T~lE M11IGAN DABTN W f i Y 2; 1, 7 , i , i 4,:1 WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Brownell Binds GOP Wounds KEEP MOVING -..RB y - .- ANN FAGAN GINGER By DREW PEARSON W ASHINGTON, Jan. 10-Republican National Committee Chairmhan Herbert Brownell spent a restless two days in Washington last week trying to bind up the GOP's wounds. He had come to the Capitol hoping to get some unity on a party program only to find that Con- gressional leaders were in revolt against the reg- ular party organization. He had planned that the Dewey-dominated National Committee could take over entire con- trol of the party and begin laying the ground- work for a great Republican victory in the 1946 Congressional elections. Instead, Repub- lican Congressional leaders, headed by Joe Mar- tin of Massachusetts and Charlie Halleck of Indiana, advised that House Republicans were In no mood to be trifled with, suggested that it would be better to let them have their head for a while. Most significant decision reached by Brown- ell during his visit was the agreement he gave GOP leaders that he would continue as Re- publican National Chairman after the Indian- apolis meeting Jan. 20. Brownell had planned to step out at that time and was not too con- cerned over who would succeed him. Then he began a quiet survey of sentiment among party leaders, found the organization badly split, but with many feeling that he is the one man they could most agree on. Brownell rejected suggestions that he assume the post of a full-time paid basis, told Halleck and Martin that an unpaid officer had greater independence, therefore could do a better job. Next important result of Brownell's Wash- ington discussions was that the Indianapolis meeting would be no place for an all-out battle on GOP policy. Brownell talked this over with Martin, Halleck, Representative Roy Woodruff of Michigan, Senators White of Maine, Vanden- berg of Michigan, Taft of Ohio and Wherry of Nebraska. All agreed it would be more sensible to steamroller the Indianapolis meeting into a one-day affair, with little discussion of National GOP policy on important issues. Indianapolis, therefore, will concentrate on adopting a mech- anical program pointed toward winning the 1946 elections. Brownell agreed to expand the Na- tional Committee's staff at once, adding a group of paid liason men to bring harmony between the national committee and members of Con- gress. Democratic-GOP Cooperation ... CHAIRMAN BROWNELL also made one signi- ficant proposal which caused quite a bit of debate at his hush-hush meeting with GOP big- wigs. "This coalition business," Brownell told Re- publican legislators, "where we join up with the southern Democrats on certain Legislation may he all right, but it isn't what the voters have a right to expect from us. I think we need a Legislative program of our own that we can stand or fall on. We should introduce our own bills and fight hard for them. If we lose, we can accuse the Democrats of obstrue- tionism instead of having them make the ae- cusation against us." Shrewd Indiana Congressman Charlie Halleck was inclined to go along, but found himself op- posed by House Minority Leader, Joe Martin. "Herb, I don't think our boys up in the House will agree with you on that," Martin said. "They're pretty angry. We have been out of office so long that they like to take a sock at the President any time they get a chance." Brownell dropped the subject that they try to reach agreement on a broad issue pointing toward 1946 and working out some harmony program to bind the party's wounds. At Indianapolis he plans to present the Indian- apolis meeting with a million-dollar-a-year bud- get for financing GOP activities, hopes to in- 3tall hard-working smooth-talking, well-liked Leland Chessley of St. Louis, now acting publicity director, as permanent publicity chairman. Isolationist Indiana Senator Homer Cape- hart, who has his own delusions of grandeur and fancies himself a possible Presidential candidate in '48, has been trying to install his own man as publicity director, but is about ready to throw in the sponge. He' was per- suaded the party can't stand for any more isolationists in key positions. Feeding Italy.... CHIEF ISSUE in the long series of backstage arguments over feeding Italy has been Presi- dent Roosevelt's desire (1) To get the Italian people to play a greater part in the war; and (2) Avoid a repetition of Greece. Already there have been rumblings of food rioting, and should Allied tanks and guns be turned against the people of Rome as in Athens, the repercussions would be tragic. Theoretically, the British have agreed with Roosevelt. When it comes to putting the pol- icy into effect, however, it is different. Fol- lowing some disagreements last August and September, FDR thought he had the whole matter ironed out at the Quebec conference with Prime Minister Churchill, only to find that in late October nothing had been done. Finally, on Oct. 31, he took the unprecedented step of giving a direct order as Commander-in- Chief to the Secretary of War. He wrote: "I have had before me the shipping difficul- ties in getting supplies to the civilian popula- tion of Italy and I note that we have been building up some reserves for use when northern Italy collapses. "In the meantime, it seems to me that the situation is so acute, from the point of view particularly of food in southern Italy, that some risks must be taken regarding supplies at the time of collapse in northern Italy. That col- lapse may well not come until Germany itself collapses, in which case the shipping situation will be much less acute. "Under the circumstances, I have determin- ed to, assume the responsibility for asking General Wilson to increase the ration to 300 grams throughout all of Italy that our for- ces occupy." (Copyright, 1945, by the Bell Syndicate, In.) I'D RA THER lIE RIGHT: GOP Is Losing By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, Jan. 10-There was a difference of only five seats between the voting strength of the Republicans and that of the Democrats in the lower House of the last Congress. But the Republicans have lost so many, and the Demo- crats have gained so many, that the margin between the two parties is now fifty-three seats, in favor of the Democrats. One might have supposed that the Republicans would stare moodily at these figures and try to find out why they had slipped. In politics, as in business, the customer is always right, and the Republicans have been losing customers. But instead of opening the season with a new line of goods, we find the Republicans ecstatically doing business in exactly the same manner in which they have previously failed to make a living. On the very first day of the new session, by means of a slippery par-. liamentary maneuver, and without hearings or effective debate, 17 Republicans joined with 70 Democrats to re-establish the old Dies com- mittee on a permanent basis. Dies himself is no longer a Congressman, a thought which should give any experienced poli- tician a turn; two other prominent members of the old Committee, Starnes and Costello, have been knocked off their perches by the voters; but the Republicans, possessed by that obscure demon which drives them steadily on toward failure, have not been daunted. Let us look at the new Congress for a moment: There has not only been a quantitative change in the relationship between the two parties; there has also been a qualitative improvement in the Congress as a whole. The new Congress convenes with such members added to its roster as Mrs. Helen Gahagan Douglas of California, a warm and vital liberal, and Mrs. Emily Taft Douglas, of Illinois, an "amateur" Democrat, elected as Congresswoman-at-large against a veteran isolationist. The new Congress has a Senator Fulbright, and a Senator Saltonstall. Senator Reynolds of North Carolina, is out, and a good hard-working liberal, Senator Thomas of Utah, will now be chairman of the Senate Mili- tary Affairs Committee.' Many more names might be cited, but these are enough to make the point that this is not only a new Congress, but, to a degree, a new kind of Congress. Just as improve- ments come along, from time to time, in medi- cine, or in journalism, or in other profes- sions, to raise the whole level of performance, so an improvement, by will of the people, has come to Congress. THERE IS ALSO a great hunger on the part of many Congressmen for better and more modern Congressional methods. The establish- ment of a large and permanent Congressional research staff is spoken of; Congressmen are beginning to realize that, in these days, when you don't even dare make soda crackers with- out a research staff, the makers of legislation may also be entitled to intelligent help. There is a mood of self-examination in Congress, and a kind of rebellion against the old-type of blatting Congressman, who says whatever comes into his head. A kind of professionalization of the Congressman's work is under way. Well, to go back, the worst thing about the Republican re-establishment of the old Dies Committee is that it is counter-trend. The old Committee on un-American activities was the leading committee of the yip, the bellow and the inuendo. It was Congress at its worst, that Congress which bleats platitudes, sniffs plots' and would much rather win arguments than solve problems. It threw some light on Com- munist activity, much less on fascist fancy- work, but it so complicated everything it did with it hatred of President Roosevelt, that, toward the end, hardly anybody believed hardly anything that it said. For a majority of Republicans to vote to re-establish this committee (and to accept the leadership of Representative Rankin of Mississippi in doing so) shows that they would much rather spend their afternoons playing back of the gas-works, than in the library. It shows a leaning toward rough stuff. It is the twirling of a long black stock- ing with a rock in its toe. The most important result of this vote is not the re-establishment of the committee, but the revelation, by so many Republicans, that they have read the election returns, but that the story told in them has not registered. (Copyright, 1945, New York Post Syndicate) We need more defense workers if we are going to keep on successfully backing the attacks made by the ar- mies of -the United Nations against Germany and Japan. We certainly cannot afford to have workers now on defense jobs return to civilian em- ployment at this time. But that is exactly what is hap- pening. And it is happening because men and women. are afraid that after the war there is going to be an- other depression, worse than the last one, (just as this war is more a total war than the last.) And. they want to have enough serior- ity on a civilian job by V-"Day to protect themselves from the im- minent crash. The only thing wrong with this1 reasoning is that there need not be a crash after the war, in the same way that there need not be another war, or another plague. The medi- cal profession now knows how to control plagues. The political econ-1 omists are finding out how to con- trol plagues. The political econo- mists are finding out how to control the causes of wars and depressions, and will put them into effect WHEN THEY ARE ENCOURAGED AND SUPPORTED BY THE CITIZENS OF THE NATION. The President made various pro-r posals to see that no crash occurs: 1) assurance of 60,000,000 post-war jobs, (2 continuance of the Fair Em- ployment Practices Committee so that no discrimination in hiring or firing occurs, 3) the Pepper Bill to raise the minimum wage rate to 65e per hour, 4) post-war trade with the other United Nations, particularly the Soviet Union and those countries whose economic life has been com-, pletely disrupted by tie war. Many people are skeptical about the first proposal. "Bore are you going to find 60, 000,000 jobs in peacetime? Why, it's never been done before!" Enough of generalities. Specific proposal number one to make sure there are 60,000,000 jobs; creation of a Missouri Valley Authority (The following material is taken from The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Collier's Ma fazine and a .UniTed Ei lpetricali homes on the newly irrigated land, including veterans, many of whom are planning to farm when they return to civilian life. (For North. Dakota vets alone, a survey show- ed that 4850 farms will be needed.) 600,000 farms would be receiving electric service FOR THE FIRST TIME. And cheap electricity would also bring new industries to the Valley. The Missouri has to be tamed if floods and soil erosion are to cease. And Unemployment must be tamed if Americans are to build a progres- sive postwar world. Th6 MVA is one method of achieving both ends, and therefore deserves our active support. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SIII ,_ t! WEDNESDAY,. JAN. 10, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 54 Publication In the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to allnmem- bers 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 aI.in, Sat- urdty,) Notices Student Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students this afternoon, Jan. 10. from 4 to 6 o'clock. The Regular Thursday Evening Concert will be held at 7:45 p.m. in Men's Lounge of the Rackham Build- ing. An all Tschaikovsky will be featured including the Romeo and Juliet Overture, Piano Concerto No. 1, and Symphony No. 6. All graduate students and servicemen are invited to attend. Membersofthe University Coun- cil: There will be a meeting of the, University Council on Monday, Jan. 15, at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. All members of the Senate may attend. Lil [1t', LG 11', tla a .,ll~l~tL'aCG6.1.2L041-od Handllers Lectures Radio and MaLchine Workers of Am --t erica-CIO pamphlet, "One River, One . wo series of lectures for food- Plia.",'I handlers will be given in the Audi- torium of the W. K. Kellogg Build- THE MISSOURI is a valley of a ing, Fletcher St. and N. University a half billion acres, comprising one- Ave., on the following days. The lec- sixth of the area of the United tures will include slides and films. States and taking in a territory the Series I size of Germany, France and Italy Lecture I, Wednesday, Jan. 10, combined. It is populated by 11,- 2:00 p. m. 500,000 people along a river course Lecture II, Wednesday, Jan. 17, 2469 miles. It directly serves great 2:00 p. m. cities like St. Louis, Kansas City and Series II Omaha. It floods the Lower Valley Lecture I, Wednesday, Jan. 10, 8:,00 and starves the Upper Valley-the fp" im. dust bowls ofthe Dakotas. Its swift Lecture II, Wednesday, Jan. 17, tributaries in the mountains of the 8:00 p. m. north are capable of producing pow- The speakers will be John Veenstra er; the fertile valley of the middle of the City Health Department (Jan. and lower river, with proper flood 10) and Melbourne Murphy, of the control can be among the world's University Health Service (Jan. 17). great producing areas. All food-handlers employed in The Missouri River runs its wild commercial establishments are re- course through nine states: North quired by City Ordinance to attend a and South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa, series in order to obtain a permanent Kansas, Wyoming, Colorado, Missouri food-handlers card. and Montana: one of the largest riv-- All persons concerned with food er valleys in the world. In three years service to University Students who floods on The Big Muddy have caused have not previously attended are 121 million dollars damage. In one asked to attend one of the present year 900,000 acres were ruined for series. Other interested persons are normal crop production. Only 5 mil- cordially invited. lion acres of the Valley are irrigated; 4 a million need irrigation. In The United States Civil Service drought years seven and a half mil- Commission gives notice that Jan. 22, lion acres of corn and 20 million acres 1945, will be the closing date for ac- of wheat were lost. Seven out of ceptance of applications for the fol- ten Valley farms lack electric power, lowing examinations. Astronomer, Big figures, these. About a big $2,433, Chemist, $2,433, Chemist Aide, SA$2,10, Meteorologist, $2,433, Pharma- to $420 per month, Vocational Visual Education Consultant ' IV, $360 to $420 per month, Prison Psychiatrist V, $440 to $550 per month, Indu- strial Hygiene Engineer II, $230 to $270 per month, and Industrial Hy- giene Engineer III, $280 to $340 per month, have been received' in our office. For further information stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bureau of Ap- pointments. Acadeinic Notices Attention Engineering Faculty: Ten-week reports on standings of all civilian Engineering freshmen and all Marine and Navy students in Terms 1, 2, 3, and 4 of the Prescribed Curriculum are due Jan. 20. - Re- port blanks will be furnished by cam- pus mail and are to be returned to Dean Crawford's Office, Room 255, W. Eng. Bldg. Attention Engineering Faculty: Ten-week. reports below C of all Navy and Marine students who are not in the Prescribed Curriculum; also for those in Term 5 in the Pre- scribed Curriculum are to be turned in to Dean Emmons' Office, Room 259, W. Eng. Bldg., not later than Jan. 20. Report cards may be ob- tained from your departmental of- fice. Seniors in Aeronautical, Electrical, Mechanical, and Structural Engi- neering;: A representative of the Bu- reau of Aeronautics, Washington, D. C., will interview seniors graduating in February and June, on Thursday, Jan. 11, for positions of P-1 trainee engineers. Interviews will be held in Room B-47 East Engineering Building. Interested men will please sign the interview schedule posted on the Aeronautical Engineering Bulle- tin Board, near Room B-47 East En- gineering I3uilding. At the regular Seminar meeting of the Department of Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering on Thurs- day, Jan. 11 at 4 p. in. in Rm. 3201, East Engineering Building, Mr. L. E. Brownell will speak on "Electric Strain Gauges;" followed by Mr. D. V. Doane on the subject "Stresses in Surface Hardened Steels." Any- one interested is cordially invited to attend. Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet at 4:15 this afternoon in Rm. 319 West Medical Building. "Anti- Biotics" will be discussed. All inter- ested are invited. Organ Recital: Bernard Piche, Guest Organist, will be heard in re- cital at 4:15 Sunday afternoon, Jan. 14, in Hill Auditorium. His program will include music by Bach, Franck, Gigout, Rameau, Le Begue, Vierne, Widor, Dupre, Tournemire, and one of his own compositions. The general public, with the excep- tion of small children, is invited. Events Today Botanical Journal Club: Rm. N.S. 1139 today at 4 p.m. Reports by Betty Linthicum, Effectiveness of growth substances in delaying ab- scission of Coleus petioles. Anatorni- cal and chemical aspects of abscis- sion of fruits of apple. Fern Reissig, The effects of syn- thetic growth substances on the shoot apex of Tropaeolum manus L. Respiratory rates of the shoot tips and maturing tissues in Lupinus al- bus and Tropaeolum Mans . The Student Religious Association Music Hour will present the second part of J. S. Bach's "St. Matthew Passion," 7:30 this evening in the Lane Hall library. Institute of the Aeronautical Sci- ences: There will be a meeting at 7:30 p.m., in Rm. 316 of the Michigan Union. A motion picture dealing with the subject of Air Flow will be shown. Aeronautical students desiring mem- bership in this organization are cor- dially invitedy The Inter-Racial Association will sponsor a lecture by Prof. Leslie White on "Racial Relations in Amer- ica," at 7:30 p.m. at Hillel Founda- tion. Everyone welcome. Refresh- ments will be served following the discussion period. Varsity Glee Club: Important meeting tonight in Rm. 306 Union, at 7:30. All men on campus who wish to join for the second semester must appear for tryouts. Program rehearsal for broadcast. Freshman club will rehearse at the same hour. Sigma Xi: Professor George Gran- ger Brown, Chairman of the Depart- ment of Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering, will speak on the sub- ject, "Problems in the Conservation of Natural Gas" (illustrated) at 8 p.m., in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Guests of members are welcome. Coming Events A.S.M.E. Student Branch Members: There will be a meeting Thursday, Jan. 11, at 7:30 p.m. at the Michigan Union. Professor A. F. Sherzer will show his colored movies of the East- . I. 4 4 I prooiem. nn one wien can -t, De dodged, must be settled. The problem is actually five prob- lems: flood control, navigation, irri- gation, soil conservation and recla- mation, and hydroelectric power. And right now, it is being handled, inef- fectively, by seven different agencies: House Committees on Flood Control, Rivers and Harbors, Irrigation and Reclamation; Senate Committee on Commerce, Irrigation and Reclama- tion; the Bureau of Reclamation (under Secretary of Interior); and fthe Army engineers (under ecre- Ser-tary of War.) Now there is a possibility, through a unified program by a Missouri Val- ley Authority, involving flood-control reservoirs and irrigation programs, to make the Valloy come alive again. Not only that, but such a pro- gram would provide jobs for at least 100,000 men for five years! Yt would increase food production $100,500,000 yearly; thus increas- ing agriculturaJ income by ONE- FOURTH. More than 125,000 farm families would find stable farm 13y CirockeU Johnson cologist, $3,163 to $5,228, Toxicologist, $3,163 to $5,228, and Physicist, $2,433 to $6,228. Applications must be filed with the United States Civil Service Commission, Washington 25, D.C., not later than that date. For further information stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bureau of Appoint- ments. Withholding Receipts for 1944 Income Tax: Numerous requests have been received by the Business Office for withholding receipts showing total wages paid and total income tax withheld (Form W-2) from indi- viduals desiring to make final income tax returns by Jan. 15, 1945. The work involved in preparing several thousand of these receipts renders it impossible to have them ready by Jan. 15, but the Payroll Department will gladly give any individual the figures his or her receipt' will contain when finally prepared. The deadline for having these completed forms in employees' hands is Jan. 31, 1945 but it is anticipated that those for Uni-, versity employes will be sent to them a few days earlier. H. P. Wagner United States Civil Service an- - nouncement for Laboratory Mechan- ics, salary $1,752 to $3,828, has been w- 4 4 I BARNABY I °. i must rush now, Barnaby. To &L- r;Si- AA. . -fJ I McSnoydthe Leprechaun, just r -(n NceI- You're a private detective? A -~~ iO11 t~1\t) II