THE MICHIGAN r) A TI N 4 SUNDAY. R X 1441 _. .-- _ _ ... .L ~.__Z_ .IT.RE..J_.. - - - .--i- -,TaC11 Vai /d L#AJa%* I, U.S. Palestine Decision More Reasonable j'E DECISION of the United States to scuttle its policy toward Palestine has been aptly described by Representative Klein as "the most terrible sell-out of the common people since Munich." The fact that a more reasonable and justifiable al- ternative has been substituted for partition- ing can scarcely cushion the impact of these words nor erase the misery that this betray- al has bred. The decision to establish a trusteeship in Palestine represents the acceptance of a middle, or moderate, course. The State De- partment reached this decision after its ori- ginal bungling efforts had made clear the impracticality of executing the partition. Acceptance of a trusteeship. program in no way relieves the Department of its initial misguided actions. The partition program was impractical because (1) it violated the rights of the Arabs in their own land, (2) it set up addi- tional barriers to future Jewish-Arab co- operation and (3) it was incapable of being supported by the present machinery of the United Nations. Trusteeship, on the other hand, may or may not serve to foster cooperation between the Jews and the Arabs. At any rate, it isj a step in the path that leads to cooperation, it is more tenable than the objectives es- poused by political Zionists and it is cap- able of ameliorating the critical develop- ments in Palestine until a more rational plan than partitioning can be effected. The creation of a binational state in Pal- estine has been suggested by a number of observers-not excluding some prominent Jews-of that area. These observers point, perhaps over-optimistically, to the favorable existence of a similar state in Switzerland and see no reason why the same sort of arrangement cannot be developed in Pales- tine. Thus, while the decision to abandon partitioning does no credit to the prestige of either the United States or the Uni- ted Nations and while the trusteeship plan many not prove to be the optimum policy-this decision, nevertheless, is the Only. one that could have been logically made in the present and unfortunate cir- cumstances. -Kenneth Lowe ditorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: ARTHUR HIGBEE Futile Leadership PRESIDENT TRUMAN is in a fine fettle this week-the proposal to abandon the UN partition plan for Palestine reached a new peak in the fine qualities of leadership the United States has to offer the world. Sordid politics have been the tradition in dealing with the Holy Land problem. The good-will and oil of the Arab states has al- ways taken precedent over the needs and sufferings of human beings. In late August when the United Nations Commission on Palestine drew up the partition plan, the Jewish agencies, although they thought it represented a sacrifice, welcomed the plan as the first constructive proposal offered. The Arabs, unwilling to compromise on any plan, denounced the commission's report as usual. For seven months now the Arabs and the Jews have been fighting it out while the United Nations, weakend by the inaction of two of its strongest members, hopelessly tried to find a way to enforce the partition. Our representative to the UN, Herschel V. Johnson, in backing the partition plan, recommended on Oct. 11 that a "special,. constabulary or a police force be recruited on a voluntary basis by the UN" be estab- lished to enforce the plan. On Oct. 13 the Soviet Union joined the United States' en- dorsement of partition. Then on Oct. 31 the United States drop- ped its. proposal for a "constabulary, sug- gested instead that partition be postponed until July 1948, and that Britain remain in command until then. Nov. 3, Russia rejected the United States' plan and suggested that the United Nations take hold on May 1, 1948 until partition took place. U.S. representative Johnson staunch- ly defended partition. Britain's Sir Alex- ander Cadogan warned the UN that Jew- ish and Arab governments or militia would not be permitted in any areas until the British left. Now Truman stands up on his hind legs and waves aside our lukewarm backing of partition. Some people have used "selling out" to describe his reversal of tactics; others call it typical of Truman's leader- ship in world affairs. Obviously the same problem will be present whether trustee- .ship or partition is the final decision, and Truman has chosen to ignore the whole thing with the White House "no comment." Innocuous support, dramatic reversals, no leadership whatsoever or bypassing the UN entirely have been the keynotes of our par- ticipation in world government. If we are to regain the respect we have lost since the death of President Roosevelt, our famous "get tough" policy must function in more constructive areas. -Lida Dailes BOOKS THE MEANING OF TREASON, Rebecca West, Viking, New York, $3.50, 307 pages. AT A TIME when treason is not merely a matter of a few individual misfits but is also an indication of a diseased society, an analysis of the forces that mold the traitor can be of immense value. Rebecca West is thoroughly aware of the indicative nature of treason. For that reason her book is more than the supreme job of reporting, that on its lowest level it undeniably is. Miss West has penetrated below the surface historical facts of the 'trials of three con- temporary English traitors and found a meaning that not only unifies the diverse facts but views the unity with an approach to solution. The three traitors whose histories are traced in detail are not picked at random. They are representative of groups, each different in background and motivation, but all of them equally guilty. Because he was sane and always aware of his actions, be- cause he had a chance to play a different role, William Joyce is the most important and dangerous of the three. He came to be known to the world as "Lord Haw Haw" during his broadcasts from Germany. Miss West has portrayed Joyc as a man curi- ously dogged by a malignant fate, consist- ing largely of family idiosyncracies and a confused, misdirected nationalism. Order- ing the odd events of his early life and des- cribing his physical and mental states, she reconstructs the forces that created a curi- ous creature who at almost any other per- iod of history would have been quite harm- less. It was the combination of his own unfortunate background, his social eco- nomic position which was far below that of his intellect, and the situation of society which fostered William Joyce. In contrast to his sanity and awareness the other two figures are arranged: the in- sane and the innocent. The insane ele- ment is exemplified in the figure of John Amery, wild, blacksheep of a highly respect- ed family. He was not technically insane to be sure, but there was the flavor of mad- ness about every wild, complicated, confus- ed event of his life. His acts were not the result of a reasoning intellect such as Joy- ce's. Miss West characterizes them as be- ing born of an adolescent desire for ex- citement combined with an almost unique gift for complication. And the other h'and there was a child named Kenneth Edward, who was pulled into the whole conflagra- tion when he was still a child, and wh was never anything else. He is typical of=those of whom the author says, "There were also the children among the traitors, the ones who thought like children, and felt like children, and were treacherous as children are, without malice .. All of these different yet similar figures are bound together by the thesis, which i stated in different forms many times. At one point in the discussion of John Amery, Miss West says, "For people do not become traitors unless they are unable to fit into the society into which they were born, and the cause of that incapacity in their case is a disturbig society which catches those around them off their guard and therefore provokes them in their turn to strange be- haviour." This is perhaps as succinct a statement of her general viewpoint as she gives. But it is broadened in the Epilogue to a treatment of the general ills of con- temporary society: "The trouble about man is twofold. He cannot learn truths which are too complicated; he forgets truths which are too simple." We have forgotten the positive values which our predecessors knew to be true because we have lost track of our spiritual tradition. The values will emerge again to be recognized only out of the very negation of them. In spite of certain inconsistencies and misjudgements, "The Meaning of Treason" is on the whole sound, and convincing. The basic inconsistency lies in the attempt to reconcile a psychological and sociological analysis of the forces that molded such traitors, with a strong sense of personal moral responsibility. It is often difficult to see how Miss West achieves the reconcili- ation, but this does not imply impossibility. She comes close when she says of such men as William Joyce, "These men were fort- unate in their misfortune, for they were given by their destinies the chance to wrestle with reality, to argue with the uni- verse, to defend the revelations which they believed had been made to their spirits; and that is man's glory. But treason also takes to itself the madmen and the children, and for them there is no glory." Perhaps the weakest link in the factual argument is in the flights of fancy Miss West indulges in while trying to reconstruct the mental or psychological atmosphere of her traitors. Some of it rests on common sense. Much more of it, however, is pure conjecture. If it is read as nothing more than conjecture, it is delightful and quite successful in creating people, who are com- plex as individuals are, rather than simply collections of facts about their exterioi: lives. Certainly the basic assumption that all these people, and particularly Joyce, led active internal lives, had emotions and thoughts just as other people, is valid. But the emotions ascribed to them are the work- inks of a highly imaginative mind, not their own by any means. Letters to the Editor . Daily-Dworsky, Love, "Room for one more to campus, son!" DAILY_ OFFICIAL BULLETIN 01' Mae Reprinted from The Battalion, Texas A. & M. College. W HY SHILLY-SHALLY in this business about electing some General as Presi- dent this fall? Why not go all the way? Despite the howls from veterans which are arising all over the country, and the formation among ex-soldiers and GI stu- dents of "Anti-MacArthur Clubs," we will back MacArthur to the extent of suggesting a completely military administration and cabinet. No doubt it would work as well in the. United States as in Tokio. (Did we hear a question?) For President of the United States we want General of the Army Douglas MacAr- thur. We believe that "Dug-out Douggie" w President Student Guide EVERY SEMESTER the perennial ques- tion confronts the student of what cour'- ses and instructors to elect. Next semester, the faculty is finally com- ing through with a plan for faculty evalua- tion, but a plan, unfortunately, which is bound to be useless to the student in every respect. Under the proposed system, com- mittees composed entirely of faculty mem- bers will make the final appraisal based in part on student rating sheets. Such a plan is bound to be weighted with faculty opin- ion. But the most obvious limitation of the plan is that results of the committee's ap- praisal will not be published for the stu- dents, who after all are directly concerned. A student evaluation system of faculty AND courses has been employed at Har- vard for many, years with much success and provides an excellent example for a similar plan on campus. Published by the Harvard Crimson under no faculty supervision, and called the "Con- fidential Guide to Freshman Courses" it gives the unofficial lowdown on courses and faculty members. It is compiled from stu- dent rating sheets and is distributed to all students at the university. The system is valued highly by students and faculty alike. It has resulted in the removal of incompetent men from the staff when student evaluation strongly indicated such. Here at the University there is no effec- tive way for student opinion to be express- (as he was affectionately called by the men under him) will be able to get the vote of the men who served in the Pacific. Since several million men served in this theatre, he ought to be able to get these votes as well as those of these men's families and friends. Many people are worried whether the General will come back and run for the Presidency. But, in the General's own words, "I shall return." For Vice-President we suggest Major Gen- eral Howland D. "Howlin' Mad" Smith of the Marines. This selection is only natural since it will consolidate the ex-Leathernecks and therefore prevent a split vote in the party. For Secretary of State we will approve Lieut. Gen. John C. H. "Courthouse" Lee. His deft diplomacy will enable him to handle our diplomatic problems tactfully. For Secretary of Treasury our choice is naturally Brig. Gen. Bennett E. Meyers. We have selected Meyers for this key posi- tion because we feel that he has done such a good job with finances in the past. For Secretary of Defense we select Rear Admiral Husband E. Kimmel of Pearl Har- bor fame. We feel that his record shows that he has always been on the alert and will be an ideal man for this spot. We will fill the Attorney General slot with Col. James Killian. He is one candi- date who needs no boosting. His record at the Litchfield Detention Camp speaks for itself. What couldn't he do with the FBI? For Postmaster General we hesitate in naming our man. However, we have finally decided to give the job to Brigadier General (ret.) Elliot Roosevelt. His ability to get his dog shipped via air express during the war proves that he will be a most capable man. For Secretary of Agriculture we are ad- vocating Lt. Gen. Lucius D. Clay. His experi- ence in the dairy business in Frankfurt, Germany, will stand him in good stead for this task. For Secretary of the Interior, we nomi- nate the President's physician, Brig. Gen. Wallace H. Graham. Many people will think that a doctor would not be able to fill this position. However, we believe that General Graham's experience in the grain market will enable him to handle the job superbly. For Secretary of Labor we are backing Maj. Gen. Ben "Yoo Hoo" Lear. His ability (Continued from Page 2) Course. Complete details concern- ing the various positions may be obtained at the Bureau. Automatic Electric Company will have a representative here on Wed., March 24, to interview me- chanical and electrical engineers. Kemper Insurance Company will have two representatives here on Thurs., March 25, to interview men for their College Training Pro- gram. They have openings in many departments, particularly in un- derwriting, claim, accounting, and engineering departments. Kroger Company will have two representatives here on Thursday and Friday, March 25 and 26 to interview men for merchandising, accounting, auditing, real estate, personnel, warehousing, transpor- tation, baking and food manu- facturing. Connecticut General Insurance Company will have a representa- tive here on Fri., March 26, to in- terview men for their sales, actu- arial and claims departments. For complete information and appointments with the companies mentioned, call at the Bureau of Appointments. The General Electric Company will have a representative here on Thurs., March 25, to interview men interested in advertising and sales promotion. Writing or journalism experience preferred, Call exten- sion 371 for appointments. University Community Center: Willow Run Village: Mon., Mar. 22, 8 p.m., Wives' Club Style Show committees. Tues., Mar, 23, 8 p.m., Bridge Session. Wed., Mar. 24, 8 p.m., Plays and Games Group. Thurs., Mar. 25, 8 p.m., Arts and Crafts Workshop. Sat., Mar. 27, 3-4:30 p.m., Chil- dren's Party, sponsored by the Vil- lage Church Fellowship. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for David Murray Gates, Physics; thesis: "An analysis of the Infrared Spec- tra of the Normal Paraffin Hydro- carbons and the Far-Infrared Spectra of Carbon Tetrachloride," East Council Room, 3 p.m., Tues., March 23, Rackham Bldg. Chair- man, D. M. Dennison. Mathematics Colloquium: Tues., March 23, 4 p m. in Rm. 3201, An- gell Hall. Prof. A. H. Copeland will speak on "A New Formal Logic Based on the Theory of Ideals." Exhibition Museum of Archaeology, 434 S. State Street: "Life in a Roman Town in Egypt," closes March 28. Hours: Tuesday through Friday, 9-12, 2-5; Saturday, 9-12; Sunday, 3-5. Events Today Radio Program: 9:15-9:45 a.m., WJR-Hymns of Freedom, Donald Plott, Music Di- rector. 6:30-6:45 p.m., WPAG-"Your Money"-Willard J. Eiteman and Douglas H. Hayes. Michigan Sailing Club: Meet 9 a.m., Michigan Union, for Whit- more Lake. U. of M. Hot Record Society: Live Jam Session, Michigan League Ballroom, 8 p.m. Everyone invited. Student Religious Groups: Congregational-Disciples Guild: Supper, 6 p.m., Memorial Christian Church. Speaker: Rev. Kenneth L. Potee, Secretary of the Disciples of Christ Missions in Central Pro- vince, India. Lutheran Student Association: Choir Rehearsal, 4 p.m. Supper meeting, 6 p.m., Zion Lutheran Parish Hall. Luthean World Ac- tion movie, "The March of Faiths," will be shown. Roger Williams Guild: Supper 6 p.m. Palm Sunday Worship Serv- ice will follow. The Westminster Guild will be guests. Unitarian Student Group will meet at 12:15 in conjunction with the Fellowship Dinner. Speaker: Dr. Rensis Likert. Westminster Guild will meet with the Roger Williams Guild at the Baptist Guild house at 6 p.m. for a Palm Sunday program. Wesley Foundation: Interna- tional tea honoring Islamic stu- dents, 3-5 p.m. Regular guild meet- ing at 5:30 will conclude the series on contemporary religions. Stu- dent panel: "What is Fundamental in Christianity." Supper meeting, 6:30 p.m. Willow Run Village Church Fel- lowship: Village Interdenomina- tional Church Fellowship, Univer- sity Community Center, Willow Village Divine Worship: 10:45 a.m. Church School and Nursery same hour. Executive Committee meet- ing, 8 p~m., Library. Coniltg Fveits Symposium: Report by the fac- ulty of the Sociology Department on their plan for integrated re- search studies. 4 p.m., March 22, East Conference Room, Rackhanm Hall. Sponsored by Alpha Kappa Delta. Public invited. Music Forum "Planning Cocert Careers," Dr. W. Raymond Ken- dall Chairman of Music School Faculty Panel, composed of Pro- fessors Philip Duey, Vocal Conduc- tor; Wayne Dunlap, Orchestra Conductor; Oliver Edel, 'Cellist; Mischa Meller, Pianist, and An- drew White, Baritone. Mon., March 22, 8:30 p.m., Rackham As- sembly Hall. The public is invited. Open discussion. Sponsored by Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia. Water Safety Instructor's Course will be conducted by the Red Cross between May 3 and 31, Intramural Pool, and is open to both men and (Continue I on Page 7) EDITOR'S NOTE: Because The Daily prints every letter to the editor re- ceived (which is signed, 300 words or less in length, and In good taste) we remind our readers that the views expressed in letters are those of the writers only. Letters of more than 300 words are shortened, printed or omitted at the discretion of the edi- torial director. G;roup Recogii it ion To the Editor: IN REGARD to the question of recognizing student organizations the following may be of interest. It is part of a statement recently adopted by the Faculty Senate of the University of Connecticut (in- cidentally, it came out of a fracus over the local American Youth for Democracy chapter - MYDA's counterpart therein which AYD was not banned). "The University recognizes the right of any group of students to form a voluntary organization for any purpose not forbidden by law. If an organization composed chief- ly . . . of students' desires to hold meetings in University buildings, it is required to have an adviser who is a member of the professional staf f . . . and to 'file with the Di- rector of Student Personnel such information as he may require about its purposes, officers, mem- bership, dues, and the like. An or- ganization which has fulfilled these requirements is called a reg- istered organization.. . "So far as its facilities permit, the University will provide each registered organization with suit- able meeting places without charge and will endeavor to en- courage and protect complete free- dom of expression within the law in meetings of such organizations. The responsibility for any views expressed in such meetings is sole- ly that of the individuals con- cerned; and the University is not to be held to approve or disap- prove such views, whatever their nature, but to be concerned ex- clusively with the discharge of its educational obligation to facilitate free discussion of all points of view to the extent guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States and of the State of Connecticut. The University does not pass upon the qualifications of speakers whom registered organizations in- vite to address them, now, except as to availability of space, on the number or size of meetings which may be held." The University of Michigan can establish a much freer intellectual atmosphere here-and maintain face thru the State-by adopting and giving wide publicity to a pol- icy statement similar to the above. Pete Hill Membership Figures To the Editor: FOR SOME time now, the front page and editorial page of the Daily have been devoted almost exclusively to the actions, plans, and ideas of ADA, IRA, YPCM, MCAF, SLID. When this formidable array of alphabet soup takes a stand on some issue, it would seem to the reader that a large portion of the -student body is represented. Some membership figures might prove interesting. In the Fall Term 1947-48, these five organizations had a total membership of 160. Of this num- ber, 20 held membership in two organizations, and 10 held mem- bership in three. This means that these five organizations rep- resented 150 students, or a little more than seven-tenths of one per cent of the total enrollment. Spring semester found member- ship down to 90, or a little over three-tenths of one per cent of the student body. If you've been worried that the whole campus is going red, relax. -B. Strickland Durant .' ."* '!Vichii, u r Upheld To the Editor;: N REGARD TO your March 17 front-page article announcing the formation of the "MacArthur for Emperor" club, may I say that I consider it in extremely bad taste. Certainly a gentleman of intellectual capacity, such as Prof. Karl Litzenberg as a member of the faculty must possess, should have something more constructive to do than join such an organiza- tion, much less co-sponsor it. Cer- tainly their group is devoted - through its very name-to a de- structive policy and in no way to a constructive policy. Their ap- proach seems almost vindictive. I am not a supporter of General MacArthur for President or for any other office, but feel a grave injustice is being done to a fine man through the medium of a group of rather thin minds. Mr. William B. Dickinson, United Press War correspondent in the recent war, writes in an article: "MacArthur's bravery, of course, had been established long before the second World War. In World War I he rose from major to com- mand of the famous 42nd Rainbow division with the temporary rank of brigadier-general, and the then secretary of war, Newton D. Baker, called him America's "greatest front-line fighting general." "He was twice wounded, once gassed, and was decorated 15 times. It is on the record that, as a major and armed only with a riding crop, he led a raiding party into No Man's Land and returned with eight German prisoners." Mr. Dickinson further estab- 'lishes the fact that the "Dugout Doug" slur was the result of a frustrated young air 'force officer who apparently could find no oth- er outlet for his expressions. Mr. Dickinson neither supports or ad- vocates the General for the presi- dency, but objectively discusses the man's merits and weaknesses. I think Mr. Litzenberg and his organization would do well to fol- low this pattern and offer some objective, but constructive criti- cism as to their opposition of Gen- eral MacArthur for public office. Their resort to irrational emotion- alism-"I shall return-to Mil- waukee"-speaks poorly for their movement. ---Charles L. Lyle Party Line IT WOULD APPEAR to the out- sider reading the letter page of the Daily that a large proportion of its readers are Communists or quasi-Communists, so plentiful is their correspondence. Since this apparently must be so, and since this is an educational institution, how about a little new material in the party line? The old platitudes about the "kept press," "Wall Street dictators" and "decaying capitalism" (Mr. Ernest Ellis), "monopoly capital attack on American living standards and civil liberties" and "imperialistic economic penetration" (Mr. Bill Carter), are merely indicative to the reader that no new ideas are present. Such phrases are fine for the chronic "have-nots" who crave any explanation of their failure that will blame others. But for the high intellectual standards of a university student body, let's have some real food for thought. I'm fed up with this rot that sounds so much like the mouthings of the wartime radio propaganda of an enemy. -Walter T. Arnold Fifty-Eighth Year t To the Editor: , r 4 p 11 Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board In Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff John Campbell .......Managing Editm Dick Maloy..............City Editor HarrLett Friedman .. Editorial Director Lida Dailes.... ,...... Associate Editor Joan Katz.............Associate Editor Fred Schott......... Associate Editor Dick Kraus ..............Sports Editor Bob Lent ......Associate Sports Editor Joyce Johnson.......Women's Editor Jean Whitney Associate Women's Editor Bess Hayes ................. Librarian Business Staff Nancy Helmick .......General Manage. Jeanne Swendeman ......Ad. Manager Edwin Schneider .. Finance Manager DicknHalt ....Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication 4 all news dispatched credited to it of otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of re-publication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Off ice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. Member Associated Collegiate Press 1947-48 L 4 BARNABY..4 - - - r- - - " I - -. - iI -~ M ___ _- I