DACE PFOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1940 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Letter To The Daily Describes -* London During Nazi Air Attacks Dire Straits 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. gntered 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, $4.50. REPREOENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO * BOSTON * LOS ANGELES * SAM FRANCISCO Member, Associated CoUegate Press, 1939.40 Editorial Staff Hervie Haufler,. Alvin Sarasohn . Paul M. Chandler Karl Kessler Milton Orshefsky Howard A. Goldman , Laurence Mascott Donald Wirtchater . Esther Osser Helen Corman. . . Managing Editor . . . Editorial Director . . . . City Editor . . . Associate Editor . . Associate Editor . . . Associate Editor * . Associate Editor S . Sports Editor . . Women's Editor . . . Exchange Editor The British Isles are now being besieged, an event which has repeatedly occurred in their battle-scarred history. However, England has never been successfully invaded since the time of William the Conqueror, and its present gen- eration has been born with a tradition of "back to the wall" warfare that includes the rout of the Spanish Armada and Napoleon's fiasco at Trafalgar. The following letter was written by an Englishman to New York friends who for- warded it to The Daily. September 30, 1940 "A LL DAY LONG we get raid alarms of vary- . Ing length. Sometimes the raiders come over for several hours and sometimes they are driven off in an hour or so during the day. When the official alarms go we are one of the com- panies that carry on with their work. We pull down the blinds in case there is an explosion outside which would send the glass into the rooms, but we have spotters on the roof and if they see the planes directly overhead the private signal is given and the staff goes down to the aid raid shelter. The roof spotters decide when we can come out again. This saves a lot of time as the official warnings are always much longer. We do this to try and keep up output and keep work going in the general interest of keeping up the business of the country. I will now describe the last three nights that I have experienced. On Friday night I went early to a movie show in the hope that I could see a show before a raid warning came on. About 8 o'clock, however, the manager came on the stage and said there was an air raid warning on and all people who wished to leave had better leave now (otherwise they could stay and see the show). I stayed on and when I left the building about 9 o'clock in the dark the anti-aircraft barrage was very fierce. The danger is walking in the streets when the guns are firing as often- times large pieces of shell fall down as naturally everything that goes up must come down. I have picked up pieces of shell 8 inches long so you could imagine what it would be like to be hit by one of these. However, on occasions of this sort I wear a steeel helmet. I went to bed about half past nine and the attack on London continued. One could hear the planes overhead and the bombs screaming down, sometimes very close to the house. The ex- plosions were loud and the anti-aircraft guns were sometimes almost deafening. About 2 o'clock in the morning it really became bad and it seemed as though they were all fighting over my house. I decided to get out of bed and go down to the air raid shelter as the house was shaking with the vibrations of the crashing bombs and guns. I had not been in the shelter twenty minutes before I heard an incendiary bomb just miss the house and fall close by. I could hear some people trying to put a fire out so I put on my steel helmet and ran out to find that the fire was about two doors away. A moth- er and two daughters in the house by themselves were trying to put it out. We managed to put the bomb out successfully with little damage done. About 4 o'clock in the morning the all- clear signal went as the raiders had left the City. They always get away before daylight, otherwise they get caught by our fighting planes. You can quite understand we are not very keen on bringing them down over London for if they fall it means a lot of bombs coming down with them and destroying houses, etc. It is rather like the idea of a wasp getting into a drawing room full of expensive China and you are wait- ing to swat it when it gets in some inexpensive looking place. It is very much the same idea of tackling bombers over London in the dark. After a night of this sort I thought I would take the Saturday morning from work and go out into the country for a quiet weekend in a little village in Surrey. I have some friends who have a country house all surrounded by trees, etc. In the middle of the night to my great surprise incendiary bombs just rained down on' us. We had to rush out in our night clothes to put out the fires. We counted twenty-three incendiary bombs in all and as luck would have it, not one of them fell on the house. One fell within two feet of my car which was in the courtyard. The fires made the place just like daylight but we managed to get them all out by throwing earth on them. Last night five delayed bombs fell in the gar- den and in the vicinity. These are extremely dangerous as sometimes they go off in a few hours and sometimes it may not be for six days. They are extremely hard to find when they fall in soft earth as the soil closes over them. We could only find the one which went off some distance from the house and fortunately in- jured nobody. I decided then to come back to London as it didn't seem such a bad place after all. On my return I found that a building three doors from us had been demolished but so far we are all right. They seem to be dropping incendiary bombs all over the countryside. I think the reason is that some of the Nazis lose their heads when they approach London with the big anti-aircraft barrage and just drop their bombs out in the country and return, as they can run no danger this way. It is all a matter of luck. There are parts of England that are very quiet but anywhere around London seems very lively these days. You might imagine from my description that the whole of London is being bombed to pieces. It sounds like that at night and when you go out in the rporning expecting to find everything in ruins you can go-quite a way before you can find a house that has been demolished and then you see thousands of houses further on that have not been bombed and then find again others in ruins. London is so immense that it will take years of consistent bombing to greatly affect it. Naturally traffic conditions are often-times very difficult, as the fallen houses get in the way, etc., and communications are badly upset, but these are soon put right and we try to carry on as usual. There is no scarcity of foods and everyone is cheerful-at least the majority, and we have the-satisfaction of knowing the losses that are incurred are out of proportion to the results achieved. The above is a fair description of life in Lon- don at present. Yours very sincerely, Eric L. H. Cosby Business Staff Business Manager . Assistant Business Manager . Women's Business Manager . Women's. Advgrtising Manager Irving Guttman Robert Gilmour Helen Bohnsack Jane Krause' NIGHT EDITOR: EMILE GELE The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Bringing Up Nazis.. THERE'S A KID about seven years old who lives tm our block ad who runs around our house almost every day. His parents are German, and the little fellow is be- ing brought up in the real new German style. But one never quite realized how much of the new order hate was in him until a few days ago. We were building our homecoming exhibit, and the kid was there, helping out. The central attraction of the display was an airplane, which seemed to hold a special attraction for him. When we had finished the plane, the kid asked us what we were going to do with it after the weekend. When he found out that we had no further use for the airplane, he said that we should give it to him. And what, we asked him, would you do with a big airplane? His face was serious as he told us that "I'd take the plane over London and bomb it all over." He stood there calmly, blandly telling us that he would use that toy, if he could, to kill English- men. Then as a finishing touch, he threw in a "Heil :Hitler." The heil is not new to the kid. He shouts it every so often while playing on the street;It may sound funny, coming from a little runt, 'but the desire for that airplane doesn't seem sblaughable. At first glance, the thought comes- to mind that there is something seriously wrong in the kid's bringing up. His parents are the cause for that childish theme of hate. Something ought to be done about it Bringing up a child here in the United States with the thoughts and desires of a :junior storm trooper. Right now, the kid stands -a swell chance of eventually becoming the district Bund leader. Call his talk childish prattle if you want, but soon he will be old enough to believe his "prattle." His hate will grow with him and enlarge as he becomes big- ger. His beliefs will be Nazi beliefs and his ;ac- tions will be New-Germany actions. For this, we condemn the child's parents. For this, we must condemn the generation that put the Treaty of Versailles in effect. For this, we must condemn the men who accent hate, who foster racial superiority, who. warp the minds of the common people. The kid is a product of "the new world order.' He is a product of the hate of the last war. He is a typical example of the European youth, living on the hatred of his neighbors. He represents not only the German youth, but the English, Italian, Russian and French youths. His hate was forced on him by his parents; their hate was forced on them by a ranting and raging little man who did not originate the doctrine of hate, but who has brought it to a new peak in violence. For if there is any excuse to be offered for Hitler, it is that he too is a product of the hate and revenge of the last decades. He too runs around shouting his hatred of the English, but he shouts louder than the kid or his parents, so he has a bigger audience. Yes, we condemn the kid's parents. But unless we keep ourselves in hand, our children will one day condemn us. To hate and fight against the new order is the aim of every lover of free- dom. The "new way" is one of regimentation, one of ruthlessness. But to hate the Germans as Germans, or the English as English is to bring the condemnation of future generations down ._.. Letters To The Editor To The Editor: President Ruthven's statement on the expul- sions demands an answer. The American Student Union, as one of the organizations participating in the Michigan Committee for Academic Free- dom, feels itself bound to speak out in the name of the expelled students. The Daily has been sent a series of press re- leases by the Michigan Committee for Academic Freedom which it has failed to print, as yet. In one of them we find a significant statement by Rev. Owen A. Knox of Detroit, Chairman of the committee, pointing out the evasive nature of Dr. Ruthven's reply.+ Reverend Knox states: "Instead of frank- ness Dr. Ruthven replaces silence with evasion. He declares that his refusal to grant an open hearing to the students is in their 'best inter- ests'-despite the fact that it is the students themselves who have demanded a statement of the charges and an open hearing! Certainly, if the students had something to hide they would be more anxious for concealment than Dr. Ruthven. It is apparent that this reticence was based on other grounds." Michigan State College officials in a U.P. dispatch on June 27, which the Ann Arbor Daily News carried, praised Dr. Ruthven for "requesting students suspected of having 'un- American' views not to return next fall." The dispatch goes on to say: "The American Student Union attempted to organize a branch here several years ago, but we found that it conflicted with other student activities which adequately served the needs of the student body. We told them so. They haven't been back since." Why does President Ruthven ignore these statements? Are the Michigan State officials mis- informed? Does Dr. Ruthven's refusal to partici- pate in the open trial belie his own utteran es? How can he declare a case which has never been opened as officially closed? These are questions to which the students of our university and every university in the country demand an answer. This case has attracted the attention of prom- inent scholars throughout the nation. The open- of the American Federation of Teachers, A. F. L.; Joseph Curran, Nat'l Maritime Union, C.I.O.; State Senators Diggs and Nowak; Franklin P. Adams (F.P.A.). All students and faculty members are cordially invited to act as jury. Executive Committee, American Student Union, University of Michigan SRA Lectures To the Editor: I was very glad to learn, from its recently published program, that the Student Religious Association is continuing its lecture series. In the past, the determination on the part of the Association to present a well-rounded series by including even the most unorthodox views has led to its bringing such noteworthy men as Ber- trand Russell and Anton Carlson to the campus. I notice that the Association is continuing the policy this year in having as one speaker the eminent physiologist Martin Fischer. In view of the fact that Dr. Fischer is a scientist, I am look- ing forward to his presentation of "The Nature of Man." It seems that the policy of presenting all points of view on the subject of the lectures is a very commendable one. Such open-mindedness should be characteristic of a university com- munity. - Robert T. Swartz, '41 The City Editor's SCRRqTCH PHD Michigan's football game with Penn here Sat- urday gives promise of being one of the best in the nation. All the newspaper services are plan- ning to send ace men. And it will be broadcast by a couple of big men-maybe Bill Stern and &WPTCR by moscott That slinky fellow came here again this morning and plunked another ream of closely typed drivel on our desk. Here goes : I promised that I'd continue my merry tale of the Essex Super Six named Alcibiades and of three Michi- gan men and a coed. Today's chapter is entitled: "How I Won a Woman in a Raffle." Well, last week, we left our little safari stranded in a little mountainI town. The junk man offered us seven4 dollars but we held out for thirty. After a hard struggle we got him to take Alcibiades for eight dollars. A moral triumph. But he didn't gyp us! After we -sold the car, we deftly re- moved the tires, the horn, the win- dows and an old piece of fungus which happened to be growing out of the back seat. Our problems were not over. We had to get to AA ourselves. And we had! eight dollars. We took inventory of the baggage; - an old pair of corduroy pants, six bottles, a dead mongoose, three bottles, a spider web and six- teen bottles. So we disposed of ,the contents of the bottles and left the baggage there to rot. But we were 700 miles from Ann Arbor. How would get there? There was only one answer-the almighty thumb. But when we reached our decision, one member of our little party shied away. It, was K (for so we shall call her temporarily), who was the "woman" in the party. The other three members of our group' however, thought highly of the idea. We decided we must split up into twos to make the tedious journey. Obviously, there was a catch there. Who would hitch with K? O (for such was the name of male number two) hemmed. Z (the other) hawed. Finally Z made the startling sugges- tion that rocked the globe with its momentousness. He suggested, I quote, "Let's toss a coin to see who gets K." K didn't object. But O, the pride of the economics department, suggested coyly: "Now, come on fel- lows-let's be rational about this thing." By "rational," O meant let him go with the woman. Z and I of course, were violently opposed to any action of this type, so O was overruled, despite his economic pro- testations. K, of course, had nothing to say in the matter. So the moment had come. K was to toss the coin. She threw it into the air. Like a knife (it was a dime) it sliced the night air. Down, down, ,rnn it fell. t landd 1head~s.That (Continued from Page 2) at 8:00 p.m. All members urged to come. All interested are invited. Coming Events Anatomy Research Club will meet Thursday, October 24, at 4:30 p.m. in Room 4556 East Medical Building. Dr. James T. Bradbury will give a paper on "Is A.P.L. a Gonadotrop- ic Substance?-A Clinical Evalua- tion in the Woman." Tea will be served in Room 3502 4:00-4:30 p.m. All interested are cordially invited. U. of M. Flying Club will meet on Thursday, October 22, at 8:30 p.m. in the Union. Plans for the coming year will be discussed, so all students who would like to purchase an air- plane under a group plan should be present. Every pilot in the Univer- sity is welcome. Refreshments. The Beta Chapter of Iota Alpha will meet at 7:30 p.m. ,on Thursday, October 24 in the Seminar Room, East Engineering Building. caI tisurged that every member on capus attend. Alpha Lambda Delta will meet Thursday, October 24, at 4:30 p.m. in the League. If you cannot come at 4:30, come as soon as possible. Men's Physical Education Club will meet on Thursday, October 24, at 8:30 p.m. at the Michigan Union. All physical education students are urged to attend. Mimes meeting of the members on Thursday, October 24, at 10:00 p.m. Important work concerning the Union Opera. League House "Representatives will meet at 4 p.m. Thursday in the All Freshman Women Orientation Advisers will meet in the League at 4:30 p.m. on Thursday. Suggestions for next year's Orientation will be received and discussed. Katharine Pickerill Cooperative House, 328 E. Huron St., announces an Open House on Sunday, Oct. 27, 7:30-11:00 p.m. The public is invit- ed. Inter-faith Study Trip: Students interested in studying the services of different faiths are invited to leave their names at Lane Hall. The first trip will be made to Detroit on Sun- day, October 27, to attend a Greek Orthodox service. Reservations must be made before Friday. Open Meeting of the Young People's Socialist Club to discuss economic policies, Thursday, 4:15 p.m. in the Michigan Union. Seminar in the Bible will be held Thursday, 4:30 p.m. at Lane Hall. Subject: "The background and con- tents of the Old Testament. Michigan Dames: Tea at the home of Mrs. A. G. Ruthven on Friday, October 25, 4:00-6:00 p.m. All wives of married students and Internes are invited. Michigan Dames: First meeting on Wednesday, October 30, in the Mich- igan League at 8:00 p.m. All wives of students and Internes are invited. Women's Tennis Club will meet to- day at 4:15 p.m. in the Women's Athletic Building. Everyone is in- vited to come out for matches with the men's team. Alpha Phi Omega meeting tonight DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN League. Each League send a representative. tion will be framed. : House should A constitu- RADIOSPOTLIGHT WJR WWJ CKLW WXYZ 750 KC - CBS 920 KC - NBC Red 1030 KC - Mutual 1240 KC- NBC Blue Wednesday Evening 6:00 News Ty Tyson Rollin' Home Bud Shaver 6:15 Hedda Hopper Newscast 11 The Fact!finder 6:30 Inside of Sports Bill Elliott Conga Time Day In Review Lowell Thomas " Evening Serenade 6:45 Melody Marvels Fred Waring News Easy Aces 7:00 Amos 'n Andy Passing Parade Meet Mr. Morgan Mr. Keen-Tracer 7:15 Lanny Ross Cavalcade Carson Robison The Lone, Ranger 7:30 Mr. Meek " Doc Sunshine 7:45 Mr. Meek Hollywood Playh'se Good Neighbors Quiz Kids 8:00 Question Bee 8:15 Question Bee Plantation Party Observation Booth Manhattan Midnite 8:30 Sen. C. McNary' Ed News Aced k h 8:45 Sen. C. McNary Eddie Cantor To Be Announced Yukon Challenge