THE MICHIGAN DAILY - VND4~ ~ Fifty.Fourth Year |dited 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 ,wegular 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 $525. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942.43 Editorial Staff Marion Ford . Jane Farrant . Claire Sherman Marjorie Borradaile Eric Zalenski Bud Low . . &(ary Anne Olson Marjorie Rosmarin . Hilda Slautterback Doris Kuentz B . . . . Managing Editor . . . Editorial Director . . . , . City Editor Associate Editor . . . . . Sports Editor . . Associate Sports Editor . . . . Women's Editor . . Ass't Women's Editor . . . 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: MARION FORD Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. GOODFELLOWS: Campus Drive Gives Yule Cheer to Needy IF THE Christmas spirit which is so sparklingly displayed in local shop windows means any- thing to Ann Arbor residents, servicemen and students, then those 350 coeds who will be selling Goodfellow Dailies tomorrow should "go over the top" of their $2,000 goal. Like most drives, this one is for, a worthy cause; the money collected will be used to pur- echase clothes, food, Christmas baskets and medical supplies for needy Ann Arbor fam- 1lies. Whatever remains of the total will be placed in the Goodwill Fund and the Textbook Lending Fund. There are 27 campus organizations who think enough of the Goodfellow Drive to donate their time and energies to sell the papers; the least we can do is to buy one. -Virginia Rock AYD OPPOSED: New 'Fascist' Group Denounces Movement UNDER the leadership of Rev. Harvey Spring- er, one of our native fascists; a "new na- tional youth organization" was launched Nov. 25 in Detroit. Formed expressly to oppose the na- tional group, American Youth for Democracy, the meeting opened its campaign by calling AYD the "Young Communist League under a new name." AYD, organized nationally on October 17, has dedicated itself "to all that is democratic, Just and progressive." By distributing copies of PM's pledge against race hatred and intol- erance AYD has already begun taking action on its principles. The Michigan AYD has formed committees to work for the creation of better recreational facilities in Detroit and other congested areas to combat juvenile delinquency. A resolution urging that the Dies Committee investigate the AYD has been adopted by Springer's group formed in Detroit. But are the men, Springer and his associates, valid critics? Springer came to Detroit with the expressed purpose of helping Gerald L. K. Smith's Amer- ica First Party's campaign disrupt national unity. At the Nov. 25 meeting, Springer de- nounced the Roosevelt administration and the Moscow Conference and made assaults upon Negro, Jewish and Catholic groups. Springer has long been known as a follower of Gerald B. Win- rod, now under Federal Grand Jury indictment. " WHEN Jack Raskin, executive-secretary of the Civil Rights Federation in Detroit, called Springer, he learned .that Henry Ford and his friends are supporting the new group. Entire' publicity for its opposition to AYD has been through the "Times" and other Hearst papers. The support of Hearst and of Ford, whose Dear- born Independent of the 20's was violently anti- Semitic, immediately brands the group as op- posed to the American principles of liberty. Yesterday's "Free Press" told of a complaint by officers of the Wayne County CIO Council that trea'sonable speeches were made at a meet- ing in Pontiac Nov. 30 by Springer and Smith. The complaint was referred to the FBI. DREW PEARSON'S MERRY-G0-ROUND WASHINGTON, Dec. 5.-Secretary Ickes has scraped up an old Colorado law under which he is asking mine operators in Leadville to pay back out of mine royalties $1,400,000, representing the cost of a tunnel. The tunnel was a free gift quietly voted by Congress. One of the chief beneficiaries was Bernie Baruch's close adviser, Fred Searles. Another was DeWitt Smith, vice president of Searles' Mining Company, and now vice president of RFC's Metals Reserve. There is not a bit of evidence that either was active in having pushed the $1,400,000 taxpayers' gift to Lead- Ville. Back in 1933, Leadville interests applied for a Public Works grant and loan to build a tunnel under their mining properties to drain off the water and facilitate mining lead and zinc. At that time, they proposed repaying to the Gov- ernment 75 percent of the project's cost. How- ever, PWA Administrator Ickes didn't think the project sound and refused. Ten years later, Senators Johnson and Mil- likin of Colorado, with Congressman Rockwell, suddenly tacked a rider on an appropriations bill providing $1,400,000 to dig the tunnel which PWA previously turned down. But this time, no provision was made for pay- ing anything back to the Government. Ickes Gets Thrifty ... After Congress voted the money, it was up to Secretary of the Interior Ickes to dig the tunnel. It was the same project he had vetoed ten years before, only this time the Govern- ment was to spend all the money with no pro- vision for repayment. This made thrifty Harold sore. He imme- diately went to equally thrifty Comptroller Gen- eral Lindsay Warren, suggesting it was the prob- able intent of Congress to provide for repayment, even though not specified. Warren didn't re- quire much egging. Enthusiastically, he agreed. Terribly upset, Senators Johnson and Mil- likin, plus Representative Rockwell, called at the Interior Department, spent a total of six. hours protesting vigorously. Ickes' reply was that Congress had created the Comptroller General as its own watchdog to keep an eye on Executive expenditures. Since the Comp- troller was their agent, he suggested they see him. They did. But with no luck. Their agent was not obliging. (Copyright, 1943, United Features Syndicate) I'd XRather Be Rixght_ By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, Dec. 5.-The meeting at Cairo was both a council of war and a conference on the peace. The decisions taken by it as a council of war have quite properly been kept secret. The only decisions announced in the Cairo com- munique are decisions on the peace. We are told that Japan is to be thoroughly whipped, and stripped of her spoils, even of such ancient loot as Formosa and Korea. She will be left her own island home, but all territories acquired by her since 1914, even by legal man- date, are to be cut from her. THIS IS THE PEACE CONFERENCE The meeting in Cairo might almost be consid- ered a first meeting of that "Council of Asia" whose formation Mr. Churchill suggested not so long ago in a radio address. In which case, we might consider the recent meeting at Moscow to have been the first meeting of the "Council of Europe," whose formation the Prime Minister had also proposed in the same speech. And the coming meeting, of Messrs. Roosevelt, Churchill, Chiang Kai-shek and Stalin would then be a combined grand meeting of both councils. PEACE AS A CONTINUATION It is difficult to realize, but it is true, that we are actually legislating the future of the world through four men. They are proceeding from a definite operational method for war to a defin- ite operational method for peace. Maybe this is a case of Clausewitz upside down. The German strategian considered war to be "a continuation of politics by other means." At Cairo we have a foreview of the peace and its politics as a continuation of the war, of the forces and the authorities which are winning the war. The old formula doubles back on the aggressors, and they will die of it. Their powers, which seem so limitless, are in reality sharply limited. Their decisions, so far, are decisions to liberate, to set free, to return and restore. They have decided to make Korea an independent nation. Korea, and the world, would welcome any agency which contributed to that end, even the weather. In the unlikely and absurd case that the three men at Cairo had decided to, say, give Korea to Portugal, there would have been a world-wide storm of protest lonIlie Says "GIVE ME none of your missiona'ries and cru- saders," said the Accountant. He had in mind the fact that where faith and zeal show in one person, they invariably produce a social menace. He specified "Teddy and F.D.R." as the type. He is correct. Such men are creative and troublesome, being self-starters and certain to keep going. We need wait but three generations to see the results of such dynamic spirits. In the Euphrates Valley they were Jews. In Hol- land they were Calvinists. In England they were Puritans and in France. Huguenots. If you examine men of the faith-zeal amalgam, you will be apt to discover that their grandsons own most of the banks, control the corporations which the speaker likes to audit and perhaps endowed the chair he occupies at the university. Many sacred ideas were borrowed long ago by commerce from those who keep that garden of words called religion and ethics. Here is "guar- antee," "value,"' "security," "fidelity," "worth" and "goods." All emerged from the experience of creative men who went afar in economics or religion chasing wild dreams. Or the remark may have referred to nothing particular except the solidity of such things as trust companies, investment houses, industrial plants, mining companies, river franchises, realty subdivisions, international contracts and similar firms. Notice the words "firm" meaning solid, "contracts" meaning to cement good faith, "companies" signifying fellowship, "plants" deriving from growing life, "invest" ariving from to be clothed, etc. Today these words which, according to the Accountant, should have fallen dead on the first lips which spoke them, are his symbols conveying ideas, striking with the impact of a gong at times and living among us with such usefulness that no group can meet at lunch, teach a class, transact a business or even go into a commit- tee without them. In factory, field, market and in the drawing rooms as well as from the rostrum or in the laboratory, these symbols carry the feelings and desires and wills just because all during the history of our culture, persons capable of high emotion, venturesome action and explorative drive packed succinct ideas into them. The accountant never meant what he said. Faith and zeal not only motivate men, turn the defeated back to victory and leave an ordered nation, but it is faith and zeal combined with consistent action which give tone to the symbols themselves. Such symbols convey value from mind to mind and, therefore, the exchange mer- chant, the banker and the trust company use those words to Ain and hold their patrons. Edward W. Blakeman Counselor in Religious Education .. 4i ted THE REPUBLICAN and Southern Democrat coalition has done it again. All possibility of fair and equitable overseas voting for soldiers was smashed by the Senate Friday with the passage of a substitute to the Green-Lucas bill, leaving control of the ser- viceman vote in the hands of the individual states. Instead of the four-man commission advocated by the bill, each state will decide for itself who votes and how. This means that the poll tax states whose senators were influential in putting through the substitution will again be represent- ed by a small fraction of the voting population. All this so that men like McKellar of Ten- nessee, .McClellan of Arkansas and Eastland of Mississippi retain a chance for reelection. All this so that the Republicans may again feel they have thrown a monkey wrench at the Administration. Men denied the right to vote in a country for which they are asked to die cannot help but feel they are waging a useless battle. -The Editorial Director which would have nullified the decision. The great, new powers which these heads of states have assumed rest on the fact that they are operating in an atmosphere of consent. THE POWER TO SET FREE Similarly, the power to free Austria, exercised at Moscow, is not quite so awful as it appears. Anybody has that power, who can do it. The heads of states are operating by consent, but they are operating. There actually is some- thing new in the world. When we go from war to peace, we need not go from force to forceless- ness, from purpose to no purpose. All this is strange, new governmental territory, somewhat alarming by its very unfamiliarity. Butwho shall say that the trip has not been a rewarding one, so far, or unworthy of continuance? Maybe we have built better than we knew; which is a not unaccustomed product of our way of life. (Copyright, 1943, N.Y. Post Syndicate) Jo fihe C6k0 o GRIN AND BEAR IT Letters to the Editor must be type- written on one side ofthe paper only and signed with the name and address of the writer. Requests for anonymous publication will be met. On Your Own .. . T LOOKS as if my letter on the front page of Thursday's Daily started at least some readers think- ing. I did not mean that I thought it was the responsibility of the Un- versity to hand the students a new war program or a self-government charter. It's not a question of MORE freedom; it's a matter of being a participant in the freedom we have. I threw the challenge into the ring for University women who have the courage and initiative to climb down from the ivory tower to pick it up. There are those who did. Someone took the responsibility to suggest that a list be prominently displayed of all places that needed help. The coeds who are conscientious, serious about running the campus more democratically won't wait for speakers on bended knees or fer- vent pleas from The Daily. The few admirable ones that are doing war work will go quietly ahead and do more. What I really meant was that I hoped the University women would defy them-all those who have said that the situation is "regrettable, but unavoidable"-show them by having the courage to seize the initiative; prove that they really believed the battle for democracy worth fighting for .I was hoping that everyone would do WAR WORK, and do it on their own, --A University Coed War Work for Men ... S LONG as you are jumping all over our lazy Michigan coeds who refuse to spend two hours per week in war work, I might as well add 4-F men and freshmen males to the list. What is their right to a compla- cent, normgal student;.xistence ,simi- lar, to the one you are blasting the Michigan coed out of? I say they have no such right! They are fi bettr than your so- called coed vlif still wrapped in a pre-Pe'l -Ht tr--dream '.lf 'ideal' college life! In fact, these men, espe- cially those whom the Army or Navy has discarded as unfit for combat duty, should feel morally obligated to do more than a normal share. They can be of invaluable assistance be- hind the scenes. It isn't their fault that the 4-F tag has been hung on them. But too many of these men are attempting to live a pre-war col- lege existence, smug in the knowledge that the coed will take the verbal By Lielity l -- 7 -1 \ Fat ; 2" '>F a t "I'm going to write my gal and break our eng-iaeent-when this is over, I never want to eat out of tin cans again'." beatings for lethargy, laxity and lazi- ness. how about our 200-odd fresh- man men? Most of them have enough money to pay for room and board and incidental expenses. So, they don't feel a bit obligated in lending a helping hand, even though they will wait hours for meals because of a shortage of help. There are many freshmen who will be going into the service before long. Their natural reaction is to "eat, drink and be merry for . . ." That sort of philosophy was all right in some cases, but it does not become the college freshman who should co- ordinate his education with aid in the war effort. -Ed Zalenski DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SUNDAY, DEC. 5, 1943 VOL. LIV No. 29 All notices for the Daily Official Bul- letin are to be sent to the office of the President in typewritten form by 3:30 p.m. of the day preceding its publica- tion, except on Saturday when the no- tices should be submitted by 11:30 a.m. Notices Student_ Tea: President and Mrs., Ruthven will be at home to students, Wednesday afternoon, Dec. 8 from, 4 to 6 o'clock. Instructions for Reporting Acci- dents. It seems necessary again to call attention to the necessity for re- porting every accident immediately on its occurrence. One or two unfor- tunate situations have arisen re- cently due to the failure of somebody, whose duty it was, to make such a report. Reports should be made in accordance with the following in- structions: (1) Report AlluAccidents occur- ring in line of duty involving any person on the University payroll in. whatever capacity, whether medical care is required or not. Accidents: should be reported in writing or by telephone to the Business Office of, the University Hospital (Hospital ex tension 307). A supply of University;; of Michigan accident report forms (No. 3011) will be furnished on re- quest by the Hospital Business Office., (2) Medical Care. Injuries re- quiring medical care will be treated only at the University Hospital. Em- ployees receiving care elsewhere will be responsible for the expense of such treatment.- Whenever possible a written report of any accident should accompany the employee to the In- formation Desk on the Main Floor of the University Hospital. This report will be authority for the Hospital to render necessary medical care. (3) Emergency Cases. Emergency medical care will be given at the Hos- pital without a written accident re- port. Ambulancercases should be taken directly to the Ambulance En-. trance, at the rear of the Main Build- ing of the University Hospital. In all' such cases the written accident re- port should be forwarded as promptly as possible to the Business Office of the Hospital. The so-called Workmen's Compen- sation law is fo the mutual protec- tion of employer and employee. In order to enjoy the privileges, provided by the law all industrial accidents must be reported promptly to the, correct authorities. These reports entitle each employee to compensa- Lion for loss of time and free medi- cal care as outlined in the law. The Compensation Law covers any industrial accident occurring while an employee is engaged in the activi- ties of his employment which results in either a permanent or temporary disability, or which might conceiv- ably develop into a permanent or temporary disability. Further Information. If at any time an employee wishes further in- formation regarding any compensa- tion case, he is urged to consult either the Hospital Business Offie or the Office of the Chief Resident Physician at the Hospital, or the Business Office of the University on the Campus. --Shirley W. Smith The Faculty of the College of Lit- erature, Science and the Arts will meet in Room 1025, Angell Hall, on Monday, Dec. 6, at 4:10 p.m. Notices of this meeting and the proposed agenda 'and reports have been distributed through campus mail. Edward H. Kraus Phillip. Scholarships: Freshman students who presented four units 'of Latin, with or without, Greek, for admission to the University, and who are continuing the study of either language, are invited to compete for the Phillips Classical Scholarships. Two scholarships, of fifty dollars each, will be awarded on the basis of an examination covering the pre- paratory work in Latin and in both Latin and Greek, as described in the bulletin on scholarships, a copy of which may be obtained in Room 1, University Hall. The examination will be held this year on December 9, in a room and at an hour to be determined by the mutual conveni- ence of the contestants. Interested students are urged to leave their names with Professor Copley or Dr. Pearl, 2026 A. H., or with Dr. Ray-, ment, 2030 A. H. Graduating Seniors in Aeronauti- cal, Civil, and Mechanical Engineer- ing: Mr. Wesley J. Hennessy, Direc- tor of Engineering Training of the Grumman Aircraft Engineering Cor- poration, Bethpage, L.I., N.Y., will be in Ann Arbor all day Monday, Dec. 6, to interview seniors who will grad- uate in the early part of 1944. Inter- views will be held in Room 3205 East Engineering Building. Interested sen- iors will please sign the Interview an, University Museums, who has for some time been sending Michigan Dailies to University met in the armed services, asks that all' who are able to do so send her theiiused but unclipped Datlies for th purpose. Attention, Student Blood Donors: Four hundred soldiers are coming from Fort Custer to donate their blood as a Chbistinas gifton Dec. 16 and 17. All student appointments have been cancelled for the above dates. Watch the Michigan Daily for January Blood Bank dates. University Lecture: Dr. Hans Si- mons, Dean of the School of Politics, New School for Social Research, will lecture on the subject, "Problems of Reconstruction in Germany," under the auspices of the Department of Political Science, on Monday, Dec. 6, at 7:30 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The public is invited. Food-Handlers' Lecture: A series of two lectures for food-handlers will be given on Tuesday evenings, De- cember 7 and 14, at 8:00 pjm. in Kel- logg Auditorium. All food-handlers working in com- mercial establishments are required by City Ordinance to atteid a series in order to obtain a permanent food- handlers' card. All persons concerned -with food service to University students are asked to attend. Academic Ntices Students, Fall Teim, College of Lit- erature, Science, and the Arts: Courses dropped after Saturday, Dec. 11, by students other than freshmen will be recorded with the grade of E. Freshmen (students with less than 24 hours of credit) may drop courses without penalty through the eighth week. Exceptions to these regula- tions may be made only because of extraordinary circumstances, such as serious illness. -E. A. Walter English 181 will not meet Tuesday. -M. L. Williams Concerts, Choral Union Concert: The Uni- versity Musical Society announces the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Serge Koussevitzky, Conductor, for the fifth concert in the; current Choral Union Series on Wednesday, Dec. 8, at 8:30 p.m. in 11111 Audi- torium. The program will consist of numbers by William Schuman, Shos- takovich, Moussorgsky, Debussy and Rimsky-Korsakoff. -Charles A. Sink, President I BARNABY By Crockett Johnson I Hey, Mom. Will you take me to see Santa Claus so I can talk to him? Why-yes, I didn't think he believed in Santa Claus any more ... Jane never has., had to persuade ive her Ma! You won't forget to take me to see Santa Claus this year,.wil you? It's no trouble, Mr. O'Malley ... 4 We'd have gone to see Santa Claus anyway ... We wouldn't spoil all our mothers' fun ... I I FcA