PAOP xTwO TSHE MICHIGAN DAILY THUgDAYnT, JULY 22,-.1943 Fifty-Third Year ...WHILE WE WATCH... I'd Rather Be Right SBSAMUEL GRAFTON - - --®--+- ---s- - --- . , 'r*=mm e n t- e--a Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control Q~f 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 TeAssociated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all iews 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 Anil 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 Sta,, 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 Stafff Jeanne Lovett . . . . . Business Manager. Molly 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. THERE IS A TENDENCY LATELY, it would seem, on the part of American-liberals and those sympathetic with progressive movements toward discouragement. They are discouraged not With the principles they back, but with the response their humanitarian program has re- ceived from the very humanity they seek to improve. They are frankly quite depressed with the-hob Congress has been playing with reform and the lack of protest it gets from the people, whom these reforms are designed to benefit. The blackballing Wallace received from Roose- velt has been like sand thrown on the coals for a great many, particularly those who have stuck with the New Deal as, the opening wedge for enlightenment in this country. The. mounting storm of reaction looks black indeed. This doesn't mean to imply that lib- erals are scattering for the shelter of obscurity. 'here's too much marrow in the bone structure of the American progressive movement for that. Rather, the attitude is a manly shrug of the shoulders and a resolve to take a battering. Their discouragement isn't unreasonable, how- ever. When a. Army is forced back after get- ting well under way, its spirits are not apt to be. rollicking. IGHT AJOUT NOW, I believe, would be a goodtime for liberals and progressives to. look over their forces. Rather than putting on the cloak of self. pity, they could start asking themselves. some incisive, questions. For one, why doesn't liberalism seem to catch on more readily with the American masses? One ugly fact grins out at us, to be sure. The extreme reactionary elements, which symbolize- economic power, has been able to keep the body politic confused as to the concept of: progressive move- ments. Samuel Grafton's term, "Obscurantism" fits very nicely here. They manage to tangle honest opinion and rational lines of reasoning and planning with startling cries from many places at once, with a hodgepodge of contradic- tory statement, which while no decoy to the ciearheaded, analyst, has served to give the people a political nervous breakdown. Could it be, however, that the approach, em- ployed by liberalism has been one of its own stumbling blocks? I believe in a sense that it has. Except in the case of: certain unions, the progressive movement has been given to the people as a set of theorbs, a social blueprint arrived at by scientific observation, whose con- clusions are difficult to refute on any reason- able grounds. Yet this same intellectual and rational basis for liberalism may be what makes it so distaste- ful to a great many of the common clay. It may be that it has the awesome air of a weighty trea- tise which they have stumbled across on a book- shelf, and which they close after reading t the first few -lines as too complicated, too indirect to help them solve their problems. The truly suc- cessful liberal trade unions have been so because they laid their ideas before their members in simple terms, with straight talk of what liberal- ism meant for the individual and for the better- ing of society. They had the intellectual basis as the foundation, but they translated it into terms that could be handled easily. Outside of labor, however, I can't see where the progressive trend has made a profound im- pression on any other single large group. There is a vast well of unsounded material for liberal- ism which has been neglected unwittingly be- cause of the lack of personal appeal in presenta- tion. I refer in part to the millions of white collar workers, the farmers, and many wage groups who would be benefited by the progressive trend if they knew where to catch hold of it. I believe the case for liberalism could be carried to these groups if a variation of the methods used by successful unions were uni- versally applied. The reactionary forces have used the animal weakness of tending to follow the most attractive object very well. Their lollipops have sparkled a lot clearer in the American eye, even though they were poison- ous, theirs has been a sensory appeal. These groups who regard liberalism as some- thing out of this world, should be convinced that. the progressive movement is their baby, to nur- tulre and raise, to point at with pride, that it is democracy in action. It's almost impossible to sell them on it with a trayload of doctrines and theories, however. They want to see themselves in the scheme. They want the human element. Besides the unions, and PM in the liberal jour- nalistic field, I don't believe there are many pro- gressive organizations which make the earthy step of presenting liberalism as a thing for all, a living social organism which can give them an active role in American life. This idea may be small solace to liberals await- ing the full force of reaction, but I would like to see more done about it in the near future. I think it presents an exciting challenge to the progressive movement, a challenge which if an- swered correctly can result in a swelling of the ranks of American liberals and a subsequent. uplift of spirit and impetus. - J. M. I1 NEW YORK, July 22.- We have a way of treating the Jews of Europe as a special problem when we want them to be a special problem, and as part of the general problem when we want them to be part of the general problem. Thus when Jews are gassed (,as thousands have been gassed in the execution caravans of Poland) we. treat them as a special problem; our terrible warnings to the enemy against the use of poison gas do not apply. But when it is suggested that Jews can be rescue# out of certain Balkan countries, the Allied an-I swer is that the Jewish problem is. the same as the problem of all refugees, that nothing can be done until victory is obtained. The Jews of Europe are a special case when they are executed; they are part of the general case when they are denied rescue. Never in the Right Class All the classifications leave them in Hitler's hands. They never seem to be lucky enough to achieve a classification which saves them. If their position is the same as that of the other peoples of Europe, then must we not consider that Hitler is using poison gas against Poles when he uses it against Poland's Jews? But if there is a difference, if they are a special case, then can we con- tinue to give them the dusty answer that their rescue must await the general rescue, that their problem is the general problem? Actually, the Jews are a special case. Hitler has made them so. They are the only people he has threatened to exterminate. To tell them to wait along with the others is to disregard this special classifi- cation. They cannot wait. Hitler will not let them wait. They Cannot Wait Either we consider the Jews part of Europe, and therefore we retaliate against their murderers as against the murderers of Europeansi or we must consider them a special case, and therefore devise a special means of rescue. There are no other alter- natives, in logic or in honor; only these two. {I hope it will be the chief bus- iness of the Emergency Conference to Save the Jews of Europe, now meeting in New York, to sharpen up these alternatives, to strip the ora- torical ivy from them, so that all democratic mankind may clearly see the two horns and decide at last which it will grapple with.) But how can the. West rescue the. Jews of Europe? The answer to that is that the West. cannot do it at all, until it starts to do it. It must make at least the beginning of setting up one man, or one agency, in one room, as an office in charge of rescuing the Jews. The situation is not that the West has failed in this task. The West hasn't even assigned the task. We don't know who has failed, be- cause nobody has even been asked to try to succeed. A Hatful of Answers. The Bermuda conference decided that it was really a conference on all refugees. Therefore it stepped out of and away from the special prob- lem of the Jews. It was like a con- ference on apples which decided to hold a meeting on pears, and began by defining apples as being really pears. Its first order of business was, actually, its resignation. What could a special agency do? After all, howumany Jews can we get out of Rumania, and where can we send them? The spirit that begins by asking such questions will not rescue anybody, even it- self. We take as many out of the Balkans as we can. We use retali- ation. We use poison gas in Ger- many as the answer to poison gas in Poland. We make the flat promise that all Jews who reach a neutral country will be received and maintained, if only as prison- ers of war. No one of these moi~es is a policy, but all of them together become a policy. How can we win the war? It has been a hell of a complicated business finding the answer to that one, too. We did not depend on any one an- swer, either. We tried them all. (Copyright, 1943, N.Y. Post Syndicate) GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty BOYCOTT: t" X. l' . \ .1v r ! KY < '. a r ;' "4,.V> 47 " ; 13a3. Ct, .ca /me.Ic "I'm new at this farm work, Mr. Perkins-are you sure this is the right way to make hay while' the sun shines?" United Student Effort Needed To Stop 'Holdup' A DAILY EDITORIAL last week urged students and faculty members to boycott a certain sandwich shop and in this way make them lower their prices to a reasonable level. At that time it was impossible to expect anyone to cooperate because the hungry had to be fed, and there wss just no other place to go at the late hours. But no a united boycott is possible because at least two reasonably priced places to eat will be open from now on. One which has not been taken full advantage of by students, is the soda bar at the League. Here sandwiches, cakes, pies, cokes and sundaes are served nightly until 11 p.m. and on the week-end until midnight. A privately owned restaurant recently an- nounced that they would be open until later. Here the manager said a ten cent coke will cost ten cents and a sundae will be 15 cents-with ice cream in it, too. NO ONE is trying to drive the sandwich shop out of business, but we are merely trying to show them the error of their ways. With your help the students of Ann Arbor can prevail upon them to lower their prices. Besides aiding the pocketbook of every poten- tial after 9 p.m. coke buyer you will be helping remove some of the antagonism the servicemen feel toward Ann Arbor. Everyone hates to be gypped-prices charged by the sandwich shop are definitely unreason- able. To remedy the situation stop crowding their booths, but instead go to one or another of eating places that will also be open. Perhaps a united student body can do what the OPA has failed to do. - Margaret Frank BACK TO AFL: UMW Move Is Step to Stronger Labor Front THE RECENT MOVES by John L. Lewis's United Mine Workers toward a reaffiliation with the American Federation of Labor indicates a strong labor step toward consolidation. Labor is getting scared and it is taking steps toward the union in which there is strength. During the past decade labor reached a pin- nacle of power in this nation. Now it has start- ed on the decline. UMW strikes were influential in causing that decline. Because. there is a war going on, Congressmen pushed the Smith-Con- nally Law through over the President's veto and dealt a death-blow to labor's freedom of action. Consolidation nowseems labor's.only hope. of winning back their power and of maintain- ing what they still retain, Congress is plainly inimical to a strong labor front holding the whip hand over war production. President Roosevelt's support appears to be doing little for labor. Their only hope of escaping even- tual Congressional action toward further con- trol appears to lie in the maintenance of a strong labor front and effective lobbying. THE RECENT FORMATION by the CIO of a Political Action Committee headed by Sid- ney Hillman was one step in that direction. Lewis's move toward the AFL which his UMW left more than five years ago appears to be an- The WASHINGTON MERRY-GO ROUND By DREW PEARSON DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN -111 WASHINGTON, July 22.- Final decision to oust both.Jesse Jones and Wallace from any con- nection with Economic Warfare, replacing them with Leo Crowley, was attended by much inner White House debate and personnel, juggling. It, showed significantly how the President's new crop of advisers line up. The solution first proposed by ex-Justice Jimmy Byrnes was to make Wallace's director, Milo Perkins, an Assistant Secretary of State under Cordell Hull. This would have kept Perkins, an able administrator thoroughly fa- millar with Economic Warfare, but put him back-under the State Department, where Eco- nomnic.Warfare. was originally. Two years ago Secretary Hull got his Tennes- see. dander up. when this job was transferred away from his slow-paced diplomats and.he has never stopped pulling wires to get it back. Not many peopleknow it, but in the end, it wasTom Corcoran who, in the present imbroglio, swung the Economic Warfare job away from Hull to Leo Crowley. The young brain truster, formerly the Presi- dent's closest, adviser, had been euchred out of his White House, intimacy by. Harry Hopkins. So this was a real triumph. Ropkins, now closest to, the President, spiked Corcoran long ago; but Tommy still has a powerful friendin Justice Byrnes, also in Ben Cohen and Leo Crowley. Thus indirectly, Corcoran was able to convince the White House that Economic Warfare should, not go back to the State Department, where it. had sagged woefully, but should, get fresh, new, blood through Crowley. Note: Whether it can, get that fresh blood through Crowley remains to be seen. An Al executive, Crowley is already overburdened with Federal Deposit Insurance and Alien Property Custodian. He has done a good ,job, but sodid Jesse Jones before he took on too many responsi- bilities. Hopkins vs. Wallace Final line-up of the White House inner circle on ;the basic question of ousting Henry Wallace was a split 'pte,-3 to 2. Harry , Hopkins, Judge Sam, Rosenman, and, Byrne* all voted against the..,Vice-.President: Hopkins has always been against Wallace, has made catty remarks about him for years, start- ed some time ago to euchre him, out of renomi- natio if FDRAruns for a 4th term, Also Harry is,a, poker-playing intimate of Jesse Jones. Siding with Wallace were . Budget Director. Wallace. The Vice-President had submitted a memo to the White House two weeks before, telling of recent Jesse Jones delays in the pur- chase of strategic materials. These were not delays of 18 months ago, as stated in the Presi- dent's letter, but instances of the past few days and weeks where war materials were held up despite the constant importuning of Wallace and Perkins. After this memo had been on the President's desk for two weeks with no action, Wallace fin- ally opened up his public blast. He told the President in advance that he was going to make a statement, but either Roosevelt did not appreciate how strong the statement was going to be, or else Wallace got his dander up and warmed to the writing afterwards. At any rate, the blast caught the President off base and he was irked. Judge Vinson Performs White House adviser who did the most effi- cient job for the President during the Jones- Wallace row was hard-hitting Judge Fred Vinson. He was the man who stopped the_ Congressional investigation of the dispute. Because the President had okayed four letters authorizing Jesse Jones to hold up rubber, alu- minum and other strategic materials, a Con- gressional investigation was the last thing the administration wanted. It would have shown that the President had acted hastily, to say the least, in signing Jones's memos. So on the day the House Rules Committee was to vote.on an investigation of the Jones-Wallace row, smart Fred Vinson went up on'Capitol Hill and got his successor in Congress appointed to the Rules Committee. When Vinson resigned from .Congress in 1937 to become a court of appeals judge, he helped elect Kentucky's erudite Joseph B. Bates to the vacancy. So with the Rules Committee dead- locked over whether or not to investigate Jones and Wallace, Vinson got Bates appointed, and Bates broke the Rules Committee tie. Social Security Sir William Beveridge, author. of the famous Beveridge plan for increased social security in England, gave a most enlightening address in Washington recently, but later proved unable to "take it" at a reception at the home of Pennsyl- vania's ex-Governor Gifford Pinchot. At the reception, Assistant Attorney General NormanLittell, who made the Navy take back its Elk Hills deal with Standard Oil of Cali- THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1943 VOL. LIII, No. 18-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 Chairmen of Student Activities are reminded that at the beginning of each term or summer session every student shall be conclusively pre- sumed to be ineligible for any public activity until his eligibility is af- firmatively established by obtaining from the Chairman of the Commit- tee on Student Affairs a Certificate of Eligibility. The Chairman shall file with the Committee on Student Affairs the names of all those who have presented certificates of eligi- bility with a signed statement to ex clude all others from participation. Blanks for the chairmen's lists may, be obtained in the Office of the Dean of Students. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments has received notice of the fol- lowing Civil Service Examinations. The United States: Dental Hy- gienist, $1,620 per year; Estimator, and Jacket Writer,. $3,000 and $3,- 300 per year; Medical Officer, $3,200 to $4,600 per year; Student Nurse, $288 (quarters, substinence, laundry, and medical attention included) per year; Technical Aid, Quartz Crystals (Trainee), $1,620 per year. Closing date Sept. 10, 1943. State of Michigan: Graduate Nurse, $125 to $145 per month. Baltimore: Senior Recreation Lea- der, $1,600 per year. Closing date July 29, 1943. Further information may be had, from the notices which are on file in. the office of the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 201 Mason Hall, office hours 9-12 and 2-4. -Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, Schools of Education, For- estry, Music, and Public Health: Students who received marks of I or X at the close of their last term or summer session of attendance will receivea'a 'grade of E in the course or courses unless this work is made up by July 28. Students wishing an ex- tension of time beyond this date in order to make up this work should file a petition addressed to the ap- propriate official in their school with Room 4 U.H., where it will be trans- mitted. Academic Notices Makeup Examinations in History will be given on Friday, July 23 from' 4 until 6 o'clock in Room C Haven Hall. Any student expecting to take the examination should get his in- structor's permission in' advance so that an examination may be pre- pared. France. Group singing and a social hour. All students and men in uni- form, as well as Faculty people inter- ested, are cordially invited. -Charles E. Koella Russian Tea: There will be a Rus- sian tea at 4 p.m. today at the Inter- national Center. Per§ons interested in speaking Russian are cordially invited. Pi Lambda Theta- Initiation' Re- ceptioni This evening at 7:30 p.m. in the Women's Lounge of the Rack- ham Building. "Which Way China in the, Post. War World" will be presented Thursr day by Dr. George W. Shephe' d at 8:00 p.m. in the Rackham A aphi- theatre under the auspices of the' Post-War Council. The public is cordially invited. Coming Events A Motion Picture showing the ac- tivities of the Adjutant-General's Office in keeping up-to-date records in the field will be shown in the" Rackham Amphitheatre, third floor or Friday, July 25, at 7:30 p.m. While of particular interest to Army Ad- ministrative Personnel, this film is open to the public in general. Pre- ceding the film 'a short lecture de- scribing the I. B: M. System' of Punched Card Records will be given .by Mr. Meacham of the Tabulating Service Department of the Univer- sity. Chairmen of Carnival Bootha:' There will be a meeting at the WAB' at 4:30 p.m. Friday, July 23 of repre- sentatives from each house sponsor- ing a booth. It is important that. everyone" be present. German Departmental Hours during the Summer a.m. to 12 noon, Monday Friday; 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. through Thursday. Library Term: 8 through. Monday Mentor. Reports: Reports on stand- ings of all Engineering freshmen will be expected from faculty members during the 5th week and again dur- ing the 11th week of the semester. These two reports will be due on July. 31 and Sept. 11. Report blanks will be furnished by campus mail. Institute of the Aeronautical Sei- ences: A meeting will be held on Tuesday night, July 27, at 7:30 p.m., in Room 1213 East Engineering Buil- ding (Lecture Room, North Wing). A sound motion picture entitled "Aerodynamics-Air Forces on an Airfoil" will be shown. Institute members and any others who are interested are invited to attend. Events Today Meeting for all women interested in golf at 4 p.m. in the W.A.B. .Any woman interested who cannot attend the meeting, call Jane Richardson, 2-4471. *" *I WA Purple Heart