PAGE TWO THE1 -MICHIVGAN II . S ATT1MAV, JiJ'TY 10, 1949 Fifty-Third Year ...WHILE WE WATCH.. Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the regular Universty year, and evey morhiig except Mon- day and Tuesday during the summer sesson. Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is excusvely entitledstosthe use for republication of al news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of repub- lication 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 $4.25, by mail $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 Editorial Staff Marion Ford . . . . Managing Editor Bud Brimmer . . . Editorial Director Leon' Gordenker . . . . . . City Editor Harvey Frank . . -. . . Sports Editor Mary Anne Olson . . . Women's Editor Business Staff Jeanne Lovett . . . . . Business Manager Molly Winokur . Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: MARGARET FANK Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NEW POLITICS: Labor Fears Clamps On Its Powr of Action YABOR'S recent formation of a Political Action Committee headed by Sidney Hilinan fore- casts a third element in the already explosive Washington set-up. Congress and the President are waging a private war of their own which is taking prece- dence over the military war this nation is sup- posedly devoting every effort to win. Now labor, bitter about the passage of the Smith- Connally Act over the President's veto, is tak- ing 'the only possible action to stop further Congressional clamps on the freedom of action which labor has enjoyed during the Roosevelt administration. While it is yet too early to ascertain the exact function of this new Committee, a major part of its action could very well be Congressional lob- bying. The passage by Congress of any other re- striction comparable to the Smith- ConnaJ l Act could deal almost a death-blow to organ- ized labor. The CIO no-strike pledge, which was reaffirmed at the same time that the Committee was inaugurated, was originally an attempt to avert such legislation as this Act. HILLAN has had previous experience in Washington, and is obviously the man for a lobbying job. Furthermore, the CIO resolution adopted at the meeting makes an effort to put labor on the right side of supporting the war effort. While assailing the Smith-Connally Act bit- terly, the resolution also declares: "Because of our deep appreciation of the issues involved in this war, we shall not tolerate or permit any in- terruption or stoppage of work." Labor, in the losing of its power to strike, lost its chief weapon of attack. inless some decisive action is taken shortly, labor's power, which has been mounting steadily in recent years, is going to take the sharp decline which is the nightmare of every union leader. Labor's future actions promise danger to the war effort, and yet in the sense that they need b the goat no more than Congress or the Presi- dent, one is tempted to ask why Congress and Roosevelt can bicker and yet ask labor to toe the line and risk the loss of nearly twelve years' achievement. - Jane Farrant IT'S NOT FUNNY*: Stories About WACs Endanger Recruiting IT STARTED OUT as a funny joke, but the foul propaganda that has been recently inflicted upon the Women's Army Corps is far from the realm of humor now. These self-styled moralists who seek to defile the women in dhiform are doing a splendid job of keeping qualified women from enlisting. Becoming a WAC requires a certain amount of courage and when the respect that should accompany the uniform is swept away by idle tongues and not so idle columnists such as John O'Donnell of the New York Daily News, the recruiters' job becomes doubly difficult. By making the WACs a part of the Army of the United States, Congress did more than re- move the extra "A" out of their name. They recognized that these women were more than -n11Ax il ite d I1 1Vraaae IF YOU HAPPENED to be listening to your radio last Sunday at two o'clock, you might have heard a very unusual program. I tuned in on it because the papers said Wendell Willkie was going to speak, but I almost turned it off when I heard the beginning of it. Typical Fourth of July God-Bless-America theme, it seemed, and at the risk of appearing unpatriotic I have to admit those skits seem a little jaded by now. With Fredric March doing the narrating, they went through the higher spots of constitutional freedom, dramatized a couple of Revolutionary skits, and told about the well-known difficulties of factional prejudice while the new nation was trying to get on the right road. I was saying to myself "Uh, huh," and "So what," as I imagine a lot of other listeners were doing. Then suddenly Mr. March started asking what about the constitutional guarantees now, on this July 4, 1943, in the land of the free. Ask the Negro in Detroit, he said, about free- dom to work where he wants and laugh where he wants, and the answer was a well-timed shot. Or ask about freedom to enter a South- ern polling place, and the answer was a gut- tural drawl saying, "Get along there, black boy. This ain't no place for your kind." Or asl the Jewish family looking for a place to spend the holiday about pursuit of happiness, and the reply is a cold-sounding, "Restricted clientele. White Christians only." ND what about the great great grandchildren of those people who kept the Revolutionary prejudices hot. What do they say now. The tian from Massachusetts who swore he wouldn't give one finger of aid to the Rhode Islanders in 1787, his present day counterpart is griping about the way we're letting Communist Russia influ- ence us, and incidentally so what about a United Frnt. The New Yorker who boomed the Vir- ginia Tariff as part of New York First, his ump- teenth grafndchild is screaming America First now, even though he is a few short hours from the rest of the world. Z,/2derj to tieedcior To the Citizens of Ann Arbor and the University of Michigan: SO IT HAS COME TO THIS AT LAST; that I, an American soldier should walk down any one of these community streets and find written in each citizen's face a multitde of adverse opinion-suspicion, disdain, aloofness and even a touch of fear. Why? For what? Must I suffer this harshness because of an impression hastily, and ofttimes mistakenly formed? Is this an intelligent, broadminded attitude? I wonder. Can it be that a bigted mind reached out for an incident perpetrated by some soldier or group of soldiers and pointed to it- "Look, they're drunk!" or "Good heavens, they committee a breach of morals so they're bad boys. Watch out for soldiers, they're all bad." Yes, ignore us; evade us for we would do you great harm. After all, see what sort we are-look at our backgrounds. The majority I mean, the vast majority. We've had at least a high school education. For the most part, our families reside in the solid middle classes; average citizens from all parts of the world who guided us upward through each individual, turbulent year of our lives. Our general intelligence is quite high. We're normal souls with normal tastes, hold- ing perhaps in our present military capacity, a slightly broader outlook on life than was the case before. Why then do you condemn us? Do we in- carcerate you because a group of men else- where strike for greater mining wages and thus hold up what may easily prve the life blood of our comrades overseas? Do we hold you to account for all the absenteeism in De- fense Plants across the country; the exorbi- tant prices that tax to the utmost our monthly pittance? What is it we ask of you? A smile or friendly hello; a mere greeting or warm look that costs you so little yet means so much to us. You instruct your daughters and students to beware our ways for we mean to desecrate' and defile them. We are insincere Lotharios, shun us or suffer vile consequences. What a stigma to carry about! Does it strike you as remarkable that perhaps we harbor no such insidious thoughts and in- tents, that strangely enough our glances and words carry no such ulterior designs? Are these the freedoms we have sworn to de- fend with our lives? Is this the tolerant America we have mobilized to protect? I wonder. What of OUR families? What of the towns they live in? What of their reactions to Service Men., And YOUR sons; YOUR husbands; YOUR relatives; YOUR friends? Do they meet with this unfeeling attitude? Do our relations berate them with this efficient perspective? We're here for a purpose, a vital purpose. We all, civilian and soldier, are wbrking for a com- mon goal. Why then can we not pull together in common accord rather than struggle at oppo- site ends? These are drastic times and must be met with drastic measures. As you have had to revise your ways of living, so have we, and believe me, ours is a more varied and complicated transition. This led up to the main point of the pro- gram which was a plea for a broader and more human outlook on your fellow man, the rest of this shrunken world. This may sound like so much hog-wash to the skeptic who sums unp a united World as another crackpot Utopia, but they made a nice distinction there, too, lie- tween ideal realism and the brand of pre-war realism which appeased the Axis and sent scrap iron and vital materials to Japan. In fact, the whole program was done very effectively, no hysterical approach, but a straight, sincere appeal to Americans to take an honest look at themselves and their place in the world. I can't think of another Fourth-of-July program - which set aside the bunting for a change and got to the real meaning of freedom, as it was meant in the plain language of the Constitution. R. WILLKIE did speak, too, not as much as I'd like to have had him, but reaffirming the point he made in his excellent world analysis, One World. The program was designed around his theme and he gave it phrase at the end. Said Mr. Willkie, we should try to make the principles of the document we trust in so well, the Declara- tion of Independence, a Declaration of Interde- pendence among the Unitedl Natiorns, make it the basis for a World truth. The question is asked often lately, "What's Willkie's game?", and frankly I ask myself the same thing sometimes. Maybe the Republican candidate without the Republican viewpoint has some sort of an angle up his sleeve in his em- bracing of a world structure which gives a break to more people. Maybe it's a type of farsighted siper-politics over our heads.' But he talks a straight and sincere brand of universal sense, he seems to mean what he advocates, and until proven guilty of some- thing subtler, I think we have to admit that Willkie has done a lot to foster good-will to- ward America throughout the world and to make homespun America aware of where it stands in the sun. E IS THE ONLY prominent Republican poli- tician I know of today who can think in broad enough terms to make party secondary to national and international welfare. In fact, the only thing wrong with Mr. Willkie, and his politi- cal chances, is his party. If they can keep him from getting nominat- ed, they will, for Mr. Willkie is part of a small liberal minded Republican clique, with sup- porters such as the New York Herald Tribune, which seems to be out of the world of usual GOP reactionary, America-as-usual, and par- ty-first, thinking. I hope a lot of people heard that program, though, no matter what they think politically, and particularly those who are prone to not do- ing much thinking at all. I wish I could catch the same spirit they produced, for those who didn't hear it. Good term. Declaration of Interdependence among Nations. Better sense behind it. Seems that it would make an excellent incentive for even the lowliest citizen of the United Nations. Certainly better than giving all to crush the Axis and then retrenching to a pre-war stand of self-protection only until the next holocaust comes along. I'd Raether Be Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, July10.- As I understand it, the leading Republican candidates for President are reluctantly willing to live in the brave new world, if we really insist on having one. Their attitude is that if the country is going to be petulant about it, if it is going to cry its eyes out for an international tile bath and a world court daylight kitchen, all right, all right, they'll move in, too. One has only to look into Governor Dewey's countenance, or Governor Bricker's, to sense that both men feel they are really pampering us by consenting to these improvements. When I hear Mr. Harrison Spangler, chairman of one wing of the G.O.P., speak an occasional unhappy word for better international collabora- tion, I have a feeling that the voice is shrill. The tone is that of a man telling his good wife to go ahead and buy that new piano, who's stopping her? It would be a real thrill to have Mr. Vanden- berg and Mr. Taft and others close to Mr. Spangler come running up once in a while, flushed and breathless, with a scheme for this kind of a world peace force, or that kind of a treaty with England. But they seem only to wear the expressions of men whose chairs are being maliciously moved after forty years. They are not building. They are watching. Once in a while the forefinger rises. It wags, and the mocking words come forth: "I don't thnk I'm going to like it!" At which point humanity is supposed to bust out crying. A . . . .. - .- . .,. f.. m - v -, u WERRY® G0 ROUND Ry DREW;. PEA'RSON WASHINGTON, July 10.- High ranking officials of the agriculture Department are frank in saying that farmers are impeding the war effort just as much as striking coal 'miners when they stage a sit down strike on corn. Feed corn is desperately needed by poultry farmers, dairy farmers, and corn processors. But corn is not moving to market because farmers are holding for a higher price. The typical farmer in the corn belt today is looking at his bins full of corn and reasoning that he might as well hold it for a while, since he doesn't need the cribs yet, and since the price might go Up. Washington is partly to blame for this. The attacks on OP'A, the firing of Chester Davis, and the Congres- sional demands to set aside the price fceiling, all have created uncertainty. So the farmer sits tight, saying, "I'll just wait till they make up their minds." But when thousands of farmers do the same thing, it creates a scarcity which throws the national economy out of gear just as much as the lack of coal production. The patriotic thing to do, say Wash- ington officials, is to 'send your corn to market now, especially since, the farmer is guaranteed the benefit of a price rise, if it comes. Meantime, the corridors of the Department of Agriculture are seeth- ing. Pressure for a corn rise is ter- rific. This is Marvin Jones's first big battle. Navy and War Frauds While the President is cleaning out the boys who fight themselves instead of Hitler he might take a look into the manner in which his dearly beloved Navy Department has been sabotaging Justice Department efforts to prevent war frauds. The Justice Department, under two-fisted Texan Tom Clark, chief of war frauds, has been prosecuting a long list of companies delivering GlUN AND BEAR IT r1 By Lichty 'Calm yourself, Mr. Snodgrass! You; know how the laundry is now- adays-they merely returned the wrong caps!' faulty goods to the Army and Navy -only to have the Navy cut the ground right from under him. When Clark prosecuted two ship-welders in Baltimore for sab- otaging ship construction, he was amazed to have a naval officer walk into the court room and tes- tify on behalf of the two sabo- teurs. The exidence was so over- whelming, however, that they were convicted despite the officer's tes- timony. Even more amazing was the strange behavior of the Navy in pro- tecting the Anaconda Wire and Ca- ble Company at Marion, Ind., which the Justice Department had indicted for fraudulently selling faulty wire to the Army and Navy. The Army Signal Corps immedi- ately telegraphed an order that the defective Anaconda wire be segre- gated and used for training purposes But the Navy acted as if the An- aconda Company 'should be re- warded. Admiral Earle W. Mills, assistant chief of the Bureau of Ships, telephoned Assistant Attor- new General Clark that he might be 'called upon to testify, and if so his testimony would be favorable to Anaconda. Simultaneously, the Justice De- partment found that the Navy had prepared a statement to the effect that it had tested 15 samples of An- aconda's beGaussing wire and found it satisfactory. The DeGaussing wire was entirely different from the wire for which Anaconda was indicted. So thanks .to the Navy, Anaconda got off with $31,000 in fines and sus- pended sentences on a war fraud charge that involved $5,000,000. (Copyright, 1943, United Features Synd.) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SATUIRDAY, JULY 10, 1943 VOL. LII, No. 10-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- tices should be submitted by 11:30 a.m. Notices 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 exemptions to which any employee shall be entitled. The University has elected, under Federal authority, to base this deduction, after legal ex- 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- cate. Vice-President and Secretary -Shirley W. Smith Foundry Molding Tools wanted by students now taking Metal Process- ing Courses 3 and 9. It will be great- ly appreciated if anyone having trowels and slicks will make these tools available. --John Grennan Zoology Concentrates: Students planning to offer credits in Military Science as part of the total of 90 hours required by the Medical School should see me at once. -F. H. Test Dept. of Zoology Phone Ext. 2134 Student Organizations: All ap- n Qfi ,tudant nrgnnizntions that applies to students in both the Sum- mer Session and the Summer Term. Enrollment is for the students who wish employment in teaching and in business or industrial jobs. Every- one interested in a new position or in a change of position, is urged to register. There will be a mass meeting Mon- day, July 12, at 4:15 at the League for all those people interested in the Student's Speakers Bureau. Speak- ers are needed for post-war ques- tions, civilian defense topics, and others. No special speaking talent is needed as people are needed for panel discussions as well as platform speaking. Anyone who is interested and cannot attend the meeting is asked to contact Mary Lee Grossman at 2-3279. Change of Address: Any student who has changed his address since registering is urged to report the new address to the Dean of Students, Room 2, University Hall. Academic Notices School of Education Students: Changes of elections in the Summer Session: No course may be elected for credit after Saturday, July 10. No course may be dropped without, penalty after Saturday, July 17. Any changes in elections of students in this School must be reported at the Registrar's Office, Room 4, Univer- sity Hall. - - Students Summer Session, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: No course may be elected for credit after today. -E., A. Walter Students, Summer Session, Col- lege, Literature, Science, and Arts: Except under extraordinary circum- stances, courses dropped after the third week, Saturday, July 17, will be recorded with a grade of E. -E. A. Walter Students, 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 Assistant Dean Wal- ter. Students who fail to file their election blanks by the close of the third week, even though they have registered and have attended classes unofficially will forfeit their priv- ilege of continuing in the pollege. -E. A. Walter Engineering Mechanics 12: Fun- damentals of Vibration. The course will be given Tuesdays and Thurs- dents: Four-week sport classes will begin the week of July 12 in Body Conditioning,; Iancing, Golf, Ele- mentary Swimming, Riding and Badminton. Students interested should register in Office 15, Barbour Gymnasium, 8 to 12 and 1:30 to 4:30 daily except Saturday; Saturday 8 to 12. The July meeting of the Faculty of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts will be held on Monday, July 12, at 4:10 in Room 1025 Angell Hall. The agenda and committee reports have been distributed by campus mail. Concerts Faculty Concert: Joseph Brink- man, pianist, and Arthur Hackett, tenor, of the faculty of the School of Music, will present the first in a ser- ies of recitals to be presented this summer, at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, July 13, in Hill Auditorium. The general public is cordially invited. Events Todgy The Angell Hall Observatory will be open to the public from 9:30 to 11 this evening. The moon will be shown through the telescopes. Chil- dren must be accompanied by adults. Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club, will have an outing this eve- ning. Meet on the steps of the Rack- ham Building at 7:30. The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation will hold a summer mixer this eve- ning at 9 o'clock. There will be dancing and entertainment, and re- freshments will be served. All stu- dents and service men are invited. Wesley Foundation: Baseball and weiner' roast for all Methodist stu- dents and service men and their friends this evening. Leave Wesley Lounge of the Methodist Church at 7:30. Call 6881 before noon for res- ervations. SCoring Events Engineering Council Meeting, Wednesday, July 14, 7:30 p.m. in Room 244 West Engineering Build- ing. Any member who is unable to attend should oall me at 7248. -D. B. Wehmeyer, Secretary Lutheran Student Association: Will meet in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall at 5:30 p.m. Sunday, July 11. Following supper at 6:00 the Rev. Carl Satre will speak on "The Church