FIUE juui THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, AP rIL 11, 1945 WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Food Administrators Quizzed he Pendulum _ By DREW PEARSON ASHINGTON-Without much publicity the House food study committee headed by statesmanlike Representative Clinton P. And- erson of New Mexico has been holding closed door sessions with the men responsible fo food - i production. Last week the committee quizzed war food chief Marvin Jones, OA head Chester Bowles, PEA head Leo Crowley, UNRRA director Herbert -_ Lehman, OWM administrator Fred Vinson and _^ w representatives of the Army and Navy, this is the first time in months that all these key offi- nd managed by students of the University of cials have been together to try to work out a inder the authority of the Board in Control solution to the food problems. Publications. Some time this week two matters discussed Editorial Staff backstage are due to be announced. Perhaps llips . . . Managing Editor the more important is that Chester Bowles 'armer . . . . Editorial Director will raise the support price for live hogs, pity Editor now $12.50, to $13.00, with the ceiling re- tho . . . . Associate Editor maining at $14.75. Bowles will assure the enberg . . Associate Sports Editor nation's farmers that this .price structure nedy . . . . . Women's Editor will hold through September of 1946. . . . Associate Women's Editor Last year the War Food Administration cut Business Staff the support price for hogs to $12.50 and asked kland . Business Manager farmers to taper off their record 1943 hog crop mitt . . . Associate Business Mgr. of 120 million to about 103 million. This was a . Associate Business Mgr. serious blunder, and was vigorously opposed by Telephone 23-24-1 Economic Stabilizer Fred Vinson. Result was that the farmers, afraid they would be left out on a limb at the end of the war with millions ember of The Associated Press of unwanted hogs, cut down their run to only ciated Press is exclusively entitled to the use about 87 million. The OPA assurance should cation of all news dispatches credited to it or mean an increased hog crop this year and next. redited in this newspaper. All rights of re- In addition, War Food Administration will of all other matters herein also reserved. announce certain relaxations in slaughtering at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as annonetg Sma matterregulations to permit more authority for state tions during the regular school year by car- inspectors and less for federal inspectors. One >y mal, $5.25. quick result of this move should be the chan- RR~rENTD Fff ATMeL ASUC~r~rvuenvneling of more meat into interstate trade. "REENTE OR N ~ATIr)NL ADlVE~TI3fNG DY erd. tional Advertising Service, Inc. (odding Nazi Prisoners College Publishers Representative zO MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. EVERAL MEMBERS of the House Military KAO ' BOSTON . LOS ANGELES * SAN FRANCISCOMi Affairs Committee are up in arms over what Associated Collegiate Press, 1944-45 they feel was a whitewash given the Army on its treatment of German prisoners at Papago liT EDITOR: LOSIS IVERSON Park Camp, near Phoenix, Arizona. A report by commitee counsel Able Ralph Burton was mildly critical of the Army's handl- ls published in The Michigan Daily ing of prisoners. But several members refused ten by members of The Daily staff to sign because they felt it was essentially a resent the views of the writers only. "whitewash." The report was issued without signature, and no member of Congress participated in the in- ULSORY MILITARY TRAINING: Worl Plice Force referabe AN SHIVELY, in her recent letter to ditor, shows rather clearly that she organization, could be set up in part as the .port" some sort of post-war peace or- world police force, leaving more than enough (perhaps that embodied in Dum- to handle the internal civil strife of each ndi- ks) and at the same time she would vidual nation. ust those forces that will quickly de- And Miss Shively to the contrary, a well-in- kind of world co-operation. formed public, actively concerned in protecting kvely is fearfully afraid that her home world peace, is one of the best safeguards against veCy , is rfuglyafid tht er hed friction. Public opinion formed through free ort, Conn., is going to be wiped off access to knowledge of world conditions can be ni a few years by a lot of nasty Ger- an even stronger preventive force than the Japs (and maybe a few Englishmen threat of the military. ans too) unless right after this war Sam raises the biggest o1' army this By actually doing what we say we are go- ever seen. ing to do-that is, set up a permanent world peace organization, we move several steps s heard rumor that maybe Dumbar- toward the goal of all peoples-the desire for is a pretty good thing, but she's everyone to live together in harmony. We sure. She's just a little wary about shall more nearly achieve world co-operation; a lot of foreigners after this war' we shall come closer to the ideal of one world s going to keep on worrying about under one international governing body with eigners until she's sure that the one world army to support it (rather than ates has a real big army-big enough have a collection of self-concerned nations and any attack from Germany or with large armies to protect their own selfish r Britain or even Madagascar. Of interests). In this scheme for the future, the e is all for world co-operation-it's large trained militia-that Miss Shively wants so long as good old America has will be unnecessary, unwarranted and detri- hand.mental to the peace of the world. iss Shively and all those pepole like -Phil Elkus see is that that kind of set-up just -Ray Shinn co-operation. It's nothing but dog- _.- - d might makes right and every nation best to beat out its neighbor at being Airfield Nam e 'st and toughest. iss Shively should realize is that world Col. Robert R. McCormick is very happy that on does not mean every nation hav- he stopped his latest Chicago Tribune drive be- army to project itself. It means in fore it had a chance to get started. if in spite of all our efforts to make The Colonel had planned to campaign for manent peace we still do need some naming the new Chicago airfield in honor >licing force, then the world should of General Marshall, but changed his mind world army to protect the world- when he realized the airport would be called se Finland or Ethiopia starts acting Marshall Field. -Anita Franz investigation. One investigator was- sent to Arizona last month, but his report failed to touch upon some of the most serious charges made against the Army at the Papago Park camp. For some time Florida's Representative Bob Sikes has been planning a special study of German prisoners as a result of another Mili- tary Affairs Committee report four months ago which he felt was a whitewash. Last week when the new Papago report came to him, Sikes not only refused to sign, but insisted that the wording be changed to make it plain that committee members had not written the report or investigated the situation. Sikes will now demand a thorough investigation by members of Congress. (Copyright, 1945. Bell Syndicate. Inc.) I'D RATHER BE RIGhT: Food Situation By SAMUEL GRAFTON THE FOOD situation always seems to work out in favor of the enemy. When we cap- ture him, he becomes a prisoner of war, entitled to standard Army rations under the Geneva con- vention. When we reach our friends, on the other hand, such as the members of the under- ground F. F. I. in France, they become merely unemployed. Revolutionaries are rather frowned upon in peace time, and so the Geneva conven- tion makes no provision for them. Then, too, when we are among friends, we live off the country, to a certain extent; if not in terms of food, at least in terms of transport. In France our armies have used 40 per cent of all the locomotives, nearly 56 per cent of the freight ears, and 40 per cent of all railroad coal supplies. We are using 800,000 tons of French shipping to carry supplies all over the world, but not to carry food to France. That is the sound and solid war reason why liberation has meant less food for France. When we reach a French village it steps into the war, and suffers accordingly. But when we reach a German village, it steps out of the war, and its immediate local burdens are probably reduced. We bring war to France and peace to Germany; that is the logic of our enterprise, and nothing can be done to alter it until the war's end. It is another paradox of war that we have to look after things better in a German village than in a French town. For we are among ene- mies; if we don't look after the water sup- ply, the water may be poisoned; if we don't organize some sort of food supply system, the people may go underground and blow us up. In any setup under which each individual has to be watched from morning to night, he will, in the end, also be fed, somehow, for that is an essential part of the control apparatus. Those for whom we assume total responsibility always eat; the prisoners in our jails were among the few groups in America whose diet did not deteriorate during the depression years. The Germans gave the French more food than we do, for exactly the same reason; the French were enemies. But reasonable as these paradoxes may seem, they remain paradoxes, after all; and they are really reasonable only when examined after a good lunch. The fine points are inevitably lost unon a French mother, watching German prisoners of war, on the other side of a fence, being given oranges, chocolates and tinned meat. There are no words, in any language, with which to explain the situation to her. As if to show how wide this gulf of misun- derstanding can grow, a French writer recently blurted in a Paris newspaper: "If the French suffer dangerously from hunger, and have passed the whole winter without coal, this is because the American Army uses our trains and our coal." This will seem like contemptible nonsense to Am- ericans who would much rather be home using their own trains, than in France. All it proves; really, is how suffering makes people think strange thoughts, and speak a strange language. I am sure that when the average Frenchman hears that a French delegation is going to the San Francisco conference, the first image which flits across his mind is not that these men will help build the peace, but that theyj will have good meals in California. The French are turning inward, as those do who are hurt enough. And we turn in irritation from them, because they don't give us credit for what we do do; we forget that what we do isn't enough to en4 the hurt. One felt that inward-turning quality in General de Gaulle's sad little recent speech, in which he told the French they must rely on themselves; a thought which seems to have occurred to them only after their friends arrived We must make the first move, to break down the wall that is forming between us. But we are briskly talking about hoar best to rehabili- tate Germany, and we are also enjoying a solemn debate on what kind of price ceiling would best move our 80,000,000 cattle, highest number we've ever had on the ranges. To the French this must seem as blazingly silly as the quotation from a French paper, above, seems to us. The two nations no longer com- municate. They are mutually appalled, and that is not a good beginning for a happy life. (Copyright, 1945, New York Post Syndicate) By BERNARD ROSENBERG " OBY DICK" is an exposure and a dramatization of evil. This fact alone suffices to explain its long unpopularity. That it should have fared better in a century when disil- lusionment and pessimism pretty largely supplanted the imperturbably optimistic attitudes of earlier Amer- ica, is also understandable. The novel has sweep, richness of texture, and breadth of a sort that provide keen insights often enough to make the reader stop and re- flect every few moments. A nod- ding acquaintance with Greek phil- osophy is helpful in grasping the author's ideas. Melville was steep- ed in and has constant recourse to it. How "Moby Dick" got to be ranked as a youngsters' adventure story I cannot fathom. It takes a- supple adult mind to wend itself through the labyrinthine pages of this book. The first few chapters are comparatively light and eminently suitable for the high school anthology-but even they seem loaded with symbolism, viz., the appearance of Queequeg, as noble a savage as American letters has pro- duced, the New Bedford chapel, etc., that points to more somber evocation later. Gradually Ishmael, the narrator, has himself shipped on a whaler bound from Nantucket on a mission whose actual purpose is locked in the heart of its captain, Ahab. Only after setting out for sea does this Ahab make his maniacal appearance. He stands on a wooden leg, having been "dismasted" while grappling with the White Whale--Moby Dick -which animal comes to signify ev- erything malevolent in the universe. It is Ahab's single-minded aim to seek out the cursed leviathan for another encounter, for a final fight unto death of Man versus Evil. Evil triumphs, dragging Man down to hell and taking "a part of heav- en" along. Thus, a sort of diabol- ism and an unmistakable determin- ism are implicit in the philosophy of "Moby Dick." Any fair critical analysis of the chef d'oevure would require a great deal more space. I want here merely to quote a single passage that ex- culpates Melville from the charge # that he had lost faith in democracy. Perhaps such an implication can be detected elsewhere--especially in that poem where he refers to democracy as a harlot-but no anti-democrat could write these words: "This aug- ust dignity I treat of is not the dig- nity of kings and robes, but that abounding dignity which has no in- vestiture. Thou shalt see it shining in the arm that wields a pick or drives a spike; that democratic dig- nity which, on all hands, radiates without end from God Himself. The great God absolute! The center and circumference of all democracy! His omnipotence, our divine equality." This is roughly as anti-democratic as Walt Whitman or Carl Sandburg. Melville's real loss of faith was more theological than political. In this respect, he and Thomas Har- dy were parallel cases. They both moved from belief in God, to dis- belief in God, to belief in the Devil-or at least that the Devil had triumphed over God. Our cos- mos is ruled from Hell, said these thinkers--as Baudelaire and Rim- DAILY OFFICIAL WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 118 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 2:30 p. in. of the datv preceding publication (10:30 a. i. S;t- irdays). CENTRAL WAR TIME USED IN TilE DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN. Notices Student Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students this afternoon from 3 to 5 o'clock (CWT). To the Members of the University Council: There will be a meeting of the University Council on Monday, April 16, at 3:15 p.m., in the Rack- ham Amphitheater. Use of Lane Hall: Due to increased activities at Lane Hall, it has become necessary to reconsider all non- S.R.A. groups making use of our fa- cilities. The principles on which groups are to be judged are as fol- lows: 1. Student membership and opera- salary $166.75 to $189.75 per month, have been received in our office. For further information, stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bureau of Appoint- ments. U.S. Civil Service Announcements for the following have been received in our office. Budget Officer, Man- agemert Planning Officer, $5,228 to $7,128 a year, Budget Analyst, Ad- ministrative Analyst, $3,163 to $7,128 a year, Director of Information, $5,- 228 to $7,128 a year, Information Specialist, $3,163 to $7,128 a year ' Stenographers, Typists, and Clerks, $1,752 a year-. For further informa- tion and applications, stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bureau of Appoint- ments. AcademicNotices Civilian freshmen in the College of Literature, Science, and the'Arts may obtain their five-week progress re- ports in the Acadlemic Counselors' Office, 108 Mason Hall, according to the following schedule: Surnames beginning P through Z, Wednesday, April 11. Surnames beginning I through O, Thursday, April 12. Sur- names beginning A through H, Fri- day, April 13. io. tio. ReligiouscEvents Today 3. Approval from Dean Bursley's Botanical Seminar: Professor F. G. Office. I Gustafson will speak on the subject Groups wishing regular hospitality "Growth Hormone Studies" this af- may apply on a prepared form to the ternoon at 3 p.m. (CWT), Rm. 1139. House Committee constituted by the Anyone interested in hearing this Board of Governors and approved by talk is cordially invited to attend., the Student Council. To all male students of the Uni- versity: There will be no refunds or renewals on lockers purchased for the Fall Term 1944-1945 at Water- man Gymnasium or the Sports Buil- ding after April 14, 1945. 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. A meeting of the University of Michigan Section of the American Chemical Society will be held today at 3 p.m., CWT in Rm. 303 of the Chemistry Building. Dr. Maurice L. Moore of Frederick Stearns and Company will speak on "The Chem- istry of the Heterocyclic Derivatives of Sulfanilamide". The public is cordially invited. The University of Michigan Wo- men's Glee Club will hold a rehearsal today at 3 instead of the usual time. , ON SECOND 4 THOUGHT.*. By Ray Dixon WE UNDERSTAND that students who are tired of cramming for five-week exams are going to attempt one last review-the Army-Navy Revue to be given tonight in Hill Auditorium. Some people will attend at 7 p. m. campus time and some at 8 p. m. town time-but no one will two-time the boys overseas by buy- ing a ticket since all profits will go to the Army-Navy Relief Societies. Yankee troops push into Holland and now the Germans are in Dutch. Attention Pre-Medical Students: House Directors and House Presi- The Medical Aptitude Test of the dents are urged to note that their Association of American Medical combined meeting this evening in Colleges will be given here on Friday, the Grand Rapids Room of the Mich- April 13, in 25 Angell Hall, at 2 p.m. igan League will begin promptly at (C.W.T.) . Anyone planning to enter 6:30 (CWT) so that persons so desir- a medical school in the fall of 1945 ing may attend the Army-Navy or in the spring of 1946 should take show. Questions must be turned in the examination at this time. This by Tuesday if they aie to be an- is the only time the test will be given swered during the meeting. before next spring. Further informa- tion may be obtained in Rm. 4 Uni- versity Hall and tickets are still mer-Racil tAssociation busiess available at the Cashier's Office. meeting tonight at 6:30 in Union. State of Michigan Civil Service Announcements for Veterinary Lab- oratory Aide A, salary $150 to $170 per month, and Building and Grounds Maintenance Foreman Al, Election of Sect. -Treasurer. Plan- ning of activities. All members and friends are urged to attend. Please bring eligibility cards. Post-War Council will present Pro- fessor Newcomb who will speak on the topic of "Propaganda" this eve- ning in the Union at 6:30. The pub- lic is cordially invited to attend. 1 BARNABY By CrockheIuJohnson !l I . a I sp ,A1- _, __ ._Ia/