'i- P iV6- G -. THE MICHIGAN DAILY UTDNESDAY, rilA. WW3, 1943 PAGE WWNESOAY, MA1~~3~ 1*43 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 niorning except Mon- day and Tuesday during the summer session. Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is eclusively entitled to the use" for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of repub- lication 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 car- rier $4.25, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 .tP,9OPCgkV'Ft NAf'N.. L AVRIJINd er Coldge PublishersRepresetnitae 420 MA8isON AVe. NEW YOtK. N. Y. iCAGO * 9606 LOS AUGILES * SA" FRARCISCO Editorial Staff got spurs S.?. that jingle-jangl2-jingle . . I The WASHINGTON MERRYGO-ROUND By DR m EARSON .,v I w. M i t ' ° 'i , ,. /. , r T , , N;t Ir.; WASHINGTON, March 3-Under- Secretary of War Patterson's labor, advisers have a one-point program for ending absenteeism in war plants. Here is the one point: Communities should adjust them- selves to the hours of the factories. Stores. banks, doctors, lawyers, plus other services should be available not merely for one shift of workers but for all shifts. At present, workers on the swing shift, beginning at midnight, find themselves out of gear with the life of the community. The greatest ab- senteeism is among workers on the odd shifts, and can be attributed not to indifference to winning the war but to the inconvenience of trying to live and buy food and get Johnny to the doctor, while the swing shift turns night into day. Absenteeism is higher among wom- en than men, which may mean noth- ing more than trouble with the ra- tion board. A woman will take a day off from the factory because she has to register for canned foods, or be- cause a child is sick in the family, or because she hasn't had time to buy a new dress at the store. Remedy for this is nothing less than two or three shifts on the part of the services that serve the work- ers. The ration board, it is suggested, should come to the factory. Ir many cases, War Department advisers say, absenteeism is caused not by loafing but by overwork. In certain machine-tool areas, such as' New England, men have been work- ing 50 and 56 hours a week for years. They are simply exhausted. Incidentally, this factor is the prin- cipal cause of absenteeism in Ger- many, where workers are worn down by unremitting labor and long hours. Note: There is little sympathy in Under-Secretary Patterson's office for the Rickenbacker crusade against labor. It is regarded as useless and unsound to try to appeal to workers over their leaders. Capital Chaff Senator Nye of North Dakota, long-time critic of Harry Hopkins, met Mrs. Hopkins at the hospital where she is a nurse's aid and where Mrs. Nye was convalescing. Quipped Nye, tugging at the collar of Mfs. Hopkins' uniform: "I don't see any lend-lease emeralds" . . - It is He- bert Hoover's opinion that tI.S. troops will come back from this war more rugged individualists than ever and we will go back to our old era of rugged individualism. le bases. this on the fact that soldiers today are getting intensive specialist train- ing . . . Senator Styles. Bridges, the man who spiked the diplomatic ci- reer of Ed Flynn, will also attempt to spike the, judicial career of As- sistant Attorney General * Francis Shea, if he is appointed U.S. District Judge in New Hampshire. Shed was born in New Hampshire but lived most of his life in Buffalo, N. Y.. (Copyright, 1943, United Features Synd.) # John Eriewine . Bud Brimmer., Leon Gordenker MVarion Fo'rd CharlotteConover. Eric Zalenski Betty Harvey James Conant . Managing Editor Editorial Director * . . City Editor Associate Editor Agsocia e Editor . - . Sports Editor - - -Women's Editor Columnist "