THE Mil-C-HiGAN DAUY t, --,,JIT--71-7 ___ ___ I- WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Wallace Spurns Compromnise r- Ltterst o .. By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON, Jan. 27-Senator Styles Brid- ges' sub-committee, which is probing the air- plane travel of Elliott Roosevelt's dog, may also want to look into the honeymoon airplane trip to Rome and Paris of General Denny Giles' WAC Secretary, General Giles is Commander of American op- erations in the Near East, with headquarters at Cairo, Egypt. His office there is run by beauti- ful, Joan Crawford-ish WAC warrant officer Jean Lutz, who not long ago married an Army cap- tain, For their honeymoon they were planning to go to Palestine, the Mecca of most American Array personnel when they want a rest from Cairo. You can get there on the "Jeriusalem Express," a desert railroad which belies its name, but gets there in the end. General Giles, however, stepped in with a counter-suggestion. ie proposed that his sec- retary and her new captain-husband fly to Rome and Paris. So he arranged it. The happy couple flew first to Rome, then to Paris, then back to. Cairo. Whether they had a special plane is not definitely known, but the same crew was with them throughout. A good time was had by all, except that a lot of G. I. Joes, who had to stick in Cairo, were plenty burned up-and not from the hot sands of the Sahara. Later, General Giles himself flew to Paris to spend Christmas. But, of course, that was on very official business. Wallace Is Tempted ... N THE middle of the Senate fight over ex- Vice President Wallace for Secretary of Com- merce, Henry was taken up on the mountain. Democratic advisers told him that if he would appoint Ed Pauley, Treasurer of the Democratic National Committee, as his Federal Loan Admin- istrator, he would be confirmed both as Secre- tary of Commerce and in charge of the far- flung loan agencies. Pauley had raised large amounts of money during the recent campaign, had helped a large number of Senators get elected. His influence in the Senate is not to be sneezed at. Henry looked down from the-mountain and did not accept the deal. He decided that if he could not be confirmed on his own merits he would not buy confirmation through Demo- cratic patronage. Actually,' he is more likely to appoint a leading Republican businessman as Federal Loan Administrator if he is con- firmed.o Tesse Jones' PoweG - - THE MANNER in which Jesse Jones has con- trolled banks, railroads and even newspapers by making loans and appointing directors in key places long has been well-known on capitol hill. Down in Tennessee, the Nashville Tennessean appeared on the streets Sunday night with an editorial in its bulldog edition praising Henry Wallace as Jesse Jones' successor. Then suddenly the editorial was pulled out of the paper. Later editions of the Tennessean carried no praise for Henry Wallace. Two days later, however, the Tennessean sud- denly cane out with an editorial in exactly oppo- site vein. Bitterly, it criticized President Roose- velt for losing the excellent services of Jesse Jones and replacing him with Henry Wallace. What most people outside the publishing world did not realize was that Silliman Evans, pub- lisher of the Tennessean, secured control of that paper through Jesse Jones. Evans had been a newspaperman ark ghost writer for Jesse, and when the RFC made a substantial loan to the shaky Maryland Casualty Company, Jones rewarded Evans by making him head of that company though he knew absolutely nothing about insurance. Later, the RFC bailed out a New Orleans bank in which the Nashville Tennessean had deposited certain assets as collateral on a loan. Thereupon, Jones took over these assets, despite the fact that James Hammond of the Mem- phis commercial appeal made a id for them. And with the cooperation of another Nashville bank, Jesse proceeded to set his old friend Silliman Evans up in business as publisher of the Nashville Tennessean. FBI Budget Cut . fKESPITE the fact that more than one thousand German war prisoners have escaped at var- ious times in this country, and despite the recent entry of two Nazi saboteurs, the Bureau of the Budget has just made a backstage demand that J. Edgar Hoover's efficient FBI cut its approp- riation by $10,000,000. Hoover has already suggested voluntary cuts which would save the taxpayer considerable money. But the additional slashes proposed by the Budget Bureau would mean the firing on June 30 of 400 G-Men and 200 clerks who keep fingerprint and crime records. On econd Thought... By RAY DIXON OCAL Philippine saloon keepers on Luzon will probably set up a Clark bar. All those things they are saying about Henry Wallace may be true, but we were never under the impression that 4'ones was a fair-haired boy. Maybe if a "visionary radical" had been head of the Commerce Department before the war, the Allies would have had a little more synthetic rubber and quinine. BARNABY The 're giving the reword r As your Fa e . Y PI MI Meanwhile,, there is considerable evidence indicating that Hitler and Himmler, now des- perate, are intensifying their efforts at sabo- tage inside the United States. The landing of the two saboteurs near Bar Harbor, Maine, is one indication. Another is the apprehension of Nazi agents in South America. These, when picked lip, are shipped back to Germany on the Gripsholn unless the Latin- American country is at war with Germany. One of the Nazi saboteurs who goes on trial at Governor's Island tomorrow had been picked up in Peru some time ago and returned to Berlin by the State Departieint without even the pre- caction ef getting his fingerprints and photo. Of the thousand or m ore German war pris- oners who have escaped, all but twelve have been recaptured. However, it remains an un- comfortable fact that these twelve, or any one of them, would be sufficient to blow1 up certain key bridges in this country. That is why Congress is seriously considering a reversal of the Budget Bureau in order to keep the FBI going at efficient strength. (npyrigt, 1945, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc ) IDRA THER lIE RIGHT: New Appointments By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, Jan. 24-A few weeks ago, the President appointed a flock, or covey, of conservatives to the State Department, and the Senate liberals rose in flushed protest. They de- inanded reconsideration of the names of Messrs. Grew, Clayton, and Rockefeller. Senate conser- vatives, including the Republicans, supported the President. It was a curious scene, with all the old familiar political landmarks reversed. like life in a mirror. Now the President has chosen Henry Wallace to be Secretary of Commerce, replacing Jesse Jones. This post has carried with it, in Jones' case, headship over the government's huge money lending agencies, including the Reconstruction Finance Corporation; and that fact makes the Senate peculiarly sensitive to the question of whether the appointee is a liberal or a conser- vative. A liberal at the head of these agencies could pump money out to make jobs in the post- war period; and we know that Mr. Wallace takes a dime view of unemployment. He doesn't really care for it. He thinks money can be awful use- ful; Jesse Jones used to hold more to the idea that it was awful pretty Life in the Senate will now return to normal, with the conservatives attacking the Presi- dent's appointee, and the liberals defending him. It looks as if the President has finally accepted that showdown fight between liberal and conservative opinion which he has been dodging for months on many issues. It is curi- ous that the President should be willing, now, to undertake that fight, after going to such great lengths, in the State Department ap- pointments, to avoid it. And here a doubt arises. Is the President really going into a showdown fight for Wallace, or is he merely throwing him to the Senate for action, as he threw him to the Democratic Convention last July? YUTIE PRESIDENT'S letter to Jesse Jones, ask- ing Jones to step down for Wallace, is curi- ously tepid. It says that Wallace worked hard during the election campaign, that Wallace thinks he'd be good in the job, and that Wallace is suited for it, and "therefore" ought to have it. It's an odd letter. lhere's no elevation in it. It's the kind of letter one writes to a President, trying to get somebody appointed to a third-class postmastership; it is not the kind of letter a President normally writes, proposing a major cabinet change. The letter offers Wallace the job, in a bored kind of way, not for anything Wallace is, but because he was a good campaign worker; it is a flat letter; it never gets off the ground. All sorts of prospects open up, most of them dismal. Will the President really back Wallace in the Senate, as he backed Clayton.? Or will he be completely occupied with international affairs when the vote comes, and will he let whatever happens, happen? Or will there be a ferocious fight over confirma- tion in the upper House, that Wallace, with his usual taste for self-sacrifice, will withdraw his name, to avoid embarrassing the President? In that case the President will have got rid of both Wallace and Jones through a single maneuver, which would set a new high in political virtuosity. There are other reasons for doubt. The President has placed the Reconstrue ion Fi- nance Corporation within the Department of Commerce, but Congress can take it out. A bill to split the two has already been drawn up. Of the two agencies, the R.F.C. is incom- parably more important than the Commerce Department; the R.F.C. will not only have the money lending function after the war, but it will also be- in charge of disposing of our war plants. The manner in which we use our new plants may make all the difference between full or partial employment. If Congress takes the R.F.C. out of Commerce, Wallace may be konfwrmed, but he will then be left high and dry on a mountain of business statistics, with little to do except tell us how many betel nuts were chewed in the East Indies in 1928. The President still has to show whether he is really backing Wallace, or merely letting nature take its course. (Copyright, 1945, New York Post Syndicate) Sovereigry . i SIGNED editorial published in l yesterday's Daily attributed to me the view that "American policy is prepared to resume advocacy of the old principle of sovereignty and that1 the State Department places tra di- tional position before contenmiporaryt need. ''t This editorial contains so flag- rant a distortion that it cannota pass unanswered. The entire the-l sis of my speech was that no Coun- try, even one as powerfu. as our own can any longer rely for its - security upon its own national ac- l tion. In other words, the doctrine of sovereignty which is merely a legal formulation of isolationism, is obsolete in an interdpendent world." As to the allegation that I advo- cated a negative concept of sover- eignty, I need only refer to the fol- lowing excerpt from my address: The extent of the advance which we have made in our national atti- tude with respect to international collaboration since 1919 may be judged by reference to the presentt position of the discussion with re- spect to the always thorny problem} of national sovereignty. In the great' debate concerning our proposed par- ticipation in the League of Nations. many of the opponents of our entry: denied that it was legally possible for the United. States to participate in an organization in which our na- tional independence of judgment might be discussed by an interna- tional body, even thougli we partici; pated in it. This objection is no longer seriously raised. There seems to be no dissent from the proposition that the United States can legally and constitutionally assume the obli- gations for the maintenance of peace and security outlined in the Dun-1 barton Oaks proposals, and that ful- fillment of such obligations does not involve a delegation of sovereignty to the organization. As an indepen- dent state, the United States can I exercise its sovereignty, through con- tracting any type of obligation which is customarily the subject matter of agreement among states. Emphasi., is no longer placed on sovereignty as a negative conception, which would limit the sphere of international co- operation to relatively unimportan, matters which lie upon the surface of international right. Our present emphasis is upon sovereignty as a power to be used in cooperation with others for the very purpose of secur- ing more efficacious protection of our national independence and secur- l ity. The Supreme Court of the Unit- ed States has expressed it in this way: "As a member of the family of nations, the right and power of the United Statesa....re equal toI the right and power of other mem- bers of the international family. Otherwise the United States is not completely sovereign." nani, Bach, Mozart, and de Falla. The public is cordially invited it he Ldaor Exldb-i ai Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: Twenty Lithographs, by rgs of te 'i alf-baked liberal." Not prominent artists, loaned through conteit with stating his views, this the Museum of Modern Art, New liberal mnusi, constanly revert to the York City. Ground floor corridor, most infan1ile kind of side remarks Architecture Building. Open daily whichu repel anyone who makes the 9 to 5, except Sunday, through Jan. lightest attempt to be fair. He must 29. The public is invited !O oij oi cx ('Iesive digressions telling_ -- ihuw wicked some wealthy man once was a:sd how the latter was con- i VE I1 I s!iodd stantly oppressing his more unfor- The Congregational-Disciples Guild anHe must disser- will meet at the Memorial Christian ate len il (ei than emoc Church (Disciples) Hill and Tappan big risks. He takes great pride in at 5 p.m. Folowling the supper Dr. ofering reIengdorus explanations Preston A. Slosson will speak on "The sol i ta how :;onie liberal was not Religion of an Historian." Miss Bev- reu. & fault for mnaling some not- erly Paul will lead the closing wor- t-d oraistamentwhie nhe-ship service. Those coming promptly cate-d isrocrei's atlment, while he from Kampus Kapers will be served. cannot let his rers or- listeners be ignorant 1 Ilieact that some ad- Lutheran Student Association: mirable qual y a any respected Re- Skating Party tonight at 7:30. All who wish to attend meet at the home i'(aly no a u,-lislhuent of that of Rev. and Mrs. Yoder, 215 E. Wil- iiwdi e at ll; t1)esprobably bor- liam St. The regular meeting of the r'0 v(( t Lfoin sonb successful liberal. Association will be held in the Parish '1hat the hall-baked liberal has a Hall on Sunday afternoon at 5 with righ to to so I do not deny. It is supper and fellowship hour following merely that the stand of this liberal supproag is, in a sense, a perfect farce. The the program. more disgusting the liberal, the more Talent Night: Tonight, 8:30, at the effectively ill his re:ider be driven Roger Williams Guild House, 502 E. iv, to te I.othle Slae. May I suggest to these liberals a re-reading of the great writings ofI their idols. Only ths time, instead of looking for phrases they .can sling at the conservatives, may I request that they notice the digni- fled humnity of thses men. May he obierve the tirustig sincerity of Jeffeono and Linol n and the rotgh fadr-and-square attitude of an T my they make the characteristics of' these men the basic principles of their daily liv- ing. In so doing they will convertI more conservatives than could be do ne by writing .a thousand books. -Harry Daum ;.. OFCIL Huron. Musical and dramatic stunts will be presented. All Baptist stu- dents and their friends are invited to join in the program or the enjoy- ment of it. Corin g Events 3, SATtRDAY, JAN. 27, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 69I Puhticantio in ithe aDiy Official ul- 1 re1's of ttie I f ei Vtr'ily NhIlf' S for the Nu1ein slii)i h' setlit tyhewrIItea. form to Hw Ie Asistal; to the President, 1021 AA( W 1illby :"!01 :e, .. lthe day pr'ect'."ifi: iiiihijcatio (11:3 1 . . .Sat- it rf . Noice Shoh t 6' iJ ' W, Assembly: Monday morning, Jan. 29, at 11, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, for students1 and faculty members. Eleven o'clock (lasses and lessons in the School of Music will be dismissed for the as-1 sembly, by order of the Executive Commit tee. The Turkish Student Club of the University of Michigan will play host for the l rogm'an at the International Center on Sunday, JTan. 28, a t 7:30 p.m. Michigan Youth for Dernoratic Action will meet Monday, Jan. 29, at 8 p.m. in the Union, Rm. 302. There will be a discussion on affiliating with the national American Youth for Democracy. All members are urged to attend. The Cercle Francais will meet Tues- day, Jan. 30, at 8 p.m. in the Michi- gan Union. As the picture of the Club will be taken at the meeting, all members are urged to be present. On the program a few French songs by Miss Elizabeth B. Moore, games and group singing. Ci11tniches First Baptist Church: 512 E. Huron. Rev. C. H. Loucks, Pastor. Roger Williams Guild House, "502 E. Huron. Saturday, 7:10, Choir rehearsal in the church; 8:30, "Talent Night" at the 'Guild House. Sunday, 10, Panel discussion closing the Idea of Right and Wrong--Guild House; 11, Morn- ing worship, "Youth and the Chu- rch," Miss Frances Lee, Mr. George Doyle, Mr. Dudley Orvis; 5, Roger Williams Guild. Pres. Ernest Van Valkenburg will speak on the actions of the National Collegiate Christian Council recently held at Granville, 0, I As Senator Connally has expressed it, in assuming obligations for co- operative action in the maintenance of peace, "there is no surrender of our sovereignty. On the contrary, there is an exercise of 'sovereignty. There is an assertion by our nation of the will and power to do those things which are for the best inter- ests of our citizens and, in a larger fashion, in the best interests of the world and world peace. That is the very essence of sovereignty." -Dr. Lauwrence 11ics s lIb Qral$ . . * T HAS BEEN the consistent policy of The Daily editorial staff, I be- lieve it fair to say, to emphasize the fact that we must have a progressive outlook on the social, political, and economic problems of our day. We must keep moving, unceasingly striv- ing to attain the higher objectives of. life. While humanity is marching for- ward, the conservative-so is he depicted-exerts all his energy try- ing to impede this movement, if not to reverse its direction. It is the conservative who obstructs the path leading to true democracy. It is the conservative to whom the concept of human rights is but a secondary consideration. It is the conservative who is the deadly foe of the general welfare of the na- tion. l i 4 .j l) S+I . + Notice to Men Students: Men stu- 0.; 6, Cost supper. dents living in approved rooming First Congregational Churc Suite houses who intend to move to differ- andr William Sts Minister, Rev ent quarters for the Spring Term - and W .llam rr Mitr, CRe wilt expect to leave the University at LoadA ar ietr oge the eof this eani must Uive no- gational-Disciples Guild, Rev. H. L. ti'e in writing to the Dean of Stu- Pickerill. 10:45 a.m., Public worship. dc iit 11 at.n a Dr. Parr will preach on the subject: Feb. :3. Feb. 24 is the official closing "It's Good To Be Here." 5 p.m., date for the F lTlermr. 1 Congregational-Disciples Guild for young people. Supper at 5 p.m. Dr. important Notice: La Sociedad Preston Slosson will speak on "The Hispanica will have the Michigan- Religion of an Historian." Beverly ensian group' picture taken on Mon- Paul will lead the devotions. Guild day, .lan. 29 at 7:30 p.m. in the will meet in the Christian Church 1ii'i ar n o All hnen' ,a (Disciples) at Hill and Tappan. 4' hbe jj'c, cnt. First Church of Christ, Scientist: 11-v IUnited States Civil Service 409 S. Division St. Wednesday eve- Commissionie ties thatl Febve ning service at 8 p.m. Sunday morn- r;xm" gives notice that Feb. 6, ing service "at 10:30 a.m. Subject 1945, will be the closing date for ac- "Truth." Sunday school at 11:45 a.m. c i~ane of aplhcations for the fol- A convenient reading room is main- low ~ing exarnrticrs: Bacteriologist, tained by this church at 106 E. $3,1;3 and $3,828; Dental Hygienist, Washington St. where the Bible, also -1,970; Mainitenance Supervisor, $3, the Christian Science Textbook, "Sci- 828 and $4,128; Nursing Education ence and Health with Key to the Consultant, $3,163 to $5,228> Occupa- Scriptures" and other writings by tional Therapy Aide, $1,970 to $2,433; Mary Baker Eddy may be read, bor- Physiotherapy Aide, $1,970 to $2,190; owed or purchased. Open daily eX- 4 Pub Health Nurse, $2,10 and $2,- cept Sundays and holidays from 43,3 , public ealt NursingConsul 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays until be fled with the United States 9 p.m. Civil Service Coumission, Washing- The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat- ton ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ e 27 D.C., nc 1_( r thani that date. TeCuc fJssCrs fLt United States Civit Service An- ter Day Saints: Sunday services will Unitd Sate Civl Srvie . be held at 10 a.m. in the Chapel of nouncemnents for Dictating Machine the Michigan League. Transcribers, salary $1,970, and Sub- -_g__g stitute Railway Postal Clerk, salary } First Methodist Church and Wes- $1,850 to $2,464, have been received ley Foundation: Student class at 9:30 in our office. For further informa- a.m. Dr. E. W Blakeman, leader. tion stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bunr- am r .W kmn edr Subject for discussion: "Religious eau of Appoitments. Counselling in Wartime." Morning I. 1 --~---~ City of Detroit Civil Service An- nouncemeuts for Sr. General Staff. Nurse salary $2,520 to $2,880 a year, ,. ,-- y.1 , - That the conservative has often Second Operatm g Ergineer( Steam Thattheconervtivehasoftn ,Engine) s;4iary $2,063 to $3,174, and, been guilty of these accusations there Marine Operating Engineer Fire- can be no doubt. boat). salary $3,381 to $3,864, have The danger to democracy and to been received in our office. For fur- the common good of mankind from' ther information stop in at 201 Ma- this source, however, is almost negli- son ll Bureau of Appointments. gible when compared to the destruc- ' tive effects of the teachings antd writ-,. ly Crocket Johnson The Univ :rsity ol' Michigan Sym- worship service at 10:40 o'clock. Dr. James Brett Kenna will preach on "Is a Christian State Possible?" Wesleyan Guild meeting beginning with supper at 5 p.m. Program at 6 p.m. Scott Miyikawa will be the speaker. Memorial Christian Church (Disci- ples): 10:45 a.m., Morning worship. The Rev. Frederick Eugene Zendt will speak on "Van Dusen of Union." 5 p.m. Guild Sunday Evening Hour. Following the supper Dr. Preston A. Slosson will speak on "The Reli- gion of an Historian." Miss Beverley Paul will lead the closing worship service 'Those coming nromptly from ,t airy c dfathei, I We r Bonds, eh? . . . And not . . , . a e Copydighi i1945, The Newype4ePM. Inc. phony ('cliestra, cilbert Ross, Act- SinConductor, will be heard in a f I I E I