,e THE MIfHIUAi DAIL gy'p ^- T7 Z4 -A^ 1 e _ _ 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 NATIONAL ADVERTMINO BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO * BOSTON * LOS ANGELES * SAN FRANCISCO Three men on a horse The WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND By DREW PEARSON Editorial Staff John Erlewine . Bud Brimmer . Marion Ford. . Charlotte Conover . Eric Zalenski Betty Harvey . . . . Managing Editor . ,. . . . City Editor . . . . Associate Editor . . . Associate Editor . . . . -Sports Editor . . . . Women's Editor Business Staf# Edward J. Perlberg Fred M. Ginsberg Mary Lou Curran Jane Lindberg . Business Manager Associate Business Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR : EVELYN PHILLIPS Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. WASHINGTON-One of Washing- ton's most closely guarded se- crets is the detailed history of rubber production. Reason for the secrecy is not military. Rubber Czar Jeffers has just released what must be com- forting news to the enemy that we shall have only 100,000 tons of rub- ber by the end of this year, and Bernie Baruch estimated we needed a minimum reserve of 120,000. Actually the reason is political. With 130,000,000 Americans virtually taken off wheels, certain high-up individuals are anything but anxious to have the details on rubber produc- tion leak out. However, here is the actual record on one of the saddest and most inexcusable chapters in our entire economic history. In June, 1940, one year and a half before Pearl Harbor, President Roosevelt ordered an immediate study of the synthetic rubber indus- try to prepare for possible Jap inva- sion of the Dutch East Indies. That study was turned over to Edward Stettinius of the National Defense Commission, who on July 13, 1940, recommended the immediate need of building synthetic rubber plants and reported to the President: "It is ex- pected that before this month is over a plan of synthetic rubber produc- tion will have been worked out which in the future will eliminate our de- pendence upon imports." What Stettinius referred to was the fact that Emil Schram of Jesse Jones' Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration was negotiating with Good- rich and the Phillips Corporation to produce 100,000 tons of rubber. But Stettinius did not know, when he wrote his report, that Jesse Jones, Schram's superior, would blfck the deal. This Jones did. And for seven months, Stettinius and various other, defense officials, fumed, fretted and tore their hair, until finally on Feb- ruary 19, 1941, Jones announced that the RFC "still had under considera- tion" plans for aiding the production, of synthetic rubber, though he said the need was not urgent and possi- bly, ultimately unnecessary. Before Pearl Harbor ONE YEAR LATER, March 21, 1942, Secretary Jones issued a statement which caused amazement on the part of his cabinet colleagues. He said that "On May 16, 1941, we concluded agreements with some of the leading producers of rubber, chemicals and oil products for the construction and operation of syn- thetic rubber sufficient to increase the total annual capacity in 'the _r country to approximately 100,000 tons." This statement was made after ?earl Harbor, though it referred to action allegedly taken before Peas i Harbor. And the reason it amazed Jones' cabinet colleagues, was that actually in May, 1941, he had author- ized capacity not for 100,000 tons, but for a mere 10,000 tons. The four copolymer plants he au- thorized before Pearl Harbor were. planned with the understanding that each would design a 10,000-ton plant, but that actually equipment for a capacity of only 2,500 tons would be installed in each plant. In other words, the four plants, oper- ating at 2,500 tons each, would net the nation the meagre total of 10,000 tons-against a need in 1941 which had already risen to over 700,000 tons and which Bernie Baruch esti- mated should be 1,000,000 tons in 1944. As Pearl Harbor approached and the Japanese menace which Secre- tary Hull and President Roosevelt for months had mentioned in cabinet meetings increased in tension, Jones gradually began to wake up. He or- dered the four rubber companies to disregard their previous limit of 2,500 tons capacity and go up to 10,000 each. After Pearl Harbor BUT ALL THESE THINGS, plus the genial Jesse's complacency, delayed the program so that ground for only three rubber factories was broken before Pearl Harbor and one afterwards. Even after Pearl Harbor, Mr. Jones continued his easy optimism. On Jan. 13, when our military leaders had reported to the Cabinet that the Philippines and the Dutch East In- dies probably could not be held, Jesse estimated that with care and pru- dence the nation could get along on about 450,000 tons of rubber a year for both war and civilian purposes. Reminded that the 1941 consump- tion had been 750,000 tons, he pointed out that the pre-war figure was only 600,000 tons and that the halt on manufacturing automobiles would reduce the civilian demand for tires. He also made the cheering prediction that in. about eighteen months-or by June, 1943-there would be enough rubber to provide new automobile tires to the public. We are now within four months of June, 1943, and Mr. lef'ers has just warned the nation that not until after March, 1944, would we begin to see daylight on rubber. Again on Feb. 3, 1942, Jones opti- mistically informed the house bank- ing committee that we would be get- ting "all the rubber we needed from the Dutch East Indies by the end of 1943 despite the present Japanese threat to that area." This was at a time when the Japs already had landed in part of the islands, and only one month before Batavia, the capital, fell. Also on Feb. 3, 1942, Jesse stated that 90,000 tons of synthetic rubber would be produced by the end of 1942. In contrast, Mr, Jeffers has now announced that not a pound of synthetic rubber came from a gov- ernment plant through January. Reason for Failure REASON for this failure was first the fact that the rubber factories urged by Stettinius and Schram nearly two years before, were not built. Making synthetic rubber is a difficult process. It requires trial and experimentation. That was why Stettinius urged that the plants be built early. Second reason was continued pro- crastination. Despite the optimistic statements immediately after Pearl Harbor, actual construction work on only one-fourth of the Government's butadiene plants was begun by June 1, 1942. Roughly three-fourths of the program was not begun until after June, six months after Pearl Harbor. This was also true of Jesse's addi- tional copolymer plants. Three- fourths of them were begun after June, 1942. Most of them actually did not get started until around Sep- tember, nine months after Pearl Harbor-by which time the Baruch committee had taken rubber com- pletely out of Jesse's hands. (Copyright. 1943, United Features Synd.) Scientists in India who worked on the problem of warm clothing for the growing Indian Army discovered a process of treating cotton cloth with the seeds of two native trees, and have produced a finished prod- uct that is warm, soft, and durable. In the Albany, N.Y., area, where ration banking has been in opera- tion, the ration currency .deposited in participating banking offices rep- resented an average of 900,000 pounds of sugar and 3,900,000 gal- lons of gasoline a week. Allied troops fighting in North Africa are familiar with rationing of the scarcest commodity there-wa- ter. From private to general, water rations are identical. .4 -: 4:w"ireM®RL ®61943. Chicago Tres, Id HYPOCRISY: Gandhi's Death Would Be Blow to Four Freedoms THE CURRENT fast of Mohandas K. Gandhi in India and its concomittant cicumstances pose a very serious problem that the Allies- Britain especially-have chosen to evade thus far. Gandhi's fast is another indication of India's protest to the manner in which the Allies have handled her problem. Most of the Allied nations have tacitly agitated for self freedom for India while British colonial interests have maintained their firm imperialist policy while dealing with the internal affairs of the country. The question resolves itself into one of Im- Serialism on the one hand and the four free- 'oms and the idea they symbolize on the other. Are we fighting- for a world wherein the domi- nant powers will rule with an iron hand? Or, are we fighting for the freedom of the human spirit and the integrity of man-the Four Free- doms? This is the question that the United Nations have ignored. Can it mean that we shall evade other serious problems and again miss our oppor- tunity to create the kind of peace we fervently desire? If Gandhi is allowed to die, if the British ignore the situation that his fast points out, we shall witness in India a greater catastrophe than the "non-violence" campaign of last August. It is not our purpose here to evaluate either the policies of the Hindus or the Moslems. Each group has their own ideas which have to be com- promised. Rather, we must argue for and heartily support a positive attitude in India. We must prompt the British, who are in direct control, to initiate an active policy. Recent press dispatches bear witness that the Indians don't want Japan to win. But neither do the Indians desire to remain trampled under the heel of the Western powers. They want what our Four Freedoms imply-their own government acting in their own best interests. It is the role of the United Nations to make sure that diver- gent interests are brought together. We lay po claims to being hypocrites. If we continue passive to the Indian problem and maintain our belief in the Freedom for which we fight, how else can we consider ourselves? The Indian problem is a serious one. It will form an important point in post-war arrange- iients. If we act now and work out an equitable solution, we shall have come one step closer to providing the kind of world for which we are fighting. - Stan Wallace iIELP WANTED: WMC Plan Is Solution To Manpower Shortage R. EDWARD C. ELLIOT, President of Purdue University, has presented to the House Mili- tary Affairs Committee a plan developed by the War Manpower Commission for possible subsi- dization of civilians in America's colleges and universities. This plan would supply the need for "a stockpile of trained manpower." No one can fail to realize the seriousness of the manpower shortage now facing the factories, as the armed forces draw more men into service. The only possible solution to the shortage remains that of using women and deferred men in the place of those drafted. It is evident from reports The Sorcerer's Apprentice By El Gordo WE AMERICANS have funny gods. One of them-Eddie Rickenbacker-has done amaz- ing and brave things in a rubber boat out in the Pacific Ocean. But Eddie's a strange man because he rejects his own worshippers. He did it the first time in Detroit. There he gave a fiery speech charging his friends, the laborers who produce for him and his fellow aviators, with seriously harming the war effort through idleness and through their unions. Eddie's done it again. This time he spoke before the New York State Legislature and again gave the same old speech about taking men out of fox holes to double production in the plants and sending present workers out to the fox holes. He got a new phrase in this time, too: ". .. the inner clique of bureaucracy is thinking only of a fourth term." He varied his pattern in another way, too. Here's what makes me sore: "And again, I frankly prefer to break bread with Henry Ford-the Fisher Brothers-the K. T. Kellers of Chrysler and the Charlie Ket- terings of General Motors-for here are men who have come from the soil and given the world one of the greatest gifts humanity has ever received in history-the automobile." Then he told about not wanting to break bread with union leaders "who are living in the laps of luxury at the expense of honest men and wo- men." Right now I won't quarrel with the good Ed- ward about his conception of great gifts to hu- manity. That's something that I'll save for an- other sour moment. But I wonder whether Eddie has ever thought of the invention of writing and speech. It's much worse to hear a man who's learned his politics floating on a rubber raft talking about what and who is the best in the nation. And then there's that matter of exploiting work- ing men. Sure, sure, Eddie, only labor leaders ex- ploit workers and pay them wages that are too low and take their money and their health from them. Sure, sure. We Americans once had another god that re- minded me of Rick. He flew the Atlantic in 1927 and came back to become a master politician. Lindy had all the dope from his European ex- periences and told America about them. He spoke loud and long for the America First Committee and said that the best thing America could do is isolate herself from the whole world. The best thing Charles A. Lindbergh ever did was to go back to production and help the United States win the war that he said we would never fight. That might be the best course for Eddie Rick- enbacker to follow. His redundant speeches are making working men sore. And those speeches will bore the rest of America silly in another two weeks. Come on, Captain Rickenbacker, be nice to us and get in a factory somewhere so that you too can double production. RADIO PROGRAMS TODAY: I'd Rather Be Right_ By SAMUEL GRAFTON THE OPPOSITION to the administration has a set of war aims. They are more specific than those of the administration. The opposition wants permanent possession of the air and naval bases leased from Great Britain, it wants compulsory military training in peacetime; it wants some form of union with Canada; it wants to dominate the commercial air lines of the world; it wants friendly relations with Latin America but (like George III in anothercase) no development of Latin American industry. These are war aims so hard you could crack a tooth on them. Now another item has been added. The oppo- sition wants Congress to take the entire field of post-war planning away from the adminis- tration and do it itself. This idea was first broached in the Scripps-Howard press. Senator Byrd has taken it up. THERE IS NO SUCH ANIMAL THE THEORY has a certain winning plausi- bility; Congress is the people's branch of the government; the people ought to do their own planning, etc. But the theory lacks substance and collapses under even a tentative touch of the thumb. There is no such animal as "Congress," in the agency sense, in the sense of a working body to do a specific, creative job. There are two major political parties. Each ought to have a post-war' plan. The two plans should be presented to the public at th next election. The party which wins the greater public endorsement, and there- fore the majority power in Congress, should then carry out its plan, under the mandate thus given. In the absence of such a presentation of clear alternatives to the people, the proposal to have an agency called the "administration" is, simply and precisely, meaningless. Yet it is a kind of meaningful meaningless- ness, for the men making the proposal that Congress do the planning are, by and large, opponents of economic planning. Senator Byrd has long sniffedat the "planners," and "plan- ning" has long been an amusing word to the Scripps-Howard newspapers; they have got off some of their best anti-administration jokes on this theme. When, therefore, those who are not, by and large, fond of planning ardently propose that Congress do it, are we not entitled to ask whether that proposal does not lead us up the garden path, away from planning toward no-planning? When, instead of a clear choice between plans, we are offered an obscure choice between agen- cies, we must ask whether the effort is not de- signed to stop long-range planning. And, in fact, the effort to stop long-range planning is actually one of the opposition's plans: it is implicit in the word "globaloney;" it is inherent in the jokes about milk for Hottentots. UP THE GARDEN PATH THE IMPORTANT thing is to note how firm the opposition's program now is. It has ma- tured more rapidly than the administration's program. It distrusts planning and it has found a device (let Congress do it) by means of which to express that distrust. It distrusts international reciprocity, and has found a number of methods for expressing that distrust, as outlined above. Its program may not be good, but it is clear; and where it is unclear, it is brilliantly unclear. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, FEB. 24, 1943 VOL. LIII No. 97 AU notices for the Daily Official Bul- I 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- S tion, except on Saturday when the no- tices should be submitted by 11:30 a.m. Not ices If you wish to finance the purchase of a home, or if you have purchased improvedE property on a land contract and owe at balance of approximately 60 per cent of thet value of the property, the Investment Of-t fice, 100 South Wing of University Hall,t would. be glad to discuss financing through the medium of a first mortgage. Such fi- nancing may effect a substantial saving in interest. Faculty, School of Education: The reg- ular meeting of the faculty will be held [on Thursday, February 25, in the Uni- versity Elementary School Library. The1 meeting will convene at 4:15 p.m.t The American Association of Universityj Women Fellowship: The Ann Arbor-Ypsi- lanti Branch of the A.A.U.W. is again offering 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. Applica- tion blanks may be obtained now from r the Graduate School Office and must be returned to that office no later than March 15 in order to receive consideration. Notice: Identification cards may now be called for in Room 2, University Hall. Office of the Dean of Students 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 German Departmental Library, 204 Uni- versity Hall. Open from 2 to p.m. Tues- day, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday each week; Saturdays from 9 to 12 a.m. Books may be returned at any time. Lectures University Lecture: Professor R. S. Knox, Department of English, University of Tor- onto, will lecture on the subject, "Recent Shakespearian Criticism," under the auspi- ces of the Department of English Language and Literature, on Monday, March 1, at 3:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The public is invited. University Lecture: Sir Bernard Pares, English historian and diplomat, will lec- ture on the subject, "Russia Now," under the auspices of the Department of His- tcry, on Tuesday, Marcht 9at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Academic Notices La Sociedad Hispanica features Mr. Ralph Stephens Gerganoff, Arch. '17, who will lecture on Ecuador, illustrating his talk with colored movies, on Thursday at 4:00 p.m., Room D, Alumni Memorial Hall. This lecture will take the place of the one by Dr. Aiton as originally scheduled. There will be a program meeting of the Spanish Club at 8:00 p.m. on Thursday, February 25, at the Michigan League. The Botanical Seminar will meet in 'boom 1139 Natural Science Building today at 4:00 p.m. Mrs. Betty Robertson. Clarke will present a paper entitled "The Aquatic Flowering Plants of Michigan." All inter- ested are invited. Math. 348, Seminar in Applied Mathe- matics, will meet Thursday at 3:00 p.m. in 319 West Engineering Bldg. Dr. Civin will speak on "A Non-Linear Boundary Value Problem." Hereafter the meetings of this seminar will be held at the regular time, Mondays at 4:00 p.m. Physics 25 Final: The final exami ation in this course will be given Friday, Feb. 26, beginning at 2:00 p.m. in the West Lecture Room. Make-up Final Examination in Geology II will be given Friday, February 26, at 1:00 p.m., in Room 3053 Natural Science Bldg. Organic Evolution (Zoology 31): Sup- plementary examination for those absent from final will be held in Room 3089 N.S. on Saturday, Feb. 27, at 9:00 a.m. ROTC DRILL: Cadets in Wednesday Section will report to the I-M Building in uniform with avm sh . enrenar efor' Students planning to petition the Hop- wood Committee should read paragraph 18 on page 9 of the Hopwood bulletin. The deadline for such petitions is March 1. R. W. Cowden Concerts Alec Templeton in special piano recital cn Thursday, Feb. 25, at 8:30 p.n. in Hill Auditorium. Reserved seat tickets, tax in- cluded, $1,.10, 90c and 60c, on sale at Of- fices of the University Musical Society daily, except Monday, until 5:00 p.m.-on the night of the concert after 7:00 p.m. in Hill Auditorium box office. Charles A. Sink, President Exhibitions Exhibit: Museum of Art and Archaeol- ogy, Newberry Hall. Photographs of Tu- nisia by George R. Swain, Official Pho- tographer to theUniversity of Michigan Expedition to North Africa in 1925. Tunis, Medjez-el-Bab, Tozeur, Tebessa, Sfax, Matmata country. Events Today Junior Mathemitics Club will meet to- night at 7:30 in 3201 Angell Hall. Professor Rainich will talk on "Mathematics in Meteorology." Varsity Glee Club: The serenade orig- inally scheduled for this evening has been postponed. Regular rehearsal Thursday evening. Bring eligibility cards and money for music folders. The Cercle Francais will meet tonight at 8:00 in the Michigan Union. Miss Helen Hall will give an informal illustrated talk on French paintings. All members and prospective members are cordially invited. Refreshments. The Women's Glee Club will not meet tonight. Coming Events The Regular Thursday Evening Recorded Program in the Men's Lounge of the Rack- ham Building at 8:00 p.m. will be as fol- lows: All Sibelius Program consisting of Con- certo in D minor for Violin, Symphony No. 3 in C major, and Symphony No. 7 in C major.