THE MICHIGAN IAILY SUINDAY, JtL"QY 7, 1940 IE MICHIGAN DAILY The Straight Dope By Himself clhe DALYASINGTON ERRY TROUND TRADE MArA EISKE _ _ i __ 7I dited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Cantrol of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the University year and summer session. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to t 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 aecond class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.0; 'ly mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL AOVERIsZNG BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative .424 so iON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO - BOSTON "LOS AOSI.S - SAl FRACICO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1939-40 Editorial Staff Managing Editor .............. Carl Petersen City Editor ...............Norman A. Schorr Associate Editors....... Harry M. Kelsey, Karl Kessler, David. I. Zeitlin, Suzanne Potter, Albert P. Blaustein, Chester Bradley Business Staff Business Manager............Jane E. Mowers Assistant Manager..........Irving Guttman NIGHT EDITOR: CARL PETERSEN The Navy Of Fr anc .1 . W INSTON CHURCHILL was under- stating when he said yesterday that the disposition of the French Navy was a "grim and somber" problem. It was, on sentimental grounds alone, the most heartbreaking choice that ever confronted a British government. Some of the French Navy was safely in British hands, but some of it, including the powerful 26,000-ton battleships Dunkerque and Stras- bourg, was in North African harbors, under or- ders to hurry home. Had this fleet been left untouched by the British, it would have fallen inevitably into German or Italian hands, to harry British shipping and perhaps to inflict "mortal injury" upon British naval supremacy. The British made a hard choice. At twilight on Wednesday they fell upon the French fleet at Oran and all but destroyed it as an effective fighting force. Whatever bitterness will be caused in France by this tragedy piled upon a vast tragedy, fair minded opinion will agree that the British were right in what they did. They were not making war on France; they were making war on a powerful offensive weapon which, in the hands, of the mortal enemy of France, could be used to help fasten serfdom on the French Republic. They had given France every opportunity to save her ships. They had consented, first, to let France make a separate peace on condition that her warships were brought into British ports for safe keeping. The pece was made; the condition was ignored. They waited a fort- night for French commanders to bring their ships voluntarily into British ports. Some of the ships came, others did not. It was a hard choice for the French commanders also. Mr. Churchill willingly admitted as much yesterday, when he spoke of "the characteristic courage" of the French Navy and said that "every allowance" must be made for French officers "who felt themselves obliged to obey the orders which they had received from the Government, and could not look behind that Government to see the Grman dictator." But even at the last, the British were not unreason- able or inhumane. They offered the French admiral at Oran the choice of continuing the fight against Germany and Italy or sailing with reduced crews to British ports, or taking the warships to French islands in the New World, or scuttling the ships within six hours. When all these conditions were refused, the British opened fire.c"Ieleave judgment of our actions with confidence to Parliament," said Mr. Churchill yesterday; "I leave it to the nation; I leave it to the United States of America." He need not fear what this judgment may be. The French Navy as a whole is no longer a potential threat to British seapower and sur- vival. In their home ports and in Alexandria harbor the British now control at least three French battleships, six cruisers, eight destroyers and more than 200 smaller craft. The immediate British naval problem has not, however, been solved. This is 'the recurring menace of the submarine and the reduced strength available to the British for convoying supplies and pa- trolling the seas on anti-submarine duty. Until France surrendered, the French Navy was in- valuable to the British iii helping to keep the supply routes free of marauders. Today it is no longer an allied force. The British Navy's bur- den may, therefore, become desperately heavy, especially since the Italian submarine fleet has become an enemy, and since Germany has won new bases from North Cape to the Pyrenees. It is clear by now why the British begged for thirty old destroyers from us, and for twenty old torpedo boats. Their naval position from now on will be an anxious one, even without serious danger from the French fleet. At any moment the British Navy will be straining every nerve to. repel an armed invasion and to prevent the ON OCCASION we have attempted to amuse and divert what readers this column may have. Such is not our intention today. Today we would speak of a tendency for which Amer- ica has been all too famous since the days of the witch burnings. I speak of a tendency to persecute any unpopular minority regardless of the constitutional guarantees which those mi- norities enjoy. Abolitionists, religious groups from Catholics to Mormons, philosophical groups and others have felt the sting of the tar a swell as many dozen political and econolic agitators. Perhaps the most pitiful of all cases is that wherein the innocent citizen suffers from of hate-hysteria which seems so easily to become rampant. An example of this came through to us in last week's mail and we want to tell you the story. DURING THE SUMMER OF 1917, Jerome Joachim, a former student at this Univer- sity's Law School, was selling books to farmers around Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. A story that he was a German spy began to circulate and spread like wildfire. To save his life he had to flee. , For twenty years Joachim wanted to go back and visit the family whom he suspected of cir- culating the rumour. Late in 1937 he had an opportunity and went. When he told the head of the household who he was the man turned pale. "Great God," he said, "I always thought you had been hanged as a spy." JOACHIM is now publisher of an Illinois news- paper. He speaks now and spoke then typi- cal Midwestern English. His parents also were born in this country. However, because he was a stranger in that area and had a German name it took only a few hours for a rumour to st.%rt which almost turned his life into tragedy. We quote the Niles (11.) Daily Times on the ART American Painting ONE OF THE undeniable advantages of the art of painting is its immediacy, and it is refreshing in the building where so much is being spoken this summer about American cul- ture to be able to ascent three flights and ex- amine on the spot some of the visible evidences of it. The exhibition of American painting ar- anged in the Rackham Building as part of the current Graduate Study Program in Amer- ican Culture and Institutions~makes no preten- sions to completeness, but it does cover in tab- loid fashion the various periods and movement of the American school, and manages to in- elude a number of the painters involved in its development. The fact that they are repre- sented by minor examples adds a certain charm and informality to the occasion. It would be easy to regret the more glaring omissions, Cop- ley in particular for the Colonial period, and Bellows for the more recent, but that would be perhaps placing too many demands upon what is after all a fairly unassuming exhibition. Many of the works shown are from local and neigh- boring collections, and Miss Hall and the com- mittee in charge have performed a service in letting us have a glimpse within an ordered framework of these not often enough seen or sufficiently appreciated art treasures. Various works from the collection of the University of Michigan and from that of the Ann Arbor Art Association shine with a new lustre when dis- played thus within their proper sequence, slid bring again forcibly to mind the crying need for permanent gallery space where they may always be as well shown. A bright spot among the colonial works is Benjamin West's "Death of Wolfe," a small replica belonging to Cranbrook of the large painting in our Clements Library. Of the early portraits one should speak of Peale's "Thomas McKean," Waldo's "Major-General Andrew Jackson," and Vanderlyn's "James Monroe," the latter from the University's collection. THE EARLY RISE of interest in the American landscape is sufficiently well illustrated by various contemporaries of the Hudson River school of painters, among them John M. Stanley of Michigan, again with works from the Univer- sity's collection. The later Inness is represented with a very good example. Of the great names Winslow IHomer is repre- sented by an extremely early small work, stiff, self-conscious and posed, but delightful in its sureness and command of the medium. The Ea- kins heads is a sober performance but eloquent, to those who know the body of his work, in its command of planes and structure. The Ryder is almost too much the usual, and the Duvaneck seems dated more than most of his work. Sar- gent's portrait of a lady is almost a parody'of his method, so greatly does it run to slick twirls of the brush. Gari Melchers is really well presented, both with an early genre and his superbly painted portrait of Chase S. Osborn, one of the several fine examples of his art in the University's collection. N THE contemporary room there are several highlights, brightest among them the three major works owned by the Ann Arbor Art Asso- ciation, the landscapes by Niles Spencer and Henry Lee McFee" and the nude by Alexander Brook, all thoroughly adequate examples of important men. Carroll is represented by a charming early portrait head loaned by Mrs. moral of this little story. "Feeling against the Kaiser in 1917 was mild compared with the ferocity of present American hatred of Hitler. It is doubly important therefore, that we profit from incidents of the last war like this. SURELY ANN ARBOR, which already has had its full share of persecution of citizen's suspected of being in league with Germany, can take this tale to its none-too-susceptible heart. It might with equal authority be applied to those who have found it necessary to discrim- inate against other groups on racial, political or economic lines. When war starts the time for civil liberties seems to be over. Why this is so we cannot say. The constitution makes no point of the sus- pension of free speech in time of war, it rather provides the contrary. LET US THEREFORE, while we are still at peace, be the more vigilant that the author- ity and power of the land be directed against those who deny -our liberty to speak, to write, to assemble peaceably, to petition authority, to be secure in our homes and to enjoyra sleep untroubled by fears of tyranny. Let us remem- ber that equality of opportunity is still the bea- con of the American Way and that that means equality of opportunity for the Communist, for the Bund member, for the Negro, for the Semite and for those opposed to all these. WHEN WE ONCE DENY to any man his con- stitutional guarantees we are all in danger. Let the Negro be touched and the Jew comes next. Let the Catholic be persecuted and the Baptist follows. If Communists be thrown in jail they will share cells with the liberals of both parties before all the shouting is over. Now is indeed the time for all good men to come to the aid of what America really stands for. Now is the hour for free men to reassert their free- dom. WASHINGTON- To say that the Willkie-McNary ticket worried Democratic chiefs is to put it mild- ly. The real fact is that they are scared stiff. Not only are they fearful of the campaigning effectiveness of the powerful GOP combination, but they are even more disturbed by their own state of disorganization. Because of the serious rift between Jim Farley and the New Dealers, the Democratic National Committee has- n't functioned for months. Whatever battles were waged for the Deno- cratic Party originated from outside the Committee. All of the anti-Will- kie-McNary blasts in the Senate and House came from independent Demo- crats. Meanwhile every GOP fusillade on Capitol Hill has behind it the re- juvenated and fast-clicking Republi- can National Committee. Another thing that alarms insiders is the effect of the President's strong pro-Ally policy on large blocs of vot- ers, German, Italian and certain Irish elements are hostile, and fairly sure to vote Republican. Similarly, John L. Lewis' vendetta is cetain to cost votes. Lewis speaks for only a minority of the CIO. Not one important union in the oganization has endorsed his stand. However, he has destroyed the effectiveness of Labor's Nonpartisan League as a campaign force, and in 1936 this was an important factor in several key industrial centers. Summer heat has come to Wash- ington, but the President's only air- conditioned method is to take off Calendar Of Third Week Sunday- 7:15 p.m. 8:00 p.m. Mon day- 4:15 p.m. 7:45 p.m. 8:15 p.m. Tuesday 4:15 p.m. 5:15 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 8:00 p.m. 8:15 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Concert on the Charles Baird Carillon. Vespers and Convocation. Address by Dr. Louis A. Hopkins, Director of the Summer Session. Music under the direction of William Breach, Supervisor of Music, Public Schools, Buffalo, New York. (Hill Auditorium.) Lecture. "The Monroe Doctrine and Hemispheric Defense." Pro- fessor Lawrence Preuss. (Rackham Lecture Hall.) Square and Country Dancing. Benjamin B. Lovett, Edison Institute, Dearborn. (Michigan League Ballroom.) Free. "Church and State In the New World." William W. Sweet, University of Chicago. (Rackham Lecture Hall.) Lecture. "Personal Achievements of the Clergy." Dumas Malone, Director of the Harvard University Press. (Rackham Lecture Hall.) Lecture. "Contribution of Roman Catholics to American Culture." Edward Fitzpatrick, in connection with the Sixth Annual Con- ference on Religion. (W. K. Kellogg Auditorium.) Beginners' Class, in Social Dancing. (Michigan League Ballroom.) Duplicate Bridge. (Michigan League.) Anyone wishing to play is invited. Come with or without partners. Lecture. "Religion and Humanitarianism." Dixon Ryan Fox, Pres- ident of Union College. (Rackham Lecture Hall.) Concert. Faculty of the School of Music. All Brahms program. (Hill Auditorium.)' his coat and hang it over the back of a chair. The executive offices of the White House are air-conditioned, but the President will have none of it in his office. Hle keeps the vents turned off and opens theFrench doors looking out on the rose gardens and the South grounds. This, and the coat removal, are enough for him. In the White House proper, sep- arate air-cooling units have been established in the various rooms. (This was preferred to air-condition- ing, so as to avoid tearing out walls to introduce new vents. But the President at first declined to have even a cooling unit in his rooms. Finally he was persuaded to accept it, with the understanding that it would not be turned on when he was there. . The same is true of the President- ial yacht, Potomnac. Air-conditioning equipment has just been intsalled throughout the boat, but the Presi- dent insists that it be turned off in his room. Note-The same preference for nature's hot air is expressed by Cor- dell Hull and Sumner Welles in the State Department. Their rooms are the only offices in the building which have cooling units, and neither makes use of it. Nazi Revolution When Nazi troops marched into Poland, September 1, 1939, Adolf Berle, Assistant Secretary of State and Roosevelt brain truster remark- ed: "This is the beginning of the world revolution." The war-or revolution-has now been in progress for ten months and every report coming back from Ger- many indicates the truth of Berle's words. For what most people do not rea- lize about Germany is that the Nazis are fighting with a crusading revolu- tionary fervor. They are staging a social revolution. Their redistribution of wealth in Germany makes Stalin's working for the Government. All his raw materials come from the Gov- ernment. His credit is arranged by the Government. Exchange is regu- lated by the Government, and prices are manipulated almost daily by the Government. Today in Germany also, the in- dustrialist who owns an automobile does not dare to drive it to work., It would be taken away from him, and he would be hissed off the streets. Only Nazi officials ride in cars. Oth- ers ride bicycles. Real fact is that Germany has borrowed Karl Marx back from Rus- sia and made it work. Bomb Plots Lost in the shuffle of war news was what happened to the Christian Front members, recently acquitted and released after a trial in which they were charged with conspiring to overthrow the Government of the United States. After they were released, one of the first things some of them did was to go to the clerk of the court in Booklyn and demand return of their guns. Immediately thereafter several bomb plots were unearthed in New York. Most of the bombs were crude- ly manufactured and failed to ex- plode. The papers reported two that went off, but gave the others no publicity. However, there was no question but that the bomb epidemic resulted from the feeling on the part of var- ious subversive elements that the ac- quittal of the Christian Fronters gave them immunity. Merry-Go-Round Approximately one-third of the 1,000 delegates at the GOP conven- tion were World War veterans and all the candidates had vets playing leading roles in their campaigns- Harry Colmer of Kansas, former American Legion Commander, was active for Willkie, and Ben Doris of Oregon, one of the three remaining Legion "king makers", worked for Taft. Assisting Doris was chunkey little Karl Kitchen of Cleveland, who managed the only Legion convention that didn't go in the red. Senator Rush Holt, buck-toothed West Vir- ginia anti-New Deal Democrat, re- cently defeated for nomination, is quietly aiding the campaign of Tom Sweeny, the Republican nominee. Navy officers may shortly be pro- hibited from writing letters to news- papers. The ban is being seriously consid- ered as a result of a letter written by Lt. Commander Jackson R Tate, air officer of the Carrier Yorktown. Published in the Honolulu Star-Bul- letin and The Pensacloa (Fla.) Jour- nal, thec ommunication vigorously defended the airmanship of Admiral Charles A. Blakely, former com- mmer o~~ f the.Aivrrft TBattl~ e For 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 Outing Club will meet on Sunday, July 7, at 2:30 p.m. in the rear of the Rackham Building for a trip, a short distance from Ann Arbor, affording swimming, softball, volleyball and hiking. All graduate students, faculty and alumni invited, Band Concert. The University of Michigan Summer Session Band will present its first concert in the sum- mer session series Sunday afternoon, July 7, at 4:15 o'clock, in Hill Audi- torium, under the direction of Pro- fessor William D. Revelli. The gen- eral public is invited to attend. The Michigan Christian Fellow- ship, an Evangelical Student Group, wish to welcome summer school stu- dents to their hour of devotion Sun- day afternoon, 4:30, in the Fireside room of Lane Hall. Students who wish to attend both this weekly meeting and the band concerts are urged to be present this week to make their preference for a conven- ient hour known. Summer Session Convocation and Vespers: The Summer Session Con- vocation and Vespers will be held in Hill Auditorium, Sunday, July 7th, 8:00 p.m. Professor Louis A. Hop- kins, Director of the Summer Ses- sion will give the address of welcome. The Summer Session Chorus, under the direction of Professor William Breach will present a program of songs by modern American compos- ers Lutheran Students: Pastor Yoder conducts early service at 8:30 a.m. and regular service at 10:30' a.m. In Trinity Luteran Church each Sun- day, and. Pastor Stellhorn conducts regular service at 10:30 a.m. in Zion Lutheran Church each Sunday. The Lutheran Student Association for Lutheran Students and their friends will meet this Sunday evening at 6:00 at the home of Pastor and Mrs. Stellhorn, 120 Packard St. St. Andrew's Episcopal Churebi: Sunday, 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion; 11:00 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon by the Reverend Henry Lew- is; 11:00 a.m. Kindergarten, Chil- dren's Chapel in the Church Office Building; 3:00 p.m. Cars leave Harris Hall for a student tour of the Cran- brook Foundation and Christ Church, Bloomfield Hills. Picnic supper, 25c. All Epicopal students and their friends cordially invited. If you can provide transportation, please call the Church Office, 7735. Wesley Foundation. Student class in the Wesley Foundation Assembly Room at 9:30 a.m. Subject: "The Bible and Literature." Leader, Mil- dred Sweet. Wesleyan Guild Meeting at 5:30 p.m. in the Wesley Foundation Room. Refreshments and Fellowship at 5:30 followed by the meeting at 6:15 p.m. There will be a panel discussion on "Industrial Disorder" by persons of varying viewpoints. We will adjourn in time for the Vesper Service at Hill Auditorium. First Methodist Church: Morning Worship Service t 10:40 o'clock. Dr. C. W. Brashars will preach on "Christian Citizen First Baptis l i.h, 512 E. Huron St., C. H. Lou ks, Minister. 10:30 Morning Worship. Communion Med- itation: "The Word of God" 11:30, The :Church at Study. We hope to have the entire family stay for this thirty-minute period of Bible Study. 10:30, The Beginner's and Pri- mary Departments will meet during the Worship Service. A recreation period is provided for these Depart- ments during the Church School session. 6:15, The Roger Williams Guildl (Baptist Student Group) will meet on the lawn of the Guild House, 503 East Huron Street, for a picnic sup- per, and attend the Summer School Convocation in a body. Unitarian Church: 11 a.m. Rev. John Howland Lathrop D.D. of Brooklyn, N.Y. will speak on "What the Liberal Church Stands For." 3:30 p.m. Monday, July 8. A re- ception will be held in the Unitarian Church library for Rev. and Mrs. Edwin Wilson of Chicago. All Uni- tarians and Universalists are par- ticularly invited. Presbyterian Church: 10:45 a.m. "Help For Our Burdens" will be the subject of the sermon by Dr. W. P. Lemon. 5:30 p.m. Sunday evening vespers led by the minister, Dr. W. P. Lemon, on "What the Other Half Believe." This Sunday evening his subject will be The Jew Views "The Gentile Prob- lem." A cost supper at 5:30, meet- ing at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday- 12:45 p.m. Excursion No. 5-The Ford Plant. Inspection of the various Ford industries at River Rouge. Round trip by special bus. Reserva- tions in Summer Session Office, Angell Hall. Trip ends at 5:31 p.m., Ann Arbor. 3:30-5:30 p.m. Dancing. (Michigan League Ballroom). Free of charge. Come with or without partners. 4:15 p.m. Lecture. "Evangelists and Statesmen of Education." Dumas Ma- lone. Director of the Harvard University Press. (Rackham Lecture Hall.) 5:15 p.m. Lecture. "Principles of Christian Education." Dr. Edward Fitzpat lick in connection with the Sixth Annual Conference on Religion. (W. K. Kellogg Auditorium.) 7:30 p.m. Intermediate Dancing Class. (Michigan League Ballroom.) 8:00 to 10:00 p.m. Open House at the International Center, for all foreign stu- dents and others interested. 8:15 p.m. Lecture. "Education as a Responsibility of the State." Edgar B. Wesley, University of Minnesota. (Rackham Lecture Hall.) 8:30 p.m. "Beyond The Horizon," by Eugene O'Neill. (Mendelssohn Theatre.) Thursday- 4:15 p.m. 5:15 p.m. 7:15 8:00 8:15 p.m. p.m. p.m. 8:30 p.m.' Friday- 3:30 p.m. 5:15 p.m.; Lecture on Niagara Falls. Professor Irving D. Scott. (Natural Sci- ence Auditorium.) Lecture. "The Jews In American Culture." Dr. Louis Binstock, in connection with the Sixth Annual Conference on Religion. Lecture. "The Social Responsibility of Education." Ernest H. Wil- kins, President of Oberlin College. (Rackham Lecture Hall.) Concert on the Charles Baird Carillon. Bridge Lessons. (Michigan League.) Round-Table Discussion. "Religion and Education in American Life." Chairman, Lewis G. Vander Velde, University of Michigan. Pres- ident Ernest H. Wilkins and Professors William W. Sweet, Edgar B. Wesley, Dumas Malone, and Charles B. Vibbert. (Amphithe- atre, Rackham Building.) "Beyond The Horizon," by Eugene O'Neill. (Mendelssohn Theatre.) Excursion No. 6-Niagara Falls and vicinity. Two and one-half days. A member of the Department of Geology will accompany the group as lecturer. Round trip by boat and special bus. Reservations in Summer Session Office. Lecture. "The Education of Jewish Children." By Dr. Louis Bin- stock, in connection with the Sixth Annual Conference on Reli- gion. (W. K. Kellogg Auditorium.) Watermelon Cut. (Michigan League.) Free. "Beyond The Horizon," by Eugene O'Neill. (Mendelssohn Theatre.) Social Evening. (Michigan League Ballroom.) Come with or without a partner. 7:30 8:30 9:00 p.m. p.m. p.m.