PAGE TWO ""HE MICHGAN DAIL 'I'llUR SDAY, \'(>VE'AIBER 29, 1945 THlE 11Ml. 11"['1.NI I !ITV IWSAY.NVEBE1Z L94 _ _ _ __ Fifty-Sixth Year I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: U.S. Scientists Protest CHINA QUESTION. U. S. InterventionSupportsDictator ; Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. Ray Dixon . . Robert Goldman. Betty Roth . . Margaret Farmer Arthur J. Kraft Bill Mullendore Mary Lu Heath Ann Schutz . Dona Guimaraes Editorial Staff . . . . . . . . Managing Editor ... . . . . . . . . City Editor .. . . . . . . . Editorial Director .. . . . . . . . Associate Editor . . . . . . . . . Associate Editor . . . . . Sports Editor . . . . Associate Sports Editor . . . . . . . . . Women's Editor . . . . Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Dorothy Flint . . . . . . . Business Manager Joy Altman . . . . . . . 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- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR: CHARLOTTE BOBRECKER Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. DemobiliZtiion LAST week commanders of three of the branches of the armed services spoke of the danger that rapid and extensive demobilization is causing. General Carl ("Tooey") Spaatz termed the discharge system "hysterical demobilization" and blamed the deterioration of the Air Forces on it. He forecast a "rising curve of flying ac- cidents due to loss of experienced ground per- sonnel." Admiral Ernest J. King admitted that the Navy could not fight a first class battle today because of its disorganization. General Dwight D. Eisenhower said, "If our strength in Germany is cut below the point where we can do our job, then we had better get the residue out as quickly as possible." A danger is clearly stated here, and yet -all of America is eager to have its defenders re- turn. Those men who have fought overseas for months should be, and are being, sent home, but there are many who had just been drafted when the war ended. Reluctant as people are to send men overseas in peacetime, it is necessary under plans set forth in war-time conferences. General Eisenhower asks, "Are we going so far in weakening ourselves in Europe that we are going to abandon unfulfilled the purpose for which we fought?" -Patricia Cameron By SAMUEL GRAFTON COME to think of it, there was something odd about our destruction of Japan's cyclotrons. Cyclotrons are not factories for making atomic bombs; cyclotrons are laboratory instruments for studying the nature of the atom. To destroy them is like destroying logarithmic tables, or perhaps microscopes would be a better illustra- tion; and thus there was in the act something like a touch of intellectual vandalism. I am sure no such motive consciously entered the hearts of our military men when they ordered the destruc- tion; but, after all, it is the whole point of our atomic policy that, consciously or unconsciously, it makes us fear knowledge. There is a kind of splendor in the manner in which American scientists have risen to protest the destruction. Professors Johnson, of Chicago, Stone of the University of California, and Bur- ton, of Notre Dame, have protested, and so has the Association of Oak Ridge Scientists. These men are hardly pro-Japanese (many of them worked on the atomic bomb which killed so many Japanese) but something about the sight of soldiers pulling laboratories apart gives them the goose-bumps. The action was unlike us, somehow; it was- unlike America; and it raises horrid visions for the future. While, for example, we have not yet made a bonfire of books, it would be only a logical follow-up of the destruction of Jap- anese cyclotrons to destroy any good Japanese book on nuclear physics; if the one is justi- fied, the other is, too. And then what do you do with the Japanese physicist? You can't very well have a sergeant blow him up. Do you make him sign a pledge not to think? OUR action was a kind of wild pitch; and it is a characteristic of our atomic bomb policy that, instead of giving us a real solid feeling of security, it makes us fearful, and it makes us pitch wildly. For President Truman, hardly a week before, had carefully dravn a line between theoretical atomic knowledge and industrial atomic techniques, of the kind which make it possible to build fission bombs; he had said that while we would keep the second a secret, we were not greatly concerned about the first. Then we go on to destroy cyclotrons, which are run by quiet-type characters who can rarely tell a fac- tory from a mine. The greatest value of the incident is that it shows us exactly, and in the clearest form, what is worrying American science; our policy sen- tences almost everybody outside a selected group of official thinkers, to ignorance concerning a vast field of natural knowledge. It means that the enemy will not only be deprived of factories for making steel and munitions, which is one kind of problem; but that he is also never to know the truth about the neutron. He is to be officially benighted. He is to be kept ignorant; his ignorance is necessary to us; and that is a new kind of thing in our world, almost a new kind of world for us. Yet it reminds us of a very old kind of world, too; of bygone civilizations cetirt. th~e,Clitor Labor's.13igoMorment To the Editor: TAKE issue with your editorial entitled GM Strike signed by Lila Makima. It is my belief that the notion that "Labo's big moment" consists of a production-crippling strike or wave of strikes is adverse to the true in- terests of all three parties to industrial produc- tion-the Public, the Unions, and Management. It is my honest conviction that labor's big moment will come when union leaders can agree with management leaders that the you and me of industrial America-the public, have a vital interest in higher production, higher wages, and lower prices. To say that wages can be boomed without increasing the prices of consumers goods is mere political talk To say, as Miss Makima did, "Management must come to terms now" after reporting the existence of a serious production stoppage is lut one-third of the story. I submit that the labor, management, AND the people, through their governrment, must "come to terms now." I believe that the editorials and letters which have appeared in this student paper since No- vember 1 do not do justice to the intelligence of the students of this University. The editorials and letters I have read have been too "union- minded." As a citizen and veteran, I expect that our government will help recalcitrant unions and stubborn management to reach agreement through negotiation. When negotiation fails, as it does all too often, I believe that the public in- terest in economic health requires compulsory arbitration in some form. I maintain that none of the three parties to t enera Motors-AW-CIO strike is faultles; and that saying fanagement must comc to terms now" is a biased understate- ment. -Joseph N. Morency, Jr. which once tried to thrive and prosper by forcing algebra underground, or whatever. SOME of us are pitching wildly in another de- partment, too; and I think now of the com- ments which are increasingly cropping up in some (isolationist) newspapers, to the effect that it is anti-American to question our atomic policy. Here we are really getting into something new, for not only do we have an official science, for the first time in our national history, but we also have supposedly patriotic and unpatriotic ways of thinking about that science, and of commenting on it, and it is precisely this welter of cops and laboratories, and of demagogues pas- sionately laying down the law of both, that is frightening some of our best scientists. This mixture of legal authority and science and hot nationalism, all compacted, appears to our scientists as something strange, and pro- foundly, perhaps irremediably, reactionary; and it seems to me that those of us who are more familiar with the issue of freedom as it concerns the press, etc., must begin to think now about freedom and the scientist, for much is wrapped up in that issue. (Copyright, 1945, N. Y. Post Syndicate) O(ff the 9ence by Leo ard Cbei A FEW DAYS after my first column appeared in The Daily, I received a long and very sarcastic letter from a Mr. Mackey, a student at the university and a veteran of World War II. His letter expresses a point of view that is, unfortunately, common to many of our veterans. He dismisses any question of the workers' kids going hungry with, "I would have thought they might have saved a bit." He quotes soldiers as saying, "The unions roll in greenbacks; we roll in the mud." He describes cold nights at the front when, "Our ammunition was limited, and it was understood on some authority that this shortage was occasioned by strikes in certain plants manufacturing ammunition." Near the end of his letter Mr. Mackey makes the observation that, "Years ago the writer of "Off The Fence" would have been called a dan- gerous radical." Mr. Mackey is, of course, entitled to his opinion. As a veteran he has a right to expect people to give special consideration to his expressed views. But, because his opinions mean so much, the veteran has a special obli- gation to consider the opinions of others, and to search for a truer picture of what is actually happening than he can get from his daily newspaper, or from casual conversation. He has an obligation to dig out the real facts, and to make his judgment on the basis of the evidence he finds. What are the facts on wages, profits, and prices, and how do honest people like Mr. Mackey get such distorted pictures of what's going on? This is what "In Fact" for November 12, 1945 had to say: "The newspapers showed which side they were on by sensationalizing strike news, suppressing real news, as for example the official U. S. Government survey showing that industry generally could afford a 24 per cent wage increase without losing money, decreasing dividends, or increasing the price of the goods-in fact Gen- eral Motors could do all this and reduce the price of a Chevrolet by $100." So say the Government economists, according to "In Fact." And just in case anyone thinks Editor Seldes of "In Fact" is a "dangerous radical," I will quote a character reference for Mr. Seldes. Harry S. Truman wrote to Mr. Seldes, "I believe you are on the right track ... and I hope you are successful." If the reader is interested in more facts, here they are. According to U. S. Department of Agriculture statistics, the average worker in manufacturing industry was earning $45.42 a week in August, 1945. The cost of living has risen 30 per cent since 1939, which means the average worker in manufacturing earns $31.90 a week at 1939 prices. That's not exactly rolling in greenbacks. But what most veterans are really interested in is strikes. Well, what about the wartime strike record of the unions? What are the facts there?- According to Secretary of Labor Schwellen- bach, "Not one of these work stoppages had the sanction of top labor leadership. And the fact is that time lost through strikes averages only one-tenth of 1 per cent of total time worked. . . . By staying on the job holidays, American workers more than equalized the time lost through strikes." Writing a column of opinion that is really "Off The Fence," I naturally expect name- calling. I am fully aware of the fact that "Years ago the writer of 'Off the Fence' would have been called a dangerous radical!" I am also familiar enough with my American History to know that George Washington, Thomas Jeffer- son, Tom Paine, and Abe Lincoln were all called dangerous radicals in their day. Moreover, they really were radicals, and the first three were actually Revolutionists. So you see, Mr. Mackey, it all depends on the time and place, and who's calling names. Who can state with certainty that both Mr. Mackey and Mr. Cohen would not have been burned as witches had they lived in a certain town in Massachusetts about 300 years ago? EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second4 in a series of articles on the Far EastI by S. 1D. Yvehta, an Indian national attending the University.t AMERICAN intervention in China is no longer a secret. The State De-1 partment knows this, yet forges ahead{ with the continuance of help to the Chungking government. With Ameri- can planes, arms and ammunition, with the blood of United States Ma- rines, the Chinese people are driven under the one-party dictatorship of the Kuomintang. Thereare those who call this one- party dictatorship a democracy. Let us examine the facts. The fact that Chiang Kai-Shek's government is not democratic has been proclaimed even by anti- Communists in China. The undem- ocratic character of the Kuomin- tang has been described by one of its leading members as follows: "If we had strictly observed the principles of democracy during the past twenty years, the democratic spirit of Kuomintang would today shine brilliantly. Unfortunately, we have not strictly observed this prin- ciple for various reasons. As a result of the organization of the Kuomin- tang now moves on the contrary from top down to the bottom. The men of the committees of the provincial and municipal party headquarters, for instance, are appointed by the central party headquarters. . . . . Does it not mean that the represen- tatives of the Kuomintang National Congress elect themselves? We must frankly admit the fact that in these twenty years the machinery and practice of Kuomintang have turned in a wrong direction, inconsistent with the party constitution drafted by Dr. Sun Yat-Sen in 1923 and con- trary to, the spirit of democracy." Sun Fo, China Looks Forward (p. 107). This member of the Kuomintang, who served his party for years, is not alone in pointing out that reaction- ary elements now dominate the Chungking government. Donald M. Nelson. in his January 26, 1945 report to the late President on his mission to China, stated: "The government should also benefit from its closer relations .with industry. At the same time the heightened status of Chinese industry under the War Produc- tion Board will tend to exert a liberalizing influence. Under that influence there is more likelihood that moderate elements in Kuo- mintang will continue to gain power adding to the chances of genuine cooperation between the national government and the Com- munists." What is this in effect saying? It is implies that the chief obstacle to genuine cooperation between the na- tional government and the Commun- ists lies with reactionary elements within the Kuomintang ..who wield the power, and it says that effective cooperation awaits the rise of the moderate elements in the Kuomin- tang. The membership of the Kuomin- tang amounts to less than one per cent of the population under its control. Governmental representa- tives have not been elected since 1936. The places of those who have died have been filled by appointees. Whether or not the country has had time for an election, is it il- logical to suppose that those who have been appointed will toady to those to whom they owe their ten- ure? The Central Government itself is made up of a number of rival cliques, whose only common denominator is loyalty end- subservience to feudal reaction. Each group has its Gestapo. Prominent among these is the gang run by the C. C. Group, which is led by two brothers, Chen Li-Fu (for- mer Minister of Education and in charge of Kuomintang Party organi- zation, and Chen Kuo-Fu, head of the personnel division of Chiang's headquarters. Another such group is headed by Tai Li who runs the secret police of the Military Affairs Commission. Both these organiza- tions operate abroad as well as in China, keeping track of the behavior of Chinese students and officials abroad and presenting their views to the believing eyes of foreigners. Let us turn next to an evaluation of the way in which the war was fought against the Japanese. Max- well Steward of the American Coun- cil Institute of Pacific Relation states in his book, War-Time China (pub- lished in 1944): "Manufacturers who had made contracts with the government found that owing to the constant increase in prices of raw materials and labor they could not afford to fulfill their con- tracts. They found it more profitable to hoard and speculate in raw mate- rials than to run them to finished goods..... Mineral output had also been cut drastically and because of the extremely high costs of trans- portation, most construction, includ- ing the building of new industry, had come to a standstill." The Central Government failed to build the basic war industries. And they blamed the lack of supplies on the inadequacy of American lend- lease. But what do the figures say? The figures say that although steel. production in China wept down DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 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, 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:30 p. m. of the day preceding publication (11:00 a. m. Sat- urdays). THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1945 VOL. LVI, No. 22 Notices Faculty, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: The civilian freshman five-week progress reports will be due Dec. 6 in the office of the Academic Counselors, 108 Mason Hall. The five-weeks' grades for Navy and Marine trainees (other than En- gineers and Supply Corps) will be due Dec. 6. Department offices will be provided with special cards and the Office of the Academic Counselors, 108 Mason Hall, will receive these reports and transmit them to the proper officers. A. Van Duren Students are' reminded that all blanks taken out for registering with the Bureau of Appointments, must be returned a week from the day taken. Friday is the last day for re- turns during the registration period. Engineering Faculty: Five-week re- ports on standings of all civilian Eh- gineering freshmen and all Navy and Marine students in Terms 2, 3, and 4 of the Prescribed Curriculum are due Dec. 8. Report blanks will be furnish- ed by campus mail and are to be re- turned to Dean Crawford's Office. Engineering Faculty: Five-week re- ports below C of all Navy and Marine students who are not in the Prescrib ed Curriculum and for those in Terms 5, 6 and 7 of the Prescribed Curricu- lum are due in Dean Emmons' Office by Dec. 8. Obtain report cards from your departmental office. .All Student Organizations desiring space in the 1946 Michiganensian should contact the Michiganensian business office between 2 and 5 p. m. or 2-4561, line 338, after 7 p. m. This must be done this week. All organi- zations that have already received contracts should return them as soon as possible. Phillips Scholarships: Freshman students who presented four units of Latin, with or without Greek, for ad- mission to the University, and who are continuing the study of either language, are invited to compete for the Phillips Classical Scholarships. Two awards of fifty dollars each will be made on the basis-of an examina- tion covering the preparatory work in Latin 'or in both Latin and Greek, as described in the bulletin on schol- arships, a copy of which may be ob- tained in Room 1, University Hall. The examination will be held this year in- Room 2013 Angell Hall on Wednesday, Dec. 5, at 4:00 p. m. In- terested students are asked to give notice of their candidacy to Professor Pearl (2024 A. H.) or to Dr. Rayment (2030 A. H.) in advance of that date.' Past holders of the scholarships who seek renewal should file an applica- tion before Dec. 5 with the same people. The W. J. 1-Uammill prize of $100 will be awarded for the best essay concerning the pertinence and mod- ernity of ideas found in classics of thought and literature in the fields of history, economics and political sci- ence. The contestants for the prize may choose any one of the following topics: 1. Theories of relationships between human ecology and political systems; 2. Relationships between political systems, ethical values, and the concept of personal property; 3. the individual and the state. Lists of books that shall form the basis for the discussion of these topics will be supplied contestants. The essay is to be between ten thousand and twenty thousand words. The contest is open to any undergraduate of the Univer- sity of Michigan, and essays must be submitted by March 15, 1946. Con- testants are requested to consult with any member of the committee on awards before writing the essay. Joseph E. Kallenbach William B. Palmer Palmer A. Throop 14. The test is a normal requirement for admission to nearly all medical schools. It is extremely important for all students planning to enter a medi- cal school in the fall of 1946 to take the examination at this time. If the test has already been taken, it is not necessary or advisable to repeat it. Further information may be ob- tained in Room 4, University Hall, and fees must be paid at the Cash- ier's Office by Dec. 1. Lectures Lecture: Paul Hagen, former Ger- man and Austrian trade union labor leader, and author and, lecturer on the subject, "European Labor in the Post-War World," on Friday, Nov. 30, 4:15 p.m., Room 101 Economics Building, under the auspices of the Workers Educational Service. The lecture is open to the public. Academic Notices Mathematics: Orientation Seminar today at 3:30 p. in., 3201 Angell Hall. Mr. Rabson will speak on the Five Numbers. Employment Seminar: The first of a series of meetings to study employ- ment in all branches of Forestry will be held in Room 2039 Natural Science Building this afternoon at 4:30. Professor Allen will make a general survey of the course and dis- cu'ss Methods and Techniques of Se- curing Employment. All Foresters and Pre-Foresters will be welcomed. Seminar in physical chemistry will meet today in Room 410 Chemistry Building at 4:15 p. m. Mr. John Biel will speak on "Electronic Structure and Reactions of Acrylonitrile." All interested are invited. Make-up Final Examination in Economics 51, 52, 53, and 54 will. be given Friday afternoon, Nov. 30, in Room 207 Economics Bldg. at 3:00. Geology 12 make-up field trip to Trenton, Michigan, is scheduled for Saturday, Dec. 1st, from 8-12. All students who missed the original field trip must report to the Geology office, 2051 Natural Science Building, promptly at eight. Exhibitions Exhibit of Paintings and Sketches by Various Japanese-American Ar- tists, On Relocation Centers,. From Nov. 26 to Dec. 16. Sponsored by Stu- dent Council of Student Religious As- sociation, Inter-Guild, Inter-Racial Association, All Nations Club. Office of Counselor in Religious Education, Michigan Office of War Relocation Authority, U. S. Department of In- terior. Exhibit: Museum of Art and Arch- aeology, 434 South State Street. His- torical Firearms and other Weapons, Nov. 25 through Dec. 9. Weekdays, 9-12; 1:30-5; 7:30-9:30; Sundays, 3-5. Events Today Bible Seminar: Mr, Littell of Lane Hall will discuss the prophet Amos Thursday, Nov. 29 at 7:30 at Lane Hall. All are invited to attend. The Ann Arbor chapter of the American Veterans Committee will meet tonight at 7:30, room 305 of the Michigan Union. Servicemen and women, veterans, and their wives are invited to attend. The Chemistry Club invites all men interested to hear Prof. Barker speak on ATOMIC ENERGY at a smoker Thurs., Fri., Sat., 8:30 p. in., Room 316, Michigan Union. Forestry Club Meeting - Elections will take place at the meeting of the Forestry Club this Evening at 7:30 in the Natural Science Building. Other business will be discussed and refreshments will be served after the meeting. All Foresters and Pre-For- esters should make a special effort to attend. Committee "Z" will meet today at the Hillel Foundation. Al curious souls ar einvited to attend. Art Cinema League presentation from 10,000 tons in 1942 to 8,000 tons in 1943, Allied aid increased at the same time from 3,000 to 20,- 000 tons monthly. The argument that military defeats were due to insufficient Allied aid thus appears to be a disguise to hide the real crux of the matter. There is more, far more, for those who believe in the staunch anti-Jap- See CHINA p. 4 Air Corps Vets A RMY AIR CADETS recruited from civilian life are offered three options under the present discharge plan: honorable discharge, a career in the postwar Service Force or enlistment in regular Aimy. No provisions have been made, however, for the discharge of pre-service cadets. Those who fit into that classification have objected. They have entered their present training from the regular Army and have consequently for- feited rank and pay as well as the opportunity to gain discharge points. These pre-service cadets have had no oppor- tunity for air crew training through voluntary enlistment because of the strict early require- ments which were later lowered. When the recruiting program slackened these men were taken. They would be eligible for discharge under the present plan if they had gone through to commissions, but as explained, they have had no opportunity for air crew training. The men in this branch of the service feel that they have been discriminated against. They, too, should be eligible for discharge. -Liz Knapp Wheel, er's See "IOU would be compelled to go to war with Russia," said Senator Burton Wheeler to his colleagues the other day, even if the United Na- tions were already organized to stop aggression. In opposition to a bill outlining the terms of American participation in the United Nations Organization, he suggested "a real peace confer- ence" to bring about disarmament, abolition and international contrbl of the, atomic bomb. BARNABY By Crockett Johnson .. r - - .. - ,,r _ - . 1_ *._ ~ A ..,..,..,8 ..,1. .,. i TL = - . t t E !" 1 I When) you've filled out the credit iH-II I Amomern m boy. Imhey'rej I:::zzjI 1 - ~. .I-Vnel -"Cl~l[ 1 xI ! A,-I-- .t.,.-1- - rTl- ...- -- a I