i I!A'!]FTWO 'I' HE MICHIG(AN DAILY .. ...,..- . _ .._ . _ _. .. r__.__ __ e .... _. _____.._._____ _ Fifty-Fourth Year I r'''' ( ['m -I 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 ror 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 Jane Farrant . Claire Sherman Marjorie Borradaile Eric Zalenski Bud Low N.4ary Anne Olson Marjorie Rosmarin Hilda Slautterback boris Kuentz . . .Managing Editor Editorial Director City Editor Associate Editor S . . . Sports Editor . Associate Sports Editor . . . Women's Editor Ass't Women's Editor Columnist . . . . Columnist Business Staff Molly Ann Winokur . Business Manager Elizabeth Carpenter . . . Ass't Bus. Manager Martha Opsion . . . . Ass't Bus. Manager Telephone 23-24-1. NIGHT EDITOR: BARBARA HERRINTON Editorials published in The Michigan Daily' are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. SH-1ITTSIGRITED? Rep. Dondero Fais To Follow Own Yardstick REP. DONDERO, speaking on the repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Act on Oct.' 21, said, "We need the help of the Chinese people. They need ours. "This may be a gesture, but it is a friendly gesture. It is a step in the right direction. They are our allies. Let us encourage them today with what we do in this Chamber in order to stiffen their morale and encourage them to resist, and in that way aid the Allied cause. I home this bill will pass," he said. It seems that this same principal would apply to .our Russian allies. We need their help, and what we do in '.'this Chamber" may be an impor- tant factor in determining just how much help we are going to get. Here Rep. Dondero fails to follow his own advice. PERHAPS we cannot expect more from Rep. Dondero, for as Will Chassen said in "The Nation" magazine for Oct. 31, 1942, "Rep. Don- dero's post-Pearl Harbor record, has been con- sistently bad. He voted for the inflationary farm bill and against needed tax legislation. He dis- approved of restriction of automobile production. He wanted to abolish the forty-hour week. time and a half for overtime, and the Farm Security Administration, and thinks that all social gains ought to be abandoned in the interest of our defense program." Chassen went on to quote Rep. Dondero as -saying, "One dictator nation has demon- strated to the world how to build national de- fense. It was not done by social reform or social gains." Rep. Dondero is again inconsistent. On one issue he says we should give up democracy, later, he says that we should not let even friendship with Russia endanger this democracy, Rep. Dondero might profitably take a definite stand on leading national issues instead of hop- ping back and forth over the fence. - Doris Peterson I'd Rather Be Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON . NEW YORK, Nov. 24 --I have been asked whether the small nations should not have equal power with those large nations which have agreed upon the Moscow Declarations. The an- swer is that they don't have it; cannot have it, and never will have it, any more than Rhode Island is ever going to have equal power with New York. As a matter of fact, if the suggestions were ever made to give Rhode Island equal political power with New York, those same liberals who are for equality among the nations would de- nounce the proposai as the creation of a rotten borough, as a denial of effective voting strength to many millions. in New York, and so on. HE'LL STILL BE SMALLER The proposal to give Britain and Luxembourg the same power in an international organization is not a proposal to do justice to Luxembourg; it is a proposal to inflict injustice on Britain, and on all other large national agglomerations. Those liberals who have been speaking along these lines are,'of course, afraid of big-nation power. They have reason to be. And so, though their proposal takes the form of a sug- gestion that the power of small nations be increased, their actual desire is to see ' the power of the big nations decreased. 'They say they want to raise Ecuador up; they really wish to cut Britain, America, and Russia down, in world political terms. Morally, they take the position that power is evil in itself. Their postwar thinking is along the lines of hobbling power, curtailing power, binding power with thin but strong cords. The squirrel is not as big as the elephant, but they want the world to say he is, to pretend he is, to act as if he is. But power is a reality. Power really exists. Even after you give the squirrel a certificate which says he is quite as big as any elephant, he is still going to be smaller, and all the squirrels will know it and all the elephants will know it. WHEN POWER IS GOOD These thinkers find power hateful, of course, only during a time of peace. in' time of war, they do not object to big-nation power; tfiey are glad it is available; they make gateful use of it to win the common objectives 'of all of us; they depend upon the existence of big-nation power to bring about a world 'in which, they hope, there won't be any more of it. In other words, power is good now, but is going to be- bad tomorrow. It seems to me that those who are thinking along these lines are thinking in terms that are too formal; they are falling into 'verbal traps. Power is not evil. Wrong use of power is evil. To curb power is not a political program. To use it for the right ends is a program. The duty of liberals in the big-power rnations'is not to try to make national power fade away, but to insist on using it for the right objectives. SHOULD A MOUSE WEIGH A TON? That may turn out to be quite a struggle. It is always easier to reach for a verbal an formal solution than to engage in a meaningful struggle. But we are supposed to be fighting for a more democratic world. The creation of a council of confusion, on which the toothles 'pretend to have teeth, while the toothed pretend to be bare- gummed, may not be the same'thing at aL. It may turn out to be merely an unhappy equilib rium, of great forces gone stale, making it quite possible for a wicked small nation (there have been such)' to veto the will of a progressive big nation, and then where are you? The fight for democracy is a fight, indeed; it is to be won by enlisting and using all pos- sible weapons, not by blunting them and dull- ing them. The formal and legalistic solutions which have been proposed show more fear than fight. To ask whether the small nations ought to have equal power with the big is a meaningless question; it is like asking whether a mhoduse should not weigh a ton. The small nations ought to have equal rights of self-development. That is another matter, and in the fight for that, all the power in the world could well be enlisted. (Copyright, 1943. N.Y. Post Syndiate) . ""l""'atio"'ry Measures W HEN the Presidential campaign is at its height next year, one of the major planks in the Republican platform will be presented to the voters "back home" in the form of a re- minder that the GOP has not fostered any of the administration's high tax programs, What does the Republican record show in sup- port of this statement? As Ernest Lindley, writing in the Detroit E"News" pointed out in his column recently, Republicans in Congress have been supporting bills which would raise the cost of living and cause a complete run-away inflation. The GOP has backed the sales tax, which would hit the low income groups hardest. The Repub- licans have tossed all other tax problems into the waste basket while supporting the infla- tionary anti-subsidy bill. Latest reports have the GOP anti-subsidy boys going all out for inflation. with the House pass- age of the anti-subsidy bill. Letters, mostly from feminine constituents, have been flooding Wash- ington telling Republican representatives to vote against the anti-subsidy bill. This sudden surge of public pressure was ignored by the GOP. With next year's Presidential campaign in mind, therefore, the GOP is pulling one of the dirtiest political tricks *i this nation's history, which involves selling the country down the in- flationary road in an attempt to place a Repub- lican in the White House, and gain a majority in Congress. This all boils down to whether the bulk of this nation's voters, the laboring class, will be con- tentsto spend four years at the hands of a party whose policy involves fulfilment of big business demands and ultimately labor's detriment. -Bob Goldman SAWDUST AND OYSTER SHELLS \yE'VE lived through our last football Saturday and we're glad. It's with football games like it is with people who sit at bus stops and never get on the bus. It's the same way as it is with people who ride on subways without newspapers or go to cowboy movies and sit in the last row o the back bal- cony. It worries us. They keep saying that foot- ball games aren't really anything at all. They say that the games are really nothing you'd want to see, but the people, gee, it's the people that you really want to get a look at. All of them gathered together, you watch them, see, and you ;!eep saying to yourself what damn fools people are. These are the same people-the ones that keep telling us these things, the ones that keep watch- ing other people-who tell you to sit down with them and offer you a cigarette and ask if they can order you a cup of coffee. They're the same ones that say: "You know, I think you're an interesting person," and they lean back,-or-"I'd like to know you better," and .smile,-or-"Gee whiz, I don't like knowing only the surfaces of people," and then they hold their head down and look up at you with their eyes and you're supposed to feel like something's going right through you only you never do, you don't at all. You're just em- barrassed until you'd like to die because people keep looking at you all the time. It's a fad these days. It's supposed to be the intellectual thing to do to keep looking at people. We went to a football game just once because they'd been after us so, about how we should go and look at all the people and how there were so many people there whom we should see. We told them we didn't know beans about football but they said it didn't make any difference. SO AT THIS FOOTBALL GAME-I think it was with Minnesota, we were only a sopho- more at the time--we started first to look at this little blonde in front of us. see, but then she turned around and started looking at us and some of them were pretty dirty looks, too. So we decided after all, that we had best confine our looking to other people who were not also look- ing at people. There were so many people obstructing the view. of course, that it was difficult to find anyone who lent himself well to being steadily looked at. There was a fat redhead down the bleachers in front of us who kept howling and jumping around. Everybody around us said that she was watching the game. This was very interesting to us because we hadn't, up to that time. been able to find anyone who was actually watching the game. So we started looking at her but she left pretty soon to get a hot dog and never came back. Frustrated completely, we decided 'not to look at any individual person but rather to sit and absorb the "color" that abounded. However, everytime we'd start absorbing the "color," the color" would start moving around, and some of it would be getting up and down and a little of it would begin to howl. Everyone knows that it's very difficult to absorb color that doesn't stay still. TT WAS ABOUT THIS TIME, when the color was all moving around and we couldn't get started looking at any one person without that person turning around and looking at us, that we borrowed a bottle from the guy next to us ANTI-LABOR: GOP Goes Al Out for r f : 11 MERRY -GOO ROUND By DREW P E AR SON WASHINGTON, Nov. 24 - Behind the Army's breath-taking cut of thir- teen billions from its appropriation bill was some sledge-hammer tactics by the Budget Bureau. And behind that in turn was a scathing off-the- record sessioi of the Ways and Means Committee, at which Detroit's determined Representative John Dingell put the screws on Budget Director Harold Smith. "How much money is the Army spending each month?" Dingell asked Smith. "About seven billions per month," replied the Budget Director. 'The Army," Dingell said, "now has 206 billions already appropri- ated and awaiting expenditure. That means about 29 to 30 billions a ,month. In other words, you're asking us to appropriate at the rate of 39 billions a month though the Army is spending only seven billions a month., "Now will you tell me," continued Dingell. "just how much money the Army must have appropriated ahead of time and lying idle for its loose system of expenditure?" "I don't know that I'd call it loose." r'eplied Smith. "Well, what do you call the fact that we appropriate $32,000,000 for the Pentagon Building and the Army spends $78,000,000? What do you call the fact that around the Pentagon the Army builds 40 miles of road, 27 bridges, removes one lalke, digs out another lake in an- other place, and has altered the entire northeast corner of Virginia Avenue around the .Pentagon Building? "What was this for?" stormed{ Dingell. "To hang a couple of extra stars on Lieutenant General B. ' B. Somerveil in reward for doing what he damn pleases -without permis- sionl from Congress." Saverkrout Ionopoly . . . "Also," continued the irate Con- gressman from Detroit, "what about the million and a half dollars' worth of first-class machine tools that the Army sold in the Detroit area for the ridiculous price of only $40,000? I understand they're now being sold back to the Government. "An expenditure like that has nothing to do with winning the war. We can win the war without throwing the tax-payers money ! I l I- i _,, t . i +.;; - - " F.' i' i : t ,a...""-.- _ '" . t ~"' ' t t5 f 3 ' Y ----- i ; C. g._. .-.._., ... i "Well, maybe I shouldn't object to Thanksgiving with us! I understandI a bunch of savages the first' . .. .. ....- x - _ your relatives spending the Pilgrims entertained Thanksgiving!" - DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichiy WEDNESDAY. NOV. 24, 1943 VOL. LTV No. 20 All notices for the Daily Official Bul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the President in typewritten fori 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 Smoking in University Buildings: Attention is called to the general rule that smoking is prohibited in Uni- versity buildings except in private offices and assigned smoking rooms where precautions can be taken and control exercised. This is neither a mere arbitrary regulation nor an attempt to meddle with anyone's personal habits. It is established and enforced solely with the purpose of preventing fires. In the past year six of the total of 19 fires reported were caused by cigarettes or lighted matches. To be effective, the rule down the yawning mouth of the must necessarily apply to bringing War Department. lighted tobacco into or through Uni-' .'Don't you have some control over versity buildings and to the lighting the Army? You're supposed to be the of cigars, cigarettes, and pipes within Budget Director. Do you put your buildings-including such lighting OK on everything the Army wants?" just previous to going outdoors. If "No." replied Smith, "but I have the rule is to be enforced at all its no authority to stop them." enforcement must begin at the build- , ing entrance. Further, it is impos- Well, why in ;hell did the Army a h uesol eefre buy up the whole sauerkraut crop ileth o he rleso uolnsbe en foe of the United States?" continued class of persons disregards it. It is a Digell. "We aren't runnig a disagreeable and thankless task to German army. And even if we "enforce" almost any rule. This rule were, that's more sauerkraut than against the use of tobacco within all the armies of the world could buildings is perhaps the most thank- tif you fed it to them three less and difficult of all, unless it shall time a ay.have the support - of everyone con- "And why," he asked. "did the cerned. An appeal is made to all Army buy the entire salmon pack at persons using the University build- sky-high prices and then disgorge ings-staff members, students and four fifths of it on the market toward others-to contribute individual co- the end of the season? Is that what operation to this effort to protect you call military planning? University buildings against fires. "Or why did the Army break the Please note especially that the al- OPA ceiling prices on turkeys? We cove at the rear of the main corridor all want the boys to have turkeys, in University Hall is not a smoking but that's not the question. The room and should not be used as such, Army can commandeer turkeys if This statement is inserted at the it wants to, but instead they pay request of the Conference of Deans. 8' cents above the ceiling price. Shirley W.. Smith "It looks to me," concluded Ding- Faculty Directory: To date com- ell, "that this is a result of- the Army paratively few members of the Uni- having too much money. I for one vriysffhvced at the Infor- constitute himself or herself a com- mittee of one to contribute in every reasonable way to the end that there shall be no waste of electricity, wa- ter, gas, oil, coal, or of communica- tions or transportation service. This notice is in behalf not only of the University administration but of var- ious United States Government au- thorities. Library Hours, Thanksgiving Day: On Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 25, the Main Reading Room and the Periodi- cal Room of the General Library will be open from 2:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M. The departmental and collegiate li- braries and study halls will be closed, with the exception of the study hall on the first floor of the General L- brary, which will be open from 8:00 A.M. until noon for the use of men in the armed forces. Books from other parts of the building which are needed for use on that day will be made available in the Main Reading Room if request is made on Wednesday to an Assistant in the Reading Room where the books are usually shelved. W. G. Rice, Director - School 'of Education Faculty will meet on Tuesday, Nov. 30, in the Uni- versity Elementary School Library. The meeting will convene at 4:15 p.m. Mentor Reports: Reports on stand- ings of all Engineering freshmen will be expected from faculty members during the 5th week and again during the 10th week of the semester. These two reports will 'be due about Decein- ber 4 and January 8. Please refer routine questions to Emalene Mason, Office ofthe Dean (Extension 575), who will handle the reports; other- wise, call A. D. Moore, Head Mentor, Extension 2136., 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 until Dec. 1. All deposit receipts become void after that date and no further refunds will be made. H. O. Criser, Director Job Registration: Students who took registration blanks from the University Bureau of Appointments last week are reminded that all blanks are due a week from the day they were taken out. After that peri- od a late registration fee of $1.00 must be charged. This means that the last of the blanks must be back by Friday. Due to the Thanksgjving holiday, blanks taken out last Thurs- day may be returned Friday. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information 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 auspies of the Department of Sociology n Friday, Nov. 26, at 4:15 p0m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The public is invited., Academic Notices SERVICEMEN'S BALLOTS: Republican Senators Propose Amendinents To Insure Representation on Voting Commission. EPUBLICAN CONGRESSMEN, aware of the fact that the next year's president may be determined by the ballots of 10,000,000 service- men, are viewing with favor the proposed ab- sentee voting bill now being debated on the floor of the Senate. The Green-Lucas measure, as it is known, -would set up a War Ballot Commission to su- pervise the Army and Navy administration of absentee voting. Itepublican Senators, 'of course, have definite amendments to propose which would insure them of an adequate rep- 'resentation on the commission. Meeting with Senator Vandenberg, Saturday. a group of men agreed that the method of ap- pointing the corgmission should be changed; instead of having the President pick just any two Republicans and any two Democrats, they propose that the representatives be appointed on recommendation of the parties' central commit- against it because, they said, "it would inter- fere with states rights." Earlier 'last week Rep. John Rankin, from the poll tax state of Miss- issippi, had succeeded in shelving the bill tem- porarily; under a federal administration, sol- diers would not be required to pay a pall tax, so Rep. Rankin suggested that the responsibil- ity of the soldier vote be left with -'the states. T WOULD seem. then, that some people, do not want the servicemen to vote unless they pay a poll tax; others would prevent them from cast- ing ballots unless they vote "right." But, what- ever their political view, whatever their poll-tax status. all servicemen outside the continental limits of the United States as well as those still stationed here should have the right to vote. It would be a step forward, indeed, if the poll tax were abolished nationally-even though it wgre only among the servicemen for the duration- of the war. am not in favor of skinning the tax- payer just to please the brass hats who don't know how to plan." (Copyright. 1943, United Features Synd.) A GREAT VIOLINIST wisely took, advantage of his greatness lastj night in Hill Auditorium by breakingf program conventions and thus per- forming two obscure sonatas and giving some 'deserving works a chance to be heard. Yehudi Menuhin and Adolph Bal- ler opened the program pleasantly with a Beethoven sonata which indi- cated the fine musicianship and ar- tistry of both performers. Then Mr. Menuhin played a Bach sonata which is written for violin alone. It is an intricate piece of music, ex- tremely difficult to perform andl those who are not familiar with Bach found it difficult to listen to. Cer-I tainly the instrument on which the mation Desk in the Business Office for Faculty Directories. These are for general distribution to all qualified persons for use at home and should have general circu- lation. Heretofore the University has delivered them by mail, but to save postage anyone on the staff who has not yet had a Directory is asked to call at the Business Office for his copy. Herbert G. Watkins, Assistant Secretary Conservation of Public Utilities: It is urged that every member of the University community, faculty, stu- dents, clerks, and other employees, that reason wished to include it in his program. It is obvious that no one can claim to understand this selection at first hearing but cer- tainly the potential pleasure to be derived from the work is easily seen; for it contains many strange melodies and fascinating harmon- ies which will one day be fully ap- preciated by the musical world. Mr. Menuhin thanked the audience