SUNDAT, _1MA CH -7, 1-IM TIn, I + A- b",-Al . -,PAGE TIBEt a rr.. a a a .v -a. .. . +.ar a i a " .!P L'1 i. L ..R -PGEmn STORMY PETREL OF UNITED NATIONS: Russia (EDITOR'S NOTE: here is another of the interesting articles on Soviet Russia by Henry C. Cassidy, Associated Press Chief of Bureau in Moscow.. Tuesday he writes on the Russian press and censorship.) By HENRY C. CASSIPY Associated Press Correspondent NEW YORK, March 6.- The Soviet Union, which is regarded abroad as the stormy petrel of the United Nations, still does its best to get along with its :allies. Three major issues have arisen, from time to time, to trouble Sov- iet-Allied relations: The second front question. The Rudolph Hess case. Soviet-Polish problems. Yet, basically, those relations re- main sound. Their cornerstone is the 20-year Soviet- British Treaty of May Seventh 26, 1942, providing al- in a liance during the war, Series mutual assistance af- ter the war and a guarantee that neither side will make a separate peace. Joseph Stalin, in his last utter- ance on foreign affairs Nov. 6, 1942, set the line from which the Soviet Union has not swerved: The Anglo - Soviet - American Coalition, as it is termed in Mos- cow, has the edge over the Italo- German Axis in man and material power. There is no reason to doubt that the Allied leaders are capable of prosecuting the war. It is wrong to believe that differ- ences in ideology will prevent orga- nization of joint action against the enemy.. "The only conclusion to be drawn," he said, "is that the Ariglo - Soviet - American Coalition had every chance of vanquising the Tries To Be Agreeable Red Cross Drives for X1.00)OGoal University Lacks Equipment For War Training Programs Italo-German Coalition, and that it certainly will do so." It is important to recall that this speech was made to the Moscow Soviet, before the United States' landing in North Africa. After that, Stalin, in a letter to the Asso- ciated Press, reiterated his confi- dence in American and British leaders, and welcomed the North African campaign as a prelude to a second front in Europe. That, for the Soviet Union, re- mains the situation to date. Since my return from Moscow, I have been asked many questions implying doubt in the sincerity of the Soviet Union's membership in the United Nations. I cannot an- swer them with the authority of a participant in Soviet affairs, but I can tell you the impression of one which has been an outsider, but interested observer of matters in Moscow throughout the war. Most of them arise from Stalin's order of the day to the Red Army Feb. 23, in which he asserted that, in the absence of a second front in Europe, the Soviet Union was bear- ing the entire burden of the war against Germany. Does that imean a new alarm in Allied relations? The answer is that this, to the Soviet people, is a statement of fact. It does.not necessarily imply a political crisis. Stalin made an identical declaration in his pre- vious order of the day Nov. 7, im- mediately after his favorable re- view of international affairs. In such an order, he never goes into details' of the world situation. Moscow observers have no doubt that the Soviet Union wants an- other land front in Europe as soon as possible. As spring draws on, they expect this anxiety to in- crease. But they have noted a Matheson Will Be Soloist at Annual Evensong' Choral Today Charles D. Matheson, SM Grad.,, from Albion, Michigan, will be guest tenor soloist at the ap~nual c o ra "Evensong" to be presented in the First Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m. today. Matheson will sing "iijus Ani- man" by Rossini and "Sanctus" by Gounod. Prof. Hardin Van Deursen, difrector of the School of Music, will direct the First Methodist Chou. Mrs. Mary McCall Stubbins is organist. The public is cordially invited to at- tend. The complete program is as fol- lows: Introit: "The Lord is in His Holy Temple," by Skeats; organ pre- lude, "Gothique Prelude," by DeLa- marter, Mrs. Stubbins; chorales: "Passion According to St. Matthew" by Bach, the choir; antiphon: "0 Thou Eternal One" by DeMarter, Rev. Dunlop and choir. and Brahms' 'Bse- hold, a Rose is Blooming" presented by Mrs. Stubbins at the organ. Anthem: Brahms' "How Lovely is Thy Dwelling Place," choir; Solo:I Rossini's "Cujus Animan" by ir.7 Matheson: anthem: "Prayer for 0 00 Troublous Times" by Voris, the choir; solo, with choir: "Sanctus" by Gou- nod, Mr. Matheson and choir; and marked reduction since last au- tumn, in the sharpness of such de- mands. The Hess case, also, has been dropped, at least temporarily, as a Soviet bone of contention. The Soviet government and press de- manded last autumn immediate trial of Adolf Hitler's aide who flew mysteriously to Great Britain. Since then, nothing has been heard in Moscow of this matter. Moscow observers there believe the Soviet motive, in bringing up the matter at that time, was to make plain the Soviet desire to participate equally in settlement of post - war problems, including treatment of war criminals, which was then being discussed by the United States and Great Britain. The Soviet position in the prob- lem of sovereignty over Polish ter- ritories seems clear from an exam- ination of the record: Moscow con- siders the parts of Poland incor- porated in the Soviet Union in 1939 as full-fledged members of the Soviet family. The same goes for the Baltic states. Stalin, in his first address of the war July 3, 1941, named the Belo- Russians, Lithuanians, Latvians and Esthonians among the "Peo- ples of the Soviet Union." Since then, there have been numerous similar references. About 113,000 Poles have been evacuated from the Soviet Union, but no negotiations for a further movement are underway, and there are indications that Moscow con- siders the question closed. A moot point in Moscow has been the Soviet attitude toward Finland. The Moscow press, which in pre- vious winters carried long accounts of misery and difficulties in Fin- land, has ceased its campaign this winter. Finland, sometimes, is conspicuously absent from lists of Germany's satellites. Observers believe the Soviet Un- ion would naturally welcome a Fin- nish withdrawal from the war. But whether the German powers in Finland would tolerate this is an- other matter. All the major German-occupied nations of Europe are represented '1' Men Gain Fame, Honor For Uncle Sam (Continued from Page 1) reported as dead when his plane went down at sea. Another time reported as missing, but came back uninjured. Now Lt. Roberts is instructing navi- gation and tactics at Pefisacola. Another hero of the Pacific, War- ren Andrews Beth, '40, lead the Octo- ber 16 raid on Jap vessels at Kiska in the Aleutians. Flying so low they had to pull up to clear the masts of the ships, the bombers reported prob- able destruction of two Jap destroy- ers. There was irony as well as steel, had the Nazis known it, in a January 18 bombing somewhere in Germany. Keith Orland Bartlett, enrolled in 1936-38, co-pilot on the first United States plane to drop a bomb on Germany, was the grandson of Ed- ward Smatts, a native of the Reich. From Iceland comes the story of a Michigan man who wants more ac- tion. Lt. Julius "Jake" Beers, '40, Beta Theta Pi, considers himself "probably the loneliest man of all ... I've been up here in Iceland for God knows how long," he complains. And means it! War Shortages Have Hit Campus But Haven't Hurt (Continued from Page 1) received less than a dozen packages. While there will be no new razors, either manual or electric, some cam- pus stores still have a few. Confections and chewing gum can still be purchased, but there is no longer a wide selection. Most stores make the limit one to a customer in order to make the supply meet the demand. According to a sign in the tap room of the Michigan Union 'Vanilla Ice Creatn Has Gone to War.' The Army and Navy get first choice on slide rules and drawing in- struments, so the engineers will just have to wait until the military orders are filled. The bookstores are con- fident that present orders will be delivered, but. they cannot promise any dates. There is no shortage at all of sporting goods.' A local shop reports that there is plenty of sports equip- ment; only the variety has been cut down. Of course tennis balls are mvarlon- .nf l a 4 tnaA p, xhh~ar hilt ux in Moscow or Kuibyshev, still the center for much of the diplomatic corps, and maintain close relations with the Soviet government. The Fighting . French have a particu- larly active mission. Any anxieties these nations may have over their future status tend to be quieted by repeated Soviet assurances of a policy of self-determination and non-interference in the affairs of other states after the war. The questions I have been asked most often are: "Will the Soviet Union make a separate peace with Germany? Will the Red Army go beyond its borders? The first is one you never hear in Moscow. Observers there see no reason to speculate on Soviet exe- cution of a given promise. The second is a military question which can be answered only when and if the Red Army reaches its borders. But it must be remem- bered that, if the Red Army was created only for defense, the offen- sive is sometimes the best defense. I have often drunk in Moscow meetings, and in Red Army mess- es, to the toast: "To our meeting in Berlin!" I Conitinued from, Page 1 Stating that each fraternity looks Watkins, assistant secretary of the University, is heading the drive among the University employes. One third of the $53,000 quota has already been raised throughout the county in the first week of the drive. $20,000 has been contributed so far with about $10,000 coming from Ann 'Arbor, the other half of this amount coming from Ypsilanti and the other sections of the county. This current War Fund campaign will run throughout the month of March. a chn's\ Own odI HVitc9% er ROBERT FRIERS 'Michigan's Own World Hitchhiker LY D IA MEN DE LSSOH N THEATER Tuesday, Mar. 9, 1943. 8:15 P.M. Tickets, 40c (tax included) I 4 " '' ' upon each other during rushing as "ruthless highwaymen," Dean Rea {Conin~uedi from Page 1 declared in his statement that "until The University women have set for 1 .a greater feeling of confidence in, themselves a goal of $2,500. On the each fraternity during the rushing first day of their drive which started season, no plan can be successful. last week they received approximate- The establishment of the Univers- ity War Board to coordinate campus ly $100. Over $90 of this amount was war activities, the creation of a War contributed by Stockwell Hall resi- dents. Geraldine Stadelman, 44, is the chairman of the committee for the! li women's campaign with headquarters in the Michigan League. Herbert G. TECHICLOR teVIE LECTdRE Information Center. and the steady depletion of the male student enroll- ment are part of the changes that have been wrought in the University since the beginning of the war. Reviewing the changed conditions of "employment for women students, Dean of Women, Alice C. Lloyd, pointed out in her statement that "a number of women students changed during the year from maintenance positions in home to part-time em- ployment in defense industries." CHARLES D. MATHESON concluding the program, organ post- lude: Gounod's "Marche Pontificale" by Mrs. Stubbins. . ' t R L Iv -~X 7J 1IQ for o ° I ecis~'Mew NOW' BUY IN DS HRfE! OFFICIAL ISSUING AGENCY! ISSUED HERE DAY OR NIGHT I