THE MICHIGAN DAILY iA -..z: -1 ,' '"'). TI' ' ---- ® FL I . Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Contro of Student Publications.n Publishece every morning except Monday during the VUitersty-year and Summer Session. Member 'of the Associated Press Tie Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to t t or not otherwise credited in this newspaper., All rights of repubiction of all other matters herein also reserved., Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as sqeond class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, *i4.00(; by mail, $4.50: &iember, Associated Collegiate Press, 1937:38 REPRESSNTEO FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY - NationalAdertisingService, Inc Collat0Publishers sRejesentative 420 MAs0ON Av.E. NEW YORK, 1,. Y. CNICAGO -. BOSTON - LOS ANSELES SAN FRANCISCO Board of Editors MA AGING EDITOR. . IRVING SILVERMAN City Editor . . . . . Robert I. Fitzhenry Assstapt Editors ....... .Mel Fineberg, Joseph Gies, Elliot Maraniss, Ben M. Marilo, Carl Petersen, Suzanne Potter, Harry L. Sonneborn. Business Department USINESS MANAGER ... ERNEST A. JONES Credit Manager . . . . Norman Steinberg Citculation Manager . . . J. Cameron Iall Assistants . . Philip Buchen, Walter Stebens NIGHT EDITOR: CARL PETERSEN The editorials published in The Michigan" Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only It is important for society to avoid the neglect of adults,^but positively dangerous for it to thwart the ambition of youth to reform the world. Only the schools which act on. this belief are educational insttu- tiofs in the best meaning of the term. -Alexander G. Ruthven. The American Newspaper Game .. . _. HE ERA of enlightenment we are told has dawned upon our country and upon us. We live in an atmosphere saturated with scientific laboratories and multi-million dollar educational factories, with globe girdling wires of telegraph and telephone, with television aid short wave, "truth serums" and inferiority complexes, three cent newspapers, 20 cent movies and fiftycent best sellers, with "Non-stop" Cor- rigans and Bathosphere Bebes. The ponderous catalog of enlightenment in truth, rambles into encyclopedic lengths. But we live also in an age of high dividends and low wages, of Wall Street Croesus and De- lancey Street paupers, of breadlines and crop control projects, of red-plush employes and starving workers, of Kellogg pacts and arma- ments races, of Harlan County feudalism and highr education, of boss-ridden political mon- strosities and the democratic process. The pon- derous catalog of unenlightenment, in truth, rambles into encyclopedic lengths. But what manner of made-to-order, iand-me1, down enlightenment is this, we ask, which coun- tenances such contradiction? What manner of erightenment is it, we answer ourselves, why of course it's no enlightenment at all. What of the laboratories, educational factories, inferiority complexes, et al? What, of them, why they're simrply the means to enlightenment which, for the most part, serve us miserably or if they serve us well individually, accomplish a negligible composite effect on thepattern andtmanner of our living. But are they equipped to serve us better? Of course they are. Why, then, do we starve for enlightenment in the midst of this plenty of communicative facilities. We starve for enlightenment, not because we are illiterate, not because we cannot buy printed matter, no, the cause is more insidious than this. We starve for enlightenment because we are deliberately and maliciously misinformed by our No. 1 enemies of public enlightenment. No. 1 devotee of Mammon and high priest of the status quo-the American newspaper. Power to send the news for one bundred million unsuspecting readers through a sieve of prejudice, power to proscribe absolutely and without exception the everyday reading diet of these millions is indeed a large order, but Ameri- can newspapers don't shrink from large orders. Indeed they live and thrive on them. Put together the influence of Caesar, Tamourlane, Alexander, Charlemagne, the holy . Roman emperor's, add any mighty monarch of history fancy dictates, reckon the sum and we have-withal such a pauc- ity of influence compared to the power of the American fourth estate as to render comparisons ludicrous and virtually impossible. The Ameri- can press gives information to one hundred million people, has virtually every man amoi% them thinking about the same thing at about the same time. Where in history is there a power of this magnitude? Where is there a Mussolini or a Hitler rivaling this colossus sown on American soil. Do we talk of hand-picked news in Italy and Germany? Then let us look to our own glass houses wherein censorship flowers. Why do we speak of the American press as such a unity? Because the American press ,; American scene when our growing country stored away its short pants and settled down after the Civil War into its more mature pursuits of industrialization. And the American press didn't report therise of steel trusts and Standard Oil corporations and Union Pacific Railways and Wall Street banking houses without itself learning something of the golden profits flowing from business on a grand scale. Bigness was the watchword and the American newspapers were watching closely. They soon fashioned their own organizations along the Gargantuan profit- making lines of the business man. Do we challenge the American press without sufficient evidence? Not by a long shot. Why did nine-tenths of the American newspapers support Governor Landon in 1936, though the Governor was overwhelmingly repudiated by the people's franchise? Why does the American press oppose child labor laws and in so doing hark. back to the dim, sweat-ridden days of 18th century child labor exploitation? Why did the American press thrust a knife into the Tugwell Pure Food and Drugs act of 1934, though the evidence of adul- terated foods and quack cures was everywhere before them? Why did the American press refer to President Roosevelt's reorganization bill as the "Dictator Bill" though its provisions called for a- simple administrative economy advocated since Harding's administration? Why did the American press almost unanimously appoint it- self counsel for the defense of Arthur E. Morgan of the T.V.A. long before any documented evi- dence 'in support of either side had appeared?. Why . . . but what's the use, the "why's" can run on into December and, indeed, they have already been exhaustively chronicled by Upton Sinclair, Will Irwin and George Seldes in their respective'works on this business of running a newspaper. The crimes of the American press are becoming obvious even to the readers of the American press. But what to do about it? Panaceas are few and very far between. There appear none applicable to the sores of the American news- paper. Sir Norman Angell, however, has listed four sound measures which would go far toward liberating modern journalism and making it over into a purveyor of truth. Sir Norman suggests: "1. While . . . encouraging freedom on the press . . . amend laws with reference to anony- mity, libel and so forth . . . 2. Make of journal- ism a chartered. profession like the law and medicine, demanding certain qualifications. 3. Create a state or government press,,managed -. - ,by a journalistic judiciary, pledged to the im- partial presentation of news . . . 4. Encourage organized labor to create its own cooperative press . . . (via) trade unions and the industrial cooperative societies." Other critics of the press have suggested: a, small ad-less newspaper at a penny, an endowed newspaper, daily newspapers to be published by the university presses, labor union news- papers, staff direction (Xansas- City Star and Brooklyn Eagle) and municipal papers (Los Angeles Municipal News). Any one ofrthe suggestions appears feasible. And at any rate it is high time the American people insisted on a pure press and newspaper act to stamp out the adulterated, sensationalized and many times wholly quack information passed out by our principal informer. -Robert I. Fitzhenry I;/ feeimr o1, M Ve H-eywood Broun It is a custom with several columnists of my acquaintance to grow plaintive because their contact with the public is so tenuous. They sigh because they cannot see how their master lines are received, because they cannot hear the nation chuckling over some inspired gag. . But they seem to forget' those days when they sit at the typewriter with blank minds, piling pages of false starts beside them until at last they tear off a little essay on the joys of pipe smoking or an appre- ciation of our friend the dog. Only one with stage experience can know how punishing the presence of an expectant audience can be when the performer knows that he has no good news to bring from Ghent. * *,* Stage Experience --- 20 Persons: I remember a matinee I once played to of an audience of 20, which included nine small chil- dren who seemingly had read none of the re- views and ,were in no wise reconciled to hearing a monologue which was not so good-. When I first looked at them they were happy and expectant. In the space of 30 seconds my whole speech flashed before my mind, and I wish it hadn't. Even if the anecdotes had bee most scintil- lating it would have been too little. These tiny tots had not come to listen to talking. They watched me wide-eyed and waited for tricks. The situation demanded that I should stand on my head or take two white rabbits from my sleeve. But I cannot stand on my head. Probably I couldn't get a. rabbit in my sleeve or out, and, anyhow, there were no rabbits. * * * Audience Reaction Punising I directed my monologue at a little' frontier settlement in the second row. Tio of the chil- dren were here, but between them'sat a mature woman. It seemed to me that if I could project my monologue to her the suffering of the chil- dren might be tenpered by a sort of vicarious enjoyment. "Mumsey's just laughing and laughing," each little prattler would say to himself, and per- haps venture a tentative giggle on his own ac- count. But Mumsey didn't laugh, In fact, she was an even tougher audience than Buster and Johnny. And yet that I could endure. The thing which broke me up and made me bleed internally was the patient trustfulness of Buster and Johnny. rT he Editor Gets Told... The English Viewpoint (Editor's Note: The following material was includ- ed in a letter from Allan Swinton author and writer of articles for The Saturday Evening Post and the American Boy. Mr. Swinton is recuperating in Essex, England, after a severe surgical operation.) To The Editor: It seems to me that, of all the lunacies pursued by man in this day, none is greater than that which so assiduously in some strongholds of old notions, seeks to keep American and the British Commonwealth and the British Empire (these two latter are different things) apart, and I do what I can to combat this. Unhappily, into the real strongholds of Anglophobia our voices never reach. It seems to me that a great majority of Eastern Americans and almost all the Houses- though members dare not admit it if they come from the west, for obvious reasons-have lived down the old distrusts. But as you know, in the west there are vast hinterlands where England is still the arch-foe. How' to reach them, heaven knows. The fact, it seems to me, is that the crassest sort of self- interest forces the two entities to range up side by side if they will face the truth. Here in England, attitude toward world politics is completely crystallized. Thanks to the incred- ible clumsiness of Hitler, Mussolini and Co., who have so behaved as to drive the English back-to-back in common cause,,things here are in a supremely healthy state-not economically, but sentimentally. The key to the whole business is, and always was, here. There would have been a different Europe if the masses here had not gone "League of Nations" and then refused, because they did not want to face the truth, to ' admit that it was dead. During that time we were at the mercy of anyone who liked to kick us around. No one in America seems to realize how disarmed and pacifist we were-the masses, that is. The brains always knew, but what could they do? But Fascist threats and policy have done that trick and we are getting ready to fight. We are not going to fight in anybody else's time or ground, but in our own, and we shall avoid it if by any means that may be possible. $ut, try and push England too far, and she will accept war, and all it stands for, and fight it so long as there is need or she has not prevailed. All English- men realize that soon we shall smack Hitler in the eye to see if he is bluffing. If he isn't, then the fur will fly. It has to come, this bluff-calling. You can't fight Fascism with fair words. If war DAILY OFFICI GOP'So onq'toopsT ConquerPublication in the Bulletin isC TOP'tosopsdTobConerof the University. Copy received at The fact should not be overlooked until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. that the Republican party, which only a year ago was protesting vigor- ously and properly against a proposal THURSDAY, AUG. 18, 1938 1 at Washington to pack the courts, is VOL. XLVIII. No. 45 now busily engaged at Albany in All Students who have competed packing the Legislature. There is no in the Hopwood Contests should call other way to describe accurately the for their manuscripts at the English proposed reapportionment amend- Office, 3221 Angell Hall, this Friday,j ment on which debate was begun yes- 8:30-12, 1:30-4:30. terday in the Constitutional Conven- Students who have won prizes will tion. be notified before noon today. Consider the evidence in the case. The five largest cities in the State are Exhibition'of Student water colors New York, Buffalo, Rochester, Syra- and oils done in the summer class in ruse and Yonkers. The counties inns hav outdoor sketching. Ground Floor which these cities are situated haveCorridor. Architecture Building. 8,900,000 people. These counties will .#'_ receive 88 seats in the Assembly un- Extension Courses. Bulletins listing der the reapportionment plan which the courses to be offered by the the Republican party has brought University Extensionl Service during forward. In these heavily urban the first semester of 1938-1939 are counties, therefore, each member of the Assembly will represent approxi- 700.000. Under the proposed reap- mately 100,000 people. por tionment plan these counties will And in the balance of the State? receive 71 seats in the Assembly. Inl The counties other than those in these more rural counties, therefore, which the five largest cities are sit- each member of the Assembly will uated have a total population of 3.= represent approximately 50,000 peo- __ple. In other words, using the five" will be economic war almost as bad largest cities as a test, people in the and leading to martial war once rural areas will have twice as much more-unless we dig up some new xrepiresentation as people in the urban method of exchange. There is the areas. rub: the old system of finance de- It is idle to argue, as the Republi- can leaders do, that this arrange- upended upon a demand that always ment is fair "because territory as well exceeded supply and always needed as population must be considered in new worlds to conquer to keep up any plan for reapportionment." Ter- that situation. ritory is already given adequate con- Now, with the world filled up- sideration in the allotment of seats technically that is-supply completely in the State Senate, where the cards swamping demand, we have got to are heavily stacked in favor of the find some way of distributing that r uralareas, and the same thing ought suppy wthou th by-ourleav ofnot to be done in the case of Assembly supply without the by-your-leave of seats as well. It is equally idle to bankers and the thousand-and-one argue, as the Republicans do again, parasitical businesses, that live by that the allotment of seats on the clipping money to the extent that a basis of votes cast for Governor (the motor that costs $145 to make meth6d followed in the present case) costs $750 to buy. is a more just method than allot- But with all the power there is i4 ment on the basis of population. The the hands of those who' depend for existing Constitution of the State that power on that system, there can provides that allotment of Assembly be small hope. But what is more seats among the several counties shall childshlyridic.lBut hathespmer-be made "as nearly as may be ac- childishly ridiculous than the spec- cording to the number of their re- tacle of an entire world yelling that spective inhabitants, excluding the there must be more foreign trade, and aliens," and there is no good reason all looking at the same time for some suddenly to change the rules of the, place where they can sell, but not game. buy! The plain fact is that the Republi- War will bring chaos, and after cans are attempting to ?:se their pres- that who knows. Peace will bring in- ent majority in the Constitutional creasing muddle until war comes or Convention for the purpose of con- until by some stroke that is impos- solidating their power in the Legisla- sible to visualize a new system of ture, precisely as the President who 'exchange is evolved. I am not a social is so bitterly criticized by the Repub- creditor but I think that somewhere licans sought a year ago to use a pres- cr teditor f 'butig hatDIg-ent majority in Congress to con- in the line of reasoning that Doug- solidate the influence of his Adminis- las follows is the germ that we must tration in the courts. That fact ought nourish if we want a satisfactory to be remembered when the Republi- modern world. cans go campaigning. -Allan Swinton -The New York Times. now available at the Extension of- fice, 107 Haven Hall. Registrants of Bureau of Appoint- ments: Persons registered in the Bu- reau should leave a change of ad- dress notification at 201 Mason Hall before leaving campus. Hours: 9-12, 2-4 p.m. daily: 9-12 only on Saturday. UniversitysBureau of Appointments and Occupational Information. Colleges of Literature, Science and the Arts, and Architecture; Schools of Education, Forestry and Music: Sum- mer Session students wishing a tran- script of this summer's work only should file a request in Room 4, U.H. several days before leaving Ann Ar- bor. Failure to file this request will result in a needless delay of several days. Exhibi!ion of Early Chinese Pottery, at the School of Architecture, Mon- roe Street, under the auspices of the Institute of Finj Arts upon the occa- sion of the Summer Institute of Far Eastern Studies. Th1e exhibition has been extended by requt throughout 'the Summer Session. Summer Session French Club- The picture taken at the fourth annual banquet in the Michigan Union, Thursday, Aug.11, can be obtaine from the Secretary of the Romance Language Department, 11a Romance Language Building. Charles E. Koella. Colleges of Literature, Science, and the /Arts, and Architecture; Schools of Education, Forestry and Music: Each student who has changed his address since June registration should file a change of address in Room 4 U.H. so that the report of his sum- mer wgrk will not be misdirected. Liquor Control Body To Probe Breweries' LANSING, Aug. 17.-()-The Liquor Control Commission ordered hearings in September for more than a score of breweries and beer distrib- utors cited today for "unfair trade practices." Brewers were charged with making presents to distributors and with subsidizing waiters and bartenders in violation of commission regulations. Distributors were accused of provid- ing licensees with beer and 'vending machines at no cost. Among those cited were: Tivoli Brewing Co., Detroit; Eck- hardt and Becker Brewing Co., De- troit; Hudepohl Brewing Co., To- ledo; Schlitz Brewing Co., Mil- waukee; Anheuser-Busch Brewing Co., St. Louis AL BUI constructive notice the office of the 1l - AL JL.L members r Session iw Hull's Speech On World Peace ... Y. i A FORTHRIGHT DENUNCIATION of isolationist inclinations in the United States was issued bySecretary of State Cordell Hull in his radio address Tuesday night. In a speech, obviously designed for European as well as American ears, the Secretary issued the warning that no nation can hope to escape unaffected the developments in the world today. Each day, he said, it becomes increasingly clear to the people of this country that "our own situation is profoundly affected by what hap- pens elsewhere in the world." Freedom could never hope to endure here, he said, when freedom was being destroyed over increasing areas elsewhere. No one could feel his home safe, when' the dignity of the human soul was being denied in other parts of the world and when that denial was being made a slogan under'which propaganda was set in motion and armies were put in the field. The forthrightness of the Secretary's words deserves as much commendation as their wis- dom. In a country where all too often words uttered more than two centuries ago have been made the excuse for avoiding international coopera- tion, the Secretary's words indicate a realization' of the basic principle that international peace is founded firmly on international cooperation and that when the most powerful country in the world eschews that cooperation, peace can be but an idle dream. "It is necessary," he said, "that as a nation we become increasingly resolute in our desire and increasingly effective in our efforts to con- tribute along with other peoples to the support of the only, program which can turn the tide of' lawlessness and place the world firmly upon the one and only roadway that can lead to enduring peace and security." In his speech, which included as directed a denunciation of totalitarian* powers as official United States has yet seen fit to issue, Secretary Hull warned that the whole world is in danger of being "sucked into a maelstrom of unregulated and savage economic, political and military com- petition and conflict." Whether catastrophe can be avoided, he said, depends on the ultimate course of nations-toward military adventuring or the exercise of. moral restraint and observance of international principles, for world peace and progress. Secretary Hull has indicated to the people of the United States the course of international cooperation which is necessary to foster world peace, progress and enduring security. -Carl Petersen Pv aa p i inr ris Does a Sumimer Session student on th-eCampus become, a Michigan Alumnus 0...? THE ANSWER IS Yes! * I He is entitledto avail hemnself of tihe privileges of mnembership in The Alumni Association if he so desire~s. The, initiative should come from him. An interested Al umnus reads THE MICHIGAN ALUMNUS Order Your Subscription Now!r ugs 2 Regular Price $4.00 per year .,.. 26 issues Order from THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION