THE MICHIGAN DAILY ashington's Birthday I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: T Saturday the nation "observed" the 5th birthday of George Washington. ges over the country suspended classes, merchants closed their stores, and e in general took advantage of the legal ay to pursue their own individual de- It seems safe to assume that very few ns devoted any time on that day to eration of the man to whom they owed thanks for the "day off," and perhaps few more things. e brief reminders in the form of the utionary's portrait on the covers of ;ical supplements probably aroused d fleeting thoughts of the historic e. A handful of after-dinner birthday hes likely performed the services of .ng powders. haps this is a good sign. Unconcern and erence over the superficial observance nation-founder's birthday may indicate' the people are beginning to realize that nationalistic rituals do not help any e nurture of a feeling of brotherhood all races of the earth. orge Washington in the past, as seen gh the eyes of Americans living in his torials published in The Michigan Daily written by -embers of The Daily staff represent the views of the writers only. :GHT EDITOR: FRANCES PAINE time and living ,now, was a "great" man, courageous, persevering in the throwing-out of foreigners from this soil, above corrup- tion, prudent in judgment, in short a human symbol of American nationality worthy of the most embracing and everlasting tribute that American memory is able to pay him. It must be realized that every other "father of his country" has held and in many cases still holds this place in the minds of his countrymen. Bolivar is the man of history to many of our southern neighbors; Bis- marck was for long, and perhaps still is, the epitome of German nationality; Lenin stands out in the Russian mind, and mem- ories of Garibaldi still bring a chill to Ital- ian spines. The same is true of a host of other big men in history who freed their own countries from the chains of foreign powers, or from the chains of ignorance and economic slavery. The time will come, if it has not come already, when each nation must forget about its .founding heroes as symbols of national- ity, when its peoples must come to think of; them only in the light of their work toward the production of a human race of true world citizens. The concentration of the. people's social mind on their own strictly nationalistic in- stitutions and rituals must be replaced by a broader outlook on humanity as a whole before the seeds of lasting peace can have rich ground in which to grow and flower into a truly democratic One World. -John F. Neunan, Jr. i Student Tdwn Hall ;; 'MALL DISCUSSION GROUPS have al- w°,ys been a tradition on the Michigan ampus, but there is a need to bring the tlents together as a whole on topics that Itally 'concern them. The Student Town CalI is attempting to answer that need by >resenting a series of monthly forums on '"pus and national problems that effect ie student body.. Originaly The Daily and SRA sponsored he Town Hall sessions, but the central omenittee has been enlarged to include rpresentatives from all the large campus irganzations. In this way there is a feeler RATTER OF FACT:. Greek S By STEWART ALSOP ATHENS, Feb. 23-The United States has got to fish or cut bait, not only in Greece, jUt throughout this whole area. In a rather ,rude nutshell, that is the opinion of every Aplrieneed observer in Athens. It is also he conclusion which has been independent- y reached and dispatched to Washington y both Mark F. Ethridge, head of the Amenr- .can delegation of the United Nations Corn- nision, and Paul A. Porter, chief of the .mericanx Economic Mission to Greece. The conclusion is in essence this: Eiher the United States makes a deter- ri~ned effort to bring some sort of order out of the political and economic chaos in which Greece is now wallowing, or Greece * mathematically certain to become another Soviet-Balkan puppet with the profoundest effect on the whole world balance of power. If the United States decides to make this ffort, Porter and Ethridge will be initial- y, at least, the two chief instruments of h radically new American policy. Their lobs will be cut out for them. A brief glance t, the present internal situation of Greece I .enough to show why. In the first place, Porter has found him- elf confronted with an economic criis yhich threatens to blow the whole of Greek. economy sky high within two to four weeks. [f that happens, Porter and Ethridge might ust as well have stayed at home. The crisis springs from the fact that the Greek drachnia has been held in some sort of wobbly equilibrium for a number. of months only by offering sovereigns minted from the pre-war stock of Greek gold in exchange for paper money. Now the Greek government is scraping the bottom of the barrel and already the war- ier Greek merchants are refusing to deal in drachmas in large sums. If nothing is done, the drachma will again litter the Athens streets within a month at the latest and all hope of bringing order out of the Greek economic mess will have come to an end. In these circumstances; Porter's first ob- jective has been to buy time, a commodity which only the United States government can now afford. His first effort met with a ebuff when the Federal Reserve Bank ather haughtily pointed .out that the tech- pIque he advocated was contrary to its harter. Yet, Porter is a determined man %4d it is probable that some expedient will >e found. Even so, he will not really have >egun to do his job; he will merely have nade it possible to do a job at all. The Greek political situation and the Greek economy are in effect one and the same problem. The guerrilla fighting in. the north is a terrible strain on the feeble Greek economy, a fact of which those who organized and control the guerrillas are in eyery group for determining . subjects with which the student body are concerned. he first open forum, tonight at 8 p.m. in Rakham Lecture Hall, will deal with "The Wage Price Issue and a Stabilized Eonomy." It will offer an opportunity for students to air their views and hear other sides of the question of how wages and prices are and will effect our economy. 'The .aim of the 5tudent Town Hall group is to encourage student participation in dis- cussion; the .success of this project depends on campus support. -Bette Hamilton ituation terror of the Greek "Monarcho-Fascist" re- gime- More important than the Communist propaganda have been their secret organiza- tions, of which the most successful is, the Kossa, established to infiltrate and weaken the Greek Army. No one knows how many Kossa men there are. When uncovered, they have always been found to be those soldiers who had saluted most sharply and clicked their heels most enthusiastically. The Greek Army contemplates an all-out drive against the guerrillas in the spring and it will then become clear just how effective the work of the Kossa has been. As for the Greek government, it has of- ten been described as Fascist. Its main characteristic seems to be rather its total incompetence. There is no doubt that it was elected fairly and by a huge major- ity and there is also no doubt that it has allowed complete freedom of speech and of political action, at least in Athens. But at the last elections, the Greek people, re- volted by the excesses of the Communists, turned in terrified reaction to the Right. The result is a government largely dom- inated by a, small group of rich traders and merchants who religiously avoid the payment of income taxes. These men are totally in- capable even of discussing the kind of sweep- ing social and economic reforms which alone could counteract the quite natural attrac- tion of Communism in this misery-ridden country. There .are a few capable men in the gov- ernment. and a few tired old men of good will, like Maximos, the new Prime Minister, but most Greek politicians have no higher ambition than to continue to taste the pro- fitable delights of a free. economy at Ameri- can expense. To the skirts of politicians clings a vast mass of civil servants, aston- ishingly inefficient, who are guaranteed by law a lifetime place at the public trough. There is some Fascist talk in the smart bars in Athens, but the real failure of the Greek government is better typified by American luxury goods bought with precious dollars, visible in the windows of rich shops while small boys beg at the doors of the foreigners' hotels. But more tragic than government incom- petence is the new and bitter hatred between Greek and Greek. -Neither American econ- omic aid nor the implacable blood-letting of Soviet rule will soon end that. Certainly Porter and Ethridge have their job cut out for them, but it is only necessary seriously to consider the alternative to realize why so, many competent experts here are con- vinced that it is a job which must be done. (Copyright, 1947, New York Tribune, Inc.) Palestineeeting IN PALESTINE, though two years have passed since war in Europe ended, basic human rights are still'being trampled upon. nAilr th e Jewish nno-le fae eviction from Occupation Notes By SAMUEL GRAFTON PRAGUE-You can feel the tensions here, under the surface, not by the amount of public controversy, which is small, but by the shape the Czech economy is taking. The Czechs have rejected the Russian idea of state trusts, each in charge of an entire in- dustry. Their goal is to have each national- ized factory run as business by a little au- tonomous state-owned corporation. It is as if they wanted, even under nationalization, to keep as much of the western way as they could, as if they were comforting themselves by preserving at least the forms of western life, hoping that their little autonomous corporations will resemble western business models, if only so much as a wax flower re- sembles the original. The Czech desire for political freedom is real; and Czechs seem afraid that if the forms change too much, the substance of political liberty will go also. But in trying to join capitalist form with social- ist content, the Czechs are opening up a whole series of problems entirely new to the worl4, like boxes within boxes. How, for. example, does a private firm (and there are mary small ones left here) com- pete with an autonomous state corpora- tion? Both presumably will pay taxes, but .what if the state corporation can't? Do two state officials then meet and have a quarrel? Or does. the state sell part of itself out to pay taxes to itself? Then too, is it patriotic or unpatriotic for a private firm to compete with a state -orporation, and perhaps pin its ears back? The Czechs, looking East and then West, say frstly that eachtautonomous corpora- tion must stand on its own feet. ut will the state, in a false Schizoid calm, sit by and let a private firm, snatch a fat contract from under its nose? If nationalization is right and proper, why should the state pre- tend to be disinterested and why shouldn't it give all possible help to its own units? Here you take another slide on the ideo- logical sandpaper. What will indeed be the long range trend in relations between the state and the autonomous corporations? Won't the state try eventually to rationalize industry, by assigning certain tasks to cer- tain units? Will it really stand by, as a blithe impartial umpire, and let a dozen autonomous corporations compete with each other in making the Czech equivalent of corn flakes? But to take the other road is to go in the direction of the state trust. The Czechs don't know the answer; they know only that it is a hard winter and the snow is high on Prikopy street, and they are trying desperately to make a stable mix- ture of socialism and freedom. There is another problem remaining, almost as standard in Europe today as the cold in the head. Czechoslovakia, like every country I have been in, is passionate for exports. That weird feeling you get in Europe, that each nation is trying, as with a strange kind of inverse politeness, to foist its best on the world and keep its worst, flares highest here, for thirty per cent of Czechoslovakia's income normally rests on foreign trade. But no nation has ever tried a heavy socialist export trade. That idea is even newer than atomic energy; and some Czechs wonder what will happen to exports, their living link with theWest, at the hands of the autono- mous corporations which are being created by the state and sent out, like so many busy bees, to work. (Copyright, 1947, New York Post Corp.) -d . Cop,'. 1447 by Unt.4 Feature Syndkcate.ikc. Tm. Reg, U. 5. PatI. OHf.-AiI rghts r'escued CURRENT MOVIES area, except for those students who quested to file the titles of their Jack Hertz of the John Widdi- At the Michigan . . are physically incapacitated to dissertations with the Recorder. comb Co., Grand Rapids, Michi- The Shocking Miss Pilgrim ( th Cen- whom campus permit plates have _ -gan will speak on the selection, tury), Betty Grable, Dick Haymes. been issued. layout, and maintenance' of plant It is the sincere hope of the College of Literature, Science, and equipment in the furniture THIS IS an example of how bad musicals committee, to which the Univer- and the Arts, Schools of Educa- industry at 11 a.m., Wed., Feb. can get when the music is poor and in- sity Council has delegated the re- tion, Forestry, and Public Health: 26, East Lecture Room, Rackham sufficient and the plot equally poor and sponsibility of administering the Students who received marksIeX Bldg. All students in the Wood overly abundant. So much has been atterpt- rules with respect to parking, that or no report' at the close of their Technology Program in t h e edinhe pt tnant te lmcan n ligy a thoughtful respect for the rights last semester or summer session School of Forestry and Conserva- S u plotthatthefiln.can.nly lightly of the others may ease the prob- of attendance will receive a grade tion are expected to attend and touch upon the major points. This makes lem for all. of E in the course or courses un- any others interested are cordial- for loss of interest on the part of everyone, Signed: less this work is made up by March ly invited. particularly the audience. What looklike Robert C. Angell, Walter M. Roth, 10. Students wishing an extensiony v potentialities are occasionally introduced R. P. Briggs, Herbert G. Watkins of time beyond this date in order and .then dropped, while the dull stuff is University Committee on Parking to make up this work should file a Academic Notices kept continually before one's eyes - in petition addressed to the appro- technicolor. Miss Grable's legs, which usual- Engineering Open House will be piate official in their school with Botany I Make-up examination ly compensate for her lack of vocal ability, held Friday, April 18. There are Rm. 4 U.H. where it will be trans- for students with excused absenc- ar comn efleeingyevsileco committee positions open for mitted. es will be given Thurs., Feb. 27, 7T- are only fleetingly visible.c mitepsins pfrm . 9:30 p.m., 2033 N.S. those desiring appointment. Per- sons interested please call John The Emma M. and Florence L. History Final Examination At the State Morrison, 8612. Abbott Scholarships and the Eu- is Fi., eb.n28, tiom Never Say Goodbye ( Warners), Eleanore gene G. Fassett Scholarships. Eli- Make-up: Fri., Fe.8.4pimon Parer Errol GFlyn rFootball Tickets: A trial was gibility for these scholarships is Rm. G, Haven Hall. Students must EONN.social theme held last December 2 for those not restricted to those enrolled come with written permission ol TlE COMBINATPION of a sstudents accused of falsifying in any particular school or college instructor. with light comedy is never a good idea. their number of semesters in res- of the University. For the terms One detracts from the other, the outcome idence at the University in order on which they are awarded, refer History Language Examination being neither serious nor humorous. This to obtain upperclass seats at the to the bulletin on Scholarships, for the M.A. Degree: Fri, Feb. 28 unfortunately is true of Never Say Goodbye, home football games. The fol- Fellowships, Prizes and Loan 3 p.m., Rm. B, Haven Hall. Eac which tries to join the effect of divorce on lowing students were asked, by Funds. Candidates should make student is responsible for his own children with drawing room patter and mali to appear at this trial but application through the Dean (in dictionary; and must register at some semi-slapstick. The obvious has prob- were not in attendance: Herbert the Literary College, the Assist- the History Department Office be- ably sleabee sid thtthis pctre-R. Buckner, Lillian K. Cohn, Gor- ant Dean, and in the Engineering fore taking the examination ably already been said, that this picture don K. Craig, Ralph E. DeVore, ollege, Prof. H. W. Miller). of the should have never said hello. Such opinions Anna Mae M. Felts, Lee K. Fish- unit in which they are enrolled. Seminar in Engineering Me- are harsh, however, for it has some gay er, Daniel H. Gilbert, Morton M. Applications for these scholar- chanics:- The Engineering Me- moments. Harty, Orlin C. Heller, Joseph ships for the year 1947-48 must chanics Department is sponsoring -Joan Fiske Hooper, Burton Hunter. John S. be made by Saturday, March 15. a series' of discussions on the BARNABY