FACE FGUIFR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY,MAY 12, 1940 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ANSWER TO THE PRESIDENT _t i 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 alo reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class mail matter.. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.O0; 'y mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERi.SING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representalive 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO * BOSTON * LOS ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1939.40 Editorial Staff Hervie Haufler . Alvin Sarasohn . Paul M. Chandler Karl Kessler Milton Orshefsky Howard A. Goldman . Donald Wirtchafter . Esther Osser TltIenCorai . . . Managing Editor . . 2Editorial Director . . . . City Editor . . Associate Editor . . . Associate Editor . . . Associate Editor . Sports Editor . . . Women's Editor * . .Exchange Editor. Business Staff Business Manager . Promotion Manager , Credit Manager . . Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Mazager Irving Guttman . Volney Morin Robert Gilmour Helen Bohnsack Jane Krause NIGHT EDITOR: GERALD E. BURNS The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Threat Of Fascism Lies In America .. . E QUALLY as shocking to the Amer- ican people today as Hitler's sudden attack upon the neutral Low Countries must be the speech of President Roosevelt before the Eighth American Scientific Congress yesterday. ican Scientific Congress' yesterday.- The distance from Europe is less than that covered by the "chariots of Alexander" rolling down Macedonia to Persia, the President said. Very short, in plain language. He questioned whether the new world could continue its policy of "peaceful construction" if another principle of life spread over all the rest of the globe. And this spread is going to be :perpetrated by the "chariots of Alexander" and the "ships and legions of Caesar," according to the Pres- ident's declaration. In contemporary language the President says that Fascism or Nazism will come to America on the wings of Hitler's bomb- ers and the decks of battleships some time ii the future. VERY WELL, we agree with the President that our country, our hemisphere, does not possess a "mystic immunity" from fascism. But before we "act with unanimity and singleness of purpose," as he would have us do, we want to determine how to act and why, we want to know exactly what fascism is and how it might very easily arise in America. The best example that suggests itself to us is Germany, the place where fascism is now running its fullest course. Fascism in Germany did not nave its begin- nings in 1932 when Hitler took over the Chan- cellorship. The basic roots of fascism lay in the disorganized and crushed economy of post- war Germany. Hugely excessive reparation pay- ments, loss of markets and colonies, and the bereavement of Alsace Lorraine left the most highly developed industrialized, processing na- tion of Europe hopelessly hamstrung. Added to this was the psychological feeling of resentment created in the youth of Germany by the oppressive treatment that the Allies dealt upon them for the sins of the Kaiser's regime. AND WHEN the world depression of 1929-30 accentuated the inadequacy of an already crippled economy there appeared in bold re- lief those elements and conditions for the growth of fascism. Millions of unemployed, especially youth, disillusioned and without a legitimate place in life, were receptive to the panaceas and oratory of demagogues. The position of the farmers and small business men became steadily worse as purchasing power declined., And the big industries, so vitally important in a highly industrialized economy such as that of Germany and America, began rocking at their founda- tions. Politically the whole process of decadence was manifested by increasingly large and ar- ticulate socialist elements in the Reichstag. Industrial and political leaders were sensitive to the implications of the time. Hitler's organ- ized National Socialist party attacked vocifer- ously the left-wing groups with the traditional charges of subversive activity. Big industrialists like Thyssen gave him financial support; dis- gruntled farmers and small business men sym- pathized with him; disillusioned youth flocked to his activist program. The army leaders liked the sense of order and diciline Hitler main-, B y/ henior Editors LET US GET THIS STRAIGHT: We admire Franklin Roosevelt for the work he has done. We admire his personality as a leader and will not indulge in person- alities when talking about him. But we cannot follow him out of the camp of peace. We do not say his speech Friday night was war-mongering. He is not definitely proposing intervention in the European war; he has not asked for another A.E.F. Our protest is that he who once resolved himself to fight for peace has admitted a defeatist attitude toward peace for America. We may be blind to the facts, we may be sticking our heads in the sand, but we refuse to submit to the thesis that America cannot remain aloof from an inflamed Europe. We need no elaborate historical anal- ogy to prove to us that the world has shrunk. The war-forces of Europe might be able to sweep over every mile of the earth's surface as the President declared. Some military men say yes. Some say no. But it remains at best a hypothesis-and we believe a highly improbable hypo- thesis-that Hitler's legions will come swooping down on America. Although we readily grant that we are not wholly safe, not immune, we do not think that the air-raid alarms should start sounding for so remote an eventuality. $[UT PERHAPS THE PRESIDENT does not want us to wait. He does not say what we should do about the militarists of Europe. He merely warns, focuses our attention, starts the war hysteria to percolating. Should we pitch in with England and France now? Some people have read that interpretation into the President's speech. Mr. Roosevelt has worked a lot of people into a mood ap- proaching war-frenzy, and has not sug- gested an outlet for their zeal. Or does he expect that to come later, when his leaven of alarm has done its work? We protest especially against the broad implications of the speech. . .. . defend by every means our science, our culture, our freedom and our civilization." What does this mean? What lies beyond these stereotypes? The President does not an- swer-yet. Are we unduly cautious and hostile in suspecting that this is only a precursor to more positive declarations, more positive leanings toward war? EFORE THESE new blitzkriegs on Nor- way and the Lowlands came, James Cromwell, American minister to Canada, brought public rebuke down upon his head by too frankly declaring his pro- Allied views. Cromwell was a little pre- vious. Americans, remembering their de- votion to peace which President Roose- velt had himself fostered in the early days of the war, were not ready to give up their ideal. As columnist Raymond Clap- today in America. They aren't subversive for- eign agents, but the very domestic products of a failing American economy that is not meeting the vital needs of the American people. We have milions of unemployed, ten millions in fact; and four millions are youth, most sus- ceptible to the calls of demagogues like Cough- lin, Dies and Smith for crusades against the easiest scapegoat. Approximately half of our farmers are tenants and more of them are be- coming so. The mortality among small busi- nesses is astonishing. We have an army, trained for military obedience to those who might at any time control them, that is being increased alarmingly. And our large industries have and still are experiencing unprecedented stagna- tion, broken only by tremendous government spending for public works, relief, and now war preparations. There is hunger and misery midst the potentiality of plenty. Here, in America itself the latent elements of fascism lay preg- nant. President Roosevelt questions whether we can continue our policy of "peaceful construction," if fascism spreads to this country. JF WE DON'T vigorously pursue a policy of construction (which the President has al- ready miserably abandoned) it is very true that fascism will, not spread to America, but will rise in America. The distinction is the crux upon which the action of America resides. Our battlefields are laid out before us-on every domestic front the fight must be waged to eliminate these fascist potentials-unemploy- ment, insecurity, human misery, and above all today, the continuance of a war economy. While the greatest military battle of all times is in progress in Europe, America must wage the greatest and most crucial social program she has yet known for the preservation and promo- tion of those ideals which are in the throes of midpassage today. -Robert Speckhard 130 Years Of PeaceI per pointed out, however, there was even then a vast undercurrent of opinion leaning toward England and France, an undercurrent which, in deference to the public desire for peace, did not receive overt expression. We believe President Roosevelt's defeatism has opened the gates. The war-thinkers will feel free to express themselves. The war drums are beginning to roll. The only hope for us who still believe that involvement in Europe would be both futile and ruinous was indicated by the President himself: f "It is our compelling duty to guard and enrich that legacy (Preservation of civilization), to preserve it for a world which must be reborn from the ashes of the Present disaster." We cannot believe that this "duty" need take us outside this hemisphere. We believe that we can continue our "peace- ful construction," and that in that con- inuation lies the only permanent fulfill- ment of our "duty." And we cannot reconcile the enrichment and the preser- vation of our legacy with a blackout of peace in America. By JOHN SCHWARZWALDER This column has been criticized for its in- sistance upon finding a meaning, a message, in the interpretations Mr. Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra give to each of the major symphonies. Such criticism is part of a musical quarrel that has gone on for a long time. To us it would seem that a work of art in what- ever medium must be judged for what it has to say. If it is true that music cannot be even approximately translated into words then there is no field whatever for the critic. But if, like art, the dance, and poetry it has an expressible theme then it is only the critic's duty to set this down as he hears it. This preamble is a method of stating that yesterday afternoon's program of music writ- ten by Johannes Brahms was tremendously im- portant not only for the fine execution given the compositions by the participants, not only for the mellow and haunting beauty of the strings, the perfection of the brass and wood- winds, not alone for the expressive phrasing and clarity of orchestral diction, but also for the spirit and mentality of its conductor and for the cooperation of orchestra and soloists in giving to the audience a message that will endure as long as their memories can hold the name of Brahms. For though there can be little question but that the program was varied enough to suit the most exacting listener, yet each of the works: played had esentially the same message to give. The Haydn Variations lent us the picture of the ideal and transformed it from a vignette of other times into an immediate present. The Second Symphony enlarged upon the message, showing those who listened that the essential conditions of human happiness are the gemut- lichkeit, the singing, the dancing, the very living that we do. May those who now own the Germany Brahms loved so well find their reward for the destruction of that kindness of spirit the composer prized so highly. The A minor Double Concerto deserves a special section of its own if only for the great performances given it by Josef ;3zigeti and Emanuel Feuermann, violinist and 'cellist re- spectively. These artists were so much at one with one another and with the conductor that they seemed an extension of each other's per- sonality, some sort of giant violin (or 'cello) played by one master hand. The power of their feeling no less than the perfection if their technics carried the work through to a con- clusion that necessarily was as perfect- as the composer's conception had been. The effectI of the strings against the orchestra, the solo statement against the orchestral whole was never more perfectly carried out. There was credit in this afternoon's performance for all concerned including the Festival management, for this most worthy program. * * * Thor Johnson gave a pleasant surprise to the large audience which attended the performance of Saint-Saen's Samson and Delilah last night. In the successful termination of the May Fes- tival he was ably assisted by a quartet of excel- lent soloists and by the best trained Choral Union it has ever been our privilege to hear. The concert opera is traditionally slower paced than its equivalent on the stage but last night's ;erformance was so energetically carried through that it was impossible for the most music-worn listener to become even slightly bored. Under Mr. Johnson's direction the opera was vital, dynamic and exciting throughout. The singers acquitted themselves ably at most times and occasionally were superb in their rendition of the traditional solos. Mr. Martinelli and Miss Enid Szantho, a newcomer to the Festival, had their best moments in the familiar "Mon Coeur a ta Voix Douce" and Mr. Robert Weede con- tributed a dramatic moment as the high priest in the first act and again near the close of the opera. Norman Cordon's brief appearances were perhaps the most perfectly voiced of all, the rich quality and mature feeling of his voice be- ing especially welcome as a contrast to the dra- Drew Peairson RoberS.Aen W10 ice tiue te5cretaryN, uObservatory. Academic Notices WASHINGTON-In addition to Zoology 32 (heredity): The third . Axammtion w-l beadditioThnrs- the San Francisco Fair the Presi- examMatio will held on Thurs- dent has two "musts" on the sight- day. May 16. seeing schedule of his transcontinen- A. Franklin Shull tal trip next month. They are King a i 1ifii.Qualifying examinations for candi- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Although lie refused to be drawn nation will consume about four hours' out on any political plans for the trip, he did reveal that he expected to take a southern route on the way west and return via the north, af- ter visiting his daughter, Mrs. John Boettiger, in Seattle. "I'm very anxious to spend some time in the national parks," he said. "particularly King Canyon and Yo- semite. These beauty spots have al- ways intrigued me, and I haven't gad a leisurely trip for several years." PRESIDENTIAL DERBY There was one event on the Ken- tuck Derby program that not many people knew about. It occurred in he private car of genial L. W. "Chip" Robert, secretary of the Democratic National Committee, when some of the big politicos got up a hat pool on the presidential race. A total of $1,800 was placed in the Democratic pool for President and $1,800 in the Republican, with eight Democratic candidates, one Demo- cratic dark horse, and eight Repub- lican candidates plus a Republican dark horse. The names were auctioned off to the highest bidder by Chip Robert, and the biggest prices on the Demo- cratic side went to Roosevelt, Hull and Farley. They all sold for about the same price-around $225. Three Republican candidates- Dewey, Taft and Vandenberg-also brought between $200 and $225. Jus- tice Owens Roberts brought the lowest price on the Republican tic- ket, while Wendell Willkie was bought for next to nothing by John Traphagen, president of the Bank of New York and Trust Company. The other Republican candidates were Bricker, Landon and Hoover; the other Democratic candidates Garner, McNutt, Wheeler, Jesse Jones and Barkley. Jesse Jones finally was bought in by a vice-president of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, which owes sev- eral million dollars to Jesse's Recon- struction Finance Corporation. Per- haps the B. and O., which was haul- ing the special car, considered Jones' candidacy a necessary investment. $60 FOR HOOVER When Herbert Hoover's name first was mentioned the bidding was not enthusiastic. Finally someone bid $50. "Fifty dollars I am offered for Hoover," barked auctioneer Robert. "Fifty dollars for Hoover! Are you going to let this fine presidential bargain go for only fifty dollars?" "Sixty dollars," bid old Vincent Bendix, donor of the Bendix aviation trophy, who was sittig, sleepy-eyed, in the corner. "Sixty dollars," continued Robert, "Just listen, folks, here's Herbert Hoover going for $60! Are you going to let him be knocked down for $60? Going! Going!" "Hey, wait a minute," shouted Bendix. "I thought I was bidding for J. Edgar Hoover." "All right," countered Robert, "we'll throw in J. Edgar Hoover, Herbert Hoover and the Hoover vac- uum people all for $75. Sold!" Note-Names of the candidates and their purchasers were carefully registered, and the money held for the election next November. HITLER AND HUNGARY Opinion toward Hitler inside Hun- gary is mixed-some opposed, some favoring a Nazi alliance which would help reconquer Transylvania from Rumania. But the one Hungarian who hates Hitler most, and in turn is hated most by Hitler, is the Regent, Ad- miral Horthy. Two years ago, Hitler invited Hor- thy to visit him to discuss the idea of a Hungarian-German military al- liance. Horthy, however, was cool. time; promptuess is therefore essen- tial. June Candidates for the Teacher's Certificate: The Comprehensive Ex- amination in Education will be given on Saturday, May 18, from 9 to 12 o'clock (and also from 2 to 5 o'clock) in the auditorium of the University High School. Students having Sat- urday morning classes may take the examination in the afternoon. Print- ed information regarding the exam- inationrmay be secuied in the School of Education office. The Doctoral Examination of Lowel Angus Woodbury will be held at 4:00 p.m., Monday, May 13, in 3089 N.S. Mr. Woodbury's department of spe- cialization is Zoology. The title of his thesis is "A Quantitative Studi of Parasites of Fishes with Special Reference to Clinostomnum margina- tum in the Perch of Walsh Lake, Michigan." Dr. G. R. La Rue, as chairman of the committee; will conduct the ex- amination. By direction of the Ex- ecutive Board, the dhairman has the privilege of inviting members of the faculty and advanced doctoral can- didates to attend the examination and to grant permission to others who might wish to be present. C. S. Yoakum Doctoral Examination of Richard Oliver Edgerton will be held at 2:00 p.m., Monday, May 13, in 309 Chem- istry Bldg. Mr. Egerton's depart- ment of specialization is Chemistry. The title of his thesis is "The Syn- thesis of Polycyclic Compounds." Dr. W. E. Bachmann, as chairman of the committee, will conduct the examination. By direction of the Executive Board, the chairman has the privilege of inviting members of the faculty and advanced doctoral candidates to attend the examination and to grant permission to others who might wish to be present. C. S. Yoakum Exhibitions Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: Photographs of recent architectural work in Florida in the modern manner, by Architects Igor B. Polevitzky and T. Trip Russell. Ground floor corridor cases. Open daily 9 to 5, through May 22, except Sunday. The public is invited. Exhibition, College of Architecture and Design: Drawings of candidates in the recent competition for the George G. Booth Travelling Fellow- ship in Architecture. Third floor ex- hibition room. Open daily 9 to 5 except Sunday, through May 18. The public is invited. Exhibition of works in water colors by Cleveland artists, drawings by John Carroll, Walt Disney originals. Auspices Ann Arbor Art Association and University Institute of Fine Arts. Open daily, 2-5 until May 22, Alumni Memorial Hail. Sundays included. An exhibition of the H. A. Elsberg collection of coptic and islamic tex- tiles of the University of Michigan. Rackham Building, May 7 to May 18. 2-5 daily. Lectures University Lecture: Harry Elmer Barnes, Ph.D., Lecturer, New School in Social Research, will lecture on "The Present World Crisis" under the auspices of the Division of the Social Sciences at 4:15 p.m. on Thursday, May 16, in the Rackham Amphithe- atre. The public is cordially invited. k-U11y ,,IIll ...'At l a l lu s x m e AI e National Park. He revealed this to the delegation cf California Congressmen who pro- tested the use of government-owned ships to transport cement and lum- ber to the Panama Canal Zone from Atlantic ports. The Californians said this put Pacific Coast dealers at an unfair disadvantage. The President promised to look into the matter and then the group asked him about his travelling plans for this summer. He countered by inquiring when Congress would adjourn, saying his trip depended upon that. "We're willing to call it a dayI whenever you givetthe word," said Representative Ed Izac of San Diego, echoed by Representatives Dick Welch and Frank Havenner of San Francisco. Roosevelt replied with a grin that he hoped the windup would be around June 10 or 12. (Continued from Page 2) initiates may be obtained at the nfffin f th 1'S - *,,C.*,-.fn dates for the Degree Program for Honors in Liberal Arts will be given in Room 2235 Angell Hall on Mon- day. May 13, at 3 p.m. Preliminary Examinations for the doctorate in the School of Education will be held on May 23, 24, and 25. Graduate students desiring to take these examinations should notify my office, 4002 University High School, not later than May 18. Clifford Woody 3 Directed Teaching, Qualifying Ex- lamination: All students expecting to elect directed teaching (Educ. D100) next semester are required to pass a qualifying examination in the sub- ject which they expect to teach. This examination will be held on Satur- day, May 18, at 1 o'clock. Students will meet in the auditorium of the University High School. The exami- that the students may attend this lecture. Coming Events Seminar in Bacteriology will meet in Room 1564 East Medical Building Monday, May 13, at 8:00 p.m. Sub- ject: "Aciduric Organisms and Den- tal Caries." All interested are in- vited. Physics Colloquium: Professor Ed- ward Teller of George Washington University will speak on "Energy Sources in Stars" on Monday, May 13, at 4:15 in Room 1041 E. Physics Bldg. Research Club will meet on Wed- nesday, May 15, at 8:00 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Annual election of officers and vote on a candidate for membership. Papers by Professor C. L. Hubbs on "Fishes of the Isolated Waters of the Ameri- can West," and by Professor A. Hy- ma on "Anglo-Dutch Rivalry and Subsequent Friendship in the Far East." The Council will meet at 7:30 in the alcove of the Assembly Hall. German Table for Faculty Mem- bers will meet Monday at 12:10 p.m. in the Founders' Room, Michigan Union. All faculty members inter- ested in speaking German are cordial- ly invited. There will be a brief in- formal talk by Professor William H. Worrell on "Die Zauberkunst als Lieb- haberei." Senior class presidents will meet to discuss Commencement plans on Tuesday, May 14, at 7:00 p.m. in Room 227, West Engineering Build- ing. Mathematics Club will meet on Tuesday, May 14, at 8 p.m., in the West Conference Room of the Rack- ham Building. Mr. Gaskell will speak on "A Problem in Heat Con- duction and an Expansion Theorem," and Mr. Fan will speak o "Integra- tion with Respect to an Upper Meas- ure Function." Sigma Rho Tau will hold finals in impromptu and after-dinner speech contests on Tuesday evening, May 14, in the Union. Final plans for na- tional convention to be discussed. All members please be present. University Club: The annual meet- ing and election of officers will be held on Monday evening, May 13, in the club lounge. Acolytes meeting Monday at 7:30 in the Rackham Building Mr. Copi- lowich, Mr. Weitz, and Mr. Maluf will conduct a symposium on the A Priori. The executive council of Congress, Independent Men's Association, will meet in Room 306 of the Union at 10:00 p.m. Monday night. Graduate Tea on Wednesday, May 15, 4-6 p.m., West Conference Room, Rackham Building. Professor James K. Pollock of the Political Science Department will speak on "Germany After the War." Graduate students and faculty members are invited. The Division of the Social Sciences will hold its annual dinner meeting at the Michigan Union on Thursday, May 16, at 6:30 p.m. After the din- ner, a brief talk by Dr. Harry Elmer Barnes will introduce a general dis- cussion of the present war. Members who plan to attend are requested to notify the secretary of the Division, Prof. Dudley M. Phelps. Phi Eta Sigma, freshman honor society, will hold its spring initiation in the Michigan Union on Monday, May 13, at 5:30 p.m. The banquet will follow at 6:15 p.m. All members of Athena Speech Society, accepting pledges are request- ed to meet at 5 p.m. Monday in the League Lobby to discuss initiation plans. An open meeting for all those in- terested in student cooperatives will be held at 4:00 p.m. on Monday, May 13, at the Union. Those interested in living or boarding at a cooperative next semester are especially invited. A faculty man and two students will speak on Michigan's men's and wo- men's cooperatives. The College Republicans of Ameri- ca will meet Wednesday, May 15, in the Michigan Union. All students and faculty members interested in the party are invited to attend. The Fellowship of Reconciliation meets in Lane Hall at 7:00 p.m. Mon- day. Mr. Joseph Mazzawi will talk on the Arab-Jewish problem in Pal- estine. The Michigan Christian Fellow- ship will hold its regular semi-an- nual business meeting on Monday, May 13, 1940 at 7:30 p.m. in Lane