FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1946 FitSxtriega r Fifty-Sixth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Red-Tape Trips Meat Packers LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Students Thanked, Java Rule Condeiined 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 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. - REPRESENTED FOR NATION.L AUVERTIJING Of National Advertising Service, Inc. Coalleg Publishers Representative 420 MAioN AE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO * BoSToN - LOS ANGELES . SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR: ANITA FRANZ Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Southern Justice LAST MONTH, nearly 100 socially-minded Michigan residents came to the defense of an 18-year-old Alabama Negro sharecropper who was facing extradition. The defendant, Fletcher Mills is accused of and has admitted the stabbing of his landlord, T. R. Terry, in an argument over the pasturing of Terry's cows last October. However, Mills says he stabbed Terry after the landlord struck him on the head with a three-foot wooden club. Fearing mob violence,, Mills fled to Detroit where he has been living with his sister and working in a brass factory. The delegation, appearing in behalf of Mills, including Dr. Robert G. Foster of the Merrill- Palmer School in Detroit and Dt. T. T. Brum- baugh of the Detroit Council of Churches, ar- gued that because of southern race prejudice, the defendant cannot be given a fair trial. Mills could only expect the same southern justice as was received by Jesse James Payne, Veteran Moses Green and Veteran Sam McFadden, three Negroes who have been murdered by lynch mobs in the past few months. Extradition as a legal device cannot aspire to aid in the administration of justice so long as lynching mobs that go beyond the means of legality are allowed to administer their own brutal and cruel justice. The Michigan residents who came to the aid of Fletcher Mills are but a handful, but combined pres- sure from- democratic, peace-loving Americans everywhere, could do much to reform the bitter irony of southern justice today. -Alice Jorgensen Political Inquiry THE STRONG FAITH that the Pearl Harbor inquiry would lead to an expose of what actually happened on Dec. 7, 1941, has changed to a feeling of disgust and disillusionment. The amount of work expected to be accomplished in committee hearings, despite a transcription of 700,000 words of testifiers, has been negli- gible. Pertinent questions have been left unan- swered. No one knows why U.S. planes were not in the air the morning of Dec. 7, why anti-aircraft guns were not manned, why radar was not operating and why, with Hono- lulu newspapers headlining possibility of an attack a week earlier, no one at Pearl Harbor had expected it. The reason for the failure to accomplish any- thing in the committee and for the resignation of Chairman Barkley and his staff, however, is easy to answer in one word - politics. Many Democrats are resigning from the committee. Barkley feels that it is almost impossible to get his preparatory information before the com- mittee. Many Republicans are willing to con- tinue the investigations. "It has been current gossip," a PM report states, "that Republican factionalists, dis- satisfied so far with the failure to show that the Roosevelt Administration deliberately sac- rificed the U.S. fleet at Pearl Harbor, are awaiting election of a new Congress so that a By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON. - Housewives may be in for another meat shortage as a result of a red- tape snarl between the small meat packers and the Office of Economic Stabilization. Several weeks ago, the small meat packers went to economic stabilizer Judge John C. Col- lett of Kansas City, whose Washington nickname is "Snuffy Smith" because he looks like the Barney Google character. They told him they wanted to give a two-dollar-a-day increase to their employees, and needed a small increase in the price of meat in order to do so. Collett told them to go ahead. "You lay your egg," were his exact words, "and I'll hatch it." So the meat packers went home, gave em- ployees their wage increase, but now "Snuffy Smith" seems to have forgot all about the matter. The meat packers have been remind- ing him of it, but if they don't get action from him soon, a lot of small packing plants will have to close down. Was FDR Responsible? MOST Republicans piously disclaim any politi- cal motivation in the Pearl Harbor inquiry, but not so, frank, able Senator Owen Brewster of Maine. During a secret session of the com- mittee he put his cards face down on the table. "One of my primary purposes in this investi- gation," said Brewster, "is to find out for cer- tain whether President Roosevelt had any commitment with the British prior to Pearl Harbor that both nations should go to war with Japan. "In order to make certain of that fact, which I think the American people should know, I want every bit of evidence the State Department or anyone else has on the subject. "I think we've had a huge mass of evidence on that subject already, and I frankly admit that I could not at this time back up a state- ment that FDR did have any such commit- ment. But we've got to be absolutely cer- tain." Brewster referred briefly to Tyler Kent, for- mer code clerk in the U. S. embassy in London who recently returned to this country after serv- ing a term in a British jail for mishandling what he claimed was secret correspondence between FDR and Churchill while the latter was stilll first lord of the admiralty. At this point, Republican representative Frank Keefe of Wisconsin interrupted. Object To Calling Kent "I WILL not go along with any move to call Ty- ler Kent before this committee," he said. "I sat with him most of a whole night last week, and I can tell you that, although he has a very interesting story, it has no direct bearing upon Pearl Harbor and why we were unprepared for the Jap attack. That's what this committee was set up to find out about, and I for one will not waste time and energy on extraneous matters." Keefe was seconded by Republican representa-' tive Bertrand Gearhart of California, who had interviewed Kent with Keefe. Senator 'iomer Ferguson of Michigan, the only other Republican on the committee, maintained a strict silence through this err- tire discussion. Later Gearhart proposed the names of former American Legion commanders Warren Athertan and William Colmery as co-counsel to succeed William Mitchell, now resigned. But Senator Scott Lucas of Illinois inter- posed that selection of Atherton by the com- mittee would have clear political implications, since Atherton went from his Legion post in, 1944 to Governor Dewey's campaign headquar- ters. NOTE-Lucas might aiso have mentioned that Colmery of Topeka, Kansas, was a leader in the Alf Landon campaign in 1936. (Copyright, 1946, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT : Atom Gad geteers By SAMUEL GRAFTON A NUMBER OF SENATORS are chivvying Mr. Truman, anxious lest some bit or piece of atomic knowledge be given away to the world before a planet wide inspection and security system shall have been established. These sen- ators are making a great fuss and pother, un- doubtedly under the sincere conviction that they are defending America's place in the world, and her safety, for they are concerned that, at Moscow, we may have agreed to part with a formula or two before the Russians shall have agreed to let our inspectors into their factories; they are afraid we have been had. This tremendous emphasis on keeping the bomb tells us, I think, a great deal about our- selves. There has long been something like a school of gadgeteers in American politics, men who believe, for example, that we ought to bal- ance the budget with a lottery, ban war. with a neutrality act, and, now, keep our heads high as the greatest power by virtue of the bomb. The bomb is the most miraculous gadget in history, and, consequently, we have fallen upon it with wildest enthusiasm. Some day, perhaps, a social philosopher will do a study relating our adoration of the bomb to our massive folk belief that the way to solve one's personal problems is to invent a better hair- pin than any on the market. If personal prob- lems, why not world problems, too, for in the bomb we have something like the final gim- crack, the universal gadget. It is not strange that we have come to think of it as the Little Giant World Order Keeper. Yet, on analysis, what a skinny approach this is to the matter of America's greatness and place in the world, to the question of America's safety! It is not the bomb which makes us great; what makes us great is that we have an industrial and scientific system capable of pro- ducing the bomb. All the precious diplomatic victories we have been winning in the matter of keeping the bomb secret will beceme a whiff of stale air once some other nation invents a similar weapon; will our greatness then be gone? It would seem so, from the emphasis the political gadgeteers place on the matter. It doesn't need much more examination to show that they are committing us to a kind of sucker's bet. THEY have not truly examined into the ques- tion of how to maintain a genuine American greatness. Britain fears us at the moment, for example, but, obviously, not on account of the In Appreciation To the Editor: W E, the undersigned Filipino stu- dents, desire to express our very great appreciation to the student body of the University of Michigan for the considerate, thoughtful expression of interest in the welfare of a fellow institution, the University of the Phil- ippines. As you know already, the Univer- sity of the Philippines has had prac- tically all of its buildings bombed, its libraries and laboratories destroyed, and many of its staff and adminis- trators killed. It will take heroic ef- forts to restore, within the next dec- ade or two, even the semblance of that University in Manila, the Pearl of the Orient. President Bienvenido M. Gonzalez, the deans, and as many of the instructors as are available are doing all they can, but their best is greatly limited by the conditions un- der which they have to work. This show of interest on the part of the student body of the Univer- sity of Michigan and the expression of desire to be of assistance will be of tremendous help in the rebuild- ing and restablishing of that Uni- versity. We desire therefore to ex- press our heartfelt thanks and ap- preciation to each one of you. Signed: Members of the Philippine- Michigan Club in Ann Arbor George E. Carothers, R. S. Swin- ton, advisers. Rafelital Hilario Soriano, pres.; Filadelfo Panlilio, v.p.; Lourdes Se- gundo, sec.; Mike Abakita, Francisco Castro, Manuel Hizon, Zailo Lindo, Lucille Martelino, Cipriano Masidat, Francisco, Narcisco, Eddie de Leon, Alfredo, Morales, Eddie Panlilio, Ramn Reyes, Jose V. Santos, Paz P. Salgado, Donato Leodoro, Leopoldo Toralballa, Major Fernandez, Major Rivero, Capt. Sian, Capt. Quintos, Lieut. Lozano, Lt. Melotendos. Dutch Imperialism TO THE EDITOR: N MY LETTER on Dutch imperial- ism,' I stated that the island of Java is fabulously rich. Dr. Senstius says this is not true. Here are a few figures: (1928, common index) Area of 51,032 square miles, about equal to No. Carolina, tin $41.4 mil, gold $2.7 mil., silver $1 mil., oil 32 mil. bbls., sugar, 2,948,000 tons, rubber 262,000 tons, vegetable oil 100 mil gal., tapioca 1,090 mil. lbs., tea 162 mil. lbs., rice 128 mil. lbs., corn 77 mil. lbs., coffee 25.1 mil. lbs., Mn $370,000 not to mention kapok, pepper, cinnamon, nutmeg, tobacco, etc., ("Goode's School Atlas") It is funny how racialism and the suppression of colored races takes such a consistently familiar pat- tern the world over. British sold- iers are in Java to protect "white women and children in various concentration camps insomuch as the male whites have been sent out Schleswig DENMARK'S MOST PRESSING foreign problem, today, is that of Schleswig. In 1920, Schleswig was al- located to Denmark despite the at- ter's neutrality. However, the bulk of the region of Schleswig and all of Holstein taken by Prussia in 1864 re- mains German. What the Danes apparently want is to separate South Schleswig from Germany and to divorce the entire question from Holstein which they admit is German. However, pertions of Holstein north of Kiel might well be added to South Schleswig when it is removed from the Reich. But Denmark does not wish to assume responsibility either for initiating these ideas or ad- ministering them. They do not want to absorb Schleswig and they do not wish to administer the Kiel Canal. Neither would they feel ccmfortable with Germans smack on their border and they want some slight shock absorber in be- tween. There remain, then, three alterna- tives. South Schleswig, including the Kiel Canal Zone, could either be made autonomous, an International Canal Zone, or a United Nations trusteeship. Should the area be made autonomous, it is probable that Rus- sia, if she didn't object completely, would demand special concessions since the canal is a vital link between the North and Baltic Seas. Already, the Danish island of Bornholm is in Russian hands on these grounds. The best solution is that of mak- ing the territory an International Canal Zone under the trusteeship of the United Nations. This would provide the Danes with the much wanted buffer state between them- selves and Germany, and would be satisfactory to the Russians. -Alice Jorgensen By Crockett Johnson of the country." Oh, the chastity of white women, the crimes, usually lynchings, committed in thy name. Perhaps, though, I am a little too idealistic and not sufficiently "un- sophisticated" and unappreciative of "social stratification." Maybe this is why I fail to see the humor in the December 13 U.P. dispatch: "A puni- tive expedition supported by tanks and planes today burned every build- ing in the village of Bekasi 12 miles east of Batavia. Truckloads of sol- diers swept through the village drenching wooden buildings with gas- olene and planting-incendiary bombs. The village was completely demol- ished. Indonesian trucks fleeing the village were cannoned and machine- gunned." Dr. Senstius insists that the nat- ives are so happy under Dutch rule. Why then was it necessary for Queen Wilhelmina to promise them self-rule and a much wider degree of independence to get them to aid the Dutch war effort? A promise forgotten as soon as it ceased to be expedient. Some people believe that it is per- fectly moral, even commendable for westerners to invest money in colon- ial areas, develop their resources and make fortunes from the land and labor of the population, as long as the "unsophisticated" natives are happy with their hand full of Tice and head full of ignorance. I have always felt that the natural resources of the land are the property of the people living on it. That the advances of science are the common property of the human race, not sub- ject to monopolisticrrestrictions which enable a few people to use them at the expense of many. I do not believe that the fact that the victims of exploitation are blissfully ignorant is enough to justify the act of exploitation. A pickpocket or embezzler is no less guilty before his victim discovers he has been "took." Sooner or later the victims always wake up to the cold facts. This is what is happening among colonials every- where, Java not excepted. -Cornelius Loeser DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN CINEMA bomb; she knowsi drop atomic bombsc fret? It is because tial, at a hundred ourselves; because the greatest centerc world; because she perfectly well we will not on her. Why then does she she understands our poten- points, better than we do she knows that we can be of trade and finance in the sees that the world is beat- Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- hers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 1021 Angell Hal, by 3:30 p. m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a. m. Sat- urdays). FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1946 VOL LVI, No. 42 Notices To the Members of the Faculty - College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: The January meeting of the Fac- ulty of the College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts will be held Mon- day, Jan. 7, at 4:10 p.m. in Room 1025 Angell Hall. In view of the importance of the matters under consideration the Ex- ecutive Committee feels that a larg attendance at the next meeting of the Faculty is very desirable. Hayward Keniston AGENDA 1. Consideration of the minutes of the meetings of December 3, 12, and 17, 1945 (pp. 1215-1226). 2. Consideration of reports submit- ted with the call to this meeting. a. Executive Committee - Profes- sor F. E. Bartell. b. University Council - Professor R. L. Wilder. No report. c. Executive Board of the Gradu- ate School - Professor I. A. Leonard. d. Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs-Professor N. E. Nelson. e. Deans' Conference - Dean Hay- ward Keniston. No report. 3. Curricular Recommendations. 4. Departmental Honors Program. The Editorial Office of Official Publications has been moven from 221 Angell Hall to the second floor of the University Press Building, 311 Maynard St. The telephone numbers (Extensions 794 and 2130) will re- main unchanged. Attention All Seniors in Lit, Music, Education, and Art Schools Who Are Graduating in'February: Place your orders for graduation announcementsrat a booth located in University Hall today. The booth will be open from 9 to 12 and from 1 to 3. Announcements sell for 10 cents each. All orders must be paid for in full at the time of placing the order. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for Removal of Incom- pletes will be Saturday, Jan. 5. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for dropping courses without record will be Saturday, Jan. 5. A course may be dropped only with the permission of the classifier after conference with the instructor. Admission to School of Business Administration-Spring Semester Applications for admission to the School of Business Administration for the Spring Semester MUST be filed on or before Jan. 15. Informa- tion and application blanks are avail- able in Room 108, Tappan Hall. Scholarships Open to Senior Me- chanical, Aeronautical and Electrical Engineering Students:. Consolidated Vultee Aircraft Corporation has es- tablished an annual scholarship of $250 which is available to students who have completed their junior year in the above fields of engineering and who are highly recommended by their faculty Scholarship Committee. The student will be employed by the Com- pany the first summer after the award. Application forms for this scholarship may be obtained in the nautical engineering. The students will be employed by the Company the first summer after the awards. Ap- plication forms for these Fellowships may be obtained in the Aeronautical Engineering Office. Lectures French Lecture: Professor Ren6 Talamon, of the Romance Language Department, will open the series of French lectures sponsored by the Cercle Francais. The title of his lecture is: "Lecture Dramatique". This lecture will be given on Tuesday, Jan. 8, at 4:10 p.m. in Room D, Alum- ni Memorial Hall. Tickets for the series of lectures may be procured from the Secretary of the Department of Romance Languagese(Roomn112, Romance Language Building) or at the door at the time of the lecture for a small sum. These lectures are open to the general public. Academic Notices Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet today, at 4:00 p.m. in 310 West Medical Building. "Histamine," will be discussed. All interested are in- vited. Concerts Faculty Recital: The first School of Music recital will be presented at 8:30 Sunday evening, Jan. 6, by Elizabeth A. H. Green, violinist, In- structor in Music Education. The program will include Sonata for vio- lin by Geminiani, Concerto No. 4 in D major by Mozart, and Sonata in B minor for piano and violin by Respighi. Miss Green will be assisted by John Kollen, Assistant Professor of Piano. The public is cordially invited. Ij The Art Cinema League presents Jean Gabin and Annabella in "Escape from Yesterday;" directed by Julien Dubivier. FOR MANY YEARS it has been generally ac- knowledged that the French cinema, while technically behind Hollywood, has maintained a higher artistic level than American films. It is a belief to which I subscribe, too, but in the par- ticular exihibit currently at the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre, the French have beaten Holly- wood at its own game. "Escape from Yesterday" is a gusty for- eign legion opus, replete with gun-play, to- the-last-man heroics and a cavalry-to-the- rescue finale, that inevitably recalls such Amer- ican efforts as "Morocco" and "Beau Geste." It concerns a murderer (Jean G'abin) who flees his crime and joins the legion. In the desert he meets a cafe entertainer (Annabella, wearing more eyeshadow than anyone since Theda Bara) who is described in the English subtitles as- an "artiste." Aside from Mr. Gabin's legion career, the film pictures his romance and marriage with the lady in question; the latter detail featuring an embrace that must have fractured at least three of Miss A.'s ribs. In a film having no high artistic standing, the technical short-comings are inevitably high- lighted. One cannot help noticing the occasion- ally raspy, sound-track, the choppy continuity, and the fact that Annabella has looked much better in all her American appearances. How- ever, there are typical touches of gallic ingenu- ity; the realistic sound-track accompanying the Barcelona street scenes, the photographing of a brawl from slanted angles, and the well-sus- tained wedding celebration, replete with jazz band. -Barrie Waters Events Today ing a path to our door, and not because we have invented a better munitions mousetrap -than our neighbor, either. Do we want to win victories at conferences? Let us trade on our place, not on our gadgets. If we were to announce, for example; that we have committed ourselves to independence for all the peoples of Asia; not at some in- definite future date, but within stated terms of years, we would be making our weight felt, and in a consequential style. We have already set the precedents; we have put dates on both Philippine and Korean independence; "put- ting a date on it" can become a standard American doctrine, and then we will really emerge from conferences with victories of size. Our generally defensive foreign policy line, our hugging of our glamorous bomb, have none of the substance of our greatness in them; so might we chatter if we were small. For half of what our bomb cost, we could set democracy on its feet in half a dozen troubled countries of Europe; and once we did so, we would need no conferences to find out that our position in the world had improved. But though we yearn at countries where our influence is slight, and shiver at develop- ments in the Balkans, we are absent-mindedly indifferent about countries where our influ- ence is great, as in Italy; or where it could be great, as in Indonesia; the giant fondles his slingshot but talks like a boy. It is not only in Britain that men begin to show fear and doubt concerning us, but in the humbler places, too, in Italy and in Java and in India; and here, also, strangely enough, that is not because of our bomb. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) The Geological Journal Club will meet in Rm. 4065, Nat. Sci. Bldg. to- day at 12:15 p.m. Program: (1) A survey of geologi- cal periodicals in the English lan- guage. (2) Miss Friedkin on the Develop- ment of the West Edmond, oilfield, Okla. All interested are cordially invited to attend. The Pitch and Putt Club will meet today at 4:30 p.m. at the Women's Athletic Bldg. A class will be formed under the instruction of Mrs. Hanley. A movie with demonstration will be shown. The Polonia Club is holding an ice- skating party tonight at 7:30, at Burns Park. All members and their friends are urged to attend. B'nbhi B'rith Hillel Foundation will conduct Sabbath Eve Services tonight at 7:45. Following the services there will be a fireside discussion led by Rev. E. Redman and Rabbi J. M. Cohen on the subject "JUDAISM AND UNITARIANISM: COMPARI- SONS AND CONTRASTS." The 1. C. C. Educational Commit- tee will present a talk by Father Mc- Phillips: "Catholiscism and the Mod- er-n Individual" tonight at 8:00 p.m. at Muriel Lester Co-op, 1102 Oakland. Outsiders are invited to attend and participate in the bull-session after- wards. Refreshments will be served. Coming Events La Sociedad Iispanica will show "El Sombrero de Tres picos," a Span- ish movie with English subtitles, BARNABY Mr. O'Malley, my Fairy Godfather, is going to make an epic with my Oh, he'll be able to.f Your Fairy Godfather's not worried, m'boy. H has decided to scrap Technicolor. A colossal savin. Besides black and white is a more pure e II