'I'tt E IVI i C H fG A IN Dk i IN 1yd l. l 1 {_Y 111 iI !IS 1. ll ! 1. 1J1 . I WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Secreti-Off-he-Record Talk. T he Pendulum [I I By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON, Jan. 31-Most of the 400 Con- gressmen who crowded into the Coolidge Auditorium of the Library of Congress for what was supposed to be a top-secret off-the-record talk on the war went away with a feeling that they had wasted their time. The words of Ad- miral Ernest King, Chief of Naval Operations, and Army Chief of Staff General George Mar- shall might have been of interest to a non-Con- gressional gathering, but to a Congress which already follows the war carefully, it was dis- appointing. Congressmen concluded that the hush-hush meeting was actually arranged to boost Congres- sional support for work-or-fight legislation. As for the constant admonitions of Admiral King that "This must not go beyond this room," Congressmen figured this was nothing more than good theatre. Secretary of War Stimson and Secretary of the Navy Forestal opened with brief in- troductions of Marshall and King. Many Congressmen, knowing of King's unpopularity on the Hill, grinned as Forrestal went out of his way to -build up King as the man the late Secretary Frank Knox selected as Naval chief "only after consultation with dozens of Naval officers who had worked with him and other outstanding Naval leaders." (For a long time King and Knox scarcely spoke.) Forrestal dwelt on King's "strong, silent" qual- ities, explaining that the Admiral is "not a good talker or good mixer" but an ace as Naval chief. Even those who don't know King were mystified by the introduction. King then spoke from a prepared script, de- claring that the United States is today the great Naval power of the world. In our en- gagements with the Japanese, he said, we have suffered more damage than is generally known, but fortunately the Japs have not known about our damages in time to capitalize on our tem- porary weakness. "You will excuse me if I do not go into more detail," said the Admiral. King observed that recent Naval history has justified our huge production of long-range submarines and also the several foating repair docks now attached to the fleet. Many minor repairs on Naval vessels have recently been ac- complished at sea with these floating docks, King said, which formerly would have required lengthy and expensive trips to land bases. The only real news King gave the congress- men was in a movie of new Naval guns and certain protection devices. Both Marshall and King emphasized that the major Jap strength--both on land and sea-is still to be met, Marshall liar poons Headlines - GENERAL.MARSHALL then held the floor for nearly an hour and a half. He made a good impression and brought chuckles with his dry wit as he castigated newspaper headline writ- ers for "giving the public an over-bright pic- ture." There is still a lot of war to be fought in both hemispheres, Marshall said-and a lot of supplies to be sent out. To emphasize the magnitude of the supply problem, Marshallsaid that in two months now we ship as much sup- plies to France as we shipped in all of World War 1. It was lack of supplies which stopped our drive across France last summer, Marshall said, although he made it plain it was the Army's inability to supply enough fuel and munitions, rather than lack of production at home which stopped us. With a nod to Clare Luce, Marshall observed that morale among our troops in Italy is lower than on any other front, and he added that the tone of many letters from home tends to depress rather than raise morale. Marshall said the Army has received good sup- port from the home front and from Congress, but that this is no time to slacken on the job. This country has done miracles, he contended, especially considering the fact that the war was never brought to our shores. He spoke at some length of the suffering in London, and showed charts comparing the destruction in London with what it would have been in New York had the Germans blitzed that city. Marshall on Russia ... AS FOR the Russian drive in the east, Marshall said he cannot yet evaluate the progress, but that the small number of German prisoners re- ported thus far makes it appear that part of the German army was intentionally withdrawing be- fore the Russians in Poland. He said he had not known in advance when the Russian offen- sive was to take place, precisely where or in how great a force. In fact, he said, the Rus- sians have not notified the British or Americans in advance of exact details on any of their offensives. And, he added, "The Russians are right. We are not security-mindedA." Marshall did not say whether the Russians had been notified of our D,)Day plans. Capital Chaf . . . WHEN JESSE JONES appeared Wednesday be- fore the Senate Commerce Committee, chair- man Josiah Bailey smiled benignly on all demon- stration for Jones but cracked his gavel sternly when there was applause for Wallace. . . . Sen- ator Glen Taylor of Idaho is featured in recent newsreel shots singing "Give me a Home 'Neath the Capital Dome." . . The United Rubber Workers (CIO) will come to Washington next month to take a crack at the little-steel for- mula. . . . Mayor La Guardia, who fears the growing support for New York OPA Admini- strator Dan Woolley's campaign to be Mayor of New York, has asked National OPA Head Chester Bowles to fire Woolley and Max Men- scher, his publicity man. Woolley, bitter enemy of Republican La Guardia has lined up both CIO and Democratic Party support. House Majority Leader John McCormack put Representative Walter Brehm, Ohio Re- pubican, in his place last Tuesday. While McCormack was answering a question from Republican leader Joe Martin on the Wallace- Jones affair, Brehm asked him to yield for another question. "I'm already yielding to % better man than you," shot back MeCor- inaek, CIOSedShon .. 'WHEN THIE House Military Affairs Committee agreed last week to knock the anti-closed shop amendment out of the Navy bill, it did so under pressure of a foxy move by Represent- ative Chet Holifield of California a new member of the committee. Holifleld had opposed the anti-closed shop amendment then it was pro- posed by Representative Ham Andrews, rank- ing Republican. However, his sudden move to force it out of the bill caught its supporters flat- footed. (Copyright, 1945, by the :Be Syndicate Tne.) 15D RATHER BE RIGHT: dA 1 Ira 4 0e On Foreign Policy By SAMUEL G1AF'TON NEW YORK, Jan. 31-The American nation has had an unhappy time of it, discussing its foreign policy these last three months. But the results have been good. We seem to be movin on from simple, uncomplicated, primitive concep- tions, to more mature and rounder ones. It is not so long since our conception of the world was that of an unruly playground, full of rough boys, in which it was our duty (if we had a duty) to mount a soapbox and read the urchins a lecture on morality, idealism, and no stealing. We seem now vaguely to comprehend that the rest of the world is not exactly a reform school- that it is peopled with adults, who have adult problems of economy and military secur- ity. When we go among them now, we are less inclined to clap our hands and demand instant order; we now start our foreign conversations more in man-to-man style, with some casuel remark like: "Cold day, isn't it?" And of course it usually is. Senator Vandenberg helped us enormously by his bold proposal for a five-power alliance, con- sisting of the United States, Britain, Russia, France and China, to keep Germany and Japan permanently demilitarized. Until Mr. Vanden- berg spoke, too many of us had the though that it was our problem (and specifically our Ameri- can problem) to keep all the nations of the world down equally, to sit on Britain with the same weight as we might apply to Germany, to take somewhat the same dubious view of Rus- sia's foreign policy as of Japan's. After Mr. Vandenberg spoke, it became clearer that all the nations of the world are not alike; that some have better records than others, and can be trusted more, and must be trusted more. The outer world then ceased to be a dark space of unmitigated hostility; Mr. Vanden- berg reminded us that this is actually a war against Germany and Japan, not against Brit- ain and Russia, and he added the telling point that our allies are, or can be, our friends. These may be siuple conceptions, but too many of us had foggily forgotten them, and had over-concentrated on the problem of how to punish our partners for helping us to defeat our enemies. NOW ALONG come the sixteen "freshmen" Senators, who have written a round-robin letter to President Roosevelt, proposing that we adopt both the Dumbarton Oaks plan for a world organization of all nations, and also the Vandenburg plan for an immediate, limited alliance of five powers to curb Germany and Japan. This is sensational progress, because it means that now we are actually able to hold two ideas in our minds at the same time. Even more, for the new Senators suggest also that we work with our allies on a day-to-day basis in solving the problems of the liberated countries. They propose, in short, that we should cooperate with our allies on three differ- ent levels simultaneously, and this is a great improvement over the time when we so eagerly yearned for the one master key which would unlock everything. So our thinking about our allies is becoming deeper and richer. A mature relationship with. them is bound to be a complex one; not only Dumbarton Oaks, but as many other treaties covering as many other relationships as pos- sible; not only a general financial underpinning of world trade through Bretton Woods, 'but also specific loans, credits and exchanges; not only organizational contact with our allies, but also a kind of social life, around, over and above our organizational life together. Those of us who primly tell the world how our Constitution, a single document, holds our forty-eight states together, forgot the thou- sand intricate realities of social and political intercourse which have really made us one. (Copyright, 1945, New York Post Syndicate) By BERNARD ROSENBERG WITH THE relaxation of family bonds, juvenile delinquency be- gan to flourish in this country as nev- er before. Mothers could not simul- taneously tend their children and work in war plants. So it was that a correlation arose between the de- gree of independence women attain- ed and the incidence of 'teen-age crime. Reactionaries immediately manned their guns to blast women out of the factory and back into the kitchen--- arguing that there they could fulfill familial obligations and save Amer- ica from youthful violence, Other more enlightened members of the community clamored for municipal intervention, for state subsidized parks and playgrounds. The second view is sound so far as it goes, but' it does not go far enough. For anyone who really believes in equality between the sexes must also favor practical abolishment of the family as a social institution. If women are to maintain econo- mic independence they cannot be manacled to their homes. The pres- ent situation has amply demon- strated that fact. But, on the oth- er hand, children neither of whose parents, is home during the day ought not to be let loose without guidance and control. To this problem there is but one answer: transference of key functions from the family to the state. That the proposal is a radical one I will not deny, but anything short of it will only serve to prolong that anomolous circumstance in which womankind wants to have its mar- ital cake and eat it too. Monday night Ann Arbor theater- goers witnessed a bleary misinter- pretation of Ibsen's wonderful play, "The Doll's House." Despite hercu- lean effort to the contrary, Francis Lederer could not altogether obscure its message, viz., that the family structure is such as to make inequal- ity inevitable. Nora, the heroine, her individuality buried for eight years, has to leave home and start life anew. There is pith to the melo- dramatic statement Nora makes that she would rather be a human being than a mother and a wife. There sometimes occurs a genuine incom- ptibility between the two. Some people are of the opinion that taking an infant from the bosom of his family would serious- ly harm him. This fear is based upon the assumption that an in- fant is not seriously harmed with-1 Inquiry Deni and A Republican and a Democrat have joined forces in the House to demand a congressional inquiry into the De- partment of Justice, and this is as it should be. Congressmen of both parties, and citizens in general, should have a keen concern for learn- ing the full facts about recent char- ges of outside influence, notably that of Lobbyist Thomas G. Corcoran, in the handling of cases of this import- ant agency of the Government. What about the documented charges against Attorney General Riddle made in recent weeks by his former aid, Norman Littell? A good way to find out about them is for the House to vote the inquiry! proposed by Representatives Voor- his (Dem.), California, and Smith (Rep.), Wisconsin. -St. Louis Post-Dispatch ,ON SECOND B IODxGHTon Bly Ray Dixon HEADLINE in yesterday's Daily said "U. S. Army Sweeps Across Our River." For a moment we thought it might have been the Hu- ron. Horrible Thought Department: Looking through the lit school bul- letin we note that a course called Roosevelt to Roosevelt is being given in the history department next semester. If Dewey had been elected it would have ruined a good course, In January, ever since we can re- member, there always comes a thaw -except this year. Evidently the I OPA has gone one step farther thanI freezing prices and put a ceiling zero degrees on Ann Arbor. A* * It was so cold yesterday, that people didn't say goodbye, they said snow long, In the bosom of his family. Psy- chiatry tells us otherwise. It is understood pretty generally that the formative years in personality development are the first five. In- fantile, even preconscious experi- ences, some of which may be trau- matic, leave an inpact upon us that can never be eradicated. Now, the first five years are those in which we are completely depend- ent upon our mothers. Karl Men- ninger, the emminent psychoan- alyst, has pointed out that most of mankind's woes on a personal level are thus attributable to misman- aged rearing of children. Mothers simply have not raised their off- spring properly-as the number of psychotics in and out of American asylums will testify. The one job women are supposed to perform with instinctive perfection they have consistently botched. There is another contention, how- ever, that seems to carry more weight. It concerns an ostensible loss of warmth which would follow banish- ment of the family. Recent experi- ments along this line do not bear out what appears to be a just criti- cism. In Palestine one whole gen- eration of children has been raised in state nurseries. Yet there does not seem to be any marked absence in that little country, cooperative as it is, of the virtues Western man most admires: compassion, courage, fra- ternity. Nor has Russia been bar- barized by employment of a simila system. In Palestine on a miniature scale and in Russia extensively (though less so of late) the state has succeeded in elevating women and liberating children so that neitherj would be fettered by familial ties, Plato envisioned a state in which the elite would live communally. Knowing as too few of us know today that the family constitutes a powerful brake on progress, Plato would have done with it for his aristocracy. There is no sign on the political horizon to indicate that we will soon make such a move ourselves. But one may say with assurance that it can be done for the masses in addition to the clas- ses, and that when it is done we shall have taken a giant step for- ward. Wanted It seems p lausitble catlfirsit thougzht that the preparaition and launching of this war should be defined as a, crime, and that the top Axis leaders should be tried on that charge, as the United Nations War Crimes Com- mission has'recommended. There is danger, however, thati such an ap- proach will provide fruitful opportu- nities for legalistic hair-splitters, -and that the result will be a failure like that after the last war. In the Versailles Treaty, the Kai- ser was arraigned on a similar charge: "a supreme offense against international morality and the sanctity of treaties." The Dutch, in whose country he had taken refuge, replied that no such crime was list- ed in their extradition treaties, that - it was a non-extraditable political offense in any event, so they would not surrender their guest. Is it not likely that the pseudo-neutrals of this war, such as Argentina and Spain, will take a similar stand if the extradition of Hitler & Co. is asked by the Allies on such a sweeping charge as is proposed? This need not mean that the Axis criminals will be immune if they manage to flee Germany. They can be accused of many specific crimes which the legal sharp-shooters can- not question: such crimes as mur- derconspiracy, robbery, arson, tor- ture, kidnapping. These offenses are covered in extradition treaties, and there would be no logical excuse for denying demands for the criminals' surrender, The Allies should beware of fancy rhetoric in preparing for the war guilt trials. "Wanted for Mur- der" is enough, in common law and in common sense. -St. Louis Post-Dispateh Better Early ' The President's Press secretary may arrange, while in Europe, for Ameri- can newspapers to get a better break on big stories at the forthcoming Big Three conference. Better early than never. -St. Louis Post-Dispatch 4 1 -A, DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, JAN. 31, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 72 Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to allnmem- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 1421 Angell fal, by 3:30 p. n. of the day preceding publication (11:30 a. m. Sat- urdays). Notices Notice to Men Students: Men stu- dents living in approved rooming houses who intend to move to differ- ent quarters for the Spring Term or who expect to leave the University at the end of this Term, must give no- tice in writing to the Dean of Stu- dents before 11 a.m. on Saturday, Feb. 3. Feb. 24 is the official closing date for the Fall Term. Members of the University Coun- eil: There will be no meeting of the University Council in February. Louis A. Sopkins, Secretary The Michiganensian: All Organi- zations expecting space in the MICH- IGANENSIAN must return contracts to the business office of the Student Publications Bldg. by Friday of this week. Lectures -Lectures: Public Health Nursing Day will be celebrated locally in the School of Public Health Auditorium at 3 p.m. Thursday, Feb 1. Dr. Otto K. Engelke, Director, Washtenaw County Health Department, and Miss Helene Buker, Director, Bureau of Public Health Nursing, Michigan De- partment of Health, Lansing, will talk on "The Public Health Nurse- What She Is and What She Does," The public is cordially invited. A cadem ic Notices Bacteriology 110, lecture course, and Bacteriology 114, advanced bac- teriology, will start on March 5 and will be given on the spring term schedule for the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts. Bacteriology 111, laboratory work for medical students, will start March 19 and will be given on the spring term schedule for freshmen in the Medical School. tial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music, at 8:00 this evening, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. A student of Professor Gilbert Ross, Miss Lewis will play compositions by Pug- nani, Bach, Mozart, -and de Falla. The public is cordially invited, Events Today Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet today at 4:15 p.m., in Rm. 319 West Medical Building. "The Rela- tion of Serum Proteins to Immunity -Protein Nutrition as a Factor in Immunity" will be discussed. All interested are invited. The Student Religious Association Music Hour, led by Robert Taylor, '46E, will present the second half of J. S. Bach's Mass in B Minor this evening at 7:30 in the Lane Hall library. Refreshments will be served and scores will be provided. Everyone is invited. Varsity Glee Club: Rehearsal at 7:30 tonight--serenade will follow. Graduate Students: There will be a Graduate Coffee Hour tonight from 7:30 to 8:30 in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. All graduate students interested in get- ting acquainted with each other are invited. La Sociedad IHispanica announces that the second lecture in the annual series will be presented at 8 p.m. in the Michigan Union. Because of the unavoidable absence of Lieut.-Col. Burset, the lecture originally sched- uled for Feb. 7 will be given. Pro- fessor Arthur Aiton will speak on "Relaciones entre Latino-America y los Estados Unidos." Tickets for the series will be on sale at the door. Coming Events Tea at the International Center, every Thursday, 4-5:30 p.m. Faculty foreign students and their American friends are cordially invited. Department of Chemical and Met- allurgical Engineering: At the regu- lar Seminar meeting on. Thursday, Feb. 1, Mr. N. Fatica will speak on the subject "Electroplating." The meeting will be held at 4 p.m. in Rm. 3201 of the East Engineering Build- ing. All persons interested are cor- dially invited to attend. -4 I * I I a & J BARNABY By Crockett Johnson F1rI s 8ornby! I'll produce II _____ I'-I I D.~4 4. ... .i I.. Ti.be(/yres/Aesn frypyrr i:P. 9ati;. tf.. Ne aper rM. i tisT (~oV~(CVf Jo'.wJ~ov, I I I