t THE MICHIGAN DAILY _=, C,1hr Lt7 4n Ittty , . .' The WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN . ! Edited and ranaged by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publicatipns. Tho Summer Dailyis published every morning except Monda and'Tuesday. M dember 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 thisnewspaper, All rights of republication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptionsa uring the regular school year by car- rier $4.00, by mail $s.0.0 REPrEME!TED FOR NATIONAL ADVERtI3NG 3 National Advertisi6g Service, Inc, a College Publishers ReP sentative A20 MADISON AVE. NEW YoRnK. N. Y. CHICAVO "* 1SOSTON " Loa Awa!:LES " SAW FrRANCSCO , Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1941-42 Editorial Staff Homer Swander . . Managing Editor Will Sapp* . . . .City FEditor Mike Dann . . . . . Sports Editor ASSOCiATE EDITOnS Hale Champion, John Erlewine. Leon Gordenker, Irving Jaffe. Robert Preiskel lusiness Staff Edward Perlberg Fredi M. Ginsberg Morton Hunter S . . , Business Manager . . Associate Business Manager . . .Publications Manager WASHINGTON-Wendell Willkie is wrestling with-the toughest decision of his political life. He must choose between taking off the gloves and wading bluntly into a powerful Republican ffice-seeker whose views he detests. or remain silent and permit himself to be elbowed out of party leadership. It is not an'easy decision to make. The GOP leader whom Willkie would have to challenge publicly is Thomas E. Dewey, candidate for governor of New York and aspirant for the White House in 1944. Dewey has been on all sides on the foreign policy issue and recently was quoted as declaring that while he was against "Ham" Fish it was because of his asso- ciations and not his isolationist views. It was not until ten days later, after the quotation ap- peared in an advertisement, that Dewey con- tended he had been misquoted. Willkie is publicly opposing the re-election of Fish. But. so far he has not publicly thrown down the gauntlet to Dewey, whom he disap- proves of privately almost as strongly as he ob- jects to Fish. Reason is, Willkie believes that to oppose Dewey actively would entail becoming a can- didate himself, as there is no other Republican who can possibly stop Dewey. And Willkie sin- cerely does not want to run for governor. But close friends, chiefly the young, liberal Republicans who were the backbone of the spec- tacular campaign which won him the GOP nom- ination in 1940 over the violent opposition of the machine bosses, are arguing differently with Willkie. They say very frankly that it is not enough for him to be against GOP isolationism; that if he means what he says he must take up the cudgels militantly and fight for his views within the party. Popular Hero These advisers have told Willkie that they and the politicians know he considers Dewey an iso- lationist, and closely tied up with Herbert Hoo- ver, Alf Landon, Joe Pew and other Old Guard and isolationist% party forces. But the great mass of people do not know this, the advisers point out, and won't know it unless Willkie as- serts his leadership and dells them so publicly. Willkie intimates also have told him that the sole basis of his strength is popular support; that the m chine politicos always '+ave been against him, d that he can never make his influence fet except by going over their heads as he did in winning the 1940 nomination. These advisers are strongly urging Willkie to disregard the politicos and go direct to the people. They hold that Willkie can't lose if he will do that even if Dewey, through control of the convention machinery, does capture the gubernatorial nomination. Willkie's stature and influence with the great mass of voters, these friends contend, will be stronger than ever. Party Unity This militant counsel is being countered strongly by old-line GOP chiefs on two grounds. One, that if he opens fire on Dewey, there is grave danger of disrupting "party unity." The other is that Willkie would play squarely into the hands of the New Dealers. These arguments are carrying much weight with Willkie because of his deep conviction that in these disturbed days it is vital for democracy to maintain the two-party system. Willkie is much concerned about preserving this U.S. sys- tem. He sincerely believes that its continuance is endangered, and he harbors very definite sus- picions regarding Franklin Roosevelt. However, at the same time, Willkie is equally disturbed about the powerful isolationist forces within the Republican party. He considers them just as menacing to the welfare of the nation as the Democrats he suspects of having designs on the two-party system. How to fight both most effectively is the problem he is up against, and so far he hasn't found the answer. Economizers-Sornetimes! - One of the busiest crusaders for government economy is Henry Merritt Wriston, socialite president of Brown University. As chairman of the Citizens' Emergency Committee on Non- Defense Expenditures, Dr Wriston has bom- barded Congress with impassioned demands for cuts in the budgets of the National Youth Ad- ministration and other agencies. Also, he has functioned as a leading backstage adviser of Senator Harry F. Byrd of Virginia, anti-New Deal chairman of the Joint Economy Committee on Non-Defense Spending. However, like many politicos, Dr. Wriston doesn't apply his economy dogmas to expendi- tures in which he has a personal interest. The educator recently wrote to Senator Theo- dore F. Green of Rhode Island, vigorously de- manding that the Senate recede from a 40 per- cent reduction it voted in the State Depart- ment's budget for "printing and binding." "The amount available for printing and bind- ing has been reduced to such an extent," pro- tested Dr. Wriston, "that it would prevent the publication of tfhe records of the Paris Peace Conference of 1919." a Suggestion To Uncle Sam Here is an example which might be followed very profitably by Uncle Sam: In Australia every business man appointed to a jpb with a government war agency must first go to a special school for one month to learn how to cut redtape. According to Australians this system has been extremknely successful in speeding up governmental administration. Not only could the idea well be applied to U.S. business men, but also to a great many govern- ment officials, particularly Army, Navy and State Department brasshats. 3 r s " NIGHT EDITOR: OHN F RLEWINE 4 The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily taff and represent the views of the writers only. AUow Bridges To HIelp War Effort. H ARRY BRIDOES' NAME was new to the labor-baiting employers of San Francisco when he led a general strike in 1934 that spread from his realm at the waterfront to tie up the entire city. There had been no union in San Francisco or its southern rival, Los Angeles, since tle IWW fell to pieces. The employers were afraid-very much afraid-that the West Coast stronghold of the open shop would fall. They had to get something on the dynamic new leader. .And they did. Harry Bridges had come from Australia, neglected to take out citi- zens4ip papers and was still an alien. THR.EETIMES Bridges Was accused of beingy affiliated with organizations advocating over- throw of they government. The House of Repre- sentatives twice passed bills-fortunately killed in Senate committees-providing for immediate depprtation of Bridges. His first trial at which Dean James Lhndis, new director of the OCD, presided, ended with a verdict absolving Bridges of any connection witp revolutionary organizations. In the second trial before Judge Charles B. Sears he was found guilty of belonging to a revolutionary organiza- tion. This decision was reversed by the Board of Immigration Appeals. On May 28 Attorney General Francis Biddle on his own initiative once more reversed the decision and ordered Bridges deported. THE CRUX of the charges against Bridges was that he was a Communist and later that he was affiliated with Communists. Biddle said that Communists were attempting to destroy the government of the United States. Evd"ence that Bridges belonged to the Com- munist Party was scanty and unreliable. Both Bean Laidis and the Board of Appeals threw out the only testimony on this subject. A further consideration is that even if Bridges were a member of the Communist Party it would be difficult to prove that the party is after revolution. The complexion of the Daily Worker has changed so much sin~ce the war that one would think it the bulletin of a super-patriotic organization. Biddle over- eaJously applied a stupid law wien h ,oderd Bridges' deportation. He could have waited until the war was over be- fore Ie applied the law and might have found excellent reason postponing action. ARRY JRIDQES has been a great force in controlling the hot-headed waterfront work- ers of the West Coast. His followers applied a speed-rap to themselves to load the important ships quicker than normally. And they have con- tinually exposed inefficient management. Workers on the West Coast docks are impor- tant to the war effort. The ruge factories of California, which has a larger share of war con- tracts than any other state in the nation, need those ships. The workers, of the dockcs were uniofed under Harry Brdges' leadership--now they are re- sentful of the goernment. Biddle's move may be the cause of much unrest and disunity. DAULY 9FICIAL BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1942 VOL. LIL No. 7-S All Notices for the Daily Official Bul- letin are to be sent to the Office of {he Summer Session before 3:30 p.m. of the day preceding its publication except on Saturday. when the notices should be submitted before 11:30 a.m, Women Students: The informal picnic for women students, which was scheduled to be held on Wed- nesday., June 24 at the fireplace near the Women's Athletic Building, has been postponed indefinitely. Dept. of Physical Education for Women. Student Organizations which are active during the Summer Term should file a list of officers with the Dean of Students at once. That of- fice now has mail for certain groups which cannot be delivered for lack of this information. Certificate of Eligibility: At the beginning of each semester and sum- mer session every student shall be conclusively presumed to be ineligi- ble for any public activity until his eligibility is affirmatively established by obtaining from thetChairmanof the Committee on Student Affairs, in the Office of the Dean of Stu- dents, a Certificate of Eligibility. Participation before the opening of the first semester must be approved as at any other time. * Chairmen and Managers of Public Activities: Before permitting any students to participate in a public activity, the chairman or manager of such activity shall (a) require each applicant to present a certificate of eligibility, (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 certifi- cates of eligibility and a signed statement to exclude all others from larticipation. Banks for the chair- men's lists may be obtained in the Office of the Dean of Students. Electrical Engineering 23N. Ele- mentary Radio will be offered dur- ing the Summer Session if there is sufficient enrollment. This course has no prerequisite and gives 4 hours of credit. Students interested in electing the course should call Miss Loffi, Telephone 443. The Government has requested this University to help standardize a psychological test for one' of the! branches of the armed forces. We are requesting undergraduate men stu- dents to volunteer to take the test. It will be given from seven to ten p.m. today, Wednesday, in Natural Science Auditorium. B. D. Thuma Faculty, College of Literature, Sci- ence. and the Arts: Attendance re- port cards are being distributed through the departmentaloffices. Instructors are requested to report absences of freshmen on green cards, directly to the Office of the Aca- demic Counselors, 108 Mson Hall. Buff cards should be used in report- ing sophomores, juniors, and seniors to 1220 Angeli Hall. Please note especially the regula- tions concerning three-week ab- sences, and the time limits for drop- ping courses. The rules relating to absences are printed on the attend- ance cards. They may also be found on page 52 of the 1941-42 Announce- ment of our College. E. A. Walter, Assistant Dean The Storehouse Building will act as a receiving center for scrap rub ber and also- metals. Any depart- ment on the Campus having metals or rubber to dispose of for defense purposes. please call Ext. 337 or 317 and the materials will be picked up by the trucks which make regular campus deliveries. Service of the janitors is available to collect the materials from the various rooms in the buildings to be delivered to the receiving location. E. C. Pardon Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: English war posters il- lustrating present life in England. Third floor exhibition room, Archi- tecture Building. Open daily 9 to 5, except Sunday until July 1. The pub- lic is invited. Episcopal Students: Tea will be served for Episcopal students and their friends at Harris Hall this afternoon, 4:00 to 5:15. Evening Prayer will be held at 5:15 in Bishop Williams Chapel. Episcopal Students: There will be a celebration of the Holy Communion at 7:10 Thursday morning in Bishop Williams Chapel, Harris Hall. Break- fast will be served after the service. Apparatus Exchange: The Regents authorize the sale of scientific ap- paratus by one department to an- other, the proceeds of the sale to be credited to the budget account of the department from which the apparatus is transferred, under followiig condi- tions. An Axe To Grind By TORQUEMADA So I tell Mamie that she wouldn't do no better than 4-F in the draft herself. BEFORE SATURDAY, we had never been to a wedding. Imagine if you will a grown person so cut off from the ordinary realm of polite society. But Saturday, the guy went and did it, and we got an invitation, and mighty lucky at that. So came the day, and there we were, in our best and only tie, walking up the noble cracked stone steps of the East Jefferson Presbyterian Church (Detroit), walking up..the steps armed with a female com- panion. The first thing you do is worry about losing the invitation, but they don't even ask for it. Instead, a rather smooth looking gent sidles up to us and friend, grabs the babe from off my arm, and escorts her down the aisle. We fol-. lowed rather sheep-doggishly, but belligerent in our desire to make sure the guy wasn't leading, her into a back room, and stumbling several UAW-CIO Conference IMnplmetLs Denmoc racy. CRITICS OF LABOR UNIONS, crying for more democracy and a more enlightened leadership in workers' organizations, inay well look at the UAW-CIO educational con- ference being held here this week for the answer to their fondest wishes, or for the biggest hob- goblin that ever haunted their reactionary dreams. The more than 200 hundred delegates attend- ing the conference. one in a series being con- ducted at universities all over the country, are being instructed in fair labor practices, effective organisation, rationing, taxes, housing and other problems of importance to workers, and will pass on their newly acquired information to all CIO members. HE classes and conferences are part of the CIO educational program intended to com- plement democracy. to develop an organization capable of choosing its leaders and having its leaders express the desires of its members. They are .part of a plan to develop a union with truly times in the Stygian darkness. When we were at about the center of the church, Mr. Smoothie, whom I had by now grown to know and hate like a termite, asks, "Bride ,or groom?' My friend answers, "Groom." So we get seated on the right side of the center, and I learn that they always divide people up according to wheth- er they are friends of the bride or groom. The idea is to make everything cozy, and it kills time before the ceremony starts; each team sitting there glaring at the other, and making wry comments about hats, and the inadequacy of one or the other betrothed. Suddenly we became conscious of an all- pervading mystical sound from overhead, and looking up we see the organist seated in a golden chariot, playing the sweet and slushingly ro- mantic melodies of Carrie Jacobs Bond, unwisely and unwell. MEANTIME at spasmodic intervals a candid camera boy would run down the aisle, flash- ing his bulbs, and scaring the cravens on the bride's side no end. (We groomers, comrades all by this time, merely sneered clannishly and turned our heads.) The next thing we knew, there was a slithering swishing sound, and the center aisle carpet van- ished beneath our terror-stricken eyes. It seems that the canvas carpet on which the guests come in gets dirty, so the attendants slide it back, and the bride has a fresh clean carpet to walk on. ElN the organist plays "Here Comes the Bride," and first the two bridesmaids come in, painfully self-conscious, and then the maid- of-honor (we thought at first that she was the bride, and were about to start applauding. save for a tactful punch in the stomach by our es- cortee). Next came the bride proper, and stun- ning she looked in a wedding gown which looked like wedding gowns are supposed to look. Highly- justified "Oohs" and "Ahs echoed lustily from the vaulted ceiling. The service itself lasted about twenty minutes, and it was exactly like in the movies, except that the preacher didn't ask "If anyone knows any reason why these two shall not be joined in holy matrimony, let him speak now, or forever hold sold within a reasonable time, it will be returned to the department from which it was received. The object of this arrangement is to promote econ- omy by reducing the amount of un- used apparatus. It is hoped that de- partments having such apparatus will realize the ad antage to themselves and to the University in availing themselves of this opportunity. Shirley W. Smith' Wesley Foundatipo: Tea and open house this afternoon, 4:OQ to 5:30. All 'students invited. Friday night there will be a weinie roast at the Island. Remember to make your reservation by Thursday night. Call 6881 or sign up at the student office. Commgnications to the Regents: Those who wish to present communi- catiops 'for consideration by the Re- gents are requested1 to present them at least eight days before the next ensuing meeting at the Office of Miss Edith J. Smith, Budget Assistant to the President, 1006 AngeU H all. Fif- teen copies of ea ch communication should be 'prepared and 1eft with Miss Smih. (Please note that one more copy is requested than in pre- vious yeafs.) A uniforml type of paper is used for communicat4 s to the $oard oq Regnts, a supply of which may be procured at the Office of the Vice-President and\ ecretary. "The Atlantic Charter" will be dis- cussed by Professor Ehrmann Thurs- day at 7:15 in the Grand Rapids Room of the Michigan League. The public is invited. P atriciaMcGraw, Chairman, Post-War Council On Thursday, June 25, there will be a banquet in honor of the tniver- sity of Michigan General Hospital No. 298 at 7:00 p.m. in the University of Michigan Union Ballroom. All members of the Medical faculty and their wives and other friends of the personnel of the unit areecordially invited "to attend. Banquet tickets are available at the Galen news stand and at the office of Dr. A. C. Kerlikowske, University Hospital, and at the office of Dean A. C. Fursten- berg, We'st Medical Building. Army Air Force Aviation Cadet Program Deferred Plan. Students interested in this programare ap- prised of the following change in reg- ulations: "The applicant's status as a stu- dent must be certified by the proper official of his college, and he must at all times maintain a satisfactory scholastic standing. In his second year he will be required to take the qualifying examination given to all members of the Army Enlisted Re- serve, of which the Air Corps Enlisted Reserve Corps is a part. Failure in this examination will end the de- ferred status and ,make the student subject to immediate call to duty. Students on temporary leave of ab- sence may be certified" R-1. Thuma Non-Credit Course in Civilian Pro- tection: Course to qualify any experi- enced teacher as an air raid warden instructor in his community. Begins June 30. Tuesday and Thursday evenings 7:30 to 10:00 for six weeks. Room 246 Architecture Building. In- struction given. by Prof. G. M. Mc- Conkey and others. Students, Summer Term, College of Literature, Science, and the 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 Assis- tant Dean Walter. Students who fail 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 tlme, inconvenient 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 Uni- versity Hall. Waiting in the drivewy blocks traffic and involves confu- sion, inconvenience and danger just as much when a person is sitting in a car as when the car is parked empty. University Senate Committee on Parkng Registration for Sele'ctve Service: 1. pate of RegistratIon. June 3, on day only. 2. Who Shall Register.: 411l le students born (1) on or after Janu- ary 1, 1922 and (2) on or before June 30, 1924. Anyone who fails to regis- ter, must bear individually the full responsibility for this failure. Those who' have registered for selt e serviceaat earlier registration date should not register again. Foreign students must register and give the country of citizenship. Those who have Alien Registration Cards must give the number of this card as part of the registration procedure. Those who have taken out first citi-A zenship papers only, are not citizens of the United States. Members of the federally recog- nized, active National Guard Officer Reserve Corp; Regular Army se- serve; enlisted Reserve Corp; +and members of the advanced Corps, den- ior Division, R.O.T.C., are exempt from registration. 3. Place of Registratiop. All Uni- versity students and employees in the age limit should register in the Arim ory Building, 223 . Ann Street. Stu- dents living in nearby communities, who travel back and forth each dy are requested to register in the home community, 4. Time of Registration. The regis- tration office in the Armory will be open at 7 a.m. and will not close 9 p.m. Since registration is beng handled by voluntary workers .h receive no pay, students are request- ed to register between the hourp of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., in order that a minimum staff may take care of registration at other hours. 'P ease register at the earliest possible mo- ment. 5. sRegistrtion certificate. Each registrant w l be given a registration certificate which he should carry at all times, "as h nay be required to show it from time to time." 6. Change of Ad&ress after Regis- tration. Each student who changes his address at arny 'time after regs- tration should address a commuuni"- tion to the Selective Service BoardItn hlis home city, indicating his new a- dress. This is the individual st ud.ent's responsibility and cannot be 'drn r shared by anyone. Rober L. Williams EpiscQpal St dents: There will le a tea for students today from 4 to 5:30 in Harris Haf. Tom Johnson, Vice-President Eiiscopal Students: There will be la Service of Evening Prayer at 5: f6 today in Bishop Williams Memorial Chapel at Harris Hall. Jim Terrell will conduct the service. Tom Johnson, Vice-Presidnt Student Religious Association: Edu- cation For What? Vocational or £