T MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1944 U I Of 4 r, F ffty- fth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Roosevelt 'Colorful Copy'' C 'oU , R R E N TMO IE MOVIES BBARRIL WATIERS DUMBARTON OAKS FORUM: 'Pro' Arguments Presented I 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 gislin Hanki Mantho Dave Loewenberg itavis Kennedy Ann Schutz Dick Strickland Martha Schmitt Kay MeFee . S . . . Managing Editor * . . Editorial Director . .. . . . . City Editor Associate Editor . . . Sports Editor . . . Associate Sports Editor * . .. Women's Editor . . Associate Women's Editor Busioess Stff . . Business 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- jubllc tion 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- tier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25.+ - EPRS9ENTED FOR NATIONAl. ADVLRT13NO Y National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEw YORK. N. Y. C10CAGO * OSTON . LOS MLUS . SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1944-45 NIGHT EDITOR: ANNETTE SHENKER. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-The town seems very empty today-and a little numb. Actually Frank- lin Roosevelt hasn't been here much this win- ter, and things are really no different. He went to Warm Springs after his re-election, then to Hyde Park for Christmas, then, after the inauguration, to Yalta, then back to Hyde Park and Warm Springs. I doubt if he had been in Washington a total of two months since election day. But people always felt that he was here, that he had his hands on things, and so the town seems empty. Even the guards around the public build- ings, the folks who sit on the park benches, the elevator operators, the taxi drivers, seem a little lost. More than any other man, Roose- velt was their president. They felt he was working for them. And he was. They know it will be hard for them to get another such friend. It is hard to write about Roosevelt now that he is dead. It was easy to write about him when he was living. He was vivid, colorful copy. And batting out one column a day, seven days a week for thirteen years, I have probably writ- ten more about him than any other man in America-some things he liked, some he didn't like, and some he criticized quite frankly in public. But not everything was written. And here are some of the unwritten things I remember about Franklin Roosevelt. FAR Emptied Arsenals ... HAVE ALWAYS THOUGHT that Roosevelt turned the tide of the European war by a daring move in the late spring of 1940, when France fell and it looked as if England were about to be invaded. " The British had lost most of their arms at Dunkerqub. Their arsenals were almost empty. Ours were none too full, but the President, in one bold stroke, emptied them. He knew that if he waited, Hitler would invade England. He knew what the consequences were to the United States if that happened. He knew also that if b went' to Congress, it would debate pro and con for weeks, and the isolationists might defeat him. So he took the law into his own hands. Probably he acted illegally. But he acted. And Englnd was saved. How Dewey Go' Had. .. HAVE ALWAYS THOUGHT that Roosevelt won his fourth term campaign by a very smart piece of strategy which only he would have devised. He got Tom Dewey mad. He deliberately set out to get him mad. Dewey had been coastin, along, making semi-New Deal speeches which were beginning to win a few votes away from Roosevelt. Your Part THE SORROW of the nation's loss is still in the hearts of the people. But the liment must end. Time will not wait for us. We must go on. but not as before. It is trite to be reminded that what we do now is vital, but the fact is no less true. Statesmen can be no greater than th people they represent. We must fill the need for great statesmen by making ourselves po- tent. The success of the Golden Gate Confer- ence and those which follow it is directly dependent on the knowledge and actions of the American people. We have only made the slightest of efforts-to reaj, to listen, to think. It took a December 7th to shock us into good intentions. Perhaps April 12th will provide the impetus for thinking and action. Few of us at Michigan will be invited to attend the San Francisco conference-nor will our names appear on any of the documents signed there. But that in no way decreases the neces- sity for our knowing intimately all that the united representatives decide. What those men do will directly concern our lives and the lives of our children for years to come. Popular opinion can be a stronger force now than ever before. If a greater know- ledge of what was determined at 1umbar- ton Oaks, what student groups similar to our Post-War Council and Town Mall are debating, and what editorialists and news- commentary magazines are considering will help us to develop our own opinions about our post-war world, then by all means they de- serve our active consideration. True, it is sometimes difficult for us now to take a perspective view of the events about us. It will be easier for us to. let the histo- rians of the 21st century figure out what hap- pens here now. But our .own actions now will in a large measure determine the sort of histo- ry those future writers can set down. --Milt Freudenheim ing Harry Hopkins and his son Jimmy, and asked them to submit their reasons why they thought he should run. One of those present made a particularly eloquent plea. When the confer- ence was over and the group, filed out, Jimmy rushed up and said: "What are you trying t do? You're trying to kill my father! No man can live through terms in that job. You can't do this to him. We won't let you do this to him!" "Jimmy," said the White House aide, "he's your father, but he belongs to the country as well. He belongs to the world." (copyright, 1945, Bell Syndicate, Inc.) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: New President By SAMUEL GRAFTON WE, IN AMERICA, are forced, under the rigidi- ties of our Constitutional system, to accept ,whomever happens to be vice-president as our new national leader. The system is stiff, but the results are not wholly bad. All parties, all factions, tend to moderate their approach to the new .man, knowing that they will have to live with him, in this case for three years and nine months. There is a kind of coming togeth- er. A period of adulation always sets in for a president who takes office by the accident of death; we search for good words; we say he is simple, he is thrifty, he is steady, he is hard- working. It does not matter what words we choose; for what we are really saying is that our father is a wise father,, our father is a kind father, he is like ourselves, there is something of all of us in him. The purpose of our adula- tion is to make ourselves safe. We are concerned about what kind of presi- dent Mr. Truman will make, but partly it is a question of what kind of president and how much of a president we make of him. Here a sound American instinct has already gone to work, one of the sweetest and fairest aspects of the American character; for we are busy ,making Mr. Truman President, in ur own minds. He will be Pesident, never fear. The question of whether he has it in him to be "a President" cannot be deduced from a minute examination of his modest past ree- ord; if lie will but allow us to make him a President, we will make him one. The political significance of this intense desire on our part to have a President, is that it gives Mr. Truman something like Mr. Roose- velt's famous first "hundred days." We cannot deny a new President the first two or three, or seven, things he wants, for if we block him at the start, we have no President. One of the loudest isolationist newspapers in America has just said editorially that it will not attempt to judge Mr.Truman for up to six months. This is a political fact of the first importance. The schedule falls in such a manner that we are compelled to make prime decisions during Mr. Truman's "hundred days" We must decide within that period on world organization, on Bretton Woods, on the recon- struction of Europe. We can defeat Mr. Tru- man on these issues only at the cost of having no President at all during the remaining three and one-half years of his term. It is not a mystical statement, then, to say that what kind of President we shall have de- pends in great measure upon ourselves. The problem is not Mr. Truman's alone, it is ours. If we misbehave nationally during the next hundred days, we shall be leaderless there- after. But, in this process of the making of a presi- dent, what the man himself does is also import- ant. We can make him only so much a President as he will allow us to. One of my friends, in the hour of grief said it was rather brusque of Mr. Truman to move into the White House offices, and start working, even before the fu- neral. No criticism could be wider of the mark. A President must be a president. Mr. Truman could have dodged several de- cisions during his first day. Instead of an- nouncing that the San Francisco conference would go on, as scheduled, he could have said that be wanted time to study the situation; and a sensible remark that would have seemed, too. He could have delayed addressing Con- gress for a week, and the troops for a fort- night; these decisions, too, would have ap- peared sanely conservative, and right. But it is not enough merely to be safely right on spot issues. One must think of the net effect; and the net effect of such decisions would have been tentative, faltering, uncertain. Mr. Truman showed an instinct for total at- mosphere, for understanding what things add up to on balance, and in sum. He could have spent a little time not being quite the Presi- dent, looking it over. But he is willing to try to be President, and we can ask no more of any man. The American people can, have a Presi- dent, if they want one, if they put fear out of their hearts, as Mr. Truman must have done, when, after taking oath, he " took his first few steps. (Copyright, 1945, New York Post Syndicate) At* the Michigan ADMITTEDLY attended the Mich- igan's "National Velvet" with grave doubts as to my entertainment prospects. "National Velvet" you see, is a "horse picture," and after suffer- ing through that recent bore, "Thun- derhead," I felt that it was asking too much of any man to sit through another hour and a half of rampant horseflesh. "National Velvet," however, turns out to be a highly enjoyable film, pro- vided you're in a light, relaxed mood. It does not concentrate on horses with quite the morbid determination that "Thunderhead" employed. There are soothing glimpses of ordinary humans to balance the presence of the equine actors, and they are pro- vided with intelligent, if not brilliant, dialogue, instead of the monosylla- bles of "Thunderhead." The story, adapted from Enid Bagnold's novel, concerns a young English girl who wins a horse in a lottery and rides her prize to vic- tory in a thrillingly photographed Grand National. Excellent direc- tion by Clarence Brown and adroit performances by Elizabeth Taylor, Anne Revere, and Donalgd Crisp have lifted these cliches above the routine and fashioned them into a thoroughly likeable film. At the State .." SWWEDISH character actor Oscar Homolka once summed up his first Hollywood venture, "Ebbtide," as "the only B picture ever made in technicolor." Mr. Homolka should now stand advised that his statement has been amended. There is noth- ing to distinguish the State's "Sudan" from the ordinary run of B pictures, except the element of technicolor. The film is another one in the Maria Montez series. It presents, once again the mythical kingdom, the beautiful queen, her energetic admirers, etc., etc. I sat through it mainly by telling myself that, after all, the movies are the great popular art of our time and that "Sudan" is merely a manifestation of that fact. Actually, I don't think I'd mind this sort of thing so much if they were just done with a sense of humor. They insist on taking themselves so seriously, however, that you begin to wonder if Hol- lywood has a rather low opinion of your mentality. While nothing the screen will ever do will descend to the depths of bore- dom reached by Miss Montez' last effort, "Gypsy Wildcat," "Sudan" is still not anything to write a fan let- ter about. The star is easy to look it, of course, but she doesn't do any- thing for a sarong that Dorothy La- hasn'tsalready done to better advantage. Hero Jon Hall is on hand, per usual, and wears his togas, or what-have-you, . with his usual poise and patience. Turhan Bey is present also, and the ladies in the audience, who should know whereof they speak, apparently found much to admire in him. P,1! ___ J-i---m (EDITORS aNOTrE; in order to give all students an oportunity to familiarize themselves with the Dumbarton Oaks provisions,- Tip Daily, with the coopera- tion of the Post-war Council, is pres- enting a series of articles on various phases of the plans to be discussed at the San Francisco conference opening April 25. An outline of the organiza- tion proposed was presented on Sunday's editorial page; a 'Con' discussion, an explanation of the connection between Dumbarton Oaks and Bretton Woods plans, and editorials by members of The Daily staff will apear later this week. Letters to the Editor on any phase of the discussion are welcome.) HAT THE Dumbarton Oaks Pro-' posals are perfect no one will maintain. Any set of compromises such as those contained in the pro- posals are bound to fall short of perfection. But if they have other virtues ,they should not be rejected because they fail to usher in the millennium and the Dumbarton Oaks. Proposals do have other virtues. It should be evident to a world at war that any plan which estab- lishes the means of settling inter- national differences peacefully and which provides for the use of force to prevent or stop aggression is better than nothing. The world tried to get along without such machinery for centuries with obvi- ous failure to keep international peace. Neutrality Acts, Embargos, Oxford Oaths, "Splendid Isolation" have been tried without success; defensive alliances of powerful al- lies have not kept their members from being attacked. The men who met at Dumbarton Oaks not only worked out proposals that are better than no machinery at all, but they also made improve- ments on the League of Nations. First of all, the requirement that all deci- sions made by the Assembly and the Council had to be unanimous (except for nations which were parties to a dispute) is not retained by the plan devised at Dumbarton Oaks. Under the new plan, a two-thirds or even a simple majority is sufficient for a decision in the Assembly; in the Security Council a majority vote is sufficient in most cases, but when deciding upon action to be taken against an aggressor, a unanimous vote of the Big Five is required. Though this arrangement concerning the method of voting in the Security Council is far from perfect, still the old, impractical unanimity rule has at least been discarded. A second improvement over the League of Nations is the provision for a Military Staff Committee and certain armed contingents. One of the most frequent changes made against the League was that it lacked "teeth," and these provis- ions in the Dumbarton Oaks plan are an attempt to put the teeth for enforcement into the world security organization. It will be a tremendous advantage to the or- ganization to have plans and for- ces ready and available for imme- diate action whenever necessary. Something new has also been ad- ded in the form of an Economic and Social Council. This body is to co- ordinate the many humanitarian ac- tivities of such groups as the Inter- national Labor Organization-which was practically separate from the League of Nations-UNRRA, the Food and Agricultural organization and others. These are some of the most im- portant improvements on the old League which have already been made, and no doubt further im- provements will be made at the San Francisco Conference. Within the next month or so we shall know what alterations are plan- ned in the mandate system and the Permanent Court of International Justice, and what declaration of world-wide human rights is pro- posed. In spite of this lack of perfection, it is imperative that the United States and the other United Nations adopt the Dumbarton Oaks proposals as they are polished up at San Fran- cisco. The document which emer- ges from the Golden Gate Conference will be the Charter upon which the United Nations can agree at the present .time, and the only such char- ter. The choice before us will not be between this document and a mor-e perfect plan, but between this docu- ment and nothing. After the First World War the United States reject- ed the League Covenant, and the al- ternative was not a better plan but isolation. We have learned all too painfully that this was an expensive alternative. For the United States to reject the United Nations Charter as out- lined in the:Dumbarton Oaks plan .would be disastrous. If we, the most important nation in. the world, without whom no peace plan can succeed, join the organization and work for its improvement from within whenever possible while we are cooperating to use its facilities to the utmost, we can have peace in our time. The alternative: a Third World War. -Elizabeth Hawley Post-War Council 'I q His Seattle sion speech tical withl not enough didates for the Gallup was not a So at the speech on labor, his old-age pen- at Los Angeles, were almost iden- FDR.'s own policies. There was basic difference between the can- people to get out and vote. And Poll told Roosevelt that if there heavy vote, he would lose. Teamster's dinner, he deliberately jl DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN set out to prod and poke Governor Dewey and stir him into a rage. Dewey fell for the trap and at Oklahoma City came back with a smash- ing speech attacking Roosevelt on everything. Republican leaders were delighted. So was the President. From that time on, labor began to get sore. They rallied to get out the vote. From that point on, Roosevelt knew he was elected. I have always thought that if FDR hadn't succeeded in getting Dewey mad, Dewey might be in the White House today. FDR Belonged to World... SIHORTLY BEFORE THE END of his second term, Roosevelt, still silent as to his third term plans, was under heavy pressure to run again. Jimmy Roosevelt was then a member of the White House staff. Roosevelt called in a group of advisers, includ- ON S ECON By Ray Dixoss f ET'S ALL HOPE that the new president is a Goodman and, a Wellman as well as a Tru- man. Everyone thought that crossing the 1lbe would be as hard as the seats in 1hill Audit- oriumn, but the Yanks didn't think so. It's beginning to look as though Hitler is beginning to see red and our troops are going to see Red. Meanwhile the Russians are promenading on the banks of the Danube and should know by now whether it's everything Strauss said it was. What a war! Events move as slowly as Uni- versity time month after month and then all of a sudden things move as fast as Louis Prima's version of "The White Cliffs of Dover." Question.: What game will be most popular among delegates at the San Francisco Confer- ence? Answer: Golden Gate Bridge. TUESDAY, APRIL 1.7, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 123 is 1Ad dress PRESIDENT TRUMAN, in his initial address delivered yesterday before a joint session of Congress, reaffirmed the aims to which our nation stands pledged. This is the speech America was awaiting. The new President voiced only the familiar ideals, accepted by all of us; yet somehow it was important to us that he should repeat them. We wanted to be told again, to be sure that nothing had changed. Discussing the post-war world, President Tru- man declared that it is "the responsibility of the great states to serve and not dominate the peoples of the world." He expressed the im- perative need for "a strong and lasting United Nations organization," appealing for support at San Francisco. He asserted that our war strategy will con- tinue "unchanged and unhampered," that we shall win unconditional surrender from the enemy. He pledged himself to support the ideals "so eloquently proclaimed by Franklin Roosevelt," ca;ling the nation to unite in their support. WE HAVE LOST a friend. I believe that I can speak honestly and representatively for the Negro stu- dents on the campus. We, probably more than any segment of the Am- erican population had come to love, trust and respect Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Our problems were never refused time and consideration by this great "common" man, time and considera- tion that was if at all possible fol- lowed by direct action. His smile in these considerations was never one of tolerance but rather one of genuine sincerity. He realized that the United States could be no stronger than the st-rength representbd by its con- stituent elements. For this reason, the legislation that grew 'out of his ideas and programs were directed toward a more inclusive policy- ofj integration that was oblivious to all narrow ideas of race, creed and color. This spirit was truly one of the most good for the most people. To be sure he had his faults as do all humans but becausekhis efforts were sincere, we could ask mno more. The Negro has lost a friend. His very memory will give us hope in our future in the United States andj courage in our fight for the "free- dom from shame." -Ralph M. Gibson President, Epsilon Chapter Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity 1.y Crockett Johnson Copyright, 1945, the Newspaper PM, Inc. You realize, don't you,we, i . ,.. e r rt ' Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all men- hers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 1021 Angeli Hall, by 2:30 p. m. of the day preceding publication (10:30 a. m. Sat- urdays). CENTRAL WAR TIME USED .IN THE DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN. Notices United States Civil Service an- nouncement for Substitute Clerk- Carrier, Post Office Service, for em- ployment in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Substitutes salary 65 cents an hour. Appointments are made from $1700 and up. For further information stop in at 201 Mason Hall. Bureau of Ap- pointments. City of Detroit Civil Service An- nouncements for the followiing exam- inations have been received in our office. Junior City Planner, $2415 to $2760, Intermediate City Planner, $3036 to $3450, Junior Publicist, $2700, Intermediate Publicist, $3450, Junior Social Economist, $2484 to $2760, and Intermediate Social Eco- nomist, $3164 to $3450. For further information stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bureau of Appointments. Lectures Uiversity Lecture: Miss Helen M. Martin of th'e Department of Conser- vation will speak on the life of "Doug- lass Houghton," on Thursday, April 19 at 3:15, in the Rackham Amphi- theater, under the auspices of the Department of Geology. The public is cordially invited. University Lecture: Dr. Pablo Mar- tinez Del Rio of the National Univer- sity of Mexico will lecture on the sub- ject, "Visions of Mexico" (illustrated) at 3:15 p. m. today in the Rackham amphitheatre under the auspices of the Department of History. The pub- lic is cordially invited. sity Symphony Orchestra, Gilbert Ross, Acting Conductor, will meet in Lane Hall at 3 p. m. today for regu- lar rehearsal. On Friday, April 20, the orchestra will meet in Hill Audit- orium at the usual time. Polonia, Club : There will be a, meet- ing today in the International Cen- ter at 6:30 p. m. Plans.for a forth- coming picnic will be discussed in ad- dition to the regular social func- tions. All students interested in Polish culture are welcome. Alpha Phi Omega will initiate its new pledges for the spring term to- nite at 7:30 at the Michigan Union. Those prospective pledges having re- ceived invitations as well as all reg- ular members are requested to be present on time in order that the ceremonies may begin promptly. The Christian Science Students' Organization is holding a meeting to- night at 7:15 in the chapel of the Michigan Lea'ue. All are welcome to attend. Coming Events Spanish Play: La Sociedad Hispa- nica will present its annual play, Zaragueta, on Tuesday and Wed- nesday, April 17 and 18, at 7:30 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Call 6300 for reservations. La Socie- dad lecture series tickets are good for 25 cents toward purchasing a play ticket by surrendering lecture ticket. The Research Clubs: The annual Memorial Meeting will be held in the Amphitheater of the Rackham Buil- ding on Wednesday evening, April 18, at 7 o'clock. Professor Here- ward T. Price will read a paper on "Henry Bradley" and Profes- sor Ernest F. Barker one on "Wilselm Conrad Bradley." The twenty-eighth State Cham- pionship Debate of the Michigan High School Forensic Association will be held at 2:00 p. :m., Friday, April 20, in the auditorium of the Kellogg Institute. The Eastern High School of Lansing will uphold the af- i Id BARNABY We haven't tried to get into your office an -lmarid I r'AfoI,1t (o hrwvAn'* uaI Ianrnd A iimafad I1 An eminent British physicist explained the