THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fifty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every iorning except Monday during the regular University year, and every morning except Mon- day and Tuesday during the 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-otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights- of republication of all other matters. herein also reserved. ' Eitered at the Post'Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second.class mail matter.. SUbscriptions during, the regular school year bylcarrier $425,r,sbyseierls5,25e Cr ]Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1942-43 NEW EROSION PROBLEM ON THE FARM FRONT REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BYD National Advertismg Service, Inc. s;'5r CallegePakbkers Representative 480MAISON Ave. - NEE.YORK. N.Y. -S ,t ' n' fr CHICAGO '".84 O R O S LosAGLES " SAN FRANCCOrI 1*#, Y 'j ' ,. i- Editorial Staff Homer Swander . .. Managing Editor ' Morton Mints. . . . . Editorial Director Will Sapp ..,.. City 'Editpr w i.N George W. Sallade . Associate Editor Charl Thatcher . . . . . Associate Editor Bernard Hendel . . . . . Sports Editor Barbara deFries . . * . . Womnen's Editor - d Myron Dann . Associate. Sports Editorr Business Staff - Edward J. Perlberg . Business Manager k G !,+"r FPred M. Ginsberg,.. . Associate Business Manager *-', ;r ' 4- ,r v', Mary Lou Curran . Women's Business Manager x r7 A ,- Cr J :4~--'t. *, Jane Lindberg . . Women's Advertising Manager :y.t :,,: ' 4 z , Jam~es Daniels . . Publications Sales Analyst Telephone 23-24-1 , *-..a lIGHT EDITOR: BUD BRIMMER r .- -... a', V. "t Editorials published in The Michigan Daily Gy \ r are written by members of The Daily staff 7y- and represent the views of the writers only. . LIN YUTANG'S WarA (Because of space limitations, we areable to reprint here only the intro- dluction and conclusions of "The War About The Peace," which appeared originally in "Free World." Lin Yutang, a noted Chinese scholar, is the author of "The Importance of Living," "My Country and My People," and other books.) THE UNITED STATES is now standing at the crossroads: one road leading to a higher and better world order based on equality and cooperation of all nations, and the other leading to world mastery or world domination through sheer military force by America in the exclusive company of Britain and excluding Russia and China and all other countries. These two tendencies of thought are basic; this is the war about the peace. Their conflict is necessary and inescapable, and between world mastery and world cooperation there is no other choice. Both schools of thought have sensibly ruled ' out isolationism after the war as both foolish and impossible. In this war our political leaders make a better showing than our academic writers. On the side of world cooperation and equality of all nations stand President Roose- velt, Vice-President Henry A. Wal- lace, Secretary Cordell Hull and Under-Secretary of State Sumner Welles, so far as their public rec- ord goes. On this same side, I must also mention all New York taxi- drivers and our soldiers at ther front, and Samuel .Grafton, the only columnist who seems to speak about a better world with anything like passion and deep sincerity. The showing on the part of publicists and college professors is disgraceful, and this is the whole point of my writing this article. The deep-seated cyni- cism, the stupid belief in domin- ation by force, the total absence of appreciation of a moral point of view, and above al, the haughty threat of force, in the form of an overwhelming air and sea power with which they are going to police the world for the world's own good, are the general characteristics of such reasoning. On the whole, it is the American college profe'ssor or research ad- visor of some learned institution, rather than the statesman, who can view comfortably the substi- tution of a nineteenth century im- perialism by a greater and more powerful, more overwhelming rule of force. This is the result of his peculiar academic training, which teaches him to be objective and amoral and to rule out all "silly," inexact, immeasurable human sen- timents. I accuse modern Western scho- bout Th larship of being amoral, which is a splendid attitude in regard; to the natural sciences, but downright decadent in the sphere of hunan studies. I maintain that academic attitude, deprived of warm emotions for our fellow men, is a dangerous attitude to teach in our college classrooms. I maintain that this trend of thought has produced a Hitler, and might produce more Hitlers: in the future, wherever this type of mental attitude prevails. I maintain, further, that this method of strict objectivity, use- ful in natural sciences, is unre- liable and dangerous in the hu- man sciences. I maintain that objective thinking in human re-; lations is an impossibility, and never exists. I maintain this, because first of all, in- the final weighing of con- clusions, after the assemblage of facts, the decision is always a sub- jective process, involving evalua- tion of imponderable factors, never reducible to facts and figures. An example of the failure .of the objective method is the isolation- ist position of Charles A. Beard. In the final weighing of divergent facts, to arrive at an isolationist or anti-Axis stand, the emotions not only do, but also should enter into our consideration, or we are debasing the intellect and the con- science that God has givenits. ECONDLY, in the realm of hu- man affairs, psychological facts and factors could never be assessed with anything like the accuracy in the scientific measurement of elec- tric volts or radio waves. Outstand- ing cases are Russian and Chinese morale. If anybody ever took pains- taking trouble to assemble facts, the Germans certainly did. The odds looked all in their favor; but the odds do not look that way now. If the Germans could be wrong, so could we. Thirdly, we all place different values upon such human factors, naking objectivity impossible. The fact that the Japanese are a war- like nation, and the English are a peace-loving nation has a certain significance for me, but not for Professor John Nicholas -Spykman. The fact that the Japanese are warlike and aggressive and the Chinese are peace-loving and es- sentially democratic in spirit should be a deciding factor in choosing our partners for the post-war world; but it does not seem so to Professor Spykman, who only looks upon the map, spread out before him and is in- tellectually intrigued by the sim- ilarities in geographical positions between England and Japan, Peace, Who is really objective, and who can'say that he alone is correct? Fourthly, our emotional bias in- evitably steps in. Professor Spyk- man notes that China's position in the Far East is similar to that of the United States in North Amer- ica. Nevertheless, through personal bias, he thinks of the necessity of creating a strong Japan to check China, while he would never for a moment think of creating a strong Mexico to check the United States. That final decision is emotional and not objective. FIFI'HLY, back of all such fascist thought, is the fashionable de- termination of modern scholarship. Determinism always spells irre- sponsibility, as if we were by neces- sity helpless to create a better world to live in. The taxi-driver has the courage to say, "This world of eternally recurring wars is bad; let's change it." The determinist, objective professor has not the heart to say it, but must say, "It is bad, and will continue to be bad." There is a curious intellectual pleasure in such Satanic predic- tions, but it is not going to help build a better world. The elimina- tion of conscience from Western scholarship has gone far enough SIXTHLY, the world is not so simple as these pseudo-scientists like to imagine. What the unpre- dictable effects of Anglo-American domination by an overwhelming force will'be the best geopoliticians cannot tell us. The normal human reaction against all threats of force, the corruption that will set in with power, and the guilty conscience that follows corruption, the dilem- ma of sending American boys to help England fight a native insur- rection in New Delhi or Calcutta, the absolute certainty of the will- ingness of Russians, Chinese, and Hindus to be bombed to pieces and sullenly continue to resist, the meeting of violence with non-vio- lence by the Hindus which should burn Christian cheeks, the groan- ing and public dissatisfaction with the crushing burdens of taxation for armaments-all such things are bound to follow in its wake, result- ing in a violent reaction such as followed the Versailles Treaty. The advocates of such sheer domination by force have not even the wit to see that such things are bound to happen. In any case, the guilt of arming against Russia and China will ,ie heavily on the American coni- science, and moral defeatism will set in long, before an actual war between the races sets the final and greatest conflagration of the world. FIA YS. WILLKIE: A Squabble All Of The United Nations Regret T was a pretty scheme that Wendell .Willkie and the President cooked up to worry the world a little more about the "Sec- ond Front." In his blunt Indiana manner Willkie made a big noise in Chungking yesterday by demanding "all-out offensives everywhere by all the United Nations." That sounded very encouraging, be- catls Willke left this country on his war tour withtlie unofficial blessings of the Administra- tion. But after the President heard about Will- kie's startlingly clear, opinion, he made a big coiter-ros.--He bluntly told newsmen that Wilke was talking through his hat, acting like a- speculative- poet. He asserted that the accounts of Wiikie's speeches were not worth reading. All that is left now is a mess of contradictions. Willkie is speaking for a large part of the action-hungry people of the United Nation whe he speaks of a second front. The Russians- back him up the Chinese acclaim him; the Britishpeople are won over-arid we Anericans admire hun. - THE PRESIDENT added a new note of con- fision. ' If he must send unofficial envoys, let him instruct them to keep their opinions to theiselves' until he hears them. Roosevelt has maiaged -to destroy any good that Willkie might haVre accomplished. And Willkie made a mess of his trip by giving the President a chance to contradict him. At least Willkie did reflect- the feelings of the-people of the United Nations, Those opin- ions--whether they are militarily correct or notshouldnot have been - brushed off per- fukictorily., Wendell Willkie was not playing with words when he spoke of the doubts in the minds of our allies. -Russia mistrusts us, China is waiting to see results of our over-abundant promises. Does the President think that he has, allayed any of these misgivings by flatly denying what a man popular in those counties says for them? Now, Mr. President, is the time to speak for democracy, for the winning of this war. You did not do that in your statement yesterday. You did not help the people of the United Na- tions maintain their faith in a great victory. - Leon Gordenker NEWSMEN POUT: But Safety Required Stay In Washington HIRTY-THREE Washington news- men, hopping mad because they were not forewarned of the President's junket through this country's defense plants, have dis- yatched to the White House a written complaint. An ominous warning of a tendency to ward "creeping censorship" marks their special mes- sage. In the President's secrecy they see "a kind of suppression which undermines confidence, not alone in the iiewspapers, but in the Government." Poting over. such a matter may soothe the ruffled -correspondents in their grief over the loss of such a sensational news story as the President's tour.,But pouting will not heighten the nation's estimation of their common sense. The trip, planned as it was to afford maximum protection to the President, actually did include one man each from the country's three leading press services. The absurdity of telling thirty- rof +h innnP Atrin and inviting I'd Rather BeRight_ By SAMUEL GRAFTON You can't get away from it, you have to save the world at retail. Wholesale doesn't do it. The four freedoms promise to -free men wholesale, but when Hitler selects French slaves for his factories, he knows each individual man's name, age, address and makes sure he gets the notice. "You cannot Xdistribute slavery through a radio speech. You have to follow up each case. Why we should suppose freedom is any easier to pass out is har4 to understand. When we begin to creep up on slaves as gloatingly as Hitler does upon free men, and clasp them, one by one, in our glad embrace, shouting, "Tag! You're free!" we shall be well on our way. DO BUSINESS WHERE YOU CAN You have to grab slaves where you can, of course. When Hitler found tradedull, and could do'no better, he even enslaved little Luxembourg; It wasn't much, but it increased his volume and kept the overhead down. So, we, too, cannot be choosy. If the best lo- cality for enfreeing men we can find is, say, Martinique, of the West Indies, now run by the Vichy French, then the morning sun should find us loitering near Martinique, whistling disingen- uously, looking as if butter wouldn't melt in our mouths, and pretending to be waiting for a ferry boat. The temptation to jump in, and enfree the Martiniquers ought to be too powerful for us; we should be unable to keep our hands off them; our palms should itch, as Hitler's would in con- trary circumstances. Does anyone suppose Hitler would pass up Martinique, if it were free, and he could reach it? It is not free, and we can reach it. REACH FOR THE TELEPHONE We issue blanket pronouncements proclaiming our aim for a free world. But we don't and my voice is rising, free it. All we need do is do It. If you do it, you don't have to talkabout it. When the ugly rumor that there is a man in Fort de France or Alabama or Calcutta who is being deprived of some of his liberties makes us swear and reach for the telephone, inducing in us the same symptoms that free speech in Berlin induces in a Nazi, then we shall be out of the wholesale branch of the freedom business, and in the retail branch, where trading possibilities are almost unlimited. The Nazis, who -hate the individual, always make sure to look him up. They knock on his door. They want to know what he is doing.-They distribute their burdens by means of a careful canvass, and make sure each man gets one. It is hard for us Americans to understand the indi- vidual terror created in Europe and the world by this retail marketing of Fascism; each of hun-' dreds of millions of people now knows that Fas- cism is no abstract threat to his principles, but that he, himself, the single separate man, with. his own particular bunions, will be called upon and seen to; that a specific finger will wag under his nose, and a specific voice will speak his spe- cific future to him. FREEDOM MADE TO MEASURE Our own wholesale approach to humanity is broad, general, rather blowsy and shiftless by comparison. What do we do to convince the little Italian peasant, in his little Italian village, that we care about him as specifically as the Gestapo agent in the city hall cares about him, with blackjack particularly, and with willingness al- waytno give him individual attention. if only Ce WASHINGTON WERRY* GO*ROUND, 9ND By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Some of the President's close advisers are getting more and more con- cerned over drafting a huge army and the simul- taneous problem of supporting that army. They figure that the quest for manpower is going to get tougher and tighter, and that eventually we may find it a mistake to draft an army of 10,000,- 000 men-especially since we lack the means of getting them to grips with the enemy. White House advisers point to physicians as an example. Today the Army is plucking doctors from civilian life by all sorts of methods, first promising them commissions if they enlist, then threatening that if they don't enlist they will be drafted. Students in medical schools have been taken in as reserve officers, and, in some cases, third-year medical students who couldn't pass the officers' physical exam, are being drafted as buck privates--despite three years of medical training. The goal which the Army seeks is seven doc- tors to every 1,000 men, whereas the British have found the optimum figure to be four and a half. Result is that many small communities find themselves without a doctor, and the situation will get worse. For at the rate of seven doctors per 1,000 men, a 10,000,000-man army will need 70,000 doctors and there are only 150,000 to 160,- 000 in the entire United States-of which only 105,000 are young enough for service in the Medical Corps. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ' The' ('4'in te Pe)n . h r LAST NIGHT we went to Davenport's where we stuffed ourselves with T-bone steaks, cracked corny jokes and bid our farewells fib Hale Champion, who goes to war today. Champ's been around The Daily for three years and now he won't be here for his senior appoint- ment. He didn't even wait for his degree. We can't do anything about the sheepskin . . . but he's been a senior as far as we're concerned ever since his freshman year. He's always told us what to do whether we liked it or not.-And we always did. The Daily has seen some "natural" newspaper- men. - Also some plain good guys. Champ was both. He could sit down at a typewriter and bang out the best damn copy you ever read. And he'd always be talking over his shoulder and crapking jokes with the gang while he typed. He said after he enlisted that he was happy and a little proud to be going into the Army. We're glad he is . . . but we can't feel the same way about it. -Murph, Mort, Will and Sam set up a special United Nations Foreign Legion of all United Nations' refugees; we would issue United Nations passports to all lost, stateless souls. In other words, individual treatment for the individual'c ustomer, a nrincinle khnown tn every (Continued from Page 2) Algebra Seminar will meet Friday at 4:15 p.m. in 3201 A.H. C. J. Nesbitt English Honors (197) will meet for organization today at 4:00 p.m., Oc- tober 8, at 4 p.m. in 3217 A .H. . W. R. Humphreys Phychology 91 will meet in Room 225 Angell Hall. Psychology 153 will meet in Room 16 Angell Hall. Bus. Ad. 22 (Statistical Method) and Ec. 175 (Economic Statistics) will meet Tuesdays and Thursdays at 2:00 o'clock in Room 231 Angell' Hall.t -0. W. Blackett Graduate Students: Preliminary examinations in German and French for the doctorate will be held on Fri- day, October 9, at 4:00 o'clock, in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Buil- ding. Dictionaries may be used. Frederick W. Peterson Mathematics 9, Spherical Geome- try and Spherical Trig. This course will meet in 3010 Angell Hall, at 1 o'clock, beginning Thursday. C. H. Fischer Students in my section of English 297 are to report to me this after- noon between the hours of 2:00 and 5:30 in the Hopwood Room (3227 An- gell Hall). R. W. Cowden Oriental Languages: Students who may be ihterested in a beginning course in Chinese, Malay or Thai language are asked to call at 3:00 p.m. today at 2021 Angell Hall. L. Waterman English 107, sec. 3, TuTh, 10, will meet in 2208 A.H. insteadl of 208 U.H. A. H. Marckwardt New Graduate Students: All stu- dents registering -this semester for the first time in the Graduate School should report at the Lecture Hall in the Rackham Building for the four- part Graduate Record Examination on Tuesday, October 13, at 7:00 p.m.- and also:on Wednesday, October 14, at 7:00 p.m. Credit will be withheld from students failing to take all parts of the examination-unless an excuse has been issued by the Dean's office. Be on time. No student can be ad- mitted after the examination has begun. Pencil, not ink, is to be used in writing the examination. Mathematics 6, Solid Geometry: There will be three sections of this course, one on Tuesdays and Thurs- days at 3:00 p.m. in 307 West Engi- neering, and two on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 4:00 p.m. meeting in' 317 and 318 West Engineering. Geology 11: There will be a field trip Saturday morning, Oct. 10, at 8:00 a.m. This supersedes the an- nouncement at the Wednesday lec- ture. Students should - meet at the east door of Natural Science Building facing the Chemistry Building. C. E. Dutton Upperclass and Graduate Women Students: The following physical ed- ucation classes are open to upperclass and graduate women students: Golf, Monday and Wednesday 4:15, or Tuesday and Thursday 10:30. I Body Conditioning, Friday 2:30 or Friday 3:20. Register at Barbour Gymnasium by Friday noon, October 9. Silversmithing and-Jewelry Courses will be given in the University High, School Shop every other week. One course will begin- Friday, October 9,. 7:00-10:00 p.m. and the other Sat- urday; October 10, 9:00-12:00 am. The course will consist of designing and making hand-wrought jewelry, rings and hand-forged flatware. Fee for the course, which is given through the Extension Service, is $15. There annual Choral Union Concert Series, in Hill Auditorium: October 20: Don Cossack Chorus, Serge Jaroff, Conductor. October 29: Gladys Swarthout, Mezzo-Soprano. November 8: Cleveland Symphony Orchestra, Artur Rodzinski, Conduc- tor. November 19: Albert Spalding, vio- linist. December 9: Boston Symphony Or- chestra, Serge Koussevitzky, Conduc- tor. January 18: Josef Hofmann, Pia- nist. February 16; Jascha Heifetz, Vio- linist. March 2: Open date. March 17: Nelson Eddy, Baritone. Season tickets, including tax: $13.20- $11.00- $8.80- $6.60. Each season ticket contains coupons ad- mitting to the ten concerts, and an additional coupon of the value of $3.30 when exchanged for a season May Festival ticket later in the year. On sale at the offices of the Univer- sity Musical Society, Burton Memor- ial Tower. Charles A. Sink, President Events Today The Sociedad Hispanica, will have an officers' meeting at 4:00 p.m. (in- stead of 4:30 as announced previous- ly) today in Room 302, Romance Language Building. Varsity Glee Club tryouts for old members and men who have com- pleted one semester will begin to- night at 7:30 in the Glee Club rooms, third floor, Michigan Union. Inter- ested men from all schools of the University are urged to try out. Officers are asked to meet at 7:15 p.m. to plan the first serenade and discuss other business. International Center is having a tea today, 4:00-6:00 p.m. All foreign students and their American friends, and any members of the faculty or community interested are cordially invited. ,,