PA&GE TO T HE MICHIGAN DATLY WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2. 1944 xi.aa . ..... .... ... .....P a, .v ve v v+r.r . +v a . Fifty-Fourth Year )' ) THE PENDULUM: The eea-uation of Nietzsche Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editoral Staff Jane Farrant Betty Ann Koffman Stan Wallace 4ank Mantho Managing Editor Editorial Director City Editor Sports Editor f j v - I 5 j a a a , F. t Y' 7 7 _ J i. _ -.: _; Business Stafff Lei Amner Business Manager Telephone 23-24-1 R~EPRESENTED FOR tNATiONP.I- ADVER 1i i'G BY National Advertising Servim e n, 'ollege Pabiskbers R*epresentative 420 MROISON Age. NEW YORK, N.Y. CHICAGO ° BOSTON "* LOS ANGeELES -SAW FRANCSCO Memberof The Associated Press The AsSociated Press is exclusively entitled to the use fot republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of re- publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as' econd-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.50, by mail, $515. Member, Associated Collegiate Press,_ 1943-44 NIGHT EDITOR: DOROTHY POTTS Editorials published in The Michigan Daily ore written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. By BERNARD ROSENBERG ERMAN exterminationists, whose ranks swell the closer we come to Berlin, will not admit the duality in character that has always been part and parcel of the people they would wipe out. Such observors select those indexes of culture that best suit their pur- pose. Consequently, they seize upon the philosophies of Schopenhauer or Fichte or Hegel and extract from them their most ignoble aspects. In belaboring the obvious similar- ity between some ideas expressed by Nietzsche and some acts committed by Schiklegruber, these pepole think they have proved the whole German people to. be marked by innate de- pravity and belligerence. That for every Nietzsche there are Goethes and Lessings: the fol- lowers of Lord Vansittart leave this fact to cool its heels on the cold doorstep of ignoration. That "de- pravity" and even the militaristic spirit are not inborn but result from external frustrations, is also disregarded. The assumption has been that anything nice Germans do is merely a mask to cover up evil intent. "Calm is the bottom of my sea: who would guess that it hideth droll monsters?" Actual- ly, what exists here is not a single tendency hidden by another, but two tendencies, simultaneous and( contradictory, one of which must be cultivated for war, the other for peace. This "ambivalence"-to use the word sociologists have coined- is extant everywhere. At any rate, I have recently put myself through that irreverent emo- tional wringer of philosophy, "Thus Spake Zarathrustra," Friedrich Niet- zsche's masterpiece. One reading of this book, which can be found in an inexpensive Modern Library edition, clears up many misconceptions. FIRST of all, in the glorification of power and war and "voluptuous- ness" and selfishness and paganism and pitilessness, Hitler is a true disci- ple of Nietzsche. But, the two men completely diverge on several fun- damental points. Hitler's greatest monument has been the erection and the maintenance of a monster state. Yet Nietzsche spewed forth the ven- om of his hatred (and how he loved to hate) against the encroachments of the state with the same fury he is more familiarly known to have di- rected against God. He praises the virile man, the man as yet unborn who will "sur- pass himself" in physical prowess. Could this include the effeminate Hitler and his sniveling minions? Or would they more likely be in- cluded with the "many too many" who overpopulated the world as Nietzsche saw it? I think that if he had been pres- ent at the birth of Joseph Paul Goeb- bels, for one, he would have prevailed upon the father to expose his son on a mountain top, as the Romans of old were in the habit of doing when a deformed baby slipped into the world. Nietzsche, alive today, would have nothing but recriminations for the National Socialists who, in their mad adoration of Might, have per- formed the most signal disservice to it. This war chronicles the survival of the least fit. Hitler instigated a cataclysm that has nearly destroyed the flower of manhood. It follows that eugenists will have much poorer material to work with if they want to breed a higher race of. Methuse- lahs. In his concept of the Superman, one searches vainly for mention of German racial superiority. It must be acknowledged that Wagner influ- enced Nietzsche and the Wagnerian Siegfried Superman-perhaps implicit in Nietzsche's-was distinctly Teu- tonic. However, Nietzsche's grada- tions go: from ape to man to Super- man; not like Hitler's from ape to man to German. Nietzsche forsees a Superman in the dim future: Hitler claims his present existence. WE SHOULD know by now that no trail leads directly from an or- dered philosophy to the machinations of Hitler. The Fuherer never read Pareto and Sorel, and 'it is doubt- ful if he ever read Nietzsche, although Mussolini reportedly sent him a copy of the latter when the Axis was still alive. Paradoxically enough, the chief theorists of German-Nordic racial supremacy were the Frenchman, De- Gobineau, and the Englishman, Chamberlain (who married Wag- ner's daughter.) They formulated and propagated the notions Hitler, an Austrian, has used since his ap- pearance in the public eye. The Ger- man people were receptive to these ideas. They comforted a thwarted nation. The German people were receptive to Hitler as well-and for the same reason. If we can hold out a construct- ive democratic program for post- : - . A M/ /11-/V I e-l - r may- . _ .. . -. I4R5 '1 , s3 'Who Wants Fish?' China Conference THE CONFERENCE on China which opens today has been designed to awaken an inter- est in China on the part of teachers who are attending the summer session hoping that in turn this interest will be transmitted to the young people whom they teach. The average person in the United States Inows very little about our Far Eastern ally. Before the war many people in this country considered China of little importance to us. Since the war this situation has changed with th realization that victory and lasting peace in the Pacific can only be achieved through China. Information on this vital subject can be spread primarily through our schools. But that will be only a beginning. It is even more important to get this information to the adults in this country who have already finished school. The Summer Session in connection with the Institute on Pacific Relations has made every effort to make this information available to everyone at the University. The importance of spreading this information cannot be over-emphasized. If we hope to co- operate with China in winning the war we have to understand the Chinese people better and rid ourselves of the prejudices which we have built up because of our lack of information about them. Cooperation will come only when the people in China and the United States develop mutual understanding. The current conference is a progressive step in this direc- tion. -Doris Peterson FDR's Foes Defeated LAST WEEK Gov. John Bricker of Ohio, GOP vice-presidential candidate, predicted a Re- publican victory in November. Also last week Senator 'Cotton Ed' Smith of South Carolina, one of the bitterest enemies of FDR and the N{ew Deal, went down to defeat in the primaries. Predictions and promises such as that of Gov. Bricker are merely words until measured against reality. Just as we must take into account the voting records of congressmen when considering platform promises, so must we look at the actual political situation before accepting Gov. Brick- er's predictions. 'COTTON ED,' who has had six terms of office was not defeated by a flaming liberal, but by Gov. Olin D. Johnston, conservative but a wholehearted supporter of FDR's program. This is a significant fact. In Arkansas, the Senate seat of Hattie Caraway, long-time foe of the Ad- ministration, was won by Rep. Fulbright, author of the House resolution on internationalism, and a supporter of President Roosevelt in his foreign policy. Victories have been won by such staunch FDR men as Claude Pepper and Lister Hill in Florida and Alabama. And the list of leading Democratic enemies of the Administration al- ready eliminated in previous primaries includes: Costello (Calif.) Disney (Okla.) Dies (Tex.) Kleberg (Tex.) Starnes (Ala.) Newsome (Ala.) Vincent (Ky.) and Reynolds (N. C.) Such an impressive list is not accidental-- it represents a trend. Within the broad mass of the Democratic Party, especially in the growing political awareness of organized labor, there is a measureable swing toward the policies of FDR, embodied on the home front in the New Deal, and in foreign affairs in the ideals ennunciated at Teheran. I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Nazis Are Their Enemies By SAMUEL dRAFTON NEW YORK, Aug. 1-Dr. Goebbels has issued two new orders, one forbidding all vacations for women workers in the Reich, and the other compelling front-line troops to do the heavy manual labor of bridge-building and road repair- ing which until now has been done for them by the special Todt labor organization. This means that the German people are going to be just a little more tired than they have been, or, as the Bible tartly puts it: "And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up forever and ever: and they shall have no rest day or night, who worship the beast and his image." It is one of the characteristics of a true pre- revolutionary situation, that every step taken by the rulers to prevent revolution makes life less tolerable and revolution more necessary. In the final acts of such somber dramas as the one now being played out in Germany, the ruler becomes the servant of that which he opposes. It is our aim to increase the pressure on the German people, and Hitler's only answer is still further to increase the pressure on the German people. Himmler shoots those whom our bombs miss, and Dr. Goebbels deprives of rest those whose sleep our missiles have failed to disturb. Just as French refugees, fleeing from Hitler, once blocked their own roads to their own armies, and thus made their capture by Hitler more certain, just so do Hitler's hasty counter- measures against revolution and defeat make revolution and defeat more certain. We make war on Hitler, and Hitler makes war on Ger- many. He has become a transmission belt, dis- tributing to the German people the blows we aim at him. We bomb Berlin, and Dr. Goebbels' mighty answer is to announce that not even pots and pans are going to be manufactured any more; to replace those lost in bombings; he shakes his fist at us, but makes our bombings all the more complete. It was not in our power to have made the Germans eat cold food. Only the Nazis could have done that for us, and they have done it. THE NAZIS have a bitter need for German national solidarity, but they find themselves compelled to launch an hysterical campaign against the German upper classes, and sections of the "bourgeoise." In the name of national unity, they proclaim civil war. To a population distressed by our bombings, they announce that all Germans "must now live as do the bombed-out." Oh, fine, that is one of our strategic aims, too, and the Nazis cannot keep themselves from carrying it out. A perverse fate dogs them now in every field. They are briskly engaged in bolstering the mor- ale of the army by shooting its officers. The Nazis, like characters in a dream, do our work for us. They seek to ease German terror by terrifying Germany. Their only formula for keeping Germany in the war is to be more cruel to the Germans than the Allies could possibly be. A true sign of their bankruptcy is that each of their remedies only provokes a crisis sharper than the one it seeks to solve. Their remedies are our weapons. It is when the German trooper, looking back over his shoulder, realizes that the worst of his enemies is behind him, that he will resign the battle. History is making a point, clearly and brutally. It will not let the chief of Fascism leave the stage until he has proved that Fas- cism is the enemy of all peoples, including its own. (Copyright, 1944, New York Post Syndicate) Evidence from Von Papen ... ' THERE IS no longer much doubt that Hitler has put down the revolt of the Generals. The confirmation comes, not from Berlin or Berchtesgaden, but from Ankara, and it is sup- plied by Franz von Papen, German Ambassador to Turkey. "Following the attempt on Hitler's life," the report says, "Von Papen retired to his quarters for two days, declining to see any visitors." At the end of his cogitation, Von Papen scanned the scene and "sent a telegram of loyalty to Hitler." The wily Van Papen is a highly dependable weathervane. If he now congratulates Hitler, it is certain the Fuehrer is still boss of Ger- many. All this recalls an imaginary epitaph written for Von Papen by one of his critics some years ago. It goes as follows:; "Maj. Von Papen of the First Reich, Chan- cellor Von Papen of the Second Reich, Am- bassador Von Papen of the Third Reich, Comnissar Von Papen of the Fourth Reich, Mr. Papen of the Fifth Reich." -St. Louis Post Dispatch war Germany, instead of profer- ring dismemberment plans, she will be receptive to that, too Nietzsche represents the worst qualities of Germania. Still, there is much value in reading him. Zara- thrustra spake these words, "In the mountains the shortest way is from peak to peak but for that route thou must have long legs. Proverbs should be peaks, and those spoken to should be long and tall." A book of poetic proverbs, of blasphemies, of false- hoods aplenty - and razor-edged truths: but the wonder of "Zara- thrustra" is that it does, in fact, move "from peak to peak" like the scenes of a Dostoyevsky novel in a way that compels the reader to un- derstand what Nietzsche meant when he said that his work was written not to be read but to be memorized. Japanlese Metaity. . AM not a Japanese-hater, nor do I wish in this article to arouse anti-Japanese feelings in the readers, but I do earnestly desire to warn the American public against a strange phenomenon in the Japanese men- tality with which the Chinese have had the misfortune of becoming familiar for a number of years. I mean the Japanese genius for manu- facturing half-truths. Half-truths, by their apparent plausibility, are as a rule more dangerous'than falsehoods, and, when employed as an instrument of propaganda, more potently deadly. Monday evening's lecture on anti-Japanese "prejudice," de- livered by an American citizen born of Japanese ancestry and ed- ucated in Japan, was an excellent illustration of this. Putting aside the question wheth- er the alleged ten percent of Chinese population in California constituted a relevant portion of the lecture, the whole affair was a sad instance of the human ability to distort facts by an ingenious use of words. Instead, for example, of calling the Japa- nese aggression of Manchuria as such, the speaker referred to it re- peatedly as the Japanese "war against Manchuria," as though the Manchurians had invaded the peace- ful shores of Japanese Islands and poor Japan had been compelled to resort to violence to defend her Em- pire! THE students and friends of the University have shown their true spirit of democratic tolerance and universal good-will by giving the speaker and persons of similar status the privilege of free speech; but may they also learn to season their toler- ance with caution and their good- will with discrimination, so that they may cultivate an informed ear that will guide them in distinguishing the different graduations of truth. I do not doubt that there may be Japanese in this country who are loyal to the United States, and indeed some of them have proved their loyalty by their engagement in active combat service for the Allied cause; but I have yet to meet a Japanese who is pro-Chi- nese-or rather, since that would be impossible, who is not anti- Chinese. Whether that bitterness against the Chinese is a resultof training, or whether it is an in- stinctive response to the regretful discovery of Japan's cultural debt to China, it is hard to say. But whatever the cause, the fact re- mains that that bitterness helps to induce in the average Japanese a blindly credulous mood in which he finds it convenient to parrot, when- ever the subject of China presents itself, certain Japanese home-made expressions which are peculiarly revolting to persons who are ac- customed to calling white, white, and black, black. But let us not hate the Japanese because they are Japanese. Let us rather pity them, and hope for their mental recovery. After all, they are not wholly to blame if they have not learned to think straight, and it cer- tainly does not rest with their own choice to have been born natives of that small, pitiful country, Japan. --Celia Hwaguen Chao Engineering, Steel Rule, Origin of Mathematics. Friday, Aug. 4, 2-3: Solar Family, Exploring Space, Exploring the Uni- verse. 34: Transfer of Power (2 reels), Elements of Electrical Cir- cuits. Concerts Student Recital: Miss Jacqueline Bear, soprano, will present a song- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I __ --- WEDNESDAY, VOL. LIV AUG. 2, 1944 No. 21-S. All notices for The Daily Official Bul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the Summer Session, in typewritten form by 3:30 p. in. of the day preceding its publication, except on Saturday when the notices should be submitted by 11:30 a. m. Notices Faculty, College of Literature, Sci- ence and the Arts: The civilian fresh- man five-week progress reports will be due Aug. 5 in the Office of the Academic Counselors, 108 Mason Hall. Arthur Van Duren Chairman, Academic Counselors The five-weeks grades for Navy and Marine trainees (other than Engi- neers and Supply Corps) will be due Aug. 5. Department offices will be provided with special cards and =the Office of the Academic Counselors, 108 Mason Hall, will receive these reports and transmit them to the proper officers. Arthur Van Duren Supervisor, Navy V-12 Commonwealth of Pennsylvania State Civil. ServiceiCommission An- nouncements for Civil Service Exam- inations for War-Duration Appoint- ments have been received in our office. Examinations will be given for Supervisor of Field Service, Sen- ior Field Representative, and Field Representative. Salaries ranging from $3,456 to $4,200. Applications must be filled in the offices of the State Civil Service Commission before Aug. 18, 1944. For further details stop in at 201 'Mason Hall. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information Lectures Today: "China and America Face the Future." The Honorable Walter H. Judd, M.D., representative from Minnesota and former medical mis- sionary in China. 8:30 p.m., Rack- ham Lecture Hall. The public is cordially invited. Today: University Lecture. "Brazil, Steppingstone to Allied Victory." Dr. Egberto Teixeira of Brazil. 8 p.m., Kellogg Auditorium. Auspices, Latin- American Society and the Interna- tional Center. Thursday, Aug. 3: Professor Shih Chia Chu will not lecture on this date, but will lecture, as previously scheduled, on Aug. 10. Thursday, Aug. 3: "Interpreting China to the West." Dr. Arthur Hum- mel, Chief, Division of Orientalia, Library of Congress. 8:30 p.m., Rack- ham Lecture Hall. The public is cordially invited. Friday, Aug. 4: "China Hopes and Aims." Dr. Y. C. Yang, President ofI Soochow University. 8:30 p.m., Rack- ham Lecture Hall. The public is cor- dially invited. Academic Notices Students in Speech: The weekly assembly of the Department of Speech will be held at 3 p.m. today in the Kellogg Auditorium with a program to be devoted to speech sci- ence. The public is invited. Zoology Seminar: There will be a meeting of the Zoology Club on Fri- day, Aug. 4, at 8 p.m. in the East Lecture Room of the RackhamBuild- ing. Robert Miller will speak on "The Fishes of Death Valley." BARNABY O'Malley's not even- going to try to getj4 yr. O'Malley, my back this year. .. Fairy Godfather, has to come back He's too here! To get the smart.. pirate treasure! 8\! By Crockett Johnson This can't interest you, Barnaby. We're talking about the election and Congressman O'Malley. Not that imaginary Pixey of yours. Run along- O'Malley's friends keep \ an ear to the ground... (C " 1 Yes, George. I'm sure O'Malley's close political advisors know exactly what they're doing- Barnaby! What are you doing?Y I don't know, Pop. CS)Mr. Shultz said- c- C ~cK C "tm 1 1 -_JOrINS{j - . J I seemed like a bad break for When he didn't get nominated Sure he did. He's in line for Ir: .. : T : . :_ C~2iO($KEVV- JOHNSON/ ' oyigt14 FodFum can.2 vu _, ,_. _ _ _