T H E MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1940 i U 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 University year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press The Assolated 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. Subcriptions during the regular school year by carrier $4.00; by mail, $450. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING OY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative- 420 MADIsoN AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO * BOSTON . Los ANGELES * SAN FANCISCO Member, Associated Cotegsate Press, 1939-40 Editorial Staff Hervie Haufler. . . . Managing Editor Alvin Sarasohn . . . . Editorial Director Paul M. Chandler . . City Editor Karl Kessler . . . Associate Editor Milton Orshefsky . . . . Associate Editor Howard A. Goldman . . Associate Editor Donald Wirtchafter . . . . Sports Editor Esther Osser . . . . Women's Editor Helen Corman . . . . . 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: ALVIN DANN The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only.' Michigan Forum - Is It Going Too Far?. .. OMETHING NEW and important is starting tonight at Michigan. The Michigan Forum, modeled after the Union of Oxford University, will sponsor its first debate of the season on current issues. The topic will be, "Resolved, That the President of the United States Should Be a Practical Business Man." The proposition will be upheld by two members of the campus Young Republican Club who will be opposed by two students representing "liber- al" elements in the University. And this will truly be an important occasion for the University, for it means that, at long last, we shall have a public place for free dis- cussion of important issues of the day. The Uni- versity's first excursion into the realm of stu- dent-faculty debate of important current topics was the annual Spring Parley, and it was cer- tainly -no failure. But a great fault lay in the fact that the subjects chosen for discussion were much too broad.. Persons engaging in the dis- cussions often neglected to maintain a strict di- rection, and, consequently, the debates and talks wandered all over the face of civilized thought. Little concrete opinion can arise as a result of such broad excursions into the realms of modern thought. What those Parleys have lacked is exactly what the new Forum, which will be a weekly affair, has to offer us. Topics will be narrow, will deal with specific issues, very concrete is- sues, which are important to us today, and on which we must make up our minds. These For- ums held very fairly with an opportunity for all different types of camput~ opinion to hold forth, can help us to decide what sides we want to take in the argungents of the day. Or, perhaps, after we have heard all these opinions, we may decide that none of them offer the correct solutions to what it is that ails this country and the world. That is also our prerogative as Americans. At any rate, here is an opportunity for us to get, in on free discussion of pertinent topics of today. For instance, right now we are all inter- ented in the Presidential campaign. Is it Will- kie, or is it Roosevelt? And so the Forum will discuss topics in connection with the issues of the. campaign until after the election. Then other important subjects will be taken up. It is I important that we, as students in that rare country which still permits free discussion, at- tend the Forum and try to find out the truth. The Forum can help. - Alvin Sarasohn Patriotismn New, Important . . Wy RITE TO radio station WCKY and they will send, you a free patriotic button for your lapel. Take your. American flag to some drycleaners and they will plean it for you free of charge. Listen to a certain prominent newscaster and you can repeat the pledge of allegiance every night. Except that if you are like me you won't want to do any of these things. I feel almost completely out-of-step with these avowals of patriotism. If I thought anyone would listen I would tell people not to keep pa- triotic buttons like concentrating crucifixes be- fore their eyes, tell them that in listening to the of those "potential traitors" a professor on our faculty warned against? I do not think so. I think that I (and you other reluctant patriots) are doing what we think best for America. All this wave of patriotism, say our leaders, is for defense: America must be awakened to the necessity of arming. The tri-colored buttons, the reiterated allegiance, the constant waving of the flag are employed only to bring unified support behind our national defense program. Are you asleep? those in the patriotic parade ask me. Will you wait for Hitler to trespass on your doorstep before you awaken? Do you not see that a little deliberate pricking, spurring of America's national spirit must be resorted to if we are to be reveilled out of our France-like lethargy? And I must admit that people chide me with these views and I occasionally feel like hell. I wonder if there is not within me something base and selfish that prevents me from clapping for the flag, that makes me doubt the sincerity of all this. Beside the proud, applauding patriot I am apt to feel shaken in my convictions. I would gladly go along in this glorious reas- sertion of Americanism. It would be a lot easier, a lot less wearing, I assure you. This is the overt, evident, manifestly American way. If you pound the drum and wave the flag and wear the red, white and blue in your lapel, then no one can very well argue with you that you are not.stand- ing up for the best interests of America. But as I say, the patriotic parade is one I can- not follow with full sincerity. Even though I am sometimes shaken in my views, it takes but a short time of reflection to bring my suspicions ruphing back. No one in this parade knows where he is going. The belief is that the destination is national de- fense. But how many men are needed for an effective defense? Until a few months ago the general staff of the Army said that a well- equipped field force of 280,000 men could pro- tect the nation from invasion. Later the number was raised to 375,000 to take in all of North and South America. How many men does President Roosevelt want? Two million, two hundred thou- sand. What is to be done with these extra thousands of men? It may be that the President wants a good, safe margin. One million, eight hundred and twenty-five thousand, however, is a very tremendous ,margin. You need flags and patriotism to bring support to defense. You also need patriotism, and lots of it, before you can send American boys to Eng- land or to Asia. Have the paraders heard how the Republican party decided to drop from its platform a pledge that "the blood of American youth shall not be spilled on foreign soil?" How and whom does such a pledge offend? Joe Pugh and his millions? Wall Street? Is not just such a pledge the oil that is being used to quiet the misgivings of the paraders? What is behind this double standard? Do the paraders never suspect that they are being led on blindly step by step? First it was cash and carry, sell to Germany if they could get ships here. Purely business 'transaction. Next it was Bundles for Britain-humanistic, philan- thropic bundles. Then it was conscription- warmly greeted by Britain, and then destroyers. Now it is flying fortresses and loans. Will it not be plane crews next? And then-? The United States Army is preparing for an A. E F. By spring America will be prepared to send men abroad. Is this mere philosophical .fatalism on the Army's part? Is it simply part of the Army's attempt to be ready for any direc- tion the lion of whipped-up public hysteria may spring? Or is this lion, like the frogs in "Brig- ham Young," pretty well guided in hisleap? Perhaps it is silly to think of some force de- terminedly leading us into war. Possibly our swift trend toward involvement is entirely of our own making, a product of our confused search for the wisest way. I don't know. All I can truly see is the motion itself. and I know that today's hyper-patriotism is the machinery of that motion. I know that before I can begin to applaud the patriots' parade, I will have to have a much clearer proof that it is the right way for America. Somehow I have the feeling that when histor- ians-to-come probe into our present rush to- wards war, they will find many ugly sides that we of the present do not see. They did a pretty thorough job of belatedly oe-glamorizing World War I. Remember? - Hervie Haufler The City Editor's SCRAqTCH PAD Robert S.Allex WASHINGTON - Big business members of the Commerce Department's Business Advisory Board got the surprise of their lives at the ban- quet they gave to new Commerce Secretary Jesse Jones. The towering, multi-millionaire Texan has not been noted for his New Dealism. As RFC boss, sometimes he bluntly opposed the White House, and his elevation to the Cabinet met with dour mutters in certain inner Administration quarters. So when Jones arose to address his business hosts, they leaned back in comfortable anticipa- tion of soothing remarks. A few minutes later they were sitting bolt upright in startled aston- ishment. "These United States," said the new Secretary of Commerce, "have been good to us. We have made money, we have nice homes, wear good clothes, have fine cars and can afford banquets like this one. We can look back fifty years, when most of us started, and chart the courses we followed. But we can't look ahead that far and see where we are going. "But there are some things we do know about the future. One of them is that the days of making great fortunes are over. That is fin- ished. Another is that the upper third, you and I, has got to have a more public-minded view- point. We must realize that the welfare and well-being of the lower third is our problem. We are not living in a world by ourselves. We are as much a part of society as the fellow on the other side of the tracks. "His problems are our problems and unless something is done about them the world we know and want to preserve won't last very long. We business men can't afford to be blind, or ob- structive, or stupid. You can't turn the clock back. Remember that." Equally unexpected was the reaction to the Jones talk. His business hosts applauded vigor- ously. Note--Lone guest not in dinner clothes was Averill Harriman, director of numerous corpora-, tions and railroads and former head of the Ad- visory Board. Harriman's old friend, Defense Commissioner Sidney Hillman, joshingly started a subscription fund to buy him a dinner jacket. Army Uniforms Young men who want to be officers in the new Army are finding that the greatest obstacle is the cost of getting dressed. The Army does not provide uniforms for its officers, and the cost at a tailor shop is enough to send them back home as conscientious objectors. For an officer called in from Reserve, here is the list of minimum requirements. It does not' include the "special evening dress," which would add another $105 to the total. E cho Mountains Olive drab blouse (coat) with "pink" slacks ................. $ Overcoat ......................... Garrison cap ..................... Campaign cap .................... Sam Browne belt................ Pnttees ........................... Field boots.... ................ Six shirts at $3.00 ................. Breeches ......................... 60.00 58.00 8.50 3.00 10.50 10.50 18.50 18.00 25.00 Draft Day isn't so far away now. Sometime' November, to be exact. But for Canada it much closer. Their boys go to camp today. in is TOTAL ........................ $212.00 This also does not include a $16 sabre, which has now been made optional. And it includes only one suit of blouse-and-slacks, whereas three or four actually are required. The Quartermaster Corps of the Army esti- mates that $250 would be required to purchase a "modest outlay" for a young officer. Capitol Chaff Nelson Rockefellek, serving on the National Defense Commission, has been, described as a "dollar-a-year-man." "But," complained the young millionaire, "I don't even get the dollar." He is in a classification which gets no pay at all . . . Using the remnants of the Stokowski- selected orchestra for the South American tour, National Youth Administration is staging Sun- day radio concerts . . . Mrs. Lionel Atwill claims credit for Senator Connally's long hair. "I make him keep it long," she says, "because we must have one man who looks like a real Senator." Willkie And Labor From the start of his campaign in the Chicago stockyards, Wendell Willkie has plugged tena- ciously away at wooing labor. It has been a hard, uphill fight. But the gritty GOP standard bearer has stuck doggedly to it and has gone out of his way every- where to sell himself to the workingman. Just how tough aproposition this is, is illustrated by the following incidents: 1. In Lansing, Mich., the Oldsmobile auto management asked the shop committee if it would be all right to close down for an hour, so that Willkie could visit the plarpt to talk to the workers. The answer of the shop committee was that the union had no objection-provided the company paid the men for the time they listened to the candidate. The company refused, and the proposed meet- ing was canceled. 2. Husky, white-haired Charles MacGowan, vice-president of the AFL Boilermakers and Shipbuilders Union, is a lifelong Republican and personal friend of Willkie's. Several years ago, at a conference with MacGowan in the New York .FIRE &WRTCR by mascott Tonight at 7:45 a new idea be- comes concrete reality on the Mich- igan campus. That idea, that reality is The Michigan Forum. The subject for its first discussion is: "Resolved, That the President of the United States Should Be a Prac- tical Business Man." John Huston and Daniel Huyett will uphold the affirmative and William Muehl and Daniel Suits the negative. Our views, however, on the Forum itself are perhaps best stated in the following letter which we received yesterday: "In ordinary times thedwell being of a democratic society depends on the full and free discussion, the ac- tive participation of its citizens in the determination of public policy. Today the issues facing the American people are perhaps more vital than ever before in their history; discus- sion becomes even more imperative than in peaceful times. "Student realization of this need has brought about the development of a new mechanism for discussion on the Michigan campus-The Mich- igan Forum. "Holding its first meeting tomor- row night, the Forum is more widely sponsored than any other permanent feature of campus life. The Student Senate, the League, the Union and The Daily all combine to make the Forum truly representative. In the past, an important part of the ser- vice of these organizations has been to provide opportunities for student thought and expression; now they merge their efforts to make these opportunities a permanent and con- tinuous feature of campus life. "The organization of the Forum and the nature of tomorrow night's debate have been thoroughly pre- sented in The Daily, but we wish to emphasize again the distinctive fea- tures of the Forum. Its two most im- portant characteristics are its per- manence and its democratic control. The Forum is conceived of as a series of discussions throughout the year. Furthermore, it must be clearly rec- ognized that the Forum is controlled by students: (1) The Forum com- mitteedconsists entirely of students; (2) Students at large are invited to participate in the selection of topics for discussion; (3) Any capable stu- dent will have an opportunity to speak from the platform; (4) The main emphasis of the Forum will be on discussions from the floor; (5) Students will have an opportunity to vote on the issue at the conclusion of each meeting. "Organized and operated by stu- dents. the Forum can succeed only with full student participation. tm ,- ,. ,, l .. . ... .. .1.. « i i (Continued from Page 2)2 Payrolls: Payrolls for the first sem-i ester are ready for approval. ThisX should be done at the Business Office' before October 18 if checks are to bei issued on October 31.t Edna Geiger Miller, 2 Payroll Clerk r Students in the College of Litera-t ture, Science, and the Arts, who have been accepted for the Naval Train- ing Program, V-7: Students who1 have been accepted for this training and who will need to be absent from classes for an extended period of1 time, should consult with me at their early convenience, but in no case later than'ctober 12. Students, College of Engikneering: Sophomore, junior, and senior stu- dents who are working for 'degrees in any of the following departments are requested to report .at the Sec- retary's Office, 263 West Engineer-, ing Building, if they have not pre- viously done so. Five-year programs combined with industry; and Combinations of any two programs; Mathematics, or combinations of mathematical and technical pro- grams; Physics, or combinations; Astronomy, or combinations; Engineering-Law program; Engineering-Business Administra- tion program; Engineering-Forestry program; Metallurgical Engineering pro- gram. C. B. Green, Assistant Secretary Social Chairmen: League Houses, Dormitories and Sororities. Atten- tion is called to the following ruling, from the Office of the Dean of Stu- dents: "Application must be filed in the Office of the Dean of Students, Room DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 2, University Hall, on the Monday before the event of which approval is requested. It should be accom- panied by written acceptance from two sets of approved chaperons, and in the case of fraternities and sorori- ties, by approval from the financial adviser. This office reserves the right to refuse permission for parties if the requests are not received on time." In case of women, application must first be approved by Office of the Dean of Women. Choral Union Concert Tickets: A limited number of tickets for the sea- son and for individual concerts are on sale 'over the counter" at the -offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. Charles A. Sink, President Holder of ticket receipts for the Football Ticket Resale may collect their money in the Student Offices of the Union this week from 3-5. Today is the deadline for applica- tions for the Hillel Hostess Scholar- ship, which may be obtained at the Hillel Foundation. The Congress Cooperative House has one vacancy for room and board for this semester. Any student inter- ested, phone 2-2143 or 816 Tappan. Academic Notices Mathemtaics 301, Seminar on Al- most Periodic Functions. Prelim- inary meeting for arrangement of hours today at 3 o'clock, in 3014 French and German Preliminary Examinations for the Doctorate will be given on Friday, October 11, at 4:00 p. m. in Second Floor Study Hall, Rackham Building. Preliminary Examinations for the (Continued on Page 6) Canada, maybe you recall, is the country on our north which has declared war on Germany. There has been much talk that the Nazis will attempt to take over the Maple Leaf government if England falls. So conscription is to be ex- pected. RADIOSPOTLIGHT WJR WWJ WXYZ CKLW 750 KC - CBS 920 KC - NBC Red 1240 KC- NBC Blue 1030 KC - Mutual Thursday Evening * * But maybe you're interested in Canada's draft plans. She is training only men be- tieen 21-24, for only a month's service, and the total draftees will total only 240,000. The military education will be given to gulps of 30,000 men. The U.S. plans hit men from 21-35; we will be training 900,000 in the first year; 400,000 wil' go in the first gulp; and our training period is a full year. , , * 6:00 News 6:15 Himber Orch. 6:30 Inside of Sports 6:45 Musical 7:00 Amos 'n Andy 7:15 Lanny Ross 7:30 vox Pop 7:45 vox Pop 8:00 Ask-it Basket 8:15 Ask-it Basket 8:30 strange as Seems 8:45 Strange as Seems 9:00 Major Bowes 9:15 Major Bowes 9:30 Major Bowes Ty Tyson Newscast Sports Parade Lowell Thomas Fred Waring Dinner Music Caravan Good News Aldrich Family Kraft Music Hall Dinning Sisters Concert Orchestra Day in Rev'iew Evening Serenade Easy Aces Mr. Keen-Tracer Green Hornet Pot of Gold Canadian Holiday Gabriel Heatter Life With Father Miniature Concert Rollin' Home Conga Time News Pancho Orchestra Boss Meets Worker To Be Announced News Football Forecast On Parade Baptist Hour News Ace I I I I