PAGE tO Svl'iTIY ? AR1, tti:f '; i: C,.4 £irc4jau Bally Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Open Letter t Josef Stalin 'The Pendulum 1 v:? ;- c, ", . f{ UII JA; -Ifoffm folloomp" on. A Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Evelyn Phillips Margaret Farmer Ray Dixon , Paul Sislin Hank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy Ann Schutz Dick Strickland Martha Schmitt Kay McFee . . . . Managing Editor . . Editori1 Director * . . . . .City Editor Associate Editor . Sports Editor . . Associate Sports Editor . . Women's Editor Associate Women's Editor Business Stafff AsBusiness Manager . . . Associate Business Mgr, * . . Associate Business Mgr. Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of re- publication of all 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 by car- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. 4EPRESENTEO FOR NATONL ADVRT31NO 9V Nation,, Advertising Service, Inc. College P4bisers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CI4cAGo - BOston LoS ANOELS - SAN FREANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1944-45 NIGHT EDITOR: RAY SHINN Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Open Meetings TiE PROPOSAL of the State Department to the San Francisco security conference that as much as possible of its proceedings be open to press, radio and motion pictures is an attempt to give to the people of the United Nations an opportunity to obtain what they have been fighting for. In the peace conference following the last war, secret negotiations deprived the people of the nations involved of any effective jurisdiction over the results. In place of a voice in the discus- sions of the Treaty of Versailles and the forma- tidn of the League of Nations, the various gov- ernments were given one alternative: yes or no. Mere denial or endorsement of a policy cannot be called participation in the formation of that policy. If we are really fighting for freedom and democracy, the nations attending the San Fran- cisco conference will be as willing as is the United States to publish as much- of the pro- ceedings as can possibly be made public. We do not ask for the publication of military secrets. Admittedly, not all the events of the conference can be set forth at this time. But the blind approval or refusal of a finished- pro- duct, without knowing the factors which produc- ed it, cannot be a fair or intelligent judgment of the work of this conference. This country's system iof government is founded on trust in the interest and compe- tence of the common people. Certainly we should not be called upon to back any deci- sion which has not accorded us that trust. Nor should the nations we have fought beside show themselves to be less democratic than we, if their aims are really as close to ours as they seemed to be in their hour of peril. -Marjorie Mills ASTIP Exams COLLEGE MEN who are eligible to take the Army Specialized Training Reserve Program qualifying test next Thursday have a rare op- portunity that few prospective draftees face. Men inducted into the Army nowadays, as any- one in the Army will tell you, are in almost all cases assigned to the infantry and hold little prospect of immediate advancement beyond the rank of private. For their specialized outfits, the engineers, the foreign language and area units, the Army wants intelligent men with some college, background. For these coveted outfits the Army, in coopera- tion with some of the nation's greatest univer- sities, provides this costly, specialized training. As the next ASTRP qualifying examination will probably not come till next year, men who are now in the eligible age group are likely to miss their only opportunity to enter the re- serve program if they fail to register promptly for the examination being held Thursday at the Rackham Lecture Jiall. It is an opportu- nity which no college man facing induction into the Ariy should pass up. -Arthur J. Kraft Manpower Bill THE SENATE in a 46 to 29 vote killed the Mannower Bill. Today. 6,000 Timken em- By DREW PEARSON JOSEF STALIN, The Kremlin, Moscow. Dear Marshal Stalin: I am taking the unusual step of writing you in this way because I am not sure that you realize what is happening in the United States. I am sure you must have reports from ,your embassy. But almost no embassy, sitting aloof in Washing- ton, can accurately gauge the American people. Perhaps your embassy has reported that in the last two years, much of the old Anti-Soviet suspicion has vanished and that the great bulk of the American people are anxious to cooperate with Russia for future peace as they have for winning the war. In the last two weeks, however, this friendly feeling has received a jolt. I don't know whether your embassy has reported it, but it is-true. It has received a jolt because of the general impression that the Yalta promises are not being kept and that the rights of little na- tions are being trampled on. To put it bluntly the American people are beginning to wonder whether Russia is really sincere about keep- ing the peace after the war, unless that peace is one which she dominates. Never having visited. the United States-and we hope you will some day--you probably have no conception of the overwhelming hope of the American people that the ideals of this war shall be achieved and that their sons will not have to go out and fight another war. This is not merely a hope, it is a passion. It is the American people's one great goal. The other day I attended a small dinner where a coal mine operator from West Virginia awarded prizes to the high school children or his city for the best essays on how to erect a permanent peace machinery. R. M. Davis, the man who gave the prizes, has even written a Constitution for the United Nations-and a prettyggood one at that, with one vote for every nation-and he has circulated thousands of copies throughout the country. Davis is a former street-car conductor and nine-mle driver. He is just one of millions of Americans who are thinking about this problem of permanent peace. He represents America. And the kids who received the prizes were sons of Hungarian immigrants, and daughters of German, Dutch, French parents. They represent America too-all thinking about.the same thing. The R. M. Davises and the school children of the country and the mothers of the sons who have fought in this war and the sons who are coming back from the war will never permit another letdown-unless they figure that the major powers of Europe are letting them down first. This time, it is not us but Russia which is suspicious and has its isolationists. This is only natural and partly our fault. For the State Department and the Chanceries of Europe kept Russia isolated for years. Naturally that kind of atmosphere breeds isolationists. But this time you can't afford to make the same mistake we did before. Since Yalta we have learned that the Soviet is concerned over the votes of small nations in the United Nations meetings; is worried that they may gang up on her; and believes that the 20 Pan-American Republics will all follow the United States as a bloc. But I remember the day after we landed Ma- rines in Nicaragua and sent troops to the border of Mexico when no Latin American nation would have voted with us. And if they now follow us as a bloc it is only because we have-reversed our previous high-handed policy and treated them as neighbors. As long as we are fair and honest and don't trample on their rights, the chances are they'll do right by us. And I for one have found this usually works with most things, from small nations and people to a team of horses plowing in the field. I've been to your country, Ntr. Stalin, and I like the people. I was up with the Red Army in Siberia when they eased out the last rem- nants of the Japs in 1922. And I have seen a lot of them in other places. They are good people and not hard to get along with. And if you ever come over here, you will find that our people are the same. They are very easy to get along with. Now there is only one thing the American people want out of this war. They want no ON SECOND THOUGHT... By Bay Dixon DR. RUTHVEN, in his excellent speech before the Lansing alumni Thursday night, said the University was in the "Valley of Decision." In effect he expressed the hope that it wasn't Death Valley. * * ~ He also said, "Of this we may be sure, the clock will not be turned back . . . " evidently forgetting that we go on central war time at midnight tomorrow and every clock on cam- pus will be set back an hour. German burgomasters are having their trou- bles. Seems they're losing their burgs. territory, no reparations, no pomp or fol-de- rol. They want only one thing-a fair deal for all nations, big and small, and the perma- nent peace that goes with it. The alternative is the biggest army the world has ever seen, the biggest navy, and rockets that will pulverize cities, 5,000 miles away. That would mean the eventual end of civiliza- tion. I am sure your country will not make the same mistake we did after the last war. You cannot let us down. Yours truly, -Drew Pearson (Copyright, 1945, Bell Syndicate, Inc.) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Feeding Europe By SAMUEL GRAFTON TIS PERHAPS HARD for us to realize that to the rest of the world we Americans look awfully fat. As a matter of fact, we're not thin. We are eating more than before the war began. We are packing away 3,367 calories per person per day, as compared with a prewar aver- age of'3,236. We alone, among all the belligerent peoples, have not lost weight in a lean time. That is a sensational fact, a most ostentatious fact; and it makes for whispers and comment, like a silk hat in the subway. There are times when it is not good public relations to appear too plump. The feast during a famine has always been an unpopular institu- tion; it gives rise to distressing thoughts among those whose noses are flattened against the glass. Every food ministry in the world knows, for ex- ample, that we Americans are eating more meat than before the war. We used to put away 136 pounds of meat per person per year; we are now downing 147 pounds. This does not mean that every American is eating more meat, but it means that more Americans are eating more meat. The man who used to ingest 200 pounds annually may be do- ing with 50 pounds less, but millions of others, who were once content with a bit of sowbelly now and then, today occasionally feel the un- familiar taste of beef upon their tongues. Our civilians, as a group, are eating almost three billions of pounds more meat than they used to eat. They can afford it at last. If our meat supply is still short, that is not be- cause foreigners are eating it up, but because Americans are competing with Americans for it. The war, which has destroyed so much, has improved the average American home diet, and, again, that is a fact which is sort of con- spicuous; it is like living in the only house with curtains,, on the whole street. The world is bound to think about these mat- ters, especially in those countries in which chil- dren say, "Whatis it?" when they see an orange. The feeling the hungry countries are building up about us may have a bering on how we get along with them after the war. We ought to make an effort, hard though that is, to wonder how we look to them. We are forever talking about how they look to us. How do we look to them? Thoughts which start in the belly are likely to be hard thoughts. The Greeks are receiving 900 calories a day; the French city dweller, 1900. When calories run that low, you don't have to count them to know that they are not enough. And Belgians, they say, are dress- ing as German soldiers, and letting themselves be "captured" by us, to qualify for the rations we give prisoners of war. The French send their children to pick through our military garbage. We're the richest man in town, in other words. That is how the world thinks of us. It is perhaps like the way you used to think of the town banker when you were a child. It is hard for us to think in that way about ourselves. No one ever thinks of hinself as having a portly gait: That belongs to the catagory of thoughts which occur only to others. Yet we should try to think it through. The President made it clear that he wants to help the hungry countries. He can't do it if we, the people, don't understand the need. It is time we helped. We gave the French reason to be- lieve we would get 2,000,000 tons of supplies to them last year. We sent 262,000 tons. Now we have set up a special Committee through which to limit and clear all promises of aid. Since we are not sending enough aid, this can only be considered a committee to ration prom- ises. We say shipping is the shortage, and yet we are cutting back our ship program. Why? And Londoners are talking in a new way of France's desperate urgency. They are talk- ing of Dunkerque, surprisingly enough; they say if shipping is the shortage, why not mobilize small boats, barges, anything, as was done at Dunkerque, and get the food over. For the people of France are in peril of their lives, as Britain's soldiers once were. Some splendid action, in the emergency mood, something to show that we can leap and run when we hear a cry, might make a change in the somber meditations neighbors have about each other, and in the future of the world. (Copyright, 1945, New York Post Syndicate) By BERNARD ROSENBERG NO CONVERSATION progresses very far nowadays without some- body expressing a wish for the ex- termination of the "Japs" or the Germans. Public sentiment on this= subject has soared to a high pitch of I emotional irresponsibility. Jimmy Young, INS correspondent. and Hearstling, back some years ago from a Tokyo prison, started his hul- labaloo campaign based on our popu- lar motto, "The only good Jap is a dead ,ne." The federal government, working with West Coast reaction, embarked on a disgraceful program of segregation euphemistically called relocation. Hysteria got the best of us virulently, against the Nisei be- cause theyare so conspicuous andI only a might less so against the Germans because we must satisfy our desire to hate. The very .same people who be- lieve the Germans are intrinsically bad supported Wendell Willkie by the millions-though his immedi- ate ancestry was German. They also have the utmost faith at pres- ent in General Eisenhower and Admiral Nimitz who as yet have not been accused of high treason- unlike that, Carolina gentleman whose candidacy for the presiden- tial office was announced over Radio Berlin last year. If a people4 were intrinsically bad, transplan- tation to another continent should make no difference in their make- - Such bogus* intellectuals as Lord Vansittart tell us that the Germans have always been marauding war- like people. This is, of course, dem- onstrably false, but they were just that at the time Tacitus wrote his Germania nearly two thousand years ago. Barbarians in the literal sensej 4 j J0 .34 c. .o 7~ Z( 6k0 of the word, these people still had many fine qualities. We find the German tribes, rough and coarse as they were, practicing virtues their more civilized neighbors studiedly ignored. Tacitus does not say so, but many prominent historians do maintain that the Germans were being plundered, taxed, and pro- voked into war. That they could not have been entirely to blame is indisputable. Rome would have ratted and fallen without the as- Mistance of invading hordes. Ed- ward Gibbon, the great chronicler of that event, wonders not why Rame fell, but how it was she could have stood so long. The Germans of Tacitus' day trea- ted strangers in the manner en- joined by the Bible. "In social feasts and hospitality no nation on earth was more hospitable and abounding. To refuse admitting under your roof any man whatsoever is held wicked and inhuman." German women were treated as equals-whereas they were debased in sophisticated Rome. Ac- customed to use of the javelin, the shield, and the sword they were not xauch concerned with feminine pomp and delicacy. Women shared in the fortitude and fighting of their men; promiscuity was exceedingly rare, chastity the rule. As much cannot be said of our civilization. "To the practice of usury," writes Tacitus, "and of increasing money by interest, they are strangers; and hence is found a better guard against it than if it were forbidden." Even today in America, war bonds will not sell unless an interest can be derived by the people who buy them. Tacitus is, on the other hand, full well aware of German weaknesses--but they are by no means peculiarly German weaknesses. "To wealth also, am- ongst them, great veneration is paid, and thence a single ruler governs them without all restriction of power, and exacting unlimited obedience." The German people, quite sim- ply, were never altogether good nor irremediably bad. There is in their character the same set of etiological factors that rules every people's existence. No sane person wants to pamper the Nazis. But, why in the name 'of-"sanity, ought German Nazis to suffer when Span- ish Nazis enjoy our good favor? Germany should be de-militarized forever-but so should the whole world for its pacification-and our own. Tacitus could see the many-sided- ness of the people he was describing. It will take at least this much wis- dom for us to deal with the nation whose complex character is a mys- tery only to those people who do not see in it a slightly distorted but es- sentially accurate reflection of them- selves. :li 1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SATURDAY, APRIL 7, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 115 Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 1021 Angell hail, by 3:30 p. m. of the day preceding publication (11:30 a. in. Sat- urdays). Notices Change of.Tine: Effective at mid- 'O THE EDITOR night Sunday, April 8, Central War Mr. Elkus' editorial on Military Time, one hour slower than Ann Training in the Thursday issue of Ai bor city time (Eastern War Time), The Daily creates the impression of will be officially adopted by the Uni- a high degree of idealism. Apparent-. versity, and at the same time all ly he would like to base our future officially fixed time schedules will be international policies on faith, good moved back one hour. Thus classes will, and general education. This which have been stated as beginning viewpoint strikes some of us as being at 8, 9, and 10 a.m., Eastern War somewhat unrealistic, if not naive. Time, will henceforth meet at 7, 8, In the first place, he claims that and 9 a.m., respectively, Central War "it would be to our disadvantage to Time, and corresponding changes have a large militia prepared to will be made for other class hours, swing the sword if the Dumbarton office hours, etc., throughout the Oaks proposals are carried into ef- day. Announcements in the Daily feet." We will certainly need to have Official Bulletin, Weekly Calendar, some military force behind us in and other official publications after} order to participate in any league April 8 will be made in terms of of nations. Without this, member- Central War Time. ship in a world organization would- __ be meaningless. It is not clear from Instructors are invited to attend the writer's statements whether or the special meeting of the University' not h° would sanction even a stand- Senate on Monday, April 9, at 4:15 ing force to back up DumbartonI p in. in the Rackham Lecture Hall Oaks.rButteventhis preparation for the purpose of receiving and dis- might be inadequate, for if the new. cussing the report of the Senate Ad- league fails as the old one did, there visory Committee, "The Economic would be nothing for pus to fall back Status of the Faculty". on in case of a threat to our security. It is true that a well-informed School of Education Faculty: The public is essential to national se- April meeting of the faculty will be curity, but-it still does not afford held on Monday, April 23, instead of physical protection against aggres- April 16 as originally scheduled. lion. W ithout an arm ed force be- Ai l 6 a r g n l y s h d l d i d i h u l c i e p e s o- - hind it the public is helpless, no matter how well it understands the Group Hospitalization and Surgi- rest of the world. cal Service: During the period from "A rising enemy will give years of April 5 through April 16, the Uni- advance notice before it would be versity Business Office (Rm. 9, Uni- able to attack." This is exactly what versity Hall) will accept new appli- Germany and Japan did from 1931 cations as well as requests for chan- to 1941.. Again and again we were' ges in contracts now in effect. These warned, and what did we do about new applications and changes will it? The public had access to enough become effective May 5, with the first facts to show them what was coming, payroll deduction on May 31. After t shreowrhem byhurownsexpmmg'April 16 no new applications or they were warneds by our oxpes changes can be accepted until Octo- as well; yet we sat 'back compla-be195 cently and assumed that we were , 1945_ somehow immune. As to the preventive steps that an To all male students of the Uni- informed public could easily take,l versity: There will be no refunds or just what preventive steps could the renewals on lockers purchased for American public take against Japa- the Fall Term 1944-1945 at Water- nese aggression in Manchuria and man Gymnasium or the Sports Buil- Chna? Public. opinion in the United ding after April 14, 1945. the announcements in our office. Bureau of Appointments. Academic Notices Faculty, College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: The civilian freshman five-week progress reports are due today in the Office of the Academic Counselors, 108 - Mason Hall. The Five-Weeks' Grades for Navy ard Marine Trainees (other than Engineers and Supply Corps) are due today. Department offices will be provided with special cards and the Office of the Academic Counselors, 108 M'ason Hall, will receive these reports and transmit them to the proper officers. Concerts 5th Annual Michigan Massed Or- chestra Concert, 190 players, Guy Fraser Harrison conducting, (Sunday April 8) Hill Auditorium, 4:15 p.m. Complimentary. Events Today There will be an important meet- ing of all the members of the Michi- gan Union Staff at l30 in the Stu- dent Offices. If you can't attend call any day this week between 3 and 5 p.m. Wesley Foundation: Box Social to- night at 5:30 o'clock in the Social Hall of the church. For reservation, call 6881 this afternoon. "Target for Today", a full-length film which records the bombing of Germany by the Eighth Bomber Command will be shown at Rackham Amphitheater this evening at 7:30, under the auspices of the Inter- Racial Association, the Post-War Council, the University of Michigan Bureau of Visual Education, and Michigan Youth for Democratic Ac- tion. There will be no admission charge and all those interested in seeing the film are invited to attend. Luncheon-Discussion: The Satur- day Luncheon-Discussion meeting at Lane Hall will review "The History of Bigotry in the United States" under the leadership of David Ellis. This will serve to put the books already studied into more distinct focus. Any- one interested will be welcomed this noon. Open House: Games, songs, and Folk dancing will beon theprogram for Lane Hall's second Open House with Buff Wright in charge. The first party was a great success, but a bigger and better time for everyone is planned for this evening. Coming Events Workshop on Anti-Semitism: The Workshop will meet in the Hillel Foundation lounge at 2:30 p.m. Mon- day, April 9. Professor Theodore Newcomb of the Sociology Dept. will speak and lead the discussion on "Some Psychological Aspects of Anti- Semitism." Anyone interested is in- vited to attend. Council Meeting: There will be a meeting of the Inter-Guild Council in Lane Hall at 3:30 Sunday after- noon. The Internat~,inal Cen teill i1 1 t I .1 { Jr States was all in favor of China, but1 still we could not stop our business- men from selling scrap iron and oil to Japan. The same thing happened to the British public in regard to Italian aggressin in Ethiopia. Let us not assume that in case of a threat of aggression we would still have many years to raise an army. This attitude is complacent, which in turn is dangerous. To have a well-informed popu- lace with at least a rudimentary knowledge of practical warfare is the best insurance against in- fringements on our national lib- erty. -Joan Shively Applicants for Combined Curric- ula: Application for admission to a combined curriculum must be made before April 20 of the final pre- professional year. Application forms may be obtained at 1220 Angell Hall and should be filed with the Secre- tary of the Committees at that office. Alpha Kappa Delta initiates of last December may call at the Sociology Office, 115 Haven Hall, for member- ship certificates this week. City of Detroit Civil Service: An- A -4i A I BARNABY r-;;L- m Why can't O'Malley Enterprises conduct its financial business here, m'boy? As I once told Elbert Hubbard, who by the wav was alwnv mistnlina nfor Rloh Mmm. Perhaps they would get underfoot ... But I must start my retrenchment program by nouncement for Marine Operating Engineer (Fire Boat), $3,381 to $3,- Iy Crockett Johnson 864, has been received in our office. For further information, stop in at - 201 Mason Hall, Bureau of Appoint- - .'t-N 7 ments. That beautiful mansion E University Bureau of Appointments down the road! And it's and Occupational Information 11 vIl L I