_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _TfIIE m 'icHIGIAN IAL u r Ala tgan 473ttly Edited and managed by students of the Unitrsity of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. 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. Subscriptions during the regular school year by carrier $4.00, by mail $5.00. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publiskers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CuICAGO * BOSTON . LOS AnIGELES *SAN FRANCISCO Iember, Associated Collegiate Press, 1941-42 INN Drew PecrsoR ad Robert S.Alles WASHINGTON - The American public al- ready has had a tough blow in regard to the use of automobile tires. but the inside figures indicate that the blow will be even tougher in the future. The production of synthetic rubber for tires, begun by Germany several years before the war, in this country now totals only between 7,865 and 10,000 tons for an entire year. Moreover, the new synthetic rubber factories, financed by the Reconstruction Finance Corpor- ation, will not get into production until April, at the earliest, and niost of them not until Au- gust. And when finished, their total production will be only 48,000 to 50,000 tons yearly. Thus, a year from today, we may possibly have a total of 60,000 tons of synthetic rubber - if we are lucky; if the plants are finished ahead of schedule; and if they produce a little faster than is expected. Compare this 60,000 tons to the 720,000 tons of rubber consumed by the United States during the past year, and you get some idea why Leon Henderson was so tabrupt and tight-lipped about clamping down on tire consumption. Rubber Facts Here are the new synthetic plants under-con- struction and their schedule of completion: Ai FRIEND OF MINE showed me a letter from Edi Emile Gel . . Alvin Dann' David Lachenbruch Jay McCormick Hal Wilson . Arthur Hill . Janet Hiatt Grace Miller . Virginia Mitchell The Humor of the War By TOM THUMB torial Stafff . . -- Managing Editor . . Editorial Director City Editor . Associate Editor . . . Sports Editor Assistant Sports Editor . . . Women's Editor . Assistant Women's Editor- S . . Exchange Editor a Business Staff Daniel H. Huyett . . . Business Manager James B. Collins . . Associate Business Manager Louise Carpenter . .Women's Advertising Manager Evelyn Wright . . Women's Business M(anager NIGHT EDITOR: DAN BEHRMAN The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. The State Department - Appeasement's Last Fort THE NATION, very liberal in policy, very conservative in format, is very angry. It displayed its wrath by a comparatively drastic change in its restrained layout. The reader, accustomed to turning the cover to "The Shape of Things," was faced in the Jan. 3 issue with a bold article bearing the headline, "Mr. Hull Should Resign." This is an extremely serious request and we, as did the editors of The Nation, might be forced by the logic of the article to alter the generous pattern of our thinking about Mr. Hull and the State Department. Mr. Hull will go down in American history as one of our greatest Secretaries of State, and with good reason. He has accomplished much with perseverent backing of many sound foreign policies. He has earned a popularity among the people surpased, perhaps, by none other than the President himself. Unfortunately for a na- tion dedicated to the destruction of Fascism, this very popularity may obscure the fact that his record reveals, in other ways, a lack of es- sential vision and force. On the basis of glaring defects in his' record, he should resign as did the great William Jennings Bryan, Secretary of State under President Wilson. Both men, despite their outstanding records and qualities, proved themselves inadequate for dynamic wartime leadership. THE TRAGEDY of the whole question can largely be shown by one incident. Last sum- mer, the Chinese ambassador, the Honorable Dr. Hu Shih, came to Ann Arbor to address the New, Education Fellowship's international conference. He delivered many talks, and in nearly all of them, and in a personal interview, he affirmed his respect for Secretary Hull. Dr. Shih termed him "one of the world's greatest men, one of the few whose beliefs rest on moral principles." That the Ambassador was sincere is beyond ques- tion. Yet he made these statements knowing full well that American scrap metal, gasoline and supplies were killing his own beloved people, that Secretary Hull's appeasement policies to- ward Japan were largely responsible. He made these statements even after declaring in an in- terview before his departure that a refusal by the United States to sell oil and scrap metal to Japan would not incite her to attack the strong- ly-protected Dutch East Indies. What could better illustrate the folly of our pre-war Japanese policy than the fact that our own steel mills face a dangerous shortage of scrap metal, with many already closing? No use crying over spilt milk, but the appeasement attitude still dominates the State Department. Until it is removed by way of removal of the persons behind it, mistakes of equal folly are threatened. One -the case of the two French islands-has already crystallized and it is our hope that now something will be done about the whole mess. "The St. Pierre-Miquelon affair," writes I. F. Stone in The Nation, serves notice on the world that the American State Department is now the last stronghold of appeasement.-The Free French are our allies. Vichy is the tool of our enemies. Yet on Christmas Day Cordell Hull, with a stupidity that calls for his removal from Date of Completion Goodyear.......April-May Goodrich ...... Late August Firestone .......... August U.S. Rubber ........August Standard Oil of La. (private financing) late 1942 Dupont (private financing) late 1942 In addition, the RFC announced last week that plans capable of producing 80,000 more tons would be sponsored by the Government. But with the entire nation in a race to get de- fense materials, these plants will take another year to get into production-even if then. Thus, unless we are able to send tremendous labor battalions to the jungles of the Amazon- and here the scarcity of shipping is important- it will be seen that the United States has in effect suffered an economic Pearl Harbor. And like Pearl Harbor, the rubber defeat came about largely because we were caught napping. Bottleneck' Jesse Complacent, genial Jesse Jones, whose job it was to lend the money for these synthetic rub- ber factories, was questioned recently as to why he had not been more far-sighted. His reply was: "Hindsight is always better than fore-sight." However, since we have many other lessons to learn in this war, and since Mhe first President of the United States advised his countrymen to "look back for the purpose of profiting by Dear Bought Experience", it is worth looking at the record on rubber. The record, as written in the WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND, shows that as early as July 13, 1940, eighteen months ago, Edward Stet- tinius, who had been woefully wrong on alum- inum and didn't want to be wrong again, an- nounced that before the end of July, "it is ex- pected a plan for synthetic rubber production will have been worked out which in the future will eliminate our dependence upon imports." In that same month, Emil Schram of the RFC, lived up to Stettinius' announcement by work- ing out a plan with Goodrich and Phillips. Pe- troleum to finance a rubber plant capable of producing 100,000 tons yearly, which at that time was about one-sixth of our consumption. How- ever, Jesse Jones, who as Federal Loan Adminis- trator outranked RFC Chief Schram, stopped the deal. The plan fell through, and Schram, disgusted with interference and procrastination, later re- signed. Six months passed. And Stettinius' prediction that we would work out plans to become inde- pendent of the Dutch East Indies remained only in the paper stage. undemocratic little clique of decayed psuedo- aristocrats and backsliding liberals who domi- nate the State Department do not speak for the American people. . . . In North Africa native leaders have already been saying to the Free French, "Why should we take a chance on sup- porting you when the United States supports Vichy." The State Department's rationalizations, such as the one about the French fleet, do not stand up under fire. "The President can hardly accept the State Department myth," writes Freda Kirchwey in The Nation, "that the French fleet is preserved from Hitler's control only by the blackmail paid to Vichy by the United States. "The only important check on the Petain collaboration--and on Hitler himself-is the spirit of resistance that still exists in the fleet and among the French people, a spirit which the State Department's behavior last week was calculated to damage beyond repair." T HE CONCLUSION is inescapable; the State Department must be completely reorganized and appeasement administered a large dose of sudden death. As an absolute minimum, it must be demanded that those appeasers under Hull resign. Admittedly, there is validity to the claim Capacity 10,000 tons 10,000 tons 10,000 tons 10,000 tons 8,000 to 10,000 10,000 tons one of his friends who happens to be sta- tioned at Pearl Harbor. The letter is so intensely interesting, so beautifully-written and so vital that I herewith reprint it, in part: "Christmas afternoon finds me with a little time on my hands, the first I've had since the attack and the last I'm apt to get for some time. We've been hitting the ball dawn till dusk seven days per. It's a grind all right, but somehow the exhilaration of the war, the desire for re- venge and determination for victory give an added zest and an extra energy, so that when a ioliday comes you hate to take it off. It's an uphill fight to start with, but in the long run I think we could start from the ground up and whip them all, one at a time or all together. " HAD the rare opportunity to have a bird's eye view of the first attack, and feel pretty lucky to be able to tell about it. I took off from the airport for a flying lesson that Sunday morning just about 10 minutes before the Japs dropped from the sky and struck their lightning blow. It was a beautiful morning and I was practicing banks and turns and at the same time enjoying the beauty of the green mountain island, the beautiful shoreline and volcanic cra- ters, and the high flying clouds. It's never so beautiful as from the air. "Turning back towards the field, we saw mighty clouds of black smoke curling up from many points. Then we picked out the planes, dropping from the clouds and leveling off low with the speed of bullets. It took a moment for the full meaning to register. It was war, it couldn't be anything else. Then the anti-aircraft and machine guns went into the action on the ground. The sky was filled with the burst of anti-aircraft, and planes came down like flam- ing torches. They shot by us on all sides and we saw the rising sun emblem on the wings. It all seemed too fantastic to be true, hard to believe it was the work of human beings. I had the same feeling a spectator would have if he accidentally got out on a football field and got in the way of an end run. We dived for the field just as it was being strafed by a, Jap plane, though we didn't know it at the time. One of the instruc- tors was lying in a pool of blood, shot through the head. Two other planes that took off about the same time we did never came back. Part of a wing was found on the shore a few days later, and a man on a barge said he sw them both shot down. So it was that war came to Hawaii and to the U. S., and many hundreds of men were murdered without a chance for their lives, before they knew the battle was on; while the Japanese special envoy talked peace in Wash, ington. "AS A BIT OF TREACHERY it matches Hit- ler's work very nicely. We are slow to take up the war club, but I don't think we'll lay it down till the last of their gang is battered into submission. You can't blame the little people of the world for what has happened, but they are the ones who will have to suffer. You can't annihilate Hitlerism without stopping his ar- mies, killing his soldiers, blasting his factories, and starving his people, and the same thing is true of the Japanese militarists. The world has had a great rebirth of tyranny, and I don't see how there is any hope for human civilization until it is stamped out, and liberty and dignity restored to human beings everywhere. "I wonder if the war is going to break in on your schooling. You ought to get out on a de- fense job some place. I wish you were over here. I don't think there's much danger of the rising sun ever flying over this island. An attempt to take it would closely resemble mass suicide. The boys in the armed forces are crying to get at them, and they are playing for keeps. A lot of them lost their buddies. It's hard to realize how we got into such a hell of a fix, the whole world, I mean, and nothing to do now but fight our way out of it. "Maybe the end will come more suddenly than we realize. It looks as if Hitler may have reached his turning point already, his armies are on the defensive, retreating from Moscow. The Rus- sians have shown us how to fight-make them pay for every inch, and when they get in too deep get after them and keep after them. The Japs are flying high now too, but there are chinks in their armor, and their turning point will come too. By another Christmas there will be another story to tell. "BUT enough of this war talk. I didn't intend to dwell on it so long-it's so fascinating that nothing else seems important. But such is life. Wishing you a Mele Kalikamaka, if you savvy Hawaiian, and a happy New Year, if it's in the cards." REC ORDS 0 .Harl McDonald Conducts His Own Composition McDONALD-Suite "From Childhood"-Edna Phillips, harpist- Philadelphia Orchestra under Harl McDonald. Harl McDonald, boxer, rodeo performer, man- ager of the Philadelphia Orchestra - great musician - leads the men he manages in a gay, DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) ned Fruits and Vegetables) $2,000, February 16, 1942. Plate Printer (established piece rates) February 5, 1942. Printer's Assistant, $.66 per hr., January 26, 1942. Printer-Proofreader (per hr. $1.32, 40 hr. week), February 5, 1942. Senior Pharmacologist, $4,600, un- til further notice. Pharmacologist, $3,800, until fur- ther notice. Associate Pharmacologist, $3,200, until further notice. Assistant Pharmacologist, $2,600, until further notice. Senior Toxicologist, $4,600, until further. notice. Toxicologist, $3,800, until further notice. Associate Toxicologist, $3,200 until further notice. Assistant Toxicologist, $2,600, un- til further notice. Expediter (Marine Propelling and Outfitting), $3,200, until further no- tice. Principal Research Chemist, $4,600, until further notice. Senior Research Chemist, $4,600, until further notice. Research Chemist, $3,800, until further notice. Associate Research Chemist, $3,200, until further notice. Assistant Research Chemist, $2,600, until further notice. Associate Analytical Chemist, $3,- 200, until further notice. Assistant Analytical Chemist, $2,- 600, until further notice. Senior Galley Designer, $4,600, March 2, 1942. Galley Designer, $3,800, March 2, 1942. Associate Galley Designer, $3,200, March 2, 1942. Senior Kitchen Layout Specialist, $4,600, March 2, 1942. Kitchen Layout Specialist, $3,800, March 2, 1942. Associate Kitchen Layout Special- ist, $3,200, March 2, 1942. Junior Supervisor of Grain In- spection, $2,000, February 16, 1942. Principal Technologist (Any spe- cialized branch) $,600, until further notice. Senior Technologist, $4,600, until further notice. Technologist. $3,800, until further notice. Associate Technologist, $3,200, un- til further notice. Assistant Technologist, $2,600, un- til further notice. Junior Technologist, $2,000, until further notice. Principal Meteorologist (any spe- cialiged branch) $5,600, until fur- ther notice. Senior Meteorologist, $4,600, un- til further notice. Meteorologist, $3,800, until further notice. Assistant Meteorologist, $2,600, un- til further notice. Associate Meteorologist, $3,200, un- til further notice. Plumber, $1,680, February 5, 1942. Steamfitter, $1,680, February 5, 1942. Deputy United States Marshal, $1,800, February 16, 1942. Head Engineer, $6,500, December 31, 1942. Principal Engineer, $5,600, Decem- ber 31, 1942. Senior Engineer, $4,600, December 31, 1942. Engineer, $3,800, December 31, 1942. Associate Engineer, $3,200, De- cember 31, 1942. Assistant Engineer, $2,600, Decem- ber 31, 1942. Defense Production Protective Service: Chief Inspector, $5,600, until fur- ther notice. Principal Inspector, $4,600, until further notice. Senior Inspector, $3,800, until fur- ther notice. Inspector, $3,200, until further no- tice. Assistant Inspector, $2,900, until further notice. Junior Inspector $2,600, until fur- ther notice. Junior Engineer, $2,000, June 30, 1943. Chief Engineering Draftsman, $2,- 600, December 31, 1942. Principal Engineering Draftsman, $2,300, December 31, 1942. Senior Engineering Draftsman, $2,000, December 31, 1942. Engineering Draftsman, $1,800, December 31, 1942. Assistant Draftsman, $1,620, De- cember 31, 1942. Junior Engineering Draftsman, $1,440, December 31, 1942. Junior Astronomer (Naval Observ- atory), $2,000, until further notice. Associate Public Health Nursing Consultant, $3,200, until further no- tice. Assistant Public Health Nursing Consultant, $2,600, until further no- tice. Multiith Cameraman and Plate- maker, $1,620, June 30, 1942. Multilith Press Operator, $1,440, June 30, 1942. Junior Occupational Analyst, $2,- 000, January 15, 1942. Principal Personnel Assistant, $3,- "It is funny, come to think of it-there haven't been any air raid alarms, but our husbands have been out every night on air-warden duty!" 1 ,I 4 y_ 1 _ .tp I : . aa GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty I I - -7 ?.-- - I ., ..ww I kr - r =1 sity Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall. Office hours 9-12 and 2-4. Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information Academic Notices Teacher's Certificate, February 1942 Candidates: The Comprehen- sive Examination in Education will be given on Saturday, January 10, from 9 to 12 o'clock in 2021 U.H.S. (and also from 2 to 5 o'clock in 2432 U.E.S.) Students having Saturday morning classes may take the ex- amination in the afternoon. Printed information regarding the examin- tion may be secured in the School of Education office. The Botanical Seminar will meet today at 4:30 p.m. in room 1139 Na- tural Science building. Professor H. H. Bartlett will give a paper entitled "The Cultivation of Cinchona and the World Need for Quinine." All interested are invited. Seminar in Physical Chemistry will meet today in Room 410 Chemis- try Building at 4:15 p.m. Prof. L. O. Brockway will speak on "Location of atoms on the basis of electron dif- fraction contour diagrams." Biological Chemistry Seminar will be held in Room 319, West Medical Building today at 1:30 p.m. "The Biochemistry of the Eye-The Lens and the Retina-Visual Purple and Vitamin A" will be discussed. All interested are invited. Directed Teaching, Qualifying Ex- amination: Students expecting to elect Educ. D100 (directed teaching) next semester are required to pass a qualifying examination in the sub- ject which they expect to teach. This examination will be held on Satur- day, January 10, at 1:00 p.m. Stu- dents will meet in the auditorium of the University High School. The examination will consume about four hours' time; promptness is therefore essential. Exhibitions Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: Student drawings of competitors for the Edward L. Ryer- son Traveling Fellowship, at Illinois Institute of Technology, University of Illinois, University of Cincinnati, Ohio State University, Iowa State College, and University of Michigan, are being shown in the third floor exhibition room, Architecture Build- ing. Open daily 9 to 5 except Sun- day, through January 12. The pub- lic is invited. Lectures Paleontology Lecture: Dr. Bruce L, Clark, Professor of Paleontology and Geology at the University of Cali- fornia, will speak on the subject, "Tertiary Paleontology and Strati- graphy of the Pacific.Coast," at 2:00 p.m., Thursday, January 8, in Room 1532 University Museums Building. All persons interested are invited to attend. Geology Lecture: Dr. Bruce L. Clark, Professor of Paleontology and Geology at the University of Califor- nia, will speak on the subject, "The Geological Structure and Stratigra- phy of California," at 8:00 p.m., Thursday, January 8, in Room 2065 Natural Science Building. Lecture: Dr. Gregory Vlastos, Pro- fessor of Philosophy at Queen's Uni- versity in Ontario, will be the last speaker on the series on "The Fail- ure of Skepticism?" sponsored by The Newman Club, The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, and Inter-Guild, at the Rackham Lecture Hall on gan's recent conversatians with re- ligious leaders of the eastern sea- board will be the basis of the discus- sion. The group is open to any freshmen. The Slavic Society will meet to night at eight o'clock. Place: In- ternational Center, U. of M. Flying Club: There will be a short but extremely important meeting today in the East Engineer- ing Building at 7:30 p.m. All mem- bers should attend as plans will be made at that time for the ' future operation of the club. Alpha Phi Omega: Regular meet- ing will be held in the Union at 7:30 p.m. Women's Archery Club: Meeting tonight at 7:30 in Waterman Gym- nasildm. Bring own arrows. JGP Dance Committee meeting to- night at 7:30 in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. All memhbers with last names A through L and those others who have been given 3pecial permission are requested to attend. Hillel Players: Tryouts for the Players' major production, "Awake and Sing", will be held at te Foun- dation today starting at 3:00 p.m., Thursday at 7:00 p.m., and Friday at 3:00 p.m. Everyone interested is in- vited to try out. Michigan Dames Book Group: Michigan League, today, 8:00 p.m. Program of Recorded Music: The weekly concert of recorded music held in the International Center will be given today at 7:30 p.m The pro- gram for this week is as follows: Haydn: Symphony No. 104 in D. Handel: The Faithful Shepherd Suite. Richard Strauss: Don Quixote. Anyone interested may attend. Coming Events La Sociedad Hispanica conversa; tion group will meet Thursday, Jan- uary 8, at 8:00 p.m. in the Michigan League. All members are urged to ittend. See Bulletin in League for room number. Portuguese Conversation Class: rhe first meeting of a class and round-table in spoken Portuguese will be held in the International Center at 7:15, Thursday, January 8. All persons who have a groundwork in Portuguese may attend these ses- sions each Thursday. Registration may be made in the office of the In- ternational Center or at the organiza- tional meeting. There will be a small fee. German Round-Table: The Ger- man Round-table for those who wish to become proficient in spoken Ger- man will be held on Wednesday eve- ning, January 7, at 9:00 in the Inter- national Center. Advanced students in German and others who can con- verse in German are welcome to at- tend the German Round-table. Social Service Seminar: Dr. En- gelke of the Washtenaw County Health Department will speak to the Social Service Seminar in Lane Hall, on Thursday, January 8, at 7:30 p.m. on the health problems arising in this industrial defense area. This seminar meeting will be open to the public. Badminton - Women and Men Students: The badminton courts in Barbour Gymnasium are open for use of women and men students on Monday and Friday evenings from 7:30 to 9:30. t-a jI 19 t7? F1,g. V. 8, IPat. Ott. Atl its. Res. ,I ii