2tAQ1 i!0V, SE MICHIGAN DAILY 11 A ,MARGC-Ia. 1943 I -- ---" 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 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 A, mon ueIrere-theysay i~e ttLe of France has JUST BEGUN." REPRESENTED FOR NATiON^L ADVERTIfNG MY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Pubisbers Representative 420 MAD100 AVe£. N~w-YORK. N. Y. CIRICkSO BOSTON " LOS ANGELES " SAN FRANCISCO John Erlewine . Bud Briznmer . Leon Gordenker Marion Ford . Charlotte Conover. Eric Zalenski . Betty Harvey . James Conant . Editorial Staff * . . .Managing Editor * . . .Editorial- Director . . . . City Editor Associate Editor . . . .Associate Editor . . . . . Sports Editor S . . . . Women's Editor . . . . , Columnist M1ERRY*-G0- ROUND r . By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON, March 12.-In September, 1939, just a week after war broke in Europe, the Washing- ton Merry-Go-Round went to the War Department to check on a "ru- mor" that the Army had plans for drafting American youth for military service. We were referred to a red- headded major, who said, with an apologetic air: "Yes, we have a plan, but we don't call it draft; we call it 'se- lective service.' It's nothing new. It's just a carry-fver from the last war. Besides," he added, "if I have my way, we will never use this glass bowl and these pellets. I am a Hoosier and an isolationist, and I believe we should stay out of other people's troubles." The red-headed major is now a, major general, who presides over the destinies of millions of American men. The name is Lewis B. Hershey. "But if we do have to get into it-," Hershey added, leaving the thought incomplete. Hershey mentioned the figure of 7,500,000 men as the strength of the U.S. Army. This is the figure the President is insisting on today. The record now reveals that it has been a basic figure in War Department planning for years. Hershey said at that time, more than three years ago, that the first draft would take men between 21 and 30, which, after deferments, would provide an army of about 3,000,000 men. "This should be enough to make a powerful army," he said, "but if it isn't, other age groups will be called, until a total of 7,500,000 men are in uniform." The War Department is still stick- ing to these plans made several years in advance. Note: The figure 10,800,000 men for the total armed forces is made up by Navy and Marine Corps personnel in addition to the Army. Twenty tons of scrap rubber will go into the production of 720,000 of the new baseballs with rubber-cush- ioned centers, taking the place of a similar number of cork-cushioned baseballs. Business Staff UDGING from her Daily editorial I of March 8th, Netta Siegel is one of the many who believe that it is up to the United Nations, and in par- ticular the American State Depart- ment, to control the politics of French North Africa. At first it might seem that the United Nations' battle plans for North Africa would be greatly simpli- fied by such control; but it must be remembered that when General Eis- enhower's forces took over, there was already in existence an official French government, with administra- tors appointed by the French Chief of State. Distasteful to liberty-loving people as the Vichy government is, General Eisenhower had either to deal with whatever French government was al- ready there (be it Vichy or DeGaul- list) or to put into immediate effect an American military governorship. A third possibility might have been to set up a puppet government under some pro-Allied Frenchman whose orders would certainly have been dis- obeyed by the almost totally-Vichy administrators in North Africa. Anyone who has studied the At- lantic Charter should know why General Eisenhower could not have set up an American military gov- ernorship in place of the Vichy administration. For the Charter makes, among others, the follow- ing provision: "They respect the rights of all people to choose the form of government under which they will live; and they wish to see sovereign rights and self-govern- ment restored to those who haveI been forcibly deprived of them." And history tells that the French Army had to use a great deal of force when it took possession of Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia, finally wresting them from the na.- tives after many scattered but bloody battles. To do as Netta Siegel suggests, to "put (the North African ;government) in the hands of men who are known to be pro- Allied and liberal" would require the American military to take over the government for'whatever peri- od would be needed to transfer con- trol from the present administra- tion into the hands of a liberal pro- Allied one. Thus the North African colonies would have passed from the posses- sion of the nation that originally conquered them, France, to a third party, ,ust as surely as if an Ameri- can military governorship had been set up in the beginning. If the spirit, as well as the text, of the Atlantic Charter is to be followed, the French North African colonies would. there- by. have a strong post-war claim to the "sovereign rights and self-govern- ment" of which they had been "forci- bly deprived" by the French. Gradually, General Giraud is making the changes in personnel and machinery necessary for more democratic government. The pup- pet government idea would have made it necessary for our forces to occupy cities of hostile Frenchmen whose government we had replaced with one composed of their political enemies. Such action on our part would, in addition, have led to mili- tary resistance even more fierce and more prolonged than that which we faced at Algiers, Oran, Casablanca, etc. Consideration of the valuable time in racing to Tunisia and of the thousands of French and American lives that would have been lost will, I trust, lead everyone to agree that General Eisenhower was right in not attempting to set up a puppet gov- ernment. The only practical policy is to deal with whatever French government exists in North Africa. It is impor- tant to keep in mind that democratic government can come to French North Africa only through the work and desire of Frenchmen, and not the American State Department. However, the New York Times' Drew Middleton gives most credit for wean- ing Giraud away from Vichy to Rob- ert Murphy of the American State Department. As for Netta Siegel's fear that the Allies will deal with Quislings and governments - in - exile in countries that are politically disunited, I sug- gest that she remember the following pertinent facts: one, that Darlan was certainly no "Quisling," for he hated the Germans every bit as much as he hated the English; and secondly, there is no justification for believing that we will deal with all the various governments-in-exile, for that is ex- actly what we did not do when we refused to set up a Fighting French government in North Africa. -James B. Wilton P- i Edward J. Perlberg. Fred M. Ginsberg Mary Lou Curran Jane Lindberg. . . . . Business Manager Associate Business Manager Women's Business Manager Womnen's Advertising Manager Telephone 23-24-1 f f< NIGHT EDITOR: JANE FARRANT Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff r and represent the views of the writers only. .c1943 hicaQ Times, n FDR SUPPLIES THE LEADERSHIP: Vast Post-War Plan of President Is Long-Sought Answer to Question -'What Are We Fighting For?' FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT has shown himself once again to be the leader of the nation - brushing aside all the petty clouds of doubt and confusion which have befogged the nation and its leaders, he has stepped forward and pre- sented the nation with a carefully drafted plan for a greater and better America. At a time when Congress was busy playing games with limericks, coining new phrases, and mixing political quagmire for the 1944 campaign, the President seized the helm and showed the nation where -to look for leadership. Congress, hamstrung with active pressure groups and sec- tional interests, has not been able to meet the needs of the nation -itscan not even make up its mind to pass a tax bill. But the President saw what the common man was crying for and acted. WHAT have we Americans been asking ever since the day war broke out? WHAT ARE WE FIGHTING FOR? And here is the answer in black and white, in language that means something, not vague words and fine phrases that can be made to mean anything desired. To date all forecasts of the future roamed rather indefinitely in the field of foreign relations - they have been inter- esting and vitally important, but they have not provided an answer for the fundamental craving in the mind of every soldier and worker to know what they can expect in the United States when the battlefields fade from the picture. Now the President - in presenting the vast economic plan of the National Resources Planning Board to Congress -is ready to tell them, to hold up for them to see, a picture of a possible -future America which we can ourselves make and enjoy. WHAT DOES THIS PLAN OFFER TO THE NATION? First things first: the plan tells our fighting men that for once in our not-too-glorious mili- tary history we are planning for "demobilization day." For once we are not going to slap a few paltry dollars in the hands which have been fighting for our nation and throw our soldiers back into a society organized to get along with- out them. No! If the nation elects to follow out the tenets of the President's proposal our sol- diers and sailors will come back to find jobs, education, shelter, and above all, opportunity waiting for them. But the President's plan does not stop with providing for returning the fighter and worker to a peacetime basis. That in itself would be rather meaningless. Carefully outlined in the comprehensive plan is an entire scheme for the conversion of industry back to a peace- time basis, with a clear, recognition of the problems involved and ways to meet them. His methods may bring protests to the throats of the anti-New Dealers, but the program is designed to meet the strained economic condi- tions which inevitably follow at the end of the war. Plans for continued rationing until -the peacetime economy has regained its footing and is ,able once more to meet the demands of a goods-hungry public -such problems are con- bidered in the plan. FULL comprehension of the plan can only be S gainedby reading the complete voluminous report, and the discussion of the complex plan for re-conversion of industry must necessarily hpWt 1f +is ,4 Hth~wvP..r hp stteobjecthives7 lies the strength of the nation. Throughout the provisions of the plan such intelligence and insight is evident, and is a work of which the National Resources Board can well be proud. But now the plan has left the bosom of the President, where it has been carefully nourished and formed during the past months, and has been placed before an unfriendly Congress which has receitly refused funds to the NRPB for its continued existence. What will be the reaction of the Congress which has vacillated back and forth since the outbreak of the war to a definite plan of action is unpredictable. Perhaps the wavering Demo- cratic support that has caused the President embarrassment in recent weeks will be pulled once more to his side. Perhaps it will aggravate the growing party split. But whatever the party reaction, the President has given the nation a definite goal to strive for and a plan for its achievement.- John Erlewine* DIPLOMAT? U.S. Lacks Foresight In U.S.S.R.n*Relations AMERICA is exhibiting today a dangerous lack of foresight and planning in her attitude to- ward Russia, who is one of her most invaluable allies at this stage of the game. Monday Vice-President Henry Wallace took up the question of safeguarding our future against Communism, and awhile he dealt with our post-war relations with Russia, Ambassador Standley dealt a severe blow to our present rela- tions with the Soviet Union. Without the authorization of the State De- partment, Standley announced that news of American aid was being kept from the Russian people, adding that "It is not fair to mislead Americans into giving millions froi their pock- ets, thinking that they are aiding the Russian people without the Russian people knowing about it." Standley made an error in diplomatic policy that is inexcusable in an ambassador to a nation like the Soviet Union, when it is vital that Amer- ica and Russia work together without suspicion or mistrust. The State Department not only disowned Standley's remarks, but in the person of Sumner Welles, acting secretary of state, stat- ed that Standley was "talking out of turn.": FURTHERMORE, Russian Ambassador Litvi- nov declared that supplies received by Russia from the U.S. have been "an enormous help" and, are "deeply appreciated by the people of the Soviet Union who are fully aware of its extent." A Navy man, Standley is unaccustomed to diplomatic relations, and for that reason should never have been given as important a post as that of Russia. Because Russia is an important ally of ours, we are apt to forget that she is far from a dem- ocracy, according to the American idea of free- dom. The tight Russian system of censorship lets the people know only what they should know in order to fight hard and keep up their. morale. Russia has given us one of her top nen- I'd Rather Be Right SBySAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, March 11.-What Russia wants from us is a second front. So long as we do not deliver a second front, we are not going to have much closer relations with Russia. Those relations depend only incidentally on what Am- bassador Standley says in Moscow. If we deliver a second front, Ambassador Standley can be a gowly bear in Moscow, and it will not greatly matter. If we do not deliver a second front, Standey can coo like a dove, he can wear a picture of Stalin in his locket, and our relations with Rus- sia will not be substantially improved. I doubt whether Russia is nearly as inter- ested as we are in the question of whether we recall Standley or do not recall him. I doubt if she cares greatly whether we send a more amiable ambassador to Moscow, or a less amiable one. She wants us to send troops to Europe. In the great debate over whether Standley shoulda said it or shouldna said it, it is alleged that his blast at Russia for (supposedly) not telling her own people about the extent of lend- lease aid will create disunity and encourage the Axis. But it is the absence of coalition warfare which really encourages the Axis. If we estab- lish a second front, the Axis cannot possibly be encouraged by anything any ambassador can possibly say in Moscow. Nor will the Axis be greatly discouraged, or Russia greatly encour- aged, even if we find the most polite of verbal forms for covering over the absence of coalition warfare, even if we send the nicest American there is to Moscow. Standley is not the problem. Policy is the problem. And therefore sending someone to replace Standley will not solve the problem. The problem is to establish true coalition war- fare, an offensive in the west to match Rus- sia's offensive in the east. Just as the tand- ley incident could not possibly have occurred were such an offensive taking place, so simi- lar incidents can perhaps not be avoided so long as that offensive does not take place. THOSE who are protesting against Standley, per se, fool themselves if they thing that any change in verbal forms or improvement in man- ners can take the place of policy. It will not matter in the slightest degree to Russia how politely we say "No!" to her, if"No!" is all we have to say. So long as we say "No!" on the question of the speedy opening of the second front, all those forces which are not too friendly to Russia are encouraged, and given a space of time in which to operate. The lack of an offensive in Europe creates a vacuum, which a Standley promptly fills by raising the irrelevant issue of whether the Russians are giving us enough publicity. The lack of an offensive creates a coolness between ourselves and Russia. A section of the isolationist press promptly builds on that cool- ness, arguing that since Russia does not trust us, we should not trust her. The isolationists tried, winkingly, to hint that Standley's remarks had the full backing of our government, and DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 1943 VOL. LIII No. 111 All notices for the Daily Official 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 If you wish to finance the purchase of a home, or if you have purghased improved property on a land contract and owe a balance of approximately 60 per cent of the value of the property, the Investment Of- fice, 100 South wing of University Hall, would be glad to discuss financing through the medium of a first mortgage. Such fi- nancing may effect a substantial saving in interest. Faculty of the College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: The five-week fresh- man reports will be due Saturday, March 13, in the Academic Counselors' Office, 108 Mason Hall. Arthur Van Duren, Chairman, Academic Counselors Credit for men entering armed services: By vote of the faculty, credit for stu- dents who withdraw from the School of Forestry and Conservation for immediate entrance into the armed services will be adjusted for each student individually according to the merits of the particular case, but as nearly as practicable in ac- cordance with the following principles: 1. Students in attendance for more than 2 weeks but less than 12 weeks will aeceive pro-rated blanket credit to the nearest hour on the basis of the per- centage of the entire term they have at- tended classes. 2. Students in attendance for 12 weeks or more will receive appropriate pro- rated credit in specific subjects. 3. Seniors who are in attendance for 8 weeks or more will be. recommended for the degree for which they would normally have qualified at the end of the term. In each case the pro-rated credit will be granted or the recommendation for graduation made only if such action is justified by the student's work up to the time of withdrawal and by such validat- ing examination as the instructor in each course may require. S. T. Dana, Dean Candidates for the Teacher's Certifi- cate for May and September, 1943: A list of candidates /has been posted on the bulletin board of the School of Educa- tion, Room 1431 'U. E. S. Any prospective candidate whose name does notappear on this list should call at the office of the Recorder of the School of Education, 1437 U. E. S. Credit for Men Entering Armed Serv- up to the time of withdrawal. Each stu- 1 dent's case will be reviewed as to specific credit and grade in any given course at such time as the student may return to+ the University. Partial credit in specific courses is not being recorded at this time.+ Wells Bennett, Dean The American Association of University Women Fellowship: The Ann Arbor-Ypsl- lantiBranch of the A.A.U.W. is again offer- ing a fellowship for the year 1943-1944 in honor of Dr. May Preston Slosson. This fellowship is open to women students for graduate study in any field. Application blanks may be obtained now from the :raduate School Office and must be re- turned to that office no later than March 15 in order to receive consideration. Kothe-Hildner Annual German Lan- guage Award offered students in Courses 31 and 32. The contest, a translation test (German English and English-Ggrman), carries two stipends of $20 and $30, and will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. Thursday, March 25, in room 203 University Hall. Students who wish to compete and who have not yet handed in their applications should do so immediately in 204 Univer- sity Hall. Bronson-Thomas Annual German Lan- guage Award offered juniors and seniors in German. The contest will be held from 2 to 5 o'clock Thursday, March 25, in room 203 University Hall. The award, in the amount of $32, will be presented to the student writing the best essay dealing with some phase in the development of German literature from 1750-1900. Students who wish to compete and who have not yet handed in their applications should do so immediately in room 204 University Hall. Registration for summer jobs: The an- nual registration for students looking for summer employment is being held this week at the University Bureau of Appoint- ments, Room 205 Mason Hall. Any stu- dent interested in camp work, camp coun- selling, educational advising, and all types of summer jobs are asked to call at the office for a registration form to enroll. Registration forms will be given out through Tuesday of next week. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information Lectures American Chemical Society Lecture: Dr. Carl R. Addinall, Director of Library Serv- gels Hall, at 9:30 a.m. -Chairman, J. G. Winter. By action of the Executive Board, the Chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doctoral candi- dates to attend the examination and he may grant permission to those who for sufficient reason might wish to be present. - C. S. 'oakum Concerts Faculty, Concert: The second program of the current Beethoven Sonatas series will be given by Mr. Gilbert Ross, violin- ist, and Mrs. Mabel Ross Rhead, pianist, at 8:30 p.m. Sunday, March 14, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The program will consist of the A-minor, A-major, G-major and E-flat major sonatas. These programs are open to the public without charge and without the use of tickets. Exhibitions Exhibit: Museum of Art and Archaeol- ogy, Newberry Hall. Photographs of Tu- nisia by George R. Swain, Official Pho-. tographer to the University of Michigan Expedition to North Africa in 1925. Tunis. Medjez-el-Bab, Tozeur, Tebessa, Sfax, Matmata country. Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: 'talian majolica loaned from col- lection of Detroit Institute of Arts- pitchers, bowls, plates and tiles of 14th & 15th centuries; also fragments typical of several phases of majolica technique. Ground floor corridor, Architecture Build- ing. Open daily, 9 to 5, except Sunday, until March 26. The public is invited. Events Today All house athletic managers or exercise managers will meet at 5:00 p.m. today in the Dance Studio, Barbour Gym- Snasium. Be sure to bring participation sheets for the last period of exercises. if a manager is unable to be present, a sub- stitute should be sent. Wesley Foundation: Bible Class with Dr. C. W. Brashares, leader, tonight at 7:30. Subject for study: "Acts." A Sleuth Party at 9:00 p.m. Presbyterian Sfudent Guild Social )Rou tonight at 8:30. Students cor ally In- vited. Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club. will have an ice skating party at the Coliseum tonight from 8 to 10. Refresh ices, Merck and Company, will lecture on mnents afterwards at 1337 Wilmot St. the subject, "The Vitamins; their- Indus-, trial Development and Importance," under the auspices of the University of Michigan Com ingiEvent$ Section. American Chemical Society, today The Angell Hall Observatory will be at 4:15. p.m. in Room 151, Chemistry open to the public from 8:00 to 10:00 Building. The public is invited. I Saturdavening. March 13. if the skv is 3 c E clear or nearly so. The moon and the