*A ' WO ... -.-'"-r.« -.- -.. ~Ii C Micn ANDAILY ,WEDT IKSMA ,. AV. 11, 1949 Fifty-Third Year p I'd Rather Be Right e, SAMNUEL GRAFToN Edited and managed by.students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control alf, tuetPublications. Published every morning except Monday during the regular University year, and every morning except Mon- day and Tuesday during the summer session. 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 repub- licatlon of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Offic: at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as speond-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier $4.25, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 Editorial Staff NEW YORK, Aug. 10- The fuss aohut the State Department has now grown up from a grade-b controversy to a grade-a controversy. For years it was no bigger than a man's hand. There;was, really, no State Departm~ent contro- versy at all. There were oily a few men here and there wondering why vwe qld;oil and steel ,to Japan, and whether Petain had wings. But, behold, now it is on the front page of the New York Times, where Mr. John H. Crider has reported on a supposed "clash .of personalities" in the Department. Mr. Crider cites reports that two of Secretary Hull's .assistants refer to him "by use of an odious epithet." and that foreign diplomats sometimes come away with two or three different statements of policy on a given question after conferring with two or three different State pepartment officials. A feeling of functional disorder within the pepartrnent comes out of Mr. Crider's story. This is a ,little different from the older quarrel over the State.Department's policies. If we were to .add up the current charges against the Department in the cruelest -fashion, we might say that the Department stands ac- cused today of having a wrong policy toward democratic .movements in Europe, and that it also stands accused of inefficiency in carrying out its ,wrong policy. Mr. Arthur Krock of the Times has offered an explanation. He declares that the President has been rather high-handed with Mr. Hull; that the President has not allowed Mr. Hull to pick his own.chiefaides; that the President appoint- ed Mr. Sumner Welles, for example, as Under Secretary; that the President and Mr. Welles work closely together, sometimes by-passing Mr. Hull in forming and explaining foreign policy. But .Mr. Mark Sullivan in the New York Her- ald Tribune, has a different story. He declares that the President stands "firmly behind" Mr. Hull. Mr. Sullivan says that if there is any con- flict, it is way down in the lower levels of the organization, among the "ideology" boys, who want us to establish democracy in conquered euntries as we take them. Mr. Sullivan gives the top officers, including the President, what he considers a clean bill of health. He says they are not interested in establishing democracy im- mediately in conquered countries at all. What really goes on here? Mr. Krock favors our "expediency" deals, such as our deal with Darlan. And he favors Mr. Hull. Mr. Sullivan also favors our "expediency" deals. And he fav- ors Mr. Hull. Can this mean that the quarrel over our "expediency" deals, which rages in public, now rages within the Denartment, too; that if there is an organizational problem in the De- partment, this dispute has created it; that, perhaps, Mr. Welles is turning against "ex- pediency;" that the Department is showing signs of some such change going on deep in- side? It may be that the whole State Department story is not one of plot and counter-plot, nor even of clash of personalities. It may be a quite simple story, of a Department which has ap- proached foreign affairs without any firm for- eign policy at all, and has therefore improvised and played hunches. It has adopted expedien- cies because if you don't have a policy you have to be expedient. Maybe the whole country's confusion on the kind of world it wants to live in has been accur- ately mirrored for years by a confused State De- partment. It may be that our own indecisive- ness as to what we want has at last shown itself up as a functional disorder in the Department charged with making the kind of world we want. The only remedy. then, would be the adop- ion of a foreign policy at last, a solid policy on the kind of Italy, Gcrmrany, etc., we wish to live with, and on lasting alliances with our allies. Perhaps the Department isn't ticking because the whole country isn't ticking on these issues. ,Marion Ford .$ud Brimmer Leon Gordenker Harvey Frank . .. Managing Editor Editorial Director City Editor .SportsEditor ;p4ry :Anne Olson . . . . e.uo Business Staff jeanne Lovett . . . . . Business Manager Molly Ann Winokur . Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: VIRGINIA ROCK Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Straight ,brow. the Shoulder B.y CHIPSs.. IF YOU are a progressive, and a unfounded views of Professor Slos- the truly democratic elements, bit dynamic one, you would have been son and Pfc. Bigman on Russia. the dust time and time again. dismayed by the letters addressed to Nor do I believe that the majority I am sure that the vast majority of The Daily, especially those on politi- of Ann Arborites favor letting the us, do not want to see fascism, com- cal issues. They are, in the over- Germans go scot free as do Pfc. munism, or a return to the good old whelming majority, so stubbornly re- Belikoff and Corporal Don lrvin. days of 1920's in this country after actionary as to drive those liberals Rather I think they felt that it the war. But we are practically ask- who are a little shaky in their faith was not worth the trouble to discuss ing for it, if we give the reactionaries to pitiful despair. Especially is this these issues, and that is where they a chance to capture the stronghold true of letters written by servicemen, made their crucial mistake. For it is of democracy, the youth in the school Now I admit that we don't get very only by discussion, and plenty of it, and the armed services. many letters, and that fewer still deal that sane and sou'd decisions can be There is only one way we can with political subjects, but those at t arrived at in a democracy. avoid it-that is to propagate our we do get are a confused mass of own realistic and dynamic ideas, false sentiment and plain reactionary HE worst mistake of progres- in specific form, and to combat the bunk. sives in all the countries of the insidious poison of reactinares I don't mean to imply by this world was their abandonment of a afd sentimentalists. it is o.dis- that the student body and the ser- dynamic colorful, fighting course cuss again and again with one an- vicemen stationed in Ann Arbor of action. The mistake was made other and with our democratic nv- are totally devoid of liberal and not only by political parties, but by als, our own plans for the world progressive opinion, but it seems to individuals who felt that the ex- of the future till .we are so sure of me that they keep their opinions pression of their ideas on a vital what we want, that no power on too much to themselves. For ex- question, or their active partici- earth will be able to bar us from ample, I cannot believe that the pation in the promotion of their attaining our goals. majority of the campus shares the ideas, was not vitally important. For ideas are the weapons of a vicious and in large part, totally Since that view, unfortunately was democracy, and its democratic in- not held by the reactionaries, the habitants. To keep silent, for what- communists, and the fascists, these ever reason, is to throw away our groups aternately triumphed while most fundamental right. GRIN AND PEAR ITy Editor's Note: The following letters 4IRS were received from soldiers overseas and are .in esponse to cigarettes sent to them by this campus through the "Share Your Smokes" drive of last1 April That drive was sonsored by the Union and The Michigan Daily. To the StudentIody: Thanksa million forthe cigarettes. I got them here in the British Isles. 5 Your project is a swell one and is greatly appreciated by those of us here. This war should be over soonY1 and then we will all come home and return to our respective schools. I £ was a junior at New York University before entering the Army.~- --Pvt..Milt Schwartz To the Students: I received your cigarettes bearing °'' {''1a ,tle kindly message "Good luck, Good Smoking from the Michigan Student Body." I appreciate them from the bottom of my heart. It was a gift well-needed and well-received by all / the Army men. -Pvt. S. Vergroger To Michigan Students:U The cigarettes were just like your famous football teams-plenty O. It surely was a grand gesture on your O p-q :ie part. My best wishes to the "student .1 0t M ~a - 'h body" and for people like you, fight- ing the enemy will lead us to Victory. "White fella promise we each get jeep after war-white fella say day --pl. James Donelly will come when jeep vil replace spear DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SUBSIDY PLAN A FAILURE: Government Monopoly on Food Is Only Solution To Prevent inflation with Business Approval AKING the last final steps toward the ,pre- vention of inflation and the equitable distri- bution of foodstuffs, the administration is pre- paring a program of government purchase and resale of all major crops and meat. Similar to the present food-price control now operating in Great Britain, this move would spell the death or complete taking- over by the government of grocers, both whole- sale and retail, as the present plan calls for purchase fropn the original food producer. Distasteful as such an arrangement would be to American businessmen, especially food whole- salers and retailers, it or some similar food-price control system from the source appears to be necessary in the light of present .events if the danger of rising prices is to be curbed. The OPA and business cooperation with the administration to halt inflation have failed lamentably. There has been no cooperation. Right now it looks as if American business wants inflation. Yell as business may, it is their lack of cooper- ation in the keeping down of prices that has brought about this suggested program. In the long run, it will probably prove the only way to bring the already runaway situation under con- trol. THE COMPLETE FAILURE of price rollbacks as far as meat is concerned hasproved the necessity for some other and more effective con- trol of prices. When food is sold over the, regular ceiling and the public accepts the violation, pays for ItWand makes no. complaint,.not even knowing that it has been swindled half the time, the need for any program-that will work becomes apparent. Grocers and restaurants have upped their pri- ces as .much as possible. Although restaurant food prices are held to the April 4-10 level, that level was extremely high in itself. The cost of living is skyrocketing and only stringent meas- ures can pull it down again. Food prices have had to rise, because the farm- YOUTH: 18-Yea r-Olds Should Demand Voting Rights TOUTH has its fling. According to recent statements of Chairman Hatch, a Senate judiciary subcommittee will be- _gin early hearings on the two-year-old Vanden- berg resolution involving an amendment to the Constitution lowering the federal voting age to 18. The strongest backing for this measure comes from legislators who agree that if 18- year-olds are old enough to fight, they are old enough to vote, but there is more to be said in favor of a youthful electorate than this. Be- cause of the educational standards in the ma- jority of states, a course in civics, or govern- ment is required of .high school graduates, making 18-year-olds well prepared for their role of voting citizens. For the majority of0the body politic, this high school training is as far as they go in the formal understanding of the workings ot government. Questions of jitterbugging immaturity and -emotional instability are time-worn, but a re- -lHrtiomn on similar issues of weakness in the ,er upped his prices, thereby forcing the whole- saler and retailer to follow suit. The subsidy plan should have kept farm prices low, but for some strange reason, the subsidy plan has proved a complete bust. BUSINESS OPPOSITION to subsidation has had a great deal to do with this failure. And business wants a government controlled food monopoly just about as much as it wants .subsi- dies. As long as big business opposes with all the powerful means it:possesses every government prqgram to ,ontrol prices, and as long as -bus- iness opposition remains more effective than governnent control, .a plan such as this food monopoly, whereby ;government control is complete and business takes a beating is inev- itable. If the internal war between business and the administration is not terminated pretty soon, nothing will save this country from -inflation, although the food monopoly appears to -be one of the better plans that have been advocated, -Jane Farrant 'UNDER COVER': anneti's .Com ittee Exposed as Fascistic POMPOUS FRANK ,GANNETT and his brain- child, the Committee for Constitutional Gov- ernment, are in for a rough expose. The publication of "Under Cover," sensational book charging -Fascistic activities to this and many other American groups, has rfrightened Qannett.into conducting a nationwide campaign of intimidation .against any bookseller, news- paper or radio station selling or supporting the book. :This book was written by a man who posed' as a Fascist sympathizer and spent years in- .vestigating Fascist - tinged organizations, ,American super-patriots and -,Nazi agents in the country. The author, writing under the pseudonym of John Roy Carlson, mentioned Cannett .nly twice in his iook, but his ciom- ,Mittee, ,headed by Edward A. Ruxnely, who served a sentence in AtlantaFederal Peniten- tiary in -1920 for -his activities as a German agent in War I, came in for a more searching study. This same Rumely bought the New ,York -Eve- ning Mail-from Germany and operated it, on be- half of Germany, from 1915 to 1918. IN HIS THREATENING LE'TTER to booksell- ers, Qannett staunchly defends his choice of Rumely, and when questioned he hotly denied that the pr o-German .charges ~against Rumely were true. -In -his attempt to suppress the book, Gannett is. admitting that the charges are true. He knows that -his reputation and position .as -Republican presidential candidate are jeopardized by the incriminating expose of the committee's work. This . committee has distributed thousands -of pamphletsehafgIng the New-Deal and$other liberal forces with attemptingsto wreckconsti- tutional government in the United States. If this were not true, and if the other charges made in "Under Cover" were not true, Frank Gannett would not be afraid to let the book ap- pear on the stands; he would not be afraid to take an open stand against "John Roy Carlson" and his claims. I the the am willing, .after four years of opposition to Department, to say that perhaps it is only mirror of us all. Is that fair? (Copyright, 1943. N-.Y. Post Syndicate) DREW 0T PEARSON'S OR K MERRY-00-ROUND WASHINGTON, Aug. 10.- It looks as if the whiskey distillers never learn. For more than a week they have been closeted with the War Pro- duction Board trying to put over a deal whereby they will be permitted to resume manufacture of whiskey on a limited scale-even at a time when the nation is so desperately hard up for feed grain that it is feeding wheat to cattle instead of humans. To start the distilling of whiskey would mean a further use of grain, thus depleting the supply for cattle, hogs and chickens. Despite this, the whiskey distillers, have been waving the constitution, roaring about invol- untary wattime prohibition and arguing that there are ample stocks of war alcohol on hand. The latter, of course, is true. Alcohol stocks are ample and the manufacture of explosives has been curtailed. However, two counter-factors have been pointed out by WPB officials. One is the discovery of several new uses for alcohol. One of these is an important war use, so far a carefully guarded secret, which may require more alcohol. The Agriculture Department has already warned livestock producers to. conserve feed. Yet at the same time, the distillers have been lobbying their ears off to divert grain to whis- key. Fourth Term Close friends who have talked with the Presi- dent lately are not at all sure he wants to run for a 4th Term. Naturally, he is not telling even his closest intimates what his real hopes are, any more than he told anyone prior to the 3rd Term convention in 1940. But one or two hints that he has dropped lead frieds to- believe that the President, em- phatically would not run again if the war is won, and would run only reluctantly if the war is still in progress. However, there is one ambition he deeply cher- ishes, namely to help write a permanent peace. Having taken an active part in the last war as Assistant Secretary of the Navy and having seen the "war to end wars" turn into an abortive and stymied peace, the President wants more than anything else not to repeat Woodrow Wilson's failure. Therefore it is not beyond the realm of possi- bility that to bring about a non-partisan peace treaty, Roosevelt would be willing to make an agreement with a broad-gauged Republican who supports his foreign policy, whereby that Repub- lican would get the nod, for the White House, if FDR in turn sat at the head of the Peace Con- ference. Should this not materialize and should the Pnc:f an . nintlyn- if nt. t o ru....in hor t t i r WEDNESDAY, AUG. 11, 1943 VOL. LIII, No. 32-S All notices for The Daily Official Bulle- tin are to be sent to the Office of the Summer Session in typewritten form by 3:30 p.m. of the day preceding its.publi- cation, except on Saturday when the no- I tices should be submitted by 11:30 a.m. Notices P.E.M. (Phys. Edu. for Men): The few men students who have failed to register for P.E.M. are reminded of the following Board of Regent's rul- ' ing: That as a condition to continued attendance in the University a phys- ical conditioning course be required of students who, at the beginning of a particular term, are regularly en- rolled in the University. Notice of Withholding Tax Deduc- tions: All persons upon the Univer- sity Payrolls for services rendered after June 30, 1943, are notified that under the federal "Current Tax Pay- ment Act of 1943" -there will be de- ducted from each salary payment made an amount equivalent to 20 per cent of such payment above legal elected, under Federal authority, to base this deduction, after legal ex-r emptions, upon 20 per cent of the salary payment to each individual calculated to the nearest dollar. Ev- ery employee of the University, in whatever capacity, should secure, at the Business Office, or at other of- fices at which they will be available, a copy of the Government withhold- ing exemption certificate, Form W-4, and should promptly fill out and mail or file this exemption certifi- cate at the Business Office at which the certificate was obtained. The burden of filling out and filing this form is under the law exclusively upon the employee and if it is - not filed in time the deduction of 20 per cent must be taken upon the basis of the employee's entire earnings with- out benefit of the exemption to which the employee would be en- titled if he or she filed the certifi- auspices of the Program in Regional Department of Speech at 3 p.m. Administration and Construction. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Dean J. B. Edmonson, Dean of the School of Education, will deliver a lecture in the School of Education Afternoon lecture series with a talk on, "Planning for Community Bet- terment." The lecture will be given 'at 4:-10 in the University High School auditorium and the public is invited. Academic Notices Trigonometry Course; If there is sufficient demand for the second half of Mathematics 7, the equiva- lent of Mathematics 8, Trigonome- try, a section will be formed at 11 o'clock, MTuThF, beginning Aug. 23, for the second half of the summer tea'm, 2 hours credit. Those who would wish to take this course, please leave their names in the office of the Mathematics Department, 3012 Angell Hall. Candidates for the Teacher's Cer- tificate for August and October 1943: Please call at the office of the School of Education, 1437 University Ele- mentary School on Wednesday or Thursday, Aug. 11 and 12, between 1:30 and .4:30 to take the Teacher's Oath. This is a requirement for the certificate. Concerts School of Music Assembly: Feri Roth, violinist, and Mabel Ross Rhead, pianist, of the School of Mu- sic faculty, will present a program consisting of two Beethoven Sonatas for violin and piano at 3:00 p.m., Friday, Aug. 13, in the Rackham As- sembly Hall. Open to the public. Events Today The . English Language Institute will hold a meeting this evening in the West Conference .Room of the -Rackham Building at 8:00 o'clock. Miss Clotilde Pujol, of Havana, Cuba, The Karl Marx Society is having the second in a series of discussions this evening, Aug. 11, at 7:45 p.m. at the Union. The discussion, will be on "Can Communists and Non-Coin- munists United?" French tea today at 4 o'clock in the Cafeteria of the Michigian League. Michigan Dames Bridge Group: Michigan League, 8:15 p.m. Hispanic Club meets this evening at 8 p.m. in the lichigan League. The formal program will include a talk in Spanish by Dr.-Fernando Lara of Santiago, Chile, on "Costumbres Sociales de Chile" and a speech in Portguguese by Dr. Vasco Barcellos of Niteroi, Brazil, on "Saude Publica no Brasil." Dr. Lara is one of the group of Latin-American dentists -who arrived here last week for the Public Health Program, and Dr. Bar- cellos is the Director of the Public Health Center in Niteroi. All ser- vicemen and students interested in Spanish and Portguguese are invited to attend. Delta Kappa Gamma members from other chapters are invited to a tea to be given by the local chapter at 4 o'clock Wednesday afternoon, Aug. 11, in the Mary B. Henderson Room at the Michigan League. The Inter-Racial Association pre- sents Mr. Tsume Baba speaking on his experiences in the Relocation Camps on the West Coast this eve- ning at 8 o'clock at the Union. Coming Events Pi Lambda Theta Supper Meeting: Xi Chapter of Pi Lambda Theta, Na- tional Honor Association of women in education, will have a supper meeting Thursday, Aug. 12, at 6 p.m. in the Michigan League Garden. Mrs. Mary Lou Chanter and Miss Marie Wallis will entertain the group. Miss- es Mary Ellen Dedman and Corine fr h:rh r nnnrtra of -rr-~ri~R 4