~'M*~ FQTJ~ THE MICHIGAN DATLY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1948 If Basis of World Security THE PARIS PEACE Conference yesterday fin- ally concluded its work on the Italian treaty, approving the French compromise proposals for the government of the Free Teritory of Trieste, but there was no indication that the distance between the opposing camps of the Eastern and Western blocs was any less. 1 Russia and the Balkan states were voted down 15 to 6 in the balloting on the Trieste question, and Molotov heatedly attacked the French compromise as a scheme to keep Trieste under British and American control. Earlier, Yugoslavia had charged that Britain and the U. S. wanted to make a military base of Trieste "for their future operations." The discussion of the Italian treaty was marked all the way through by discord and bick- ering between Russia and her satellites and the British-American bloc and its satellites. The Slav bloc charged that the U. S., had insulted both France and Yugoslavia during drafting of the treaty. Sen. Tom Connally made clear America's stand-pat policy against making any further concessions in the struggle, and denied the Slav statement that the governor of Trieste could be regarded as the agent for "any one foreign group of powers striving to use Trieste for their own ends." Vice-Premier Kardelj of Yugoslavia vehem- ently stated that the conference majority had deliberately avoided a just solution and had "imposed its will by means of a voting machine." "A decision keeping Yugoslavs out of their motherland is not only unjust but cannot last," he added. The conference has "missed the road to peace," he said bitterly, and the way must now be found by the Big Four's foreign min- isters. In the midst of this maze of mutual dis- trust - we may even say, mutual hatred - one sane voice stands out. It is that of Pre- 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. mier Jan Christian Smuts, who can always be depended upon to rise above conflicting inter- ests and give a wise, sensible assessment of a situation. In an address during the last week of de- liberations on the Italian treaty, Smuts warned the victor nations against dividing into two camps and making the conference "a signal of new dangers to come." "One main feature of the conference," he said, "has been disappoint- ing and discouraging to those who look beyond the present. In debate and outlook a cleavage has been revealed which, if not cleared up and removed, may bode ill for the future of this' conference and for world peace. "Those who scan the debates and votes will be struck by the constancy with which those whom I may call the Slav group on the one hand, and the Western group on the other, have voted against each other. It has been the revelation of this conference. In importance it may yet come to overshadow the conference itself." Smuts pointed out that the apparent dif- ference between East and West is .largely the aftermath of wartime enemy propaganda, and that the misfortune is that in the press and propaganda undue stress is laid on the differ- ences because they are more exciting to the public. He cited the final compromise reached on the Trieste question and the work of the Italian and Austrian delegations in settling the difficult problem in the South Tyrol as examples of "dealing satisfactorily with the human problems of this most radically di- vided continent." It may sound like undue optimism to hope, with Premier Smuts, for a time when "there will be neither East nor West and each will enjoy in peace the particular faith or ideology which suits his type of mind and outlook." However, it is more than a vague hope for sometime in the future; it is a vital necessity for the pres- ent. If we are to gain any measure of world se- curity, if the Paris peace conference is not to be "the overture to bigger struggles," we must strive to understand and be actively tolerant to all ideologies, and bring this understanding and tolerance into action in settling the immediate problems of the time. -Frances Paine _..r., o Cl6Ler O the 6kt0iICO Education and Teaching To The Editor: ET HIM who dares to teach, never cease to learn" has always been one of my favorite quotations, even though I still am unable to credit it to any author. Its significance, it seems to me, should be noted by every student here on campus. As I glance through several copies of The Daily that I have before me I notice a great many big names such as Byrnes, Ickes, and most pertinent at this time, Wallace. These names are connected with ideas and facts that are being read by everybody today. These men are leaders in their respective fields. Therefore we may look to men of business, writing, government and every other field as teachers. In the final analysis every person is in some way a teacher, but we are inclined to look to the university graduates as the big leaders in the world, the future teachers of the people as a whole. From The Daily, as well as all other news- papers, I can find only confusion and doubt in regard to most issues of national importance. Therefore it strikes me that there is some defi- ciency in the way that we college students are learning. Now I speak for the lowly civilian student. I think that the veterans have learned something that we shall never learn, God willing. In view of what they have done there seems only one thing that we can do. We must learn as much as we can now and continue to grow in our learning so that we may go out and teach in every phase of business. I suggest that we all take the above quotation to heart and absorb as much of the worthwhile education that Michigan has to offer and pre- pare to go out and teach. This world has a lot to learn! -Ruth Cook IT SO HAPPENS e Every Fact Documented Mason Hall Necromancy ONE OF OUR associates who indulges him- - self with philosophy classes brought forth the following bit. It seems that a rather ab- stract question was being debated in his class this week. And one of the students had a point he wished clarified. The student started humbly, "I'm not sure that I understand my own question . At this, a swami-like smile flickered across the Master Philosopher's countenance. "I'll ex- plain it to you after you ask it," he accommo- dated. Political Puree and Junket A FRIEND OF OURS mentioned recently that he believes he would be a more happy per- son if he became a communist. When we asked the obvious - why he doesn't do so- he answered coyly, "I can't change my mind fast enough." * 'I' * * Psychological Stand To the Editor: CERTAINLY no one can doubt the authenticity of most of the comments made by Mr. R. H. Markham in his lecture Sunday evening a week ago on Russia in the Balkans. No one will dis- agree that Russia' is presently a dictatorship and is using autocratic methods in its affairs in the Balkans. What was surprising, however, was that in all of Mr. Markham's statements and in all the subsequent questions asked by the audience there was not a solitary attempt to understand Russia's position and to wonder why she should feel it necessary to create a sphere of influence in Europe. Before following a policy of "getting tough with Russia" advocated by Mr. Byrnes, Mr. Markham, and other "sincere liberals" who evi- dently find themselves in somewhat of a dilem- ma, certain basic points must be recognized by all who would have an intelligent foreign policy. 1. A policy of being "firm" with any nation is very likely by a stream of circumstances un- foreseen at present to lead to war with that nation. 2. Until the present any nation could have survived war and often in our history it was not too much of a price to pay for certain val- ues in life. Another world war, however, with the use of Atomic Power would be so destruc- tive to our civilization that EVERY MEANS AT OUR COMMAND MUST BE EXERCISED TO PREVENT SUCH A WAR. 3. We must do everything we can to under- stand why Russia feels insecure in Eastern Eur- ope and why she must feel this desperate need for a defensive sphere of influence. 4. We must at all costs not condone Russia's methods in the Balkans and even in Russia it- self. But before we put such a condemnation into warlike action let us wipe our own slate clean and stop asking for our own peculiar brand of spheres of influence. Our more ethic- ally correct method in achieving this does not justify us. 5. We must stop defending Great Britain's imperialistic activities in the face of our "firm" policy with Russia. While we are being firm why not be filrm with Great Britain? Certainly we should take a "firm" stand against imperialisn and "despotic interference" in the affairs of smaller nations by larger na- tions. But how can we effectively take a stand against such measures, on a psychological not on a warlike plane, until both Great Britain and ourselves stop building our own spheres of in- fluence in all parts of the world. Who knows that once this is done we may find it unneces- sary for Russia to feel insecure in the world, and the Russian people who certainly do not want war might understand what we're driving at. -Capt. Gabriel D. Ofiesh I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Vital Struggles By SAMUEL GRAFTON AMERICAN LIBERALISM is fighting for its life in the coming Congressional elections, and the question before the republic is whether this warm, human, sometimes exuberant and naive, but always progressive and idealistic movement is going to continue as a settled trend in American life, or whether it is going to be knocked off the national stage for a term of years, anywhere from two to ten to forever. To put it another way, the issue is whether we can hope ever again to have a resourceful, optimis- tic government, capable of grinning a cockeyed American grin right into the teeth of trouble, and planning a way out. Maybe we can't. May- be there is no liberal movement. Maybe there never was; maybe Roosevelt was just a flash in the pan. But these are among the issues to be decided in the coming Congressional elections. It is important for liberals to understand that the issue is whether the liberal movement in A- merica is going to run governments, or only little magazines. The liberal (usually northern) who, because of recent events, announces that he is disgusted, that he is fed up, that he no longer cares, is, of course, helping to decide the issue. When he leaves the Democratic party, either to flirt with a third party idea, or to holler at Harry, or for a spell of settled non-feasance at the nearest bar, he does, in effect, what Repub- licans and conseivative Southern Democrats want him to do. It has been a settled feature of both Repub- lican and conservative Democratic policy to dis- credit and oust the liberal wing of the Demo- cratic party; it is for this that Republican edi- tors have wept that the great old Democratic party (which they loathe) has been taken over by wild men and hairy radicals from the North. The discouraged liberal, who leaves the Demor cratic party does so with the blessing of the Re- publican party and of the conservative Demo- crats. He crowns their success in capturing Mr. Truman; this is what they want the liberal to do, and he does not displease them as he plods his way toward minority organization and oblivion. In this decision, too, the liberal will have the complete approval of many Republicans and most conservative Democrats; for leaders in both groups are in favor of any development which tends to exile liberalism from the big leagues, which makes it seem minor league, irregular, ec- centric, or bizarre; they vastly prefer this to seeing liberalism safely ensconced in one of the major parties, and, occasionally, in control of it. Conservatives understand, even if liberals do not, that the issue is whether liberalism is to continue as an established, major trend in our American life, or whether it is to subside after its one big flare-up. In a sense, the fight between Republicans and Democrats is today, at least on the national level, a kind of sham battle; the real struggle is between conserva- tives in both parties and Northern and West- ern liberal Democrats; and you do not need three guesses as to who wins if the liberals go off mooning by themselves. And since the great conservative push has been precisely this, to deprive liberalism of sta- tus, to make it seem special and irregular, whacky, Communistic, or whatever, the issue of whether liberalism is viable is going to be set- tled by its ability to organize for local victories, largely in the Democratic, partly in sections of the Republican, party. Liberalism is fighting for a permanent lease of space on the American scene, fighting for the right to be a familiar of all out tomorrows, rather than a fondly re- membered transient. The struggle is in the highest degree im- portant and dramatic, too, to every American who knows a bit of his country's history; and the liberal of courage who sticks is out now is worth a dozen cry-babies carrying their wounds and hurts to the nearest corner. (Copyright 1946, by the N.Y. Post Syndicate) 52-20 Club Don't blame the 52-20 boys. Low-boiling-point editorialists have foolishly loosed the full flow of their corrosive denuncia- tion in berating the members of the,52-20 club, the former servicemen who are doing nothing but draw $20 a week from the government for 52 weeks. It should not be particularly surprising or unexpected that several hundred thousand ex- G. I.'s, who were lauded so enthusiastically dur- ing the war as "our valiant fihting men in the service of our country," are now content to sit back and let the country give them $20 a week. It didn't take long for inductees to learn that initiative and hard work don't pay off in the Army. They soon realized that it was much easier and just as effective to try to get by with the least amount of effort. They developed new capacities for bitterness and cynicism which they expressed by saying: "Take as much as you can get because you'll never be repaid in full measure." Then "veteran vote"-conscious politicians chartered the 52-20 Club by enacting the law which gave birth to the club. The law pro- vided for a handout, pure and simple, to men who had learned the hard way that industry and initiative don't count, and to take all they could get. The 52-20 Club is the natural product of vote-hungry politicians and ex-G. I.'s whose values have been warped by service experiences. -Stuart Finlayson Publication in The Daily Official Bul- letin is constru ive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the Assistant to the President, Room 1021Angell Hall,tby 3:30 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1946 VOL. LVI, No. 17 Notices Women's Housing Applications for the Spring Semester, 1947: 1. Women students now living in dormitories are reminded that their present contracts extend through the spring semester, 1947. Requests for release will be considered by the Of- fice of the Dean of Women only until Jan. 10, 1947. 2. Women students wishing to re- main in the same League Houses they now occupy may request the house- mothers for spring contracts imme- diately. Women students now living in League Houses who wish to move to other League Houses for the spring semester may secure application forms from the Office of the Dean of Women beginning Nov. 1, 1946. Between Nov. 1 and 15, those appli- cants will be referred to the first va- cancies available for the spring se- mester. 4. New women students not now on campus admitted to the University for the spring semester will be given the opportunity to apply for supple- mentary housing through the Office of the Dean of Women, beginning Nov. 15, 1946. (It is not possible to accept new dormitory applications for the spring semester, 1947, either from women now on campus or from women ad- mitted to the University.) Women's Housing Applications for the Fall Semester, 1947: 1. Women students living in dormi- tories in the spring semester, 1947, who wish to remain in the dormitor- ies for the fall and spring semesters of 1947-48, must file renewal forms with Housing Directors during the week of Mar. 3, 1947. No renewals will be accepted after Mar. 10, 1947. 2. Women students on campus in the spring semester, 1947, not living in dormitories who would like to ap- ply for dormitory accommodations for the fall and spring semesters of 1947-48, may do so at the Office of the Dean of Women on Apr. 1, 1947, and will be accepted up to the number of spaces reserved for non-freshmen. 3. Women tentatively admitted to the University with advanced stand- ing for the fall semester, 1947, may apply for supplementary housing, be- ginning Nov. 15, 1946, and will be re- ferred for definite reservations after Apr. 15, 1947. 4. Women tentatively admitted to the University as freshmen for the fall semester 1947, may apply for dormitory accommodations beginning Nov. 15, 1946, and will be accepted up to the number of spaces reserved for freshmen. 5. Women students on campus in the spring semester, 1947, may apply for supplementary housing for the fall semester, 1947, at the Office of the Dean of Women. (Dormitory applications will be ac- cepted only from those women stu- dents whom the Office of the Dean of Women expects to be able to ac- commodate in dormitories, Others will be instructed immediately to ap- ply for supplementary housing. Stu- dents may apply for only one type of housing.) Keep your hands to yourself DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Lectures All Air Corps Reserve Officers should attend RQA meeting Tues., Oct. 15, at 7:00 p.m., Michigan Union, for further details with regard to their bonus. University Lecture: G e o r g e s Connes, Dean of the Faculty of Let- ters, University of Dijon, France, will speak on the subject, "A French City under the Nazis," at 4:15 p.m., Mon., Oct. 14, in the Rackham Amphithea- ter; auspices of the Department of Romance Languages. Academic Notices History Final Examination Make- Up: Fri., Oct. 18, at 4:00 p.m. Rm. C, Haven Hall. Students must come with written permission of instructor. German Departmental Library Hours, Fall Term: 1:30-4:30 p.m. Mon. through Fri. 8:00-12:00 a.m. Sat., 204 University Hall. Mathematics 300: The Orientation seminar will meet Mon., Oct. 14, at 7:00 p.m. in Rm. 3001 Angell Hall. Concerts Faculty Recital: Andrew B. White, baritone, Professor' of Voice in the School of Music, will present a pro- gram at 8:30 Tuesday evening, Oct. 15, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Program: Compositions by Richard Strauss, a group of French songs, the aria Salome! Salome! from Mas- senet's "Herodiade," five English songs by Rachmaninoff, Robert Mac- Gimsey, Deems Taylor, and Maurice Barow. The public is invited. Carillon Recital: By Sidney F. Giles, Assistant Carillonneur, at 3:00 Sunday afternoon, Oct. 14. Program: Prelude and Fugue by Franssen, Ave Marie, by Schubert, Consolation by Mendelssohn; Pizzicato by DeLibes, Theme with Variations by Haydn; Tempo di gavotta e double di tempo by Willen de Fesch, First Fantasia by Benoit, and Chaconne by Durand. Events Today The Art Cinema League presents "PROUD VALLEY," a fine British drama based on the mining valleys of Wales starring singing Paul Robeson and a large cast tonight at 8:30. Res- ervations phone 6300. Dr. Carl Henry, of the Northern Baptist Theological Seminary in Chi- cago, will speak at a supper-discus- sion meeting Saturday at 6:00 in Lane Hall. For reservations call 4121 Ext. 2148 before 10:00 Saturday morning. Open House: Methodist students and friends will meet in the Pine Room after the game today. The Westminster Guild will meet after the game at the First Presby- terian Church. Supper will be served about 5:30 p.m. Open house: B'nai B'rith Hillel will hold open house after the game. Coming Events The Sociedad Hispanica invites you to meet for a coke and informal Spanish conversation in the Grill Room of the League at 4:00 p.m. on Mon., Oct. 14. Russky Kruzhok, Russian Circle, will not hold a meeting this Monday. The next meeting will be held Mon., Oct. 21. The Wesleyan Guild will meet at 5:30 Sunday afternoon in the Meth- odist Church. Prof. Bennett Weaver of the English Dept., will speak on "The Values of Life." Worship, a so- Aliaskan Statehood FOR ECONOMIC and military rea- sons Alaska has become increas- ingly vital to the UnitedStates. These factors should be considered carefully when discussion of Alaskan state- hood comes up at the next session of Congress. President Truman and Secretary of Interior Krug have expressed favor of statehood for Alaska. The yesults of the referendum in the territory held this week indicate that the peo- ple voted almost two to one for Alaska to becomesthe 49th state. Congress now must make the final decision. They should consider both the best interests of Alaska and the country as a whole. The military importance of Alaska cannot be overestimated. It is stra- tegically placed at the gateway to the American held Arctic area and is di- rectly across the Bering Strait from Russia. Military leaders believe that any long range attack on this country is likely to come from the Arctic and this area is being forfeited to prevent such offensive. However, since the hope of the world is for peace and if such a hope is realized, strategic military bases such as Alaska will not need' to be developed, one should take a look at the other desirable features of this area. Alaska is a sparsely populated, un- developed area with a promise for a great future. It is an opportunity for Americans to conquer another wilderness. And this wilderness is rich. The mineral resources of Alaska are large and varied and afford great promise for future industrialization. Gold, coal, limestone, iron, platinum, mercury, antimony and tin are among those now mined in limited quanti- ties. At present the leading Alaskan in- dustry is sea food, but even here room for further expansion exists. Re- sources of agriculture, forests and furs are waiting to be tapped. Among the questions involved in statehood are those concerning the tax problem for the area, home rule and civic improvements. Proponents contend that Alska would be able to retain more of the wealth produced in the area for her own improvement if she were given statehood. In ad- dition, Alaska would be made more attractive to settlers. Those in the territory who oppose statehood base their objections on the grounds that they would be sub- ject to a number of taxes from which they are now exempt. Statehood in- volves responsibilities as well as bene- fits, but the majority of the people seem willing to accept this. There are, of course, drawbacks to development, but these are no great- er than those that confronted the early settlers and industrializers of the United States. By taking Alaska into the Union, we would merely be carrying out the tradition of bring- ing new territories under the consti- tution as they develop. Alaska, it is true, is not a con- tiguous area in relation to the.rest of the country, but distance no longer lends the barriers of former times. Alaska is far closer in time to any part of the country than California was to New York or New England in 1850. Congress can, by acting favorably in regard to Alaskan statehood, pave the way for further developments of this area and other vital territories of the United States.. There is still a great deal of room for growth and expansion in the American economy. -Phyllis L. Kaye W~orld flank POLICIES that will guide the oper- ations of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund through their first year of actual op- erations are now being formulated in Washington. Weeks will go by, however, before the Bank is ready to finance recon- struction loans for member countries, and it will be months before the world can judge the effectiveness of the two institutions created to strengthen and stabilize international finances. -World Report Fifty-Seventh Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the author- ity of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Robert Goldman........Managing Editor Milton Freudenheim....Editorial Director Clayton Dickey.................City Editor Mary Brush..............Associate Editor Ann Kutz.................Associate Editor Paul Harsha...............Associate Editor Clark Baker..................Sports Editor Joan Wilk.................Women's Editor Lynne Ford......Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Robert E. Potter.......Business Manager Evelyn Mills... Associate Business Manager Janet Cork.... Associate Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 I I fl iI. I BARNABY Gentlemen-We are gathered together to I had my hand up first- Let's play school write a syllabus for our schools. . . To Leave us discuss O'Malley, do you frown .. .,_I-.R ..n.. outside, Barnaby.