THE MICHIGAN DAILY sATUR.IAY, NOV. 14, 1936 THE MICHIGAN DAILY II ,. CFjl 1q36 Member 1937 IAssocdied Colle6iale Press Distributors of CGNe6ioe Di6esI Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matter herein also reserved. Entered at the Post.Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING SY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y. CHICAGO . BOSTON - SAN FRANCISCO LoS ANGELES PORTLAND F SEATTLE Board of Editors MANAGING EDITOR .................ELSIE A, PIERCE ASSOCIATE EDITOR ........... FRED WARNER NEAL ASSOCIATE EDITOR........MARSHALL D. SHULMAN George Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins . Departmental Boards O~ublication Department: Elsie A. Pierce, Chairman; James Boozer, Arnold S. Daniels, Joseph Mattes, Tuure Tenander, Robert Weeks. Reportorial Department: Fred Warner Neal, Chairman; Ralph Hurd, William E. Shackleton, Irving S. Silver- Man, William Spaller, Richard G. Hershey. Editorial Department: Marshall D. Shulman, Chairman; Robert Cummins, Mary Sage .Montague. Sports Department: George J. Andros, Chairman; Fred Delano and Fred Buesser, associates, Raymond Good- man, Carl Gerstacker, Clayton Hepler, Richard La- Marca. Women's Department: Jewel Wuerfel, Chairman: Eliza- beth M. Anderson, Elizabeth Bingham, Helen Douglas, Margaret Hamilton, Barbara J. Lovell, Katherine Moore, Betty Strickroot, Theresa Swab. Business Department BUSINESS MANAGER. ...........JOHN R. PARK ASOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGER . WILLIAM BARNDT WOIMN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .......JEAN KEINATH Departmental Managers Jack Staple, Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore. Na- tional Advertising and Circulation Manager; Don J: Wilsher, Contracts Manager; Ernest A. Jones, Local Advertising Manager; Norman Steinberg, Service Manager; Herbert Falender, Publicationsrand Class- ified Advertising Manager. I W NIGHT EDITOR : WILLIAM SHACKELTON nomic disorders greater than any of the past. This threat is constantly increasing and the question "When will war come?" is asked much more often today than "Will it come?" Preferential trade treaties, tri-partite currency stabilizations, and similar measures cannot cure these ills. One big hope of capitalism for an ade- quate remedy is in comprehensive international cooperation in both economic and political mat- ters, coupled with the destruction of monopoly, to stimulate the free flow of trade to the ultimate degree. This would tend to extend periods of prosperity as much as is possible and correspond- ingly curtail periods of depression. With the greatest possible degree of prosperity, unemploy- ment might be reduced to a tolerable point. The certainty of peace would be both a stimulus and a stabilizer. Unfortunately, however, this sort of interna- tional cooperation and anti-trust action does not seem possible at the present time. The Issue In Spain -A Catholic Journalist's View- (From Foreign Affairs) By LAWRENCE A. FERNSWORTH (Former London Times Correspondent in Barcelona) IN BARCELONA and other loyal cities, an armed and anti-Fascist militia of citizens are patrolling the streets afoot and in requisitioned motor cars, rifles across shoulders, pistols in hand. Churches, monasteries and convents have been invaded and burned in hundreds upon hundreds. Priests and nuns have-been scattered to the four winds and a sickening number have been killed, as have other Fascist sympathizers. The rebels, also, are taking without pity innu- merable victims-peasants and workers and Re- publicans. The land is drenched in blood and the end is far from sight. Red revolutionsists - Anarcho-Syndicalists, and various brands of Marxists-have made common cause with the government to save Spain from Fascism. It is recognized both with- in and without the country, that Fascism versus popular rule has become the sharply defined issue. The constitutional government is bravely fighting with its back to the wall, hoping to save the Republic as against both Fascism and Com- munistic proletarian rule. The odds against it are heavy. * * * * Left, Right, Left.,.. THE PRESENT UPRISING is the climax of a revolutionary process which has been under way ever since the proclamation of the Re- public of April 14, 1931. Three distinct periods may be noted: 1. The "first biennium"-the period of pure republicanism; of the adoption of the Consti- tution; of the curbing of the excessive powers and pretensions of the army; of the separation of church and state; of a series of revolutionary at- tempts against the Government by Anarcho- a Syndicalists; of trials and errors and tardy rec- tifications. The first biennium ended in the election of November, 1933, which gave power to the Right. 2. The "black biennium"-the reactionary period which followed and which lasted until the elections of February, 1936. This was the pe- riod of waste, of marking time, of corruption, of the undermining of the Constitution, of the glorification of the army, of the suspension or disregard of the religious laws and the replacing of the clergy on the pay-roll. 3. The brief period after the recent elections, which brought back to power the "pure" Re- publicans, led by Don Manuel Azana, in agree- ment with the socialists and Communists, though not with their participation in the Cabinet. These groups together constituted the Popular Front, with a minimum social program accepted by all. This period saw the rehabilitation of the Consti-w tution; the abrogation of illegal laws and de- crees; the liberation of political and social pris- oners; the enactment of laws and decrees giving employment to workers and increasing their pay; the settling of peasants upon the land in large numbers. Privilege And Property...- THE REBELLION against the Republic is the work of three main forces united in a well- understood pact, sealed by the fact of mutual and interrelated interests. The forces in ques- tion are the privileged and propertied classes, the army and the church. The privileged and propertied classes have kept the people in misery. That is a fact. The tale of its how and why has been told so frequently that to tell it again now would be mere weari- some repetition. The Spanish army is a vestige of feudal times, a strangely incongruous institution in this twentieth century. Under the monarchy, crit- icism of the army or unfavorable comment upon it constituted an offense which subjected any citizen, even in peace-time, to long terms of im- prisonment at the hands of a military court. With the advent of the Republic, the power of the army was considerably curbed. The law was laid down that the army must be amenable to civil authority. Officers out of harmony with the new regime were given the opportunity of withdrawing on retirement pay. Many accepted. but the most intransigent monarchists remained to continue their plotting, though, of course, pro- fessing to be loyal to the established regime. The plain fact is that the attempts of the Re- public to curb the power of the army, to make it strictly amenable to civil authority, constituted a blow to its pride which it could never forgive. And when the Republic's enemies flattered the army with fair words, it seized the opportunity of salvaging its private interests. * . "Of All Sad Wods...' BENEATH **** IIT ALL fta---- ayB onth W jiia a JOURNEYED OVER TO DEARBORN yesterday forenoon with Fred DeLano to see Lynn Wal- dorf and his squad which today is ranked the top football team in the country. Was introduced to 217 pounds of muscle man with a scar on his nose who bore the name of Fred Vanzo. The team retired upstairs to eat and Waldorf led Freddy and me over to a quiet corner of the lobby where he settled down and proceeded to tell us all about Northwestern. When Lynn started off the year, he said he didn't think he was going to win a whole lot of ball games, but as the season progressed and the team got better, the Big Purple kept right on mowing down the nation's best. "We've had a lot of luck," Waldorf ad- mitted. "We've won every Conference game, yet never by more than eleven points, and the Ohio State game by just one." "Take that Ohio game for example. We had to come from behind twice to beat Schmidt's bunch 14-13, and then it was just luck that we got that extra point. Heap had a sprained thumb and fumbled the pass from center. He just managed to hold it up lopsided long enough for Geyer to boot it over. After all that's luck." Wolverines Scare Him? ASKED ABOUT TOMORROW'S CLASH with the Wolverines, Waldorf became really seri- ous and said that frankly he was scared of what Kip 'and the boys had up their sleeves. "They're in a great psychological spot to knock us off," Lynn said, "and we're taking them s seriously that I haven't even looked at our scout reports for our Notre Dame game next week." Waldorf never points for a game. He be- lieves in having his teams play on their ability, not on their emotions, thus going a long ways toward avoiding serious let-downs. Lynn admitted that the Cats had not played the ball they were capable of against Wisconsin last week when the Badgers scored 18 points, but went on to point out that he had used 29 substi- tutes and that at all times Northwestern com- manded an eight-point lead. "It's just what I'm afraid of against Mich- igan tomorrow," the Purple mentor con- fided, as he demonstrated how the Wiscon- sin attack had suddenly found itself and scored three touchdowns. "Michigan has a potentially great team that hasn't clicked well yet. If it starts to- morrow, our winning streak will pop like a balloon and we may well end up with two games lost." "And speaking of winning strea'ks, do you know how ours started? It began when we changed our jerseys last year. We had dropped the first three Confere'nce games of the season, and then ran into Illinois. We had been wearing Purple sweaters up to then, but Illinois had dark blue so we changed to white for that game. We gave Illinois a licking and decided to stick with the white shirts. We haven't lost a ball game since." Every Cause For Fear? THE NORTHWESTERN COACH went on to say that he had a team which had two great lines. Two lines that had fought and scrapped to make up for a set of green backs who now were developing into the best in the country. Fred Vanzo, great blocking quarter who leads all the line smashes, is a made-over fullback. Both Don Geyer and Steve Toth, ace fullbacks, are comparatively small for line buckers, weigh- ing 180 and 161 respectively, but with Vanzo 'going on before' they are a couple of real ground gainers, Lynn commented. "Our scout reports on Michigan give us every cause for fear tomorrow. I wouldn't say we were the best team in the country, no. Minnesota might very probably beat us again if we played them, but then that's the way the game goes. There's a lot of difference between the same team on two successive Saturdays. I don't know of a team I'd rate above Northwestern, though." The Wildcats have spent much of the week polishing up their pass defense and working on new plays. They are the first team to play here this fall that has not worked out in the Stadium the day before the game. Waldorf confined his final drill to a kicking and passing workout on the lawn in front of Dearborn Inn. Rose Bowl Is Out ASKED ABOUT THE POSSIBILITY of Northwestern's going to the Rose Bowl, Lynn replied that it was out of the question. He said he doubted if the team would finish the season undefeated in the first place, that secondly the Big Ten forbade it, and last of all that the university officials would not permit the squad to lose so much school work. Always famed as a November coach when he was at Oklahoma A. & M. and later at Kansas State, Coach Waldorf explained that this was mostly due to the type of material he had to work with-strong, husky kids who started slowly but had a lot of endurance. ly make mattels worse for the church. The caution has proved well-founded. In such countries as England and the United States, where the high caliber of the men of the church wins them general respect, the question is incessantly asked: "How is it that, in an al- most purely Catholic country, the people can turn against the church in such fashion?" Cath- UNIVERSITY. SYMPHONY. OR-1 CHESTRA CONCERT. EARL V. MOORE Conductor; HANNS PICKI(Continued from Page 2) Soloist. Sunday, November 15,1 . 4:15 p.m. cial emphasis on Japanese Wood 4:15 pWANGE Sculpture, under the auspices of the By WILLIAM J. LICHTENWANGER Institute of Fine Arts. South Gallery, A Sick World . 0 0, 1|HE UNIVERSITY Symphony Or- j chestra, conducted by Dr. Earl V. Moore, will make its first appear- ance of the year Sunday afternoon, with Prof. Hanns Pick as cello solo- ist. The membership of the Orches- tra, which consists of about 70 play- ers, is open to all students on the campus, although a majority of te members are enrolled in the music school. In view of the fact that the personnel of the Orchestra varies considerably from year to year; that a preponderance of wind players causes the instrumentation to be somewhat unbalanced; and that the purpose of the organization is pri- I marily that of a laboratory, to pro- vide students with a broad knowledge of symphonic music rather than simply to prepare programs for public performance-considering these facts, the work of the Orchestra in recent years has been exceptionally fine. For the Orchestra's opening con- cert of the year, Dr. Moore has chos- en a program of three works by Peter Ilyitch Tchaikowsky-works which show the composer in three very op- posite moods. The first composition to be played is Tchaikowsky's last: the Symphonic Pathetique, No. 6 in B minor, Op. 74. A Cold Reception At First Much has been written about the Symphony's enigmatic title, "Pathe- tique," about the program which seems to lie hidden beneath it, and about its relationship to the life of the composer in the final days of his mortal existence. Tchaikowsky ordi- narily was averse to "programs"- that is, programs of a concrete, liter- ary nature( most of his music is pro- grammatic in that it is based on some poetic or dramatic idea). When this, his sixth and last symphony, began to take shape in his mind, he planned. to call it merely "A Program Sym- phony (No. 6)," and under such a title it had its first performance, at, St. Petersburg, October 28, 1893, the composer conducting. The day fol- lowing this performance, which was but coldly received, Tchaikowsky pre- pared to send the score to his pub- lisher, and searched despairingly for a title which would be suitable and yet' more communicative than merely "A Program Symphony." His brother, Modeste, had a happy inspiration and' supplied the title by which the sym- phony has since been known.1 Thatnthe composer based the work1 on some definite program is known from a statement of his, but he add- ed that the program was of a kindI which would remain "an enigma to1 all-let them guess it who can." Hea did remark that the program is "pen- etrated by subjective sentiment," and7 further declared that the Symphony1 is the best, and most sincere of any work he had written, and that he loved it as he had never loved any one of his musical offsprings before.f A Self!Written Requiem? The idea that the Symphony is the embodiment of Tchaikowsky's pe- culiar spirit of pessimism and melan- cholia, and that it expresses a defi- nite presentiment of death which the composer is supposed to have felt at the time of its writing, has been nur- tured by the facts relating to the death of the composer. Four days after the initial performance of the work, Tchaikowsky contracted chol- era from drinking water which had not been boiled, and in another four days he was dead. Those seeking ap- probation for the theory that the{ Symphony is a valedictory, a self- written requiem, have claimed that Sthe composer's exposure to the chol- Sera germs was intentional, that he was weary of life and wished to aban- don it. The evidence of his brother,; Modeste, and of Rimski-Korsakov, two of Tchaikowsky's closest observ- ers, is to the contrary, however. They testify that his final days found him in exceptionally good spirits, because of his satisfaction with his new sym- phony, and contend that whatever pessimism and mortal resignation is to be found in the symphony is to be considered more universal in its application than personal, In some ways the Symphony be- lies the implication of its title, for only the first and last of the four movements are openly "pathetic."' The second movement is a graceful, minuet-like piece in the unusual metre of 5-4, and is permeated with an exquisite lyricism, tinged with sad- ness in the trio. The third movement' has the attributes of a scherzo as wells as of a march. and fills the place usually taken by the final Allegro. Tchaikowsky made an innovation fwhen he placed his slow movement, a broad, poignant Adagio, atathe end of the symphony instead of after A Change Of Mood From the Pathetique we go to a mood of simplicity, dainty and, harming. The Variations on a Ro- eoco Theme, for Violoncello and Or-] chestra, Op. 33, has something of the same atmosphere of delicacy and grace which characterized the Nut- ciacker Suite. The composer uses the term "rococo" to denote the "old- Alumni Memorial Hall, Nov. 2-14, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Exhibit of Color Reproductions of American Paintings comprising the First Series of the American Art Portfolios, recently acquired for the Institute of Fine Arts Study Room. On view daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Alumni Memorial Hall, North Gal- lery. Exhibition of Oil and Water Color Paintings Made in Spain During the Past 10 years by Wells M. Sawyer, shown under the auspices of the In- stitute of Fine Arts. Alumni Mem- orial Hall, West Gallery. Opens Sun- day, Nov. 1, 8 to 10 p.m.; thereafter daily 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sundays, Nov. 8 and 15 from 3 to 5 p.m. Exhibition, Architecture Building: An exhibition of the Ryerson Compe- tition drawings including those of teams working here under the direc- tion of Professors Hebrard and Bailey is being shown in the third floor exhibition room, Architecture Building, Nov. 11 through 14. Open from 9 to 5 p.m. The public is cor- dially invited. Events Of Today Sigma Delta Chi: There will be a luncheon meeting of Sigma Delta Chi at 11:30 a.m. today. Paul Scott Mowrer, managing editor of the Chi- cago Daily News, will lead an inform- al discussion. The meeting will be concluded in time for the football game. Coming Events The Eastern Religions Group will meet for a cafeteria breakfast Sun- day, Nov. 15, 9 a.m. in the Russian Tea Room of the Michigan League. There will be a panel discussion on MohammedanismsbyaMr. Rufai, Mr. Khatib and Mr. Hasani of the Near East. (If you wish, come after the breakfast at 9:30 a.m.) Both Orient- als and American students are in- vited. Health Service Visitation Project will hold its initial meeting at 3:30 p.m. Sunday afternoon, Nov. 15 in the Upper Room at Lane Hall. All those interested are urged to attend. Deutscher Verein: There will be a meeting Tuesday, Nov. 17, at 8 p.m. in the Michigan League. Miss Mary A. Gies, Grad., who studied at the .Uni- versity of Heidelberg last year, and Mr. Israel Warheit, Grad., who spent the year studying at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, will discuss informally student life at those in- stitutions. All those interested, and especially old members and former members of the Deutscher Zirkel, are invited to attend. The Michigan Dames will initiate the new members at the general meeting at the Michigan League, Tuesday evening, Nov. 17. The wives of students and internes who would like to become Dames, but who have not yet been reached by the Member- ship committee, are cordially invited to call the Membership chairman, Mrs. Ford Graham at 22147, or the Treasurer, Mrs. David Andrews at 6917. University of Michigan Flying Club: There will be a meeting of the University of Michigan Flying Club, Tuesday, Nov. 17, at 7:30 p.m., Room 302 at the Michigan Union. All students who are pilots, and those desirous of becoming pilots are invited to attend. German Table for Faculty Mem- bers: The first luncheonmeeting will be held at the Michigan Union, Mon- day, Nov. 16, at 12:15 p.m. All fac- ulty members interested in speaking German are cordially invited. Theatre Arts Committee: All those interested in working in the box office, please, attend a short meeting at 5 p.m. Monday, Nov. 16, at the League. The room will be posted. Stalker Hall, Sunday: 9:45 a.m., Student class. Subject, "Enthusiasm for One's Work." Lead- er, Dr. C. W. Brashares. 6 p.m., Wesleyan Guild meeting. Student discussion on the subject "Why Are We Learning?" Fellow- ship Hour and supper following the meeting. - First Methodist Church, Sunday: Morning worship at 10:45 a.m. Dr. C. W. Brashares will preach on "Gos- sip or Gospel." Evening service, 7:30 p.m. Theme, "The Need of a Chris- tian Crusade." First Baptist Church, Sunday: 10:45 a.m., Mr. Sayles will speak on "TheP 5SinrempCrnndA Art-nor to- MUSIC A Tcliikowsky Program DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of tho University Copy received at the office of the Assistant to thePresident until 3:30, 11:00 a m. on Saturday. Roger Williams Guild, Sunday: Meets at 12 noon at Guild house. Dr. Frank W. Padelford, Boston, Ex- ecutive Secretary of Northern Baptist Board of Education, will address the student class. 6 p.m. Students at Guild house. Prof. Preston W. Slosson will speak on "Peace or Truce." A cordial wel- come to all students. Church of Christ (Disciples) Sun- day: 10:45 a.m., morning worship. Rev. Fred Cowin, minister. 12 noon, Students' Bible Class. Leader, H. L. Pickerill. 5:30 p.m., Social Hour and Tea. 6:30 p.m., The program will con- sist of a panel discussion on world peace. A group of five on the panel will represent the positions of the following: the average citizen, the business man, the preparedness ad- vocate, womanhood, and the muni- tions maker. Opportunity will be given for the audience to participate. Bethlehem Evangelical Church, Sunday: South Fourth Avenue. Theodore Schmale, Pastor. The morning worship program at Bethlehem Evangelical Church will include a, special song by the Con- firmation classes and a sermon for young people on the topic "A Certain Young Man" The service begins at -0:30 a.m. The Young People's League will at- tend the Rally Banquet to be given at Emanuel Church, Manchester, Cars will leave the local church at 4:15 p.m. Harris Hall ,Sunday: The regularstudent meeting will be held at 7 p.m. in Harris Hall. Pro- fessor Robert Angell will be the speaker. All students and their friends are cordially invited. Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church, Sunday: 8 a.m., Holy Communion. 9:30 a.m., Church School. 11 a.m., Kindergarten. 11 a.m., Morning prayer and ser- mon by the Right Reverend John N. McCormick, D.D. The Lutheran Student Club: Prof. Ralph Hammett of the School of Ar- chitecture will show slides on the grcat cathedrals of Europe and dis- cuss the effect the cathedrals had on architecture. Fellowship and sup- per hour at 5:30p.m. Forum hour at 6:30 p.m. Everyone is welcome. The Lutheran Student Club will have a Bible Study Class on Tues- day at 7:15 p.m. at the Michigan League. Everyone is welcome. Congregational Church, Sunday: 10:45 a.m. Service of Worship, ser- mon by the minister. Following the sermon Prof. Preston W. Slosson will give an address on "False Gods," his subject being, "The State as God, or Worshipping Leviathan." International Night, 6:30 at the Student Fellowship. All foreign stu- dents on the campus are cordially invited to be the guests of the Fel- lowship. There will be a panel dis- cussion on the subject, "The Issues of Youth-East and West," led by Dr. Blakeman and a group of foreign students. Refreshments will be served. Congregational students and friends are urged to attend this most in- teresting meeting. Unitarian Church, Sunday: 3 p.m., Symphony on the Air. 5 p.m. Twilight Service, Mr. Marley will speak on "John Reed and the Gospel 6f the Authentic." Violin solo by Edwin Sherman. 7:30,. Liberal Students' Union. Round Table discussion by students on "Changing Status of the Newspa- per." St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Sun- day: Liberty at Third St., Carl A. Brauer, minister. Nov. 15. Morning worship and sermon by the pastor at 10:451 a.m. "Christ's Obe- dience to the Law" will be the sermon topic. Supper for students and young people will be had at 6 p.m. followed by a purely social program at 6:30 p.m. Students and their friends are invited to spend a pleasant evening at St. Paul's Lutheran Church. Trinity Lutheran Church, Sunday: Services will be held at 10:30 a.m. in Trinity Lutheran Church, corner of William and Fifth Ave. The Rev. Henry Yoder, pastor, will use as his,. theme "Strong in the Lord." Graduate Outing Club: Trip to Camp Newkirk at Dexter on Sunday afternoon. Party leaves Lane Hall at. 2:30 p.m. and will return early in the evening. At this meeting, elec- tion of officers will be held. Refresh- ments and transportation provided. T HE INTERNATIONAL Labor Of- fice in Geneva has released fig- ures which indicate such a precipitous drop in world unemployment during the past three years that the jobless of all nations are only 38 per cent more numerous than in 1929. With the figure 100 representing the 1929 level, today's in- dex figure is 138 compared with the 1933 peak of 315. Relying now upon figures presented in the -En- cyclopedia"of Social Sciences, this means that there are about 13 million unemployed today in 27 major countries of the world, whereas there were about 30 million in 1933. Post-war unem- ployment was least in 1925 when slightly more than six million were out of work. The Soviet Union, famous today for its labor shortage, had one and one-half million unemployed in 1929, chiefly because of the great flow from country to town. From 85 to 95 per cent (the percentage varying from year to year) of world unemploy- ment since the war has been concentrated in the seven greatest nations-the United States, Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the Soviet Union. At first glance, the apparent decrease of 17 million in unemployment totals is tremendously encouraging. But some reflection brings the following observations, which give matters a less optimistic hue. Any unemployment at all indicates a certain inadequacy of structure or function of an eco- nomic system. During capitalism's most pros- perous post-war year, 1925, there were more than two million out of work in the United States alone, and one and one-third million British job- less. The Labor Office report says: "Unemployment has not been reduced to the extent that indus- trial production has recovered." In the United States especially the reabsorption of unemployed in industry is far behind the pace of increasing industrial prosperity. With business activity ap- proaching to within a few percentage points of pre-depression levels, according to the latest charts, we still have at least nine million persons out of work. And so, if during the years of in- tense industrial activity in the '20's, there was an unfailing labor surplus of from two to four million, we need not be surprised to find from four to six million constantly unemployed in the future. Technological factors, prev ailing mo- nopolistic organization, and the disappearance of frontiers, share most of the responsibility for this. The Labor Office also reports that there is no improvement in international trade comparable to increased industrial production. Economic nationalism, then, promises to cut short the life of any prosperity and re-employment which