TWO THE MIC.HIGAN DAITV a as af i a 1 V 1s,: :R. Rs l"1 1 t' L 11 1 J.J" e ' _ r avaa.+ca; u! lll.: L lY a.7YY Fifty-Fourth Year i P o t F s , r . / ' : ., 1 ' \ j '_ f l ,. / -- . , j ./ t \ ! ' ", ,_ _ . ° ', t 1 Y .. ; ; ,l Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Pug1ications. Editorial Staff Jane Farrant Betty Ann Koffman Stan Wallace Hank Mantho Peg Weiss Managing Editor Editorial Director City Editor Sports Editor Women's Editor - Staff Business Manager B~usiness Lee Amer Telephone 23-24=1 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONL ADVERItiN G y National Advertising Service, Inc. Coltege PbiisersRepresentativ 4204dADISON AVE. NEw,YoRK. N. Y. CwcA O . BoSTO . LOS AneSs . "BA FRARCISCO Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use tqr republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of re- publication of al other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as Second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year y car- rier, $425, by mail, $525. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 NIGHT EDITOR: KATHIE SHARFMAN Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. illing To Serve RESIDENT ROOSEVELT has announced to the nation that "if the people elect me, I will serve," thus putting an end to all specula- tion as to whether or not he will run against Gov. Dewey. fie will run again, for his nomination is assured by the existence of a majority of pledged delegates to the Democrat Conven- tion at the end of this month. But the President has made it clear that he will not run in the ordinary sense of the word,' In the "partisan, political sense." He has said, "if the people command me to continue in this office and in this war, I have as little right to withdraw as the soldier has to leave his post in the line." This is good news to all who feel that in a time of strife and trouble, as the war nears its end, the only man to whom the responsi- bilities of the nation's welfare could be en- trusted is President Roosevelt. Reasons for this feeling are the President's clear-cut policies of cooperation with the other great nations toward the building of a better world and his understanding of the domestic situation, evi- denced by his demands for higher taxes no while we can afford them, by his support of the soldier vote bill, by his opposition to the anti-labor Smith-Connally Bill, by his unful- filled demands for strict price control, coupled with subsidies, to make wage stabilization effect- ive. But in his acceptance letter the President phrased his position far better than anyone else can:. "To win this war wholeheartedly, unequivocally and as quickly as we can is our task of the first importance. To win this war in such a way that there be no further world wars in the foreseeable future is our second objective. To provide occupa- tions, and to provide a decent standard of liv- ing for our men in the armed forces after the war, and for all Americans, are the final objectives." The President has put first things first, and his record in the past proves that he has a definite point-of-view and program to accom- plish these things. -Kathie Sharfman Polities and the G.I. THE RECENTLY-PASSED Federal Soldier Vote Act has been termed inadequate, un- constitutional or undemocratic depending upon the speaker's views but there is one section that particularly reflects the mistrust and unthink- ing attitudes of many Congressmen. One section of the act attempts to prevent "political propaganda" from contaminating the minds of citizen-soldiers. Several recent books that have come under this thoughtless ban are Bower's biography of Chief Justice Holmes, "Yankee From Olympus," and Beard's dialogues in "The Republic." The power behind such action is found in Title V of the act which states that "books purchased by Government funds shall not coi- tain political argument or political propaganda of any kind designed or calculated to effect the results of any election for Federal office. By this reasoning one might even include the Dec- laration of Independence or the Constitution in the ban. The net result would leave the prospect- ive voter's mind a vacuum. Some textbooks and correspondence courses of the U. S. Armed A(* , , i / ' iYV iV > P '- . i 'r^1 j , ' . _ .. \ ® ^^ , "Don't Tell Me I'm Not Constitutional" I'D IATHER BE RIGHT: Realistic Program for Unity By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, July 13-We need national unity during a war, but it has to be unity about something, unity for something. The candidate who surrounds himself with a smoke screen, with a cloud of ambiguity, offers only a worthless substitute for true na- tional unity. "Come into my cloud," he says to the voter. He offers a little bit of internationalism, a dash of isolation, a hint of reform, a whisper of reaction. He gets customers, as any well-stocked five-and-ten' cent store will. Muddle, But Not Unity To blur eevry public question, to dull the edges of every dispute, to "throw things in to make it harder," to say yes and no to all comers, may produce a kind of temporary, befuddled political coalition, but it will not produce na. tional unity. The valid approach to unity is to set up a sharp, clear, but limited program, about which a majority of the people can unite, and about which they will unite because they know what it means, and not because their pet prejudices have been stroked. As Through a Dark Wood Such an approach would be offered by the candidate who says, in simple, straightforward fashion: "I have certain definite political be- liefs, as all men know. But we are in a war. Ahead of us lies a length of road which, it seems, we must travel together. We must get, through the forest and into the clear space: We must protect each other on our march through that forest. I offer myself as an executive officer to all men who agree that we really do have to fight our way through the forest; to men who agree not to make evil use of dark corners on the way, in order to dispose of those whom they do not like, or to gain relative advantages for themselves. That is the substance of unity in wartime; it is unity for something. A liberal or a conservative could, equally, offer that sort of unity. Neither need be under the necessity of pretending to be not a liberal, or not a conservative. Mr. Churchill has given Britain that kind of unity, and Mr. Churchill is a conservative. No man need deny his essen- tial beliefs to be a sound war-time leader; he need only declare, in frank and manly style, that he will not fight for his special brand of politics at the expense of a war, and that he will yield to any change necessary to win the war. Such a man can build unity, not because he is all things to all men, but be- cause, for the period of crisis, he is one thing to all men. contagious disease, censoritis," which is appear- ing throughout the country. It indicates fool- ishness and shortsightedness to deprive men in the armed forces (and thus voters and office- holders after the war) of the necessary political and social stimulation to think about public af- fairs. -Dorothy Potts Where we get into trouble is with the candidate who is all things to all men. He cannot build war-time unity, because it is part of his plan to make men hot about irrelevancies. He offers a bargain ride thropgh the forest, with sleeping cars for those who want to doze, and bicycles for those who prefer to pedal; he offers higher wages to labor, and he also offers lower war costs and less taxes 'to business; you may ride any way you wish on his line, including back- wards. Such a man does not weld a fighting unity; he piles up a fermenting agglomeration of yens and discontents, a most unhappy and unstable mixture. It may all be untrue, and Mr. Dewey may know precisely where he is leading us. But his platform did not say. And so men turn to Chicago again, hoping that another meeting may try to bring the American people together, as with trumpets; and not try to catch them with sticky paper, and the promise of a gift in each and every box. (Copyright, 1944, New York Post Syndicate) Reconversion ALTHOUGH THE ARMS PROGRAM is lag- ging in some sectors, cutbacks have resulted in idle men and machines elsewhere This has increased the pressure for immediate recon- versions of unemployed facilities to the pro- duction of much-needed civilian goods . It has also led to a tense situation in Washington, where Chairman Nelson of the War Produc- tion Board is at loggerheads with most of the vice-chairmen, with the army and navy, and with the War Manpower Commission. On June 19 Nelson signed orders making available ma- terials for the construction of working models for post-war production, canceling limitation orders on the use of aluminum and magnesium -now plentiful-and permitting manufactur- ers to purchase machinery, tools, and dies wher- ever possible without interference with war production. Shortly afterward the WPB chair- man became ill, and in his absence these orders have not been put through. According to Sen- ator Truman, who is strongly supporting Nel- son's proposals, the opposition from within the board is inspired by the large corporations which are still fully engaged on armament work and fear small competitors may be allow- ed to get ahead of them. The army, navy, and War Manpower Commission are concerned with the severe labor shortages in certain vital production fields, including foundries, coal mines, tank arsenals, tire plants, and shipyards. They believe that unemployment elsewhere might be a helpful factor in steering labor to the shortage areas. It is not clear, however, that aircraft workers who lose their jobs on Long Island can be persuaded to migrate to Akron to make tires. And it is certain that the problems of reconversion will be multiplied if we wait to start until all war contracts are completed and everyone can turn to civilian production simultaneously. -The Nation KEEP MOVING: G.O. P By ANN FAGAN GINGER THEIDEA that the Republicans have chosen to nominate a young man for president brings up an inter- esting contradiction in terms . . . the idea of a "young Republican." The policies of the republican Party are as old as the first reactionary, who said, "If it's good enough for my great-grandfather, it's good enough for my great-grandchildren." ,'Re- publicanism as the philosophy of a political party has come to stand for protection of property rights above human rights, opposition to the will of the people, a narrow-minded view of the position of the United States in the world of nations. I this particular election year, GOPism is allied with opposition to internationalism in the form of a world court and a world police force, with opposition to the Sol- dier Vote Bill, the GI Bill of Rights and the Wagner-Murray-Dingell Social Security Bill, with opposi- tion to the Anti-Poll Tax Bill, with "economy" on the budget books and extravagance in the mistreat- ment of citizens in the matter of federal housing, price control, sal- ary limits. The Republican idea started out as a young man's organization based on the principles of a couple of young Presidents: Tom Jefferson (elected President at 66), and Andy Jackson. ( And its first nominee was a young man, Abe Lincoln, (51 in 1860), with young ideas about democracy and its relation to involuntary servitude. "UT the party aged rapidly, until, under Mark Hanna and McKinley in 1896 it appeared almost as old as Methuselah in its firm opposition to Jtlerm e Gtl Otr R. DONALD C. SHEPARD'S blythe trust in Dewey is truely a beautiful thing to see. It is indeed optimistic to find him searching for someone to lead him onward and up- ward. Mr. Dewey will take him for a ride, but unfortunately not in eith- er of these directions. Mr. Shepard employs a somewhat corrupt version of the syllogism first used by Socrates (who, Mr. Shep- ard, is even OLDER than president Roosevelt!). This is the little game he plays: Old men are inclined to be conser- vative. President Roosevelt is an older man. Therefore: President Roosevelt is a conservative man. Were we giving points in the presidential election for chronalo- gical age, Mr. Dewey would win Mr. Shepard's game, but it would seem that Mr. Shepard is con- cerned with youth of ideas. There is no reason to believe that Presi- dent Roosevelt has lost any of the idealism which lay behind his so- cial legislation. This idealism is present today in %is eager sup- port of UNNRA and the Bretton Woods Conference. What plan has Dewey offered that would further our progress toward Mr. Shepard's dream of a peaceful world. None! While President Roose- velt acts, Mr. Dewey does not even suggest. In fact Dewey cares so little for youth or its dreams that he refuses to give the greater part of the fighting youth of New York state an opportunity to vote for him- self or for anyone else. The "vigor- ous, intense, realistic, energetic" Mr. Dewey won't accept the Federal bal- lot. Even more important than the personal failings of Dewey to ful- fil the ideals of Mr. Shepard, is the tragically static group of'-men that would follow Mr. Dewey into office. He has already publically expressed satisfaction in being sup- ported by the Chicago Tribune. Just as rabidly nationalistic as the Tribune is Dewey's running mate, Gov. Bricker, who was the first choice of Gerald K. Smith. (nice company you keep, Mr. Shepard.) Nor can we forget to mention the Honorable Ham Fish who would step into the chair- manship of the vital Rules Com- mittee in the House of Represent- atives. These men and others like them would be helpfully helping to carry out such items in the Re- publican platform as the one which seeks to "establish and maintain a fair protective' tariff on competi- tive products." Alas, Mr. Shepard, I'm afraid that the stars you're reaching for are a bit besmattered with mud. -Gloria Rewoldt the income tax, trust-busting, "popu- lism," free trade, and in its imperial- istic ventures in the Spanish-Ameri- can War. Due to a fluke, a youngish man became President under the Re- publican banner, Teddy Roosevelt, but he in due course left the party, and it became again solidly old and respectable. It brought to the White House William Howard Taft (father of the Senator Taft now important in GOP circles), who there, and later; on the Supreme Court, expressed the most backward views on the social development then taking place in this country. From 1912 till 1920 the party, out of the White House, aged again to give birth to the Three Old Men: Harding, Coolidge and Hoover, whose policies of do-nothing-till- you-hear-from-Wall-Street helped this country to the crash in '29. Unemployment which reached two million in the middle of the twen- ties, was left alone. Housing, medi- cal care, community recreation fa- cilities, public power projects, labor conditions, child labor, the high cost of living, the condition of mi- gratory laborers; the faulty eco- nomic structure of the banking system, international cooperation in the World Court and the League of Nations, recognition of the Sov- iet Union, opportunities for em- ployment for youth . . . all these problems were Untouchables to the Old Old men in the presidency. IF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY, dur- ing the intervening 12 years, had washed itself clean of these influen- ces, and made itself a truly young '. Breeds Them Old FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1944 VOL. LIV No. 8-S All notices for The Daily Official Bul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the slimmer Session, in typewritten form by 3:30 p. in. of the day precediig its publication, except on Saturday when the notices should be submitted by 11:30 a. m. Notices To Those Who are Saving Dailies for the men in service: Please con- tinue sending them to Ruth B. Bu- chanan at the University Museum Stu dents, Summer Session: College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Courses may not be elected for credit after the end of the second week. Saturday, July 15, is there- fore the last day on which new elections may be approved. The willingness of an instructor to admit a student later will not affect the operation of this rule. E. A. Walter To all Male Students in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts: By action of the Board of Regents, all.male students in residence in this College must elect Physical Educa- tion for Men. This action has been effective since June, 1943, and will continue for the duration of the war. Students may be excused from taking the course by (1) The Uni- versity Health Service, (2) The Dean of the College or by his representa- tive, (3) The Director of Physical Education and Athletics. Petitions for exemption by stu- dents in this College should be ad- dressed by freshmen to Professor Arthur Van Duren, Chairman of the Academic Counselors (108 Mason Hall); by all other students to Assis- tant Dean E. A. Walter (1220 Angell Hall.) Except under very extraordinary circumstances no petitions will be considered after the end of the third week of the Summer Term. The Administrative Board of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts. Open House for Servicemen, Wives, Families: The USO is open at all times to the servicemen and their wives and families especially on Sundays. There is plenty of room to visit, write letters, read, play cards or just relax. If you like classical music, there is a very com- plete Classical Music Library and a quiet music room with a radio-vic combination where you may enjoy good music. The Federal Civil Service Commis- sion are recruiting for various Fed- eral agencies in the State of Michi- gan in Administrative and Profes- sional Fields, Engineering and Allied Fields, Clerical and Skilled Trades. Salary ranging from $1,560 to $7,128. For further details stop in at 201 Mason Hall. Bureau of Appoint- ments. Fraternity and Sorority Presidents are requested to pick up membership report forms for the Summer Term in the Office of the Dean of Students. Student Organizations are request- for signing up for Golf and Tennis tournaments. The sheets for entries will be posted in Barbour Gymnasium and the Women's Athletic Building until Wednesday, July 19th. Dept. of Phys. Educ. for Women Lectures Monday, July 17. Dr. Haven Emer- son, Nonresident Lecturer in Public Health Administration in the School of Public Health and Professor Em- eritus of Public Health at Columbia University, will speak to public health students and other interested individuals from 4:00 to 5:00 o'clock, in the School of Public Health Audi- torium.The title of Dr. Emerson's address will be "Civilian Health Needs in Wartime". Henry F. Vaughan, Dean Tuesday, July 18, Professor Preston W. Slosson. "Interpreting the News." 4:10 p. m., Rackham Amphitheater. The public is cordially invited. Wednesday, July 19. A. Lobanov, Visiting Professor of Russian History from the University of California, will speak on "Russia and the War" at 4:10 p. m., Rackham Amphi- theater. The public is cordially in- vited. Academic Notices Make-up Final Examination for Geology 12 will be held today at 9:00 a. m. in Room 2051 Natural Science Bldg. The Qualifying Examination for the M. A. in English will be given today at 4-6 in Room 3223 A. H. for those who did not take it at the prescribed time and who have been given make-up privileges. N. E. Nelson School of Education Students Changes of Elections in the Summer Session: No course may be elected for credit after Saturday, July 15; no course may be dopped without penalty after Saturday, July 22. Any changes of elections of students in this school must be reported at the Registrar's Office, Room 4, Univer- sity Hall. Arrangements made with the instructors are not official changes. Concerts Carillon Recital: Professor Percival Price, University Carillonneur, will play a group of French songs at 12:00 noon today in commemoration of Bastille Day. Professor Price will present the usual Friday evening carillon recital at 7:00 p. m. Student Recital: Harriet Porter, soprano, will present a recital in par- tial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music, at 8:30 p. m., Sunday, July 16, in the First Methodist Church, State and Huron Streets. She will be accom- panied at the piano by Ruby Kuhl- man, and at the organ by Howard Chase. The public is cordially invited. and vigorous group, Dewey might then be considered the candidate for youth, and a young man himself. But the pattern is the same today. Vice-Presidential candidate Bricker, and the men who back Dewey and who, at least in part, control Repub- lican policy; the nationalist Col. Rob- ert McCormick; the industrialist Henry Ford; the religious Father Coughlin and Rev. Gerald L. K. Smith; the manufacturers Pew and DuPont; the Congressman: Earl Michener-69, Ham Fish-56, Clare Hoffman--69, Arthur Vandenberg- 60, Homer Ferguson-55, and the Grand Old Man Hoover-70. . . these are Old Men with Old Ideas, incapable of dealing with the "dy- namic, difficult future." There are men in the Demo- cratic Party who are chronologic- ally old, and some of the southern Democrats have been old donkey- phants for years. But Roosevelt is still a young man, as are Henry Wallace and Vito Marcantonio and Robert Wagner and Jimmy Byrnes and Claude Pepper. They see that the world is always changing, and they are wise enough to be willing to change with it. They have sound objectives, which include the pur- suit of happiness-for all groups, and they have a program to put them into action. The point now is for young people -of whatever number of birthdays- to decide to vote in the final elections in November, as they so completely failed to do in the primaries Tuesday. And to vote against the Man From Owosso who has been using old politi- cal tricks to put over tried and false ideas on the American people. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN BARNABY fi get the 0irate treasure in spite of thot Davy Jones! I'll show I'm off, m'boy, to charter a Mom the By Crockett Johnson Hello, little felow. Been out digging JOHNSON for Captain's Kidd's treasure? Ha-ha Pieces )f Eight! n nn