PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY MONDAY, DEC. 13, 1937 I I THE MICHIGAN DAILY ll -'' I ~~~*1 - i7 it 77 - I Gr purt"w ta , "tflL OSmhv U -a ' ~'aT wnx-mNaPOT ,..,.., ,n ^ Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Mondy during the University year and Summer Session. 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 othervise 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, .00; by mal, $4.50. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 193738 i iNBPRSCNTED 9'UN . ;'.Iy,.., NationalAdvertisigSbeflc It. College Publish s Reprsentaive 420 MADSON AvE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHCAGO - BOSTON - LOS A GELES SAN FRANCISCO Board of Editors MANAGING EDITOR ..............JOSEPH S. MATTES EDITORIAL DIRECTOR ............TUURE TENANDER CITY EDITOR.................WILA C. SPALLER NEWS EDITOR . .............ROBERT P WEEKS WOMEN'S EDITOR.................HELEN DOUGLAS SPORTS EDITOR.......................IRVIN LISAGOR Business Department BUSINESS MANAGER............ERNEST A. JONES CREDIT MANAGER.................DON WILSHER ADVERTISING MANAGER~ .. .. NORMAN . STINBEG WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.......BETTY DAVY WOMEN'S SERVICE MANAGER ..MARGARET PERRIES NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT WEEKS The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Thank You For Your Cooperation.. .. Y OU HAVE HELPED, by your purchaseI of this Goodfellow edition of the Daily, to make a merrier Christmas for someone whose lot would have been less happy otherwise. We take this means of conveying to you the gratitude of those people who will be helped by your generosity, their wishes that your ownj Christmas celebration will be made more enjoy- able to you by the knowledge that you have shared your bread with others. This Goodfellow edition is no longer an experi- ment. In its two previous years the Goodfeilow Daily has been a success and we feel that the idea and the good that has been and will be done warrant its continuation as an annual tradition. We feel too that this is a promulgation of a more humane idea of charity; that which has consideration for the feelings of those whom it helps; and that which is widely administered, designed to give the most help for the resources at its command. May we thank you then for your assistance in continuing a project of such eminent worth. We hope it will continue to grow and be of in- creasing service to our fellow human beings. Tuure Tenander. Plandits For Hollywood.. .. HE QUESTION of the educational T value of the motion picture has once more come to the fore with the recent productions of two biographical films in Hollywood, portray- ing the lives of Louis Pasteur and Emile Zola respectively. Mr. Paul Muni has drawn wide- spread critical plaudits for his interpretations of the two great Frenchmen, and both movies have enjoyed extraordinary box-office success. Now the question arises, was their success due to or in spite of their educationol qualities? Do people who go to the movies care particularly about learning something of the lives of the great men of the past, or would they flock to see the same films as purely fictional episodes? It seems probable on the whole that while the factual basis of the stories was important in bringing out their dramatic effect, the details were of minor consequence to the great majority of those who paid admissions. The mystery and glamour that surrounds the names of men like Pasteur and Zola for people who have never had the opportunity to learn more of them renders them words of magic for the cinema-producers. This, however, is not all; the gleam of historic authenticity adds something further to the pop- ular appeal of a movie, even though the authen- ticity doesn't have to be strictly historic. So it seems that the public will take its mo- tion picture education in good-sized doses pro- viding the stories retain sufficient dramatic, ro- rnantic and sympathetic appeal to compete in these departments with regular boy-meets-girl, scripts. It also appears that there exists, or can be found, enough appeal in the life of a Pasteur or Zola to fulfill'the requirements. With the in- creasing scarcity of film material today there appears to be an excellent chance of a continua- tion of the historic-biographical strain in the pictures, which, even with mild dilutions of Holly- wood fancy, remain the most valuable type of movie in educational content yet to come out of THE FORUM Letters. published In this coumn should nt be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief, the editors reserving the right to condense all letters of more than 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial Importance and interest to the camua-. On The Ice To the Editor: Since the first hockey game of the 1930 season I have attended every home hockey game. The first year or two I was amused at the lack of equipment furnished these players. That amuse- mrent turned to amazement and finally to dis- gust - Surely a University of this size has more respect for itself, if not for its team, than to ask this group of men to represent the University arrayed as they have been. The spirit displayed by this team is deserving of more encouragement. I am not suggesting that they be stpplied with some flashy uniform, but merely that they are given the necessary equipment to protect them from the cold in which they play. Another thing-is not the amplifying system at the rink a disgrace to the engineering de- partment of the University? The amplifier "blasts" so much that it is impossible to make announcements over it, and the musical repro- ductions are hardly bearable. If our Athletic Board cannot afford the ex- pense involved in correcting the above two dis- gusting situations, I honestly believe that the hockey fans themselves would be glad to sub- scribe to a fund to defray this cost. In writing this I am in no way reflecting onj Coach Lowrey. I have the very highest regard for him and for the teams he produces. Who else with so little material could do so much as has Coach Lowrey? He and his teams deserve more than they are getting. -A Hockey Fan. Peace By Spirit Of Good Will To the Editor: The undersigned wish to record their beliefI that a boycott of Japanese goods in the United States is not in harmony with a Christian ap- proach to the problem of restoring peace in the Orient and establishing good will among the na- tions of the world. We do not in any manner condone the Jap- anese invasion of China. We sympathize with the intent of those who would use the boycott as a means toward peace, but we doubt that it will serve that end. In the spirit of a common search for a basis of enduring peace, we urge considera- tion of the following points by those who are preparing to advocate or participate in a boycott. A boycott implies an attitude of national self- righteousness which ill becomes us in the light of imperialistic episodes in our own history and of our shattering of Japan's self-chosen isolation, by threat of military force, in 1853. A boycott extensive enough to be effective cannot be achieved without a vast amount of anti-Japanese propaganda which will engender hatred for the Japanese people, accentuate already existing anti-Japanese feeling, strengthen tendencies to- ward militarism and fascism in this country, and in general draw the American people nearer to that spirit of hatred which finds its logical ex- pression in war. A boycott will probably weigh heaviest upon the Japanese people and not upon the leaders responsible for the present war; the effect will be a curtailing of other expenditures than those for munitions. A boycott will strengthen the hands of the military in the prosecution of the war by demonstrating Japan's need to. stand alone against an unfriendly world. The boycott will add to Japan's need for markets in China, it will strengthen the nationalistic spirit in Japan, and it will make no contribution to those funda- mental economic maladjustments whidh are in- volved in the present situation. Rather, by fur- ther curtailing international trade, it will add to the difficulties. To friends of peace we recommend action along the following lines, as alternatives to a boycott: 1. That we give the fullest possible support to all efforts to relieve suffering caused by the war in both countries. 2. That we work unremittingly for the elimi- nation of the economic and other causes of war, and that we seek by every means in our power to create the psychological conditions necessary for effective international cooperation. It would be important to avoid all manner of action by ourselves and our country which could possibly be construed by others, in the light of our record, as examples of imperialism or aggression. 3. That we express the spirit of friendship and good will in every possible way to students from China and Japan now studying in the country, and that we lend our support to other efforts at reconcliation that may present them- selves. . 4. That we do all in our power to secure the repeal of the Asiatic exclusion clause of the Immigration Act of 1924. 5. That we urge the President of the United States to invoke the Neutrality Act in the present conflict. This act is a fundamental expression of national policy, enacted by Congress. It should be applied in the present situation. More- over, it will clarify our own status and will in- dicate clearly that we have no aggressive aims in Asia. World peace will be won by no one single act and by no single movement. We believe that in the long run peace will be achieved not I/ feenu t o Me Heywood Broun When the Duke and Duchess of Windsor de- cided to postpone or cancel their visit to Amer- ica there was much wailing by the merchants of New York and other cities. In certain quar- ters it was felt that the expedition might be a fillip toward recovery, like repeal or an Amer- ican Legion convention or a fight for the heavyweight chamionship. After all, it had been announced that the Windsors were bringing sixty trunks-or was , it seventy? The hairdressers of the na- tion implored the Duchess to adopt varying styles of coif- fure in order to relieve unem- ployment and tailors felt that the Duke might send every well dressed man in to be measured, if only he ap- peared in public with some slight innovation, such as wearing his dinner trousers turned up at the bottom. After all, as Prince he all but put the starch shirt out of business. Unless I am misinformed he appeared at several minor functions wearing a sport shirt with his dinner jacket. When he came to the throne he abandoned this radical innovation, and as far as I know a Greenwich Village sculptor and myself were the only ones to carry on the good fight to combine comfort and elegance. Might Have Been Disappointed But I suspect that the merchants might have been doomed to be disappointed had the Wind- sors arrived. In the days of his princehood the. Duke was known as one of the finest salesmen for the Empire, but there is no record that he maintained a balance of trade. At my elbow lies a press association story of the Duke's most recent spending spree at a church bazaar in Paris. The rector made up for certain Anglican discourtesies and welcomed the couple warmly. Indeed, he in- vited the Duchess to make a speech. And she did. The rush cable then went on to state, "After opening the bazaar the Duke and Duchess moved among the guests chatting gaily. They spent many francs, doled out by the Duke's equery, Lieutenant Dudley Forwood. The purchases of the Duchess included a dish of English marma- lade, a jar of currant jelly, chocolate cake, a tin of tea, two boxes of biscuits, three cans of to- mato juice, two pairs of .scissors, a penknife, Christmas cards, calendars and several knitted baby jackets to be given to the poor." All right, there can be no quarrel with that. The lady quite obviously was on a spending spree, and it would have been interesting to see the lieutenant in full regimentals coming out -of the church with the knitted jackets and the to- mato juice under one arm and the marmalade and current jelly under the other. A British soldier does not ask the reason why. The Duke Comes Across But what about the Duke? He seems to have kept his head about him during the orgy of ex- travagance. The press association dispatch notes his purchases in a single laconic line. "The Duke bought a trick cigarette box and a tube of tooth pate." Up to this point I was inclined to be amazed by the skill of the correspondent in reportorial de- tail. But for all that he fluffed his big chance. A trick cigarette box indeed! As an avid reader of all the doings of the Duke I am curious to know -indeed, I demand an answer to the legitimate question-"What was the trick?" And for that matter I wouldn't mind being in- formed what the Duchess intends to do with the penknife and two pairs of scissors. Possibly she' bought them to open the tomato juice or the currant jelly. Just the same, if I were the Duke I would be worried. I've been a little uneasy my- self ever since I heard Connie calling up Stam- ford and ordering an ax, even though she says she intends to give it to me for my forty-ninth birthday. - Railroad 'Blues' An impressive parade of railway executives marked the opening on Tuesday of hearings be- fore the Interstate Commerce Commission on the petition of the American carriers for a general increase of freight and passenger rates. From them the commission could not have failed to gather that the railroads' lot is not a happy one. Between falling revenues on one side and ris- ing wages, taxes, fuel and material costs on the other, the railways are being so squeezed that they are unable to finance capital improvements which would otherwise provide a great deal of employment and business. With the screws al- ready tightened on them by recent wage increases to virtually all branches of railroad labor, com- pany officials probably have no alternative but to seek the rate increase. Yet one questions whether rate increases are the real answer to the railroads' problem. Look- ing at it broadly there is good reason to believe that labor, material, men, government and yes, railroad, officials would gain more in the long run from endeavoring to make rail service less expensive instead of more expensive to shippers and travelers. The railroads have long paid some conspicuously high salaries to executives and even to receivers and reorganizers. The railroad brake- man's wages may look small to him but they are munificent beside those of the farm laborer or t i 1 1 t l t i c T .C Il I t 'f c it SCREEN By HOWARD BARNES In The Know In the rapidly accumulating li- brary of film doings it would be well to put "We Make the Movies" (W.I W. Norton & Co., Inc.-$3) at the. top of the list. If you want to dis- cover an honest statement of what makes the wheels go 'round in the curious business of Hollywood make- believe, you can do no better than, read this symposium of craftsmen's findings. The top-flight specialists of the film business have contributed to the book ,without fear or favor,! while Nancy Naumburg has edited the material smoothly. On the whole. the volume is more informative than esthetic, but that is one of its chief virtues. Covering the whole range of producing, acting, directing, pho- tography and scenic designing, it provides provocative material tar your own particular evaluation of the most exciting of the contemporary arts. Like most. symposiums, the book[ is curiously uneven. In one chap- ter you will learn from Bette Davis that "no one in this world ever gets anything for onthing," and that her chief worries as an actress "are con- cerned with wardrobe, hairdress, learning the script and interpreting it to make the most of whatever oppor- tunities it offers me." Paired with her obviously sincere address to the fans is an essay by Paul Muni which is one of the most illuminating state- ments about acting that you can find. "The industry for years has kept ac-! tors who canont act," he writes, "not out of charity, but because they have wide public appeal." Admitting that he has no rules for screen acting, het gives a vivid analysis of the pains-f taking care with which he prepares for a biographical role and has the1 courage to write about his portrayal of Wang Lung in "The Good Earth"I Budget Debati To Balanc( Former Daily Editor Ana e Revived: e Or Not To? alyzes Financial Situation that "quite frankly, I never felt that t my mental picture of him was real-! ized by my execution on the screen." For me the most interesting pas- sages in the book have been written by those artisans who I think are the most important in the synthetic job of turning out a "movie."i I refer o the writer, the directorl and the actor. Thorugh their piecesi runs a refrain which might be sum-i marized as follows: There is still,en- ormous waste in motion picture mak- ing; the associate producers and the1 censors are the chief banes of a Hollywood artist's life; the medium is as highly confused as it is power- ful. NEW DAY DAWNING FOR SCREEN A new day is about to dawn for thet screen when as Sidney Howard puts it "our O'Neills and Kaufmans will I be writing for the screen as inde- pendently as they now writefor the stage," or, as Mr. Muni writes: "per- haps the actor can reach people and influence them so that they will go forth with a new strength and a new' vision in combating the evils of our own society." If you have a technical turn of mind, you will be fascinated by John Arnold's chapter on the cinemato-. grapher, in Anne Bauchens's frank summary of film cutting and editing, in the passages on recording and re- cording, set designing and scoring a production. In each instance a spe- cialist has looked at his peculiar field of film sorcery and has at- tempted to tell you what qualities he brings to a finished offering. There is even a chapter on "Designing for Color" by Lansing C. Holden, in which he invites controversy by stat- ing that "if a color shot is well ar- ranged it can be held longer on the screen than the same shot in black and white, which would become dull." It doesn't seem to me that hold- ing a shot longer on the screen is a good idea for motion pictures. As far as color is concerned I'll string along with Mr. Howard when he writes: "I do not know 'how many directors and writers will at this time be prepared to agre ewith me when I say that I find the problems of color far more baffling than those of sound. They seem to require men to develop a painter's imagination to a degree of which I am incapable." John Cromwell, in his excellent con- tribution on screen directing, has a goor word to say for color, but he writes more authoritatively when he describes the predicament of "the voice behind the megaphone" in the present Hollywood set-up. WRITERS MUST FIRST BE DEVELOPEDI He agrees with Mr. Howard that "not until a determined effort is made I to develop writers who have some- thing to say and have learned to say it in the medium of the motion pic- ture will the motion picture as an in- dustry really have some claim as a creative art." Of screen actors he states: "I would go so far as to say that I could count on two hands the actors in Hollywood who are truly creative." With considerable feel- ing he- writes of the director that "next to supervision censorship is the most difficult handicap to overcome and he is always obliged to compro- mise." His chapter is one of the shortest in "We Make the Movies" By DELBERT CLARK duces a boom, the vast potential (Manager of New York Times credit piled up idle in the banks as a Washington Bureau. result of 'deficit financing will in- WASHINGTON, Dec. 11.-For sev- duce the wildest sort of credit infla- en years they have been talking about tion, which is an invariable precursor balancing the budget. This year, of panic and depression. when the talk .appears to have a The foregoing are the classic argu- serious resolve behind it, the old de- ments for and against budget-bal- bate over the meritsof an unbal- ancing. Yet there is no one on either anced budget begins anew, side of the fence who will admit that Fundamentally the debaters hav he is in favor of a chronic unbal split neatly as between so-called con- h si ao facrncublne servatives and so-called liberals and it is all a question of duration and radicals, with the conservattives de- degree. Some of the "unbalancers" manding budgetary balance, debt would gladly resort to the printing liquidation and reflation if necessary, press to pay the national debt; some and the radicals insisting that a littleof more debt won't do us any harm if of the most rugged of the "balancers" the money is devoted to a useful pur- would return straight to a "pay-as- pose. . you-go" policy, either by increased Of late, however, with a secondary taxation or by leaving the unem- business recession rudely interrupting ployed without governmental aid, or the prosperity chorus, a strange, new both. voice has been added to those who WOULD insist that there is no great hurry PRINT MONEY about achieving an actual balance between income and expenditures. It scThe "balners" offthei advanced is the voice of the business man, fear- priations and trust to luck and nat- ful that too swift a balance will have ural selection; the advanced "un- such a deflationary effect on the na- balancers" would spend mroe and tion's spending power as to set busi- more for rlief until every unem- ness back several paces. mr o le ni vr nm TEs ARGUENT eployed person was assured of per- THAGAGNST NnTanent work at a union wage with AGAINST sick leave and vacations at full pay. The argument against a balanced Then they would print the money budget in times of stress is essentially to pay for it all. But they all want a this: balanced budget. The National Government has a But how? If one discards the al- direct and inescapable obligation to luring arguments of the simon pure its citizens. "Rugged individualism" inflationists - of whom there are is a mouth-filling expression, but if 94 many, oddly enough, in the ranks government tolerates and sustains an of big business-the answer that economic structure which results in Congress hears is twofold: economy periodic depressions it is the duty of and taxation. It may be assumed that government to repair the dam- that neither alone, with a large an- age. The citizen, it is argued, is -by nual deficit and a bulky national and large the innocent victim of a debt, will be sufficient. system over which he has no control The deficit for the. current fiscal and of whose mechanics he is for the year, to date, is not far from $800,- most part profoundly ignorant. 000,000. If that were to be absorbed To repair the damage and restore in a single year through economies prosperity ,the argument continues, alone, the economices would have to it is necessary to spend money on a be severe. Additional taxation to cov- large scale-to "prime the pump of er the whole amount would prove an industry," while at the same time giv- equally heavy burden. ing relief in large amounts to such TO INVOLVE victims of the depression as are un- BOOKKEEPING CUTS able to help themselves. The "pump It is reliably reported that the priming" must continue until produc- recommendations of the Budget Bu- tion indices have again reached a reau for the next fiscal year (ending "normal" level. The unemployment June 30, 1939) will involve a reduc- relief must continue until the prob- tion of some $80000,000 under ap- lem has been reduced to a point propriations for the current year; it where ordinary charity can handle it. is also reliably reported ,howver, that Since the nation is best able to pay many of the reductions are hardly taxes when it is most prosperous, the more than bookkeeping transactions anti-balancers say, a depression i no and that Congress, which is always time for a "pay-as-you-go" Ipolicy, eager for economy in some one's Incur the debt, spend the money else back yard, will blithely ignore wisely, but pass the burden on to the the recommendations anyhow. inheritors of the prosperity so en- The mood of Congress has already gendered. We do not pay as we go been indicated in the widespread re- in wartime, and a national depres- - sentment at President Roosevelt's sion is at least as bad as a war. proposal to save more than $100,- THERE ARE THOSE J 000,000 in highway subsidies; road WHO URGE-' REFLATION' happrapriations constitute one of the A small but vocal fringe of this most clearly visible and hence val- school of thought would go farther uable sources of votes available to -it would avoid the aggravation of Congressmen. Other economies might the national debt by the simple de- 'well suffer a like fate. Even the pro- vice of increasing the amount of cur- posed half-billion cut in relief funds rency in circulation. This is known' might fall a victim to the very po- as inflatioii, but its advocates do not tent spending bloc. find it popular to cal lit that. They Assuming that as much as $500,- call it "reflation." - 000,000 could be lopped off the The other side of the argument is amount to be spent in this fiscal year, much along this line: then another $500,000,000, more or Admitted that in times of deepest less, would have to be raised by depression it is necessary to spend 'taxation if the budget is to be bal- large sums, even to the extent of un- anced as of June 30, 1939. balancing the budget; admitted, for A committee of the House is work- the sake of simplifying the debate, ing long hours on the matter of tax that the government has a moral revision, but there is no indication obligation which cannothbe measured that its labors will result in any net in dollars. Yet the government must, increase in revenue. Rather the ef- as quickly as possible, return to nor- fort is expected to piitigate or elimi- mal, businesslike fiscal methods or nate certain inequities in present law. else presently find itself bankrupt, Even a net decrease in revenue is utterly unable to discharge that ob- possible. ligation. It will place itself in such THE WAYS jeopardy that it will bring down TO RAISE REVENUE upon its hapless citizens such misery Then another tax bill must raise as they have never known. the new money, and this is particu- THEY ADVISE larly true because the Budget Bu- 'TAPERING OFF' reau is compelled, in the face of cer- The free spending of borrowed tain revision, to base its estimates money, the balancers go on to say, is for the year beginning next July 1 on a perilous thing at best, and should the forms of revenue available under be terminated as soon as real signs -of present law. 1 recovery appear. The theory that the Three possibilities present them- government must continue to spend selves. New money can be raised lavishly without compensating rev- (1) by "soaking the rich"; (2) by a enue until boom times have arrived general sales tax; (3) by a broaden- is a fallacy-the very diminution of ing of the income-tax base. heavy spending, with concomitant Treasury experts and members of balancing' of the budget, will speed Congress say frankly that the last- the boom. A gradual but steady named method ,politics aside, would tapering off is not only desirable but be the fairest of the three and that, vital. it required millions of individuals now Continued piling up of debt is like- exempt to pay at least a small in- ly to be fatal in any event, the bal- come tax, it would produce a very ancers declare. If depression con- large amount of revenue. tinues, or-partial recovery is followed If Congress were compelled to by a new slump then continued bor- choose among these three methods rowing will eventually expand the of raising money, it undoubtedly national credit until it snaps and the would choose a broadening of the result will be the blackest sort of income-tax base. But it would do depression or a resort to worthless, so in a mood of unparalleled gloom, inflaed currency, or both. If, on the for the citizens whose pocketbooks other hand, government spending in-I would be affected are numerous, and they all have votes. Taxes do not tual extinction and the thing called make popular the politicians who drama, of which stage and screen are levy them. both passing manifestations, will con- (Reprinted from the New i- -A-f;-T rnnn-NwYr* ie" tinue indefinitely to emertaln man- i 1 IGW 1 Ul3i. i 1i11C n5 j .