WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TIMEE PRAVDA REIGNS: Russian Newspapers Cited World's Dullest By WILLIAM L. RYAN NEW YORK - () - The Soviet Union, which invented every- thing, has one invention nobody will dispute. It has the world's dull- est newspapers, and the dullest of these is Pravda. But imagine yourself a Com- munist Party functionary-say the leader of the party organization in a factory. You are charged with maintaining discipline and pre- venting mistakes by inept workers. You have been having an uncom- fortable feeling that things have- n't been going well. Erery day, seven days a week, you rush to the newsstand and stand in line to pay 20 kopeks (five cents at Russia's valuation) for your copy of Pravda. You have to hurry, because Pravda is not in- tended for the masses and there are just about enough to supply the members of the Communist Party. Your only concern is page one, columns one and two, which tells you the way the wind is blowing in the approved Stalinist double talk. Here you will find out just what the Party is thinking about. You read the two-column head- line anxiously. "Better organiza- tion of the Work of the Harvest," it says, and you breathe a sigh of relief. Not you-not today, anyway. The next day it's "Raise the Level of Leadership in the Economy." oYu are spared again. The next day it's "Bolshevik Firmness in Work." This may be it. You skim quickly over the first five or six paragraphs. The articles all read the same way in the be- ginning-first a glittering gener- ality about the topic in hand; then, invariably the words "Comrade Stalin teaches," or some variant thereof, along with a couple of lines of quotation from the master. But you are looking for a key word. It usually comes after Pravda fin- inshes saying that things are pret- ty good in general. One day the word is "odnako"- meaning "however." Another day it may be "regrettably," or "on the other hand," or just plain "but." This is it. Reds Agree With Troop SongParody By ROBERT EUNSON KAESONG, Korea-(A')--Ameri- can soldiers in Korea sing a par- ody on the "Prisoner's Song" that goes like this: "Now if I had ten thousand dollars, "I'd go to the general and say: "I'm leaving Korea tomorrow, "Because no boats are leaving today." That's exactly when the Chinese and North Korean Communists want them to leave-on the next boat. - It was Allied refusal to place immediate withdrawal on the agenda that caused the Reds to obtain a recess until today of the cease-fire negotiations. THERE IS the possibility that when the Reds come back they will agree to take up an agenda omit- ting this point. It is to be assumed that in talk- ing to the Reds, Vice Adm. C. Tur- ner Joy, Chief U.N. negotiator, made some mention of the fact that withdrawal of UN troops would be taken up in the United Nations as soon as peace in Korea is assured. Naturally, the UN will with- draw from Korea when the time is ripe to do so. That, according to U.S. Secretary of State Ache- son, will not be until the South Korean army is strong enough to defend itself from the North Ko- reans. That might be a year-or 18 months. * * * EVEN AFTER the withdrawal from Korea, the chances are that the U.S. Eighth Army will move to Japan and Okinawa. The latter is being developed as a U.S. base, and a treaty is in the works with Ja- pan on stationing American troops in Japan after the occupation ends. Mississippi Flood Peril Lessening CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo.-(P)- The Mississippi churned past this community of 20,000 at crest or near-crest last night, and there was a feeling that the worst is over. A reading around noon put the river at 41.8 feet. Weather bureau men said that may be the top mark. They don't plan to make another reading until today. Earlier they predicted a mark of 41.9. The record high here was 42.4 in 1943. No new damage was reported in the Cape Girardeau area as the river surged by in a mighty effort which is expected to sap its des- tructive strength. Some 50 families living in low- lying areas already had moved from their homes and no further evacuations have been ordered. Muddy waters stood a foot deep on the first floor of the four-story International Shoe Co. plant which was forced to close several days ago. The Frisco Railroad passenger station was also flooded. Read and Use Daily Classifieds LOOKING AHEAD: Korean GI Bills Head, For Failure By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-The American Council on Education says prob- ably none of some 20 or more Ko- rean GI Education Bills introduced in Congress so far will be reported favorably. In an informative note to its members, it adds, however: "Pressure is building up for some kind of educational program for members of the present armed forces. It is reliably reported that the Administration is working on a proposed bill." -HISTORY A LA RUSSE- WASHINGTON - Red Star, the Soviet Army paper, has pub- lished a "Guide to Editors" con- cerning Russia's in-the-works Great Encyclopedia. It said: "It is known that all the for- eign wars waged by the U.S.A. from its origin up to World War II not one can be called a just war or a war of liberation .. . it is to be presumed that all the wars exposing the predatory and bandit-like character of Ameri- can capitalism will be appropria- tely shown in the encyclopedia." -COLLEGE BUILDINGS- WASHINGTON-A U.S. Office of Education survey indicates building programs at colleges and universities the next 18 months will total more than one and a half billion dollars. About 79 per cent will be spent for new buildings. Almost half of the construction will be in class room buildings, 20 per cent in housing for students and staff. -LOW-RENT HOMES- WASHINGTON-Public Housing Administration (PHA) officials, troubled by what they consider un- duly high interest rates, plan to issue no more than $300,000,000 in bonds the rest of this year to fi- nance low-rent housing projects. That word from PHA officials puts a hole in expectations voiced in some New York financial quar- ters that public housing bonds of- ferings during the remainder of 1951 would be at least double that amount. PHA chiefs were disappointed when they put up the first of their new-type bonds last week to raise $171,000,000 to finance projects in 58 communities. They found it would cost them 2.073 per cent interest on the average to get the money from private investors. Although they accepted bids for the entire issue, they felt a lower interest rate should have been of- fered. Not only are the bonds un- conditionally guaranteed by the U.S. Government, but interest on them is exempt from Federal in- come tax. Besides the interest rate factor, building costs have lifted the aver- age expense of public housing units to $10,000 each. PHA officials say they won't try to raise any more money on bond TOP LEVEL CONFERENCE-Prof. Clyde Vroman, director of ad- missions (left) makes plans with Dean Thomas D. Rowe of the College of Pharmacy for the Classroom Conference to be held at the University Friday. Pharmacy is one of the 11 units in the University which have arranged special conferences and tours for high school teachers. * * * High Schooldadministrators, Teachers To Confer Friday -Daily-Robert Lewis $$$$-Isadore Million, Grad, known to his friends as I. Million and to his creditors as just another poverty stricken student, is shown engaging in his favorite extra-curricular activity. Deter- mindedly, he extracts a nickel tied to a string from a local vending machine, after purchasing a candy bar. Million, a paleo-ontolo- gist, who slices and polishes rocks that are 300 million years old in the University Museum, can be recognized by his unique slouch, a result of walking in a bent-over position looking for lost change. Rather than being a philanthropic person, as his name might im- ply, Million calls himself "the kind of guy who takes quarters out of Red Cross canisters." - * -" THEN PRAVDA will center its fire on the target for the day. It may be that not enough attention is being paid to Party leadership in the factory organization. If it is, you are getting off easy. It may speak of "serious shortcomings." Even this isenot so bad, for you can confess it is so, discipline a section foreman or two and make things look right for a while. But it may be that Pravda finds that the way things are being runs amounts to "anti-state activity." That, brother, is bad. You are on your way to being bounced and possibly a job in a cooler climate. This of course is news to the party people concerned. But it is dreary stuff to everybody else, and so is the rest of Pravda. Pravda has brought the news- less newspaper to a point of per- fection. Every day, seven days a week, it looks just the same all through its four pages, except for the headlines, and even some headlines are the same as the day before. But for all this, Pravda is prob- ably the most powerful and most feared newspaper in the world. It pipes the tune which all the So- viet press must dance. It lays down the law of the Communist Party which rules 200,000,000 souls. It pronounces sentence on straying Communists. Saddest of all for Pravda, not even its own editors are safe. They may feel the axe just as well as the next fellow. Pravda is edited by a collegium, headed by the powerful Mikhail Suslov, who is close to the Polit- buro and may even be a member by now. At any rate, he is a Com- munist Party secretary. EVERYTHING THAT goes into Pravda is weighed carefully in ad- vance when it appears on the streets, the message it bears be- comes the gospel according to the Politburo. But it seldom says any- thing directly. It is as if it were trying to hide its real meaning so that none but schooled Commnn- ists could understand. Most likely, alongside the nag- ging and scolding of columns 1 and 2 above the fold, there will be a letter to Stalin. The ap- proach to this is always the same. The headline says a mouthful like: "From the collective farm- ers, workers of machine-tractor stations and state farms, special- ists and scientific workers of ag- riculture of the Estonian SS.R." All this is in lighter face type, and then in big, bold face: "To the great leader and teacher of the Soviet people Comrade Jo- seph Vissarionovich Stalin." "Dear Joseph Vissarionovich," starts the letter, and it may go on for column after column, or it may be only a dozen paragraphs or so. It outlines the promises of the out- fit sending the letter, whose work- ers probably never saw it. There is one fascinating feature of page 2 which must not go un- mentioned. It has been appearing irregularly once or twice a week since December, 1949. The headline and introductory paragraph are always the same: "Streams of greetings." m . .... A conference of high school teachers and administrators will meet on the campus Friday to tackle the problems of high school-university goals. Arranged by a committee head- ed by Prof. Clyde Vroman, direc- tor of admission, the conference will investigate classroom prac- t i c e s, instructional facilities, teaching materials, experiments in education and ways to help stu- dents. Friday morning the visiting ed- ucators will look in on classes, tour British Plane Crosses Pole From Iceland FAIRBANKS, Alaska - () - A British bomber zipped over the North Pole yesterday on a "jolly good" 3,558-mile flight from Ice- land. The four-engine plane slipped through an overcast to an easy instrument landing at 9:54 a.m. (1:54 p.m., CST), its,.crew of 10 tired but tickled. A non-stop, 4,128-mile flight back to Manby, England-one of the longest polar hops ever at- tempted-was delayed until tomor- row after being planned for today. The plane commander, Wing Comdr. R. T. Frogley, stepped out of the Lincoln Aries bomber into a light rain at Eielson Air Force base. Frogley told newsmen "it was a jolly good flight" with icing con- ditions just after leaving Iceland and just before landing the only trouble encountered. Frogley and his crew, who left Keflavik, Iceland, Monday and made the trans-polar hop in 18 hours, 54 minutes, delayed the flight back to England so they could talk polar flying with men of the U. S. Air Force's 58th wea- ther reconnaissance group. the campus and attend curricu- lum conferences in several units of the University. "Our Classroom Goals" will be the topic for discussion at a 12:15 p.m. luncheon in the ballroom of the Union. Speakers will be Eu- gene Thomas, president of the Mi- chigan Secondary School Asso- ciation and principal of Central High school in Kalamazoo, and Dean Hayward Keniston of the literary college. Afternoon conferences on in- structional programs in h i g h schools and the related programs in the University are scheduled at 2 p.m. Visual arts, biological sci- ences, business subjects, English, journalism, languages, mathema- tics, music, physical sciences, so- cial sciences and speech will be discussed in separate meetings. Concluding event will be a pan- el discussion on "Subject Matter Problems in Today's Classroom" scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the Un- ion ballroom. Wrong Asks Quick Work Ont River Plan DETROIT-(,')-Canadian Am- bassador Hume Wrong made a plea last night for early action by Congress on the proposed develop- ment of the St. Lawrence River. In a speech prepared for open- ing day celebration of Detroit's 250th anniversary, Wrong told an audience that included Secretary of State Acheson: "The failure to cope with it (the St. Lawrence problem) is causing a good many Canadians to feel frustrated. Nineteen years have gone by since the first agreement jointly to construct the St. Law- rence Project was signed in Wash- ington, and 10 years since a re- vised agreement, designed to meet criticisms of the earlier treaty, took its place. Ford Grant Given ROME-(W)-The UN Food and Agriculture Organization yesterday announced receipt of a $20,000 grant from the Ford Foundation. The grant will be used to finance representation of Catholic and Protestant groups at FAO confer- ences and meetings, FOA Director General Morris E. Dodd an- nounced. MMOOMMMM -I i BARGAINS *.e.!for . 0*o BARGAIN .. from. 0 0 BARGAIN DAY COTTON SUMMER DRESSES Chambray.. Pique.. Linen. . Gingham All Styles $400 $700 $00 Values to 22.95 Misses and Junior Sizes BETTER DRESSES Pure Silk ... Shantung ... Crepes Sheers EVERY DRESS TO BE SOLD! 7-15, 10-20, also half sizes Ann Arbor BARGAI N Days BARGAINS for WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY OUR DAYS to offer this season's stock at below cost re- ductions to make this the best Bargain Days we ever had. YOUR DAYS to find exceptional values! Prices lower than your greatest expectations! 25 Spring Suits 3 00 15 Spring Coats 100% wool. All good 100% wool - navy year - around wear. and pastels, suedes Sizes 9 to 15, 10 to Any two 13.00 Sale fleeces a n d gabar 20 and 1412 to 24'2. Priced items pur- dines. All good for chased25together wear into late Fall. 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D e n i m - Sun Dresses. 5 All good year - around Denim, pique and linen wear. Sizes 9 to 15, 10 to Jackets. 20 and 14712 to 2472. GIRDLES SKIRTS Two-way stretch. Origi- Rayon - gabardine -- 198 na"y to 6.50. cotton. STRAPLESS BRAS Cotton, satin and nylon BLOUSES --Originally 4.00. Rayon - cotton - ba- JEWELRY tiste - crepe. Originally Pins - bracelets-neck- to 8.95. 98 laces - earrings. Origi- nally to 10.00. Odds and Ends in Hats Halters - Shorts - De- Originally 5.95 to 12.95 nims westkits. Handbags; Cotton and Rayon Slips plastic and leather. HATS Pearls, 1-2-3-Strand T-SHIRTS Blouses, Bras, Gloves HANDBAGS Costume Jewelry SUITS and TOPPERS 100% WOOL GABARDINES.. Solids or Checks 7-15, 10-20 55.00original prices s2800 COTTON SKIRTS Ski its . .. .. . .. ... .. .. .. . ... . .. 3.00 Cottons, Prints and Solids.......5.00 Choice of the House - All Sizes -- Values to 10.95 BLOUSES Light, Cool Crepes, Cottons, and Nylons. Sizes 32-38..........2.00 White & Colors, values to 10.95. .3.89 SWEATERS Boucle-Wool-Nylon ........ ,.2.00 34-40, Values to 7.95..... .... .3.00 LINGERIE Jersey Gowns Crepe Full or Half Slips Cotton Full or Half Slips Cotton Pajamas Values to 6.95. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2.29 SPECIAL PURCHASE Rayon Suits Fully .ined COl IS. TWFFDS CHECKS DON'T MISS THE.. . Special Book Sale Special Stationery Sale aiaM2 r i lfan'c nnS .A I i I