.t PAGE FOUR I THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1945 WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND. mmmwmmmmmmmm mitr4 gat aily Fifty-Sixth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Hurley, Our Cowboy Ambassador Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Ray Dixon . . Robert Goldman Betty Roth . . Margaret Farmer Arthur J. Kraft Bill Mullendore Mary Lu Heath Ann Schutz ., Dona Guimaraes . . . . . . . . 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 i 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 EDITORS: FARMER AND KNAPP Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Home for Christmas WITH regular transport ships unavailable, a conversion program for nine Liberty ships was organized in the Philippines. Eight are scheduled to get prisoners of war to Japan by Christmas, one for transportation of American troops to the States. It was suggested by the major in charge tio the editor of the "Homeward Herald," a newspaper published at a replacement depot on Leyte, that some item be printed about the progress being made in the conversion of the one ship for ship- ment of American troops, but nothing must be said about the conversion of ships for POWs. Do the officers in control of the movement of troops in that area have good reasons for such a program? The 90 point men, thousands of them, sitting in replacement depots awaiting shipment home would like to know. -Shirley Loeblich Norway's Students "IF THERE is anyone who doubts of the demo- cratic will to win," said Franklin Delano Roosevelt,". . . let him look to Norway. He will find in Norway, at once conquered and uncon- querable, the answer to his questioning." Today, having proved worthy of these terms and free again after five years of struggle, Nor- way must look to the world, and is beginning to do so through her students abroad. This year 195 Norwegian students have en- tered universities in Switzerland, the majority of them the Federal Polytechnicum at Zurich. They have received Swiss scholarships and many are living with Swiss families. The Danish, too, have shown their admiration of the Norwegian people by inviting many stu- dents to attend Danish universities free. In the United States, 120 universities and colleges have declared themselves willing to give scholarships to 200 Norwegian students because of their courageous stand during the war. Of these, 72 have already arrived and are now scattered all over the country. This student exodus is necessary because, as a result of German destruction, Norway is unable to care for her own students, many of whom, as well as faculty members, were prisoners in Ger- man concentration camps. At present, the Nor- wegians must expend all their energy merely to keep alive-to find food, clothing and shelter- and they lack the money and facilities to re- build and equip their universities. Although we are considering students of Warsaw, Tsing Hua, the Philippines, and Strasbourg for the coming election, we should not forget that those of Norway and other countries like her have suffered also and are trying to resume their studies under conditions which are certainly anything but conducive to study. -Elinor Moxness White Elephant CANOL, the famous pipeline, to carry oil to our troops in Alaska has been placed on the block for sale. So far nobody has appeared willing to purchase this white elephant. Built by the United States at a cost of $134 milli- on il--md . ita P--Ri, i By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON.-In 1925 this writer was mak- ing a laborious trip over the Gobi desert to Urga, capital of Mongolia. Across the horizon, heading down from the Siberian border, came a long caravan of motor cars-Fords, Buicks, Chev- rolets of uncertain vintage-all driven by Chinese chauffeurs. Puffing across the plain, they pulled up at the water-hole where I was encamped. On the running board of each car was strapped a long wooden box packed with rifles. Inside each car were smaller boxes of cartridges. They were being shipped by Soviet Russia to stir up civil was in China. But their recipient was none other than Chiang Kai-Shek, more re- cently the ardent opponent of Russia. Later this writer visited Chiang's stronghold in South China. He was in command of the Shampa cadets, a Red Chinese army, trained by Soviet officers including the famous Comrade Borodin. To Britons and Americans at that time, Chiang Kai-Shek and Communism were one and the same thing. Both were equally hated- and for good reason. In Canton, he and his so-called Communists had clamped down a boycott against Americans, Britons, and all foreigners that was no joke. Grass grew in the streets of the foreign settlement. The Ameri- con consul general, Douglas Jenkins, could be seen each morning sweeping out his office. Every foreign official in Canton cooked his own meals-and considered himself, lucky to get food. Only humorous aspect was watching the tall and bearded French consul pull his grocer- ies home from the commissary in a child's toy wagon every morning. History Shifts THAT was exactly 20 years ago. Since then, Chiang Kai-Shek has become the great friend of, the Americans and British and enemy of the Russians-though quite capable of patching up a new division of Manchurian spoils with them as reported this week. I mention this because such changes are not uncommon in China. Neither are civil wars. There has been no period in the last 100 years of Chinese history when some war lord or other did not have an army in the field jockeying for more revenue, more territory, or more concubines. At such times as I have visited China, it was al- ways an axiom that when the Chinese corn crop was cut, the troops would start moving. Even Chinese war lords had some consideration for peasants' crops and the country's food supply. It was into this vortex of political intrigue that Pat Hurley, our naive and delightful cow- boy ambassador from Oklahoma, threw the full weight of the U.S.A. with all its prestige, all its lendlease, all its Far East airplanes- and threw his weight on one side, apparently not realizing that its chief was quite capable of making a new deal with his enemy, the Rus- sians, whenever it was expedient, behind Hurley's back. All this is why Hurley was so sore at the State Department's Far Eastern experts who tried to warn him what was cooking. Months ago they realized what public reaction would be to Ameri- can pilots losing their lives for the benefit of Chinese war lords. NOTE 1-Eleven U. S. plane crashes were re- ported last week in China in one day alone, all of them flown by U. S. pilots for the benefit of Chiang Kai-Shek. NOTE 2-Senator Langer of North Dakota has long demanded that the State Department explain the gift of rare Chinese jewelry valued at $30,000 by the Chiang government to Mrs. Hurley. No Parachutes ADDITIONAL information is now available re- garding the tragic death of Pvt. W. M. Calla- way of Beaumont, Texas, on Oct. 27, 1945, in the Himalaya mountains, just after his and other Army passenger planes had been ordered not to carry parachutes. The no-parachute order was issued by the Air Forces in Washington, Sept. 5, and by Brig. Gen. William H. Tunner, commander of the India- Burma theatre, on Sept. 20. He was carrying out Washington orders. The order applied to C-54S, or 4-engined transports carrying passengers, in- cluding General Tunner's own plane, and speci- fied that they should not carry parachutes. Hitherto these planes had carried parachutes while flying the "hump" but the Army explains that hump flying has been stopped. Reason for the no-parachute order on 4-motored transport planes carrying passengers is that though the crew can bail out, the passengers can't. They haven't been trained in parachute jumping, and no crew can desert a ship ahead of its passen- gers. One reason why U. S. pilots in China are now burned up is that many of them have to carry Chinese troops into the battle area for Chiang Kai-Shek. Imagine the panic if 50 to 60 Chi- nese troop passengers all tried to bail out. (Copyright, 1945, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Uncle Sucker By SAMUEL GRAFTON IF THERE is one fixed idea in this republic, more solid than another, it is that Great Brit- ain is waggling a tin cup at us in her current effort to obtain a loan; that she has put on her oldest clothes, and drenched her cheeks in glycer- ine tears, and is working our sympathies at Washington for all they are worth. It may come as news to many Americans that this is not the British mood at all; that there is a considerable body of British opinion which doesn't want an American loan, particularly if the terms are onerous; and that the loan, when finally offered (the terms may be re- vealed at any moment) may even be turned down by British home opinion and the British Parliament. We have got it so firmly planted in our heads that we are always Uncle Sucker that we cannot quite realize that there are many Englishmen who do not wish to be tied to America financially, and that they would prefer to go it alone for five or six hard years of rationing and austerity, banking on trade within the empire to get them on their feet in the end. The British feel that too high an interest rate would mean hypothe- cating too large a share of their national income to America; and that this would prevent their country from being a free operator in foreign trade; that the loan might cripple them, while leaving us free. But, as I say, we are so sold on the notion that everybody wants our dollars that it is hard for us to realize that citizens of another country may have a real feeling of fear -about losing their financial independence to us, and a real feeling about keeping free of us. T HE same stereotyped thinking shows up on the matter of Bretton Woods. Remember how hard it was, last spring, to convince our Con- gress and public that Bretton Woods was a good deal for America? Our internationalists had to rant and roar to get the thing ratified, while the opposition groaned that, as always, we were being the annointed suckers of the whole wide world. Well, we have ratified Bretton Woods, but no other nation has. There has been no rush to get into the World Bank and the World Fund; there has, actually, been a rush to stay out. If these institutions were (as the opposition said) merely a device whereby the United States put up some $6,000,000,000 for the rest of the world to gobble and spend, we could expect the chow line to have formed up by now, reaching from here to Tues- day. No one is in line; and Bretton Woods turns out to be exactly what those of us who sup- ported it said it was, a sound commercial ar- rangement for the United States, whereby the strength of the dollar would be used to back up all currencies, and to underwrite good loans to all countries. There is no special rush to share its blessings because it doesn't give any- thing away; and, in fact, there is fear in some foreign circles that it makes the dollar too big, and puts us in too good a position as re- gards control over international banking. Our rigid belief that we are always the world's victim, that the rest of the earth is forever send- ing out tentacles to reach toward us and to grab from us, is a primitive sort of notion, in part, perhaps a colonial hangover; and, like all ideas which have lasted beyond their time, it is crip- pling to us. It keeps us from seeing clearly. Do we realize that we are the only consider- able nation which is balking at fulfilling its UNRRA commnnitments? That is a fact, and it hardly squares with our fancy about ourselves as sucker to the planet; but our stereotyped be- lief about our role, and the angers developed around the myth, lead us into just such dubious types of action, or non-action. It is a pity that we should let ancient slogans blur the world picture for us, at a moment when we must be utterly clear about, and precisely sensitive to world relationships, if we are to hope to keep our pre-eminent position. (copyright, 1945, N. Y. Post Syndicate) Imperialism MADAME PANDIT didn't pull any punches when she spoke in Hill Auditorium Wednesday night. She called Britain just what it is-an im- perial power which has attacked and conquered weaker, helpless countries and exploited their resources and their people. In India, as in other colonial coun- tries, the British have worked to keep the people ignorant, to pit them against each other, and to spread stories about their disunity, their re- ligious differences, their poverty, their unsolvable problems to the rest of the world. If there has been no progress in India, it is directly due to British policy. For example, the Brit- ish themselves see to it that religious differences are never forgotten, by stressing them in every phase of In- dian life. Britain has kept them weak, politically, and deliberately en- couraged ignorance and disease, so that they could say to the world; you see, they aren't capable of governing themselves, yet. Madame Pandit made an accusa- tion which Americans cannot af- ford to take lightly; that in failing to protest these colonial policies, and by permitting the use of our lend-lease materials against colon- ial peoples, we are helping to sow the seeds of future race war. -Marjorie Littlefield Synonyms IS IT that the United Nations' machinery is slow in starting or is it that their sincerity is lacking? Did they mean it when they pro- claimed the noble purpose of inter- nationalism in San Francisco? The reason we ask is that it seems rather incongruous that undeclared' wars should be raging in both Java and China so' soon after the writing of the United Nations' charter and no United Nations' action be taken to stop it. Indeed, the Big Three nations are directly involved. The latest news said that British naval guns and war- planes were bombarding the Indon- esian city of Soerabaja. News from China contained charges by the Chi- nese Communists that the United States and the Nationalistic govern- ment had signed a $64,000,000 muni- tions loan and that American fliers were transporting munitions for gov- ernment forces. Meanwhile, the Rus- sians supported the Chinese Com- munists. It has been said "that the Big Three have so far been unable to get together in any significant manner because they are so much alike. That is, all three are rabidly nationalist, out for their exclusive gain, to spread their exclusive in- fluence. But the spheres of nationalist in- fluence overlap and clash. America for the reactionary dictatorship of Chiang Kai-Shek. Russia for the Communist dictatorship. England for Dutch (and their own) imperialism. Peace is either synonymous with internationalism or synonymous with impossible. -Daily Northwestern, Nov. 14, 1945 U. S. History WHEN THE G.I.'S first went over- seas and began to see them- selves against the backdrop of the peoples of other lands, they began calling for books on American his- tory. They had to find out how they got that way. As one put it, "Some- thing makes us different. Why aren't we taught about it in school?" He had a point there. Americans need to understand America. And many rightly feel that the schools serve the citizen to the full only in so far as this understanding is de- veloped. There are, happily, many schools in which this work of inter- preting the American spirit to young America is ably done. But there are many others that have failed to give boys and girls this understanding of American freedom and its responsi- bilities to mankind It is this fresh appreciation of one's own land and of its usefulness in, the world that the schools need' to capture and to build into their teaching of history, civics and all the "social studies." What is it in America's story that gives Ameri- cans their special opportunity to make a unique contribution to the world? Every school youngster should be awakened to know the answers. -Christian Science Monitor, Publication in the Daily Official Sul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:30 p. in. of the day preceding publication (11:00 a. m. Sat- urdays). SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1945 VOL. LVI, No. 24 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 Choral Union Members in good standing, will please call for their courtesy pass tickets for the Don Cos- sack Chorus concert, on the day of the concert Monday, Dec. 3, between the hours of 9:30 and 11:30, and 1 and 4, at the offices of the University Musical Society, Burton Memorial Tower. Passes will not be issued after 4 o'clock. Charles A. Sink, President. Medical School Sophomores: The University Automobile Regulation will be lifted, for members of the Sopho- more Medical Class for the period beginning 8:00 a. m. Saturday, Dec. 1, 1945 and ending at 8:00 a. m. Monday, Jan. 7, 1946. The Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters: The Academy,wish- es to invite into active membership all persons in the University engaged in research, the promotion of litera- ture or the arts or the dissemination of knowledge. At the Annual Meet- ings in March sections are organized in the following fields: Anthropology, Economics, Folklore, Geography, His- tory and Political Science, Language and Literature, Philosophy, Sanitary and Medical Sciences, Zoology, Bot- any, Fine Arts, Forestry, Geology and Mineralogy, Landscape Architecture, Mathematics, Psychology, Sociology. The "Papers of the Michigan Acad- emy of Science, Arts and Letters" are published annually. If you wish to become a member or if you are a for- mer member and wish to resume membership please communicate with the Secretary, F. K. Sparrow, Botany Department. All women students on the campus who are employed part-time or who are seeking such work are instructed to register this fact immediately at the Office of the Dean of Women. The Health Service and the Academic Counselors Office are cooperating to put this requirement into effect, which has been decided upon so that good health and maximum academic efficiency will be insured among women students. A brief form will be filled out by each woman student who is employed in any capacity whether she works on the campus or otherwise. The W. J. Hammill 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- erice. 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 U. Kallenbach William B. Palmer Palmer A. Throop 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. mi. 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. Academic Notices Geology 12 make-up field trip to Trenton, Michigan, is scheduled for this morning from 8 to 12. All students who missed the original field trip must report to the Geology office, 2051 Natural Science Building, promptly at eight. Section 7 of English 31 will meet in Room 2235, Angell Hall, hereafter. F. W. Peterson. Concerts The Don Cossack Chorus, Serge Jaroff, Conductor, will give the fifth concert in the Choral Union Series Monday evening, Dec. 3, at 8:30 in Hill Auditorium. The program will consist of religious numbers, Cossack songs, and Russian folk tunes. Exhibitions 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. 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. Events Today Saturday Luncheon Discussion: After luncheon at Lane Hall at 12:00 Wayne Saari will review Davenport's "The Modern Man is Obsolete." Ev- eryone is urged to secure reservations from Pat Kelly. Call Univ. 4121 Ext. 2148 before 10 a. in. on Saturday. Coming Events The Graduate Outing Club will hold its first activity of the semester on Sunday, Dec. '2. We will meet at the rear entrance (N. W. 'entrance) of the Rackham Building at' 2:00 p. m, and leave from there for a hike. An informal dinner and social are planned for the evening. Those planning to go must make reserva- tions by 12 :00 noon Saturday at the coat-check desk in the lobby of Rackham. M. C. F.: Dr. H. H. Savage, of the First Baptist Church, Pontiac, Michi- gan, is this week's guest of the Michi- gan Christian Fellowship. His talk will be the third Gospel Leture in a series of five sponsored by M. C. F. Lane Hall, at 4:30, Sunday, De. 2. For : One and All. Refreshments will be served. Hymn Siftg at 4:00. Ann Arbor Friends' Meeting; Im- portant Notice ! Beginning Sunday, Dec. 2, the time of meeting will be changed to 5:00-6:30 p. mn. Meetings will be held in the Unitarian Church at the corner of Huron and State Street (This is instead of the morn- ing meetings held at the League)). The B'nai Bi'rith Hillel Foundation Cost Supper Committee will meet on Monday, 'Dec. 3, at 7:3 0 p. in. at the !Hillel Foundation. All who are inter- ested are invited to attend. A class in elementary Hebrew given yby Professor Hootkins of the Romance Language Department will meet at the Hillel Foundation, Tuesday, Dec. 4, at 4:10 p. m. and every Tuesday thereafter. The intermediate Hebrew class taught by Benson Jaffe will 1meet Wednesday evening at 7:45 and every succeeding Wednesday. Regis- tration for classes is still open. Those interested call the Hillel Foundation, 26585. Science Research Club: The De- cember meeting of the Science Re- f search Club will be held on Tuesday, Dec. 4, 1945, in the Amphitheatre of the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies at 7:30 p. m. Pro- gram: The Pharmacology of the Tet- raethyl Ammonium Ion, G. K. Moe, Dept. of Pharmacology. Fossil Plants 1 of the Michigan Coal Basin. Chester A. Arnold, Dept. of Botany. Alpha Phi Omega will hold a meet- ing on Tuesday, Dec. 4, at 7:30 at the Michigan Union. All members are DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN BARNABY h that invisible Leprechaun the right kind of a reference, Mr. O'Malley? Sign here, McSnoyd 1 got me own pen. C P c=ca t fsoy With the signature of a substantial citizen like you on this credit form of Bigger's Department Store, all the formalities are attended to. Thanks. Glad to be of soivice. 6 - 0 By Crockett Johnson But, Mr. O'Malley! His name is INVISIBLE! Yes Ultra-violet ink. No, O'Malley t's ;nfra-red. G __.a s i ---m T ILA= i t I FUL