PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY'- SUNDAY, MAV-1, 1945 . r _ m Eif eap & Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Pauley Favors Hard Peace DEAN WALTER RECOMMENDS: Barzun's'Teacher in America' v Edited andemanaged 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 Hank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy Ann Schutz Dick Strickland Martha Schmitt Kay McFee . Editorial Staff * . . . 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 second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.50,'by mail, $5.25. 'REPRESENTED FOR NATIONA- ADVERT13NG SY National Advertising Service, inc. College PublishersRep resentative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO - BOSTON . LOs ANGELES * SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press; 1944-45 NIGHT EDITOR: ARTHUR J. KRAFT Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. War Cries N SOME LOCALITIES the American public is to be spared the job of viewing atrocity films. This is liable to save some of the persons respon- sible for the real "in the flesh" atrocities from serving punishment. Certain theatres throughout the nation, in- cluding the Radio City Music Hall, have en- forced a voluntary censorship on these. films. We have seen newspaper photos of deformed bodies heaped together, of saucer-eyed children and of skeleton-like men. We are horrified, and we are indignant. We demand that war crim- inals be punished. But as people are liberated and relieved, as refugees are returned to their homelands, as dead bodies are buried and forgotten by all but the next of kin and those who loved, our feeling of horror will decrease. We will forget the pic- tures in the newspaper. But watching a screen which reveals figures- the same skeletons and scrawny children-mov- ing, groping, struggling and dying-we will not forget so soon. A clenching fist and a grimacing face are easier to remember;than "just a body." This sort of memory is painful, 'but for this memory we need pain. As William L. Chenery, publisher of the Collier's magazine said to a PM reporter, "If some can endure it, others can look at it." Because there are some people who will pass these crimes off lightly, because there are some people who will say, as Representative Max Schwabe of Missouri has said, that these crimes "have not been the rule but the exception," it is necessary that these films be shown through- out the country. By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-At the Chicago Democratic Convention last July, there was a tunnel under the speaker's stand to the floor of the convention hall. Off this passageway were little doors. One was marked: "Edward Pauley." To the little office behind this door, big, in- gratiating Democratic treasurer Ed Pauley hauled from the floor delegate after delegate who was wavering between Truman and Wallace. There he convinced California's Attorney Gen- eral Bob Kenney, who had arrived as a Wallace supporter but who after listening to Pauley voted for Truman, and took half of California's delegation with him. In those last frantic hours when it was nip and tuck between Wallace and Truman, Pauley and his little office did a thriving business. Perhaps lie tipped the scales for the man who now sits in the White House. Last week, after the political debt was paid I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: San Francisco By SAMUEL GRAFTON NOTES ON SAN FRANCISCO: 1. The San Francisco conference ran into trouble when it began to consider matters that should never properly have come before it. One such was the admission of Argentina. In forcing the question of Argentina on the conference, the United States carried on as if the conference were a world organization, which it is not; it is only a body called to set up a plan for a world organ- ization. This conference has somewhat less legal power than a coroner's jury, picked off the street, for the results of its deliberations are binding on no,government until ratified. We allowed this pick-up team to act like a world government, and to arbitrate an issue between America and Russia. In doing so, we abandoned the principle of unanimity among the great powers; we aban- doned fixed points of reference; and we threw the world into solution, long before it was safe to do so. We have been playing world organiz- ation, the way children play house, before there was a world organization to play with. 2. No question of admission of any nation should have been allowed to come before the conference, in any form, not even the ques- tions of White Russian and Ukrainian Soviet Republics, or the question of Poland. These are fundamentally questions or recognition, which are always settled on the diplomatic level. Instead of trying, by hard and patient work, to settle these questions through diplom- ecy, we have used the conference, like a club, to bring about forced settlements. The result is that we have something like a split in the world organization, before we even have a world organization; we have set up the cleav- age before we have written the by-laws. Our pathetic eagerness to use the conference in this way to bring about forced solutions seems to represent nothing less than a failure of nerve on the part of the State Department, It has seemed rather glad to be able to turn its prob- lems over to an outside body; and our diplomacy appears to have gone crashing, even on the technical level, since the death of Mr. Roosevelt. 3. We must return to a much more humble conception of the conference, and stop using it as an apparatus for solving' hard problems with which it is not equipped to deal. The State Department should try doing its own homework again. The results of its slackness have been all bad. For one, it has set the small nations of the world against each other, in a recklessly anarchic fashion, with all of Latin America lining up against most of the small countries of Europe. It will be a solemn enough moment when, after a world organization has been ratified, and is functioning, a major question is tossed to it, to be settled by counting of noses. To have done this now, before there is a world organization, has amounted to giving the small nations much more power than is contemplated for them on the ultimate world bodies. The whole business has worn a sickly air of improvization, as if bystanders at a bar had been called in to settle an argument. THIS CONFERENCE has been oversold; over- sold, so that most of us are afflicted with the notion that a world legislature is meeting in San Francisco, rather than an organizing com- mittee for a world legislature. The State De- partment should have had enough courage to turn down most of those American organizations which wanted to send "consultants," and were allowed to do so, though their purposes, in al- most every case, had almost nothing to do with this conference. Somewhere in the Senate there should be a disciplinary power fit to deal with the three Navy Committee Senators who went tearing out last week-end, to influence the con- ference on a territorial question which is never going to come up at this meeting. This conference is setting up a blueprint for an organization; that is all. For the rest, we have to turn to the doctrine of unanimity among the great powers, which Mr. Roosevelt used so brilliantly. We are not yet ready to let the world go fluid. We still need our fixed points of reference. This can still be a good conference, though it has turned out to be a poor world legislature. It can still succeed in what it was called to do. (Copyright, 1945, New York Post Syndicate) which made Pauley U.S. member of the Repar- ations Commission, Big Ed talked with old friends, including his chief in the White House. Judging by what Big Ed told them, there is no doubt where he stands regarding a hard peace for Germany. State Department appeasers, he told them, will arrange his transportation and his hotel accomodations, but that's all. Otherwise, Pauley is determined that the policy of Frank- lin Roosevelt before he died shall be carried out. That policy was that every potential war factory in Germany be transferred or wiped out. President Truman has reempha- sized that policy. Pauley, who is as good a businessman as he is a politician, may be a lot better than some diplomats when it comes to carrying it out. Truman Woos Governors . PRESIDENT Harry Truman is determined to cement his relationship with state leaders as well as Congress. That was the reason behind the recent visit to the White House of Gover- nors J. Howard McGrath of Rhode Island, Her- bert R. O'Conor of Maryland and Robert Kerr of Oklahoma. McGrath and O'Conor had actually been asked by Truman to come to Washington, while Kerr happened to be in town and was invited to join them. Truman opened the conversation by telling the governors that since they live among their ecnstituents from day to day, they are per- haps able to keep a closer check on what the people are thinking than members of Congress. He asked their help in seeing to it that our foreign policy is understandable to the Amer- ican public, and in turn is understood by the public. Foreign policy was the only subject discussed, aside from the arrangements for the annual Governor's Conference, to be held in July at Mackinac Island, Mich. Truman was invited by the three governors to attend the Mackinac Island sessions, or at least to come out and speak to the governors. The idea appealed to him, but he said he could not reply definitely until much later, when he knew what would be happening in Washington and elsewhere in the world. As the gubernatorial trio left, McGrath of Rhode Island dropped behind for a moment and Truman said he might be calling him to Wash- ington again within a couple of weeks. Mc- Grath, who led Roosevelt and Truman by more than 10,000 votes in Rhode Island last year, is serving his third term as governor and was U.S. attorney in Rhode Island for seven years before that. A close friend of Bob Hannegan, McGrath seconded Truman's vice-presidential nomin- ation last year at Chicago. Note-Later in the day a reporter called McGrath and asked him if he had discussed horse-racing with the President. The Gover- nor said he had not, hung up the telephone and turned to a friend. "Lord, what a story the reporters could have made out of that- the governors of Maryland and Rhode Island, two of the hottest horse-racing states, closeted with the President as V-E day gets close. You know, I didn't even think of horse-racing, and I'll bet O'Conor didn't either." Capital Chuff ABOUT THE FIRST to benefit from V-E day will be farm machinery. WPB's chairman Krug has ordered that farm machinery manu- facturers be given first crack at any steel that can be spared by the military. . . . Although mail to American prisoners of war is carried free, Americans writing to them long were forbidden use of the common three-cent stamp bearing the large "V." Letters were returned to the Post Office with warnings against sending any kind of propaganda. ...Meanwhile, parents of U.S. prisoners received from their sons letters with German stamps on which were pictures of Hit- ler A 50-cent subsidy to cattle feeders was to be included in the ten-point meat program re- cently announced by OPA. But it was blocked by the War Food Administration, which in- sisted upon more time to "study" the situation and decide how to pay the subsidy. (Copyright, 1945, Bell Syndicate) Mode, tICHIGAN faces an opportunity to modernize its state legislature which comes to few states. One year ago, following the disclosure of improper practices in the legislature, the gov- ernor of Michigan appointed a committee to study legislative procedure and suggestimprove- ments. Recently a subcommittee was appointed to study the one-chamber legislature. The strength of meaningless tradition is so great that it appears to take a major scandal or the inspiration of a great leader to make it clear that governmental affairs have lagged far be- hind not only normal progress but the positive desires of the people for better conduct of the public's business. While some of the imperfections of the bi- cameral legislature are fresh in the public mind, it is to be hoped something substantial in the way of improvement will be attempted. Opportunity conies even less frequently than lightning strikes. -National Municipal Review (EDITOR'S NOTE: There are two copies of Barzun's book in the University library and Dean Walter's own copy is onrreserve in the Angell Hall study hall.) TEACHER IN AMERICA by Jacques Barzun. Little, Brown & Company. Boston. 1945. $3.A0. SOME BOOKS may be read by .proxy, by one's favorite reviewer; some books can be skimmed; but some books must be read thoroughly from cover to cover. Jacques Barzun's Teacher in America belongs to the third class. Every prospective teacher, every teacher who genuinely wants to be more effective, and every teacher who really is a success, or who merely thinks he is, should read this book. Furthermore, all people who are seriously concerned with the position of the teacher in America cannot afford to neglect Barzun. Since there is no substitute for reading the book, this review will con- sist of a series of questions that Bar-' Dorninie Says IN A BRILLIANT but negative de- scription of the modern English- man, C. E. M. Joad says, "They ac- knowledge no duty toward God, in whom they do not believe, and no duty toward their neighbors, whom they do not know." The continent suffered the same skepticism and now we have the spiritual tragedy of political infidelities, mass mobiliza- tion and a sudden return to destroyed homes and unrequitted loyalties. It is an ancient fact that once I set out to wrong another person I must have a hard time, regardless of circumstances, training myself to admire him or to see merit in him. Perhaps the injunction by Jesus to do good to those who spitefully use you and to love not only your friend but your enemy, is the virtue which puts Christianity at the apex of universal ethics. Today we shall observe that Germans will find it even harder to recognize merit in the Russians, whom they definitely attacked, than in the English. Cer- tainly the Russians will find it far moreadifficult to deal fairly with the landowning Poles than with their other enemies. The attacking Franco will never learn to love the Republicans whom he violated. In Europe for five years, the contrary national and ethnic currents, an- cient grievances and fierce atti- tudes of centuries, like the waves of a sea breaking its dikes, have been on a rampage of orderly crime. Sociologist Newcomb is to be envied at having an appointment to study these expressions of human nature at its worst. We say at its worst because upon relaxation of that heavy mili- tary discipline which, at this distance brings us relief from minor strain and a great sense of reversion to custom, must mean to certain Euro- pean men a new freedom to do some private killing. At every alley and around each dark corner in Europe will now lurk the petty grudge. Hu- man nature as such is a futile de- scription of man. One man identifies human nature with the Deity, the next with his counterpart, the Devil, and a third, never comprehending his inconsistency, asserts while he works at education and religion that human nature cannot be changed. However, we know now that human nature means personality, the native endowment of a man's organism with its nerve system and brain plus the attitudes which compose that person. This organism, nerve system, brain and the attitudes or responses habit- ual to the person so constituted are modifiable downward by fatigue, shock, strain or disease and are modi- fiable upward by the affectionate training of mature leaders. "There are depths in man that go to the low- est hell, and heights that reach the highest heaven, for are not both heaven and hell made out of him; everlasting miracle and mystery that he is." (Carlyle). Man is put to it just now to be saintly. It becomes a civic, if not a moral duty upon us all in a peace making epoch, to teach; herein resides the spiritual demand of events. That duty begins with commitment to all in the interest of a world-wide peace effort. Every inhabitant of these free new continents should voice a prayer for older peoples, learn forgiveness toward those per- sonalities who are hard to accept, and eschew every local hatred. -Edward W. Brakeman Counselor in Religious Education By Crockett Johnson C ushlmochree! Listen! n..-- rnc fA nno zun raises. The page number after each question refers the reader to Barzun's answer. What does a "C" really mean? (p. 257) How many kinds of human thought are there? (p. 308) What can we do with the "incubus of Europe's profundity"? (p. 316) How large should a student schol- arship be? (p. 285) What relation does the Ph.D. have to good teaching? (p. 195, ff.) What is the measure of Intelli- gence? (p. 209, ff.) Why are young teachers the best teachers? (p. 19) Why is a study of at least one of the fine arts indispensable to a good engineer? (p. 116, ff.) Why "ought deans by professional duty always prefer facing Educa1on D ISTRESSING facts concerning America's educational system were described last week by Colum- bia University's Dr. John K. Norton in a Congressional hearing. Statistics revealed that 2,000,000 school-age children are not attend- ing schools. Furthermore, more than 10,000,000 adults have had only four years or less of formal schooling. At least 1,000,000, more adults, men, were classified 4-F be- cause of inadequate education. Educational leaders suggest as remedies higher pay for teachers and federal aid to schools. Twenty-three per cent of the teaching profession receives less than $1,200 a year be- cause schools lack sufficient funds. Opposition to this plan comes from conservatives fearing federal control of schools, and from religious sects fearing handicaps to their owh edu- cational systems. While we are formulating pro- grams to re-educate the Nazi mind, it would be wise to broaden our discussions. to include these mil- lions of uneducated Americans. -Martha Ann Dieffenbacher trouble"? (See Chapter 13, p. 177, ff, "Deans Within Deans.") Can women deal with abstractions? (p. 250) Should all high school graduates be admitted to state universities? (p. 254) What is the test of democratic cul- ture? (p. 274) Why is reading the classics indis- pensable to a sound education? (p. 148, ff.) What is adult education? (p. 259) What is history? (p. 103, ff.) "What is it that our men of science are guarding like a threatened virginity?" (p. 88, if.) Why should "all dealings with those taught to a certain degree be contradictory"? (p. 226) Why is "a young man who is not a radical about something a pretty poor risk for education"? (p. 238) Montaigne, to whom Barzun re- fers repeatedly, concluded his essay, "Of the Education of Children," thus, "there is nothing like arousing appetite and affection [in the stu- dent]; otherwise you make nothing but asses loaded with books. By whipping them we give them their pocketful of learning to keep; which, if it is to do any good, we must not merely lodge in us: we must espouse it. (D. M. Frame's translation.) Barzun espouses the teacher's profession. He knows it from every angle and criticizes it mercilessly, but always construc- tively. Read with understanding, his book can help the beginning teacher in hundreds of ways. Older teachers will recognize his discern- ing analysis of common problems. Readers generally cannot fail to appreciate his espousal of this fundamental idea: "unless the teacher feels that besides bread- winning he has 'his own work to do', he is cheating himself of free- dom and joy, and reducing the worth of his toil as a teacher. For what he will infallibly convey to a class is his awareness of Quality or his blindness to it." . -Erich A. Walter I {I i DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN r s L S SUNDAY, MAY 13, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 146 Publication in tie 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 Angel 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 La Sociedad 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.. Lt. R. W. Hansen: Representative from the Signal Corps, Arlington, Va., will be in our office Tuesday, May 15, to interview all seniors who want to be considered for employ- ment. For appointment call Bureau of Appointments, University Ext. 371. State of Connecticut Civil Service announcement for Assistant Social worker, $1500 per annum, has been received in our office. For further information stop in at 201 Mason Hall, Bureau of Appointments. Lectures University Lecture: Mr. Flavel Shurtleff, Professor of City Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technol- ogy, will speak on "The Field of Town Planning", on Tuesday, May 15, at 3:15 p.m., in the Rackham Amphi- theater, under the auspices of the College of Architecture and Design. The Henry Russei Lecture: Dr. Edward H. Kraus, Professor of Crys- tallography and Mineralogy and for- mer Dean of the College of Litera- ture, Science, and the Arts, will de- liver the annual Henry Russel Lec- ture at 3:15 p.m., Thursday, May 17, in the Rackham Amphitheater. His subject will be "The Unfolding Crys- tal", illustrated. At this time public announcement of the Henry Russel Award will also be made. The public is cordially invited. A cademic Notices Preliminaries in Education: Pre- liminary Examinations for the Doc- torate in the School of Education will be held on the afternoons of June 7, 8 and 9 from 1 till 4 o'clock, CWT. Anyone desiring to take these examinations should notify the Of- a Lieder recital, accompanied by Kathleen Rinck of the piano faculty, at 7:30 p.m. CWT, this evening in Lydia Mendelssohn. Mrs. Feldman's program will consist of compositions by Brahms, Hugo Wolf, Richard Strauss, and Schubert. The public is cordially invited. Student Recital: Doris Jean Gil- man, Soprano, will present a recital in partial, fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Bachelor of Music in Music Education, at 7:30 p.m. CWT, Tuesday, May 15, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Miss Gilman is a student of Hardin Van Deursen. Her program will include a group of French, German and English songs, and will be open to the general public. 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. 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 Mrs. Henry A. Sanders, native Tex- an, will lecture, accompanied by March of Time film, on Texas, at 6:30 p.m. today in the International Center. The public is cordially in- vited. Coming Events Post-War Council Meeting will be held Monday, May 14, in the Union, Rm. 302, at 3:30. There will be a forum on post-war education Monday, May 14. Profes- sors G. G. Brown, C. D. Thorpe, H. Y. McClusky, and J. L. Brumm, will speak. Men's Lounge, Rackham, 6:30 CWT. There will be a meeting of Russky Kruzhok (Russian Circle) on Mon- day, May 14, at 7:30 (CWT) in the International Center. Those inter- Vi 4 I I We must be impressed with the fact that these crimes' took place, and this impression must last. It may hurt us to see pictures of others tortured and murdered, but it is better that we see others now than feel, ourselves, later. -Anita Franz Recogniition WHICH POLISH government is to be recog- nized by the United Nations-the Lublin or the London provisional government or a new coalition following the Yalta Formula? And what is Russia's explanation of the arrest of the 16 Polish leaders? These questions are being discussed currently at the San Francisco conference, and a decision is imperative. The Soviet reply is expected within a few days, and the Russian delegate may be able to explain, to the Allies' satisfaction, why the Polish mission to discuss cooperation between the two governments was seized. Basic, however, is the issue of recognition. Russia, apparently, has been reluctant to ap- 4 BARNABY I fI'm so successfully foiling my pursuers, Barnaby, because 11 If they put themselves in my place-after I already am in And I'd bring about an arrest in no time! I'd !I I l I I