TIRE IMTCH~IGAN.DAIT1Y SATURDAY. SEPT. 1*,I:;. ~ }y.u.aa ,_; .ia .Z + : x ~m. Fifty-Third Year eried 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 the regular University year, and every morning except Mon- -ay 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-a-1l other matters herein also reserwed. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter.' Subscriptions during the regular school year by carrier $425, by mail $5.2. REPRE99NTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative, 42 ^MAbJ6QN AVE. N EW YORK. N. Y. CeICAGOr *BOSTONLos ANGEiS PreSANsFsAN4S Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-4 3 LONE LIGHT IN THE PRICE LEVEL ] LACKOUT Homer Swander Morton Mintz Will Sapp George W. Sallad Charles Thatcher Bernard Hendel- Barbara deFries Myron Dann . Editorial Staff SManaging Editor Editorial' Director i City Editor . . . . Associate Editor . , . . . Associate Editor . . . . . Sports Editor . . . . . Women's Editor . . . Associate° Sports Editor Business Staff Edlward 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 NIGHT EDITOR: WILL SAPP Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by nembers of The Daily staff and represent the views of-the writers only. BACK TO THE 20'S:. Getting School Loyalty A t 75~ Cents Per Throw THOSE nice two-color, all wool, fitted- to-your head freshman pots that are brightening up the campus are part of the at- tempt to build college spirit. Yes, boys, and that they will. But, you know, guys, those little hats are very smalL And you know how hats become a habit and no longer give you the feeling of 'wearing anything. They will build that old school spirit nd make one feel like a fine- college man at a pep rall: for a little while, but they are so small." Now, fellows, if you really want to get that old spirit here's the way: let's make it compulsory for all freshmen to wear yellow and blue raccoon coats with large pockets on the inside. The front might be yellow and the back blue. Or better till let's make them in yellow and blue stripes ke an c d school spirit skunk. Since none of you freshmen are yet fraternity, lodges, in short, YOU DON'T HAVE TO WEAR OIL BUY POTS! -Leon Gordenker CleWASHINGTON _ Rm g Rg UAP f MERRY E60- RON By DREW PEARSON Americans Will Always 'Have Guts' (From a speech of Vic President Henry A. Wallace.) THE AMERICAN PEOPLE have al- ways~ had guts and always will have. You knoW the story of Bombe' Pilot Dixon and Radioman Gehe Al- drich and Ordnanceman Tony Pas- tula-the story which Americans will be telling their children for genera- tions to illustrate man's ability to master any fate. 'These men lived for 34 days on the open 'sea in a rubber life raft, 8 feet by 4 feet, with no food but that which they took from the sea and the air with .one pocket knife and-a pistol. And yet they lived it through and came at last to the beach of an island they did not know. In spite of their suffering: and weak- ness, they stood like men, with no wea on left to protect themselves, and no shoes on their feet or clothes on their backs, and walked'in military file because, they said; "if there were Japs, we didn't want 'to be crawling." The American fighting' men, and all the fighting men of., the United Nations, will need to summon all their courage during the next-few months, I am convinced that the summei and fall of 1942 will be'a time of supreme crisis- fotus all. Hitler, like the prize fighter who realizes he is on-the verge of being knocked out, is gathering all his remaining forces for one last des- perate blow. There is .abject fear in the heart of the madman- and'a grow- ing discontent among his 'people as he prepares. for h4s last all-out of- fensive. WE MAY BE SURE that Hitler and - Japan will cooperate to do the unexpected-perhaps an attack by Japan-against Alaska and our north- west .coast at a time- when German transport _planes "will 'be °shuttled across from Dakar to furnish leader- ship and stiffening to a German up- rising in Latin America. In any event, the psychological and sabotage of- fensive in the United States and Latin America will be timed to coin- cide with, or anticipate by a few weeks, the height of the military of- fensive. I We must be especially prepared to stifle the fifth columnists in the United States who will try to sabo- tage not merely- our war materials plants but, even more important, our minds. We must be prepared for the worst kind of fifth-column work in Latin America, much of it operating through the agency of governments with which the United States at pres- ent is at peace. When J say this, I recognize that the peoples, both of Latin America and of the nations supporting- the , agencies through ,which 'the fifth columnists work, are overwhelmingly on the side of- the democradies. We must expect the of- fensive against us on the military,x propaganda, and sabotage frontsi both in the United States and in Latin America, to reach its apex some time during the next few months. The convulsive efforts of the dying mad- man will be so great that some of us may be deceived into thinking that the situation is bad at %a .time-& when it is really getting bette But in the case of- most-of us, the:events of the next few -months, disturbing though they may -be will only in- crease our will to bring about com- plete victory in this war of liberation. Prepared-in spirit, we cannot be sur- prised. Psychological terrorism will fall flat. As we- nerve ourselves for the supreme effort in this hemisphere we must not forget the sublime hero- ism of the oppressed in Europe and Asia, -whether it'be, in the mountains of Yugoslavia, the factories of Czech- oslovakia; and. France,- the farms tbf Poland, Denmark, Holland and Bel- gium,:among., the seamenof Norway, or in the occupied areas of China and the Dutch East Indies. Everywhere the soul of man is letting the tyrant SAMIUEL GRAFTON'S P Id Rather Be Right. I want to call your attention to the recent convention of the Indus- trial Union "of Marine and Ship- building Workers in New York.' It was a great convention. It gets the gold star because it was so free from cant. Do you knowwhat cant is? Cant is mushmouth talk: Cant is when you talk as if you are try- ing to swallow a hot potato while keeping your eye fixed on a dollar. Cant is saying the kind of empty nothing to an audience that you wouldn't dare say at your own din- ner table, because people would laugh. The Revolution Against Cant The rebellion against cant start- ed when John Green, president of the union, looked his members in the eye and said to them that Brit- ish workers were building ships faster than American workers, and what did American workers propose to do about it? That's not the way one talks at a convention. A convention is where everybody in sight is better than everybody else; a convention is a device for putting mutual admira- tion on a straight-line production basis. But Mr. Green said flatly: "Trade -unionism-as -usual must go." He declared that production is the first, chief and major problem, that the union must work~ for it in cooperation with even hostile em- ployers. Let 'em hate you, he said, in effect, to his men, but get the ships out. This was bold enough. Everybody is willing to accept 50 per cent of know that slavery of the body does not end resistance._ There can be no half measures. North, South, East, West, and Mid- dle West-the will of the American people is:for complete victory. No compromise with Satan is possible. We shall not rest unti all the victims under the Nazi yoke are freed. We shall fight fora com- plete peace as well as. a complete victory. The people's revolution is on the march, and the devil and all his an- gels cannot prevail against it. They cannot prevail, for on the side of the people-is the Lord. "He- giveth power to the faint; to them that have no might He in- creaseth strength . . . They that wait upon the Lord shall . . . mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; they shall walk and not faint." Strong in the strength of the Lord, we -who, fight in the people's cause will never stop until that cause is won. Down Argentina Way ... A RGENTINA has dissolved the Ger- man Federation of Cultural and Welfare Societies, a Nazi"front." But neither subversive activities nor the torpedoing of Argentine ships have so far induced President Castillo to follow Brazil into the war against the Axis-His policy of- 'prudent neutral- -ity'" for Argentina:is not entirely the result of fascist-mindedness. Argentina and Chile, which also has not broken with the Axis, have long coast lines, far from the United States, which they can't defend and are not sure we can. The recent occu- pation of the Galapagos Islands and the establishment of a base on the Ecuador coast indicates a southeriy extension of our defense system, which may have a decisive effect on Chile's future course.-of action. - -Detroit Free Press Don't blame Kaiser for buying bootleg steel. If Nelson won't con- trol and apportion it wisely, patriots must get what they can any way they can. the implications of our crisis. Mr. Green accepted them all, withott coyness, evasion, or cant. Did You Hear That? Two days later, at the same con- vention, we were treated to the extraordinary spectacle of an as- sistant secretary of the Navy cook ing with gas. Mr. Ralph A. Bard, the official in question, made his r speech. I cannot believe it yet. Tell me, did he really say something like: "We prate about our unity . . Then we retire to the woodshed with a sharp pencil and clean shin- gle, to figure out whether the agri- cultural or the petroleum interests will grab the synthetic business." It seems to me I also, heard Mr. Bard say: "We hope we can enlist the support of the shoeless masses of Latin America and our own Ne- groes, without having to do ,too much toward solving the agrarian problems of our neighbors to the south, or the economic problems of our fellow Americans." And I could swear I distinctly heard Mr. Bard make some remark , about "anti-union employers who sabotage production committees for fear that industry will be Soviet- ized" and a moment later he poked labor leaders who fear labor unity and an end of jurisdictional chaos. Then he added: "And we hope that the Russians will whip the Nazis, but not be too unreasonable about spreading their uncomfort- -, . able doctrines outside of Russia." Mr. Bard, in a word, undressed us. There are a number of people in Washington who must have felt the wind around their knees be- fore he finished. He undressed us, $ and he said: "Look at-us," and that is what I mean by the absence of cant. Mr. Bard's speech was as shocking as the first short skirt. We've Been Suffocating For we have been drowning in cant, suffocating in a tide of mush- mouth talk, since Pearl Harbor. But there was Mr. Bard on the P4I- -, form, saying frankly that, so far,, "We are still losing this war," re- - fusing to give us a word of false comfort, refusing to talk about the shameful and selfish rubber squab- ble in the time-honored Washing- ton formula: "We admit there are difficulties in the way of progress, but if we overcome the difficulties - we shall certainly progress." No, there was Mr. Bard, looking at the war straight and clean, too con- cerned about it to juggle it, and at the end he poured himself out, say- ing that if we would only break o t't 0l the "standard of democratic ideal- ism," stop "flexing. our imaginary muscles" and go to work, telling the. truth, shaming the devil and solv- ing problems, we might win. I say it was a great convention. Truth came out of her corsets and scandalized the town. I say that the rebellion against cant, against conciliating industrial and labor selfishness, instead of exposing it; against kidding the Negro instead of giving him a job; against lying about India, say, instead of freeing it, can give us victory. For the Axis people must be sick of cant, too. They get it, like our- selves. We hear about "difficulty in the way of unity which ma~kes for less progress in our harmony" and they hear about the "nucleus Ger- man and his great role in connec- tion with the peripheral Teuton." When we begin to tell the truth, and offer bread, milk and f.:eedom to the people of the world instead of words about it, we shall win. They will rise with us in a joint re- belihon against cant. I think that's what Mr. Bard meant when he said break out the banner. He, like many of us, is sick of losing and sick of words. -N.Y. Post Syndicate -J WASHINGTON: Russia's refusal to permit U.S observers nearithe Red Army fighting lines still irks the War Department, and it is hoped" that ,Wendell Willkie can- use his persuasive charm to get Stalin to yield on this point. However, a backstage look at certain Russian negotiations here makes you understand why the Russians still are suspicious. One of these is the manner in which we have delayed six priceless months in selling two old oil refineries in Tyler and Longview, Texas, while the big oil companies jockeyed over how much royalties the Russians should pay them. If these refineries had been shipped to Russia and -set. up behind the lines when first proposed last March, the Russian army would not be para- lyzed-as it will be after the fall of the Caucasus. You can understand Russian : suspicion even 79 THE CLASS AOF 1946: It's Up To You To Ins till ANew 'Will To Win' In The University Of Michigan's Student Body THIS HAPPENS every year: the edi-. tors - of The Daily look down from their "wise-old-senior" perch and solemnly hand out several hundred words of wisdom to the in- coming freshman class. Tradition, you- know. .- But to the extent that we are following tradi- tion in writing this, we apologize, because this country. of ours-including its government, its. Army and Navy, its political parties, its schools and its people-is already wallowing knee-deep in a morass of tradition. If there was less tradi- tion and more imagination, more just plain, honest-.o-God common sense in America today, we would be winning this war instead of losing it. (And before anybody tries to tell us we are not losing, just take 'a good-long look-at the latest war map of the Russian front.) But to get back to Michigan and to those of you who are coming here for the first time this aear, You will' find at the' University the same lin, ,inexcusable clinging to moss-backed tradi- tions that you-find in the rest of the nation. You. will find here a University still living too much, at its ease, still without the realization of how desperate the battle actually is. You will find a University not yet willing to give up all of its peace time pleasures" and privileges. You. will find this in the administration, in the faculty and in the students. You will find everywhere a frigh- tening lack of enthusiasm, imagination and origi- nality which right now is at such a premium. Of course, there are exceptions, but even here at what is undoubtedly dne of the finest universi- ties in the country too many of us have- not yet learned what it is that really wins wars and then applied it to our own daily life. We admir'e a man e Henry Kaiser because he combines imagina- i. with common sense to get things done in a 'ig"way and in a hurry. But for some reaspn or otier we .-efuse to go the next step and apply the Kaiser methods ourselves-we refuse to give up our traditional, easy-going college life and our traditional, old-fashioned ideas of education. It is inexcusable and almost criminal that this should be-but there it is. And the of you change their ways, but you can-and you should-demand that you be allowed to exercise to the fullest your own individuality and originality. Instead of falling into the coke-dance-date routine, you should give up more of your time to winning the war than the upperclassmen have been willing to give. They have thus far failed in too many respects and it is up to you to show the nation that at least the new college students rea- lize total war affects the campus as much, if not more, than any, other section, of the country. You must realize that there is no place forthe traditional or the ivory tower on a wartime cam- pus. You must realize that the majority of stu- dents and faculty have failed to see this or to do anything about it if they did see it. And it is, therefore, not up to you to follow but, rather, to instill a new spirit, a new imagination, a new will to win 'in the student 'body of the'University of Michigan. ---Homer Swander Morton Mintz Will Sapp George Sallade Charles Thatcher better when you examine some of the behind- the-scenes maneuvers with both Japan and Rus- sia before Pearl Harbor. The Japs were treated with more friendship than the Russians. Here are two examples: Example No. 1: Early in 1940 the Japs had con- tracted with the M. W. Kellogg Company to purchase a $3,000,000 oil cracking plant to Manu- facture aviation gasoline in Japan. They had paid $20,000 down and considered the deal closed.' However, Secretary Hull previously had urged that American oil compafiies not sell gasoline to Japan in view of its bombing of China, and the' Kellogg Company finally decided that the - con- struction of a gasoline plant in Japan might vio- late the spirit of Hull's reques't. Japs Get U.S. Secrets So Dr. Maurice Cooke of the Kellogg Company "told the Jap representatives in New York that the deal was off, and that their $20,000 would be re- turned. No, you keep the money, we have a contract," was the Jap reply. "We know you want to keep gasoline secrets from us," the Jap continued, "btt" look." He took out a thick booklet marked "Imperial Japanese Navy" and showed on page 106 the "know-how" or carefully guarded trade secrets for making aviation gasoline belonging to the Kellogg Company, Shell and Universal OilPro- ducts. - "Where did you get this?" asked the amazed Cooke "We pay $700,000 to Universal Oil Products Company in Japan," was the reply. - Note :--Universal Oil Products Company is a patent- pool owned by Standard Oil of New Jer- sey, Standard Oil of Indiana, the Texas Company and M. W. Kellogg Company, the same group which also negotiated the synthetic rubber deal with the Nazis and which now is the chief bene- ficiary of the Jesse Jones contracts for synthetic rubber factories. Russians Rebuffed Example No. 2: The Kellogg Company. (which though a member of Universal Oil Products to some extent competes with it) did not sell the cracking plant to Japan-.But one year later, on Jan. 14, 1941 it received a signed letter from Russian representatives in the United States' ordering $35,000,000 of aviation gasoline plants. These were to be transported to Russia aid set up in -"safe" areas. Apparently the-Russians a- ready figured they would be attacked by Hitler and feared loss of Lheir Caucasian oil. Before closing the deal, however, Frank John- son, vice president of Kellogg went-to.-Washing- ton and consulted with the State Department. He came back with this advice: "The State Department doesn't want the Rus- sians to know it is blocking the deal, but it says we cannot sell the plants. They want us to say we're too busy with other work." This was what.Kellogg representatives told the Russians; but the latter were skeptical. They spent an hour quizzing the Kellogg people, trying to find out"if it wasn't the State Department which really had blocked the deal. Ii. ____- ' . The Pomn ted. Pen YOUR DAILY DOZEN: 1. WAR NEWS 2. SPORTS 3. FASHIONS 4. UNIVERSITY DAILY OFFICIAL BULLE'I IN 5. THE StCIAL WHIRL 6. -SHOPPERS' GUIDE 7. ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWS 8. EDITORIALS 9. SUNDAY ROTOGRAVURE SECTION 10. NATIONAL FAMOUS COLUMNISTS 11. CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY - 12. CAMPUS NFWS 7)p Just in case you didn't see the lit school sup- plementary "announcemenit, we'd like to tip you 6ff on a good coarse. It's Poly ci 68-The Far East - and the Pacific Area. The course has been tossed around a bit, since Prof. Joseph Hayden left last year but the right man is here for it now. He's Prof. Esson McDowel Gale, a native Sutbscribe NoW.! 180 Issues ....$4.251 per year _