TIRE MICHICA DAILY Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Meniber of the Western Conference Editorial Associatto The A4ssociated Press is exclusively entitled to the e for re- bublication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise redited in this paper and the local news published herein. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second !lass matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Asistant Postmnaster General-.r .s~tn Subscription by carrier, $4.00; br mail, $4.50 Offices Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, IFlchigan. Phones~: Editorial, 4825; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR RICHARD L TOBIN EdItoria Director..................... ........Beach Conger, Jr. Cay Editor ................... ................Carl Forsythe News Ed'tor................................David M. Niohol E orts Editor...............................Sheldon 0. Fullerton Womena Editor ..,.......................Margaret M. Thompson Issistant News Editor ..4....... . .......Robert L. Pierce community into a superior, cooperating body. Yet it has about as much reason as fire: when suddenly set off by a spark of "National Honor" it can get out of control and ruin everyt'hing. That we call war. Kirby Page gave a good example of the methods of "National Honor." A business man from out East goes to Chicago to start up an enterprise; racketeers take his money and finally shoot him. "He was a fool to go to Chicago," everyone says. No one thinks of calling out the New York State Guard to intervene in Chicago. But another man goes to Mexico. Some bandits take his property and shoot him. Immedi- ately some military fire-bug shouts "National Honor" and starts a great flare-up. "The United States must protect the property of its citizens." But the recent rise of nationalism in most small countries has made armed intervention no longer safe. In any case it is an unnecessary and unsound policy; it must be abandoned. Why should a person travelling or in- vesting abroad not take his chances along with the people of the other country? Excessive nationalism is associated with an insti- tution of recent origin, the "National State"-artifi- cial, sovereign, proud and touchy. In medieval times there was no such thing. May we look forward to a new world where again political divisions will fall less sharply and more naturally, where the patriotic spirit will attach to a world community as well as the local. In fact we have in the League of Nations the possible beginnings of a new order, but it is being thwarted on every hand by intensely nationalistic, narrow states, which refuse to cooperate, be it about armaments, tariffs, unemployment, overproduction or underconsumption. It is hopeful, however, that these states, including the United States and the Soviet Union, are learning to cooperate through the League on a host of less important matters. come truly democratic governments in the leading coun- tries would soon build up some form of world gov- ernment. But if we continue to tolerate governments by the rich in the interest of certain of the rich, which persist in such policies as armed intervention like small beys playing with fire, then the political and industrial system is going to collapse before our eyes. One can see the signs. Charles A. Orr. i1m HWA%-4. HbbsAVI \AWiIliar H. H'obbs i .I Editor's Note: This is the fourth of a series of articles on outstand- ing members of the University fac- ulty. Others will apear in this col- umn on Wednesday of each week. By E. Jerome Pettit During that period ~of the year 1918 which climaxed the World I F War, one of the leading men who were employed with the assembling of material for the use of the Amer- ican delegates at the Peace Confer- ence, was an eminent geologist. One of the leading publications concerning the results of the War was "The World War and Its Con- sequences" with an introduction by Theodore Roosevelt, w hi i c h was written by this same geologist. That the .war work of this man should stand out with that of lead- ing political scientists, historians, and sociologists, although the mat- ter is somewhat apart from the field of geology, is only an excellent illustration of the versatility of the man, Prof. William Herbert Hobbs, head of the department of geology of the University. Although his work in the geologi- cal field has been of such a nature as to mark him as one of the lead- ers in that branch of science, the k B. Gilbreth ad Goodman Karl Seiffert NIGHT EDITORS= J. Culen KenD e dy James Inglis GerryorgA Rosvinthal George A. Stauter ber J. Myers in Jones anley W. Arnheini wson E. Becker omas Connellan muel GI. Ellis meet .l L. Finkle uis B. Gascoigne Sports Assistants John W. Thomas REPORTERS Fred A. fluber Normai Kraft Roland Martin lledfry Meyer Marion A. Milezewski Albert I1. Newman 1;. Jerome Pettit Georgia Geisman Alice Gilbert Martha Littleton Eliz~abeth Long Frances Manchester Elizabeth Mann John . Towns td Oharles A. Sanford John W. Pritchard Joseph Renihan C. Ihrt Schaaf lirackley Shaw Parker R. Snyder G. R. Winters Margaret O'Brien Hillary Rarden Dorothy Rundell Elma Wadsworth Josephine Woodhamis thy Brockman m Carver rice Collins e Crandall Feldman ence -foster BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21224' CHARLES T. KLTNE ........................Business .Manager NORRIS P. 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Good May Seefried Minnie Seng Helen Spencer Kathryn Stork Clare Eanger Mary Elizabeth Watt.- NIGHT EDITOR-FRANK GILBRETH WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1931 Viewpoints Qi The News INDIVIDUALLY, this morning's Daily will be' read with varying shades and viewpoints on, the .news. Ivan Williamson will see his name in headlines and will probably be the proudest man on the'campus-and rightly. He's the new foot-; ball captain. But somebody else, perhaps two or\ thre 'others who thought they had a chance, will read the same story and, while accepting the ver- I dict and wishing Michigan's star end a great season next year, will put the paper down, glad that those same headlines aren't going to appear in tomorrow's issue, tOo. The news-hawk's eyes will pop open when he sees the new mystery story brewing in Ann Arbor following the discovery of a woman's clothing in the Huron late yesterday. What a story, he thinks! And this same clew may deepen the sorrow of some other individual who remembers the nau- seating horror with which he or she read of a similar event long ago. Congress opens up next Monday, another story tells us, and everyone is' anxious to see which Democrat accepts the seik- er's chair. What does the Republican candidate for the post, defeated after years of ttiumphs, feel when he reads that story? "Who cares if the famous Chinese philosopher is going to lecture here," says the disriterested reader at this iriorning's table ; and yt oe of hi fellow countrymen, reading the same story at the same time, has already clipped it out and sent it home. .To him it is the week's greatest event. The Daily prints an editorial on a controversial issue; it is read, discussed, and huiled bck, torn to bits by friend and foe alike. 'He's dead wrong', shouts one reader. 'You're wrong ! He's dead right' says another. And both look into the mirror and are surer than ever of their viewpoints. It's being voiced around the conference that Michigan should concede the Big Ten title to Northwestern this year as a reciprocal gesture for the 1925 sportsmanship thC Wildcats displayed. The opinion is based on the fact that during the normal schedule the Evanston team won five and lost no games, only to be beaten when they were stale and on the down grade in a charity struggle. But there may be another side to it, and Michi- gan's "sportsmanship" in such a concession is debatable. It takes all kinds of news to make a world. CAMPUS RIN O Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous communications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon re- quest. Contributors are asked to be brief, con- fining themselvesN to less than 300 words if possible. I was struck by a recent contribution to your column concerning the armed intervention of the To The Editor: In the able and well-sustained discussion between Mr. Gillette and his critics, both sides have made strong and logical arguments, but there is one point which might bear a little more stressing. Granting the natural combativeness of man, does it follow that war as it exists today is necessarily an eternal insti- tution? In the middle ages neighborhood wars be- tween one baron and another, in the old Scottish highlands clan wars between one family and another, in the Italy f the fifteenth century municipal wars between one city and another, in the sixteenth cen- tury religious 'wars between one church and another seemed altogether natural and "inevitable." Yet they have all ceased to exist and it requires an effort even to reconstruct them in imagination. There is nothing about national wars that promises greater perman- ence. The step from our huge national states (one of which, the British Empire, already contains in comparative peace a fourth of the whole human race, and another, the United States of America, covers an area comparable to that of all Europe) to an inter- national world state is a much shorter one than has already been taken from the feudal anarchy of the tenth century France with its hundred local "wars" to the peace and public order of France today. Preston W.,Sosson. AT TIlE MICHIGAN Of "Ambassador Bill" little more need be said than that Will Rogers plays the lead, which has be- come virtually as eloquent as all the glittering praise so unanimously showered by critics upon past per- formances of the famous corn-fed political commen- tator, humorist; and, what applies more directly here, comedian. With the exception of one or two spots where the action b come what might be termed soggy-and what could one expect with an eight-year old boy king in the script-the show is good enough so that it is only by exercising all our restraint that we re- frain from terihirig it brilliant. Even Margaret Churchill, who so often has been the weak spot of an otherwise good cast, does well as the youthful queen-mother, while the mere pres- ence-and what more need she offer--of Greta Nissen helps the bed-room scene immeasurably. Miss Nissen doesn't have to be able to act. The action, of which there is an abundance, con- cerns the foibles of a sagebrush diplomat in a royal court of the Balkans. The situation is ideal as a backgrouAd for the verbal rapier thrusts of Mr. Will Rogers, who, it appears, still is an' ardent Democrat. His lines are extremely well-written, while his de-_ portmnent throughout the film, is, of course, prime. The love story-oh, yes, there is a love story-is not nearly as sickeninf as one might expect in a pic- ture where.it is secondary to a comedy theme. Ray Milland as the deposed king is just ardent enough toward the queen, Margaret Churchill, so that the audience doesn't get that bloated feeling so frequent- ly created by the lesser lovers of the screen. LAST WEEK'S BEST SELLERS -Rentschler Photy' unusual Ithing a b o u t Professor Hobbs has been his widespread in- terest in all things affecting hu- manity. This tall figure, with his sharp yet kindly glance, possessing a full ruddy beard, is one of khe most pic- turesque characters on the Michi- gan campus. Students of former years remember him as the indi- vidual who was always accompan- ied by Sandy, the tawny handsome collie who died last December. Professor Hobbs, who has had three glaciers named in his honor, is one of the most widely-traveled men of the country. In 1921 he made an extended trip through the Orient, visiting many islands and carrying on research work wherev- er he went. He stopped at Hawaii and Japan, where he studied moun- tain range formations, and then sailed for the Coral Islands on a Japanese gunboat, the first foreign civilian to travel on a Japanese war vessel. On this voyage the ship ex- perienced many storms,all0of which the grey-haired profecsso-i took with a smile. In January of the following year he sent this message to Pres. M. L. Burton of the University, "I am now on a 4,000-mile cruise skirt- ing North Borneo-thence through the Straits and past Flores into th' Indian Ocean. The scientific prob- lem on which I am working has se developed as to make it'necessary for me to extend my trip."-The an- swer to this letter of course advis- ed Professor ;Hobbs to continue his work. Another experience of this trip was the discovery of a marooned isailor on the shoals of Kusai Is- lands. The man had been there for twenty years, and Professor Hobbs laid his case before the Acting- Governor of the Philippines and so arranged for the sailor's return to his home in Utica, Ohio. His next important venture was in connection with the famous Koch of Copenhagen, in the form f a scientific expedition to Green- .and during the years 1926, 1927, and 1928. His work there was laud- ed by Admiral Byrd in the follow- ing statement, "The -work of Pro- fessor Hobbs in the North was most valuable, and what he has done there must be done in the South. When I reach the age which he has attained, I am mighty sure that I shall beglad to retire. Not he. He Wahr's Maid-In-Waiting, by John Galsworthy. (Scrib- ner's) $2.50. A White Bird Flying, by Bess Streeter Aldrich. (Appleton) $2.00., Hatter's Castle, by A. J. Cronin. (Little Brown & Co.) $2.50. Westward Passage, Margaret A. Barnes. (Hough- ton Mifflin) $2.50. Cold, by Prof. Lawrence Gould. (Brewer, Warren & Putnam) $3.50. .N