PAGE FOUR~ THE MICHIGAN DIL Y -_e. _. .Q . --- -- -"- 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 the 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 mailnmatter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by carrier $4.25, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 REPRESENTED FpR NATIONAL ADVERTISING tY) National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO * BOSTOR . Los ANGEES * SAN FRANCISCO Editorial Staff "A FINE KETTLE OF FISH!" 4' *2 HE KNEW ALL THE TIME: 'From the I gnorant' Homer Swander Morton Mintz . Will Sapp. George W. Sallad6 Charles Thatcher Bernard Hendel Barbara deFries Myron Dann Edward J. Perlberg Fred M. Ginsberg Mary Lou Curran Jane Lindberg . James Daniels . Managing Editor Editorial Director S. .City Editor Associate Editor . Associate Editor . . . . Sports Editor . . Women's Editor . * Associate Sports Editor :Business Staff Business Manager . Associate Business Manager Women's Business Manager . Women's Advertising Manager Publications Sales Analyst (From PM) pRESIbENT ROOSEVELT dis- closed at his press conference that a second front in Africa has been on the drawing board almost since Pearl Harbor. He and Prime Minister Churchill determined last Winter to open a second front this year either across the English Channel in France or in Africa. They chose Africa last Sum- mer when it became apparent to them that a cross-channel thrust could not be made until 1943. The African campaign to date, of course, is not itself a full blown second front, but it inevitably will become one. Ever since their choice was made, the President observed, he and Churchill have had to sit back and take it on the chin from their crit- ics. They could not reply without giving away the African show while it was still in rehearsal. They did indeed take it. They took it from those who said we and the English had lost our guts, that a second front was being postponed deliberately by Machiavellian cap- italists who wanted to give German Nazism and Russian Bolshevism time to kill each other, that Wash- ington and London were entangled so completely in the red tape of futile democratic muddling that they never would be able to move. The President very charitably'ex- cused his critics on the ground that they were ignorant-for the most part through no fault of their own. They simply couldn't know what the American and British High Commands were cooking up and they therefore were understandably impatient. ROOSEVELT'S attitude becomes still more charitable when it is realized that his self-imposed si- lence-the silence that perpetuated the ignorance--helped materially to win an election for the Republicans. For now it is apparent that the President threw the election away rather than jeopardize the success of his military plans. Many newspapers and many poli- ticians now should be thoroughly ashamed of some of their charges against the President and his Ad- ministration. But they probably won't be. We only hope that their readers and their constituents will remember some of the things they were-saying as recently as a week ago. But they probably won't either. For ourselves, we gladly plead guilty to ignorance and injustice to the Administration in the second degree. Our crimes weren't very much compared with those of most of our 'contemporaries, but they were something and we hereby ac- knowledge them. We, too, became impatient for offensive action. We, too, became impatient with what we considered, unjustified softness in our relations with Vichy, Madrid & Co. (How successful the State Dept.'s so-called appeasement policy was cannot be finally judged until the final score from North Africa is in.) But we did not, thank God, hail the Churchill-Roosevelt pledge of second front action in 1942 as a bold-faced lie. We did not assume that the High Command was devot- ing itself solely to development of waffle tails .in Washington and London offices. We could see, as could anyone with eyes and the will to use them, that the High Com- mand was working and to good ef- fect in gathering the man power and weapons for attack. Moreover, we were at no time tempted to put President Roosevelt down as a liar and a bumbler. We have been watching him in opera- tion for 10 years and we don't make that mistake. Some of our readers have damned us to hell for our failure to join in the second front claque. We may now explain that we didn't join be- cause, although we had no more definite information than anyone else, we did have faith in the word of the President and in his ability to make it good. We also observed and reported, as any .other news- paper could have, that Washington was devoting itself to no other pur- pose in the world than a second front to be opened the first minute it could be opened. O THE PRESIDENT we say, and many should say it louder: We, the ignorant, salute you. -Kenneth G. Crawford Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: MORTON MINTZ Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staffc. and represent the views of the writers only. TIME SAVER: Slow Readers Benefit From Special Classes THE SCHOOL of Education is giving students a valuable wartime service by offering slow readers an opportunity to do their work in half the usual time. Through the speed-reading classes starting next week, Joe Grind can learn to do long library assignments twice as fast and with a gain in accuracy. By attending training classes two hours a week for a month or more, students can increase their efficiency by 50% and tackle the accelerated program with greater ease. The education school is to be congratulated for this contribution to war work. It is a patri- otic duty, every bit as much as nutrition courses and PEM, for all students who are not satisfied with their ability to meet the intensive work ahead to meet this opportunity. If you are one of these, (and there are few who cannot im- prove) attend the preliminary meeting tonight and start to streamline your efficiency in a war- world that demands the best of everyone at the greatest speed. - Charlotte Conover IS IT YOURS: 'Mine Is Mine' Attitude Is Wrong Propaganda A RECENT issue of the Detroit Free Press car- ried a column by Malcom Bingay which might serve as a fertile source for students of propa- ganda and public opinion. In his column Mr. Bingay tells his readers how "Joe Smith, American" thinks. He says, "I'm Joe Smith, American ... I think my state is the most beautiful because it is my state . . . We sprang from all the races of the earth, therefore we have no quarrel with any other people (remember Pearl Harbor, Mr. Bingay?) I'm for the ideals of Washington and Jefferson and Lincoln. They are mine. Those of Marx and Engels and Lenin may be all right. I do not know... I am not will- ing to trade my country into some world federa- tion where my country will lose the thing that has made it unique in the history of the world, the beacon light of liberty for all mankind every- where. I'm just plain Joe Smith, American." NO, MR. BINGAY you are not Joe Smith, American, you are an unwitting opponent of one of the things Joe holds dearest-an enduring peace. No, Mr. Bingay, Joe isn't as illogical as you make him out to be. He doesn't follow you when you say in effect ... "mine is mine and therefore it is the best, change be hanged." You are giving Joe a narrow-minded outlook that he doesn't de- serve. He is willing to look at the other person's viewpoint. He doesn't ignore others' ideas with a shrug and say "they can't be any good-they're not mine." But worse than that, you are not only misinter- preting Joe, you are pulling an elephant hide over his eyes. You bring in Marx and the Inter- nationale. Ah, that's bound to scare him. You tell him that his father and mother were the finest old couple ever. That will appeal to his emotions. You tell him he has no quarrel with other people (even if they do want to maim him) That glittering generality ought to slip by un- noticed but have the right effect. A LITTLE FORESIGHT and-an open mind will save the things worth saving, Mr. Bingay, .,. , «...:.., ;r w i A aravn #clAr n b a n I'31 Rather Be LRight_ - By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK- Let's try to remember how we felt before the election. If you listen to the Re- publicans, there was a good, clean debate; the Republicans mounted the platform, stated cer- tain arguments against Mr. Roosevelt; the people listened; they then decided the Republicans were right. I am going to put it to you that what really happened was considerably more complicated. First, remember that liberals, and Democrats, and the little boy who lives down the lane, were all shouting at Mr. Roosevelt, along with the Republicans. You were shouting. I was shouting. The Chicago Tribune was shouting, but so was the New Republic. Sometimes, when the noise gets high, it is hard to distinguish whether it is an isolationist, saying that the New Deal is destroying our liberties, or an interventionist, saying why don't we have a second front. I want you to remember those noises, because I don't think we can understand this election without remembering them. They were not Republican noises, exclu- sively. We know Republican noises when we hear them. Forty-hour week? That was not the big noise of the campaign. A business-like administration? That melody could be heard, but it was not the dominant theme during the campaign months. Can you reniember the sound of America during the election struggle? It was the bitter, characteristic lament of a people sensing themselves to be on the defen- sive and hating it. Why can't we hit Hitler? That was one of the popular election-month statements. But it was not a Republican statement; it was a Democratic statement, and a non-partisan expression, too. How long, oh Lord, how long? That was another campaign-month theme. Again, it was not ex- clusively Republican. The Republicans have not been especially for the offensive. That was Amer- ica speaking. This late summer was the worst part of the long waiting period the democracies have been through. Russia had gladdened us, and then came late summer, early fall, marked by ominous signs of disintegration of our relations with Russia. And nothing going right, India, Vichy. And the country hating it, and waiting, and hating the waiting. And America showing the ill-temper of too- long waiting, the reaction of irritation under siege. I suggest to you that the election result is one small aspect of this whole, big picture; that in it some of the stresses of this period are made visi- ble; but that it has little specific importance; tat its importance is general Under the two-party system, how can you vote for a hotter war without voting Republican, even though, on the cold, count-it-on-your-fingers record of Congressional action on foreign policy, the Republican Party was much less hot than the Democratic? You vote hot by voting cold; for you have no choice. Where there was another choice, as in New York, the American Labor Party (during a "swing to the right," or it is to laugh) rolled up an incredible 410,000, almost scaring its own DREW Ch PEARSON S_ . . i MERRY-GO-ROUlND WASHINGTON- The railroads have been ne- gotiating with the schools and colleges to extend their Christmas holiday period so that it will begin before the usual Christmas home-going dates and extend beyond the usual returning dates. The purpose was to get rid of the school and college traffic before taking on the burden of the furlough movement of soldiers, This longer vacation would be okay with a lot of girls and boys, but most of the schools and col- leges have turned thumbs down.' Result is that the American railroads will carry the greatest burden in history during the period from December 15 to January 5. The peak will come between December 20 and 24, when the railroads will have to carry: (1) Home-going students; (2) the usual heavy civilian Christmas travel; (3) soldiers on fur. lough; (4) soldiers on week-end passes; (5) the normal troop movement, which will not be sus- pended for Christmas. Relations With France REAL FACT about Anglo-American relations with the French before the African landings was that the job was divided equally between' London and Washington.- Because the British were not on speaking terms with Vichy, after the naval clashes off Oran and Dakar, the United States handled re- lations with Vichy. In return, the British han- dled relations with General de Gaulle. Both Allies, however, acted for each other and kept each other well informed. It was good diplo- matic teamwork. THE BRITISH, although financing de Gaulle and giving him headquarters in London, found he had a lot of definite ideas of his own about running the French part of the war. In egypt, last summer, he had such an argument with Win- ston Churchill that Churchill afterward dropped the wisecrack: "The Cross of Lorraine is the hardest one I have to bear." (The Cross of Lorraine is the sym- bol of the Free French.) Later, when Churchill returned to London, he wired de Gaulle to join him. Nothing hap- pened. Foreign Minister Eden then telegraphed. Finally de Gaulle replied that he would come to London at his own convenience; that he was going to Central Africa first; that when he 're- turned he would take up the problems of Mada- gascar, not before.. Finally, when de Gaulle did arrive in London, he received a reprimand such as only the brusque Prime Minister of England can give. "I had hoped," Churchill said, "that you would be a help to me. Instead you have been an obsta- cle.". (Copyright, 1942, N.Y. Post Syndicate) CINEMA Though handicapped by slow-moving action which makes it seem overlong, "Nght of the Mayas," prize Mexican film now playing atthe DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 9i 27/e Cldor Eventual Destiny To the Editor, THE CURRENT discussion rn the problem of India and the role the United States should play in regard to the destiny of that country, omits one very important factor. This is the question as to the eventual destiny of relations between the United States and Great Britain. Winston Churchill made an im- portant statement in the House of Commons (Tuesday, November 10) in which he emphasized that this war meant that Great Britain would never give up the British Empire. The Prime Minister shade this statement is connection with the Anglo-American invasion of northern Africa. In view of the de- bate over India, I think it most im- portant that we confine our atten- tion to this statement and its im- plications. One thing which our policy to date in regard to India has done is to leave us totally dissatisfied as to the eventual status of India. I suppose this has been due to a reluctance on the part of the United States to force the hand of the British in regard to India. We have also been reluctant to force the hand of Britain in regard to the status of Hong Kong. It has been printed out that the recent sur- render of extra-territorial privileges and rights by the United States and Britain did not mean to include a set- tlement of the eventual status of Hong Kong once we win the war in the Far East. In a sense, both India, and China seem to be in for more than disappointments. On the surface, all seems peaceful and calm in Anglo-American rela- tions. That calm is being disrupted to some extent as we debate the fu- ture of India and, if we remember Hong Kong, the future of China itself. Wendell Willkie certainly realizes that the Anglo-Saxon peo- ples are not winning the sincere co- .operation and affection of our allies in the Far East as long as India and Hong Kong remain moot questions to be decided in the future. IF THE UNITED STATES is tb as- sume the leadership in the Mnglo- Saxon world for the "liberation" of India and (in a sense) of China, it will have undergone the rtellet&1 transformation pleaded for by aul Lim-Yuen. But, we have not even es- sayed to analyze the cost. That cost may well be the loss of Britain as our friend and ally. The failure of the Cripp's mission coupled with our ig- nominious background role in the formofsthe Johnson mission, the doubtful future of a "free" (i. e., Chi- nese) Hong Kong and our failie to back up Nehru and other leaders for a free India has indicated to date'that we follow the line of least resistance at'the moment in regard to India and British Asia in :general.. We have not demanded that Biitain take the decisive steps which so'many of us feel she must take. And Church- ill's statement-incompatible as it'is with the Four Freedms-has not aroused us. Perhaps there is mnore wisdom in begging the question is to the Far East at this moment in view of our current successes in Northern Africa than we can imagine. Only time can give us the answer. So, let a consideration of the re- alities of this hour motivate our thinking. The question for the United States is not so much one of Free India or Free China. The question for thinking Americans Is whether or not the day will ever come when we must definitely make a choice. Shall we be the friend and ally of Great Britain and maitain Churchill's avowed ideal to save the Empire as of 1942 or shall we be- come the true, friend of Free jndia and Free China and incur the en- mity of Great Britain? O ARGUE for the complete an real independence of India an China without seriously considerin the British point of view and presen statements as to war aims, is to mis the point. The issue lies, first, gs what the eventual status of Anglo American relations will be in terms o our hopes for Free India and Fre China and the issue is only secondar in regard to the realization of a Fr' India and a Free China. Frankly, w are between the Devil and the Dee Blue Sea. - Tomas E. Hawse of the Dean of Students will oe con sidered unapproved: Abe Lincoln Cooperative House Alpha Kappa Delta Am. Society of Mechanical Engineer Armenian Club Assembly Athena Avukah Cercle Francais Christian Science Organization Congress Cooperative House e Delta Omega r Disciples Guild e Engineering Council Episcopal Student Guild o Gamma Delta a Graduate Student Council + .. . FRIDAY, NOV. 13, 1942c VOL. LIII No. 35T All notices for the DailyOfficial 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 To the Members of the University Senate: There will be a meeting of the University Senate on Monday, November 16, at 4:00 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall. AGENDA: Election of Members for the Sen- ate Advisory Committee on Univer- sity Affairs. Leaves of absence by Provopt E. B. Stason. Report of University War Board, by Secretary Clark Tibbitts.' Some Problems of the Health Serv- ice, by Dr. W. E. Forsythe. Hospitalization Insurance, by Dr. Harley Haynes. Payroll Difficulties, by Vice-Presi- dent Shirley W. Smith. Army Air Forces Training in Me- teorology: The Army Air Forces are in great need of men to apply for training as meteorology officers, and are seeking candidates for advanced training in meteorology beginning early in January. Those chosen for the course will enter military service as aviation cadets on a non-flying status. They will receive free tuition and in addition the regular pay and allowances. To qualify for the course, the prospective candidate must have completed his sophomore year in college and have taken courses in mathematics, including differential and integral calculus, and a year of general physics. He must be a citizen of the United States between the ages of eighteen and thirty, and meet the physical re- quirements for ground officers. Fur- ther details and application blanks may be obtained at 1009 Angell Hall. B. D. 'Thuma Enlisted Reserve Program: All stu- dents who have enlisted in any En- listed Reserve program at another village, spurred by a jealous young sorceress, attempts to end a pro- longed drouth by punishing the girl. It is this connection of the love story with the superstitions of the village which raises the former above the level of a Dottie Lamour jungle epic. Far outstripping the stars in dram- atic ability is Isabella Corona, who college and have transferred to the University of Michigan this fall,. please report to 1508 Rackham Bldg. as soon as possible B. D. Thuma, If you wish to finance the purchase of a home, or if you have purchased improved property on a land contract and owe a balance of approximately 60 per cent of the. value of the prop- er'ty, the, Investmnent Office, 100 South Wing of UniversityHall, would be glad to discuss financing through the medium of a first mortgage. Such' financing may effect a substantial saving in interest. Public Health Assembly: An assem- bly for students in the School of Pub- lic Health willabe held on Monday, November 16, at 4:00 p. m. in the, Auditorium of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation Institute. Dr. Haven Em-' erson of Columbia University will ad- dress the assembly on the subject, "Units of Local Health Administra- tion in the United States." Foreign Journals on Microfilm: Fifteen hundred issues of about three hundred and fifty scientific and tech- nical journals are now available on microfilm in the General Library. Most of this material was originally published within the last year in 'Ger- many or in some part of occupied Euiope. It is hoped that use will be made of it by members of University faculties and qualified graduate stu- dents. This microfilm is in charge of Miss Agnes Tysse in Graduate Reading Room Number 4 on the top floor of the General'Library. Miss Tysse will answer reference questions and assist readers in using the reading machines in themicrofilm room. In case itis necessary to use the film in other buildings it may be charged out by departmental and collegiate librari- ans and read in their libraries. A portable reader is available for this purpose. Lists of the periodicals avail- able may be seen in the General Li- brary and in Departmental and Col- legiate Libraries. Warner G. Rice, 'Director Bronson-Thomas Prize in German. Value $32.00. Open to all under- graduate students in German -of dis- tinctly American training. Will be awarded on the results of a three- hour essay competition to be held in March, 1943 (exact date to be an- nounced two weeks in advance). Th essay may be written in English or German. Each contestant will be free to choose his own subject from a list of 30 offered. Students wh( wish to compete must be takinga