PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, DEC. 2, 1939 PAGE FOUR SATURDAY, DEC. 2, 1939 I I THE MICHIGAN DAILY 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 a 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 rightsof republication of all other matters hereinalso 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 ADVERi.SING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y, CHICAGO BOSTON LOS ANGELES - SAN FRAI]CISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1939-40 Editorial Carl Petersen Elliott Maraniss Stan M. Swinton Morton L. Linder Norman A. Schorr . Dennis Flanagan John N. Canavan Ann Vicar . . Mel Fineberg . . Staff Managing Editor Editorial Director . City Editor . Associate Editor . Associate Editor . Associate Editor Associate Editor *Women's Editor . Sports Editor * Paul R. Park Ganson P. Taggart Zenovia Skoratko . Jane Mowers . Harriet S. Levy Business Staff Business Manager Asst. Business Mgr., Credit Manager Women's Business Manager . Women's Advertising Manager Publications Manager GULLIVER'S CAVILS By YOUNG GUlLLIVER TODAY's column was to be about the teach- ing of English, but since Thursday a new war has begun and there are more important things to be discussed. The first incendiary bomb that fell on Hel- singfors smashed the last vestiges of support which the Soviet Union enjoyed in the United States. Without going into the ramifications o the Russo-Finnish war, we can at least draw two conclusions: first, that no one but an en- rolled Communist would even want to try to explain how Russia is made secure or how socialism is advanced by the ruthless bombard- ment of civilian populations; second, that the Russian invasion gives us the most graphic demonstration that any hope which we may have for the future of mankind lies now not in the British Empire, not in France, not in the Soviet Union, but in the United .States. If we are going to look at Europe, throw up our hands and sigh, This is the way the world ends, then most certainly this is the way the world will end. But if we sit down and see what can be done here at home, then maybe we've got a fighting chance. THE GREATEST problem is of course the war. Once this country is drawn into war, the energies of the entire civilized world will be systematically exploited to the end of de- stroying, not Hitlerism, but civilization itself. On no account must we allow ourselves to be used by the British and American imperialists for the ostensible purpose of smashing that hate- ful political organism which those imperialists themselves helped to create and support. Obvi- ously it is not German propaganda, or Russian propaganda, which is trying to make a parti- san of the United States-At is British propa- ganda. OUR second problem is that of civil liberties. We simply have to face the fact that either we are going to allow anybody in this country to get up and speak his piece or we are going to go the way of France. In France they started out by outlawing the Communists; yesterday Daladier was given /complete dictatorial powers after his speech in which he "paid tribute to . . . Premier Mussolini and Generalissimo Franco." Suppression of the Communists means suppression of the Socialists. Suppression of the Socialists means suppression of the liberals. Suppression of the liberals means fascism. The Communists have signed their own death war- rant, as far as winning the support of the American people is concerned, by their defense of the Russian invasion. Anyone who, follow- ing in the footsteps of Martin Dies, says that he wants to save American democracy by sup- pressing the reds, is simply not being honest. Nor is Mr. John O'Hara being honest either when he says "I want to see America a socialist state." Mr. O'Hara has a short memory, or possibly he thinks that Gulliver's memory is not long enough to recall the O'Hara letters of 1938 to The Daily-letters in which he de- nounced the Spanish government for defending itself against the murderous attacks of Musso- lini's legions. Maybe we are going to be told next that Franco is a socialist too. In any event, Gulliver is not going to trouble to answer any further attacks which Mr. O'Hara may address to The Daily. THE THIRD problem which we face is that of reordering our economy with two main ob- jectives in mind; first, removing the basic drives toward war which are present in every capitalist economy, and second, extending democracy into the realms of industry and agriculture, so that the United States will once again attain that preeminent position which it held 150 years ago-the hope of the world. For the United States is the hope of th world. And if we capitulate in any way, if we . .,,. 4; ' ''>' \rvu ' ~'ar'1 I most wars, international law has been torn to shreds; neutrals and innocents have suffered, and the contending leaders have accused each other of all the crimes which can be imagined. I am not neutral, and I have my own opinion as to the accusations which come closely home. And yet, in Iim ken cMe Heywood Broun The most curious fact in the present war is the circumstance that up till now the bitterness has been more localized than is customary. As in NIGHT EDITOR: HERVIE HAUFLER The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. And It Is A Good Cause . . S ONE SALESMAN put it, "It's got to be a good cause to keep me out here in the rain getting money from the stu- dents." The cause referred to is the annual Galens Christmas Drive and is undoubtedly a worthy one. There have been many articles written in the news columns of The Daily abot this drive which uses the money for the benefit of the crippled children in the University Hospital; there have been stories about the Soph Cabaret which has this year been turned into, a benefit for the crippled children in this area who need hospital care, but who can't get it. These stories emphasize graphically the importance of the situation. They tell the story that the crippled children are in dire need of aid. Galens is only one of the organizations which is doing its bit to help these ','kids". The material on the back of the tags tells the story: "This fund maintains the Children's Workshop, the Children's Library and provides for an annual Christmas party. Each year several hundred kiddies are busied during their stay in the Hos- pital and thus their minds are diverted from their bodily afflictions. Your support has made these projects possible." The continued support of the entire campus and town will insure continuance of the fine work. More than ever this year, because of a reduced Hospital budget, Galens needs money. Today is the final day of the drive. When you see some of the members of Galens who are giving their time, drop some money in the bucket and wear a green tag signifying that you have helped the "kids." -Bernard Dober Freedom Of The Screen Just as they will undoubtedly regret its sen- sational title, adherents of the democratic ideal will be encouraged to learn that "Beasts of Berlin" has been freed for showing by the New York State Board of Censors. Censorship assumes widespread and authoritarian propor- tions in time of crisis. Thus, Abel Gance's tragic anti-war plea, "That They May Live," is banned in France. Thus, Canada is reported to have forbidden the showing of newsreels in which American neutrality is advocated or which show German generals of the last war. Thus, New Zealand has "requested" Warner Brothers to withdraw "Dawn Patrol," which concerns the British air force in the last war. But the United States is not at war. There is, therefore, no excuse for abrogating the rights of the American public to hear and-in the cinema's case-to see all shades of public opin- ion. To offset those films which may have a negative and destructive tendency, there will continue to be pictures like "That They May Live," "We Are Not Alone," Chaplin's unnamed lampoon of dictatorships, and "Beasts of Ber- lin." Surely the best censorship is an informed and discriminating public-a public which, for example, can recognize that "Beasts of Berlin" Is an unfortunately sensational title while yet realizing the possible worth of the film to which such a title may be attached. -The Christian Science Monitor spite of the true bill which can be drawn against Hitler, the hatred of the individual English- man against the individual German, and vice versa, is far less than in the war of 1914. That is perhaps the one hopeful symptom in the present disorder of the earth. And gravely do I fear that it wil not long obtain. Sooner or later, if the war continues, the bombers will move all men to become sons of Cain, and even between civilian populations, which have no proper quarrel, all shred of fellowship will be gone. Action for peace should come before the day when rage has blotted out every civilized instinct all along the line. There ought to be a breathing spell, and I suggest that the dates on which a, tacit armis- tice might be observed by common consent could well be Dec. 24 and Dec. 25. * * * If pressure came from all neutral executives and from religious leaders of all faiths it might be possible to have Christmas and Christmas Eve observed on land and sea and in the air. A majority of the men who fight profess to fol- low the counsels of the Prince of Peace. The war will not be won or lost in any 48 hours, and so I think a gesture should be made to keep in part, an actual fidelity to a faith which so many millions profess. On the night before Christmas no city or town in any of the contending nations ought to be blackened out into sullen darkness. Upon that night in England, in France and in Ger- many candles should blaze and churches stand wide open for worshipers. Here is something which is held in common by men and nations which differ so violently in all other things that daggers have been drawn. But no matter what the loyalty of the soldier may be to dictator, president or premier, he owes a higher allegiance upon the night of Nativity. So why should there not be recognition of a joint commitment to a creed by which the many live and die? Nor am I suggesting this as a mere fruitless and sentimental truce. If two days passed in which no shot was fired and no torpedo or bomb loosed, there might be a return to sanity. Once a gun has been put down it is hard even for the angry to raise it up again. permit ourselves to be lured into war, if we permit our civil liberties to be stolen from us at this critical period, then we will have con- demned not only ourselves, but Europe also, to death. THE TASK which faces us is extraordinary. Nowhere in the world has the problem been critically met and satisfactorily solved-trans- forming the economy, socializing it, and at the same time retaining political democracy. Today, apparently, Franklin Roosevelt has given up the job; he has capitulated to the war party and he is going to scuttle his entire security program in order to build up a war economy. Which means that for all practical purposes we will have to start all over again. But we must start, and we must succeed. We will be labelled Fascists by those who will want us to die fighting Hitlerism, and we will be labelled Communists by those who will oppose our efforts to rebuild America. But it's our only chance. e Drew Pearson and P Robert S.AI en WASHINGTON-There is an ex- cellent reason why the U.S. Navy has been so secretive regarding the German magnetic mines which have been causing such disaster to Allied shipping. Probably it will be de- nied, but the real fact is that the Navy has been experimenting with this type of mine itself. Behind the scenes, the British have known the exact make-up of the German mines for some time. So also have our own experts. The first German magnetic mine was found washed up on the coast of Norway, several weeks before the Germans began their campaign in the English Channel. Apparently, the Germans at that time were ex- perimenting with the mine in Nor- wegian waters. The British, however, didn't pay much attention to the new mine. So when the Nazis began their cam- paign in earnest, Allied shipping was caught completely off base. Since then, more mines have been washed up off the English coast, and have been taken to pieces by the British. The principle on which the mine works is a magnetic compass. The needle of the compass points norm- ally north. But when a large body of steel passes nearby, the needle is deflected from the north, and this swerving of the needle ignites the high explosive inside the mine. The mine lies at the bottom of the sea and does not rise to the top. Therefore, it is effective only in shallow water. But even 30 or 40 feet from the hull of a ship, its ex- plosion can be just as deadly as if it actually struck the ship itself. Subs Explode Too Because the mines are effective only in relatively shallow water, they have been concentrated in and around the English Channel. They would be valueless if strewn around the deep Atlantic. One important effect which they have had on German warfare is to force all Nazi submarines out of con- trol waters. Submarines explode the mines just as easily as merchant vessels, in fact more easily. So the Germans have to keep their U-boats in the deep Atlantic or at home. Reports from the British navy re- ceived in official quarters are that the British now have the mine terror licked. The British solution is to tow a large piece of iron behind a wooden boat. The wooden boat does not set off the magnetic mine, but the iron which follows in its wake, does. At present the British have aban- doned the old fashioned mine sweep- er, and are literally combing the seas around the English Channel. They may be too optimistic, but they think that in another week or even less, Germany's magnetic mines will be all exploded. Meanwhile the British air corps is extra diligent to prevent Nazi planes from dropping more mines around the English Channel. They are not entirely sure, but they believe most of the mines were dropped from the air, unless some were planted by disguised Nazi wooden vessels. Scene in Mrs. Roosevelt's New York apartment about two weeks ago: Enter Miss Thompson, the First Lady's secretary. Miss Thompson: "Well, at last I've found out when Thanksgiving is." Mrs. Roosevelt: "When is it?" Miss Thompson: "It's on the 23rd. At least that's the day your news- paper syndicate is celebrating it.' NOTE: Mrs. Roosevelt had beer anxious to find out which day her syndicate was celebrating, as it was necessary for her .to write two col- umns on the day before Thanksgiv- ing, so the syndicate staff could take a full holiday off. Capital Chaff Keep an eye on Rear Admiral James Otto Richardson. He iE scheduled to command the United States Fleet upon the retirement of Admiral Bloch next year . . Washington circles find it hard tc believe that Senator and Mrs. Ger- ald P. Nye have agreed to disagree. The Senator has maintained a separ. ate residence since late spring, ant friends insist there seems to be nc prospect of reconciliation. The Sen- ator has been in the Far West one speaking tour since Congress ad- journed and the family has beer living at 3802 Gramercy where th Nyes have resided for nearly fifteer years . . . The British censors hav not let it out, but the British ad- mirals never appointed a board o: inquiry to examine the reasons foi the sinking of the Royal Oak. The: knew that any such inquiry woulb reveal that they had taken no pre- cautions to prevent submarines fron P rin ScannaFl now .Ordinarilv DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Atomic Theory" by Dr. R. K. Mc- Alpine. Discussion and demonstration of "Electron Diffraction Equipment" by Dr. L. O. Brockway. Lunch at the Cafeteria, Michigan League, at 12:30 p.m. Afternoon Session, 1:30 ,in East Conference Room, third floor Rackham Building. Symposium on "Chemical Com- pounds and Chemical Reactions." The meetings are open to all who wish to attend. Sophomores, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Elections for the second semester are now being approved by the Academic Coun- selors. You will be notified by post- card to see your Counsellor, and it will be to your decided advantage to reply to this summons promptly. By so doing, you will be able to discuss your program carefully with your Counselor and avoid the rush and confusion at the end of the semester. Remember that there will be no op- portunity for you to see your Coun- selor during the final examination period. The New York State Employment Srvice has asked us for applicants for counselors, nurses, physicians, and dietitians, for the summer of 1940. There will be a meeting for all those iterested at 12:45 p.m. Monday, Dec. 4, at 205 Mason Hall. Dr. Purdom w'ill discuss the qualifications re- quired. There, are three definite spe- ifications for camp counselors: 21 years of age or over, at least 2 years of college training, and at least one season of successful work as a camp counselor. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Informa- tion. Pulitzer Prize Play: Students in English courses may procure tickets for "Abe Lincoln In Illinois" at 3223 A.H. on Saturday morning 9-10. No buses will be run. Students who have bought bus tickets should return them to 3223 A.H. for refund. Dr. Leonard A. Parr will resume his Fortnightly Book Lecture Series Mon- day, Dec. 4, at 3:30 in the Congrega- gational Church assembly room. These lectures are open to the public. 1940 Mechanical Engineers and Graduates: Monday, Dec. 4, is the deadline for turning in your 4x6 glossy print.4 -' Choral Union Members in good standing will be issued tickets for the Jussi Bjoerling concert Monday, Dec. 4, between the hours of 9 and 12, and 1 and 4, at the office of the School of Music on Maynard Street. Members are required to call in per- son, and are reminded that no tickets will be given out after 4 o'clock. Phi Gamma Delta has been placed on Social Probation for a period of eight weeks for initiating four men without permission of the Dean of Students. The action was taken by the Executive Committee of the In- terfraternity Council. Concerts Choral Union Concert: Jussi Bjoer- ling, Swedish tenor with Harry Ebert accompanist, will give the fifth pro- gram in the Choral Union Concert Series, Monday, Dec. 4, at 8:30 p.m. in Hill Auditorium Exhibitions formal banquet will be held tonight from 6 to 9:30 in the Henderson Rdom of the Michigan League. Women Students: A short organiza- tion meeting will be held at the Wom- en's Athletic Building today at 2 p.m. for all women students interest- ed in winter sports (skiing, ice skating and tobogganing). Bring your ice skates if you would like to skate at the Coliseum afterwards. Graduate Dance will be held this evening from 9-12 p.m. in the Assembly Hall of the Rackham Building. Those attending should come unescourted. These dances will be open to graduate students and fac- ulty, and identification cards must be presented (Small charge). Refresh- ments. Hillel Fall Dance: All members at- tending the annual fal dance to be held at the Michigan League tonight are requested to bring their affiliate membership cards and identification cards. Coming Events President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to members of the faculty and other townspeople Sunday after- noon from 4 to 6 o'clock. Junior Research Club meeting Tuesday, Dec. 5, at 7:30 p.m. in the amphitheatre, third floor, of the Hor- ace H. Rackham School of Gradu- ate Studies. Program: C. A. Brass- field, Asst. Prof. of Physiology: "The Application of the Glass Electrode in PH Determinations in Biological Pluids," and J. S. Koehler, Dept. of Physics: "Methods and Problems in Infra-red Molecular Spectra." German Table for Faculty Members: The regular luncheon meeting will be held on Monday at 12:10 p.m. in the Founders' Room of the Michigan Union. All faculty members interest- ed in speaking German are cordially invited. There vill be a brief inform- al talk by Prof. Helmut Callis on, "Erfahrungen in Genf 1938 und 1939." Eta Kappa Nu: Formal Initiation and Banquet will take place in the Michigan Union, Sunday, Dec. 3, at 6 p.m. International Center: Prof. Martha Colby, who has an interesting col- lection of musical records, will speak on Oriental Music, illustrating her talk with her own records on Sunday at 7 p.m. The film announced for Monday has been changed. Mr. Benz will show his African pictures at a later date. Sound reels on the Recreational Fa- ciltiles of our National Parks will be shown. Women's Hour on Wednesday, Dec. 6, at 4 p.m. A specialist will speak f on "Interior Decorating." All foreign women, wives of foreign students, P and any of their friends interested are invited to this special tea hour. The Michigan Christian Fellowship meets regularly at 4:30 p.m. Sunday afternoon in the Fireplace Room of Lane Hall. The Lutheran Student Club will meet Sunday at 5:30. Fellowship hour from 5:30 until 6 when dinner will be served. Professor James K. Pollack of the Political Science de- partment will speak on the present situation in Europe. Tap Dancing Committee for Sopho- more Cabaret meeting at 4:30 p.m. Monday, in the League. 4 + THEATRE. + Paintings by prints by the Artists shown William Gropper and Associated American in West Gallery, Al- 4 By JAMES E. GREEN Mr. McKelvey's Dilemma The second offering of the current season of the Children's Theatre of Ann Arbor, "Thanks- giving at Buckram's Corners" by Richard Mc- Kelvey opened yesterday afternoon at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Mr. McKelvey is also the director of the Theatre. The play will close with two performances today. It is the impiobable story of what happens when two city gangsters kidnap the proprietor of the store at Buckram's Corners and is con- cerned principally with his rescue by the Buck- ram's Corners chapter of the Lone Rangers. I use "improbable" advisedly. A gentleman named Peter who sat beside me, and who was in a very receptive frame of mind when the curtain went up, considered the whole thing very unlikely. There is little doubt in the minds of those who have followed the Children's Theatre in the past few years that its work has been pretty consistently worthwhile and excellent but the current offering gives rise to at least one ques- tion that must be answered if it is to continue with such work. One can, I think, legitimately ask if there is not a type of juvenile drama that can hold the minds of youngsters without sink- ing to the level of the late afternoon radio serial. Tf "Thanksgiving atB uckrnm's Corners" is has provided an answer for many but it is cer- tainly not the only answer. Such a theatre must, necessarily, concern itself with the simpler patterns and values of the life that it mirrors, but even the very youngest patron can demand that the stage be peopled with real persons do- ing real things. It must allow scope for the spontaneous sense of mimicry of even the most backward ten year old but it must scale down every one of the demands that the theatre makes upon the adult actor to a size that the juvenile actor can easily handle. There is really no such thing as a bad child actor if he is allowed to be natural. The child actor in the professional theatre can, by conscious training, be brought to understand the essential nature of artifice but the amateur will become stilted and unnatural when weighted down by highly plotted and, to him, incompre- hensible matter. In the first act of this play the younger members of the cast far surpassed their older fellows but in the second act, which Mr. McKelvey seemed to be writing with the stage of the Metropolitan in mind, and which seemed to be motivated variously by nine younger cohorts of deus ex machina and a desire to point the obvious moral, the acting was stiff and stagey. The children's playwright must write simple drama but "crude" is not a good syno- nym for "simple." Mr. McKelvey, the playwright could learn umni Memorial Hall, daily, 2-5, until Dec. 15. Auspices of Ann Arbor Art Association. Lectures Wild Land Utilization: Dr. Frank A. Waugh, Professor Emeritus of Land- scape Architecture, Massachusetts State College, will give the following talks in the amphitheatre of the Rack- ham Building at the times indicated: Dec. 4, 11 a.m., "Basic elements in the study of wild lands: Land forms- physiography." Dec. 5, 11 a.m., "Basic elements continued-the forest and its ecol- ogy." Dec. 6, 11 a.m., "Lines of approach to an uhderstanding of natural ele- ments in wild lands." Dec. 8, 9 a.m., "Administrative problems to be considered in the management of wild lands for hu- man use." These talks are intended primarily for students in the School of Forestry and Conservation, who are expected to attend, but all others interested are also cordially invited. Rabbi James G. Heller, of Cincin- nati, will speak on the subject: "Can Religion Be Saved in the World To- day?" at the Rackham Lecture Hall, Sunday, Dec. 3, 8:15 ,p.m., under the auspices of the Student Religious As- sociation and Hillel Foundation. ',r-3rnf ng -s n Ticket Committee (Peggy Polum- baum's division) of the Sophomore Cabaret meeting at 4:30, Monday. Finance Committee of Sophomore Cabaret meeting at 4:15 p.m. Monday. Tryouts for the third Children's Theatre Production, "Dick Whitting- ton and His Cat," from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday and Tuesday in the rehearsal room of the League. Churches Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church: Sunday, 8 a.m. Holy Communion; 11 a.m. Holy Communion and Address by the Rev. Henry Tatlock, D.D., rec- tor emeritus of St. Andrew's Church; 11 a.m. Junior Church; 11 a.m. Kin- dergarten, Harris Hall; 7 p.m. Stu- dent meeting in Harris Hall. Profes- sor Leroy Waterman will speak on the topic, "About the Prophets" which is the fifth and last of our Speaker- Discussion meetings on the Old Testament section of the series on Foundations of our Religion. Next week, special Christmas celebration. First Congregational Church: 10:45 a.m. Public worship. Dr. Parr, "A Two-Fold Appeal." 6 p.m. Stpdent Vn- zln T rn1 FT Tap and Ballet, Dance Groups Sophomore Cabaret meeting at p.m. Monday, in the League. of 8