PAGE.PFOUL THE MICHTE.AN fDAILY MSDAIT, J UM L 1642 m my irwe,, m. W i1.J.r. V 23 L .. 1aI 27. L 1! 1 ' _. :. . . 1 qv %.0 JLI A A, A -UP IM a Z4-ir4I-gan 43ai1y I A' I - - - -I Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. The Summer Daily is published every morning except Monday and Tuesday. 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 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. PREBSENTVO POR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertisiig Service, Inc College Publishers Representative 420 MADIeON Avg. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO - 8sTOn - LOS ARUES '- SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1941-42 Editorial Staff omer Swander . . . . Managing Editor Will111Sapp ' . ' . .City Editor Mike Dann . . . . . . . Sports Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS Hale Champion, John Erlewine, Leon Gordenker, Irving Jaffe, Robert Preiskel Prepare Now For Permanent Peace. . SOME troublesome questions have lodged themselves deep in the minds of men of service age. "Are we fighting again in vain? Will we do something this time to solve the problem of quarter-century war? Or shall we utter platitudes once more and leave the real task undone?" It would be an easier task to fight and to die if they knew that these questions could be answered favorably. As in the riddle of the sphinx, failure to solve our riddle of intermittent war results in death. The problem is surely not beyond solution. Men have already advanced plausible answers to it. Thinkers have shown how we can make political and economic adjustments which would leave nations both incapable of waging war and with- out motive for it. Visualize a super-state with a representative government made up of all nations-a master democracy possessing the only existing armed might-a might contributed by all the nations, but subject to the sole direction of the super- state. Picture the countries of the world occupy- ing a position similar to that of our states, un- armed, except for a small police force with a free exchange of commodities and equal access to opportunity. You may recognize in this picture suggestions made by various members of our faculty. If you are an idealist you will see in it the end of war. If you are a pragmatist you will detect a step toward the solution of war between the nations. The war between the classes we can tackle next. But even the most skeptical have not found fault with the plan of federation itself. They attack it on the grounds of the difficulty in put- ting it into substantial effect. Once achieved there is no reason to suppose that the state would fail in its mission of international peace. The great difficulty is found in the obstacles which lie in the way of achievement. The greatest one being that the multitudes do not seem to want it. The peoples of the earth desire peace, but not enough to make the neces- sary sacrifices, not enough to make the conces- sions prerequisite to federation. They aren't quite ready to give up their petty national sover eignties (despite the failure of self-determina- tion). They are loath to part with their grasp- ing imperialisms, their jingoistic superiority complexes, their rapaciously gleaned monopolies of economic advantage, and their disdain for the foreign. They can't get it through their thick skulls that war is the price they must pay for such selfish retention of the war-causers. Our task as youth is clear. We must drive it home to all men that they must submerge their nationalistic prejudices in the super-state and replace international anarchy with order, or leave the riddle of the twentieth century sphinx unsolved. We must make it clear that non- solution means mass death. It behooves us to point out that a vain victory means future thiev- ery, famine, disease and destruction on a scale which will dwarf our 1942 vintage. In one way or another the public mind should be prepared. The plan must not meet a Wil- sonian fate at the hands of an unreceptive world. Therefore let us, as youth, as soldiers, educate, propagandize, publicize and crusade in order to put a receptive dent in the public mind. We already have our intellectual leaders in Schu- mann, Slosson and Streit, as well as others. Let's fall in line and fight an organized cam- paign for peace. We owe it to the incredulous soldier. We owe it to ourselves. - Vie Baum Edward Perlberg Pred M. Ginsberg Morton Hunter Business Staff Business Manager Associate Business Manager Publications Manager NIGHT EDITOR: IRVING, JAFFE The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Present Congress Among History's Worst... WE'RE SO DISGUSTED with Congress that we sometimes wonder if there isn't something in this 'Communist-dominated' movement to do away with the Congress of the United States. Of course we want nothing so drastic, but what we do want is a rapid change in the ac- tions and personnel of the current Congress, one which has stamped itself as one of the worst in our history. It includes no zany Marion Zioncheck, no bull- dozing Joe Cannon, but unfortunately it also lacks many able, intelligent, or courageous men. When we look at a roster that names without aste'isks or any other qualifying marks such men as Howard Smith of Virgiia, John 13ankin of Mississippi, and Clare Hoffman of Michigan it is small wonder that we shrink from the con- sequences of our own selections. Of course such outstanding Congressional flops are exceptions, but they are almost com- pletely supplemented by mediocrities like our own Mr. Michener, men whose social vision and capacity for action is extremely limited. If, for any reason of special prejudice, one finds himself unable to condemn Congressional personnel we can, as the politicians often advise us to do-take a look at the record. There is no dividing lime in an almost con- tinuous string of errors-intentional and un- intentional-on the part of Congress. But for the sake of fair play with the flat-bottomed boys let's only consider the star-spangled rec- ord since Dec. 7, 1941. After a dutiful declaration of war only, of course, after the necessary amount of oratory about remembering everything since and includ- ing Custer's last stand, Congress settled down to the task of fighting a war from the base of its collective spine. When a drastic price bill was necessary it fid- dled and faddled-even did a little diddling on the side-before passing an almost unrecogniz- able wreck of the bill presented by an Adminis- tration in a desperate hurry to get authorization for control measures. Only the long, exacting, patient work of Senator Prentiss M. Brown, proof that they aren't all alike, kept this same Congress from tossing the price bill out of the window-and thus bringing inflation through the door. Price control isn't the only Congressionally mishandled problem. The draft is another .ex- ample. Refusing to listen to Army demands -for permission to draft the 18-20 age group Con- gressmen smiled long smiles of satisfaction at the home folks, happy that they had stood up to the big, bad boys who threatened to take the wee bairns from their respective- cradles. Now Congress awaits only the fall election's passing to rectify this now universally recognized mis-a take. It's pretty decent of Congress to consider it at all. Consider too the ridiculous-Congressional pen- sion scheme, its wholesale demand for 'X' cards, and its renewal sanction of the frantic cater- wauling, of Martin Dies. Of course there are good as well as bad Con- gressmen, at least that's what everybody tells us, and we imagine it's true. But the sum total of the good guys is shame- fully small, and the sum total of their accom- WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND By Drew Pearson and Robert S. Allen WASHINGTON-After months of backstage plugging, the State Department finally has put across its idea of censoring the press on any news regarding diplomatic negotiations. The sales campaign to accomplish this started right after Pearl Harbor when the press censor- ship code first was being written. At that time the career boys wanted all criticism of their Vichy policy barred from the newspapers, but the Army, Navy and other government agencies demurred. They did not consider this as military information of any value whatsoever to the enemy. Now, however, the censorship code has been restricted so that the American public must re- main in ignorance of any diplomatic negotia- tions until the official cut-and-dried announce- ment is proclaimed. Behind-the-scenes there is a lot of Senatorial resentment against this new policy of keep-the- public-in-the-dark. On Capitol Hill they point out that the press has performed an important function not only of keeping the public informed on foreign rela- tions, but has kept the State Department from putting across several phony deals through the exercise of what Woodrow Wilson once called "pitiless publicity" and the policy of "open cove- nants openly arrived att" For instance, two years ago when the Stat Department secretly planned to lend $100,000,000 to Fascist Spain, it was newspaper publicity unquestionably which blocked the deal. But today under the new censorship rules, newspapers could not publish such a story until after Franco already had his $100,000,000 signed, sealed and delivered. Secret Agreements More recently, during the Molotoff visit, news- papers published the story of the secret Russian- British agreement on Russian boundaries after the war. The Russians also wanted the United States to OK this deal, but President Roosevelt wisely refused. And it is quite possible that the newspaper account of the negotiation and its effect on public opinion may have influenced his decision. Whether it did or not, the British hit the roof when the newspaper account was published. Churchill, then in Iondon, telephoned to Lord Halifax in Washington to find out how the story had leaked out, and British newsmen were called on the carpet. From now on American newsmen also will be called on the carpet if they report a Russian pro- posal to fix the boundaries of Poland and East- ern Europe before the war is over. In fact, under the new censorship code, secret treaties can be negotiated all over the map, exactly similar to the secret London Treaty of 1915 promising Italy various concessions after the war, and the Amer- ican press will not be able to print a word. And if the next peace treaty goes on the rocks as did Versailles on the issue of these secret pacts, then historians will go back to the date of June 24, 1942, and point to the muzzling of the American press as the date when the trouble really started. Note: Winston Churchill muzzled the London Mirror last winter when it pointed to inefficiency in the British Army, and too many officers ap- pointed because they came from the right fami- lies. Churchill's critics now say that if he had done less censoring and more army house- cleaning the result in Libya might have been different. Behind The Rubber Not many people know it, but the current rub- ber salvage campaign had been planned by the War Production Board for around August and was rushed through at this time at the insistence of Oil Coordinator Ickes. The WPB's salvage division, under deliberate Lessing Rosenwald, had been proceding through rather intricate and elaborate channels and would not have been ready to do the job for a couple of months. But Ickes persuaded the President that there was no time to lose, that 'it was necessary to col- lect all the scrap rubber possible before a deci- sion could be made on nation-wide gas rationing. Twenty-four hours after Ickes sold FDR on this idea, 35 oil company executives from all over the country flew to Washington and mapped plans for the campaign. In addition to collecting rubber at their filling stations, they agreed to use their trucks to haul rubber to freight cars, to advance money for cash pay- ments to the public, give the time of their filling station operators and donate the necessary bookkeeping. All profits from the campaign will go to the USO and the Army-Navy Relief. Rubber Notes The Santa Anita Race Track is contributing all rubber from its equipment, totalling an orig- inal cost of $15,000 . -. . James R. Young, the newsman who cabled so many dispatches from Japan warning what was to come, suggests that every autoist who drives a long distance to a golf course, or who joy-rides at night, be re- quired to surrender some rubber from his car . . R. S. Wharton, Quaker Rubber Co., says: "Turning in your rubber that's obsolete, helps turn in victory that will be complete." The Pacific Lighting Corporation, which con- trols several large California gas companies; the Los Angeles Times Building, and the Secur- ity First National Bank, which controls a chain of banks, all have donated the rubber mats from DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) -/ All stud'ents of German. faculty members, and others interested in acquiring practice in spoken German are cordially invited. Students, Summer Term College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: No course may be elected for credit after the end of the third week. Saturday, July 4, is therefore the last date on which new elections may be approved. The willingness of an in- dividual instructor to admit a stu- dent later does not affect the opera- tion rule. E. A. Walter. Students, Summer Term, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Election cards filed after the end of the first week of the semester may be accepted by the Registrar's Office only if they are approved by Assis- tant Dean Walter. Students who fail to file their election blanks by the close of the third week, even though they have registered and have at- tended classes unofficially, will for- feit their privilege of continuing in the College for the semester. If such students have paid any tuition fees, Assistant Dean Walter will issue a withdrawal card for them. Foyer Francais: Please note new location, 849 Tappan Avenue. Stu- dents desiring to make arrangements for breakfast and dinner at the French Table may call Mrs. Gucker, telephone 7379. Arrangements for individual meals may also be made with the house manager. Cercle Francais: Studens interest- ed in joining the Cercle Francais will please notify Prof. A. J. Jobin, 103 Romance Language Building before the organization meeting Thursday, July 2nd, if possible. Please note that meetings of the Cercle Francais will be held on Thursday evenings of each week. The Storehouse Building will act as a receiving center for scrap rub- ber and also metals. Any depart- ment 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 buildings to be delivered to the receiving location. E. C. Pardon . |. Notice to All Faculty Members and University Employees: Employees on "full-time" and on annual or month- ly salary who ordinarily receive a vacation at the expense of the Uni- versity and pay on holidays and fQr a reasonable period of sick leave if necessary, are not entitled to pay- ment for "overtime," whether in their own or another department of the University unless such arrange- ment shall have been authorized in advance by the President or the Board of Regents. College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, Schools of Education, For- estry and Conservation, Music and Public Health: Students enrolled in the regular Summer Session who re- ceived marks of I or X at the close of their last term of attendance (viz., semester of summer session) will re- ceive a grade of E in the course unless this work is made up by July 29. Stu- dents wishing an extension of time beyond this date should file a peti- tion addressed to the apropriate official in their school with Room 4 U.H., wherebitwill be transmitted. ssRobert L. Williams, Assistant Registrar. Notice Relative to Keys and Locks: The Bylaws, Section 3.24. provide: Keys and Locks for University Buildings. No person shall own or possess a key to any University building except under regulations made and promulgated by the Vice- President and Secretary. The re- moval of locks or the substitution therefor of special or private locks on doors of rooms in University buildings is prohibited. Every "authorized" key has been issued by the Key Clerk, whose office is in the office of the Department of Buildings and Grounds, North Uni- versity Avenue. "Authorized" keys are identifiable and any dean, profes- sor, official, watchman, custodian, or other proper representative of the University has- the right to inspect keys believed to open . University buildings at any reasonable time or place. No person holding an author- ized key may order, have made, or permit to be ordered or made any duplicate of his or her University key otherwise than through the Key Clerk's office, nor may he lend his authorized key. Complete compli- ance with these regulations would undoubtedly have saved the Univer- sity and individuals numerous losses from theft in the past. In the pres- ent war emergency compliance is especially desirable and requested. Violations of these regulations, when found, will be referred to the dean or other proper head of the Univer- sity division concerned for his action "We've been married a month now and Edwin hasn't started to read the paper at breakfast-will I have to go on all my life combing my hair and putting on makeup every morning?" L C GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty n I "f-I i TT E RS TO THE EDITOR British Policy Is Scored To the Editor: THE recent Allied reverses in Libya again bring to mind the question: Are the British sacrificing militant and effective conduct of the war to post-war imperialist considerations? The folly of British policy in Burma and Ma- lay is all too apparent. They did not take the Burmese and the Malayans into a cooperative partnership in an all-out effort to stem the Japanese invasion. The British remained aloof from the "native," and a- good many of the lat- ter formed an effective fifth-column for the invaders. There was no "scorched-earth" resistance in these countries, for the inhabitants did not con- sider this their war; to them it was merely a struggle betwen two imperialist powers and who- ever won was of no consequence. This is not the "People's War" of which the Vice-President spoke. N LIBYA, TOO, the outcome of the battle might have been different, had the British taken the trouble to arm those eager to join their ranks. I refer especially to the unheeded pleas for the formation of a Jewish army. At the outbreak of war in 1939 the recognition of a Jewish fighting force in the Near East was re-- quested of the Chamberlain Government. The offer was acknowledged and filed away. Not even when the supposedly aggressive Churchill government came into power was the situation changed. Instead excuses were offered that inadequate shipping space and supplies made the plan impossible. Nevertheless, suffi- cient shipping and supplies were found to trans- port Anzacs halfway around the world. Yet right on the spot there were 50,000 Jewish soldiers, many of whom were refugees from Hit- ler tyranny and could be relied upon to fight to the death in defense of their newly-acquired nical School, and Aviation Service Schools of the United States Navy as follows: Provision (1) of the Junior Instructor requirements in the basic announcement is amended to read as follows: (1) The completion of 3 full years of progressive technical experi- ence as Aircraft Engine Mechanic, Aircraft Mechanic, Aircraft Sheet Metal Mechanic, Aircraft Welder, Machinist (shop), Radio Operator or Radio Engineer. Applicants (on the date of re- ceipt of application) must have reached their twentieth birthday. There is no maximum age limit for this examination. r Physical requirements-Applicants must be physically capable of per- forming the duties of the position and be free from such defects or dis- eases as would constitute employment. Hazar'ds to themselves or danger to their fellow employees. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments has received the following in- formation concerning Civil Service Examinations. Last date for filing applications is noted in each case: Detroit Civil Service Motorman (male), salary, 79c to 84c per hour, until further notice. Power Plant Armed Guard (male),, salary, $1.00 per hour, July 6, 1942. Auto Repairman (male), salary 90c to $1.00 per hour, July 8, 1942. Auto Repair Helper (male), salary, 80c to 85c per hour, July 8, 1942. Public Service Attendant (male), salary, $1,584 per year, July 9, 1942. The Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information has re- ceived the following information con- cerning Civil Service Examinations. Last date for filing applications is noted in each case: United States Civil Service Amendment to Announcement No. 166 of 1941 (Unassembled). Radio Monitoring Officer, $3,200 a year. Assistant Radio Monitoring Officer, $2,600 a year. As amended: (1) Applications will be accepted until the needs of the service have been met, and must be filed with the Civil Service Commis- sion, Washington, D.C. (2) There are no age limits for this examination. (3) Applicants must be physically capable of performing the duties of the position and be free from such defects or diseases as would consti- tute employment hazards to them- selves or dangers to their fellow em- ployees. Michigan Civil Service Planning Technician I, salary $155 per month, July 24, 1942. Planning Technician II, salary $200 per month, July 24, 1942. Child GuidancemClinic Director. salary, $460 per month. Residence in Michigan not required, July 24, 1942. Graphotype Operator C, salary $100 per month, July 15, 1942. Obstetrician V, salary $400 per month, July 5, 1942. Obstetrician VII. salary, $650 per month, July 5, 1942. Typist Cler B, salary, $115 per month, July 24, 1942. Stenographer Clerk, salary $115 per month, July 24, 1942. Typist Clerk C, salary, $100 per month, applications may be filed at any time. Examination will be given when existing register becoies in- adequate. Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information. Summer Session Choral Groups: Students from all the schools of the University are eligible for member- ship in the Choirs of the Summer Session. Those who have had choral experience are invited to apply for Tuesdays and Thursday at 7:00 p.m. in the School of Music Auditorium. All rehearsals for the Summer Choirs will be one hour in duration. No fee is required for membership. Both groups will prepare for a public ap- pearance during the session. The A Cappella Choir is now hold- ing rehearsals. The first meeting of the Festival Choir will be Thursday, July 2. Apply for membership with May- nard Klein, office in Lane Hall. If impossible to come for tryout before scheduled rehearsal, come to the re- hearsal and the director will give you the necessary tryout after the meet- ing. Maynard Klein. Mathematics 329, Cryptanalysis Study Group. Preliminary meeting to arrange hours, Thursday at 5 p.m., 3010 Angell Hall. A. H. Copeland. Michigan Repertory Players of the department of speech will open their summer series of plays July 8 with "The Rivals" and will follow this with four distinguished plays and a Gil- bert and Sullivan operetta. Season tickets for the series are on sale now at the box office, Mendelssohn The- atre; box office hours are from 10-5 daily except Sunday. Mathematics 327, Seminar in Sta- tistics. Meeting of those interested to arrange hours, Wednesday at 12 noon, In 3020 Angell Hall. C. C. Craig Cercle Francais: Please note that the first meeting will be held at the Women's League. Thursday at 8 o'clock, not at the Foyer as previ- ously announced. Short talks, group singing, refreshments. All students in both the Summer Term and Sum- mer Session who are interested in French are cordially invited. Children's Play Group: The De- partment of Physical Education for Women announces the opening of a demonstration play school for chil- dren 4 to 9 years of age. This group meets Wednesday and Friday morn- ings, 9:00 to 10:30. Swimming, plays and games, and dancing will be of- fered. There is a small enrollment fee. For further information, call at Barbour Gymnasium. Red Cross Life Saving Course: Wo- men students who wish to earn Life Saving Certificates of the American -Red Cross may register for this course at Barbour Gymnasium. The class meets Tuesday and Thursay evenings at 8:30 at the Union Pool. Dept. of Physical Educ. for Women The -first meeting of the Cheer Leaders will be held Thursday after- noon at 5:00 Room 325 of the Michi- gan Union. Thoseinterested in try- ing out and those who have tried out before are urged to attend. Sched- ule of workouts will be arranged at the meeting. University Flying Club will meet today in Room 302 in the Union at 7:30 p.m. All members should be there. Episcopal Students: Tea will be served for Episcopal students and their friends this afternoon, 4:00 to 5:15 at Harris Hall. Evening Prayer will be held at 5:15 in Bishop Wil- liams Chapel. Tom Johnson will be in charge of the service. Episcopal Students: There will be a celebration of Holy- Communion Thursday morning at 7:10 in Bishop Williams Chapel, Harris Hall. James R. Terrell r pl1