THE MICHI-AN DAILY THE MICHIGAN DAILY Propaganda In The Press No. 3: The Name-Calling Device, Use Of Stereotype Words; To Label People And Ideas On The Other Side Spring Parley Panels Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the, authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published Levery morning except Monday during the Uiversity year and Surno r 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 otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republicationi of all other matters 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 -8Y National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHAGO -SOSTON --Los AmorELs . sA fRANtISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1938-39 Board of Managing Editor. . Editorial Director . City Editor . Associate Editor . . Associate Editor- . Associate Editor . . Associate Editor . . Associate Editor. . Associate Editor Book Editor .. Women's Editor . Sports Editor . . . Editors . Robert D. Mitchell . . Albert P. May1o Horace W. Gilmore * Robert I. Fitzhenry . . S. R. Kleliman . . Robert Perlman . . Earl Gilman * . William Elvin Joseph Freedman * . . Joseph Gies . . Dorothea Staebler . . Bud Benjamin Business D Business Manager . Credit Manager . Advertising Manager' Women's Business Manager Women's Service Manager . )epartment . Philip W. Buchen eonard P. Siegelman William L. Newnan . . Helen Jean Dean . . Marian A. Baxter By JOSEPH GIES To take up another phase of newspaper pro- paganda, let us turn to the Name-Calling Device. This has reached a singularly refined form in modern American journalism. It is to a large extent one end of a vicious circle; the press builds up a public stereotype in a certain word or phrase, and then, having established it as a Name, proceeds to label all enemies with it. In past history many celebrated Names have been employed: Tory, Copperhead, Black Republican, etc. Contemporary Name-Calling has outdone its predecessors in resourcefulness; and yet, the, public appetite being satiable in this respect political partisans have in general concentrated on a small number of Names and Bad Words and have been content to wrap these around the necks of their opponents with the most tenacious repetitiveness. There is, unfortunately, a psycho- logical basis for expecting that an untruth, even a fairly obvious one, will, if repeated often and long enough, gain some of the power of truth. This is especially the case when the matter is one of word-stereotype. Several studies have been made in the last three or four years of the relative value of com- mon stereotypes as Names. Two, made in 1937, should be enough to indicate the general trends. Dr. Ross Stagner of Akron University conducted a research on the subject among a group of workers and small business men. These reacted unfavorably to the following words and phrases in the percentages indicated: Ku Klux Klan - 90% Communist 80 Child Labor 74 Nazi and Fascist 73 Townsend Plan 48 Liberty League 30 Socialist 43 Prof. Selden C. Menefee of the University of Washington made a study of political symbols among 742 students, teachers and professional men. Positive (favorable) responses were made as follows: Conservative 33.0% Fascism 9.8% Patriotism 63.6% Pacifism 69.1% Liberalism 83.8 Radicalism 17.7 Socialism 47.0 Communism 8.9 It is somewhat surprising that Professor Mene- fee omitted from his list the greatest stereotype of them all, "Americanism." And yet, "Ameri- canism" requires no testing; its hallowed place in the propaganda picture is so securely fixed that we can accept it a priori as the favorite virtue-word in American politics, better even than "democracy" because it is even more in- definite. Americanism And UnAmericanism The Name-Calling aspect of "Americanism" is the epithet "Un-American," which has reached its zenith in the hearings of the Dies Committee. The Chicago Tribune has been the leading spon- sor of the Dies publicity, and is, in fact, the best Name-Caller among the large newspapers. The following excerpt from an editorial of last fall furnishes a typical example of the Tribune's use of this device: The purge of the Democratic Party is being conducted to throw out the conservatives and give control to socialists, communists and col- lectivists who call themselves Democrats and radicals whose program is something that no Democrat could associate with anything here- tofore represented by his party. Continuing in the same vein for several para- graphs and speaking of "imported ideas of dicta- torship" and "alien-minded outsiders" the Tri- bune makes a plea for a coalition of Democrats and Republicans in "an American front." Notice above, incidentally, that "conservative" is not a Bad Name in the Tribune, but rather, in fact, a virtue-word. This is quite certainly a faulty technique; "conservative" has a bad connotation for the majority of Americans. The "American front" is better. The caption on the editorial was "American Democrats and Republicans." The Double Thrust The Tribune, more than any other paper, pur- sues a consistent and thoroughgoing policy of what might be called the Double Thrust and of which mention was made earlier-the simultan- eous creation of a stereotype and exploitation of it against the enemy. Cartoons, editorials and news stories concentrate on the two-fold pur- pose of making Communism a bloody villain and of making Roosevelt, the C.I.O. and other enemies of the Tribune tools of Communism. Occasionally other Names are introduced into the fight against the New Deal-Waste, Corruption, Crime. When Dewey was running for governor of New York, Crime briefly regained some of its old-time pres- tige in the press, but it is a pretty jaded term by now, as is corruption, though the Tribune still makes the most of both-a head on one of a series of WPA articles during the 1938 campaign, for example: Graft, Frauds, Theft! WPA Reeks With Corruption Communism, however, clearly remains the best of the Name-Calling devices against the New Deal. (It has also been called "fascist" by many newspapers as well as by Glenn Frank, who at the meeting of the Republican Program Committee in Chicago last summer made a plea for the abandonment of propaganda devices by the G.O.P. The Tribune has also called it Nazi.) The pro-New Deal press, although hopelessly outnumbered, makes good use of these devices. For Name-Calling, the best example is perhaps the New York Post, which never mentions the opposition newspapers except by the appelation "Tory press" and, almost constantly by that. The Daily Worker once called Dewey "Wall Street's Fig Leaf" in a head. The Dictator Bill The commonest Name used directly against Roosevelt is "dictator." This Name reached its apogee in that curious phenomenon of the spring of 1938, the fight against the Reorganization Bill. To inquire into the reasons for the tremen- dous battle waged against that measure, which Time Magazine called "a straightforward at- tempt to increase efficiency" in government, does not lie within the scope of these articles. Per- haps it was merely a good opportunity to use the label "dictator," although almost any other occasion would serve as well. At any rate the Hearst papers, the Tribune and the New York Sun never referred to the bill save as the "Dicta- tor Bill." The Detroit Free Press, the New York Herald Tribune, the Chicago Daily News and many other papers all over the country also used the phrase freely. For a prize example of the value of Name-Call- ing, consider the treatment of the combatants in the Spanish civil war. The general press, most of which has been neutral or mildly pro-Loyalist, at first spoke of the "Government" forces and the "Rebels." Franco's objections coupled with those of the Catholic Church led to the introduction of the term "Insurgent." Papers friendly to Franco called his troops "Nationalists," and when the outcome of the war became assured, the wire services adopted this term. The Loyalists, on the other hand, have been the Reds, the Marxists and the Communists to the Catholic press, Hearst the Ne York Sun and the Volkischer Beobach- ter. NIGHT EDITOR: MORTON C. JAMPEL The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent-the views of the writers only. 'The Student Looks At The Forties' ..-0 i AgBOUT 500 STUDENTS and faculty members crowded into the North Lounge of the Union yesterday to convene the ninth annual session of the Spring Parley. They indicated thereby that they are seriously con- cerned about the problems that face them as they face the forties. Elsewhere on this page we present a summary of the subjects that will probably be discussed at the panel meetings this afternoon and evening. Most encouraging about the general meeting yesterday was, the attitude of the students who refused to accept the pessimistic remarks of one faculty speaker and the blanket optimism of an- other. They demanded a realistic appraisal of the difficulties blocking American progress and a concrete program of action. And their refusal to accept fears and hopes as adequate analysis promises much hot debate in a creative manner at the sessions today. What was most discouraging about the session yesterday was the fact that no more than 50Q out of 10,000 students are willing to discuss c:. listen to a discussion of the problems of the day. The 500 are already thinking about these problems: their presence testifies to that. From the Parley they will gain a new perspective of their society, they will be in a position to re- evaluate the beliefs they hold and form tenta- tive convictions on issues they have not consid- ered. We are the youth of a depression era. We were born in one world war, and events abroad are promising that we shall die in another. It would seem that 9,500 students on this campus are willing to accept tihese fatalities, or at any rate, that they are insufficiently interested in them to seek a solution. This cannot possibly be trt.\ of all those who did not attend yesterday's Par- ley session. It is to, these students that this edi- torial is addressed. The panel sessions today offer an excellent op- portunity for thorough student debate with the aid of many faculty members capable of provid- ing invaluable source material. Theadivision of the main topic "The Student Looks at the For- ties" into six sections, meeting separately, will permit a more intensive discussion as well as a wider range of subjects. The Parley meets but once a year, and that for merely three days. The opportunties it offers should not be ignored. -S. R. Kleiman AsOthers SeeIt. . For the "pros", on the war referendum propos- al the Spectator of Eau Claire (Wis.) Teachers College says: "This amendment is a reasonable demand on the part of American citizens and is consistent with the rights and obligations of in- telligent and responsible citizenship. Certainly it should not be thought foolish or un-American to have a referendum on the spending of lives and blood." The summaries of the plans for dis-] cussion in the Spring Parley panels today which follow were written for( The Daily by the student chairmen1 of the panels. In addition to those below, there will be a panel on+ Science and Civilization. Americl Culture The culture panel of the Spring Parley, under the chairmanship of Bernard Friedman, will first hear1 brief talks on the following arts by+ a panel of six: Poetry and Literature, Criticism, Movies, Drama, Music, the Plastic Arts. The six men, who will+ speakfor about five minutes each, will attempt to point the direction of these arts in the immediate future and sketch the principal problems which1 confront the artist. The attempt will be made to center the discussion+ about this direction and these prob-; lems rather than to have too general a treatment, although of course most of the broader considerations (for- mal analysis, art and propaganda,i etc.) will enter in their relation to1 the immediate situation. Following; the introductory statements the floor will be open to discussion, comment and questions.r In the past the discussions in the: art sections have been vitiated by a lack of relevance to the present situ- ation and by failure to recognize con-, crete exemplification of general prin-I ciples-in short, by being discussionsi of esthetics rather than of art in practice. This year, in accord with( the theme of the Parley as a whole,i The Student Looks At The Forties, it is hoped that this defect will bei remedied and that the discussion stemming from the opening remarks1 will not be dissipated into esthetical generalities. Religion There is no subject more integrallyt bound up with ways and circum-1 stances of lifethan religion and re- ligious trends. That the Michigan University student is alive to this hasc been evinced recently by the wide at- tendance and attention received byI the S.R.A. lectures last fall, by the; enrollment in courses on religion,t religious literature, and theory andi psychology of religion, by church at- tendance, and, most important of all,E by the amount of informal discussion in lobbys and halls, in rooming housest and fraternities, and in beer hall andt "coc" joint. The Parley panel on religion is an effort to call together,E on common ground, students, faculty, and others who have questions to ask opinions to expound, -or disinter- ested curiosity in what will be said. The discussion will be directed along lines compatible with the gen- eral theme of the Parley, and ant effort will be made to keep it con- structive and informative rather thanl solely critical. Emphasis will be onE the student and his theories and re- actions to future trends, the status,E quality and character of religion and church in the coming decade, the, '40's. Some of the questions whichE have been raised and will be consid- ered are: (1) Should the church beE liberal or conservative in its poli- cies? (2) Can and should the uni- versity influence religious ideas? How much of a factor in religious , education is the high school? the primary school? the family? How and to what extent shall children be, educated in this line? (3) What should our religious ideals be in this decade, and what part' should they play in our lives? (4) What part does relig- ion (the church) play in. politics? (5) What is the place of scientific method in religion? The faculty panel, which will in- clude W. R. Humphreys, English, Dr. W. R. Lemon, Presbyterian Church; H. L. Pickerill, Church of Christ; Kenneth Morgan, S.R.A., Dr. Rabinowitz, Hillel Foundation and Arthur Wood, Sociology, will be pres- ent as resource material and to stim- uate the discussion. Daniel Suits is student speaker, and Dekle Taylor will chair the meeting. Students, both ones who are thoughtful and well in- formed on the subject, and ones who are not, have been invited, in fact, all are invited, and it is hoped that the panel will provide an ideal setting for palaver and prognostigation. The University Student The student looks at the forties and sees a progressive university and pro- gressive students under an extended form of the Honors System. The edu- cational panel this year will attempt to confine itself to interpretations of present trends in the university func- tions and to describe the student's concept of an ideal university. In- stead of negative criticism, the em- phasis will be on the positive con- struction of the student's picture of tomorrow's educational institute. Prof. Howard Y. McClusky of the Education School will open the panel Saturday afternoon at 2:30 by de- scribing the recent tendency to shift the organization based upon subject matter toa reorganized system built around the individual. student. Mr. McClusky will present some facts from his own recent studies and Ronald Freedman, '39, will speak of his ?xperience with the Honors Sys- tem and urge its extention to all students after the university has fin- ished their high school education. Then William Centner. '39BAd.. will, Bible, solved a quadratic equation, read a German novel, composed 10,- 000. words, and systematically sought the causes of some social ill? The university - concentration camp for intellectuals? Is this the place where the student and the pro- fessor may come to escape the reali- ties of life? Do we have a monastary where we only pursue the truth, and sun ourselves in the pleasures of knowledge? Or do we have a techni- cal institute where we learn how to sharpen lawn mowers, manipulate a slide rule, and say witty things to; please the public? How may the en- gineer appropriate a larger slice of culture? Or must he forever remain the "white man's burden?" What is the social responsibility of a univer- sity? What is the social responsibility of the Chemistry Department, of the Business Administration School? Government, Economics The university student panel ex- pects to build out of student opinion the dream university that we hope and want to see in the forties. During recent years the relation- ship between government and eco- nomics has grown ever closer. Among some groups the increasing partici- pation of the government in the eco- nomic life of the nation has aroused grave misapprehensions while others have hailed this trend as represent- ing the beginning of a new era in our economic life. It will be our task to evaluate this trend with respect to the specific areas in which govern- ments and economics come together and to consider the directions in which it is desirable that the rela- tionships of government to econom- ics should develop during the '40's. The problems which we shall con- sider will be those which have arisen in the fields of Labor, Transporta- tion, Money and Credits, Businessa Cycle Control, and Monopoly. 1. Labor. There will be a discussion )f labor in its legal, economic, ethi-i cal and social relations to business. This will lead to an analysis of the Wagner Act and the proposed revi-i sions of it. The problems arising from the inauguration of the Social Secur- ity Act will be given treatment, as well as those arising under the Wages and House Act. 2. Transportation. The nature of, and currently suggested remedies for,' the "railroad problem" will be con-3 sidered first in a discussion that will° expand to include the whole problem of transport coordination. 3. Money and Credit. A number of proposed reforms in the field of money and credit will be considered, including the 100 per cent plan, branch, groups and chain banking; the restoration of an international gold standard; strengthening of the Bank of International Settlements; continued and increased use of stab- ilization funds; and adoption of the commodity. 4. Control of the Business Cycle. Various methods of controlling the cycle will be demanded with partic- ular reference to thedrole of the Fed- eral Reserve System and government spending. 5. Monopoly Problems raised by the current Federal investigation (TNEC) will receive attention, along with the regulation of the administrative pro- cess through increase in government competition. Science AM Civilization Professor McFarlan will keynote a discussion directed toward clari- fying, first the part that science and scientists play in the present order and the present disorder. He will sketch a history of the development of technics as a social tool, its conse- quent appropriation by the entre- preneur class to its own ends and the decay of individualism in science to a point where the scientist disclaims, by pointing to his social inaction, any responsibility for political, economic, or social consequences of his dis- coveries. Second, Prof. McFarlan will state briefly what will be the social responsibility of the scientist, par- ticularly the engineer in the coming decade. Professors A. D. Moore and Mene- fee are two members of the panel who will undoubtedly take issue with Pro- fessor McFarlan. Speaking of the conservative stu- dent, J. Anderson Ashburn, the new editor of the Michigan Technic, will present the demands that should be made upon the scientist and engineer in the '40's, and what concessions society should grant. Further discussion is expected from a consideration of socialized medi- cine versus individual practice, with argument upon various group medi- cine plans suggested in various sec- tions of the country. The Editor Gets Told.. . The Peace Rally To the Editor: About 600 students attended the All-Campus Peace Meeting of Thurs- day afternoon. It is to be hoped that By HEYWOOD BROUN .DAILYOFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) advanced doctoral candidates to at- tend the examination and to grant permission to others Who might wish to be present. C. S. Yoakum. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received notice of the following Pittsburgh Civil Service Examina- tions: Residents of Pittsburgh who are attending the University may take the examinations providing their applications are on file in Pitts- burgh not laternthan Saturday, April 29. Summer Recreation Leader (male and female) $5.25 per day. Head Counselor (male and female) $5.00 per day. Junior Counselor (male and fe- male) $2.50 per day. Complete announcements are on ile at the Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information, 201 Mason Hall. Office Hours: 9-12 and 2-4. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information. Bureau of Appointments and Oc- cupational Information: A represen- tative of a young and expanding flour mill and baking company will be in this office, 201 Mason Hall, at 10 o'clock this morning, Saturday, April 22, to interview men. Preference will be given men who have worked their way through school. University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Xnfor- mation. Carillon Recital: Sidney F. Giles, Guest Carillonneur, will give a recital on the Charles Baird Carillon, Sun- day afternoon, April 23, at 5:15 p.m., instead of the usual time, because of conflict with the organ recital by Palmer Christian, University organist, at 4:15 p.m. in Hill Auditorium. Organ Recital: ,Palmer Christian, University organist, will play a pro- gram of compositions by Johann Se- bastian Bach, on the Frieze Memorial organ, Sunday afternoon, April 23, at 4:15 p.m., in Hill Auditorium. The general public is invited, but is re- spectfully requested to be seated on time. Graduation Recital: Gwendolyn L. Fossum, pianist, from Havre, Mont., will give a piano recital Tuesday eve- ning, April 25, at 8:15 o'clock, in the School of Music Auditorium, in par- tial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree. The general public is invited. Exhibitions Exhibition of Drawings and Models by Jack Williams, architect and in- dustrial designer of Detroit, will be shown in the ground floor corridor cases through April 22. Open daily from 9 to 5 p.m. The public is in- vited. Exhibition, College of Architecture: The annual exhibition of student work from the member schools of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture is being shown in the third floor exhibition room, Archi- tecture Building. Open daily, except Sunday, 9 to 5, through April 28. The public is cordially invited. Lectures University Lecture: Dr. Paul R. Cannon, Professor of Pathology at the University of Chicago, will lec- ture on "Some Aspects of Respira- tory Infection" on Tuesday, April 25, at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Audito- rium. The public is cordially invited to attend. Biological Chemistry Lecture: Dr. Genevieve Stearns, Research Asso- ciate Professor of Pediatrics in the School of Medicine, University of Iowa, will speak to the students of biological chemistry and others in- terested on some phases of mineral metabolism on Monday, April 24, at 4 p~m. in the East Lecture Room (mezzanine floor) of the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Stu- dies. Events Today The Graduate Outing Club will go bicycling today. The group will meet at 3:30 p.m. at the Campus Bicycle Shop, 510 E. William. They will take a short ride along the river to Delhi and back. Sunday there will be the usual outing. Faculty and graduate students are invited. The Outdoor Club will meet at Lane Hall today at 2 p.m. for a hike. Members are urged to come and bring a friend. Students are welcome to attend. Biological Chemistry Seminar, today from 10-12 a m., Room 319 West Medical Building. "The Sulfur- Containing Amino Acids of the Pro- tein Molecule-Their Determination and Biological Relationships" will be dicussed All interested are in- 4 Concerts t4 At the moment this is written it seems likely that President Roosevelt's appeal for world peace will be rejected by Hitler and Mussolini. But even this indicated contingency should not be set down as a failure of the efforts which we must make to save the world from ruin. The phrase "World Peace" must come to be as familiar to our ears as 'World War." Once upon a time two householders had A"little homes which stood in a clearing in the center of a forest. One night they both were awakened by dancing flames. The woods were on fire. As yet this conflagration was fa good many miles away, but it was evidently ap- proaching the clearing. Both men went to work to save their homes. One undertook to dig a deep moat around his house and filled it with water. "You see," he explained, "when the fire comes in this direction I do not think it will be able to leap across this water." But his neighbor said, "I think I have a still better idea. Let's join the neighbors and by our combined efforts stamp out the blaze while it is still miles away. If everybody joins in with a neighborly spirit and understanding we can quell the danger be- fore the entire forest takes to blazing. In tha,. event your moat may not be wide enough, and even if it proves to be sufficient you will be compelled to live under a pall of smoke. Surely we will be much better off if we can manage to see that there isn't any fire at all in the forest; even though it is still well down behind the bend waging war here within our borders. The words of Senator George almost convey the implication of an invitation to aggressors to come over here and meet us on our home grounds. The State which George represents still harbors a few old people who dimly remember the actual experience of war right at their doorsteps. And it was a conflict which moved even the invading General to say, "War is hell." We cannot tolerate the thought of hell in the lands across the sea. Those are the fires which do leap oceans. We must try and try again to end the theat of carnage by international agree- ment. And surely something of American tra- dition will crumble if it is said, as it has been said, that our President should not be allowed to talk of freedom for fear that the word may be annoying to some dictator. It would be well for each one of us to look again at the funda- mental document which was the cornerstone of our nation. The Declaration of Independence was an appeal to the moral sense of the entire world. It was not written simply for consumption by the embattled colonists. Thomas Jefferson wrote, "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by ,their creator with certain inalienable rights, that among them are life, liberty and the pur- suit of happiness." And note well that Jeffer- son did not say, "All Americans" or even "All in the western hemisphere." He wrote boldly "all men," and to that statement our forefathers affixed their signatures. America will be less than faithful to its genesis if it fails to hold the torch of liberty high ononiah far+ha m r +.1t sa "This new aggrandizement of Nazi territory points the finger of condemnation at the 'peace by agreement' policies of France and England, makes them seem more shortsighted and futile t.n ,, erPrett' non itvv fto nla- tefor I