FOUR THES MICHI AN D~AILY g I h :nA".:NOVW. 2'2Th l i *tF$iurt ear Fifty-Forth Year s . -. Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Contro) 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 ,or 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 $4.50, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 Editorial Staff . Marion Ford . . . . . Managing Editor Jane Farrant . . . . . Editorial Director Claire Sherman . . . . . City Editor Marjorie Borradaile . . . . Associate Editor Eric Zalenski . . Sports Editor Bud Low . . . . Associate Sports Editor Mary Anne Olson . . . . Women's Editor Marjorie Rosmarin . . . Ass't Women's Editor Hilda Slautterback . . Columnist Doris Kuentz Columnist Business Sta ff Molly Ann Winokur Elizabeth Carpenter Martha Opsion . . Business Manager . . Ass't Bus. Manager . . Ass't Bus. Manager e 23-24-1 Telephon NIGHT EDITOR: VIRGINIA ROCK Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. INFLATION: House Anti-Subsidy Bill Must Be Stopped Now TOMORROW the House of Representatives will vote on extending the life of the Com-- modity Credit Corporation and the extension of subsidies which that agency finances. By to- morrow evening the public should know whether the battle against inflation will be successful or not. This battle is probably as crucial as any that has been fought on any fighting front and yet the American people have been pecul- iarly apathetic about the outcome. On one side there is the Congressional farm bloc, farm lobbies and trade interests such as can- ners and meat packers; on the other side the President, practically all the government econ- omists, and consumer groups throughout the nation who support subsidies. To the well-informed, unprejudiced observer it seems inconceivable that anyone would actu- ally want inflation and yet it seems almost cer- tain that the House is going to knock the props out from under the only means that has been proposed so far for curbing it. THE ANTI-SUBSIDY group's argument is that the continuance and development 'of the sub- sidy program eventually would mean regimen- tation of all classes and destruction of the Am- erican economic system. This argument does not stand up very well when countered with actual figures compiled by government economists. These men say that, although it will cost $800,000,000 to fin- ance the subsidy prograni, if we throw sub- sidization out the window, living costs will go up at least ten percent and the nation will be in the hole $15,000,000,000. $15,000,000,000 against $800,000,000 and still subsidization op- ponents scream that the subsidization pro- gram will cost the people money. In addition the President's hold-the-line ord- er will be completely by-passed and the OPA's struggle to roll back prices will be practically hopeless. Defeat of subsidies will bring a de- mand from labor for higher wages that cannot be resisted. Higher wages will bring a demand from manufacturers for higher prices. Higher prices will bite into the farmer's budget again, they will raise their prices and the whole spiral will be started anew AND SO AFTER inflation has had a chance to get going there will be almost no way of stopping it. Economists say that by December, 1944, milk will very likely be up to 30 cents a quart, butter to $1.04 a pound, hamburger to 94 cents a pound and the price of bread will be raised to 18 cents a loaf. However, members of the House do not seem worried. Republicans and Southern Demo- crats seem impervious to all arguments. They seem to be on a kind of a devil-may-care emo- tional spree that resists all sensible sugges- tions. Whether these men that are supposed to serve their constituents and represent their opinions do not understand the issue, wheth- er they do not care or whether they feel that the pressure groups represent the true feelings of the people is a question. It is certain that there has been almost no attempt to propose I'd Rather Be Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, Nov. 21-It is sweet of so many persons to say they are going to judge de Gaulle by the way he handles the situation in Lebanon. Let's have a judgment day, by all means. But will the same persons also judge the British by the way they handle the situation in India, and ourselves by the way we handle the situation in Italy? Or is this to be a tiny little judgment day, reserved for de Gaulle alone? Lebanon, under French mandate, wants its independence. And de Gaulle must settle it, and we shall lean back and watch him, and see what he does. But India wants its independence, too, and the British "solution" in India is exactly the same as the "solution" which the inept French admin- istrator, Helleu, contrived for Lebanon: Those who moved for instant independence have been fired upon and placed in jail. Ah, but India is split, between Mohammedans and Hindus. I know, and Lebanon is almost half-Christian, half-Mohammedan. THE LITTLE PROBLEM, AND THE BIG My advice to the more heated participants in this debate is not to call for judgment days, lest they be judged. What do the Lebanese want? Freedom. Who can give them freedom? Only a French gov- ernment, because Lebanon is under a French mandate. Where is the French government? There is none, because we have not recognized the French National Comniittee as even a temporary governing body. So, even if de Gaulle, with the best will in the world, had wanted to free Lebanon, he would not have been allowed to do so, because he has been denied the legal power to make such decisions. By whom? By us. At this point it becomes a little less than sport- ing to ask de Gaulle to solve the Lebanese prob- lem. De Gaulle refuses to give full, instant recog- nition to a Lebanese independence movement. But we refuse to give full, instant recognition to the French independence movement. The big problem sits on the shoulders of the little prob- lem. And the big problem involves us. ONE IS BAD, ONE IS NOT GOOD So, in some respects, there is a conversation going on between pots and kettles. None of the great powers is too clear on how to handle national independence movements, for all the muttering that some of their officials engage in concerning de Gaulle's methods. If de Gaulle has aggravated the Lebanese, it might also be said that we have aggravated the de Gaullists; and if Lebanon displays hostility toward the French, it is also true that we have brought the French to the point of displaying some hostility toward us.. If one is bad, the other is not good. The nearest we have come to a firm method for handling national independence movements lies in that part of the Moscow Declarations which concerns Italy. One clause declares "it is essen- tial that the Italian government should be made more democratic by the inclusion of representa- tives of those sections of the Italian people who have always opposed fascism." But Sforza and Croce are still not in the Italian government; the Italian government is Badoglio's new "cabinet of undersecretaries," his government of sticks. So we still seem to be flubbing it somehow in Italy, while denouncing de Gaulle vigorously for flubbing it in Lebanon. And de Gaulle did, at least, institute popular elections in that country, during war, which nobody else has as yet done anywhere. (Copyright, 1943, N.Y. Post Syndicate) IN THE FUTURE: University Merits Credit For Post-War Planning THE PROPOSED PLAN of University expan- sion and modernization with an estimated cost of more than $26,000,000 for an .expected enrollment of 18,000 students is now following the general business trend of drafting post-war projects. Practically every corporation, large or small, and every community, from London to Center City, is looking with a new eye to present defects in their set-up. With no possibility of remedying them in war time, future activities look bright and promising. The Building Committee deserves much credit for publishing in concrete form the de- tailed study of the University's needs, recom- mendations for buildings and equipment, and proposed sites. There is a strong necessity for every one of the projects, and one wonders only why there has been a delay in construc- tion. East Hall was given up by the city Board of Education many years ago as being unsatisfac- tory and inefficient for a grammar school. This site is finally to be used for the addition to the West Engineering building. Certainly the admin- istrative duties call for a place devoted entirely to that purpose instead of the University Hall with its hodge-podge of offices, bureaus, Jap- anese, English and math classes. The site of a general service building at the Jefferson and S. State corner will complete the University's ex- pansion on almost every side of the campus. WITH SO MUCH EMPHASIS on modern lan- guages of the world, a new unit for classes and offices might well be suggested. Other out- standing improvements listed were a new school of music building to complete the group by Hill Auditorium, an Armory for campus military Lights Out .. . THE POINT IN QUESTION, regardless of when lights should be turned out, is whether the students' representative government can commit them to any policy without first con- sulting them. I don't believe it can. How does the ASTP Cpl. know what he may be missing after his bedtime? -('pl. R. H. Weinstein American-Soviet Relations . . . IT IS TRUE that American-Soviet friendship should be welcomed and fostered. Americans are all for it. It is true that the United States should follow a policy of internationalism in- stead of her former policy of isolation. In Doris Peterson's editorial of Nov.. 18, I am accused of being an anti-Russian isola- tionist. This accusation is unjust, for I am neither anti-Russian nor isolationist. Furth- ermore I am maligned as mistrusting Russia. This is also unjust. We can trust Russia just as much as we can trust England, France, Sweden or any other nation. But while we are trusting the Russians, it might be well for us to remember that it is the same Russia which just a few short years ago carried on a war against tiny Finland; it is the same Russia which stabbed Poland in the back when the Poles were being crushed by ov- erwhelming German forces; and it is still the same Russia which made a pact with Hitler. Has Russia changed so much since then? MISS PETERSON would have us believe that it has. She says that the Russian. government has abolished the Comintern and has given up aspirations of world wide Communist revolu- tion. This could have been done to persuade us to send more aid to Russia. Rep. Dondero reported to Congress that pro- paganda was being brought into this country from Russia in returning lend-lease ships. In the "Daily" of Nov. 14, Miss Peterson said that Rep. Dondero should have refrained from re- porting on so vital a subject because it might of- fend Russia and interfere with American-Soviet friendship. Does friendship with the U.SS.R. require that we become communists, or even that we accept communistic propaganda? Perhaps Miss Peterson has communistic sympathies, but I, for one, am satisfied with our American system. In The Daily of Nov. 18 Miss Peterson said that it would be a wise idea for him (Rep. Don- dero) to find out the facts about the thing (propaganda, ref. editorial of Nov. 14) against which he is protesting. "Why not just accuse the man of perjury?" TPON WHAT INFORMATION does the editor- ialist base the assertion that Rep. Dondero does not know the facts? Congressman Dondero's pre-war isolationism was mentioned. Of course that couldn't be an attempt to discredit him in the public eye? If we are going to play an active part in international politics, we have to go into it with our eyes wide open. It's nice to have trust in nations-we're all for it-bt the safety of the United States is too preciousF to risk. Rep. Dondero cannot be chastised for being cautious. International politics is a game where the rules are "play for keeps, everything's fair and every man for himself. We cannot afford to be on the losing side.-Lee Williams litne Says SECURITY has become the most binding con- cept of our generation. In the ancient world, justice was the key to emotion and will. Liberty then became the magnetic word and held its central place for half a century. Today, security has supplanted both of them. The word has many meanings. At the bank, security means tangible assets to guarantee your promise. In statecraft, security is collec- tive and infers a world order backed by ade- quate police. In the.councils of labor, secur- ity means insurance against accident, unem- ployment and old age. If you ask a sociologist about security, he will refer to balance or to the adjustment of an organism to the social situation. With the minister, in line with the view of prophets, security is a negative term meaning complacency or absence of zeal. It is associated with indifference to the dynamic and creative reaches of the self. In religion, therefore, the secure person is one who is fall- ing below the level of which he should be cap- able. Yet out of this wilderness of meanings has emerged the current concept of security. When the inspired collaborators, Churchill and Roosevelt, slowly crowded into the abyss of war, sought to catch the imagination of pros- trate peoples, they promised, in human terms, half what Christianity had held out in Divine terms and enumerated freedom from want, free- dom from fear, freedom of worship, freedom of speech, and called them the Four Freedoms. No one, short of the Angels, immediately saw what a completely new psychology Was to be brought about by that great document. Here, in this mundane concept of security, born out of the grief of depression, plus the pain of war, set opposite the productive abundance of modern industry, man has caught a glimpse of the King- dom of Heaven on earth. Scarcity, that Babel of ancient economic voices, tumbled to the ground like a house of cards. To the side of SUNDAY, NOV. 21, 1943 VOL. LIV No. 18 All, notices for the Daily Official Bul- letin are to be senteto 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 Eligibility Rules for Fall Term: Because of changed conditions on the campus the Committee on Stu- dent Affairs has decided to modify the rules of eligibility for public activities for the current Fall Term. The continuance of the plan will depend upon the success with which it is managed by the individual stu- dent during the coming months. Students will not be required to se- cure certificates of eligibility, but will be personally responsible for checking their own eligibility. First term freshmen will be al- lowed to participate but will have their grades checked by their aca- demic counsellors or mentors at the end of the five-week period and at mid-semester. Continued participa- tion after these checks will depend upon permission of the academic counsellors or mentors. All other students who are not on Probation or the Warned List are eligible. Any- one on Probation or the Warned List is definitely ineligible to take part in any public activity and a student who participates under these cir- cumstances will be subject to disci- pline by the authorities of the school or college in which he or she is en- rolled. Participation in a public activity is defined as service of any kind on a committee or a publication, in a public performance or a rehearsal, holding office or being a candidate for office in a class or other student organization, or any similar func- tion. In order to keep the Personnel Records up to date in the Office of the Dean of Students, the president or chairman of any club or activity should submit a list of those partici- pating each term on forms obtain- able in Room 2, University Hall. These records are referred to con- stantly by University authorities, governmental agencies and indus- trial concerns throuighout the coun- try and the more complete they are, the more valuable they become to the University and the student. Civilian students who purchased student tickets for the Michigan- Minnesota football game and have not yet presented their Deposit Re- ceipts for refund are asked to do so immediately. Refunds will be made at the Ticket Office in the Adminis- tration Building on Ferry Field from 8:30 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. daily until1 Dec. 1. All deposit receipts become void after that date and no further refudns will be made. H. O. Crisler, Director Choral Union Members: Members of the chorus whose records of atten- dance are clear will please call for their courtesy pass ticketsforvthe Menuhin concert, on Tuesday, Nov. 23, between the hours of 10 and 12, and 1 and 4. After 4 o'clock no tick- ets will be issued. Charles A. Sink, President Sigma Xi: Members who have transferred from other chapters and who are not yet affiliated with the Mihignn Chanter are cordially in- tion, Burbank, Calif., will interview Seniors on Monday, Nov. 22, in Room 214 West Engineering Building. Interview schedule is posted on the Bulletin Board atRoom 221 West En- gineering Bldg. Blanks are available in Room 221. Seniors in Aeronautical and Me- chanical Engineering: Dr. Levin of the Consolidated-Vultee Aircraft Cor- poration, San Diego, Calif., will inter- view graduating seniors on Monday morning, Nov. 22, in Room B-47 East Engineering Building. Interested men will please sign the interview schedule posted on the Aeronautical Engineer- ing Bulletin Board, near Room B-47 East Engineering Building. Applica- tion blanks are to be filled out in ad- vance of the interview and may be obtained in the Aeronautical Depart- ment Office. Lectures University Lecture: Dr. Albert H. Burrows, Professor of Economics and Sociology at Northern Michigan Col- lege of Education, will lecture on the subject, "Social Problems of the Nor- thern Peninsula" under the auspice of the Department of Sociology on Friday, Nov. 26, at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The public is invited. Academic Notices All Students are invited to audition for membership in the University of Michigan Concert Band. Auditions will be held at Morris Hall as per the following schedule: Flutes, Oboes, English Horns, Bassoons-Monday, Nov. 22, 4:30 to 6 p.m.; E flat Clari- nets, B flat Clarinets, Alto Clarinets. Bass Clarinets-Monday, Nov. 22, 4:30 to 6 p.m.; Saxophones-Tuesday. Nov. 23, 4:30 to 5:15 p.m.; French Horns-Tuesday, Nov. 23, 4:30 to 6 p.m.; Cornets, Trumpets-Wednes- day, Nov. 24, 4:30 to 5:30 p.m.; Bari- tones, Euphoniums - Wednesday, Nov. 24, 4:30 to 6 p.m.; Trombones- Friday, Nov. 26, 4:30 to 6 p.m.; Tuba -Friday, Nov. 26. 5:15 to 6 p.m.; string Bass-Saturday, Nov. 27, 10:30 to 11 a.m.; Percussion-Saturday, Nov. 27, 11 a.m. Students unable to audition at hours indicated will be given other audition periods by calling at Morris Hall any afternoon from 1:00 to 4:30 p.m. Rehearsal schedule will be deter- mined after the membership has been selected and the available time deter- mined. Concerts and radio broad- casts will be presented at appropriate periods. W. D. Revelli, Conductor The special short course in speeded reading will be given for students who wish to improve their reading ability. Those interested will meet Tuesday, Nov. 23, at 5:00 p.m. in Room 4009, University High School. Building, School of Education. At that time the course will be explained and time of meeting set. If you are interested and cannot attend the organization meeting, call Mr. Morse, Ext. 682, for further information. There is no charge for this non-credit course. College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, Schools of Education, For- estry, Music, and Public Health: Stu- dents 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 Dec. 1. Students wishing an ex- tension of time beyond this date in "Can't get any more replacement parts for the milking machine, Maw! You remember how to milk a cow?" DA ILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty M ERRY - E0 ROUND1C By ySRE W WASHINGTON. Nov. 21-A pro- posal has been made backstage in the State Department which prob- ably would bring revolution to Ar- gentina and force that country ,to break with the Axis. However, ap- peasers inside the State Department are opposed. The proposal is to stop all pur- chases of meat from Argentina for at least a month-longer if nec- essary. Most people in this coun- try don't know it, but Argentina, while cooperating with the. AXis, also is waxing fat and prosperous from U. S.-British purchases of her meat. At present, the Allies are buying almost every ounce of meat she can produce. The frozen and chilled meat is shipped to the British, the canned meat to U. S. troops. We even supply the tin for the Argentina's canned meat. Meat is the biggest business of the Argentine. If the market were cut off, the country would suffer econ- omiC paralysis, and there would be terrific resentment against Argen- tina's rulers. However, some State Department advisers oppose the plan because the Argentine people would stiffer most. Furthermore, the American public would also suffer, since much' larger quantities of U. S. beef would go ;o England and to U. S. troops. More militant State Department advisers argue that the American people can take it if they have to, and that, if the Argentine people suffer enough, they will throw off the military fas- cists who now rule them. Russian Labor Vs. U.S. . . When Donald Ne son was in Rus- sia, he was shown how the incentive system works to increase production. It was explained that workers who produce the greatest amount of goods are given special rewards, the top prize-winners being allowed to visit the front to report to the soldiers regarding the work of factory broth- ers in arms. Then Nelson was asked what sort of incentive system there was in the United States. He was obliged to explain that American labor unions are opposed to theincentive system. The Russians were perplexed. "But aren't they brothers of the soldiers?" they asked. "Don't they want to win the war?" Wilkie in Wisconsin.... Willkie advisers -didn't go arqund advertising it, but privately they were a bit worriedtbeforhand a ut his proposed trip to Wis6onsi . '~ey thought his ardent anti-isolatioism wouldn't go down well in a state pup- porting isolationist Senator Bob La- Follette. After the Wisconsin visit, haw- ever, they were immensely pleased. A lot of LaFollette progressive leaders came around to tell Will- kie that they were strong for his stand on international affairs. Also significant was a strong ed- itorial supporting him in the Madi- son Capital Times, long the mouth- piece of the LaFollettes. Quite aside from Willike, this anti-isolationist sentiment in Wisconsin is considered highly significant in Washington, where a peace treaty sooner or later will have to be written. Broken Whiskey Bottles Believe it or not, the Treasury, despite the shortage of manpower and materials, still requires all liquor bottles to be broken up after they are used. Brand new bottles must be supplied for each new bottle of whiskey. As a result, from a bil- lion and a half to two billion bottles are broken every year. The Treasury explains that this is to protect the consumer and pre- vent whiskey bottles from being used over again by bootleggers. How- ever, the distillers claim that part of the liquor shortage is due to the scarcity of bottles. There is plenty of liquor in barrels, they say, but not sufficient bottles to retail it. The Treasury replies that the bottle shortage is partly the result of beer conversion from tin cans to bottles. (Copyright, 1943, United Features Synd.) of Music faculty, will present a pro- gram of Brahms' sonatas for piano and violin at 4:15 this afternoon in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Open to the public without charge. Choral Union. Concert: Yehudi Menuhin,, violinist, and Adolph Bal- ler, accompanist, will be heard in the third concert in the Choral Union Series, Tuesday evening, Nov. 23, at 8:30, in Hill Auditorium. Mr. Menu- hin will present a program of violin music by Beethoven, Bach, Bartok, Debussy, Villa Lobos, Guarnieri, and