'G1E ,TWO 11,H l I ,CI jGN )A I,. Fifty-Fourth Year 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 Univ'brsity 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 ,nhr m! ers herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class smail matte'r. Subscriptions din the regular school year by car- rier $4.25, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 Ed;torial Staff Marion Ford Jane Farrant Claire Sherman Marjorie Borradaile Eric Zalenski. . Bud Low . Harvey Frank , Mary Anne Olson Marjorie Rosmarin Hilda Slautterback Doris Kuentz . . . . , Managing Editor . . . . Editorial Director City Editor . . . . Associate Editor Sports Editor . . Associate Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor * . . .Women's Editor . . Ass't Women's Editor - - - - Columnist . . . . . Columnist Business Staff Molly Ann Winokur Elizabeth Carpenter Martha Opsion . Business Manager Ass't Bus. Manager Ass't Bus. Manager . Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: NEVA NEGREVSKI Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are writ/en b)y members of The Daily staff and represent the views of The writers only. CAMP US POML: State Solution of Soldier 7ote Dnits asic ight 0,00,000 Americans will be disenfranchised for the 1944 elections according to all indications today. For, despite President Roosevelt's appeal for the creation of federal machinery to assure the vote to all servicemen and women, the House elections committee favors leaving the issue up to the states. T[he Green-Lucas-Whorely bill, being con- sidered now in the house committee, simply provides for a federal non-partisan commis- sion to administer the job of getting the ballot to the mcA. Not only the President, but also the War and Navy Departments have declared that only through some such federal control will the votes of soldiers and sailors be made to count. The Secretary of War has declared that it will be impossible for the Army to ad- minster 4$ different election laws. No one suggests that any of the legislation now being proposed in Congress is designed spe- cifically to eliminate the possibility of getting the ballot to our armed forces. But if the ar- rangenents are left in the hands of the states this is exactly what will happen. It is interesting to note where most of the objections to federal control of the voting mach- inery rest. Sen. Rankin and the other poll-tax congressmen are almost to a man against any federal "interference." It couldn't be that the men whose re-election to Congress is assured by the,restrictions on voting in their own states are afraid? SPECJJLATION is also wide-spread concerning the conlidential poll which Harrison Spangler, chairman of the GOP National Committee, had taken of the political affiliations of the soldiers stationed in England. Could it be that the Re- publican leader wanted to see which way the wind was blowing before taking a stand on the federal soldier vote bill? Citizens of this country are guaranteed their right to vote by the Constitution. The votes of the 10,000,001) now in the armed forces cannot be made a political issue. A poll will be held on campus today by the Michigan Youth for Democratic Action in con- urnction with The Daily to determine what the civilians and soldiers here think of federal con- trol of the soldier vote. Here is a chance to niake your opinion felt. Register your vote in favor of the federal soldier vote bill today. -Kathie Sharfman r lraft of Labor Would Antagonize Workers yITH MORE equitable distribution of labor forces brtweel essential and non-essential industries possibly a eeonday motive. President Roosevelt's request for a "National Service Act" to drat labor probably had one main objective: complete stoppage of strikes. Casreful analysis of the results of such a measure reveals, however, that its inception BALKAN STATES: Bulgaria May e Fir To Break Axis Alliance THERE is good reason to believe that Bul- garia will be the first of Hitler's remaining satellites to break away from their Axis alliance and sue for peace with the Allies. Although complying with -Germany's will in most respects, the Bulgarian government has flatly refused to declare war on Russia. The Bulgarian people have a strong affection for Russia. In a "showdown choice" between Ger- many and Russia, it is very probable that Bul- garian sentiments will choose Russia. The strong affection which the Bugarian people feel towards Russia dates back to the later part of the last century, when the Rus- sians liberated them from 500 years of Turkish oppression. With the consistent bombing of their capital, 'showdown choice" will inevitabe come as soon as the Red armies are in position to challenge the Nazis forces directly in the strategic Balkan regions. With this in mind. the Germans have been reported to be rushing motorized detachments of troops to various areas in Bulgaria. However, it will not be a simple matter for Hitler to hold the Bulgarian puppets in line. With the Partisan forces of Marshal Tito giving the Nazis a tough fight in Yugoslavia and with Rumania bowling with unrest, Hitler will have his hands more than full. With Bulgaria suing for peace with the Allies, a great blow will be dealt to Nazi power in the Balkans. It will be a cue for Rumania to revolt and for the other Balkan countries to increase their efforts in their struggle against German domination, thereby setting the pace for the ul- timate liberation of the Balkan region. -Neva Negrevski DREW C h PEARSON'S MERRY-CO-ROUND WASHINGTON. Jan. 13.--A. F. Whitney rail- road brotherhood leader who stuck out his neck and was the first to accept Presidential arbitra- tion of the railway wage dispute, has been get- ting it hot and heavy from the three brother hoods which refused to arbitrate. But he came back at them the other day with a poem which reads: Three blind mice-hear how they talk! They all refuse to arbitrate- They're gambling with their country's fate: Though the hour is getting late For the three blind mice. This rhyme was sent by Railroad Trainman Whitney to all the secretaries, vice-presidents. and subordinate lodges of his union with a con- fidential letter blasting the three hold-out brotherhoods. In the letter Whitney revealed that 450,000 copies of "Labor," the railroad brotherhood magazine, had been sent to the post office just before the President offered ar- bitration. "Thousands of these copies were recalled and destroyed," Whitney wrote to his fellow-train- men. "On the following day they were re- printed without changing the cross on a 't' or the dot of an i'. This hasty action, of course, did not help the paper shortage, and in all probability will never be explained." Whitney then went on to excoriate the three "non-arbitrating brotherhoods" whom Labor magazine had called "The Three Musketeers." "Were they afraid to trust the President?" he asked. "Had they overlooked the fact that the Commander-in-Chief could settle the dis- pute without their consent? Or is it possible that they were playing organization politics in the hope that they may strengthen their nu- merical and financial condition? "Our experience is that organizations of labor must have something to offer to attract men to their rank s, and it would appear that these unions had utterly failed, siice their memberships have been on the wane during the past 15 years." Hull Remintisces Cordell Hull received an unexpected caller the :ther day. U.S. District Judge "Jefty" O'Connor of California, former Comptroller of the Cur- rency and the man who really pioneered the Federal Deposit Insurance system after the big bank smash-up in 1932. Hull had known Jefty when Jefty was one of the few Democrats in North Dakota. They had fought'mapy progressi-ve battles together-usual- ly on the losing side. Recalling them, the Secre- tary of State mused: "Some day when the war is over and I can retire from all this, you and I must sit down together and look back over the mistakes we have made and the things we could have done better." Judge O'Connor flew back to Los Angeles thinking that after faith, hope and charity, hu- mility comes next. iNwi-Fighting Sailor. Frank Knox. Secretary of the Navy, is a great talker about efficient use of manpower. But it Id Rather Be Right_ By SAMUEL GRAI TON NEW YORK. Jan. 13.-The President's request for a national service act will really rattle the windows of Congress. It is a cold breeze against a hothouse. Inside the Capitol.soft men have been planning to win the war by increasing the taxes on milady's fur coat. A national service act would tell milady, in-. stead, that she will either join the armed forces or go to work in a factory, or else sit in the cooler, thinking it over until she decides to be good. Check your mink, lady? Life has been extremely pleasant these last few months inside Congress, where men have been dreaming a sweet incoherent dream of higher prices because the people are so rich, and lower taxes because -the people are so poor. It is very uncouth of the President to interrupt these happy fantasies by a request for a national serv- ice act. WIN THE WAR, BUT DON'T HURT ANYBODY By the flickering lights inside the Capitol, it had seemed clear. only a month ago, that the way to win the war was to return $4,000,000,000 of recaptured excess war profits, and, maybe. bal- ance off by hiking the tax on soda pop. There is, however, a large body of Congressional opinion which thinks that this is no time to raise the tax on soda pop. So the debate goes, pop, pop and pop. It is into this warm, amiable and mushy atmosphere that the President has intruded his proposal for a new law which can force any American, he or she, to go to work in a designated war factory. By the Congressional reaction to this hard pro- posal we shall have the answer to the great question of the hour: "Who's electioneering now?" SO SOFT, SO NICE, SO KIN) The quarrel between President and Congress is not a quarrel between right and left. It is a. battle between attitudes, a fight between hard- ness and softness, between consequence and in- consequence. This Congress is not opposing the President on any lofty question of principle. It is merely trying to prove that it is nicer than he is, kinder than he is, softer than he is all at a time when niceness and kindness and softness are the wildest forms of inconsequence. I am afraid that this mood of inconsequence shows up very strongly in the statement by Mr. Harrison Spangler, national chairman of the Republican Party, to the effect that his pArty -will win this fall "with anybody the conven- tion chooses to nominate." Doesn't it matter what the man will stand for? There is a kind of gleeful confidence here that President Roosevelt has been beaten on points, so to speak: that there has been a sufficient ac- cumulation of small political advantages by the opposition to sweep it in next November. regard- less of the issues. A GAME OF POINTS This game of scoring small points, steadily, consistently, day after day. is exactly what marks and degrades the current Congressional record. In London, at this time, Labor Minister Bevin picks certain numbers from a hat. once a month. All youths whose registration cards match these numbers, have to go down into the mines to dig coal, regardless of their wealth or social status. But our Congressmen ,with, of course, many, though not enough. honorable exceptions, are busy trying to soften the draft, to prove that they love the farmer by raising his prices, and that they love the taxpayer by keeping his taxes down. See what I mean? They are murmuring that the war is softer than it is. They are saying that two plus two equals a lollypop. President Roosevelt has just said that two plus two equals foui, and now we shall see what we shall see. (Copyright. 1944, New York Post Syndicate J ?terA Jo §/ do ~ ~ 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- K quests for anonymous publications will ' be met. , HE RECENT editorial polioy of y The Michigan Daily in regards to the labor trouble that is spreading, through vital war industries hasp caused me to write this. my first let- ter-to-the-editor in four years at Michigan. I am firmly convinced that something need be said to neu- tralize what you have already printed- as editorials by one member of your staff. Mr. Stan Wallace. Jus how inconsistent Wallace's libelism has caused hm 1in be i best illustrated by his own editorials. On Thursday. Dec. 30. 1943, Wall:ace in justifying the executive order for =x the government to take over the rail- roads, wrote in part, "Primarily, it - (the executive order) averted the most damaging blow our war effort could have suffered." Wallace was pointing out in this editorial that the war was to be won at all cbst, and that we citizens of a free democracy peot e constantly tramnp were not going to allow a rail strike to tie up our war effort. (May I ual, Mr. Wallace? Are you referring pause foi' a moment to reflect on to the averag American. the clerk., the manner in which Mr. Wallace the teacher, the erviceman as well might have greeted an alternate gov- as the laboring man I is my coi- ernment action which would have tention ,ere that Mi'. Waa'es lib- gone to the real source of. the trouble eralism goes only to the extent of --what if the government had taken worrying about protecting the ad- over the non-cooperating unions in- vances labor has made in the past 12 stead of the cooperating manage- year, disr arling the winiifg o ' ments of the railroads?) the war. He is all lr labor. and if - however, on Friday, Jan. 7, 1944, an adanlenunl for labo' should Wallace's editorial expressed his happen to be coincident wim a be~ displeasure at the suggestion of the te'ig of the wi' (410rt. he makes no national American Legion Com- Iesitation to point it out. When the mander that the government ss-. government look over he railroads, pend labor's right to strike for the the natio sv f isike duration. Herein, Wallace stated which would hine r its war poaress, in Passing that "the war effort MI Wallace hastened to point ou. m asm ht te a ffr i tis in Itself was n1ot ('''"u h~'o wouldn't be furthered by forced la- Bant tslliel sroenouh t bor," and that such an act would arer lc's Ok fact in reality be a move to "endanger the aiitdrr eelo the freedom of the individual." assured 01 their raise by virtue of the government anion was eno wth1, 1'ow- Now. we must take Wallace's dia- ,w metrically opposite opinions (namely, e . (1) that labor strikes hurt the war F. ON the Ot'.r hand, there is a effort, and (2) that labor strikes do choice betwcen one policy that not hurt the war effort) and deci'de would help tile war ad an opposite of which one he is most firmly con- one which would help labor. Mr. vinced. Common sense dictates the Wallace throws his support to the answer, specifically that lost man latter. Thus he condemns te pro-1 hours of production prolong the war lposed gOv'rlm(1 actiOn wnich woui~l and impair our battle strategy. Hav- keep our countrv tree lrom strikes ing made this observation, we may for the duration. Surely. Mr. Wle- proceed to Wallace's fear of endang- lace ust have i-ad Drew Pearson's e'ing "the freedom of the individ- "Mcrry-Go-Roltnd" of De. 80 in ual." One might ask. "What individ- which he reveal;d hat "In Noveme .v_. - _ '7-- led thax ever--what with ig; all over his corns! 1943) alone ti-ere were 120 strikes." tnd tih t "there is every probability t .,1 li , i , i ,at st ikes wil increase1aer tan l((crease in tile future." This being he case, and having already assum- xd aibitigily that Mr. Wallace be- eves that strikes hurt the war effort, an I neat now assume that Mr. Wal- e tnins ny poiTcy in favor of labor. regtardles; the war effort? r. Wallace is, through no in- tention of his own,, physically ex- mnt irom military service. That is too bad. Ii he were slogging through the mud of Italy or the ,ugli s of New Britain I don't be- lieve he would be nearly so con- e>'ned with actions which might ,t'nd'aier the freedom of the in- dividua " as he would be with oth- ers that were bound to endanger the lives of many individuals. The synthesis of the whole prob- .cm is lat the editorial writer in uestioni tails to see that a quick win- ning of the war is advantageous and desirable for al Americans, labor in- cluded. If he were to realize this, I believe Mr. Wallace would favor the Atherton or any other proposal as a wartime, and therefore tempor- 'rr. metsll'ue whii-h would hasten our war el-;ort. At the same time he (:ould ientinue to be a liberal with consist ency. -A Serviceman GR N A ) )EAI I IBy Lichty DAILY OFFICIAL T U BULLETIN THURSDAY, JAN. 13, 1944 VOL. LIV No. 52 All notices for the Daily Official Bui- letin are to be sent to the Office of the j President in typewritten form by 3:301 p.m. of the day preceding its publica- tion, except on Saturday when the no- 1 tices should be submitted by 11:30 a.m.1 Noticest To the Members of the University Senate: There will be a meeting of1 the University Senate on Mondayj Jan. 24. at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre, for the consideration of a revision of the Regents' by-law concerning dismissal. demotion, and terminal appointments. Louis A. Hopkins, Secretarys The University Bureau of Appoint- ments has received notice of the fol- lowing Civil Service Examinations:; City of Detroit: City Planning Ana- lyst, $104 to $154 per week: Police- woman. $3,042 per year; Police Ma- University Lecture: Dr. Itagnar Nicolaysen, Diretor of the Depart- ment of Nutrition of the Uiversity of Oslo, Norway, will sneak on, Some Aspects of Calcium Metabolism: an Endogenous Factor in the Absorption of Calcium front -1 Intesin. to- day at 4:15 p.m. in Rm. 151, Chem- istry Building. This lecture is iven under the auspices of the Mcdi'al School and the Department of Bio- logical Chemistry. .All nterested areI invited. University Lecture: 1)r'. Ragm Nicolaysen, ?;irecl or ot 11ic Depart-1 ment of Nutril ion of the University of Oslo, Norway will speak on the subject. "University Life at Oslo tn- der German Occupaton tnder the auspices of the Department of His- tory and the European Section Area and Language Program today at 7:30 p.m. in the Raekham Lectu'e Hall. The public is invited. looks as if he was an even greater believer in avoiding criticism. For months now he has stationed one of the Navy's astute officers with nothing to do ex- cept keep an eye on the highly critical Truman committee. The officer is Captain John Ken- nedy, former ace Washington newsman and owner of a chain of radio stations. Kennedy was once a star Washington operator for Hearst, won the Pugsley award for top Cap- itol news-sleuthing. now owns two broadcasting chains in Ohio and West Virginia. However. the Navy keeps him occupied playing golf with Senator Ferguson of Michigan, a mem- ber of the Truman committee: flying to Alaska with Senators Truman and Kilgore; and running back and forth between the Navy and the Senate trying to paint a favorable side to Truman com- mittee questions. Kennedy, an able man, does an A-1 job. But most people seem to think that Navy man- power was recruited to fight, rather than to cushion criticism. Knox. however, is an expert at criti ism-cush- ioning. He also keeps the son of Congressman John Tolan of California busy doing odd jobs on Capitol Hill, and advising the Navy about how to rub Congressmen the right way. Tolan also is an A-1 man, but he thought he got into the Navy to fight, not to scratch Congressmen's backs. (Copyright. 1944. United Features Syndicate' ncers) will be due after Jan. 15. Only unsatisfactory grades need to be re- portd. The Office of the Academic Coun- selors 108 Mason Hall, will receive hese reports and transmit them to the proper officers. If more blue cards are needed, l lease call at 108 Mason Hall or tele- phone 613 and they will be sent by campus mail. Arthur Van Duren Chairman, Academic Couoselos E ~ Cot ice'rts The University of Michigan String Orchestra, Gilbert Ross, Conductor, wll present a rog'ram of composi- tions by Handel, Fi'escobaldi, Stam- itz, Bach and Boccherini, at 8:30 p.m., Sunday, Jan. 16, in the Lydia Mendelssohn Tleatre. Ruby Kuhl- man, pianist, will appear as soloist. The public is cordially invited. Events Today The American Society of Mechani- cal Engineers will meet today at 7:°0 prm. at the Union. Professor A. F. She zer vill show several reels of ilm on the Arctic region and Eskimo i i the ltdon Bay district. All engineirs are invited. A.I.E.E. will meet today at 7::30 p.m. in the Michig'an Union. Mr. Carl Wes i'adio engineer at the V-M station, WENA, will speak on Ihe Operation of Station WENA." Ac :00 shar, the picture- of the members will be taken for the Ensian. so please be on time. Refreshments. Tea at Internationai Center is setred each week on Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. for foreign students. faculty, townspeople, and American student friends of foreign students. Pst-War Counci meeting today *t I';; ? r; f 1,hogTUnion, s tron. $38 to $55 per week. Lochner Lecture iancelled: TheI Bureau of Appointments and Louis P. Lochner lecture scheduled by Occupational Information the Oratorical Association lo'r this ---evening has been cancei'ed. Tick- All women students attending "Ai- ets for this lecture may be used for da" and "Life with Father" will have the appearance hire of the Honor- one half hour permission from the able Sumner WEellc, former Uride- time the performances end. Special secretary of State. who has been en- permission from the Office of the gaged by the Association to speak i Dean of Women is not necessary. I Hill Auditorium on March 30 O ti'h subject, "Ou Foieign Policy" Indi- vidual tickets wob n sl a A representative of J. E. Seagram ,id & Sons, Inc. in Lawrenceberg. Ind, 29 and 30 at the box ollice of Hil: will be here to interview people who Auditorium.j are chemists, bacteriologists, engi- neers, lawyers, psychologists, business administrators. or executive secre- taries on Friday, Jan. 14. They have plants in Kentucky, Maryland, Indi- ana and Ohio. February or June graduates who are interested call ex- tension 371 for appointments or stop in at 201 Mason Hall. Eng~lish 211e Wiil met-c Saturday. 9-li. instead 01 TIn-say. N IL Nelson ioctoral Examination bor Jean Chien-Han Chu, Chemistry' tihesis: "Part A> The Inlucnce of Excess Ions oteA tio"fy on C'salzdSle rmd n BARNABY By Crockett Johnson k j , I