)PAGE IWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, DEC. 22, 1944 ~'AGE TWO FRIDAY, I)EC. 2~, 1944 Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Notes on Nazi Counter-Attack The Pendulum 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 Stan Wallace Itay Dixon Hank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy BU., . . Managing Editor City Editor Associate Editor * . Sports Editor . Associate Sports Editor . . Women's Editor smness Staff Lee Amer . Business Manager Barbara Chadwick . . Associate Business Mgr. June Pomering . . . 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 inal matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier, $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. Hostile Forces? THE SUPREME COURT this week ruled that the Army had a right to remove all Japanese from the West Coast in 1942 because American shores were "threatened by hostile forces." The Court went further in this six to three decision and indicated that there was a differ- enee between this order and others under which Japanese Americans were detained in interior relocation centers. The decision in the case automatically released a Nisei woman from such a camp at Topaz, Utah. It was held by the court that the War Relo- cation Authority had no right to detain loyal citizens since no military law was involved. Some very basic considerations fundamental to our democracy were under fire in this case. What does a citizen have to do to be loyal to his country? To what extent can military law be substituted for civil practice even in war? Can the government under the veil of military expediency 'deprive citizens of their rights under the constitution? These questions the Court refrained from answering for it is the prerogative of the Court to confine itself to the specific point at issue even though a hop, skip, and a jump would give consideration to a more fundamental doctrine. Justice Murphy entered a vigorous dissent and claimed the exclusion order was one of "obvious race discrimination", and should have been declared void. The court took the view that imminent danger to the nation permitted the Army to relocate citizens of the United States on the West Coast because they had Japanese ancestors. The logi- cal extension of this doctrine is almost ludi- crous, Under the guise of imminent danger, almost any group with a common background can be de- prived of its rights, can be told what to do, and what not to do. The danger to the rights of all groups is readily apparent and we should recoil from this doctrine. Perhaps it would be wiser, for the sake of perpetuating at home what is being fought for abroad, to stretch the rule of miiltary expedi- ency to the limit before we impose restrictions and infringe civil liberties. Subsequent events have not proved real the danger that was thought to have existed and yet the precedent has been set and the Court didn't see fit to denounce it. We have an extreme reverence for law in this country and in that belief we feel that anything can be cured if we only pass a law, any kind of a law, so long as it is a law. But perhaps a little less reverence and a little more reason, as Professor Wes Mauer will tell you, should guide our action. -Stan Wallace PollR es uls [HE RESULTS of the Inter-Racial Associa- tion's campus poll on the establishment of a permanent Fair Employment Practices Com- mittee (FEPC) to erase racial discrimination in industry showed that at least 286 of the four hundred students polled favored the establish- ment of. a pernainent FEPC. The problem of racial discrimination in indu- stry is one of the most important to be solved i the present and post-war world. The FEPC was established in 1941 as a temporary meas- uxe. The bill in Congress now would establish By DREW PEARSON W ASHINGTON, Dec. 21-It is no secret that both sides on the Western front know pretty much what the other side is doing behind each Other's lines. Observation planes fly back and forth, the Nazis having jet-propelled planes Which go well over 400 miles an hour-so fast that no fighter plane can catch them, but not too fast to take pictures of Allied operations below. U. S. observation planes, while not so fast, undoubtedly must have been good enough to note the massing of the German army opposite the First Army for what was probably about a week ahead of the big Nazi counter-offensive. However, it is admitted that the First Army was taken off guard, so no steps had been taken to prepare for the German drive. U. S. command- ers apparently figured that the Germans were massing to defend against an American attack. Also U. S. troops noted the weakening of Nazi forces in the Vosges Mountains to the south, which meant that the Germans left this rough snowy mountain area relatively undefended and risked everything. It was a desperate gamble similar to the 1918 Marne offensive. Here are some of the reasons for the initial success of the daring Nazi move: 1. Marshal Von Rundstedt, the ablest Ger- man general, is now in complete command. He is the man who argued that the German Army should withdraw from France at the time of the Normandy invasion. Edwin Rommel, close friend of Hitler, opposed and it cost the Nazis about 800,000 men. Rommel's death un- doubtedly is a blessing to Germany, for it leaves Von Rindstedt, a disciple of Von Mackensen in the last war, in complete control. 2. The Nazis have tanks superior to ours- their latest Tiger tank being almost impossible to put out of commission. Even their older tanks have been reinforced with a bulkhead in the nose behind which is poured concrete. This makes it almost impossible for shells, fired head on, to knock them out. 3. The Nazis also have developed a new type of mortar, also have been saving their planes and put about 1,200 into battle last week end, also are using more and more robot bombs. 4. The Nazis have brought up a lot of fresh troops, while our men have been fighting for six long months-ever since Normandy. Russians Go Slow .-.- 5. Most important and inescapable factor, however, is the let-up of the Red Army on the Polish front, plus the stalemate of the two Brit- ish armies. It was known in advance, though officially denied, that the British would furnish only 30 per cent of the western invasion army, with an even lower percentage of replacements. American troops were to furnish 70 per cent. This is about the ratio followed. However, it was not contemplated that the Red Army, after reaching the Vistula River and Warsaw, would stop and detour through B adapest to Vienna. While the Germans probably haven't been able to shift many troops from the Polish front, they have been able to use far less munitions; in other words, if the Nazis had been fighting heavily on two fronts, their supply and production problems would have been terrific. As it is, they can now conentrate the major portion of their supplies on the Western front. Last fall when the Red Army eased up on the Polish front, highest U. S. war chiefs had their experts make a study of that front and report whether the Russians were easing up on purpose. The report was that the Red Army had actually tried to cross the Vistula, that German fortifications were extremely strong, and that the Red Army needed more supplies. At least two months have dragged on since then. Regardless of the factors, it is no secret that U. S. military men are bitterly disappointed at the Russian delay. They have been hopeful recently, however, that with the ground frozen the Polish offensive will soon start. It is the biggest factor to watch in the entire war. Battle of State Department. . . SENATORS Pepper, Guffey, and Chandler had an interesting conversation with the Presi- dent when they called him on the phone to ask whether the Stettinius-Hopkins State Depart- ment appointments really represented his own personal choice. They especially mentioned to him James C. Dunn and Brig. Gen. Julius Holmes, the latter known as a strong anti-Roosevelt man, and both of them linked with the pro-Vichy, anti-De Gaulle group which snarled things up in North Africa. Roosevelt replied that Dunn was Secretary Hull's personal choice as Assistant Secretary of State, and implied that a request for Dunn's pro- motion had been made when Hull resigned. Regarding Holmes, the President replied that he should be given a trial, and if he didn't work out he would be removed. Roosevelt added that he was glad the liberal senators had made the fight against the State Department new executives. "It was a very healthy thing and will put them on guard for the future," he remarked. Note-Those who have watched Roosevelt operate over the years all agree that if there is one thing he is famous for it is failure to remove an official who doesn't function. In all his twelve years of office there have been Capital Chaff... NSIDE fact is that it was self-effacing brain- truster Ben Cohen who first sold Senator Joe Ball of Minnesota the idea of having a talk with Roosevelt regarding foreign policy before elections. Cohen met Ball in New York and planted the first seeds which led to Ball's famous switch to Roosevelt. . . . But when Cohen passed word along to Harry Hopkins and the meeting with Roosevelt took place, Ben was left out in the cold. Harry, not Ben, sat in on the conference which made history. .. .The only Senator who voted against the confirmation of Ed Stettinius as Secretary of State was Bill Langer of North Dalpota. Since then seven Senators have told him he was absolutely right. . . . Senators Pepper of Florida and Guffey of Pennsylvania always have been ahead of their time when it comes to foreign policy, always have been proved right in the end. . . . In May, 1940, before France fell, Pepper proposed a resolution by which France and Britain could buy U. S. Army planes imme- diately. Other Senators snorted, said it was an insult to the Foreign Relations Committee, de- manded that it be rejected in 24 hours. It was. . . . The only Senator who joined with Pepper in voting for this resolution was Guffey of Penn- sylvania. . . . At that time, as now, Pepper got no support from the White House. But a few weeks later. Roosevelt dipped into U. S. arsenals without permission from Congress and rushed all sorts of munitions to Britain. This was one factor which probably tipped the scales in Eng- land's favor in the battle of Britain. (Copyright, 1944, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Suggestion on Bluebooks NCE MORE the devil has dealt the student of this fair university a blow below the "water line." I am referring to the ancient practice conceived by the prophets of Satan of tossing the proverbial book at the child delinquents that roam this blemished campus. Why oh why is it necessary to subject the college student to such treatment every six or seven weeks throughout the semesters? The average "eager beaver" does absolutely nothing for days-for weeks, for that matter-only to be dragged out of his lethargy to be confronted with bluebooks, speech reports, and all the rest of the "niceties" our enlightened despots can uncover. The solution of this problem is too practical, I know. All these ambitious professors would have to do would be to spread their "Christmas presents" out over a period of three or more weeks and the situation would be lightened. I have a better solution-says here. If you don't believe me, just ask me. Why not every eight weeks declare an exam week where all your "important" blue books could be taken with the least amount of grief. Then we could com- mence the second half of the term. However, as I said this would be too practical; also too much organizing for those already "overworked" secretaries in the administration offices-the poor lads and lassies who labor from 9 to 12 and from 2.to 4, 5 days a week. If you say so, I shall go back to sleep and quit dreaming, but I do think the professors could be a little less cold hearted. What do you say, Prof? -Harry Hank only three known removed outright Usually he shifts promotes them. cases where Roosevelt has a relatively high official. them to another job or By BERNARD ROSENBERG 0 GALLERY of campus charac- ters would be complete without a portrait of the grind. Let us call him Hubert. Hubert, be it under- stood, is Shiela's boy friend andj Shiela stands for the collitch girl at her worst.j I have sketched Shiela in this column before, and been called a boor for it. The girls, however, who took offense most demonstrated my point best. it being that they were excessively preoccupied with them- selves. Unstirred by ideas of a more abstract natuire, so soon as these females were attacked head on they felt deeply injured. But, sorry to say, Shiela, the nit-wit coed with a glad eye and an empty head (like the world) is too much with us. It is Shiela's fate to go through life with the horribly mistaken notion that she possesses supreme knowledge whereas, in fact, she has not mas- tered the rudiments of it. And neither has Hubert. ledged crammed into his skull for wisdom which he never acquired. Nobody needs to be told again that this is an era of specialization or that we have wonderfully adap- ted ourselves to it. Lawyers know the law, doctors know medicine, but unless a bedrock of real educa- tion underlies their special dexter- ity in specific fields, America will have to look elsewhere than in its universities for leadership. A pox on Shiela and Hubert!' DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN FRIDAY, DEC. 22, 1944 VOL. LV, No. 44 Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- hers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:30 p. m. of the day preceding publication (11:30 a. in. Sat- urdays). For, the grind grinds. He pores over musty textbooks, memorizes what they contain down to the last Notices footnote, disgorges the stuff comeATI examination time-and straightway Automo bile Regulation: Tieo Uni- 1 forgets it. Hubert has never been versity Automobile Regulation wvill be' known to relax the tenseness of his lifted for the Christmas vacation muscles as he records with minute- period from 12 noon on Friday, Dec. ness and exactitude every syllable 22 until 8 a.m. on Thursday, Dec. 28. however incoherent it may be, that is uttered by Professor Whoozits New Year's Day is not a University from the lecture platform. If the holiday and classes will be conducted professor, in a moment of drollery, as usual. should essay a witticism, why Hubert --- throws that in, too. The General Library will close at "Complete notes for the fastidiou. o p.min. Friday, Dec. 22, and will re- student" is his motto--and Huber( main closed Saturday to Monday. is nothing if not fastidious. Thu Dec. 23-25. On Tuesday and Wednes- notes he takes home, re-writes, out- day, Dec. 26 and 27, it will be open lines, checks, compares, caresses, and from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. binds. Not until the course is fin- All Collegiate and Departmental ished does he realize the magnificen' Libraries will be closed Dec. 23-25. irrelevance of the facts he has sc and on Tuesday and Wednesday,' studiously pigeon-holed in his mind Dec. 26 and 27. will be open on a short schedule. Hours will be posted Facts are necessary too- but on the doors. should not be confused with ideas. All libraries will resume the regu- Intelligence lies in the use of one's lar schedules Dec. 28, and will be conceptual faculty. It is not a open full time on New Year's Day. TVA Success THE TENNESSEE Valley Authority --TVA-is now conceded to be a success even by many of those who opposed it bitterly while it was get- ting on its feet. It began in Woodrow Wilson's time as the Muscle Shoals (Wilson Dam), Ala., project for nitrate manufacture. It lapsed out of public attention dur- ing the Harding, Coolidge and Hoo- ver administrations, and was revived in the first Roosevelt administration. Nowadays, the TVA operates a giant complex of dams and power plants embracing the entire Tenes- see River system. In the area are parts of Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi. Ten- nessee and Kentucky. Results de- livered include flood control, erosion curtailment, electric power produc- tion and improved navigation. f Athletics Paradox . . [HEN athletic coaches Ray Courtright and Eddie Lowrey were "released last summer, the athletic department declar- ed that the move was made for reasons of econ- omy. At the same time hockey was to be sus- pended. Yet only two weeks ago Vic Heyliger was hired to coach Michigan's puck squad for the coming season, and only yesterday Heyliger announced the scheduling of a contest with Minnesota, a move which was'vetoed when sug- gested by Lowrey in 1943-44. It is apparent that there were other reasons besides "economy" involved in last summers' house-cleaning. Yet one of the mentors had brought home Big Ten titles. We wonder, -Harvey Frank, BAd '44 Answer to Miss Ryan ... T SEEMS to me that by expressing their own viewpoints on what Miss Ryan terms "idle dissertations on the evils of our social struc- ture," the editorialists and columnists on the staff of The Daily succeed in arousing people like Miss Ryan to do a- little serious thinking on important issues such as compulsory military tr.aining, racial problems, etc. These editorials and articles, which represent the personal views of the writers only, if they do nothing more than awaken the students to what domestic and foreign issues are confronting us, serve their purpose. Therefore, I would suggest that henceforth Miss Ryan either write something constructive, or else keep her adolescent criticisms to herself. -Beryl Kulka matter of having acquired informa- tion on a subject, but of piecing together that and other informa- tion in new patterns. Any college, therefore, that fails to stimulate the associative imagination of its students is unsuccessful. For with- cut imagination, concepts do not emerge from the cortex to illumine life. Thus, we have in Ann Arbor as on other campuses dull, plodding, con- scientious, but fatuous Huberts, wh are ch so proper in their rmanner, and ever so agreeable to the faculty Hubert wends his way uncertainly through college and into a middle; class society that welcomes him with open arms. He is not concerned with the na- ture and destiny of man. He can a, little get out from within himself a, Shiela whom he will eventually wed The two of them and their offspring are doomed to eternal smugness be- cause they have never. been shocker; into recognition of their own massive ignorance. They will in due time come to look down their noses at the "uneducated" people who, thougi: they have not gone to college, out- distance them ten to one. SPECIALISTS, of - course, need tc retain a good many of the details with which they are burdened in school. However, more than one de- partment in this University give, quarterly examinations at whici: time it is stated that students are under no obligation to remember what they beat into their heads be- yond that date. The iawyers, medi- cal doctors, and engineers are the chief products of specialization. Hu- bert, unless he takes up hotel man- agement or salesmanship, most often interests himself in one of these pro- fessions. They require a maximum of absorptive power so that the more sponge-like he is the better and a minimum of individuality so that the more docile he is the better. And what results from all this? At the vanguard of every reactionary movement in this country one can be sure to find specialized men. The American Bar Association, and the American Medical Society, have al- ways been notoriously illiberal. They are no less so today. As for the engineers, fortunately they seldom venture into public life and are, forl the most part, unconscious of it.l Herbert Hoover with his engineer's orientation was in full flight froml reality most of the time he occupied the White House. There is a move- ment in existence calling itself Tech- nocratic which. would have the engi- neers running our society. May Heaven protect us from that. Hu-j bert's (and probably Herbert's) trou- ble is that he never got a liberal education, that he mistook the know- By Crockett Johnson To February, June, and October raduates: Senior pictures for the 1945 Michiganensian are due at the Student Publications Building Feb. 1. Appointments with photographers should be made at once. Pictures from any photographer are accept- able if they are a glossy print, meas- uring 4" by 6". preferably with a light background. Applications in Suppart 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 have projects needing support during 1945-1946 file their proposals in the Office of the Graduate School by Friday, Feb. 9, 1945. Those wishing to renew previous requests whether now receiving support or not should so indicate. Application forms will oe mailed or can be obtained at Sec- retary's Office, Rm. 1006 Rackham Building, Telephone 372. Candidates for the Teacher's Certi- ficate for February and June, 1945: A list of candidates has been posted- on the bulletin board of the School of Education, Rm. 1431 University Ele- mentary School. Any prospective candidate whose name does not ap- pear on this list should call at the office of the Recorder of the School of Education, 1437 U.ES. United States Civil Service An- nouncement for Metallurgist, salary, $2,433 to $6,228 a year, has been received in our office. For further details, stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bureau of Appointments. Academic Notices Freshmen, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Freshmen may not drop courses without "E" grade after Saturday, Dec. 3b. Only stu- dents with less than 24 hours' credit are affected by this regulation. They 'must be recommended by their Aca- demic Counselors for this extraordi- nary privilege. School of Education Freshmen: Courses dropped after Saturday, Dec. 30, will be recorded with the grade of E except under extraordin- ary circumstances. No course is con- sidered dropped unless it has been reported in the office of the Regis- trar, Rm, 4. University Hall.# Events Today The Geological Journal Club will meet in Rm. 4065, Nat. Sci. Bldg. at 12:15 p.m. Program: G. V. Cohee on "The Cambrian and Ordovician boundary in Michigan and adjoining areas," with further discussions by G. M. Ehlers, R. C. Hussey and H. Wedow. All interested are cordially invited to attend. U.S.O.: There will not be a meeting of the dancing class tonight. None of the individual states in the Tennessee River system could have handled the river and its tributaries alone. It took a Federal organization to do it-one which could ignore siate boundary lines just as the rivers do, and which could also fit the ambitions of state politicians into their proper place in the whole picture. Needed in This Valley... On the other side of the Mississippi and considerably to the north of the Tennessee River system is another and much bigger network of rivers- the Missouri River system. The Missouri itself is 2469 miles long, from its beginning at Three Forks, Mont., to where it empties into the Mississippi at St. Louis. Some of its feeders are big rivers in their own right. The biggest of them are the Platte, Little Missouri. Yellowstone, James and Big Sioux. Nine large states lie wholly or partly in the Missouri watershed-Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, Nebras- ka, North Dakota, South Dakota, fWyoming. mGen. Custer's old Seventh Cavalry regiment (now fighting dismounted with MacArthur in the Philippines) had a song about "the wild Missouri" (last syllable rhyming with "rye") and the term was and is no exag- geration. The wild Missouri sages one flood a year regardless, and some- times more. It put on two in 1943, and the total estimated dam- age was $63,000,000. A great deal of effort has gone into jetties, dikes, channel-widening, and so on, to curb the Missouri and its more temperamfental tributaries, but it hasn't done much good. There axe the usual conflicts between states over what should be done, and what the main uses of the river should be. Farmers back in the semi-arid states of MIontana and North and South Dakota want irrigation ser- vice, chiefly; people down in Nebras- ka and Missouri are more interested in flood control and better naviga- tion. It seems obvious. that, as in the case of the Tennessee River sys- tem, nothing but a Federal Author- ity, overriding individual state ob- jections in order to serve the whole Missouri system area, can deliver a complete job. Workable Plan Necessary Not that a Missouri Valley Author- ity-M VA-should try to copy the TVA in all respects. Problems in- volved in the two areas differ widely. The Missouri, for example, runs mainly through fiat country, while the Tennessee and its feeders are mainly in mountain country. For that reason, it is hard to see how any phenomenal amounts of power could be produced from Mis- souri River dams-though there are engineers who insist that some one to three million more kilowatts than Iat present could be wrung ot of it. Floodscontrol and irrigation look from here like the major goods which an MVA could deliver, to the great benefit of the 11,000,000 people who inhabit the Missouri River area, and to the increase of the entire nation's real wealth. David E. Lilienthal, who has made so good a record as TVA chairman, might be given the job of supervising development of an MVA. The main thing, we think, is for Congress to put together a work- able plan, with the best profes- sional advice procurable, and get it on the books, so that work can be commenced as soon as possible after the war. We'll most likely be needing a lot of job-making public works projects sooner or later after the war. Here is one which, in addition to making considerable jobs, ought to make that part of the United States considerably bet- ter and more productive. -New York Daily News Raiways Railway Shares have reached their best levels in more than seven years in trading on the New York Stock Exchange this month. The railroads are prosperous. The fact has a bear- ing on the state of safety equipment on the railroads, which, as analysis of wrecks in past months have shown, is far from adequate. 4 . . C x 9 1 I BARNABY E® of~i A careless driver! He'll have ME to answer to, m'boy, for this outrage- On second thought, I'll put the whole afhir in the hands of an attorney-