PAGE TWO HE 'MICHIGAN DAILY' VMAT, -"LY 24,1943 - - !.-- p --- - -- 1943 Fifty-Third Year ...WHILE WE WATCH ... f _ , -._._ ''I .I The WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND * 4 Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control Lf 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- leation 6f all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Offic3 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 None But the Brave ... NAVY DEPARTMENT issued a statement the other day which I believe was under-' played in most papers. Secretary Knox said the Navy was expecting six more years of war in the Pacific. This was the first concrete estimate of the extent of America's participation in the war, and coming from. such an authoritative yet conservative source as the Navy Department, it should 'be a ohering influence to most Americans. I hope we took that announcement from the mass of daily press releases and gave it special attention. I hope we mulled it over in our minds and let the implications sink deep into our con- sciousness. For it gives a much needed hypo to our concept, already misty from two, years of abnormal life, of total war. This announcement means that we will be fighting a longer war than any we hate ever enga;ed in before. It means that we must keep producing apd sweating, that we'll have to keep the family car in mothballs, that we'll have to plan our meals by the ration card for six long years at least. The Goverpmnent be- lieves we have to take that long, so the people might as well stop fooling themselves that we'll win Tokyo in a year, the European vic- tory having been long since celebrated. THE WAVE of false optimism engendered by certain 'industrial planners who are already sending out feelers for conversion of parts of war plants to civilian production is a dangerous kidney punch to American morale. We may not feel anything from it now, but when we're still spreading our one pat -of butter per dinner thin over our bread two or three years from now, when we're still getting letters from our' relatives and friends in the service, who we may assume are writing from Singapore by then if NO ISOLATION: Marion Ford Bud Brimmer Leon Gordenker Harvey Frank Mary Anne Olson Jeanne Lovett Molly Winokur . . . Managing Editor * . . .Editorial Director . . . . City Editor S. . . . Sports Editor . . . . Womens Editor . Business Staff . Business Manager 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. SPRINGBOARD: New Coal Contract Will Destroy Pric? Ceilings THE CONTRACT granting 35,000 lllinois coal miners an increase of about $3 per day, al- though still hinging on approval from the War Labor Board, might easily be the springboard for another demand from Lewis to line up other operators on a regional, piecemeal basis. The two-year pact with the Illinois Coal Oper- ators Association necessitates not only approval of the WLB, but also a boosting of the ceiling price of coal to compensate for the wage in- creases It is against just such actions as these that the WLB and the OPA have been fighting a losiig battle. This contract embodies a por- tal-to-portal pay increase, chief issue in the recent disputes, in addition to-time-and-a-half wage for a 35 to 48-hour work week. These concessions will give the miners $1 per day more than Lewis asked in his original de- mands. UNDOUBTEDLY, these demands will not get through the War Labor Board intact, but if a liberal concession is made to the Illinois min- ers, it will precipitate demands from other sec- tors. It will give the 500,000 miners in the Na- tion's coal, pits a wedge to pry into the War Labor Board and into OPA's price ceilings. It has been emphasized again and again that inflation must be checked on all fronts, but lobbying groups, despite their alleged desires to curb inflation, seem bent on getting what they can and forcing the administration to take drastic wage and price measures to control the economy of a country where everyone thinks first of himself. - Claire Sherman THE BOSS:, President Unjustified In D ismissing Wallace "THE PRESIDENT made it clear that he was still the Commander-in-Chief on the home front," gurgles a recent comment on Roosevelt's recent dismissal of Vice-President Wallace from the Board of Economic Warfare. He also made it clear that he was not ahve dismissing a well-qualified man who was doing his job well when his own popularity was threatened. Of all New Deal agencies the Board of Economic Warfare was the most efficiently run-and run with the least pu- licity until the unfortunate Jesse Jones-Wal- lace feuds. The President was well in the realm of his power by dismissing the two men-true, but he hurt the New Deal and New Deal liberl doc- trines immeasurably by his curt action. Roose- velt wanted to establish a precedent whereby all of his agency heads would realize that they were. in danger of being fired if they dare air their private fights without first consulting him. JNSTEAD of investigating the matter the Presi- dent fired the two administrators thereby losing Wallace, excellent theorist and ardent New Dealer. Roosevelt in firing Wallace is also disposing of a fearless speaker who bore the brunt of American criticism while acquainting, the public with Roosevelt theories. Besides competently filling his position as head of the Board of Economic Warfare, the, all has gone well, our outlook will be an unheal- thily depressing one. We may by that time be ready to listen to any crackpot who jabbers that we should forget the war in the Far East, that the Japanese have been impressed enough by our defensive might, that the Orient isn't our burden. The same hollow sounds that advocate easing up 'on the European front and go roaring over to the Japs now, will very likely be the ones who'll be press- ing for an early withdrawal from the Pacific a year or two later. We should have it pounded into us now that we're in this thing up to our ears. If we back down in Europe, where the greatest threat lies, we lose face, not in the diplomatic sense, but in the realistic sense of belief by millions of people in our ability to bulwark a democratic world. If we don't carry the Pacific war through to a logical conclusion, the complete overthrowal of Japanese Fascist ambitions, we leave an ulcer to fester and grow again. Americans should supercharge themselves for the long grind. We have been backing the war effort with an initial zest, but mainly I believe, on the vague assumption that pretty soon it will all be over. If we don't want that zest burned out soon, we have to condition ourselves to the strain. We have to take a calm faith in what we expect the results of victory will be. It's been too easy to fall back on hand made propositions for the post-war world, doing little personal thinking as to the implications, and the force our own opinions will bear. THE PERSON or group who beckons us toward the back door and an easy way out is guilty of a blundering treachery. The Germans are afraid right now. Being unable to grasp the ideal of freedom, they see no solace in an Allied victory, and they'll fight and starve through till the bitterest end. The Japanese are even a tougher nut. Besides their tremendous conquests through the . blitz and the strategic position of having to defend one small island at a time among the thousands on the road to Japan proper, they have also a powerful weapon in American superciliousness toward the Oriental and in American overopti- mism of victory. Among the many features of Japan impossible for the American to conceive are the efficiency and extent of their industrial output, the absence of any management or labor problems peculiar to a fascist state, the tenacity and endurance of the individual who can live in combat in almost animal fashion, who can labor at paces killing to the average American worker, and this with a diet that would find us starving and emaciated after a month. The religious aspect of Japanese politics adds the locoweed of spiritual fanaticism, and we have an opponent that can only be knocked out with sheer force. We have to supply that force. We have to strengthen the Chinese. In short we have to mop up totalitarianism. We can't do it by day- dreaming of the luxurious ease of peace after- wards, that will-of-the-wisp afterwards which can drive us into frustration. We can ease our burden by looking at our- selves and our fellow men, and honestly ana- lyzing what puts us into this distorted position, this world of dog eat dog. Why do we have internal dissension, such as race riots, similat- ing the very hallmarks of the enemy we are fighting? We can ask ourselves if we don't want something more stable in our afterwards. We can impress ourselves that we have the power to make our afterwards sensible and in- dividually productive one, by concerted action to prevent and remove the causes which have made the unrest following World War I the conflagration of World War II. Then we have a stimulus to plug out these six more years, to make them more than just a spiritless day by day drudgery till it's over, maybe half finished, but anything to get it over. -J.M. By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON, July 23.- The Army's promiscuousygranting of "cellpphane" commissions to all sorts of people during the first year of the war is now coming home to roost. There is such a huge surplus of commissioned officers holding down desk jobs on the home front, that hundreds will be sent back to civilian life. Older officers with reserve and national guard back- ground will be relieved first. There has been no ballyhoo about it, but a systematic weeding out of such officers already has begun. An order has gone out that offi- cers below the rank of brigadier gen- eral serving in the United States ::hall be, retired when they reach the statutory age limit of 60 years. The statutory age limit for a brigadier general is 62, and for a major gen- eral, lieutenant general and full gen- eral, 64. The order will lop off an esti- mated 1,000 officers in the United States (only) who are about 60. They are chiefly majors, lieuten- ant colonels and colonels who were taken from reserve and national guard inactive lists and placed on active duty after Pearl Harbor. Note:-Officers overseas will not i be retired even when over age. Gen. MacArthur, for instance, has passed the age for retirement, 64, but will continue on active duty. Fifth Term ... Here is the latest "fourth term" joke going the rounds of the capital. A friend called on a New Dealer who had just become the father of a bouncing boy. He was ushered into the nursery, where the infant was engaged with the business end of a bottle. "What do you think of him?" in- quired the proud father. "He sure is a fine-looking boy," replied the visitor. "Yes, sir, sure is. Have you ever thought that some day he might grow up to be Presi- dent?" The New Deal father reared back in rage. "Say," he exclaimed, "what's the matter with Roosevelt?" SVeto Message... Most talked of incident during the closing days of Congress was why the President took his administra- tion leaders completely by surpriseI and sent up his veto of the anti- strike bill without warning them in advance. They did not know the veto mess- age was coming until it arrived at 3:05 p.m. Here is the backstage explana- tion of that mystery. Actually the veto message was sent to Ed Hal- sey, Secretary of the Senate, at a little before 3 o'clock, with instrue- tions not to deliver the message until 4:34 p.m., just a few minutes before the Senate adjourned. At 4 o'clock, White House advisers knew, Senator Tom Connally, co- author of the Smith-Connally anti- strike bill, was to take a train to Canada. So the strategy was to wait until he had left to catch his train, then have the veto message delivered GRIN AND BEAR It by Senate Secretary Halsey. Halseywas supposed to keep secret the fact that he had the message. However, he made the mistake of telling Senator Lister Hill of Ala- bama. Senator Hill was Acting Ma- jority Leader in the absence of Sen- ator Barkley and supposed to be fighting for the President. When Hill learned about it, he instructed Halsey to'bring the veto message out on the Floor right away. Halsey understood by this that Hill, the Administration lead- er, had enough votes to uphold the President. But when the President's mes- sage was ,read, he was amazed to riote that Senator Hill led the fight to override his chief in the thite House. -J }; By Lichty G.O.P.'s Foreign Policy Has Taken New Turn ONE WAY of measuring the great strides with which history is marching nowadays is to note the fact that just two years ago today Pres- ident Roosevelt sent to Congress his special mes- sage pleading for an extension of the period of military service for the young men who had been called into the Army under the Selective Service Act. Let us recall briefly the international situation as it stood that day. France had fallen. Italy had declared war on Britain. All western Europe was under Hitler's domination. The German armies were driving deep into Russia. In the Pacific, Japanese warships had sailed for Indo- China, in what proved subsequently to be the first step in the conquest of Singapore and the Philippines. ''et so blind were many members of Con- gress to the fact that the whole world was aflame with danger to the United States that the President's request for action which would keep a sizeable American Army in existence was approved in the House of Representatives by the razor-blade margin of a single vote. On that critical test of the foresight of the legislative branch of the Government of the United SMates, five months before Pearl Har- boy, the House Republicans voted six to one to dissolve the American Army. E RECALL THIS FACT-part and parcel of the blind and fatuous isolationism of the Congressional Republicans of those days, an isolationism which led them to oppose Secretary Hull's trade agreements, to fight amendment of the Neutrality Act and to resist the adoption of Lend-Lease-in order better to measure the dis- tance which the Republican party has subse- quently come. By this we mean more than the whole- hearted support which the Republican party has given to the war. We mean also the indis- putable fact that the party has been moving in the direction of a clearer vision.of the post- war world and of the responsibilities which the United States must assume in that world if we are to avoid the outbreak of another war. This was shown in the resolution adopted by the Republican National Committee a year ago. It has been shown by the party's new support of the Hull trade program. It has now been shown again this week by the work of the wholly unof- ficial, but nevertheless potentially important, Republican Post-War Policy Association at its meeting in New York. WITH THREE HUNDRED delegates in atten- dance, including several Govenors and a number of members of Congress, this meeting adopted a platform, calling for complete. victory and an unconditional surrender of the. enemy. It wants the Republican members of Con- gress, immediately upon the reconvening of that body, "to sponsor and support Congres- sional action pledging cooperation by the United States in world affairs." It insists that "the United Nations must remain united if w,e are to secure inernatioal collaboration to prevent. the recurrence of future. wars." It would have the American Government and the American people "plan now for the establish- ment of an organization of nations to assume full responsibility in, maintaining world peace." We agree, with the delegate from Massachu- setts, president of the Bar Association of that State, who told the meeting that "our people are not fools." that they will demand the best pro- 4t l 0"1943, dicapc 'flmes. It' '... you'd think seniority would count for something!' DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1943 VOL. LIII, No. 19-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 cincts. But we are neither weak nor desperate, and so the Vatican stands. It turns out to be our strength which protects it. It is safe because we are powerful. I'd Rather Be Right By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, July 23.- The bombing of Rome. was the use of force as only the strong can use force. It was force under iron control, force limited and circumscribed. Consider that the American and British air- men chose not to protect themselves by bomb- ing at night; that they chose the clearest day and the clearest part of the day, in order to be sure not to hit religious and cultural monu- ments; that they chose precision bombing, not area bombing; that they came over Rome in, waves half an hour apart, permitting smoke to clear between blasts in order to see with certainty what they were about. Each of these decisions increased the danger to our airmen and Britain's. This was not force as a weakling uses force when it falls by chance into his hands. In comparison with Goering's weak violence over London, this was strong gentleness. The bombing was a demonstration of force. The manner of the bombing was a moral demon- stration. We have now seen used in the air something very like that code of honor which has for centuries been a nart of physical combat If we were a weaker or more de- spairing foe, the Vatican would have much more to fear. If we were fighting negatively, like cornered an- imals, its danger would be far great- er. But we are fighting affirma- tively. We do exactly what we say, we shall do, no more, no less. There- fore we are no longer a vague men- ace to the Vatican, nor a doubtful quantity; we are a guarantee, a bet- ter one than any Mussolini or Hitler can by this time offer.I The raid on Rome showed our mower to protect, as well as to wound. It must have made those on the streets below conscious of the double meaning of our strength. That is the lesson which could be read in the skies of Rome this week. And if we can read it, we may be sure Italians can read it, too. It means that our promise to the, Italian people to hold them safe against harm, once they have ejected fascism, is a good promise. It means that we are strong enough to spare them, whereas the Germans have never been strong enough to spare anything or anyone. We are. That is what makes. the raid on Rome a moral demonstration. There would have been no moral grandeur in not raiding Rome be- cause of fear of the risks involved. To do it, as we did it, doing what. had to be done, and then wiping out the special dangers, by accept- ing additional dangers, is morally 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. Michigan Sailing Club: Meeting Monday, July 28, 7:15 p.m. Room 302, Michigan Union. To All Dekes on the Michigan Campus: All. Deke servicemen from other chapters interested in partici- pating in DKE meetings and social events, call Joe Fee or Tom Ulmer at 2-4482. Omicron Chapter of DKE is still active and carrying on its traditions at Michigan. Academic Notices Students who wish to enter a com- bined curriculum at the beginning of the fall term must make application on or, before Aug. 1 in Room 1210 Angell Hall. There will be a $5 fee for late registration. 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. The language examination for candidates for the Master's degree in History will be given Friday, July 30, from 4 to 5 in Room 216 Haven Hall. Record Concert at Horac 'H. Rackham Building: Another, of the weekly concerts will be given Tues- day evening at 7:45. The program will consist of the following record- ings: Haydn's Quarter in D Major, Brahms' Concerto No. 2, in B Flat Major, and Rimski-Korsakov's Ca- priccio Espagnol. Servicemen are cordially invited to join the' Grad- uate Students for these concerts. Exhibitions Rackham Galleries: Exhibition of Paintings from ten Latin-American Republics. From the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Open 2 to 5, and 7 to 10 daily, except Sundays. July 26 to Aug. 14. Events Today Chairmen of Carnival Booths: Meeting at 4:30 at W.A.B. of repre- sentatives from each house sponsor- ing a booth. It is important that everyone be present. French Tea: There will be a French Tea today at 4:00 p.m. in the Cafeteria of the 'Michigan League. Students, men in uniform, and fac- ulty people are cordially invited. Religious services will be held apt B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation this' evening at 8 o'clock. Rabbi Cohen, Lewis Singer, Elliot Organick and Harvey Weisberg will lead the, ser- vices. 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, this evening 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. Coming Events "Graduate Outing Club will" meet at 2:30 p.m. on Sunday, July 25, for A N.7,n. iror ,Erin 'o+n nn.'.+w. ill 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 Preliminary examinations for the doctorate in English will be given in series: Aug. 4, 7, 11, 14. Please notify Prof. N. E. Nelson by Aug. 1 of inten-