riIF MICH It'ANI-)AIMV li TfflRkSfAY JAN. 4. 1949 A AA. 11.A. 1 \,., 1t A V' 1# IN Lr 1% ./. 1< 1." " AAAL A.a VAJSR 1.! Vi'l1Is Ap WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: ;; 1 Secret Talk on Italian Problem I The Pendulum By DREW PEARSONl WASHINGTON. Jan. 4-Secret talks have been taking place for the past two weeks between the State Department and British cabinet mini- ster Richard Law on the problem of feeding Italy. Very little has leaked out of the back- stage sessions, but it can be revealed that Presi- dent Roosevelt has given definite instructions that the Italian people must get more food and be encouraged to take a greater part in the war. He believes a well-fed people do not become a communistic people. The British, however, have opposed any- thing more than subsistence feeding. Actu- ally the debate over this has seesawed secretly back and forth over a period of many weeks, and probably gets to the root of the basic difference between British and American pol- icy in the Mediterranean. At one point during the argument, Lord Hali- fax handed the State Departmenta confidential "aide memoire," considered by diplomats some- thing of a scorcher and warning of "a grave danger of divergence" which would "have far- reaching consequences for the whole settlement of Europe." This "aide inemoire" is interpreted by many diplomats to set the stage for future British policy in the Mediterranean. Hitherto unpub- lished, it states: "If the U. S. government were to indicate its intention of expanding the scale under which Italy can receive supplies, there would Fbe a grave danger of divergence of policy be- tween the U. S. Government on the one hand and His Majesty's Government and our Allies on the other hand. "Such a divergence would be bound, in the view of H. M. Government, to have far-reaching consequerices for the whole settlement of Eu- rope. Furthermore, British public opinion would not at the present time permit of H. M. Govern- ment associating themselves in the rehabilita- tion of Italy except to the limited degree neces- sary for the actual war effort. "Should the U. S. Government decide to take an independent course, public pressure would almost certainly force H. M. Government to make their own position clear and the diver- gence in policy which H. M. Government fore- see would immediately become open and obvious. "H. M. Government therefore greatly hopes that the U. S. Government will be prepared to give consideration to the views expressed above and will not take any unilateral action from which the British public might compel them to disassociate themselves." Roosevelt Opposes British .. . HIS NOTE was delivered just before Roosevelt conferred with Churchill at Quebec last Sep- tembei. And despite this blunt memo, the Presi- dent went counter to British wishes by ordering Assistant Secretary of State Acheson to press for a $50,000,000 UNRRA grant for relief to Italy, by sending Ambassador Myron Taylor to the Vatican to get church assistance in dis- tributing food supplies, and finally by sending a personal letter to Secretary of War Stimson Oct. 31, assuming personal responsibility for increasing the Italian ration. He also authorized General William O'Dwyer, former Brooklyn prosecutor, to keep working on an 8-point program for the rehabilitation of Italy. Insiders say that Roosevelt's determination to give Italy more inspiration for co-operating in the war was one of the back ground reasons why Prime Minister Churchill got sore at Count Sforza, also why F. D. R., in turn, authorized Stettinius to issue his cryptic state- ment opposing British interference on Sforza. A showdown and possible solution of the en- tire Allied controversy over Italy is expected soon. Stettinius' Detectives . . CHURCHILL still appears to be boiling mad over publication in this column of his in- structions to General Scobie to treat Athens as a "conquered city." At his behest, Secretary of State Stettinius is still urging his house detec- tives to track down how the cable leaked. Stettinius, has even enlisted Postmaster Gen- eral Frank Walker's inspectors, who recently took the unusual and almost unprecedented step of searching the files of the news syndicate then distributing this column-even though the story had been passed by the censor. Secretary Stettinius seems to think the leak came from his near-eastern division which has been critical of British behavior in Ath-- ens, and there is some talk that Wallace Mur- BARNABY :.. E ray, head of that division may be promoted to be Ambassador to Turkey in order to get him out of Washington and prevent future leaks. Murray would make a good ambassa- dor and we hope he gets the job. But regard- ing the leak--guess again, Mr. Stettinius, you're not even warm. (Copyright, 1945, by the Bell Syndicate. Inc. I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: British Attacks By SAMUEL GRAFTON NEW YORK, Jan. 4-Well, now we have it. Open attacks on America have appeared in the London "Economist" and in the Yorkshire "Post." Readers of my little essays will hardly be surprised. For well over a month I have been trying to convey to American readers some sense of the nervous quality apparent in Brit- ish press discussions of the postwar world. British publicists see a place for America in the postwar world, and they see a place for Russia, but they have much more difficulty in seeing a place for Britain. These fears have exploded into the open. That is why the "Economist" says openly that Britain ought more or less to forget about us, and join more closely with Russia. That is why the Yorkshire "Post" calls upon Americans to explain just what they intend to do about maintaining peace and "world trade for the good of all, And there will now be a great temptation, in America, to call these articles "attacks," to answer them, as "attacks," with "attacks" of our own, and to let it go at that. That is a tempta- tion which American commentators ought to re- sist; it is too easy a way to make a living. We must dig deeper. Why are these influential and thoughtful sections of the British press attacking us? Because they hate us? Not at all. They write as they do because they are worried about the future of Britain. Their anxiety takes the form of anti-American argument, but its sub- stance is concern for their own country, and we must understand that. AND WHAT is it about America that gives Britons concern? They have a certain pic- ture of us. It may be a true picture or a dis- torted one, but whichever it is, it shapes up like this: Many influential Britons, liberal as well as conservative, feel that America intends to go its own way, economically, after the war. They feel that we intend to take all we can get of the world's commercial airways, of its ocean shipping, of its communication services. They don't sense much live-and-let-live on our part. They feel that we Americans are depending too much on some sort of rarefied international organization to keep the peace, a kind of un- obtrusive constabulary, far away and remote from the wrestling that goes on in "the dust of the arena."' These Britons feel that we Americans don't really want to live with them as allies; that we don't propose to keep the peace by being friends, but that, rather, we propose to slug it out with them, while keeping the peace through a gadget. These Britons find us excessively addicted to talking about "principles." They are not against "principles." They dote on principles; almost everybody does. But they wonder whether we are not using principles as a substitute for friendship. They suspect us of hunting for some world legal arrangement under which we can compete with them as if we were deadly enemies, while, somewhere up in the stratosphere, a for- mal organization dealing only with abstractions, serves happily to prevent war. r HAT IS WHY the British press begins to twist, to turn, to look to Russia, to any- where, for some assurance that it can live. Brit- ain will need bread as well as principles. It fears that our abstract utterances or world peace will make only a thin gruel. It wants, not to draw it too fine, air lines, shipping lines, press services, cables, friends. It does not have quite the same gay adventure feeling about the post- war that some Americans enjoy. It wants tot know whether we are prepared to give up a few commercial advantages for peace, or whether we will confine our efforts to elocution on the moral nature of the universe. The answer to the British press explosion is_ for us to examine ourselves, to ask ourselves how wel we have learned to live with allies, as allies. This is a new art for us, and perhaps one we have not yet perfected. Yet everything depends on it, both principles and bread. Even an international organization, heavy with high-type principles, will fail if it cries peace, peace, where there is no peace. (Copyright, 1945, New York Post Syndicate) ' By BERNARD ROSENBERG THE FEAR of communism is still deep-seated in America and Eng- land. It has frequently been at the root of our makeshift foreign policy, providing us with an excuse to mur- der Greek patriots, Balkanize Eur- ope, support Franco Spain, and gen- erally alienate liberty-lovers every- where. Now, I submit this fear can be put to good use. It has been a total liability for long enough.. One good result attendant upon fear is unity. Nothing short of fear could put Will Clayton, Harold Ickes, Archibald MacLeish, Jesse Jones, and sundry others of equal diver- sity in the same cabinet. Cohesion within comes from the certainty that deadly danger lurks without. Broadly 'speaking, finance capi- talism is tl'eatened by the more or less communistic Russian state. As they stand the two systems are in- compatible. Neither can accommo- date itself to the other unless sig- nificant changes are made on both sides of the economic fence. With this in mind we have made some inadequate modifications of late while seeking at heart to perpetuate as much of the status quo as possible. However, when men fail to evolve swiftly, they find revolution or coun- ter-revolution on their hands. The rapidity with which we move ahead peacefully gauges our success as a democracy. Seeing certain advantages in the Russian system-and there are un- doubted ones like security, we should copy and improve upon them. That the masses of Europe find I communism attractive is evidenced by the leftist ferment which has been seething in every liberated country Allied armies have entered. Moreover, the U.S.S.R. is fashioned in such a way as to make easy the admission of new states. Eventually, Yugo- 1 slavia who may resent the presump- tion of Great Britain in trying to foist King Peter on them, may turn to Russia and even become part of it. Hungary went communist after the last war under Bela Kuhn and but for Allied intervention might be communist to this day. THE FACT is we are mortally afraid of a communized Eur ope-and have been from the ear- liest days. Not Britain alone, but American statesmen prayed during the inter-war years that Germany would fight Russia in a mighty battle calculated to destroy both nations. This policy did not work; in fact is boomeranged. But many of us are still terrorized to the point of immobility. This is most\unfortunate, because domestically speaking we can pre- vent communism-as effectively as we can prevent fascism-by erection of an economy superior to that of Russia. For instance, instead of solv- ing problems through a highly cen- tralized bureaucracy, the TVA could be used as an exemplar for the future. It embodies federal planning and regionally de-centralized admin- istration. In this manner govern- ment does not exist ethereally apart from the people affected by it. Of course, much as we like to "keep moving" we are not moving that way. Six new power projects, including the Missouri River Authority and the St. Lawrence waterway are on the docket for private ownership I after this war. Hence, explcitation and profit once more supersede pub- lie service and we make ourselves all the more vulnerable to violence and radicalism. Internationally, we could silence the Marxian siren by playing more seductive and democratic airs. In Europe, to cite the most important example, confederation should long since have been achieved. But, say the wisenheimers, the people of these states are too jealous of their sover- eign status to give it up. There is an answer to this and men like Albert! 3 Guerard who favor a United States of Europe are best able to provide it. The laws of logic dictate that when one is confronted with a seemingly irrefutable statement the thing to do is make a distinc-. tion. This is what the Russians have done. They distinguish be- tween kinds of sovereignty. One reason why Czechoslovakia was not altogether successful as a republic lay in the fact that different minority groups chafed at having to give up their old cultural habits. Russia, on the other hand, does not try to change what centuries have ingrained in an ethnic group. The group of each region may continue to sing their own songs, dance their own dances, and speak their own languages. Culturally they are au- tonomous; politically and econom- ically they are units in the U.S.S.R. The Balkans seem likely to fall into the Russian orbit for good. Yet, among themselves they have stub- bornly resisted amalgamation-be- cause amalgamation heretofore has meant loss of individuality. Take the Russian structure, which (para- doxically enough) preserves individ- uality. add democratic processes, and you will have beaten the communists at their own game. This is the way for us to deal with our fears-not by bottling them up so that they may burst forth at any time. If we do not counter communism with earnest humanitarianism, the former will appeal mightily to the underpriv- ileged masses of this earth-so much so that any further effort to contain the inovment will only produce more strife and greater chaos. On Second Thomgl t By RAY DIXON A GERMAN news broadcast claims Hitler is developing a stoop. That's nothing. We knew he was stupid all the time. It's beginning to look as though the OPA will have to do sothig about the German's new lease on life. Art Kraft thinks the high com- mand did not have to think twice when they made a man by the name of Lt.-Gen. Sultan, commanding gen- eral of the United States forces in the India-Burma theatre. During the cold wave Tuesday, we heard a little boy icicle say to a little girl icicle, "I may be just a frozen drip, but don't give me a cold shoulder." DAILY OFFICIAL THURSDAY, JAN. 4, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 49 Publication in the Daily Official Bul - letin is constructive notice to all niern- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 1021 Angell Hai, by 3:301 p. in. of the day preceding publication (11:30 a. in. Sat- urdays). Notices To the Members of the Faculty, College of Literature, Science and the Arts: The January meeting of the Faculty of the College of Litera- ture, Science, and the Arts for the academic year 1944-45 will be held on Monday, Jan. 8 at 4:10 p.m. in Rm. 1025 Angell all. The reports of the various com- mittees have been prepared in ad- vance and are included with this call to the meeting. They should be retained in your files as part of the minutes of the January meeting. A large attendance is desired. Edward H. 'Kraus Agenda 1. Consideration of the minutes of the meetings of: a. Dec. 4, 1944 (pp. 1122-1124); b. Dec. 18, 1944 (pp. 1125-1127), which have been dis- tributed by campus mail. 2. Consideration of reports sub- mitted with the call to this meeting. a. Executive Committee-Professor F. E. Bartell; b. Executive Board of the Graduate School-Professor R.L. Wilder: c. University Council-No Report; d. Senate Advisory Commit- tee on University Affairs-Professor J. W. Eaton; e. Deans' Conference- Dean E. H. Kraus. 3. Special Order: Admission of Veteran Students tRecommendation accompanies this communication- - Professor H. M. Dorr.. 4. Combined Report ol' the (Cute riculum Committee and the Commit- tee on Concentration and Group Re- quirements,--continuation of infor- mal discussion. 5. New Business. 6. Announcements. Faculty, College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: Midsemester re- ports arec due not later than Satur- day. Jan. 6. Repomta S c"; i+e arc ellig distributed to al eatetl ,cs re card < ar bein providd for fresh- men reports; they should be returned to the office of the Academic Coun- , -Inrc- 1O 1'.4nnr T-TIjl Whi+ ,nxrl , to the school or college in which they are registered. jAdditional cards may be had at 108 Mason Mall or at 1220 Angell Hall. Applications in Support of Research Projects: To give Research Commit- tees and the Executive Board ade- quate time to study all proposals. it is requested that faculty members have projects needing support during 1945-1946 file their proposals in the Office of the Graduate School by Friday, Feb. 9, 1945. Those wishing to renew previous requests whether now receiving support or not should so indicate. Application forms will be mailed or can be obtained at Sec- retary's Office, Rm. 1006 Rackham Building, Telephone 372. The last day of interviewing for Orientation Advisors will be Thurs- day, Jan. 4, from 3 to 5. Lectures Mr. J. 0. Almen of the General Motors Research Laboratory will be here to give a lecture on "Fatigue in Machine Parts," this afternoon in Rit. 311, West Engineering Build- ing, at 3:45 p.m, This meeting is open to anyone interested, but should especially be of interest to graduate students, sen- iors and faculty. French Lecture: Professor Michael Pargment of the Romance Language Department, will give the second of the French Lectures sponsore'd by the Cercle Francais on Tuesday, Jan. 9, at 4:10 p.m. in Rm. D, Alumni Memorial Hall. The title of the lec- ture is: "Anatole France." Tickets for the series of lectures may be procured from the Secretary of the Department of Romance Languages (Rm. 112, Romance Lang- uage Building) or at tle door at the time of the lecture. These lectures are open to the general public. All servicemen are admitted free of charge. A cademic Notices The regular Seminar meeting' of the Department of Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering scheduled for Jan. 4 will be held on Jan. 11. liwen ts Today The Geometry Seminar will meet today at 4:15 p.m. in Rm. 3001 Angell Hall. Mr. Leisenring will speak on the "Analytical Introduction to Non- Euclidean Geometry." Tea at 4. The "omanc Languages Journal Club will meet this afternoon at 4:15 in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Dr. Abraham Herman will discuss some phases of the recently pub- lished "Survey of Language Classes in the ASTP." Professor Michael S. Parganent will speak "On Learning a Foreign Language." Graduate students and all who are interested are cordially invited. Kappa Phi, Methodist College Wo- men's Club, will hold its meeting today at 5:30 p.m. at the Methodist Church on State St. The program is a panel discussion on peace. The A.I.E.E. will meet this evening at 7:30 p.m in Rm. 246 West engi- neering Building, Mr J. S. Needle, instructor in Electrical Engineering, will discuss "Ind tion Heating." The talk will be suppl ented with dem- onstrations. Refreshments will be served. Alpha Phi Omega service fratern- ity will hold its first membership meeting in the Michigan Union, at 7:30 p.m. All members are requested to be present. All students who have had Scouting experience and are interested in joining Alpha Phi Ome- ga are cordially invited to this meet- ing. Alpha Phi Omega also extends a special invitation to the meeting to any faculty 'member who is desirous of becoming a faculty advisor of the fraternity. The Executive Roard of the Inter- Racial Association will meet tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Union. The Regular Thursday Evening Record Concert will be held in the Men's Lounge of the Rackham Buil- ding at 7:45 p.m. An all Mozart pro- gram will be played, featuring the Magic Flute Overture, Quintet in C Major, Concerto 34 in C Minor, and Symphony 38 in D Major. All grad- uate students and servicemen are invited to attend. Permission has been granted by the Student Affairs Committee for a dance for Company "A" tonight, ending at midnight. Undergraduate women attending this dance =ay have 12:30 a.m. permission. Coing Events Michigan Youth for Democratic Action is holding a party on Sunday, Jan. 7 in tie Women's Athletic Building Ifrom3) 7 p.m.- 10 p.m Allr vetei'ans, servicemen and students are cordially invited. The Post-War Council will spon- :: . I .i Y I - . r 4 .. IBy Crocketl Johnsonr i Of course. Search the] house. Iinsist on it! We'll start attic, Lti No furs in the attic, Chief. A iI I 4 So L nn .:.- J __ __-a 2 I'd better tell the cops the furs are down in the cellar. I doubt if that will allay thei suspicion, m'b L ,0 it Soy. I've read many parallel cases, The only way falsely suspected people prove their innocence is by apprehending the really guilty perpetrators themselves. -f-J You haven't looked in the - IenlInr. Goahend I incd -. We must forestall the police- - Until I've brought the case to a brilliant conclusion . I must act quickly! Now., Perhaps they'll believe my yInnicernlannntion Fln-.- I 1 it t , ; r ]la t c Ssuppose we'll owe you I O0n nnn0l0nn Rrvr Ri Iu RL Lk