Tflt IdIC1GN DAILY A ~ L..4.~ Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUNOi: British Policies in Greece 11 Edited and managed by students of the University of Mechigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Evelyn Phillips . . . . Managing Editor Stan Wallace . . . .sCity Editor Ray Dixon * . . . . Associate Editor Hank Mantho . . * . . Sports Editor Dave Loewenberg Associate Sports Editor Mavis Kennedy . . Women's Editor Business Staff Lee Amer . . . . Business Manager Barbara Chadwick . . Associate Business Mgr. June Pomering . . Associate Business Mgr. Telephone 23-241 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is excsively entitled to the use for republication 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. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1943-44 REPRESENTED FOR .NATIONAL. ADV.TIMNG BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADiSON AvE. .NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO 'BOSTN . Los ANGELES . SAN FRANCISCO NIGHT EDITOR: LIZ KNAPP Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. A Free Press It has been most encouraging in recent weeks to see the battle joined to establish freedom of the press in a very real sense after the war. Most American agencies led by some of the ablest journalists in the world have been press- ing for a definite statement on the position of the world press in the postwar world. Kent Cooper, head of Associated Press, has made re- peated pleas in the last few months for an under- standing of "what freedom of the press means. It means a free interchange of ideas in an open and competitive market." Hugh Baillie, head of United Press has lined up with Cooper on the issue and both have received support from the Congress. Perhaps, the most outstanding development in this controversy between the free competition advocated by the United States and the cartel arrangements espoused by Britain was the di- vorce of Reuter, British agency, from the gov- ernment. Reuter has declared its allegiance to free in- terchange and has left behind it the government subsidy that gave Whitehall claim to direction. In Paris, too, there is a move among the old guard Parisian editors to cast off the tradition of the past and look to the future wherein compe- tition will govern news gathering and distribu- tion. We can go off into lengthy discussions as to the freedoms of a free people or of any people. We can ask upon what are they based, what principle? But if any generality can be made we can say that free interchange of ideas within the entire world can be one of the most wholesome circumstances in which to create a freedom loving people. When the people feel a confidence in their source of news facts, when they know that no government or group of people is dictating what will be said and what won't, they can feel assured that their freedom is real and not something written in books. To carry this proposition of a free world press, we naturally think of the Russian problem, where at present, all news is subject to rigid govern- ment censorship and is channeled through only one agency, Tass. Even in this regard there is hope that freedom will triumph. Proponents of freedom found a ray of hope in the Russian report of a free press in Italy only this fall. At any event, these events look heartening andt it is to be hoped that a definite statement of policy will be forthcoming from the United Nations Conference in January. -Stan Wallace Commercials DETROIT radio station WWJ is our choice as Number One Public Benefactor of 1944. Last week station officials announced that starting February 1, WWJ will ban singing com- mercials-in the public interest. Elimination of the most asinine form of adver- By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON, Dec., 12-When Secretary of State Stettinius issued his statement divorc- ing the U. S. A. from British mddling in Euro- pean governments, he had just received a sum- mary of Prime Minister Churchill's orders to British General Ronald M. Scobie in Athens "to act as if he were in a conquered city." Churchill's orders have been seen by only a few high-ranking U. S. officials, but those who have read them consider them harsh, almost brutal in tone. The British Prime Minister or- dered General Scobie to "keep and dominate Athens," told him not to "hesitate to open fire on any armed male in the Greek capital who assails the authority of the British." The orders were summarized by U. S. Am- bassador to Italy Alexander Kirk in a cable- gram on December 5 from Caserta, Italy, Al- lied headquarters for all of the Near East. On that day, Stettinius issued his statement that I' RATHER' BE RIGHT: A Serviceman Writes By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, Dec. 12-Another service man writes to me, and this one has the thought that skill-less or trade-less men ought to be let out of the Army last. He feels that skill is the quality most respected by the American people. It is his conception that men without specific training for skilled jobs should be kept in the Army longest, and taught trades in special schools before being demobilized. He thinks the diction and speech of those who are somewhat imperfect in these departments should be brush- ed up. "Grammar is no harder than Morse Code." I have now had two approaches to this prob- lem, an earlier soldier-correspondent having sug- gested that men with secure incomes awaiting them, or good businesses, or college careers, or civil service jobs, or pensions, be kept in the Army longest, thereby giving those who have none of these advantages the first crack at civilian jobs. The two approaches are not so very differ- ent. The first would help those who have the fewest assets by giving them training; the second would help pretty much the same group by giving it first place in line in the coming competition for civilian jobs. This last is a kind of priorities idea; priority in answering the want-ads. It will be seen that neither correspondent really believes there, will automatically be jobs for all. The fear that there will not be jobs for all is the great fear now besetting and afflict- ing American life. Fear gives birth to strange ideas. Both soldiers are advocating nothing less than forced detention as a partial solution for employment. They could not come closer to say- ing that it is better not to be free than to be jobless. That idea is charged with some peril for dem- ocracy. In saying that I do not at all impugn the democratic sentiments or the sincerity of my soldier-correspondents; they are merely do- ing the best they can with a hard problem. As for war-workers who are drifting away from their war jobs, between days, going back to the security of farm and counter, the maxim of their acts is that it is better to lose the war than to be jobless. These (comparatively few) deserters have weighed the two fears, and they fear joblessness more. I sometimes wonder whether our fear of job- lessness, which is the consuming fear in modern American life, does not underlie our strange failure to celebrate major Allied military victo- ries; whether that could not be the unconscious reason why we do not set off firecrackers and cannon, and make the drums roar, when our troops have raced across France, or torn into Leyte. Congress, in its own way, shows fear of un- employment, too. It reveals its fear by re- fusing to adopt any kind of adequate unem- ployment insurance measure. Congress seems to feel that there is going to be unemployment; that if we have a large-scale unemployment insurance scheme, benefits will actually have to be paid out; and that this will cost a great deal of money. But if Congress were sure that there is not going to be major unem- ployment, it would not be afraid of an unem- ployment insurance plan. If there is no un- employment, there are no benefits to be paid out, and there is no cost to thq treasury. A legislature which was actively confident of full employment would not hesitate to pass the most generous unemployment insurance bill, for it would mean nothing; who- cares how high, benefits are which are not going to be paid? It might be said that Congress, also, acts according to its fears, but, so far, has responded to its fears in an unconstruct- ive direction. The Pre'sident's call for a minimum program of 60,000,0000 jobs may seem startling; but it does not approach the queerness of some politi- cal developments likely to come along in Ameri- can life, if these particular fears and tensions are not relieved. (Copyright, 1944, New York Post Syndicate) the United States did not believe in meddling with European governments. Kirk's message follows in full: "General Scobie at Athens has been informed in a message from Churchill that SAC (Supreme Allied Command) has been ordered to leave all British troops in Greece and to reinforce them as fully as possible. The PM (Prime Minister) states that he holds Scobie responsible for de- stroying or neutralizing all Eam-Elas groups (National Liberation Front which opposes the King) who approach Athens, and authorizes Scobie to intern any desired number of persons and to issue all regulations necessary for com- plete control of the streets. "When the shooting begins, said Churchill, it can be expected that Elas will put women and children in the first line. Scobie is in- structed to be 'clever' about coping with this and to avoid errors. Ordered To Open Fire ... "SCOBIE is also instructed that he should not hesitate to open fire on any armed male in the Greek capital who assails the auth- ority of the British or of the Greeks who are collaborating with the British. It would be a good thing, said Churchill, if Scobie's forces could be augmented by the forces of the home Greek Government. The British Ambassador, according to the message, is advising Papan- dreou (Greek Premier supporting the King) not to hesitate. "Scobie should not hesitate, say Churchill's orders, to act as if he were in a conquered city, confronted by local rebellion. With the forces under Scobe's command, says Chur- chill, Scobie should be able to hand Elas a lesson that would make it most improbable that others will behave in the same way. "Churchill closes by saying that he will back up Scobie in whatever action Scobie takes along these lines, and that the British must keep and dominate Athens. It would be a splendid thing if Scobie could accomplish this without shedding blood but he should not hesitate to do whatever he has to, Churchill declares. (signed) "Kirk." Meanwhile, it has also leaked out that Prime Minister Churchill refused to accept a coalition Cabinet headed by 85-year-old Themistocles Sophoulis which would have contained repre- sentatives of all Greek political parties. This might have avoided civil war. Not only the Royalists, but Eam-Elas and even the Com- munists were willing to serve under Sophoulis, but Churchill said no. British Ambassador Rex Leeper informed the Greeks that Churchill had wired instructions that Papandreou must remain as Premier. British Interests in Greece ... WHEN WINSTON CHURCHILL was in financial difficulties in 1912, he was help- ed out from three sources:--the late Lord Moyne, recently assassinated while in Cairo; Maj. General Sir Edward Louis Spears, now British Commander and high commissioner in Syria; and the Hambro family, owners of Hambro's Bank in London. Hambro's Bank has floated heavy loans to Greece. These loans financed the Athens water works, the Boeotian irrigation project, the Pa- tras railway, and most of the Greek light and power companies. Through an English mission sitting in Ath- ens, interest on these loans was paid in gold right up until April, 1941, when Greece was invaded by the Germans. It was one of the few countries where payments were made in gold. The interest rate is high, varying from 7.75 percent to around 16. percent. One of the bones of contention between the British Government and the left-wing groups in Greece is the fu- ture of these loans. The Eam-Elas group pro- poses scaling the interest rate to around 5 per- cent, plus other concessions at the expense of Hambro's Bank. Some diplomats in Washington think that basically this is what part of the Athens shooting is all about. (Copyright, 1944 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) On Second Thought.. . By RAY DIXON Having reached the point where they can hang their clothes on the Siegfried Line, the Yanks are now making plans to wash them in the Saar Basin. This points to their determination to make Hitler come clean. Ja*. :t :Y More than 1,600 planes pound Frankfurt and we Americans yell "hot dog." That's almost as many planes as there were comments about the weather yesterday. Pete the Pessimist is saying that this snow arrived just in time for a thaw over Christmas. * * * * Women have been told by Uncle Sammy that they can't buy feathers under four inches long to wear in their hats and thousands of females don't like their hattitude. The government says it needs these feathers for pillows in military hospitals, which, it seems, are all down and none to go. The Pend idui By BERNARD ROSENBERG Publication of a new White Paper has served to remind us once again of Great Britain's sterling qualities. That island fortress, which withstood a full-scale blitzkrieg for years, is still suffering all the hardships of modern war-from undernourish- ment to robot bombing. Americans, on the home front at least, have not had to endure discomforts of this sort. So we commisserate with our English Allies as they tighten their belts and prepare for the final blow against Germany. But one simply cannot, because of this White Paper, forget anoth- er White paper issued by the same government - though Neville Chamberlain was the head of it- one that is as wicked a document as has ever emanated from White- 4 hall.4 Put into effect but a few months ago, this White Paper was an offshoot of the Munich Conference. Appease- ment acted at that time as the nar- cotic with which European democ- racy deadened itself into an almost fatal lethargy. Nobody was going to war for Danzig! Hitler could seize Memel, the Sudetenland, and all of Czechoslovakia after a while for what he called "lebensraum" and in the name of what we called appeasement. The policy never worked, and it cannot in the nature of things fas- cistic ever work, except to feed the insatiate monster, aggression. Win- ston Churchill, his eyesight better when outside a cabinet that consid-. ered him obstructionist, saw the stu- pidity of it. He did not want to propitiate Hitler but to crush him. He condemned the White Paper of 1939 as soon as the Chamberlain ad- ministration, its Machiavellian face still aglow from the "peace in our times" the prime minister thought he had bought with Czechoslovakian blood, promulgated the infamy. Appeasement turned its ugly visage eastward and, by some geo- graphic high jinks found one Mec- ca in Arabia and another in Pal- estine. So successful was this tac- tic that before long the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem was broadcast- ing over the Rome-Berlin radio, actively pledging pan-Arabian re- action to the war against man- kind. Under the pretext of wooing Ara- bian sentiment-when they were only wooing Arabian overlords-all fu- ture Jewish immigration to Palestine was to be halted after March 1, 1944. When the Struma, a rotten tanker laden with refugees out of Istanbul was refused admission in one. port after another, Tel Aviv included, it finally collided with a German tor- pedo, and every one of the seven hundred souls aboard perished. These are the putrescent fruits of appease- ment. Palestine, once a haven of refuge for the broken remnants of persecu- tion is now just another inaccessible dream. The United States will not itself admit these people even temporarily -now that the President has thrown them a few crumbs off the diplo- matic table by establishing an in- ternment camp that houses one thou- sand grateful refugees. But, it seems the more sadistic Nazism becomes in this respect with its gas chambers and lime cellers, with its death camps and crematoria, the less we do about it. Little Switzerland-may the bless- ings of God be on it-has snatched more would-be victims of this mod- ern barbarism from torture and death than the whole Western hemisphere! Very well, we are not willing to help the helpless. This is no more than passive criminality. But, to shut the Palestinian door where a local popu- lace waits with open arms to greet whoever needs rehabilitation-not in- cluding several thousand Polish Ca- tholics (among the recent emigrees) is so fantastically brutal as to com- pete with Nazism itself. The truth-and the whole truth -is that England has not the right to place such restrictions on Pales- tine, nor even a single vestige of legal justification for it. This ter- ritory was mandated to England by the League of Nations. A mandate is nothing more than a trusteeship. Yet, Britain, ever since she acquir- ed Palestine, has treated it like a crown colony taken by means of military conquest. This is a usurpation; it is illegal beyond the shadow of a judicial doubt-and continuation of it can only mean more strife, more terror- ism, and a growing restiveness that may prove contagious. AT THE meeting Monday after- noon, Dec. 11, of the University Senate in which, when I presented a certain resolution concerning a proposed investigation of the Univer- sity hospital, the charge was made by Professor Clarence D. Thorpe against me. that my remarks were based on "hearsay evidence." The professor has evidently just learned this term since in another case re- cently under investigation by this professornhe was gullible enough to accept "hearsay evidence" against two men whose academic lives were at stake. Unfortunately while the professor uses the term he does not' know its meaning. In his evident de- sire to be a "good boy" Professor Thorpe confuses facts with "hear- say evidence." In the resolution in the first item, the fact that the University hospital took in a professor's son for an operation and treated him as a private patient concerns the son of a professor of physics, who supposed his son was a University patient. Thefee charged was $200. I can furnish the name of the physics professor and I was in the hospital when the boy was being operated upon. Dr. Furstenberg can give the name; my son, then a student, who was there at the same time as a "refer" patient from the University, paid medical service, and the physician attempt- ed illegally to extract a fifty dollar fee from me. He didn't get it; ask Dr. Furstenberg. What the normal "bedside fee" is cannot be considered a matter of hearsay, it is a matter of fact and of record. I refer to facts that the fee, formerly was $3.00 and was changed under the new administra- tion ten years ago to $10.00 for each bedside or office visit( to one of the clique-possibly also for the assist- ant, but I believe the pay goes to the professor in charge.) This change from $3.00 to $10.00 is exploitation; this is a fact, not fancy. The fact further that the younger men and older men not in the clique are not adequately paid is not a matter of hearsay; the younger men have told what they receive. The Regents can easily establish their at- titude. The fact that fees paid by "pri- vate" patients in the University hospital are not a matter of writ- ten record cannot be controverted. I believe the Regents should see to it that these charges should be re- corded and should be standardiz- ed. The fact that one operation has cost $5,000 is paralleled by the charge made in the hospital against a. professor for a comparatively slight operation, one hour, of $500. I am not free to tell the professor's name, but I will reveal it confi- dentially to any Regent who re- quests it. As a teacher of English, Mr. Thorpe, you should be able to distinguish between facts and hear- say. -Louis C. Karpinski DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) etter6 cially dropped unless it 'has been reported in the office-of the Regis- trar, Rm. 4, University Hall. Academic Notices School of ' Education Students: Other than Freshmen: Courses drop- ped after today will be recorded with the grade of E except under extra- ordinary circumstances. No course is considered officially dropped unless it has been reported in the office of the Registrar, Rm. 4, University Hall. Chemical and Metallurgical Engi- neering Seminar: At the regular Seminar meeting of the Department of Chemical and Metallurgical Engi- neering on Thursday, Dec. 14, Mr. C. Karkalits will speak on the subject, "Oscilloscope; Its Use in Coloromet- ric Determinations." The meeting will be held at 4 p.m. in Rm. 3201, East Engineering build- ing. All persons interested are cor- dially invited to attend. Lectures University Lecture: Dr. Anna Jacobson, Associate Professor of Ger- man, Hunter College, will lecture on the subject, "Thomas Mann as a Cultural . Mediator" at , 4:15 p.m., Wednesday, Dec. 13, in the Rackham Amphitheater under the auspices of the Department of Germanic Lan- guages and Literatures. The public is cordially invited. French Lecture: Professor Palmer A. Throop of the Department of His- tory, will give the first of the French lectures sponsored by the Cercle Francais on Thursday, Dec. 14, at 4:10 p.m. in Rm. D, Alumni Memor- ial Hall. The title of his lecture is: "La Predication de la Croisade." Tickets for the series of lectures may be procured from the Secretary of the Department of Romance Lang- uages (Rm. 112, Romance Language Building or at the door at the time of the lecture. These lectures are open to the gen- eral public. All servicemen are ad- mitted free of charge to all lectures. Events Today "Junior Miss," hilarious comedy by Chodorov and Fields, opens tonight at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Presented by Play Production of the Department of Speech, the play will be given for four performances, to- night through Saturday evening at 3:30 p.m. Tickets may be purchased at the theatre box office, phone 6300. Varsity Glee Club: Special rehear- sal, Wednesday 7:30 p.m. for Christ- mas Carol Sing on campus next Sun- day evening. No Sunday afternoon rehearsal this week. Michigan Christian Fellowship: The weekly prayer meeting and Bible study will be held tonight in Lane Hall at 7:30 p.m. La Sociedad Hispanica has been invited by the Newman Club to at- tend a Latin-American program on Wednesday, Dec. 13, at 8 in the base- ment of Saint Mary's Chapel; corner of Thompson and William Sts. This program will take the place of the regular Wednesday meeting of La Sociedad. Botanical Seminar: Wednesday, Dec. 13 at 4 p.m. Rm. 1139 N.S. Pro- fessor W. C. Steere will speak on the subject "Quinine-producing plants of South America" (illustrated with col- ored slides). Anyone interested may attend. The Inter-Racial Association will meet at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, Dec. 13 in Rm. 316, Michigan Union. Claudia Jones, former editor of "The Spotlight;" will speak on "The Negro and the War." Biological Chemistry Seminar: Dr. William D. Robinson, Assistant Pro- fessor of Internal Medicine and in charge of the work of the Arthritis Research Unit of the University Hos- pital, will discuss "The Methods of Assaying the Nutritive Status of a Human Population," at 4:15 p.m., on Wednesday, Dec. 13, in Room 319 West Medical Building. All interested are invited. Coming Events Zoology Seminar: There willbe a meeting of the Zoology Club on Thursday, Dec. 14 at 7:30 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Mr. Louis Krumholtz will speak on "The pro- ductivity, northward acclimatization and use of the mosquito fish Gam- busia affinis in mosquito control." Physical Education for Women: Registration for the second season of physical education classes will be held in Barbour Gymnasium on Fri- day, Dec. 15 from 8:30 to 12:30, 1:30 to 5:30, and Saturday, Dec. 16 from 8:30 to 12:00. All students planning to take physical education courses should register at this time. The Regular Thursday Evening Record Concert will be held in the Men's Lounge of the Rackham Build- ing at. 7:45 p.m. Beethoven's Missa Solemnis will be featured. All grad- uate students and servicemen are invited to attend. hours when they are on duty or when persons with keys to buildings un- lock doors and leavethem unlocked. It is desirable that department heads make a careful check two or three times a year of all keys to quarters under their charge, to make sure that keys have not been lost and are not in theahands of persons no longer requiring their use. It is strictly contrary to University rules to have duplicate keys made or to lend keys issued for personal use. A reward.of $50 is offered to any person for information that directly or indirectly leads to the apprehen- sion of a thief or thieves on Univer- sity premises. -Shirley W. Smith Health Service Clinic Hours: There is a tendency for students to over- crowd the general clinic during late afternoon hours. Early hours in the forenoon are much freer and stu- dents are advised to use them when possible to insure prompt and satis-' factory attention. Warren E. Forsythe, M.D. - Director, Health Service Students, Fall Term, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Courses dropped after Saturday, Dec. 16, by students other than freshmen will be recorded with the grade of "E." Upon the recommendation of their Academic Counselors, freshmen, (students with less than 24 hours credit) may be granted the extra- ordinary privilege of droppinghcour- ses without penalty through the eighth week. L.S.&A. Civilian Freshman Five- waa~.1. R .Pn rfc illhP nivn out' i~in the I BARNABY By Crockett Johnson Mr. O'Malley, my Fairy Godfather, says it's going to snow, Pop. And- How can you tell it won't snow?1 Orion? But Orion also said it will snow, Pop ... He's an p tPY7 1944 Fid Publications Those three bright ones a re his belt. And-Pay I 9