PA "'tre tHfE MICHIcAN DAILY ,.t7 A71 _14 r? PT'Y'TU ti XM A wdf'" A T T A£T"U-ST 7 i____- --___ THEr AUCIIIAIN MAIL Y THE REPLY CHURLISH By TOUCHSTONE Picture Of Man Ready To Bite Dog 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 newpaper. All tights 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 the regular school year by carrier $4.00; by mail, $4.50. IEPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERY3I3N0 97 National Advertising Service, Inc. College Pubdlishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO * BOSTON . Los ANGELES * SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1940-41 Editorial Staff Hervie Haufler Alvin Sarasohn Paul M. Chandler Karl Kessler Milton Orshefsky Howard A. Goldman Laurence Mascott Donald Wirtchafter Esther -Osser Helen Corman . . . . Managing Editor . . . . Editorial Director . . . . . City Editor . . . . Associate 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: CHESTER BRADLEY The editorials published in The Michi- gan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. The Academy And The county Fair .. . F AIR DAY IN ANN ARBOR- that is the thought one has as he visits the many and varied sessions of the 46th meeting of the Michigan Academy of Arts, Sciences and Letters now in progress on the campus. And so it is, a big fair, refined and much more inclusive than the gatherings back home con- ducted each fall in surroundings of ferris wheels, barkers and the stench of cattle barns, but still a fair indeed. The same atmosphere of cheery geniality, the same bearing of quickened interest alert for the new and unusual, and the same motivation is characteristic of the Academy and the county fair. To the fair come farmers, merchants, house- wives, factory workers, grandmaw, grandpaw and the kids to exchange their handicraft, wares and conversation. In their own little way each does his part in contributing to the cultural life of the community. In the cattle barn stands the proud farmer, owner of a blue-ribbon sow anx- ious (remember the late Will Rogers in "State Fair"?) to tell his fellows how he did it. Mom is in the foodstuffs building exchanging notes on sour pickles. And so it is at the Academy. Teachers and scholars with news of their latest accomplish- ments and a hearty hand-shake for the colleague they haven't met since the last Academy; anxious young instructors and students with the results of their first research project; and many others, not yet ready to present papers, but just eager to learn. The atmosphere is the simple and genially serious one of a bull session. Gone is classroom decorum; they are all there to ex- change their wares and conversation-to add to the culture of the community. That is the significance of the Academy. The community of the Academy is larger and more sophisticated than that of the county fair-but the principle is the same.- Robert Speckhard Air Bases In South America .. . ANNOUNCEMENTS by the State De- partment that the Republic of Pan- ama has granted to the United States the rights to new air bases, anti-aircraft positions, and warping stations, coming right after the agree- ment for mutual defense with Mexico, "repre- sents an important and timely step. Emphasis is given to the necessity for addi- tional safeguards to Panama by two new devel- opments-the Dies disclosures of new reports of Nazi German activities among the Latin Ameri- can countries and in the United States as well and the new book by Major-General H. H. Arn- old, chief of the army air corps, and Col. Ira C. Baker, entitled "Winged Warfare." The Arnold-Baker book is a study of the pos- sibility of air attack on the United States. It suggests the possibility of Brazil as a great thea- tre of air operations, through the flying of great fleets of bombers to air fields already prepared by the millions of German residents in that republic. rHERE IS, of course, no purpose to be gained FOR MY COLLECTION of This Town Ain't Big Enough for Me And-notes: The grub- by looking young lady who wormed past me while I was still taking notes in modern novel yesterday, and left one (1) dainty saddle-shoe print on my poor, worn old topcoat. Young lady if you do that again, I'll trip you or speak to your housemother. Such things, coming as they always do, on a yellow and lovely spring morn- ing, are what make or makes me as the case may be a misogynist. 'Refer the preceding question of usage to Messrs. Anning and Wells. As for the young lady, I hope I won't have to mention it again. Nice to have a column and get rid of these thoughts, peeves, and headaches for cash money every month. All in all a good day though. Got eight glasses of water and eight pats of butter at local eatery because of crossed lines in the waiting department, and so did have three pats of butter on my waffles which in itself is considerable of a feat. There were three others with me-don't think me a pig sit- ting and sipping dog-in-the-manger-like at eight great glasses of water. Water gives me hives. Enough. Give off that. YESTERDAY amongst other things was Star- vation Day. The restaurants did not look as though they were suffering. I wonder how many big hearted guys and gals gave up a square for the sake of somebody they'll never see to get thanked by. A mistake to call it by as ugly a name as Starvation Day, because the genus Michiganensius applies the title to itself because it gives up one meal, rather than to the starvees abroad where the game is played for a little higher stakes than League points or steaks or whatever the hell it is people around here play for. Well, I hope it went well anyhow, and may- be as they sit picking their teeth after the meals Michigan almost didn't eat, those kids, kind hearted like all us kids, will have a stray human- istic thought about the golden rule, or do I sound as if I'm preaching? If I'm wrong about the takej for the day, I promise to apologize to genus Michiganensius, but on a basis of observation I don't expect to have to crawfish. IlEAR HOPWOOD COMMITTEE: Each year at this time it is a time honored Daily cus- tom to remind you that some day maybe you might get around to changing some rules. This isn't me, Hopwood Committee, because thanks to God I made it without any red grades, but hon- est, when every other activity on campus asks only a 'C' average, and you persist in enforcing the rule eliminating anyone who has just one grade below 'C' regardless of his other marks, it appears to me and to a great many of us that you are guilty of a slightly bleary emphasis, for it must be plain that under the present system a set of rather mediocre grades which don't miss the good old safe 'C' will beat the rap, while someone who received several 'A' grades and one D' is left out in the cold. Then too, if you allow the slightest bit of temperament to the college writer, he ought to be allowed to follow his in- RobertS.Atles ' WASHINGTON-American aircraft companies have now been supplying pursuit and bomber planes to Britain for two years. Yet it remains an unpalatable and not generally known fact that not one American pursuit plane has been used against the Nazis without first undergoing substantial overhauling in British factories. In fact, few of them have been used at all. "We have shipped some of them around to the Mediterranean, where they are plenty good enough against the Italians," explained one high British air ace. "And we are now preparing one squadron of your pursuit planes for action over England, hoping they will prove satisfactory." And this after months, in fact years of delay. It has not leaked out yet, but the performance of American fighter plane engines has been so disappointing that the British have proposed to lend us the "Sabre," their best engine for fighter or pursuit planes, together with engineers to supervise its production in American plants. So far William Knudsen, Defense production mogul, has opposed this. He/ claims that Ameri- can models already are in production and it would be uneconomical to break steps and intro- duce a new model. The British, not feeling free to go over Knudsen's head, have hesitated about opening negotiations direct with an American company, though Chrysler is reported to be anxious to start production of the Sabre. r Guns, Armor, Motors The defects of American planes boil down to guns, armor protection, and motors. American pursuit planes, when first delivered to England, were unarmored, and had machine guns in the cockpit, firing through the pro- peller. British engineers say that even before the war started they tried to persuade American airmen that guns should be mounted in the TO T HE EDITOR The Real Intellectuals To the Editor: i R. ROBERT SPECKHARD'S EDITORIAL, "'War for Democracy -Retreat of the American Intellectual," is too reasonable and too carefully-wrought a challenge to the "intel- lectual interventionist" to go unanswered. Space limitations, however, will allow only two con- siderations: first, whether these intellectual interventionists are defectionists from the tradi- tional tenets of intellectual liberalism; and, sec- ond, a commentary on the cosmopolitanism of the interventionist group. In his editorial, Mr. Speckhard says that American intellectuals have usually cried for peace, and that war is irrational. He says that the Munich agreement "blasted the intellectuals' life-line of League interventionalism and moral- ity to bits. The American intellectuals were lost and confused, prophets without a message, lead- ers without a following." So they jumped on the war bandwagon, Nothing could be farther from the truth. The traditions of real liberalism are not so superficial as a cry for peace at any cost. Those traditions are, instead, a belief in humanism, in freedom of scholarship and research, in freedom of the press, of speech and public assembly, a belief in government for all the people with the consent of all the governed. These are the fundamental tenets, and their cultivation and amplification was ruthlessly uprooted by fascism. THAT THE LIBERAL INTELLECTUALS have never been committed to a peace-at-any- cost policy is substantiated by the long and dis- tinguished editorial crusades of The New Repub- lic and of The Nation in their opposition to fascism (by force, if need be). Mr. Lerner's "It Is Later Than You Think," and sometime- held opinions (but only qiite recently avowed) like those of Lewis Mumford and Waldo Frank are further evidence. Even Professor Bertrand Russell, in a letter in The New York Times, Feb- ruary 16, says that he "has never been one of those who condemn all war." Lord Russell is convinced that the present war is a justifiable one, and supports the United States' aid-to- Britain program. The intellectuals' support of the war is based on moral and ethical values far more fundamental than the absolutists' cry- their "usual cry"-for peace. Perhaps Mr. Speckhard thought all intellectuals were abso- lutists or perfectionists of the Robert Maynard Hutchins brand. That is not so. The logical conclusion would seem to be that the intellectual non-interventionists are the de- fectionists; not the interventionists. Now for some curtly-put and oft-stated dec- larations about the intellectual's position in gen- eral. First, none of them has declared that the United States has all at once become "a full- fledged democracy ready to fight to insure the triumph of democratic ideals throughout the world." They realize, as well as Mr. Speckhard, that the United States-and even more definitely Great Britain-is still a very imperfect democ- racy. But, not being absolutists or perfection- ists, they are able to spot the greater of two evils (the imminent fascist danger abroad compared with the imperfections of domestic democracy). And they have not sold out the program for domestic social reform. 'RECAUSE the interventionist movement is such a cosmopolitan one, there is a common and dangerous tendency to class the intellec- tuals with the almost inevitable imperialists and militaristic jingoists. The real liberal wants to put his liberalism to work, and he is not afraid (especially in a threatening situation like this one) to associate with these other groups in a co-operative effort, trying where he can to im- plement the program with liberalism. Abso- lutists, quite naturally, have too inflexible a program to allow for such co-operation, and they persist in their traditional negativism: to oppose. Finally, the charge that the intellectual has terests, assuming that he doesn't come into a conflict with the rules for eligibility generally enforced by the University. Nothing has ever been done about this rule, gentlemen, though many of you individually will admit that perhaps it could be amended. It seems to be one of those things that just goes on and on, bogged down by its own inertia, and perhaps to you, unimportance, but believe mr, there are a lot of pretty good writers being kept out of the Contest because of it, and if you are really interested in° encouraging writing here, a not too radical modification seems to be in order. Again, I realize it's a little late to start talking about this now, unless something in thy line of a retroactive change could be rushed through, but there is still next year, and the year after that, and perhaps several years after that, and I know it's your business, but how about it? On reading over the above, I see that quite by accident I have put myself eating a meal in too close juxtaposition to my squib on Starvation Day. And so, just to take the Tartuffe out of that, let's say that I kicked in with supper money, and so long until soon. Ix \ h BE-NCH fLES- r~ t ~.nx S i rph'> 'q LETTER S ------l--------*-- - -, ENOUGH people have commented to us on what they consider to be a lack of balance shown in the choice of Choral Union concerts to make us feel that a column in answer was warranted. The complainants seem to be split DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1941 VOL. LI. No. 116 Publication in the Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices Faculty, School of Education: The March meeting of the Faculty will be held on Monday, March 17, at 4:15 p.m. in the School of Education 1Li Gettemy of East Lansing. The holder must be a graduate of Northwestern High School, preferably a man, and one who is specializing in English or Speech; he must have a scholarship average of at least B. Letters of ap- plication should be sent to B. J. Riv- ett, Principal, Northwestern High 1School, Detroit, with a transcript of the applicant's University record to date, before April 15. up into groups, each of which wishes particular emphasis laid on the typeT of music it most enjoys. We believeI a short perusal of the concerts thatX have already gone by this year willI suffice to still the objections. Let us take them up. THIS PAST SEASON of concertsC and recitals shows that we have had presented to us singers, both as solo artists, and as choral groups, soloists in the fields ofrviolin and piano, three symphony orchestras, ae single chamber music recital by at string ensemble, and a series of thet same (the Musical Art Quartet). All{ this in addition .to a wide range of concerts given by the music faculty., Let's point next to the concerts scheduled for the May Festival. We shall hear Lawrence Tibbett, Jarmila Novotna, Norman Cordon, Suzanne Sten, Dorothy Maynor, Enid Szan- tho. Charles Kullman, Mack Harrell, as well as the Children's Chorus and University Choral Union in the field of voice, Gregor Piatigorsky, Jose Iturbi, and Jascha Heifet , in the respective rolesofcellist, pianist-con- ductor, and violinist, and at each of the concerts, participation of the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra. THE AIM of the series is education- al as well as recreational, and it strives to bring as diversified a group of programs as possible in order that it may satisfy the musical tastes of the many, instead of the few. We feel that the selection as shown in this column is sufficient proof of a well- rounded choice which does a reason- ably good job in its representations. This next should, we suppose, come to the eyes of the reader in the form of a letter to the editor, but as long as we are writing, we shall take this space to voice an objection to an objection. A recent complaint to The Daily columns has been against that part of the audiences at Hill Auditorium which leaves before the informal part of the concert has been deliv- ered, thus annoying those remaining. The objection works both ways. It is true that there are large numbers of people in Ann Arbor who are sincere music lovers, but it must be remem- bered that many of those were the ones who left the concerts before the entire program was run, and they were often justified. Most of those who remained behind were often mis- taking quantity for quality; some, perhaps, were staying on in the hope of getting a better deal at the end than had been presented to them a May Festival Tickets: Subscribers of record to Patrons' Tickets ($12.00 The Alumnae Council is again seats) for the current Choral Union offering the Lucy Elliott Fellowship Concert Series, to whom special or- to women who wish to continue their der blanks were mailed under date studies in the graduate field. Any of February 8, are respectfully re- woman with an A.B. degree from a minded that the "deadline" for re- recognized College or University is taining the same seat locations for eligible to apply. A graduate from the May Festival expires Saturday, the University of Michigan may use March 15, at noon. Unless orders the award on any campus of her are received not later than that date, choice, but a graduate of any other the particular seat locations cannot College or University must continue be guaranteed. Orders from all other tier work at Michigan. Applications ticket purchasers are filed in se- are available at the office of the Dean quence and in due course tickets will of Women, and must be returned by' be selected accordingly and will be March 15. Appointment will be made mailed out about the middle of April April 15. The award carries a sti- by ordinary mail at purchasers' risks, Pend of $300.00. unless fee of 18 cents is included for registratidh. Please address com- Interviews with Katharine Gibbs inunications to, or leave orders at the School Director: Miss Eelen Shell, offices of, the University Musical Director of Katharine Gibbs School, Society, Burton Memorial Tower. will be on the campus Saturday morn- ing and Monday. Any women inter- ested in a secretarial course at the Katharine Gibbs School may inter- view Miss Shell by making an ap-] pointment in the office of the Dean! of Women. Detroit Northwestern High School Graduates: A one-year tuition schol- arship in this University, in honor of Miss Julia E. Gettemy, B.L. '98, for) many years teacher of public speak- ing and dramatics at the Northwest- ern High School, Detroit, is being offered by her sister, Miss Winifred Academic Notices Zoology 32 (Heredity): First exam- ination will be held Thursday, March 20. Exhibitions Exhibitions: The following exhibi- tions will be open at the hours stated below in the Rackham Building: Ceramics and Bronzes from Siam. The Neville Collection. Stelae from Kom Abu Billu. From (Continued on Page 6) RADIO SPOT-LIGHT WJR WWJ CKLW WXYZ 750 KC - CBS 920 KC - NBC Red 1030 KC - Mutual 1240 .KC-NBC Blue Saturday Evening 6:00 Stevenson News Ty Tyson British Sketchbook Day In review 6:15 Musical S. L. A. Marshall NHL Hockey Players Sandlotters 6:30 Inside of Sports Frazier Hunt Jim Parsons Vass Family 6:45 Worldi Today Music Canada Calls New World News 7:00 People's Platf'rm American News-Val Clare Town Talk 7:15 People's Platf'rm Defense Dance Orchestra News Ace 7:30 News To Life World Of Sons of Little Ol' 7:45 News to Life Music the Saddle Hollywood 8:00 Marriage Club Knickerbocker N.H.L. Hockey The Green 8:15 Marriage Club Playhouse Game: Hornet 8:30 Duffy's Tavern Truth or Chicago Bishop and 8:45 News at 8:55 Consequences vs. Toronto the Gargoyle 9:00 Your Hit Parade National Barn NHL Hockey: Gabriel Heatter 9:15 Your Hit Parade Dance with at Toronto National Defense 9:30 Your Hit Parade a Corny Contact News; NBC 9:45 Sat. Serenade Cast -Musical Symphony,-