T t 17? I CV-1ft-"A 't f' -,ii V 7f1a~..' i tal -r - 4 a a t L 11 L' lr.i 1 l.. 111 "_a is\- L .f*,1 L T ' rw +r wrrn Aar 'rntt g; JIM 6, 1944 4 Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority. of the Board in Control Of Studenit 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 entitledto the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspapet. All rights of repub- lication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by.car- rier .$4.25, by mail $525.--- Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 Editorial Staff Miarion Ford . . . . . . Managing Editor Jane Farrant . . . . . . Editorial Director Claire sherman . . . . . . City Editor Marjorie Borradalle . . . Associate Editor Eric Zalenski - . . . . . Sports Editor Bud Low. . . . . Associate Sports Editor Harvey Frank . . . Associate Sports Editor Mary Anne Olson . . . . . Women's Editor Marorie osmarfn . . . Ass't Women's Editor Hilda Slautterback . . . . . Columnist boris Kuentz . . . . . . . Columnist Business Staff. Molly Ann Winokur . . Business Manager. Elizabeth Carpenter . Ass't Bus. Manager Matha Opsion . . Ass't Bus. Manager Telephone 23424-1 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. READY-MADE: U. S. Strikes Inetitably Help Nazi Propaganda A STATEMENT, attributed to Gen. Marshall, to the effect that U.S. Labor troubles have provided fuel for the Nazi propaganda machine and perhaps delayed revolt iif Europe has created a frenzy of denial and surprised horror among labor leaders. The newspaper, PM, goes to great length to prove that the -Axis has made little use of Am- erican labor troubles as propaganda material. It also implies that Gen. Marshall has an anti- labor bias and merely wishes to create disunity between soldiers and workers. If Iferr Goebbels has not yet seized upon American labor troubles as grist for his mill, he is more stupid than we have thought. It is perfect, pre-digested material for his purposes. The whole story, told wthout prevarication would have a psychological upliftijg effect on the German people and an equally depressing effect on underground groups in occupied countries. As for the charge that Gen. Marshall is trying to antagonize the armed forces toward labor, it is logical that fighting men should be disgusted with recent strikes and threatened strikes. It is not hard to -understand the attitude of serv- icemen toward workers on the home front who fail to do their duty. However, Gen. Marshall, a great diplomat as well as a great military lead- er, would be the last person to try to drive a rift between servicemen and labor. It is significant that Marshall's statement, which merely referred to the enemy's capital- ization of strikes for propaganda material, did not accuse labor groups, did not in.fact specif- ically mention them. Then why all this protest over a statement that "strikes have hurt the Allied war effort? Without discussing the pros and cons of who is to blame for recent steel, coal and railroad troubles, it is pretty obvious to everyone that labor troubles have hurt and are hurting our war effort. Why is it so shocking that a high of- ficial should say so? ,Labor leaders, perhaps suffering twinges of conscience, are evidently trying to shift blame to the administration and at the samtie, to divert public attention from themselves by mak- ing a big noise-a furor entirely unjustified by Gen. Marshall's words. -Jennie Fitch BLOOD BANK: Civilians Are Needed To Fill Month's Quota ECOGNIZINIG the need for donors to them January Union blood bank, Navy men have already signed up to fill over half-the quota for this month. With 170 Navy men registered, 152 civilians and Army trainees must make up the remainder of the quota. The evident negligence on the part of civilian students in the University to sign up for the blood bank this month shows a defin- ite lack of interest in campus affairs. I'd Rather Be Right_ By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, Jan. 6.-I am not surprised to hear Senator Wheeler making a big thing of the report that the Allied invasion forces will consist of 73 per cent Americans and only 27 per cent English. If Senator Wheeler had not managed to find an anti-allied moral somewhere in the second front situation, I would have been left with an incomplete feeling, something like waiting for him to drop that other shoe. Fer an old familiar strategy is at work; it is merely using new tactics. It is not as if the men who are trying to make a scandal about the division of troops on the second front had no records. They have long records of opposition to Great Britain and to Russia and to our other allies. THE MOOD IS ETERNAL It is not as if they had suddenly heard of a supposedly unfair division of soldiers, and had clapped their hands to their heads, and moved in to stop it. The real truth. is that whatever the issue has been ,they have managed to squeeze an anti-allied meaning out of it. This is no isolated squawk. This thing has roots. When theissue was that of fortifying the Atlantic islands, these same men "proved" that Britain was short-changing us, by giving us mere 99-year leases, instead of permanent possession, though in a world changing as rap- idly as ours, 99 years is just about as long as forever. The same group once "proved" that Russia's refusal to give us bases would. cost us 1,90,090O casualties; in that instance they used a scare about American casualties as a point against Russia; they are now using a scare about American casualties on the second front as a point against England. We have to remember that we have heard these cries before, we have seen these tears before. The subject matter changes, but the mood is eternal. THESE ARE NOT BRAND-NEW MEN But these men always act as if they have no pasts. Just a bunch of fellows talking about the second front, you see. A brand-new problem, and now let's sit down and discuss it. Ah, but these are not brand-new men. These men who have always tried to inject nationalistic argu- ments into a coalition war. They are doing what they have ever done. On November 11, 1941, Senator' Wheeler said: "If we go to war with Japan, the only reason will be to help England." (The Japanese anti-Pearl Harbor striking force must already have been assembled). Today Mr. Wheeler says that we are going to make up 73 per cent of the second front forces, and Great Britain only 27 per cent. It is the same man, and the same serial story; nothing is new, except that another page has beenturned. THOSE HIDDEN MEANINGS But we must not underestimate the political power, of, these nationalistic outcries. For Sen- ator Wheeler says many things that he does not put into words. By his comments on the supposed (but unconfirmed) 73-27 ratio of Am- erican and British soldiers, he murmurs mean- ingfully, if wordlessly, that American leader- ship doesn't care about American lives; that Generals Marshall" and Eisenhower are glee- fully letting England off easy; or that our military leadership is inept; or that it is care- less of its men. And our troops absorb these hidden meanings, too; a consideration which has just brought an outraged editorial against the Wheelers from the Army, and Navy Jour- nal. It seems to me that we have to make a funda- mental decision. We have to decide that our generals are as patriotic as any isolationist Sen- ator, and are doing the very best they can for us, or we ought to get new generals. We have to strike down these hidden meanings in the nationalist lament. And the chief of. these hidden meanings, which snarls at us out of every. complaint, is that our coming casualties will be due to a man named Roosevelt, not to a man named Hitler. (Copyright. 1944, New York Post Syndicate) Work absences in a Cleveland, Ohio, plant were reduced by a labor-management drive from 22,000 hours to 8,500 hours in a four-month per- iod, in spite of increased employment. WASHINGTON, Jan. 6.-Terrence Burke, e itor of the Loyola College newspaper, came t Washington the other day and got an appoin ment to see the Vice-President. He asked M Wallace for a statement in the form of advice the young men of this generation. Wallace grinned and shook his head. haven't got anything to say. I never liked when the old folks handed out advice, and I a: not going to impose my advice on others." Theboy stared, puzzled. He had never four an adult unwilling to tell the young how to b have. There was a long pause. It looked as the interview would fold up on the spot. Presently Wallace resumed. "The only wa for a young fellow to determine the right cours is to search within himself. Advice imposed on him is no good. It has to spring from within." Wallace had struck a theme close to his hear He warmed up. "A man came in here the other day and aske for the titles of the ten books which had infh ennced me most. He was getting the same thin from a lot of people-the President, Mrs. Roose velt, Churchill, Stalin, and others. I didn't war to do it, because books that have influenced m might not be the right books for others. I neve like to prescribe for others. "But I did name the Bible and Plato's Re- pubic. These two books are full of the idea of the dignity of the human soul, respect for the individuat They state it over and over again. The ancient Hebrews and the Greeks -the Bible and, Plato. Both civilizations were based on the dignity of the individual human being." Terrence Burke had expected to stay onl: five minutes. But the Vice-President was talk ing so earnestly that it was obviously not th moment to go. He sat like the student at th feet of Gamaliel. "The only way to develop your full strength is to reach out for something greater than yourself. That holds for a runner in a track meet, and it also holds for a politician or a business man. You have got to reach beyond your grasp, or you will never explore your full capacities. "This is in the Bible time and again. Ther are a lot of things in the Bible that fit condition today-even infliation!" Bible on Renegotiation ... HERE WALLACE reached for his Bible an searched through it for the Book of Amos "Amos was the oldest of all the prophets, and a real social revolutionary." The Vice-President started reading from th eighth chapter of Anios. "'Hear this, O ye tha swallow up the needy, even to make the poor o the land to fail . ..''' Wallace looked up. "Those are the prof- iteers," he said. "And listen to this. Amos is putting his finger on the people who don't want to renegotiate contracts. Merry-Go-Round ... "'WHEN will the new moon be gone, that we may sell corn? Andthe Sabbath, that we may set forth wheat, making the ephah smal and the shekel great.' That's inflation-and falsifying the balances by deceit." The Vice-President looked at his listener, with a twinkle behind his silver-rimmed glasses. Then he read another verse. "'That we may buy the poor for silver, and the needy for a pair of shoes; yea, and sell the refuse of the wheat?'" "But even this wasnt very popular in those days," continued the Vice-President. "Amos was a social revolutionary, and social revolu- tionaries are never popular. What's more, he belonged to the wrong kingdom. He was of the people of Judah, and he had gone up to Isreal to do his Preaching. And the Israelites didn't like it, so they told him to go home." Atlantic Charter,... "AND OVER HERE in the Book of Micah, Chapter 4, there's something about recon- version. 'And they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks: Nations shall not lift up a sword against nations neither shall they learn war any more.' Yes, Micah even has Rural Electrification, Farm Security and the Atlantic Charter all in PEARSOW'S e MERR-GOw-ROUND cL/lCJo Letters to the Editor must be type- written, double-spaced, on one side of the paper only and- signed with the name and. address of the writer. Re- quests for. anonymous publications will be met. Coed Dislikes 'U' Food ... 4FTER living in University Resi- dence Halls, or Dorms, to use the colloquial expression, for two and one half years, I have come to the end of my patience and tolerance of the horrible slop, or shall we-call it food, that is thrust at the coeds day after day. The food was bad enough before the war, but it is even worse now. "We're sorry," we are told by the distinguished dieticians, "but there is a war on. Moreover, the Army and Navy have the priorities, you know." Yes, we all know there is a war on, and. we all wish it were over. But the war and priorities are no excuse for poorly balanced meals, and equally poorly cooked food. All starches at one meal, and all proteins at another do not make for well balanced meals. The little food the dorms. get may be good, before it is cooked, but one would never know it to see its condition after it comes out of the oven. We independent women have left the dinner table too often lately so, hungry that we could eat almost any- thing. Since many of us are on an. allowance, or are helping to put our- selves through school, we cannot afford to run over to a campus hang- out for food, simply because we are forced to leave the dinner table with our hunger unsatisfied. Not only is the food poorly cooked, but you even have to wait in line for hours just to get some of that stuff. When you finally get to the food, you can hardly see it. And if you can see it, you can't tell what it is supposed to be. We don't want to deprive our "boys," who have the priorities, of the food they need to become our '' ' #1 'II '" ., 1. C..t ; GRIN AND BEAR If By Lichty ( 14 t'- [p ,.5. ;3N { ! / ......._ i 1 ^ {. "I'm pretty suspicious of all this post-war planning! Somebody is sure to come up with an idea for bigger and better schools" strong fighting men, but we too need= good food to build up our resistance against flu and flunking out. One can't study with an empty stomach. Neither can we carry 15 or more hours of class work, plus extra-cur- ricular activities, which we are urged to participate in, if wP are hungry or are not eating well-balanced meals. We must have well-balanced and well cooked meals if we are to have strength enough to withstand the tough grind we find on campus. Something must be done and done soon. Right at this point I think I would pass out from shock, if I walked into dinner and found something appetizing and well cooked to eat. Must we indepen- dent coeds continue to waste away from lack of food and well cooked food at that? Disgruntled .. ....... . .............. .. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Chapter 4. Listen to this: 'But they shall sit every man under his vine and under his fig tree; and none e shall make them afraid.' (That's s freedom from fear). 'For the mouth of the Lord of hosts has spoken it. For all people will walk every one in the name of his God.' (freedom. of religion). 'And we will walk in the name of the Lord our God for ever and ever.'" Wallace turned back to the Book of Psalms. "I don't know whether e it is faulty exegesis or not. Maybe t it is finding a text to fit your own f ideas. Anyhow, here's a passage that most people use to prove that Christ, who was spurned and ac- cursed, came to be the foundation stone of the Christian religion." He had found Psalm 118 and he read Verse 22: "'The stone which the builders refused is become the headstone of the corner.' But I see something else in that verse," he con- tinued. "I see a reference to all the rejected peoples-the minorities all 1 over the world. The rejected people grow strong. They work harder and hang together and get to be a dom- inant people. "That's true of the Jews, and it may prove true of the Negroes and even the Japanese-Americans who are being spat upon today. Gener- ally speaking, it is true of all re- jected peoples. That's why there is so much hope for the minorities. We used to reject and despise the Chi- nese, but they may become 'the head- stone of the corner.' "That's something we will have to watch in making the peace," con- cluded the Vice-President. "It must be a fair and generous peace, or the vanquished will become strong by the very fact of being op- pressed."' The young man looked at the clock and realized henhad been with the Vice-President of the United States for half an hour. His head, was swim- ming. Mr. Wallace had told him he had no advice for young people, but his listener's head was brimming with new ideas. He rose, grateful, and, went away. (Copyright, 1944, United. Features Synd.) By Crockett Johnson THURSDAY, JAN. 6, 1944 VOL. LIV No. 46 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. NAotices To the Members of the University Council: There will be a meeting of the University Council on Monday, Jan. 10, at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The agenda will in- clude: Report of the Counselor to Foreign Students; Report of the Committee on Cooperation with Ed- ucational Institutions; Election of a Senate member to the Board of Dir- ectors of the Michigan Union. Mem- bers of the University Senate are invited. Louis A. Hopkins, Secretary Applications in support of research projects: To give Research Commit- tees and the Executive Board ade- quate time to study all proposals, it is requested that faculty members having projects needing support"dur- ing 1943-1944 file their proposals in the Office of the Graduate School by Friday, Feb. 18. Those wishing to renew previous requests whether now receiving support or not should so indicate. Application forms will be mailed or can be obtained at Secre- tary's Office, Rm. 1006 Rackham Building, Telephone 372. C. S. Yoakum All 17 and 18-year-old civilian col- lege students not in the Armed Ser- vice Reserve desiring to make appli- cation for V-5 Aviation Flight Train- ing should immediately contact Lt.- Com. E. F. Scott, Executive Officer, Naval V-12 Unit, at 27 North Hall. .lectures University Lecture: Captain C. R. Cook, D.F.C., of the Air Corps, Engi- neering Division, Equipment Labora- tory, Wright Field, will lecture on the subject, "Navigating a Bomber over Europe and Africa," under the auspi- ces of the Department of Mathemat- ics tonight at 7:30 in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The public is invited. Alexander Ziwet Lecture in Mathe- matics: Dr. Paul Erdos, of Purdue University, will lecture on "Some Problems in Additive Number The- oretic Functions," today at 4:15 p.m., in Rm. 3011 Angell Hall. French Lecture: The lecture of Professor Rene Talamon scheduled for tonight has been postponed to Thursday, Jan. 27. Academic Notices Faculty. College of Literature, Sci- --- .. semester is D or E, not merely those who receive D or E in so-called mid- semester examinations. Students electing our courses. but registered in other schools or colleges of the University should be reported to the school or college in which they are registered. Additional cards may be had at 108 Mason Hall or at 1220 Angell Hall. E. A. Walter Bacteriology Seminar will meet Friday, Jan. 7, at 5:00 p.m. in Rm. 1584 East Medical Building. Subject: "Atypical Pneumonia." All interested are invited. Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet on Friday, Jan. 7, at 4:06~ p.m., in Rm. 319 West Medical Building. "Biochemistry of Lipoidoses" will be discussed. All interested are invited. Concerts Student Recital: Marianne Good- ing, pianist, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the .degree of Bachelor of Music, at 8:30 tonight in Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre, with a program of compositions by Chopin, Brahms, Tansman, Copland and Schubert. Miss Gooding is a pupil of Joseph Brinkman. The public is cordially invited. Events oda y All Varsity Glee Club Men: Regu- lar rehearsal at 7:30 this evening. As picture for Michiganensian will be taken, wear white shirts and dark suits. Attendance is compulsory for all members. All dormitory and auxiliary dormi- tory stamp chairmen: Important meeting at 4:30 p.m. today in the League. If you cannot attend, call Rosalie Bruno, 2-2591, or Betty Wil- lemin, 2-1528, before Thursday. The Surgical Dressings Unit of the Hillel Foundation - will meet today from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. Volunteers will please wear washable blouses or smocks. Attention, Freshman Women: In- terviewing for the Central Commit- tee of the '47 Corps will be held today and Friday afternoon from 3 to 5, and from 9 to 12 Saturday morning in the Undergraduate Office at the League. Positions open are those of general chairman, assistant chair- man, equipment manager, publicity manager and bookkeeper. Please sign up for time of interview on the sheet posted on the bulletin board in the outer office. Petitions for Orientation advisers for the Spring, Summer and Fall terms must be in the Undergraduate Office of the League by noon today. Interviewing will be held in the Un- dergraduate Office today and Friday from 3 to 5 and Saturday from 9 to 19 gia m in nr im of n+ vipw ---. BARNABY The workout -em taking in our "gym" every morning really is making me feel worlds better. Everybody ought to get some regular exercise nowadays.. Congressmen, 'too, Pop?. . t . t3 -Congressmen? Of'icoise. Why not? ... As a matter of fact, the congressional physician claims they're all overworked and don't get enough exercise ... He also says they need a month's rest- Huh? j J Nf S ~ teppigbt 144 AiOd ikbliteglsi ++ Mr. O'Malley!: The doctor o in Congress said you need C a whole month's vacation! . Bafc Be carefui af.r month of? And doctor's orders! Can't gnore THAT, -an. , m'boy? I1 ,_ I - -4- --- .....:_ . "ees cu e..m..._..__. I Copyright 1944 field P.Wkat4" V H I I