THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, AUG. 1 AN DAILY ... . = TOWN & GOWN By STAN M. SWINTON DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I ad and managed by students of the University of an under the authority of the Board in Qontrol of it Publications. ished every morning except Monday during the sity year and Sumra Session. Member of the Associated Press Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the r republication of all news dispatches credited to not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All of republication of all other matters herein also id. red at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Miohigan, a class mail matter. criptions during regular school year by carrier. REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL AOVED,,SING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. N Ew YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO -'BOSTON * LOS ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCO be,, Associated Collegiate Editorial Staff t D. Mitchell . . . M. Swinton. . . Q. Norberg... . . . N. Canavan . . . . . . M. Kelsey ..* 3. Kessler .. . lm E. Long . L. Sonneborn . Business Staff Press, 1938-39 Managing Editor City Editor Women's Editor Asociate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor We're off to Detroit to see Pepite Santini and Benny Goldberg throw leather at each other so a couple of boys on the staff who think this column is almost as bad as we do and have been eager to satirize it will produce the column. We won't see it until it's in print but, knowing our weaknesses, we predict it will lance informality, self-publicity and sentiment. Go to it, boys- you've got something there. CJamLet &Skirt By STAND N. PRINTUM (Editor's Note: All persons or events here por- trayed are purely fictitious, and any resemblance to events or persons living or dead is purely coin- cidental.) flash for our reading public: Janie Schnitzel- baum, one of the who's who and what's what of the campus was heard remarking at the Parrot yesterday that John Q. is now a regular cor- respondent on the Paduca Daily Record-was a time when he was a regular hanger-oner here at the Daily office. * * * Just-received a letter from one of our relative,. in Germany, Baron Von Printom, who writes on his opinions on the foreign situation in German eyes: "Verdamnte Juden!" After a few paragraphs of this, he calms down and gives us the real low-down on Germany's ,stand:. "Hitler is the real man of the people, jawohl, we all love Adolph. Heil Hitler! Hitler is a peace-loving citizen, and has repeatedly prom- ised us that there will be no war, unless some- one else starts it all. Those are the words of our Fuehrer, and who can doubt the words of God? Of course, if any country refuses to be pro- tected by us, we shall feel obliged to send a few men over to convince them, but no war, you understand." "Heil Hitler." Once when we were very young and had a job as counselor at the Less Care camp we met, for the first time, Lou Loulou, then managing headacher on the Daily. What a night that was! After sixteen cokes I recited "Trees" and passed out. At the Bell yesterday we ran into an old friend of ours from former newspapering days. He was on the Daily back in '41, and is now considered ip W. Buchen . . Business Manager I Park . . . Advertising Manager' NIGHT EDITOR: HARRY M. KELSEY The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the views af the writers only. : The People . . 0 T HIS IS A DREAD decade, the age in which the scarlet fury of hatt threatens to consume the world in torture, blood- lust, war. Nation hates nation, people hates people. In Germany a new generation is indoc- trinated with a blind contempt for one of the world's great peoples. The national faith in her "manifest destiny" leads Japan to conduct a murderous invasion of China and win-the world's hate. In the Near East Arab hates Eng- lishman and Jew. In the United States a blind hate of one of the greatest Presidents in our hiss tory obscures reason and leaves its aftermath of bitterness. Hate, hate, hate-the theme song of an age, the elemental, uncivilized, stupid emo- tion which stultifies civilization. And what is the reason for this hate? Propaf' ganda, of course. The lies which a controlled press-controlled either by government or by class-drums into the people's minds. But more than that, it is the lack of analysis. For the people of the world hate because of confused thinking. You hate, you say, the Ger- mans. But think? Is it the German people, the smiling farm youth, the methodical worker, the courageous mountain guide? Of course not. It is the madmen who lead the nation, the evil Goebbels, the power-mad Goering, the barely- sane emotionalist, Hitler. You hate, you say, the English becaues of their blind stupidity, because of Munich. But think. It is not the English you hate but the men who rule England, the symbols of a decadent artis- tocracy. It is the blundering, ill-trained Cham- berlain, the snobbish Halifax you hate. You hate, you say, the Japanese. Think once more. Is it the Japanese, the gentle people with their love of beauty? Or is it the imperialistic war-lords who drive the nation, the omnipotent financial oligarthy, the insane pride in nation? We could go on. But what we have to say is that it is not one another we he. It is those who misrule. The universality of humanity re- mains. We are the people and hate between us is madness. We are brothers, the brother- hood of man. These others are perverted humanity. If we must hate let us hate them. But, despite race, despite nationality, despite class, despite all, we are the people, brothers, brothers in the universe of humanity. That sounds very id(al- istic and a trifle silly to the cynic but its truth, is incontrovertable. And if the world would reA member that which it has forgotten, if, from the confusion of thought, the people should be- gin to see clearly and whole, the flame of hate would die. The very thought of war would be ludricous. Until the day when they do see that brotherhood, our civilzation will be in danger and our very lives in jeopardy. -Stan M. Swinton Pioneering The declaration relative to national territorial claims in the Antarctic, written in 1924 by Charles Evans Hughes, has in it both logic and fairness: The discovery of lands unknown to civil- ization, even when coupled with a formal taking of possession, does not support a valid claim to sovereignty unless the discov- ery is followed by an actual settlement of the discovered country. At present there is a wide difference of opinion amoni interested nations around the world as to the leading American expert on feminine beauty. He has graciously consented, for old times' sake, to do a guest column for us. Presenting The Way We Pick 'Em By N. WENO HOW Back in '41 we used to judge by the shape of the bustle. Now we judge by the shape. Them were the good old days. Thank you, very much, Weno. Heard the other day that the best dancer on campus is one Margaret Nesbitt, who, during the winter, teaches way up at the University of Maine. So drink a stein to dear old Margaret, who is now working for her Ph.D. here. Dr. Robert A. Millikan, noted scientist, told us personally through an Associated Press dis- patch in the Detroit News that the purpose of his projected expedition is to extend the survey of incoming cosmic ray energy; at many latitudes, - to the top of the atmosphere. We ran into Androkoko Popopolious at Flautz's yesterday and he told us, excitedly; "Etaoin shrdlu! !" * ~* * INCIDENTAL INFORMATION: We feel hot today . . . There's a professor in school named John Smith. . Diana Barrett Moulton of Play Production and Repertory Theatre fame, no playing a green (costumed) fairy in Iolanthe and a personal friend of ours, will be (should v% tell?) tomorrow. Happy birthday, Diana . . The Chicago Daily News yesterday had a head- line in it . . . W. R. Hearst is still W. R. Hearst ... . And frogs are usually green and sometimes brown . . . A Light Dawns On Mexico Through the history of our relations with Mexico runs a thread of discord spun from our southern neighbor's sense of inferiority and re- sentment against the Colossus of the North. It was normal and natural that such a feeling should have expressed itself in a consistent endeavor to throw off what the politicians have represented as the heavy hand of northern economic influ- ence. It is this feeling that explains whatever popularity the Cardenas expropriation program has won with intelligent citizens of Mexico. Many of these have been sincerely convinced that, whatever its shortcomings, the policy has looked in the ultimate direction of a freer Mexico. But in the current issue of Economista, Mexi- co's leading economic journal, there is an im- portant signal of a shift in the intellectual wind. A long article by the Mexican Institute of Eco- nomic and Social Studies finds that the Cardenas program, far from furthering Mexican economic independence, has actually made the country more than ever dependent on the United States. The peso, for instance, is found utterly domi- nated by the silver-buying program of the United States. When our Treasury dropped the silver price to 35 cents the peso plunged immediately. The relationship is so intimate, according to the Mexican economists, that it can be expressed by mathematical formula. The Mexican economists proceed to examine the oil seizure policy for any tangible benefits it has produced. They fail to find any. On the contrary, "if, as the government maintains, the oil industry is advancing, then it is advancing toward disaster." Mexico must sell its seized oil at a little over half the world price for oil of comparable quality produced elsewhere. It has to take half of this return in German goods, and since it finds no use for much of this bartered income, it has to act as world sales agent for German products. Since expropriation, the number of - wells actively operated has fallen about 30 per cent. Only four new wells have been drilled this year. Some of the government's moe dissatisfied critics openly predict that before the year is out oil production will not be sufficient even for satisfaction of internal needs. But the coldest water flung by the article upon the Cardenas policy is contained in this trench- ant paragraph: "Public opinion in the United States is very contrary to the maneuvers being made'in Mexi- co to forward illusory economic independence Our government certainly counts on Presi- dent Roosevelt's friendship, but supposing that the firmness displayed by President Cardenas renders an understanding with the oil companies impossible and leads to the evaporation of this friendship-has the finance minister foreseen the consequences that might result?" Ah, yes, indeed. And to this question we would add another, more timely, and more ominous: Suppose that Mr. Roosevelt's administration is supplanted, in 1940, by one not so determined to sacrifice every consideration of international equity to a "good neighbor policy" in which the desire to be neighoborly is all on one side? Such a possibility is calculated to cause hearts of the sternest patriotic "liberators" to quail. Can any observer of political trends in the United* States doubt that this is today much more than a possibility? -The Chicago Daily News 62 Per Cent For Vandenberg The America Spealts poll of Michigan, in the series resembling trial heats for the 1940 Presi- dential race, was of special interest. No state is blessed with quite so many "favorite sons," a novel experience for Michigan, which seldom has had any. The ppll results probably were a surprise out- side the state. Elsewhere America Speaks has found young. Thomas E. Dewey far in the lead as a Republican possibility. In the last national poll, made early in July, Dewey was the choice of 47 per cent of Republican voters, Vandenberg of 19 per cent and Taft of 13 per cent. In Michigan it runs Vandenberg 62 per cent, Dewey 29 and Taft 5. The outcome is no discredit to the colorful Owosso entry but is a notable testimonial to Vandenberg, nevertheless, which hardly can es- cape national notice. The reason for the reversal of form in Michi- gan is plain enough. The voters of the state know Vandenberg a lot better than Dewey. He has been Michigan's servant in Congress. The people of the state naturally have watched him closely and have approved what they saw. It is notable indeed when a favorite son stands so. strongly with the homefolks, on the basis of his record and in competition with so formidable a second' son. Of course, it is a long time until the national party conventions, an observation that may apply particularly to the poor showing of Atty.- Gen. Murphy in the Democratic preference re- sults. In his home state, Murphy was the choice of but 25 per cent of Democratic voters, as against 49 per cent for Vice-President Garner and 10 per cent for Postmaster-General Farley. But this, one sees, may have less to do with Murphyk personal popularity than with the fact that regu- lar Michigan Democracy now has a strongly anti- New Deal bent. The observation about the trial heats being strictly preliminary applies to the poll- results on the main event. These indicated 54 per cent of Michigan voters of all parties "want the Re- publicans to win" in 1940. Similar polls in thO' series thus far have shown Pennsylvania and, Illinois 54 per cent for the Republicans, New York 53 per cent and California 60 per cent for the Democrats. The director of America Speaks, who does not claim absolute accuracy for the poll technic, calls the Michigan Republican edge a "narrow" one, and it is. It hardly warrants the kind o over-confidence that has inspired Republicans at Lansing to rebuff public opinion as to Civil Service and other matters. A better record at Lansing almost certainly would have improved the Republican poll showing. Continued failure. to better the record might produce surprising re, sults by November, 1940. -The Detroit News Engineering Seniors: Diploma ap- plications must be filled out before Aug. 16 for graduation after Summer- Session.B G C. B. Green, Assistant Secretary.- Library Service After Summer Ses- sion. In the interim between the close of the Summer Session and the opening of the fall semester the Gen- eral Library will be closed evenings, but service will be maintained in the Main Reading Room, the Periodical Reading Room, the Medical Reading Room, and the Circulation Depart- ment from 8 a.m. till 6 p.m., with the exception of the period from Aug. 28 to September 4, when the building is closed completely while extensive re- pairs are in progress. Graduate Read- ing Rooms and StudyHalls both with-. in and outside of the main building will be closed until the opening of the fall semester. All departmental and collegiatelibraries, with the ex- ception of the Transportation Li- brary, are also closed during this interval. To All Students Having Library Books: 1. Students having in their pos- session books drawn from the Uni- versity Library are notified that such books are due Monday, Aug. 14, be- fore the impending examinations. 2. Students who have special need for certain books after Aug. 14 may retain such books if renewed at the Charging Desk. 3. The names of all students who have not cleared their records at the Library by Thursday, Aug. 17, will be sent to the Cashier's Office, where their summer's credits will be with- held until such time as these records are cleared, in compliance with the regulations of the Regents. Final Doctoral Examination of Mr. Donald Gordon Thomas will be held at 2 p.m. today, Aug. 11, in 309 Chemistry Building. Mr. Thomas' field of specialization is Chemistry. The title of his thesis is "A Study of Hydrox ynaph thyldip henylc arbi nols." Professor L. C. Anderson as chair- man of the committee will conduct the examination. By direction of the Executive Board, the chairman has the privilege of inviting members of the faculty and advanced doctoral candidates to attend the examination and, to grant permission to others who might wish to be present. C. S. Yoakum. Summer Hopwood Contest: The Summer Hopwood Contest closes to- day at 4:30. Manuscripts should be handed in at the Hopwood Room, 3227 Angell Hall. E. A. Walter. Chinese Students Attention: There will be a banquet of the Chinese Students' Club in honor of His Ex- cellency, The Ambassador of the Re- The Editor GetsTold To the Editor: Your article "Midwesterners Honor Guests at Friday Ball" invites all midwestern states as special guests at the dance. The states are listed with the exception of Nebraska. Look in your geography book and find that Nebraska is located between South Dakota and Kansas. What's the matter with Nebraska? Perchance you don't know: 1. Nebraska is the "White Spot" of the United States. We pay as we go! 2. Our State Capitol ranks as one of the finest pieces of architecture in the United States (and it's paid for)( 3. Largest alfalfa center of the world is located in Nebraska. 4. Nebraska has the richest town per capita in the world. 5. The Government, at the present time, is constructing the second larg- est earthern dam in the world, the Kingsley Dam, in western Nebraska. See you Friday night if you think Nebraska qualifies as a Midwestern State. Midwesterners Sorry, Nebraska Midwesterner/. Afraid our reporter couldn't see Ne- braska for the alfalfa. Nebraska quali- fies; you may come. Kentucky Lost To Roosevelt If. Lieut. Gov. Keen Johnson proves successful in his race for the Demo- cratic nomination for Governor of Kentucky-which- his commanding lead seems to assure-the event will have two points of national interest: First, it is a blow to the Congress of, Industrial Organizations, the John L. Lewis labor group, which was. made an issue in the campaign, and, second, Kentucky's votes at the 1940 Demo- cratic National Convention will not be delivered to President Roosevelt or to his chosen successor without the con- sent of the forces headed by Mr. Johnson and his ally, retiring Gov. A. B. "Happy" Chandler. The election doubtless will be in- RADIOSPOTLIGHT WJR WWJ wxyzl CKLW 750RKC-CBS 920 KC -NBC Red 12940KC -NBC Blue 1030 KC - Mutual Friday Afternoon 12:00 Goldbergs Julia Blake News News commentator L2 :15 Life Beautiful Feature Farm Almanac Turf Reporter 12:30 Road of Life Bradcast Golden Store Black and White 12:45 Day Is Ours Words and Music Fan on the Street Songs 1:00 Ed McConnell Vera Richardson Betty & Bob Freddy Nagel 1:15 Life of Dr. Susan Diamond Dust Grimm's Daughter word Dramas 1:30 Your Family Kitty Keene Valiant Lady Music 1:45 Enoch Light Gardener Betty Crocker Muse and Music 2:00 Linda's Love Mary Marlin Navy Band Marriage Romances 2:15 Editor's Daughter Ma Perkins " Organ 2:30 Dr. Malone Pepper Young " Mel and Jane 2:45 Mrs. Page Guiding Light Book Ends News Commentator 3:00 Minuet Detroit-St. Louis Club Matinee voice of Justice 3:15 Gold Coast "" 3:30 Joe Englehart " toSongs 3:45 Duncan Moore " News Bob Crosby 4:00 Binghamton Choir " Police Field Day Jamboree 4:15 Three Treys " Bruce Becker 4:30 Tower. Tempos " Affairsof Anthony " 4:45 Alic~ Blair " Bob #rmstrong 5:00 Misj Julia Democracy Hollywood Hilights To be announced 5:15 Eton Boys Malcolm Claire Gray Gordon Turf Reporter 5:30 Uncle Jonathan Soloist Day in Review Baseball Scores 5:45 Tomy Talks Lowell.Thomas - Harry Hellmann News Friday Evening 6:00 News Tyson Review Artie Shaw Stop and Go 6:15 Inside Sports Bradcast f 6:30 Calling All Cars Midstream Lone Ranger Fintex Sportlight 6:45 " Dinner Music " Jimmie Allen 7:00 Western Skies Cities Service Universal Music Voice of Justice 7:15 " " Factfinder " 7:30 Johnny Presents " Don't Forget Washington News 7:45 " " Symphony 8:00 99 Men and Girl Waltz Time Plantation Party Musical Varieties 8:15 . - i o 8:30 First Nighter Death Valley Concert Jamboree 8:45 " a o 9:00 Grand Central Lady Esther To be announced Dance Music 9:15 " I" Jimmy Dorsey 9:30 Ripley Radio Extra Hollywood Ladder Congress Review 9:45 to ""toPromenade 10:00 Amos 'n' Andy Sports Parade Graystone Police Field Day 10:15 Parker Family Vic and Bade 10:30 Sports Fred Waring Tommy Dorsey Doc Sunshine 10:45 Cab Calloway Dance Music to Ben Bernie 11:00 News News Ella Fitzgerald Reporter 11:15 Harry James Dance Music " Music 11:30 Harry Owens Eastwood Lawrence Welkt 11:45 Harry Owens st~t s 12:00 Sign Off Westwood Sign Off Dance Music r r. A " Vi Ia' public of China to the United States of America, Dr. Hu Shih at the Inter- national Center this evening, 6:30. Those who have not been informed, please call the International Center 4121-2131 for reservation before noon.- School of Music Concerts. During the remainder of the Summer Ses- sion, concerts will be given under the auspices of the School of Music as follows. All concerts will begin on time and the general public is invited without admission charge, but is re- spectfully requested to refrain from bringing small children. Friday, Aug. 11, 8:15 o'clock, School of Music Auditorium, Bertha Hol- man, soprano. Monday, Aug. 14, 8:15 o'clock, School of Music Auditorium, Ella Mae Burton, pianist. Tuesday, Aug. 15, 8:15 o'clock, School of Music Auditorium, Ruth Skinner, pianist. Wednesday, Aug. 16, 8:15 o'clock, Hill Auditorium, Fonda Hollinger, or- ganist. Social Evenings. The social evenings will continue throughout this week- end at the Michigan Union. Satur- day night, the regular dance, starting at 9 p.m. will be a -summer formal. Admission is 35 cents a person. "Psychology Master's Comprehen- sive Examination" will be given Sat- urday, Aug. 12, at 2 p.m. in Room 3126 Natural Science Building. The last Rackham Repord Concert for the Summer Session will feature the following program: Selections from the opera, The Magic Flute, Mozart; Le Beau Danube Ballet Syn- thesis; Moto Perpetuo, Paganini (Philadelphia Symphony); Through the Looking Glass, Deems Taylor; Symphonic Variations for Piano and Orchestra, Franck :(Gieseking); Bo- lero, Ravel. The Rackham concerts have gained steadily in popularity during the summer and will be re- sumed at the beginning of the winter session. This week's concert will be held at the usual time, Saturday at 3 p.m., in the Men's Lounge. The Graduate Outing Club will have a picnic, including swimming, base- ball, volleyball, and hiking on Sun- day, Aug. 13. The group will meet at the northwest entrance of the Rabkham Building at 2:30 p.m. and will go by car to a picnic spot near Ann Arbor. Those with cars are urged to bring them, and they will be repaid for expense incurred. All graduate students and faculty mem- See BOB GACH for Everything photographic Nickels Arcade bers are invited. meeting regardless Renaissance Dinner: The Gradu- ate Conference on Renaissance Stu- dies will close on Monday, Aug. 14, with a dinner at the Michigan League at 6:30 p.m., followed by an evening of Renaissance music in the Rackham Building. Reservations for the dinner must be made at the Eng- lish Office, Angell Hall, by 10 a.m., Saturday, Aug. 12. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received notice of the following examinations to be given by the Civil Service Department of the Michigan Unemployment Compensation Com- mission in Detroit. Last date for fil- ing application is noted in each case: Unemployment Claims Referee III, salary range: $250-310, Aug. 16. Employment and Claims Branch Managers I, II, III, salary range: $150-310, Aug. 30. Complete announcements on file at the University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Informa- tion, 201 Mason Hall. Office hours: 9-12 and 2-4. University Bureaus of Appoint- ments and Occupational Infor- mation. To Uphold Hatch Law WASHINGTON, Aug. 10.-(/P)- Attorney General Murphy said today that the Justice Department would act in "good faith" and seek to ad- here to the intention of Congress when interpreting the Hatch Law re- stricting political activities by gov- ernment employes. ---- Last Times Today - Two Features Warner Bros' Feud-t rn, Action- TrIlMer There will be a of the weather. 4 I * GLORIA DICKSON . DENNIS MORGAN - MARIE WILSON LARRY WILLIAMS.SHEILA BROMLEY And "The Gracie Allen Murder Case" SATURDAY "The Kid From Kokomo" a I I ~ SHOWS DAILY AT 2- 4 - 7-9 P.M. Now Playing. ! I 11:1h No war, says Rome gossip, until ginio Gayda returns from vacation. should retire him, with full pay. * * * Editor Vir- The world THE BUMSTEADS ARE IN TIHE COUNTRY NOW! The public display of old-fashioned penny banks by a Boston savings bank will remind many of the time when people looked upon a penny as Benjamin Franklin did. -Christian Science Monitor I M WFU-L.3' M.. 7 iffl 1 1 Umm XIMM