PAGE TWO THE MTCHTIGAN DAILY i1 , }i 1 1 1 V S L 1i mI i THE 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 University 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 reserved. 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. 9PRESENTED POM NAltONAL ADVEN,,SNG BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Rekresentative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO * BOS'O N - Los 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 Asistant Manager........... Irving Guttman NIGHT IDITOR: NORMAN A. SCHORR The Necessity For Conscription .. . T HE UNITED STATES SENATE this week begins debate on a bill which has provoked nationwide discussion, the bill for general selective military conscription. Fully realizing that this measure means a wide departure from previous American peace- time methods, we are nevertheless firmly con- vinced of the necessity for its adoption. On grounds of national emergency, of efficiency in building our defenses, on grounds of democracy, enactment of conscription is vital. The forces of aggression and tyranny are running wild, engulfing nation after nation. Their ultimate aim is nothing less than world conquest. 'If America is to be saved from the deadly threat when it moves on this hemisphere, we must be ready. We must show Hitler that when it comes to home defense, we mean busi- The people agree that great fleets of planes, new battleships and masses of mechanical equipment shall be build for the national de- fense. To operate all this machinery of war- fare, we need well-trained and fully skilled men. Our vast reservoir of manpower must be utilized in systematic fashion. Registration will tell the authorities the extent and capacities of this reservoir. THERE ARE OBJECTORS to conscription, to be sure. Senator Vandenberg thinks "our ordinary reliance on volunteers" will produce the necessary manpower, and proposes a test of one-year enlistments. In an emergency, there is no time to experiment. The Government does not depend for its revenue on voluntary tax payments; it informs each citizen what he owes. Each must pay in accordance with his ability to pay, and this principle is fair for military service as well. Much is said of democracy in opposing con- $cription, but just how democratic is voluntary service under present circumstances? The nien now attending officers' camps at Plattsburg, Leavenworth and elsewhere are those able to pay their own way and devote their time to the training. They are among the economically for- ttunate; those in the lower brackets thus are debarred from officers' training. A high-pressure enlistment campaign would bring in volunteers, but they would be those most susceptible to propaganda. Many among the unemployed would be pushed to enlist, thus filling the ranks on an undemocratic basis of economic status. The American 'Youth Com- mission, a group of enlightened educators and business men which has taken a progressive attitude on the problems of youth, favors the draft chiefly as a means to "avoid concentrating military service among the unemployed boys of 18 to 22 who are most willing to volunteer." .As Walter Lippman says in his article today, only ,a conscription system can decide who is best fitted to fight and who best fitted to work. SENATOR WHEELER says that Democrats who vote for conscription before the election will be driving a nail in their political coffins. The Senator is talking through his hat. Con- scription is not political poison; it is approved by the majority of voters. The Gallup poll has tested public opinion on a far more drastic con- scription plan than is now proposed. The vote was 64 per cent in its favor a month ago, and 67 per cent in yesterday's returns. Will conscription create a war spirit in this country? Senator Norris thinks it will, and cites the example of Germany. Senator Norris is a respected and venerable figure, but he errs here by confusing cause and effect. It was not con- scription that bred Nazi militarism, but vice Versa. The Straight Dope By Himself WE REALIZE that it is bad form to criticize It further seems that the way she overcame one's editorial colleagues. That is an un- these difficulties was by hard and consistent written law in the newspaper business. To burst work. Strange again. There doesn't seem to be into print with a statement that so-and-so any other way. But one thing she would allow sells bad peanuts is generally only an invitation no one to touch was the essentially Midwestern for so-and-so to say that his critic also sells quality of her speech. We hope all dictionih)s, bad peanuts. But the other day, whoever writes elocutionists and would-be cultured Eastern and that "On the Aisle" column really got off the Southern graduate students note that well. reservation. Her chief advantages as a student here were Whoever it was liked the movie "Our Town" her appearance, her willingness to work (not very much. So did we. But there was one state- just at acting but as property mistress and other ment to the effect that "Martha Scott, of whom things) her superb concentration and her ability we never heard before, was excellent." We think to speak with such sincerity that even lines of Miss Scott was excellent also. It was to that the most doubtful value took on a new signifi- "of whom we never heard before" that we ob- cance, and added meaning, when she spoke jected. Such a line should never have been them. That this was an earnest of her future printed in the Michigan Daily. performances cannot be doubted. You see, Martha Scott is an alumna of FINALLY, we should like to speak of Martha this University of not very long ago. She Scott as she affected us when we first saw is the result of the experience afforded by the stage version of "Our Town." We considered Play Production and the Michigan Reper- ourself a pretty tough specimen even then. We tory Players. She is a product of the pains- thought we had seen it all, as far as the drama taking training of Valentine Windt and his went and we pretty nearly had. We didn't like able assistants. She is, at the moment, the Thornton Wilder and we doubted if he could most prominent and most successful of the write a play. But we won ten bucks in a bridge growing number of drama graduates of this game and we decided to go to a first night. school who have made good. The audience came in astonished at the Martha Scott is about to become very famous bare stage and was pleased when Frank indeed. Her reviews in the stage version of "Our Craven took over. But when Miss Scott ap- Town" were raves. Her reviews in a later Broad- peared things began to happen. We were way production were hardly less emphatic. The amused by the first act, touched at the reports we have had on the movie version range pathos of that lovely love and the marriage from such people as Pare Lorentz to The Daily's business in the second. But when Miss Scott, columnists and all state without fear or favor as Emily Webb, went back into the past for that Miss Scott is tremendous. Her next movie, a long forgotten birthday in the third act, "Tree of Liberty" with Cary Grant, can, we hope, we sat vith our head in our hands and wept. hardly be less successful. In short, Miss Scott The whole point of the play to us is still is due to be the hope of the new Hollywood which that inability of anyone human to realize is going to produce real pictures for real people. the preciousness of daily living. The joy and We think Michigan people should know about it. beauty and wonder of it. Miss Scott showed We interviewed one of Miss Scott's oldest it to us very simply, very quietly. We have friends at Michigan the other day and we found worshipped her from afar ever since. out some interesting things about her. It seems that when she came here she was not just com- We have seen the first and second acts done pletely a finished product as an actress. Strange, almost as well since. But her ethereal combina- isn't it? It seems that she had troubles making tion of tenderness, sensitiveness and sincerity her voice loud enough, that she had difficulties in the third act is one of the experiences in the in getting variety 'in her characterizations, that theatre we do not expect to repeat. Miracles there were other minor troubles to be overcome. so seldom repeat themselves. Washington Merry-Go-Round Grin And Bear It . . . By Lichty "Well, I guess it all boils down to this!-I'm a Democrat mainly because my husband is a Republican!" WASHINGTON-After seven years of stalling over one of the most important raw ma- terials to American industry, the State Depart- ment actually is doing something about the U.S. tin supply. In cooperation with the National Defense Com- mission, State Department officials are doing three things. 1. Talking with Jesse Jones about an RFC loan to establish a tin smelter in the United States. The U.S. firms in on this are Phelps Dodge, National Lead, American Metals, and the American Smelting and Refining Company. 2. Facilitating the visit of the world's biggest tin king, Simon Patino, to the United States; also holding conversations with Mauricio Hoch- schild, big German-Jewish producer of Bolivian tin. 3. The National Defense Commission has or- dered 75,000 tons of metallic tin from the Malay Peninsula and the Dutch East Indies. This is almost enough to last the United States for half a year-if it ever gets here. But the catch is that the tin is still down in the mines of Malaya and must not only be mined and smelted, but also shipped half way around the world. Meanwhile the Japanese may move into this area of the South Pacific, or the Germans may crush the British combine which controls Malay tin, or the British may decide that they need the tin for their own military purposes. Only Three Weeks' Supply ALL OF WHICH reveals one of the most inex- cusable chapters of national defense neglect in recent history. Almost nobody knew that on January 1 of this year, U.S. stocks of tin were so low that we had only three weeks supply. And few people know what the exhaustion of our supply would mean to American life and industry. Not only wouji it put an end to our packing of food in tin cans, which is a major industry, but it would eventu- ally mean a blackout for every American home not lighted by gas or kerosene lamps. For the contact point of every electric light bulb is made of tin. Furthermore, the U.S. Fleet would be laid up in a few months for lack of tin for bearing re- placements. The same would apply to automo- biles, and to many other products intimately woven into American life. Bolivian Overtures DESPITE THIS, the State Department literally ignored representations by the Bolivian Gov- ernment to work out a trade agreement whereby the United States would secure tin not from the South Pacific, but from inside the Western Hemisphere, thus avoiding dangerous shipping hauls, and the danger of foreign controls. First Bolivian overture to the State Depart- ment was made by charge d'affaires Enrique Lozada in June, 1933, at the suggestion of The Washington Merry-Go-Round. At that time, Acting Secretary of State William Phillips, now Ambassador to Rome, turned a deaf .ear. He said the TTnite'd States was not interested. more favorable to British interests if it had been written in the British Foreign Office." Opponents Of Plan BY THAT TIME it had become apparent that the chief opponents of, having Bolivian tin smelted in the United States were (T3 the British tin monopoly; (2) the Patino tin interests, which were shipping ore all the way from Bo- livia to Liverpool, thence back to the United States, in order to enjoy British monopoly price- fixing; and (3) the National Lead Company and perhaps also other heavy U.S. users of tin, which seemed to be linked up with the British-Patino interests. For instance, the late Edward J. Cornish, chairman of National Lead, also was chairman of Patino Mines and Enterprises, while the pres- ent chairman of the Patino company, Fletcher W. Rockwell, is also president of National Lead. Thus big American business appeared to be cooperating with the British-Patino monopoly, despite national defense interests, while the State Department appeared to condone that cooperation. But now, suddenly awakening to the grave danger of the situation, the State Department is trying desperately to make up for past neg- ligence. Several days ago it sought to arrante space on a clipper plane for Patino to come {p the United States. But since his family almost fills on clipper, he is en route by boat. Nazis In Bolivia MEANWHILE Jesse Jones, in cooperation with the State Department, is discussing an RFC loan to set up a tin smelter in the United States, with a possible subsidy of one or two cents a pound on smelted tin. The first company to show an interest was Phelps Dodge, but more recently American Metals, American Smelting and Refining, and National Lead have shown interest. Meanwhile Hochschild, who has been mining, tin in Bolivia for ten years, informed the Na- tional Defense Commission that he was ready to do immediate business. But the Defense Commission, like the State Department, bowed to the tin king and said they would wait for Patino's arrival. Most ominous development has been the re- cent and sudden activity of Nazi interests in Bolivia to try to block these deals. The Bolivian army, long trained by German officers and lean- ing heavily toward the Nazis, is doing every- thing possible to sabotage the negotiations not( being conducted by Bolivian Minister Guachalla in Washington. Note-Dr. W. Y. Elliott, Harvard expert, com- ments on the present tin situation: "Today the prospect of Japanese domination of Asia and of German domination of Europe and the whole of its colonies presents this country with an entirely changed strategic situation, desperate in its implications. The securing and processing of these vital strategic materials is no longed an arguable point. It may be a matter of sur- <'i- 1 if --If _f I,- A ,,+: _ v.. .7n7 Interpretive: Ultimate Hour Coming. By KIRKE L. SIMPSON (Associated Press Staff Writer) A sudden concentration of German air attack on Dover stirred world- wide conjecture that Britain's hour of ultimate trial had come, when Dover as a prospective bridgehead for invasion of the tight little isle. Yet circumstances of the Nazi bom- bardment of that port, as officially reported in Berlin, sharply conflict with that impression. Certainly, if the Germans plan to land masses of troops at Dover port, blocking its entrance by sinking en- emy ships in the fairway would cre- ate more difficulties for the invaders than for the defenders. That is a step that the British plan of defense might well include in order to deny the enemy use of the sheltered wa- ters of Dover or any other narrow- mouthed harbor on the English Channel. Landing of siege guns, tanks and other equipment which the Germans would need to prosecute an invasion with any hope of success would be a difficult matter at best. Setting even lightly equipped troops ashore on open beaches is not an easy mat- ter. Landing heavy tanks, guns and trucks without docks to help would be a tremendous undertaking. British veterans of the World War, as well as of the fruitless attempt to stem the Nazi invasion of Norway, know much about such difficulties. It was inadequacy of dockage facili- ties in selected Norwegian fiords, coupled with Nazi air bombing, that frustrated the Franco-British at- tempt to relieve Trondheim, and un- seated the Chamberlain ministry in England. A landing on England's open beachesnwould be even more diffi- cult. The Dover-Calais passage is apt to be an uneasy journey for pas- sengers given to seasickness at any season of the year. There is ample testimony in literature as to that. All this enhances the importance of the weather factor on the present military situation. Any signs of a prolonged spell of calm on the Chan- nel probably would arouse graver fears in Britain than the intensified 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. Graduate Speech Students: A sym- posium in the general field of Speech Science will be held today, July 31, at 4 p.m. in the Speech Clinic, 1007 East Huron Street. "Some Critical Issues in the Field of High School Student Activities," is the lecture to be given by Edgar G. Johnston, Associate Professor of Secondary Education, at 4:05 p.m. today in the University High School Auditorium. Chemistry Lecture. The fifth in the series of chemistry lectures will be given by Professor R. H. Gillette today, July 31, at 4:15 p.m. in the Amphitheater of the Rack- ham Building. Subject: Recent Views on the Nature of the Covalent Bond. Physical Education Students: The Men's and Women's Departments of Physical Education are sponsoring a picnic supper for undergraduate and graduate students in physical educa- tion, their wives and families today, July 31. This supper will be held at the Women's Athletic Building at 6 p.m. Tickets priced at twenty-five cents may be secured before Tuesday noon. July 30 from Office 15, Barbour Gym- nasium; Office 4200-C UniversiVy High School; or from Miss Barbara Jones, Mr. Harve Oliphant, or Mr. Don Farnum. Vibration Problems Symposium.. The third lecture in this series will be given by Professor S. Timoshenko, who will speak on "Vibration of Bridges". The meeting wil be held today, July 31, at 7:00 p.m. in Room 311 West Engineering Build- ing. All interested are cordially in- vited to attend. Pi Lambda Theta Annual Honors Day and formal reception will be held at 7:30 today, July 31, in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. All Pi Lambda Thetans are urged to attend. The Graduate Commercial Club will hold its regular weekly meeting today, July 31, in the West Con- ference Room of the Rackham Build- ing at 7:30 p.m. All commercial tea- chers are cordially invited to attend. Refreshments will be served. Linguistic Institute Lecture, "Eng- lish Syntax" to be given by Professor Eugene A. Nida, at 7:30 p.m. in the Auditorium of the W. K. !Kellogg Building, today. Weekly meeting of the Cercle Francais this evening at 8 o'clock. Mr. James O'Neill of the French De- partment will give a brief talk en- titled "Souvenirs d'un autre Monde". Mr. Jan LaRue will present a selec- tion of compositions for the piano. Refreshments will be served. .The annual banquet will be held at the Union on August 7. All mem- bers of the Cercle who wish to attend the banquet are requested to leave their names with Mr. Jobin or with Miss McMullan at the Foyer. Tele- phone 2-2547. Piano Recital. William Schott- WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1940 given at 8:15 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall, today. The tea dance originally schedul- ed for Wednesday, July 31, ha been cancelled. Men's Education Club: There will be a meeting on Wednesday, July 31, as scheduled. Professor James K. Pollock will speak on the Demo- cratic National Convention. Doctoral Examinations: Mr. Claude John Whitlow, Economics; Thesis: "The Property Tax in South Dakota," Thursday, August 1, 2:00 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Build- ing. Chairman, R. S. Ford. Mr. Amos Henry Hawley, Jr., So- ciology; Thesis: An Analysis of the Relation of Service Institutions to Urban Populations in the United States, 1935: An Ecological Study," Thursday, August 1, 3:00 p.m., West Council Room, Rackham Building. Chairman, R. C. Angell. By action of the Executive Board the chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doctoral candidates to attend the examination and he may grant permission to at- tend to those who for sufficient reas- on might wish to be present. C. S. Yoakum Deutscher Verein: Members of the Deutscher Verein, residents of the Deutsches Haus, and all those inter- ested are cordially invited to attend a demonstration lecture by Profes- sor Percival Price, University caril- loneur at 8 o'clock on the eighth floor of the carillon tower Thursday night, August 1. Piano Recital. Miss Mildred An- drews, pianist, of Norman, Oklahoma, will give a recital in partial fulfill- ment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree, Thursday evening, August 1, at 8:15 o'clock, in the School of Music Auditorium. The public is invited to attend. Master's Candidates In History: the language examination will be given at 4 p.m., Friday, August 2, in Room B, Haven Hall. Candidates should bring their own dictionaries. Please register for the examination in the History Department Office before Wednesday noon. 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: Michigan Civil Service Social Worker, salary range, $105 to $125, August 21, 1940. Attendant Nurse, salary range, $90 to $110, August 10, 1940. Prison Guard, salary range, $115 to $135, August 9, 1940. City Of Detroit Civil Service Last date of examination is noted in each case: Application must be made one week prior to date of the examination. Electrical Repairman, August 12, 1940. Electrical Worker (Traffic Con- trol), August 12, 1940. Construction Equipment Operator (Gasoline), August 19, 1940. Construction Equipment Operator (General), August 19, 1940. Complete announcement filed at the University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information, 201 Mason Hall. Office hours: 9-12 and 2-4. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information Examination Schedule for Six- Week Courses in Education: Time of Regular Tim of Class Meetings Examinations 8 a.m. Fri., 4-6 p.m. 9 a.m. Sat., 7-9 a.m. 10 a.m. Sat., 1-3 p.m. 11 a.m. Sat., 9-11 a.m. 1 p.m. Sat., 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. 2 p.m. Fri., 2-4 p.m. 3 p.m. Sat., 3-5 p.m. Candidates for the Teacher's Cer- tificate for August 1940, to be recom- mended by the School of Education, are requested to call at the office of the School of Education, 1439 U.E.S. on August 1, 2, 6, or 7 to take the Teacher Oath which is a requirement for the certificate. Unidentifiable mail is being held in Room 1, University Hall, for the following addresses: Freeman, Irene Herb, Dr. Kennedy, Prof. George King, Dr. Walter G. McIntyre, Prof. H. J. Montigny, de Joachim Reese, Dr. Hans Schmid, Prof. Calvin F. 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. Crash Near Detroit Kills CAA Teacher DETROIT, July 30.-P)-The first fatality in the summer session of the Government's Civilian Pilot Program occurred today when a mid-air col- lis -.m .cinnam 'PrntCtyArurl_ air bombardment vicinity. of Dover and its Henry Ford Faces Future Optimistically DETROIT, July 30.--U)-Henry Ford, who has sometimes been called the world's leading optimist as well as one of its outstanding mechanical geniuses, observed his 77th birthday anniversary today with a normal routine interrupted only long enough for him to reiterate his conviction that the future will bring a prosper- ity "greater than any we have known in the past." "It will come," he said, "when we all realize that the things worthwhile and the things worth having are worth working for. "The cost to society of a philosophy of indifference and carelessness has been strikingly demonstrated in what has happened to certain European nations in the last few months. It is of the utmost importance to our own future that we avoid falling into that same attitude."