THE MICHIGAN DAILY E MICHIGAN DAILY Advisability Of Entering War Viewed By Professor Hobbs Say It Ain't So Joe! ..................__ 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 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. Suberiptions during the regular school year by carrier $4.00; by mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING 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 Editorial Staff Hervie Hauler . . . . Managing Editor Alvin Sarasohn . . . . Editorial Director Paul M. Chandler . . . . City Editor Karl Kessler . . . . . Associate Editor Milton Orshefsky . . . Associate Editor Howard A. Goldman . . . . Associate Editor Laurence Mascott . . . . Associate Editor Donald Wirtchafter . . . . . Sports Editor Esther Osser . . . . . Women's Editor Helen Corman . . . . . Exchange Editor Business Staff In accordance with The Daily's desire to keep its editorial columns open to all its readers and to present fairly all the opinions on campus, the editors have invited Prof.-Emeritus Hobbs of the geology department to present his views on the current international situation. Other faculty mem- bers and students will follow him in The Daily's columns, so that all groups on campus may have adequate voice in expressing what they believe to be the proper course for this country to pursue in these troublous times. By PROF. WILLIAM H. HOBBS YOU HAVE ASKED ME to contribute for the Daily an article on the subject of the war -as it affects the United States. It is important, it seems to me, to realize that the war is a world-wide conflict, already on in Europe, Africa, the Near East, and the Far East. We may start also with the assumption that in everything save name we are already at war on the side of Britain, and it is likely that we must soon be at war in name. We are, moreover, committed to the defense of the American con- tinent, and have already conscripted an army for this purpose. The Allies, now largely Britai, are receiving and will receive from us very considerable amounts of war material, and we have promised to send all that can be spared. TWO VITAL QUESTIONS await solution and should soon be settled. Should we officially enter the wai' now, and should we keep our fleet in the Pacific so as to check Japan in her purpose to conquer Indo-China, Dutch East Indies, New Zealand, and Australia? The argument is often made, and it is sup- ported especially by those in sympathy with the Axis powers, that we are not yet prepared, and that if we oppose Japan our country is in no condition to defend itself. This is much less true than is generally supposed, for no one of our prospective enemies is in a position to start a large-scale attack upon us. So long as our fleet is dominant in the Pacific-it is now far stronger than that of Japan (1,097,500 tons of capital ships as against 535,000 tons)-and the British fleet in the Atlantic, no effective attack can be launched against us. As regards our war equipment, it is true that we are without modern tanks and are still far below our needs in military planes; but we are building these as fast as is possible, and when the necessary tools have been manufactured, we shall arrive at mass production. It is not only to the advantage of Britain, but to ourselves, as well, that we should supply planes already in stock, for we shall in the near future be able to to secure for ourselves, by mass production methods, the very latest and best models. AS REGARDS FIELD GUNS, machine guns, and small arms, we are well prepared, con- trary to much false information. (In the recent war maneuvers, stove-pipe field and machine guns and the small-arm junk from sheriffs' of- fices were brought into use and widely publi- cized.) Of new 75 mm. field guns we still have 5200 after sending Britain 500 from our used stock. Of new heavy Browning machine guns we have 80,000, and of the Browning light model 37,000, after having sent to Britain a great num- ber of the used Lewis guns. Of small arms we have 2,200,000 used Lee-Enfield rifles in good condition (the Lee rifle is the standard British I i weapon today), 600,000 Springfield rifles, and 52,000 Garand semi-automatic rifles which are to be our service weapons and are now coming into mass production at the rate of about 1,000 a day. As regards our attitude toward Japan, quite apart from our necessary role in the joint con- flict, our whole war effort would be doomed to failure if she were to be allowed to conquer southeastern Asia, since 90 per cent and more of many of our essential raw materials come from that region-rubber, tin, manganese, aluminum, antimony, tungsten, chromium, wool, manila fiber, silk (for parachutes and ammunition bags) and mica. One of our reasons for urging Britain to open the Burma Road was to secure the anti- mony from China. If we were now to enter the war officially, it would be possible for us to patrol the Atlantic coast of the Americas (we now have 125 patrol vessels there), thus releasing British naval ves- sels which are much needed in European waters. Far more important, the prestige of the allied cause would be raised, and would reverberate, throughout the world. IT MAY WELL BE a question of our fighting to- gether with the Allies or of fighting alone; and we have, let us hope, learned the lesson that to fight in enemy country is to risk our soldiers and ,sailors prepared for service, whereas- in fighting at home it is our families who must bear the brunt of the frightful total war. It may be some comfort to recall that our Allies are not in need of armies, but of planes and naval vessels. f "S MY '= ." Business Manager . . Assistant Business Manager . Women's Business Manager . Women's Advertising Manager Irving Guttman Robert Gilmour Helen Bohnsack . Jane Krause NIGHT EDITOR: JEAN SHAPERO The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writera only. The Gargoyle Comes Of Age .. . S TUDENTS YESTERDAY saw a new and better Gargoyle on sale on camphs, and from last reports, the sale went over successfully. All of which is good for the students of the University and also justifies the faith of its editors, for the new Gargoyle is no longer an empty humor magazine as many re- garded it. The Gargoyle is now the result of a seemingly successful merger of fun, service and serious literary effort. a There is still a good deal of the humor maga- zine about the publication, and that is probably a good thing, for good laughs are few and farn between these days. Curiously enough, the Gar- goyle manages to get in some pretty funny jokes, articles and cartoons, many more than the usu- al similar college periodical does. That is one part of the new Garg. But its most important aspect is the introduction this year of the serious literary efforts of student writers. And thus Gargoyle leaves the ranks of humor magazines that are forced to struggle inanely through several months of publication, looking frantically each month for .funny stories and jokes that everyone has heard before. The G goyle now becomes a magazine, a real magazine, one that contains all types of literary contribu- tions. Gargoyle can now take its place beside Perspectives as an inducement to serious young writers and as a vehicle of adult literature. Students will welcome a new and better Gar- goyle that is bound to improve with each suc- ceeding issue as its editors get the feel of the, job they have set out to do. The Gargoyle has come of age. -- Alvin Sarasohn One Good Effeclt Of The War . . . W .VAR, as any paie person will agree, is very nasty business, not much fun and extremely unlikely to have good results. Yet one good thing is apparently resulting from the current brawl in Europe, and we are get- ing a good indication of it right here at the University. We have long realized the need for closer re- lations with South and Central America. but it took a war to start the move toward this rap- proachement.' Now people are talking almost frantically about, and striving hard for, better inter-American understanding. Symptom No. 1 of increased pro-Latin Amer- ican feeling among students at the University is the rise in enrollment in Spanish course Students apparently are realizing that the fu- ture of American business has been forced into channels that require a knowledge of Spanish. IT IS GOOD that we are beginning to realize this, that we are working for pan-American accord. Yet it seems a little pathetic that a war should be needed to bring about this work and that the rise of Spanish as a "friendly" tongue should be accompanied by the fall of another "friendly" language, French. According to the Romance Language Depart- ment's figures, the rise in students of Spanish has been accompanied by a nearly equal drop in French students. This may be practical, but it is scarcely a drop to be heralded with .ioy, for Frenchh has on, been a latiiuage whose suldy Drew Pedrsos RobertS.Alen .: .. ,f- I t-. ]ta t 'niY lf - ' t i'e- " -ALYO FIIL ULEI CINEMA By Laurence Mascott To the University audience, already condition- ed to superb French films, specifically, "Grand Illusion," "Mayerling," and "La Kermesse Hero- ique," last night's showing here by the Art Cine- ma League of "The End of a Day" was conven- tional-conventional in its excellence. And to those who missed last night's per- formance, there is still the consolation that the motion picture will be shown again tonight and tomorrow night at the Lydia Mendelssohn. "The End of a Day" is the story of a home for old actors and the actors who lived inhthat home while still re-living, dreaming their past. Central figures are those of the actors Marny, (played by Victor Francen), talented yet too -austere to have ever won public acclamation, St. Clair (played by Louis Jouvet), the eternal Don Juan, who plays that same life-role even in his old age, and Cabrissade (played by Michael Simon), the perpetual understudy who tried to retain his youth by forever playing the buffoon. Sentimental, yet avoiding the farce that an ordinary director and cast would have made of its situations, "The End of a Day" is moving, powerful, and above all, lacking in the triteness which its theme could easily and inherently have stimulated. The acting is excellent, especially that of the three central characters and of Jeannette, the barmaid, (played by Madeleine Ozeray) while the capable direction is well indicated 1by the swift pace of the picture. The photography and technical work was better than that of most foreign films and can indeed be classified as satisfactory. The dia- logue, however, was typically Gallic, sparkling, clever, alive. An absorbing comparison is, moreover, offer- ed to audiences that have seen both the Ameri- can "Stage Door", with its emphasis on youth entering into a stage career and the French "The End of a Day", with its emphasis on the aged actors, looking back upon their thespian careers. In the French film one of the actors ex- claims: "Oh, the theatre, what a life!" Another replies: "Oh, Life-what a theatrc." And we affix in conclusion: what a film. NOTHING has been said about it publicly, but the Defense Commission has persuaded the Army to make a revolutionary change in its purchasing methods. It will mean juicy orders to hundreds of factories which never had a look- in before. The new system junks the old procedure of advertised bids and substitutes a modified plan of negotiated contracts. Instead of buying shoes, shirts, or raincoats in huge quantities from a few large concerns, the Army will purchase these goods as far as possible within each of the nine corps areas. This means that small local factories will have a chance to obtain a chunk of the Army's busi- ness. THE NEW PROCEDURE works this way: When the Army needs 1,000,000 pairs of shoes, it will not ask for bids on the total order, upon which only a few of the biggest firms can bid. Instead, the Procurement Divisions of the nine army corps areas will each ask manufac- turers in their districts to submit a bid on as large an order as they can fill within a specified time. The manufacturer must also make a state- ment on the size of his plant, type of equipment, number of employes, wage levels, working con- ditions, and other details about his methods. At corps headquarters these offers are opened on a given day and hour, but not publicly as in the past. Instead, the quoted prices will be kept confidential until the orders have been allocated. Each corps abstracts the bids submitted and makes a report to the Quartermaster General in Washington. There the awards are decided on the basis of lowest price-plus considerations of speed of delivery, labor standards, local condi- tions and other military factors. Thus, while price is important, it is no longer all-important in making the awards. PROCUREMENT EXPERTS predict that the new system not only will speed up deliveries, but also will eliminate many bottlenecks by dis- persing production, build up, local industries an- raise the general level of labor standards, since plants with the best standards will be given preference. On the basis of orders already granted under the new system, experts say costs will be no higher than under the old procedure. The City Editor's SCRflTCH PRlD Tom Harmon has evidence that the umpires who officiated at Harvard are philosophers. Or maybe you did see the storm of bad publicity which fell on the ears of the guessers after that performance. * * * Harmon adds this evidence: Michigan has the ball, Quarterback Evashevski is trying to shout the signals to his mates. The Crimson band is blaring away. The Harvard gridders were yelling their heads off. So Harmon asks the ump to quiet the field down. What does the ump do? He tells Harmon to shut up. "You're doing all right as it is," he explains. *h* * w Now w' knIOW why those kids5 were kicked FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1940 VOL. LI. No. 17. Publication in the Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices To the Members of the University Senate: There will be a meeting of the University Senate on Monday, October 21, at 4:15 p.m., in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Louis A. Hopkins, Secretary Tickets for the Ann Arbor com- munity dinner to the members of Company K of the National Guard may be had at the Business Office, 1 University Hall, at $1.25. The din- ner will be at 6:30 p.m., Monday, October 21, at the Michigan Union. The sale of tickets will cover the dinner to the members of Company K and will also, it is hoped, provide a substantial sum for the Company mess fund when it departs next week for a year's training at Fort Beaure- garde, Louisiana. Faculty, College of Engineering: There will be a meeting of the faculty of this College on Tuesday, October 22 at 4:15 p.m., in Room 348, West Engineering Building. The order of the meeting will, be: presentation of new officers and members of the en- gineering staff; a report on enroll- ment figures; changes in curriculum, and routine business. Mrs. C. B. Green, Asst. Secy. Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: No course may be elected for credit after Saturday, Oct. 19. Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: ,Election cards filed after the end of the first week of the semester may be accepted by the Registrar's Office only if they are approved by Assistant Dean Walt- er. Students who fail to file their election blanks by the close of the third week, even though they have registered and have attended classes unofficially will forfeit their privilege of continuing in the College for the semester. If such students have paid any tuition fees, Assistant Dean Walt-, er will issue a withdrawal card for them. School of Education Students: No course may be elected for credit after Saturday, Oct. 19. Students must report all changes of elections at the Registrar's Office, Room 4, Uni- versity Hall. Membership in a class does not cease nor begin until all changes have been thus officially registered. Arrangements made with the instructors are not official changes. Phillips' Scholarships: I!reshmnan .._.-7a - I- s e- - t+-4 - i iml Greek, as described in the bulletin1 on scholarships, which may be ob- tained in Room 1, University Hall. The examination will be held this year in Room 2014 Angell Hall on Tuesday, Oct. 22, at 4:00 p.m. In-f terested students may leave their names with O. M. Pearl or R. A. Pack, 2030 A.H. Wanted: Alpproximately 50 men and 50 women students for the Mich-i igan Sports Service at the Stadium on the following dates: October 19, 26, and November 16, from 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Pay on hourly basis. See Miss McKinnon any morning after 9:00 o'clock in her office under; Section 4. Student Employment Bureau Room 2, University Hall Academic Nhiat ices Seminar in Analytic Number The- ory will meet today at 3 o'clock in Room 3201 Angell Hall. Dr. Elder will speak on "Asymptotic Behavior of the Class Number Function." If desirable, the hour of future meet- ings may be changed. Botany I Make-Up Examination will be given Wednesday, October 23, from 7-10 p.m. in Room 2033 N.S. Only students with excused ab- sences from the June final examina- tionwill be permitted to take the make-up exam. Geology Make-up Final Examina- tions for geology courses given the second semester of last year will be held on Monday, October 21, at 2:00 p.m. in Room 2054 Natural Science Building. German Make-Up Examinations: All students entitled to take these examinations must call at the Ger- man departmental office this week to make arrangements. Political Science 52 make-up ex- amination (Mr. Heneman's sections) for those who did not take the final examination last June will be given at 2:00 p.m. Tuesday, October 22, in room 2031 Angell Hall. H. J. Heneman Political Science 52 make-up exam- ination (Professor Preuss' section) will be given Saturday, October 19, at 9:00 a.m. in room 2037 Angell Hall. L. Preuss Sociology 51: Make-up final ex- amination will be given today at 2:00 p.m. in Room D Haven Hall. Physics 203: There will be no meet- ing today. E. F. Barker. Make-up Examinations for all his- tory courses will be held at 3 p.m. today in Room C Haven Hall. This is the only make-up examination which will be given. All students taking it must present written per- mission from the instructor in charge of the course. Psychology 34 and 42 makeup ex- aminations will be held on Monday, October 21, at 2 p.m. in Room 2125 Natural Science Bldg. Students registering in the Gradu- ate School for the first time this sem- ester who did not take the GRADU- ATE RECORD EXAMINATION on October 4 and 5 must take the make- up which will be held on October 18 and October 19, in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. If any part of the examination was missed, it must be mAde up at the time' desig- nated for the particular part missed The schedule of the various parts of the examination is as follows: (Continued on Page 6) RADIO SPOTLIGHT WJR WWJ CK4.W WXYZ 750 KC - CBS 920 KC - NBC Red 1030 KC - Mutual 1240 KC- NBC Blue Friday Evening .6:00 Stevenson News Sport Review Rollin' Home Bud Shaver 6:15 Hedda Hopper Newscast; Music " The Factfinder 6:30 Inside of Sports Bill Elliott Conga Time Day In Review 6:45 Melody Marvels Lowell Thomas " Evening Serenade 7:00 Amos 'n Andy Fred Waring Val Clare-News Josef Marais 7:15 Lanny Ross Passing Parade Red Grange 7:30 Al Pearce People's Choice Caron Robison Lone Ranger 7:45 Al Pearce It Chamberc Music I 8:00 Kate Smith Cities Service Hour To Be Announced Harry Kogen Orch. 8:15 Kate Smith 8:30 Kate Smith Russell Barnes Observation Booth Death Valley Days 8:45 K. Smith; News Concert Orch. Sinfonietta 9:00 Johnny Presents Waltz Time Mormon Chorus Gang Busters 9:15 Johnny Presents "!Interlude 9:30 Gd. Central Sta. Everyman's The'tre Com'nd Perf'nance John B. Kennedy 9:45 Gd. Central Sta. " Football Revue 10:00 Believe It or Not Winw, Of DEaiuy Canadan News Ray Gram Swing In: 1 5chevc It nr Not Brtin Sneaks News Ace