THE MICHTGAN lTILY THURSDlAY, JULY 25, 1 IE MICHIGAN DAILY Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the Uiiversity year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press. The Assolated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it. or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein also rserved. Entered at the Post -Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class mail matter, subcriptions during the regular school year by carrier 4.00; by mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL. ADVS .fNG DVy National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Represenative 4O MADisON AVE. NEW Yorn, N. Y. ChICAGO BosToR * Lov ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1939-40 Editorial Staff Managing Editor ... ........Carl Petersen City Editor.............Norman A. Schorr Associate Editors,..........Harry M. Kelsey, Karl Kessler, Albert P. Blau- stein, Morton C. Jampel, Su- zanne Potter. Business Staff Business Manager ............ Jane E. Mowers Assistant Manager ........... Irving Guttman NIGHT EDITOR: NORMAN A. SCHORR The 'Nazi Way' In Action . T HE NOTION that defense of the "American way" begins only at "the water's edge" still immobilizes too large a body of public opinion in the United States. Some, day, and the sooner the better, Americans will awake to implications of Nazi military success which are now only vaguely felt by many. To understand the "Nazi way" one need only watch the methods by which the "new order" is imposed, on much of Europe, including coun- tries which have not even been invaded by Nazi armies. The Christian Science Monitor's Rome correspondent reports that among the various aims by which the Axis Powers would re-order Europe are (1) disarmament of the Danube States to a point where resistance to the "new order" would be impossible for them, and (2) the revamping of their governments along to- talitarian lines to make possible the "co-opera- tion" which the dictators demand. WJHAT THIS MEANS to the peoples in coun- tries which come under the "new order" is tragically illustrated in France. The French now have a totalitarian government. Een a plebiscite-after the event-will not express the will of free Frenchmen. For the French people have been, for the moment at least, deprived of the. weapons of freedom. Who will debate the questions to be voted on in a plebiscite? Internal divisions which made Nazi military victory possible in France are being exploited by the Nazis in other countries where their mili- tary forces have never set foot. As in France, so in the Balkan States, are groups who believe their interests will be served by the extension of the Nazi way. Sometimes these are groups of the extreme "left," sometimes of the "right." They include persons who seek the establish- ment of socialism by a short cut: the dictator method. They include others who seek safe- guards against discontented elements of their own populations. NAZI MILITARY SUCCESSES enhance the prestige of such groups wherever they exist, and increase the power of these groups to gain their ends through terrorism. Thus the rule over majorities by minorities is extended, and the voice of the peoples is silenced by censor- ship imposed from within,. but exploited from without. Even in the United States there are groups and individuals who imagine their interests lie in the application of increasingly authoritarian concepts of government. Should Nazism break down the last resistance to-it in Europe its in- fluence could. no longer be confined to Europe. Its intrigues already are felt in Latin America. Americans would find it increasingly difficult to suppress totalitarian spokesmen if the "new order" for Europe should be seized by world autocracy as a base for the new "world order" envisaged in German-Japanese circles. Sub- sidies would promote totalitarian projects, and their representatives would benefit by every immunity that joint diplomatic pressures on the United States could procure. Americans need not fear such developments if they are awake. They can guard against them. If they see how other peoples have been divided, they can plan defenses of their own unity. But they must understand that totalitarianism is a world phenomenon, and is seeking a world, not a single country or even continent, in which to operate. - Christian Science Monitor The Straight Dope By Himself Today's guest columnist is Albert J. Webber to its logical conclusion, namely, the significance class of '42. We do not know Mr. Webber and we o do not understand his column but he says it is in of the fact. support of Wendell Willkie. It is indubitably writ- , ROOSEVELT'S liberalism is a kind of ten in English and without any great degree of censorable profanity. In these particulars it stands guiding philosophy acquired through con- out from the rest of the epistles so far received. tacts in politics and education. It is rather o - Besides we believe in giving a man enough rope. vious that he never learned to soak the rich at Its all yours Mr. Webber. home. He is a true idealist whose liberalism T HE BLANKET INVITATION to the campus has its source in literature and in the minds of concerning Willkie holds most intriguing his associates. There can be no doubt that possibilities. We are -invited to write a column Roosevelt is a brilliant man. His chief difficulty about a man concerning whom the sole known is pulling hard-headed politicians up to his fact is that he is the Republican candidate for intellectual level. the fall election. However, we Republicans on campus, both of us, decided that since you had mr. ir kie, howeelarnedhs libe stuc yor nck- utit oul be n ecelent ism first hand through hard knocks and the stuck your neck out, it would be an excellent good old American tradition of rising opportunity to stifle one New Dealer before the through the ranks. His association with Wall avalanche sweeps FDR back into office next Street has not apparently altered it. His fall. It is good military strategy to kill off as fight over the TVA, which might be consid- many of the enemy as possible before the finae victry s wo. I isnt qite o seet heneed reactionary in some quarters, came victory is won. . It isn't quite so sweet thenfrom loyalty to a cause, from responsibility Perhaps it would be best to begin by attempt- to others. ('Tis privately rumored that he ing to clarify some of the basic issues raised disliked the whole affair because it ran con- by the present campaign. The question is no trary to some basic ideas on public utilities.) longer oie of whether or not the country will Judging from this, it would not be hard to be conservative or liberal. It is simply what assume deeper roots for his beliefs than brand of liberalism will you have, Rooseveltian those of the President. I have been asked, or Willkien? It is practically axiomatic that "How do you know Willkie is a liberal? you don't be an American without being a liberal. What has he ever done to- prove it?" All this country has or does stand for is free thinking. The Declaration of Independence was To this there is no certain answer. We are and is one of the great radical documents of dealing with a dark horse who has never been history. Even the good old DAR is the descend- in public life before. But the fact remains that ant of a band of terrible revolutionaries. the old guard of the party put up a desperate What was it other than the spirit of revolt fight to keep him from being nominated. An and free thinking that led men to these shores accolade from Hoover is tantamount to mem- in the first place? Surely it was not conserva- bership in the Sisters of Suppression. Further- tism that caused men and women to turn their more, to evaluate the work that Willkie has done prairie schooners toward the setting sun in the is difficult because of his lack of appearance in last century. Was it for the continuation of the politics. He may be an able administrator, but existing order that Robert E. Lee took up arms so is Roosevelt. against his own country? Or for that matter, why did Washington cross the Delaware? AS HAS PROBABLY been surmised long ago, I oppose Roosevelt on purely negative We prate a lot about our conservatism, grounds. There is need now to wipe the slate but in reality, isn't it just a lesser degree of clean and consolidate the gains of the last eight liberalism? Our civilization is as yet very years. We have tried to do since 1932 what young; progress is the law of life for the other countries of the world have been working young. In our senescense we can sit back on since 1900. We've got to find out where we and be crotchety about new ideas. But that stand and what comes next. It is highly im- will not be for more than a decade of cen- probable that Willkie would change any of the turies. President's basic reforms. His real service would To get back to the original proposition, that be to put in working order these momentous osevetadkWillierrent troositypeof, a social changes so that after a year or two of Roosevelt and Willkie represent two types of respite we can continue. liberalism, the question is why choose one overr eoweca rasontinurc the other. The answer is that Willkie's liberalism Moreover. I fear a split in the Democratic stems from something deeper than does that party, should be President be re-elected. In of FDR. this time of crisis and uncertainty we need, Mr. Malcolm Bingay of the Detroit Free Press above all, cooperation and understanding. Even often manages to give birth to a bit of clear worse would be a split in the country as a whole. thinking in between prejudices. One of these "A house divided against itself lucid moments appeared last week. Bingay When November rolls around the Republicans pointed out the apparent reversal of roles of will be wondering why the world is so full of the candidates in this campaign. Roosevelt, fools and Democrats and the Democrats will be the aristocrat of the Hudson River Valley, car- quite certain that all the Tories didn't go back rying the banner for the liberal party, while to England in 1776; but out of the haze will Willkie, the grass roots liberal from the Midwest come one question: Which of two roads will parades under the torch of conservatism. Bin- the American people take to arrive at the same gay neglected, however, to follow the thesis out end? Washington Merry- Go-Round Grin And Bear It 0 s. By Lichty m , \ I .- - - .5--.2 - L4. S- Re g v.s. pat one.All Eta Re. -2 "Well, if we're not going to buy, we may as well look at something more expensive!" - -- I On Friday, July 26, at1 room 231 of Angell Hall,] man Wilson of Wayne will demonstrate the use{ pictures in the teaching speaking. 11 a.m. in Mr. Sher- University of motion of public for the Master of Music degree. Helen Byrn of Ann Arbor will play the accompaniments. "What a Life" by Clifford Gold- smith .will be given at 8:30 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Other performances will be given on tonight and Friday and Saturday nights. This is the fifth production of the Michigan Repertory Players of the Department of Speech. Tick- ets are available at the box-office (phone 6300); prices are 75c, 50c and 35c. W ASHINGTON-Not many people knew it, but Andrew Mellon's Aluminum Corpora- tion of America was one of the U.S. concerns cooperating with Germany to maintain high prices on certain raw materials necessary for national defense. The Aluminum Corporation controlled the supply of magnesium for the United States. This metal is used as an alloy in substitute for aluminum in the manufacture of airplane parts. It is absolutely essential to the airplane indus- try. Yet the Magnesium Development Com- pany, jointly owned by the Aluminum Corpora- tion of America and the I. G. Farbenindustrie of Germany, has enjoyed virtually a world mo- nopoly of this metal. The I. G. Farbenindustrie, of course, is now completely Nazified and dominated by the Ger- man Government. Under the joint control, Mr. Mellon's company in the United States agreed to produce only 2,000 tons of magnesium a year, while Mr. Hit- .er's company in Germany produced 10,000 tons annually. As a result, prices were high. Not long ago, the Department of Justice be- gan to probe the monopoly holdings of raw ma- terials and the degree of cooperation existing between American firms and German. Details of this probe were published in The Washington Merry-Go-Round. The other day, John W. Davis, attorney fob the Aluminum Corporation of America, came in to see Assistant Attorney General Thurman Arnold, who has done more to reduce prices than any other man in America, and promised him the full cooperation of his client. He said the Aluminum Corporation would be glad to pro- duce magnesium for national defense purposes, and cooperate in every other way possible. Mother Knows Best THE MORNING AFTER the Democratic con- vention nominated the President for a third term, Jim Farley called up his young son, Jimmy, at a camp in New Hampshire. "How'you, champ," he greeted the boy. "Hi, dad, how did you make out last night?" "I got licked." "Well," was the comforting reply, "that will please mother." Note-Jolly Mrs. Farley intensely dislikes trn-zMnnn lnn hgs wnted her husband tn the convention floor rooting for Speaker Bank- head. In the course of his operations, Elliott told members of the Mississippi delegation that his father had personally informed him that while he favored Wallace, Bankhead and McNutt also were acceptable. Therefore the thing to do, Elliott declared, was to work out a compromise; and Bankhead was his choice. COMING FROM the second son of the Pres- ident, the Mississippi delegates naturally considered the information straight from the White House and spread the word. When it reached worried Administration floor leaders they rushed to Senator Jimmy Byrnes, who, from the rostrum, was directing Wallace's fight. Jimmy dashed for a nearby phone and told the President what had happened. Roosevelt's reply was that he hadn't talked to Elliott in over a month, so naturally could not have told him what he claimed. "I am for Wallace and no one else," Roosevelt added. "Further, you have my authority to state that if he is not nominated, I won't run." After Byrnes transmitted this message to the Texas delegation, Elliott piped down. Note-When Wallace, at 2 a.m., immediately after his hard-won victory, telephoned the Pres- ident and thanked him, Roosevelt advised th4 he immediately see Bankhead, Farley, Jesse Jones and McNutt and thank them for their sportsmanship. The President personally tele- phoned McNutt and commended him as a "gal- lant soldier who performed ' a great public ser- vice tonight." Camera Opposites T HE NEW Republican members of Roosevelt's Cabinet, Secretaries Stimson and Knox, are peas-in-a-pod to Senate isolationists, but they are poles apart with Capital newsreelers. Stimson, 72, grave and intense, has no time for such fol-de-rol as pictures and cameras. As Secretary of State under Hoover he used to brush photographers aside with a pre-occupied "too busy" and he does the same now. They almost had to "talk their heads off" to get him to pose after his recent confirmation as Secretary of War. Finally he consented, with the reservation that there was to be no sound. Colonel Knox, 66, who has published news- nar ara all hic li ais, r14f, - a fiv - . ,.«__ DRAMA] By JAMES E. GREEN Henry Aldrich, who has already made something of a conquest of the Broadway stage, of the movies, and of the radio, came to the stage of the Lydia Mendelssohn last night in the person of William Kinzer and added a few hundred more to his list of admirers (among which is your re- viewer). Clifford Goldsmith's farce, "What a Life," had a considerable advantage over some of the other productions of this summer season; its farce was conscious and its set- ting and characters were more likely to be familiar to the average summer school audience than either patho- logical peasants of New England or eighteenth century ham actors; but. even allowing for the fact that the play occupies a particularly advan- tageous position in the sequence of the season, both the play and the production given it can stand on their own merits. Sentimentality At Home It is not difficult to predict a long and pleasant career for "What a Life." Its sentimentality is placed in a setting in which it is completely at home. It exploits to the fullest extent all of the conscious and un- conscious humor that is present in both our educational system and in the adolescent of any time. Its satire is mild but not aimless and if its moral can be best appreciated by school teachers its humor, at least, has no such limitation. Henry Al- drich is an underdog with whom we can sympathize completely without ever raising any cosmic questions of morality. We demand that Henry triumph as much as we do that Fal- staff triumph. Henry is no more at home in his world than Falstaff was in his and we are with him and against the world. Henry has a kind of virtue that completely transcends the rigid virtue around him and we are fairly certain that any compro- mise that he makes with it will be only a temporary one. Kinzer Excellent All of this is a rather stuffy way of saying that Henry is a completely delightful character as Goldsmith has conceived him and as Kinzer plays him. There is no more accur- ate description of Kinzer's portrayal than to say that he "throws himself" into the role. He twitched his pants with eloquence and was never com- pletely at home in a shirt, even with- out a necktie. I am not sure that any question of "understanding the role" enters in but after last night's performance it would seem that youth which so many young actors seem to have prematurely lost has been, in Kinzer's case, only mislaid. He is never once anyone but Henry Aldrich, a distillation of all the young rogues who have ever assault- ed the "mores" of the adult world. The theatre group here occasionally gets the benefit of a completely pro- fessional performance by one of its own members. This was such a per- formance. Henry Aldrich is the play but Goldsmith puts him in setting of characters who have some merit in their own right. Adeline Gittlen and Roy Rector as Henry's sweetheart and enemy, respectively, didn't quite have Kinzer's verve but they turned in very capable performances. Ray Pedersen was a very funny detective. As to the members of the cast who made up the academic setting, there were no complaints from the audi- ence and who can judge a school teacher better than a school teacher? Low Cost Plane Designed ETROITT .Tulv 24.-UP)-Devel-1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN_ All notices for the Daily Official Bulletin are to be sent to the Office of the Summer Session before 3:30 P.M. of the day preceding its pub- lication except on Saturday, when the notices should be submitted be- fore 11:30 A.M. Visual Education Demonstration: Today at 11 a.m. in the Elementary School auditorium, Miss Evelyn Bice of Battle Creek Schools, will demon- strate a teaching film using a class of elementary school pupils. Visitors are urged to be in the auditorium by 11 a.m. Linguistic Institute Luncheon Con- ference: "What We Know About the Hittite Subordinating Conjunctions," Professor E. Adelaide Hahn, at 12: 10 p.m. today in the Michigan Union. A preview of school films is being held in. the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building from 2 to 4 p.m. daily, until July 25. The movie to be shown today, July 25, will have Ele- mentary Grades as its area of in- terest. E. M. 18-Theory of Limit Design. Mr. C. M. Goodrich, Consulting En- gineer of the Canadian Bridge Com- pany (formerly chief engineer) will address my class on Limit Design on the subject of Transmission Towers this afternoon, July 25, at 3:30 p.m. in Room 101 West Engineering Buil- ding. All interested are cordially in- vited to attend. "The Place of Vocatioal Guidance in a Program of Public Education," will be the lecture to be given by George E. Meyers, Professor of Co, cational Education and Guidance at '4:05 p.m. today in the University High school Auditorium. Colloquim in Physical Chemistry will be held on today, July 25 at 4:15 p.m: in the Amphitheater of the Rackham Building. Professor F. W. London of the Duke University will speak on "Inter-Molecular For- ces". All interested are invited. "The Development of Social Con- trol" is the lecture to be given by I. Leo Sharfman, University of Michi- gan, at 4:15 p.m. today in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Wesley Foundation. A group will leave the Wesley Foundation Recre- ation Room at 5 p.m. for a swimming party and picnic. There will be a small charge for food and transpor- tation. Please phone 6881 before noon today for a reservation. Deutscher Verein. There will be a picnic today for members, resi- dents of the Deutsches Haus, stu- dents of German and all those inter- ested in folk songs, folk dancing, and out-of-door games. Meet at Deut- sches Haus at 5:30 p.m. and drive out to Saline Valley Farms. The price of excursion is 45 cents including supper, refreshments, and transpor- tation. Please make reservations at the German Office, 204 University Hall. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church- Thursday, July 25, 7:15 a.m. Cele- bration of the Holy Communion. St. James the Apostle day. Round-Table Discussion. Laissez Faire and Public Control Chairman, I. Leo Sharfman, University of Mich- igan. Dean Claire E. Griffin, Pro- fessors Arthur Smithies, Charles F. Remer. Dumas Malone. and Charles Shakespeare recordings by Evans and Gielgud will be played at the Michigan Wolverine, 209 S. State St., Friday afternoon from 4 to 5 p.m. Graduate Speech Students: A tea for all graduate Speech students will be held Friday, July 26, from 4 to 6 p.m. in the Assembly Room of the Horace H. Rackham Schol of Grad- uate Studies, Vibration Problems Symposium. The second lecture in this series un- der the direction of Professor S-Tim- oshenko will be given by Professor J. P. Den Hartog of Harvard Uni- versity who will speak on "Multi- Cylinder Engines with Dynamic Dampers." The meeting will be held on Friday, July 26, at 7:00 p.m. in Room 311 West Engineering Build- ing. All interested are cordially in- vited to attend. The Men's and Women's Educa- tion Clubs will hold their annual, jointly-sponsored mixer in the Wo- men's Athletic Building at 7:30 p.m., Monday, July 29. There will be a variety program of games, commun- ity singing, and old-time and social dancing; refreshments will be served. An admission fee of 15c will be col- lected at the door. Wives, husbands, and friends are also invited to at- tend. Some appointments for dental at- tention at the Health Service are un- filled for the remainder of the Sum- mer Session. Students desiring these are advised to report during the forenoon at an early date. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received notice of the following Civil Service Examination. Exam- ination date is August 5, 1940. Ap- plication must be made one week prior to examination. City of Detroit Civil Service Weights and Measures Inspector, salary $1860 per year. Complete announcements on file at the University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information, 201 Mason Hall. Office hours: 9-12 and 2-4. VJniversity Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received notice of the following Civil Service Examinations. Last date for filing application is noted in each case: United States Civil Service Principal Explosives Engineer, sal- ary $5,600 Aug. 19,1940. Senior Explosives Engineer, salary $4,600 Aug. 19, 1940. Explosives Engineer, salary $3,800 Aug. 19, 1940. Associate Explosives Engineer, sal- ary $3,200 Aug. 19, 1940. Assistant Explosives Engineer, sal- ary $2,600 Aug. 19, 1940. Radio Monitoring Officer, salary $3,200 June 30, 1941. Assistant Radio Monitoring Officer, salary $2,600 June 30, 1941. Bookbinder (Government Printing Office), salary $1.20 an hour Aug. 12, 1940. Bookbinder (Bureau of Engraving and Printing), salary $10.08 a day Aug. 12, 1940. 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 Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information Exhibition of American Painting presented by the graduate study pro- gram in American Culture and Insti- tutions is being held in the Rackham Building through July 31, daily ex- cept Sunday, 2-5 p.m. and 7-10 p.m Penn Will Present Music Recital Today James H. Penn, bass-baritone of Granger, Missouri, will be heard in a recital at 8:15 p.m. today in the School of Music Auditorium, accom- panied by Heln Byrn of Ann Arbor at the piano. Mr. Penn is a student of Mr. Har- din Van Deursen of the School of Music faculty, and will present the following program: "Vein_ +ltF++ -mr-..n nrf Heat Wave Comments ... When a heat wave reaches the front page it has ceased to be amusing. There is no comfort in being reminded that we have had hotter summers. There is no sympathy to spart for