THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, APRIL 8, 1945 U WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Press Relations Cooling* 'RICHARD WRIGHT'S CATHARSIS': Prof. Williams Reviews 'Black Boy' By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-The honeymoon is over be- tween Mrs. Roosevelt and the girls of the press. After twelve long years, relations are cooling. Trouble came over a statement by the First Lady that she saw no reason why the United States should be expected to feed Europe-"I'm sure there are other nations that can and should help." This came just the day before the President told the American people we should tighten our belts and feed Europe. The statements seemed to disagree. The White House then said the girls had misquoted Mrs. Roosevelt. ' But the girls compared notes and agreed they had her quoted correctly. However, a stenographic transcript of her press conference was produced to show that the girls were wrong. Hair began to fly. The standing committee of women correspondents drafted a protest against "doctoring of transcript" by Miss Malvina Thompson, secretary to Mrs. Roosevelt. But the protest was held up by newswoman Mae Craig, who urged that hereafter an official transcript be prepared for the girls to depend upon be- fore their stories are filed. However, they can't agree on that. The women writing for a. m. papers approve, but the wire service gals, who have to file immedi- ately for afternoon papers, disapprove. Meantime, Mrs. Roosevelt, who finds that her words shake the world-sometimes the wrong way-is growing less affable, much more cautious in press conferences. She weighs every word. She no longer indulges in the gay little remarks that used to brighten her talk. In short, the honeymoon is over. But there is not a woman of the press-nor a man for that matter-who does not give full credit to Mrs. Roosevelt for making more of her job than any First Lady in history, and for letting the press have ring-side seats at her gold-fish bowl. Dollar-a-Year Men. . . URPLJSWAR PROPERTY Board Chairman Guy Gillette dropped a bombshell up on capitol hill the other day while testifying on disposal of government-owned war plants. , Gillette told the Senate small business com- mittee he had investigated some of the vast government-owned war plants, had found that some had been collusively designed and lo- cated in such a way that they could not be used after the war, and thus would not compete with other companies. "These plants have been installed . . . either by accident, necessity, or unfortunately in some cases, by design or were located and established so they would not enter the competitive field after the conclusion of hostilities. "I think the latter reason prevailed in many instances," said Louisiana's hard-hitting Senator Ellender. Senator Wherry of Nebraska then asked Gil- lette whether the contracting agency or the gov- ernment was responsible for this neat bit of finagling. "It is very evident," replied Gillette, "that certain vested interests were in a position to, and did, see that plants were so established, processes were so adopted-not in all by any means, but in some instances-where they could not and would not enter the competitive field." Senator Wherry wanted to know if that meant small experimental plants, and was told by both Ellender and Gillette that the manipulating was by big corporations.r Wherry protested mildly against Gillette's in- dictment of "big interests," pointing out that the companies maintained they had nothing to do with selecting or building the government- owned plants. "Well," cracked back Ellender, "the company may not have had anything to do with it, but WPB and other agencies of the government are ON SECOND THTHOUGHT... -y Ray Dixon NEWSPAPER editors all over the nation must really be mad at the Germans now. The war was bad enough when the compositors used to have to struggle with unspellable, unpro- nounceable Russian names of towns, but the all-time high was reached yesterday when a little town name of Ehrenbreitstein appeared in the news. * * * General Bradley's army captured the place and General Bradley raised an American flag over it, but we'll bet General Bradley never pro- nounced it. Spring is not all nectar and sweet stuff. It looks as though newspaper readers are going to have to go through the rigors of another Chaplin trial. Ain't that the Berry's. Proceeds from the Army-Navy Revue to be given Wednesday will be offered to the Army and Navy Relief Societies. Bet they take it. J chock-full of their representatives, and they are the ones that make the decisions." Wherry concurred. NOTE-Secretary of the Interior Ickes had a debate with Jesse Jones during the early part of the war, maintaining that Jones and the Aluminum Corporation of America were establishing plants in such a way that they would not compete with ALCOA's monopoly, Ickes especially objected to Jones's loan, whereby ALCOA established the giant ship- shaw project in Canada, now running full blast while some U. S. aluminum plants are closed down. Capital Chaff * * MOST COMPLETE picture coverage of any event in the history of the world is planned for the San Francisco conference. Government cameramen will make sound films of every min- ute of the sessions. (Copyright, 1945, Bell Syndicate. Inc.) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Unity Necessary By SAMUEL GRAFTON WE HAVE LEARNED much from our little fuss with Russia over the San Francisco con- ference. We have learned that when the unity of the three great powers is threatened, hope sinks out of the world, the lights go down, and the salt loses his savour. Once it was established that there was a quarrel between America and Britain on the one side, and Russia on the other, over the seating of the Lublin government, and perhaps over voting arrangements in the As- sembly, the Conference itself lost some of its attractiveness. We suffered a kind of interna- tional sinking feeling. There was an impulse to ask for postponement of the meeting. The glory went out of it. The day before, the Conference had meant everything, and the day after, nothing; it had been our hope, but it became, for a moment, an embarrassment. It could not be set forth in clearer style that the hope of world peace rests on the unity of the three great powers; when that goes, everything goes, and no legal structure, however inspired, can be a substitute for it. One of the phantom hopes raised by San Francisco was that we could set up a legal- apparatus so ingenious that it could be em- ployed to use force against one of the major powers; but it is now quite clear that that would not be organization of the world for peace, it would be organization of the world for war. The unanimous-vote rule on the Council now shines with a new meaning; it is a legal reflection of the practical need for unanimity among the great powers. Without that, the Conference becomes a different kind of Conference, the world organization a differ- ent kind of organization; the spirit goes out of it, and its wine becomes water. We are fated to agree; and he who sets up the perspective of disagreement knocks down the perspective of peace. But we have learned also last week that the great powers do agree. Sometimes only a quarrel can prove that, and, this quarrel has proved it. The three powers have had differences, and the differences have not led to a break, and that is unity. Unity is not the non-existence of differences; it is a method for handling differences. We do not like multiple-voting in the As- sembly, but we have not pushed our position to the point of a break. Russia wants the Lublin government seated, but she has not pushed her position to the point of a break. It looked for a moment as if Britain wanted the Conference postponed, but she has not in- sisted on that. Some of us talk about the manner "in which the three powers consort and agree as being "power politics;" but it is the opposite; their need for each other puts a limitation on politics, and is the greatest disci- plinary force now existing in the world. When we understand, deep down, that that unity is not open to question, when we stop throwing doubt on it because of the emergence of minor issues, when it becomes such an over- riding reality in our lives that we accept it, like the weather, then we shall be able to say that the outlines of the postwar world have begun to emerge. We learned one thing more last week, in some ways the hardest of all to accept, and that is that Russia does not consider herself on proba- tion. She has not come into the house as a peni- tent, content to sit on a low stool and be quiet. She takes any chair in the place, smokes cigar- ettes, feels entitled to a full serving at. table, and, in general, carries on as if she lives in the house. She is not abashed, she says what is on her mind, as one does among equals; and someday soon we shall have to stop remind- ing her that she is Russian, and special, every time she makes a crack. She is going to behave as any nation behaves, without shy- ness. We shall have every right to continue to question her proposals, but soon or late we shall have to drop the business of going into a fainting flurry because of the fact that she has made one. (Copyright, 1945, New York Post Syndicate) BLACK BOY by Richard Wright. New York, Harper and Brothers, 1945. $2.5. MANY will read Black Boy as they read Native Son, as a sensational presentation of the sordid aspects of racial hatred and violence. And they will find much to whet their jaded and depraved appetites. The record of brutal beatings from first chap- ter to last will give readers and re- viewers alike the chance to mouth familiar cliche "overwrought," "exaggerated," "icendiary," "more harm than good." They will be dis- appointed to find no sex in the story. Such a reading will miss the point of the book. Nor is this just the autobiogra- phy of another novelist seeking to exploit his personal experiences while the market value of those experiences is still high. True, it is the story of Richard Wright's early life, turbid yet tragically sim- ple. But it is also a terrible analy- sis of the Southern code of hu- man relationships as practiced in Mississippi and Tennessee. The non-Southern reader will find, in all its sordid details, the real basis of discrimination. That reader has long known about poll tax, lynch- ings and Jim Crow, and he has been properly disturbed both by the practice and the cause. But he has 4 Dominie Says "ANY EDUCATION which is to have a realistic relationship to peace must free men from hatred and destruction. It must free men for life, and offer men freedom from the domination of their own aggressions," wrote a New York Board of Educa- tion executive recently. Are we not in the situation of hav- ing by war over-stimulated the ag- gression of our ablest young men, used them to halt tyranny afar, to defend the civilization we admire and meet the hard facts of war only to get them ready to return and unduly dominate civil affairs? "No," say the men themselves, "training is dis- cipline, the military spells order and the field has sharpened our taste' for home and peace." The process of discovering which is true will soon be upon us. In the country's relation to its returning servicemen, the Church and all reli- gious groups have an opportunity more challenging than any former local situation thus far presented. What then has religion to offer for the reception, education and future citieenship of veterans? First, the Church can mobilize on the basis of whole families as can no other disci- pline. Second, the Church, due to its being the traditional custodian of the ideal, should be able to lay claim to these home comers at the level of their nobler impulses, not their baser ones. Third, Churches, operated on a community, not a sectarian pat- tern, should be the ideal platform from which thoughtful servicemen may expound the patterns of life they fought to preserve, or create. It is heartening to hear of a church canvas for $25,000,000 by one denom- ination for post war reconstruction. It is inspiring to know that Jews. Methodists, Presbyterians and the rest have such programs. But when we ask about the co-operative plans for community expenditure of this reconstruction money now being sub- scribed, we hear faint voices admit- ting that Methodists will receive most of the Methodist money and Luther- ans only small benefit from Lutheran giving. That is not reassuring. Would it not seem to be the function of University men and women within the great religious commissions to ask significant questions, to plan pro- grams for the veterans on a generous community basis, to work out local re- forms such as the Conference of Catholics and Jews will endorse and to call upon religious bodies which claim to be altruistic and humanitar- ian to practice such limiting of sov- ereignty within ecclesiastic precincts as we all exhort the politicians to exhibit in international affairs? Why should not all of the religious units in a city like greater Detroit volunteer to reconstruct the city of Cologne, restoring its cathedral, chur- ches, hospitals, galleries and schools and do it as an Inter-Faith project? Such an undertaking, if endorsed by the U.N.R.R.A. but led by various churchmen, both clergy and lay, might enlist as many pagans as Christians and, in the end, might convince the unfortunate children of Cologne that after all God does have a few who actually worship Him. Aggression cannot be blocked but can be converted into service. --Edward W. Blakeman Counselor in Religious Education never had the cause so graphically clarified as this book clarifies it. The South recognizes only a part of a black man, accepts only a fragment of his personality and "all the rest-the best and deepest things of heart and mind-are toss- ed away in blind ignorance and hate." There is the story of the woman who asked the thirteen-year-old boy applying for a job, "Do you steal?" When he answered with a laugh she asked, "What's so damm funny about that?" "Lady, if I was a thief, I'd never tell anybody." "What do you mean?" she blaz- ed. Wright had violated the first law of the white man's world: Negroes who think are "sassy." He had made her aware of the fact that she had asked a ridiculous question and Ne- groes must not make their superiors appear silly. There is the story of the brickyard boss who had a dog. The dog bit young Wright. He asked the boss for medical aid and was turned away with the blunt refusal: "A dog bite can't hurt a nigger." Then there was the time he broke the jug of orange syrup. "Words came instead of blows and I relaxed. "Yes sir," I said placatingly. "It was my fault." My' tone whip- ped him to a frenzy. "You goddam right it was! he yelled louder. "I'm new at this," I mumbled, realizing that I had said the wrong thing, though I had been striving to say the right. "We're only trying you out," he warned me. "Yes, sir. I understand," I said. He stared at me, speechless with rage. I had said just one short sentence too many. My words were innocent enough, but they indicat- ed, it seemed, a consciousness on my part that infuriated white. people. The story of Shorty, the elevator operator, will become a classic. The brutal tale of how the white fellow workers engineered a fight between Wright and another Negro by lying to both of them illustrates the depth to which man can descend in bringing about the debasement of human per- sonality. Caldwell's amputation of dog's tails in "Kneel to the Rising Sun" stands high by comparison. Black Boy does more than describe the border land of conduct where white meets black. It portrays the social emptiness of- life within the patterns of Negro culture. The con- flict between middle class and proli- tarian Negroes is no less horrifying than that of black against white. The inability of Wright's own family to recognize and evaluate his aspira- tions is not an uncommon situation even in the best regulated white homes, but it becomes the more poig- nant when set against the background of other conflicts. Wright left the South not "to forget the South, but so that some- day I might understand it, might come to know what its rigors had done to me, to its children. I fled so that the numbness of my de- fensive living might thaw out and let me feel the pain-years later and far away-of what living in the South had meant." Those who read Uncle Tom's Children knew that Wright would someday have to write Black Boy. A sensitive, creative artist must purge himself of his personal bitterness before he can go on to the realization of his potential power. Black Boy is Wright's catharsis. -Mentor L. Williams DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 6 - SUNDAY, APRIL 8, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 116 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 Hall, by 3:30 p. m. of the day preceding publication (11:30 a. m. Sat- urdays). Notices Change of Time: Effective at mid- night Sunday, April 8, Central War Time, one hour slower than Ann Arbor city time (Eastern War Time), will be officially adopted by the Uni- versity, and at the same time all officially fixed time schedules will be moved back one hour. Thus classes which have been stated as beginning at 8, 9, and 10 a.m., Eastern War Time, will henceforth meet at 7, 8, and 9 a.m., respectively, Central War Time, and corresponding changes will be made for other class hours, office hours, etc., throughout the day. Announcements in the Daily Official Bulletin, Weekly Calendar, and other official publications after April 8 will be made in terms of Central War Time. Instructors are invited to attend the special meeting of the University Senate on Monday, April 9, at 3:15 p.m. (CWT) in the Rackham Lecture Hall for the purpose of receiving and discussing the report of the Senate Advisory Committee, "The Economic Status of the Faculty." Student Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students Wednesday afternoon, April 11, from 3 to 5 o'clock (C.W.T.). Group Hospitalization and Surgi- cal Service: During the period from April 5 through April 16, the Uni- versity Business Office (Rm. 9, Uni- versity Hall) will accept new appli- cations as well as requests for chan- ges in contracts now in effect. These new applications and changes will become effective May 5, with the first payroll deduction on May 31. After April 16 no new applications or changes can be accepted until Octo- ber, 1945. Detroit Armenian Women's Club Award: The Detroit Armenian Wo- men's Club offers a scholarship award of $100 for 1945-46, open for compe- tition by undergraduate students of Armenian parentage residing in the Detroit Metropolitan district who have had at least one year of college work and who have demonstrated both scholastic ability and excellence of character. The award will be made by the scholarship committee of the club May 15, 1945. Applica- tions will be received and forwarded by F. E. Robbins. Assistant to the President, 1021 Angell Hall. Applicants for Combined Curric- ula: Application for admission to a Scouts Organization is going to be in our office Monday, April 9, to inter- view girls interested in Organiza- tional. Work. If interested, call Bur- eau of Appointments, University Ext. 371, for appointment. For all students who have taken application blanks for the Junior Professional Assistant, we now have the announcements in our office. Bureau of Appointments. Tickets for "Uncle Harry," mystery melodrama by Thomas Job, will be placed on sale tomorrow morning at the box office, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. "Uncle Harry" will be pre- sented by Play Production of the Department of Speech for four per- formances only, Wednesday through Saturday nights at 7:30 p.m. (C.W. T.). Theatre box office hours will be: Monday and Tuesday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Wednesday through Saturday 9 a.m.- 7:30 p.m. (C.W.T.) Lectures University Lecture: Professor Ar- cher Taylor, Professorof German, University of California, will speak on "Renaissance Scholars and Their Books," Tuesday, April 10, at 3:15 p.m. (C.W.T.) in the Amphitheater of the Rackham Building. The lec- ture is under the auspices of the Department of German. The public is cordially invited. Academic Notices Students, College of Literature, Science & the Arts: Applications for scholarships should be made before April 14. Application forms may be obtained at 1220 Angell Hall and should be filed at that office. Concerts Carillon Recital: Percival Price, Universitk\ Carillonneur, will play the first in a series of spring recitals at 3:15 E.W.T. (2:15 C.W.T.) this after- noon on the Baird Memorial Carillon. His program, including compositions by Handel, Sir Hamilton Harty, and Mozart, as well as a group of Amer- ican airs, will be repeated at 7:15 E.W.T. (6:15 C.W.T.) Thursday eve- ning, April 12. 5th Annual Michigan Massed Or- chestra Concert, 190 players, Guy Fraser Harrison conducting, Hill Au- ditorium, 4:15 p.m. Complimentary. Events Today Council Meeting: There will be a meeting of the Inter-Guild Council in Lane Hall at 3:30 this afternoon. The Congregational-Disciples Guild, will meet at 5:00 p.m. at the First Congregational Church. Following the supper Mrs. H. L. Pickerill will discuss BEFORE YOU GET EN- GAGED. This is the first of the Guild Series on LOVE AND MAR- 'T- s.-"a.] Wnmdi wll la th BARNABY O'Malley's still expanding. He's moving into utilities and rails .. . At. L , , . , ,. ,. Stocks closed high, with those six new O'Malley corporations His program of sound, privately] initiated expansion can mean By Crockett Johnson 1'll admit, Barnaby,1, nt times I nourish I 5