'9 Germany Is Easy To Handle-So Far Lochner Says Conqnest So Rapid That Poppulation 'Meely Does What Told' 4- (EDITOR'S NOTE: This article was writ- In the Saarland on the whole, the ten by the former head of the A Berlin Bureau before V-E day was officially foreign occupation is accepted more proclaimed and tells how the German grudgingly. Various military govern- peole have reacted to control by the Al- ment officials testified the German lied Military Government thus far.) attitude was neither friendly nor hostile-merely acceptance. By LU .But here, too, the picture was not Associated Press Correspondent unanimous. At Saarbruecken, for in- SOMEWHERE IN GERMANY - stance, the attitude of the popula- The Allied conquest of Germany in tion was described as "cooperaive". the last months has been sb rapid In the Palatinate, cooperation that the bewildered German popula- appears faultiest in cities the leastI tion in occupied territory for the touched by war, whereas civilians most part meekly does what it is told. in totally wrecked places like Lud- This temporarily makes military wigshafen and Worms evince a government a relatively easy task definite anxiety to fit themselves but no military governor is willing to into the new picture. predict that it will remain thus. I have talked to dozens in the Rhine- Whatever may be the degree of land, Saar territory and Palatinate willingness to accept the situation from colonels in major centers like of a defeated people, military gov- Cologne and Saarbruecken to a non- ernment officials everywhere agree commissioned officer in a small spot thatrthree factors makedtheir task like Gtuenstadt in the Palatinate. easier than was expected the Ger- Few Difficulties man's respect for order, his cleanli- None as yet has complained of any ness and his devotion to his job. important difficulties in governing Nazis Ignoble in DefeatI the defeated Germans. Almost in- As military government officials variably they say the biggest prob- see it, the average German with a lem is caring for displaced persons, long tradition of obedience to au- of which there are estimated to be thority behind him, accepted Nazi- eight millions-five and a half mil- ism because it constituted the only lion civilians and two and a half mil- authority in the Reich. Now that lion liberated Allied slave laborers authority is gone and, fortunately and prisoners of war. for the Allies, the Nazi authorities The attitude of the conquered Ger- left under disgraceful conditions. mans varies from an expressed desire They abandoned their peoples and to cooperate to sullen acceptance of fled with the retreating armies. This a situation that cannot be changed. did more to debunk the Nazis in the In the Rhineland, especially Cologne, eyes of the German people than any people went out of their way to offer amount of propaganda. help. With Nazi authority gone, the be- ~L~hf-O-IhLll- - LFOf _I LtflJflTL. h...OlJ Peace as finally come towa r-tor Euro e... and the nations are now preparing the treaty that will conclude the second great world con- flict. Let us hope that this V-E Day and the eventual V-Day will mark the beginning of a 9 new era of international co-operation and1 brotherliness.1 BROOKIN1S'Sat/je 108 East Washington Phone 2-2685t T1HE .'lCHIGANf lAITY' Quotations that Have Become Famous During World War II (AP) Features ded upon four essential human free- The great, the near-great and the dors . . . freedom of speech ommcn man said these memorabie freedom of cvery person to worship phrases during Europe's war. He' God in his own way . .. freedom from Member? want . . . freedom from fear."- "I shall not take off this uniform Roosevelt, Jan. 6, 1941. ntil we have achieved victory. -_ "Italy will march to the end side Adolf Hitler, Sept. 2, 1939. by side with Germany."-- Benito "I have nothing to offer but Mussolini, Feb. 23, 1941. blood, toil, tears and sweat."- Wi sten Churchill, May 13, 1940. "The enemy (Russia) has been "'Ihis tattle decides the fate of the t so hard that lie never again German nation for the next 1,000 will rise up."-Hitler, Oct. 3, 1941. years."--Hitler, May 20, 1940. "Another few months, another half "Never in the field of human year, one year maybe, and Hitlerite canflicts was so much owed by s0 Germany will burst under the weight 1rany to so few."--Churchill, to of her own crimes. '-Joseph Stalin, the RAF, Aug. 20, 1940. Ncv. l, 1941. "You can say one tJng for t' e 'Sighted sul, sank same."-En- t . hrycertaini take on3 ign -ad F. Masr, U.S.N., Feb. a ind off the war."--London house.- k 42 wife duri:-g air blitz, Oct. 1940. "We must become the great air- "I have not become the king's first scral of deinocracy."- President minister in order to preside over the Rooevelt, D c. 29, 1940. liquidation of the British Empire."- "We look forward to a world foun- Churchill, Nov. 11, 1942. DON'T TAKE A HOLIDAY, AMERICA! Swe've got the enemy on the run ! THEi WAR IS H ALF OVER!9 COME ON.. .Let's Finish the job! . L G. BALFOUR CO. -___ ~_____________- - ~ r ~ - - - _ ____ HORROR OF WAR GRAPHICALLY DEPICTED-This picture shows the destruction and terror wrought by the War against Germany which has just ended. It was taken in the streets of Cologne during the heaviest fighting there. Note the rubble in the streets and tankmen fleeing snipers' bullets. Recon- struction of these battle-scarred areas is expected to take a long time. wildered German turned to the next authority-the military government. They take orders just as they did from the Nazis. The picture is some- what misleading, however, because many military government officials wonder what will happen now we have reached regions from which the Nazis cannot escape. German cleanliness is a by-word among military government officers. In every city I visited, housewives were cleaning windows, scrubbing floors, removing debris and men were repairing damage and inserting glass panes. In the agricultural sections they were doing the spring planting. The average German "little man" lives for his job and family. It hurts him to destroy what he created. This explains why orders to sabotage plants before the Am- ericans arrived often were not car- ried out. In some cases, AMG men say, men who all their lives assembled and pored over records, failed to destroy them because that meant destruction of their life's work. This regard for their life's job also explains in part, AMG officers said, why technicians are so ready to assist in getting their city in running order again. There is no doubt the Germans prefer American occupation to French or Russian. The Germans fear the liberated Russians most for these were probably the worst treat- ed as forced laborers. The Russians on their part have a long memory for the bad bosses they worked under. There were long faces in Saar- bruecken, Zweibruecken, Homburg and Speyer when I visited them, sim- ultaneously with arrival of French troops, including colored colonials, who apparently are to relieve Ameri- can detachments soon. People came running to the American military governors, importuning them to re- main. Germans in most occupied areas are so bewildered and awestruck that they make no complaints and pre- sent no grievances. They do plead. however, to be permitted to resume running such of their factories as are relatively intact. Military governors .thus far have discovered no evidence of the Nazi subversive underground. They re- gard typical Nazis as bullies who fold up when the game is up and who are not likely to be able to sell themselves as underground leaders in view of the fact they unheroic- ally fled. It is too early as yet for any pic- ture of the civilian Germany of the future to emerge. Many military government offi- cials believe that now Hitler is licked and unconditional surrender is im- posed, new, competent leaders will emerge. Others, less optimistic, fear a long time will elapse before the nilitary government can become a nere advisory function. THEY THOUGHT HUN WAS LICKED: Ann Arbor Town Let Down Hair In Celebrating 1918 Armistice (Continued from Page 1) Issue Items at 3 P.M.: Metropolitan Cities Celebrate: Whole Country Pa- triotic." By this time whistles had begun to blow, church bells were ringing, many students marched up and down the campus walks, drag- ging tin cans or anything to make noise after them. A huge bonfire in front of the court house was started at 7:30 a .m., while thousands of students gathered on the campus to send up cheer after cheer for President Wilson. Tin cans,I tin horns and tin lizzies were the order of the day. Classes were sus- pended to allow the students to cele- brate the signing of the armistice. Parades, war dances, bonfires, hazing of freshmen - . - There wals no official celebration by the military personnel stationed on can;pus; however, by the time the fourth and final war's end Dai- ly extra, headlined "Terms Out," was issued, a parade had started in front of the city court house. Ac- cording to the extra, Ann Arbor paraded as it had never done be- fore; an abundance of flags and bunting practically buried the city in their folds; the S.A.T.C., naval unit, played a prominent part in the parade. Under the heading "Heard as They Pass," in the final extra edition, such comments as "And this was the iay I had five classes; some folks ;et busted out on all the luck, huh?" "That Kaiser ain't the only one 'hat's slinging scraps of paper!" "What are we going to do with these old uniforms anyway?" and "Spppu- beuth"-a faceful of confetti! could 'e found. President Harry B. Hutchins was )ut of town that joyous day, but the excited people who had been aroused 'rematurely with the false announce- 'ment of an armistice on Nov. 7, could not contain themselves. When the irst false report of the German sur- render came, excited groups on the street corners threw their hats into she air, embraced each other; church >ells rang, and factory whistles blar- d noisily throughout the city. As thousands of students and townspeople celebrated the surrender )f the Boche in this small University gown, so millions more were letting )ff some of that "surplus steam" vhich had been aroused by the early :alse armistice report, in the larger netropolitan cities of Chicago, Phil- idelphia and New York. In the city of bright lights, now dimmed during the nationwide brownout, New Yorkers led the nation in a 24-hour celebration. As a searchlight spotted out the news flashed on the Times build- ing, air raid sirens blew, Barnard coeds snake-danced across the campus, heads were bowed and hats taken off as a tall, fresh- cheeked English girl sang the "Doxology" from the platform of Liberty Hall; the familiar strains of the "Marseillaise", "Star Span- gled Banner," and "God Save the King" were heard by celebrators on Fifth Avenue. An effigy of the Kaiser was burned in Times Square. The United War Work Campaign, headed by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., in New York City, caOled for at least $170,500,000. Proceeds from a horse show went to the nationai fund, and the Hotel Astor held a V-Ball, char- ging $10 per person, the recipients of which also went to the UWW drive; patronesses included such fa- mous names as Ethel Barrymore, Billie Burke, Theda Bara, Fay Bain- ter, Mary Pickford and Lillian Rus- sell. "Fair and not Much Change" was the weather forecast for the day, as the Red flag was hoisted over the royal palace and Brandenburg Gate, while the Socialist Democrat Party in Germany undertook to form a new government under Frederich Ebert, chancellor. Reminiscent perhaps, but an Ital- iant Discount and Trust Co. an- nounced the opening of offices for transaction of business that day. The Fifth Avenues of that great metro- politan city and this college town were united--by a common bond of joy, on Nov. 11, 1918. Is Our Battle Cry!! We have a right to be happy on this momen- tous day, but we can't wholeheartedly rejoice until the Pacific War is also over. We must keep up our good work and even strive harder until complete victory is won. 1113 South University Ave. - - -- -_ I -' II r a t s r Y' .. .Ask the Joes in the front lines!" "They know; every G.I. Joe knows, "This is the big show. This is the pay-off. This is the one that counts." GERMANY HAS SURRENDERED! But that victory has come at the greatest price we have ever had to pay. We at home must not forget for one careless minute that the road to Tokyo is long and hard, that much American blood will soil the countless little Pacific Islands before we readJ that Japan has quit. So forget that Germany has surren- dered . . and keep in mind that Japan must be beaten; they started it, let's finish it! The Road to Tokyo WillBeLong The American Army, Navy, and Marines reign victorious in the Pacific. We have beaten the Japs at Midway, Tarawa, Saipan and Iwo. But Japan still controls an area and population far larger than the United States. Japan has more than 4,000,000 well-trained, battle-hardened troops ready for battle. Every man, woman, and child is ready -eager to die for their sacred emperor. No, Japan is not through yet. But WE DAY SAFFELL & BUSH leads for fine Men's Wear. STII the parade EN BLOCH clothing sold excusively in Ann Arbor by / " 1 1 " 1 I I I XXTP 'IrPnf" 4;n;c i,-A Plt-Y4PY -W r.- 1r Yt ntsr t-,. nh I 1