T E MNhiIGAN DAILY Fifty-Fifth Year I WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Conference Opponents Listed Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Evelyn Phillips Margaret Farmer Ray Dixon . Paul Sislin Bank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy Ann Schutz Dick Strickland Martha Schmitt Ray McFee Editorial Staffg. . . . . Managing Editor . . . . Editorial Director . -. . . . . City Editor Associate Editor S . . . Sports Editor . . Associate Sports Editor . . . . . Women's Editor . Associate Women's Editor Business Stafff . 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 second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.50, by mall, $5.25. REPRESENTED FOR.NATION,.. AIJVRTltN4G OY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADisoN AVE.' NEW YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO - BOSTON *-LOs ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1944-45 NIGHT EDITOR: MYRA SACKS Editorials published in The Michigan- Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Mature Thinking A NEWLY arrived soldier in the campus Japa- nese language group, sitting in the music room of Lane Hall Monday night, said that Ann Arbor was the first place he'd ever hit that gave him a depressed feeling. This was the day that victory had been shouted from the steps of the Union to the corner of the City Hall-V-E Day, the banners read. In a Maine accent, the soldier said that he was born in Yokohama, had lived mostly in Osaka and had travelled from coast to coast in the United States, yet people here "floored him." He also expressed the view that college students of our age are perhaps more mature now than they will ever be. For, we dare to think more radically, are more aware of the struggles going on about us. Monday, May 7, was V-E Day. What does this mean? Victory in Europe. But is that all? Perhaps so. The following excerpt from a stu- dent's letter home, written shortly after the news was announced, reveals some idea of its meaning. "At 9:45 a. m. Monday morning, news of the German capitulation came over the radio, and several of us dashed over to The Daily. Stuff was coming over the teletype fast, and in less than an hour, we had an eight page extra 04 the streets. "When this first wave of excitement left me- after selling extras for nearly two and a half hours-I began to wonder. It had begun as a bright, sunny day-literally, too-yet ended as a dreary, rainy one. Watching people, I became depressed. Nobody really cared-unless it were in the most personal way-unless it meant the possibility of some loved one returning soon. "How could we, any of us, actually under- stand just how the liberated Europeans must feel. No bombs have been dropped on our towns; the women in our families haven't been treated brutally; we haven't starved or gone naked; only tales from our men or from war correspondents bring the war closer to us. "So it all comes back to the fact that we're just selfish beings, for so long as we can go to movies and see "For Whom the Bell Tolls," we don't care if there's a dictator in Washington; the government can "go to pot!" We're self- centered individuals. Let's admit it. Let the other guy do our thinking, fool us. But must it always take a Lusitania or Pearl Harbor to shock us into reality? "The delegates at San Francisco are trying to change that; without some support, some criticism from the people, they will fail. As a friend of mine said, you can't change people overnight, nor can a banner in today's paper. For like Hitler's reported death, the proclama- tion of V-E Day becomes just another story in yesterday's paper. "Students didn't celebrate here-no, not the expected flow of liquor, so far as I could see. We were sober-sober to the extent that classes went on as usual. Some attended church. How much sober thinking there was, other than the realization that only half the physical combat was won, I can't say." Iisn' t ios An n Ar.h.. *i-mrh Cf c*, Alu By DREW PEARSON SAN FRANCISCO-Secretary of State Stetti- nius has just received an 'interesting docu- ment from his undersecretary, Joe Grew, listing a variegated group of organizations trying to undermine the San Francisco conference, Bret- ton Woods and other steps toward international cooperation. The report was prepared by Louis M. Birkenhead of the Friends of Democracy, who spent two hours with Grew, giving him a bill of particulars regarding the anti-peace agitators whom he described as having all the strength of the pre-Pearl Harbor isolationists with no Pearl Harbor ahead to shock us into unity. The people who are now screaming, "poor Pol- and," and "poor Rumania," the report warns, are the same ones who once insisted that Poland, Czechoslovakia and the rights of small nations were none of our business. When the Atlantic Charter was first proclaimed they called it a fraud, but today they shed tears over its "demise." Here are the chief agitators against the San Francisco conference and Bretton Woods, ac- cording to the Birkenhead report: Gerald L. K. Smith, one-time Huey Long lieutenant, leader of the America First party I'D RATHER. BE RIGHT: International Law By SAMUEL GRAFTON THE GERMANS will probably now become a nation of lawyers. It is the usual course, after a national defeat, for the defeated to devote themselves to a study of the subtler aspects of international law, much as some of our gunmen take to reading law-books in pail. This theme has already shown itself, in the German Foreign Minister Von Krosigk's "surrender" broadcast. He said: "We must also recognize law as the basis of all relations between the nations; we must recognize it and respect it from inner conviction." The sentiment is unexceptionable, and no man is to be derided for expressing an attach- ment to law. But it remains true that when the Germans were on top, their attachment was to the principle of force; it is only now that they are at the bottom that they have become newly devoted to law. They will try to reach us through law, to work on us through our own respect for law; and we must look forward to a period in which the most eloquent speeches on behalf of international law (and justice, and kindness) will come from Germany. Poems, even. It is the underdog who builds up the mystique of natural rights, as opposed to force; and this is certainly one di- rection which the intellectual life of the new Germany is bound to take. Three years ago they were talking force, and we were talking law, and the switch is on. VON KROSIGK'S speech is curiously com plete, for he also trots out the idea of "liberty." Liberty has been living under a rock in Germany for a dozen years, but Von Krosigk wipes the mold off it, and exhibits it, blinking stupidly in the sun. The Germans did not talk about liberty when they were overrunning other countries, but now that their own is being overrun, they remember the good word. This is the very beat and rhythm of history, as the former tyrants snatch slogans from the lips of their own victims, as S. S. men in mufti mutter the same words they once shot human beings for daring to speak. The Germans will be in a not unfavorable position, as it happens, to raise questions of law. Germany is to be divided into several zones of occupation, a situation which is bound, almost immediately to bring up questions as to how the powers involved are interpreting their rights, and conducting themselves. Sharp differences in method, as between the occupy- ing powers, would immediately give Germany a case upon which to stand before the forum of world opinion. It happens that the pro- posed Russian zone includes the chief food- producing areas of Germany, while the British and American zones are largely industrial. Will the Russians permit the German farms to feed the German cities? Has the issue been discussed and settled? It will be seen that even a defeated Germany has room for play here. She will be able to raise legal and moral questions, and it is not too far-fetched to suppose that some day Rus- sia-haters in America may find themselves echo- ing pleas for justice from the lips of the jailers of Buchenwald. Our problem is not so different in peace from what it was in war. -The great powers still face an opponent which has an enor- mous splitting potential. Unless they cling to the principle of unanimous action, they may find that Germany can make almost as much trouble by using legalisms in an era of legality, as she could by using force in an era of force. Suppose the powers fall out among themselves, leaving only an amorphous world organization, before which Germany can plead her case, perhaps through the voices of old friends? The name of Argentina comes to mind. It is clear again that organization is no substitute for policy, and that we will need both policy and organization to keep the world at east during the years ahead. (Copyright, 1945, N. Y. Post Syndicate) -just arrived in San Francisco only to be barred by most hotels. Elizabeth Dilling, long under indictment for sedition and even more active an isola- tionist than the Chicago Tribune. Ex-Senator Bob Reynolds of North Carolina, son-in-law of Mrs. Evalyn "Hope Diamond" McLean, and who once edited a weekly maga- zine with reputed Fascist leanings. Also Senator "Pass-the-Biscuits Pappy" O'Daniel of Texas; ex-congressman Sam Pet- tengill, columnist for the Gannett newspapers; Charles Hudson, Court Asher; John B. Trevor of the American Coalition; Walter Steele, edit- or of the National Republic, the Brooklyn Tablet, New York Gaelic American, San Fran- cisco Leader, and the Meriden, Conn., Malist. Samples of the propaganda-Ex-Senator Rey- nolds: "Bretton Woods is an insane plot for world government" sponsored by "international bankers." Mrs. Lyrl Van Hyning of "We, the Mothers, Mobilize for America," says of the San Francisco conference: "Your son is to be a policeman. If you want to see your boy again, then speak out now or forever hold your peace." The New York News: "San Francisco is as phony as a seven-dollar bill. It has no concern with establishing a peace of justice." Arab Glamour... SAUDI ARABIA, which supplies the chief glam- our for San Francisco, has sent five of its top-drawer princes to represent the Arabs of South Arabia-all sons of Ibn Saud, the man from whom Roosevelt said he had learned more about the Jewish problem in five minutes than in weeks of correspondence. Riding through San Francisco in limousines supplied by the Standard Oil Co. of California, and striding through hotel lobbies dressed in long-flowing burnooses, they are the chief visual attraction of the conference. The other day as the five Arab princes walked past, a near-by lady remarked: "Oh, they're so fierce, so roman- tic." In perfectly good English, one of the princes, scarcely turning his head, replied: "Tsk, tsk, you should see us on horses, my dear." Broadway and Royalty . . FAST-TALKING Walter Winchell went to call on gentle, slow-speaking British ambassador, the Earl of Halifax, a delegate at the San Fran- cisco parley. His lordship, who can trace his ancestry back five centuries and who has served as Viceroy of India, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Minister of Agriculture, asked polite and curious questions about Winchell's~method of broadcasting. "Do you ever let visitors come and watch you broadcast?" questioned his lordship, indicating that he might like to come and watch the mysti- cal ceremony. "Oh, no," shot back Winchell, "some nut might grab the microphone and yell in it at 27,000,000 people. Then where would I be?" His dignified lordship smiled, decided he would not risk the temptation of addressing Winchell's audience of 27,000,000. Discrimination at San Francisco WHILE San Francisco delegates attempted to build a framework to carry out the Four Freedoms of the Atlantic Charter, the minions of music dictator James C. Petrillo were denying the right of one of America's foremost Negro singers to make music recordings if accompanied by a white pianist or any other white musicians. The Negro, Huddy Ledbetter, is probably the nations most outstanding folk singer; has made hundreds of recordings for the Library of Con- gress. But in San Francisco, Petrillo's musi- cian's Local Union 6 denied him the right to make recordings with three white musicians- Ellis Norne, Squire Girsbach and Paul Lingle. Ed Moore, vice-president of Local 6 and Secre- tary Jack Haywood telephoned Petrillo in Chi- cago to ask whether Ledbetter could play with the three white musicians and got the word "No." There has been a long standing rule in the San Francisco Bay area that Negro musicians cannot play in public with whites. But Local 6 once before stretched this rule to discriminate against Negroes even on private recordings where the public has no idea who the musicians are, and whether they are white or black. (Copyright, 1945, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) ".N, E SECOND By Ray Dixon G1 ERMAN submarines have started surrendering to the Allies. Off-hand we can think of few things more useless than submarines in time of peace. If the War Crimes Commission brings all the Nazis up for trial, we'll be satisfied an( the Germans should be shotisfied. The House has passed a bill appropriating $4,000 to reimburse some fellow who got hit by an egg thrown from a passing troop train. This sounds like a new version of the old shell game. Dr. Burgess the sociologist who spoke here Wednesday claimed that the divorce rate of war- time hitchings might rise as high as one to four. This is a variation on the old wheeze, "Three out of four splices are nices, but the fourth comes to a crises." WHICH WOULD YOU BET ON? r 7:' SYSTEMATIC BONI BUYER~ [.TH TREADMILL T HE T R E A DMIL L By PAULA BROWER T HE SEVEN days ending Thursday gave us just about as much as any reasonably promising week can in fairness be expected to confine within its limits. This one was crammed obligingly full. No sooner had the let-down come after the four exhilarating - Escape Days of May Festival than Reality became considerably more bearable with the announcement of V-E Day. The Pulitzer Prize winners were an- nounced, and the deplorably human squabbles which we had somehow hoped the San Francisco Conference would be able to rise above never- theless continued as a "Well, after all, I lave my own interests to look out for" attitude prevailed. Of course we all realize that that sort of thing is perfectly natural and certainly to be expected, but at the same time we-wonder doubtfully how a world organization can possibly succeed when we still are unable to get rid of the ancient jealousies and over gippng rights feuds which, al- though discouragingly unsolvable, still persist in coloring our decisions and actions to such a crippling extent. It's demanding an almost super- human objectivity of view, of course, but how else can a community of nations succeed? And now that the German surrender has made the whole thing so much more urgent, and the policies to be decided upon are se soon to be carried out, it will be a good deal more difficult for the representatives at the conference to maintain a degree of detachment in their considerations. The tendency may well be to sacrifice the ideal for the expedient, and the ultimate good for the immediate consolation. One of the greatest difficulties in setting up an organization of this sort is attempting to maintain the balance betwelen the practical and the ideal. Enter now (with Due Consideration) May Festival, which was mentioned in the sec- ond sentence not exclusively for literary effect. May Festival itself undoubtedly has had not the slight- est effect on the San Francisco Conference, but it is representative of one of the most powerful forces in the direction of civilization's de- velopment. PARTICULARLY in the case of the more social as against the highly personal works of art, society re- ceives considerable impetus from men frequently cast off as mere dreamers, Of creawive work Matthew Arnold says: "Its gift lies in the faculty of being happily inspired by a certain intellectual and spiritual atmosphere, by a certain order of ideas, when it finds itself in them." In pointing out, comparing, or presenting singly the existent currents of thought and the Ideal, the artist supplies valuable critici-m of :ian, his habits and insti- tutions. During the years of the war the engineers, the economists, the sci- entists and industrialists have held sway, and no one has questioned their right to this position. Things like practical training, production, and transportation are the deter- mining factors in the success of a military force, so naturally we have turned to the men who are experts in these fields. In a time of emer- gency that demands immediate ma- terial relief we cannot hesitate, so the questions of Natures and Rea- sons and Purposes must be subor- dinated to the more pressing de- mands for men and equipment. But now that the peace is ap- proaching and plans are being laid for world organization we cannot go on working on the same basis. We must know what the significance of our decisions will be and examine the direction our present policies may take in the future. We cannot be satisfied by. an excellent compromise -the ultimate ideal toward which we are striving must be kept con- stantly im. mind. T'HIS is where the artists come in, for it is their business to be con- cerned with the dreams for which other men have neither time nor patience. Thcy are the ones who give meaning to man's accomplishments, who give 'impetus to new bursts of vitality. , It is of course important that a sound, practical plan emerge from the San Francisco Conference, but we need more than a working order having good, functioning economic, military, administrative provisions, We need a scheme founded upon an ideal that is' strong enough to survive the blunders which will in- evitably occur-an ideal of which the artists and philosophers are the guardians. It is time that we relieved these visionary flame-ten- ders of their roles, as mourners over lost ages, and vain prophets who shout their warnings only to lie ignored. Call them in ahead of time, for we need them the minute the generals and chemists and ec- onomists have accomplished their jobs. Listen to them now, instead 7 of waiting until later, when all they can do is bind up our wounds. Hard Peace ENERAL JODL, the German gen- eral who signed the unconditional surrender at Rheims, has made a request of the Allies. He has asked them to be "generous" intheir treat- ment of the German people, the Ger- man people who, according to the general, have suffered more than any1 other people in this war. There arej two points in the general's statement, the first of which typifies German1 colossalfnerve, the second the Ger-. man gift for falsehood. The request for generosity made I by this German is outrageous. He asks for mercy-for that is what he wants-for the people who inflicted the most devastating of wars on the world; for the people who wilfully' stood by, or, worse yet, aided in the torture and slaughter of millions. He stands there and speaks of Ger- man suffering when reports of Ger- man atrocities are daily pouring out of Europe. It must sound strange to the Czech who remembers Lidice, to % the Pole who remembers Maidenek. to the Russian who remembers Boby-c Yar, to hear of German suffering. t The Allies cannot do to the Ger- mans what the Germans ltve done to others. That is essentially whatr makes us: different. But we mustr turn only deaf ears to General Jodl and anyone else who seeks generosity for the Germans. We must be harsh in our treatment of that nation gone mad. Any soft treatment will invite World War III -Eunice Mintz DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 144 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. m. of the day preceding publication (10:30 a. m. Sat- urdays). CENTRAL WAR TIME USED IN THE DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN. Notices University Council: The May meet- ing of the University Council has been cancelled. Louis A. Hopkins, Secretary All Students interested in partici- patingin the three-act student writ- ten English Department comedy are asked to be on hand this afternoon at 2 o'clock (CWT) fourth floor An- gell Hall. La Soiedad Hispanica offers two fifty dollar scholarships (plus tui- tion) to the University of Mexico Summer School. Students interested must apply through Professor Mer- cado in 302 Romance Languages be- fore May 15. Prescott Club: All members who wish to attend the party on May 20, 1945, should sign the list on the bul- letin board next to the Pharmacy Office before Monday, May 14, 1945. Academic Notices Directed Teaching, Qualifying Ex- amination: All students expecting to do directed teaching next term are required to pass a qualifying exami- nation in the subject in which they expect to teach. This examination will be held on Saturday, May 12, at 7:30 a.m. Students will meet in the auditorium of the University High School. The examination will con- sume about four hours' time; prompt- ness is therefore essential. English II, Section 14: Rm. 4208 A.H. will be available as usual on Saturday. Econ. 121, Labor I: Class will not meet today, May 11. Z. C. Dickinson. Speech 31: Professor Owen's 8, CWT, class will meet in the Kellogg Auditorium in the Dental School to- day. Doctoral Examination for Hui Lan Yeh, Biological Chemistry; thesis: "Studies of the Proteins of the Tung Nut (A. Fordii) ", today, May 11, 313 West Medical, 9 a.m. Chairman, H. B. Lewis. By action of the Executive Board the Chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doctoral candidates to attend this examina- tion, and he may grant permission to those who for sufficent reason might wish to be present. Concerts Faculty Recital; Dorothy Ornest Feldman, guest soprano, will present a Lieder recital, accompanied by Kathleen Rinck of the piano faculty, .t 7:30-p.m. CWT, Sunday, May 13 in Lydia Mendelssohn. Mrs. Feldman's program will consist of compositions by Brahms, Hugo Wolf, Richard Strauss, and Schubert. The public is cordially invited. Exhibitions Sixteenth -Annual Exhibition of Sculpture of the Institute of Fine Arts: In the Concourse of the Michi- Ian League Building. Display will be on view daily until Commencement. Twenty-Second Annual Exhibition by the Artists of Ann Arbor and Vicinity: In the Mezzanine Exhibition Rooms of the Rackham Building daily, except Sunday, 2 to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m. The public is cordially invited. "Krishna Dancing with the Milk- maids" an original Rajput brush drawing with studies of the hands in crayon. Also examples of Indian fab- rics. Auspices, the Institute of Fine Arts. May 14 through May 26; Mon- day-Friday, 1-4; Saturday, 9-11, CWT. Alumni Memorial Hall, Rm. B. Events Today Orchestra Rehearsal: The Univer- sity Symphony Orchestra will meet in Hill Auditorium at 3 p.m. (CWT) today, for regular rehearsal. Coffee Hour: The presence of Dean 4 1 I 11 4 I 1 70 J e Ck to THE EDITOR: All of us who are so appalled by the atrocities committed in Germany, let's stop before we ask for an eye for an eye, think, and perhaps come to the conclusion, as I have, that those in Germany should be treated as we would anyone who represents a harmful influence to society, and , BARNABY -the search for the indicted financier reached proportions of a national manhunt today with O'Malley reported seen -Schenectady, St. Louis, New Orleans, Pittsburgh, St. Paul, East Orange, Boise- I mw~A4m ;n wIAaja By Crockett Johnson -Altoona, Washington, Yonkers, Kansas City,andl the leftfield heeachers of the Brooklyn boll park-- Now, that's imoossible! Edmonson of Vhe School of Eciuca- tion promises to make the Lane Hall Coffee Hour a very pleasant gather- ing this week. Anyone wishing to attend will be welcomed this after- noon at 3 (CWT). The Graduate Council is sponsor- ing a Mixer and Dance May 11 in the Rackham Building. There will be dancing, movies, games, enter- tainment, and refreshments. All I