GAGE TWO T4i~ MIcflIGAN hAlt? #EDNESflA, JUL* 28, 190, Fifty-Third Year I'd Rather Be RightI By SAMUEL GRAFTON 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 Maion Ford. . Managing Editor Bud Brinier . . . . . Editorial Director Leon Gordenker City Editor -arvey Frank . . . . Sports Editor Mary Anne Olson . . . . . Women's Editor Busi ess Staff Deanne Lovett . . . . . Business Manager Molly Ann Winokur . Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 NIGHT EDITOR: JANE FARRANT Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. SOVIET DOGMA: Russian Gospel of Hate To Destroy Free World °IOU AND TH GERMANS cannot live on the same earth ... so kill the erzpans . . . Kill the German!' is the plea of your old moth- er; 'Kill the German!' is the plea of the girl you love! 'Kill the German!' whispers the very grass of our native land, now so drenched in blood." Such is the gospel of hate propagated a- gainst the 'Aryan' by the Pravda,, mouthpiece of young Russia, according to Maurice JIindus in 'Mother Russia,' published this year. Hindus quotes a Russian soldier as saying, "As a child I often went to the woods with my grandfather to pick raspberries. My hands used to get red with raspberry juice. Now I want my hands to be red with German blood." This hatred of German blood did not eist in the beginning of the war, Hindus says. It started when the Russians discovered the Ger- mans were not fighting on Soviet soil an ordinary war of conquest, but a war against the whole population. German atrocities were responsible for this discovery, Hindus believes. The Germans, went from house to house driving the population out into the bitterest cold in years, and set their homes on fire. That is a small part of what they have done. SO THE RUSSIANS have adopted the dogma proclaimed by Stalin May 1, 1942. The dogma that, "You cannot conquer the enemy without learning to hate him with all the power of your soul." This may account for the Russian morale that has stumped the rest of the world, including hitler. It may explain why the Russians fight as bravely and savagely as they do. But the Russian gospel of "kill the murderers" proclaimed by Maurice Hindus is not going to produce the same 'cooperative, hate-free, men- ace-free post-war world that we are fighting for. - Marj Borradaile NOT ENOUGH: NO-Strike Pledge Needs More Than Lip-Serice S TRONGER LABOR LEADERSHIP in holding unions to their no-strike pledge continues to be required in spots. During the past ten days it might have been particularly useful in the strike of northern Atlantic fishermen. Their tie-up, the biggest in the history of their territory, has kept millions of pounds of fish from coming -to market, at a time when the demand is greater than ever. Questioning how far union officials had ac- tually gone to get their men back, the New Eng- land War Labor Board did something that has been much needed, when defining what the no- strike pledge should mean to the union leader. The Board told the fishermen's leaders: This pledge must be carried out in a osi- tive, not a negative, manner. This pledge places on the responsible leaders of all unions the positive duty of making strenuous, clear cut, public efforts to end work stoppages en- gaged in by union members. This board can- not consider that any union leader who, when his members fail to report for work, merely shrugs his shoulders and disclaims power to cope with the situation, is living up to the pledge given by labor to the President, -and to SNation NEW YORK, July 28.-- The smaller the mind, the greater the sensation which will be produced upon it by the downfall of Mussolini. In the peasant huts of Italy and in some bar- rooms of Manhattan, this may appear to be the great moment, the big thing, the mighty climax toward which our war was heading. (But in Victor Emmanuel's palace in Rome, sophisticated minds are well aware that, real- ly, nothing has happened; a nothing which has been dressed up to look like everything. Actually, they have thrown Mussolini out in the hope that thereby nothing would happen to them, to theirs. They have done it pre- cisely to keep important things from happen- ing. So it is not important.) Come, let us start our school for democrats. We need training in how to behave during -such occurrences. A similar event may happen soon in Germany. Let us repeat: It means little, it means little, it means little. In the name of every'small man in the world who hungers for real change, and not for a mere rearrangement of place-cards at the table of power, let us repeat, it means little. We, who hate fascism, are indifferent to names. To names and to men. Change them as you like; we are not impressed. (But watch for those who do not really hate fascism. They will show you how to hate a par- ticular fascist. Oh, how they will stamp on Mus- solini now, and kick his head, and assert their blazing hate of him! And try, perhaps, to canal- ize our hatred of fascism into hatred of one man. It is like those ex-isolationists of ours, who say they hate the axis, but invariably end up by denouncing only Japan. How they hate Japan! How they steer us toward Japan! Have you noticed? But we, who hate the whole bus- iness, are not impressed.) Yes, the school for democrats needs to hold its classes immediately. We do not know what lies instantly ahead, but we remember how only two years ago Mr. Chur- chill called Mussolini "this great man," and only later called him "jackal," and then said that one man, and one man only, was at fault in Italy. That is what Victor Emmanuel whispers today to Marshal Badoglio: "Only one man." And Badoglio whispers reassuringly back to Victor Emmanuel: "One man." Only it isn't one man. To make him the symbol of all the 'iniquity in Italy is only the other side of what they were doing a few years ago when they made him the symbol of all that was great in Italy. We reject both symbols. We have never be- lieved in either theory. Watch out for any movement to build Musso- lini up, even in his downfall, for the bigger some can make his downfall look, the less downfall of fascism need there by. Once it served special purposes to paint Mus- solini as the paragon of virtues. Today it may serve special purposes equally well to paint him as the one and only monster of villainy. Great man, jackal, beggarman, thief; it is like a game with buttons. Let us who have hated Mussolini most, forget about him the first. He does not matter now. Let us watch these who may tell us that Mussolini, and Mussolini alone, made fascism in Italy. We also remember hearing that Mjussolini, and Mussolini alone, made the trains run on time. In that case, too, the men who were pointing to Mussolini so emphatically were hoping we would take our eyes from them. FROM THE SHOULDER 6 ip THE WAR WITH ITALY will be over in a short time, perhaps in a few weeks. Italy, after having put up only the most nominal resistance, is on the verge of complete collapse; and almost before we can fully com- prehend our military victory in Sic- ily, we are faced with the question of determining the fate of Italy and its people. What will our answer be? In making our decision let us remem- ber that we are not setting a pre- cedent for Germany. The Italian people, unlike the Germans, are 95% free from responsibility for the crimes committed by the Axis poers. The Italians troops in pri on camps, notably unlike the Germans, have expressed with gus- to their hatred of the war and fascism. They have refused to fight for their Blackshirt leaders, and are largely responsible for our s}}ashing victories in Sicily and Africa. The Italian people by tneir many acts in captured Sicily have proved, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that th1ey are our friends and not our enemies. There are, of course, Italians who are guilty of brutal crimes outside the scope of military operations. Those Italians who are guilty of committing atrocities against our sovereign ally Ethiopia must be pun- ished; the brutal castor-oil Italian Secret Police can be safely left to the tenderumercies of a free Italian nation; but the masses of Italian troops and civilians must be given as soon as possible a new birth of free- dom, a freedom that they have lacked for 22 years. They must be treated honorably and with respect for having defied Mussolini, rather than with scorn for having been knocked out of the war so quickly. This does not mean, however, that we must bargain with the semi-fascist Badoglio or the King- Emperor for the unconditional sur- render of Italy. We must rather_ offer the Italian people, not the semi-fascists, generous treatment if they come over to our side. We must guarantee Italy's continental territory excluding, of course, Al- bania and Sardinia, and must promise to consider her Lybian holdings in the same light as French and British holdings in Africa. We must promise Italy equality among nations after the war and entirely different treat- ment from that which will be ac- corded Germany and Japan in the near future. We must also guar- antee Italy the right to maintain DAILY GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty 'Frankly, I'm interested in the money-not whether the job has a future-besides, I have to go pack to seventh grade in the fall!' Is he to serve the same distracting duty second time, as a political corpse? (Copyright, 1943, N.Y. Post Syndicate) a it i The WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND a lon-fascist gqvernment in peace and securiy To whom, then, can and must we offer these terms? Not to the King- Jimperor or his lackey Marshal Ba- doglio, not to the reactionaries and semi-fascists, but to a jbint commit- tee of Italian underground organiza- tions. Thus we will not only win the confidence of the masses of Ital- ians with our generous terms but we will endear to them the gallant anti- fascist underground leaders who, in all of Italy, are the only group which can lead them to a democratic way of life. For then the Italian masses will see clearly that the fascists brought them only disaster, that the reactionary semi-fascists were pow- erless and unwilling to help them, and that only the democratic under- ground wyas able to secure, for them,' peace terms consistent with the hon- or and national pride of Italy. Italians remember only too well how Mussolini for over 20 years urged them to skimp and sacrifice for fascism, for Empire, for Italian honor, and how they saw first Empire, then honor, and then fas- cism crumble into the dust. But they do not yet know whether the Allies respect and trust the men who have gladly worked with the fascists, but who have not been official members of the party, the reactionary semi-fascists like Ba- doglio and King-Emperor. They are waiting to findoutwhether italy's salvation lies with the King or with the revolutionary anti-fas- cist underground, even now fight- ing for liberty. Only our com- plete refusal to deal with the reac- tionaries and the offer of generous terms to the Italian underground can convince the masses of Italians that their rehabilitation and fu- ture lies in militant democracy. Does this policy mean the aban- donment of the Allied unconditional surrender pledge? In a sense yes, but it also means the winning over to our side of an innocent people who are only too anxious to join us in the fight against the Germans, whom they heartily despise. For is it the peace-loving Ital- ians on whom we want to wreak our vengeance? Or is it the bru- tal Nazified Hun, drunk with sad.- istic orgy, and the criminal ber- serk Jap that we want to destroy forever? Let us give the Italian people a chance to share in the bitter defeat in store for the real criminals of this war, the Nazi-led German people, and the semi-feudal barbarians of Japan. The Italians deserve it, for by their passive resistance to the war, they have hastened our victory. By DREW PEARSON i1 _ J ----- WASHINGTON, July 2&.- Last September the War Department announced it would con- vert enough Army posts along the Atlantic sea- board from oil.to coal to save 15,000,000 gallons of fuel oil per year. Real fact, however, is that neither the Army nor the Navy has stirred itself about convert- ing to coal. OPA officials estimate that if the armed forces really wanted to, they could -save tons of fuel oil along the Atlantic Coast. This does not include oil used for fuel in naval vessels. Nor does it include gasoline or oil used for Army trucks and tanks. It includes only 'fju# oil t heatArmy and Navy establishments o eralte MEmy and Navy factories.. Both the Army and Navy get a blank check for oil requirements to be used as they see fit.' The OPA has no authority to talk to the armed forces about either conversion or con- servation. Here are some of the requests made by the Army for fuel oil within the fiscal year begin- ning this month: Army Engineers, Atlantic City, 1,080,000 gallons; Army Engineers, Cape May, 1,980,000; Quartermaster Corps, Atlantic City, 938,000; Model City, N.Y., Ordnance Works, 4,- 943,000; Springfield, Mass., Armory, 2,785,000; Aberdeen Proving Ground, 1,240,000; Watertown, Mass., Arsenal, 6,675,000-plus an extra 2,000,000 for storage. The Navy requirements for fuel oil for next year include: Philadelphia Naval Hospital, 1,- 110,000; Marine {Corps Supply Depot, Philadel- phia, A960,000; New York Navy Yard, 4,200,000; Lakehurst Naval Air Station, 1,500,000; Paw- tuxent River Naval Air Station. a new establish- men t,1,531,000. Note: Though located In;an area where oil is not so scarce as along the Atlantic Seaboard, the War 'Relocation Authority at Rivers, Ariz., a new establishment for Japanese, has just requested 1,260,000 -gallons of fuel oil for the 1 oming year. Cox .comrniUtee Clowning Congressman Cox's investigation of the Fed- eral Communications tCommission has degener- ated chiefly'into a name-calling contest in which Chairman Larry Fly is the main target. Every- thing that happens, no matter whether it per- tains tointernational affairs or the salary of a stenographer, is blamed on Fly. Only objector to the antics of the Cox Com- mittee is 'forthright Representative Hart of New Jrsey. The other day Cox's committee counsel, Eu- gene Garey, started to read a message from J. Edgar Hoover, when Cox of Georgia interrupted with a eulogy of Mr. Hoover. He told of his great devotion to the FBI chief, concluding with the remark: "At one time we wanted to vote a Congres; sional Medal to Mr. Hoover." "And I suppose;" said Congressman Hart of New Jersey, "that Chairman Fly blocked that too." HWollywood Sit-Down Hollywood moguls have been staging a polite sit-down strike against the Army's training films Deeds Goes to Town," and "Meet John Doe." He has done equally well in producing films for the Army. Although called training films, his pictures are much more than that, comprise a liberal education for any good American. But Hollywood big-shots, though not actual- ly refusing to show the Army's films, schedule them for the tag-end of the show around mid- night when the theatre is almost empty. Behind the film sit-down seems to be Holly- wood's fear of Government encroachment on the motion picture industry. Five Flying Senators There was a lot of cloakroom opposition to the trip of the Five Flying Senators to inspect the North African, Australian and Pacific war fronts this summer. Senator Bennett Clark of Missouri vigorous- ly opposed the investigation, describing it as a "junket trip" to the battlefields, which will be "no public service." Senator Scott Lucas of Illinois, who holds the purse-strings on Senate investigations as chairman of the Audit and Control Committee, also raised objections. Lucas demanded to know who was paying for the trip. Majority Leader Alben Barkley of Kentucky replied that the War Department was footing expenses. To this Lucas retorted: "I wish to state emphatically that if any money is to be requested, I will not vote a single dime for the trip." In reply to further questions by economy- minded GOP Senator John A. Danaher of Connecticut about whether "any value at- tached to the proposed trip, Barkley stated that that would depend on "future events." "Well, the members of the party making the trip might come back and write a book," sug- gested Danaher amid laughs. "It wouldn't be the first time," quipped Bark- ley. "Another famous American has done the same thing, with apparently fruitful reward." FDR and Farmers FDR's testers of political opinion for some time have been trying to decide how seriously the President has lost the farm vote. Some of them are convinced that it is the big farm lob- bies who are the real leaders against the Presi- dent and that the great masses of farmers are not. Here is the way one top-,ranking official in the Agriculture Department, himself a farmer, sumnarizes the farm lobby battle against FDR: "All my life," he says, "the farm organiza- tions have been plugging for parity. That has been their slogan: Parity for farm products. Now they have it. Every major product ex- cept wheat is selling above Parity. "So the farm organizations are left without an issue. But they can't survive without an Issue. They have to have something to battle for, or farmers would not support them. "So they take up the cry against subsidies. Instead of subsidies, they want farm prices to go higher, 'which means inflation." It's a curious comment on U.S. politics that, after ten years of subsidies to farmers from a i DFFICIAL BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1943 VOL. LIII, No. 22-S All notices for The Daily Official ulile- Ain are to be sent to the Office of the Summer Session in typewritten form by 3:20 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 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. -Shirley W. Smith Vice-President and Secretary Anyone interested in joining a Red Cross lif saving class Wednes- days from 7:3d to 9:30 p.m. call Kay Vedder, 4018 Stockwell Hall, Faculty of the College of -Litera- ture, Science, and the Arts: The five- week freshman reports will be due Saturday, July 31, in the Academic rnmnnior' Office . 1 0Mason Hall. year 1943-1944 salaries for those on' the academic or university year basis will be paid as follows: Summer Session Summer session staff will be paid in two equal installments on July 31 and Aug. 31, 1943. Summer Term (a) Those teaching the first half only will be paid in two equal install- ments on July 31 and Aug. 31, 1943. (b) Those teaching the second half only will be paid in two equal installments on Sept. 30 and Oct. 31, 1943. (c) Those teaching the entire term will be paid in four equal ip- stallments on July 31, Aug. 31, Sept. 30, and Oct. 31, 1943. Fall and Spring Terms 1943-1944: Salaries will be paid in eight ,equal installments on Nov. 30, 1943 and on the last day of each succeeding month through June 30, 1944. Annuity and Insurance and Group Surgery and Hospitalization Deduc- tions: For those teaching through the fall and spring terms, whether during the summer or not, one- eighth of total annual requirements for annuity and insurance premiums will be deducted from each of the eight checks received during the per- iod from November through June. For group surgery and hospitaliza- tion, two monthly premiums will be deducted in November, one will be deducted from each payment from December through May, and four monthly premiums will be deducted from the June payment to cover the summer months. The above arrangements are for the year 1943-1944 only and are oc- casioned by the change in the aca- demic calendar due to the war emer-' gency and the various features of the Federal Withholding Tax. Graduate Outing Club: All mem- bers of the Graduate Outing Club who will attend the party in the Rackham Building from 8 to 11:45 p.m. Friday, Aug. 6, please leave your names at the Rackham Build- ing desk before noon Saturday, July 31. series: Aug. 4, '7, 11, 14. Please notify Prof. N. E. Nelson by Aug. 1 of inten- tion to take them. 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 receive 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. --Robert L. Williams Assistant Registrar Engineering Seniors: graduating in October, and all NROTC men in eighth term: The Senior Class Offi- cer elections have been postponed, and petitions may be handed in until Aug. 2 at the Office of the Dean of the College of Engineering. Elec- tions will be held Aug. 5 and 6. Recital: Members of the String Quartet Class under the direction of Oliver Edel, cellist with the Roth String Quartet, will present a recital at .8:30 p.m. Thursday, July 29, in the Assembly Hall of the Rackham Building. The program will consist of compositions by Beethoven, Dvor- ak, Mozart and Haydn, and will be open to the public. Lectures In the Series on Current Problems and Policies Prof. J. F. Hostie will speak on Wednesday afternoon at '4:15 o'clock in the Rackham Amphi- theatre on "Europe and the-Aims of the. United Nations." Round Table Discussion: "China After the War as Forecast by the Chinese Themselves," under the leadership of Prof. Hsing-Chih Tien, 4:15 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Ausnice of theSummer esn