1v ?& 4Z P t Ty l MCHIGAN DAILY T~t~SflAY, DEC. 10, 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 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 a11 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 ADVERTIWING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Pablisbers Representative 4206 MADisON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO BOSTON . LOS ANGELES . SAN FRANCISCO Editorial Staff STABBING OUR ALLIES: The New Isolationism Homer Swander Morton Mintz. Robert Mantho George W. Sallade 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 Business Staff Edward J. Perlberg Fred M. Ginsberg Tary Lou Curran, Jane Lindberg . James Daniels . . . . . . Business Manager Associate Business Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Publications Sales Analyst By BUD BRIMMER THERE is an "Old.Testament of Americanism" to which a divi- sionist faction among us still sub- scribes. It was incorporated in the words and deeds of American endeavor from the Declaration of Indepen- dence to Woodrow Wilson's plea for the League of Nations, but it is currently represented by those who would call a halt on shipment of American industrial plants to Rus- sia. Once this early Americanism meant "separation." However, after America's formative years the. de- featers of Wilson degraded it into a doctrine of isolation by withdraw- ing America from the era of nations to the boundaries of a Chinese wall of the Western Hemisphere. Now, though actual war has proved the isolationist's doctrine untenable, 'contorted separationist delusions such as those in a recent editorial in the Detroit Times are still with us. * * . * T'HETIMES said: "As a glaring instance of irre- sponsible government . . . running insanely wild is the wholesale ship- ment of American industrial plants to Russia at the very time when Ameicans are being held down to the ABSOLUTE NECESSITIES OF LIFE." The Times cited the treasury procurement division's purchase for Russia of two oil refineries, a steel mill, an aluminum mill, a railroad system (its size unspecified), an electric power plant, an oil pipeline and a tire manufacturing plant. It went on to say: "We are the military ally of Rus- sia in our war against the common enemy, but that does not mean that we must give away our industrial establishments." The Times then quotes Repre- sentative Woodruff of Michigan: "If we are sending steel mills out of this country we must be out of our heads. We don't have enough steel mills as it is. And the shipment of an oil pipe- line at the time that Americans are asked to live in frigid homes be- cause of the lack of transportation to bring oil to the East, seems ut- terly incomprehensible." YES, perhaps this would seem incomprehensible to these short sighted men-the Hearst newspa- pers, the Detroit Times and Repre- sentative . Woodruff-whose self- assured detachment from the world of democracies was a factor in causing smoking ruins at Dun- kerque, Warsaw and Stalingrad. Bitt, aiding Russia is no less in-' comprehensible to them than their criticism to any American anxious to crush Nazism. To answer their arguments about Americans being held down to the absolute necessi- ties of life and being asked to live in frigid houses while we send oil pipelines to Russa, one has only to remember how the gallant Soviets have stopped Nazi tanks with their blood in Stalingrad's cold rains and snows, to recall their bitter de- laying action and how they stead- ily whittled down the might of the German hordes. To recall that this great ally of democracy has lost the factories of Kiev and Kharkov, such giant elec- tric facilities as the Dnieprope- trovsk Dam, the oil fields of Maikop is alone reason enough to justify moving our factories to Russia, be- cause by their heroic fighting the Reds have given us additional time in which to better prepare our own armies ! HOWEVER, there is much more. to be read between the lines. To assume that America should not send Russia manufacturing facili- ties to replace those destroyed when the conquest-bound Nazis swept through the Ukraine means that similarly this "Arsenal of Democ- racy" should cut off the supply of war materials to England and Chi- na and every other one of our al- lies. After that we would have to retract our promises of hope, de- liverance and the four freedoms to the starved but fighting French, Yugoslavs, Greeks, Czechs, and the rest of the conquered peoples for whom we have made the world a living-space or dying-space for all nations of men. But to .do this would sap the fighting spirit with which we now endow democracy, and it would wreak havoc upon our dreams of a better post-war world. To do this would mean that the goodwill which men like Roosevelt and Will- kie have furthered among cur allies would be shattered. It would mean that just as the foundations of the house that Hitler built are begin- ning to crumble under the might bf Allied arms, the ring of steel that surrounds the fascist enemies of mankind would be broken. THEREFORE, the men who criti- cize our sending factories to Russia are not the minute men of 1942 as they would picture them- selves, nor are they fighting this war for the same principles that the Allied governments are. This divisionist faction does battle only for that early American "separa- tionism," but they ignore what we would call a "New Testament of Americanism" that must identify itself with world humanism, a post- war era of nations that includes the United States, and right now with a U.S. policy of aiding Russia. d' Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN ERLEWINE Editorials .published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. - . HELL WEEK: It Should lie Abolished By Fraternity Heads To Fraternity Presidents: IF YOU want to prove to a somewhat skeptical public that fraternities on the Michigan cam- pus are honestly and thoroughly finished with "Joe College" for the duration, you can do a large part of the job at your meeting tonight. You can do it by voluntarily abolishing what even in peace times was a dubious luxury-Hell Week. When the American public thinks of fraterni- ties, it thinks in terms of pots, paddles and par- ties. This is unfortunate but a fact. The picture is based upon stories-partly true, partly Holly- wood-of excessive parties and excessive hazing in past years. Nothing less than decisive action completely abolishing -not merely "curtailing" -Hell Week and all that goes with it will erase that picture from the public's mind. You are constantly worried about people who have long been enemies of the fraternity sys- tem using the war effort as an excuse to do away with it. It must be obvious that the best way to defeat such persons is to make the general pub- lic realize that fraternities and fraternity men are voluntarily cutting out peacetime frills, are re-making their college life to harmonize with the nation's war effort and are constantly alert to every opportunity to help in the strenuous times ahead. You have done a good deal already, but nei- ther you nor anyone else has done enough. To- night you can prove to the campus and the nation that you are willing to forego tradition in favor of the war and you can show that you are sincerely interested in the good name of fraternities. -Homer Swander SPANGLER: His Election Presages GOP Fence-Straddling EDITORIAL comments on the election of Har- rison Spangler to the chairmanship of the Republican party have noted cheerily, in most cases, that the reactionary, isolationist element in the party has been eradicated or at least that it has suffered a severe setback. Well, since it was a matter of choosing the lesser of two evils, the progressives, of whom we hear there are a few in the Grand Old Party, have reason to blow a short sigh of relief. But they can hardly be too enthused over the choice' of a man who has been identified with the stand- stillish ideas of Hoover and Landon. Not only has Spangler toyed with stagnant policies in the past, but even now when fore- sight is of vital importance, he is stil able to tell us in speaking of the post-war world that "after the war we'll have to carry our share of the load, but what that share of the load is, I don't know ... my job is td build an army of voters, and I don't believe there are many vot- ers in China or Mongolia that I could get." Words such as these can hardly be interpreted as a complete overthrow of the reactionary ele- ment. It seems to indicate rather that a session PEARSON'S MERRY-O-ROUND WASHINGTON- This is the story of two boys from Houston, Texas, who came to Washngton to occupy two vital positions in the Government. It is also the story of a David and Goliath feud between them which has influenced armies and the question of whether 130,000,000 Americans walk or ride. "Goliath" Jesse Jones-banker, newspaper publisher-came to Washington, eventually to lend more money to more companies than any other man in the history of the world. "David" Milo Perkins, a young bag sales- man-came to Washington eventually to chal- lenge the lending authority of Jesse. The battle between them came to a head last week when Secretary of Commerce Jones testi- fied secretly before the Senate Banking and Cur- rency Committee asking for a Senate amendment which would override a White House order giving his rival from Houston final power to buy rubber, quinine, tin, and other strategic war materials. Eight months earlier, the President had arbi- trated the first battle between David and Goliath and ruled in favor of David's Board of Economic Warfare. So now Jesse is trying to get Congress, particularly Senate Republicans, to go over,the President's head. Actually the two boys from Houston don't dis- like each other. And when Milo Perkins heard that Jesse had testified before a secret session of the Senate Committee, he telephoned Jesse and asked for a copy of his testimony. "What!" said the Secretary of Commerce, "Are you going up there to testify with all that enthusiasm of yours?" "Of course," said the executive of the Board of Economic Warfare, "and you can't tell what I might have to say when I get up there." Whereupon Jesse invited Milo to lunch and proceeded to turn on the charm. Jesse Jones can be extremely charming, and he wooed Milo as a second lieutenant woos a debutante, to get back his old power to buy rubber, tin, quinine and other war materials, which the President last April gave to his rival from Houston. Actually, a much more important principle is at stake in this argument than the personal prestige of two gentlemen from Texas. It is vital- ly important to every member of the armed for- ces, and every civilian left behind them. It dates back to last winter, when on April 13, four months after Pearl Harbor, Jesse Jones, entrusted with buying rubber from the Amazon, had only about six men in all South America. During this period between Dec. 7 and April 13, Vice-President Wallace-Perkins' boss-made perhaps 40 trips to the White House urging the purchase of Brazilian rubber and other strategic raw materials. There were perhaps 17 different meetings on quinine which the army wanted so badly from the Dutch East Indies. Jones called meeting after meeting. Some of this vital medicine was purchased, but the big order to buy was cabled just one day before the fall of Java's capital, Batavia. The BEW also proposed to buy chrome from the Philippines when it was still possible. But I'd Raher BeR ight_ - By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK- The Nazis have always pictured 'Britain and America as slap-happy "capitalist plutocracies," currently engaged in a meaning- less fireworks display, for no clear purpose. Every American who makes bad jokes about war aims gives realism to this' attempted por- trait. Radio Berlin constantly says that America is in the war to save its own skin, and for what it can get. When one of our gpvn citizens, in a frenzy of hard-headedness, announces that we are in the war to save our skin, etc., and don't care what happens on the Danube, etc., Radio Berlin 'nods. That, it says, with a Nazi leer, is the stuff. THE NAZIS BELIEVE IT THE NAZIS not' only say all this about us, but for many years have believed it and acted on it. The cornerstene of Nazi foreign policy has been that Britain and America 'were thorough- ly selfish, and could be had. They have always felt they could catch u with a bit of peace-in-our-time cheese, or anti- Bolshevik salami, or an after-all-what-do-we- care sardine. Time after time, the west rose to the bait, while the world watched and wondered what was with us. The world is still watching, and every repe- tition of that corny old "hard-headed" act does us harm. Millions of little people listen- when one of us raises his beak to Sthe heavens and in an cutburst of lyrical sarcasm, tells of his indifference to the little ieople 'of, say, 'the Zulu Islands. They always make it the little people of the Zulu Islands, or some such place, because that sounds funny, but the little people of Paris are perhaps smart enough to read 'aris"for Zuu, and the little people of Vienna are bright enough to make the same easy transposition. ACROSS THE NIGHT THUS, every time we become funny 'and say: Damn the problem of the unmarried mother in New Guinea, anyway, we encourage the Nazis to believe that their portrait of us, as a fat, self- ish chuzzlewit, is substantially correct. We also encourage the world to believe that the Nazi portrait of us is substantially correct. These -gags are like winks, or -the significant psssst! announcing -that we are not such idealists, after all. That is the way hard-head subcon- sciously calls to hard-head, across the spaces of ideological night. That "hard-headed" vaudeville act assures the top Nazi leadership that the "reasonable" world, in which they once obtained such bargains, still exists. It encourages them to fight on, to try to change the bait, to set the trap another way,not to give up too %asily. As I've said, the Nazis really believe we are what they say we are. They 'woid not have dared do one-tenth of what they have 'done, if they had not believed we would be "reason- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Scr The Pointed pi, Pen ILKA CHASE says, "What this coun- try needs is more love." She's wrong. What the country really needs is less-much less-of Ilka Chase. If you listen to this female phi- losopher for more than three min- utes you get the idea that the big- gest problem facing the women of today is how to do the least pos- sible ii the war effort without com- ing right out and refusing to admit the existence of a war. Of course, the girls should look pretty and dress expensively while they aren't doing anything. Miss Chase says, however, that if the German forces were arriving at the Ann Arbor station she "would ex- pect everyone to man the barricades" -even if you -have to leave the dance early. After all, this is war. At least we think it is, don't we, Miss Chase? And the Oratorical Association rust have paid her good money to come here. NDELL WILLKIE becomes more .of a lost soul in the Republican wilderness every day. - Hard as he looked he couldn't find anyone in the entire party worth sup- porting for the national chairman- ship. Someone finally stumbled onto this fellow Harrison Spangler who, while he wasn't worth supporting, wasn't worth opposing, either.. Spangler's election has so con- fused some Republicans and they are so happy that Isolationist Wer- ner Schroeder wasn't elected, that they are trying to make themselves believe the "progressives" (who- ever they are) are in control of the party. If anything, St. Louis proves two things: 1) the talent and leadership 'in the Republican Party is composed of one Wendell Willkie; 2) Wendell Willkie is in the wrong party. -Homer Swander certain kind of .America is the men- ace. The combination is the menace. if we change the western branch of that combination, the whole structure tumbles. That's the war aims fight. The funny boys are partlyv rigaht. The amount of milk (Continued from Page 3) the Alpha Omega Alpha honorary medical society. All interested are invited. La Sociedad Hispanica 'announces a lecture, "Lazos de amistad entre los mejicanos y los estadounidenses," by Dr. Hirsch Hootkins of the De- partment of Romance Languages to- day at 4:15 p.m. in Room D, Alumni Memorial Hall. Tickets may be ob- tained at the door, from any Spanish teacher, or from the Office of the Secretary of the Department of Ro- mance Languages. Academic Notices Experimental Discussion Group in Psychology will meet tonight at 8:30 in Room 3126 N.S. Building. All who are interested are cordially invited. Events Today Graduate History Club Meeting to- night at 8:15 in the East Conference Room, Rackham Building. Refresh- ments and election of officers. The Cercle Francais will hold its annual Christmas meeting tonight at 8 o'clock in the Michigan League. There will be reading of Christmas plays and singing of French songs. All 'members and prospective mem- bers are cordially invited. Refresh- ments. The, Inter-Racial Association will present Leonard B. Troutman at the Michigan Union tonight at 8:00. He will talk on "Twenty Centuries Be- hind the Veil." All interested peo- ple are urged to attend. La Sociedad Hispanica will meet tonight at 8:00 in the Michigan League. Program: Sr. Jose Perdomo will speak on "Colombia: aspectos culturales y sociologicos"; Sra. Ro- berto F. Olmedo of Paraguay will sing popular Spanish songs, and poems will be recited by Mary Ellen St. John and E. McCarus. Everyone interested is invited. The University "Pops" Band will meet tonight at 7:30 in Morris Hall. This is for organizing the band and will end by 8:30. .Please attempt to be present. The Surgical Dressing Unit invites all women-Senior, Junior, Sopho- more and Freshman-to help make surgical dressings for the American Red Cross in the Game Room at the League this afternoon, 1:00-5:00. The Merit Committee will meet to- day at 4:30 p.m. Interviewing for Orientation Ad- visers will continue today and Fri- day in the Undergraduate Office of the League. Today, Underwood through Zumack, and Friday anyone who was unable to be interviewed at her appointed time. at the clubrooms just inside the Northwest Entrance of the Rack- ham Building. Plans call for a hike and possibly tobogganning. All grad- uate and professional students are welcome. B Michigan Outing Club will have a Barn Dance on Friday, December 11, from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m: at the Wom- en's Athletic Building. All students are welcome. Wesley Foundation: Wesleyan'Guild will have their annual Christmas dinner and party Friday night at the Russian Tea Room at the League at 6:15 p.m. Please make reserva- tions by calling 6881 before tonight. FOR SOME REASON, no doubt a secret shared by only a select group of modern composers, Ravel's "Bolero" has become the musically metaphysical basis for the present war. Last Sunday Harl MacDonald's "Bataan," as played by the N.Y. -Phil- harmonic, utilized the monotony of this notorious show-piece to repre- sent MacArthur's men or the Japa- nese or something-and last night Hill Auditorium echoed to a longer- than-average blitzkreig persisting el- ephantinely all through Shostako- vich's Seventh Symphony. Serge Koussevitzky conducted the Boston Symphony in'a brilliant perfornmance of this work and of the Haydn 88th. Certainly there can be no doubt of Mr. Koussevitzky's fondness for the Shostakovich, but it seems, to this reviewer at least, that he has es- poused an ugly duckling that will never be a swan. There is also no doubt that the symphony has many spots of contemplative beauty and a few of raucous good-nature, but they are far apart and separated by stretches of insignificant noise, il- luminated here and there by fifth- rank themes from second-rank com- posers, notably Tchaikowsky and Si belius. HE PROBLEM of simple and di- rect musical articulation is doubt- lessly a difficult one, but I cannot see it being solved by pseudo-exciting programmatic boredom. Tchaikow- sky's "1812" is simple enough, but I have never seen it compared to Bee- thoven, except perhaps to the "Bat- tle" Symphony, which happily is played about once every ten years or so in a fit of morbid curiosity. Music is not so serious a proposi- tion as war, but that is no reason for going all out for a work because of its historical connection and over- decorating it with significance. The Seventh Symphony, for one thing, has overstepped itself and taken its role entirely too seriously, so that material for fifteen minutes was swollen into shakily epic proportions. Its musical ideas were sparse an