FOUR THE MICIllGAN DAILY WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Building Up Germany By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Greatest tragedy of the cur- rent strikes is one which few people realize. They switch the public focus away from the seeds of war being planted abroad. Right now, for instance, the U.S. Army has quietly adopted a new policy in occupied Ger- many. The change may be purely accidental; or it may be deliberate. Either way it may bring future war. The new policy is to build up Germany in the American-occupied zone. Here are some con- crete examples of what has happened. Recently, the U.S. Army has been suffering a shortage of gasoline in Germany. However, there is no serious shortage of gas among German civilians. They now have more than under Adolf Hitler. Furthermore, the U.S. Army has now turned over to German civilians a total of 8,000 army trucks. This is one reason why so much gasoline is flowing in Germany-to keep the 8,000 trucks moving. With these trucks also went extra parts and spare tires. C 1 Simultaneously France and Belgium had been seeking these trucks, while Czechoslovakia had requested gasoline. Both were allies of the United States, not enemy nations. Both were turned down. The army told the French and Belgians that the trucks were not in good con- dition, despite the fact that they are now per- forming well on German highways. The Czechs, who were pleading for 20,000 tons of gasoline, were finally given half that amount-without disturbing the German economy. It may have been that the meager help given Czechoslovakia was due to back-stage Russian influence in that country and the recent ap- pearance of Soviet troops in Czechoslovakia, ostensibly enroute to Berlin. Aid to Germany at the expense of Belgium and France is more difficult to explain. It may simply be due to American efficiency and the desire to do a good job in any area where Amer- ican troops are located. In either case, the policy of building up an ex-enemy which has caused more wars than any other nation in Europe, is a vitally important change which the American people are entitled to know about. IT HASNT LEAKED OUT, but a Russian re- quest to purchase 500,000 bales of raw cotton from this country has been turned down on the grounds that some of the cloth would be ex- ported in competition with U.S. textiles. Mean- while the Department of Agriculture is pro- ceeding with its plan to furnish German mills with 154,000 bales of American cotton. Thus, the Department of Agriculture is actually pushing a plan to have German mills export textiles in competition with us-and with our financing. (Copyright, 1946, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) .t BOOKS P 1 THIS WEEK'S BOOK LIST contains Upton Sinclair's A World to Win, the seventh in as many years of the Lanny Budd novels of what his publishers term The World's End Series. In this latest volume Sinclair traces the events of World War II through his seemingly ageless presidential agent 103, Lanny Budd. It is history in story form, which is Mr. Sinclair's avowed purpose of the series. While Sinclair, a writer not without some merit, could probably write creditable fiction or creditable history, this, his latest systhesis, suffers as a result of the com- bination. For as history A World to Win is shallow and often misleading in its over simpli- fication and interpretation of deeply complicated political, economic, and military occurences from Vichy through, and including, the German attack on Russia. And as fiction it is too like a newspaper account of the inside story of what Churchill said to Roosevelt over their private telephone. Lanny Budd has intimate talks not only with Petain, Admiral Darlan, and Hitler, but he chats amiably with "Winnie,' "F.D." and "Uncle Joe" and even drinks a toast with Stalin to the effect that, "may he (Stalin) live to carry out a pro- gram of democracy, with freedom of speech and religion for all men." These along with other in-the-know items will undoubtedly delight the fans of Upton Sinclair, and there seem .to be many. But for those who are concerned with the state and welfare of American letters, A World to Win is a confirmation of the present day assertion that we are a sick people. It is no better, and certainly no worse than the preceding volumes. And next year we can certainly look forward to reading what good old Mac said to Hirohito upon their first meeting in the eighth of this Without End Series. -Don Thornbury. General Library List Butcher, Henry C. My Three Years with Eisenhower New York, Simon & Schuster, 1946. Farrell, James T. Bernard Clare. New York, Vanguard, 1946. Forbes, Roita Torr Appointment with Destiny. New York, Dut- ton, 1946. Hutton, Graham Midwest at Noon. Chicago, University of Chicago press, 1946. Stuart, Jesse Foretaste of Glory. New York, Dutton, 1946. Werfel, Franz Poems, translated by Edith Abercrombie Snow. Princeton, Princeton University press, 1945. NIGHT EDITOR: CLYDE RECHT Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. World Example A recent newspaper article written by an American correspondent in China states that "many Chinese find it hard to understand why a nation as insistent as the United States is that China put in order its affairs for peace is unable to bring cooperation into its own house- keeping." The eyes of the entire world are resting on the American domestic scene. The breakdown of our economy due to the current railroad and coal strikes wil have severe economic re- percussions in both Europe and the Far East. These areas depend on us for vital food and other commodities. If we cannot manage to care for the physical needs of these people and keep our house in order, we cannot expect to retain American influence abroad. At present, we are competing with Russian influence in our zones of occupation and sur- rounding areas. American progress in Germany has not been encouraging; Gen. Marshall's Chinese peace was short-lived. If, in addition to these none too prepossessing records, we fail to feed the starving people of the world, Amer- ica's stock in international approbation will Donmini Says R ELIGIOUS CALLINGS are in the running again. For fully half a century the Graduate Courses in Religion and the Theological Sem- inaries have been getting few of the first rate minds. But today, due to a combination of influences they are getting the best. Yale, Union at Columbia, Chicago, Pacific School of Religion, and Princeton advise us that the fall classes promise more for the religious leadership of the future than at any time during the current century. Likewise, the inquiries made by vet- erans as to the possibility of some form of religious leadership in world affairs is encour- aging, not as to numbers but as to quality. Now that the post-war period of reconstruc- tion begins to take on patterns some of the influences may be enumerated. The depression followed by a second world war made plain to youth the sickness of our culture. That sick- ness appearing at the bottom of the Fascist and Nazi type of social nihilism surprised but did not embitter our youth. It taught them that the nature of civilization lies deeper than economics. Their fathers and mothers thought the whole sickness could be cured by shun- ning Communism and labor leaders, or by learning more of an old economic theory. They sent their boys into Engineering, Business or Political Science. The sons begin to under- stand that life is complex and that there are indirect causes more powerful than, the sur- face ones. They ask about the purpose of life itself. Having been educated by the dole during the depression, advised that our democratic way, by sheer virtue of truth would speedily give every man employment and by means of free enterprise would offer adequate inducement for the more ambitious of the population to make a few millions as their fathers did, our students went to war. Now that we come out of war with a forbidding repudiation of the Four Freedoms for which they bombed Cologne and traversed the Pacific with atomic energy, they are dazed. Having been drilled upon the Atlantic Charter with its humanitarian announcements while they were in uniform, they look about to find that lobbies in Washington never quote that document. In the home-town they discover that adequate housing is delayed because for ten years the money grabbers who sent those lob- bies to the capital never did believe F.D.R. when he properly enough told them that liberty could be maintained in the U.S. and introduced to other countries of the world. -Human nature is certainly complex. What is life anyhow? The youth entering graduate study in religion are doing so not to escape hard thinking and great intellectual conflict. They say deliberately, in so far as we have met them or received direct reports from other Counselors, that the prob- lems are deeper than political systems, more profound than economic theory alone, more fundamental than reshaping the governmental controls and more difficult than our current sec- ular education had led us to believe. That the top scientists have come out of laboratory and organized themselves into crusading bands is assurance enough that religion was correct in the first place. Now they say let us get down to giving religious goal the necesary techniques. One way to do this is to look beneath the symp- toms, discover causes, know the ideal and master motivation. Religion broadly conceived is the field which must be brought abreast. -Edward W. Blakeman, Counselor in Religious Education Russias Fea r U.S.=Briish floc By EDDY GILMORE ((Eddy Gilmore, Associated Press Correspondent now home for a vacation, has spent the last five years in Russia. Ie is married to a Russian girl, knows the language, and has had an opportunity vouchsafed to few if any other foreigners in Russia in recent years. It was through Gilmore that Stalin recently addressed to the world a promise of cooperation for peace.) NEW YORK, May 30 P)--Despite Secretary Byrnes' protestations that no Anglo-Amer- ican bloc exists against the Soviet Union, the prevailing opinion in the U.S.S.R. now and in the past is that such a bloc does exist and words alone, no matter how earnest, will do nothing to eliminate the belief. British and American representatives in Mos- cow are acutely aware of the Russian point of view on this subject and it is often one of their most delicately handled bits of protocol. Both sides go well out of their way, often to what seems fantastic ends, to avoid it. Only recently, when the new United States Ambassador, Walter Bedell Smith, was to arrive in the Russian capital, it came up-and pointed- ly. Several high ranking members of the British colony announced they planned to journey to the airport and give Smith the customary diplo- matic welcome. "Oh, no, we won't," said persons in authority, "we can't give the Russians the impression that we're welcoming a new batsman to the cricket field." The well meaning, friendly Britishers stayed at home. The fact that Americans and Englishmen speak the same language is, in this one par- ticular, unfortunate. Just as spectators at a ball game never know what the umpire and players are saying to one another, the Rus- sians never know what the Americans and British are saying. The suspicion of the bloc has been coming along at a nice rate for a diplomatic matter. Seeking to comment on the question about 18 months ago I wrote: "The Russians believe there is a movement among the British and Americans to gang up on them."' The censor suggested that I write it: "The Russians hope there is no movement among the British and Americans to gang up on them." Twelve months later I put it much stronger and it passed. After Winston Churchill's Mis- souri speech, I don't believe the censor would like it if you suggested that the Russians. were not firmly convinced that a gang-up was in progress. The testimony of General Eisenhower and Admiral Nimitz before the House Foreign Af- fairs Committee that military and naval col- laboration among countries of the Western hemisphere is necessary is sure, to anyone remotely acquainted with the state of the present Russian mind, to set off new bursts of suspicion. Russians are going to read Eisenhower's words "anyone who looks at the globe can ob- serve that the shortest air route to the United States from Asia or Europe is over the North Pole" with new alarm. The whole Hemisphere defense proposal is going to cause a tempest of discussion in the high councils in the U.S.S.R. Frankly-and I stress Pm only trying today to explain the Russian point of view-it's going to sound like what has come to be known in Moscow as the Churchill Plan to Attack Against the Soviet Union. At the same time the Russians are going to growl and mutter to themselves and perhaps publicly, that people who not only object but often denounce them for their policy in certain countries in Europe, now suggest American Military and Naval collaboration with South American countries. To a Russian this is either blindness or su- preme hypocrisy. County PoliticsI Last week Washtenaw County Prosecutor John W. Rae was acquitted on a disorderly charge in Municipal Court. This case was lifted from the realm of the inconspicuous by its serious political implications. During the course of the trial a public of- ficial of twenty years experience and almost four terms in a position of high trust admitted calling the chairman of the County Republi- can Committee to determine his course of action in the case in order to "avoid publi- city." This same official was charged with endea- voring to persuade Prosecutor Rae to resign his office so that the charges could be drop- ped, since his actions were apparently ini- mical to the party name and interests. No formal charges were placed against Rae until more than two months had elapsed after the date of the incident. Meanwhile, no attempt was made by any local officials to investigate the case. Finally, the attorney- general undertook the investigation at the behest of the county Board of Supervisors. Such reprehensible actions by those in office and politics leave only two alternatives for those interested in cleaning up local government: The ballot box or the grand jury. -Clyde Recht (Continued from Page 2) Examination Announcements have been received in this office for: Publicist I: Salary, $200-$240. Publicist II: Salary, $250-$290. Publicist III: Salary, $300-$360. Public8Relations Executive IV: Sal- ary, $380-$440. Bacteriologist I: Salary, $200-$240. Bacteriologist II: Salary, $250-$290. Closing date June 19. For further information, call at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason e Hall.q Willow Village Program for Vet-s erans and their Wives: . Sunday, June 2: Classical Music. Records, 3-5 p.m. Office, West Lodge. Tuesday, June 3: Discusion Group, t 7:30 p.m. Office. Tuesday, June 4: Safety Series, "Home Groan," Miss Frances E. Wil- son, Home Demonstration Agent of Washtenaw County-demonstration, followed by movie on canning. 8:00 p.m. Village Community House. Wednesday, June 5: Bridge, 2-4 and 8-10 p.m. Conference Room, West Lodge. Thursday, June 6: Home Planning Group invited to attend Tuesday evening Safety Series program. Saturday, June 8: Record Dance, 8:30 p.m. Auditorium. Sunday, June 9: Classical Music, Records, 3-5 p.m. Office. Lectur?s Lecture, College of Architecture and Design: Tau Sigma Delta, Architecture and Design Honorary, will sponsor Mr. Roger Allen, Pres- ident, Michigan Society of Archi- tects, Wednesday, June 5, 4:15 p.m., in the College of Architecture audi- torium. The annual Tau Sigma Delta Sophomore awards will be made at this time.rThe public is invited. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Filadelfo Panlilio, Engineering Mechanics; thesis: "The Theory of Limit Design Applied to Magnesium Alloy and Aluminum Alloy Structures," Mon- day, June 3, at 3:00 'p.m., in 406 West Engineering. ChairmannJ. A. Van den Broek Doctoral Examination for William H. Sullivan, Chemistry; thesis:"Arti- ficially Produced Radioisotopes of Tungsten and Rhenium," to be held on Tuesday, June 4, at 2:00 p.m., in the East Council Room, Rackham Building. Chairman, K. Fajans. Sociology 196: Final examination on Tuesday, June 11, from 7:00-9:00 p.m., Room D, Haven Hall. Department of Bacteriology Sem- inar: Tuesday, June 4, at 8:30 a.m. in Room 1564 East Medical Building. Subject: The Paracolon Bacilli. All interested are invited. Concerts Carillon Recital: Percival Price, University Carillonneur, will present a program at 3:00 this afternoon, which will include a group of hymns, Sonata for carillon by Van Hoof, and six British folk songs. Student Recital: Harry I. Phillips will present a recital in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music in Wood- wind Instruments, at 8:30 Tuesday evening, June 4, in Rackham Assem- bly Hall. He will be assisted by Mildred Andrews, pianist, and Edward Or- mond, violist, in a program during which he will play compositions for the clarinet, flute, and oboe. His in- structors in these instruments have been Albert Luconi and Russell How- land. The public is cordially invited. University of Michigan Women's Glee Club, Marguerite V. Hood, Con- ductor, will present its annual spring concert at 8:30 Thursday evening, June 6, in Hill Auditorium. The first half of the program will consist of compositions by Brahms, Rachmaninoff, Rossini, Kernochan, Wood, and Hageman, while the sec- ond half, entitled "Latin-American Fiesta", will feature appropriate mu- sic. It will be open to the general public without charge. Events Today Hindustan Association: Spring Meeting at 7:30 tonight at Lane Hall. The program includes formation of a committee for the forthcoming De- troit performance, secretary's and treasurer's reports, solo dances and songs. Members and their American friends are cordially invited to at- tend. (Continued on Page 7) Time of Exercise Monday at 8 .,. "o "$ 9 .. " 10 ... "f " 11 ... Monday Tuesday Tuesday ", at t at "I " at ", 1 2 3 8 9 10 11 1 2 3 ...............Tues., June ................Wed., June '... '.'....... Mon., June ................Thu., June ............... Fri., June ...... ... Thu., June ........... Tues., June ...............Mon., June ................Sat., June ...............Wed., June ...............Tues., June SPECIAL PERIODS 18, 10:30-12:30 19, 8:00-10:00 17, 10:30-12.30 13, 10:30-12:30 14, 2:00- 4:00 13, 8:00-10:00 18, 2:00- 4:00 17, 8:00-10:00 15, 8:00-10:00 19, 2:00- 4:00 18, 8:00-10:00 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Spring Term Exam Schedule UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN College of Literature, Science, and the Arts College of Pharmacy School of Business Administration School of Education School of Forestry and Conservation School of Music School of Public Health June 13 to June 19, 1946 NOTE: For courses having both lectures and quizzes, the time of ex- ercise is the time of the first lecture period of the week; for courses having quizzes only, the time of exercise is the time of the first quiz period. Cer- tain courses will be examined at special periods as noted below the regular schedule. To avoid misunderstandings and errors, each student should re- ceive notification from his instructor of the time and place of his examina- tion. In the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, no date of examina- tion may be changed without the consent of the Examination Committee. College of Literature, Science, and the Arts Sociology 51, 54 .................. Spanish 1, 2, 31, 32 .................. German 1, 2, 31, 32 ................ Political Science 1, 2, 52 ............ Psychology 42 ...................... Chemistry 55 ....................... Speech 31, 32 .................... French 1, 2, 12, 31, 32, 61, 62, 91, 92, 93, 153 .................. English 1, 2 ............. . ...... . Economics 51, 52, 53, 54..... .... Botany 1........................ Zoology 1................... School of Business Administration Thu., June Fri., June Fri., June Sat., June Sat., June Mon., June Mon., June 13, 14, 14, 15, 15, 17, 17, 17, 18, 18, 19, 19, 10:30-12:30 8:00-10 :00 8:00-10 :00 10:30-12:30 10:30-12:30 10:30-12:30 2:00- 4:00 2:00- 4:00 8:00-10 :00 8:00-10 :00 10:30-12:30 10:30-12:30 Time of Examination Thu., June 13, 2:00-4:00 Sat., June 15, 2:00-4:00 Fri., June 14, 10:30-12:30 Mn.,, Tues., Tues., Wed., .Wed., June June June June. Courses not covered by this schedule, as well as any necessary changes will be indicated on the School bulletin board. School of Forestry and Conservation Courses not covered by this schedule as w'ell as any necessary changes will be indicated on the School bulletin board. School of Music: Individual Instruction in Applied Music Individual examinations by appointment will be given for all applied music courses (individual instruction) elected for credit.in any unit of the University. For time and place of examinations, see bulletin board at the School of Music. School of Public Health Courses riot covered by this schedule as well as any necessary changes will be indicated on the School bulletin board.. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING SCHEDULE OF EXAMINATIONS June 13 to June 19, 1946 NOTE: For the courses having both lectures and quizzes, the time of exercise is the time of the first lecture period of the week; for courses having quizzes only, the time of exercise is the time of the first quiz period. Drawing and laboratorywork may be continued through the exam- ination period in amount equal to that normally devoted to such work during one week. Certain courses will be examined at special periods as noted below the regular schedule. All cases of conflicts between assigned examina- tion periods must be reported for adjustment. See bulletin board out- side of Room 3209 East Engineering Building between May 29 and June 5, for instruction. To avoid misunderstandings and errors, each stu- dent should receive notification from his instructor of the time and place of his appearance in each course during the period June 13 to June 19. No date of examination may be changed without the consent of the Classification Committee. Time of Exercise Time of Examination Monday Tuesday (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at 8 9 10 11 1 2 3 8 9 10 11 1 2 3 Thursday Saturday Friday Tuesday Wednesday Monday Thursday Friday Thursday Tuesday Monday Saturday Wednesday Tuesday June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June 13 15 14 18 19 17 13 14 13 18 17 15 19 18 13 14 15 17 17 18 19 2-4 2-4 10:30-12:30 10:30-12:30 8-10 10:30-12:3.0 10:30-12:30 2-4 8-10 2-4 8-10 8-10 2-4 8-10 Chem-Met 1; E.E. 2a Draw. 1; M.E. 1; Span.; E.M. 1; C.E. 2 Draw. 3; Surv. 1, 2, 4 Draw. 2; M.E. 3; Frencl Econ. 53, 54; English 11 M.P. 2, 3, 4 *Thursday German*Friday *Saturday *Monday h *Monday * Tuesday *Wednesday 10:30-12:30. 8-10 10:30-12:30 10:30-12:30 2-4 8-10 10:30-12:30 *This may also be used as an irregular period, provided there is no conflict with the regular printed schedule above. Prescribed V-12 courses will also follow the above schedule. Fifty-Sixth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Hoard in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Margaret Farmer . . . . . . . . . Managing Editor Hale Champion.. . . . . . . . . . . Editorial Director BARNABY By Crockett Johnson 1. MMMM WV, I There's precedent for a ten man baseball team m'boy. Abner Doubleday to the contrary. Merely Your father's feeble team) could use an extra hand- I W;" The same. He's always good for a base on balls. And imagine him on the defense- 0 IMAifnr --1---_i .r_15- -- F. I I r Robert Goldman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . city Eaitor