FRIDAY, NOV. 17, 1944 THE MICHIGAN.DAILY 1- Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON 1MERRY-GO-ROUND: President Meets Cabinet I I 9I -- _---a" = L " <01 Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Evelyn Phillips . Managing Editor Stan Wallace . . City Editor Ray Dixon ... Associate Editor Hank Mantho . . . Sports Editor Dave Loewenberg . Associate Sports Editor Mavis Kennedy . . Women's Editor Business Staff Lee Amer Barbara Chadwick June Pomering . . Business Manager . Associate Business Mgr. . Associate Business Mgr. Telephone 23-24-1 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 re- publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptions duringthe regular school year by car- ier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 NIGHT EDITOR: PAUL SISLIN Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. onscription Needed HOSE who maintain that post war military conscription would inevitably lead to a third world war, fail to realize that existant differ- ences in the basic philosophies of government and economics cannot be reconciled in a day or a week. Without a world army to enforce peace, nations harboring these conflicting dif- ferences would grasp at each other with renewed vigor, setting the stage for more armed con- flict. Factors which are necessary to maintain peace include agreement on world trade and the issues of imperialism, equality of races and the extension of opportunity to the masses. How can these issues be settled, once and for all, if we allow jealousy and greed to inter- fere, as we have in the past, with the free interplay of ideas? In preparing ;for and fighting a war we are diverting our energies toward the attainment of victory, not of international cooperation. A world army could conserve time and effort by crushing fascist agression wherever it may occur while the rest of the world is working out a sturdy basis for peace. True, agreement on the meaning of genuine freedom may be reached before the termina- tion of the war. But this is highly improbable. We cannot risk future peace under the illu- sion that the causes of war have vanished We must have a police force ready to protect the world against outlaws who seek material ad- vantage at the expense of society. Until the people of every nation have the great ends of life in common; until agree- ment is reached on the conduct of world affairs, some method of force must be in- stituted, at least temporarily, to insure peace. -Carol Zack Fine Experiment. CIVIL RIGHTS were given a boost last week when Negro physicians were admitted on n equal basis with white doctors to the staff of a U. S. voluntary hospital, setting a precedent that has met with unexpected success. Only white patients at .Harlem's (NYC) Syd- enham Hospital, a modern, 200 bed building, up to last week were permitted to occupy private and semi-private rooms, Negro patients being relegated to wards. The only Negroes to enter the comparative sanctity of private rooms were members of the utility staff and a handful of Negro nurses. Colored patients could not be treatedbytheir ownrdoctors and had to accept any white doctor assigned to their cases. But more important was the discouraging effect that discrimination has had upon color- ed medical students. For a long time there existed and still does exist a shortage of Negro doctors and this, coupled with un- healthy housing facilities, is responsible for Harlem's tremendously large death rate as compared with the rest of New York City. The reaction among other staff members of Sydenham has been mild. Two nurses and three other workers have quit but the rest of Sydenham's white staff . members, 277, have stayed on. White bed patients in semi-private rooms have not objected to mixing with Negr patients. Negro doctors practicing at the hospital numbey 23; interns, two; and nurses number 60 percent of the total. Negro patients num- ber roughly about 25 percent. The precedent has been set but can lead to failure if other hospitals do not follow Syden- ham's example. There is always the danger that By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON, NOV. 17-President Roose- velt's first Cabinet meeting after Election Day found him fighting mad. Cabinet members Who have sat in these semi-weekly meetings for twelve long years said they ha never seen "the:Boss" so grim.% "In thirty years of political life," he said, "I have never seen such a dirty,unfair, below-the- belt campaign. "During the last two weeks," the President continued, "I got mad. And I stayed mad. I could bite some of those so-and-sos." He said he had not even received the tradi- tional telegram or letter of congratulation from Gov. Dewey which a defeated candidate always sends to the victor. Aside from this, Cabinet members remarked among themselves that the President had never looked better, that it had done him good to get out and do some campaigning instead of being surrounded with generals and admirals in Washington. . He himself indicated that he had enjoyed getting the feel of the people. More Social Security .. . During the first Cabinet session, the Presi- dent gave his okay to two important projects which will come before the next Congress. (1) Change in the minimum wage from 40 to 60 cents an hour; and (2) revision of the Social Security Act. This came up when Secretary of Labor Per- kins asked about certain revisions in the Wage- Hour Act, and the President, not quite catching what she said, remarked that he was in favoi of giving farm hands and domestic servants the Slum Areas AT A RECENT post-war conference sponsored by the National Association of Manufac- turers, the Michigan Manufacturers Association, the Detroit Board of Commerce, and the Em- ployers' Association of Detroit, the following question was asked of John W. Scoville, econ- omist of the Chrysler Corporation: "Under free economy, how do you propose to take care of the slum areas?" Scoville answered, "You are worrying about something that doesn't need to be worried about. If the people living in slums don't like them, ret them move out. Some people like to live in one-room shacks. There is no solution to this problem. Certainly industry doesn't intend to attempt the impossible." While people starve in the filth and cold of slum areas, Scoville can sit back calmly and maintain that there is no problem. "Let them move out if they don't like it," he says. Where does he propose they moye, to the streets or another 'one-room shack that has cross ventilation, because there is only wrapping paper to cover the doorways and win.dows? There is a problem when slum areas is con- sidered, and there are also .solutions. If everyone had a job, with decent pay, then there would be. no slum areas, because every- one would have the money to pay for rent in better' homes. If those living in the slums now knew where their next meal was coming from, and that the family pay checks were sufficient to pay for a better home, they would follow Scoville's advice and move out. Most people who live in slum areas now, did not pick their broken down homes because they liked the surrounding scenery of polutted river banks, garbage in the halls, filth, dirt, corruption, and an unhealthy atmosphere in. general. They have been forced to live in these "holes," or find a park bench instead. One must admit that a park bench is not big enough or comfortable enough for a family, nor is it private. It is industry's job to see that these germ- infested areas are whipped out. The only way for them to do it, is to devise systems by which everyone can find employment, and in addition to full employment, maintain a decent living wage for its employees. No problem can be solved when the smug and arrogant, but powerful people of this country, turn their backs on reality, and choose to ignore the issues. -Aggie Miller Kampus Kaper's KAMPUS KAPERS, the all campus variety show points the way to a new spirit of student cooperation in activities.- Sponsored by the Daily, Michigan League and Union, the show attracted a crowd of 4,000, jamming the audi- torium and balcony. The enthusiasm which. greeted Bill Layton and his orchestra as they opened the program showed how ready all the students were to en- joy one of the best campus shows ever pro- duced. And the fact that the rest-Judy Chayes, Judy Ward, the trio, Bill Beck, Varsity Glee Club and especially "Doc Fielding-were all recruited from the students show the versa- tility here. There is no doubt that many more programs can be made up from Wolverine tal- ent. The crowd really appreciated this show; let's hope it sets an example for more to come. -Mary Brush w benefit of unemployment and old-age ance. insur- This comes under the Social Security Act. and' Federal Security Administrator Paul Mc- Nutt spoke rii' to ask whether the President was in favor of presenting new social security legislation at the next session of Congress in January or at the present closing session. Soial Security chairman Arthur Altmeyer has drafted some detailed revisions of the law, broadening it 'to include farm workers and servants, also including new health insurance and other benefits., The President made it clear that these revi- sions of the act were to be introduced at the January session. He also indicated that he favored changing the minimum wage from 40 cents -to 6 cents an hour, which will give an automatic boost to wages all along the line. The Carleton Hotel's Hamlet . . The Scene: Washington's swank Carleton Hotel, main dining room. The Tine: Almost any lunch hour. Soft music plays while the nation's top-notch "thinkers" and lobbyists digest their mid-day meal. The music stops. The waiting crowd at. the door parts. Eyes turn toward the center aisle. In walks a hulking, black-bedecked bushy- browed, greying man. He struts ponderously, loking neither left nor right. John L. Lewis has come to lunch. Lewis eats alone. He takes the same table every day at the extreme rear of the dining room, knows that many a newcomer to Washing- ton is as excited at seeing him as at seeing FDR. His menu is the same every day, if he can get it -rare roast beef-preceded by a wee snifter of sherry. When his coffee is served, Lewis reaches into a pocket, takes out a long black cigar. Out of another pocket he takes a detective story magazine. He relaxes for fifteen minutes, then struts out the way he came. Shakespeare's Hamlet, invisible robe over his shoulders, dagger at his side. Parachute Tragedy in Normnandy On March 9, the Washington Merry-Go-Round .revealed an army parachute scandal. It stated that the Amy had failed to supply U. S. airmen and paratroopers with the quick-release para- chute harness despite the fact that, nine months earlier, General Newton Longfellow of the U. S. Eighth Air Force in England had warned Wash- ington that "anything but the quick-release harness is murderous." The Army, on that same day, issued a series of denials, but one week later ordered 100,000 of the single-point quick-release parachute har- ness. About three weeks later, it ordered 300,000, and orders have increased since .then. Unfortunate inside fact, however, is that these orders did not come soon enough to save hund- reds of lives in the Normandy invasion. General Longfellow had written his report to the War Department on June 1, 1943. This column published the above excerpt from his report on March 9, 1944. Between June 1 and March 9, the War Department had ordered only a scanty handful of 2,500 quick-release harnesses for experimental purposes-and none of them had been delivered. So, despite the heavy orders placed in March, a very large proportion of the U. S. paratroopers who came down over Normandy had to use the old, slow-release harness which tediously un- buckles in three different places. Trapped by Harness .. . Detailed reports of what happened as a result were hushed up at the time, but it is now possible to reveal that 'many U. S. paratroopers were shot down by German snipers before they were able to get out of their harnesses. Brig. Gen. 'Anthony C. McAuliffe, artillery commander of the 101st Airborne Division, later awarded the Silver Star for gallantry in parachuting over Normandy, had to cut his harness off with a knife. A Time Magazine correspondent got hung up in a tree head down, nearly choked to death on his parachute harness before some- one"climbed up and cut him free. It was especially bad when men landed in trees. There they had little chance to unsnap the three cumbersome buckles before German snipers shot them down. Dead bodies in the trees of Normandy gave mute, gruesome testi- mony to U. S. Army bungling on the home front. It was after this that Army paratroop chiefs really were galvanized into action. An American parachute rigger was immediately rushed back to England with a crew to convert U. S. para- chutes to the quick-release harness. Not even by this time had any of the new har- nesses, ordered after this column's March ex- pose, arrived in England, so British harnesses were purchased. The British, incidentally, re- fused to sell their quick-release box alone, in- sisted on selling their entire harness at a very high prace, charged up on the books as reverse lend-lease. American parachute riggers worked day and night converting our parachutes to this har- ness. Finally, by the time of the spectacular paratroop landing at Arnhem, about fifty percent had been converted. Arnhem, unfor- tunately, was not a success. But at least, there were many fewer casualties from men being fouled in their harnesses at Arnhem. (Copyright, 1944, United Features Syndicate) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Chicago Meet By SAMUEL GRAFTON CHICAGO,ILLINOIS, NOV. 16- There is something fiat about the International Civil Aviation Confer-' ence, meeting here at the Stevens Hotel. There is something morally flat about it. To begin with, you have the neutral nations all over the place, Sweden, Spain, Ireland, Swit- zerland, Turkey; and for years we have been saying oh, boy, those neu- trals aren't going to have a seat at the Peace Conference. But here they are, and this is a branch of the Peace Conference, and don't you forget it; it is the part of the Peace Conference that you can make some money out of, too, the setting up of Interna- tional Air routes; and here they are, those neutrals, whacking up a world they wouldn't save. So you have the representatives of fifty-two nations milling around the Stevens Hotel. But Russia isn't here. And that too makes the con- ference seem fiat., It makes it seem like a pre-war conference. T)he fact that Russia isn't in it disconnects the conference from the war. The State Department announces that it is time for an International Civil Aviation Conference, and every- body says meekly, my, my, I see it is time for an international civil avia- tion conference. But is it time? Who made it time? Why couldn't it have been just as good a year from now? And those who have arranged this conference have made several fundamental de- cisions for us, while most of us were- n't looking. We have been debating the place of the neutrals in the post- war world, but here it has all been decided. The neutrals, including the pro-fascist neutrals, have been for- given. When you invite somebody to' your house, you forgive him. Can we exclude these neutrals from some future conference, on the ground that we have, suddenly recalled they didn't help us in the war? No, that question has been decided at this conference, though it wasn't even on the agenda. The spirit of the war is not pres- ent in this conference. That is why it is a flat conference, and even though it reaches some tortured com- promise plan on air routes, it will re- main a flat conference. There is not a comrades-at-arms feeling about it. We are comrades-at-arms with some countries, and not with some other countries, but this conference is pro- ceeding as if that were not so. It is operating in a world of its own, which is not the world that is fighting. If you look at the world that is fight- ing, there are America and Britain at loggerheads, and the neutrals in, and Russia outside. The Stevens shelters a world that is gone, and the world as it really exists must be stop- ping at some other hotel. There are good little reasons for everything that has been done. We don't need Russian airports for a round-the-world service, so we don't mind much that Russia has belatedly walked out in a huff, re- fusing to sit with her opponent, Spain. More Americans than Brit- ons will travel the air routes, so we have a good little reason for re- jecting Britain's request for a fixed quota of the air business, and for wrangling with Britain. But in act- ing upon our little reasons we may be risking something big-world unity; we may be making deci- sions about things we don't even know we're deciding about, like the decision about neutrals. I want my country to extend its in- terest. But just because you want something doesn't make it your real best interest as of the moment. I find myself curious about what tum- bling, rushing pressures made us pick this way and this moment. (Copyright, 1944, N. Y. Post Syndicate) On Second Thought 1ERE'S hoping no one goes to the concert tonight in Hill Auditor- ium expecting to see a football coach play the violin. A local restaurant is currently featuring Fried Ocean Perch on its menu. What we can't figure out is where Fried Ocean is located. Headline: "Filipino Bow and Arrow Fighters Kill 5,000 Japs in Jungle." It's all the same war-they do it with arrows and we do it with arrow- planes. Anyway, the Japs are running amuk on Ormok. The cigarette shortage is getting so bad that people are being forced to go downtown to get lit up. And nowadays, if you do find. a cigarette, it's a lucky strike. -Ray Dixon To the Editor: I have come across a situation which-if true-ought to arouse the ire of every student on campus. I am- referring to the Bomber Schol- arship Fund and the money in it. The fund is a worthwhile project and deserves the support of every student, but now with veterans en- rolled in school it seems the idea ought to be implemented by action. I have had the pleasure of meet- ing some former Michigan men who have come back to campus as veter- ans- and some of them are finding it no easy job financially. Yet, I have- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN FRIDAY, NOV. 17, 1944 VOL. LV, No. 153 All notices for The Daily Official Bul- Ietin are to be sent to the Office of thet Assistant to the President, 1021 Angelle Hall, in typewritten form by 3:30 p. m.d of the day preceding its publication,T except on Saturday when the notices should be submitted by 11:30 a. m. t' Notices School of Education Faculty: Thea November meeting of the facultya will be held on Monday, Nov. 20, ing the University Elementary SchoQlp Library. The meeting will convene f at 4:15 p.m.v To Users of The Daily Officialh Bulletin: The attention of users off The Daily Official Bulletin is re- spectfully called to the following: (1) Notice submitted for publication'h must be typewritten and accompan-e ied by name and telephone number.t (2) Ordinarily notices are published B but once. Repetition,is at the Edi-b tor's discretiorj (3) Notices must be f handed to the Assistant to the Presi- h dent, as Editor of The Daily Official i Bulletin, Rm. 1021 A.H., before 3:30 t p.m. (11:30 a.m. on Saturdays.) a Thanksgiving Day: Thursday, Nov. 23, is a University holiday. All Uni- versity activities will be resumed on Friday, Nov. 24. Nov. 30 will not bew celebrated. 9 To All Staff Members and Employ-1 ees: All those who find it necessaryr to file requests for supplementaryw gasoline ration for passenger cars ("B" or "C" Book) for either driving to and from .work, driving personalB car on University business, or to carry on other occupations, should mail their original applications or renewals to H. S. Anderson at theP Buildings and Grounds Department, University Ext. 317, and not directlyn to the Local , Gasoline Rationing Board. These applications must be approved by the Committee in.charge of the Organized Transportation Plan in the University and trans-8 mitted by it to the rationing board.f Any information concerning sup- t plementary gasoline rationing shouldF be obtained by calling Universityr Ext. 317.r Organized Transportation Planc L. 14. Gram, Chairman Choral Union Members in goodY standing (those with no unexcused absences on their records) will please call for their pass tickets for thet Kreisler concert, Friday, Nov. 17, between the hours of 9:30 and 11:30s and 1 and 4 o'clock, at the offices oft the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. After 4 o'clock no tickets will be issued.'r The University of Michigan Sym- phony Orchestra rehearsal will be! held in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre at 4 o'clock today instead of Hilll Auditorium. Faculty, College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: Attendance re-l port cards are being distributed through the department offices. In-i structors are requested to report ab- sences of freshmen on green cards, directly to the Office of the Aca- demic Counselors, 108 Mason Hall. Buff cards should be used in report- ing sophomores, juniors, and seniors to 1220 Angell Hall. Please note especially the regula- tions concerning three-week absen- ces, and the time limits for dropping courses. The rules relating to absen- ces are printed on the attendance cards. They may also be found on page 46 of the 1944-45 ANNOUNCE-! MENT of our College. S- I All-University Women's Swimming Hour: The Michigan Union Pool will be opened to women students for recreational swimming on Saturday mornings from 9:15 to 10:15. Any woman student may swim during this hour provided she. has a medical permit. This may be obtained at the Health Service. A fee of 25c per swim is charged. Instruction will be provided for anyone interested. The Women's Swimming Club will use the pool from 10:15 to 11:15 on Saturday mornings. n't heard of one of them who has received any money from the Bomber Scholarship Fund. The GI Bill is an advanced step forward but by itself is not sufficient to see a veteran through school. Liv- ing costs in Ann Arbor eat up his monthly allotment before he even gets it. We who have contributed our little bit to make the fund grow would sincerely like to know when the money will be put to some good use. I know that among the vet- erans here now there must be some who need the money. -Joy Altman Storehouse office, University Ext. 337. The rates now in effect are as follows: Sedans, $.05 per mile; Sta- tion Wagons, .07 per mile; Minimum charge, $1.00. Trucks, 2 Ton & un- der, with driver, $1.75 per hour; Trucks, 2Y2 Ton & over, with driver. $2.25 per hour; Minimum charge for trucks, $3.00. Women students will have 12:30 a.m."permission Wednesday, Nov. 22, and 11 permissioi Thursday Thanks- giving Day. House heads may give permission to residents to leave town for the Thanksgiving Holiday pro- vided such students return in time for their first class on Friday. House heads may not grant late permission for Thanksgiving Day. Registration: Registration is being held this week at the University Bur- eau of Appointments and Occupa- tional Information, 201 Mason Hall. Blanks for registration may, be had by calling at the office-of the Bureau from 9 to 12,a.m. and 2 to 4 p.m. from Tuesday through Friday. There s no registration fee. This registra- tion is for students who will be available in February, June, August r October. University Women Students: A Nurse's Aide Class, beginning the week of Nov. 27, will be held Tuesday, Wednesdayvand Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. for five weeks. All practice hours must be confined to 9 a.m.- 12 noon, or 3-6 p.m. Students are reminded 'that credit for the course will be withheld until the (150) vol- unteer hours have been fulfilled. All tudents must register inrthe Nurse's Aide Office, Rm. 203 North Hall. Hours 9 a.m. to 12 noon. Urgent Call for Dailies: Mrs. Buchanan at the Museum would like more Dailies for the boys in service. Academic Notices Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Students Who fail to file their election blanks by the close of the third week of the Fall Term, even though they have registered and have attended classes unofficially will forfeit their privilege of continuing in the College. A Make-up Examination in History has been scheduled for Nov. 24, 1944, at 4 p.m., in Rm. C of Haven Ball. Students who plan to take a make- up examination should consult their instructor in advance as it is neces- sary to have written permission from the instructor. Psychology 31: Make-up exam will be given Tuesday, Nov. 21, at 4:35 in Rm. 1121 Natural Science Building. Concerts' Choral Union Concert: Fritz Kreis- 1cr, eminent violinist, will be heard in the third concert in the Choral Union Series in Hill Auditorium, this evening, at 8:30 o'clock. Mr. IKreisler will be accompanied on the piano by Carl Lamson, and will pre- sent the following program: Beetho- ven's Sonata in A major; Concerto No. 3 by Mozart; Rondo Brilliante, Schubert; Hungarian Rondo, Haydn- Kreisler; La Zambra, Arbos; and deFalla's La Jota. Tickets may be purchased at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower daily until 5 p.m., and at the Hill Auditorium box office beginning at 7 p.m. this evening. Events Today B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation: Re- ligious services will be conducted tonight by Rabbi Jehudah M. Cohen, Sam Krohn, '44D, and A/S Eugene Malitz. Because of the Kreisler con- cert services will begin promptly at 7:30 p.m. and there will not be a Fireside Discussion. There will be a meeting of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority tonight at the Women's League at 7 o'clock. International Center: There will be a tea dance from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Center. S : Letters to the Editor 4 IV; 'A .4 BARNABY I ( --- I fere's a nutty news item, Ellen. tih cops picked up a hunter in They kept him af the station house to sober up. But he still . L- . .A . So, m'boy, I flew up over the bushes and pointed Mvp'u.,,et ruight a By Crockett Johnson And, exactly as I pulled the trigger, the turkey f~prn h hrirk; rit Mna w I