?AG O i1E MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1945 Fifty-Fifth Year ONE OF ERNIE PYLE'S BEST: Yanks Mourn Dead Captain 7ie 7ieadmti/I DUMBARTON OAKS FORUM: Bretton Woods .;. ,fi. Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editoriql Staff Evelyn Phillips Margaret Farmer Ray Dixon . Paul Sislin Hlank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy Ann Schutz Dick Strickland Martha Schmitt Kay MeFee . . .Managing Editor . . . Editorial Director . . . . City Editor Associate Editor * . . Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor . . .Women's Editor . . Associate Women's Editor Business Staff . . . 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- publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as econd-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- dier, $4.50, by mail, $525, AEPRESeNTO POFR NATION L ADV RTIMNG Y National Advertising Service, hic. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YO#tK, N. Y. cHiio *"BostonII " Los ANGELES - SA FRANcIsco Member, Associated Collegiate ,Press, 1944-45 NIGHT EDITOR: CHARLOTTE BOBRECKER Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Erxnie Pyle AMERICA lost a "brave man" when a Jap sniper's machine gun got Ernie Pyle on Ok- inawa. This "little man in the soiled and creased brown uniform" who wrote the human story of 'the war so well will be missed by both the GI's at the front and the people back home. He was no mere reporter; he was one of the men at the front and was able to bring the soldier's war to all the world. His daily col- umn was a human history of the war from the assault on Sicily and Italy through the in- vasion days of Britain and France and on into the Pacific, to Okinawa. Perhaps it was because he hated war so much, and because he was admittedly afraid, that the fighting men and brass hats alike loved him. The hone front loved him because, as Edward Streeter of the New York Times once said, "He writes only of what he sees, and he sees the things that those at home want most to know: What their boys eat, where they sleep, what they talk about, and how they react to the fa- tigue, dirt and danger of a fighting front." Ernie Pyle will long be remembered as the human historian of this war. His great desire was, as he said in Brave Men, that "All of us together will have to learn how to reassemble our broken world into a pattern so firm and so fair that another great war cannot soon be possible." -Jean Mac Main Art Cin ema THAT A SMALL GROUP can do the entire campus valuable service is well demonstrated in the recent revival of the Art Cinema League which had closed in 1942 because of difficulties caused by the war. The League, composed of faculty and student members, brings outstanding foreign and domestic films to the campus and promotes interest in good cinema art. .- Prof. Hereward T. Price expressed the most important reason for the League's existence when he said: "It is now clear that the art of the film is one of the great arts and it is important that students become acquainted with the best that is being done." A second service is performed by the League in bringing foreign language films to the cam- pus, as such films are invaluable to students in the language departments in acquainting them with the. idiomatic forms and giving them an opportunity to make active use of their know- ledge while still studying. -Leona Landy San Francisco PREMIER JOSEF STALIN'S appointment of Molotov as Russia's repiesentative to the San Francisco Conference indicates Stalin's opinion toward the conference and our country. Ostensibly, it is a respectful concession to Pr-sident Roosevelt's wishes and a gesture of (EDITOW' NOTE: This column first apeared January 11, 1944. It, is reprinted by courtesy of the Ann Arbor News.) By ERNIE PYLE AT THE FRONT LINES in Italy-In this war I have known a lot of officers who were loved and respected by the soldiers under them. But never have I crossed the trail of any man as beloved as Capt. Henry T. Waskow, of Belton, Texas. Capt. Waskow was a company commander in the 36th division. He had been in this com- pany since long before he left the States. He was very young, only in his middle 20's, but he carried in him a sincerity and gentleness that made people want to be guided by him. "After my own father, he comes next," a sergeant told me.. "Ile always looked after us," a soldier said. "He'd go to bat for us every time." "I've never known him to do anything un- kind," another one said. Bodies Brought Down .-. WAS AT THE FOOT of a mule trail the night they brought Capt. Waskow down. The moon was nearly full, and you could see far up the trail, and even part way across the valley. Soldiers made shadows as they walked. Dead men had been coming down the moun- tain all evening, lashed onto the backs of mules. They came lying belly down across the wooden pack-saddle, their heads hanging down on the left side of the mule, their stiffened legs sticking awkwardly from the other side, bob- bing up and down as the mule walked. The Italian mule skinners were afraid to walk teside deat men, so Americans had to lead the mules down that night. Even the Americans were reluctant to unlash and lift off the bodies, when they got to the bottom, so an officer had to do it himself and ask others to help. The first one came early in the morning. They slid him down from the mule, and stood him on his feet for a moment. In the half light he might have been merely a sick man standing there leaning on the other. Then they laid him on the ground in the shadow of the stone wall alongside the road. I don't know who that first one was. You feel small in the presence of dead men, and you don't ask silly questions. We left him there beside the road, that first one, and we all went back into the cowshed and sat on watercans or lay on the straw, wait- ing for the next batch of mules. Somebody said the dead soldier had been dead for four days, and then nobody said anything more about him. We talked for an hour or more; the dead man lay all alone, outside in the shadow of the wall. More Bodies Outside ... r[HEN A SOLDIER came into the cowshed and said there were some more bodies outside. We went out into the road. Four mules stood there in the moonlight, in the road where the trail came down off the mountain. The soldiers who led them stood there waiting. "This one is Capt. Waskow," one of them said quickly. Two men unlashed his body from the mule and lifted off and laid it in the shadow beside the stone wall. Other men took the other bodies off. Finally, there were five lying end to end in a long row. You don't cover up dead men in the combat zones. They just 1i4 there in the shadows until somebody else comes after them. The uncertain mules moved off to their olive groves. The men in the road seemed reluctant to leave. They stood around, and gradually I could sense them moving, one by one, close to Capt. Waskow's body. Not so much to look, I think, as to say something in finality to him and to themselves. I stood close by and I could hear. One soldier came and looked down, and he aid out loud: "God dain it' That's all he said, and then he walked away. Another one came, and he said, "God damn it to hell anyway!" He looked down for a last few moments and then turned and left. As if Hle Were Alive, . ANOTHER MAN CAME. I think he was an officer. It was hard to tell officers from men in the dim light, for everybody was grimy ON SECOND WHOUGHT... ~ By Bay ixopn IF YOU NOTICE a dearth of men on campus this week and next it'll be because they're all sitting at home by the telephone waiting to be asked to Panhel-Assembly Ball. FTYhUis is a. new ex deriele for most of us guys and we're currently wondering where the devil to put a corsage if we get one. Meanwhile, the Yanks and Reds are closing in on old lady Berlin without waiting to be asked. and dirty. The man looked down into the dead captain's face and then spoke directly to him, as though he were alive: "I'm sorry, old man." Then a soldier came and stood beside the of- ficer and bent over, and he too spoke to his dead captain, not in a whisper but awfully tenderly, and he said: "I sure am sorry, sir." Then the first man squatted down, and he reached down and took the captain's hand, and he sat there for a full five minutes holding the dead hand ill hs own and looking intently into the dead face. And he never uttered a sound all the time he sat there. Finally he put the hand down. He reached up and gently straightened the points of the cap- tain's shirt collar, and then he sort of rear- ranged the tattered edges of his uniform around the wound, and then he got up and walked away down the road in the moonlight, all alone. The rest of us went back into the cowshed, leaving the five dead men lying in a line end to end in the shadow of the low stone wall. We lay down on the straw in the cowshed, and pretty soon we were all asleep I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: President Truman By SAMUEL GRAFTON PRESIDENT TRUMAN continues to handle himself impressively. There were obvious temptations before him when he rose to address Congress. He could have mumbled something about a "return to constitutional government." and he would have evoked a great swelling chorus of praise for himself in the conserva- tive press. He could have used any one of a number of code words, to show that he was going to be a little 'different from Roosevelt, get what I mean, and the response among the sworn opponents of the late President would have been enormous. But Mr. Truman has not chosen to curry favor, to give these little signals, which are so eagerly awaited in some quarters. lie has it in his power to pick up applause, cheaply and easily, but he has not used that power. He coud have made the kind of speech which could have got him off the hot spot, so to speak, dissociated himself gently, on the level of mood and tone and atmosphere, from the late President. But he has not done it. He needs support, he needs prestige; his need of these is bitter, but so far, lie is working for them like a President and like a man. In time to come, there will be moments when he will have to be conciliatory. President Roose- velt knew how to conciliate opposition, too; con- ciliation is a part qf democratic process. But, in President Truman's case, as in Mr. Roosevelt's. there is hope that this will be conciliation on behalf of great and stated ideals; not the kind of empty, corny conciliation of everybody-in- sight that oneo often hears from the election platform. The net impression, so far, is that Mr. Truman is asking for support, with dignity,'on the ground that he happens to be President; he is not agi- tatedly begging people to like him, by slobbering over them, or by adopting their pet verbalisms. The slightest effort to do so, in the Congressional speech, would have introduced a note, not only of corn, but of cant, and that note was totally absent. He is thinking like a President. Some of those who are so liberally offering him ad- vice, especially in the more partisan sections of the press, are thinking of him as if he were a candidate for President. But he is President. As President of all the people, he does not have to turn double handsprings to entertain us, or run amok among the bureaus, chopping off heads and uttering shrill little cries, to please some special interest. He need not woo; he can ask to be wooed; that is 'part of his job. This is the hard road to favor, but he seems to be followiIg it; and in the end there is no better way to convince the American people that he really is President than by being President. The greatest praise that can be uttered for Mr. Tru- man's speech to Congress is that it was not the speech of a candidate for office; . it was the speech of a man holding office. Humble men have been able to become great Presidents of the United States because of the fact that there really is a humble road to great- ness in a democracy. Men make ideas, but ideas also make men; and it is the humble idea that he represents all the people which makes a great President. Let those with bright hot eyes who will come storming into the White House to sell their political knick-knacks realize that the hu- man being on the other side of the desk feels that he represents all the people; and they may hate him, but they will know he is President. It seems to me that Harry Truman has be- gun to feel his way along this road. It is a road which closes when the chief executive be- gins to buy the little knick-knacks, for no purpose but to please. But the simplest of men may hope to travel unendingly along this path, if he but holds to the great idea. (Copyright, 1945. New York Post Syndicate) IL1 By PAULA BROWER A FUZZY little koala peeped anx- iously out from behind the branch of a eucalyptus tree. "Oh, it's you," he said to a seemingly identical animal which was sitting on another branch and whistling. "When I heard your whistle I thought it was one of those flying squirrels whistling some abominable tune from the Hit Parade. And I certainly didn't want to be bothered with a conversation with one of those creatures, or I shouldn't have been so long in answering," he apologized. "Oh, that's all right," the second koala had started to say when the first interrupted him. "That WAS Tschaikowsky, wasn't it? The fourth? or was it the fifth?" "Handel," said the second, "the D-minor-" "Oh. Well do come in," the first koala interrupted again. "I have something to show you. Just look at what I have found!" He picked up a volume conspicuously placed in a crotch of the tree. "Just listen to this: "Wartetf... das schmeckt Schon ists auf der Flucht . .. Wenig Muck nur, ein Stampfen. ein Sum- mer- :- he read on eloquently. "Tremendous! Wonderful! Such thought! Such meaning! Where DID you find it?" gasped the second koa- la, his nose quivering ecstatically as he surreptitiously looked across the page for the translation, which wa mostly obscured by the first koala's paw. Just then there was a knock at the door. "Come in!" shouted the first koala. The door flew wide open and in bounced a flying squirrel. "Oh. hello," he said. "I didn't know you had company. ijust thought I'd drop in for a friendly little chat." "I was just reading a bit of Rilke_- you MUST hear it." and the koala began again: "Wartet .....das schmeckt ..-" "What does it mean?" asked the squirrel. "I don't 'know any German." The second koa- la sighed discouragedly. "It loses all its beauty in English," he said severe- ly, and began a lengthy dissertation upon the Untranslatability of Art. "On the way up here I passed a jackrabbit," said the squirrel meek- ly when he had finished the ser- mon, "and he says they're having a town meeting over on the island tonight. Sounds like it might be a good thing." "Oh, but those jack- rabbits!" the first koala grimaced, "and the ones that live on the is- land especially! They're just a lit- tle reactionary clan-won't let any- body even set foot on the island except jackrabbits!" "They've got quite a good man in the presidency this year," ventured the squirrel timidly. "The meeting's open to anyone who wants to come." "Intolerance! Prejudice.If there's anything I can't stand it's that!" snorted the first koala. This struck the squirrel as being a little contradictory, but he didn't like to say anything, so he nodded sympa- thetically instead. "Such intoler- ance has no place in our modern society!" went on the first koala. "It must be stamped out! Some- times I just don't think.there's any hope for those islanders. The only way we can get any equality or fair representation for everybody is to arrange to do things so that they can't be in on it." The squirrel nodded wisely, though a litle con- fused. There was deep silence for some minutes, broken only by the rustling of the eucalyptus leaves. "Think we ought to be going?" asked the first koala, suddenly, clear- ing his throat. "What?" asked the second koala, his ears standing up startledly. "We were just going out to do a bit of shopping when you came," the first koala explained to the squirrel. "Oh, well, in that case I won't keep you," said the squirrel, "come over to my house some time won't you?" and he scampered out. "Dull fellow," commented the second koala. The first shrugged his shoulders. "Perfectly impossible," he agreed. "Makes no effort to improve him- self at all." "Between flying squirrels and jackrabbits-" exclaimed the first, what are we to do? Iiow are we ever to take any steps toward the Better World?" "Suppress them," announced the second. "Disfranchise them. We've got to eliminate the intolerance they stand for." "Sometimes I think it's a losing struggle," sighed the first koala. Af- ter a short friendly silence he spoke again. "Thank goodness that intol- erable fellow has gone. Now we can settle down and enjoy ourselves." The second koala patted his friend's furry shoulder. "What a blessing there are two of us," he said. "WE HAVE learned that we cannot live alone, at peace; that our own well-being is dependent upon the well-being of other nations, far away. We have learned that we must live as men, and not as ostriches, not as dogs in the manger'," President Roosevelt said in his Fourth Inaug- ural Address. Men with heads lifted from the sand have formulated the.Dumbar- ton Oaks and Bretton Woods pro- posals and planned the San Fran- cisco Conference to consider these proposals. There is general agree- ment that we must have a world organization of some sort-there has been no split along isolationist, inter- nationalist lines. A new test must be applied to sort out the isolationists. War has blurred the old and obvious signs. The new type of isolationist is the man who lauds the idea of a world political organization at the same time that he denounces interna- tional economic cooperation. His head is still in the sand. Americans as a whole have become quite familiar with the Dumbarton Oaks proposals. They have a mental picture of the organizational frame- work that has been worked out. They can visualize rather easily the Security Council, the Assembly and the Court of Justice. The danger lies in assuming that a neat political structure alone is going to keep the peace. The phra- ses 'peace-loving nations' and 'ag- gressor nations' have been used and we are forced to ask: "Is there anything inherent in a people which makes them either 'peace- loving' or 'aggressive'?" THIS WAR has taught us that a . people with empty stomachs can of hunger on lands beyond their bor- ders. (Remember 'lebensraum'?) This war has taught us that unless we have a prosperous world we can- not have a peaceful world. Foremost among the means of achieving economic stability are the Bretton'Woods proposals. 1) the In- ternational Bank for Reconstruction and Development and 2) the Inter- national Monetary Fund. The noted economist, Alvin Hansen, briefly de- scribes these proposals in two articles in the New Republic, "Isolationism or Bretton Woods", Feb. 26, 1945, and "Bretton Woods or Economic War- fare", March 5, 1945. The Bank, a $9.1 billion pool of funds, will permit reconstruction in war-devastated areas and will foster the industrialization of backward countries. The International Monetary Fund seeks to establish internal and international economic stabil- chinery on a longiterm basis for orderly changes in exchange rates, when such changes are necessary to promote iternational equilibrium. 3) To provide a system of inter- national short-term credit designed to help countries over short-term balance-of-payment difficulties. 4) To provide machinery for con- tinuous international consultation, We cannot afford economic iso- lationism any more than we can afford political isolationism. A world political organization with- out effective international econom- ic agreements just will not work. The United States will be in a particularly advantageous position economically. We have suffered less from this war than any other people. On the surface withdrawal into ourselves looks attractive. We know now how impracticable it would be because we have learned 'that our own well-being is depen- dent upon the well-being of other nations, far away.' -Betty Roth DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 125 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 day preceding publication (10:30 a. m. Sat- urdays). CENTRAL WAR TIME USED IN THlE DAILT~ OFFICIAL BULLETIN. Notices honors Convocation: The 22nd an- nual Honors Convocation will be held on Friday morning, April 20, at 10 o'clock, CWT, at Rackham Lecture Hall. Provost James P. Adams will deliver the address, "Standards of Thinking." The only seats reserved will be those for honor students and their parents. There will be no aca- demic procession, and academic cos- tume will not be worn. To permit attendance at the Convocation, Mlasses, with the exception of clinics, will be dismissed at 9:45. Doors of the Lecture Hall will open at 9:30. The public is invited. Applicants for Combined Curric- ala: Application for admission to a ombined 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. Lectures University' Lecture: Miss Helen M. Martin of the Department of Conser- vation will speak on the life of "Dou- glass Houghton", at 3:15 in the Rackham Amphitheater, under the auspices of the Department of Ge- ology. The public is cordially invited. Dr. Howard Kershner: Vice-Presi- dent of "Save the Children Federa- tion", will be sponsored by Post-War Council in his lecture today on "Sav- ing the Future". He will speak at 3:15 p.m. in the Hussy Room of League. The public is cordially in- vited to attend. Concerts Organ Recital: Frieda Op't Holt Vogan, whose organ recital was post- poned last Sunday because of the memorial Services for the late Presi- dent Roosevelt, will be heard at 3:15 p.m., CWT, Sunday, April 22. Mrs. Mary Stubbins, originally scheduled to play April 22, will give her pro- gram on April 29 at the same hour. Both recitals are open to the public. Exhibitions Exhibit of items relating to the career of Douglass Houghton, first State Geologist of Michigan and pio- neer in the development of Michigan copper, in Rm. 160, Rackham Build- ing by the Michigan Historical Col- lections, from April 16-April 20. Events Today Tea at the International Center, every Thursday, 3-4:30 p.m. Faculty, foreign students, and their American friends are cordially invited, Inter-Guild Inventory: Rev. H. 0. Yoder will discuss "Lutherans and Protestant Action" at the Inter- Guild Inventory this afternoon at 1 4 in Lane Hall. Town Hall: This evening at 7:30, the Student Town Hall will debate the subject, "Resolved, That the Fra- ternity and Sorority System Is Basi- eno Undemocratic". Studnts in- X ;X 1 4 -t 'X ity by substituting international cooperation in the monetary field for the extremely nationalistic pol- icies followed so drastically during the last war under the old gold standard. II THE INTERNATIONAL Monetary Fund is designed to achieve or- derly flexibility combined with opti- mum stability, Hansen explains, list- ing specifically these functions: 1) To provide machinery to estab- lish by international consultation (and not by destructive unilateral action) the appropriate exchange rate for each member country. 2) To provide international ma- e t O THE EDITOR : Peggy Goodin, '45, has made such an important statement and has hit the nail so squarely on the head that I hereby break my rule of action not to write letters to the editor, in order to support the point of view pres- ented. Entem'ing freshman, both men and women, should have at least one year during which to "get their bear- ings, academically and socially, .with- out the complications of sorority (and fraternity) obligations." During the year there should be no "silence," 'no artificial barriers" between en- tering freshman and other students. There will be adequate time and op- portunity to "rush students" after they have at least one year's record on the. registrar's books. This is the only fair plan both for the student and the sorority or fratemnity. During a good many years of teaching in college, I have had op- portunity to observe the working out of the fraternity-sorority sys- temn in several different institutions of higher education. I have ob- served the situation both from Swithinand without the fraternity Ihouse, As Director of the Bureau of Cooperation which carries on work with secondary schools I have many opportunities to study the attitude toward the fraternity sit- uation held by students both be- fore they leave high school class- rooms and after asyear or two col- lege. During these years I have 1 A4 BARNABY Gus and I got up to O'Ma ley Enterprises last night. The watchman let us have the elevator- Unfortunately, they presented no challenge. Jhey were open. You see, the cleanina oeoole- By Crockett Johnson That takes time, O'Malley. And Gus feared LI if we were working there when the staffI came in. it might unset their routine. Sn- I