PAGE TWO THE MICH IC A V n - A I Y.V- PPMTR.Q!TtAV TAVTTADV Irl 4030- TT P M C ~ ~ N f A T ..- JY..~ A X.. .f1ZU 1".L ...? t 1 L A V1., TAW ATTWT1 ;'.rlCltfu i 'AY, d :! l t11i:1 1;, !J 1(i p Ddga aily' Fifty-Sixth Year - d~ Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staffj Ray Dixon. . ... .... .Managing Edtor RobertGoldman . . . . . . . . CityEditor Betty Roth . . . . . . . . . . Editorial Director Margaret Farmer . . . . . . . . Associate Editor Arthur J. Kraft . . . . . . . . . Associate Editor Bill Mullendore . . . . Sports Editor Mary Lu Heath . . . . Associate Sports Editor. Ann Schutz . . . ........ Women's Editor Dona Guimaraes . . . . Associate Women's Editor I - - - ---- - - -- f- WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Leaky ring o GI Morale c etteri to the 6citor Dorothy Flint Joy Altman Business Staff . . . . . . . . . Business Manager . . . . . . 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 Ofice 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: FREUDENHEIM Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Press Freedom S ENATOR Arthur H. Vandenberg's pledge that the United States' UNO delegation will seek United Nations support of freedom of the press raises the questions of free access to sources of news, and fair and impartial reporting of this news. Free access to news sources and lack of secrecy and censorship is the first requisite of a free press. Full and complete information of the activities of all countries is the best safeguard of international understanding and cooperation. However, free access to news sources will be of little value, unless such news is fairly and impartially reported. Stories which are slanted to give the views of the writer, rather than the facts as they really are have no place in a free press. The use of words which carry a connota- tion not borne out by the facts i the most com- mon way of slanting news stories. It is especially bad because such slanting is not always readily apparent., Accurate reporting by newspapers and care- ful reading by the public are both necessary, for accurate knowledge of news and consequent world understanding. -Shirley Frank RssianPlans LOUD have been the shouts of "aggressor" levied against Russian foreign policy in the Balkans by those who are uninformed of its basis. A little explanation would be a great aid to those who are confused about the perennial Balkan situation. Russia's efforts to establish economic ties in the Balkans derive in part from immediate need of her own devastated areas. The order given her State Planning Comnmission sets a five-year limit not only for completely re- building communities and industries, but also for reaching by 1950 a production level far above that of 1938-39. That is the real explanation behind Moscow's insistence upon reparation claims against Ger- many and former Axis satellites', especially in materials and industrial equipment. Nothing is permitted to interfere with the concentrated drive for rehabilitation. Russia's trade treaties with Bulgaria, Ru- mania, and Czechoslovakia, and those pending with Hungary and Austria have also a political basis They are examples of Russia's unwilling- ness to take risks in the Balkan region which might permit alienation of their support through infiltration of foreign capital without Russian competition. During the past fifty years such investment placed key Balkan industries . in the hands of Russia's opponents in Europe. The political impl cations of capital from 'the outside, free to go its own way, have shaped recent Balkan history. So far, the industrial development repre- sented by such investments has been of scant ben,fit to native populations. Their wealth has been drained away and their poverty is appalling. Rusia has agreed to American proposals for Imm-diate withdrawal of their joint armies of occupation from Czechoslovakia. The Russians are beginning to see that an army of occupa- tion, is not likely to be an ambassador of good -m - s aa-wil nnrn> fi. tclxa nffl- ,-, a i By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON. - Admiral Leahy, who since the departure of arry Hopkins knows more about what goes on behind the scenes in inter- national conferences than anyone else around the White House, dropped in to see his chief, President Truman, the other day. Leahy has worried over the morale of U.S. troops abroad and recalled a committment Franklin Roosevelt had made to Churchill to keep more than 2,000,- 000 men in the American armies of occupation. "I told Franklin Roosevelt after the Yalta conference," the White House chief of staff said to Truman, "that we couldn't keep that many men abroad. The country, I told him, won't stand for it. "These are boys who were glad to fight a war to defend their country when it was in danger, But they're not a professional army, and when the fighting's over it'll be like a football game-- everybody'll want to go home, "You can't expect boys to stay over there mak- ing $50 a month when they know they can make $50 a week back home, "That's what I told Roosevelt," Leahy con- tinued. "I'm not at all sure he agreed with me, but that's exactly what's happening today. "A few hot-heads and Communists are tak- ing advantage of a situation which is ready made for them and the result is making us ridiculous in the eyes of the world." NOTE-Admiral Leahy doesn't for a minute think we should get out of Germany and Japan altogether. But he does think we can curtail U.S. forces in Germany down to what we actu- ally need and let this army be one of volunteers recruited expressly for overseas occupation. The same system should be followed in Japan, where an occupation force of Marines eventu- ally could take over. The islands of the Pacific and many other less essential areas could easily be policed by the Navy with much small- er use of manpower. Cordell Hll's Poker FVER SINCE the Texas Baptists lampooned President Truman for poker-playing, every- one around the White House has been poker-shy. So also is Governor Dewey. During the last campaign, one newsman, after writing a very complimentary story about Dewey, submitted it to him for comment. .He described the New York governor as a home-loving man whose usual form. of relaxation was a quiet poker game with a few friends on Saturday night. Dewey called the author, praised his story, but finally blurted out: "Now, about those Saturday nights - couldn't you change it from poker to bridge?" Not so sensitive is Cordell Hull. Col. Harold Hinton, now returned from five years in the Army to rejoin the New York Times, is Cordell Hull's official biographer. In writing his bi- ography, he sent the former Secretary of Stat several anecdotes for verification. One was a story regarding Hull's ability as a poker player. In the Spanish-American war, so the story went, Hull was so good at poker that he kept his com- pany continually out of funds. When the story cane back from Hull, the Secretary of State had crossed out the word company" and submitted the word "regiment." NOTE-There are only 170 men in a com- pany, but about 2,800 in regiment. Japs, Marines Cooperate TWO-fisted Maury Maverick, retiring chairman of Smaller War Plants Corporation, gave President Truman a very disturbing report on conditions in the Orient last week. Maverick told Truman he was particularly dis- tressed about the morale of American forces in China, where they are increasingly embittered at Chiang Kai-Shek. The G.I.'s, Maverick re- ported, are boiling mad over the way Chiang has insisted on retaining 20,000 armed Japanese to help put down rival Chinese factions. When Maverick lauded at the Peiping air- port, he told Truman that he found 1,000 Ma- rines on one side of the field and 600 armed Japanese on the other. The American boys, many of whose buddies died fighting the Japs, were outraged over the fact that they had to cooperate with their enemies-all for the sake of Chiang Kai-Shek. Maverick went so far as to warn that there might be instances of Chi- nese killing American troops because of our new being on the same side as the Japs. Maverick also reported to Truman that Ameri- can businessmen were suffering economic set- backs in China despite our help to the Chinese government. He said that while the Chinese kept American businessmen at arms' length, the British and Russians were already on their way to resuming large-scale trade. The Russians have already signed a secret trade agreement with the Chinese which gives them far greater trade opportunities than Amer- ican business. At the end of Maverick's gloomy report, the President explained that he was not favoring the Chiang Kai-Shek government, but that he did very much favor peace in China. He said he was aware of the dangers in China, but didn't see what could be done about it until peace was finally worked ou. NOTE-Since then it looks as if General Marshal finally had worked out the long-de- sired goal of Chinese peace. State Department experts are very much hoping the peace will be more than a temporary lull. (Copyright, 1946, by the Bel Syndicate, Inc.) I'D RATHER IE RIGHT: Asemnb ytrategy By SAMUEL GRAFTON HE ASSEMBLY of the United Nations Or- ganization is trying to decide what it is; it does not quite know; it is seeking for a defini- tion of itself, and the first week's struggle has been largely confined to moves and counter- moves directed toward giving the body one per- manent Jhape or another. The Russians, for example, seem to have little feeling that the Assembly is an organism, des- tined to develop a life and traditions of its own; they appear to regard the Assembly as merely a convenient place where the powers may meet and work out their agreements. Any concept such as that of "the will of the Assembly" seems quite strange to the Russians; they are forever butting their heads against the workings of parliamentary law, attempting to make speeches after the time for speaking has been declared closed, etc.; they show an almost puzzled resist- ance to the idea that the rules of a deliberative body can be superior to the will of any of its members; their stern realism is offended by what seems to them the legal fiction that the Assembly has a mind and purpose of its own, as distin- guished from the minds and purposes of its members. At the other extreme stand the small na- tions; and the "small nations line" holds that the Assembly is everything, that its individual members are, or should be, as nothing. Thus a week-end dispatch told us that the small nations were profoundly reassured because the great powers had fallen out among themselves; this meant to the small -nations that the Assembly was being an assembly, and not a consortium of great powers dictating to the world. There seems something wrong, of course, in the idea that a disagreement among the great powers should be reassuring to anybody. That is not a development which most men would place in the category of reassuring news; but the small nations are possessed by the hope that they have, in the Assembly, a great friend, made up in part of the great powers, but greater than the great powers; a friend who enjoys only a legal and corporate existence, but whom they hope to make into a real power, like a nation with armies. Both France and China are, in an interesting fashicn, drifting over toward this viewpoint; both have been admitted into the top circle, as the smallest of the great powers, but both seem to prefer to become the greatest of the small powers, instead. HERE is also what might be called "the Brit- ish line." The British have long been accus- tomed to balance-of-power politics; the old in- stinct seems to be stirring again, and, very sure- footedly, to be working out a new balance in an unfamiliar setting. For the British are firmly among the Big Three on the Security Council; they have the vetoes and the privileges which go with membership among the great powers; but, in the Assembly, Britain too is becoming a spokesman for the small nations. It is as if Britain, lacking a large, compact power-mass, like that of Russia, or the United States, is attempting to form a bloc of precisely those nations which are excluded from the blocs, an organization of the unorganized. This is an intricate, new application of balance-of-power, indeed; for Britain's line gives her a foot in each of two camps, both among the small nations and the great ones. Mr. Bevin is the only one among the Big Three foreign ministers who both holds the veto power and argues against it. It can be said, without impugning his sincerity, that there is in his line something of the traditional British appreach to the practical business of diplomacy; it helps, in a curious way, to make up for Britain's lack of real power as compared with Russia and America. All of which puts the United States in a deli- cate position, for we are also fond of self-running parliaments; temptation is strong upon us; but if we were to join with the small nations group- ing, too, it would suddenly become a case of the world against Russia. So far Mr. Byrnes has been feeling for compromises; he has insisted, in some instances, that Russia yield to the Assembly's rules; he has stood up for'the dignity of the Assembly; but he has also worked with the Russians on specific election strategy, If American policy has seemed nervous, it has not been without point; for suddenly it has come clear, somewhat to our own surprise, that the United States, and not Britain, is the mediator between Russia and the world; and there the great story stands at the end of the first historic week. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) Write to Congress To the Editor: T HE response from this particular district in support of President Truman's request that the citizens wiite to their Congressmen concern- ing pending or stalled legislation has been apathetic. I should like to reassure those who have not written because they feel their letters are ignored and ineffec- tive. Years of work as a citizen in- terested in better government which has included work with Representa- tives from the various districts where we were located at the time as well as our Senators has led to the follow-. ing conclusions which I should like to present for your consideration: 1.Our future chances of survival as a democracy are in direct ratio to the willingness of the public to ac- cept their responsibilities as individ- ual citizens in active participation in government. 2. Letters and interviews are a welcomed and effective means of presenting your views and opinions. To dismiss the only -mediums open to the average citizen is to abandon the field to, highly organized and well financed pressure groups which rarely take into considera- ticin the welfare of the whole peo- ptle. 3. Letters supporting or opposing certain proposed legislation should always be accompanied with the rea- sons for such support or opposition to receive the greatest consideration. Our Congressmen are elected by the people and dependent upon the votes of the people for continuance in of- fice. Views which they are convinced would lead to defeat at the polls are seldom entertained for long. 4. Together with letters and in- terviews with elected representa- tives, a wider participation in elec- tion primaries is essential. The at- titude that primaries are unim- pcrtant and one can safely wait for "the real election in November" leaves the selection of final candi- dates to pressure groups and often mediocre party hacks who hold po- sitions of power solely because of public apathy. The result is the citizen is frequently left with a choice between two evils in Novem- ber and concludes, "what's the use?", and sits it out. -Mrs. John Benson White Man's Burden AGAIN I must "climb into my pen" in an attempt to correct some in- terpretations of facts. Mr. Arun Chhatrapati state (M.D. Jan. 10, 1946) that the common man in Indonesia had become civilized long before there was any civilization in Western Europe. Is that really so? Anyone who has observed men and things in the Orient will doubt the truth of such a statement; for he is aware of the fact that at no time in history and nowhere on earth is there any evidence that the common peo- ple who comprise, let us say, 99.44! per cent of the total population, were directly responsible for the active participants in any native civiliza- tion. It has always been a small frac- tion of the population that erected the structures, or produced and ap- preciated the literature and the works of art by which later genera- tions estimate the worth of past civ- ilizations. In Indonesia, in India, China and elsewhere in the Orient it was this very small group of the population -one half of one per cent would probably be a liberal estimate- that was responsible and had an appreciation for those manifesta- tions of civilization and culture which did not affect the common man at all. The priesthood took the initiative to build temples for the glorification of their god (s); the princes and other magnates had palaces built for the glorifi- cation of themselves, or for other motives. Thus, it is said that the Taj Mahal resulted from the am- orous prosperity of a "fabulously" rich Indian prince; while in Java the noteworthy /'Water Castle"- a secluded bathing place in the city of Jogjakarta-was especially built in mediaeval times by another na- tive prince to promote his private study of the comparative anatomy of the beautiful sex, although all rivers and creeks on Java are pub- lie bathing places. In the construction of these edi- fices the semi-skilled among the com- mon people had as much to do as the stone-masons and the bricklayers had to do with the building of the Lincoln Memorial; while the un- skilled were active only in the kind of work that is now done in this country by the steamshovel and the "bull-dozer." The common people in the Orient have remained unaf- fected by civilization to this day. Everybody has heard about the splendor and culture of Babylon, Niniveh and Carthage. What has become of all that under the care and management of the natives? If the people in Java had reached the de- gree of civilization claimed by Mr. C., they would not have allowed the magnificent temples, left by the Hindu interregnum, to fall into ruins; nor would they have waited for the initiative of the Dutch to patiently restore the Borobudur, Panataran and other temples to their former grandeur. Thus, Mr. C.'s statement is only one more example of the all-too- prevalent confusing of the many with the few and vice versa. It is useless to answer Mr.Chha- trapati's scoffing remarks on the "white man's burden" in the Orient inasmuch as he appears to be com- pletely oblivious of the very recent sacrifices the white man has made in the Orient. -M. W. Senstius DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I 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 Angell hall, by 3:30 p. m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a. n. Sat- urdays). THURSDAY, JANUARY ' 17 VOL. LVI, No. 53 Notices To the Members of the Faculty-Col- lege of Literature, Science, and the Arts : There will be a special meeting of the Faculty of the College of Litera- ture, Science, and the Arts on Jan. 21 at 4:10 p.m., in Room 1025 Angell Hall, for continued discussion of the curriculum proposals. Large atten- dance of the faculty is desired at this meeting. 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 1046-1947 file their proposals in the Office of the Graduate School by Friday, Feb. 8. Those wishing to re- new previous requests whether now receiving support or not should so in- dicate. Application forms will be mailed or can be obtained at Secre- tary's Office, Room 1006 Rackham Building, Telephone 372. Choral Union Members. Courtesy passes for the Heifetz concert will be issued to all members of the Chorus whose attendance records are clear, on the day of the concert, Friday, Jan. 18, between the hours of 9:30 and 11:30 and 1 and 4..After 4 o'clock no passes will be issued. Ushers wanted for Hasty Heart in the Michigan Theater on Jan. 21. In- terested women should sign up this week in Miss McCormick's Office in the Michigan League. Lectures 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. today in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre;, auspices of the Dept. of Fine Arts. The public is cor- dially invited. Dr. F. A. Vening 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 lecture on the topic, "Shearing of the Earth's Crust and Shift of the Poles" tonight at 8:00 in Room 2082, Nat- ural Science Bldg. William Henry Chamberlin, noted American journalist, author and speaker, who lived and worked in many European countries and Japan as a Foreign Correspondent will be presented Monday night, Jan. 21, at 8:00 p.m., in the Kellogg Auditorium. The topic of the lecture will be, "Russia and the West: Conflict or Cooperation?" Dr. Ananda K. Coomaraswamy of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, will speak on "The Riddle of the Sphinx" at 4:15 p.m., Tues., Jan. 22, in the Rackham Amphitheatre; aus- pices of the Institute of Fine Arts. The public is cordially invited. Academic Notices Chemistry 291 will not meet today. F. E. Bartell Orientation Seminar today at 3 p.m., Room 3201 Angell Hall. Dr. George Piranian. will speak on "Detection of Singularities of Analy- tic Functions." Tea at 4 p.m. Seminar in Physical Chemistry will meet today in Room 410 Chemistry Building at 4:15 p.m. Dr. Jerome Karle will speak on "Influence of thermal motion on electron scatter- ing by gasses." All interested are in- vited. Forestry Seminar-The Deputy Di- rector of the Michigan Department of Conservation will describe that or- ganization and employee duties in- volved as well as state employment in general. Mr. Fontanna is makingx a special trip from Lansing so a largel turnout is desired. The Employment. Seminar meets in Room 2039 Natural Science Building at 4:30 this after-r noon. Biolegical Chemistry Seminar will meet on Friday, Jan. 18, at 4 p.m. int 319 West Medical Building. "Thel Physiological Relationship betweent Amino Acids and Vitamins." All in-l terested are invited. i Exhibitions A joint exhibition of paintings byx John Pappas and Sarkis Sarkisian ofX .-nfni in fh T~nram T0TrIavP o'clock today. The lecture is spon- sored by the Undergraduate Club of Students in Education, and a cordial invitation is extended to all who may be interested to attend. The lecture will be followed by the showing of a film, "Living and Learning in a Rural School." Tea at the International Center: The weekly informal teas at the In- ternational Center on Thursdays, from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. are open to all foreign students and their Ameri- can friends. Phi Delta Kapa. There will be a coffee hour today at 4 o'clock in the East Conference Room of the Rack- ham Building. President Ruthven will speak on "Some Problems Re- garding Admissions to the Univer- sity of Michigan." Members of all chapters are cordially invited. Mortar Board will meet tonight at 7 o'clock in the Undergraduate Office in the League. The I.C.C. ,Educational Committee will present a talk by Professor Lob- anov-Rostevsky: "Causes of the Rus- sian Revolution," tonight at 7:30 p.m. at Stevens Co-op, 816 Forrest. All are invited to attend and partici- pate in the bull session afterwards. Refreshments will be served. American Youth Hostel: There will be folk dancing at 7:30 tonight at Lane Hall. All students are invited. La Sociedad Hispanica will hold the fourth of its lecture series to- night at 8:00 p.m. in Kellogg Audi- torium. The speaker will be Dr. San- tedomingo Guzman, who will talk about "Colombia-Pais Del Dorado." Dr. Guzman will illustrate his talk with a movie. All members are urged to attend. Psychology Club: Professor Mischa Titiev of the Anthropology Depart- ment will speak on Culture and Per- sonality at the next meeting of the Psychology Club tonight at 8:00 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheater. The meeting is open to all students and those interested are cordially in- vited to attend. "The Old Maid and the Thief" and the Garden Scene from "Faust" will be presented tonight at 8:30 in the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre by Play Production of the department - of speech in conjunction with the School of Music and the University Orches- tra. Other performances of the operas will be given tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. and Saturday evening at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are on sale daily in the theatre box office. BARNABY By Crockett Johnson The program is Detect and Collect. And I fI t1.../_ ... ta:._._ I- - iL - -. 1... You mean they won't ,( I I i