THE MICHIGAN DAILY JIGAN DAILY Controversy Over Neutrality Proposals Reflected In Letters To The Editor I OF ALL THINGS!.. By Mor y-Q. DAILY OFFICI) Publication in the Bulletin is constructive, Copy received at the office of the Surimer Se I I ,1 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 Associatedl 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. REPRESENT4D FOR NATIONAL ADVURTiStNG BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CICAGO -oS'oN -T O .'LANGELES sAN FRANCLSCO Menber, Associated Collegiate Press, 1939-40 Editorial Staff Carl Petersen Elliott Maraniss $ n g. Swinton Morton L. Linder Norman A. Schorr Denis Flanagan John N. Canavan AnniVicary Mel1 Fineberg Managing Editor Editorial Director city Associate Associate Associate Associate Women's Sports Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Business Staff $tsiness Manager Agst. Business Mgr., Credit Manager Wgznen's Business Manager Womgen's Advertising Manager Puliclaijons Manager Paul R. Park Ganson P.'Taggart Zenovia Skoratko Jane Mowers Harriet S. Levy NIGHT EDITOR: HOWARD A. GOLDMAN - The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers .ynly. And Publ cN eed... N THES DAYS of the consequences of appeasement it behooves the pro- p opbts of budget balancing to think and advo- cate with caution. The argument of those who desire to appease business is, roughly, as follows: Ably voiced by Mr. Alfred P. Sloan, the first tenet is that there exists today "a tremendous backlog of consum- er demand." The next tenet is that the rate of expansion in the capital goods industries is shivering between the point of complete stand- still and the point of letting urgent replace- moents slide. Now the logical conclusion to be reached, apparently,. is that if the Wagner Act were cautiously emasculated, if the WPA and direct relief expenditures were ploughed under, if the Social Security taxes were further cut (the recent revision of the Social Security tax rates deprived American employees o 'fthe $600,- 000,000 it saved business), if the TVA were allowed to function a little less ominously for the private utility companies, if the coal, rail- road, banking and other industries were allowed to pursue their own course-in short, if the New Deal would only Return to Normalcy, the "tre- mendous backlog of consumers demand" would disappear. It is, of course, entirely true that there is a tremendous backlog of consumers demand. The publications on income and its distribution by the Brookings Institute, the National Resources Committee, and the taxable wages reported to the Social Security Board indicate how incred- ibly low that consumers demand actually is. The National Resources Committee's Consumers Income in the United States, 1935-36, discovered that about 70 per cent of the nation's wage- earners received less than $1,500 a year. (p6 Table 2.) The data secured form the records of Old Age Insurance reveals -that the median ' taxable wage per employee in covered occupa- tions is $723 per year. (Social Security iulletin, April 1939, p.6 Table 2.) Furthermore such low incomes are not only characteristic of depression periods. Fr the Social Security Board data are for 1937 when the volume of industrial produc- tion, according to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Board, was at 125, while the corresponding figures for 1929 was 127. And the Brookings Institute data for the golden year of 1929 shows 60 per cent of the wage-earners in the U.S. to have received less than $2,000 in that year. The New Deal was designed to remedy this situation with accepted legislative instruments. The Wagner Act, the Wage and Hour Act, WPA, Unemployment Compensation, Old Age Insur- ance were innovated precisely to bolster this mass deficiency in purchasing power. They have all helped, undoubtedly. But the crucial question still remains: why are there two-thirds of the American people who are still unable to purchase what they produce? Under our preent economic structure, the mechanics of the distribution of income is such that the sum total of income apportioned to the American people is always disproportionately les than the current value of the goods they pro- duce. 'And, because of the prior claim of owner- ship on the proceeds of management and labor, the disparity. betwen t e v.alue of goods pro- duced and cnaubleo nf hin' nrn duc o nn the Dear Gulliver To the Editor: In re Slosson's "factual errors" the following item is of interest: 1937 United State automobile exports to Canada were 18,595 cars and 56,439 engines Foreign Commerce Yearbook, 1938, page 195. - I cannot find out how many were Fords, but the principle is the same even if they were Chevrolets!I Will your policy of no trade with belligerent foreign nations mean a patrol'along the Canad- ian-American frontier to keep them out? Speaking of automobiles, the United States uses over seven-tenths of all the world's rubber and grows virtually none of it. Rubber can be made artificially but only at an almost prohibi- tive cost (Germany has virtually forbidden private owners to use their cars except on, public duty). The British Indies are our main present source of supply. To be sure the Dutch East Indies are neutral, but for how long no one can tell. Economic autarchy will make little appeal to Michiganders! Cordially yours, Preston Slosson No True Neutrality To the Editor:, Shall the United States reeal the Embargo S4hall the United States repeal the Embargo and carry policy as regards the sending of arms and munitions to belligerent countries? Shall we send raw materials to belligerent countries? Shall we send raw materials to the belligerents butt not arms and munitions? All these questions do the Congressmen vehemently discuss with each of them deciding that his solution of the problem will solve the riddle of United States neutrality. It is my contention that there can not be arny true neutrality for the United States, whatever policy we adopt; this I shall endeavour to prove. The dictionary defines neutrality as "the condition of' a state' or government which re- frains from taking part directly or indirectly in a war f etw'een other powers." With this defini- tion as my premise I proceed with my analysis of a possible neutrality for the United States. If the United States retains the present Em- bargo Act, we shall not be acting neutrally; for by means of the act we are still able to send raw materials to belligerents. And this is direct, or at least indirect, aid to the belligerents. Modern warfare does not consist in merely fighting at the battlefield Economic warfare is just as important. An act that merely prohibits the shipment of arms and munitions to a belligerent and not raw materials is not a neutrality act. And if we send raw materials to a belligerent, the necessary implication is that the stronger sea power will be better able to receive these goods; and thus we shall be directly aiding the latter in its combat with the enemy. For we would not be acting as a neutral as far as prac- tical results were concerned. If we repeal the Embargo Act and adopt a cash-and-carry policy, which policy is the only measure offered as an alternative to the Embargo Act, we still would not have a neutrality. The country with the greater financial resources and better naval equipment would be the one to re- ceive the direct benefits from these transactions; and in terms of modern warfare which must cer- tainly be approached from an economic point of ,view, this is not neutrality. Having reduced the problem to one of either the retention of the Embargo Act or its repeal and the consequent adoption of the cash-and- carry plan, I maintain that neither policy will lead the United States to a condition of real neutrality. In this matter we must judge a policy in terms of its practical implications and not in terms of international law. The issue is thus not one of neutrality. It simply amounts to our deciding which policy will better serve our 'interests and which will prevent us from actually shouldering rifles for the longest time. For whatever procedure we follow, considering the matter from the standpoint of its necessary economic implications, we are in the war. -Norman B. Klibe WFake Safe For Democracy? To the Editor: I read with amazement and distress the sug- gestion in The Daily yesterday that the United States should again try to save the world for democracy and defeat Hitlerism. The majority of those Americans who fought in the last war sincerely believed they were fighting a peopleX whose attributes were summed up in the word, "Hun," and whose leader was an utterly ruth- less paranoiac. When the Kaiser was unseated, millions were shocked because he went unhanged. Still greater was the shock when-once the arms were laid down-we were told the Germans were really an excellent people, sincerely fighting for the right as they saw it. But perhaps the great disillusionment was the gradual realization that our companions had died to make the world safer for American investments. It is true that the majority of the German, British and French people are friendly, indus- trious peace- loving citizens, but commonly so concerned with the immediate and fascinating business of living that the government drifts taxes is not going to remove that diminishing rate of profitability. If the budget is to be balanced, it will be done by the resolute and democratic action of public enterprise, not private. It is only by such con- structive undertakings as the TVA, with its 130,- nnnnn rinrnnrr Ff n r -la t . of m a into the hands of a tight little minority. As Professor Slosson has pointed out elsewhere, on of the essential differences between the British and American ways of choosing a leader is illus- trated by the fact that any reasonably astute 9bserver could name a very few Englishmen and be quite confident he had included all the possi- bilities for the post of Prime Minister for years to come. It is with this group and the interests they represent that we must reckon. Now we are told by them-and surviving members of the 1914 group are still there-that it is not the German people, it is their leader who is being opposed. Again science is losing its Mosleys, lit- erature its Rupert Brooks, and the people their lives. Does anyone believe that once Hitler is banished to the Netherlands, English leadership will be less selfish than in the past? On the eve of going to war we heard a British states- man warn the English people and the rest of the world that aggression in Poland would create an unfavorable balance of power which England would not tolerate. The sincerity of these words can not now be questioned, and they seem to contain the essence of British policy. It is a policy that allowed Germany to rearm and Hitler to come to power when French influence seemed growing apace; it had something to do with he repudiation of the agreement with the United States and other nations to prevent aggression in China, when the United States on the strength of this compact, protested the invasion of Man- churia. When nearly a quarter of the entire popula- tion 'of Great Britain signed a petition to its government requesting it to embark on a cep tain policy during the Italo-Ethiopian conflict, the government gave heed and made promises which it kept only until safely reelected a few months later. Without taking time for a de- tailed indictment of Great Britain's official behavior during the past two decades, I believe few of us would trust an individual whose con- tracts had been voided as often. There seems little doubt that the government of the United States, at present, is one of the most democratic in the world. We believe in it and naturally wish all the other peoples of this earth to be happy and democratic too. But I see nothing in the events of the past twenty years to suggest that our type of democracy will spread over Europe if England and France are agaiN helped to win a war to preserve the (British) bal- ance of power. If we are to achieve the "coming World State" which Professor Slosson forsees, it would seem we must first assume the postion of supreme arbiter of European affairs with complete co- operation'from England and France. This seems a remote possibility for which to risk the loss of our own liberties. The choice of "going all the way in or staying entirely out" seems the only logical course, but it now appears sadly probable that we will pursue the meddle-and- muddle-way that will be so financially helpful to some, unless sentiment changes and a few more tons of mail deluge Congress. -T. S. Lovering Jfee, o l Heywood Broun Sigmund Freud, the disturber of dreams, died in a nightmare world and has been gathered back to the father image. He has gone, I be- lieve, to the heart of a dark continent whose fringes he explored. And yet if he never traveled more than half a day's journey across the divide which separates sleep from waking he remainr :4 pioneer. Not since Orpheus . has any mortal come closer to the secret springs. And I imagine it will be as artist and philosopher rather than as physician that the little Viennese will be remembered. ID suffered too much from a sort of Sherlock Holnes complex to be numbered among th scientists. Like the fictional detective, he would take a less than conclusive clew and say cog- matically to some convenient Watson, "That man was running for his life." He could take the fragment of a dream and build it into a case history as readily as Holmes might solve a murder mystery by looking at a cigar ash through a lens. And yet, though psychiatry may reject Freud in whole or part, the medicine men first must knock him down. Ironically enough, his name and fame will be best preserved by a' motley crew, most of whom never read a line of his writing and got his teaching in distorted form at fourth or twentieth hand. At the very moment Freud's ashes are being laid to rest, somewhere an American prize-fight matiager, sixth grade class of 98, will be saying, "The trouble with my heavyweight is the kid's inhibited. He don't know his own strength." And baseball managers have begun to ask their southpaws with more than academic interest, "Tell me, Lefty, what's your sex life?" At the very least Freud has changed the sig- nificance of a dream in popular mind from a horse in the sixth race to a fixation in the fifth year. And surely it will be a long day before, the gored artist refrains from turning on his tor-' mentor to say, "But really, Mrs. Harriman, you fail to grasp the fact that I painted that out of my unconscious." black-and-white levers in none-too- rapid succession and on the carriage above would hesitatingly appear a series of words, which, when read consecutively, would sometimes make sense. But at least the woodpecker- ish levers would transmit the same words that Mr. Q. had meant to be transmitted. "But that is aIl changed now. Something has happened to Mr. Q.'s infernal friend.. No matter what Mr. Q. intends the levers to report, no matter wihat keys he taps in an effort to telegraph a word or two to the waiting paper, the same words appear; sometimes the order is shifted so that different sentences or phrases come out, or sometimes, in keeping with the high literary style to which the machine has become accustomed, synonyms will be used. But always it pecks out the same idea or thought. It is quite amazing. So yesterday, when Mr. Q. sat down to note a few observations, he forgot about the amazing transformation and planted himself in front of his old friend. And he began to tap the keys in the usual manner, ptting his best index-finger forward. And glancing up to the paper, he was taken back by the same old phenom- enon: the typewriter again refused ti transmit accurately; somewhere between the tap of the finger, along" the key bar and finally snapping up to meet the ribbon, there had been the same filtering, the same change. And there sneering at him from the paper, was the message for the dayT, this time in caps: KEEP US OUT OF IT. * * * DETERMINED not to be censoredf or propagandized by a distorted fugitive from a munitions plant, Mr. Q. hurried out of the building in quest of a non-sabotaged typewriter, a good old-fashioned machine that wouldn't get creative all of a sudden, butf would report accurately. So he fin- ally found himself in the registrar's office and there, in a corner, was a nice quiet outfit that didn't look as if it had creative aspirations. Itt looked very trustworthy. He assembled his notes on the1 table, readied the paper in the car- riage, adjusted a couple of gadgetsE and began anew to set down some- thing that would go well with toast and coffee. He felt the machine tremble slightly as he fingered the keys. An excellent typewriter, he thought; how fortunate he was to have chanced upon the registrar's1 office. And, even as he thought thus, hie looked at the rolled paper: there before him, in the registrar's office, the trustworthy machine- trembling with excitement, was the same phe- nomenon. Traced on the sheet,x standing out in almost third dimen- tional emphasis, was the clipped no- tation: RECORD ENROLLMENT. With a hollow feeling of havingt been let down, Mr. Q. shoved the automatic propagandist away in dis- gust, and left. He thought he heard1 a clicking snicker as he stamped out.t * *,* IT WAS the same wherever he tried: each typewriter had been geared by some mystical fiend to relate only what it had been instructed. So, in the Athletic Administration Building, it was: BIG TEN CHAMPS; And, inl the music school, it was: CHORAL UNION SERIES; and, in the Union, it was: NEW DORMITORIES. It was horrible.' Tired, dazed and disappointed, Mr. Q. finally turned homeward and to his trusty little portable that sure- ly, in all this topsy-turvy commo- tion, would not fail him. He made himself comfortable, feeling buoyed. and secure in his own room; now he would show them, he thought: he would get out his column despite all these demonical efforts to make him a tool, a puppet, a mouthpiece . He gripped his pipe firmly, adjusted the paper, and lovingly fondled the fam- iliar keys. Then he started ,to tap,' and, there it was, in faint black. PAY YOUR RENT. Mr. Q. will try again Sunday. might go far to nourish a more kindly civilization than exists today. Cer- tainly Freud was a scourge to the Pharisees of the earth. He crusaded; against cant; the method he espoused served to strip the mask from men who . clothed mean motives under phrases of high pretensions. He did suggest that health and integration lay in the individual ability to keep open covenants with himself, and it is my notion that he forged a wedge with which to split the hypocrisy of race and 'religious prejudice. a_ . ... t . L L.. . x.t. the Rules Governing Participation in Public Activities may be directedto appear before the Committee on2 Stu- dent Affairs to explain their negli- gence. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received notice of the following Civil Service examinations. Last date for filing application is noted in each case: United States Civil Service: Senior Oyster Culturist. Salary: $2,000. Oct. 2. Senior Aquatic Physiologist. Sal- ary: $4,600. Oct. 2. Senior Plant Anatomist. Salary: $4,600. Oct. 2. Senior Soil Physicist. Salary: $4,- 600. Oct. 2. Assistant Physiologist (Plant Hor- mones Investigations). Salary: $2,- 600. Oct. 2. Biochemist (Nut Investigations) Salary: $3,800. Oct. 2. Pomologist (Fruit Breeding). Sal- ary: $3,800. Oct. 2. Pomologist (Physiology). Salary: $3,800. Oct. 2. Associate Agronomist (F o r a g e Crops). Salary: $3,200. Oct. 2. Assistant Agronomist (F o r a g e Crops). Salary: $2,600. Oct. 2.- Assistant Agronomist (Cotton). Salary: $2,600. Oct. 2.. Assistant Pathologist (Corn In- vestigations). Salary: $2,600. Oct. 2. Head Scientist-Astronomer, to ba Director, Nautical Almanac. Salary: $6,500. Oct. 9. Galley Designer, U.S. Maritime Comm. Salary: $3,800. Oct. 9. Chief Engineering Draftsman (Me- chanical). Salary: $2,600. Oct. 9. Principal Engineering raftsman (Mechanical). Salary: $2,300. Oct. ' Senior Engineering Draftsman (Mechanical). Salary: $2,000. Oct. 9. Air Carrier Inspector (Radio). Sal- ary: $3,800. Oct. 9.] Junior Domestic Attendant (Seam-f stress). Salary: $1,30. Oct. . Michigan Civil Servce: Social Worker A and B. SalaryE range: $105-150. Oct. 4. Social 'Work Administrators I, II, III. Salary range: $150-310. Oct. 4. Attendant Nurse C2, B2 and B. Sal- ary range: $75-125. Oct. 8. Detroit Civil Service: Auto Repairman. Salary: Prevail- ing rate. Sept. 30.4 J u n io r Architectural Engineer (Housing Analysis). Salary:' $2,580.k Oct. 7. Junior Accountant. Salary: $2,580. Oct. 7. Senior Technical Clerk (Account- ing). Salary: $1,860. Oct. 7. Complete announcements on file at the 'University Bureau of Appoint-t ments and Occupational Information, 201 Mason Hall. Office hours: 9-12 and 2-4. College of Literature, Science and the Arts, School of Music, and Schbolk of Education: Students who received marks of I or X at the close of theirr last term of attendance (viz., senes- ter or summer session, will receive a grade of E in the course unless this work is made up and reported to this office by Oct. 25. Students wishing an extension of - time should file a petition addressed to the appropriate official in their school with Room 4 U.H. where it will be transmitted. Robert L. Williams, Asst. 9egistrar. Mail for Students, Faculty and tem- porary residents at the University: , All students and new members of the faculty should call at the U.S. Post Office and make out pink card, "Order to Change Address," Form 22, if they have not already done so. This applies also to temporary resi- dents in Ann Arbor who may be do-l ing reference or research work on the campus. Unidentifiable mail is held in Room 1, University Hall. If you are expect- ing mail which you have not received, please call at Room 1, University Hall, and make inquiry. Phi Lambda Upsilon: All faculty and student members of Phi Lambda Upsilon who are affiliated with the University of Michigan for the first time, or who are returning after an absence, please get in touch with me by phone or post card. C. W. Zuehlke, Secy. Delta Chapter 727 S. StateSt. Phone 3918 Academic Notices Graduate Students: Dr V. E. Hull, Examiner in Foreign Languages for" the doctorate, will be in his office, R. w 151 will meet Russian A.H. Classes in Speech C dents interested in c services of the Speech correction of speech d quested to call at'the Cl Huron Street, sometin week for the purpose a schedules. Announcer of classes will follow li (Continued from Page 2) SOQMETHING has happened to these of the Dean of the School or College typewriters since the first week to which the student belongs. in September. They look the same: XI black and white, 41 keys, black rib- Discipline. Cases of violation of black and whiter4 kueysnlack r- these rules will be reported to the bon, and all other accoutrements for proper disciplinary authority for ac- mechanical palmering. But they're tion. different. Mr. Q. remembers sit- . XII. ting at this same machine last year: Officers, chairmen and managers of he would press a number of the little 'ommittees and projectswho violate German Room 225 I cease or begin until all 11: Will meet fro Angell Hall. Frank X. Speec Speech meet Il ;been thus officially registe rangements made with th tors only are not official c English 31, Section 15 hereafter in 305 South V p.m., MWF. Norman E. Lectures German 167: Will meet'.; fromn 4-6 today. J. Pharmacy Lecture:'D Clark, Pharmacy Serv ment, Merck and Compar on the topic, "Developing tion Department," at 4 day, in Room 308, Building. Pharmacy s others interested are coi ed to attend. rT. Today$s Events Candy Booth Committee: T will be a meeting this afterr at 4 o'clock in 'the League for girls interested in working on committee this year. Informal Tea for Public He Nurses: Themt will be an informal for all public health nurses toda 3:30 p.m. at the Women's Field H on For'est Ave. All public he nursing students are invited to tend. Recreation Night at the Inte tiona Center: This evening the II national Center will have its firs its series of weekly Recreation Nig The Center will be open from 7 t o'clock for foreign students and I friends. The class for beginner bridge will be organized and bri games started by Conway Magee, L. M. Ochs, the new member of st ff in charge of the athletic gum, will during the evening students interested in both in and outdoor sports to discuss them his plans. J. Raleigh Nelso Physical Education for Won Exemption tests in baseball, hoc: volleyball, basketball and soccer be given at the Women's 4th ing today at 4:30 p.m. Episcopal Students: Informal m ing at Farris Hall tonight at 8 Hillel Foundation will hold Sa services at the Hillel Foundatior night at 7:30 p.m.. Ronald Freed will officiate as cantor. Dr. J Sachs, Dr. Isaac Rabinowitz, Ronald Freedman will speak at Fireside discussion following sern A social hour will follow the fire discussion. The Lutheran Student Associa will hold an open house this eve at the Zion Lutheran Parish 309 E. - Washington St., from 10:30 p.m. Games and refreshn have been arranged. All Iutl1 students are welcome. Coming Events The Graduate Outing Chub meet at the northwest entranc the Rackhai Building at 3 p.in. day, Oct. 1. The group will go hike, which will end at the Is where a wiener roast will be All graduate students are cord invited to attend. Freshman Round Table: Prof thur VanDuren will speak on the ject "For What Are We Edu at at-Lane Hall, Saturday, 7:15,p.n freshmen men and women are come to take part in the discus The Outdoor Club invite attend a bicycle hike Saturd 30. The group will meet Hall at 2 p.m. A limited n 0 1