. FAA TWO., T'H E MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAYOCT-24. 1942 Fifty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan. under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during tie regular University year, and every morning except Mon- day and Tuesday during the 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 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 $4.25, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERT13ING BY. National Advertising Service, I c. College Publishers Representative 420 MADI®ON AVE. NEw YoRK, N.Y. CHICAGO . BOSTON . LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO Editoral Staff 1, , 1r r...J SMOKE DRIFTS HOMEWARD age !!r tr a y ,2;4. ;.4 >s t .y ?'an d "F~" b'r :.; fw "txN R s 1r'4 .'..iffl TS' Z w . k SI 'l a., Homer Swander, Morton Mntz , Will Sapp George W. SalIads Charles Thatcher Bernard Hendel Barbara deFries Myron Dann Managing Editor Editorial Director City Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Sports Editor Women's Editor Associate Sports Editor .4 Business Staff Edward J. Perlberg Fred M. Ginsberg Mary Lou Curran Jane Lindberg . James Daniels". . . . Business Manager . Associate Business Manager . Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Publications Sales Analyst Telephone 23-24.1 j, .. NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT MANTHO '.~,,4 9 ' ,, '9!_," ; ., Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are writt enb by nemers o the Daily sta.ff ,, and represent the views of the writers only. STRIKE NOW.! Smuts Foreshadows African Second Front THE SHADOW of an African second front was cast in London yesterday by the carefully weighed words of Field Marshal Jan C. Smuts, the Dark Continent's great sol- dier, scholar and statesman, when he said, "The German Army is bleeding to death in Russia" and that this is the time for a new and final phase, the Allied offensive. Although it was not definitely known that Smtuts' speech specifically called for an African second front, it has long been known that lie has advocated clearing the Axis out of Africa and fighting the war from the Mediterranean's south- ern shore.- This fact together with the recent announcement of troop movements to various West African ports and the killing of a Vichy French air scout over Dakar all presage the loig- awaited battle front. However, these late developnients do not bring the African theater of war to the fore for the first time, because such a front's strategy and fedsibility have long been advocated by James W., Gerard, ambassador to Germany during World War I. WRILE European coasts now bristle with Ger- man gun emplacements as shown by the fatal Dieppe commando raid in which half the Allied force was wiped out in nine hours, Gerard argues, no such problem exists along the long African shoreline. Here guns, tanks, planes and meih could be landed easily and could be sent northeast to place Axis commander Romniel between two fires of Allied military might. The prospects of this strategy are inviting. First, General Harold Alexander's Egyptian army would be free to aid 'Russia via Palestine, Syria and neutral. Turkey. Second, Egypt, Suez, and the oil fields of Mosul, Bahriein, Ro'weit and Persia would be secure from Axis clutches. Final- ly, a Weakening Italy would be exposed to attack from Liberia and perhaps to subsequent detach- ment from the Axis, while the brave Yugoslavian guerillas and starving. Greekst could be given relief. Gerard is not alone in his advocacy of an African second front, moreover, for concurrent with Smuts' arrival in London the British Secre- tary Hore-Belisha wrote, "Africa may be our victory route." UNDOUBTEDLY these facts indicate, and should prove, that Africa is going to be the stage of tremendous issues. So far in World War II the Allies have not been able to mass over- whelming strength at a single crucial point, but now their opportunity is at hand. Instead of allowing Axis armies to continue their policy of dividing and exhausting our forces, American and British armies should strike now in Africa and reverse German strategy by erasing Rommel and Italy from the enemy line- up. -Bud Brimmer SUIISIIHZATION.? America Should Provide Post-War Student Aid ANADA has long had a provision for students whose college education is interrupted by service in the armed forces. It provides for a complete subsidy plus an allowance BEGIN PEACE TALK Post-War Planning Bust Be Undertaken At Once INNING THE WAR is our sole job right now . . . post-war planning is all right in its proper perspective but unless we win this war we will have little to say about what our future economy will e ..." This statement was made the other day by Harvey Firestone Jr., the wealthy young tire magnate.' In some respects what Mr. Firestone has to say is undeniably valid. Beyond a doubt winning the war must be our prime objective these days. Ob- viously victory must be ours before the peace can be ours. But the one objectionable word in this otherwise commendable declaration is "sole." Now, even more than ever before, that cliche "winning the peace" holds good. In doing our utmost towards military victory we cannot afford to lose sight of that much greater victory-indeed what we fervently hope is our ultimate goal in fighting this war-a just and durable peace. A peace that is to endure is one that must be prepared for in advance. Not one that is made amidst the hatred and discouragement of an armistice meeting. \ If we once forget that we are fighting for a great deal more than military victory, our tribu- lations will have been in vain. It is not only for this reason that we must plan a peace based on sound political, economic, and geographical foundations, but also because we must have an incentive more intelligently groun- ded than hatred of our enemies. As was shown by the last war the people and unfortunately even our legislators must be awak- ened to their responsibilities to posterity. This job cannot be left to a disillusioned, bitter post- war world. It must be begun now. -Jim Wienner Ltterj to the &dito1 To The Editor: "Punish Hess: Former Nazi Leader Should Be Tried Now" was the caption on an editorial which appeared in Thursday's Daily. The writer, Jim Wienner, asserted that "it hardly seems justifiable to accord Hess any sort of immunity, even if only until the armistice, while we punish saboteurs to the fullest extent of the law." And then the writer goes on to add that one of Hit- ler's most poisonous stooges deserves the same treatment. Yes, Hess deserves the same treatment as the saboteurs, but the British have not done so yet for obvious reasons. The German government has announced that drastic reprisals will be taken if Hess is punished, and there is no doubt in our minds that it would not kill scores of innocent war prisoners. The Allies, of course, would be forced to strike back with more repri- sals, and this give-and-take proposition would continue indefinitely. Hess is a prisoner of war and is being kept under close guard until the day when it will be feasible to put him on trial. He will join the other Nazi leaders in court when the more im- portant aspects of the war are history and the world is ready for a recounting. There is nothing I'd Rather Be Right_ -By SAMUEL GRAFTON - MNEW YORK-- Let us take another look at the old quarrel between the amateur and the expert. It has flared up in connection with the second front. It has an older history than that. You could go back through the last few years, and you will find that we have had continuously through that period what might be called an amateur foreign policy, contesting the field with an expert foreign policy. The amateur is today a "'typewriter strategist." A few years ago he was a "typewriter diplomat" poinitiiig out that it was evil and wrong to sell oil and steel to Japan. It is a curious thing that the amateur, oper- ating on the basis of a simple instinct, was right, and that the expert, working on the basis of his complete knowledge and informa- tion, allowed the country to be stripped of 10,000,000 tons of its choicest scrap' steel, the irreplacable accumulation of a generation, for the benefit of an enemy. The amateur wanted desperately to help China, almost from the moment when Japan attacked. The popularity of China in this country is one of those great, instinctive manifestations of dem- ocratic comradeship which flare up from time to time, comparable with the feeling of French and Polish patriots for us when we fought for our freedom. The amateur deeply distrusted the Hitler- Mussolini adventure in Spain, but the experts ruled against him; the amateurs wanted to recog- nize the Free French, but the experts recognized Vichy; the amateur did not want to sell 400,000 tons of scrap to Mussolini in the spring of 1940; the experts allowed the sale to be made. It's Called Democracy Please do not believe that I am trying to tear the experts down. I am not. I am trying to build something up. The question of the amateur versus the expert goes to the root of democratic theory, one of the leading principles of which is specifi- cally that the amateur does have an enormous contribution to make to public policy; that the grocer is to be trusted in choosing a Commander- in-Chief; that there is such a thing as native, popular wisdom. I could use the above to attack the State De- partment, but that would be using 12-inch shells against 4-inch game. The bigger thought is that there has been, in America, an instinctive, demo.- cratic counterpart to those popular forces which have made the Chinese resist, which have led peasants to scorch their fields against the enemy. On the record, as between amateur and expert, the basic theories of democracy have been hand- somely validated during the very decade in which they have been most under attack. A Fact To Live By I have been moved to the above by reading Mr. Hull's attack on Laval and Mr. Hull's new apology for the State Department. I always read Mr. Hull's apologies with interest; they are fine, good apologies. They grow better all the time. But the better the apologies become, the more clearly is the fact entered on the record that apologies are necessary, and that they have been necessary often. I will not even quarrel about Mr. Hull's flat statement: "We have given all possible encouragement to the people of France to keep alive th e-reat ide.als and ideas of freedom ..." IERRY- GO* W W''RY 6 By DREW P E AR S O N (The plastic ring, good for one free ride on the Washington Mery- Go-Round is awarded today to Steel Engineer H. A. Brassert, who has finally jogged the big steel compa- nies into trying out the new, cheap- er process of making steel out of sponge iron.) WASHINGTON- In the summer of 1939 an American engineer named H. A. Brassert fled from Germany just before Hitler invaded Poland. He had been constructing the Hermann Goering Works, a big steel mill using a new process, quicker and cheaper than the big blast furnaces; and he left the job unfinished. Later he heard that the six iron furnaces he had put in the new Goer- ing plant had burned out in the first six weeks. Reason: Brassert had left the job without giving the Nazis the secret of his new process. More recently, Brassert has been trying to give these secrets to the American steel industry and to the War Production Board. But all he got until this week was a generous and consistent run-around. First run-around came from the U.S. Treasury, which put him on the blacklist and froze his funds. Bras- sert has been many years an Amer- ican citizen, but was born in England and is distantly related to the second wife of Goering's father (Goering's mother was his father's first wife). However, the U.S. Treasury later removed him from the blacklist, apol- ogized,-infroze his funds. Meanwhile, Brassert had been warning the steel industry as early as two years ago that there would be a scrap iron shortage, that it would be absolutely necessary to find a quick source of iron, independent of scrap. Also he has urged that the present steel shortage could be remedied by working small iron deposits all over the United States. For instance, the Dover, N. J., Iron Works, which pro- duced cannon for the Revolutionary War and the War Between the States, could be reopened under the new sponge iron process. Also old iroi de- posits in New York and Pennsylvania, which thrived in the Eighties, could be opened,to say nothing of impor- tant deposits in Missouri, Texas and Oklahoma, which are near natural gas. Iron ore is also found in South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Kentucky and Washington, while the sponge iron process would permit Wisconsin and Minnesota to produce their own iron on the spot,t andn save delay due to tying up ore boats during heavy freezes on the Great Lakes. Congressional Probe His process, known as the Brassert- Cape process, is a refinement of the sponge iron system, and prduces iron at low temperatures instead of smelting by the blast furnace method. Brassert had designed the Corby plant in England, also has signed a contract to erect a steel mill for the Government of Peru. But the War Production Board opposed similar operation in the U.S. The WPB was willing to erect blast furnaces costing $13,000,000, includ- ing coke plant and Bessemer conver- ter. It was not willing, however, to use a new process which would cost only $4,000,000. Friends of the stee industry on the WPB were bluntly opposed to change, didn't want to upset longtime practices in the indus- try. WPB's objection was not based on the fact that Brassert once had been blacklisted. For such unsuspect gen- tleman as Secretary Ickes, Senator O'Mahoney of Wyoming, and Con- gressman Boykin of Alabama hack been hammering at the WPB foi months. Opposition was based on the fact that WPB advisers just don't like change. "Hell Of A Mess" Regardless of this, Congressman Boykin has been stirring up the WP steel experts with a Congressiona investigation, trying to show that the country could get enough steel if the WPB wanted to go after it. One wit- ness summoned was S. O. Hobart, of WPB's Blast Furnace Unit, who, be-- fore the hearings opened, telephoned to Brassert in New York. "You've stirred up a hell of a mess, Hobart said. "I've stirred up nothing," replied Brassert, "I've simply been asked to testify. Are you going to testify?" "I guess I'll have to," said Hobart "But it's a mess, I tell you-all hell's broken loose." Hobart is president of the Troy (N. Y.) Furnace Corporation, makers of blast furnaces and coke ovens which Brassert's process would cur- tail. Testifying before a Congressional hearing, Hobart said of Brassert's method: "Of all the processes I have ever seen, this is the best." Inside the WPB, however, he has opposed adoption of the same process by the industry, as have several other WPBoys. Donald Nelson Yields SATURDAY, OCT. 24, 1942 VOL. LIII N. 18 All notices for the Daily Official Bul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the President in typewritten form by 3:30 p.m. of the day preceding its publica- tion, except on Saturday when the no- tices should be submitted by 11:30 a.m. Notices D. O. B. Users: It will be much ap- preciated if you make your notices brief. Frank E. Robbins Faclty, School of Education, meet- ing will be held on Monday, October 26, in the University Elementary School Library. The meeting will convene at 4:15 p. m. For undeheated or overheated rooms, call the Buildings and Grounds Department, Extension 317. Do not in any case open the windows. Help in the war effort by conserving fuel. E. C. Pardon Phillipa Scholarships: Freshman students who presented four units of Latin, with or without Greek, for admission to the University, and who are continuing the' study of either language, may compete for the Phil- lips Classical Scholarships. The awards, of $50 each, will be based on the results of a written examina- tion covering the preparatory work in Latin or in both Latin and Greek, as described in the bulletin 'on Schol- arships, which may be obtained in Room 1, University Hall. The exam- ination will be held in Room 2014 1 Angell Hall on Thursday, Oct. 29, at 4:00 p.m. Interested students may leave their names with O. M. Pearl, 2026 A.H., or R. A. Pack, 2030 A.H. German Table for Faculty Mem- bers will meet Monday at 1210 p.m. in' the Founders' Room Michigan Union. Members of all Departments are cordially invited. There will be a' brief talk on "Suetonis" by Mr. Henry A. Sanders. Seniors in Engineering & Business A ministration: General Motors Cor- poration representatives will inter- view seniors on Tuesday and Wednes- day, October 27 and 28. Interview blanks to be brought to the interview are available in each department office. Sign the interview schedule on the Bulletin Boarad at Room 221 West Engineering Bldg. ' Lectures University Lecture: "Personalities in Washington and London", by Es- ther, Van Wagoner Tufty, disting- uished Washington Correspondent who has just returned from London, where, on invitation of the British Minister of Informatio, she has been : engaged in interpretg American life to the English public. This lecture r open to the public without charge r will be given in the Rackham lecture room at 7:45 tonight. A cadem ic Notices Biological Chemistry Seminar wil meet on Tuesday, October 27, at 7:30 1 p.m., in Room 319 West Medica Building. "Vitamin A-Chemistry Deposition and Fate" will be dis- cussed. All interested are invited. Hours for School of Music Library IBeginning Monday, October 26, the - School of Music Library, 306 B.M.T. will be open during the following hours: Monday through Friday, 1:00 5:30, 7:00-9:30 p.m. Saturday, 9:00-12:00 a.m. Students, College of Literature Science, and the Arts: No course may be elected for credit after today. E4 H. Walter l . e ake-Up Final Exam inations in ePhysics 26 and 72 will be given on Wednesday, October 2, beginning a 2:00 pm. in the West Lecture Room West Physics Building. Students ivho plan to eiter one of the flowing professional schools Law, Business Administration, or For estry and Conservation, at the begin ning of the spring term on the Com bined Curriculum must file an ap . plication for this Curriculum in th( Office df the Dean of the College o Literature, Science, and the Arts 1210 Angell Hall, on or before No vember 2, 1942. After this date appli cations will be accepted only upon the presentation of a satisfactory excuse for the delay and the payment ofa fee of $5.00. School of Education Students: N( course may be elected for credit after today. Students must re- port all changes of elections at th Registrar's Office, Room 4, Universit$ Hall. Membership in a class does not cease nor begin until all changes have in the Amphitheatre of the Rackharn Building on Monday, October 26, ad Tuesday, October 27, at 7:00 p.m. Credit will be withheld from students. failing to take all parts of the exam- ination unless an excuse has been issued by the Dean's office. Be on time. No student can be admitted aft- er the examination has begun. Pen- cil. not ink, is to be used in writing the examination. Concerts School of Music faculty concert will be given at 8:30 p. m. Sunday, October 25, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, when Lynne Palmer will appear in a program of compositions for the harp. The public is cordially invited. Choral Union Tickets: A limited number of tickets for the Gladys Swarthout concert, or for the season, are still available at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. Charles 'A. Sink, President Events Toddy The American Association of. Uni versity Women will meet this. after- noon at 3 o'clock in the Michigan League. Professor Arthur Smithies of the-Dfepartment of Ebonomics will speak on "Australia and Post-War Reconstruction." Michigan Outing Club will leave from Hill Auditorium today at 1:30 p.m. Avukah will have a communal luncheon today at 12:30 p.m. at the Hillel Foundation. General plans for the semester will be discussed. For reservations call 3779. Coming Events The- Graduate Outing Clb will meeteat the northwest corner of the Rac kham. Building Sunday, Otbr 25 at 2:30 p.m. for a hike. All faculty and graduate students are .welcome- League Dance Class Committee will meet2at 4:30 p.m. on Monday, October 26, in the Undrgraduate Office of the League. If you cannot attend, call Audrey Johnson at 2-4561. Avukah, the American Student Zi- onist Federation on campus, an- nounced as its guest lecturer at Hil- lel Foundation Sunday, evening at 8:30, Professor Fullerof the Saciology Department, who will speak on "Fas- cism and Anti-Semitism." Churches Zion Lutheran Church services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Sunday.Re. Stellhorn will speak on "Christian Patience." Trinity Lutheran Church will hold services at 10:30 a.m. Sunday' with Rev. H. o. Yoder speaking on "Things Which Cannot Be Shaken." The Lutheran Student Association will hold its fellowship meeting at 5:30' p.m. First Methodist Church and Wesley l Foundation: Student Class at 9:30 a.m. with Mildred Sweet, leader. Morning Worship service at 140 am' Dr.Charles W. Brashares wil preach on "New Light on ld Rea- ities-Worship." Wesleyan Guild will meet at 6:00 p.m. Subject: "How I Am Growing." Fellowship hour and supper following the meeting. First Congregationa Church; Service of worship--10:45 a.m. Dr. L. A. Parr will preach on the subject: "For Whom The Bell Tolls" At 7:15 p.m. the Congregational Student Fellowship will meet. Lutheran Students: Sunday: Serv- ice in Michigan League chapel at 11 a. m. Sermon by the Rev. AI- fred Scheips. Meeting of Gamma Delta, Luther- an Student Club, at 5:30 p.m. at St. Paul's Lutheran Church. First Church of Christ, Scientist: "f Sunday morning service at 10:30. , Subject: "Probation After Death." - Sunday School at 11:45 a.m. - Free public Reading Room at 106 - E. Washington St., open every day - except Sundays and holidays from e 11:3 a.m. until 5:00 p.m., atutdays f until 9:00 p.m. - First Presbyterian Chuih: - Morning Worship--10:45. "Mean- e while"-subject of the sermon by Dr. e W. P. Lemon. Presbyterian Student Guild: Sup- per and fellowship hour at 6 o'clock. o Unitarian Church: Sunday, 11:00 t a.m., Mr. V. K. Bose of Chicago Will - speak on "Harvests Without Season." e 8:00 p.m.-Student meeting-Dis- y cussion of the elections and the war. t e St. Andrew's Episcopal Church: DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN