?AGX FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, AUGUST 12, 1945 .. _I Fit-ifthYat# Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Truman Liquidates Old Cabinet DEMOCRACY FOR THE DEFEATED: Political Action for Occupied Nations 4 - . ! , IN-- r . Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control% of Student Publications. The Summer Daily is pub- lished every day during the week except Monday and Tuesday. Editorial Staff Ray Dixon Margaret Farmer Betty Roth Bill Mullendore Dick Strickland ., . .Managing Editor . , . . Associate Editor * * * . Associate Editor . . . . . Sports Editor Business Staff . . . . Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of re- * publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTI3ING DY National Advertising Service, Inc. College PxA shers Representative 420 MADISON Ave. A NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO -BOSTON - LOS ANGELBS - SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR: KRAFT AND FRANZ Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON - Harry Truman has now moved faster in cleaning out an inherited cabinet than any other vice-president succeed- ing to the presidency. In the short period of two months, he has already decapitated six Roosevelt cabineteers. Calvin Coolidge, the last vice-president who succeeded to the presidency, had three cabinet resignations forced upon him by the Teapot Dome scandals - Secretary of Interior Fall, Secretary of the Navy Denby and Attorney Gen- eral Dougherty. Aside from this, however, he kept most of the Harding cabinet. Teddy Roosevelt, who succeeded President McKinley after the latter's death, also made changes much more slowly in the McKinley cab- inet. It was not until about a year after Mc- Kinley's death that T. R. began bringing in his own friends. On the other hand, Truman, nominated only because of Roosevelt's support at.Chi- cago, and elected on a pledge to support Roosevelt policies, has proceeded to dump two-thirds of the Roosevelt cabinet. While a lot of house-cleaning was needed, the big question in the minds of politicos is whether Truman will now make further chan- ges. Four of the old Roosevelt cabinet re- main: Secretary of the Interior Ickes, oldest FDR appointee in years of service; Secretary of Commerce Wallace, who would have served an equal length of time with Ickes except for his four years as Vice-President; Secretary of War Stimson and Secretary of Navy For- restal, both relative newcomers and neither one close to Roosevelt. Truman Steps on Tloes SOME POLITICAL leaders (and this does not include Bob Hannegan) are hoping Truman will now be a little more cautious in firing the old Roosevelt cabinet for this reason: they point out that already has stirred up a large amount of ill-will. For instance, Ed Stettinius, the ex-Secretary of State, is boiling mad, and so are his friends. No one has heard from Ed since he got the gate right after San Francisco. Attorney General Biddle's friends are also peeved at the way he was suddenly thrown out, while Henry Morgen- thau's friends aren't happy either. Furthermore, Truman stepped on some toes needlessly. Despite his deserved reputation for getting along with Congress, he forgot one of the cardinal points of Congressional co- operation when he appointed Clinton Ander- son as Secretary of Agriculture. He forgot to consult the two New Mexican senators, Hatch and Chavez, from Anderson's state. They are good friends of Truman's, but they were peeved. Also when Truman appointed Judge Vinson BY WILLIAM S. GOLDSTEIN Liberal Education VITHTHE WAR rapidly coming to an end, ten million young men must stop and take stock. The war, the same war that seemed to be eternally with us, is rapidly clearing away. Young men in America can no longer dodge that problem of self-decision, that problem of ele- ciding to allocate our most valuable resource, the individual. These young men must now decide what they are going to do. Some will go into business, the greater share of them. Others, the young ones, will go on to college. But deciding to go to col- lege is not, enough. What they will get from college ist more important. A most challenging article, "A Letter to a Seventeen-Year-Old Son," offering guidance to young men, appears in this month's issue of Harpers Magazine. Although the recent war news alters its significance, there is much of value in it. The anonymous author of this article writes a letter of advice to his 17-year-old son. He tells his son that merely going into the army does not offer a proper adjustment to life. Entering the army is not a voluntary approach to a life goal, but is rather an obligation that every citizen is willing to meet, roughly an- alagous to paying taxes. To go to school and to what school to go and what to get out of that school are the issues facing the 17-year- old. The father, in advising his son, stresses the importance of word subjects. While there is growing emphasis today on materialism, this father tells his son that nothing is more im- portant than language. It is language that holds all of society together and man's technological achievements would go for naught had there not been language to translate these ideas into a .common, denominator. Advising his son further, he claims that next to language the most important developments are the sciences of politics and economics. The father's ,comment is worth quoting: "Sheep have a herd instinct that tells them to get under a sheltering bank when they smell a blizzard coming., Men have no political instinct to protect them. Instead, we have history which takes the place of instinct. A people which doesn't know history is like a sheep which can't smell a wolf in the wind. In a democracy a citi- zen cannot entirely delegate to experts his duty of thinking (language) and his share in exer- cising the herd instinct for self-preservation (history)." The importance of a non-materialistic so- ciety is emphasized again and again. The father says, "The technicians will always be the slaves to the word artists until the tech- nicians learn how to handle people, how to think logically, outside their own narrow fields, how to talk,'and how to live." This all leads the father to his important conclusion. He, advises his son .to study the lib- eral arts, the humanities, the achievements of the human races. It' is these humanities that make men know what to fight for or whether to fight at all. It is the humanities, the liberal arts if you please, that ennoble the soul, streng- then society, and make life worth living. -The challenge is thrown, out to the young col- lege student. The purpose of the college edu- cation is to understand human life. Early spe- cialization of 'courses or 'concentration in the physical sciences deprives the indvidual of this undrstanding. of Kentucky to be Secretary of he Treasury, he failed to consult the two Democratic senators from that state - Barkley and Chandler. Bark- ley, who is Truman's Senate floor leader, cer- tainly thought he had a right to be consulted, and he was peeved. Morgenthau Gets Slapped HOWEVER, none of these irritations compare with the deep hurt felt by Henry Morgen- thau's friends when he was thrown out of the cabinet. Jewish people generally had taken pride in the honest, fearless job Henry Morgenthau had done as Secretary of the Treasury. But what really hurt was not losing one of their faith from the cabinet, but the announcement that Truman and Byrnes would ride separately to Potsdam, thus leaving the implication that they would take no chance on a Jew's succeed- ing to the Presidency. On top of this came the sudden, abrupt message from Truman in mid- ocean asking Morgenthau to retire immediately. (Copyright, 1945, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Dminic Says WITH THE LABOR victory in Britain, Chris- tianity versus Socialism has become a live issue around the globe. This is true first, because Christianity has made its case as a universal way of life. It is more than Church, more than a system of belief, more than an ethical code for action, more than one of the several reli- gions of mankind any one of which can serve its people while they are primitive. The religion of Jesus has made its case as an integrity among men akin to the basic integrity within the struc- ture of the Universe. As such we have an ideal for persons, a goal for such groups as the family, an aim which will endure scrutiny or if accepted by all would enhance persons as well as streng- then society. It is true secondly, because, in our own time Communism has been accepted as the dynamic force which at once upset Europe with a so- cial revolution. Here is a force which now stands over against Christianity as a rival, a threat, a certain competitor. We cannot ig- nore that fact. To' get emotional when Com- munism is mentioned or to say Socialism only under one's breath is to -practice the false strategy of an ostrich. Socialism, just because her Russian patrons came out of hiding with all of the modern scientific methods, mastered illiteracy, banished mental illness, lowered race antagonism to the vanishing point, cut delinquency to zero in a quarter of a century and then stopped the German military ma- chine, has earned our respect if not our af- fection. Christianity must reckon with it in the open by research, discussion, experimen- tation and prayer. We say with prayer because we need to find a deep sincerity such as we in the United States have not cultivated politically and economical- ly. Now the Socialism of the Labor government in Britain focuses attention upon children needing milk and their fathers needing bread. There is its power. Socialism insists that life comes first and that the life of a thousand persons is a thousand times as interesting and important to God as the life of one, of anyone. That is a significant spiritual assumption. The Soviet Socialists insist that they expect to become kind after that fact of the minimum for all has been made a basic good. They say that they will be- come merciful afer this elemental right is grant- ed. They observe that rights move all men to- ward equality but charity inflates one while it humiliates his brother. The process keeps the culture tense and unstable. They insist that they expect to become philosophic afer this basic assumption that life is just as real and precious for the poor as for the rich, has been accepted. They say they may be able to indulge in art and religion when the elementary essence of human existence is guaranteed to all. Had they merely talked this way we Christians might have had a rare time at religious forums, community conferences, a study of economic theory and lectures on the remaking of political Instruments. But when the Soviets took over a nation of 170,000,000 and actually organized ignorant peasants, educated them in the elemen- tal matters, adopted goals deliberately and at- tained these goals, precisely, built vast plants, constructed great dams, managed modern cities and then evolved vast modern armies which challenged Hitler, we are stunned. Now while there may be cruelties not ours to approve or to emulate, there is no one good in Socialism which is not implicit in a Chris- tian =Democracy. Therefore no one needs to "go communistic" to revise America. When we Christians begin to practice our religion economically, industrially, socially and polit- ically with the thoroughness advocated by the Labor government, there will be no danger of a clash between Christianity and Commun- ism, nor a gulf fixed between the Kingdom of God and the good of Man. -Edward W. Blakeman Counselor of Religious Education DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN PERHAPS the greatest mistake made at the peacetable after World War I was the assumption that all peoples are eager and ready for self-government. The example of our own nation should disprove that. In this coun- try the role of thinking, acting citi- zen is too much trouble for many people. Large numbers of individuals neglect to vote or else mark a "straight ticket" based on, almost hereditary party affiliations rather than inform themselves and take the trouble and responsibility of arriving at some decision, on an individual question. If this is true of a nation with a heritage of hundreds of years of republican government following a colonial apprenticeship of near- autonomy, it seems almost impos- JE HAD NEVER THOUGHT much one or the other about the possibility of peror Hirohito staying on in the event of a way Em- Jap- Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all ie - bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Summer Session office, Angell Hall, by 2:30 p. m. of the day preceding publication (10:30 a. m. Sat- urdays). CENTRAL WAR TIME USED IN THE DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SUNDAY, AUGUST 12, 1945 VOL. LV, No. 29 Notices The American Red Cross has ur- gent need for Social Workers. Rec- reation workers and Staff Aides to help in Hospitals in this country as well as for overseas positions. Age 23 to 50 and college men and women preferred. Personnel secretaries from Headquarters will be in Ann Ar- bor on August 13 and 14 to inter- view interested persons. Appointments for interviews may be made at Red Cross Headquarters, 25546. The University of Michigan Polo- nia Club will hold its next meeting on Tuesday, August 21st at the Interna- tional Center, at 7:30 EWT. Plans for a picnic will be discussed at that time. Phi Delta Kappa. The last dinner meeting of the summer will be held Tuesday evening, August 14, at the Michigan Union at 6:30 p. m. The speaker will be Mr. Clark Tibbitts, Director of the University Veterans' Program. Members will go through the cafeteria line and proceed into the faculty dining room. La Sociedad Hispanica is present- ing a lecture on Argentinian Art by Prof. Julio Payro, visiting prof. at the Fine Arts Department from Argen- tina. The lecture will be given in Spanish Wednesday, August 15th at 8 o'clock (EWT) in Room D Fine Arts Department. (Alumni Memorial Hall). Everybody is invited. State of Connecticut Civil Service announcements for Deputy Commis- sioner in Charge of Child Welfare, salary $4,800 to $6,000 per annum, has been received in our office. Fur- ther information regarding the exam- ination and qualifications may be obtained at the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 201 Mason Hall. French Tea: Tuesday at 4 p. m. EWT, (3 p. m. CWT) in the Grill Room of the Michigan League. French Club: The last meeting of the Summer Session French Club will be held Thursday, August 16 at 8 p. m. (EWT), 7 p. m. (CWT) at the Michigan League. Professor Charles E. Koella, of "the Romance Language Department, will give an informal talk entitled "Souvenirs d'Algerie." Group singing and social hour. Come all. - Lectures What not to believe about Russia will be the subject of a talk by Pro- fessor Andrew Lobanov-Rostovsky on Monday evening, August 13th, in the Rackham Amphitheatre, at 8:15 p.m. (EWT). The Russky Kruzhok (Rus- sian Circle) cordially invites all facul- ty members, students, and towns- people to attend. Events Today, the Congregational-Disciples Guild will meet at the Guild House, 438 Maynard Street, at 4:30 p. m. (EWT) and go from there to Riverside Park for a Reunion Picnic with recreation and closing Vesper Service. In case of rain the group will meet in the sible that a country schooled to more or less paternal despotism, to blind obedience in exchange for the comfortable security of non-respon- sibility, could successfully undertake a democratic form of government. After the last war this was proved to be impossible. Circumstances conspired to defeat the Weimar Re- public but not the least of these was the fact that the German people were accustomed to taking orders, that they preferred the reassurance of authoritative commands to the self-doubts which must accompany self-reliance. It will not be surprising if, after the war, the liberated countries find the experiment of democracy too onerous to continue. The horrors which to- talitarianism brought in its wake will fade in their memories; they will re- call only the ease and security of paternalistic control. If we are not to repeat the errors of the last peace we must keep in mind the fact that democracy is not the easy way. New democra- cies must be encouraged and helped, not strangled economically and po- litically. These new governments must not be identified with defeat and dis- grace, but with rebirth. They must not be leaders in demoralization but in hope and active reconstruction. They will need help, and we must give it. If we allow these first feeble attempts at democracy -however incomplete-to die, we are playing ball with Fascism. -Marjorie Mills First Congregational Church, Wil- liams and State.I A Service of Thanksgiving and Dedication sponsored by the Congre- gational-Disciples Guild will be held at the First Congregational Church, 'State and Williams at 8:00 p. in. (EWT) on the day of the official announcement of the end of war, pro- viding the announcement comes be- fore 6:00 p. m. If the announcement comes after 6:00 p. m. the service will be held at 8:00 p. m. the following day. The program planned will in- clude music, short readings and time for meditation. Welcome is extended to all persons.' Academic Notices Colleges of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and Architecture and De- sign; Schools of Education, Forestry, Music, and Public Health: Summer Session Students wishing a trans- cript of this summer's work only should file a request in Room 4, U.H., several days before leaving Ann Ar- bor. Failure to file this request be- fore the end of the session will re- sult in a needless delay of several days. Seniors: College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts, Schools of Educt- tion, Music, and Public Health: Tent- ative lists of seniors for September and October graduation have been posted on the bulletin board in Room 4, University Hall. If your name does not apear, or, if included there, it is not correctly spelled, please notify the counter clerk. Doctoral Examination for Fred George Walcott, English and Educa- tion; thesis: "Matthew Arnold and the Growth of Democratic Educa- tion in England," Monday, August 13, 3223 Angell Hall, at 9:00 a. m. EWT. Chairman, C. D. Thorpe. By action of the Executive Board the Chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doctoral candidates to attend this examina- tion, and he may grant permission to those who for sufficient reason might wish to be present. Symposium on Molecular Struc- ture. Dr. Kasimir Fajans will speak on "Electronic Structure of Boron Compounds and of Some Carbon Compounds" in Room 303 Chemistry Building on Monday, August 13 at 3:15 p. m. (CWT), 4:15 p. m. (EWT). All interested are invited to attend: Students, Summer Term, College of Literature, Sciehnce, and the 'Arts: Courses dropped after Saturday, Aug. 11, by students other than freshmen will be recorded with the grade of E. Freshmen (students with less than 24 hours of credit) may drop courses without penalty through the eighth week, upon the recommendation of their academic counselors. Exceptions to these regulations may be made only because of extraordi- nary circumstances, such as serious illness. Colleges of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and Architecture and De- sign; Schools of Education, Forestry, Music, and Public Health: Each stu- dent who has changed his address since June registration should file a change of address in Room 4, U. H., so that the report of this summer work will not be misdirected. Linguistic Institute. Introduction to Linguistic Science. "Pidgin Lang- uages; Problems and Implications." Dr. Robert A. 'Hall jr. Tuesday, Aug- ust 14, 6 p. m. CWT (7 p. m. EWT), East Lecture Room, Rackham Build- ing. a Students in Speech: The final speech assembly will be held at 4 p. m. (EWT) Wednesday in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The pro- gram will be a demonstration debate. Attendance is required of all Speech make-up grade not later than noon, August 31, for the Summer Session, and noon, October 26, for the Sum- mer Term. Grades received after that time may defer the student's graduation until a later date. Recommendations for Department- al Honors: Teaching departments wishing to recommend tentative Aug- ust graduates from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and the School of Education for de- partmental honors should send such names to the Registrar's office, Room 4, University Hall, by noon August 31. Recommendations for tentative October candidates should be in the Registrar's Office by noon October Engineering Faculty: The fourth of a series of lectures on Electron Tubes will be given Monday, Aug. 13, at 3:15 CWT (4:15 EWT) in Room 246, West Engineering Bldg. The topic will be "The Electron Tube as an Amplifier. The subject matter of each lecture is to a large degree inde- pendent of the others in the series. Linguistic Institute Lecture-dem- onstration. "The Music of Speech." Dr. Kenneth L. Pike, lecturer in pho- netics in the Institute and professor of phonetics at the Summer Insti- tute of Linguistics at the University of Oklahoma. Wednesday, August 15, 6:30 p. m. CWT (7:30 p. m. EWT), Rackham Amphitheatre. Students of speech, drama, music, and the lang- uages are invited to attend. Geometry Seminar: Tuesday, 3:00 p. m. (CWT), 4 p. m. (EWT). Manuel Rizon will discuss "Projective Trans- formations Leaving the Circular Points Fixed." Concerts Student Recital: Florence Mc- Cracken, mezzo-soprano, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Mast- er of Music at 7:30 p. m. (CWT) Monday, August 13, in Pattengill Auditorium of the Ann Arbor High School. A pupil of Arthur Hackett, Miss McCracken will sing selections by Gluck, Debussey, Dvorak, Medni- koff and Rachmaninoff. The public is cordially invited. Faculty Concert: Louise Rood, viol- ist, and Benjamin Owen, pianist, will present a concert Tuesday evening, August 14, at 7:30 p. m. (CWT) in Pattengill Auditorium of the Ann Ar- bor High School. The program will consist of compositions y Jacobi, Griffes and Bloch. The general pub- lic is invited. Exhibitions Clements Library. Japan in Maps from Columbus to Perry (142-1854). Architecture Building. Student work. Architecture Building. Student work. Michigan Historical Collections, -160 Rackham Building. The Uni- versity of Michigan in the war. Museums Building, rotunda. Some foods of the American Indian. General 'Library, main corridor cases. Early military science. Selec- tion from Stephen~ Spaulding, 27, memorial collection, presented by Col. T. M. Spaulding, '021 Coming Events Concerts, Florence McCracken, Mezzo-Soprano, August 13; Chamber Music Series, August '16, Pattengill Auditorium. Operetta. "Naughty Marietta," by Victor Herbert and Rita Johnson Youhg! School of Music and Michigan anese surrender. We had more or less taken it for granted that the Emperor would have to go. If he remained on the scene, he would presum- ably retain sovereignty over his white horse; that possibility and Admiral Halsey's announced objectives are mutually exclusive. Admiral Halsey long ago said that he, in- tended to possess himself of the Emperor's steed and ride it down Tokyo's main stem in the grand victory parade, and we must con- fess that we were looking forward to reading about the unusual spectacle. We had fully expected it to be the finest show in its, line since Lady Godiva put on her famous per- formance in London. * * * IT IS UNLIKELY that Halsey would agree to any sort of "two men on a horse" proposal, and from our own intimate experiences we are sure of this much: the horse would register strenuous objections. We can remember our one and only eques- trian attempt. The trainer assured us that we were starting off on an equal footing; the horse had never been ridden and we had never been riding. The whole thing ended tragically when the horse threw a shoe, our shoe, and we were in it. WITH THIS background we feel qualified to predict that the Tokyo show will be a one man affair. We understand that the citizens of one Western state presented the Admiral with a silver saddle, Western style, with a horn to be used in heavy traffic. It is also said that the Admiral has had a pair of spurs made for the occasion and that he has already chosen his rid- ing habit. The thought of Halsey riding through Tokyo sans battleship may seem startling at first, but nothing stopped the Admiral in his chase across the Pacific, and we are willing to bet six-to-five that Halsey and the Emperor's horse will be at the post when the victory par- ade gets under way. BARNABY By Crockett Johnson . . . * 'i OtA' | I r - 10, r 1. f I. I .1 *I . --1 I All- =-~l - II i