THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOV. 1, 1942 Fifty-Third Year dited and ranaged by students of the University of higan under the authority of the Board in Control Student Publications. ublished every morning except Monday during the ular University year, and every morning except Mon- and Tuesday during the summer session. Member of the Associated Press he Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the for republicatiOn of all news dispatches credited to or otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights epublication of all other matters herein also reserved. ntered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as >nd-class mail matter. ubscriptionp during the regular school year by carrier 5, by mail $5.25. ember Associated Collegiate "Press, 1942-43 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTI3NG By National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Represenrative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO . BOSTON . LOS ANGELES * SAN FRANCISCO Editorial Staff 25,000 BELOW ZERO._ Z i ): %-sDfl#2 . ' . t ,Y- .r fit.4 j' d1 o, - K'-"r a'' STOP LABOR SHORTAGE: U.S. Manpower Act, v i mer Swander *. rton Mintz 11 Sapp orge W. Sallade . arles Thatcher rnard Hendel rbara deFries ron Dann ward J. Perlberg ed M. Ginsberg iry Lou Curran ae Lindberg.. mes Daniels . Managing Editor Editorial Director - - . . . City Editor . . Associate Editor Associate Editor * . . Sports Editor Women's Editor . . Associate Sports Editor iness Staff1 . . . Business Manager . Associate Business Manager Women's Business Manager . Women's Advertising Manager . Publications Sales Analyst Bus Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT MANTIO Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. S41 4 ' r - t 9s '< ,: i s..J , tr rt t t p : tdl . 4 ti. f C r y r ^~ ''r 1 -'-- ... - . ¢ m c :, .1t F . 1x, ,?,yf"l D .4 fn. - - --R fdw srS4 . . . 'n3 ' t R . ...43 ! 4. **. By LEON GORDENKER AS the production lines move faster and the Army continues expand- ing, the supply of manpower grows smaller.j But America is still limping along with a voluntary manpower alloca- tion program and a powerless War Manpower Commission directed by none-too-able Paul V. McNutt. Meanwhile, our reservoir of man- power-never infinite-is shrinking as ever increasing numbers of men between 18 and 45 go into the Army which will reach a peak of 7,500,000. Add to this the Marine Corps and Navy enlistments and ' the total is 9,000,000 men in the service-9,000,- 000 fewer producing men than in peacetime. After the Army.and the Navy filter off their men, the entire male work- ing force will be left at 34,000,000. This is simply too small to run Amer- ican war industry and government even with slashes in civilian produc- tion. Women must take over the jobs. The number of women in industry this year is estimated at 3,500,000 and another 2,800,000 must be em- ployed next year to replace the ab- sent men. And farm labor is con- tinually leaving for the factories and next year at least another 1,000,000 will have gone to the city. There is a "no-piracy" rule to stop cohnpetition for labor. Factory hands are supposed to be kept on one job and not leave for higher wages at an- othere plant unless they are in non- essential industry. But this has not stopped the bootlegging of labor. Wages are being raised in an effort to get labor and the farms are being. raided for their able bodied men. PAUL McNUTT said of the situa- tion: "Turn-over in West Coast war plants has reached fantastic heights. Labor piracy is rife in Buf- falo and Detroit. Squeezing the last employable person in the area mnto employment is a crucial problem in Connecticut." The solution is in over-all con- trol of jobs and labor without re- gard for political pressures. Man- power problems are becoming much too critical to leave them any long- er in the hands of volunteered in- competency and impotence. President Roosevelt spoke of ra- tioning workers in his Columbus Day speech andon the following day he told his press conference that the volunteer manpower program was not working. About a week later Paul McNutt, always politically expedient, liolilnie' Says announced that his office was draft- ing a National Service Bill. The National Service Bill would re- quire employers to hire their labor from an employment pool, grant au- thority to control labor utilization Sam el Grafton's I'd Rather; Be Right FOR OUR EARS: Axis prepares Winter Peace Rumor Series QNCE AGAIN the Axis rumor "factories" are working overtime preparing their fall and inter line of peace rumors. Unconfirmed reports and those emanating from "usually reliable sour- ces" are starting to pour from the German con- roled and German dominated capitals of Europe. All of these reports have the same theme, that the Axis and its allies are on the brink of surren- der. Dr. Goebbels would have us believe, that Finland is about to make a separate peace, that the discontent of the Italian people has grown to almost revolutionary proportions, that the German army is about to cease operations and retire into warmer winter quarters. THE PURPOSE of this type of propaganda is not to make peace overtures, but rather to make the people of the United Nations so soft and overconfident that not only will German vic- tories be easier to achieve, but also that each one will appear twice as great as it actually is. Thus while the Nazi radio announced the intention of iving up the attack on Stalingrad, the German igh Command'continued to hit with the same if not greater ferocity. However, both the Ameri- aan press and radio and also the majority of our people celebrated a victory yet to be achieved. - Monroe Fink NEW FQRCE: Strengthen Democracy By Lower Voting Age ENATOR VANDENBERG'S proposed amend- ment to -lower the voting age to 18 makes a ot of sense. When youths justout of high school ire asked to, go out and fight for their country, earn their living or educate themselves on a uni- rersity campus, it seems right that they should iave a voice in the government that controls heir lives. However, many people believe that teen-agers re not mature enough to vote. They think of an .8-year-old as an irresponsible kid who will nerely reflect the opinions of their elders at the allot box and vote without looking thoroughly nto- the issues involved. But let's look at it another way. Let's consider he problem from the standpoint of the average 8-year-old man. He has just graduated from igh school and feels that he has had a pretty air grounding in the essentials of the democratic rocess. He knows how to vote and probably has one definite opinions on the men he would like o see in office. He is all set to go out and shoulder gun or adapt himself to an environment that svastly different from his home life. He has the right to fight, the right to earn his living, the right to ge married, the right to drive a car, the right to pay taxes, but not the right to vote. Vandenberg's amendment would give him that right. To those who say the younger generation would ot exercise this right intelligently, it can be onted out that most 18-year-olds who would %ke the trouble'to vote-have had the advantage f a high school education and that they would e largely free from any prejudice obtained after eing out in the business or social world for any ngth of time. If anything, there would be less a tendency toward straight ticket voting. The ercentage of conscientious voting among teen- EVER FUSSING: Farm Bloc Threatens Revolt Against Byrnes THE FARM BLOC boys-that small, stubborn group of farm-state senators-are at it again. This time they threaten "complete revolt" against James F. Byrnes and his Office of Economic Sta- bilization, the much-needed anti-inflation agen- cy established four weeks ago by Congress. Again farm-senators seek higher prices on agri- cultural commodities such as flour, sugar, pota- toes and pork. They demand that Byrnes recon- cile establishment of price maximums on farm products with a"clear" provision ofthe Stabili- zation Act calling for a parity price or a price equal to the highest peak reached by the pzoduc- tion befween Jan. 1, and Sept. 15, whichever is higher. THEY also scorhii gly characterize Byrnes as a "man who has gone down the line with the Preident and made himself much the same type of person Leon Henderson is." Of course, this latest action of the farm-bloc brings to mind, how three weeks ago they held up passage of the overdue and urgent anti-infla- tion measure by insisting upon parity prices be- tween Jan. 1 and Sept. 15. This was done despite presidential insistence upon parity prices of an earlier, less-inflationary period. But, this threat of deliberate revolt by price- grabbing politicians should bring more to mind, especially today when American family circles tighten their collective belts more in the prospect of drastic rationing and the stiffest tax bill yet. Not only is it apparent that these electin-wor- red politicos are attempting to get more from the Washington grab-bag in order to salve their constituents who will go to the polls in a little more than two weeks, but the fact of their being out of step with a nation trying to keep prices down is obvious. Moreover, even their "revolution" threat is ex- ceedingly nauseous, especially when national unity and cooperation is demanded now more than ever. Today America's confidence in Con- gressional efficiency and our faith in the all-out- for-the-war-effort spirit of our legislators totters with each rumor we hear aout graft-hungry politicians, profit-minded dollar-a-year men, and the general disunity and chaos that has overcome Wasington. Surely this is not the time for a farm minority to heave wrenches into the cogs of anti- inflationary machinery. By their action they only increase the public impression of Congress' lack of wisdom and sagacity! - Bud Brimmer SMALL WORDS: Browns Cause Helped By Ferguson's Actions TWO of the finest arguments for the reelection of Senator Prentiss M. Brown have issued, not from his own campaign headquarters, but Nom the mouth of his Republican opponent. Judge HomerFerguson, in his public appear- ances, has given utterance to sentiments which show him to be of a stature already too common in Congress, and which, moreover, give promise of an arbitrary and dangerous obstruction of necessary war measures in the event of his elec- tion. The pettish name-calling with which he an- swered Brown's arguments in the now famous radio debate of last week indicates not only an annoying small-mindedness but a complete DREW PEARSON'S cll MERRY-GO-ROUND WASHINGTON- Unfortunate, inside fact re- garding our grandiose plans to get rubber from the Amazon Valley is that we aren't going to get any more than a driblet this year. About 4,000 tons have been produced, against an expectation of around 50,000 tons. Part of this failure is due to the jealous tug- of-war between Jesse Jones and the Board of Economic Warfare. Jones' Rubber Reserve at first delayed doing anything about Brazilian rubber. Later the BEW stepped in. This situation, bad as it may be, is insignifi- cant compared with the handicaps of nature. For in the jungles of the Amazon, nature has erected the most difficult barriers conceivable to protect her rubber. Here is the tragic, inside story of what has happened. First, the BEWI, working in cooperation with Jesse Jones' Rubber Reserve, offered a higher wage to rubber workers, with the result that they flocked to the jungle. But this took men away from the lesser paid work of farming and wood- cutting, so that river steamers lacked wood fuel, and the jungle settlements lacked food. Starves in Jungles The result was that a great many men actually died of starvation in the jungles. A few had been given shotguns, but ammunition was so scanty tha~t they were scarcely able to shoot monkeys. Later the people in the towns from which the rubber workers were recruited heard that their friends and relatives starved to death. Now these towns won't send any more workers. One factor contributing to the tragic situation was that a ship bringing food, firearms and more equipment to the Amazon, was sunk by a Nazi submarine. Also it takes a tremendous number of tin cups to collect rubber. A cup is tied to each tree, and catches the rubber as it slowly oozes from the trunk. About 15,000,000 cups are necessary for one area alone.h t However, the chief shipment of tin cups got held up on the dock in southern Brazil, missed the boat, then were further delayed by submarine warfare, and now have missed the current rub- ber season. So they will have to wait for the next season. Hitler's New Order Here is an authentic account from Dutch Gov- ernment sources, of what happened to Hollanders who were caught in the act of printing an anti- Nazi publication in The Netherlands. One victim was forced to place his feet in a tub of water, which was brought slowly to the boiling point. Another patriot, who had been ar- rested in mid-winter, was compelled to undress and was placed upon a chair in the open court- yard of the prison, surrounded by warmly dressed Gestapo men,. who questioned him as long as he could stand it. (Copyright, 1942, United Features Syndicate) Republican obstructionism shall not perish from the earth. Judge Ferguson's efforts to drag the defunct and evil-smelling issue of Regimentation into the campaign melee are amusing in the light of recent charges that the Administration lacks firmness and vigor in imposing necessary war THE contributions to religion from social science and psychology are many. The primary °one is the per- sonality trinciple. This more valid and enlightened idea about the in- dividual, how he lives and associates, has provided for the church-an ar- ray of facts to displace the, more speculative claims which have been generally accepted. The personality at birth with its body-mind potentialities, has great promise. Its ability of interaction with the material force of the world, as well as with 'the social factors define anew those basic relations formerly addressed in history and literature as breath or soul. Over and above all this, the infant has a measure of selectivity in deciding his reactions to situations, thus pro- viding uniqueness in conduct and an individual reaction to accrued or in- stitutional values. Not until the Church, adopts these data at their face value in our world and incor- porates them as part of its religious education willafaith function effec- tively in our common life. The spiritual significance of all this is far-reaching. The meaning of personal existence, the claims of the universe upon the indi- vidual, the effect of the imponr derables of birth, death, disease, faith, love and hate are stupen- dous. The old religion returns in a new dress. Not only is this an addition to knowledge, but human relation and divine accountability have been im- mensely increased. The fact that every group act leaves its mark on a person as a" scar or an enrichment gives fresh meaning to society and a sense of worth to the individual. Also, the correlative fact that each thought or wish or decision or prayer by a person changes the tone and sufficiency of the group, is a power- ful incentive to human will. The human personality is the reason for this sensitivity for he is the supreme entity of worth in the vast network of social reality. Only when one accepts these facts, comes into en rapport with his world, as it were, and becomes a part of na- ture but proudly asserts a creative and responsible place in it, can a man say with Henry Bergson, "Every voluntary act in which there is free- rlnm n~nl'- m nmm~r. of a" nr .a NEW YORK-The cold rains come for those who earn them. The people of Stalingrad had to stop Nazi tanks with blood for sixty days, before water fell to help them. One thing leads to another. But that is a hard lesson to learn and we of the West have not learned it. We prefer to be able to see our way clear through to the end of a campaign before we start it. It is an unreasonable desire. It is, also, smug. The wish sets us up in busi- ness, not as experts, but as fortune- tellers. It asserts our ability, some- time, in 1943 or 1944, to be able to foretell every twist and turn in a battle. Then we will start the bat- tle. Next year, perhaps. I do not know what is going to happen in 1943. But I think 1943 is a mirage. It seems like a clear, sensible sort of year now, only because this is 1942. When 1943 finally comes along it will appear quite as unclear as does today. One thing leads to another. All that war requires of us is that we do 4he one thing which can lead to another. Who can say what a diversion in Norway, or France, or Spain, or Italy would do? But we do know that it would make a new situation. In that new situa- tion it might be possible to do something else. Wars are never won because of anybody's plan. They are won because someone takes advantage of an opportun-- ity -which arises during action. But the cold rains never help generals who keep their forces in quarters. It would be raining now on a German Stalingrad if the Rus- sians had not fought when it was dry. Do you remember Tolstoy's giant laughter when he tells how Napol- eon fought furiously to get to Mos- cow, fought furiously for the policy which defeated him, by stretching his lines until they snapped? Tol- stoy laughs, too, when he tells how the Russians fought with equal fury to stop Napoleon's advance; the Russian tried bitterly to keep Napoleon from making the mistake which saved Russia. The generals on both sides planned it that way. Their plans would have been more sensible if they had been inter- changed. Russia won, says Tolstoy, not because of anybody's plan, but because in the thousands of little developments which add up to make a war, the spirit of the humble Russian soldier turned out, accidentally, to be the deci- sive factor. Tolstoy goes very far. He says no general's plan ever won a cam- paign. That can't be true. Stone- wall Jackson probably did catch General Banks in 1862, as Douglas Southall Freeman saYs in Lee's Lieutenants," by at tacking. him near Winchester on the only day on which an attack could have suc- ceeded. Jackson was a planner. But he was also a fighter. Free- man quotes a contemporary com- ment: "In advance, his trains were left far behind. In retreat, he would fight for a wheelbarrow." In the fight for the wheelbarrow, the cold rains might come, or the only day, or something equally useful. The experts have to say where we shall make our diversion. That is indisputable. No one else can do it. But are the experts prepared to say that now, two years and four months after Dunkerque, two years and five months after the start of our munitions program, no diversion of any kind is possible? That is what the question has beeome, a question Tolstoy would have loved. One thing leads to another. Even the chance we now have to make a second front is based on acci- dents. We have a chance to make a second front only because the Brit- ish defended themselves so desper- ately and well in 1940, and because Hitler miscalculated ,the strength of Russia. We did not plan this chance for a second front. We found it, on the road. It is smug to say we must now see the whole length of the road that remains be- fore we cal move along it another foot. Our experts can be experts; but no more than that; not soothsayers. We are now helped by the rising revolt in France. and freeze workers at their jobs. It is extremely necessary that this bill pass quickly to expedite the solution of the manpower problems. Good as the bill is, it fails to de- fine the agency of control satisfac- torily. The present Manpower Com- mission is designed to report to the President who is too busy to take all the decisions himself. The new Man- power Administration should work under the Office of Economic Stabil- ization. Paul McNutt, a handsome, popular politician but no administra- tor, should be replaced as director by a man with Leon Henderson's under- standing and forcefulness. IMPLICIT in the bill is a need to coordinate the various branches of the armed service with the labor draft. The first action which must be taken is the discontinuation of en listments in the services. This must be quickly followed by a census of skilled workers and an order keeping this highly necessary group of men from being drafted or enlisted. Army enlistments should be closed permanently except for the Air Pore, and Selective Service must be con pletely informed of manpower needs and instructed by executive orler not to draft necessary men in necessary industry. This action is partially in operation already and extension of it will be easy. Navy enlistments may be reopened to men not necessary to war industries. Too many men are still employed in non-war jobs. This year 25,100,- 000 men are working in civilian 'production. Next year the amount must be trimmed to 19,200,000. An estimate by the WMC's chief plan- ner, Dr. William R. Haber, indi- cates that in all 5,000,000 people must leave their jobs for others., The War Production Board should be consulted about making changes in production so that more of these civilian producers may be released for essential production and farm work. Many more men could be-released by eliminating luxury and peacetime work. Throughout this whole process, the War Labor Board should adjust wages to keep parity within industries so that labor pirating can be com- pletely stopped. But unnecessary wage raises should be avoided so that inflation can be controlled. There must be close cooperation with housing authorities so that mi- grating workers will not go to areas where there is no housing. Much closer check on this migration is nee- essary. WE CAN no longer waste our scarce manpower. Complete control for total war is necessary and the first step will be the passage of a sound National Service Act. Then alloca- tion must begin quickly, for there is not much time. DAILY OFFICIAL (Continued from Page 3) -follows the' 6 o'clock luncheon and fellowship hour. First Church of Christ, Scientist: Sunday morning service at 10:30. Subject: "Everlasting Punishment." Sunday School at 11-45 a. m. Free public Reading Room at 106 E. Wash- ington St., open every day except Sundays and holidays,- from 11:30 a. m. until 5:00 p. in., Saturdays until 9:00 p. m. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church- 8:00 a. m. Holy Communion; 10:00 a. m. High School Class, Tatlock Hall; 11:00 a. m. Junior Church: 11:00 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon by the Rev. Henry Lewis, D.D.; 6:45 p. m. Freshman Discussion Group, Harris Hall; 7:00-9:00 p. m. H-Square Club Hallowe'en Party, Page Hall; 7:30 p. m. Canterbury Club for Episcopal Students, Harris Hall. Meeting fol- lowed by Compline and Choral Group. First Congregational Church: At morning worship, Dr. L. A. Parr's sub- ject will be "Our Lamps Are Going Out." Ariston League, 5:15. p. m. PrO- fessor A. K. Stevens will present a discussion on, "How Shall We Think of God?" Student Fellowship, 6:00 p. m. Supper will be served at 7:15. Following supper, Professor John L. Brumm of the Department of Jour- nalism will speak on, "Living Toward the Future." Zion Lutheran Church Services will be held Sunday at 10:30 a. m. Rev. Stellhorn will preach on "Loyalty." 4. I t 4 - - I FJ .r t4 - 4f ( Z$ 1'I - -X IL' "S, 1p 4. i 4. Ay Trinity Lugieran Church services will be Sunday at 10:30 a. m. with Rev. H. C. Yoder speaking on "The Charter of Privileges of the Refornia- tion." The Lutheran Student Association will meet at 5:30 p. m. for their fel- lowship dinner and a round-table dis- cussion on the "Believing Church.? 'The Ann Arbor Meeting of Fends