x r ot© lijE M'i C i A N. ii 1 .:Yi, . . iii.i.f: 31 , l'ri:f FE.. __ _ __ - - , 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*o 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 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 REPRESENTED FOR NATION,.L ADVENTIING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publisbers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y.. cHICAGO . BOSTON * LOS AnGILES * SAN FNANCISCo Editorial Stafff John Erlewine . . . . . . Managing Editor Bud Brimmer . . ' . Editorial Director ]on Gorenker . . City Editor Marion Ford . . . . . '. Associate Editor Vharlotte Conover . . . . Associate Editor Erie Zalenski . . . . . . Sports Editor Betty Harvey . . . . . Women's Editor James Conant. . . . . . . Columnist 'Detschland UNDER allies' Business Staff Edward J. Perlberg . vomme Saes ENERGY and its expenditure is good, but should it be made the one enveloping good - a God? Freud ran into debate with other psycholo- gists and into an ugly jam with relig- ious leaders because he held that one drive was certain to swallow all the other drives. In similar fashion the Nazi thesis of "strength through joy" is a perversion. When one good is made the adequate personal aim of man and a whole generation is taught to "let the Feuhrer choose," then all of that group energy can be chan- neled with ease and you have a fight- ing machine. But such is not a people's movement nor a democratic society however much those units in the fighting machine are told that their goal is efficiency and mastery. Democracy or the democratic way is quite different. The social process, of which democracy is the ideal, foc- uses the attention of all upon the wel- fare of each. The majority concerns itself in part with the welfare of each minority. The driving power of the whole is balanced against, and pro- gressively conditioned by, the welfare of persons.A IN AMERICA, ideally, we are trying to develop political democracy, educational democracy, religious de- mocracy, social democracy, and eco- nomic democracy. Actually, our de- mocracy if put on a point scale with autocracy at zero and democracy at one hundred, those five functions of group life in the United States might appear about as follows: in political life, we are 80% democratic; educa- tional 70%, religious 60%, social 40% and economic 20%. There is no wayI to measure the degree of democratic action. However, to have such a scale in mind may help us as we pass our culture, our common life, our prop- erty problems, our racial attitudes, and our church governments in re- view. WE run all the same dangers the Germans run. We love technol- ogy as they do. We desire to enjoy the power our scientists have released for our use. We rely upon the engi- neer and other applied scientists as the Germans do. The danger we run is 'this : we are apt to make a god of power, apt to conclude that energy expenditure itself is the summum bonum. When the millions come to so believe and to accept the correla- tive that temperance, forgiveness, mercy, justice and love are several names for a common weakness, as Nietzchi taught, then the dictator can have his way. WHERE would the citizen with the power of an army general or the sweep of an industrial manager ap- pear on that scale, if rated by his . Business Manager Fred M. Ginsberg Mary Lou Curran bane Lindberg - 4 clu RE WAS ON M4ERRY= G0 ROUN'D rs By DREW PE A RS O N"-.,--. . . . Associate Business Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Telephone 23-24-1 WASHINGTON--Capitol Hill polit- icos, chesty with power since they forced the ouster of former Price Ad- ministrator Leon Henderson, are now hot after the scalp of another Admin- istration notable who has weathered many storms in 10 years of the New Deal. Their quarry is Secretary of Labor Perkins, and don't be surprised if the President finally yields to Hill pres- sure and gives her the gate. The House Appropriations Com- mittee already has slashed to the bone a deficiency fund for the Labor Department, but Miss Perkins' en2- mies in Congress - and they are practically unanimous - don't intend to stop wth this slapdown. A big secret rally of Congressmen "who-want-to-get-rid-of-Fanny-Per- kins" is being quietly arranged in the House, with the intention of present- ing a joint demand for her ouster co the President. Kingpin of the movement is Representative Jed Johnson, able, Oklahoma New Dealer, who took Miss Perkins over the coals for her timid attitude toward "absentee" war plant workers during a recent closed-door session of the Appro- priations Committee. Johnson, a veteran supporter of the President on both foreign and domes- tic issues, had more to do with engi- neering the demise of Henderson I than any member of Congress. It was he who persuaded Speaker Rayburn to lead a delegation to the White House, with an ultimatum that if the President didn't discharge the 'price soldiers in one case and his employees in the other? More important, what attitudes toward others am I building up within my own personality?, On a team, in my company discipline, in a cast of players, as a partner in an experiment, as one of a family, and in a situation where I am the one in full control, do I so, act that the others concerned would placetme high in that scale? Am I autocrat or dem- ocrat? In our era, the word "faus- tian" with the German and "dynam- ic" with the American, should stand out as a "Beware" sign to every citi- zen. Let no person focus attention exclusively on energy as an inclusive virtue lest some American Fuehrer take over and all those Christian phases of our Democracy which have been worked out by long social strug- gle, pass into history. Edward W. Blakeman Counselor in Religious Education chief, the House Appropriations Coin- mittee might not approve any fur- ther funds for the OPA. Recently some of Johnson's friends suggested that the same strategy be employed regarding Miss Perkins, who has been in the hair of Congress from the day the President appointed her. The Oklahoma Congressman was not only agreeable to the idea, but enthusiastic The anti-Perkins movement is expected to reach a. showdown in a few days, by which time her ene- mies in the Ihase hope to have enough support to present an ouster petition to the President. The President Roams HERE is the latest story attributed to "Bull-in-the-China-Shop" Jef- fers, the rubber czar. Some weeks ago, Jeffers went to the White House to present his side of the dispute with the Army and Navy over stategic ma- terials, and was referred to astute "Assistant President" Jimmy Byrnes. There Jeffers learned for the first time that the President was in North Africa. Returning to his own office, Jeffers was complaining to his associates about the President's absence. "Here he is fiddling while Rome burns," he grumbled. "You're wrong," corrected one of Jeffers' assistants. The President's roaming while Byrnes fiddles." Pirching Pennijes for U.S. HERE is a little sermon given by HryWarner to his Warner Brothers movie staff which govern- ment officials wish could be made by shipbuilders, munitions makers and various war contractors. Mr. Warner said: "In making these pictures, we want them made at absolute cost. And when I say absolute cost, I mean ex- actly that. We don't want, to make a single dollar of profit out of these pictures. Not only do I insist that we not make a single dollar of profit, but on the contrary, in instances where certain situations arise where it may be necessary to spend more than the budgets submitted to the government, we prefer to take any losses in- curred,. . . This is no time to make money on any venture. I'm sure that the injured and the sick among the men in uniform and their families are more entitled to the income from ( this picture than our company." NIGHT EDITOR: CLAIRE SHERMAN Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. 143 ..oc - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 143Chago Tumes, In. VOTING FOR 18-YEAR-OLDS: Bill in Legislature To Enfranchise Lower Age Group' Gets Enthusiastic Support of Prof. James K. Pollock NOW up for consideration before the state legislature, Senator Vandenberg's proposal that the suffrage should be extended to 18 year olds, has touched off a controversy which has many educational as well as political implica- tions. Objections to the proposal came in a flood from all quarters. Most common among themi were the cries-they're too young, too immature, they lack the necessary experience. The unf*rWunate thing about these comments is that they fail to take into consideration the progress and training for citizenship offered under our present educational system in the col- leges, but especially the secondary schools of the nation. A training so fine that it led Professor Pol- lock of the Department of Political Science to remark in a letter to Senator Hatch that "It is clear that our young people are better able to perform the duties of citizenship today than. in any previous period. I would go farther and say that they are better prepared to express intelligent opinion in elections and at the polls than many of their less fortunate elders who never had the advantage of instruction in citi- zenship." As far as their mental maturity, psychologists have long iecognized that the growth of intelli- gence ceases after the age of 15. Looked at from the opinion of the advertiser, the mental age of the average American is 12. HOWEVER, barring all these arguments, there is still the all-important factor that our pres- ent policy, established in the fourteenth amend- ment has proved a failure. Voting studies have revealed that the poorest records are held by those between the ages of 21 and 30. This, is in no small part due to the three, year lag which exists at present between the day of graduation from the high schools and the time when the first ballot is cast. It is dur- ing this interval that the interest built up in political affairs lags and to a large degree vanishes' because it has not found some mode in which to express itself. Far from revolutionizing the electorate the proposed change would add only 6,800,000 votes to an electorate of 80,500,000. a mere ripple when compared with the nineteenth amendment., ment. Arising out of the change in draft age neces- sitated by the war, Senator Vandenberg's pro- posal, if adopted, may well be considered one of the great advances in political democracy aris- ing from the conflict. -Monroe Fink BOMBER PLANT: Inefficient Planning Delays Vital War Work THE Willow Run Bomber Plant, which should be one of the biggest airplane producing fac- tories in the United States according to its size and the amount of labor it employs, has fallen far behind schedule in its output. One of the most striking examples of why the plant's Ford management finds itself unable to keep to production schedules occurred last week, with the biggest mixup yet to disrupt work. More than 1,000 workers in fuselage assem- bly department were suddenly shifted Tuesday without warning to a different time schedule which completely upset transportation facilities to and from the plant. Employees who shared rides with workers in other departments still operating on the old schedule found their arrangements disrupted. As a result, many quit work when a ride home was available ignoring orders to finish their jobs. Hundreds of others who finished their shifts were forced to wait hours in zero weather for rides into the Detroit area. Wednesday the shift change was revoked, but too late to notify the night workers to re- arrange their hours again. As a result two days of manpower were almost completely lost, due to bad planning and lack of foresight. Why, if such a time change was necessary, the employees and their regular transportation facilities could not have been notified, is a question that brings up the more important one of what is the mat- ter with the .Willow Run management? Many employees have not had enough work to keep them busy and have been handed any kind of job, even that of driving an empty delivery truck around the grounds, in order to keep them busy. - Ir T w 'v.. . n. .... n « S".. a... ].. , 1_. _.... NAVY SPIES: Government Annoyed By Pearson's Column THE A merican newspaper is apparently not quite as free from government interference. today as we like to believe. Drew Pearson, known to The Daily readers through his "Merry-Go- Round" column, has had six Naval Intelligence operatives spying on him in an attempt to dis- cover his sources of information. Accounts of this strange situation were . pre- sented by the Philadelphia Record and reprint- ed by PM. But none of the other papers carrying Pearson's column have even mentioned the fact' that a Washington commentator has been sub- jected to wire tapping, the questioning of his guests, and a general campaign to prevent fur- ther disclosure of facts derogatory to the Navy, Department. Pearson, who never hesitates to attack either the Administration or its opponents for mis- management, has reported several inefficien- cies that have resulted in rebukes from the Navy. His articles have hit at some of the Navy's most tender spots because they have exposed examples of waste that the Depart- ment would prefer went unnoticed. So a group of amateur detectives from the Navy spent their time trailing their man in an effort to see how he 'knew of the shortcomings he de- scribed. With his reputation for impartiality, it could hardly be claimed that Pearson was trying to undermine the work of the government, and no one has yet charged him with printing informa- tion that should be legitimately censored. Then the only activity in which he has engaged is that of a wide-awake reporter, writing the news as he sees it. It just happens that the Navy Depart- ment is very must aware that inefficiencies I'dRather RBe Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, March 7.-NOTES FOR A SPEECH TO THE GERMANS: Germans! Your Fuehrer offers you another offensive in Russia. This will be the third. For the first, in 1941, you paid by having to import 3,000,000 for-' eigners, Poles and Czechs and Italians, to take the safe, secure factory jobs, while your sons and husbands died in Russia. For the second offen- sive, in 1942, you paid by having to import 4,000,000 more foreigners to work at home, while your own people perished. Germans! Now you are paying for the third offensive by having to close 300,000 stores. In each of those stores there used to be Ger- mans. Now there will be none. But there will be perhaps 10,000,000, perhaps 12,000,000 foreigners working in Germany. Germans! Even while you sweat the foreigner, and underfeed him, you are giving your country to him, you are killing Ger- mans to make room for him. THE upshot of your fight for "lenensraum" is that a hundred times as many foreigners have moved into your country as there are Germans who have been able to settle else- where. Your country has become the colony for all Europe., From every backwater of the conti- nent, they come to Germany. There are plenty of jobs for them, because so many Germans are dead; After the third offensive, there will be more jobs for foreigners. Your home be- comes the "lebensraum" for the conquered. Germans! The greatest invasion in history has already overswept your land. These invaders, these foreign workmen, have not had to kill Ger- mans to make room for themselves. Your Fuehrer has done that for them. Or, it is almost as if millions of you had committeed suicide to make room for your land to be overrun. GERMANS! You do not feed these foreign workers very well; you give them no soft beds; you pay them little. Perhaps that makes you feel secure against them. But, Germans, the weakness of these for- eigners is their strength. They came because they were conquered. They will stay because they work cheaply. Which of your employers will hire one of you, when he can have one of them for nothing? Even if you should win the war, will your' employers really say after the war: "Out with the foreigners! We prefer to pay wages. We are against having labor for nothing." And if your employers keep the foreigners, Germans, what will you do, then? Will you go to Dr. Robert Ley, the leader of the Labor Front, and make a protest? Who among you will be the first to volunteer to go to the headquarters and make the protest? Your child will have to compete for a living with the foreigner who works for nothing. The blood of his father will have brought the for- eigner to German; the death of his father will have made room for the foreigner. And you are helpless against these helpless strangers. Starve them, feed them only half as much. That means only twice the profits for those whon ethem Rea tthem That man% (Continued from Page 2) Zoology Seminar will meet on Thursday, March 11, at 7:30 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Report by Mr. Percy Baker on "The Effect of Environmental Influ- ences on the Expression of the Pufdi Gene in Drosophila Melanogaster." College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, Schools of Education, Forestry, Music, and Public Health: Students who received marks of I or X at the close of their last semester or summer session of attendance will receive a grade of E in the course or courses unless this work is made up by March 8. Students wishing an extension of time beyond this date in order to make up this work should file a petition ad- dressed to the appropriate official in their school with Room 4 of U.H. where it will be transmitted. Robert L. Williams, Asst. Registrar Concerts Faculty Concert: The first program of the Beethoven Sonatas series to be given by Gilbert Ross, violinist, and Mabel Ross Rhead, pianist, of the School of Music faculty, will be presented at 8:30 tonight in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The second and third programs are scheduled for the Sunday evenings of March 14 and 21. All are open to the general public without charge. Exhibitions Exhibition under the auspices of the In- stitute of Fine Arts: Metal Work from Is- lamic countries (Iran, Egypt, and Syria). Rackham School, through March 11. Every afternoon, except Sundays, 2:00-5:00. Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: Class work in the course in cam- ouflage showing techniques and materials is being displayed in the ground floor corridor of the Architecture Building until March 10. Open daily 9 to 5 except Sun- day. The public is invited. Events Today Mortarboard members will meet tonight at 7:00 in the League Undergraduate Council Room. The Graduate Outing Club will meet today at 2:30 p.m. in the clubroom, west entrance of the Rackham School, for a hike or indoor entertainment. All graduate and nrfeicinna l e tn in+ ited- i+. kivst and Loyal Gryting will lead a dis- cussion on "Christians in Crises." Coming Events Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences: A meeting will be held on Monday, March 8, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 1213 East Engi- neering Building. 16 mm. sound movies describing "Metal Fabrication for Air- craft" will be shown. All interested per- sons are cordially invited. The Pre-Medical Society will hear Dr. John W. Bean' of the Physiology Depart- ment Tuesday evening, March 9, at 8:00 In Room 304, Michigan Union, in a discus- sion of its place in medical training. Senior Society will meet Monday, March 8, at 7:15 p.m. in the Judiciary office of the League. Polonia Society will meet on Tuesday, March 9, at 8:00 p.m. in the International Center. Agenda: Next social function, cooperation with Detroit Clubs. Refresh- ments. All students of Polish descent are invited. The Christian Science Organization at the University of Michigan announces a- free lecture on Christian Science entitled "Christian Science: The Revelation of the Rights and Character of Man", by James G. Rowell, C. S. B., of Kansas City, Mo., in the Lydia MendeKssohn Theatre on Mon- day evening, March 8, at eight o'clock. The public is cordially invited. The Play Reading Section of the Fac- ulty Women's Club will meet on Tuesday, March 9, 2:15 p.m. in the Mary B. Hender- son Room of the Michigan League. Churches St. Andrew's Episcopal Church-8:00 a.m. Holy Communion; 11:00 a.m. Junior Church; 11:00 a.m. The Order of Confir- mation with Sermon by the Rt. Rev. Frank W. Creighton, S.T.D., Bishop of the Dio- cese of Michigan; 5:00 p.m. Choral Even- song and Commentary by the Rev. John G. Dahi; 7:30 p.m. Canterbury Club for Episcopal students, Harris Hall. Mr. Wil- liam Muehl, Acting Director of Lane Hall, will lead the discussion on "Political Bases for a Just and Durable Peace." Lutheran Student Chapel: Sunday at 11:00 a.m., Divine Service in the Michigan League Chapel. Sermon by the Rev. Al- fred Scheips, "Mediation Between God and Man." Sunday at 6:00 p.m., Supper Meeting of Professor George E. Carrothers will lead the discussion on "Seeking Happiness Through the Way of the Stoic." Morning worship Service at 10:40 o'clock. Dr. C. W. Brashares will preach on "Call to Dedica- tion." Wesleyan Guild meeting beginning with supper at 5:30 p.m. At 6:15 p.m. Dr. Brashares will speak on "The Sovereignty of the Self." A Choral Evensong will be presented Sunday evening, March 7, at 7:30 o'clock in the Sanctuary of the Church by the Senior Choir under the direction of Hardin Van Deursen, Director, with Mary McCall Stubbins as organist. They vill sing compositions by Haydn, Gounod, Brahms, DeLamarter and Voris. Guest soloist will be Charles Matheson, Tenor, graduate student in the School of Music, who will sing Rossini's "Cupis Animam." The public is Invited. Trinity Lutheran Church services will be held at 10:30 a.m. onsSunday with the Rev. Henry 0. Yoder speaking on "Self-" Sacrificing Love-A Spirit of Life." Zion Lutheran Church will hold its services at 10:30 a.m. on Sunday with the Rev.'Stellhorn delivering the sermon. First Church of Christ, Scientist: wednesday evening service at 8:00. Sunday morning service at 10:30. Sub- ject: -"Man." Sunday School at 11:45 a.m. Free public Reading Room at 106 E. washington St., open every day except Sundays and holidays, from 11:30 a.m. .ntil 5:00 p.m.; Saturdays until 9:00 p.m. Memorial Christian Church (Disciples): 10:45, Morning Worship. Rev. Frederick Cowin, Minister. 7:00 p.m., Guild Sunday Evening Hour. The Rev. Ralph Douglas Hyslop of Boston, national director of student work for the Congregational Church, will address a joint meeting of Disciple and Congregational students at the Congregational Church. A social hour and refreshments will follow the meeting. First Congregational Church: 10:45 a.m. Morning Worship. Sermon by Dr. L. A. Parr on "Open Windows." 5:30 p.m. Ariston League of high school students meets in Pilgrim Hall. Gale Potee will speak on "Indian Customs.." 7:00 p.m. A joint meeting of the Stu- dent Fellowship and the Disciples Guild in the Assembly Room. Rev. Ralph Doug- las Hyslop, national director of student work for the Congregational Churches, will speak on "A Creed For The Christian Builder." Refreshments and social hour. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN