__ _w.___._._ _= _. ... .. ' - 1- ' _.. . L ^ .. _.. 1.I I1r1ll:. 'll '. i r. .'~4 Milli F Ion 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 REPRESENTED FOR NATiONAM. ADVERTIaING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADteON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO * BOSTON . Los ANGELES . SAN FSANCISCO :. >: .= -: "He never did care for British cooking" j . W John Erlewne. Irving Jaffe Bud Brimmer . Marion Ford Charlotte Conover, Eric Zalenski Betty Harvey Editorial Staff * . . .Managing Editor . Editorial Director . . . . . . City Editor . .Associate Editor Associate Editor . . . . . Sports Editor . . . . . Women's Editor Edward J. Perlberg Fred M. Ginsberg Mary Lou Curran. Jane Lindberg . Business Staff . . . . . Business Manager * . Associate Business Manager . . Women's Business Manager . . Women's Advertising Manager Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: STAN WALLACE Editorials published in The Michigan DailyX are writtew by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. A NEW 'ISM: Facts of Absenteeism Not Revealed to Public HEWHOLE story about absenteeism among war workers has not been presented to the public either by Capt. Rickenbacker or Paul Mc- Nutt, both of whom recently issued statements on 'the subject. It has been pointed out that normal absentee- ism in industry before the war was 2.2 per cent and that today it is now 4.5 for men and 6.5 for women. This shows that absenteeism has more than doubled; yet no one seems to see any reason for it. The general idea hinted at is that the workers just haven't felt like working much sine Dec. 7, 1942. What they need, says Elmer Davis, is a new morale build-up. The radio and movies have picked up the idea and the public is now being pounded with this new 'ism.' The reasons for increased absences were shown by a recent OWI investigation to be shared in a large degree by management as well as labor. The report said that "management often .shares responsibility for poor attendance rates" through "faulty arrangement of work shifts, poor work- ing conditions" and "inadequate labor relations." The critics of labor have shown no sign that they are aware that a large portion of war work- ers have never worked in a factory before, that many of them are women who also take care of a family and that many of them are retired work- ers who ave come back in their old age to help the war effort. These people have to be taken with absenteeism or not at all. We obviously need them very badly- even with their absences. The OWI report shows that a large portion of the fault is management's. Can we honestly expect a worker who often spends 4, 5 and 6 hours out of ten with no work to do to believe that "hours lost mean production lost," as one of the morale posters says? Labor hoarding and poor production planning is the cause of much ab- senteeism. Let's see some government statements about the crime of jobs with no work, of workers who produce nothing but are told to "look busy." -Charles Bernstein CROSSROADS: Smith Can Determine Committee's Usefulness AMONG the many resolutions passed last week by the House of Representatives is one that can be either very beneficial to the country and the war effort or very harmful. The House sanctioned an "investigating" com- mittee to probe all government agencies and offi- cials excluding the President. They put at its head Rep. Howard Smith (Dem.), the anti-New Dealer from Virginia. It is in accordance with our constitutional principles that Congress be permitted to keep check on the executive, but one vital considera- tion must be taken into account when creating such a body-the type of man at its head. ACCORDING to his past record, Rep. Smith does not seem to be the right man. From the beginning of his tenure in Congress he has been anti-just about everything. He has taken a stand against labor, and he bias likewise opposed the Administration at every turn. For such a committee to function in the best interests of the people, its head must be free from I'd Rathe RBe Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK- The new wave of "assassina- tions" in Europe (I would prefer to call them impeachments by gunfire) is more depressing than cheering. Where you have individual acts of assassination, it is almost certain that you do not have an organized movement for real revolution. If I were a dictator, and knew I was hated in the country, I would be worried by an absence of assassinations. It would seem to me then that something real in the way of uprising was being cooked up, something sober and ser- ious and with no time for grandstand plays. Assassinations just don't make revolutions, they merely make dead hostages. It is pro- foundly interesting that Radio Orange, the Dutch broadcaster in Holland, is said to have been warning Netherlanders against meaning- less violence, during a week in which no less than three Dutch Quislings have been infor- mally impeached at revolver point. THE BLACK HAND What can this mean except that anti-Nazi sentiment in the Netherlands (as elsewhere in Europe) is unorganized, is without sufficient con- tact with London, and is proceeding on its own tow rd a perhaps bizarre goal of its own? The Dutch underground is called "The Black Hand," and is said to have as its program the execution of all the members of the Quislingite Mussert government. No more meaningless pro- gram for a serious anti-Nazi underground could possibly be devised. The sabotaging of one loco- motive would be ten times as valuable. A five- minute slowdown in all Dutch factories working for Hitler would be infinitely more useful. If Radio Orange is advising along this line, then Radio Orange is right, but the question arises: Why can't Radio Orange get its orders enforced? and then the bigger question: What are the con- tacts, if any, between the United Nations and the underground in Europe? So far, the contacts seem to be limited to admiration and admonition. WHAT'S THE NAME, PLEASE? The fact that the United Nations have no single, central agency for conducting the peo- ple's side of the people's war is of itself a con- fession of our profound failure to understand the importance of popular action in winning the war. It has not occurred to us, for example, that in refusing to establish full official con- tact with de Gaulle, we have thereby refused to establish official contact witU the French underground, whose outside contact is with de Gaulle, and only with de Gaulle. It is therefore, more than a form of words to say that by disdaining de Gaulle, we disdain the people of France; it is the literal truth. And if we do not build official contacts with Europe's new leaders, the leaders of the underground, dur- ing the war, what contact shall we have with them after the war? We shall have only a vague, frightened feeling about them, as good fellows, perhaps, but "terrorists," "extremists," not to be trusted with rebuilding the continent. Our diplo- macy is shot through with this fear, so that we start by disdaining the people, then we leave them to work on their own, wasting blood and energy in invalid enterprises; and so we may find ourselves staring blindly at them after the war as if we did not quite catch the name. of a scratch popular effort is a sign that we do not rate popular effort highly enough. It speaks of disconnectedness between ourselves and the people of Europe. The Dutch assassinations, so meaningless and so dangerous, testify to dis- connected, incoherent, romantic underground activity. Can we set up closer ties? The Russians have shown in this war (as in 1812) that it is quite possible to direct irregular activity, even behind enemy lines. As Tolstoy says, popular action can be made into a "cudgel" against the enemy. It is a waste for it to be merely a nuisance to him. To succeed in this, we must have faith that the next order in Europe can be achieved only through planned disorder, which is a hard faith for too- orderly minds to encompass. (Copyright, 1943, N.Y. Post Syndicate) L I1 IERRY*EO- By D RE W a P EARSON WASHINGTON- Here is the in- side story of how the Secret Service performed one of its most difficult assignments in history- protect- ing the President on his trip among North African Arabs, West African natives, and through South Amer- ica. To prepare for it, Michael F. Reilly, White House Secret Service agent, left Washington several days before the President, and traveled the exact route he was to follow. From Miami to Brazil to West Af- rica to North Africa, Reilly and a picked squad of men went over every step in advance. At Natal, Brazil, when Reilly walked out on the dock where the presidential clipper was to land, he suddenly turned and disappeared. He had seen Walter Winchell, and he was afraid that ace reporter would smell news in the wind. Win- chell was on his way north, after an assignment at Rio. Reilly says he expects to kid Winchell Some day about missing that bit of news. (Even if Winchell had got wind of the affair, of course, he could have printed nothing about the move- ment of the President.) At Bath- urst, West Africa, the British al- most interned the Secret Service squad for not having yellow fever inoculations. They had feared ill- ness from "shots," and took a chance without them. Actually one man was detained, but he was the one assigned to remain there any- how. Casablanca Precautions At Casablanca, a barbed wire fence was erected around the hotel and villas in which the President and Prime Minister were to "stay. All native servants (Arabs) were removed from the two villas in- tended for the two chiefs, and U.S. soldiers were substituted. Arabs were retained in other parts of the hotel, but not allowed to leave the compound during the entire period. They soon learned, who their guests were, and some tried to pass notes to friends out- side (with no apiparent harmful intention), but the notes were in- tercepted by Secret Service. Toughest job was protecting the President on his motor ride from Casablanca to the former fighting zone, 110 miles away. The round trip of 220 miles was made in a single day, the President riding in a closed car, preceded by Secret Service agents in a jeep. Mrs. Roosevelt Expected The President tells the story of how the agents distracted bystand- ers, to prevent them from discover- ing that the President was in the car. On the road up to the lines,. Agent Mike Reilly would suddenly point to the heavens, as if he saw a plane, and Agent Jim Barry would crane his neck to see. So would the bystanders. And by the time they had finished looking, the Presi- dent's car would have passed. For variety they changed the ruse on the return trip. Agent Jim Barry pretended to fall out of the jeep, and Agent Mike Reilly pretended to catch him. Natives became so ab- sorbed in watching this little dra- ma, that they paid no attention to' the car behind. The aim of all these tricks and preparations was successfully met --namely, to keep the President's visit a secret from the Germans. Reilly says, that most people who saw preparations being made in ad- vance suspected that a distin- guished visitor was coming,. but guessed wrong as to the person. They thought it was Mrs. Rse- velt. Capital Chaff Meeting in the Mayflower lobby, ex-Senator Bill Smathers of New Jersey shook hands with ex-Sena- tor Clyde Herring of Iowa, said "As one lame duck to another, how are you?" . .. Herring is about to join the OPA staff as political advisor to ex-Senator Prentiss Brown, OPA Administrator . . . Wherever Brig. Gen. Pat Hurley went- through Russia, Iraq, Iran, Syria, and Egypt,- he amused himself by en- listing members in his "B.S. and N. Club." Only after collecting $1 ini- tiation fee did Hurley disclose the full title of the club- Boobs, Suck- ers, and Nuts.. . In his tour of the Americas, Mexican labor leader Lombardo Toledano was denied en- try to Argentina. He says the Ar- gentine government is pro-fascist. The Argentines say he is pro-Com- MUSIC The programs of virtuoso violinists are us- ually hybrid and irritating affairs and Mr. Hei- fetz's program last night was no exception. That he is, all told, about the world's greatest violinist very few will deny- but to say that this particu- lar concert was an outstanding example of his artistry would not be just even to the standards that Mr. Heifetz at his best has set. There is a rather extensive violin literature suitable for recital presentation, extensive enough to make transcriptions unnecessary. For example, there is little point having Emanuel Bey play at his piano what was meant by Vieux- temps and every possible law of musical balance to be an orchestral part, and even less point tran- scribing Prokofieff's Larghetto from the Classical Symphony and March from the Love for Three Oranges into violin and piano "pieces." Proko- fieff knew quite well what he was doing, as his perfectly apt orchestrations of these selections demonstrate, but Mr. Heifetz evidently had ideas of his own, The program opened with Mozart's Sonata No. 8, which was distinguished mainly by the alert and fastidious performance of Mr. Bey at the piano. Perhaps this is not up Mr. Heifetz's alley, for his idea of Mozart playing seemed to be cau- tion and self-effacement. Super-virtuoso execu- tion would have been equally wrong, but the illu- sion of ensemble musicianship is not maintained by the exact opposite of this. Mr. Heifetz played with the Romantic's concept of restraint, not a restraint that I, for one, believed he really felt- to whisper is not to understate. Next, however, in his playing of a Bach Cha- conne-for violin alone, Mr. Heifetz really hit the top point of the evening. Here was virtuosity put to a glorious use in the variety of expression and tone that was achieved, achieved too in order to set forth the full significance of a great piece of music.' Vieuxtemps' Concerto No. 4 was performed in the great virtuoso tradition, though Mr. Heifetz has played it on other occasions with even more brilliance and ease, and Mr. Bey was plainly over- worked and inadequate impersonating ninety to one hundred musicians, but did his best. Mr. Heifetz concluded the program with a (Colonel Ganoe has just returned from conferences in Washington con- cerning Specialized Training in col- leges and universities. The following statement is a report by Col. Ganoe on the Army's aims in regard to such training as clarified at these con- ferences.) It was brought out that this is a program designed neither to provide college education for a few favored and selected students nor to continue regular students in their formal edu- cation under its present form. It is likewise not a device to keep colle- giate education alive. Neither is it a scheme to militarize or change the American system of education. It is a plain necessity for winning the war more quickly. One feature makes this fact apparent. It has been found that highly needed specialists of all sorts can, by the Specialized Training Programs in the colleges, save from four to six months for the government over the present univer- sity and collegiate systems. In other words the Specialized Training Pro- gram can obtain the trained student for the service that many months sooner. The saving of time means the saving of lives and treasure. For that Army Statement Clarifies Aim of Special Training DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN reason- the Program was given prece- dence and naturally occupied its ap- parent disturbing and misunderstood place in the minds of many. The War Department desires that everyone realize it intends in no way "to take over" the institutions or any part of them. The plan aims to use the facilities of colleges instead of having to put up makeshift educa- tional centers in the camps and draw professors and teachers away from the colleges. It is swifter, more effi- cient and less disturbing all around to use the plants the colleges have developed through the past decades. So the government hires such in- struction, housing and feeding as it can obtain and the authorities of the universities and colleges desire to contribute to the war effort. It is not commandeering the schools. The mili- tary commandants at the colleges are specifically charged with serving ini- struction and the colleges, giving such military drill and exercises as can be wedged in, and causing the students sent here as soldiers to live in a bar- racks system. It will shortly be seen that such a system will aid the ill- struction given by professors, rather than retard or interfere with it. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 17, 1943 VOL. LI No. 92 All notices for the Daily Official Bul- letin are to be sent to .the Office of the I President In typewritten form by 330 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 Student Tea: President and Mrs. Ruth- ven will be at home to students this after- noon from 4 to 6 o'clock. Monday, Feb. 22, will be observed as a holiday in accordance with previous an- nouncements. Students in EnlistedReserves: All V-1, V-7, Marine Corps Reserves and ERC stu- ients who have transferred to this Uni- versity at the beginning of this term are requested to report to Room 1508 Rackham Building at' their earlist convenience. B. D. Thuma, Armed Services Representative Army Enlisted 'Reserve Corps: Sopho- nore, Juniorsand Senior Engineering stu- dents who are in the Enlisted Reserve Corps and in good academic standing are eligible for deferment until the end of the Spring Term. Such students should not Withdraw from school in antidipation of immediate call. Pre-medical and pre-dental students and those in certain other categories considered eligible for. deferment for the Spring Tem wil be notified to that effect individually within the next few days. B. D. Tiiurna, Armed Services Representative Communications to the Regents: Those who wish to present communications for consideration by the Regents are re- quested 'to present them at least eight days before the next ensuing meeting at t~he Office of Miss Edith J Smith, Budget Assistant to the President, 1006 Angell Hall, Fifteen copies of each communication should be prepared and left with Miss Smith. (Please note that one more copy is requested than in' previous years.) A uniform type of paper is used for com- unications to the Board of Regents, a supply of which may be procured at the Office of the Vice-President and Secretary. 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 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. Closing hours for women students for Sunday, February 21, will be 11:00 p.m. and Monday, Washington's birthday, 12:00 mid- night. Alice C. Lloyd, Dean of Women Students: A list of graduates and former students now in Military Service is being compiled at the Alumni Catalogue Office. This list already numbers approximately 6,000. If you are entering Military Service, please see that your name is included in this list 'by reporting such information to the Alumni Catalogue Office. This cour- tesy will be greatly appreciated. Lunette Hadley, Director Alumni Catalogue Office The attention of those preparing to enter the Hopwood contests is called to the fol- lowing change in regard to paper: Swan linen, sixteen pound weight, 8% x i inch- es, must be used for the first copy. The two carbon copies may be on any white paper of the same weight. -R, W. Cowden, Director of the Hopwood Awards The American Association of Uiversity Women Fellowship: The Ann Arbor-Ypsi- lanti fBraohofthe AA..U.W is gain offer- ing a fellowship for the year 1943-1944 In Sociedad Hispanica Lecture: The lecture by Dr. Charles N. Staubach scheAuled for Thursday, Feb. 18, has been postponed I- definitely on account of Dr. Staubacha's Illness. The next lecture of the series Wll be by Professor Arthur S. Aton on T!his- day, Feb. 25. French Lecture: Professor William Mc- Laughlin of the Romance Lanuage Pe- partment will give the fifth of the French Lectures sponsored by the Cercle 0rancas entitled: "Un Lycee En France Souveirs Personnels" 'today at 4:15 p.m. in Room P, Alumni Memorial Hall. Tickets for the series of lectures may be procured from the Secretary of the De- partment of Romance LangUgeuror at the door at the time of the lecture. Open to the public. Academic Notices Math. 371, Seminar,first m tig to range the work today at 4:00 ;pj.A:in 3001 A.H Also, Mr. Johnson will seak on "Curvors on the Sphere." -G. V. Rainich Math. 34, Seminar in Applied Mthemat- ics, preliminary meeting today at 1 o'Adok In 319 west Engineering Bldg. -Rit:v.Chgrhil English 4, sections 1 and 4 (College of Engineering), will meet on Friday, Fe. 19, at 8:00 and at :00 at the Speech Clinic, 1007 East Huron Street. -L-, M. Richlnan Codes and Ciphers: All who are nteI csted in learning how to .solve scet m - sages are invited to attend the senci ar ti Friday at 4:00 p.m. in 3011 A.H. No r - requisite except willingness to work. A. H.'C .i S. B. Mye , ROTC Dril-Wednesday Sectiodt: t battalions will report to the L-M Buil~l in uniform with gym shoes. Drum ad Bugle Corps will report to the Wrestitg Room. Advanced Corps Cadets will 10 prepared to give instructionin Ma ua1 1 firms, Squad and Plato on Irill. Ref.: FM 22-5 (IDR). A Piano Recital will be 'given by rM. Maud Okkeberg, Assistant reisor ;°of' Piano, School of Music, on Thursay £e- ningg, Fe. 18, at 8:30 o'clok in tthleM1i 'uditorium, Rackhazn Educational MeMor- .a1, woodward at Farnsworth, Detrit Th1a Is sponsored by the School Of1usi n o operation with the Univerity EbtensIon Service. Events Toda The Research Club will meet in th e A- phitheatre of the Rackham Buii3ng to- night at 8:00. The following paers iill be presented: "Observations on the Pre- cordial .Electrocardiogram" by Poi'ssor F. N. Wilson and "Codes and Ciphr"b Professor Arthur H. Copeland. A.S.M.E.: Mr. James W. Armour, Presi- dent of the Detroit Section of the An1ei-1ia Society of Mechanical Engineers, ill 'speak on the subject. "The Design and oVltru4- tion of Steam Generating Unit,".before the U. of '. branch of the A.S'M.E. to- night at 7:30 in the Union. All eng1nee1Wg students are invited. Graduate Students in Speech: !he Xiit meeting of the Graduate Study C1'o*tlie Department of Speech will be h0l at p.m. today in the East Confarele Itoon (third floor) of the Rackham iildlng.' Coming Eventt The Anatomy Research Club il , Thursday, February 18, at 4:30 . Room 2501 East Medical Buildhig. Dr. O. M. Farris of the Department Qr Siigey will give a paper entitled: " e erttIo anaesthesia in Traumatic Surg Tea wlU be served at 4:00 b'dook 1 ;i