PAGE TWO THlE MICTTTGAN DOXT TI IMS DA*, JULY 15, 1943 _. as a~sw A . JUL V 1. Th il A1Z47 :%J, Fifty-Third Year ...WHILE WE WATCH... t^ -a n a i rs- r -W =axJ -- 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 and Tues- day during the regular University year, and every; morn- ing except Monday 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- lication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Offic- 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 Ed "Podliashuk . . . . . Columnist Mary Anne Olson . . . . . Women's Editor Business Staff Jeanne Lovett . . . . . Business Manager Moily Winokur . . Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: MARGARET FRANK Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. GOAL-$1,200: Tag Day Drive Today Wir Send Boys to Camp TAG DAY has become a real tradition on the Michigan .campus--and not without reason. Established twenty-three years ago, the annual Tag Day drive is held for the purpose of securing contributions from students and townspeople to send "city kids" to the Fresh Air Camp. This University camp is different from the ordinary vacationing spots; of course, the kids who go there have fun. They still go swim- ming, and boating; they still get acqualned with other kids; they learn how to get along with each' other. Buteven more important than those things those boys from Detroit, Pontiac, and nearby metropolitan areas receive expert advice and counseling from trained psychiatrists, sociolo- gists, and psychologists. Many of these boys have special problems which cannot be solved or corrected by the social agencies who have sent them to the camp. Many of them have come from tene- ment districts vhere they find it more than easy to get in trouble. Many of them have never known what a real vacation is. One young boy, when asked why he wanted to go to camp, replied, "I want to laugh." Today ninety-six of those boys who have been at the camp for nearly a month will be in Ann Arbor selling little white tags for the Tag Day drive. In the past, students, faculty mmbers and townspeople have contributed generously to the drive. This time the goal has been st at $1,200. Won't you help them? - Virginia Rock CATT*LE CZARS: Cattlemen's Association Continues Meat Strike I JNHAMPERED by a no-strike pledge the cat- tle-raisers of the nation are deliberately withholding their cattle from the mlarket, hoping to break through the price control wall by forcing up prices. At present, according to C. M. Elkington, OPA food price executive, the ranges of the Southwest are crowded with more stock than has ever been available, while slaughter houses are receiving less than half the normal rate of head per week. Last week for example only 95,000 cattle were' slaughtered as compared with 176,000 slaugh- tered for the same period last year. The most seriously hurt by the cattlemen's action have been the armed forces. The Army now gets 45 percent of all steers and heifers slaughtered. As a result, Army tbeef supplies last week were cut to almost half the require- ments, and supplies shipped to our fighting. Allies have been curtailed. The action of the cattlemen, who have been encouraged by the- recent Senate refusal to sup- port subsidies, is the same sort of sabotage as. the John L. Lewis coal mine strike. However, it should be noted that the nation's press has hardly been aroused by this dastardly act. MANYNEWSPAPERS have even defended the action by saying that "farmers are just like any other businessmen with something to sell. If they think they are going to get higher prices by waiting, they wait." Of course, the shortage Good Morning, Mr. B. TODAY we watch the journalistic antics of the Detroit Free Press' Mr. Malcolm Bingay. Mr. Bingay's column has become as standard at thousands of Detroiter's breakfast tables as bacon and eggs and good coffee ... or bad coffee, depending on your taste. Mr. Bingay writes, he hopes, in a style as sunny and soothing as his column head, "Good Morning", and I must admit T've found myself more than once attracted to his quaint descriptions of leisurely rambles through Greenfield Village or his thumbnail sketches of Detroit's development. Sunday Mr. Bingay's column was missing, because Mr. Bingay decided he had some clever editorializing to do, whichrequired' all the space usually given to the Free Press editor- ials. Mr. Bingay's'contribution of the day was a long chummy open letter to Winsto Churchill reassuring the Prime Minister that our cabinet quarrels and such were Just little surface brawls and the English didn't have to worry about them, because that's the way we do it over here, everybody wrangling over the common cause but somehow or other we al- ways manage to come out okay in the final frame. That sentiment seemed okay to us, bt after we got through we realized that Mr. Bingay's point attempted to cover a multitude of mgtters which frequently disturb his docile attitude. WINNIE, he says (and he feels it's all right for him to call Churchill that because ... heh, heh .. .so does Roosevelt when they talk things over man to man), you don't have to worry about that Jones-Wallace feud. That's just an- other example of New Deal misplanning, throw- ing two opposing elements in the same pot and expecting harmony. In fact, Winnie, he goes on, the whole New Deal setup was a big farce and despite all the harebrains in it, we're doing pretty well thanks to a Congress that hasn't shirked when it came to dishing out money for the war effort, our own tremendous natural reserves and the spirit of the American people. This war won't bust us, Winnie, he says. And after it's over, we can settle down to some nice sensible living, with young new leaders and no empty party catch phrases to cloud the way to a happier, stronger democracy. Mr. Bingay throws a little shovel of dirt in the respective faces of Walter Winchell, Mrs. Roosevelt, Clifton Fadiman, Henry Wallace, Elmer Davis, and Harold Laski. All this type, representing the idealistic and impractical, are talking through their hats Winnie, and under- neath it all, we're going to go right on and win this war in our own quiet way. Sit back andl have a cigar, Winnie, you and the English people. WELL, NOW, MAL, (you won't mind me calling -you Mal will you), I'm mighty surprised the Free Press lets you, knock Roosevelt that way, because after all they're supposed to be support- ing him generally, although lately they don't seem to be much supporting anybody except the various little opinions of their readers. However, that's their business. What I'd like to know, Mal, just what is. your ideal of a rational and prosperous post-war America? You give Roosevelt the business for all his idealistic economic planning. Planning is a bad thing, Mal? I'm afraid there are quite a few million, servicemen who won't agree with you, who are doing a little unobtrusive planning for their lives after the war. I also have a hunch that they'd like to have a society to return to which will have provi- sions, for their personal plans to take shape. Idealistic planning, you say, Mal, with a pish posh? Well, I have to admit that is somewhat idealistic, making provisions for a stable post- war economic structure, seeing ahead to the fate (A 65,000,000 war workers and 10,000,000 return- ing fighters. Kind of a high type of idealism, don't you think. When you lift your nose at the term you malign it unduly; my friend. What planing no matter how practical, with a lofty purpose, ean't be called idealistic? But I'm getting too abstract for such an earthy fellow as yourself. You baseyour denunciation of the Administration's idealism on this easily spoken statement. "These planners have been drawing plans for ten years now and very few of them have ever worked." COME, COME, MAL. From what lofty peak are you looking that you can't see the waters flowing under your feet. What happened to the depression and the despair that followed it, right about the time Roosevelt came in. If I'm not mistaken, there were a lot of people out of work about then. There weren't a comparatively great amount of Americans not constructively em- ployed before the war broke out. Wages were pretty high before Pearl Harbor too, particularly for labor; for the first time in labor history. Or don't you believe in the worker getting good wages? In fact American spirit was high: enough= by that time to enable us to leap to the war effort with amazing vitality. Something must have helped boost us out of adorned editorial. pages in connection with the UnitedCoal Miners of America. Fortunately for the-country, porksupplies have increased and have at least partially solved the, serious meat situation, temporarily; Also, the meat producers are approaching, the dry spell the hole, Mal. Who do you think did it? You didn't quite make that clear in reducing Admin- istration idealists for Winnie. Henry Wallace is a dreamer in your sharp eyes, Mal, therefore he gets a chuckle. But Jesse Jones is a conservative old banker who thinks before he spends the people's dollar. Not, however, before he neglects the materiel reserve behind the military forces, composed,, incidentally, of the people's sons. What do you imagine the people think more of, Mal, their dollars or their sons? Shucks, Mal, as I go along here, I'm beginning to think you aren't so earthy after all. Congress has shelled billions out to fight the war, without a squawk. Darn nice of them; but how else could they have made it possible for us to fight at top efficiency. When it came to backing up' proposals to strengthen the home front though, like the Ad- ministration anti-inflation bills, what happened to the old cooperative spirit. They . admittedly didn't have anything to offer in place, but it seems they don't like certain people in the Ad- ministration, just like you don't, so that's what counted most. They were ready to negate us into inflation and anything else that might crip- ple a necessarily unnatural economic setup. SORRY if I appear a little persnickety, Mal, old shoe, but you give me the impression that, except for the crackpot meddling which you don't exactly define very clearly, this country is just running about as smoothly as a new car. Regular old Peaceful Valley. Only I don't know quite what to make of these race riots and re- ports that conditions in mining areas amount to economic slavery and the news that our biggest airplane plant, turns out defective engines. How about that, Mal? If the planning you condemn means to cor- rect that sort of conditions and any others like them which will have even more opportunity to expand when we don't have a war to occupy us, then It can't be as evil as you make it sound. That to me seems like common sense under the banner of which you purport to write and think. From what your friends, the big industrialists say, I gather they have some big plans for after the shooting themselves. New worlds of science and mechanics, a plane in every family garage. Fine, but what a corresponding set of blueprints for social progress, which automatically includes economic planning. I don't know how Winnie would take your letter if he ever read it, Mal. But out here it sounds a bit like a self-satisfied after dinner belch. - F.M. I1d Racther By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, July 15.- President Roosevelt has never been less convincing than in his cur- rent tete a tete with General Giraud. It doesn't sell. General Giraud is not at the White House because he is important; he is important because he is at the White House. As a general, Giraud is a solid man, of flesh and bone compact. But as a politician he has been in one continuous fainting spell for six months. It was necessary, for months, to keep ce Gaulle out of Africa in order to give him air. Now he is receiving the oxygen-tank treatment of a White House visit. It does not help. The minute the Giraud movement is left alone, it keels over. We are forever finding it on the floor and picking it up. Giraud, the man, is a stpt soldier and can march all day. Giraud, te movement, has rubber legs. We are trying to puff life into a shadow on the wall. It is an incredible enterprise for a free democracy to engage in, in connection with an- other country which we hope will someday soon be a free democracy again. It is embarrassing. We have selected this man, and we have thrown our hats into the air-over him, and shouted loud- ly, hoping to stir an ovation. Now we look, at the< French people sidelong, out of the corners of our eyes; and we find that we are shouting all alone; they are watching us, wondering why we are making all that noise. The Giraud movement seemed to exist so long, as de Gaulle was kept out of Africa. We fooled ourselves into thinking it did exist. So, finally, we admitted de Gaulle to Africa. We were so sure, there was a Giraud movement. that we insisted. de Gaulle make unity with it, on a new French committee. But the moment de Gaulle arrived, the Giraud movement dis- appeared. The new French committee became a de , Gaulle committee, to the surprise of everybody except the people of France. Our reporters were so puzzled that they ac- cused the de Gaulle movement of "outmaneuver- ing" the Giraud movement, of having crowded it, brutally and ruthlessly, of having been arrogant and naughty with it. It wasn't that at all. There never was a Giraud movement. The de Gaulle, movement obligingly made unity with an empty room, as requested, and found itself alone in it. One plus nothing equals one. So, we do not like the French Committee for National Liberation any more. We made it. DRAMA' The Michigan Repertory Players have turned from the mayhem of Ladies in Retirement to the mara- schino of Alice Sit-by-the-Fire, which they ;resented last night at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre (and ob- viously intend doing 'the rest of this I week), as though it were the most normal thing in the world. The J. M. Barrie opus is no g'reat shakes as a play and is as remote from this world, or any world, as a Vassar daisy chain; but it makes tolerably pleas-' ant listening in the production which the Players have given it. Valentine Windt and Claribel Baird have directed the play with becoming disrespect.' An opening night attack of ambiguous and superfluous move- ment will, undoubtedly, disappear, leaving a crisp, impertinent and rap- idly paced play to entertain you. Some of the corn, which nearly pop- ped in the Mendelssohn's torrid at- mosphere, will undoubtedly be scrap- ed from the ear. And a slight inde- cision in the attack upon the play . noticeable especially in the third act . . . should evaporate before to- night's performance. The acting, while uniformly ade- quate, is by no means uniformly suc- cessful. The nicest performance ,was that of Patricia Meikle as Alice. From the neck up, Miss Meikle looked as pretty as those candy box pictures Mother used to enjoy. Be that as it ' may, her performance as a whole was a agreeable, believable, pleasant and a small bushel full of other ac- ceptable adjectives. She moved with assurance and charni and her voice was a delightfully flexible one. (There is an un-sat-by fire which would enjoy having Miss Meikle for company.) John Hathaway as Cosmo Grey ... a rather insufferable 1905 brat .-. managed to deliver some outrag- eously prissy lines and still get off- stage without being murdered. He has a talent worthy of careful work- ing. John Babbington, as the Colo- nel. was amusing and enjoyable, al- though he evidently had no shred of characterization upon which to build his satire. Blanche Holpar, un- believably badly costumed, managed somehow to surmount the difficul- ties thrust upon her and pontributed a performance chock full of fun and disrespect. Marcia Nelson, while sprightly, played a trifle too hard and, regrettably, tended to throw the entire acting unit out of focus. The costumes . . . "costumes" . . were neither imaginative nor taste- ful, failing to integrate with Mr. Philippi's respectable and unobtru- sive sets, both of which were so badly lighted that the play seemed visually ugly. The lack of crispness and verve which kept the opening night performance from realizing all its potentialities may be directly traceable to a limp and foggy techni- cal production. On the whole, however, the play was pleasantly amusing, even .verg- ing on the uproarious at times, and you should have a fine time at the Mendelssohn this week. Last night's audience laughed itself fairly silly. -Richard McKelvey MERRY-GO- ROUND. By DREW P E AR SON WASHINGTON, July 15.- A new I phrase has developed among War' Department strategists in mapping out operations in Sicily and the Med- iterranean. It is "classical war- fare The Army Air Forces have coined the phrase in their desire to throw cold water on the "classi- cal" foot-soldier methods of the older services of the Army, and to" push ahead with all-out air at- tacks. Classical warfare, they say, is like studying Greek and Latin in a day when we need Spanish, Russian and .French,- This debate began before the land-f ing in Sicily, and continues now re- garding future possible operations in Sardinia, Corsica and Italy itself. Want To Move Fast, The method used in invading Sicily was a compromise among land, air and naval elements, resulting in the "peculiar amphibious operations" Churchill talked about. But the Air Forces believe they can rove even faster and more effectively in con- quering other parts of Italy if they don't have to be tied down by classi- cal warfare. For instance, with bases in Sicily, Army airmen think they can so pulverize the industrial plants of northern Italy that they can bomb that country out of the war without waiting for huge landing operations to come up and help them. Then with air bases in northern Italy, they are within range of the hidden synthetic gasoline and rub- ber factories which Hitler has moved into Austria and Czecho- slavakia. Thus, step by step, the air forces believe they can knock out the enemy without resorting to classical warfare. Axis Planes Knocked Out Here is one significant thing Army airmen point to. During the ten days just before we: invaded Sicily the Nazis had been sending a lot of new planes into Sicily and southern Italy. But after one day of fresh Axis air strength, which was heavily dam- aged by U.S. planes, there followed a -day or two of weak resistance. In other words, Axis planes were knocked out and had to wait for reinforcements. These reinforce- ments kept coming up until about two days before the invasion, after. which Axis air resistance was light. Cox the Fox The Cox Committee investigating the Federal Communications Com- mission, having set one record for violating the American spirit of fair play, now is out to beat its own rec- ord. First, its chairman, Representative Eugene Cox of Georgia, having been Mr. Chips . .. TELL YOUR MR. CHIPS that he confuses me-and probably a lot of other people too. Is he serious when he asks that 5,000,000 people be killed-in cold blood? It seems like we're supposed to be fighting to do away 'with mass murder, preju- dice and ignorance-three mudholes that Mr. Chips bathes so gruesomely in. If he expects me to be a part of that wonderful firing squad, he'll first have to beat me on the head a few thousand times. The German soldier has been doing a job-perhaps it's a nasty one and millfons of victims don't care much for them. But in the name of what kind of justice and what kind of humanity are we to right the wrongs done to all peo- ple by the war? And can the wrongs be righted by murdering 5,000;000 Germans? If hatred and vengeance are to be bridgeheads through which we ap- proach the post-war world, we'll wind up with another war in short order. As one interested in a peaceful post-war world in which all peoples will live with the four freedoms un- der their pillows, I suggest that we concentrate on education, recon- structiori and learning how to live with others-rather than closing our eyes and murdering an arbitrary 5,000,000 human beings. Goodbye, Mr. Chips! -P.F.C. Harold Belikoff I effder6 accused of illegally taking a $2,500 lobbying fee, is now placed in the unique position of sitting in judg- ment on his accusers-the FCC. The Georgia Congressman at one time had so many relatives on the government payroll that the total take- of himself and family was $56,500. This is nearly four times greater than the salary of the Vice-President, nearly three times the salary of Chief Justice Stone.eNevertheless, when the FCC sent the matter of Cox's al- leged lobbying fee to the Justice Department for 'criminal prosecu- tion, Cox flew into a tantrum and started a Congressional probe of his accusers. Now, his committee has gone one step further and has devised a sys- tem of trying to shut up any rebut- tal from the Federal Communica- tions Commission, so that only one side can be heard. (It might be a good idea for the public to remember this in reading news about the FCC investigation.) Author of the strategy of letting- only one side of the news picture get to the reading public is Robert Hum- phreys of International News Ser- vice, acting as adviser to the Cox Committee. Humphreys wrote the memo for the committee, which was circulated to every member by its counsel Eugene L. Garey. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN- THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1943 VOL. LIII, No. 13-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 Registration for students in both the Summer Session and the Sum'- mer Term continues in the Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information, 201 Mason Hall, from 9-12 and 2-4. Those interested in enrolling for employment in teach- ing and in business or industrial jobs may pick up the registration mater- ial at this time. Those who already mistaken is the absurd. The last stage of the absurd is the angry. What could have seemed more practical to practical men than to select a dim sort of French Hoover, with a military background, a man whose greatest political virtue is his inertia, and to set .him up as-leader? He doesn't want any new kind of France, he doesn't want any big up- sets; he doesn't want to punish re- spectable people merely because they were traitors for a couple of years; he doesn't think we were wrong to deal with Vichy; his very existence reassures the State Department that nothing very importanst has hap- pened in the world, and that it was really right for the last ten years, but happened to be unlucky. It must give these practical men of ours a fright to find that it all have checked out the material are reminded to return it within a week of the date it was checked out. Campus Mail: To expedite deliv- ery should be addressed to the indi- vidual, his department, and the buil ding. Room numbers not necessary. Lectures Lecture-Demonstration on how to lead community singing, by Augustus Zanzig of the United States Treasury Department, will be given at 9-11 aim. today in the Lane Hall Audi- torium. Open to all. Academic Notices Students, Summer Term, College of Literature, Science and the Arts: No course may be elected for credit after the end of the third week. July 17 is therefore the last date on which new elections maybe approved. The willingness of an individual instruc- tor to admit a student later does not affect the operation of this rule. E. A. Walter School of Education Students: Courses dropped after Saturday; July 17, will be recorded with the grade of E except under extraordinary cir- cumstances. No course is considered officially dropped unless it has been reported in the Office of the Regis- trar, Room 4, University Hall. School of Education, Changes of Elections in' the Suer Ternm: No course may be elected for credit after Saturday, July 17. Students must report all changes of elections at the' Registrar's Office; Room 4, Univer- intending to take these examinations should notify my office at once. -Clifford Woody, Chairman of Committee on Graduate Study in Education. Events Today American Society of Mechanical Engineers: The opening meeting of the Summer semester- will be held this evening at 7:30 o'clock in Room 318 of the Union. Pictures of the Michigan-Notre Dame 1942 football game will be shown. All engineering students (Marines, Bluejackets, Sol- diers, and civilians) are invited to attend. A.I.Ch.E.: All Chemical Engineers are invited to attend the first meet- ing: of the semester. Professor J. A. Van den Broe will talk on "What Is Strength?" The meeting will be held at 7:30 o'clock this evening' in room 302 of the Michigan Union. French Club: The French National Holiday will be celebrated by the' French Club this evening at 8 o'clock in the Michigan League. Mr. Pierre de St. Clair will give a talk. There will be group, singing and a friendly social hour. All students and men in uniform are cordially invited, as well as faculty people interested. French Tea: There will be a French Tea at 4 p.m. today at the International Center. Students, men in uniform and" faculty people areA cordially invited. Xi, Chapter of- Pi Lambda Theta: National Honor Association of Wo-