PAGE TWO . THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wl ,Mrlvy, JAN, 0. PIC) PAGE TWO fl~S1VA~, JAN; 30; 1.~4~i Fifty-Fifth Year WASH4INGTON MERRY-G O-ROUND: Post- War Control of Machinery Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Evelyn Phillips Stan Wallace Ray Dixon Hank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy Editorial Staff . . . . . Managing Editor * . . . City Editor Associate Editor . . . . . Sports Editor g . . . Associate Sports Editor Women's Editor Business Staff Business Manager ck . . Associate Business Mgr. . . . Associate Business Mar. Telephone 23-24-1 Lee Amer Barbara Chadwi June Pomering 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. Eptered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 AEREfSENTO FOA NATIONL ADVRTIXG Y National Advertising Service, Inc- College Publishers Representative 420 MAOISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO * * TO . LOS AHGLES * SAN FRANCISCO NIGHT EDITOR: P. F. SISLIN Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Dumbarton Oaks fHE PROSPECT for Senate ratification of the Dumbarton Oaks charter never has looked brighter than it does today," reads the lead of a story in the Christian Science Monitor. That's fine. For years, this nation has been building to a point where it can perceive the advantages of a world organization which "will preserve the peace." According to the Monitor story, 41 Senate Democrats and 14 Republicans are for the rati- fication of the charter. Eleven Democrats and 10 Republicans are doubtful, and the isolation- ist ranks claim 15 Republicans and five Demo- crats. Senators placed in the doubtful group have been thus classified, because "their inten- tion has not been made decisively evident," the article claims. Most optimistic note of the story lies in the fact that all "freshman" Senators have declared that they are whole- hertedly for the adoption of the charter. It must not be overlooked, however, that a seemingly progressive governmental experiment for the world's future may be blocked by slight- ly more than 40 per cent of a skeptical or iso- lationist. Senate.I It is rumored that when the world political chips are down, "statesmen" will revert back to their old practices of power politics, and cut- throat competition. These "statesmen" may well be among the group now supporting the world charter. Clearly, the task of the U. S. Senate majority is to discover why it is for the charter's passage and then convince the apparently die-hard 40 per cent. Bandying around the phrase "world char- ter" without realizing its real meaning and its ultimate application, may prove far more di- sastrous than opposing the world govern- ment plan. -Bob Goldman Complacency: Now? W E ARE a great fat complacent nation-or was it yesterday that we said that? Yester- day, before we read that Stimson reported total casualties between December 16 and January 11 in the European theatre at 55,421; before the news seeped out that we have not kept pace with Germany's development of new weapons; before the prospect of a 150,000 monthly draft of men into the armed services rather than the Decem- per rate &f 60,000. Before Jimmy Byrnes gave his ultimatum re- garding conventions; before official warning that clothing would be much more difficult to get because of requirements in liberated coun- tries? Sureness was the byword yesterday. This is today, and the Russians are going to beat us to Berlin. We've lost weight. Nervous jitters have increased our cigarette and liquor consumption. Even nylons cost $15 a pair now. Things are tough. Homes are "ordered" to maintain a temper- ature of 69 degrees. Can we live through the year? A soldier without a leg stood and watched the inauguration on January 20. The khaki-clad By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON, Jan. 30-The fight over Jesse Jones and Henry Wallace boils down largely to one thing: control of the tremendous war machinery of the U. S. A. after the war is over. With the beginning of World War I, Wood- row Wilson's reforms-the income tax, the Federal Reserve, the Federal Trade Commis- sion-were frozen. They gave way to the war. And after the armistice, Wilson, busy with the Versailles conference and the League of Na- tions fight, let the war factories of the country be dismantled ar converted by private industry to their own us, or in some cases remain idle. The nitrogen-fertilizer plant at Wilson Dam, now part of the Tennessee Valley Authority,S languished for 12 long years-the years of Hard-I ing, Coolidge and Hoover-during which they were the center of a bitter controversy between government and private operation, until finally Roosevelt established the TVA. At the end of the last war, the nation had enough gun-powder plants to manufacture a bil- lion pounds of powder. But they were all turned over to private industry and converted. At the beginning of this war in 1939, the U. S. Army had only two weeks supply of gunpowder on hand, War Jea/h Cice arated WTITH. THE beginning of World War II, Roose-1 velt's New Deal reforms, like Wilson's stop- ped. But in addition, war business and accom- panying wealth were concentrated as never be- fore in the hands of Roosevelt's old enemies- big business. Six companies got more than 60 per cent of all the war orders. (General Motors, Du Ponts, Newport News Shipbuilding, Bethle- hemn Shipbuilding, Curtiss-Wright, The Alumi- num Corporation.) In addition, 100 companies got 80 per cent of the, war orders. Instead of dispersing business, the war did exactly the op- posite. Today the biggest question in the minds of business, and of the conservative Senators who so conscientiously represent them in the fight against Wallace is: Who will get these war plants after the war? Jesse Jones up until Jan. 20 was in general charge of their disposition-subject to certain counter-checks by the war surplus property board. He also was completely in charge of new loans to these and other companies. Econ- omically, he was the most powerful man in the world, and the amazing thing about it was that, thanks to a powerful lobby of friends in the Senate, he was able to maintain that power despite the fact that his record for short- sightedness in ordering vital war supplies is almost unbelievable. in regard to tin, Jones was asked by the State Department and the National Defense Council as early as two years before Pearl Harbor to grant a loan to build a tin smelter in the U. S. A. They were afraid our normal tin would be cut off from Singapore. But Jesse refused to budge. And as a result, housewives today are still salvaging their tin cans. 72-Year Old Banker .. . PART OF THE trouble was that Jesse has spent most of his 72 years as a banker, not as a planner. He almost seemed more interested in saving pennies rather than saving the na- tion. For instance when the War Department finally demanded that rubber be rushed from the Dutch East Indies in the summer of 1941, the Navy wanted to unload rubber-laden ships at San Francisco, instead of taking them all the way through the Panama Canal to New York. This meant a more expensive rail haul over the Rockies, but it also meant saving about a month in getting the ships back to Singapore. But Banker Jones wouldn't pay the extra rail charge from San Francisco to New York. He insisted that the ships go all the way through the canal. He had made the loan to buy the rubber, and so lie was boss. As a result, he saved 6 cents a pound on the rubber. lBut he cost the American people thousands of tires one year hence. And only a few months later he was paying at a rate of more than $1 a pound to get rubber from Brazil. Again in Mexico, Banker Jones refused to pay more than $100 a flask for mercury. Japan was paying as high as $230 a flask, and mercury was vitally needed for making shells. But Jesse wouldn't go a cent higher. Furthermore, Jesse wouldn't buy the mercury except through the banks in Mexico City, who took a commission from the natives, with the result that the natives preferred to sell direct to the Japs. ON SECOND By Ray Dixon HERE was so much excellent campus talent at the Kampus Kapers show Sunday after- noon, that we were reminded of the old joke about the zipper salesman who went to Holly- wood and became a talon scout. We noticed that a bunch of Army fellows had gone "over the Bill" Auditorium to see the show. California has Los Angeles, but the Japs have lost Angeles. Jones and Big Business .. . ,BECAUSE he always plays ball with banking and big business circles, Jesse is considered safe by the Georges, the Baileys, and the Van- denburgs who rushed frantically to his support in the Senate. He has always cooperated with their friends. That is also one reason why there has been such a concentration of wealth in the hands of a few companies during the war. This has been true of aluminum, rubber, water power, magnesium, and tin. Take for instance, rubber. There were two reasons why Jones was so tragically slow in producing synthetic rubber. First reason was that he bucked the frantic, persistent recom- mendations of Ed Stettinius and the National Defense Council who nagged him for - eighteen months prior to Pearl Harbor to start building rubber factories. Jones now alibis that no one could foresee that the Japs would attack. But the National Defense Council foresaw it and warned him repeatedly. The second reason for the delay was that even after Jesse started the synthetic rubber factories; he put all his eggs in one basket- that of the big companies. He put all his rubber production in the hands of the Stand- ard Oil of New Jersey patent pool, headed by his old Texas friend, the late William Parish. And despite the fact that the thirty-one rub- ber factories to be built by the Standard group were not to be even completed until 1944, Jesse stuck to them until blasted loose by the Baruch report on rubber. Jones, however, was playing with his old friends. And big companies had their eyes on the post-war world. (Copyright, 1945, by the Bell Syndicate. Inc.) I'D LUTHER BE RIGHT: INADEQUATE? "et' Emblem A DETROIT newspaper is making quite a front-page to-do about the supposed inadequacy of the lapelj button issued discharged servicemen. Among other things, the gold-plat- ed plastic emblem is termed too small, too odd of design, too difficult to see, and it is said that it does not "thrill the public." The first desire of the ex-ser- viceman is to become again inte- grated into normal civilian society. His military service being in most cases an unnatural and unlonged- for experience, he has no wish to keep its memory actively alive. He wants only to be accepted again in society, not as a uniformed oddity, but as an Vrdinary person with an individual personality. The program advocated by the De- troit paper would produce a discharge button bigger, gaudier, "more dis- tinctive" and generally louder than what we have now, a button that would call immediate attention to the veteran as he walks down the street. It would take away the present un- assuming token, which a man can wear without being unduly conspic- uous. The veteran may appreciate it if acquaintances realize that he has been in the service, but he does notR want that fact to call especial at- tention to himself. Above all he does not want a glaring label on himself that segregates him from "ordinaryj civilians." Admittedly many veterans do not often wear the lapel buton, not be- cause they are ashamed of it or be- cause it is not distinctive enough (what is more distinctive than the American eagle?), but because they feel that even the present small, sober button calls undue attention to the fact that they have been in the ser- vice. The veteran wants to be treat- ed as a civilian, and not as an "ex- serviceman.' Some of them feel that by wear- ing the button they immediately be- come an object of segregation, as if -the button says in effect, "Look at me, folks. I've served my coun-j try. I've done something big for you. Now what are you going to do for me?" It is a mood that noc person-veteran or otherwise- consciously wishes to create. s Of course the discharge button is no ever-living work of art, nor should it be. Within the forseeable future, discharge buttons will become as common as blue serge suits, and will excite just about as much comment. The button is only a symbol which signifies that a man has served. Any button, so long as that was its deno- tation, would and could serve the same purpose. If the desire of the metropolitan newspaper is to give publicity to the present button, then it is performing a service, since the public should, if only out of respect, recognize the dis- charge button when they see it. But there is no need to campaign for some new type of insigne, equally un- recognizable. The fact that only a small portion of the general public knows the button is not the fault of the present design, but rather that the public has seen very few of them and that the button itself has re- ceived little publicity. "She was voted The-Girl-Most-Li Wax-Bonds," TIME FOR CHANGE? 0 Navy War Bond Cartoon Service kely- To-Mature -Before - Her- 4 ! I M War Offensives By SAMUEL GRAFTON EW YORK-To understand row big the new Russian offensive really is, we must compare it with the German offensive into Belgium. The German offensive looked big enough to us, and made is doleful; and it was a little hard to understand at the time why it aroused only derision in the Soviet military press. During those alarming early days, when the initial German success threw us into paroxysms of abuse of our generals, and of our Intelli- gence officers, Soviet military writers remained calm. More than calm, they were scornful; Soviet military commentators reviewed German tactics in a curiously bored and sniffy fashion, as if they were watching a tiresome old routine, a worn-out military vaudeville. German tactics were "hackneyed," said one Soviet writer, Lieut. Col. V. Kravtsov. He pointed out, on December 28, in the Moscow News, that the Germans were up to their old business of attempted encirclement, but that they were encircling "a sector where Allied troop concentration was lowest." Why en- ircle a weak point? asked Lieut. Col. Kravt- sov. If you win, what do you win? There was'no point to the German, maneuver, said the Lieutenant Colonel, unless it could bring German armies into contact with the main Allied force, in the hope of destroying that force. Otherwise, he noted, a strike at a weak spot may be no more than a tactical success and "may lead to a major disaster." On the basis of current news from Belgium, the Lieutenant Colonel seems clearly to have known what he was talking about. THE RUSSIAN offensive stands in sharp con- trast with the limited German enterprise of a month ago. It hammers, not at German weak points, but at German strong points. It seeks to come to conclusions with the main German armies, to join battle precisely where the results of battle can be decisive. It is not a hunch play, aimed at one point in the line, where a temporary weakness has been dis- covered, and can be exploited for reasons of pres- tige. The Russian aim is not to go where the German army isn't, but precisely the oppo- site, to involve the entire German army; to make this, not a local test, but a truly total test of all of Russian force against all of whatever German force may happen to be available in the east. In this straining of totality against totality, the Russian endeavor is to present the German command with a contnuous series of unsolved problems, an endless array of bad choices, all up and down the line. No soldier in the German army escapes the effects of Russian tactics; the very last trooper in the German reserves is con- tinuously needed somewhere else than where he happens to be, and he will never arrive in time. Our armis are included in this total concep- tion, too; no action, west or east, is local now; each contributes to the total strain upon a planless Germany. This is unity in action. And if this magnificent moment puts the recent German offensive into correct perspective, it ought to put some of our international political problems into perspective, too. They are not ,as big as what is happening now. Sometimes they seem to be puffed up, be- yond their true size, by some who still cling to the unreal hope that the great Russia of to- day will somehow win and vanish, conquer and evaporate. (Copyright, 1945, New York Post Syndicate) New National Anthemde "rHE STAR Spangled Banner" is -a sng born of war Its spirit The courage of the pioneers is praised in the second stanza in such is warlike. The words of the first j phrases as "stern, impassioned stress stanza are a stimulus to the patriot- . . . of pilgrim feet . . . a thorough- ism of the flag-waver and the jingo- fare for freedom beat across the I wilderness ..' The self-admon- ist. It is no more than a war song, ihngrs . . . mend se every 1 o1 f astat m shing wards . , . end thine every appealing to love of an abstract sym- bol, t American flans flaw" are a fitting symbol of the As suchm"e tarSpanrecognition that we have yet to fully As such "The Star Spangled Ban- elzordmcrt ga."L- realize our democratic goals. "Lib- ner" is an inadequate reflection of erty in law" is certainly more fun- the finer ideals of Americans. In thel damental to our system than military days ahead when we look for peace, power. our attention will be concentrated on the finer values of human existence. Self-sacrice for our nation's Our present national anthem will no ideals is by no means disregarded longer befit our national aims and its in "America, the Beautiful." Ra- military phrases, "bombs bursting in ther, it is put on a higher plane by air" and "the rockets red glare" of "Oh beautiful for heroes proved in the first stanza will be intoned with- liberating strife, who more than out feeling. The other stanzas, ad- self their country loved, and mer- mirable as they may be, are not sung, cy more than life." Surely; look- are not known to most people, and ing upon war as sacrifice to ideals therefore cannot enter into a con- is more spiritually provocative than sideration of the spirit of the song. concern as to whether "our flag was still there." In the future we will come to realize that a new anthem, express- "The Star Spangled Banner" tells ive of the ideals of humanity, only of our battle to remain free and should supersede "The Star Spangl- j speaks nothing of our other ideals. ed Banner" as our national song. "Till all success be noblen'ess," a Surely. it is not heretical to con- positive goal, is not even hinted at in template a change, especially when the four stanzas of our present na- we consider that our present an- tional anthem. them exists as. an anthem only Another objection to "The Star since 1931, when Congress chose Spangled Banner" is that its range it from a group including "Amer- of notes extends too low or too high ica, the Beautiful" and "America." for the averae voice. This has been The song that should replace "The a vexing problem for some time, and although a simplified arrangements Star Spangled Banner" as our an- has been written, it has never gained them should be one of two just men- wide popularity. tioned, preferably "America, the Beautiful,' 'a song truly expressive Therefore, we suggest that some- of the most spiritual values of this time in the near future, Congress great nation. It's first stanza speaks consider the inadequacies of "The of the natural beauties of this vast Star Spangled Banner" and, land, its "amber waves of grain . . . through legislation, replace as our purple mountain majesties . . . the national anthem with "America, fruited plain" and the crowning ideal the Beautiful," whose words are of the great 'melting pot', . . . "broth- more expressive of America's ideals. erhood, from sea to shining sea." -Arthur J. Kraft t DAILY OFF I TUESDAY, JAN. 30, 1945 # Never, however, should be reach the state advocated by one soldier, who conveniently said for the De- troit newspaper, "The time should come when everyone looks first at a stranger's lapel and then at his face." --Ray Shinn Health Figures VOL. LV, No. 7 1 Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- 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. in. of the day preceding publication (11:30 a. m. Sat- urdays). Notices EVERY TIME someone suggests Notice to Men Students: Men stu- that the poor must have better dents living in approved rooming doctoring than their own means will houses who intend to move to differ- provide, a segment of the medical' ent quarters for the Spring Term or profession raised the objection that who expect to leave the University at Americans are the world's healthiest the end of this Term, must give no- people. What have such "realistic" I tice in writing to the Dean of Stu- persons to say to the figures just re- dents before 11 a.m. on Saturday, leased on draft rejections? Feb. 3. Feb. 24 is the official closing Turn-downs are highest among do- date for the Fall Term. mestic servants. Next the part-time and unemployed workers-poverty.' Concerts Third, with a shocking 56.4 per cent I rejected, come farmers. Even among Student Recital: Elizabeth Lewis, farmers, poor man's diet is also a violinist, will present a recital in par- big cause, with a race for the worst tial fulfillment of the requirements health between the Negro share-crop- for the degree of Bachelor of Music, per and the tobacco-growing hillman at 8:00 this evening, in Lydia of the Appalachians. Rejections are Mendelssohn Theatre. A student highest in the South. of Professor Gilbert Ross, Miss The draft statistics speak a Lewis w ll play compositions by Pug- Thegu drafth at sticsun speaku at nani. Bach, Mozart, and de Falla. language that the country must - The public is cordially invited. ponder.± IAL BULLETIN p. m., at the Hillel Foundation. Evelyn Kossoff will speak on "The Possibilities For a Reconciliation Be- tween Science and Ethics." Sigma Rho Tau-Pictures for the 'Ensian will be taken at tonight's meeting of the Stump Speakers' So- ciety of Sigma Rho Tau. Black or dark ties should be worn. All mem- bers are required to be present at 7:30 p. m. in Rooms 319-323 of the Union. Support of non-profit exten- sions of public utilities will be dis- cussed. A third round of debates on compulsory military training will be given new opposition. Coming Events The Student Religious Association Music Hour, led by Robert Taylor, '46E, will present the second half of J. S. Bach's Mass in B Minor Wed- nesday evenng, Jan. 31, at 7:30 in the Lane Hall library. Refreshments will be served and scores will be pro- vided. Everyone is invited. Graduate Students: There will be a Graduate Coffee Hour Wednesday, Jan. 31, from 7:30 to 8:30 in the West Conference Room of the Rack- ham Building. All graduate studentts interested in getting acquainted with each other are invited. La Sociedad Hispanica announces that the second lecture in the an- nual series will be presented on Wed- nesday, Jan. 31, at 8 p. m. in the Michigan Union. Because of the unavoidable absence of Lieut.-Col. Burset, the lecture originally sched- uled for Feb. 7 will be given. Pro- fessor Arthur Aiton will speak on "Relaciones entre Latino-America y Al { J --St. Louis Post Dispatch HoI i ri1 . T HERE are pigmies in the Philip- pines, says Ripley, who smoke cigars with the lighted ends in their mouths. This will surprise everybody but Harold Ickes, whose tongue has always been asbestos. -St. Louis Post Dispatch iEvents rToday Assembly Board Meetings will be held today at 5 p. m. in the League. Dormitory and Auxiliary Dormitory presidents meet with Jane Richard- son in the Kalamazoo Room. League house and Co-op presidents meet r1 with Florene Wilkins. Place of meet- los Estados Unidos." Tickets for ing will be posted on the League the series will be on sale at the door. Bulletin Board. Attendance is com- pullsBor y.- Suent Recial: Jerry Pickrel, pia- __usryt nist, will present a recital in partial The Cerele Francais will meet to- fulfillment of the requirements for B RNABY By Crockett Johnson i