THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1940 m" THE MICHIGAN DAILY rL.( aR - DNO"'s3.bP 1'Im tNI a N rku tW'rn Am tmceY M -C-.0. 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 $4.0; by mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL AVERSING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Pusbisers Rpresentative 420 MADIsON AVE. NEw YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO ' BOSTON * 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 Stall Business Manager ............ Jane E. Mowers Assistant Manager...........Irving Guttman NIGHT EDITOR: KARL KESSLER Hitler's Weapon- Not So Secret! .. . A REPORT to the Conference Board, an employers' organization, by two of its experts reveals the probable truth about Hitler's "secret weapon." Theysay: "Germany's secret weapon was the all-inclusive organiza- tion of the total life of the nation and the thorough training of the people as the living cogs df the machine." This process of converting folks into cogs required about seven years. If the machine endures, we may have to revive our historical time schedules of social change. It required centuries for feudalism to shade into the indi- vidualist commercial capitalism that became the dominant pattern of civilization around the beginning of the 19th century. It required at least another 100 years to form the highly in- tegrated system of incorporated business dom- inated by money and credit capital that reached its peak about 1910 in this country, which was several years behind Britain and France in that respect. IF HITLER has taken only seven years to build a termite social system in Germany, his speed as a revolutionist is as remarkable as his speed in war. Undoubtedly what has been done in Germany was made much easier by the destruc- tion of German money and credit in the post- war inflation. That wiped out the economic ground upon which the middle class stood. That class has always been the principal champion of individual freedom and individual initiative in trade and industry. The ruin of money helped Hitler to revive many features of the static and stratified type of class and guild society that prevailed under feudalism in Europe before the rise of modern trade. John Flynn has pointed out that it was the increasing use of money that destroyed feu- dalism. For centuries men discussed the decline of feudal institutbns, but did nothing about it. EVERYBODY KNEW what was destroying feudalism-money. But nobody ever re- fused any money, no matter how much its so- cial effects might be denounced. In our time the undermining of money and credit by in- creasing taxation, which is caused by the ex- pansion of state functions, which in turn has been largely caused by the weakening of the old natural regulators of trade and industry under a free competitive system, has been dis- cussed just as ardently as was money under feudalism. But nothing was done about it. Monopolies, trade restrictions and state interference with industry to foster military might and territor- ial expansion flourished everywhere up to 1914, heaping up the explosives in the magazine that exploded them. Looking backward at this time, we can see that this war is a logical sequel to the really unfinished war of 1914-1918, which did not expirate imperialism in Germany or restore real economic freedom anywhere else. The Nazi state as "the supreme monopoly" is not only a highly intensified composite of the external threats which the allied world fought in the last war but it also embodies in ultimate per- fection those internal evils that have been un- dermining freedom in every land. That is why Nazism is both armed menace without,rand con- tagious disease within, every other form 'of so- cIety..- Chicago Daily News British Labor Thinks MOST ENCOURAGING to all those who are interested more in what is to come after this war than in the question of who's going to win are reports from London of the fine and con- structive thinking on war aims done by British labor leaders. The Straigjht Dope By Himself (Today's guest columnist is Bernard Friedman, his fireside chat on the "fifth column" and sub- of the faculty of Harvard University, and one of versive activity which, more than any other fac- this country's ablest young philosophers. With his concl&*sions we disagree. with his right to state tor, gave impetus to the wave of anti-demo- them we are in absolute accord.) cratic and anti-alien hysteria which has swept A SHORT WHILE AGO Himself wrote acol- the country. He signed the alien registration A mn iHnRTsuHILErAoHselftedin-his bill, transferred the Immigration Department umn in support of Roosevelt and m in from the Department of Labor to the Departt- characteristic way offered the use of his column ment of Justice, permitted the outrageous ac- to anyone who wanted to support Willkie. Some- wetoJuicprtedheuraosa- one did. But finding things to say in favor of tivity of the FBI in Detroit and elsewhere. Willkie is no easy job, and the someone who He speaks of preserving (no longer of extend- tried it had a pretty opaque way of putting ing) the rights of labor, yet the Secretary of things, so. the result was that Roosevelt came the Navy now has the right to suspend the out way on top. It was a pretty funny kind of Walsh-Healy Act in awarding naval construction victory though-Roosevelt had only two cards contracts if he thinks it necessary; yet he sup- played for him, his "big heart" and a not in- ports the conscription bill; yet the chairman of glorious past, and we never got a chance to see the Senate Military Affairs Committee, which what's in the rest of his hand. is charged with the duty of drawing up the Yet the strange thing about this election is legislation for the defense program, has intro- that, in spite of the strong personalities in- duced a bill to provide employers in defense industries with a private army, armed by the volved and in spite of the near identity of the government, of the sort that Ford and a few two party platforms, when you vote, you'll be other industrialists happen to be able to afford voting on issues more than on men. Still more themselves. curious in this election is the fact that the is- sues on which you'll be voting are not presented AND WHAT HAS HAPPENED to plans for a in any pro and con way. That's pretty opaque, public housing program, for a public health too-what do we mean? program, to WPA. to NYA, to the Unfair Labor Practices Bill, to the anti-lynch bill, to the anti- Let's see: Suppose you vote for Willkie. poll tax bill? No, in voting for Roosevelt you You'll be voting for a dangerously interven- would be voting not for the New Deal, but for tionist foreign policy, for peacetime con- scrapping the New Deal and a lot more in the scription (considering the articulateness of name of defense. some other Republicans on this matter, What do we do then? How can we show that Willkie's silence can mean only one thing), we are supporters of peace, of democracy, and for a Utility man's policy, for a Morgan pol- of the, rights of labor? First of all, a lot de- icy-there's not really much point in carry- pends on the Congress and on the state offi- ing this side'of it out very far. As it looks to cers whom we elect-in many cases we can find us, the only people who are progressive at candidates for these offices whom we can sup- heart (and -"progressive at heart" covers port. Secondly, we can cast a negative vote by enough Americans to carry any election by refusing to vote for either major candidate- a landslide) the only people who are pro- we can write in a name, say Senator Wheeler. gressive at heart who will vote for Willkie He won't win, but we'll have made a point. are those who have used Himself's reductio argument in the other direction-that is, And most important, we can remember those -who will vote for him because they that while we are permitted to vote on can- realize they can't vote for Roosevelt. didates only once every two or four years, we can vote on issues every day in the week. THE ROOSEVELT SIDE is a little trickier. It's We can send letters and telegrams to our clear-ask any interventionist-that a vote President ,our Senators, and our Congress- for Roosevelt is a vote for an interventionist men, we can support and take part in the foreign policy, and for conscription in peace- Emergency Peace Mobilization in Chicago at time. The trick comes in because people will the end of this month. If we let them know say that a vote for Roosevelt is also a vote for what we think, if we say it often enough and democracy and the New Deal program of pro- loud enough and together enough, then our gressive social reform. But is it? elected representatives, whether or not they As a matter of' fact Roosevelt has sacrificed are the men we wanted, will give us the pro- his democracy to his "defense" program. It was gram that we want. Washington Merry-Go-Round Grin And Bear It . . i _... By Lichty "Careful about the tips you take, girls'.--I just heard there's a lot of counterfeit $1,000 bills in circulation." The Manchester Quardian Views germany And Petain's France WASHINGTON-For some time British air observers, and also U.S. military experts sta- tioned in England, have been puzzled by the fact that a mere handful of two or three British planes have been able to chase away as many as twenty Nazi bombers. American air attaches in London have sent back glowing reports of British success, telling how sometimes even one British pursuit plane would put to flight an entire Nazi squadron. Nazi planes about-faced and fled so easily that it was suspected they had standing orders from Berlin not to engage in battle. Now the mystery of these German tactics has been solved. Enough German planes have now been shot down in raids over England to establish the fact that most of them are not equipped ,with regular navigation instrument(' Apparently, only the leader in every German squadron carries navigation apparatus, and the other planes follow him.6 Therefore, should the leader be shot down, the other planes are under orders to head for home, flying blind. Also whatever the leader does, the other pilots must do. On the other hand, every British plane is a complete unit in itself, fully equipped, and can act independently of any squadron. Reason for the failure to equip Nazi planes presumably was Hitler's haste to build them, and also the desire to cut down the expense. Note-It was a characteristic of German sol- diers during the World War that they liked to fight elbow to elbow. American doughboys found that when they got separated from their com- pany, even in fairly large groups, they were much easier to capture. Straight Sumner Welles One lady who really worked at Pan-American- ism during the recent Havana Conference was Mrs. Adolf Berle, wife of the Roosevelt Brain Truster who is now Assistant Secretary of State. Mrs. Berle took tea with this delegation, lunched with the next and organized swimming parties with the third. - She was a real Good Nleighbor. Lunching with some of the Argentines one day, the discussion turned to Mr. Berle's col- league and superior, Sumner Welles, Under Secretary of State. Remarked Senora Zuber- buhler: "Oh, I can't get over his figure. He is so tall, so erect, so straight." "Yes," replied Mrs. Berle, "he's too straight for me." Congress Poker Favorite relaxation after a hard day in Con- gress is a snappy game of stud poker. The Capitol Hill poker fraternity, of which Vice President Jack Garner is the dean, includes Montana, isolationist leader, who sat next to Senator Ed Burke, co-author of the conscription bill and Willkie-Democrat. Near them were House Democratic Whip Pat Boland of Penn- sylvania, and handsome Senator Scott Lucas of Illinois, champion of Roosevelt's foreign and defense policies. During the course of the evening Wheeler and Burke found themselves frequently "in the mid- dle"; that is, stuck with losing hands between raises and re-raises by Lucas and Boland. For them the evening was expensive. After con- tributing liberally for a long time, Wheeler finally commented to Senator Lucas: "Say, this is getting uncanny. Burke and I seem to be getting nowhere. We contribute to every pot, but either you or Pat always hold the winning hand. You boys aren't using sig< nals on us, are you?" "Now, Burt," drawled Lucas impishly. "How can you say that? You know this is what we always do to isolationists and bolters." Loudest guffaw came from pompadoured Gene Cox, arch anti-New Deal Congressman from Georgia-but no bolter or isolationist. Iallck's Dilemma It hasn't come out into the open yet, but a stormy undercover row is raging inside the House Labor Board investigating committee over whether it should continue its sleuthing or call it a day. The committee's liberal minority-Represen tatives Arthur Healey of Massachusetts, and Abe Murdock of Utah-are insisting on the lat- ter. They hold that since the NLRB probe has been finished, the committee should turn back, its $30,000 of unspent taxpayers' money and quit. But Chairman Howard W. Smith, Virginia, who has secret ambitions to run for governor next year, is dead set against this. He wants the committee to continue operating by going after racketeering in labor organizations. Murdock and Healey are not opposed to com- pating labor racketeering, but contend that this is entirely beyond the authority of the commit- tee. Also, they charge that Smith's secret aim is to make political capital for himself at the expense of the AFL and CIO. Backing Smith is Harry N. Routzohn, Ohio Republican. All of which is very embarrassing for Repre- sentative Charles Halleck, curly-haired Indiana first-termer and Willkie's nominator at the Phil- adelphia convention. With the other committee members lined up evenly, two to two, Halleck has the deciding vote. Ordinarily, there would be no special significance in this. But as one of Willkie's closest political advisers, if Halleck votes for the probe Smith is trying to put over, then it's sure to raise howls in labor circles. In the past, Halleck has taken a middle of What is Germany's attitude to France, and what are her intentions as far as France is concerned? Is she proposing to destroy France? Is she prepared to tolerate the Petain Government as an, obedient satellite? Or is she thinking of replacing the Petain Government by a more dy- namic Nazi regime more closely mo- deled on Berlin "ideology" and aban- doning all claim to autonomy and "relative independence"? It is probable that the Germans have not quite decided yet, for so much still depends on the progress of their war against England. But a study of their broadcasts on France during the past fortnight is none the less illuminating. Broadcast Matter Varies The matter and manner of these broadcasts vary consistently in ac- cordance with the audience to which they are addressed. There is a strik- ing difference between the comments on France contained in the German home broadcasts given from the German controlled stations of Rhen- nes and Radio Paris, in French oc- cupied territory, and the foreign language talks given by German sta- tions for the benefit of neutrals and Scandinavians. Thus atGerman broadcast in Dan- ish recently dwelt on "the probabil- ity of a solid Franco-German peace before the end of the war with Eng- land." In a broadcast to Rumania the German wireless drew idyllic pic- tures of the friendly atmosphere in Paris, which it claimed was rapidly returning to normal. Very different is the tone of the German home broadcasts. These continually sneer at the French and emphasise the distrust which Ger- many must continue to feel for them. Described 'Deserted Paris' Thus recently the Deutschlander described Paris as "almost a deserted city whose inhabitants wander around on the roads somewhere be- tween the Loire and the Pyrenees." The same station likes to dwell on one of the favorite themes of "Mein Kampf"-the French are a negroid and racially impure people who have committed a crime against white Europe. The Saarbrucken station has been dwelling onl anti-French atrocity stories, on the alleged ill-treatment of German war prisoners, and on the hatred of the French people for Ger- many. It also speaks contemptuously of the lack of discipline in the French Army. "This is only an arm- istice and there is no room for false sentimentality." "France must reap the harvest she has sown." At the same time these broadcasts like to speak of the German social Welfare work in occupied France, which, they say, is greatly superior to what the French ever did. They also talk of the fine behavior of the German troops in Paris, and an alleged state- ment by the Archbishop of Rouen is quoted in support of this. Treated With Contempt The Vichy Government is treated with contempt, and sometimes with anger. Until recently at least the Germans continued to say that they could have no confidence whateved in the "old gang"-meaning, pre- sumably, M. Laval. Although the "Relazine Internazionali" recently dismissed M. Laval's "Latin block" Iohnrea "serUtpa" the Ger... Rennes P.T.T. told the French that they were having a new Constitution inflicted upon them: "The people of France have not been consulted. The old constitution, though old-fashion- ed, was still of some value to many people . . . will the French people accept these polical manuervers for "saving their country?" Boost Unification The same station dwells on the theme that "Europe is too small to be divided into small nations," and one of its most astonishing broad- casts was that addressed on July 13 to the French working class, who had been told how the Hitler regime had abolished unemployment in Ger- many and had set up a minimum wage. They were also given a glow- ing account of the "Kraft urch Freude" holiday organization. It is quite possible that the Germans are keeping in reserve a number of the French demagogues like Doriot with whose help they may try to replace the Petain regime by a purely Nazi regime-with its "Socialist" aspect held out as bait to the French work- ers. It is curious how at the same time the anti-British propaganda from the German stations in France is intended as an appeal to the national instincts of the working class: "The British intervention in France was a most painful page in our (French) national history." Mr. Churchill's proposals to the French Reynaud Government of a union of the Brit- ish and French 'Empires is indig- nantly treated by Rennes P.T.T. as an "outrage to France's ten centuries of history." We French shall take our revenge on England one day." Anoth- er talk said that Germany was "com- pleting Napolean's work in destroy- ing the British Empire." Significant- ly enough ,the same station said that England was not only the enemy of France but that she was essentially "undemocratic." Division Of France In .short, the German game of di- viding France is continuing. Having lured Petain's men into submission the Germans are now preaching dis- loyalty towards the Petain Govern- ment among the people of France, especially of Paris, and are tempting them, particularly the French work- ing class, with pleasant pictures of "Kraft durch Freude" and other of the "democratic advantages of na- tional socialism, with the emphasis on the second word. How insincere it all is may be seen by the savage an- ti-French home broadcasts. Little need be said of the wireless stations in unoccupied France. Their news bulletins are almost entirely based on the official German News Agency. The talks are almost entire- ly anti-American and if anything pro-American is said the Vichy min- ister soon hears of it. Thus M. Bau- doin's statement to the Associated Press that the new French Constitu- tion resembled that of the American Government instantly produced the German wireless retort: "Is M. Bau- doin trying to show that-he is not totalitarian? Is he carrying favor with the Yankees in the hopes that they will help France. Mr. Green's Teeter-Totter William Green, president of the Americaon Peilnntinnof ,an. w . I mpl ications Of The Battle Over Britain The Atlantic, was not wide enough yesterday to shut from our ears the clamor of hundreds of fighting planes in the British skies, the screech and roar of exploding bombs, the crash of falling buildings. It is sheer guesswork to decide whether these gigantic raids are the forerun- ners of an immediate invasion; but it is not guesswork to see in the pres- ent air battles the first of a decisive struggle, aimed at bringing the Brit- ish people to their knees and des- troying British power forever. The struggle for mastery of the air over Britain has now reached such a pitch of intensity that it can be heard around the world. Damage is Uncertain One would like to know just how much impairment of the British war efort is being caused by the Nazi raiders, and how much havoc is be- ing wrought by the British in their savage counter-thrusts at German air bases from Jutland to the Bay of Biscay. These are military secrets, and one cannot blame the British or the Germans for being uninform- ative about them. We are told, how- ever, that 500 to 600 planes have been launched against England on three successive days, and that the British, acording to their own claims, have brought down only about one- tenth of the raiders. If the raids and their retribution continue on the present scale, the German losses in machines will be far smaller than the German rate of production. The only serious losses for the Germans at this time will be the deaths of so many skilled pilots and the daily consumption of somewhere between 150,000 and 300,000 gallons of avia- tion gasoline and Diesel fuel. Must be Expanded The present raids must, however, be greatly expanded and continued on an intense scale for weeks before Britain can be seriously crippled. Considering that so much of the British island is within easy bombing range, the curious feature of the raids so far has not been their in- tensity but their comparitively limit- ed objectives. The Germans seem to have concentratel their bombing ef- forts until now upon only two im- portant naval bases-Portland and Portsmouth-and upon the Channel Port of Dover, which ishso closeto the enemy coastline that it can hardly be a great asset to the Brit- ish defense. The damage to Portland and Portsmouth may be especially serious if it has harmed the ship- yards where some seventy or eighty damaged British destroyers are be- ing repaired; if so it will heighten the urgency of obtaining fifty or sixty old American destroyers which can help the British hold the Channel. But there are other naval bases, at Devonport, Rosyth and elsewhere, which have hardly been touched as yet. They must be wrecked, and wrecked totally, before an elemen- tary part of the German task, the paralysis of British naval power in home waters, can be accomplished. Air Attacks Just Begun Moreover, the Germans have bare- ly begun their long-promised air at- tacks against the great British har- bors through which food and sup- plies are brought from the outer world. If German planes could destroy most of the wharves and railroad sidings at eight ports-at Bristol, Plymouth, Southampton, London, Hull, Newcastle, Glasgow and Liver- pool,-then Britain's plight would indeed be perilous. Yesterday raids at Southampton and on. docks and warehouses at Wallsend; in greater Newcastle area, may pretend greater harbor raids in the immediate fu- ture; but for the present the great stream of shipping goes on uninter- rupted, even in the besieged waters of the English Channel and the great Thames estuary. Airdromes are Attacked Several military airdromes in the southeastern corner of England have been attacked in determined fashion, jbut this is not the same thing as the disastrous swoop which ruined most of Poland's airfields in a single night on the outbreak of the war. The British have been busy since last fall in building secret ardromes, some- times with hangars sheltered by the sides of the hills; the future will tell how effective these efforts have been. Apparently railroad junctions and power stations in Britain remain comparitively unscathed; there has been no persistent attack aginst any of them comparable to the relentless British hammering of great railroad yards in the Ruhr and the Rhine- land. As for aircraft factories, there has been no sign as yet of a serious interruption of British production, which has mounted by now to a to- tal approaching 2,000 a month. Britain, in other words, is a large target. The vital centers of its war are well-distributed and well defend- ed. The British are wise. too, not to