THE MICHIGAN DlAILY 'Tiuj,-S4AT, DECU 145, 1f4, 1 11 -PRI WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Facts About Joseph C. Grew KEEP MOVING -FByG- ANN FAGAIN GINGER Business Staff Lee Amer . . . Business Manager Barbara Chadwick Associate Business Mgr. June Pomering. Associate Busness 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 iights of re- publication of all other matters herein also reserved, Entered at the Post Ocfle at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as secnd-cass mal matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.50, by mal, $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 REFPNRE9NTEDF OR NATION,. ADV t3ING WY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MASON AVE. NW YORK. N.Y. CHICAO - OSTON - LOS ANMIMES-SAN FSACiSCQ 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. G00-dfellows The belief that the wartime boom makes the tradition of helping the needy at Christmas time obsolete is orle of the -most unfortunate ideas to stem from the war. The overcrowded stores, the bustling shoppers, the tales of huge paychecks coming out of the factories tend to make us forget that the down- to-the heel shanties by the railroad track and the overcrowded apartment houses are still here, and still filled with children who believe in Santa Claus. For many families, these wartime holidays are the first to find a bountiful Christmas feast on the table and a tree full of presents, but for many years, this Christmas will mark the first spent with a star at the window as well as on the tree. The Goodfellow drive is your chance to play Santa Claus to the hundreds of Ann Arbor children whose Santa isriding a B-29 instead of a reindeer this year, to keep your Christmas merry and your New Year happy. -Annette Shenker Sedition Trial Statements on American judicial procedure made by Prof. Carl L. Becker during his lecture here on "Constitutional Government" have been given added pertinence by an announcement that the mass sedition trial at Washington would be discontinued. Twenty-six persons under indictment for sedi- tion were thus released by the recent death of Justice Edward C. Eicher, trying the case. Unless the government institutes new action these 26 persons, all shadowed by suspicion, are free to return to their earlier pursuits. Prof. Becker asserted in his lecture that exist- ing defects in the laws of civil rights by which Americans are protected were attributed to their age. Eighteenth century laws on civil liberties need revising, he said. Foremost among those antiquated laws, which have since ceased to guarantee the liberties they were framed to pro- tect, were the right to trial by jury and other phases of the American conception of fair judi- cial procedure. Some revision is needed, he asserted. The ending of the sedition trial is a tragic confirmation of Prof. Becker's statements. The trial's completion would have indicated whether this democratic nation possessed suffi- cient legal machinery to protect itself from subversive elements in war-time. The spirit of the trial was admirable, but eight months of hearings and some three million words of testi- m ny were not sufficient to bring the case to a jury. It is evident that some revision of the method of trial is needed. -Paul Sislin Facka ges Orchids and bouquets to the campus coeds who have gone out of their way in the past few weeks to provide Christmas packages for wound- ed veterans at Percy Jones Hospital at Battle Creek. Their efforts have been wholly unsolicited and sprung from their sincere desire to help make this Christmas just a bit more bright for some Fallmir xvh riihi hn!' for thn ninn in By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON, Dec. 13-Grey, grizzled Joseph C. Grew, newly alpointed Undersecretary of State, is about six feet three in height, towered like a grandfather over the diminutive Japanese when he was in Toyko. Grew was just two years ahead of FDR at Groton and Harvard, is descended from the Boston Cabots, married into the J. P. Morgans, and after a youthful career of shooting tigers in Manchuria and elephant- hunting in India, settled down to diplomacy. Popular in Turkey . . When Grew was Ambassador to Turkey he once jumped into the Bosporus and rescued a Turk from drowning. For this and other quali- ties he was immediately popular in Turkey, also in Japan. But when he was Undersecretary of State, the job 4o which Roosevelt has again nominated him, Joe was in constant hot water. Frank B. Kellogg, then Secretary of State, and a former senator from Minnesota, was green at the job. He leaned heavily on Grew, a career diplomat. Before long, Kellogg woke up to find he had landed Marines in Nicaragua and was trading hot verbal blows with Mexico. All Latin America turned against us. The Nicaraguan row was especially messy. Senator Borah got all steamed up. Various senators introduced resolutions. They claimed the State Department had picked its own man, Adolfo Diaz, an employee of an American company, and made him president, then sent in the Marines to keep him in office. Worried over the rumpus, the State Department ac- cused Mexico of stirring up trouble in Nica- ragua against us. Old man Kellogg got the blame, but Grew and career diplomats led him into, it. Finally Calvin Coolidge stepped in, appointed Henry L. Stimson as special envoy to Nicaragua over the State Department's head. Stimson cleaned up the mess. However, it took five years to undo the error and get the Marines out of, Nicaragua. Also it took the appointment of Ambassador Dwight Mor- row to smooth over relations with Mexico and put things on a non-nose-thumbing basis. Unfair Promotions Clwrged . .. By'this time Grew was ready to resign. But an equally smelly mess was brewing right inside the. State Department-unfair promotions. It brought four resolutions in Congress before it was finally cleaned up. For many years, U. S, diplomats had wanted a career service of their own. Finally, in 1924, Congress gave it to them. That same year, Grew was made Undersecre- tary of State, also made chairman of the per- sonnel board to administer promotions under the new Rogers Act. Running the new career state department with Grew were Hugh Wilson, heir of the Chicago shirt manufacturer; J. Butler Wright, arbiter of protocol and diplomatic dress; and Leland Harrison, scion of a wealthy New York family. Their appetites were insatiable. Their friends got the promotions, hard-working consuls in the field got none. Illustrative case was Eugene Hinkle. Gene was a nice boy and socially successful. He squeezed through the career service examina- tions, but after one year of the usual training in the State Department he still didn't know what it was all about. So the personnel board of which Grew was chairman decided to attach him to the office of press relations where he would have to answer half a hundred news queries a day and learn to stay on his toes. At first, newsmen were patient. But when Hinkle got bound up in endless red tape, they complained to Secretary Kellogg-to no avail. Hinkle had a friend at court. He was related to Undersecre- tary Joseph C. Grew. Senator George Moses of New Hampshire help- ed to break open the whole promotion scandal. A good friend of Coolidge, Moses went to the White House. Also he introduced a bill in Congress. So did Congressman Steve Porter, also Congressman Edwards of Georgia, and Con- gresswoman Edith Nourse Rogers, whose husband sponsored the career service. About that time Tracy Lay, who helped write the Rogers act, resigned as U. S. Consul General at Buenos Aires because of unfairness in promotions. Things got so bad that Vice President Charley Dawes even made a speech about it. Favoritism Admitlled . . . FINALLY Frank B. Kellogg, in an official an- nouncement, ate crow. He admitted rank favoritism for a few of the blueblood insiders. "In view of this," he said, "steps should be taken On Second Tiwuht.. By RAY DIXON This EAM-ELAS-EAH situation is so compli- cated that it's time someone revives the old expression about, "It's all Greek to me." Tokyo claims we bombed the Imperial Palace as well as photographing it, while the U. S. neither denies nor confirms it. It it's true we hope the Japs believe that a man's home is his palace. Stettinius proved he's a 1rue diplomat by the way he avoided the Senate committee's question- ing on Tuesday. to correct any unintentional injustice that had occurred." Since then, favoritism has been less blatant. No longer at official functions is the caste line drawn so carefully as when Joe Grew gave a reception at his palatial home and invited the career officers one day and the ordinary non-career functionaries of the State Department the next. Grew and friends saw the handwriting on the wall about the time Congress started its vari- ious investigations. Kellogg and Grew had not been getting along any too well anyway, with the Secretary of State chafing more and more at his career advisers. As the Congres- sional probes broke, Grew promoted himself to be Ambassador to Turkey; together with Hugh Wilson as Minister to Switzerland, Le- land Harrison as Minister to Sweden and But- ler Wright as Minister to Hungary. These were juicy plums. With Grew to Turkey went his relative, Eugene Hinkle, as secretary to embassy, thereby breaking the rule that young entrants to the career service must first serve two years as consuls. Freed from the admini- strative job of running the delicate machinery of the State Department, Grew made an A-1 ambassador-in fact, one of the best in the service. (Copyright, 1944, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: U.S. Foreign Policy By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, Dec. 13-Two themes run through American foreign policy. It seems to me there is a constant struggle between them. One is the theme of intertnational cooperation, and so we have Dumbarton Oaks, and Bretton Woods. The other is the theme of "freedom," of "inde- pendence," and so it turns out that while Britain and France now have twenty-year treaties of mutual assistance with the Soviet Union, we have not. We are willing to join in some kind of big general post-war organization with Rus- sia, but we are not willing to enter into any sort of marriage; we are willing to attend the same picnic, but not to live in the same house. Mr. Stettinius' recent statement, affirming our detachment from any effort to shape the politi- cal futures of Italy, Belgium, Greece, etc., pleas- ed the liberals, but I think it also stroked other groups the right way. It reaffirmed our "inde- pendence," our disconnectedness. It relit ancient fires of hostility to Britain, in some quarters; and pleasantly, too, because it did so on the soothing moral basis of our concern for Italian, Belgian and Greek free- dom. (Only an idiot will think that I am criti- cizing Mr. Stettinius' fine statement in mak- ing this objective report on some of its inci- dental effects and meanings. I think Mr. Stettinius' stone was well and truly cast. This is a story about the ripples.) Historical patterns die hard, and slowly. Mr. Stettinius' admirable statement also contained within itself the idea of commercial freedom as well as political freedom; freedom for ourselves to set up air routes to everywhere, to send mer- chant ships anywhere.1 Business enterprise, in America, uses the word "freedom" with the same meaning. The struggle that has been going on inside Amer- ica these many years between the concept of government regulation, and the concept of free enterprise, is not unlike the struggle between the idea of an organized world, and the idea of American freedom to go out and get the business wherever we can get it. SOMETIMES wonder whether we really love peace, or whether we only hate war. There is a difference. Peace is a kind of house, which we rqust first agree to help build, and then must consent to live in, and according to certain rules; no ashes on the carpeting, take your turn at the bathroom door, no loud music, after eleven o'clock, and a decent regard for the feelings of the rest of the family. I do not say we are entirely without the desire for this kind of a world community; but this constructive concept does struggle in our minds with another one, that war is merely an unhappy accident: let's get it out of the way, and then be free to do whatever we want to do. Mr. Stettinius' fine statement undoubtedly aroused images of this sort in many minds. Its pattern was a pattern of disengagement from Britain, of going it alone; and this may be one reason why so many conservatives liked it, even though its point was support of liberal and leftist movements in three countries. Of course I feel that the only way out is to build that house, and to learn to 'live in it; to come to a financial accord with Britain which will give her some hope of a future, even if it costs us some air lines, and thus enable her to forego these destructive Greek and Belgian ex- periments. That would give Britain's liberals a place to go, too; we cannot expect them to give up their support of Toryism without an alter- native. But it would be so nice not to have to do it; not to have to give anybody anything nor to ask anybody anything; to go freely where the trade is, where the green grass beckons and the soft winds invite; and we sniff the air of this freedom, and it is sweet, and the two impulses in American life are perhaps in sharp- er conflict than we know. (Copyright, 1944, New York Post Syndicate) AMERICANS are proud of their high standard of living, the high- est in the world. Some citizens feel satisfied just because our standards are the highest, disregarding the per- iodic depressions, unemployment, and 1/3 of the nation being ill-housed, ill-clothed, ill-fed during the '30's. But even we who admit these statis- tics, and are trying to make plans to correct these in post-war America, frequently forget how we got where we are. Under our capitalist system of ec- onomics, capital and labor are the two forces involved in production. And these two factors were respon- sible for building this high standard of living. Most Americans know the story of the Great American For- tunes, of the mergers of U. S. Steel, Standard Oil, the beginning of mono- poly-capital in the early 1900's, the exciting achievements of inventors who later headed rubber, radio, auto industries. We are brought up on the philosophy of Jay Gould, Com- modore Vanderbilt, I-picked-myself- up-by-my-bootstrais-Tom Girdler. But do we know the other side of' the story, or even consciously admit that there is another side? Do we know anything at all of labor's ef- forts in building railroads, clearing forests, digging coal to run factories? And all this at great personal risk, before the safety of workers was even considered in setting up manufactur- ing processes. All this at low wages, 12 to 15 hours of work six or seven days a week, and much of it done by slave labor, and by women, and children. Workers have had a great part in inventing new methods of pro- duction, too. This is particularly clear from results in defense plants where Suggestion Boxes have been provided. Much time and money has been saved by this means. But what we hear in wartime news- papers is, instead, a constant rhythm of "labor strikes, workers squander their.money, the common people are- n't doing their part, aren't patriotic:" THE United States War Department has now come forth to blast these myths. Gen. G. C. Marshall, Chief of Staff, and Gen. J A. Ulio, Adjutant General have issued Orientation Fact Sheets Nos. 29 and 33 for distribu- tion to servicemen in this country and overseas. No double talk here. No sugar coat- ing. "Two opinions rather widely held by soldiers are responsible for considerable 'anti-civilian' feeling. They are: (1) That war production is being seriously hampered by labor disputes. (2) That war workers are living in luxury on huge wages. The serious thing about these opinions is that they are misconceptions based probably on inadequate access to fac- tual material." As for the "strike myth": " . . . so prodigious and faithful have been the efforts of the great majority of our people that the loss (of production due to strikes) represents less than 1/10 of 1% of the total labor time available." "The prominence given in the press to accounts of strikes has sometimes tended to overshadow the positive achievement of labor in the war effort. Undoubtedly press re- ports have tended to dramatize and perhaps overplay the occasional stop- pages that have occurred in war pro- duction. It is precisely because these are extraordinary that they are news- worthy." "During the past year American workers have turned in over 1,000,- 000 suggestions through their Lab- or-Management Committees resulting in the saving of millions of man-hours and millions of pounds of critical materials." For example, suggestions at Kaiser's Oregon and Washington shipyards during 1943 resulted in saving of "1,823,278 man-hours and a total saving in manpower and materials valued at $2,850,000." "High-living, champagne-drink- ing workers grab headlines and feature comic strips, By contrast, a Dept. of Labor study asserts 'the burdens of the war have been borne by nearly all factory workers in the form either of a reduced scale of living or of harder work without material improvement in current living." No. 29 quotes statistics showing that in October, 1943 (there have been no pay increases since then) the, average factory worker with three dependents had real earnings ('after deductions for taxes and bonds, al- lowances for increased living costs) of only $5.65 a week above his earn- 'I ings in January, 1941. "The single worker with no de- pendents had (an increase of) 22c, enough for two beers per week" above his January, 1941, earnings. Tin conclusion, the War Depart- y Crockett Johnson ment says: "The production front record of management and labor is magnificent. It needs and should have no apology, only publicity and; understanding." General Marshall and the War Department are to be congratulat- ed for finally setting the facts down straight and for leaving out the myths created by supposedly "im- partial" news reports. DRAMA1 THE DEPARTMENT of Speech launched its dramatic season last night on an auspicious stream of chuckles. No, not chuckles-belly laughs, for Jerome Chodorov and Joseph Fields' adaptation of "Junior Miss" is scarcely on the subtle side. It is, in fact, a jerky, episodic, al- most plotless and everywhere pre- cious take-off on adolescent America. That the audience, what there was of it in a half-empty theatre, some- times acted in a manner not far different from that of the cast, is' a comment on the far-reaching effects of Hollywood-which this play paro- dies. Judy Graves, the in-between who befuddles affairs andistraightens them out with equal ability, is ex- pertly played by Ethel Isenbeg. She moves about the stage in correctly "awkward" and graceless fashion cavorts with her playmate from the apartment above, Fuffy Adams, gor- geously done by Mary Acton, giggles here, and simpers there all with telling effect. The playwrights compounded this farce from several short stories by Sally Benson, and it seems strung together rather unevenly though the humor sparked by bright dialogue is 3ustained throughout and a climax of sorts is reached somewhere near the middle. Lucille Genuit, playing Judy's older sister Lois entertains an assortment of boy friends around whom some very nearly terrific slapstck is built One discerns the experienced hand )f Director Valentine Windt in on of the funniest bits of pantomine this reviewer has ever seen on an Ann Arbor stage: Albert Kunody (James Land) lighting a cigarette. No character was seriously mis-cast un- less it was Miss Genuit whose talents are best put to sweeter roles, and Robert Acton who looked as young as his offspring. Byron Mitchell was properly subdued, if somewhat ill at ease in a role that called for sobriety, Babette Blum contributed a gem as Hilda, the maid, and Orris Mills blustered more effectively as the eve- ning progressed. Herbert Phillipi's settings shook some, but they were adequate. The make-up Was not. This is a very serious defect in any attempt to cre- ate versimilitude-one which can be overcome by tonight if the proper steps are taken. -Bernard' Rosenberg DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN THURSDAY, DEC. 14, 1944 VOL. LV, No. 37 Al notices for The Daily Official Bul- letin are to be sent to the office of the hall, in typewritten form by 3:30 p. m. of the day preceding its publication, except on Saturday when the notices should be submitted by 11:30 a. m. Notices It seems necessary again ito call attention to the necessity for report- ing every accident immediately on its occurrence. One or two unfortunate situations have arised recently due to the failure of somebody, whose duty it was, to make such a report. Reports should be made in accor- dance with the following instruc- tions: Instructions for Reporting Acci- dents: (1) Report All Accidents oc- curring in line of duty involving any person on the University payroll in whatever capacity, whether medical care is required or not. Accidents should. be reported in writing or by telephone to the Business Office of the University Hospital (Hospital ex- tension 307). A supply of University of Michigan accident report forms .(No. 3011) will be furnished on request by tde HospitalnBusiness Office. (2) Medical Care. Injuries requir- ing medical care will be treated only at the University Hospital. Employ- ees receiving care elsewhere will be responsible for the expense of such treatment. Whenever possible a writ- ten report of any accident should accompany the employee to the In- formation Desk on the Main Floor of the University Hospital. This report will he anthori n for c Tu eRnit n l sation law is for the mutual protec- tion of employer and employee. In order to enjoy the privileges provided by the law all industrial accidents must be reported promptly to the correct authorities. These reports entitle each employee to compensa- tion for loss of time and free medical care as outlined in the law. The Compensation Law covers any industrial 'accident occurring while an employee is engaged in the activi- ties of his employment which results in either a permanent or temporary disability, or which might conceivably develop into a permanent or tempor- ary disability. Further Information. If at any time an employee wishes further information regarding any compen- sation case, he is urged to consult either the Hospital Business Office or the Office of the ChiefResident Phy- sician at the Hospital, or the Bus- iness Office of the University on the Campus. Shirley W. Smith Approved Organizations: The fol- lowing organizations have submitted to the Office of the Dean of Students a list of their officers for the aca- demic year 1944-45 and have been approved for that period. Those which have not registered with that office are presumed to be inactive for the year. Fraternities and sororities which maintain houses on the cam- pus, or those which are operating temporarily without houses, are not included in this list. Alpha Chi Sigma, Alpha Kappa Alpha, Alpha Kappa Delta, Alpha Phi Omega, Am. Inst. of Architects, Am. Inst. of Elec. Engineers, Am. Soc. of Civil Engineers. Am. Soc. of Mechanical Engineers. Armenian Student Association, Cercle Francais, Christian Science Organization, Del- ta Omega, Delta Sigma Theta, Engi- neering Council, Forestry Club, Inter- Cooperative Council, Interfraternity Council, Inter - Racial Association, Christian Fellowship (Michigan), Kappa Phi. Lester Cooperative, Men's Judiciary Council, Michigan Cooperative, Mi- chigan League, Michigan Union, Michigan Youth for Democratic Ac- tion, Mortar Board, Mu Phi Epsilon, Newman Club, Palmer Cooperative, Panhellenic Association, Phi Delta Epsilon. Philippine Michigan Club, Pi Lambda Theta, Post-War Council, Prescott Club, Quarterdeck Society, Rho Chi, Robert Owen House, Roch- dale Cooperative, Sailing Club (Mich- igan). Scroll, Senior Society, Sigma Alpha Iota, Sigma Xi, Sociedad Hispanica, Society of Women Engineers, Sphinx, Stevens Cooperative, Student Relig- ious Association, Triangles, Veterans Organization, Vulcans, Women's Ath- letic Association, Women's Glee Club, Wyvern, World Student Service Fund Com., Zeta Phi Eta. Students, Fall Term, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Courses dropped after Saturday, Dec. 16, by students other than freshmen will be recorded with the grade of "E." Upon the recommendation of their Academic Counselors, freshmen, (students with less than 24 hours credit) may be granted the extra- ordinary privilege of dropping cour- ses without penalty through the eighth week. L.S.&A. Civilian Freshman Five- Week Reports will be given out in the Academic Counselors Office, 108 Ma- son Hall in the following order: Dec. 13, Wednesday, A through H; Dec. 14, Thursday, I through ; Dec. 15, Friday, P through Z. Detroit Armenian Women's Club Award: The Detroit Armenian Wo- men's Club offers a scholarship award of $100 for 1945-46, open for compe- tition by undergraduate students of Armenian parentage residing in the Detroit Metropolitan district who have had at least one year of college work and who have demonstrated both scholastic ability and excellence of character. The award will be made by the scholarship committee of the club May 15, 1945. Applica- tions will be received and forwarded by F. E. Robbins, Assistant to the President, 1021. Angell Hall, Lectures French Lecture: Professor Palmer A. Throop of the Department of His- tory, will give the first of the French lectures sponsored by the Cercle Francais today at 4:10 p.m. in Rm. D, Alumni Memorial Hall. The title of his lecture is: "La Predication de la Croisade." Tiokets for the series of lectures may be procured from the Secretary of the Department of Romance Lang- uages (Rm. 112,.Romance Language Building or at the door at the time of the lecture. These lectures are open to the gen- eral public. All servicemen are ad- mitted free of charge to all lectures. Events Today Chemical and Metaihtrgical Eugi- icerin;. Seminar: At the regular Seminar meeting of the Department of Chemical and Metallurgical Engi- neering today, Mr C. Karkalits will speak on the subject, "Oscilloscope; Its Use in Colorometric Determina- tions." The mnpptim, will h. held at 4 1.m .;; ;* -{ 'w , Note on the manpower shortage: a ours claims he saw a bunch of girls snowballs at a man yesterday, Students are getting tap-happy Mortarboard and Senior Society talk members. BARNABY If you fry, you may learn to rif _.t friend of throwing again as ~e in new And he's got a baseball bat- 1111111 1 z I Yes! Pop can te!l frorm