j EFOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY -- - i Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Wallace Goes Conservative DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 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 Iay Dixon . Paul Sislin Hank Mantho Mavis Kennedy Ann Schutz Dick Strickland Martha Schmitt Kay McFee Editorial Staff . . . . Managing Editor . . . . Editorial Director . . . . . .City Editor . . . Associate Editor . . . . 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- tier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. NEPRESENTED FOR NATIONA ADVERTI3NO NY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. * NEW YORK. N.Y. CNICAGO * oSTO * LOS ANGELES * SAN FRANCISCO 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. BornholmnHeld ONE of the little known happenings since V-E Day is the Russian occupation of the Danish island of Bornholm. The island is located in the Baltic, 25 miles off the south coast of Sweden, but the Russians claim that it lies off the coast of East Prussia, 125 miles to the east.- Although both of these assertions are true, the Russian claim does not appear valid when we remember that the island has historicalk been regarded as a part of Scandinavia. Disputes as to its ownership in the past have always been between the Scandinavian powers and for many years it has been a major part of Denmark. The inhabitants of the area have no more desire to be under the Russian rule than under the Ger- man. Like Poland, they are forced to accept the lesser of two evils. Already, Russian engineers have begun work towards establishing an air base on the island and apparently regard the area as a part of their defense in the Baltic, the southern coast of which they have almost completely in their pos- session. This means that the Russians are on to stay and can only be negotiated off. So far, no definite stand on the matter has been taken by London or Washington. Russian leaders have stated no future policy. However, the move is of far-reaching importance and must be settled by the combined representa- tives of the governments concerned. This means giving Denmark an opportunity to be heard. It is possible that Russia wants Bornholm to balance Britain's probable occupation of Helgo- land, an island located west of Jutland. If the occupation of islands throughout this area as well as in the whole world is to become a tit- for-tat affair between the major powers with no regard for the smaller nations concerned, the doctrines set forth in the Atlantic Charter have become meaningless. One nation cannot silently occupy an area without making explanation to the rest of the world. Neither can it be allowed to occupy an area against the volition of the inhabitants. It is imperative that Russia, Britain, and the United States make known their policy in this matter. To quietly shelve those problems which are not pressing at the moment is add- ing fuel to the highly inflammable heap of grievances that could give rise to a third world war. -Alice Jorgenson Delay Justified " IEPATRIATION of prisoners shall be effected with the least possible delay after the con- clusion of peace," the Geneva Convention states regarding prisoners of a belligerent nation. Our government interprets the clause "after the con- clusion of the peace" to mean after the peace treaty has been signed and ratified. German and Italian prisoners now in the United States will therefore remain and work here until the peace treaty is signed. It is right that they should be made to work on our farms, and at our manual tasks for two reasons. First, shipping space to Europe will be at a By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Some of the liberals who fought so hard for Henry Wallace's confir- mation are now beginning to wonder how much he is the prisoner of old line bureaucrats inside the commerce department. Privately they say they don't see much difference between his ad- ministration of commerce and Herbert Hoover's. What has particularly aroused Wallace's liberal friends is his appointment of a com- mittee to study the U. S. patent system. Wal- lace appointed the committee upon receipt of a letter from President Truman which re- minded him that the American patent system had been misused by unlawful monopolies and needed overhauling. Whereupon Wallace appointed a committee to study patents which included two men considered staunch defenders of the present patent setup. They are: Charles F. Kettering, vice-president of General Motors, and Dr. Vannevar Bush, di- rector of the Office of Scientific Research and Development. This caused justice department experts to hit the ceiling. In the early war days, both Kettering and Bush served as members of a patent committee to ascertain whether patents were interfering with the war effort. They came out with a re- port completely white-washing the existing pat- ent system. So now Wallace, great liberal, appoints two men who say the patent system is OK, on a committee which President Truman says should remedy the "misuse" of patents. "'Full Employment" Discussed. . . ONE OF THE hottest backstage battles at San Francisco was over the simple but signifi- cant words, "full employment," and whether these words should go into the final charter as an expression of hope for future mankind. First fuss was kicked up by the American dele- gation after gentle Dean Virginia Gildersleeve of Barnard College reported to a closed U. S. meeting that the commission on social and eco- nomic welfare of which she is a member had endorsed "full employment." Senators Connally of Texas and Vandenberg of Michigan promptly hit the ceiling. 'Both said the senate would turn down the charter if "full employment" were in- serted. "Folks will say it will lead to an international WPA," stormed the gentleman from Texas. Vandenberg called it nothing but "an inter- national New Deal," while others moaned about " a quart of milk for every hottentot." Result was that Secretary Stettinius, who personally favored the "full employment" phrase, began to back water, and asked his aides to work out a compromise formula. Next day, master strategy was evolved. Miss Gildersleeve was instructed to go before the social and economic welfare commission, propose that the wording of the phrase which had already been approved and voted on be changed sd as to include "education" as well as "full employ- ment" as .one of the aspirations of the United Nations. If her commission could be persuaded to reopen its discussions, Dean Gildersleeve was also instructed to try to put some qualifying language around the words "full employment" in order to soften them. Miss Gildersleeve Goes To at , , , GRACIOUS Miss Gildersleeves appeared that night at the commission meeting, and asked on behalf of the United States that the entire discussion be reopened because the American delegation wanted to include the word "educa- tion." Whereupon Australia's hard-hitting Foreign Minister Evatt jumped up to ask whether that was all Miss Gildersleeve had on her mind, or whether the U. S. was merely using this as a wedge to reopen the whole question after it had been voted under normal democratic procedure. Evatt was swiftly seconded by forthright Prime Minister Fraser of New Zealand. Some one else proposed that the commission act first on the education question, then pry into the aims of the American delegate later. De- spite protests, however, a vote was taken and the word "education" was included. Miss Gildersleeve next urged that qualifying language be added to make certain the charter did not give any country the right to interfere in the domestic affairs of another. But Fraser objected, saying the United States was trying to weasel out of the original vote. The Russian delegate then pointed out that the whole principle of non-interference was ade- quately covered in the charter. - ONSECOND xh HOUGHT**. By Ray Dixon THE MARINES on Okinawa are making prog- ress slowly, but Shuri. Prohibitionists' slogan for golf players: Too many shots the night before means too many shots the next day. U.S. Defeated . . . Miss Gildersleeve vigorously defended the American position, said the United States is not opposed to full employment. Australia's Evatt again sprang up to say that he was mystified by the U. S. approach. Reading from speeches delivered in the last campaign, Evatt continued: "I note that President Roosevelt ran on a platform of full employment. I have here several speeches by Governor Dewey in which he endorsed full employment. And here are some talks by Mr. Truman who is unequivo- cal on the question, so I can't see why there should be an argument." In the end, Miss Gildersleeve was defeated, had to report her failure to the U. S. delegation. Finally a face-saving formula was worked out by Senators Connally and Vandenberg, Repre- sentatives Bloom and Eaton, whereby the com- mission included in the appendix of that charter a record of the debate, showing that it was clear- ly meant that the phrase "full employment" did not give any nation the right to interfere in the domestic affairs of another. (Copyright, 1945, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Miracle Happened By SAMUEL GRAFTON rT'HE MIRACLE seems to have happened; Mr. Truman really is President, a functioning, working, succeeding President. One thinks of the domestic political situations in the three big western countries, America, Britain, France; and ours is, by all odds, the best. Both Britain and France seem to be loss. ing hope, to be heading obscurely for domestic showdowns of some kind. Mr. Truman does not appear to have heard of the theory that there has to be a lost and divided generation after each war. lie seems quite unimpressed by the diffi- culties of our position. He is plugging on, like a man shingling a roof, and he has scored a remarkable success at taking action that is de- cisive, yet acceptable to liberals and conserva- tives alike. The short-term way for an executive to avoid political strains is to be a blob, vague, indefinite, a man of uncertain outline. Mr. Truman is not a blob. He has a trick of dropping a little remark, or a short formal statement, and of then taking decisive action, a few days later, in a manner which shows that his words were not only words. Thus his promise to send food to the liberated nations of Europe was followed, within a week, by his appointment of Rep. Clin- ton P. Anderson to be Secretary of Agriculture, and war food administrator. Mr. Anderson is a believer in unlimited food production, exactly what the world food situation calls for. It is big food news that he has replaced Mr. Marvin Jones, who has on several occasions seemed to be rather more afraid of surpluses and of stock- piles than of starvation IN MUCH the same way, Mr. Truman has fol- lowed up a routine press conference remark about working for closer relations with Churchill and Stalin by sending Mr. Joseph Davies to London, and Mr. Harry Hopkins to Moscow. The point seems 'to be that when Mr. Truman makes even a casual remark, it is a good notion to remember it. The words don't lie in air; something happens. It is hard to out one's finger on the precise quality which Mr. Truman has shown during his first six weeks in office; it has something to do with his having won confidence, a general acceptance as a gray little man without angles. Nobody suspects hin of anything; it is quite impossible to build up wicked imaginations about him. As a result he is able to use fig- ures who were storm centers of the last ad- ministration, such as Mr. Davies; but there are no storms. AND THE PRESIDENT manages his curious gift with dignity; he does not adulterate it by slobbering over the opposition. The appeal he makes is based on the clarity of his own motives, and is not, in the main, a tactical achievement. He has already ceased to be merely the President we happened to inherit, and is by way of becoming a national asset in his own right.' Maybe a world asset. For Mr. Truman has stronger domestic support than any other western leader of consequence. Mr. Churchill's position at home has been weakened; he is in the throes of a show-down. No one knows what may happen domestically in France, where returning French prisoners of war find that the $20 given them by a grateful gov- ernment will feed a man for only three days; food strikes are breaking out, and the French press begins to complain that de Gaulle is too interested in restoring French "grandeur" by obtaining territory, instead of thinking About the French-in-France. Mr. Truman, alone in the west, has something like solid home opinion behind him; events are shap- ing un to give him a great world' role, if he will take it. But, there, he has already asked de Gaulle to come here for a visit, to discuss French prob- lems. He is a man who does his home work. (Copyright, 1945, N. Y. Post Syndicate) 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. SUNDAY, JUNE 3, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 163 Notices Faculty Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to members of the faculty and other townspeople, this afternoon from 3 to 5 o'clodk. Cars may park in the restricted zone on South University between 3 and 5:30 p.m. (CWT). To the Members of the Faculty College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: The June meeting of the Faculty of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts for the aca- demic year 1944-45 will be held Mon- day, June 4, at 3:10 p.m. in Room 1025 Angell Hall.. The reports of the various commit- tees have been prepared in advance and are included with this call to the meeting. They should be retained in your files as part of the minutes of the June meeting. School of Education Convocation: The tenth annual Convocation of undergraduate and graduate stu- dents who are candidates for the Teacher's Certificate during the aca- demic year will be held in the Uni- versity High School Auditorium on Tuesday, June 5, at 1 p.m., CWT. This Convocation is sponsored by the School of Education; and mem- bers of other faculties, students, and the general public are cordially in- vited. President Ruthven will pre- side at the Convocation and John S. Brubacher, Professor of Education, Yale University, will give the ad- dress. Margaret E. Bell Recorder, School of Education To the Members 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. Student Accounts: Your attention is called to the following rules passed by the Regents at their meeting of February 28, 1936: "Students shall pay all accounts due the University not later than the last day of classes of each semester or summer session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are subject to this regulation; however, student loans not yet due are exempt. Any unpaid accounts at the close of business on the last day of classes will be reported to the Cashier of the University and, "(a) All academic credits will be withheld, the grades for the semes- ter or summer session just completed will not be released, and no tran- script of credits will be issued. "(b) All students owing such ac- counts will not be allowed to reg- ister in any subsequent semester or summer session until payment has been made." Seniors: The firm which furnish- es diplomas for the University has sent the following caution: "Please warn graduates not to store diplomas in cedar chests. There is enough of the moth-killing aromatic oil in the average cedar chest to soften inks of any kind that might be stored in- side them resulting in seriously dam- aging the diplomas." Identification Cards which were issued for the Summer, Fall and Spring of 1944-45 will be revalidated for the Summer Term 1945 and must be turned in at the time of registra- tion. The 1944-45 cards will be used for an additional term because of the shortage of film and paper. German books are office, 204 June 9. Departmental Library due in the departmental University Hall, Saturday, -- State of Michigan Civil Service an- d DOMINIE SAYS..0% THE CITIZEN and the Christian, or the citizen and the Jewish be- liever, or the citizen and the agnostic are two selves within the same per- sonality. However, when the man in minoritynstatus looks himself over he is inclined to think of himself alone as being in this dual relation- ship. For example, that able teacher and writer, Prof. Mordecai Kaplan, writing -in the "Reconstructionist" for June, finds the Jewish people of the United States compelled, as he holds, to live in two civilizations at once-in Judaism and in America. Here is lifted a challenge to our democratic attempt to found a peo- ple on cultural pluralism. The writer finds that his tradition is called upon to be a herald of the better life which eventually man shall enjoy, called upon to stand out ahead of the slow evolving culture bleakly pointing the way to a slow moving mass of people, called upon to practice the ideal while living in the practical conform- ity of Americanism. But how about the high-minded Christian? He is of the majority, yet he, too, feels called upon to live the ideal. He, if he will be a genu- ine Christian, will not only be an American but will guard jealously the reverend mien, will scan and re-study the sacred scripture, will be imbued day by day with the discriminations made by the great prophets of the Bible, will hold the Gospel of Jesus as summarized in the Sermon on the Mount before himself and his family as the acme of good taste and will, like the martyrs if need be, be ready to live or die for that faith, hope and love which constitute the Christian val- ue. The nobler the religious self the more certain the seemingly lonely status. This is true of either the man in majority status or the devotee in minority position. BUT BEYOND the mental and spir- itual aspects, on which level both the Jew and the Christian are always dual selves, there is the matter of how patient the man is. The philo- sophical man of faith who has a Christian training will usually insist that man can commit himself unto the Lord, follow the known laws of God, practice all the Christian vir- tues in his life among men, but must then wait upon God. Grace is not attained but given us by the Deity. At this point he will insist that pa- tience based on the faith that the Universe itself is more interested in the finalĀ° outcome than man can possibly be.sThe believer, having done the best he knows, can wait, for he is not God but only a creature permitted to struggle within the area of his Creator. On the other hand, the Jewish believer, as it were, seems to run ahead of God and to take into his own hands the final as well as the introductory works. It is thought that by refusal to inter- marry, by insistence on many ancient ceremonies, by isolation of the family within the traditions of Israel, the Jewish believer, instead of waiting in faith upon God, makes a short- cut to perfection. This concept of "two' civiliza- tions lived at once" brings before the majority of religionists a spe- cific challenge. If those fifty mil- lions who gave the census takers their church affiliation should sud- denly or even within this recon- struction period become "dead-in- earnest" Christians practicing wor- ship with regularity, diligence in the training of children, ethics of Jesus in business, and strict Good Samaritan economics in the com,- munity, most of the grosser evils of the nation, on the one hand, would cease to have promoters, and on the other, would cease to have patronage. Black markets would starve, monopolies, which ultimately gouge the consumer, would cease, usury, that ancient grinder of the poor, would finally be no more, the number of church members entering American jails would decrease, and fully half of the common sins of our era, this era, called the Sensate Culture, would soon be a matter of history. But here ,we recall that it is the minority who is disciplined. The majority, undisciplined, takes its re- ligion sitting down or reclining. We Christians are only theoretically re- ligious. Let the priest or the preach- er appear for us before the altar, that is what they are for, we might well say. But of course we never dare to state the degree of our negligence. For this reason, it is the Jew who takes his faith seriously or the devout Catholic Christian marooned within an unsympathetic community, who loves the ideal sufficiently to live' gladly in two civilizations at once. One is impelled to congratulate the' minorities, therefore, and for the majority to pray the prayer John Drinkwater wrote: "Grant us the will to fashion as we feel,j Grant us the strength to labor as we know, nouncements for the following exam- inations have been received in our office. Institution Recreation In- structor A & B, salary range from $135.25 to $170 per month, Insti- tution Recreation Director I, $180 to $220 per month, and Property Sales Clerk B, $125 to $145 per month. Further information can be obtained at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall. Brach & Sons Candy Company, Chicago, Illinois: Representative will be in our office on Tuesday, June 5, to interview Mechanical and In- dustrial Engineers, Chemists, Food technologists, and also Literary and Business Administration students for Training Program. For appointment call the Bureau of Appointments, University Ext. 371. Social Security Board, Detroit and Cleveland: Mr. Waechter, and Mr. Pollock will be in the office on Wed- nesday, June 6, to interview all sen- iors who would be interested in work- ing for them. For further infor- mation and appointment, call the Bureau of Appointments, University Ext. 371. Michigan State Cicil Service: Mr. Joseph Corcoran will be in the office on Thursday, June 7, to interview all girls who would be interested in the Psychiatric Aide Program. Psychol- ogy and Sociology majors are prefer- red. For appointment call the Bureau of Appointments, University Ext. 371. Summer Employment Opportun- ities for Veterans: Four to'six stu- dent veterans are desired for full time jobs from the end of the present term to the beginning of the fall term in October. Outdoor work in the maintenance of grounds and buildings in a district close to Ann Arbor. Veterans interested are re- quested to communicate immediately with the Veterans Service Bureau, 1508 Rackham Building. Admission: School of Business Ad- ministration: Applications for ad- mission to the School of Business Administration for the Summer Term or Summer Session should be filed at 108 Tappan Hall prior to June 15. Fall Term enrollees should also apply now if they are not to be in residence during the summei Concerts Student Recital: Janet Wilson, a student of organ under Palmer Christian, will be heard at 3:15 CWT, this afternoon in Hill Auditorium, in a program of compositions by Han- del, Bach, Franck and Widor. Given in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bach- elor of Music, the recital will be open to the general public. Student Recital: Arlene Burt, a student of violin under Gilbert Ross, will present a recital at 7 CWT to- morrow evening, June 4, in the As- sembly Hall of the Rackham Build- ing. Her program will include compo- sitions by Tartini, Bach, Lalo, and Kreisler. The public is cordially in- vited. Student Recital: Ivor Gothie, pia- nist, will .present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music at 7 p.m., (CWT), Tuesday, June 5, in the Assembly Hall of the Rackham Building. A pupil of Joseph Brink- man, Mr. Gothic will play composi- tions by Scarlatti, Paganini, Mozart and Debussy. The public is cordially invited. The University of Michigan Sym- phony Orchestra: under the direction of Gilbert Ross, will be heard in its second concert of the current season at 7:30 p.m. (CWT), Wednesday, June 6, in Hill Auditorium. The pro- gram will consist of compositions by Frescobaldi, Mozart, and Brahms, and will feature Mary Evans John- son, pianist. The general public is invited. 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 The Congregational-Disciples Guild will meet at 4:00 p.m. at the First Congregational Church for the Guild Banquet. Dinner will be served to only those who have made reserva- tions, but all are welcome to the fol- lowing Installation Service. Post-War Council Meeting will be held this evening at 5 p.m. CWT at Slosson's home, 2101 Devonshire Rd. Both Post-War Council mem- bers and those interested in becom- ing members for the Summer Ses- sion are cordially invited. Coming Events Members of the faculty and stu- <1 We suppose what the denizens course do is eat mashie potatoes. thought golf course they should! Put of the golf On second definitely. BARNABY By Crockett Johnson Well, son, that imaginary Fairy Godfather of yours didn't come to our picnic. I told you he wouldn't ... Mmm. Missed a fine meal, didn't he? Mmm ... I'll stretch out for a it's just as well your Fairy Godfather didn't get here, Barnaby. None of us would Hell'bo, mboy. Sorry I'm Daote.I hope 1haiven'tI