y, 6rur : THE MICHIGAN I I MIARCH i. ilitl U TH E MICHIGAN DAILY - -f -- - ____ 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 Monday 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 otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class mall matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; yy mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERSING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO *'BOSTON * LOS ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1939-40 Editorial Staff Carl Petersen . Elliott Maraniss . . . Stan M. Swinton. Morton L. Linder Norman A. Schorr . . . Dennis Flanagan . . . John N. Canavan . . . . Ann Vicary . . . Mel Fineberg . . Business Staff Business Manager . Asst. Business Mgr., Credit Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Publications Manager I Managing Editor Editorial Director V Assocate Edi . Associate Editor . Associate Editor . Associate Editor *Women's Editor . Sports Editor . Paul R. Park Ganson P. Taggart Zenovia Skoratko * Jane Mowers . Harriet S. Levy GULLIVER'S CAVILS ray YOUNG G;ULIV ER GULLIVER'S last Cavil was cut off somewhere to set before the children in City College the before the end, but you probably got the moral bankruptcy of a dissolute mind ..." idea. We have been appraising the status of E INCIDENT has been building up; it has American culture so far, with a little essay on m the possibilities of ghostwriting as a major made the front page of the Times for a educational subject, and a criticism of the fund- week running. The Philistines are evidently raising methods of the Metropolitan Opera. very eager to put the finger on Russell. But Today we return to the educational scene. In the defenders of Russell have been growing in New York City recently the College of the City number daily, and it is very heartening to see of New York appointed Bertrand Russell as that the leading New York publishers, for exam- Professor of Philsopohy. Now you would think ple, have come out with a blast against our that this appointment would be cause for general native barbarians. They have been joined by rejoicing; indeed, American students of mathe- leading educators all over the country. But one matics and philosophy are lucky that Lord Rus- of the more depressing results of the barbarian sell is in this country at all. But no, the vulgar- invasion of American education has been the ians are on the march again, attitude of the Philosophy Department at CONY. The Philistines have met in solemn conclave For some unknown reason, Russell's colleagues and have decided that Bertrand Russell is un- in the Department decided that it was necessary fit to teach mathematics and logic. That is to run through Russell's books and dig up not all. They have decided that mathematics enough quotations to demonstrate that he "is and logic are immoral. That is not all. They actuated by a strong ethical note in all hA writ- have decided that Russell ought to go back where ing, praises liberal Christianity, believes that he came from. hostility between religion and science is ended, wishes to place family life on a permanent and MAYBE you thought that this sort of thing happy basis, is not an opponent of marriage or had ended about fifteen years ago, down advocate of easy divorce and has criticized Karl in Dayton, Tennessee. Well, you're wrong. Last Marx, communism and tyranny in Russia as Friday, the City Council of New York vote well as Germany." Now it is hard to see jus (16 to 5) to ask the Board of Higher Education what all this has to do with Russell's capabilities to rescind Mr. Russell's appointment. Council- as a logician. As far as Gulliver is concerned, man Charles E. Keegan, a Democrat from the it is futile to even attempt to answer these peo- Bronx, talked like this: "Regardless of what we ple on their own terms, because they are not. as Councilmen think of Russell, any Councilman interested in logic, whether it be Mr. Russell's who reads his mail knows that the great major- logic or just common sense. ity of the taxpayers of the city do not want this Can you argue reasonably with a man who alien coming in here with his moral code and has the effrontery to use the words "the moral getting paid from the city treasury. We should bankruptcy of a dissolute mind" to describe one step in now and destroy the plot which began of the greatest intellects of the twentieth cen- three years ago, when the Board of Higher tury? Such individuals would, if they were Education set its cap for this man of doubtful properly keyed up, take great delight in burning moral character. The board was careful enougl4 Principia Mathematica in the public square to make way for this alien--and it broke down because Russell was born in England, or in the laws of this state by sneaking through legis- burning The Magic Mountain in the public lation at Albany to let this man hold a public square because Thomas Mann was born in Ger- office without American citizenship. He does many. not thinly enough of this country to take oul it's true that the whole fuss is quite ludi- his first citizenship papers, and yet Ife is t YEsh get $8,000 a year from public funds. His alien crous. But consider how far removed the character alone is ground enough for expulsion." antics of the American vulgarians are from the bestialities of the Nazis. From last Monday's T'HE NEW YORK TIMES goes on with the Times: "A person from Cracow who said that story like this: "Mrs. Earle interrupted to he had talked to one professor told this corre- ask if Mr. Keegan would erect barriers against spondent that 150 elderly scientists were jailed the distinguished savants of the world on the in the Olympic Village of the 1936 Olympic ground that they were aliens, and Mr. Keegan Games, which he been converted into a concen- replied that he would condemn any circum- tration camp. They shared two big halls with stances resembling those of the Russell appoint- a number of German Catholics from the Rhine- ment. He made the same answer when Council- land and several criminals . . . The informant man Laidler asked him if he would hold non- declared that the professors were garbed in old citizenship a bar against teaching by Professor army uniforms with large numbers on their Einstein. 'Councilman Keegan seems to think breasts. Their beards and heads were shaved, that Russell is a guy looking for a job,' said he said. At 6 o'clock every morning they had Councilman Straus . . ." to get up and clean their rooms, the toilets, Whereupon Councilman Joseph E. Kinsley wash dishes and peel potatoes . . . Two priests, got up and said that "It was Bishop Manning professors of theology, were kept separately in who called attention to the fact that Russell a room allotted to the clergy and Jews, he said, teaches barnyard philosophy. Children will play and added that the Bishop of Lublin was there with poison if we let them. It is very dangerous too . .. The DAILY WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND (This is the first of three articles deal- ing with the Associated Farmers, their organization, function and threat 1t American democracy.) I. Fascism, Incorporated ' By DAVID LACHENBRUCH A new relief bill recently breezed through the California legislature, which is destined to drive from the state, by starvation, at least 100,000 migrant workers. That is the esti- mate of Carey McWilliams. Califor- nia Commissioner of Immigration and Housing. This piece of legislation, especially when viewed in the light of Stein- beck's Grapes of Wrath, seems ex- tremely unjust, if not completely criminal. The law increases legal residence requirement for relief from one to three years, requires aliens to prove legal residence, places re- strictions on the spending of relief money and includes provisions for a fixed maximum payment of $55 per month per family. McWilliams, in an unsuccessful ap- peal to U.S. relief officials- for aid, said that under the new statute a per- son could be stricken from the relief rolls if he bought a toothbrush, since the bill specifies that relief money must be spent only for food, shelter, clothing or utilities. This appropriations bill, according to McWilliams, "was forced upon the state by the same old reactionary gang that has been running Cali- fornia for 15 to 20 years. That gang is now working through the Associat- ed Farmers, an organization of large landowners in California." An Omnipotent Lobby This "gang," McWilliams has writ- ten, has such an omnipotent lobby in measure it desires. The Associated Farmers have sponsored laws restrict- ting the right of labor to organize, because, in the words of their own spokesman, such legislation "would help cut down the cost of labor;" they have forced the passage of many other violently anti-labor bills, in- cluding provisions prohibiting sym- pathetic strikes, bills designed to pre- vent the unionization of governmen- tal and utility company employes, laws limiting the relief accorded to strikers, enactments outlawing the Communist Party and prohibiting all picketing. "Under the present sys- tem," McWilliams stated, the Associ- aited Farmers and affiliated groups' "actually hold a legislative veto through their control of the state Sen- ate." The Associated Farmers developed from a group of large landowners and bankers organized to combat the growth of unionization, to a fascist organization very similar in set-up to many which are to be found in Nazi Germany. Controlled to a great ex-I tent by the Bank of America, the largest land-owning corporation in California, its main raison d'etre is now to keep farm and factory labor wages at a starvation level, and it achieves this end by flouting law and letting mob violence reign. Bankers, Owners United In 1934, when in some parts of California the rising sun of labor or- ganization showed itself, these bank- ers and large farm-owners united to suppress the growing movement for better labor conditions in the state. This organization now has a mem- bership in California of 40,000, and has as its goal, the driving, through legal or extra-legal means, of all labor unions from the state, thus holding the cost of labor down to an unlivable minimum. At present the entire labor situation and practically all of the government in California is controlled, directly or indirectly, by the Associated Farmers. "Law Is Inadequate" John Steinbeck writes: "The large growers' groups (Associated Farmers and affiliates) have found the law inadequate to their uses; and they have become so powerful that such charges as felonious assault, mayhem and inciting to riot, kidnaping and flogging cannot be brought agains them in the controlled courts. They practise a system of terrorism that would be un- usual in the fascist nations in the world. A continuation of this approach constitutes a criminal endangering to the peace of the state." At its inception in 1933, members of the Associated Farmers pledged themselves "to help one another in case of emergency . .". to cooperate to harvest crops in case of strikes and to offer their services to the local sheriff immediately as special depu- ties in the event of disorders arising out of picketing and sabotage." The Associated Farmers started, in other words, as a large fraternity of strike- breakers. Pledged To Report Each member of the organization is pledged, "in case of trouble," to report at the local sheriff's office. Frank J. Taylor, defending the Asso- ciated Farmers in the Country Gentleman (Oct., 1937), explained that "under agreement with the local sheriffs, no volunteer farmer will be asked to carry a gun or throw a gas bomb, even if he is deputized. He is armed with a pick handle about 20 inches long. A good many of the Associated Farmers would prefer fire- arms. But they have been overruled by cooler heads who say that in the heat of defending their homes by in- vading strike pickets, the embittered farmers might use their guns too ef- fectively and turn public opinion against the organization." It seems a bit ironic to conceive, however, of these "embittered farm- ers" defending their "homes" against strikers, when most of these "farm- ers" are large corporations, and about 50 per cent of the farm lands of Central and Northern California are controlled by one organization-the Bank of America. (The second article in this series will follow.) Sowing Seeds For Grapes Of Wrath: ITE-l2 ASSOCIATED FARMERS NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT W. BOGLE The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Unemployment Survey Needed . U NEMPLOYMENT, the permanent bugaboo of workers, employers and government officials, has come in for consider- able comment lately. Republicans are accusing the Roosevelt administration of failure to cope with the problem; Democrats are claiming that their political opponents are exaggerating the number of unemployed persons in the country. And the figures available today on American unemployment display considerable inconsisten- cy, ranging from 2,000,000 to 12,000,000. The federal government has never taken a really authoritative count of the unemployed, and government measures related to employ- ment have always been along lines of emergency pathology rather than along those of research aimed at its cure. In fact, the Department of Labor is always careful to warn that it offers no figures on unemployment. The CIO advances regularly what is often termed the "largest employment" theory. Its figures are based upon union and Government reports and show the number of unemployed to be approximately 12,000,000. This figure is said to be an increase of 14 percent over Decem- ber, 1929, which is generally accepted as a month which the nation was near peak prosperity. The Glenn Frank Report, employed most frequently by government officials, accepts fig- ures which place the number of unemployed at about 8,000,000. The compilers of this figure take into account the idea that September, not December, 1929, was the high-water month of American prosperity and also the thought that increases in total population since that date have added to unemployment. This leads to the con- clusion that, in proportion to population, there are 7,000,000 fewer persons employed than at the time of the peak in 1929. The "little unemployment" theory claims that, including WPA workers, there are actually more people employed now than in December, 1929-1,865,000 more. Assuming a population increase of 3,800,000, the believers in this theory come to the conclusion that there are actually only approximately 2,000,000 unemployed in the country today. The discrepancy in these estimates shows the difficulty of preparing any program to fight unemployment. It also shows the need for the establishment of some authoritative agency for the collection of accurate figures on unemploy- ment. Without such figures little can be done to keep everyone at work who wants to be at work. The 1940 census is one step that is being taken to secure the figures. Another is being made by about 60 members of the House of Represen- tatives-Democrats, Republican, Farmer-Labor- ites and Progressives-who have organized them- selves into a conference on unemployment and have appointed 12 sub-committees to deal with the varying phases of the subject. It is only through such measures and through cooperation with them that we can see the un- employment problem as it really is and that we can do something to correct its evils. -- William Newton The Sheltered Life Are you as a student leading the sheltered life or the exposed life? the California able to push legislature that it is through almost any AT THE urgent request of the Navy, Congress included in the emergency national defense appropriation, passed early in the session, $2,- 000,000 for the recall of 500 retired officers to active duty. Later, before a House Appropria- tions subcommittee, Rear Admiral John H. Towers, Chief of the Bureau of Aeronautics, declared that the Navy lacked enough pilots to man all the planes it will receive under its vast expansion program. One of the officers recalled is a 66-year-old veteran who was retired in 1914. But, despite this urgent need and clamor for trained per- sonnel, the Navy in June will let out a group of eight of its most experienced flyers. The men to be .dropped are at the height of their powers, with world reputations, and fill some of the most important flying commands in the Navy. If that doesn't make sense, neither do the reasons behind it. They are just as fantastic. There are two reasons: First, and the root cause, is the Navy pro- motion system. A Selection Board, made up of non-flying brass hats, slated these ace pilots for the junk pile ostensibly because they have had no experience in commanding surface craft; in other words, because they aren't seadogs. But the real reason was that they are not Anna- polis graduates. They came into the service during the World War as enlisted men, ,'nd though all are university educated, they don't bear the Annapolis brand. Second reason, and the most idiotic feature of the whole affair, is that a bill to save the pilots is blocked by a furious feud between the chairmen of the two congressional naval com- mittees, arising out of the unyielding insistence of one of them, paunchy Senator David I. Walsh of Massachusetts, on using the measure to keep a personal friend in office as a Marine general., Me-First Statesmanship When the Selection Board ordered the eight flying commanders retired, widespread criticism arose in aviation and congressional circles. Early last year, with the approval of the President, Representative Melvin Maas, ranking Republi- can member of the House Naval Committee and s wartime nilo t.drafted a hill designd to keepn When H. R. 4929 was before the Senate, Walsh, as chairman of the Naval Affairs Com- mittee, slipped in a provision to save his frieid's scalp. At the first conference meeting the House members, headed by Naval Committee Chair- man Carl Vinson of Georgia, demanded the elimination of the "Meade rider." Walsh refused and a heated row ensued. Only two other meet- ings have been held since then, both ending in fiery blow-ups between the rival naval chairmen. Vinson has offered to compromise by giving Meade the rank and pay of a retire Major Gen- eral, but Walsh angrily refuses to make any can- cession. He is so irate that he won't talk to Vinson, and has served notice that he will attend no more conference meetings unless assured Vin- son will back down. And that's where the matter rests. Unless by June some way is found to break this deadlock, one Senator's private pique will cost the country the services of eight of its greatest naval aviators-at a time when the Navy is clamoring for more personnel and tens of mil- lions of dollars are being spent to build up the nation's air defenses. Ace Flyers Each of the eight Commanders has a notable flying record, with more than 5,000 hours in the air. They have performed hazardous missions, won many honors for U.S. aviation, and are un- equalled in their field. Outstanding among them are: Dave Rittenhouse, winner of the 1923 Schnei- der (speed) Trophy in England and other races, rated the top fighting-plane ace in the Navy. Now on duty as Navy Inspector at the Grumman aircraft factory. Harold J. Brow, another racing pilot, did much pioneer flying including service on the Langley first U. S. Navy aircraft carrier. Now command- ing officer of the Alameda, Cal, Naval Air Sta- tion. Andrew Crinkley, another aerial pioneer on the Langley, made first round trip across the U. S. in a seaplane. Now commander of the Navy's four-engine bomber used as flagplane by Admiral Arthur Cook, C.O. of the Aircraft Scout- ing Force, who draws pay as a pilot but is not Z14C DITOR e JL-- To the Editor: In three years on the campus here at Michigan, I've read many articles in the Michigan Daily. Some have been good; some have been poor; some have met with my approval; others have made my blood boil. It was not until I picked up today's Daily that I was actually motivated to write The Daily a comment upon its content. However, today, I read an article within your pages of infor- mation and opinion that has forced me, at long last, to break my silence. I don't know who the gentleman (or lady) who calls himself Young Gulliver may be, but today convinced me that he must be the unfortunate possessor of a brain that would be considered inadequate-even for a Lilliputian. I feel that many people share my opinion that anyone who attacks the attempt of an institu- tion such as the Metropolitan Opera to perpetuate itself and spread the gospel of good music does not have even the smallest amount of culture that one should expect from a col- lege student-let alone a journalist. Perhaps it is well that his identity has been concealed. It doubtless saves his face, if not his health. He bases his main attack upon the campaign on the contention that the Met is the proud baby of the so- called "Four-Hundred." In this he is gravely mistaken, for if he has ever had the chance or the honor to sit in the Metropolitan House he would realize that the real music lovers are those people who night after night pack the galleries and family circles. These are the people who would suffer if the Metropolitan Opera was discontinued. These and the millions of radio listeners like myself who look forward to the Sat- urday afternoon broadcasts as a re- lief from the commercialized trash of every day. By asking us for a contribution of a dollar, they are not compelling us to go into a state of financial collapse. I firmly believe that all of those who have contri- buted miss the dollar much less than they'd miss the Opera broadcasts. It seems unfortunate that the so- called free and liberal thinkers of the campus have allowed themselves to fall intwith the trend of thought that just because the "moneyed classes" are supporting a campaign that the campaign is entirely worth- less. Let us not forget that if it weren't for the patrons who spon- sored these expensive and valuable projects, the less wealthy would be unable to enjoy them too, and they are in the vast majority. We as Americans, should take pride that the greatest opera in the world comes from our fair land-irregard- less of the nationality of the names of the participants. Perhaps if the "liberals" of this campus took stock THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1940 VOL. L. No. 124 Notices Students, =College of Lterature, Science, and the Arts: Courses drop- ped after Saturday, March 23, by stu- dents other than freshmen will be recorded E. Freshmen (students with less than 24 hours of credit) may drop courses without penalty through the eighth week. Exceppions may be made in extraordinary circumstances, such as severe or long continued ill- ness. Assistant Dean E. A. Walter Freshmen in the College of Litera- ture, Science, and the Arts may ob- tain their five-weeks progress reports in the Academic Counselors' Office, Room 108 Mason Hall, from 8 to 12 a.m. and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. accord- Wednesday, March 20. Surnames beginning H through O, Thursday, March 21. Surnames beginning A through G, Friday, March 22. Diploma Applications: Graduate students who expect to be recom- mended for a degree in June, 1940, and who at the time of registration in February did not fill out a blue appli- cation, please call at the office of the Graduate School before March 23 to file an application. To All Faculty Members and Staff: Special Employment Time Reports must be in the Business Office today to be included in the roll for March. Pay day will be Friday, March 29. All R.O.T.C. Advanced Course Stu- dents, including Medical Advanced Course, desiring tickets for the Mili- tary Ball, to be held April 26, from 10 p.m. until 2 a.m., sign the list on the bulletin board in R.O.T.C. Head- quarters. Ticket preference given to those signing early. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received notice of the following Detroit Civil Service examination to be held May 4. Transportation Equipment Opera- tor, salary $.73 per hour. Applications being issued from March 18 to March 29, excepting Sat- urdays. Complete.announcement on file at the University 'Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information, 201 Mason Hall. Office hours: 9-12 and 2-4. Doctoral Examination of Edison DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN privilege of inviting members of the faculty and advanced doctoral candi- dates to attend the examination and to grant permission to others who might wish to be present. C. S. Yoakum Concerts Twilight Organ Recital: Palmer Christian, University organist, will give a special program of Good Fri- day °music at 4:15 o'clock, on the Frieze Memorial Organ in Hill Audi- torium, on Friday, March 22. The public is invited. Exhibitions Landscape Architecture Exhibit of plans and photographs of examples of the work of professional landscape architects and planners from New York to Hawaii is ondisplay in the exhibition hall of the Architecture Building. It will be open until the end of this week. Of special inter- est are the plans of the International Peace Garden in North Dakota and Manitoba, a plantation village in Hawaii, New York City parks, etc. Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: Photographs of Finnish architecture, by Ernst L. Schaible, '37A, Booth Traveling Fellow in Arch- itecture in 1938. Architectural cor- ridor, ground floor cases, through April 5. Open daily 9 to 5, except Sunday. The public is invited. Lectures University Lecture: Dr. Luigi Vil- lari, formerly in the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs antil on the staff of the League of Nations, will lecture on "Italy and the International Situ- ation" under the auspices of the De- partment of Political Science at 4:15 p.m. on Friday, March 22, in the Lec- ture Hall of the Rackham Build- ing. The public is cordially invited. Lecture, College of Architecture and Design: John Gray Faron, Jr., former fellow of the American-Scandinavi- an Foundation, will give an illustrat- ed lecture "Stockholm Builds for the Future" in the ground floor lecture room of the Architectural Building on Friday afternoon, March 22, at 4:15. The public is invited. Toda's Events Zoology Seminar: Mr. Laurence W. Roth will report on "The Effect of Hypophysectomy upon the Respira- tory Quotient of Snakes" and Mr. Harold E. Wallace on the "Life His- tory and Embryology of Triganodis-