THE MICHIGAN ,DAILY _______________ _____________________ '4' Eirvigu a11j Fifty-Sixth Year lII Colt Poepiial gelg.optep. BILL MAULDIN Argenti Parade E'ited and managed by students of. the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Oontro of Student Pubicatos. Editorial Staff Managing Editors .. Paul Harsha, 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 xe-publication of all news dispatches credited toit or otherwise credited in this newipaper. All rights of re- publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at At Arbor, Michigan Mme second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by ca - rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945.46 NIGHT EDITOR: CINDY REAGAN Editorials published in The Michigan Daily Sre written by members of The Daily staf and represent the views of the writers only. ArMy-Navymerger The proposed Army-Navy' merger bill still sits in the Senate after months of controversy. Unless Navy opposition to the unification plan is listened to and a compromise reached, chances of passing the bill before the planned recess of Congress this month are nil. Reasons for the heated Navy opposition to the bill are many and in some cases justified. In their offense upon the creation of a single De- partment of Defense, the first general assump- tion of naval leaders is that the Navy is of vi- tal importance to our national defense. Cer- tainly they are correct here, although Navy Se- cretary Forrestal's discounting of the might of the atomic bomb is evidenced by his surprise at the "relative unimportance" of the damage done to naval vessels in the Bikini Bomb test is an example of gross under-estimation. The Army, on its side, has nursed a century- old resentment of the Navy's flare for the'spec- tacular. Man's awe of the sea seems to cling des- pite modern science. Destroyer skippers and the glamour boys of the PT squadrons made the headlines during the war far more than did the infantryman. From the Army's point of view, then, the bill would be to their distinct disad- vantage. On April 11 the President cracked down on Navy lobbying and propaganda against the bill, implying threats of severe disciplinary action against violators. Three days later, "The Army- Navy Journal," unofficial service publication, made a fair offer in proposing that the Presi- dent refer the bitter controversy over Army- Navy unification to his recently created coun- cil of elder statesmen for national defense which would serve as a jury. The appealwas made with the warning that "scars from this controversy" may only intensify the "bitterness which already exists." Pointing out that the council,, which consists of ten top war leaders who were given their high ranks and active pay for life by special action of Congress, the publication remarked editorially: "A unanimous decision of that coun- cil, having upon it men ,who were leaders in the war, who coordinated the different arms in action, and who have their own convictions and yet realize thoroughly the need for harmony, would satisfy the public and be accepted by the services." The proposal was ignored. At that time Congressional opponents of the' merger said that the Senate unification bill would be delayed until the Navy was allowed to voice its objections. These forecasts have proved corect. On July 2 the Navy made its own opportuni- ty with an attack on the revised bill before the Naval Affairs Committee, headed by Senator David I. Walsh. The bill had then been amended by the Military Affairs Committee and was avowedly designed to carry out Mr. Truman's latest recommendations. Senator Walsh said that the Navy had complained that the new bill carried proposals not agreed 'to by the Navy Department and "a good deal that was con- trary" to what had been the area of agreement with the Army.. He added that several of the objections were. to parts of the bill which President Truman on June 15 had personally decided must be in- corporated, even though Navy representatives in their negotiations with the Army had been un- willing to accept them. The revised bill carried two proposals objected to by the Navy, those for a single Department of Defense and for putting all land-based aviation under the control of the Air Forces. T HIS COLUMN recently quoted the official records of the Paris Peace Conference of 1919, which indicated that the United States at that time had withheld relief supplies in an effort to starve out the Communist governments in Russia and Hungary. . UNRRA officials in China now charge that the Chinese National Government is witholding relief supplies from Communist areas in China. These charges have been revealed in a series of dispatches .fron John Graham Dowling of the Chicago Sun Foreign Service. These charges clearly demonstrate that Communist areas, con- I'D RATHER BE RIGHT : 'Let Them Eat Cake' By SAMUEL GRAFTON OS ANGELES-The strategy of the enemies of price control is quite obviously to delay action on a new bill; they hope that within a few more days our business community will be so involved in new prices and new contracts and its warehouses will be so loaded with goods bought above ceiling, that to unscramble the mess will be as hard as to dissemble an omelet. Every day that passes without a bill is, to them, a victory gained; for, as business people put their money into lead at 9.5 cents instead of 8.25 cents, or into butter at 73 cents, wholesale, instead of 51 cents, they become committed to the new price level and hence they also become reluctant converts to the doctrine that perhaps we had better stay lost, instead of trying to find our way home again. It is serious business, this, of becoming committed to a new and higher price level, and we had better begin to look at some of the likely and less obvious results. These will be many and varied. Quite at random, for ex- ample, one might pick the subject of world famine; and one can say with confidence that the price rise is going to make it harder for for us to shi wheat abroa'd. For as cattle go to a new all-time high, the urge to turn grain into meat instead of selling it as grain will be strengthened During an inflationary rise, a lust develops to turn every basic commodity into its most expensive and complex, rather than into its cheapest and simplest final product, which is why, during such a time, it is always easier to buy silk shirts and steaks than socks and bread. The present in- crease in slaughter may counteract the ten- dency for a short time, but midwestern farmers are already talking about brighter prospects for "feeding out" their cattle to the ultimate of primeness and fatness, a process which is cer- tain to compete with our need for feeding out the world's famished millions to keep them from dying. One can, at this poit leave economics and turn to a question of a more spiritual kind. One aspect of inflation is that a certain coarseness and grossness of the public spirit arises inevitably with it; of which the pros- pect sketched out above, for more steaks and less famine relief, is only one example. Surely there are those who remember the peculiar and intellectual climate of the inflatior which followed the first world war; that strange period of the striped silk shirt, the profiteer, and the disregard of the returning servicemen. Strange things happen to the spirit of man during an inflationary rise; it seems to harden, so as to fit itself to lve in a setting in which we produce elaborate night club dinners for the few instead of round steak for the many; hundred dollar suits rather than thirty-five dollar suits, and gadgets made of gold rather than kitchen articles of tin. It becomes a time when the ride in the limou- sine nocks the quiet walk in the lane; a time tough and coarse and filled with envy; a kind of night-time for the clearer side of men, and this will come upon us in a period when we shall need all our perceptiveness and our unspoiled instincts to keep us right-side up in a chancy world. This is the commitment upon which we are engaging ourselves; and it is odd indeed that it is being peddled to us as a return to a simpler and more straightforward kind of life than that which we have recently known. (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) Philippie Question N WHAT NEWS sources can a man believe? Prof. Slosson, Michigan's well known auth- ority on current affairs is reported to have said in a University Lecture Tuesday that, "Philip- pine independence marks the end of the im- perialistic era." I pointed out in an editorial last week that while the new Republic of the Philippines has been given nominal political independence, it is being forced to amend its constitution to per- mit the unchecked economic exploitation of the natural resources of the Islands. Certainly there, is no more abominable nor ,more effective type of imperialism than the domination 'of a ,na- tion's economy by foreign business interests. If his statement is to be interpreted in the popularly accepted usage of the 'phrase, it seems to me that Prof. Slosson's statement is incor- rect. t-Tom Walsh taining 25 per cent of the people of China, have received a disproportionately low percentage of the relief supplies sent to China by UNRRA. Mme. Sun Yat-sen, widow of the founder of the Chinese Republic, stated that only one per cent of the supplies sent to China by UNRRA.had reached 'the Communist areas. The Chinese Communists say that the figure is less than two per cent, and INRRA officials place it at 2 to 4 per cent. The most generous estimate thus clear- ly proves discrimination against the Communist territories. A documented report by an UNRRA field director revealed that the armies of Chiang Kai-shek had stopped a shipment of food bound for the Comniunist famine area of North Hupeh province. The report of these National troops declared that "the military feels that they have the Reds in North Hupeh cut off and hope to starve them into submission." UNRRA also revealed that this discrimination stemmed directly from the office of the Chinese National Relief and Rehabilitation Administra- tion, organ of the Chiang Kai-shek government. UNRRA reported that CNRRA had approved and was preparing to ship 5,000 tons of flour and an additional 12',000 tons monthly to "North Kiang- su refugees from the Communists". The UNRRA representatives in North Kiangsu protested bit- terly, wiring: "What's the idea? There are no North Kiangsu refugees here except a few wealthy landlords who have run away from the Communist districts." This would not be the first instance of these wealthy landlords, many of whom collaborated with the Japanese, getting relief supplies from the Chiang Kai-shek govern- ment and selling them to the starving. When confronted by these documented facts, Dr. Tingfu F. Tsiang, director of CNRRA, re- plied: "There is no political discrimination in my office." Dr. Tsiang maintained that the "Communists don't need food and don't want food". Mr. Dowling quoted the following sta- tistics to indicate that Dr. Tsiang's contention was unfounded: "Whether the Communists real- ly need aid is illustrated by the Communist re- port from Yenan on the people's losses in North China liberated areas during the war years: Killed or tortured to death: 3,100,0,. Disabled, including civilians: 2,900,000." Ths report also states that over 6 million cat- tie, 48 million sheep, and 19 million homes were destroyed by the invaders in these areas. Fiorello LaGuardia, director of UNRRA, has reacted to these charges by cutting off all UNRRA shipments to China except food. He has threatened to stop even food shipments if the Chiang Kai-shek government continues to discriminate for political reasons. Thus Mr. LaGuardia's name must be added to that long list of men who have condemned the Chiang Kai-shek government. Since early in the Sino-Japanese War, such correspond- ents as Edgar Snow and Nathaniel Peffer of the New York Times have pleaded for Ameri- can support of the Communists in China. They based their plea on the fact that the Commun- ists alone in China were vigorously fighting the Japanese, while Chiang Kai-shek did the bulk of his fighting against the Communists. But throughout the war years, and still today, the American government supports the feudal dictatorship of Chiang Kai-shek. -Ray Ginger Proud Slavery HITLER has redeemed the word "slave." He has made us see that slavery is nothing to be ashamed of. Slavery, he has made us remember, is a condi- tion imposed from the outside; and in the last analysis, no condition imposed from the outside can rate the victims as low in the scale as those who made them victims. The Frenchman who goes back to his village will, in some later day, say to his grandchildren, bitterly but proudly: "I was a slave." He will tell of insults, beatings, of working under harsh overseers, of being starv- ed into submission; but he will tell these things with a remembering pride in his tough power to survive. His grandchildren will be proud to be the offspring of this man who was once a slave. Nothing in modern history-before the Hit- ler days-is darker than the African slave trade. It was conducted by whites, and it is something for whites to be ashamed of. It is nothing for colored people to be ashamed of. Yet there is a tacit assumption that. Negroes of today have, in their slave background, some- thing they need to live down-as a newly rich woman hides the fact that her father was a sa- loonkeeper. But there is, in slavery, nothing for Negroes to live down. White men, in their moods of mastery, committed some of the cruel- ist acts in history. They were man-hunters- brutal, conscienceless, and hypocritical. They searched out texts in their Holy Bible to justify their abominations. Never did hypocrisy wear so mean a face as among Christian slavers. There is nothing in his slave ancestry for the Negro to be ashamed of. Rather he has reasons to be proud. Not only did his ancestors have the stuff in them to survive the hardships of slavery, but they were vital enough to impress the pattern of themselves upon their masters. -H. A. Overstreet in "The Saturday Re- view of Literature" f . . iY1" ^ .." I M + I +. f s s 4 k1 ,j) PRESIDENT PERON'S three-hour parade of military might in Bu-- aos Aires may have had several mo- tivations. There can be little doubt that its primary purpose was to in- press Argentina's neighbors. None of them, with the exception of Brazil, has any such array, or the money to support such an army. Argentina is using 45 per cent of her budget for that purpose. Comparisons of the equipment of the Argentine Army and the armies of the great powers that fought the war are not a true index of the effec- tiveness of Peron's forces. It makes little difference whether the carbines and artillery are comparable to those, say, of the United States, Britain and Russia. A better comparison is between the weapons and forces that Peron has at his disposal and those of neighboring countries. Peron is not rattling his saber at us. This display was for the eyes of the other Latin-American diplo- mats and military observers , Probably they were impressed., -The New York 'times 'V a 6 -,ld f-i- SY di-" I P. oft-Ail , i,,I I .lr. "I've been looking at young Judson's war record. It says he fought on the sane side as the Russians." 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 office of the Summer Ses- sion, Room 1213 AngelI Hall by 3:30 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1946 VOL. LVI, No. 9S Notices Service Women interested in dis- cussing plans for the formation of a social organization to serve their in- terests are invited to attend a brief meeting Monday evening, July 15, at 8 p.m. in the Michigan League. Interested Service women, unable to attend, may call Anne Dearnley, phone 2-4561 if they desire to be in- formed of future meetings. Dependents Schools Service: Representatives from Headquar- ters, United States Forces, European Theatre, Dependents Schools Service will be in the office of the Bureau of Appointments on Monday and Tues- day, July 22 and 23. They will inter- view candidates for teaching posi- tions in Germany. Candidates are re- quired to have two years of teaching experience and should have in hand the following information: 1. Proof of citizenship, personal data such as age and marital status, photograph, and any requirements for the procurement of a passport. 2. Complete statement of school- ing, giving dates, degrees, honors, majors, etc. 3. Description of teaching experi- ence, giving dates, location of schools, age levels taught, characteristics of groups, typical as well as unusual instructional procedures employed in directing classroom activities. 4. Brief description of self, stres- sing personality traits, health status, hobbies, reading interests, social and community activities. 5. Refereices and letters of re- commendations. 6. Copies of teaching certificates. For appointment, call the Bureau of Appointments - Extension 489, Miss Briggs. University of Michigan Sailing Club: Officers, Members, and poten- tial members : There will be a meet- ing of the club at 1:00 pm.. on Sat., July 13 at the Michigan Union. Will the secretary please bring the roll of members. We will leave for Whit- more Lake shortly after 1 p.m. Housing for Women Students for the Fall Semester; (1) Women students now enrolled who have dormitory applications on file in the Office of the Dean of Wo- men will be notified during July of their assignments. (2) Those who have applied through this office for supplemen- tary housing and been referred are advised to sign contracts with the individual League Housemothers. (3) Those who are enrolled for the summer session who still need to ap- ply for housing for the fall semester are advised to call at the Office of the Dean of Women immediately provided their admission is not limit- ed to the summer session only. The YWCA is looking for women graduate students and senior under- graduates with sociology, group, health and physical education majors who would be interested in working in an international, interracial and inter-faith organization. There are openings for teen age program direc- tor, business and industrial healthk education, and executive director. All those interested in talking to Miss1 Lois McColbch of the National Sta1 call the Bureau of Appointments, 2011 Mason Hall, ext. 371, for further in-1 formation. Lectures There will be a lecture by Mabel E. Rugen, Professor of Health and Physical Education on Monday, July 15, at 4:05 p.m. in the University High School Auditorium. The topic will be "Interesting Developments in State Plans for Health Activities in Schools." There will be a lecture by O. W. Stephenson, Associate professor of the Teaching of History, on Tuesday, July 16, at'4:05 p.m. in the Univer- sity High School Auditorium. The topic will be "New and Old Horizons in the Social Studies." Dr. Preston W. Slosson, Professor of History, and radio commentator, will give a series of discussions of current events, each Tuesday, of the Summer Session in the Rackham Amphitheatre at 4:10 p.m. under the auspices of the Summer Session. The public is invited to attend. There will be a lecture by Herbert W. Briggs, Professor of Government, Cornell University, Tuesday, July 16 at 8:10 p.m. on the topic, "The Problem of World Government." It will take place in the Rackham Am- phitheatre. "The Wagner Act, Its Meaning and Operation": a panel discussion spon- sored by the student chapter of the National Lawyers Guild. David Kar- asick, Woodrow J. Sandler and Harry N. Casselman, senior attorneys for the National Labor Relations Board in Detroit, will be the speakers Wed- nesday, July 17, at 8 p.m. in Room 120, Hutchins Hall. All students and faculty interested are invited to at- tend. Academic Notices Students, Summer Session, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Courses may not be elected for credit after the end of the second week. Saturday, July 13, is therefore the last day on which new elections may be approved. The willingness of an instructor to admit a student later will not affect the operation of this rule. Students, Summer Session, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: No courses may be elected for credit after today. Students, Summer Session, College of Litrature, Science, and the Arts: Except under extraordinary circum- stances, courses dropped after today will be recorded with a grade of Laboratory Assistantship: There is available for the, Summer Session a laboratory assistantship in the De- partmnent of Aeronautical Engineer- ing. It is desired to obtain for this position the services of a veteran who has had experience in auto-pilot installation or maintenance and other types of instrumentation on military aircraft. Interested and qualified students will please call at the office of Professor E. W. Conlon, Roo B-47 East Engineering Build- ing. Concerts Carillon Recital: Percival Price, University Carillonneur, will present a recital at 3:00 Sunday afternoon, ler, and Fantasie in C major, Op. 159 by Schubert. Scheduled for 8:30 p.m., Sunday, July 14, in the Rackham Lecture Hall, this program will be presented by Gilbert Ross and Lois Porter, violinists, Louise Rood, vio- list, Oliver Edel, cellist, William D. Fitch, oboist, Albert Luconi, clarine- tist, and Joseph Brinkman, pianist. The entire series of programs will be open to the general public with- out charge. Lecture-Recital: Lee Pattison, pi- anist, will continue his series of lec- ture-recitals at 8:30 Monday even- ing, July 15, in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Entitled "Schumann and Liszt, a Study in Contrasts," Mr. Pattison will discuss and play Schumann's Kreisleriana-Fantasies, Op. 16, and Liszt's Sonata in B Minor. Other programs are scheduled. for July 22, 29, August 5, 12, and 19. All are open to the general public with- out charge. Woodwind Recital: Approximately 20 students will participate in a re- cital of compositions for Wind in- struments, at 8:30 Tuesday , even- ing, July 16, in the Rackham Assem- bly Hall. They will be assisted by Marvin Bostrum, Beatrice Gaal, and Mildred Minneman Andrews, pian- ists. Program will include Deuxieme Suite by DuBois, Concerto No. 1 by Brandt, Rigodon de Dardanus by Ra- mean, Aubade by DeWailly Quartett No. 2 by Maas, Fantasie Italienne by Delmas, Sarabande and Allegro by Grovlez and Concerto Grosso, Op. 6, No. 11 by Corelli. The general public is invited. Student Recital: Mary Fay Slaw- son, pianist, will present a program at 8:30 Wednesday evening, July 17, in the Assembly Hall of the Rackhai Building. Given in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music, Miss Slawson's re- cital will include Sonata in A ma- jor by Bach, Prelude, Op. 32, No. 5 and Prelude, Op. 23, No. 3 by Rach- maninoff; Postludium, Op. 13, No. 10 and Rhapsody, Op. 11, No. 3 by Dohnanyi, and Sonata in F minor, Op. 5 by Brahms. Miss Slawson is a pupil of Joseph Brinkman. The public is cordially invited. Coming Events French Club: Bastille Day will be- celebrated Monday, July 15, at 8 pm, in Room 305, Michigan Union. Pro- fessor Rene Talamon, of the Ro- mance Language Department, will offer a reading of known French works. Group singing and a social hour. A special invitation to join the club is made to students in French 31, 32, 61, 83, 153, 159 and in all French courses of literature. Foreign students are also cordially invited as well as any student inter- ested in improving his oral French. No charge. The Graduate Outin Club will meet Sunday, July 14, for an after - noon of hiking and swimming. Inter- ested graduate students should meet in the club rooms in the Rackham Building at 2:00 p.m., Sunday. Will those" who can bring cars please call George Costello at 5159 to discuss arrangements? Students in Business Edcatlon: 'There will be a picnic atthe Isad Monday, July 15. Meet in the park g lot of University High School at 5:00. If you can go, and have not been contacted by a member of the com- mittee, call Helen Walter at B.sy Barbour House Saturday. The price is $1-for a chicken dinner. BARNABY I. It's a reluctant decision, m'boy ... But the J. J. O'Maley Housing Project is in a state' of temoorarv stalemate. Priorities, you know. You won't build any houses, Mr. O'Malley? By Crockett Johnson Don't say a word to Barnaby. 1 But I bought a tent for him today. A nice canvas tent. Summer Session Choir: The vacancies in the soprano sectic w