PAGE- TWO THE MiCHIGAN DAiY iEDN~SD~~i'. MAY 2,4945 ____ r _ _... _. 4e . 473aiin WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Understanding the Russians i T-, A Fifty-Fifth Year 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 Hay Dixon . Paul Sislin Hank Mantho Dave Loeweriberg Mavis Kennedy Ann Schutz Dick Strickland Mrtha Schmitt ,Kay McFee . . . . Managing Editor . . . . Editorial Director . . . A City Editor Associate Editor . . . Sports Editor . . Associate Sports Editor . . . Womien's Editor . . Associate Women's Editor Business Staff . . . Business Manager , . Associate Business Mgr. . . . Associate Business Mgr. Telephone 23-241 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper All rights of re- publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- nier. $4.50, by mail, $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1944-45 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONNkL ADViRT3NEG BYV National Adwrtising Service, Inc College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. ~ NEW YORK. N. Y. CNICAGO * BOSTON . L AGELES * SAN FRANCiSCO NIGHT EDITOR: CHARLOTTE BOBRECKER Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by menbers of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Y Adolf Hitler AN APPARENTLY authentic report announc- ing the death of Adolf Hitler reached Amer- ican newspapers last evening.. If the German report is true, it marks the pgssage of what has been symbol to the minds of American people. The acts committed in Hitler's name-from his rise to power over a decade ago to the most recent reports of concentration camp atroci- ties-have made the American people identify Hitler and the German enemy as one single entity. In some confused fashion, we were fighting against one man-Adolf Hitler-and at the same time against the German state our minds personified in him. When we called for the subjugation of the German state, as part of the same breath and the same thought, we were asking for the destruction of Adolf Hitler. And vice versa. The one was synony- mous with the other. Hitler's death yesterday will quite probably change our notion of that identity. For today we still fight the German state. Hitler's death will change little in the progress of the war. Our greatest prize is gone. but the enemy remains to be defeated We do not, nor will we in all probability, feel the personal dislike for Doenitz, the new and relatively obscure German head, that we felt for Hitler, even though Doenitz will assume practically the same position Hitler held. The Doenitz regime may be as short-lived as the Bagdolio regime in Italy, and good Nazi though he is, we probably will never perform the same identification process on Doenitz. Hitler might be called a great man-although people will disagree as to in what respect. His passing now, while of little import to how the Allies will prosecute the war, will affect the German people to the extent that they them- selves were indoctrinated with Hitler's dogmas. If the Nazi state and party have been so thoroughly organized and its pattern of gov- ernment so well laid out as we have been led to believe, then the loss of one leader will not disrupt the machinery we are fighting against. With the loss of their leader the German people may crumble and collapse, believing that without the inspiration of der Fuehrer there is no more reason to fight. They may set their fallen leader up as a martyr and fight even more fanatically to achieve the goals he gave them. They may feel that at last they have been relieved of part of a restricting yoke and act accordingly to remove the whole vestige of a system that oppressed them. Or the Germans being essentially ordinary people, they may emulate the example of the American people who two weeks ago mourned the loss of their own great leader and continue to go about their daily wartime business. -Ray Shinn Blood Bank HE MAY Blood Bank was filled yesterday in a surprisinglv short time-less than an hour By DREW PEARSON SAN FRANCISCO-To the average outsider, the most difficult thing to understand about this conference is the attitude of the Russians. Poor press relations, plus a few inept moves have melted down a large mountain of goodwill built up by the valor of the Red Army. In a few short days they have destroyed much of the favorable sentiment in Latin America, ana through no fault of ours, won us more friends below the Rio Grande than we ever had before. However, one purpose of this conference is to get to understand people and we are going to have to understand a lot about the Rus-~ sians in the future. First, let's look at some of the things hardest to understand. One of the things Molotov did in San Fran- cisco was to invite two prominent Latin-Ameri- can delegates to dinner at the Russian consulate, along with a few carefully selected Europeans. Latin guests were Mexico's tall, handsome For- eign Minister Padilla, and Chile's aristocratic Foreign Minister Joaquin Fernandez y Fernan- dez, who is rapidly assuming a new leadership in Latin America. Molotov drank a toast to Chile and her new establishment of diplomatic relations with Rus- sia. "There are so many Chileans who want to become ambassador to Moscow," joked Foreign Minister Fernandez in return, "that it is one of my greatest problems." Mexico's Padilla, ap- irently on excellent terms with Molotov said: "All Latin America would be pleased if our sister republic, Argentina, was admitted to the conference."~ Molotov, in mellow mood seemed to register no objection. Mood Changes. . BUT A DAY LATER the mood was different. Padilla arose in secret session to propose Secretary Stettinius as permanent chairman of the conference. Molotov promptly objected. He pointed out that four countries had invited the other nations to attend this conference and that the representatives of all four host coun- tries should rotate as chairman. Foreign Minister Padilla then delivered a recitation of previous precedents where the nation which served as host also acted as chairman. When he had finished, Molotov, who had already pointed out that four na- tions were hosts, got up and remarked: "I am glad to be instructed in diplomatic procedure by the delegate of Mexico, but ap- parently he prepared his little speech before he heard my view." Padilla, who had not read his speech, was taken aback. He mumbled something about always being prepared when he attended a con- ference, and sat down. After a long, hot de- bate, Molotov won his point. But the manner in which he jumped on the Mexican lost him friends. A lot of Latins, jealous of Padilla's brilliant oratory, previously had been opposed to him. But Molotov veered them in the opposite direction. Next day, in secret session, Foreign Minister Jan Masaryk of Czechoslovakia, a nation cooper- ating with Russia, pointed to the vacant chair of. Poland and moved that the Lublin government be admitted. Foreign Minister Subasich of Yugoslavia, also close to Russia, seconded the motion. Whereupon, Anthony Eden, white-faced and prim, emphatically opposed. There followed more hot debate. Finally, to break the deadlock, Foreign Min- ister Spaak of Belgium proposed a compro- mise resolution 'expressing sympathy with Poland and honing that she could be admit- ted soon. Genial, rotund Ambassador Caceres of Honduras, a great friend of the U. S. A., rose to second Belgium. Whereupon Molotov cracked back: "Notwith- PAST TENSE N CENTS pays for a bath, hot or cold," advertised a local barber shop in the Daily, 1893 version. Front page headlines, distinguish- ed by their lack of verbs, reported news that is still familiar. "It is reported that there are good pros- pects for closing the University in a day or so on account of the great shortage of coal," says an article in the best news jargon of the Gay Nineties. "A railroad blockade in the East is the cause of the trouble, and a lively correspondence has been held with railroad officials." Other news which vied with front page ad- vertisements: the faculty granted a petition "to play a game of baseball with Minnesota on some Monday," and the Congregational cler- gymen of New Haven have asked Yale to "take steps" to suppress gambling. "The funniest comedy ever produced" was touted for one night only at the Grand Opera Llouse in direct competition with H. L. Watterson speaking on "Money and Mor- als." -Milt Freudenheim standing the support of the Republic of Hon- duras, the Soviet Union stands by its position." Delegates Startled... A NOTE of biting sarcasm rang through Molo- tov's voice which startled the delegates. It sounded as if the powerful Soviet Union, repre- senting the greatest land-mass in the world, was trying to put the tiniest republic in Latin America in its place. Again, Russia lost more friends. And later when the vote was taken on seating Lublin Poland, she lost that also. These are some of the things about the Rus- sians that take a lot of understanding. On the other hand, when Molotov, after winning his point on rotating the chairmanship, finally sat in Stettinius' place, he did an excellent job. He got off a little gag about being glad the conference would now have an opportunity to hear Russian, and proceeded to handle the session in the most expert manner. (Copyright, 1945, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Peace Confterencee By SAMUEL GRAFTON NOTES ON SAN FRANCIOSCO: The hysterical quality is going out of the conference. We are putting behind us those agitated early days, as for instance when it was rumored that the Russians were keepin a ship in the harbor so that they could go home on a moment's notice, should anything about the conference displease them. There are fewer rumors now. Our atti- tude toward the conference is firming up. It is becoming hard to remember how scared many Americans were only ten days ago, when the con- ference seemed like a hot-house plant, and a rough breath might shrivel it. Those were the days when a suggestion for any change in Dumbarton Oaks seemed fatal; and indeed) many of us carried on as if hold- ing a conference meant holding our breaths for a month. Our conception was not really that of a conference, but of some difficult and complicated rite which we had to perform- without a single false step, or a misreading of the ritual at any point. So many of these mists are clearing away that it is a little hard to remember now why it seemed so plain, a fortnight ago, that to grant seats in the Assembly to two of the Soviet republics would wreck the structure of world peace. We did not know, ten days ago, whether the conference could survive a difference of opin- ion, or a- change of conception. We know now that it can. That is why it is important . to hold conferences, for it is only in conference that we can find these things out. The confer- ence is not only a different conference from what it was a week ago; the world is a some- what different world. Another development has been the calling off of the expected struggle between the large na- tions and the small nations. This will be a bitter disappointment to our isolationists, many of whom have elected themselves honorary citi- zens of the small nations, except, of course, when they are demanding island bases on the ground that we are a great power. Instead of a fight between the large nations and the small nations over the question of polic- ing the world, a totally unforeseen development has taken place. The small nations have become the spokesmen for social and economic progress. Australia is raising the question of full employ- ment, from which the big nations are shudder- ing away. Perhaps it is as natural for small nations, as it would be for small men, to raise these bitter questions in the presence of more powerful neighbors. A new perspective is opening up; it is the small nations which are calling for enlarge- ment of the powers of the Social and Economic Council. They are content to let the big nations manage the Security Council, which deals with military affairs; they are not pre- tending to a false equality in this sphere. The small nations are finding their "equality" in the demand that the new world organization pay more attention to economic settlements than had been originally planned. This in- fluence is a wholesome one, for economic ques- tions are truly international, and world-wide, and cut across regional security arrangements and other such military localisms. Another development: The press has begun to think about itself, in a new,objective way. The Christian Science Monitor and the New York Herald Tribune have both been moved to discuss the question of the dangers as well as the values inherent in having a thousand re- porters banging away about the same little squabble. The best news that could come out of the conference would be that it was chug- ging along, rather dully, making progress, with- out sensations. But there is a hunger for in- cidents, and in reporting them, a kind of inno- cent total distortion is possible, as there would be if a massed chorus of a thousand voices sang a classified ad. The free press is magnificently justifying itself by beginning to look at itself, as well as at the conference; by thinking about its function; by beginning to cover itself, as a part of the story. That, too, is a development of the conference, a sign of how this tremen- dous adventure in democratic process is crys- tallizing ideas in all of us. (Copyright, 1945, New York Post Syndicate) The CURRENT By BARRII re 4,ini// At, theState.. By PAULA BROWER THE STATE has one of the year's WAS IN LOVE once; who has not more enjoyable products in the WASn? IhV e ee; whoasnis form of "Practically Yours,"a been? I have revelled; who smoothly done comedy-drama that is uninitiated in revels? Nay, I was a certainty to rank among this seas- mad;s? at whose prompting but a on's better productions. As played god's?" We too played when the time by Claudette Colbert and Fred Mac- of playing was; and now that it is Murray, the film is excellent enter- no longer, we will turn to worthier tainment. thoughts."-Philodemus. Three of us were having coffee and Practically Yours" delves into a tweet.rolls in the League one after- case of mistaken identity. MacMur- noon in a small post-class interlude may plays a war hero who is believed customarily dedicated to the partak- dead. It eventually develops that he ing of such stimulants. A couple of ?s very much alive and complications Ccmpany A classes had pushed tables arise over the fact that his "dying together to the right of the door and words" have been misconstrued as an nere eagerly drinking malted milks admission of love for a former office as an incentive toward learning their acquaintance, Miss Colbert he was Japanese. There was a continual sctua ing to naig) Fom slow shift in personnel at a couple this situation an entertaining film of tables where a few intellectuals has been developed of the type that were holding forth like hosts at an this team has been doing with con- open house with conversation being sistent success for a number of years. offered instead of refreshments, and It should please a wide audience. most of the tables in the center were The joys of slapstick are briefly occupied by chattering members of investigated in a notable scene the Women's War Council who were showing a self-inflating life-raft taking a few minutes out of the long doing its stuff in a jammed subway afternoon hours spent working in For the benefit of those who frown their offices. on this sort of thing, I hasten to .. I MOVIES of this story of Brooklyn tenement life as crystallized in the life of the Nolan family. Dorothy McGuire as the determined mother, James Dunn as the improvident father and Joan Blondell as the generous, jovial Aunt Cissie all contribute performances of a quality rare to the moving picture. They are all the more admirable be- cause in script form, as they were in the book, these characters were mere- ly obvious types. Under the touch of this excellent cast they become indi- vidual, interesting ,personalities in spite of the script. Despite the handsome competi- tion, it remains for Peggy Ann Garner in tfle central role of young Francie to really put "A Tree Grows In Brooklyn" over. While it is a common thing to generously over-rate the accomplishments of child actors, no one could have seen her as the child Jane in "Jane Eyre" without realizing that here was true, innate ability. That opin- ion is confirmed now by this per- formance. It is a characterization so marked by personal understand- ing that no director could possibly have taught her the sense of tim- ing and restraint apparent here. She is a genuine actress and she and her aforementioned colleagues make "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" a major screen event. .k"tON SECONW Bly Ray aDixon EZO is coming to town tomorrow. He's so handsome he always knocks the women off their Pinzas. Ann Arbor is due for a sort of artificial brownout from 7:07 to 9:04 a. m. on July 9 according to Prof. Rufus of the astronomy de- partment. Only trouble is that we're never up that early in the morning. We finally found out from a fugi- tive from French 32 that "Ces Dames aux Chapeaux Verts" means "These Dames with the Green Lids." Color- ful aren't they? I E WATERSI "Do you think college will ever go back to normal?" asked one of my companions after glancing at these groups and at the miscellan- eous girls who comprised the rest of the League's clientele that aft- ernoon. "I mean normal like it was supposed to have been before the war, when there were J-Hop and house-parties and football weekends, and everybody concen- trated on things like that, that we ve never seen?" We considered the almost mythical Pre-war College for a few moments. "I doubt it," and "I hope not!" my friend and I replied simultaneously, whereupon we went on to weigh the good and bad features. D URING THESE war years Michi- gan has undergone a severe dis- location. This has been contributed to by the presence of Army and Navy men on campus, who, by the very military nature of their training, have not participated in University activities. It has been brought about by the absence of civilian men in classes, in activities, in the lobbies of women's residence halls. The accel- erated program has made for a change of emphasis toward the aca- demic from the casual preoccupation with idle, time-filling organizational projects. "Essentiality" has come to be thesprinciple qualificationcfor an academic program: the tendency is toward the practical. Students taking short courses and hurrying through school on the accelerated program are in- terested primarily in getting out. Less and less is college being con- sidered a pleasant place to spend four years; it has come to be a mea.s of preparation for the work which will follow, and students have tried to make up for its in- adequacy by putting in extra effort. As tradition after tradition has been thrown out to aid wartime conservation of time, materials, and energy, an air of greater serious- ness has begun to pervade the cam- pus. advise that "Practically Yours" still remains a generally literate effort that contrives to stay above the inferior mentality level sometimes exhibited by Hollywood. *At the Michigan r HE MICHIGAN'S "A Tree Grows In Brooklyn" is, of course, one of the major film events of the year. Based on a popular best-seller and the subject of an extensive adver- tising campaign, the film is assured a large degree of success. The unusual thing is that "A Tree Grows In Brook- lyn," unlike such other products of intense publicity as "Mrs. Miniver" and "Going My Way" which left you wondering what all the shouting was about, largely fulfills your expecta- tions. The film, through a series of com- promises with the Betty Smith novel, will please both those who liked the book and those who thought it was over-rated. Acting is the secret of the success i 4 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 136 Publication in the Daily Ofricial 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. m. of the day preceding publication (10:30 a. m. Sat- urdays). CENTRAL WAR TIME USED IN THE DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN. Notices Student Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students this afternoon from 3 to 5so'clock. C.W.T.) - Eleanor Steber, soprano; Hertha Glaz, contralto; Frederick Jagel, tenor; Nicola Moscona, bass; University Choral Union; Philadel- phia Orchestra; Eugene Ormandy and Hardin Van Deursen, conductors. Exhibitions Sixteenth. Annual Exhibition of Sculpture of the Institute of Fine Arts: In the Concourse of the Michi- gan League Building. Display Will be on view daily until Commencement. Events Today Senior Society: There will be a meeting at 4 in the 'League. All members must attend. Inte' -Guild Seminar: Rev. Chester Loucks will lead a discussion on the Lignon method of religious educa- tion at the Seminar in Student Christian Movements at 3 in Lane Hall this afternoon. Music Seminar: Mr. Lazlo Hetenyi will again lead the Lane Hall Music Seminar this evening at 6:30: The work to be studied is Verdi's Requiem lvn f.z We've occasionally complained about the barrenness of our student Academic Notces life-the absence of the traditional Graduate Students: A list of stu- rituals, pranks, parties, etc., which dents expecting master's degrees in we had learned to expect since be- June has been posted in the Gradu- fore we came to college. A lot of ate School office. Each .student is these things have been removed by requested to check whether his name official edict-and even more of is listed properly with the correct de- them have died natural deaths be- gree and department indicated. cause students simply haven't had time or inclination to keep them go- Con erts ing. ROBABLY this attitude won't last. May Festival Concerts. To avoid WhBALthiswaattituededwontha confusion and embarrassment, the When the war has ended and the sympathetic co-operation of Festival last veteran has left school, the old concert-goers is respectfully request- traditions will be revived and col-cet-goes:u lege will once more be a place to play ed, as follows: an esy ay o BOC-sip s dnce The public willy please come suf- an easy way to BMOC-ship as dance fiinl eal st be seted o committeeman, but in the meantime tciently ear y as to be seda on the present attitude represents a time, since doors will be closed and wholesome reaction. latecomers will not be admitted dur- If the war has done nothing else ing numbers. it has brought the campus a little Holders of season tickets will please closer to the outside world. The old detach the coupons for the respective "ivory tower" isolation must not be concerts before leaving home, and allowed to return, for the existence present for admission, instead of pre- of this attitude hinders both the uni- Those leaving the auditorium dur- versity and the students who are Thgsineasinareeruiredpr- supposedly educated by it from mak- ing intermission are required to pre- suppthedyredatedosibycontribution sent door checks for re-admission. ing the greatest possible Parking regulations will be en- to the rest of the world 1 A 4 ~ - r T Mass. i The Annual French Play: Le Cercle Francais will present "Ces Dames aux Chapeaux Verts", a modern French comedy in one prologue and three acts by Albert Acremant, at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, tonight at 7:30 p.m. All seats are reserved. Tickets will be on sale at the box office from 9 a.m. to 7:30. A special reduction will be made for holders of the French Lecture Series card. Call 6300 for reservations. 1 Coming E Tea at the Interna every Thursdav 3-4:30 The important thing from now on. is going to be to keep things in their properproportion. We who have spent the war years in school have probably gotten an overdose of severity, but we have alsoshad greater opportunity and encour- agement to put our efforts to bet- ter use. aorced by the Ann Arbor kPonceuij--ice De---- ', 1 partment. foreign students, and tl The several concerts will take place friends are cordially as follows : Thursday, May 3, 8:30 E.W.T. (7:30 Inter-Guild Invent C.W.T.)-Ezio Pinza, bass; Philadel- dists and Protestant A phia Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy, the subject of Rev. J Conductor. liscussion at 3 Thurso Friday, May 3, 8:30 E.W.T. (7:30 in Lane Hall. C.W.T.) - Oscar Levant, pianist; Philadelphia Orchestra; Choral Inter-Guild' Inventor Union; Eugene Ormandy and Hardin Kenna will lead ac Van Deursen, conductors. "Methodists and Prote Saturday, May 5, 2:30 E.W.T. (1:30 in Lane Hall this af C.W.T.)--Zino Francescatti, violinist; (CWT). Any studentsi Festival Youth Chorus; Paul Leyssac; be welcomed. narrator; Philadelphia Orchestra; rvents tional Center, p.m. Faculty, Lieir American invited. ory: "Metho- ction" will be J. B Kenna's day afternoon ry: Rev. J. B. discussion on stant Action" ternoon at 3 interested will I BARNABY Well, Gus, we'll have to go over those books again. Got to find The books! Hodges says they've all disappeared! 71 By Crockett Johnson Wiwi There's a man from the Securities and Exchange I