 2, 31, 32final examinations to be held Saturday, January 25, 1947, 2-5 p.m. German 1, see. 1, Gaiss, B HH; German 1, sec 2, Philippson, 2225, Al; German 1, sec.3,Willey, 3017 AH; German 1, sec. 4, Graf, D AH; German 1, sec. 5, Philippson, 2225 AH; German 1, sec. 6, Pott, 2003 AH; German 1, sec. 7, Reichart, 206 UH; German 1, sec. 8, Van Duren, G HH; German 1, sec. 9, Braun, 101 Ec.; German 1, sec. 10, Gaiss, B HH; German 1, sec. 11, Thomas, E HH; German 1, sec. 12, Bettger, C HH; German 1, sec. Fihn, 35 AH; German 1, sec. 14, Dewey, 205 MH; German 1, sec. 15, Brown, 1025 AH; German 1, sec. 16, Yates, 2003 AH; German 1, sec. 17, Bettger, 2231 AH; Ger- man 1, sec. 18, Fihn, 35 AH; Ger- man 1, sec. 19, Van Zwoll, 1025 AH; German 1, sec. 20, Kahan, C HH; German 1, sec. 21, Reiss, D HH. German 2, sec. 1, Yates, 2003 Al; German 2, sec. 2, Brown, 1025 AH; German 2, sec. 3, Norton, 1025 A: German 2, sec. 4, Willey, IL COMPETITION is now open to editorial columnists, music, book and record reviewers who wish to write for The Daily this spring. Articulate students representing every shade of opinion are urged to submit sample columns. Opinions of columnists will be judged on the criteria of clear-thinking and eloquence. They will not be selected to represent the personal views of The Daily staff or editors. From those samples submitted which are satisfactorily writ- ten, columnists will be selected to repre- sent more than one major section of campus opinion. Student columns will appear either two or three times weekly. Columns should deal with 1-issues on this campus; 2..-issues of direct interest to students. Three sample columns must be sub- mitted by each applicant, in the editors' office (second floor, Student Publications Building) before Monday, Feb. 10. Be- tween semesters, mail samples "To the Editor, Michigan Daily, Ann Arbor." -Milt Freudenheim (editorial director) Life Subscription Free ONE OF our correspondents reports that a weekly newspaper, publishing out of Hart, Michigan, has brought a touch of Thoreau into this otherwise competitive modern world. . The weekly's subscription rates run: one- quarter year-$2.00; one-half year-$1.00; one year-$.50. *, ',a Devil-May-Care WE ENCOUNTERED one of our profs. smoking in Haven Hall the other day and, reminded of the worries of University vice-presidents concerning fires, lightly rep- rimanded the fellow. He retorted, just in case we wished to know, that the sooner that particular house of learning burned to the ground, the hap- pier he would be. We retreated thoughtfully. Ready Wit PROF. Donal H. Haines of the journal- ism department is confirming his rep- utation of always having a word appropriate to the occasion. In the midst of a colorful story Wednes- day, a student's chair gave up the ghost and deposited her with a crash beneath the table. As she rose from the splinters and dusted herself off, Haines announced, "I suppose that is what is technically known as laying them in the aisles." Contributions to this column are by all mein bers of The Daily staff, and are the responsi- bility of the editorial director. Path to Failure THE FAITH of the five major powers of the United Nations in the ability of that organization to maintain peace is touch- ingly illustrated by the fact that each of these countries is planning, or has in exis- tence, some program to provide a period of compulsory military training for all its young men. The fact that future peace is ultimately based on force even under the provisions of the United Nations Charter is undeniable. No one can fail to see the need for pro- viding "teeth" for the UN in view of the ex- periences of the League of Nations. How- neriences of the L e a g u e of Nations. Political Science 51, examina- tion. Wednesday, January 29, 2 p.m. Sections 1 and 2 (Mr. Laing) in Rm. 1025 A.H. Sections 3 (Mr. Lederle) in Rm. 2003 A.H. Political Science 85, Examina- tion. Monday, January 27, 9 a.m. Rm. 101 Economics Bldg. Political Science 150 will not be given in the spring semester. Freshman Health Lectures For Men: It is a University require- ment that all entering freshmen take, without credit, a series of lec- tures on Personal & Community Health and to pass an examina- tion on the content of those lec- tures. Transfer students with freshman standing are also re- quired to take the course unless they have had a similar course elsewhere. Upper classmen who were here as freshmen and who did not fulfill the requirements are requested to do so this semester. These lectures are ndt required of veterans. The lectures will be given in Room 25, Angell Hall at 5:00 p.m. and repeated at 7:30 p.m. as per the following schedule. Lecture No. 1, Mon., Feb. 10 Lecture No. 2, Tus., Feb. 11 Lecture No. 3, Wed., Feb. 12 Lecture No. 4, Thurs., Feb. 13 Lecture No. 5, Mon., Feb. 17 Lecture No. 6, Tues., Feb. 18 Lecture No. 7 (examination), Wed., Feb. 19. Please note that attendance is required and roll will be taken. Required Hygiene Lectures For Women-1947: All first and second semester freshman women are required to attend a series of health lectures which are to be given the second semester. Upper-class students who were in the University as freshmen and who did not fulfill the requirements are requested to do so this term. Enroll for these lectures by turning in a class card at the time of regular classification at Waterman Gymnasium. Satisfactory completion of this course (or of P.H.P. 100; elective, 3 hours credit) is a graduation re- quirement. Lecture Schedule Section I-First Lecture, Mon., Feb. 17, 4:15-5:15, N.S. Aud. Subsequent Lectures Successive Mondays, 4:15-5:15, N.S. Aud. Examination, Mon., Mar. 31, 4:15-5:15, N.E. Aud. Section I-First Lecture, Tues., Feb. 18, 4:15-5:15, N.S. Aud. Subsequent Lectures, Successive Tuesdays, 4:15-5:15, N.S. Aud. Examination, Tues., April 1, 4:15-5:15, N.S. Aud. Concerts Concert: Vladmir Horowitz, Pi- anist, will give the seventh con- cert in the Choral Union Series, Friday, January 17, at 8:30, in Hill Auditorium. Mr. Horowitz will play the following program: Mozart Sonata in A major; Kab- alevsky Sonata No. 2; Variations on a Theme by Clara Wieck, Schu- mann; Chopin Impromptu in A- flat major and Four Etudes, Op. 10; and Legend: St. Francis of (Continued on Page 6) Spain. The popular front govern- ment, however, had as its slogan "we have our Republic, now let's have our revolution." The dom- inant Left Marxist Socialist Party of Largo Caballero, in collabora- tion with the Anarcho-Syndical- ists deliberately sabotaged the Re- public and it is to be noted that the youth movement joined the Third International. During the Civil War, at the outset, the Rus- sian Ambassador Moses Rosen- berg took command in Madrid and replaced Giral with Largo Caballero.I am on record as fa- voring a Republic along Western democratic lines in Spain. 2. An unbiased and dispassion- ate account of the record of the Franco regime in World War II requires that the Blue Legion epi- sode be balanced by the neglected story of aid to the United Nations. Twenty-five thousand French vol- unteers had free transit across Spain to fight Germany. Hun- dreds of our aviators, forced to land in Spain, were not interned. We had the use of Barcelona as a free port for suppliesto France. Gui' espionage service operated freely out of Spain into France. These aids could be multiplied in a full account. 3. Currently in Spain the Angli- can and other churches present before the Civil War operate un- molested. How do they function in Russia and in Russian-held territory? 4. My point of view in other words was not pro-Franco but rather anti-Communist. The late President Roosevelt put it very well as he said in November, 1942, when he told Spain that she had "nothing to fear from the United States" and "It is because your nation and mine are friends in the best sense of the word, and because you and I are sincerely desirous of the continuation of that friendship for our mutual good, that I want very simply to tell you of the compelling reasons that have forced me to send a powerful American military force to the assistance of the French possessions in North Africa." In the same vein Winston Churchill said in May, 1944, "There is no doubt that if Spain had yielded to German blandishments and pressure, our burden would have been heavier . . . I shall always consider it a service rendered by Spain, not only to the United Kingdom and the British Empire but to the cause of the United Nations . . . I am here today to speak kindly words about Spain." With no desire to provoke a controversy but merely to set the record straight these few lines are submitted. -Arthur S. Aiton Truant Officers To the Editor: WITH THE VA announcement of the new attendance require- ment we envision the addition of a new civil service position-col- lege truant officer. Nothing could be more ridiculous than deducting from leave pay for absences from class. Most veteran students are in school because of a genuine desire to learn. Many veterans are even auditing extra classes. Unnecessary foolishness. -Howard Baumgarten In the months ahead Korea seems likely to replace Trieste as the number one international sore spot. Here American and Russian interests. are grinding against each other in naked and danger- ous friction. -Harpers Fifty-Seventh Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Robert Goldman .....Managing Editor Clayton Dickey ............City Editor Milton Freudenheim .Editorial Director Mary Brush..........Associate Editor Ann Kutz ............Associate Editor Paul Harsha ..........Associate Editor Clark Baker............Sports Editor Des Howarth ..Associate Sports Editor Jack Martin ...Associate Sports Editor Joan Wilk..........Women's Editor Lynne Ford .Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Robert E Potter ....Business Manwgel Evelyn Mills ......Associate Business Managel Janet Cork Associate Business Manage' ... - - .. .y A English 1-Final Examination 3017 AH; German 2, sec. 5, Gaiss, Schedule:I B : German 2, sec. 6, Thomas, Wed., Jan. 22 2-5 p.m. 35 Al; German 2, sec. 7, Fihn, 2231 Amend, B Haven; Bacon, B Hav- AU; German 2, sec. 8, Striedieck, en; Bingley, B Haven; M. Brad- D Alumni Hall: German 2, sec. 9, shaw, 4203 AU; Burd, 2225 AU; Brown, 1025 AU; German 2, sec. Calver, 201 UH; Carlson, 1018 AH; 10. Braun, 101 Econ.; German 2, Crockett, 202 Ec; Cummins, 205 sec. 11, Kahan, C HH; German 2, MU; sec. 12, Binger, 205 MH. Dewey, 205 MU; Duvall, 2051 German 31, sec. 1, Binger, 205 MU; Fleming, 1035 AU; Hawkins, MU; German 31, sec. 2, Eaton, 2235 Al; Hirsh, 25 AU; Howard, B HH; German 31, sec. 3, Brown, 1025 Al: Karsten, 1025 AU; Kelly, 1025 AU; German 31. sec. 4, Braun, 25 AU; Kert, 25 AU; LaDue, 101 101 Econ; German 31, sec. 5, Ec; Lean, 18 AU; Madden, 1007 Kahan, C HH; German 31, sec. 6, AIU; Maliche, B Haven; McClen- Gaiss, B HH; German 31, sec 7, nen, 1025 AU; McKean, C Haven; Binger, 205 MH. McLarty, D Haven; Merriman, D. German 32, sec. 1, Raschen, 203 Haven: Moon, 1018 AU-; Muehli, UH, German 32, sec. 2, Graf, 201 206 UH; Norton, 2029 All; O'Don- UH; German 32, sec. 3, Philippson, ohoe, 101 Ec; 203 UH; German 32, sec. 4, Reich- Perkins, 2003 All; Phillips, 4208 art, 206 UH. Al-; Plumer, 2203 All; Puglisi, 1025 AU; D. Riepe, 3209 AlH; P. Journalism 91: The Journalism Riepe, 215 Ee; Randall, 2082 NS; Department will repeat Journalism Rock, 101 Ec.; J. Shedd, 1035 All; 91 the second semester for the Sparrow, 2219 All; Stacy, 2003 benefit of transfer juniors who NS; Stevenson, 3116 NS; Stocking, I were not able to take it during the 207 Ec; Swarthout, 102 Ec; Tag- first semester. Election should be gart, 2013 AlH; Thornbury, 229 AU; made thiough the Journalism Of- Waggener, 3011 All; C. Weaver, C ! fice, 213 Haven Hall. Haven; Wells, 2225 AUl; Whan, 2054 NS; Wolfinge , 203WUH; History 11, Lecture SectlonIl: Wunsch, 104W c. Final examination Monday, Janu- ary 20, 2-5 p.m. Hyma's and Mc- English 2.-Final Examination Culloch's sections, Rm. G, Haven Schedule: Hall; Slosson's, Rm. E, Haven Wed., Jan. 22. 2-5 p.m. Hall; all other sections in Water- Allen, NS Aud; Boys. NS Aud; man Gymnasium. Make-up for J. Bradshaw, NS Aud; J. Culbert, those unable to come at this NS Aud; T. Culbert, 3017 All; Ed- hour, Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2-5 wards, NS Aud; Engel. G. Haven; p.m., Rm. 322 Haven Hall. DRAMA SPEECH PRODUCTION'S presentation of "The Truth," opening last night at the Lydia Mendelssohn, offers one of the nicer evenings' entertainment. The Clyde Fitch comedy, dealing with the machinations of a lady liar, was performed by an able cast. Their capable projection added to the en- joyment of a well-written script., The story of "The Truth" is that of a young wife given to telling little white lies and of the complications that ensue in her own life as a result of them. The play has been referred to as a "period piece." It was first presented in the early years of the present century. As a dated vehicle the criticism has been offered that it is too moTait n+ +w.nrpsant dayau diences ndr1that BARNABY ( Yoiu're wastingi your time, O"Mafie.l Thee I, afora a im.uiI1 g"r~ihe atom is in Irnsv W I iI'