THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fifty-Sixth Year .1" RATHER BE RIGHT:s Prices--Pandora's Open Box BILL MAULDIN f DAILY BULLETIN 11 1 II Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board In Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Managing Editors .. Paul Harshae, Milton Freudenheim ASSOCIATE EDITORS City News ............................Clyde Recht University ............................ Natalie Bagrow Sports .. .............. .. . .. Jack Martin Women's....... .................... Lynne Ford Business Staff Business Manager .................... Janet Cork 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 newpaper. 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. Subscription during the regular school year by car" rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL AoVUrIIUNG 8Y National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. I"NEW.YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO * osTO . Los ANGeeS1 SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR: NATALIE BAGROW. Editorials published in The Michigatn Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. China Strife / By SAMUEL GRAFTON LOS ANGELES--The enemies of price control are discovering the people of America. That is the story of these first few days in July. Much loud talk in favor of price increases has died down since the week-end. Some of the same trade associations which, a week ago, were bold- ly demanding price boosts, are today nervously advising their members to hold the price line. Price increases, suddenly, have ceased to be good, clean fun; and the newspapers are heavy with interviews with people who promise to try and keep prices down. Part of this talk, at least, is pious cant, for the Bureau of Labor Statistics index of the cost of living shot up almost 8 points on Monday, and the sign-painters of Los Angeles are swamped with work, revising price- MAN TO MAN: World Bakt'an By HAROLD L. ICKES. PRESIDENT TRUMAN proved that he can hYake good appointments when he wants to in nominating Fred M. Vinson to be Chief Jus- tice of the United States and in naming Eu- gene Meyer President of the World Bank. How- ever, while these appointments give assurance of first rate administrations in their respective fields they of course cannot make up for the bad or worse appointments that the President seems generally so determined to make. If it were necessary for Eugene Meyer to prove his worth he did it by 'the first appoint- ment that he made, that of Harold D. Smith as Vice-president of the World Bank. There can be no doubt that Mr. Meye will con- tinue to make good appointments. Harold D. Smith is an irreparable loss to the Government, although he is a great gain to the World Bank. During my years in Washington I have not known a more devoted, able, consci- entious and loyal public servant. He has added greatly to the prestige of the Directorship of the Budget. He is an excellent administrator. He has performed well the functions of that of- fice and he not only has added to its standing but has greatly increased the scope of its ac- tivities-all of this without any fanfare. The simple fact is that Government salar- ies for high administrative positions are not adequate for the ability and personal sacri- fices required. Unless these salaries are ad- justed upward, other Harold Smiths will find it necessary to leave and no new ones of com- petence will be inclined to enter Government service, particularly not at a time when they can double or triple in private industry the stipend that is offered by the Government. Harold D. Smith was born in a small tow) in Kansas in 1898. He comes from the very heart of America of old American stock. In 1922 he took a degree in engineering at the University of Kansas and after graduation he became a member of the staff of the Detroit Bureau of Government Research, at the same time finding time to take a Master's Degree in public admin- istration at the University of Michigan. After holding several responsible posts in public ad- ministration, in 1937 he was made administra- tive assistant to Governor Frank Murphy and became State Budget Director and Financial Administrative Assistant. He came to Washing- ton as Director of the Bureau of the Budget in 1939. To me it is unthinkable that this superb pub- lic servant should be allowed to leave the Gov- ernment with nothing more than the usual trite and stereotyped letter which some one writes and the President signs and causes to be sent to those who resign, whatever may be their qualities or the degree of their service. Harold D. Smith ought to be given a Distin- guished Service Medal. He did as much to- ward winning the war as almost any General or Admiral who could be named. I am in fa- vor of conferring upon men in the armed' forces decorations that they may really have earned although there have been instances in the past when men were decorated who wore spurs on their heels, metaphorically at leat, to keep their feet from sliding ofof a desk that was as bare of work as grandmother's face used to be of rouge and lipstick. If soldiers doing desk work have been entitled to a Distinguished Service Medal, and some of them have been, then Harold D. Smith who did at least as important desk work as any of them should be given the distinction that he has so richly earned. The United States should not be as higgling in conferring distinctions that have fully been merited as it has been in paying sal- aries that are not commensurate with the ser- vices rendered, (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) cards, upward. But the fact remains that those who want price increases have, in less than a week, gone on the defensive. That is the first political victory Mr. Tru- man has won by his courageous veto of the ersatz price control bill; and he will win others. Though price increases are taking place, there is something furtive about them, and no business man today mounts a soap-box in front of his shop to say to the public as so many witnesses said to Congress that to boost mark- ups is to defend the American way of life. The moral climate has changed. It could be said that the advocates of higher prices have won a legal victory, and lost their case. Those who have followed the recent history of reaction in America will not be surprised by these developments, for extreme right- wing circles do have a way of fooling them- selves into believing that the peculiar private language they talk is the common speech of the nation. They will perhaps now be stun- ned to discover that the general public re- fuses to give approval to price increases, or to invest them with moral grandeur. And these circles may even have another sur- prise ahead of them; they may discover that though they command, at times, a majority in Congress, it is perhaps still beyond their power to fasten an inflation upon this country. For in a free country, not even Congress has the final word; there are secondary and tertiary lines of defense, which go into play under sufficient pro- vocation. The Los Angeles City Council has, like the State of New York, clapped a ceiling on rents. Other states and cities are considering similar steps; and over and above all, there ho- vers the threat of a buyers' rebellion, against which "Pappy" Lee O'Daniel's oratory would become a soundless mouthing. It must have seemed so neat and easy, in the smoking cars, and in the Congressional cloak-rooms, to weaken price control and the argument; but those who have taken this course have not ended an argument, they have only started one They have opened a box of troubles for them- selves; they have intruded into the area of hu- man activity in which are determined the ques- tions of how men make their livings, and feed and shelter their families; and in this area,, political activity is self-mobilizing. And it is be- cause he is working in this area, but on the po- pular side, that President Truman has made a powerful speech and has suddenly become pow- erful. The enemies of price control have won a victory that is too hot to hold. And they cannot put it down; their faces reveal their naive sur- prise at the discovery that one thing leads to another; and though they will fight, and fight hard, they will fight from now on without that wonderful fantastic arrogance that was theirs when they were at ease among themselves be- fore the door opened and the reality walked in. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) Council's Twilight It is sad to have to record that on Wednesday, June 26, the first anniversary of the signing of the Charter that brought the United Nations into -being, the United Nations Security Council celebrated by giving its worst exhibition of fu- tility and ineptitude. It is very hard to see how, after its performance over the Spanish question, any nation, great or small, can have any in- clination whatever to trust its problems, fears or grievances to the Security Council for re- dress, or any faith in the Security Council's ability to hand down a just and equitable judg- ment. It is easy to put the finger of blame on Russia and Mr. Gromyko for this unhappy state of af- fairs: to say that if the Soviet delegates had not been so reckless in their use of the veto in the Council, none of this would have happened. By using their veto power, the Russians have been cutting off their noses to spite their faces, and have achieved precisely the opposite result from the one they desired. By demonstrating the complete incapability of the Security Coun- cil to reach any positive and practical decisions, they have reduced its authority and prestige to zero in the eyes of the world and its govern- ments. If the Security Council is patently in- capable of doing anything about anything, is anybody likely to give it anything to do? Without work to do, the Council -will inevi- tably atrophy from inanition and-here is the joker as far as the Russians are concerned- power, authority and prestige within the United Nations will pass from the Council to the Gen- eral Assembly. Which is just what the Russians fear and dislike the most, and have been do- ing their best to avoid. -New Republic ~~r I, r t i A ' 1 1r t . i r "Must be election time. Ze government is building ze party's platform." '4, opposition Occupation in Norway ACCORDING TO AN OBSERVER, on campus, of the Far Eastern situation who has re- cently returned from China, bad blood between the Nationalist and Communist factions pre- cludes settlement of the present conflict through arbitration. Looking at the whole picture realistically, the situation is one of irrepressible conflict, and complete reconcilation does not seem possible. The Communist problem in China was a "sticky" one for the American forces stationed there, because the Kuomintang government was the only one officially recognized. How- ever, the problem ante-dates the war. Mutual suspicion, friction and fighting existing -be- tween the two groups goes back to 1927 when the Nationalistic government first began per- secution of the Communists. In addition to political differences, the prob- lem has its socio-economic aspect, of the "haves" (the upper middle classes) versus the "have- nots" (the small landowners). The Communist plan would eliminate much of the material inter- ests of the former group. Since China is 85 per cent agrarian, the prob- lem is mainly one of the "good earth." The Communists have made their appeal to the Chinese, largely a, nation of "have-nots," by promising them concrete improvements such as less taxes and more land. The Nationalists have nothing to combat this. They hale no social program with popular appeal. The average Chinese farmer is a practical man. He doesn't know about the Communist doctrines or, Karl Marx. He cares only for the concrete promises of this group. The Communist program has found success in the poorer north of China, where 3t has been administered. hon- estly. Now they have gained control in the rich Yangtze River valley. It will be interesting- to see. if Communism can stand prosperity, and the answer to this question will also have re- percussions in the poltical field. In spite of the fact that Gen. Marshall is well-equipped to handle the situation and has the respect of both the Communist and Nation- alist factions, the present discussions may prove of only academic value because of the limita- tions of diplomacy. Excesses on both sides have been so terrible as to create an almost impene- trable wall of hate. Aarshall has managed to secure agreement to certain compromises such as forming a national Chinese army, with a quota of Co nmunist troops. However, this plan never actually went into effect because certain die-hard Communists fear reprisals once they are disarmed. The major difficulty in present negotia- tions and the keynote, of the inability to make peace compromises stick lies in the fact that each side lacks confidence in the promises of the other. The history of the relations between the two groups is one of broken promises and treachery on both sides. It is possible that the "liberal section of the Kuomintang party may be able to unite with more "conservative" Communists and in that way establish an "entente". However, both .of these groups to which Gen. Marshall looks for support, are relatively weak t the present time. rharfnwrp +is ,snkitiAn i snt. ntt all crtain .n- EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is reprinted by permission of Prof. Stene from "The American-Scandinavian Re- view," Summer 1946. Prof. Stene, who is on the faculty of the University of Os- lo, where she taught English during the German Occupation of Norway, spoke at the Linguistic Institute here yesterday. By AASTA STENE HE BASIC question facing Eng- glish studies in Norway under German occupation was, of course, to be or not to be. This was a politi- cal issue. So was the problem of the character of texts and other mater- ial used in teaching and in advanced studies. But the latter was also a question partly dealt with behind the backs of the occupying power. The methods used in teaching and study in order to overcome the ;pe- cial difficulties created by the iso- lation as well as the maintenance of standards, was a field to which the enemy-in the nature of things- was barred from access. In our educational system, foreign languages, and English in the first place, comes in at all levels--at the elementary, the secondary, and the university stage. The experience of the war made alert people in the educational field keenly aware that education is one, that it did not make much difference whether stu- dents were elementary first-graders or were doing advanced research work; for in all casesit was our task to protect their right to free inves- tigation, to neutralize theenemy's efforts to regiment them physically and spiritually, and if possible, to aid them in acquiring skills and knowledge which would make it pos- sible for them to main.tain freedom of thought and intellectual and mor- al integrity. Therefore any enemy attack on any part of our educational system wa>> an attack on the whole. We have a concise proverbial phrase in Nor- wegian: "Today you, tomorrow me." The Nazis did not normally try a frontal attack on the whole system; tVey tried to single out one group for attack at a time, on the prin- ciple of "divide and conquer." Hence, issues that were common to all, might be fought by one group, some- times' at one level, sometimes at another. Thus the issue of banning of books was fought at the Univer- sity level; compulsory introduction of texts at the elementary and part- ly at the secondary level; the issue of "political reliability" as a pre- requisite for access to higher educa- tion (on the German pattern), by the entrants to teachers' training colleges. (To guard against a com- mon misunderstanding I had better point out that in spite of the enemy's intensive and drastic efforts to achieve this aim, Norwegian educa- tion was not Nazified, nor was Nazi material used in teaching. The enemy might curtail, but was unable to interpolate.) * * * IN THE 1930'S English was, by leg- islative action, made our first foreign language. It was introduced { in the elementary schools and also in the teachers' training colleges. Earlier, German had been the first foreign language, started in secon- dary scnools, with English coming second, a year later. This change re- presents a culmination of a tendency in our cultural life and general ori- entation. Traditionally our academic life has been strongly oriented to- ward the European continent, par- ticularly Germany. For advanced study, people went to Germany. In the schools they had acquired good knowledge of German, and real Ger- man easily. But our economic life was oriented westward, to the Eng- lish-speaking world. And, in the 19th century, from the 1850's on, popular, democratic movement work- ed for an increasing orientation west- ward also in the secondary schools, which were then dominated by the traditions of classics and German. The more radical movement stressed the importance of a science, English, and our own cultural traditions, in- cluding old Norse. Step by step these subjects were placed on the curricu- lum and gained ground. The strong position of English in our school system was thus a fairly recent achievement. And the marvel is that on one point it was even strengthened while the Germans were in power. By the school law of 1935 English was introduced into the elementary schools, with five hours a week in each of the two up- per grades. In the simultaneous changes in the secondary schools, English had been cut off at the top on the science side and on the classical side . .. In May 1939 Helga Stene pointed out that these students would stop learning English before they were mature enough to acquire the abstract romance part of the vo- cabulary, and this would be a handi- cap for them in studying thir spe- cial subjects . . . The plans (which were not yet in force) were revised, and this revision, increasing English on the science side by two hours tak- en from German and one from mathematics, was passed by the cab- inet the week before the German invasion of Norway. After the German invasion, the Ministry of Education headed by Dr. Seip, Rectbr of the University, in the period- of the Administration Council (April-September 1940) had this legacy from the government. As good patriots they put the decision into force, and published it in a circular to the schools issued in the summer of 1940, but so unobtrusively formulated that the fact that there was a change could only be discover- ed by keen and well-informed read- ers. The Nazis never discovered it ... BUT, one may ask, how were stan- dards kept up under the diffi- culties attending active work? It has meant that our advanced students have not had the opportunity we would have liked for the widest pos- sible reading, and that they have had to struggle against heavy odds in de- veloping such a thing as oral flu- ency. But, on the whole at all levels, the standards in in English have been maintained an amazing de- gree. The students have gone to their work with a will, they have loved the English language, partly for its intrinsic interest, and partly because learning English well was Publication in the Daily Official Bi letin is constructive notice to all men hers of the University. Notices for ti Bulletin should be sent In typewritte form to the office of the Summer Se sion, Room 1213 Angell Hall by 3:30 p.r on the day preceding publication (11: a.m. saturdays). SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1946 VOL. LVI, No. 4S Notices Every undergraduate house is quired to send the president or representative to a Judiciary me ing which will be held in the Mic gan League on Monday, July 8, 4 p.m. New Registration will be held all students not previously registe with the Bureau of Appointments Monday, July 8 at 3:00 in Room Mason Hall. This applies to b students and. faculty interested either Teaching or General positic Only one registration will be h during the summer. All students v will want appointments next year urged to come to this meeting. Women students interested in I ing care o children may regi in the office of the Dean of Won Their names will be placed on sitters list. Pi Lambda Theta will hold its first meeting of the summer on Tuesday, July 9, at 7:30 p.m. in the West Con- ference Room of the Rackham Build- ing. On the agenda are installation of officers for the summer, a brief business meeting, and a reception for all Pi Lambda Thetans on camps, whether members of this or other chapters. All Pi Lambda Thetans are cordially invited to be present. The Unversity of California has half time teaching assistantships in its nursery school. For details call the Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 489. Michigan Sailing Club: Members, officers, and all those interested in joining: There will be a meeting at the Michigan Union Saturday, July 6 at 1 p.m. After the short meeting we will go to the lake and work on the boats. All householders interested In ob- taining the names of students to care for children as baby sitters may pro- cure this nformation by calling the Office of the Dean of Women. The Graduate Outing Club is plan- ning a hike or canoeing, depending on the weather, on Sunday, July 7. All graduate students interested should meet in the Outing Club rooms in the Rackham Building at 2:30 p.m. Use the northwest en- trance. Lectures There will be a lecture by Thomas Diamond, Professor of Vocational Education at 4:05 p.m., Monday, July 8, in the University High School Aud- itorium. The topic will be on "The Place of Vocational Education in Education." Academic Notices Graduate students may not drop courses without record nor add new courses after Satrday, July 8. Courses may be dropped with record from July 8 until July 27. By a' recent ruling of the Executive Board of the Graduate School, courses dropped after July 27 will be recorded with a grade of E. Concerts Faculty Chamber Music Program: Rackham Lecture Hall, Sunday eve- ning, July 7, 8:30. Gilbert Ross and Lois Porter, violinists, Louise Rood, violist, Oliver Edel, cellist, Lee Pat- tison, pianist. The program will in- elude Schubert's quartet in A-Minor, Op. 29, Quartet No. 7 for two violins by Quincy Porter, a guest faculty member for the Summer Session, and will close with Schubert's Trio in B fiat major, Op. 99, for piano, vio- lin and cello. Coming Events French Club : The first meeting of the Summer Session French ub will take place on Monday, July 8, at 8:00 p.m. in the Michigan Union. Professor Charles R. Koella, of the Romance Language Department, will talk informally on: "Ou va Ia France". Election of officers, French songs. Social hour. All students on the campus are cordially invited to our weekly meetings, which are free of charge. If reconversion bogs down and de- velops into a slump, it will be due to one thing only: the failure of labor and management to agree on BARNABY . teyig 46 . HN..p.,.. b4 f."- -711 There must be a mistake. I did There's your name. And not advertise a house for sale. Alikeyy address. In the paper. A ieystory. pIt's an outrage s O 9 ) By Crockett Johnson WAait, m'boy. Your father has the situation in hand. My! the power of the press- All those people responding fo my simple ad-Ilf staggers one's imagination... C ) ti I I I . - 1, ; , k " , I I I I can't get over it. Who could have advertised an imaginary I agree. But why did your name appear in the paper? fl Gosh, Mr. O'Malley- You didn't speak to the people who answered Reg. U. S.P.'. Opt If makesIone wonder... If 1_ 1 _ - _ - -- |1t M II I I