'STHE MICHIGAN DAILY itFfth aily Fifty-Fifth Year Jtteri o the 6htor WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Braden as Aide, Slap at Argentines 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 Muendore a Dick Strickland . . . . Managing Editor .* . . Associate Editor . . . . Associate Editor . . . . Sports Editor Business Stuff 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. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR: BOB GOLDMAN Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Prison Reform THE DEPLORABLE CONDITIONS recently uncovered by Attorney General John R. Dethmers in the State Prison of Southern Mich- igan are enough to convince anyone that we need a statewide prison reform. Why such a display of bribery, trickery and harmful and per- verse moral standards are allowed to exist in a day of advanced sociological and psychological knowledge, is difficult to understand. The job of administering a prison is now nothing more nor less than a racket. We say that men must be thrust behind prison walls because they are dangerous criminals. Then, rather than rendering them less dangerous, and treating them as individuals, we allow un- trained, unskilled political parasites to order them and bully them. No man with criminal tendencies, no matter how mild he may be, can safely be assumed immune from the temptations that exist behind prison walls. If these temptations are allowed to continue and are even fostered, as they are in the Michigan state prison by men who have something to gain, any gleam of hope in re- making them into responsible citizens is lost. Attorney General Dethmers, in his com- plaints against prison officials, said that he found loose methods in the classification div- ision. This means that all types of prisoners; hardened criminals, first offenders and even juvenile delinquents, may be thrown into con- tact with each other in the penal institution. The State Corrections Commission, under the leadership of Mr. Garrett Haynes, is attempt- ing the gigantic task of supervising classifica- tion, parole, probation and prison administra- tion. But this task reaches beyond the abilities of any one commission. It needs trained sociol- ogists to study the men and send them to the right prison. It needs psychiatrists and doctors to ascertain when inmates of the prison can be released on parole. It needs wardens and guards who, unhampered by political motives, can take an interest in their jobs. It needs college grad- uates who have been specially trained to make thorough case studies of each offender. It needs money for recreational and educational purposes. The purpose of punishment, as it appears in the state of Michigan, is to avenge the crime. With this purpose in mind, officials of the prison administration have given up all hope for the reformation of people whom they term "menaces to society". They have refused to admit that the prisoner needs their help. Consequently corruption and favoritism flour- ish and prisoners remain criminals. -Carol Zack Crisis for Labor SINCE THE BEGINNING of production for de- fense, stories of labor abuses have been wide- ly circulated. All the coruptions and inefficien- cies which are inevitable in a big organization have been hung on the labor unions as if these attributes originated and ended with them. In the frantic scurry of the war effort, the ultra-conservative segment of management has had the chance of the generation to prove its point that organized labor is irresponsible and subversive. And though it was organized labor which signed a no-strike pledge, which by and large held to that pledge, which kept a large pro- portion of labor single-mindedly at its task rather than stopping off to bicker over vary- ing aims and interests, it is organized labor which is now being assaulted as the cause of all the industrial strife which there has been. As long as the push was on, these charges were only mutterings. Now that the drive of production has slackened a little, there is talk Vote Called Test To the Editor: THE STUDENTS at the University of Michigan today have an opportunity to show to the world that at least a small segment of America is sincerely interested in actively working for the cause of world peace. Today, all the students will have an oppor- tunity to vote in an election to choose a foreign University for adoption and rehabilitation. The Student Organization for International Co- operation, sponsoring the election, is eager to have the students choose whichever University makes the strongest appeal to the majority of students. So far, however, the work of SOIC has been done by a relatively small number of active stu- dents. The masses of students have shown little or no interest in the whole matter. There have been several appeals in the col- umns of The Daily urging students to vote for this University or that one. I make no such appeal, though I have an opinion on the subject. I only urge that every student vote, no matter what his opinion will be. In a sense this election is a test - a test as to whether or not the students at the Univer- sity are sincerely interested in the cause of world student cooperation and world peace. If the proportion of students voting is high, and if the number who turn out for the "Adop- tion Dance" is great, then we will have given proof of our sincerity and will. -Katharine Sharfman * * * For Tokyo, Berlin To the Editor: THIS IS A PLEA to those who wish to see a peaceful world. I am not speaking of idealists and dreamers, but rather of realists, straight- thinking individuals. The University of Michigan is adopting a foreign university. Friday (today) we will go to the polls to vote for our choice. May I make a suggestion? Why not adopt the University of Tokyo or the University of Berlin? "Educa- tion," is our cry for a better future world. Why not then educate the factions causing the trouble? Being the great university that we are, our act, would influence others to do likewise. In due time, our answer to the question of how to edu- cate these present enemies so that they may be useful citizens in a peaceful world, would be answered. We, as students, could show our lack of racial prejudice. We could prove to these enemy students that we really are as sincere and peace-loving as our governmental representation would have them believe. We could prove the success of democracy as a government of free, unbiased men. True, this will take more work, more toler- ance, more patience; but what price a lasting -Jeanne Rolfe Wartns of Mistake To the Editor: TODAY is the day on which the student body is to adopt a university. Yet as I write this on Thursday afternoon, I am deeply aware of the fact that the entire issue has had little time for consideration by members of the U. of Mich. In fact the first concrete suggestion was made only a little more than a week ago. In the first article which I wrote, I attempted to get the student body to vote for a school with which we can establish direct student-to-student relation- ships. I mentioned Strasbourg as a likely school. However the principle is more important than the particular school. Obviously, I could go on in a round about method with this letter, but instead I shall choose to be quite frank. In recent issues of the Daily, and around campus, there has been a well organized campaign for the adoption of Kiev. The latest article quotes the part Rus- sia has played in winning the war. In spite of the validity of this point, we must also bear in mind the American ideals of free expres- sion of thought, for which the war is being fought. I have been unable to find any inkling of a suggestion that if we do adopt the University of Kiev, we will not have to deal directly with the Russian government and only indirectly with the student body. Were it not for this lat- ter fact, incompatible with American idealism, I too would support Kiev as having a good claim on our adoption. However, in view of this fact, the adoption of Kiev would have a strong claim to being the greatest mistake made by the Mich- igan student body this year. - Bruce Edwards I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: New Treason- By SAMUEL GRAFTON THERE IS SOMETHING queer and hard to look at in the trial of Petain. Treason is not a common offense, anywhere; it is rare, even among thieves and gunmen and prostitutes; any treason trial is a sensation, and the spectacle of the Marshal of France held in the dock on this sort of accusation has in it the elements of a great unnatural wonder. The thing is complicated by the fact that not even Petain's accusers believe he did what- ever he did for money, or for a similar direct advantage; while even his defenders do not believe that he added anything to the lustre of the name of France. The conclusion is forced upon us that if what we are handling here is a crime, it is a new kind of crime, one hardly known before the present age, and one which th old word "treason" covers only approximately. What we are dealing with, actually, is a kind of sickness of our own time, born out of the conditions of our own age, a disorder without much history or precedient. It is in our day that certain men have become so frightened by the rising power of the people, by democracy itself, that they have shown themselves not unwilling to open the gates and let an enemy nation come in, to enforce the kind of order for which their hearts cry. They do not do this for the sake of the enemy, whom they may hate, nor to harm their own country, which they may love; they may be said to be "victims of their reminiscences;" they de- stroy their country in the present to keep alive their memories of it as it was in the oligarchical past, before political freedom came. France ceased to be France, in the minds of certain Frenchmen, when she went left; their patriotism was reserved for an older and van- ished France. It must have seemed to them in fantasy, that France would be France again, once the left wing parties were stamped out; and the victim of fantasy finds no price too high to pay, not even that of working with the enemy. IT IS ONLY on the basis of some such process as that outlined above that we can fit together the apparent contradictions and oddities of the Petain trial. The Hero of Verdun could not really have been a patriot, because he worked with the Germans, says one side; but Petain could not really have sold out to the Germans. because he was the Hero of Verdun, answers the other; and the story is a strange one, and the old word "treason" does not quite tell all of it. As to whether Petain is technically guilty of the precise charges laid against him in the indictment, we must, in accordance with a good journalistic tradition, leave it to the tri- bunal to decide. But it is not so odd to find a Marshal of France on trial, after all, when one remembers that all through Europe it was the avowed "nationalists" of the old, reactionary kind, who seemed to find it easiest to deal with Hitler. Ours is a day in which the extreme national- ists of many countries joined a kind of bleak international of their own, from Roumania to France; and in the end it was the international- ists who showed themselves rather more willing than the others to fight for national independ- ence. Ours is a day in which the ties of blood were strangely loosened. "Nationalism" in our time lost its national meaning and retained only its reactionary meaning, and, in a strange re- versal, was often made the rallying cry for loss of nationhood. It is for these reasons that the trial of Petain lets loose so much emotion; for it is not merely that one man is on trial, for one alleged offense. A disease of our time is under examination. There is no man who has lived through the last ten years but feels himself in some way involved in it; and when the issues are so large, it is not strange that the symbol of them should be so high a figure as the Marshal of France. (Copyright, 1945, N. Y. Post Syndicate) By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON--Secretary of y Jimmy Byrnes already has two key men up his sleeve for top jobs in the State Department. Unless some- thing changes his mind before he gets backfrom Potsdam, the new Under Secretary of State, replacing Joe Grew, will be Spruille Braden, now U.S. ambassador to Argentina; while the assistant secretary for Latin Arrerica, replacing Nelson Rockefell - er, will be Norman Armour, now U.S. ambassador to Spain. The promotion of Braden to be under secretary will be a direct slap at the Argentines, where crowds have been booing Braden and .hand-bills have been posted all over Buenos Aires denouncing him because of an accident in the Braden copper mines in Chile. Braden is a political diplomat with plenty of career experience. He work- ed on the fringes of the old Roosevelt brain trust in 1932, and FDR con- sidered appointing him ambassador to Chile in 1933 However, there was too much resentment from Chilean labor because of Braden's heavy cdp- per interests there and he was given one of the hardest diplomatic jobs in the Western Hemisphere. Norman Armour, slated to suc- ceed Nelson Rockefeller, is one of the .outstanding career diplomats, having been ambassador to Ar- gentina and Chile, and minister to Canada and Haiti. When Braden leaves Argentina as ambassador, his post will not be filled-a slap at the Argentine Fascists, and also indirectly at the State Department group who rushed us into Argen- tine recognition at San Francisco. England's Ex-King THERE WERE half a dozen empty' chairs last week as Hugh Fulton, former counsel for the Truman com- mittee, hosted a luncheon in Wash- ington's swank Hotel Statler for the Duke of Windsor. Fulton, whose New York law firm represents the Duke's interests in this country, had invited a small group of high Washington officials and the entire membership of the Mead committee (formerly the Truman committee) at the Duke's special request. Half a dozen busy senators found time to rush to the Statler for the luncheon, which they described as a pleasant affair with no particular significance. High spot of the luncheon was furnished by Wyoming's Senator Joe O'Mahoney, who produced a letter from an Episcopalian mini- ster in his state. The letter relat- ed the plight of an Englishman who had married an American woman and settled in Wyoming. The E~ng- lishman now wants to be naturaliz- ed, the minister wrote, but is run- ning into difficulty because his wife is determined to press charges of assault against him. If he didn't beat his wife, he should have, the minister wrote O'Mahoney. The letter was shown to the Duke, who remarked: "I can testify that the Church of England is peculiar about domes- tic life. Here is a minister of the church in apparent approval of domestic disharmony. Yet when I decided to marry, the Church of1 England insisted that I step downI as king because my wife-to-be had been divorced. "The amusing thing to me," con- tinued the former king of Eng- land, "is that the Church of Eng- land was originally founded by Henry VIII in order to provide clerical sanction for his several divorces." NOTE-King Henry VIII had six wives.- Soldier Slap-Down? ANOTHER Patton soldier slap-down on a lesser scale has~ just been settled by General Eisenhower, re- sulting in a reprimand for Brig. Gen.I Julius Slack.I General Slack, an artillery com- mander in Patton's Third Army, was reprimanded for "intemperatei and reprehensible actions and language" toward 22 enlisted men1 in an alleged rape case. Slack had accused three enlisted men of taking two German women, at the point of their guns, upstairs in a German house, where other men watched the rape.+ But according to Pvt. Walter M. State FACULTY BRIEFS: By PAT CAMERON IT was a different story for veteranswho came to the Univer- sity after the first World War. Prof. Fred B. Wahr of the Ger- man department can testify to this, because, as Counselor here for the Federal Board, he had charge of the general welfare of all disabled servicemen sent to the University at government expense - similar to the task now overseen by Clark Tibbits, Director of the Veterans Service Bureau. After the last war, in which he participated as interpreter of French and German overseas for 19 months, Prof. Wahr was asked by President Hutchins to administer for the Uni- versity this governmental project for the educational rehabilitation of ex- servicemen. "I looked after their books, their housing and their general welfare -everything but their actual aca- demic problems of the 20g men," he said. "It was a matter largely by general morale." Prof. Wahr is also responsible. for the administration. of another phase of University life. As Assistant Dean Coulter of Providence, R. I., General Slack acted "on the word of two Ger- man women who are without doubt as fanatical as the German army that we have given the best years of our lives to defeat. "We were taken to headquart- ers, 204th Field Artillery Battalion, where he had the most insulting talk delivered to us that we ever had to endure. General Slack call- Sed us a bunch of dirty ........ two or three times. He told the three men accused of rape that he would personally see that they were hanged and underground within 30 days. He also said that his judge advocate had never lost DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- 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 FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1945 VOL. LV., No. 18S Notices Beta Eta Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority sponsors a summer dance at Smith Catering Service Fri- day evening, July 27, 1945. Music by the Sophisticated Five. Tickets may be purchased from members. of the chapter. Tea Dance at the International Center on Friday, July 27, 3 to 5 p. m. (CWT). Foreign students and their American friends cordially in- vited. Classical Coffee Hour. For students and friends of the Departments of Latin and Greek. Friday, July 27, at 4:15 (EWT) in the West Conference Room of Rackham Building. Men interested in applying for life guard position at local beach, contact Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall, for further information. The Lutheran Student Association is having a bike hike this Saturday afternoon. Those planning to at- tend please meet at the Campus Bike Shop on William Street at 1:00 p. m. A picnic supper will be served some- where along Huron River Drive. Outing Club: The Graduate Outing Club is sponsoring a bike picnic on Sunday, July 29 at 2 p. m. (EWT). Each person is to bring their own bike and lunch and are to meet at the back entrance to the Rackham Building. All faculty, alumni and friends are cordially invited to at- tend. Academic Notices Attention Engineering Faculty: Five-week reports below C of all Navy and Marine students who are not in the Prescribed Curriculum; also for those in Terms 5, 6, and 7 of the Prescribed Curriculum are to be turned in to Dean Emmons' Of- fice, Room 259, W. Eng. Bldg., not later than August 4. Report cards may be obtained from your depart- mental office. Attention Engineering Faculty: Five-week reports on standings of all civilian Engineering freshmen and all Navy.andnMarine students in Terms 1, 2. 3. and 4 of the Prescrib- BARNABY By Crockett Johnson I think Minerva wanted more fuss made over her than the little dinner we're planning- What more could anybody expect? 7 2S C. , 1945.The , N .. , PM, I We'll ask the Shultzes and the Pettengills. That's six. And Minerva makes seven. We need an extra man- gay dinner dance under the stars!.. Your backyard transformed by soft colored lights reflected in women's jewels and the brass horns of the band. Half an ox on a slow spit. I'll carve. And lead the community ig. And shoot off the romrn candles- I 'll bet Aunt Minerva will like that kind p of party fine, CROCK-T'r'Mr.O'Ma ley CJOHNK After I've eulogized your aunt over the -amplifying system from the speakers' table, I'll call the square dancing. But some of the older folk, tired, perhaps, from the afternoon's ballgames, sack races, two-mile run, and caber toss, may prefer cards. We'll have a few well-run f aro tables and some three-card monte= t' Gosh, Ill tell Mom. 1 1 l 1 j 7 3 ' We're not inviting imaginary Pixies to your Aunt Minerva's party, Barnaby Hush, now- --7/1 eA't I Mr. O'Malley was going to run the whole party! Gosh! When he finds he's not even invited- Run along, son. Barnaby, 've another idea for the party! ... I'll perform my amazing card trick! . . '- But, ee wiz,