E TWO TilE ]11MA ]DAILY SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1936 "I wn- ' THE MICHIGAN DAILY Official Publication of the Summer Session TI-IF FORUM Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- tion and the Big Ten News Service. 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 paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second classsmatter.tSpecialrate of postage granted by -Third Assistant Postmaster-General.- Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.50, by mail, $2.00. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices:Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York City. -400 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Il. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ..............THOMAS E. GROEHN ASSOCIATE EDITOR ..............THOMAS H. KLEENE Editorial Director ................Marshall D. Shulman '+ Dramatic Critic..................... John W. Pritchard Assistant Editors: Clinton B. Conger, Ralph W. Hurd, Joseph S. Mattes, Elsie A. Pierce, Tuure Tenander, Jewel W. Wuerfel. R8porters: Eleanor Bar, Donal Burns, Mary Delnay, M. E. Graban, JohnIilpert, Richard E. L>rch, Vincent Moore, Elsie Roxborough, William Sours, Dorothea Staebler, Betty Keenan.' BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER ...,......GEORGE H. ATHERTON CREDITS MANAGER ....................JOHN R. PARK Circulation Manager................J. Cameron Hall Office Manager ...-......................Robert Lodge And The Devil Take The Hindmost... L INDBERGH'S SPEECH to- the Ger- man airmen was direct and dra- matic. The surprising enthusiasm with which it was received indicates that it must have been ef- fective to some extent in impressing those who heard or have read it with a vivid idea of the immensely destructive possibilities of the airplane. Yet, some of the optimism shown by Lindbergh seems unwarranted, and to hope for any material progress toward eliminating that danger to come from his speech is futile. "As I travel in Europe I am more than ever im- pressed with the seriousness of the situation which confronts us. When I see that within a day or two damage can be done which no time can ever re- place, I begin to realize we must look for a new type of security-security which is dynamic, not static, security which rests in intelligence, not in forts. "And in the fact that intelligence must be com- bined with aviation I find some cause for hope. It requires more intellect to operate an airplane than to dig a trench or shoot a rifle. The educa- tidn which is necessary in aviation must also teach the value of civilized institutions. "Our responsibility in creating a great force for destruction may be somewhat relieved by knowing we have allied this force with intelligence and edu- cation and that we have moved power further away from ignorance. I find some cause for hope in the belief that power which must be bound to knowledge is less dangerous to civilization than that which is barbaric." The type of intelligence which, aviation has shown is purely mechanical. The intelligence we need now is social, one that is willing to take cognizance of human values. To praise ourselves for "moving power away from ignorance" is ques- tionable in the light of our application of power. We are reminded of that priest who announced long ago that he, in an effort to mitigate the suffering of war, invented a gas which incapaci- tates to a far greater extent than does mustard gas. The point is, you see, that if people are in- capacitated, they won't be killed. The argument is like that of Austin Britten, about which we com- mented editorially not long ago, that armaments are not a menace to peace because they make war prohibitively expensive. Still, we are grateful that someone whose fame has come in a field of pure science should demand of his fellow workers that they raise their heads and inquire into the effect of what they have been doing. We have long known that some of our3 mechanical inventiveness ought to be diverted, into social channels; not only in war has this lag been evident, but in depressions, in a domination of our spiritual lives by industrial aims. Nevertheless, the only way to remove the menace Lindbergh sees is to appeal, not to the human race as a whole, because there is no unity among us, but to nations as units. Before the Germans1 can be converted to disarmament, they will have1 to be shown that the German nation will benefit, thereby. Unfortunately, the same is true of theE United States. For this reason, we believe that although Lindbergh's speech was courageous, in-; telligent and too true, it will be well received but unheeded. Those Oscillating Nozzles To the Editor: Here is how I felt last night after hurdling five or six of those nozzles that oscillate, so popular on the sidewalks of the campus this summer: I think I could kill without pity or passion The gents who put jets By the Library steps Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief, the editors reserving the right to condense all letters of more than 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the criteria of generalaeditorial importance and interest to the campus. Answer To Scaramouche To the Editor: ' Being as busy as Landon when Hearst discovered him, I haven't much time to waste with "Scara- mcuche" in the Daily of Thursday. But due to the fear that perhaps everyone is too busy to an- swer him, I am writing so that he will not feel that he is getting off "scot free," his ideas accepted. I agree with "Non-Partisan" that we want a President with "uncommon sense," if by common sense we mean the views of the "practical" man- in-the-street. There is a difference between com- mon sense and intellectual reasoning. No one can say the newspapers haven't tried to make Landon out a typical American stereotype of the practical man-in-the-street with his tieless collar, fishing pole, and homely pipe. As regards the administration's tax measures, "Scaramouche" might find that they are not so "ethereal and unworkable" as he makes out, if he knew the facts. And for the facts he might read Berle & Means: "The Modern Corporation," and take Prof. Peterson's course on Corporations and Combinations and Prof. Watkins' Money and Credit, rather than reading the newspapers and trade journals. It appears that "Scaramouche" has some rather naive ideas on statesmanship. Diplomacy is bound to step on somebody's toes somewhere along the line. That the New Deal tends toward free trade is something in itself. The Republican adminis- trationsand contradictory platform planks do not point to free trade. But the protective tariff is just another of the practical man's fallacious con- cepts. "Scaramouche's" reference to Roosevelt statesmanship and the war debts is not only naive, but gross ignorance. The war debts were absurd in the first place and can not, and never will be paid! They were one of the big causes for the acceptance of Naziism in Germany today. Con- cerning the release of one Major-General: Does "Scaramouche" know that said army officer had been disciplined several times previous to his re- lease? That the order for his retirement came from Army headquarters rather than from Jim Farley's desk? That the "reeking to high heaven" was just the stench kicked up by our reactionary press? (He might read the New York Times at about that time for the "true dope.") "Scaramouche" limits our progress to the tech- nological in saying: "Mechanically, the American people do not want a return to the Horse-and- Buggy age." Evidently he has never heard of our "cultural lag." The fact that our legal, political, social, and economic institutions have not kept pace with our technological progress, he entirely misses. (Something must be wrong withour edu- cation system too!) Perhaps a few sociology courses would do some good with "Scaramouche" and I am sure Prof. Sellars would enjoy his pres- ence at the Social Philosophy lectures, every Tues- day and Thursday, 7 p.m., A.H. "Scaramouche" is so far behind the times that he doesn't even recognize the Supreme Court problem. For that I recommend that he read E. S. Corwin's "The Twilight of the Supreme Court," and ask him to note that even conservative Dean Bates of the Law School recommends that no judgment invali- dating an act of Congress, shall be rendered unless concurred in by two thirds of the members of the Court. Even Republicans have awakened to this problem since the invalidation of the New York minimum wage for women law. (It wouldn't be a bad idea for "Scaramouche' to read the decision in that case and use some of his common sense on the opinion of the dissenters.) Granting that the Democrats still mean to retain the profit system, it can hardly be denied that they are more liberal than some of Landon's back- ers, (Hearst, Liberty League, etc.) And if liberal- ism can narrow the margins of the excesses in the existing system, well and good, and the nar- rower the better! That there is a place for college professors to serve governments in advisory or administrative capacities is generally conceded. But not so with "Scaramouche!" He has another of the newspaper molded ideas of the common man about the place for "Brain-Busters" and theorists. Men coming from the academic life of the campus are more ob- jective and realistic; they have greater integrity, if not greater intelligence and knowledge. And they most certainly are not so prone to "toe in" to politics. If "Scaramouche" will study the history of the New Deal, he will find that many of its worst policies (and some unconstitutional ones), were not the product of the Brain Trust, but of pressure groups. The NIRA for one was the "brain child" I of the Chamber of Commerce and not of the professors. And is the writer compelled to remind "Scaramouche" that the Republican party has already named its Brain Trust? There is a need for experiment in government today. In these; chaotic times we must experiment if we wish to solve our problems, particularly when we limit the possible solution by excluding certain alter- natives like Socialism. Business and industry are continually experimenting, and if they find an experiment is a loss, they discard and try again. We must try some watchful scientific experiment- ing in government. if "Scaramouche" doubts the fact that Hearst "found" Alf Landon, let him read Oswald G. Vil- lard and Heywood Broun in the recent issues of the Nation. And furthermore, it is not incon- ceivably incompatible with common sense that the man-in-the-street might vote for Roosevelt, for the simple reason that Hearst, the Liberty League, and big business are backing Landon! One further word to avoid misrepresentation- I am voting for neither Roosevelt nor Landon, I only wished to show "Scaramouche's" lack of in- tellectual sophistication, as Prof. Ellis would say. -"Enlightened Common Sense." BOOKS EYELESS IN GAZA, a Novel by Aldous Huxley. New York: Harper & Brothers. 1936. $2.50. By JOHN W. PRITCHARD (Review Copy Courtesy of Wahr's Bookstore) FLESH and skepticism and decadence; man who seeks freedom finding himself (when he exam- ines himself) a slave to vanity and to institutions; a civilization deteriorating into an organization of egotistical voluptuaries; specifically, Anthony Bea- vis, a man of mental brilliance, lost in that world, mentally questing after truth, and, not finding it systematically making use of the escape philosophy and soothing his body with physical pleasure. What then? Necessarily, a solution of the grand problem or complete individual and social disintegration. Bea- vis finds his solution, with the aid of another: "In peace there is unity. Unity with other lives. Unity with all being. For beneath all being, beneath the countless identical but separate patterns, be- neath the attractions and repulsions, lies peace The same peace as underlies the frenzy of the mind. Dark peace, immeasurably deep. Peace from pride and hatred and anger, peace from crav- ings and aversions, peace from all the separating frenzies. Peace through liberation, for peace is achieved freedom. Freedom and at the same time truth. The truth of unity actually experienced.' That is what Beavis discovers, through an acci- dental meeting; and that is what he ultimately practices. Aldous Huxley, you see, is writing in rather a new vein for him. "Point Counter Point," some years ago, flashed across the literary world as a rushing, tearing, despairing expose of mankind dy- ing in a frenzy of fleshy vanity; it was not the only literary symptom of post-war disilusionment but it came close to being the most skeptically maddening of all thatnovelistic genre. "Brave New World," three years ago, took the thing a step farther; it was a profane satire both on the apparent end-result of the direction that civ- iization was taking, and on the Utopias which were being optimistically adumbrated by superficial idealists. In the present work, Mr. Huxley is no longer content to be the destructive critic; his attitude on the present state of affairs is laid bare with all of the devastating Huxley speed and bril- liance, but a new note is sounded in the author's attempt to find a solution. One suspects from all this that "Eyeless in Gaza" is a didactic novel, and those who claim that there is no real license for didacticism in art will be an- noyed. There is no reason for such annoyance. No matter what didactic position Mr. Huxley decides to take, his novels are true novels, and can be so read without reference to their soci- ological content. "Eyeless in Gaza" is, above all things, the story of Anthony Beavis; and as a psy- chological character study its parallels in litera- ture are infrequent. With enormous care, at once scientific and sym- pathetic, Mr. Huxley first presents the picture of the mature Anthony Beavis, a sociologist by trade, an intellectual hermit who quite refuses to allow himself to be entangled in human affairs. We know many such individuals; what is at the bottom of them? Why does Anthony, drawn irre- sistibly in the first chapter to an inspection of photographs that recall memories of many years ago, nevertheless fight those memories; why does he, while having an affair with a woman who is suffering torments because of an unsatisfactory marriage, refuse to speak to her of her unhappi- ness, or to allow an iota of personal affection to pass between her and himself, for fear of dis- turbing mental entanglements? This man is not a scientist for the love of science, nor is he im- passive because of a dead-centre of emotional sta- bility; he has been deeply hurt, and this centri- petality of his is pure escape. Now we go back, by fragments, to Anthony's boyhood, the death of his' mother, the maudlin selfishness of his father, the enormous hurt that was done the boy when his father insisted on intruding his unwelcome self on the boy's reveries regarding his mother. Here was the immediate result: "he wears a kind of armour. Covers up him vulnerability in the most exposed place and at the same time uncovers it selsewhere, so that the slighter wounds shall act as a kind of distrac- tion, a kind of counter-irritant. It's a self-pro- tection." Then, right at the inception of this shellfish psychopathic adjustment, we have the cure for it: "and yet I believe that in the long run he'd be better and spiritually healthier, yes, and happier too, if he could bring himself to do just the opposite-if he'darmour himself against the little distracting wounds, the little wounds of pleasure as well as the little wound of pain, and expose his vulnerableness only to the great and piercing blows." Unfortunately for the small boy Anthony, his father, when he heard these words, misinterpreted their direction. "'How true that is!' said Mr. Bea- vis, who found that her words applied exactly to himself"; and Anthony's doom was sealed. Through the years that follow, light is shed on the high points of Anthony's closing of himself against the world: hurt by fancied insults at school, the spectacle of his father's erudite idiocy and maudlin self-pity constantly rankling within him, later becoming a sort of court jester for a group of patrician blades at Oxford, finally being brought under complete subjection by a morally denatured woman ten years his senior. The crash is subtly approached. At the age of twenty-one, he betrays the love of his best friend and causes his suicide, the whole process resulting from a bet which in turn has grown out of an injury to his vanity. The author does not say so explicitly, but he implies strongly that here occurred the final closure of Anthony's personality from the world of men. Yet, no matter how cowardly the buf- feted spirit of Anthony, the mind of the man con- tinues to wrestle with the situation-not as applied to himself, for himself as an entity no longer is admitted by him; but as applied to the world as an objective study. One is tempted always, in this type of novel, to suspect an autobiographical strain. Such a sus- picion is borne out in this case by the nature of AS OTHERS SEE IT Facts On Education By George Guernsey in the Summer Northwestern. Of all the states in the Union, Kan- sas contributes the lowest proportion to the school fund, only 1.5 per cent, as compared with 60 per cent in Cal- ifornia, 30 per cent in New York, 28 per cent in Maine and 24 per cent in Michigan. Hundreds of schools have been closed and others have beep kept open only by cutting teachers' salaries to, in some cases, $25 a month. The state of Kansas has not util- ized as a source of revenue, taxation on the production of gas and oil, as . have other states. This is the sort of budget-balancer that the Republican party is offering to the people of the United States. Of the 20,100,000 young people in the United States between the ages of 16 and 24, 4,700,000 or 23 per cent are out of school, unemployed, and seeking employment. This is an in- crease of over 150 per cent since 1930. T* r During the fiscal year 1937, the U. S. will spend over $3,000,000 for forage for army horses and only $2,- 500,000 for services for crippled chil- dren, according to a pamphlet pub- lished by the Labor department of the National Council for the Preven- tion of War. The amount spent for ROTC will be $4,000,900---that spent for maternal and child health serv- ice will be $3,000,000. The National Guard bureau will receive $34,000,000 while the Children's Bureau will get $7,714,000. Naval vessels will be re- placed to the sum of $230,500,000, but the Department of Labor budget' is only $24,319,000. Under the terms of a recent bill be- fore the New Jersey legislature, school children would be compelled to salute the flag upon penalty of arrest. Father Coughlin's paper came out against the Student Peace demon- stration of April 22 despite the fact that lie has frequently stated that the last war was fought to increase the profits of Wall Street. About the Peace strike Father Coughlin says, "Let vigilance committees in your school investigate the proposed peace strike in your school. If it embodies principles and a pledge . . . either gather your strength to prevent such a strike, or notify the newspapers the newspapers and the school faculty will be your allies." G. A. Perry of the National Re- public, a "patriotic" organization which spends about $100,000 to en- courage Fascism, is the nucleus of a national network which boasts that it has had 2,000 teachers dismissed for liberalism. Perry travels extensively to contact organizations.of Fascist or anti-Semitic sympathies and the managing editors of Hearst papers, with whom he plans red scares in local schools, and exposes teachers suspected of liberal views. DALLAS, Tex.-After expressing liberal views on social questions be- fore a group of young people at a Methodist church, F. H. Ross, relig- ious history instructor in Southern Methodist University, was discharged. Last Day DOUBLE FEATURE MARY ELLIS "FATAL LADY" and FRANCES DEE "HALF ANGEL" NOWPLSunday SH I R LEY TEMPLE POOR L ITTL E R ICH GI RL' NOW PLAYING CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING PERMANENT work for part and full C LAS SIFIEDtime waiter. Phone 4075 between five and twelve p.m. 17 ADVERTISING WILL exchange home within driving Place advertisements with Classified distance of the University of Chi- Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. cago for one in Ann Arbor for The classified columns close at five sumro197Mahl.Pon o'clock previous to day of insertion. summer of 1937. Marshall. Phone Box numbers may be secured at no 3653. 16 extra charge. _ __ ___ ____________ Cash in advance 11c per reading line (on basis of five average words to line) LAUNDRY for one or two insertions. 10c per read- ing line for three or more insertions. LAUNDRY WANTED: Student Co- Minimum three lines per insertion. Telephone rate - 15c per reading line ed. Men's shirts 10c. Silks, wools, for two or more insertions. Minimum our specialty. All bundles done sep- three lines per insertion. 10% discount If paid within ten days arately. No markings. Personal sat- from the date of last insertion.'isfaction guaranteed. Call for and 2 lines daily, college year ...........7e By Contract, per line -2 lines daily, deliver. Phone 5594 any time until one month .........................8c 7 o'clock. Silver Laundry, 607 4, 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months ...........8c 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months............Sce Hoover. 3x 100 lines used as desired ........9c 300 lines used as desired..........Be LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. 1,000 lines used as desired .... ,.....7c 2,000 lines used as desired.........6e Careful work at low price. lx The above rates are per reading line -- based on eight reading lines per inch FOR RENT Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add FRRN 6c per line to above rates for all capital letters. Add 6c per line to above for FOR RENT: Single room for women. bold face, upper and lower case. Add Second floor. 509 E. Madison. 10c per line to above rates for bold face capital letters. Phone 4546. The above rates are for 7% point type. FOR SALE WANTED - - ____- __..__..._...- - SCOTTISH TERRIER PUPS: A.K.C. RIDE wanted toward New York City. 6 weeks old, healthy, sturdy, splen- Leaving about July 26, 27. Will did breeding. One female, 7 months share expenses and driving. Phone old, all reasonably priced to sell, 3509. 15 1313 S State. Dividend Increases quarter a year ago, were topped off Ic a ewith a dividend increase to $4 a share 5 QO i4 1t Boom from $1.50 paid on June 30. The financial community, which usually sprouts fairly accurate esti- NEW YORK, July 24.-(P)-Busi- mates of earnings had failed to dis- ness sights today swung around to count an upturn of this size. the automobile and farm equipment industries as two representative com- HEAT VICTIM FOUND panies, Chrysler Corp. and Interna- STURGIS, July 24.-(P)-The body tional Harvester, hoisted dividends. The gathering momentum of the of a man who carried cards bearing automobile industry has long been a 'the name James Parks, 65, Detroit, source of encouragement to analysts, was found late today beside highway but the record of Chrysler surpassed U. S. 112 two miles west of Sturgis hopes of many. by Jess Modert, a county highway Indicated earnings for the second worker. Apparently Parks collapsed quarter, equal to $4.18 a share, com- after seeking refuge from the heat in pared with $2.65 a share in the pre- the shade of a small tree. 'He had ceding quarter and $2.19 in the June been dead about two weeks. MICHIGAN REPERTORY PLAYERS preseni JOHN GALSWORTHY'S "T HE PIGEON" with WHITFORD KANE TON IGHT Lydia MENDELSSOHN Theatre Prices: 75c, 50c and 35c Phone 6300 t NEWS .- .. NEWS fi rirr" ar t ~ s -NTERTAIIPENT AFTER 100 YEARS ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO the newspaper was termed a "common carrier of the news". Today the newspaper is an institution-a source of knowledge encyclopediac in scope. IN THE DAILY REPORTS of The Associated Press, the public reads news of the religious, political and economic interest, news of sporting events, news of world affairs. In I brief, The Associated Press Service covers every field of endeavor. Read I' L7, br, 11