THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1946 Fifty-Sixth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Navy Plays Hide-and-Seek aaG-; El Editedand 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 . * . . . . . . Editorlal.Director . . . . . . . . Associate Editor . . . . . . . . Associate Editor * . . .* . . .Sports Editor * * .. . .Associate Sports Editor . . . . . . . . . Women's Editor . . . . Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Dorothy Fint . . . . . . . . . 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. By DREW PEARSON W ASHINGTON. - Playing hide-and-seek with the Senate continues to be one of Washing- ton's favorite pastimes. Here is the story of one game as told by GOP Senator Ferguson of Michi- gan. The Mead Committee was inspecting the U.S. naval base at San Juan, Puerto Rico. The place was immaculate. Every shoe was shined, every jeep polished, not a speck could be seen on a barrack floor. The senators were impressed. At dinner that evening, senators were enter- tained by gracious Capt. R. H. Baker, the com- manding officer. Suddenly Senator Ferguson felt a mess boy slip something into his lap. The mess boy was an enlisted man and what he handed the senator from Michigan were the special instructions issued by Captain Baker ordering the base to be prepared for the Sen- ators' arrival. Captain Baker had not missed a thing. He even ordered a rehearsal of entertainment cere- mony for the Senators. Clean Underwear "THERE will be an officer stationed at the entrance of the main office building," read the order, "to conduct the party through the main office for inspection. This officer will be Lieutenant Sampson who will take immediate steps to insure that the entrance to the build- ing and the office itself is thoroughly cleaned and shipshape. The chief clerk will assist in this. "Captain of the yard is to issue orders imme- diately to clean up all areas of the yard and authority is hereby given to use any and all en- listed men and civilians in the amount necessary to accomplish this purpose. "Uniforms for officers and men will be the working uniform unless otherwise specified. Officers are cautioned to wear clean khaki (grays may be worn if khaki not availale). Enlisted men on duty will wear clean dun- garees, blue shirts, and white hats. Shoes will be polished. Black socks will be worn. Clean underwear will be worn. "Inspection of the barracks will be held at 1300 by, Lieutenant Corcoran, who will serve advance notice that the place is to be immaculate at that time. Noon meal will be served at 1100 and all REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERT1aNO BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADIoN AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO " BOSTON " LOS ANGELES " SAN F*ANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR: RAY SHINN Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. EDUCATION AND WORLD PEACE: Schools Not Guilty of bigotry IN A LECTURE delivered recently at the Detroit Rackham Building, Dean James P. Edmonson of the School of Education indicated some of the refoims in the nation's school system which he feels are necessary for the schools to be "effec- tive in efforts to build world peace." It is not to be denied that many reforms are necessary and desirable in our educational sys- tem. The movement toward a more liberal cur- riculum in colleges and universities is an out- standing phase of the educational reform. But Dean Edmonson also points out that "in many countries, including our own, geography and history have been taught in such a way as to develop a national pride and loyalty which is based in part on contempt for other nations and their peoples." The existence of "national pride and loyalty" is unquestionable and seems quite natural, but whether it is based on con- tempt for other peoples seems debatable. The Dean continues, "Teaching pupils to hate and distrust peoples who differ from them in culture, language or manners of living will make it exceedingly difficult to maintain the inter- national good-will required for a peaceful world.'" This writer, wondering whether in most school systems students are actually taught to "hate and distrust peoples who differ from them," ques- tioned a representative group of University stu- dents. The consensus of opinion of the group, which included students from the east and west coasts as well as Michigan and the Middle West, was that in grade and high schools and in college thus far, they had not met such teaching of intol- erance as actual teaching. The students questioned specifically excepted, the propaganda which, in the war years, by news- paper, radio and other sources perhaps more than the schools, has, rightly or wrongly, promoted distrust and hatred of the German and Japanese peoples. Disregarding this, they felt that in their schools, by textbooks and teachers, the at- tempt had been made to encourage study and understanding of the culture of other countries. They recalled such attempts, within the range of the students' age level, even in the earliest grades. They called attention to studies of the contributions of other countries to the culture of America, the "melting pot," such an ap- proach naturally increasing our appreciation of other cultures. Several pointed out, however, that in the study of the history and traditions of this nation stu- dents are definitely made to feel that America, with its ideals of democracy and greater pros- perity than most countries, is superior. They did not connect this feeling with a feeling of con- tempt for other peoples. One issue brought up by the students ques- tainu dwas that of understanding, not the in the schools. Others, too, found that while intolerance of small groups was not actually taught, conditions prevalent in the schools fos- tered it. A few, from Michigan cities including Detroit, and one from Minnesota, had found very little racial intolerance in their schools. It certainly must be admitted that intolerance of minority groups and distrust of other coun- tries is present in this nation. From this writer's own experience and those of the students ques- tioned, it would seem that the schools are not the source of such intolerant attitudes. One student freely stated that she believed the home to be the source. Such attitudes are dissemi- nated by talk in the homes of one's associates and perhaps in one's own home and so spread. Perhaps we should look to other factors in our national set-up to discover and remedy the feeling of distrust and hatred which Dean Edmonson -deplores. Perhaps education isn't doing as bad a job in this line as he thinks. -Frances Paine Act of Faith IN DOWNINGTON, Penn., last week, a man and woman contributed $10,000 to establish a scholarship at Lafayette College. That is not tremendously important in itself. The man and woman, however, are parents of an 18-year-old son who was killed on Luzon by Japanese soldiers. And the stipulation that a Japanese student receive first consideration when the scholar- ship is awarded makes a small item of news occurring in a small Pennsylvania city one of great importance. There are people who will realize the import of such an act. There are people who will be heartened by what Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. John- stone did with their son's national service in- surance. It will be important to those Americans because they understand what compassion is; it will be important to those Americans, because they will know that other Americans have not forgotten that there can be a brotherhood of men; it will be important to those Americans who have purged their hearts of war-breeding hatred; it will be important to every man under God's earth who will admit that the Japanese are also under God's earth. It will be most important, however, to those Americans who have faith in the ability of men to overcome their prejudices against certain races of men. It is most important because it is an example of that faith. -Bettyann Larsen hands will eat at that hour in order to provide time for policing the kitchensrand the barracks. "The transportation officer will inspect all motor vehicles of the yard to the end that they are washed and as presentable as possible. He will see that the commanding officer's car is cleaned no later than 1100. "A rehearsal for officers will be held on Mon- day at 1400 at which time all officers will assume their stations and will be further instructed. The cooperation of all officers is requested to the end that a favorable impression of this activity is gained by the inspecting party." Captain Baker would have made a great im- pression on the Senate committee, if the enlist- ed man hadn't slipped the order of the day into Senator Ferguson's lap at the dinner table. Capital Chaff THE RADIO TIME for Senator Taft's attack on . Truman's address to the nation was reserved for him by the Republican National Committee. When Henry Kaiser signed his new contract with the auto workers, he remarked: "Dick Thomas (UAW president) is the man who came to the west coast last year and convinced me that I should take over the Willow Run plant and make automobiles. That puts the responsibility on his shoulders to see to it that I have the men to do the job." (Copyright, 1946, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Inflation Danger By SAMUEL GRAFTON WEHAVE TOLD each other monotonously that the worst inflation danger would arise after the war was over, and, like many dull remarks, this one turns out to be quite true. A rise of 18 cents per pound in the ceiling price of butter is threatened by June, and that will be ten beautiful months after the end of the war. The Wall Street Journal tells about an auto dealer who offers his customers the implausible combination of a bird dog and a used truck, at something like $350 more than the ceiling price on the truck alone; later on he gets to miss the dog and offers to buy it back, for $15. That is what you can do with a bird dog, five months after the war's end. Peace, it's wonderful; and the thing is be- coming cyclical only now. One large company, which is having words with its employees, has offered a wage increase of 7.5 cents per hour. If butter rises 18 cents per pound, and if the average employee buys two pounds per week, the increase in the price of butter alone would absorb his proposed wage increase for five hours of his weekly work, or the better part of a working day. And current wage increases are supposed to make up only for past in- creases in the cost of living, not future rises. If meat prices are shoved up, also, to avert a packing strike, that might take away the wage increase for another five hours, leaving our av- erage employee with nothing to show for ten hours of his wage rise, except, of course, the priv- ilege of paying taxes on his new, higher earnings figure. The dike is leaking. Mr. Chester Bowles still has his finger in it, like the little Dutch boy, but the little Dutch boy, unlike Mr. Bowles, did not have some of the weightiest and most prominent citizens of his country trying to pull him away from his post. For even the Truman administra- tion has moments when it rather responds to the pull of inflation: a little rise in steel, a little boost in meat, and the most dreadful difficulties begin to seem manageable. It isn't really a stimulant, administration figures are murmuring sheepish- ly; it's just a kind of tonic, and you can always stop taking it when you want to. Only we must remember that inflation, in the end, exerts almost as seductive a pull on government as on business; it enables it to fudge, if not to solve, a number of its prob- lems. The temptation is enormous, especially in a setting of sharp social argument since it makes a nice, ambiguous, obscure solution, leaving it not quite clear, for a time, who pays, who loses. Harassed, hard-pressed men, finding other solutions difficult, accept the easy, obscure way; Mr. Philip Murray, fighting for a wage increase for his steel workers, has been ostentatiously si- lent about the steel price rise; the meat packers, at first offered only an increase in the price of government-purchased meat, may yet obtain a general rise, and their workers have offered no objection to this solution for their troubles, though it would mean an automatic wage cut for the country. It will be seen that the 'uto workers were not so very unsound in basing their wage demand solely on ability to pay, without price increases. But the day of analysis is ending, and the time of scramble succeeds it; a kind of soft- ness creeps over us, and there is a general turn- ing away of heads from factual unpleasantness. Can we still halt the thing? We can, of course, but it means going back to food subsi- dies, it means a Congressional row; it means looking into corporate pockets to see who has how much and can pay what without a price increase; and as against all this roiling of emo- tions, there is the feeling that we'can have a gay party, instead, and ears prick up, and feet begin to tap the rhythm of a time of seeming release from care. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) CURRENT MOVIES BARRIE WATERS *. . at the State Joan Crawford, Jack Carson and Zachary Scott in "Mildred Pierce"; a Warner Brothers production, di- rected by Michael Curtiz. SINCE the question of what Mildred Pierce did has become atmatter of national concern rivaling the dispo- sition of the atomic bomb, attendance is more or less obligatory at the State this week. The purple prose of the, advertisements doubtless intended to suggest that Mildred was what the Boston censors would call a fallen woman. Knowing Hollywood, how- ever, it is easy to predict that Mil- dred falls only as far as the Johnston Office normally allows-which means in this case that we finally leave Mrs. Pierce walking into a painfully sym- bolic sunrise trailing a cascade of chincilla fur and an all-forgiving husband. In the very competent perform- ance, you'll find some of the best cinema in recent months. Joan Crawford, returning to the screen after a long absence in which she seems to have preserved her styl- ized good looks, emerges as an eminently acceptable actress in a mother role that, on paper, is al- most a caricature. She rises above the script to play with sincerity and great good taste. Jack Carson and Eve Arden are standouts in the superior cast and Zachary Scott and Ann Blythe are excellent, too, as a couple of fash- ionable heels. If any movie can do it, "Mildred Pierce" should drag Ann Arborites away from that fascinat- ing excavation under way on May- nard Street and back into the thea- tre, where the press agents tell us things of a more cultural nature are occuring. ... at the Michigan Shirley Temple in "Kiss and Tell"; a Columbia production, di- rected by Richard Wallace. " X ISS and Tell" is "Janie" and "Junior Miss" all over again, but this field of comedy is apparently not yet barren of fresh material, for the film is the most enjoyable farce in some time. Plunging again into the alleged chaos of the adolescent mind, we behold a snoopy young lady who upsets the neighborhood no end by announcing her pregnancy. Her condition is a figment of her im- agination, but everyone believes her implicity and much wittily written and ably played farce fol- lows, boasting the year's most pun- gent dialogue. There is a scene be- tween the young lady's parents and the young man whom she has ar- bitrarily named as the father of the anticipated little stranger, in which some sort of world record in double entendre is set. Slavic State NOW that the lar'gest South Slav state, Yugoslavia, has changed its form of government to a republic and has had this step accepted by the big powers, it is probable that Bul- garia will follow suit and eliminate a monarchy that has been losing steadily in popular approval since the death of King Boris. The Bulgarian Parliament intends to amend the Constitution and this means the removal of such conserva- tive and harmful institutions as the monarchy according to Georgi Dimi- troff, former head of the Communist flewspaper, "Boroa." The Bulgarian minister for Social Welfare, G. Pop- off, is also on record as stating that the Bulgarian Social Democratic Party intends "to liquidate the mon- archy as soon as possible. " Creation of a Bulgarian republic would remove one obstacle from a scheme that has been in the minds of many Balkan Slavs for some time and that is said to be gathering fa- vor now. That scheme is the union of Bulgaria and Yugoslavia into one big Slavic state stretching from the Black Sea to the Adriatic. Marshal Tito used to talk about such a federa- tion during his day as a guerilla champion. As recently as November Yugo- slav - Bulgarian unification was nearly realized. The plan nowis apparently waiting two things be- fore it can be implemented; the liquidation of the Bulgarian mon- archy and the signing of a peace treaty between Bulgaria and the Allies. -Alice Jorgensen DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Daily Official Bul- 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 Angeli Hall, by 3:30 p. m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a. m. Sat- urdays). TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1946 VOL. LVI, No. 51 Notices Student Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students Wednesday afternoon, Jan. 16, from 4 to 6 o'clock. Veterans' Books and Supplies. Vet- erans who are securing books and supplies under the Public Laws 16 or 346 must complete all purchases for the current semester by Jan. 15. This deadline is necessary to allow the University time to audit and pay the veterans' accounts at the various stores and, in turn, to submit invoic- es to the Veterans Administration for reimbursement before the end of the semester. Boyd C. Stephens, Cashier Admission to School of Business Administration, Spring Semester: Ap- plications for admission to the School of Business Administration for the Spring Semester MUST be filed on or before Jan. 15. Information and ap- plication blanks are available in Room 108, Tappan Hall. Interviews for Spring Vacancies: League housemothers are available to interview only those girls who have applied through the Office of the Dean of Women and have been re- ferred to the League Houses in this way. Women students wishing ac- commodations in League Houses must apply as above. The Clements Library contem- plates arranging an exhibition of rare books owned by members of the Fac- ulty of the University. The Director of the Library would be happy to hear from colleagues who think this is a good idea and who would like to participate by lending some rarity. Entries are limited to one title per exhibitor. TWA Airlines: Two representatives will be in the office Thursday, Jan. 17, to interviewhall seniors who are interested in the airlines. Call the University Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 371 for appointment. State of Michigan Civil Service: The Bureau of Appointments has re- ceived the following Civil Service announcements: Boys' Printing Shop Trade In- structor. Salary: $160. Last filing date: Feb. 6. Reproduction Machines Supervisor A. Salary: $150. Last filing date: Feb. 6. Reproduction Machines Supervisor II. Salary: $230. Last filing date-: Feb. 6. Pediatric Graduate Nurse. Salary: $180. Last filing date: Feb. 6. Further information may be ob- tained at the Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Informa- tion, 201 Mason Hall. Applications in Support of Re- search Projects: To give Research Committees and the Executive Board adequate time to study all proposals, it is requested that faculty members having projects needing support dur- ing 1946-1947 file their proposals in the Office of the Graduate School by Friday, Feb. 8. Those wishing to renew previous requests whether now receiving support or not should so indicate. Application forms will be mailed or can be obtained at Secre- tary's Office, Room 1006 Rackham Building, Telephone 372. Lectures Mrs. Paul Robeson, author and an- thropologist, will be presented tomor- row night in Hill Auditorium, 8:30 p.m., by the Oratorical Association as a substitute speaker for Richard Wright, originally scheduled on the Lecture Course. Mrs. Robeson's sub- ject will be "The Negro and the Pat- tern of World Affairs." Tickets are on sale today from 10-1, 2-5 and to- morrow from 10-1, 2-5, 7-8:30 in the box office, Hill Auditorium. Patrons now holding tickets are requested to use the Richard Wright ticket for ad- mission- Professor Rensselaer Lee of Smith College and the Institute for Ad- vanced Study of Princeton will speak on "Poussin and the Ancient world," at 4:15 p.m., Thurs., Jan. 17, in the Rackham Amphitheatre; auspices of the Dept. of Fine Arts. The public is coddially invited. Dr. F. A. Vetting Meinesz of the University of Utrecht, Netherlands, recent recipient of the Penrose Medal of the Geological Society of America, and well known for his measurements of gravity anomalies at sea in con- nection with areas of active move- ment in the earth's crust, will give a Seminar in Applied Mathematics and Special Functions: Tuesday at 3 p.m., 312 West Eng. Mr. Ernest Williams talks on Elec- tricity and Matter in Relativity. Mathematics: There will be a spe- cial lecture today at 4:00 p.m. in 3010 Angell Hall by Professor Mahlon M. Day on "Some Characterizations of Inner Product Spaces." All interested persons are invited. Wist ry of Mathematics Seminar: Wednesday, Jan. 16, 7-8 p.m., 3001 Angell Hall. Professor Anning will speak on Or- thegonal Determinants. Seminar in Physical Chemistry will meet on Thursday, Jan. 17 in Room 410 Chemistry Building at 4:15 p.m. Dr. Jerome Karle will speak on "In- fluence of thermal motion on electron scattering by gases." All interested are invited. Events Today The U. of M. Debate Squad will meet to have the Ensian picture taken today. Please meet promptly at 3:10 at the Rentschler's Studio, 319 E. Huron St. Speech Assembly: Judith Waller, Director of Public Service for the Na- tional Broadcasting Company, will speak on "Careers in Radio" at the Speech Assembly, sponsored by the Department of Speech at 3 p.m. to- day in the Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- ter. Attendance is required of all Speech students. The program is open to the public. League House President's Meeting in the League today at 5:00 p.m. There will be a Tea for Members of the International Seminar sponsored by Inter-Guild, given by the Congre- gational Disciples Guild at 4:30 today at Lane Hall. All students are cor- dially invited, especially those inter- ested in the Philippines. Seminar on Comparative Religion will be held at 7:15 tonight at Lane Hall. The group will continue with a discussion of Judaism. A.I.Ch.E. The fist meeting of the A.I.Ch. E. will be held in Room 3201, East Engineering at 7:30 p.m. to- night. All students enrolled in the department of Chepical Engineering and freshmen planning to enter this department are urged to attend. Prof. G. G. Brown will be the speaker. Re- freshments will be served. Sigma Rho Tau, Stump Speakers' Society will meet tonight at 7:30 p.m., at the Union, for intercirce competi- tions and debate on "We should now complete the St. Lawrence Water- way." The English Journal Clb will hold its first meeting of the year to- night at 7:45 in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. After the election of officers Mr. Fred Stocking and Mr. Darrel Abel will speak on Wallace Stevens and Contemporary Poetry. Refreshments and general discussion will follow. All graduate students and members of the faculty are invited to attend. Coming Events The Women of the Faculty are en- tertaining with a tea in honor of Mrs. Paul Robeson on Wednesday, Jan. 16, from 4:30 to 5:30 o'clock in the East Conference Room of the Rack- ham Building. La Sociedad Hispanica will hold the fourth of its lecture series Thurs- day, Jan. 17 at 8:00 p.m. in Kellog Auditorium. The speaker will be Dr. Santodomingo Guzman, who will talk about "Colombia-Pais Del Dorado". Dr. Guzman will illustrate his talk with a movie. All members are urged to attend. Flying Club: There will be a short business meeting Wednesday, Jan. 16, at 7:30 p.m. in room 1042 E. Eng- ineering Building. All non-members interested, as well as members, are urged to attend. The I.C.C. Educational Committe will present a talk by Professor Lob- anov-Rostovsky: "Causes of the Rus- sian Revolution," Thursday evening, Jan. 17, at 7:30 p.m. at Stevens Co-op, 816 Forrest. All are invited to attend and participate in the bull session afterwards. Refreshments will be served. Research Club: The January meet- ing of the Research Club will be held Wednesday evening, Jan.. 16 at eight o'clock. Because of the illness of Professor Hobbs there has been a change in the program. Professor D. B. McLaughlin will present a paper on "Michigan Studies of Novae," and Professor E. A. Philippson a paper on "New Finds and New Methods in Germanic Religion.' BARNABY I By Crockett Johnson in all honesty... who among your friends --- . Have you decided which Quiz Show you're going to be on, Mr. O'Malley? 1 11 Er ... the more t ponder m'boy, the more I fancy the Detect and Collect ;I I I and acquaintances is better able to defect