I FOUR Tl-;lE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17. 1942 1_ r W sDaNrEs,,.a..amr .. fNe L17: 1 qs x 4 &1jp £irtti au lat t1 :. r 91l b*-.n - m a n " -- .- .. ... . Edited and managed by students of the University of Michig'an under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press Tbe 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 republication 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 $4.00, by mail $5.00. REPREENTED POR NATiONAL ADVERTIING WV National Advertising Service, Inc. e College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHeCAboersosml/e Ci9Los At Press,94-4ANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1941-42 Editorial Staff Homer D. Swander Will "Sapp Managing Editor City Editor Knitq Ediitn I+11 kxe Djann . . . . . . pors ASSOCIATE EDITORS Hale Champion, John Erlewine, Lean ordenker, Robert Preiskel «or Resource Allocation Is Not Army Function. ... T HE IMPORTANT QUESTION of who is to control the allocation of resources during the war was raised yesterday by the action of the Army reported by Blair Moody in the Detroit News. Donald Nelson, with the backing of the Presi- dent, stopped an attempt by the Army to take over the allocation functions of the civilian War Production Board. Under the Army scheme it would make the important decisions of sup- plying factories with raw materials and leave the administrative scraps to Nelson's hard- working board. It is easy to assume that the Army logically should supervise the important resource alloca- tion because of the huge amount of production destined for military usage. Behind that as- sumption lies little supporting information. HEAVY-HANDED Army authorities are not renowned for their able handling of business problems. And those are the problems with which they would be confronted. Before the war began there was but little de- mand on the nation's productive reserve of ci- vilian factories for war goods. During the period of half-hearted defensive arming, the Army let its contracts to old, "reliable" firms with which she had been dealing for years. After the war began the Army kept in its narrow groove of contracting with big pro- ducers for its supplies while huge capacity composed of smaller units lay idle. Small plants were starved for work, but the Army did little to untangle the mess. The Army's supply services showed only con- servative methods until General Somervell was named chief of supply. Since then the services have been more vigorous, but their past record merits no additional control. NOUGH REASON to keep the Army from control of resource allocation lies in its poor past record. But in addition to the record there is the question of the desirability of allowing military control of much of the nation's pro- ductive activity-a control that would reach far down into the civilian population, into functions always regarded as civilian. In this nation the precedent of maintaining civilian control of wartime business and pro- duction is well established. In the last war civilians mobilized industry for war purposes with success and the Army suffered little. With the Army controlling the distribution of re- sources there would be little activity not under its control. PRESUMABLY, TOO, the Navy would have a share in the new control. The Navy's record of getting production is worse than the Army's. In addition there are volumes of Congressional investigation testimony showing that the Navy dabbles in politics and had had a large part in wrecking the Washington arms conferences of the '20's. Germany in the last war gives the classic ex- ample of what happens to the government if the military can control it. Every vestige of free government disappeared as the military heir- archy took over purely civilian functions. The German army rolled up an unenviable record of tragic mistakes in national governmient. If the Army wishes quicker and better services in the field of supply the logical move would be to go to the President and Donald Nelson, 4ex- plain its needs and allow the civilian agencies to correct any faults. - Leon Gordenker Expenditures fo 1940 and 1941 at the Univer- sity of Pittsburgh totaled $2,773,335. SawduJ an] OvJ I er SC/ THE WOMAN who sits next to me in the fac- tory where I'm working this summer weighs nearly two hundred and wears tight, flowered, calico dresses. She has almost no fingernails and her hands are short and round. Although only twenty-one she's been both married and divorced and has a pitiful tarnished metal band and three children to prove it. At first I felt dreadfully superior to her. The foreman brought me in and sat me down beside her and she said, "hello" and I said, "hello" and that was all we said the first night. After that she started talking to me and her grammar was bad, so I just corrected it under my breath and didn't answer. This, though, was before I knew she could go over production. Every night she comes and sits on the high stool beside mine and every morning when we make out our cards she's made bonus on produc- tion. She's gone way over the quota and I haven't even come near it. Superior indeed, now I feel inferior to the woman in the calico dress and all of it started me thinking. IT started me thinking about other people I know. Women with long nails painted bright and thin, bony hands. Men with broad nails and blue veins in their hands. It started me thinking about big-breasted blondes with tangee cherries for lips and tall brunettes with black hats and veils. Men in polo shirts, women in evening dresses. People who go to Florida when the sun is shining and who go north when it's raining. Beautiful people, long, tall people who use good grammar and know Shakespeare. These are the people I used to admire. These are the people to whom I used to feel inferior and now, strangely, I feel superior to them. They couldn't sit on the high stool and make produc- tion. They can't even be ordinary, how can they be more than that? First, I'm going to be ordinary, I'm going to learn to be like the woman in the flowered dress. I don't mean that I'm going to say "ain't," but I'm going to earn the right to say "isn't." This summer I'm going to go over production, I've made up my mind to that. I'D like to learn to be a 'housemaid too, or a butler. I wouldn't be a very good one, not at first, but I'd learn, and maybe one day people would entrust me with their crystal goblets or their fine silver and they'd say that I was a good housemaid or a good butler and I'd be satisfied just being ordinary. I'd like to work on a farm for a while. I'd like to learn to plow and milk and all the things that farmers--ordinary people- do. And when I've learned to be ordinary I'd like to be more than that. To write a poem, compose a piece of music or paint a picture, not about farms and housemaids or factories but about people, people who are ordinary, people who are more and people who can't even be ordinary. Well, at this point I feel rather silly and I promise not soon again to wax so philosophical. It's the woman in the flowered dress. She just started me thinking. State appropriations provide 23.1 percent of the income of the University of Pittsburgh. Fraternity men buy 1,000,000 suits yearly; sorority women buy 500,000 dresses every year. Edward Periberg Fred M. Ginsberg Morton Hunter Federal Service Riddled By Unjustified Dismissals' Business Staff Business Manager .Associate Business Manager . Publications Manager NIGHT EDITOR: HALE CHAMPION The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Washington Returns To Anti-Liberalism. 0 0 MOST fair historians of World War I recall a sudden turn of events in the American capital as war fever mounted, re- call how Wilson's New Freedom became a New Fear for those 'whose liberalism had only the day before been warmly approved by a seemingly progressive, intelligent administration. If events of the last few weeks are any indica- tion, a New Deal even more highly praised by liberals may be suddenly transformed into a happy hunting ground for the NAM and its witch-hunting associates. Those same historians who remember World War I better than we of this generation will re- call the reactionary imprisonment of Eugene V. Debs--a man now almost universally recognized as a loyal, patriotic American-on charges of sedition. They will remember how the Depart- ment of Justice cracked down on governmental employes who saw fit to help the working man in his struggle towards decent living. Much the same situation seems to exist in Washington today and the parallels are so close that it leads one to wonder just how much de- mocracy has learned. Attorney-General Francis T. Biddle recently issued a deportation blast.against Harry Bridges which will go down in history-and over the Nazi radio-as a blow against democracy as great as the imprisonment of Debs. __ At the same time the greatest* crackdown on liberals in the history of Washington is taking place through the courtesy of the Dies Commit- tee, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and every crackpot in the Civil Service Commission. Admittedly the government should be careful about whom it employs, but when it fires--as PM has proved it fired-a woman for belonging to the American League of Woman Voters, it is time to call a halt. The complete silencing of governmental em- ployes as far as their political opinions are con- cerned is almost as dangerous as an under- production of tanks. It means that the pseudo- patriots who want to turn the political and eco- nomic clock back to the nineties are trying to take control again. Illustrative of the kind of things Big Business is getting away with is the censoring of war in- dustry salaries because of so-called military rea- sons. Bush wah!! How any foreign agent is go- ing to learn anything from them we challenge the Censorship Office to tell us. We repeat. Bushwah!! , Anti-liberalism in Washington can be stopped by one man, a man who has never let the type of reactionary game now being played go on very long. It's up to Roosevelt and let's hope he doesn't postpone consideration too long. - Hale Champion Equality Demanded In Censoring News . OONER OR LATER every censor and censorship board becomes un- popular with the press. The reasons are obvious and a nonchalant public more often than not shrugs off .journalistic complaints as just part of The New Republic 'HE PRESENT procedural ma- chinery for handling cases of government employees charged with subversive activities is wholly inade- quate and so completely fails to pro- tect the'rgt of such employees that grave injustice is being done, The problem is particularly im- portant in view of the notoriously loose manner in which such charges, with resultant investigations, have been, and may be, made. Various lists of employees have been pre- pared and published by the Dies Committee after ex-parte hearings- or perhaps with no hearings at all- and the persons involved subjected to investigation. Other committees of Congress, such as the Smith Com- mittee, have named specific employ- ees. From time to time Represen- tatives have taken the floor of the House and attacked various govern- ment employees by name. Often without adequate proof, organizations have been classified as "plotting to overthrow the government," and those who belonged to such organiza- tions or were on their lists have be- come suspect. Obviously, it is essential that such charges be investigated. Unfortun- ately, the case load is too heavy for proper handling in many instances, particularly since it is superimposed on the routine investigation of all newly employed federal workers. The FBI alone has more than four thous- and persons as to whom it is conduct- ing these special investigations. Moreover, the activities of the various investigating agencies are poorly co- ordinated, with many duplications of effort and no equality of procedure. The fault of the system, however, lies not so much in the manner of investigation as in the treatment accorded the accused persons when a report on them is made to the agency at which they are em- ployed. Different procedures are followed, and different agencies reach difficult conclusions on re- ports alleging similar facts. For a long time there has been an urgent need for a remedy. Respon- sible government officials, who them- selves are in no way involved, have sought for procedural means to dis- pose of these problems fairly. The faculties of the Civil Service Com- mission are frequently not at their disposal because of technicalities limiting the Commission's jurisdic- tion, and in any event the case load of the Commission is too heavy and its procedure too antiquated for effec- tive operation. Attorney General Biddle recently announced the creation of a "special Interdepartmental Committee" de- signed to "facilitate and expedite" the disposition of "charges of alleged subversive activities of federal em- ployees." The program announced by Biddle falls far short of meeting the problem and will not prevent the present serious abuses. What the Attorney General fails to recognize is that, as matters now stand, a large number of federal employees have been, and more will be, summarily dismissed from the federal service "with prejudice" and on only a few hours' notice when reports concerning their al- leged subversive activities are trans- mitted to the heads of the agencies in which they are employed. These reports have been and will be sub- mitted without giving the employee a hearing, and the employee, more often than not, dismissed not only without a hearing but without be- ing advised in any way as to the reasons for the action taken. None of the employees, if he ever suc- ceeds in obtaining a hearing, will be advised in full of the charges made. The names of his accusers will always remain secret. Those who succeed in obtaining a hear- ing may wait months for a decision, during which time they are without a job. The fortunate few who suc- ceed in overcoming all obstacles and in proving their innocence will not only have no assurance of re- employment or of obtaining back salary, but also will have no assur- same facts and obliged again to go charged with subversion on the same facts and obliged again to go through the entire process of es- tablishing their innocence. Those who meet only 90 per cent of the burden and leave a suspicion of guilt, or against whom minor non- subversive indiscretions are proved -for the investigations, once be- gun, do not stop at "subversive" activities-will find little flexibility in the process of judgment, and their cases will be handled in the same manner as those in which charges of subversion are fully proved; for once suspect, an em- ployee will often find every tech- nicality used to force his removal. ONE SHOULD NOT assume that the numerous cases involving suspicion of subversion concern only persons who are accused of being Communists or Nazis. Nor should anyne assume that these are persons who occupy positions from which they may affect the policy and think- predilections and prejudices of the person who has the power to hire and fire. Federal employees who have worked for abolition of a poll tax, who have been outspoken in urging aid for the Spanish Loyalists, who work for racial equality, who are members of cooperatives or peace movements or who are in some phase of their thinking anti-big-business are often dismissed from the federal service for these reasons alone. The Attorney General proposes to have a committee which will "assist the various federal departments and agencies in maintaining uniformity of procedure." "Maintaining!" Does that lend itself to any interpretation than that the present procedures are deemed adequate? If there were any doubt, it is dispelled later, when the Attorney General announces, "While the committee cannot undertake to consult with individual employees or employee organizations, it will make use of every resource in cooperation with the FBI to assure a fair, im- partial and comprehensive report to Congress." Are we to understand that the Attorney General believes that the problem is that the FBI needs help in its investigations? And what of the employees who are in- dividually affected? They cannot be consulted. By clear implication, they can be left to the procedure, or lack of pi'ocedure, outlined above. Nothing in the Attorney General's announce- ment even suggests concern with the present arbitrary denial of notice and hearing to those who stand ac- cused. Not that the solution is easy. It would take courage, and it would take effort, and it might take even a little money-though much less than the $100,000 which the FBI is currently spending to investigate these cases. Without implying that there can be only one solution, we suggest that a committee or board is necessary to hear cases against accused employees and make advisory recommendations to the departments or agencies in which the accused employees are em ployed. This committee or board would fill two basic needs. It would help to shape governmental policy in dealing with various political groups and organizations, and it would de- velop standards by which it could be more accurately determined whether a particular employee should be sev- ered from the service. Its organiza- tion and functions might be as fol- lows: THE BOARD should consist of per- sons having no other govern- mental connection. These persons should be of unquestioned integrity. Since the essence of the problem is the present lack of opportunity for a fair hearing, and not the decisions thereafter rendered, there is no rea- son to have the decisions of the board in the slightest degree suspect be- cause of the political coloration of its members. The number of board members should be large enough to ensure expeditious decision, but would probably depend on whether mem- bers were full or part-time, compen- sated or uncompensated, and the like. There are a large number of cases, but it is probable that they will soon fall into categories, and that particular issues common to many causes will be ironed out. In the field of "Jurisdiction" the board should be allowed to accept from any department or agency any case in which an employe has been discharged or threatened with dis- charge because of his political be- liefs or membership in organizations alleged to be plotting the overthrow of the government. Either the em- ploye affected or the agency should be able to place the matter before the board, which should be free to decline a case in which it felt unable to function properly. The board should proceed by way of open hearings, unless the employe requests a private hearing or unless the board itself believes a private hearing to be warranted by the facts of the particular case-the hearing procedure should not be allowed to become a sounding board, for exam- ple. The employe should be fully informed of the charges against him a sufficient time before the hearing to enable him to prepare a defense. The board should be allowed to re- lease names of accusers if this is necessary to serve the ends of jus- tice. Lawyers in private practice should be requested to volunteer their assistance in preparation and defense. Witnesses should be per- mitted and affidavits should be ac- cepted. The board's decisions should be written, and announced publicly. THE BOARD'S DECISIONS should be advisory only, and in the form of recommendations to the head of the department or agency in which the employe works. The board should be free to recommend any disposition of the case-discharge, demotion, transfer, dismissal of the charges or other action it may find appropriate. If the board is to ameliorate pres- ent conditions to any substantial de- gree it is essential that, pending de- cision, the status of the employe be not prejudiced. In the usual case, DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 1942 VOL. LI. No. 2 All Notices for the Daily Official Bul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the Summer Session before 3:30 p.m. of the day preceding its publication except on Saturday, when the notices should be submitted before 11:30 a.m. The Storehouse Building will act as a receiving center for scrap rubber and also metals. Any department on the Campus having metals or rubber to dispose of for defense purposes, please call Ext. 337 or 317 and the materials will be picked up by the trucks which make regular campus deliveries. Service of the janitors is available to collect the materials from the various rooms in the build- ings to be delivered to the receiving location, E. C. Pardon On Thursday, June 25, there will be a banquet in honor of the Univer- sity of Michigan General Hospital No. 298 at 7:00 p.m. in the University of Michigan Union Ballroom. All members of the Medical faculty and their wives and other friends of the personnel of the unit are cordially invited to attend. Banquet tickets are available at the Galen news stand and at the office of Dr. A. C. Kerlikowske, University Hospital, and at the office of Dean A. C. Fursten- berg, West Medical Building. Flying Club will meet Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. in Room 302 of the Union. All members should be there. In addition, any students or members of the faculty who might be interested in flying the University Club airplane this summer are in- vited to attend. Alan R. Bott, Pres. of U. of M. Flying Club Ch.-Met. 171. Explosives. 3 Hours. Mr. Osburn. Lecture and Recitation, Mon. and Fri., 1-3, Rm. 4215. A Study of the Processes Used in the Manufacture of Commercial Explo- sives: Their Properties and Uses. Prerequisites Ch.-Met. 25. First meet- ing of the class will be on Friday, June 19. Department of Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering. Women Students: The Women's Department of Physical Education is sponsoring a picnic for all women on campus. This will be held at 6:00 p.m., Friday, June 19, on Palmer Field. A small fee will be charged to cover the cost of food. Students planning to attend must sign up and pay the fee in Office 15, Barbour Gymnasium as soon as possible and not later than Friday noon. Dept. of Physical Education for Women. Methodist Students: You are in- vited to tea and open house in the Wesley Foundation lounge of the First Methodist Church from 4:00 until 5:30 today. Come in and get acquainted. Betty Rae Ilileman, Summer Director Episcopal Students: There will be a celebration of the Holy Communion at 7:10 Thursday morning in Bishop Williams Chapel, Harris Hall. Break- fast will be served after the service. James R. Terrell, Sec'y. Episcopal Students: Tea will be served for Episcopal students and their friends at Harris Hall this af- ternoon, 4:00 to 5:15. Evening Pray- er will follow at 5:15 in Bishop Wil- liams Chapel, The following course is being of- fered during the Summer Term: Metal Processing 5, Welding. 2 hours ;redit, hours to be arranged with Professor Spindler, 2044 East En- gineering Building. Prof. W. A. Spindler. Physical Education-Women Stu- Jents: All physical education classes are open. Register in Office 15, Barbour Gymnasium. No late regis- tration fee. Dept. of Phys. Educ. for Women Candidates for the Master's De- ;ree in English: The qualifying ex- .mination and examination in for- aign language will be given on Mon- day evening, June 29, for those en- tering in the Summer Term as well as those entering in the Summer Ses- sion. See Summer Session Announce- ment for time and place. N. E. Nelson of the guilty, but without, as is now the case, total disregard of justice and fairness. The majority of the cases are, after all, political in con- tent and political /in origin. We must not, in times such as these, forget the necessity of keeping the federal service free from political tampering. The Attorney General has done many things to protect the civil rights of the ordinary citizen, particularly since the dec- laration of war. He deserves great credit for some of these step. I t~ i;, 4, fh; Jewish Family Driven From Home By Neighbors Playing Hitler's Game l r HE SITUATION which drew the following edit from PM's Richard Hanser is as follows: Betsy Schiller, six-year-old daughter of a Queens business man who lives in New Hyde Park, Long Island, N. Y.. suffered the same treatment in this supposedly typical American community that her fellow members of the Jew- ish rice are commonly believed to suffer only in Nazi Germany. Her family was finally forced to move in order that she might grow up to be a normal American girl because: 1) Women, and children urged on by their parents, repeatedly called her a "dirty Jew." 2) Neighbors who were friendly with the Schillers had to stop because as the only Jews on the block the Schillers drew criticism not only to themselves, but to their associates. 3) Even the absence of a Christmas tree at the Schillers' brought violent anti-Semitism to the fore in the neighborhood. 4) One woman said, "Some Jews need to get what Hitler's giving them." Despite the efforts of the school principal, the children were still subject to the abuses of others who were being taught the best principles of storm-trooping and Jew-baiting. And those parents answered the school prin- cipal's efforts with objections that he had no right to teach their children that Americanism was more than the narrow views which they had culled from the Berlin guttersnipe. OUT OF THIS LIVING HELL for a child un- able to understand why she should be treated differently than other boys and girls her own age came two results, one tragic and un-Ameri- can, the other, encouraging and American. A Jewish family had to move from what it had story involves, you will have to keep in mind that New Hyde Park is a pleasant New York suburb, and that the condition which our re- porter describes exists in the seventh month of the war against Hitlerism. "You dirty Jew!" This taunt from the gutters of Berlin, this acho from the diseased brain of Adolf Hitler, rings out in the shaded streets of New Hyde Park-and a little girl runs sobbing to her mother, In all civilized communities, and most savage ones, the deliberate infliction of pain on a child is looked on as an outrage without any possible justification. So what kind of people are these citizens of New Hyde Park who scream "You dirty Jew!" at a six-year-old girl, and prompt their children to do the same? Are they some strange and monstrous breed to whom even the pain of a child is a matter of indifference? No. The people who can bring themselves to hurl the taunt "You dirty Jew!" at an American child are the people on whom the Hitler poison has worked like an infection in the blood, and who are unaware of their own disease. They are the people into whose brains the nausebus bab- bling of the Coughlinite Christian Front has seeped and festered. They are the ones who nurse in their hearts the vicious snobbery dis- seminated by newspaper advertisements that say "Restricted Clientele" and mean "No Jews Allowed." All the revolting nastiness of Hitler's pro- foundly ignorant thesis of Aryan supremacy bubbles to the surface in the story of the per- secution of the Schiller family of New Hyde Park. It is a story that would be shocking any- where, in Berlin or Munich or Vienna. But in an American community in 1942 it has a sig- If