PACETWO MICHIGAN DAIlY 'tTht_ fC1:bAY, Dt. ;if), t1943 .... ......... . .. ........ . .. . . ... . . . .... . ..... Fifty-Fourth Year RaUther Be Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON 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 othler 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, 1943-44 Editorial Staff Marion Ford Jane Farrant Claire Sherman Marjorie Borradaile Eric Zalenski Bud Low . Harvey Frank . Mary Anne Olson Marjorie Rosmarin Hilda Slautterback Doris Kuentz Molly Ann Winokur Elizabeth Carpenter Martha Opsion Managing Editor Editorial Director City Editor Associate Editor Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Women's Editor Ass't Women's Editor Columnist Columnist Business Staff Business Manager . . , Ass't Bus. Manager Ass't Bus. Manager Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: EVELYN PHILLIPS Editorials pub/lished in The Michigan Daily are written by inembers of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. War Effort Slowed by Indifference of Women. TJHE NATION-WIDE WAC recruiting program. -which will be opened Jan. 10 here in Ann Arbor, should make every University woman pause and think seriously about what women of the country are doing to help bring victory cloSer. The recruiting program is not intended pri- marily to reach college students because mot of them are too young to volunteer yet. Rather it should make every woman in the country within the eligible age group conscious that she 'has just as important a role to play in this war as our fighting men. Volunteers for the WAC are needed des- perately. Requests have been pouring in from overseas for more than 600,000 WACs. With the opening of the all-out continent invasion, scheduled within the next few months, the need will become even more urgent. So far women have shown a shameful lack of interest. During the last eight months hardly 6000O have volunteered. THERE IS NO NEED to stress the advantages of enlisting in the WAC. Servicewomen re- ceive better food and clothing than most civil- ians, more than adequate pay. chances for higher education and post-war benefits such as money bonuses, preference in private and government employment and bonuses of 10 points on all Civil Service examinations. It is high time that women wake up to the fact that they are shirking their responsibil- ities. We are all in this together, the women as well as the men. There is hard fighting ahead and all of us have an important part to do. -Jennie Fitch 'tITTL E J O: Japanese Peopole Are Not Inherently Wicked N A HITHERTO inconspicuous "comic" called "Little Joe," a subtle exposition of a danger- ous post-war philosophy was presented for the consumption of young American readers in Sun- day's strip. Little Joe's mother sent Christmas presents to Jap internees working on a western ranch with the thought that "everybody understands kind- ness." In return she received a package from Them that exploded when opened. Said Little Joe's mother: "Oh-h-h those awful inhuman beasts! They tried to kill us!" Said Utah, the character who carried the presents: "Yep-I still claim Japs jest don't understand kindness.. When the war ends we shall have to face the problem of dealing with Japan. We probably could place the Jap people under our military thumb and keep them in a state of slavery for 'many years after the war. This would seem to be the artist's (he signs his name Leffingwelh conception of the ideal solution. VITYTT Im TPF m'rTT~T V ffonlosed to the mral NEW YORK, Dec. 30-When General Marshall said that the Japanese are already beaten, though we still have much fighting to do. many of our journalists Jumped him. Bad for morale, they said. Makes over-confidence. A new jour- nalistic game is going on, in which a number of commentators sit about, their eyes as bright as buttons, waiting for some general or statesman to make an optimistic remark. Then they let him have it with the old inflated bladder. Well, it is an easy way to make a living, but it is also a rather crude approach to the complex question of morale in war-time. MORALE IS CONFIDENCE To begin with, morale is confidence. You can't get away from it. Morale is confidence that we can solve our problems. Gloom is not morale: doubt is not morale: worry is not morale. If these things were morale, the French should have been busting with morale in June, 1940, for they were filled with gloom and doubt and worry. The French did not think they were going to win, and they were .Quite right. They didnt win. Contraiwise, the Nazi troops had been in- formed, on the personal word of their leader, that they were of a higher species of human- ity than the French and were, indeed, super- men. Whereupon, by the crude standards cur- rently being set up, they should have lost the war against the French. Somehow, they won. 1 cite these facts to show that the question is .a bit more complicated than would be indicat- ed by our current burlesque debate over wheth- er we ought to wear a property smile or a property frown. THIN AND INSIPID Our own worried approach to morale is thin, childish and insipid. One of our high (but an- onymous) officials became so disturbed. about our supposed over-confidence last week that he even predicted we were soon going to have 400,000 new casualties. This frantic effort to get us to wipe the smile off our faces was, I think, pan- icky and disgraceful. It was an expression of fear of ourselves, just as hysterical as any sud- den expression of fear of the enemy. We need a much richer approach to these matters than this inept little campaign of glum prognosis and simulated woe. If our weapons are good, and plentiful, the people who built them have a right to know it: a parade of those weapons would produce more of same than the pretense that we do not have them. WORK AND PRIDE AND TRUTH A thirty-minute radio speech, telling the evil story of fascism and denouncing same, would have better effect than thirty minutes of syn- thetic tears over alleged American complacency. If we want the people to fight fascism, why don't we tell them the truth about fascism. instead of lies about themselves? Why not explain the importance of the coming second front opera- tion, instead of inculcating the heebie-jeebies about it? An organized campaign to do just this in army camp and factory would be the confident approach to the morale problem. The Army ISOLATIONIST? Dewvey's SayNothing' olicy. Reaps Dividends 0OV. THOMAS E. DEWEY of New York. ac- cording to a poll reported in Tuesday's New York Sun ranks first in his views on foreign policy among the GOP contenders for the Presi- dential nomination. If the victor of the survey had been Shirley Temple, the results could have been no more surprising for with the exception of one brief and almost meaningless remark at the time of the Mackinaw Island conference, Mr. Dewey has said absolutely nothing about foreign pol- icy. Wendell Willkie, the party's outstanding sup- porter of a program of international coopera- tion. ranked a poor third. It would thus appear that the "say nothing wise old owl" attitude which Dewey has been so carefully pursuing since 1940 is reaping dividends in the middle-western agricultural areas of the nation. The results of this poll'reflect either a lack of interest on the part of our fellow countrymen in the vital issue of the moment or a failure to understand even after being involved in a world war for the second time that our nation cannot live peacefully by following a policy of "splendid isolation." -Monroe Fink has been doing something like this through its wonderful special services films; you don't find sound Army officers encouraging their men to fight by telling them that they stink. They know morale to be a comlex of work and pride and truth. The worst aspect of our current informal morale program is that those in charge of it look so scared. They had better be called off before they damage the national morale. (Copyright, 1943. N.Y. Post Syndicate) A CTI()N WISE: Railvay Wage Dispute Must Be Settled Now r1 HE PRESIDENT'S action Monday taking over the nation's railroads carries with it a double significance. Primarily, it averted the most damaging blow our war effort could have suffered. As Secretary of War Stimson pointed out Tues- day, "his action prevented here what our bombers are doing to German transportation, a complete crippling of our rail life-line." It is difficult to conceive of some two million Americans, the railroad workers, actually para- lyzing the efforts of the rest of the nation. In the second place, whatever free enterprise protgonists miight holler, the executive order providing that the railroads be kept intact and operated by private industry, nullifies their cries. In this instance President Roosevelt was coun- seled wisely by history. The memory of the railroad entanglement that came out of govern- ment ownership in 1917-20 provides a basis for present action, but decidedly in the opposi-te direction. JARLY in the first World War, President Wil- son issued an executive order putting the government in charge of the railroads bag and baggage. Wilson made the error of placing political men who knew nothing of railroad manage- nment in charge of the nation's rail systems. The culmination came in 1919 'when William G. McAdoo, then Secretary of the Treasury, was made director general of American railroads. He went so far as having his name printed on every ticket in the scountry and attempted to dictate the lunch hours of rail executives. As a railroad man he made a better finance expert. ' But by the action of Secretary Stimson and the President this comedy of errors will not be repeated. This can be considered as great as any military achievement. This step is, however, only the beginning of untangling one of the most serious tieups in American industry. Notwithstanding the fact that the government is technically operating the roads, the workers' grievances with respect to wages cannot be ignored. If an adjustment is not made now, it will cause an even more serious situation in the near future. It is imperative that some action be taken on this wage dispute immediately. -Stan Wallace BLACK MARK: Company Must A void Further Buiis Accidents ETROIT has had more than its share of bus accdents. Yet, despite the caution taken aft- er the bus-train accident in 1942, another black mark was made against the city's transportation system when a Greyhound suburban bus, crowd- ed with office workers and businessmen, crashed into a streetcir Monday monring. Blame for this accident cannot be placed upon faulty railroad crossings and late signals as in the previous mishap. There is no excuse except thetdriver's negligence which could have prompt- ed the collision. Whatever the minor reasons, whether steam- ed windows or dark hours, it was the driver's responsibility to see that he had clear vision and the ability to safely stop the vehicle. The in- juries of 45 people. five seriously, and the death of the Royal Oak man cannot be shoved off .so lightly. Pressure must be brought against both the particular driver and the company if Detroit is not to face another bus accident in 1944. -Adele Rhodes MERRY-GOI ROU N Dr. By DREW PEARSNh WASHINGTON. Dec. 30 -- Distin- guished 71-year-old Senator Dave Walsh of Massachusetts has appoint- ed himself a committee of one to protect the purity of American wo- manhood. The Navy Department wants to send WAVES overseas, but Walsh, as chairman of the Senate Naval Affairs Committee, says, "Am- erican women must not be subjected to the evil influences of service abroad." The Navy wants WAVES over- seas because of the manpower problem. As things stand now, the Navy is obliged to Use men for cer- ical work at many overseas bases nowhere near war zones. The Navy has large establishments in Puerto Rico. Trinidad, Newfound- land, the Canal Zone. These are no more dangerous militarily than New York or San Francisco. WACS are al- lowed to serve there, and the Navy is allowed to send civilian women there, but WAVES are barred be- cause Dave Walsh is out to protect American womanhood. Everybody high up in the Navy, has pleaded with Congress for auth- ority to let the WAVES go overseas. including Secretary Knox, Admiral Randall Jacobs, chief of Naval Per- sonnel, and Captain Mildred H. Mc- Afee, director of the WAVES. Admiral Jacobs told House Naval Affairs that Aftmiral Harold Stark, European Commander - in - Chief, had sent word: "Send me WAVES, I could use fifty in my London of - fides and replace 50 men for fight- ing." The House committee was impress- ed and was willing to give te WAVES a break, but Walsh blocked action onathe Senate side. The mat- ter never came out'for debate on the Senate floor. Walsh sat on it in: committee. Meantime. the Wa'r Department has sent 1,000 WACS to the North African theatre alone, More Strikes Ahead There are a lot more strikes in the country than the public is aware of. The Government has abandoned the policy of regular announcements of the number of strikes and the num-j ber of many hours lost. Thus the strikes do not get into the news- papers.j But here are some figures which reveal that the no-strike pledge of GRIN AND BEAR IT t/ C-1._ t- -- -I 0r , L, V"t5 tC 'f i - x "Willis, stop piling your stuff in that linen closet- I expect tIh- stuff we sent to the laundry will eventually come hack!" labor organizations is not very ef- fective. In November alone, there were 120 strikes. The December figure will be only slightly lower.. In the week before Christmas. 91,000 man days were lost in plants engaged in war production. Two days be- fore Christmas, 21,000 people were out on strike, and a number of critical items were behind sched- ile. Some of the strikes have no rela- tion to wages. Take for example the rtrike which Washlinlgton officials re- to as "The Baltimore backhouse strike. The Western Electric plants at Baltimore are producing such highly important items as marine cables and radar wire. But white workers went on strike because white and colored workers did not have separate toilet facilities. The War Department was obliged to step in last week and take over the plants--solely because of toilet trouble. Workers began coming back slowly, but four days after the plants were taken over, over half the work- ers were still out. Unfortunately, there is every probability that strikes will in- crease, rather than decrease in the future. Next in line demanding wage increases will be aircraft, steel and shipyard workers. John L. Lewis's victory broke the line. has stimulated demands for increases in many industries. After the President yielded to Lew - is, George Harrison. railroad brother- hoods chief, visited the White Hose and said, "For G aw d's sake, you gt t o r e e n c , w y n t o yive it to your enemies. why not to your friends.?" Red Tape HB S eMe iIPf Meat producers in Mexico would like to send a million pounds of fresh beef a week to the U.S.A., but the U.S.A. declines to receive it. There is no question of foot-and- mouth disease, as in Argentina. It is merely a technical quetion of whether or not U.S. Federal meat in- spectors should cross t.he border. Washington says "no." The law gives our inspectors no authority to operate outside the United States. Washington says Mexico will have to set up its own Federal meat in- spection system before the beef can be shipped across. It is a game- of tiek-tack-toe, with the housewife suffering. But not a pound can come across. Actually, an old plant at the same site years ago had U.S. Federal in- spection. under a special agreement. cannot be revived. ,Copyright. 1943, United Features Synd.) By Lichty -- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN THURSDAY, DEC. 30, 1943 VOL. LIV No. 42 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, Jan. 5. from 4 to 6 o'clock.j Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: The Adminis- trative Board has agreed to penalize students who are absent from classes before or after Christmas vacation, unless they have been recommended for make-up privileges by Assistant{ Dean E.A. Walter. Students who were# absent on Monday, Dec. 20, will be. penalized by a subtraction of six, honor points from their academicl records. Three honor points per day will be subtracted for absence on Tuesday, Dec. 21, Wednesday, Dec. 29, and Thursday, Dec. 30. In more extreme cases of absence, students ,v Crockett Johnso n will be suspended from the College for the balance of the Fall Term. The Administrative Board The Members of the Faculty of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts will meet in Rm. 1025, Angell Hall on Monday, Jan. 3, at 4:10 p.m. Reports of various committees have been prepared in advance and are included with this call to the meet-I ing. They should be retained in your files as part of the minutes of the January meeting. Edward H. Kraus Agenda: 1. Consideration of the minutes of the meeting of Dec. 6, 1943, pp. 1006- 1010. 2. Consideration of the reports sub- mitted with the call to this meeting. a: Executive Committee-Professor Louis I. Bredvold; b. Executive Board of the Graduate School-Professor Chester Schoepfle; c. University Council-no report; d. Senate Ad- visory Committee on University Af- fairs -Professor Clarence D. Thorpe; e. Deans' Conference-Dean E. H. Kraus. 3. Adjustment of College Regtula- tions for Students in the Armed For- ces. 4. New Business. 5. Announcements. Freshmen, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Freshmen may not drop courses without "E" grade after Saturday, Jan. 1, 1944. Only students with less than 24 hours credit are affected by this reg- ulation. They must be recommended by their Academic Counsellor for this extraordinary privilege. E. A. Walter, Assistant Dean Concerts Concerts: The University Musical Society announces the following con- certs after the Christmas vacation period. Choral Union Series: Tedy Jan. 18, 8:30 p.m.-Atu Rubinste. Pianist; Sunday, Jan. 30, 2:30 p.m. Marjorie Lawrence, Soprano: Thurs- day, Feb. 10, 8:30 p.m.-Mischa El- man, Violinist; Thursday. March 6, 8:30 p.m.-Ezio Piza, Bass. A lim- ited number of tickets are available, tax included: $2.75. $2.20, $1.65, $1.10. Fourth Annual Chamber Music Festival: The Roth Quartiet : Feri Roth. violin;Michael uitter. vio- lin; Julius Shaier, viola, and Oliver Edel, violincello, will participate in three concerts, Friday, Jan. 21, at 8:30 p.m. and Saturday, Jan. 22, at 2:30 and 8:30 p.m. Series tickets. ta:. i~tiirnr7 tq r, 4'7,ft r r sf1 f ar - Br BARNABY Fs that what was in that _ package from Aunt Emma, Barnaby? Boxing gloves? I ~ Aunt Emma 1 sent them? ' Cp,,,hi 1943 Fied Pbfoin --7 u ..ii j R ll L x v v s ar v ar w w av v .s v v inciuded,$7, $2.2 ads$.z , 0 : !n- Fgle concerts, $110 and 55c-on sale School of Education Faculty: An i at offices of the University Musical informal conference of the staff will Society in Bumrton Memorial Tower. be held tonight at 8:00 in the East Charles A. Sink, President r Mr. O'Malley' Aunt Emma gave me the boxing gloves. It wasn't Santa Claus.. So you'll have to keep on investigating him, huh? rAunt Emma? I I .1 ; 4u Public interest in Santa Claus is at low ebb after Christmas, m'boy. My startling revelations won't get the headlines they deserve. . . So my committee ought perhaps turn its attentiontoward something else. Say! How about the Easter Bunny? when is Easter? 9s Same day as usual. First Sunday alter the first full moon after the Vernal Equinox... . But that's some time away, isn't it m'boy? While we're waiting, let sr slip on the boxing gloves and go a few fast rounds. S>3 Conference Room of the Rackhamn Building. To Students of the College of' Lit- erature, Science and the Arts: Stu- dents of this college who were ad- vised by the University Health Ser- vice to remain away from classes; Dec. 20. 21. 29. 30, should apply at 1220 Angell Hall for excuses which they may present to their instructors. E. H. Walter Choral Union Members: Members of the Chorus are requested to return Events Today Varsity Glee Club rehearsal to- night at 7:30. The American Society of Mechani- cal Engineers will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Union. A movie entitled "Grand Coulee Dan," which deals with materials handling methods and equipment used in the construction of this dam, will be shown. Professor Ransom S. Hawley will comment on the film. A copy of the 'Ensian pi- fairej will hP in ~~ 1~andorde~rs :J Tr I