THE MICHIGAN DAILY THE MICHIGAN DAILY p~ -~ -/ A' N . rI pultz-6 rr mfB i or s - - U'- - S- Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. P'ublished 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 mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00, py mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVER,.SING 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 Answer To By HERVIE HAUFLER I do not know what Professor Hyma will do with my story. I interviewed him today (Thurs- day) in an attempt to get a clearer idea of what he meant when he said that "there are many potential traitors on the Michigan cam- pus." He told me that his views, published as they were without any frame of reference to modify them, had been misinterpreted and that the reactions of the campus were largely "much ado about nothing." Now it is approaching midnight and the night editor has just called up to tell me that Pro- fessor Hyma wishes to change my story some- what, that he has talked it over with several members of the history department who think he has struck upon a cogent indictment against several campus groups, and that he wishes to make his statements stronger than he had in- dicated to me. In other words, since my inter- view he has found that he has company and his determination has been renewed. I feel slightly duped. Although I knew before today that Professor Hyma is the author of a book called, "Christianity, Capitalism and Com- munism," it seemed to me that he was being unfairly maligned because of the charges in his Adrian lecture. I took special pains to rec- tify as much of what seemed to me to be mis- understandings as I could. That seemed to be Professor Hyma's wish. These things I did because it seemed to me that Professor Hyma might be saying things he would later regret. This week has been a shock to him. He told me that he had for years clung to the notion that Germany would never invade his native Holland, that Germany and Holland had never fought. In his youth Pro- fessor Hyma had been pro-German. He told me that the invasion was beyond his under- standing. I thought that his charges against campus peace groups might well have gained their impetus from the bitterness and disillusion of this week. In accordance with this belief I asked the staff to refrain from writing editorials answer- ing him, although several members were anx-. ious to do so. Our only editorial response was to print some of the many letters received. Prof. Hyma And I was wrong. Right now I suppose he is telling my night editor just how to cut out of my story the defense he had wanted me to make, how to re-strengthen his incriminations until they regained much of their original blunt- ness. Professor Hyma has found friends. What, in my view, is the wrong he has done? Basically he has smeared the student body of Michigan with what I firmly believe to be an unjust and unfounded indictment. He has painted a picture of Michigan students either actively aiding or complacently standing by as some conqueror's legions over-run their land, and I defy him to find more than the merest handful of such extreme pacifists. He has, upon the slightest provocation, blackened the University's reputation when it is already far blacker than it merits. Professor Hyma told me that he seized upon the University for an example chiefly because he was familiar with it. He admitted that what he said about "potential traitors" might be true of any community. Did he realize that in using the University as his guinea pig he was fur- nishing the University's opponents with the very warp and woof of fresh accusations, un- fair, unsubstantiated accusations? This will have reverberations, for our opponents will not care to check up on the facts. The Daily editors stand for peace. We want the United States to stay out of Europe, both economically and militarily. But it would not take a very elaborate poll to determine what we would do if America were attacked. We may not wear our patriotism like a chip on our shoulders, but it is there just as strong and just as sincere as that of the more blatant exhibitionists. We think this is true of all but a very few students. As editor of The Daily, I would do anything in my power to improve the paper's relations with the faculty. I am somewhat bewildered and dismayed by the solid bank of hostility and suspicion that I encounter, and it is only reluc- tantly that I answer Professor Hyma at all, for I know that this reply will be added to the other charges that have accumulated through the years. But I cannot submit to this. Hervie Haufler Alvin Sarasohn . Paul M. Chandler Karl Kessler Milton Orshefsky Howard A. Goldman Donald Wirtchafter Esther Osser Helen Corman . . Managing Editor Editorial Director City Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Sports Editor Women's Editor Exchange Editor Business Staff Business Manager Assistant Business Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Irving Guttman Robert Gilmour Helen Bohnsack . Jane Krause NIGHT EDITOR: BERNARD DOBER The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are Written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Culture Institute Serves Education .* 21e EDITOR.....ilQ- T HE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN offers what promises to be one of the most significant developments in the field of education when seven departments of the literary college cooperate to present an Insti- tute of American Culture this summer session. The general aim of the Institute program is to deal with the problems of interpretation, definition and appraisal of the fundamental elements of our culture and with the forces that have shaped the course of America down to the present day. To best achieve this goal- to attempt to give a truly balanced, integrated and comprehensive understanding of American life-the program will combine and evaluate the contributions of various fields of human research. Heads or professors of the depart- ments of economics, English, geography, history, philosophy, political science, and sociology will cooperate in conducting and stimulating study by means of round table discussions and lec- tures. All people in the program will participate in the round table sessions, which will consider five topics during the program: "Regionalism and Nationalism," "Religion and Education," "Literature and Art," "Commerce and Indus- try," and "Government and Politics." These general discussions will be keynoted by out- standing scholars of the country. For example, the topic of "Regionalism and Nationalism" will be initiated by a lecture on "American Lit- erature as an Instrument for Cultural Analysis," by Prof. Howard M. Jones of Harvard Univer- sity; this is to be followed by addresses on "The Old South as a Laboratory for Cultural Anal- ysis," "The Conflict and Fusion of Cultural Groups in the Interior Plains" and "Cultural Trends in Relation to Regional Differences." The discussions in the round tables will be guided by these lectures and questions of the students sent in in advance. This will in effect give the symposium the necessary unity and direction to allow it to achieve valuable results. But if discussion in a general session is to pierce the epidermis of knowledge, the discus- sion itself must have mature, scholarly prep- araion of a necessarily particularized charac- ter. The program proposes to insure this by its organization of the students into smaller groups for concentration into the fields of economics, English, etc., as they relate to the current round table topic. Each of these smaller seminars will be led by a faculty member in the respective field. How deeply the study in any one field must go will depend on the degree to which that field is found to contribute to the general topic. It is in the round table discussions themselves that the contributions of the specialized sem- inars will be evaluated and integrated to form a broad and realistic definition of American culture. From the free interplay of ideas, evolv- ing as they will from differing frames of refer- ence. an intensive appraisal and interpretation of the basic elements of our culture can be formed. But the program of the Institute, exclusive of its attempt to examine our American culture. offers a more significant contribution to educa- tion by development of a method to study sub- jects that involve many intricate elements such as periods and phases of history. For it is Slosson Replies To the Editor: I have read with interest Mr. Don Slaiman's letter inviting me to debate with Mr. Max Schachtman of the Workers' Party. My first impulse, of course, is to accept out of hand; I am naturally inclined to write and talk too much anyway, and when so important an issue as the establishment of world peace is con- cerned I am capable of making a bore of my- self to any extent. This very fact gives me pause, however. Would not the campus like to hear a debate from someone else for a change, since so recently (and, on my part at least, with so much pleasure) I debated with Mr. Multila? Let me consider myself "reserve ma- terial" to fall back on if some other debater cannot be found. Another point: at the Multila debate the chosen hall proved quite inadequate and greatly inconvenienced the audience, not to mention the many who were unable to get in at all. I think another such debate should be contin- gent, therefore, on the ability of those who have the arrangements in charge to get Hill Auditorium. Preston Slosson 50,000 Planes To the Editor: In view of the recent speech by President Roosevelt, we wish to point out the following: The President has requested for us some 50,000 military planes. It would seem that this number is somewhat in excess of our needs in view of the fact that, at the beginning of 1939, there were but 30,000 military planes in the world, and of those 20,000 belonged to the Great Powers. (The facts quoted are from The World Almanac (1940) p. 855, published by the New York World-Telegram). Joe Park Harry A. White Open Letter To Students To the Editor: This is an open letter to each and every Michigan student. It is a note to every student in each and every university. It is a message in which I hope to insert enough punch to slap our more lethargic classmates into an awak- ening. Most of us on campus have already been told to go home and get our guns, some of us have even been told how soon we'll be using them. "Before another semester comes around," one class was told. Such talk is death talk because it means WAR and war means death. This is a letter addressed to those who want to live. If you don't care about that, don't bother to read on. If the United States becomes involved in the current battle, it wll mean that Mister Joe Col- lege and Miss Betty Co-ed will have reached the end of their rope. Joe will be bundled in a khaki suit, dumped aboard a ship that's had final port of call the spot where he falls, after being hit. That is what awaits you, Joe College. You may be trying to close your eyes to this future; it would be better to open them. Hopes failed in 1917, and hopes won't do any good in 1940. The natural question at this point is, "What to do about it." WE WHO WANT TO LIVE can do something about it. In spite of the allegiance and loves of certain of our better minds for vic- timized peoples abroad, we owe nothing to any- one but to America and to ourselves. This atti- tude must transgress our nation. It must be spread with vigor, and the scope of this senti- ment must stretch from coast to coast. Class- mates who want to live, you must make your- selves heard. You must support peace rallies; you must bombard newspaper editors with let- ters; you must shower your congressman with statements of your simple desire to live; you must arouse your friends who want to live at other colleges; a peace movement must sweep this nation like a fire sweeps the dried wood of a forest. The whole nation must arise. If we have guts and common sense, we'll act now. Students, if this is a democracy, let's make it work as such. Don't you think your life is worth a letter, maybe five of them? A reader might regard this as a hysterical plea of a scared writer. It is not that. The writer just wants to live. He thinks others in his class want to live. He's tired of hearing people tell him that "it's only a matter of time till we'll be in it." He's disgusted with the indifference and the fatalism of so many of the people around him. And what's more, he can't find any logical reason why we should become in- volved. What do we owe Britain? What are we to gain-What are we to protect, or defend, or save . . . What did we save last time? - - .. America had better put its own house in order We had better save our lives this time ... Students, wake up, or you'll die sleeping. David Zeitlin, '40 Anot her Reply To Hyma To the Editor: We wish to challenge the statement of Pro- fessor Hyma, concerning traitors on the Mich- igan campus. Evidently Professor Hyma has given very little thought to the situation, or has taken a short-sighted view of the situation. As a student of history, he should realize that war has never settled anything. If all peace loving persons are traitors, there must be mil- lions of traitors in the country, even excepting this campus. If love of peace is to be condemned as one of the most foul of vices, then life has little in store for any of us. The true pacifist takes neither side in the war; a traitor, on the other hand, sells his country to the enemy. The so-called traitor on the campus who refuses to allow himself to be swayed by militaristic propaganda is none the less a patriot for preferring peace for his country to war. Any person who lives by reason rather than by emotional responses will not Drew Pednos ad RoerS.A1es WASHINGTON-If the European war continues at its present world- shaking pace, it is not improbable that the Republican national con- vention will be postponed. This possibility is being deliberated privately and very seriously by GOP leaders in Chicago, Washington and New York. No decision has yet been reached, but two strong arguments based on events abroad make it a better than even money bet that the convention will be delayed if there is no let-up in the war. 1st, it is argued that during such titanic upheavals the people would be uninterested in party politics and the convention would be unable to obtain uppermost attention either in their thoughts or in the press. 2nd, that it would be unwise, if not impossible, for the Republican Party to formulate a platform plank on foreign policy and the war. This is because there is a strong-and growing -GOP element " favoring ome form of direct aid to the Allies; in other words, agreeing with the President. Battle Over Foreign Policy On the other hand, a very vocal minority is vehemently isolationist. In the middle is still another group fearful of both sides, and preferring to take no stand. A battle-royal in the convention between these fac- tions might greatly embarrass any candidate. Also, inner party leaders are wor- ried over fighting a presidential cam- paign on the war issue. As the mi- nority party, the GOP is not in a position to shift its policy overnight to meet changing conditions. The Democrats can do that. Roosevelt can take the air any day and enun- ciate what would amount to an en- tirely new platform. But the GOP platform, once approved by the con- vention, is the party's stand. It can't' be juggled around. Note-If the convention is post- poned until August or September, it would actually meet on June 24, but recess at the call of the National Committee. In this case the Demo-1 crats probably will do likewise; for? Roosevelt already has proposed that both parties hold their conventions in the autumn. War Notes War Department cables from the battle front report that the French1 are being crippled by German war-1 planes which blow up their roads behind the lines, upsetting their . lines of communication, and pre- venting them from bringing up shells and reinforcements . . . . Senatorl George of Georgia, once ansobject of the purge, is now the staunch supporter of the President on for- eign policy and rearmament. He isI giving the War Department strong1 backing for appropriations . . . Some1 of the European reports indicate thatI the people of Norway, Denmark, Hol-- land, etc., surrendered to Germany1 because they had no great faith in] their own governmental and econom- ic systems Many had been depressed by low wages ox' unemployment. didn't seem to thinkg the system was worth fighting for . . . When you look back on the Spanish civil war1 and compare it with the current surrender of neutrals, you can't es- cape the conclusion that the Span- iards really had backbone. Retreat To America One reason for the international pessimism now pervading the White House is the course which an Allied defeat would be almost sure to take. Roosevelt's military advisers have pointed out that the British Isles, if attacked, are certain to cave in, or at least to be given such a batter- .ng that the government will flee to Canada. The British fleet will try to save something from the debacle, and the most natural place for it to go will be Canada and the British island possessions in American waters-Ja- maica, Bermuda, the Bahamas. In other words, if the British Gov- ernment is defeated at home, it will try to savetjust.has much as it can and rally together the rest of the far-flung Empire-Canada, Austra- lia, South Africa and New Zealand. When and if this happens, espe- cially if the remnants of the British fleet come to American waters, then American neutrality is going to be put to the biggest test in history. Roosevelt's War Prediction There is one conference which the President had with congressional leaders from which he is getting no enjoyment-even though he was ab- solutely right. This was the confer- ence last summer in which Roosevelt urged Congress to revise the neu- trality, act because war was immi- nent. (Continued from Page 2) August, 1940, will be given today at 2 p.m., 400 Burton Memorial Tower. The Comprehensive Examination in Education will be given today at 9 and 2 o'clock in the University High School auditorium. The Qualifying Examination for Directed Teaching (Education D100) will be given today at 1 o'clock in the University High School auditorium. The Doctoral Examination of James Wright Freeman will be held at 9:00 a.m. today in 3201 East Engineering Bldg. Mr. Freeman's department of specialization is Metal- lurgical Engineering. The title of his thesis is "The Diffusion of Alum- inum and Iron in Iron-Aluminum Alloys.". Professor C. L. Clark 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 The Doctoral Examination of Har- old Shaw Howe will be held at 2:00 p.m. today in the East Council Room, Rackham Building. Mr. Howe's department of specializa- tion is Physics. The title of his thesis is "Ammonia Absorption Meas- urements with Guided Waves and the Shape of a Spectral Line." Professor N. H. Williams as chair- man 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 Sociology 260: Seminar in juvenile delinquency . . Monday, May 20, at 4 p.m., will meet in Room E. Haven Hall instead of the Michigan Child Guidance Institute Office. The Doctoral Examination of Fred William Foster will be held at 2:00 p.m., Monday, May 20, in 21 Angell Hall. Mr. Foster's department of specialization is Geography. The title of his thesis is "A Study of Land Types and Land Use in Emmet Coun- ty, Michigan." Professor H. M. Kendall as chair- man 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 Doctoral Examination of Mr. Lewis Patrick Waldo will be held at 3:00 p.m., Monday, May 20, in the East Council Room, Rackham Building. Mr. Waldo's department of speciali- zation is Comparative Literature. The title of his thesis is "The French Drama in America in the Eighteenth Century and Its Influence on the American Drama of That Period, 1701-180O0.", Professor Loui I. Bredvold as chair- man 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 The Doctoral Examination of Ran- dolph Wya'tt Webster wll be held at 3:00 p.m., Monday, May 20, in West Council Room, Rackham Bldg. Mr. ebster'sddepartment of specializa- tion is Education. The title of his thesis is "Psychological and Pedo- gogical Factors Involved in Motor Skill Performance as Exemplified in Bowling." Dr. E. D. Mitchell as chairman of the committee will conduct the ex- amination. By direction of the Ex- ecutive Board, the chairman has the 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. Yoakurn The Doctoral Examination of Limas Dunlap Wall will be held'at 4:00 p.m., Monday, May- 20, in 3089 N.S. Mr. Wall's department of specialization is Zoology. The title of his thesis is "Spirorebis parvum (Stunkard, 1923), Its Life History and the De- velopment of Its Excretory System (Trematoda: Spirorchiidae) ." Dr. G. l,. La Rue as chairman of the committee will conduct the ex- amination. By direction of the Ex- ecutive Board, the chairman has the privilege of inviting members of, the Accessory Growth Substances on Ex- cised Stem Tips of Helianthus annus L. in Culture." Dr. C. D. La Rue as chairman of the committee will conduct the ex- amination. By direction of the Ex- ecutive Board, the chairman 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 Today's Event Biological Chemistry Seminar will be held today at 10:00 a.m., in Room 319, West Medical Building. Subject: "Lipid Metabolism of the Fowl." All interested are invited. The Angell Hall Observatory will be open to the public from 8:00 to 10:00 tonight. The moon and the planet Venus will be shown through the telescopes. Other interesting ob- jects will also be shown if time per- mits. Children must be accompanied by adults. Senior Engineering Class picnic will oe held Saturday, May 18, at 2:00 p.m. on the Island. All members who have paid their dues are invited. Each one should bring a glass. Crop and Saddle Horse Show Will ake place at 2 p.m today at the Fairgrounds. City buses go out to he Fairgrounds every twenty min- utes for those who are attending nd Tish transportation. Admission is free. Coming- Events Physics Colloquium: Mr. N. t,,. Ole- son will speak on "The Multiple Scat- tering of Fast Electrons" on Monday, May 20, at 4:15 p.m. in room 1041 E. Physics Bldg. The Junior Mathematical Club pic- nic originally announced for Satur- day is being postponed until Wednes- day at 4:00 p.m. Please call Sally Lev or Ted Hildebrandt if you plan to go. The Romance Language Journal Club will meet Tuesday, May 21, at 4:15 in Room 108 R.L. The following papers will be read: Charles A. Knudson: Stream-lined in English and French. Charles N. Staubach: Propaganda in General Language Tests. A chairman of the Club for next year will be elected at this meeting. Graduate students are cordially in- vited. German Table for Faculty Mem- cers will meet Monday at 12:10 p.m. n the Founders' Room, Michigan Union. All faculty members inter- Usted in speaking German are cordial- ty invited. There will be a brief in- formal talk by Professor Theophil H. 4ildebrandt on "Etwas vom Orgel- spielen." Institute of the Aeronautical Set- ences: The final meeting of the Stu- dent branch will be held on Monday, May 20, at 7:30 p.m., in Room t,042 East Engineering Building. Final ar- rangements for the trip to the Cur- tiss-Wright and Bell aircraft factor- ies at Buffalo, N.Y., will be discussed. The election of officers for 1940-41 will also take place at this meetng. All members are urged to be present. Eta Kappa Nu will meet in the Union on Sunday, May 19, at 7:00 p.m. Those members wishing to eat in a group will meet in the Tap Room at 0:30. Graduate Outing Club will meet on Sunday, May 19, at 2:30 p.. in the rear of the Rackham Building. An outdoor program is planned. All graduate students and faculty invit- ed. The Fellowship of Reconcilition meets in Lane Hall at 7:00 p.m. on Monday. Mrs. Brevoort, of the Fam- ily Welfare Bureau, will talk on problems of social service in Ann Arbor. Congregational Student Fellowship Picnic Sunday, May 19, at Steiner's farm. Meet at Pilgrim Hall at 4:30, Sunday afternoon. Make reserva- tions at Pilgrim Hall, phone 2-1679, before Saturday noon. Churches St. Andrew's Episcopal Church: Sunday, 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion; 11:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and Ser- mon by the Reverend Frederick W. Leech; 11:00 a.m. Junior Church; 11:00 a.m. Kindergarten, Harris Hall; 7:00 p.m. Student meeting, Harris Hall. The Reverend Henry Lewis will lead a discussion on "Prepara- tion for Marriage", in particular stressing the point of view of the Church on this matter. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN