?A4 E QU 1 T HE MICHIGAN DAILY a U ____________________________________________ I - - --- THE MICHIGAN DAILY High Protective -Tarriff Is Scored As Prelude To Economic Description 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 mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by 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 Carl Petersen Elliott Maraniss Stan M. Swinton Morton L. Linder Norman A. Schorr Dennis Flanagan John N. Canavan Ann Vicary Mel Fineberg Editorial 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 By RICHARD BENNETT The problem of the tariff is once more raising its ugly head. Because the tariff question will form a fundamental part of the coming election programs, it should be clear to every voter exact- ly what that question is. To be sure, the govern- ment has considered the tariff problem, though sometimes one wonders precisely to what end. But there are numerous voters who have little or no idea of the basic issues behind the tariff. The problem of the tariff is a dilemma. If the United States levies a high prohibitive tariff, it helps to breed wars by denying to other nations a chance to earn a living by making goods for us, and by shutting off their opportunity to supply their needs from our store of raw mater- ials and the products of our factories. It creates a deficit economy abroad. Further, a high prohibitive tariff denies to debtor govern- ments possibility of repayment. Before the Land Grant period, for instance, British and Dutch gold financed the building of American rail- ways. Had there not been an open international market, the United States would have been no more able to repay its debt than were the inter- allied nations able to repay us when we placed a prohibitive tariff on American imports. We still talk of an excess of exports over imports as a "favorable" balance of trade. Such talk is nonsense. There is nothing favorable about such a situation. If it continues very long, it is bound to lead to trouble. On the other hand, if we adopt an extensive free trade policy, we multiply the nerves of com- merce and industry which are exposed to every disturbance abroad. We may become involved in a war, because our many interests are affected. It is infinitely more difficult for us to cushioy ourselves against world shock. More than this, we automatically throw, large numbers of men out of work by exposing certain industries to foreign competition. Two years ago the General Committee on Economics and Peace, weighing these factors, recommended that we accept the risks of enlarg- ing peacetime commerce with foreign nations. In advocating such a policy, however, the Com- mittee was careful to point out that we must take steps to insure ourselves against extreme fluctuation on the world market and to subsidize those producers who would be affected too severely by a rise of imports. It felt that open subsidy was preferable to tariff protection, which is its equivalent. The reasons advanced were that the cost of restriction of free trade would "thus become visible, instead of being concealed as indirect taxation in the form of higher prices, and the burden would be placed on the nation as a whole, instead of on the purchasers of goods whose prices are thus kept Iifeeimlo AMe Business Staff Business Manager Asst Business Mgr., Credit Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager Publications Manager NIGHT EDITOR: LEONARD SCHLEIDER The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Mexieo Finds Outlet For Expropriated Oil . . 0 A COUPLE of news items that ap- peared recently indicate that Mexi- co may at last be finding an outlet for the oil she expropriated from American companies in April, 1938. If this is true, it will probably mark the fail- ure of the State Department's attempts to reach a settlement between the Cardenas government and American oil interests. As long as Mexico could find no market for her stolen booty, there was a possibility she-might be forced into some settlement, but if the wells begin to pay divi- dends, she will probably consider the case closed. What must be particularly galling to the oil companies and the State Department is the fact that it is Americanacommercialism that is providing Mexico's outlet. An independent oil firm, unnamed in the news reports, is playing Judas to the other companies by agreeing to buy crude oil from the Mexican government. And another American firm is selling machinery to Bolivia so that that country can refine Mexican oil and place it on the market. UNTIL these latest developments, Mexico had been stymied in her attempts to sell the oil taken from her "good, neighbor," America. As journalist Jim Marshall points out in a recent issue of Collier's, the expropriated oil industry has until now proved something of a white ele- phant to the Cardenas government-the product has been poor and the markets, especially since the beginning of the war and the blockade of Germany, so inadequate that the Mexicans have been unable to pay out enough money to keep the machinery in efficient operating condition. It was this checkmate upon which the hopes of Washington seemed finally to rest. At first the State Department actively negotiated for a solution, but was always hampered by the limi- tations of the Administration's "good.-neighbor" policy and by the adamant attitudes of both the oil firms and Mexico. Neither would accept the only feasible solution the Department could offer-that the oil properties be operated by a joint directorate of three Mexicans, three oil men and three neutrals. After Assistant Secre- tary of State Sumner Welles' blunt diplomatic warning had been cast aside by the Mexicans, Washington apparently began to bide its time until possibilities of a settlement should become more favorable. THE position of American oil companies in the squabble is not as righteous as they maintain. Their propagandists were busy in Mexican politics and the seizure of their pro- perties may be partially in retaliation for thew opposition to Cardenas. But at least there is enough justice on their side that they should be permitted to work toward some solution without the interference of other American companies seeking to take advantage of their loss. That would be permitting too ruinous a license to business competition. -Hervie Haufler 'Under The Clock' "I'll meet you 'under the clock'," wrote a Michigan co-ed to a friend who planned to visit her. But the friend went up to see another Michigan co-ed before meeting her previously announced hostess. When the time came to meet her friend 'under the clock', she started picking up her things and above world levels." The Committee recom- mended that subsidy to a single industry should never be so great that it could afford to dump products in foreign markets at prices below those charged domestic consumers. Further than this, the Committee advised that the moment tariff removal occurs workers and investors in those industries most immediately affected should be offered financial assistance, to tide them over the period of readjustment. This would mean unemployment benefits for workmen, free training to fit them for new jobs, and indemnity to investors for scrapping or converting equipment to new uses. The Committee felt there should be open in- ternational sharing of information on all those policies and inventive processes by which is brought about commercial and industrial change of production costs. These changes should not be put into effect without consulting all govern- ments affected. "Such consultations in advance would give the affected nations time to develop changes in their economic policies in an orderly and thoughtful way, and not in the spirit of fright or of retaliation." The Committee's advice may now seem a little dated; but if the sort of competitive system we have been living under in the past is to contnue after the war-a doubtful but not impossible contingency-, it is only right that we should consider these problems while we are still far enough removed from the economic troubles that will soon arise. War necessarily results in rising prices. To clap a high protective tariff on our international trade, as Republicans like Senator Vandenburg are now asking, demonstrates, it seems to us, gross misunderstanding of the issue. As Walter Lippmann has recently pointed out, "if there were ever a time when tariffs ought to be lowered rather than raised, it is a time when goods are beginning to be scarce and the cost of living is beginning to rise. Since that time is likely to be upon us by next summer the Republicans must not be astonished if they find that once more, as in the case of the embargo, most of them have guessed wrong and gotten off on the wrong foot." Be that last observation as it may, it seems clear that at this present juncture, at least, a high protective tariff is unfeasible. Despite the enormity of our national debt, we can still better afford the subsidization of industry and workers than a tariff which will lead to post-war eco- nomic disruption. Rationalism Not Emotionalism Violent emotionalism may be an excellent catharsis, but it has never solved anything. Of late a number of people in the United States have become quite moral and indignant over matters which can best be settled on the basis of calm, rational thought. Suddenly people are beginning to discover, after all these years, that war is immoral, no, rather that the inno- cent bystanders are usually the ones to be hurt. One hundred per cent Americanism has been equated to 100 per cent Emotionalism. Today President Roosevelt is asking a "Moral Embargo" against those nations who are "'obvi- ously guilty' of unprovoked aerial bombardments of civil centers." It seems that the bombs of Soviet Russia are not humane enough to dis- tinguish between government officials, soldiers, and civilians, between airports (or railroad sta- tions) and the homes nearby. President Roose- velt is not the only one who feels deeply about this; many Americans are pained. Yet only a short time ago, when General Franco with his mercenary legions of Fascist German and Italian troops and Mohammedan Moors was bringing Christianity via fire and sword to the Spanish Catholic peasants defend- ing their homes, the United States stood idly by and maintained an embargo which doomed a sister republic and many innocent people to death. While maintaining this embargo, the United States permitted Fascist Germany and Italy to buy materials even though they were 'obviously guilty' of turning these materials over to the humane General Franco for use against defenseless civilians. The sop to conscience was that these nations were not at war. When col- lective security on the part of the democracies was feasible, it was rejected on the grounds6 that such matters were none of our business. Thus Fascism ("the lesser of two evils") was countenanced in Spain; the destruction of a re- public was countenanced; and Spanish men, women and children were made to suffer. It is a strange morality, and a still stranger conscience, which lated adopted the cash and carry policy, which too late to benefit the Span- ish Republic is very advantageous to Great Bri- tain. It is a strange morality, and a still stranger conscience, which later adopted the cash and political prejudice and imperialist economic in- terests. Yes, I grieve for the innocent people of Fin-. land. But grief and emotion will not solve their problem. Nor can a selective conscience avail to solve the enigma of war. The problem lies deeper. Its roots are inextricably bound up with those interests who profited from the last war as from all war, who through the Versailles Treaty drove the German people under the rule of a Hitler, who foster Fascism, who think in dollars and cents and piously talk in terms of morality and conscience. President Roosevelt? and a number of others are no doubt sincere; but they are looking at the personal havoc of war (terrible as it may be) instead of excoriating those interests, both here and abroad, who main-' - MUSIC= By RICHARD BENNE*TT There has just been handed to me a release of Mr. Aaron Copland's notes on "A Cowboy Ballet," or, as it is called on tomorrow night's American Ballet Caravan program, "Billy the Kid." Mr. Copland, one of America's most active younger composers and author of the music for "Billy the Kid," is now in Holly-t wood working on the score of a forth- coming picture. He has for some time been one of the reviewers for "New Music" magazine and has been in the vanguard for the furtherance' of modern American music. His observations on his score for "Billy the Kid" give some light on Mr. Cop- land's attitude toward the problems and function of music. He writes: "I don't know how other composers feel, but as for myself, I divide all music into two parts-that which is meant to be self-sufficient and that which is meant to serve one of the sister arts-theatre, film or ballet. I have never liked music which gets; in the way of the thing it is supposed- ly aiding. That is why I began with one single idea in wrting Billy-a firm resolve to write simply. If it is a question of expressing one's soul, you can always write a symphony. But if you are involved in a stage presentation, then the eye is the thing, and music should play aE modest role, helping where help is needed, but never injecting itself as if it were the main business of the evening." Modern Versions Mr. Copland's statement a few pages later is also all to the point when he says that "it is a rather deli- cate operation-to put fresh and un- conventional harmonies to well- known melodies without spoiling their naturalness." It is because of this attempt of some "musicians" to sophisticate otherwise elemental folk melodies that I have never been able to stomach the "swing" versions of such classics as "LochLomond." The fallacious notion of new generations has too often been that their inter- pretation of life can admit of no other equally legitimate one, or that if there is another, it can scarcely be as "modern" as the latest one. Not the least indicative example of Brahms' musical perspicuity was his DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Notices To The Members of the Universtiy Council: There will be no meeting of the University Council in Decem- ber. Louis A. Hopkins, Secy. Applications in Support of Research Projects: To give the Research Com- mittees and the Executive Board ade- quate time for study of all proposals, t is requested that faculty members having projects needing support dur- ing 1940-1941 file their proposals in the Office of the Graduate School by Jan. 12, 1940. Later request will, of course, be considered toward the close of the second semester. Those wish- ing to renew previous requests wheth- er now receiving support or not should so indicate. Application forms will be mailed or can be obtained at Sec- etary's Office, Room 1508 Rackham Building, Telephone 331. C. S. Yoakum. To Students Having Library Books: 1. Students having in their posses- sion books drawn from the University I Library are notified that books are due Monday, Dec. 11, before the im- pending Christmas vacation, in pu- suance of the University regulation: "Students who leave Ann Arbor for more than a week must first return all borrowed books." Books needed between Dec. 11 and the beginning of vacation may be re- tained upon application at the charg- ing desk. 2. Failure to return books before the vacation will render the student liable to an extra fine. 3. Students remaining in town may charge and renew books for seven- day periods beginning Dec. 11. 4. Students leaving town who have urgent need for books during the va- cation period will be given permis- sion to take such books with them, provided they are not in general de- mand, on application at the office of the Superintendent of Circulation. Wm. W. Bishop, Librarian. SUNDAY, DEC. 10, 1939 VOL. L. No. 65 H eywood Broun It is possible that in the course of time all dictators .will be destroyed, not by conflict but by the newsreels. No man can have his picture I countries must be in the office of the International Cente'r by Dec. 15. This information is required from the University by the United States Gov- ernment. J. R. Nelson. Academic Notices English 127: Make-up for novel quiz will be given Monday, Dec. 11, at 4 p.m., 2225 A.H. Karl Litzenberg. '1% taken over and over again without feeling and looking a little foolish. This is prompted by the report of a friend who has just returned from Italy. He says that the Italians are beginning to laugh at Mus- solini in the cinema thea- tres. Benito has played up virility for a number of years, and the performance does not improve as the years roll along. The hairs on his chest are numbered. One of his favorite shots is the sequence in the fields where Il Duce, in person, mows down the wheat so that his countrymen may have bread as well as circuses. In all fairness to the Latin top man he is structurally rather im- pressive. If he had been caught young he might very well have been a second-string fullback for Rutgers. But time takes its toll. The divid- ing line between a'stalwart chest and a palpable abdomen grows dim. Benito is by now a shade too tubby for acrobatics. * * * Heroic To Farcical And, in particular, one of his favorite devices moves over from the heroic to the farcical. Over and over again Mussolini has sent himself out in cans with a short reel in which he is first capturEli at the top of his oratorical bent and then fades out by ascending a steep stairway. And it has been the practice of the great man to amaze the peasants by taking the incline three steps at a time. It is a good trick when you can do it, but by now the sound track catches a wheeze which is not wind in the willows but the protest of bellows which are growing older. According to my informant, this is the precise point where the Italian audiences begin to say "Ha! Ha!" in- stead of "Viva! Viva!" For my own part I re- gard staircases as a nuisance, and even when I might have been a shade more alert I took the steps one at a time and never strained myself. * * * President Eliot Decides But once I saw and heard a man who applied the test to himself with an eloquence which was moving. I was in Harvard when President Eliot decided that the time had come for him to c transcriptions of early German folk ibrary Hours: During the vacation in which there is not a note period the General Library will be or rythmicpattern teaccom-open daily from 8 a.m. till 6 p.m. paniment figures which contradicts beginning Dec. 16, except on Dec. 25 the essential meaning of the original and Jan. 1, when it will be closed all 'day, and on Dec. 23 and Dec. 30 (Sat- air. This is an achievement gotten by ,easn hoeve. I demndsa Iurdays), when it will close at noon. by reason however. It demands a The Departmental Libraries will be cosmopolitan sympathy for the cul- m tures of other times and other peo- Dec. 16, and regularly each day from ples. As Mr. Copland says, "it is a 10-12 a.m. and 2-4 p.m. Monday moment for the composer to throw 'through Friday, beginning with the caution aside and to depend wholly week of Dec. 18. on his instinct for knowing what to Thed R nm. do. Courage and instinct are the The Graduate Reading Rooms will only things that can be of help at close at 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 15, and that point." observe the usual holiday schedule thereafter: 9-12 a.m. a'nd 1-5 p.m. Ballet Comes Of Age Monday through Friday, and 9-12 on The whole idea of the American Saturdays. Ballet Caravan, its purpose and way of doing things, appeals to me very Juniors and Seniors, College of Lit- much. Its very existence is proof erature, Science, and the Arts, who that the American ballet is growing expect to qualify for the Teacher's up. It is no longer copying the Certificate, but have not yet regis- European tradition of ballet. It is tered with the Teacher's Certificate beginning to feel for itself, to choose American themes and treat them in Committee should do so immediately. an American way. If we are ever Those concentrating in Group I (Lan- to have a fully developed ballet in guages and Literature) should see America, it must do just this. It will MWF, 11-12, TuTh 2-3; in Group II be something quite apart from the Prof. C. D. Thorpe, 2214 Angell Hall, "nervous" Franco-Russian style. Pro- (Science), Prof. Paul S. Welch, 4089 viding music, choreography, seting, Natural Science Building, WF 11-12; and costumery are integrated and and in Group III (Social Studies), complementary of each other-some- Prof. B. W. Wheeler, 316 Haven Hall, thing Hollywood still has failed to TuTh 3-4. achieve as a consistent policy-the American ballet should soon be able The Automobile Regulation will be to boast a highly individual autono- lifted for the Christmas vacation mous art of its own. period from Friday noon, Dec. 15, un- til 8 a.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 3. War On Women The Bureau of Appointments and If it is not too much to be asking Occupational Information has re- on the morning before the first ceived announcement of the following houseparty night of the season, we. Detroit Civil Service examinations for have always wanted to know just summer jobs: what were the great benefits be- Lifeguard (Pool) (Male and Fe- stowed upon the nation by the nine- male)-60c per hour. teenth or woman's suffrage amend- Swimming Instructor (Male and ment-a law which was ballyhooed Female), $5 per day. to set America on the road to Requirements: 20 years of age, De- Utopia? troit residence, Senior American Red According to the history books- Cross Life Saving Certificate. we were too young to know about it Applications blanks may be ob- from personal experience-female tained at the office of the Bureau, suffrage would stamp out vice, greed 201 Mason Hall, office hours 9-12, and crookedness in politics, bad 2-4. The blanks must be filed at the morals, drinking, smoking and Detroit Civil Service Office by Dec. swearing, and would bring peace to 13. Examination to be held Dec. 20. America. The vice which the ladies played TheUniversity Bureau of Appoint- to the skies when they were agitating ments and Occupational Information for equal rights is raging just about has received notice of the following as strongly as ever before, if we can Michigan Civil Service examinations. believe what we read in the New York The last date for filing application is Mirror . . . noted in each case: The women voted for Huey Long, Geologic Map Draftsman I (open and were the strongest faction be- to men only), salary range: $150-190, hind James J. Walker, and thought Dec. 21. Mr. Harding was a fine president and Military General Clerk B, salary backed Big Bill Thompson . . . range: $105-125, Dec. 21. As for drinking and swearing, it Military General Clerk A, salary is getting so a respectable citizen range: $130-150, Dec. 21., who wants to drop into one of Han- 1 Blue Print Machine Operator B over's restaurants during houseparty j (open to men only), salary range: time for a quiet scrambled eggs and $105-125, Dec. 21. coffee cannot avoid being embar- Institution Power Plant Mainten- rassed by the language and mental ance Helper B, (open to men only), condition of the girls who are guests salary range: $105-125, Dec. 21. of the town over the weekend . . . Graphic Presentation Designer I It's not that we're advocating re- (open to men only), salary range: Concert. "Messiah" Concert will be given under the auspices of the University Musical Society this afternoon at 4 o'clock sharp, in Hill Au- ditorium. The general public is in- vited without admission charge. The program will begin on time, and doors will be closed during numbers. Soloists: Beal Hober, soprano; Joan Peebles, contralto; William Hain, ten- or; Theodore Webb, baritone; Palmer Christian, organist; University Choral Union; University Symphony Orches- tra; Thor Johnson, Conductor. Exhibitions Paintings by William Gropper and prints by the Associated American Artists shown in West Gallery, Al- umni Memorial Hall, daily, 2-5, until Dec. 15. Auspices of Ann Arbor Art Association. Exhibitions, College of Architecture and Design: Photographs of tools, processes, and products representative of the Department of Industrial Design at Pratt Institute. Dec. 1 through 14. Open daily, except Sunday, 9 to 5, in Third Floor Exhibition Room, l Architectural Building. Open to the public. Lectures University Lecture: Dr. Martin P. Nilsson, Professor of Classical Ar- chaeology and Ancient History, and formerly rector, University of Lund, Sweden, will lecture on "Rural Cus- toms and Festivals in Greek Reli- gion" (illustrated with slides) under the auspices of the Department of Greek at 4:15 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 12, in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The public is cordially invited. University Lecture: Dr. Veit Valen- tin, Lecturer at University College, London, will lecture on "Austria and Germany" under the auspices of the Department of History at 4:15 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 14, in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. The public is cordially invited. Extracurricular Medical School Lee- ture: Dr. Clarence D. Selby, Medical Consultant of General Motors Corp., will speak at 14:15 p.m., Thursday, Dec. 14, in Rackham Lecture Hall on "The Relationships of General and Special Practice to Industrial Medi- cine." Medical School classes will be dismissed at 4 p.m. to permit all medi- cal students to attend. The public is cordially invited. Today's Events Pi Lambda' Theta: The Faculty Christmas Tea is to be held at the University Elementary School Library today from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Eta Kappa Nu meeting in the Mich- igan Union tonight at 7 p.m. Those wishing to eat in a group will meet at 6:30 p.m. Scalp and Blade will meet today, in the Union. All members are re- quested to attend, and all Buffalo men are cordially invited. The Art Cinema League announces the third of the programs in its Series as HAMLET and THE LAST LAUGH, with Emil Jannings today. Member- ships in the league are still available prior to the 3:15 and 8:15 perform- ances. Lutheran Student Club annual Christmas program and dinner to- day at 6 p.m. Students from dif- ferent countries will tell how Christ- mas is celebrated in their lands. Christmas carols will be sung, and small gifts exchanged. Chanukah Party will be held at the Hillel Foundation tonight at 8 by the Avukah, student Zionist organi- zation. A short program will be fol- lowed by dancing and refreshments. All students are cordially invited. Coming Events Botanical Journal Club meeting Tuesday, Dec. 12, 7:30 p.m. in Room N.S. 1139. Reports by- Su Hsuen Wu: "Development of the embryo sac of Plumbagella micran- tha." Robert Lowry: "Application of the Altmann Freezing-Drying technique to plant cytology." "A procedure for growing, staining and making permanent slides of pol- len tubes." James McCranie: "The effect of