PAGE THE MICHIGAN DAILY WED NESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 194. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Douglas'Pre-=War Aid to Japs I- INDIAN FAMINE: Offiejals Conplaent As People Starve Member of The Associated Preis The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication 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 mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR: MARY BRUSH Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Army-Navy Merger A. FEW DAYS AGO Capt. Woodson Michaux, head of the University Naval Unit, gave several reasons why a merger of the Army, Navy and air forces would not be the wise thing to do. They were pretty good reasons, too. Perhaps the most important one was his argument that creating a huge department of defense to in- clude Army, Navy and air forces would not tend to increase the efficiency of that department. Favoring the Navy plan which calls for smaller and more integrated coordination of action, Capt. Michaux pointed out its advantages in dealing with the "highly specialized probleis of design, production, procurement, supply, and logistics." There would be no chance for a "muddle of a merger" as Admiral Halsey put it, and the Navy would retain its "privilege of free de- cision." Capt. Michaux again quoted Admiral Halsey who said, "To plunge headlong into this wild- est scheme"- the unification of the armed forces -"which has proved unsuccessful in the history of war, might well invite disaster. The Russians long ago tried a single department of the armed forces and proved it didn't work. They changed it. Japan and Germany also had a Navy dominated by the Army and didn't change it. Look where they are." So far we do not have a Navy dominated by the Army and we will not have such a situation if Congress will slow down and objectively con- sider the aspects of this proposed "shotgun wed- ding". Nothing good ever resulted from such hasty proceedings, and nothing good till come of a plan in which one group unfairly dominates the other. Only when power is divided equally will there be a smooth-running military organiz- ation, and only when all groups compromise to create a strong, combined fighting force, can we be sure of American security. -Bettyann Larsen Responsible Parties 1HE SENSE OF DISUNITY and disorganiza- tion which is troubling the American people has one often-overlooked root - the irresponsi- bility of the political parties. This weakness is illustrated currently both by the failure of the Republican National Committee's Chicago meet- ing to produce a clearcut program, and by the failure of President Truman to carry his legis- lative proposals through Congress. The fact that both parties, have Right and Left wings complicates the task of party lead- ership. Between elections the Republicans in Congress largely manage party policy. In re- cent years they have been fighting the New Deal and Roosevelt internationalism. Often on domestic issues they have won short-range victories by following the lead of ultra-conserv- ative Democrats. But when Presidential cam- paigns had to be fought, the party tried to forget the Congressional record and to win by choosing more progressive candidates and plat- forms. The Democrats, perhaps even more sharply divided as between their conservative, rural, Southern wing and their liberal, urban, Northern wing, have been kept in some order by party patronage and Presidential prestige. But it is rmifii I t fnd in their Cnornasonaranks By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON. - Last week this column re- vealed that in 1939 Douglas aircraft had sold the DC-4, plus blueprints, to Japan, despite previous denials and despite the plea of Cordell Hull for a moral embargo against selling air- planes to the Japs. The Douglas official who handled this trans- action was V. E. Bertrandias, later promoted to be a major general in the U.S. Army despite representations by the Justice Department point- ing to his past record of cooperation with the Japs. This column is now able to reveal further evidence regarding the pre-Pearl Harbor co- operation of Douglas aircraft and General Bertrandias - a letter from Bertrandias to Mitsui & Company, arranging for an inspec- tion trip by General Terauchi, prominent Jap air commander, to the Douglas plant at Santa Monica, Calif. This was at a time when Douglas was mak- ing important military aircraft for the U.S. Army. It was also two months after the war in Europe had started and when many U.S. newspapers were reporting that Japanese entry into the war was inevitable. The letter follows: "October 23, 1939 "Mitsui & Company, Ltd. 350 Fifth Avenue New York City Attention: Mr. S. Kohno Gentlemen: We wish to acknowledge your letter of October 17, engineering department - M. Sasaoka, rela- tive to the proposed visit of General Terauchi and party. Your Los Angeles office has already contacted us in regard to this matter, and we understand that General Terauchi and party will visit our factory on the morning of October 30. "Please be assured that we shall do everything possible to make General Terauchi's visit a pleas- ure to him. Douglas Aircraft Company, Inc. Very truly yours, V. E.' Bertrandias Vice-president." Outfoxing MacArthur HERE is the inside reason why the Far Eastern Advisory Commission is going to Japan by boat instead of by airplane. When the commission cabled General Mac- Arthur for permission to come, he cabled back that he could handle the delegates only one or two at a time. MacArthur said there were no accommodations for the visiting diplomats, so he wanted them in driblets. The ten nations on the commission figured this was a dodge to get them split up into small groups so they couldn't function as a unit. The ten nations on the advisory commission, therefore, took over a ship which they will use as headquarters anchored in Tokyo bay. Merry-Go-Round J ESSE JONES is reported looking around to find a big banking job for John Snyder, the reconversion boss, who so many Truman advisers hope will soon leave Washington. They don't care where he goes, whether back to St. Louis or Wall Street, just so his fumbling hands are taken off the delicate job of reconversion. President Truman may not remember, but one important rumpus in the early days of the New Deal was when Chester Davis, then boss of the Agricultural Adjustment Agency, purged Jerome Frank, now judge of the second Circuit Court of Appeals, for proposing that the big meat pack- ers open their books to the public in order to ascertain how much government subsidies they needed. Today, Truman is proposing a far more revo- lutionary step - opening the books of auto- mobile companies and other big industries. Simultaneously, Truman has brought Cheser Davis back from St. Louis to serve on the im- portant reconversion board, and rumor is he may step into Snyder's all-important recon- version job. Jesse's Hidden Hand ONLY TIME President Roosevelt really got sore at anyone was when he fired Jesse Jones as Secretary of Commerce and Federal Loan Admin- istrator. Ever since Truman came into office, however, Harry has shut one eye to the fact that Jesse Jones, unofficially, is running the powerful Federal Loan Administration by remote control. Jones sits in Room 450 of the Statler Hotel, keeping two phones so busy his wife complains she can't talk to him. And since no one has been appointed to replace him, Jesse can do almost anything he wishes with the headless loan agencies. This also means that he has a lot to say about surplus property since it is largely handled by the RFC. Meanwhile, Stuart Symington, though given the title of surplus property administrator, actu- ally has little to do with its disposal. So Syming- ton, fed up with getting the blame for the sur- plus property snarl, finally went to reconversion boss John Snyder and asked that he be given full responsibility by taking over the RFC, him- self. Symington didn't say so in those words, but he is tired of having the secret hand of Jesse Jones running surplus property and the loan agencies while he gets all the headaches. Snyder, as usual, was noncommittal. Being an old pal of Jesse's, he isn't anxious to make a change. However, the final decision is not up to him - but Truman. If the latter does not clean house, you can write it down that battle to the death with the Army. ful Navy sleuths, recently noted an the New York papers reporting that "Touchy" Spaatz, hard-headed Army entertained a dinner of 65 to 70 editorse lishers at the Waldorf, with the guest< Hugh Baillie, head of United Press. Navy men, knowing the difficulty which any general or admiral has in meeting even the family payroll on a government salary, wondered how Spaatz was able to finance such a big shin- dig. They investigated, found that the dinner cost a thousand bucks, but it didn't come out of General Spaatz's pocket. It was paid for by the United Press, whose chief was guest oi honor. Naturally, the dinner was a good sounding board for air force propaganda. The airmen, although staying in the background, have been the leading motivator of the Army-Navy mer- ger. (Copyright, 1945, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT : Price Control By SAMUEL GRAFTON AN OFFICIAL of the National Association of Home Builders says that price ceilings on new homes are unnecessary because people won't be "foolish enough" to pay high prices. This is an interesting argument, because, if it is true, there should never have been an inflation in the his- tory of the world; people should never have been foolish enough. This kind of argumentation is typical of the sort of the pressures now at work to crack price control. Senator Wherry of Nebraska contrib- uted his mite during a radio debate the other evening, when he held two women's slips aloft before the (studio) audience. One, he said, was a good -article priced at $1.95; but, because the manufacturer's price was over the ceiling, he had been forced to stop producing the item. The other slip, a bad one, was put out by another maker as a "new line," at $3.95. Almost every Congressman has been sub- jected to this argument during the last few weeks; Washington is full of people wander- ing around with two women's slips in their hands. But another speaker on the program rather spoiled Mr. Wherry's point by remind- ing the audience that when OPA asked for power to enforce quality standards, Mr. Wherry voted against it. With proper backing, OPA could have curbed the maker of poor slips, or, under a proper presentation, it could have been induced to give relief to the maker of good ones, as it has done in literally thousands of instances. rJ1HE OPPONENTS of price control cannot get away from the fact that what they want is higher prices. Usually they work it out to read that higher prices mean higher production they then try to call their higher-price plan a higher- production plan; but it is startling to see Amer- ican industry, after a generation of convincing us that higher production means lower prices, now allowing spokesmen to say for it that lower prices are a barrier to higher production. What has happened to the old marriage between mass production and low prices? What new element of incompatibility has disrupted that happy mat- ing? If the country were broke, American indus- try would be pulling off its customary miracles to make and sell goods at prices people could pay; with an assured market, the miracles ought to be, if anything, a little easier to accomplish. It seems to me it is a very short-sighted propa- ganda investment, flabby and ultimately profit- less, for any segment of industry to reverse its field in this emergency, and try to build up a mystic union of high production and high prices. But even if arguments are sometimes flabby, tempers arehigh; and so Mr. Truman, going to work in one special price-control field, has tried to meet some of the flabby arguments with a flabby housing plan. It is a typical, soft compromise, i.e., one which pleases nobody. The $10,000 ceiling on new houses means that most new houses will be $10,000 houses, beyond the reach of most Americans and so housing ex- perts don't like the plan, while builders don't like it either, because they don't like any ceilings. The plan lacks style; and though the ceiling may 'be lowered by the time these lines appear (any- thing is possible in these days of rapid indecision in Washington) it is, in its initial form, clearly not an attack on the housing problem, as such, but merely an attempted answer to propagan- dists. The administration's lack of forthright style in fighting inflation is encouraging the flabby argument; and the flabby argument is increas- ingly meeting with the flabby answer; and vet- erans are now going to try to live on unsub- sidized food, in $100,000 houses. Perhaps some- one in Mr. Truman's entourage should whisper to him that true compromise is not achieved by yielding to everybody in sight; true com- promise is based on doing the best for the most. On that platform, one can stand; and if the hollering is no less, the progress is some- his old friend Symington will not tarry in the headache-ridden job of surplus property ad- ministrator. Death Battle rPHE NAVY is leaving no stone unturned in its Watch- item in General ace, had and pub- of honor BENGAL, THE BIRTHPLACE of the Indian national movement, is dying. Last year's famine taught many lessons and it took heavy toll, but the lessons have not been well learnt. The officials have remained complacent, the people are passive, and the hoarders go on with their business. The complacency of the officialdom is reflected in Mr. Casey's radio talk of the fourth of July. In this talk, he, the governor of the province, stated that there has been a 'striking' improvement in the food situation. The facts pre- sent a different picture. The prices of paddy (a form of cereal) and rice in every district of Bengal are 200 to 250 per cent higher than the government - controlled prices. Levelling of supply through storaging was supposed to keep prices low. Mr. Casey assured his listeners that storage arrangements have been made for twenty million maunds of rice. (Approx. 72 maunds equal one ton.) But no effective method was devised to keep the rice from rotting. In 1944, 21,600 maunds of rice were wasted and this year, 159,000 maunds were wasted in the months of May and June alone. These figures do not include the unreported waste and the profiteering by the government agents themselves. The governor of Bengal 'refuses to believe' that Indian mothers and sisters are committing suicide for want of material with which to clothe themselves. Mr. Casey may not be 'prepared' to believe this but nevertheless, it is a fact-"in a single week, July 1st to July 7th, thirty suicide cases were reported." Cloth rationing was to be intro- duced on the third of September by the provincial government but was postponed to October 1. The central government, which promised to de- liver 41,333 bales in April, has like- wise failed in its duty. April, May, and June passed and then, in the last week of June, 22,000 bales were given to the Bengal government. Out of these thousands, how many bales reached the people has not been ascertained. Casey's 'temporary' cloth distribution scheme has evap- orated; once again he is 'consider- ing' a new plan to have a 'cloth syn- dicate.' Mr. Casey thinks that the num- her of destitute persons has fallen considerably, that the health situ- ation in the province is hopeful and is getting back to the pre-war normal. But the facts are . . . The following figures are given by Mr. S. C. Mitter, head of the De- partment of Industries in the gov- ernment of Bengal: There are now in Bengal twelve lacs of wandering destitutes besides 27 lacs of landless labourers, 15 lacs of poor peasants, 15 laos of village artisans and 25,000 school teachers. (10 lacs equal one million) Relief sanctioned for all destitutes put together is 1,679,103 rupees- i.e., every destitute will get 6 ps. (about 1 cent) per day for only two months. The government scheme provides for 2 per cent of the adult destitutes and 3 per cent of all orphan children. Fifteen lacs of vil- lage artisans each will have 8 as. (about 16 cents) per day for a year. 10 lacs of houses need rebuilding in Bengal today. After the havoc following the famine, the govern- ment sanctioned for this job Rupees 1-3 (40 cents) for each house for the year. And even such scanty help doesn't reach the people because it passes through the channels of hoarders and officials who are more interested in making money than in feeding the people. As for the health situation .. . Epidemics which have their roots in the last famine have been raging in the whole province. In January 1945, two out of every thousand per- sons had cholera, half the cases proving fatal. In April, 1945, four out of every thousand had cholera, half again being fatal. Besides this, the "malaria scourge has become more powerful." *And at this time, there has been a cut of about 50 per cent in the budget for health expenditures. It was 17,000,000 rupees from 1944-45 and 7,100,000 from 1945-46. De- spite this cut in health appropri- ations, the sales tax, which hits the lower-income bracket hardest, has been raised from one pie per rupee to three pies per rupee. But Mr. Casey's rosey-colored dis- tortions do pot blind even the most conservative. The Economist, an im- perialist organ, claimed on October 13, 1945 . . . "Hoarding more danger- ous even than crop failure has al- ready begun, even though the real scarcity will not appear until next year. .." The situation is recognized in this article, but the Economist 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 Angel hall, by 3:30 p. m. of the day preceding publication (11:00 a. m. Sat- urdays). WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1945 VOL. LVI, No. 39 Notices The Business Office and those de- partmental offices of the University which can properly be closed will not be open on Monday, Dec. 24. Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary. During the University vacation, the General Library will close at 6 p.m. daily, beginning Friday, Dec. 21, and will be closed all day Dec. 24 and 25. There will be no Sunday Service. The Divisional Libraries will be closed Dec. 24 and 25 and will be open on a short schedule Dec. 26-29. Hours of opening will be posted on the doors. All libraries will resume regular schedules Dec. 31 and will be open full time on New Year's Day. The University Automobile Regula- tion will be lifted for Junior Medical students from Dec. 15, 1945 to Jan. 14. 1946. For all other students in the Uni- versity, the ruling will be suspended for the Christmas vacation period, beginning at 12:00 noon on Friday, Dec. 21, 1945 and ending at 8:00 a.m. on Monday, Dec. 31, 1945. 12:30 a.m. permission will be given to women students for the dance giv- en by Company A tonight, if these students present their invitation cards at the Office of the Dean of Women in advance of the party. Closing hours for' women students on Dec. 31 will be 1:30 a.m. West Quadrangle Navy men now in residence in the West Quadrangle may reapply for rooms for the Spring Term from Dec. 18 to 21 at the Of- fice of the Dean of Students. Men ap- plying during that period will be given priority over incoming appli- cants for rooms for the Spring Term. Faculty College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: Midsemester re- ports are due not later than Friday, Dec. 21. Report cards are being distributed to all departmental offices. Green cards are being provided for freshmen and sophomores and white cards for reporting juniors and seniors. Re- ports of freshmen and sophomores should be sent to 108 Mason Hall; those of juniors and seniors to 1220 Angell Hall. Midsemester reports should name those students, freshmen and upper- classmen, whose standing at midsem- ester is "D" or "E", not merely those who receive "D" or "E" in so-called midsemester examinations. Students electing our courses, but registered in other schools or colleges of the University should be reported to the school or college in which they are registered. Additional cards may be had at 108 Mason Hall or at 1220 Angell Hall. The following student organiza- tions have not returned space con- tracts for the 1946 Michiganensian: Michigamua Stockwell Hall U. of M. Band American Institute of Archiects Phi Eta Sigma A. V.C. Graduate Council Latin American Society These contracts must be received by Thursday, Dec. 20. The Michigan- ensian will not guarantee insertion of the page after that date. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for DROPPING COURSES WITHOUT RECORD will be Saturday, Jan. 5. A course may be dropped only with the permission of the classifier after conference with the instructor. Stae nf Mihizan Civil Srvice An- Hall, Engineering, Music, and Educa- tion Schools. Admission to School of Business Administration-Spring Smester Applications for admission to the School of Business Administration for the Spring Semester MUST be filed on or before Jan. 15 Information and application blanks are available in Room 108, Tappan Hall. Academic Notices Veterans (World War H) Tutoring: There are two Mathematics Tutor- ing sections: One for those taking Math. 6 and 7, meeting in Room 3010 Angell Iall; and another for stu- dents in other Math courses meeting in Room 3011 Angell Hall. From now on these sections will meet from 7:00 to 8:00 p.m., Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet today at 4 p.m., in 319 West Medical Building. 'Lipids and Hem- olysis," will be discussed. All inter- ested are invited. The Botanical Seminar will meet at 4:00 p.m. today in room 1139, Nat- ural Science Building. Botany in Brazil will be discussed by Jose M. Joffily and Jose C. Paixao. All inter- ested are invited. Seminar in History of Mathematics today from 7-8 p.m. 3001 Angell Hall. Mr. K. Leisenring will continue the discussion of Imaginary Elements in Non-Euclidean Geometry. Bacteriology Seminar will meet Thursday, Dec. 20., at 4 p m. in Room 1564 East Medical Building. Employment in Private Forestry Seminar-Professor Matthews will initiate a series of discussions on va- rious aspects of this subject tomor- row afternoon at 4:30. As usual, the seminar will be held in room 2039, Natural Science building. Events Today The Broadcasting Service and the School of Music present a special program of Christmas music over Station WKAR this afternoon at 2:30 p.m. The entire program is under the direction of Professor Hanns Pick and includes the combined forces of the String Section of the University Symphony Orchestra under the di- rection of Professor William D. Re- veli; the Women's Glee Club, di- rected by Associate Professor Mar- guerite Hood; the Men's Glee Club, directed by Professor David Mattern and Mr. Jerome Horwitz, tenor solo- ist; a quartet of brass instruments under the direction of Mr. Haskel Sexton; and an Organ solo by Pro- fessor Palmer Christian. Mr. Russel Howland has written a special or- chestra arrangement to "Silent Nicht, Holy 1 icht, and Mr. Theodore Heger will be ti_clommentator. There will be an Executive Council meeting of the Student Organization for International Cooperation today at 4:15 in the Michigan Union. No- tice to the Engineering Council, New- man Club, and All-Nations Club, rep- representatives particularly. The Seminar on the Expansion of Christianity will take place at 4:30 in Lane Hall. Junior Girls: There will be a meet- ing at 4:30 today for those who signed up and for those who wish to sign up on the publicity committee for J. G. Play. It will be held in the League; the room will be posted on the bulletinboard in the lobby. Bring your identification card. Flying Club: Meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in room 1042 East Engineering Building. Club By-Laws are to be considered and agreed upon. Members as well as all other students and faculty inter- ested in the club are urged to attend. There are still membership open- ings for a limited number. Appli- cation blanks can be filled out in room B.308 East Engineering Build- ing. Additional information can be obtained through the club officers: cleverly alibis the government by blaming the hoarders. Not that there are no hoarders at all -but is the government, which decided to crush the entire Congress in 1942, too weak to oust them? The crux of the matter lies in the fact that the government does not want the cooperation of the people. Mr. Casey has ruled the province for the past year with selected advisers rather than with elected, ministers. The Economist knows this well and so it says that "the greatest danger in fact will come from further loss of public confidence in the admin- istration" and therefore "closer con- tact between the government and the people" it needed. What must be the state of af- fairs when the Economist, tradi- tional propagandist for the white man's burden, speaks for closer contact between the government and the people? -S. D. Mehta Editor's Note: This is the third in a series of articles on the Far East by S. D. Mehta, an Indian national now attending the University. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN times greater. (Copyright, 1945, N. Y. Post Syndicate) BARNABY By Crockett Johnson -~ We're checking your answer.. . Yes! 1 ALd.If.. .- f-- -An I By the way, sir, are you i.. :md..~t"f.. .-nrf..j ^ Eh?. .. Oh. Ha, ha, heh,1 KIF ..AY e lC .: I FMmm, well, thank you. JOHNSW~ Ii II