PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY RIRSDAY, IMAY 24, l1945 Firftge y.ifh Ya Fift~f th Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Russian Relations Complicated By DREW PEARSON ti unalopw 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 Ray Dixon Paul Sislin , hank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy Ann Schutz Dick Strickland Martha Schmitt Kay McFee . . . Managing Editor . . . Editorial Director f x e e *City Editor Associate Editor . . Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor . . . . Women's Editor . Assoeiate Women's Editor Business Staff . Business Manager . Associate Business Mgr. * Associate Business Mgr. W ASHINGTON-It is always difficult to diag- nose what goes on inside the inscrutable Russian mind. But it is not difficult to know what goes on in Stalin's mind regarding one man who has played a large part in our Russian rela- tions-Winston Churchill. From the days immediately after the last war, when Churchill spurred the sending of Allied troops to Archangel and Siberia to block the Bolshevikg, they have always disliked him. Even when Wendell Willkie dined in the Krem- lin, Stalin rose and launched a violent attack against Churchill for taking Lend-Lease planes off ships destined for Russia when those ships stopped in Scotland. Knowing how Churchill encouraged Czarist admirals and generals to fight against them in the early struggling days of the Soviet, and how even recently Churchill remarked, "What will stand as protection between the white cliffs of Dover and the white snows of Russia?", it is easy to understand why Stalin is sometimes al- most savage in the notes he sends to .Churchill. With Franklin Roosevelt alive, the Russians had a friendly third party whom they liked and trusted. to act as mediator between Stalin and Churchill. Once or twice, especially at Teheran, the two men were literally at each other's throats before Roosevelt stepped in. But today, with Roosevelt dead, Stalin sud- denly finds himself face to face with the man he distrusts and dislikes, and dealing with a new American president vhom he doesn't know, but who is generally considered under the influence of his' anti-Russian State De- partment. This in itself undoubtedly is one important reason for Russian suspicion and their throwing of monkey-wrenches. ritish'U. s Iusian Splieres . . FURTHERMORE, all this has happened just at a time when the British had already carved out their sphere of influence in Europe and just as the Russians were about to carve out and enjoy theirs. With the British already having their complete say in Greece, Belgium, and Italy under U. S. blessing, the Russians now see a new U. S. president stepped in to tell them they cannot have the same free hand enjoyed by the British. The background to all this is important. It dates back to Roosevelt's Casablanca meeting with Churchill in January 1943, when the late T elephone 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 ca- sier, $4.50, by mal, $5.25. lPENSEL1DWNT0OPMATIIfj . i'&tWRcN13149 Dy NVational Advertising Service, Inc. College Putblishers Representative 420 M-AmiSomA vE. 'j NEW YORK. N. Y. mc~a ' 1mam* Lot S AiumIL3 "SAKI FARC18)I Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1944.45 NIGHT EDITOR: MARY BRUSH Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only., SHREWD POLITICAL MOVE: Churchill's Resig nation Discussed S HE RESIGNATION of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill can only be construed as a rather shrewd political move on the part of one of the ablest, if not the ablest, politician in the world. Churchill, of course, has no real thought of stepping out of the government of England at the present time, as his resignation might suggest to some. Rather, he is thinking of strengthening his position with the govern- ment and people of Great Britain for the time when there is no extreme national emer- gency, and the forces of domestic politics begin to re-assert themselves. It has been generally recognized in England that a national election must be held at the soon- est possible moment, with the conclusion of the European war being unofficially set for the time of that election. Churchill himself has repeated- ly emphasized the need for a new mandate from the people in order to replace the present Par- liament which has been in session since 1935, because of the coming of the war just before the normal five-year term had expired. Churchill apparently had preferred that the election, when held, would be put to the people strictly on the question of whether the wartime coalition government should be continued, as was done for the Lloyd George government in 1918. In his speech last week, the Prime Minister re- quested continued cooperation and good will from the members of all parties in support of the government which has led Britain through the war. It is probable that Churchill had no real hope that the coalition might be continued when he uttered these words, as the Labor Party, which will present the only consider- able opposition to Churchill's Conservatives at the election, has indicated repeatedly a de- sire to withdraw from the coalition and to "go to the country" on a strictly partisan basis with clear-cut issues drawn along the lines of the Laborites' program of gradual social- ization of the British economy vs. the Con- servative platform of continued private enter- prise and slow reform. Only last week the Labor Party conference voted by a prtctically unanimous majority to withdraw from the coalition, thus forcing the issue and leaving the next move squarely in Churchill's lap. Churchill, nothing loath, .has proceeded to submit his resignation without wait- ing for the withdrawal of the Labor Ministers from his cabinet. The King will undoubtedly give Churchill a mandate to form a new Cabinet, which Cabinet will contain only members of the Conservative Party. It is then expected that Churchill will ask for a dissolution of Parliament and a na- tI onal election along party lines to determine the rmaeup of the next Parliament. If the war with Japan i still in progress, it is highly prob- able that C hurchill will invite Laborites and Liberals hack into the government and continue the coalition for the balance of the emergency. By "resigning" at this particular moment, position of the Conservatives would be by no means so secure. On purely domestic issues, the feeling of the British people is a matter of speculation, with the possibility of a Labor triumph growing stronger by the day. Churchill, in recognizing this fact, has again demonstrated his wisdom in matters political. He has forced an election on the terms most favorable to himself and to his party. When, and if, he does decide to resign, he can do so with his party in the nossession of a clear majority and with possible defeat staved off for at least five more years, including the all-important peace-making and reconversion period, barring unlooked-for occurrences. -Bill Mullendore TIVA Director DAVID E. LILIENTHAL has been re-appointed director of the Tennessee Valley Authority de- spite the determined resistance of vested Tenes- see interests directed by Boss Crump. Lilienthal had served one term as TVA di- rector and was praised for his efficiency by numerous high government officials. Chief opposition to his reappointment came from the two Tennessee Senators, McKellar and Stewart. Too often they have added nothing to senatorial action other than a reiteration of Crumps desires. The two Tennessee legislators stated before the voice vote that the appointment was "personally obnoxious." Ordinarily this would have meant the defeat of the nomination. Majority leader Alben Barkley contended that the matter was not purely a Tennessee question and therefore should not be decided by its rep- resentatives. In view of the fact that President Truman praised Lilienthal's work as TVA head, it would seem that the executive finally has the support of the upper house-a condition lacking in our government for a number of years. -Bob Goldman Jap Ato a 'HE PARIS radio yesterday reported the launching of a new Japanese offensive against French forces in Indo-China, while un- confirmed reports reaching Chungkink indicated the Japs were preparing to abandon most of South and Southeastern China. This would entail the sacrifice of Jap forces in Indo-China, Thailand and Malay. In view of the former report, the abandonment of forces in these areas is improbable. -Charlotte Bobrecker 0 president tacitly agreed that Britain was to make all political and economic decisions for the Mediterranean and the Near Eastern war theatres. This was stretched to mean that all Lend-Lease in this area was distributed by the British, that UNRRA worked under British di- rection, that no U. S. military men could go inside Greece or Yugoslavia without a British OK Roosevelt lived to regret this, especially when he saw American tanks manned by the British firing on civilians in the streets of Athens. In fact, Athens was fresh in his memory when he left for his second meeting with Churchill and Stalin at Yalta. WJ'oodrow Wilson's Toubles AT CASABLANCA, Roosevelt had believed it wiser for the United States to keep out of European politics. He was always worried about the trouble his old chief Woodrow Wilson ex- perienced over Fiume and the turbulent details of European controversies. So Roosevelt's first decision was to leave Euro- pean politics to the British. But later, when he saw what happened in Greece, Belgium and Italy, he journeyed Jo Yalta determined that the United States must play its part in guaran- teeing the Four Freedoms to the liberated coun- tries. That was behind the Yalta plan for Big Three consultation regarding new governments, new boundaries and other changes i the lib- erated areas. Roosevelt had conceived this idea as much as anything as a safeguard against the British. But by that time, the British had pretty well finished their program in Greece, Italy, Belgium, Abyssinia and North Africa; so the chief effect of the Yalta agree- ment fell on the Russians, who were just be- ginning to open u Poland, Austria, and the Balkans. (Copyright, 0!45, by the Be l Syndicate, inc.) I'D RA THER BE Rl(;HT: RA HRFinal. Antic'do Ls By SAMUEL GRAFTON I rjHE HIGH NAZI leaders have shown a truly ape-like passion for art; they have collected paintings like cocoanuts, holding them in their arms until the last minute, and jibbering savage- ly at those who would take them away. Ah, culture! It must be a low fellow who has to reassure himself by stealing $200,000,000 of paintings, and one thinks of Goering, especially, as a hog in chiffon, drinking tea with his pinky up and pretending that he never really liked mud. I am especially fond of the story of the picture which he gave to his wife's nurse. He said to her: "Take this, and you'll never need money," and he handed her the Jan Ver Meer "Christ and the Adulteress,' worth at least a million. It was a princely gift, but not, in this case, given as a prince would give it; given, rather, as a barbarian would give it, a barbarian with the free run of a museum. It is from these final anecdotes that one realizes what a set of racketeers the top Nazis were, and how basically unimportant, as people. So many of them seemed to behave, toward the end, like characters in a Damon Runyon story, one of those tales in which the criminal element takes over a town for a day. There is the confidential secretary's story of how Hitler, hiding in his Berlin bomb shelter in April, received a telephone call from Von Ribbentrop. "Hey, chief," said Von Ribbentrop, or words to that effect, "I got a hot tip. The Allies are going to declare war on Russia." "That's what you say!" said Hitler. And, bang, he hung up. Sez you! says the Chancellor to the Foreign Minister It is like Little Caesar barking into a telephone in a hotel hideaway, while a manicurist works on his toe-nails to show to all observers that he understands the finer things of life. And Hitler's associates, it is now said, never told him how many airplanes America was making. They just kept it quiet. He would have been angry, and it would have made for a lot of noise around the joint. And Goering, trying frantically to load a twenty-car train with art, before making his at- tempt at escape. These were fellows who would even steal a locomotive. They didn't care about Germany, except for as much of it as they could carry. Suddenly one sees what the structure of the German state really was, and how these Nazi leaders were merely hired gangsters, working for other and more sinister characters. A fire is sometimes as good as an x-ray, and the German holocaust, lighting up the Nazi leaders in their comically larcenous final moments, tells us a lot about Germany. These were only the hoods, the bully-boys, the dressed-up yokels. It is true they sometimes made free with their Junker betters; if one plays with gangsters, one must expect to get a knuckle- rub now and then. But the really menacing sight in Germany today is not the spectacle of Nazi leaders, stuf- fing their pockets with silver spoons and run- ning down the road. It is the dignity with which the Junker Generals have met the end. That is really frightening, for these are the irrevocably committed, the never-say-dies, the men who have no futures except to try to change the future of the world. They are already at work again, and the anecdotes of the final days tell us who was really who in Germany. The Pendu/lun By BERNARD ROSENBERG ORGANIZED labor is sponsoring the establishment of a Michigan anti-discrimination act such as New York has recently inaugurated. Two summers ago both these states witnessed bloody race riots. There were some differences, causally spea- king, with regard to 'the two out- bursts. The ways in which they were handled were also dissimilar. The mayor of Detroit, who will soon be reelected, it seems, had to consult the gvernor at that time. Mr. Kelly was away at a conven- tion. Before he returned, hei- tated, declared martial law, called out the militia, and ordered a cur- few, the damage had been done. Conversely, LaGuardia, who seems disinclined to enter the mayoralty contest this year, handled the situ- ation in New York with masterful good sense and there was a mini- mum of bloodshed. In Detroit, a false rumr set off the ruckus; in New York, it was the arrest of a Negro, Real Causes ... BUT, IMMEDIATE causes are never real causes. That shot at Sara- jevo was not the reason we fought the last World War any more than the invasion of Poland was the basis for this one. Fratricidal warfare is cut of the same cloth. As such it can be predicted. Dr: Norman Humphrey, clear-thinking Wayne University pro- fessor of sociology, writes in the March issue of "Compass": "Not much social diagnostic ability was required to recognize that Detroit in early June 1943 was at the verge of a social explosion." In fact, Dr. Humphrey has called every turn on race relations in Detroit with keenness and accur- I acy. Nor is he at all serene about the immediate future. Dark forces of dissension that once before bli- ghted Detroit are gurgling under the surface today. An unemploy- ment situation of sorts exists al- ready. The Detroit News 'ran a most significant front page picture recently of jobless veterans resent- fully picketing an anto m ot ive plant. Their grim faces looked too much like a presage of things to come. Walter Reuther told the Mead Committee that about 60,000 women had been laid off in the Detroit area. War Mobilization Chief Vinson has spoken of the million and a half men who will be thrown out of work shortly-not a few of them from Michigai-and there is more than some doubt as to whether and how fast reconversion can take up the slack. The very conditions that allowed for the brutal murder of some thir- ty people in 1943 are present now. If there. is a more alert constabu- lary, there are also greater feelings of insecurity. Locally, little can be expected from a mayor who, though he had a full term to salve the wounds of racial friction, has done next to nothing about them. Vote May Split ... MOREOVER, if the Wayne County election of a couple months ago means anything, then as between Frankensteen and Jeffries, labor will split its vote. The AFL nominated one candidate for the board of edu- cation, the CIO put up another- Victor Reuther-who was opposed by two factions in his own union. Be- tween them enough votes were gar- nered to win the election-but they knocked each other out. So, Demo- cratic Wayne County still has a Re- publican Board of Education. TheI PAC is virtually dissolved for the1 nonce, and Jeffries' reelection is practically conceded-which means the race problem needs to be handled from some source other than the municipality. As for legislation from Washing- ton: a filibuster is more likely than a permanent FEPC. I do not say that such a law coming from our state government will clear up the whole matter. One cannot know in advance how the Quirin-Ives Bill will work put since it does not become an effective New York law until July. But, Lansing is the place for us to turn in the absence of hope else- where. We need te be rid of the stilT. institutionalized forms of prejudice before Jim Crow can die a natural death. A tremendous crisis is im- pending for America. There are those who would shut their eyes to it and focus them elsewhere-say on the stock market. But the prob- lem is real. The less done about it on any level, the more certain our doom. 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 Angeli Nall, 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. THURSDAY, MAY 24, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 155 Notices To the Memmbers of the University Senate: There will be a meeting of the University Senate on June 11 at 3:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphi- theater. To the Members of the University Council: The June meeting of the University, Council has been can- celled. Faculty, College of Engineering: There will be a meeting of the Fac- ulty on Monday, May 28, at 3:15 p.m., in Rm. 348, West Engineering Building. All Students. Registration for Sun- ier Term and Summer Session. Each student should plan to register for himself according to the alphabetical schedules for June 28 and 29. Regis- trations by proxy will not be accept- ed. Registration Material, College of L.S.&A., Schools of Education, Music: Students should call for summe registration material at Rm. 4, Uni- versity Hall. Please see your adviser and secure all necessary signatures before 'examinations begin. Registration Material, College of Architecture: Students should call for summer material at Rm. 4, Uni- versity Hall. The College of Archi- tecture will post an announcement in the near future giving time of conference with your classifier. Please wait for this notice before seeing your adviser. Registration Material, School of Forestry and Conservation: Regis- tration material should be called for at Rm. 2048, Natural Science Bldg. Chrysler Corporation, Detroit: Mr. Amus will be in the Bureau today, to interview students from any school, with a commercial, mechanical or engineering background for their College Training Program. For ap- pointment call the Bureau of Ap- pointments, University Ext. 371. American Red Cross, Detroit: Miss German, Home Service, will be in our office today to interview all sen- ior girls with majors in Sociology, Social Work, and Psychology. Those who are interested should acall the Bureau of Appointments, University Ext. 371, for appointment. Amierican Red Cross: Columbus, 0., Home Service are interested in June graduates for case work aide. Further information can be obtained at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall. ence, and the Arts: Juniors who wish to apply for admission to the Senior Honors course in English should file letters of application in the English Office (3221 A.H.) not later than Friday, May 25. Concerts Student Recital: Ruth Wolkowsky, pianist, will be heard in a program of compositions by Bach, Schubert, Mihaud, asnd Brahms, at 7:30 p.m., CWT, tonight in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. She is a pupil of Joseph Brinkman and presents the recital in partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Bachelor of Music. The public is cordially invited. Student Recital: Marian Cole Sieg- fried, contralto. will be heard in re- cital at 7:30 CWT, Friday exehing, May 25, in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- ter. A student of Hardin Van Deur- sen. Mrs. Siegfried has arranged a program of songs by French, Italian, German, and English composers. The public is invited. Student Recital: Lola Phyllis Craw- ford, Mezzo-soprano, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bach- elor of Music in Music Education, at 7:30 p.m. CWT, Saturday, May 26, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Miss Crawford is a student of Hardin Van Daursen. Her program will include groups of Italian, German and Eng- lish songs, and will be open to the general public. Exhibitions Sixteemth 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. "Kishna 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, through May 26; Monday-Fri- day, 1-4; Saturday, 9-11, CWT. Al- umni Memorial Hall, Rm. B. Exhibition under auspices of Col- lege of Architecture and Design: Architectural work of William W. Wurster, Dean of School of Archi- tecture and Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and former prominent architect of San Fran- cisco. Mezzanine Exhibition Rooms of the Rackham Building. Open daily except Sunday, 2 to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m. through June 2. The public is cordially invited. Tea at the International Center, every Thursday, 3-4:30 p.m. Faculty, foreign students, and their American friends are cordially invited, Bible Study Seminar: Mr. Littell- will continue this study with a dis- cussion of Hosea. Any students in- terested will be welcomed in Lane Hall this evening at 6:30 (CWT). Chemistry Club will meet at 6:45 pm. (CWT) in Rm. 303 Chemistry Bldg. Dr, L. 0. Brockway will give an illustrated talk on "Electron Diff- raction and Industrial Surface Prob- lems". Interested faculty members and men in chemistry and chemical engineering are invited. Refresh- ments will be served. - - - ANY BONDS TODAY? IMy Fibber McGee and Molly Illu.sra ted by Licty "eI deot want to interfere with your buying War IBond, Abner, but youlI have to find another place to hIe them." DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I BARNABY cm-IN - _--A -,Ii ]\'ohc- s y DCJoetoral Examinationi for Char t -- T aOLvi Ahonen, Physics; thesis: Littleboy, can you tell Theoretical Evaluation of Norm ,..., iar t!A - I Frequencies of Vibration of the Is ti Did you hear what the radio said about FH e must have heard of ( ab r sh1 t , I1 Barnaby believes .1 C les "A aal so-