THE MICHIGAN DAILY t1~ t ,s 4 .t~"." -"' . ^ I v~ THE PENDULUM: !!!~ 1tjiia iJJ 7fff'.yjj>:js} uayk'e Fifty-Fourth Year >.. L t'' ., "ndenendeneefan TUESDAY, JULY 4, 1944 [egro By BERNARD ROSENBERG IT MAY have been "self-evident" in 1776 that "all men are created equal" and that "they are endowed by their Creator with certain in- alienable rights." The committee in charge of drafting the Declaration of Independence certainly thought so. And yet, patriots like Thomas Jefferson and George Washington continued to help maintain a black slaveocracy, despite the fact that Negroes had fought heroically in the War for Independence.I Let's not pat ourselves too heartily on the back this Fourth of July. The situation, if anything, with respect to colored America has worsened in the past century and a half. The American Negro is neither inside nor outside the social structure-and a marginal position is always the most painful. The Negro has been edu- cated to the point where he fully appreciates the liberties we refuse to grant him. Previous to the Emancipation Proclamation no Negro could know the blessings of freedom. Born in ignorance, he was fed on ignorance, and he died in ignorance. If we did not mean to alter the glaring contra- diction between our avowed princi- ples and our prejudiced acts the federal government would have been infinitely more humane had it told and demagogic speech, not a one of the Negro to remain a nominal as his colleagues displayed any anger, well as actual slave, although Nathan Robertson charac- Associate Justice of the Su- terized it as "one of the worst exhi- bitions of racial and religious intol- preme Court Frank Murphy said erance ever seen in Congress." All at Carnegie Hall, New York, a few the old bogeys were trotted out and weeks ago, "On every side we see a few new ones were added. Fuming sinister forces at work in this over the one year lease on life given country to array class against the President's Fair Employment class, religion against religion, and Practices Act, whose enforcement race against race." There are has been less than wishy-washy any- many minority groups in the Unit- how, Bilbo made the charge that the ed States-but the Negroes are the agency was "designed to bring racial largest and most conspicuous. So equality." This is almost as serious they are due to suffer the most. as accusing a man of virtue, honesty Those of us who were in Detroit or marital fidelity. Proceeding in sThsmerus wowe tisny etoi his own disjointed fashion, Bilbo last summer recognize this only too said he looked with horror upon the well. We heard the ruffian mutte r Negroes entering white residential inggs swell into maniacal shrieks for areas. "There is no way for these "Nigger blood." The mayor who people (the white people) to get vacillated then has done virtually relief except to take the law into nothing since to prevent a repetition their own hands" ran the text of his of that riot. Detroit is a good exam- incitement to mob rule in the Dis- ple of what race hatred breeds-one trict of Columbia. that can be duplicated and outdone There you have it: from the halls in New York, Boston and points Thore o the an west. of Congress to the shores of San Diego. An undercurrent of ill will V VEN in Congress fiery speeches warps the character and contorts the condoning discrimination are ac- face of America. Not often does it cepted as part of the day's routine. find such unashamed expression as When Senator Bilbo of Mississippi that given by Senators Bilbo, East- delivered his latest inflammatory land, George and McClellan. But it WITH THE AEF: One-Man Army Honored Haunted I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Ci s Critic-ismIs Inconsistent By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, July 3.-The isolationists have never seemed to me so corny as in their attacks on President Roosevelt for attacking General Franco. If the isolationists have any principles, they should have endorsed every word the Presi- dent said. They are forever yelping at him to "speak out" for America; and surely a demand by the American President to the Spanish dic- tator that he stop sending vital war material to Germany constitutes a speaking-out. By attacking the President on this issue, the isolationist press has made it just so much easier for Franco to continue to send wolfram which means tungsten, to Germany. If giving ideological protection to the shipment of ma- terials with which Hitler kills Americans constitutes looking out for the American na- tional interest (another theme on which these men do a great deal of talking) then the na- tional interest does not mean what we have all supposed it to mean. It turns out, in practice, that when the iso- lationist press counsels the President to speak out, it means it wants him to speak out against our friends. It is in anguish when it hears of extraordinary shipments of materials to our ally, Britain; but it is bored, at best, when it hears of shipments from Spain to Hitler, and, at worst, it protests against a protest against these shipments. One of these isolationist papers (whose name I shall not mention, because I have more circu- lation than it has) goes so far as to describe Mr. Roosevelt's effort to get Franco to stop supplying Hitler as solely a political move to win the Communist vote; and in one sentence the paper concerned has made a wonderful, fuzzy package of all the vast stock of political corn in its pos- session. SOMEWHERE on their course, the isolationists seem to have forgotten about the American national interest, of which they sometimes like to pose as the exclusive custodians, if not pro- prietors. For it happens that we have a genuine na- tional interest in keeping Franco down; if he rises, his Phalanx in Latin America rises with him; and our place and prestige in that region dwindle. It is as true now, as it was at the time of the Monroe Doctrine, that the only Latin America which can be safe for us is a Latin America cut off from a powerful and anti- republican Spain. The British do not take quite the same view of Latin America; their investments in Latin America are greater than ours, their relations with Latin American reaction are old, and solid; they can get along with a reactionary Latin America, in a sense in which a New World dem- ocracy, like our own, cannot. So it was completely in the American interest that Mr. Roosevelt "spoke.out"; non-ideological- ly, in the sense that,, whatever hurts Franco helps us south of the border. It is a jewel of a puzzle, then, as to why the isolationists, who make so much with the mouth about national interest, and who hate England, should forget about national interest on the Franco question, and should actually take the British position, as expressed in Mr. Churchill's unconvincing passion for the Spanish dictator. I have remarked before that our isolation- ists, or "nationalists," as they love to call themselves, are not really nationalists; their first loyalty is toward reaction, as we can clearly see when, in that blazing loyalty, they forget both the national interest, and even their precious anti-Britishism. We find them "speaking out"-for English policy; because it happens, in this case, to be reactionary policy, and therefore their policy. Willingness to subordinate true national interest to reaction is the great political disease of this century, and these domestic manifestations of it do not seem to me to put America first. (Copyright, 1944, New York Post Syndicate) Willkie Watchful, Reserved ... Willkie to Dewey: "Hearty congratulations to you on your nomination. You have one of the great opportunities of history." This much, no more. With appropriate tact, Mr. Willkie refrained from adding, "What are you going to do with it?" But never in politics, considering the whole context of events leading up to the nomination, were words more pregnant with watchfulness, more imbued with mental reservation. If Dewey wins the support of Willkie and other progressive Republicans who see life some- what as he does, he will have moved far nearer the White House than he now stands. - St. Louis Post Dispatch By KENNETH L. DIXON SOMEWHERE IN ITALY, July 3. 0P)-A lot of doughboys were being decorated in the little wooded glade where the division was resting. One by one they filed up before the gen- eral and stood rigidly at attention while he pinned awards on their olive drab shirts. Then, after an official account of their deeds and heroism had been read to the assembled soldiers over a loudspeaker system, they shook hands with their general and marched back to their place in the line, saluting the American and divi- sion flag as they passed by. "Those guys deserve what they're getting all right, but you ought to meet this guy Knappenberger if you want to write a story about some- body," said a voice beside me. I turned around and saw a soldier had come up to the tree against which I was leaning taking notes. "Who is this Knappenberger," I asked, "and what did he do?" The soldier told the story in low tones while the ceremony continued. "WE WERE attacking this kraut position in front of Cisterna back in February and they stopped us cold. So Knapp goes up on a little hill with his automatic rifle. One bunch rushes the hill and cuts loose with a gun. There Knapp is, all alonehbut we could seeshim. "So he takes cover, and a machine gun over to the right opens up on him with the bullets soclose that they singed his hair. He stuck to his automatic rifle, knocked out the ma- chine gun, killed two of .the guys on it and wounds another one just like that. "About that time he looks around and sees a couple of krauts just as they're heaving a grenade apiece at him. Another one is justbpulling the pin out. They miss him, but he gives the guy with the grenade in his hand a burst with the automatic rifle and it kills him. "All of a sudden a flag wagon opens up on him. A flag wagon's got more guns than a damned porcupine has quills. But he shoots back, knocks out one gunner and scares the rest of them. But now he's out of am- munition, see? "You'd think he'd get the hell out of there, but not Knapp. He crawls up about 15 yards, with machine guns and rifles picking at him all the way, takes some clips off the belt of a dead dogface and crawls back, loads up and starts shooting again. "Well, by now all the krauts in the area are hammering at him. Finally they send a whole platoon up to get him. Knapp holds his fire until they're about 50 yards away and then lets them have it. He kills and wounds so many of them that l they hightail it back. Finally, the I rest of our outfit gets up to where f he is and it turns out that he's been holding back between two and three companies." ',jHILE I had been hearing this story more soldiers went up to be decorated. All were back in the formation surrounding the general 1 when the voice over the loudspeaker blared: "Step forward and meet your commanding general, Private First Class Alton W. Knappenberger of Company C. The soldier jumped up with a mile- wide grin on his face. "Hey, that's Knapp. I gotta see this." He ran over closer to watch. Out of the lines walked Pfc. Alton W. Knappenberger of Springmount, Pa., a youngster just as short and stocky as his commanding general. Half self-consciously, half cockily, he stalked up and saluted. Then he spread his feet apart and stood there with his hands locked behind him while the loudspeaker fisted in offi- cial language the very §tory his pal had just finished. After this, there was some expla- nation of the official technicalities which prevented his being decorated at that ceremony, but Pfc. Knappen- berger probably didn't mind. He obviouslyuwouldn't have traded a helmet full of silver stars and RFC's for what the brigadier-general bark- ed-to the grinning delight of all the soldiers-as he stepped up and shook his hand: "A one-man army, that's what you e are," said the general to the private.It "A blasted one-man army !"it DAI LY OFFICIAL BULLTIN (Continued from Page 2)1 fessor Frederick Marriott, guest or- nn ,,.s + --- . a. - T ..- I . I BARNABY By Crockett Johnson English 296s, S. Ses., 2014 Angell Hall Geog. 142, S.Term, 209 Angell Hall Geog. 181, S.Term, 209 Angell Hall Ger. 85, S.Term, 203 University Hall Ger. 91, S.Term, 203 University Hall Russian 98 (1), S.Term, 406 Library Greek 178s, S.Ses. 2003 Angell Hall History 189s, S.Ses., 2029 Angell Hall Lib. Science 271, S.Ses., 407 Library Lib. Science 273, S.Ses., 407 Library Philosophy 190s, S.Ses., 406 Library Russian 32, S.Term, 1025 Angell Hall Russian 113s, S.Ses., 231 Angell Hall Russian 119s, S. Ses., 406 Library Russian 119s, S.Ses., 6 Angell Hall Russian 121s, S.Ses., 231 Angell Hall Sociology 251, S. Ses., 403 Library Political Science 273s. There will be an organization meeting July 5 at 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 215 Haven Hall. History 12, Section 2, will meet in Rm. 315, Haven Hall. History 154 will meet as announced for the first meeting. A time of meeting will be decided upon then to suit the schedules of the classes. English 153: Because the first meet- ing of this course falls on July 4, a national holiday, the class will meet instead on Wednesday, July 5, at 7:30 in Rm. 3217, Angell Hall. E. A. Walter Mathematics Seminar: There will be a meeting Thursday, July 6, at 4 o'clock in Rm. 3011 Angell Hall for all those who are interested in taking part in any seminars in mathematics or mathematcal statistics. The pirates wouldn't hide their treasure down near the cottage colony. Nor up by the amusement area... Too many nosey people. -.3 That leaves only two miles of beach for us to dig up... See, m'boy, how my scientific brain narrows the problem?... Two miles? Copyright 1944 Field Publications Still quite a chore, isn't it? And that recent storm has obliterated any eighteenth century footprints or other clues they may have left- But, say! If we had a MAP! ~~~6__ __ __ _ There's a big book of maps in our cottage, Mr. O'Malley, but- Excellent! Come, Bornaby! Let's not waste any time ... CeN Ct OCKE'f'!' JOHNtOf - w - - - - V r No idication of the treasure so My Fairy Godfather is | No. Not on this road map T he back of this old laundry I AL_ i I I