it THE MICHIGAN DAILY THUNSDAY, MAY 19, 1927 "--, ------------- .......... U74 mjr tgatt atty Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Contrel of Student Publications. Members of Westera Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwiseI credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished therein. Entered at the postoffica at Ann Arbor, Michigan,as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- mnaster General. Subscription by carrier, $3.75; by mail, 64.00. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- pard Street. Phones: Fditorial, 4925; l'usiness 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING, EDITOR SMITH H. CADY. JR. Editor ..............W. Calvin Patterson City Editor................ .Irwin A. Olias NtwsEditrs.;. . . tFrederick Shiilito News Editors...........Philip C. Brooks Women's Editor............Marion Kubik Sports Editor...........Wilton A. Simpsonj Telegraph Editor..........Morris ZwerdlintI Music and Drama......Vincent C. Wall, .Jr. Night Editors Charles Behymet Ellis Merry L.ariton Chamope Stan ford N. Phelps Jo Chamberlin Courtland C. Smith ames Herald Cassam A. Wilson Assistant City Editors Carl Burger Henry Thurnawn Joseph Brunswick Reporters Marion Anderson Milton Kirshbaunm Margaret Arthur Pat'l Kern I earn Campbell Sally Knox essie Church Richard Kurvink. Chester E. Clark G. Thomas McKean Edward C. Cummings Kenneth Patrick Margaret Clarke 'Mary Ptolemy Blanchard W Cleland Morris Quiyn Clarence Edelson James Sheehan William Emery Sylvia Stone Robert E. .inch Mary Louise Taylor W Martin Frissel Nelson Smith, Jr. oert Gessner William Thurnau Margaret Gross Marian Welles Elaine Gruber Thaddeus Wasielewski Coleman J. Glencer Sherwood Winslow arvey J Gunderson Herbert E. Vedder Stewart Hooker Milford Vanik Morton B. Icove BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER PAUL W. ARNOLD Contracts................William C. Pusch Copywriting ..........Thomas E. Sunderland Local Advertsing ....George' H. Annable, Jr. Foreign Advertising.....Laurence Van Tuyl Circulation................T. Kenneth Haven Publication'................John H. Bobrink Accounts ................Francis A. Norquist Assistants countries, consistently suffers from discrimination at others' hands, no- tably in the case of automobiles. From more than a selfish stand- point also, the proposition is laudable ENSIAN in that it can not possibly foster any NVADES lurking spirit of friction betweenAPUS ns, a he tarif arrangements It wasn't so hard to get them after between France and Germany so all. Just a few minutes in a line often do at present. If the rates are where those in charge haven't had high, the affected exporters have the much practice in the art of keeping satisfaction of knowing that they are people waiting, and we had our new universally high, and that all export- 'Ensian. ers are on the same competitive basis. * * * If they are low, on the other hand, Since they were so kind as to givel it implies no necessary concession on over a whole section to Toastedj the part of any nation. Rolls, we really can't be very harsh If the tariff is for the purpose or with the latest production of the fomenting inter'national discord, as it campus historians. The pictures are seems to have been in some cases, nice we haven't found any misspelled it is utterly inexcusable. If it is for words yet, and that new B. M. O. C. the purpose of protecting native in- section really is a corker. dustries, however, as it ostensibly is * * * Mui D GR A H AMS ofMay Fes COMMENCEMENT GIFTS tival at 8 o'clock in hill aUditorium, ll.- * * * - ERNESTINE SCIIHUMANN-IHEINK . A review, by Vincent Wall GRA H AM' No one has ever satisfactorily ex- At othEnds of the Diagonal . plained why Bernhardt's last Camille!e when she was a grandmother with a= IIIIifigIIIilli 11l 3EI I lli #111111111111111 111 11111111111111 wooden leg, was one of the triumphs ______,__ j 1 c i t i there is no reason why all nations should not be on a plane of complete parity. CENTRAL CONrVROL An interesting experiment is being tried in Italy, where the government is assuming practical control of the course of industry and where produc- tion and prices are being regulated by the government economists. The latest move is an order from the government that .the exporters must reduce their prices almost at once because of the possible loss of the export market. It is possible, according to the, premises of economics to control trade in this way. And it seems that Italy, with the iron dictatorship of II Duce, is in an excellent position to wisely ordain and then enforce the wise course of industry. It is an experiment that will bear watching. Timothy Hay dropped in for a few minutes just before leaving town, early yesterday afternoon. "Tell my! friends I'll be back when things blow over," said Tim. "Somebody has been saying I made the nomina- tions for the Hall of Fame." * 0 * "That lie said. ly to the report is absolutely false," "I confined myself exclusive- humor section." * * * I .4 i CAMPUS OPINION Anonymous communications will be disregarded. The names of communi- cants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. i _1 George B. Alin W. 1-. Allmani F. r. Babcock Freda JBolotin Esther A. Boze G. 5. Bradley J. 0. 1Brow n Juliette ohen Florence Cooper C. K. Correll E. V. Egelang ]3. Fishman Alice L. Foucl4 D. J. Fuller Ii. Goldberg Selina Jensen nes J ordlan arion Kerr I'. N. Lennington Elizabeth Macauley W. A. Mahaffy R. A. Meyer R. L. Miller G. W. Perrett R. W. Preston M, L. Reading J.' E. Robertson John Russinkle A. K. Scherer. W. L. Schloss L.; I-. Goodman IanceeSolomon eatrice Gr dcaerg Harvey Talcott C. W. 1 1amrer iFred 'Tocpel A. M. inkler G. T. Tremble M. R. Hubbard harold Utley E. L. Hulse Herbert Varnum 1.. A. Jaehn Ray Wachter THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1927 Night Editr-G. THOMAS KeKEAN EDUCATING FRESHIMEN Something new and beneficial seems to be in store for incoming freshmen in view of the recent announcement of puans for a regular Freshmen week to be held the last week in Septem- ber before classes start. In accord- ance with the policy of the commit-, tee in charge of the program for freshmen for "humanizing education," activities have been planned for the benefit of the new students for the purpose of helping them to become acquainted with the University, its activities, and in a general way, in- clicating what' will be expected of them in the four years to follow. The original Freshmen week was Inaugurated at the University of N4aine in 1922 by President Little. Since then, Pof. William A. Frayer, of the history department, points but, the idea has spread to more than 100 other American universities. The idea involves a full week of ac- tivities for the freshmen entering the university. They will arrive one week before upperclassmen and will be oc-1 cupied until. the opening day of' classes. Although it may take two or three years for the new system to show any direct results, it is wholly prob- able that the plan adopted by the committee will prove a success and be one more step forward in stabiliz- ing college education; and at the same .time it would be an additional feather in the cap of Michigan's president and, the University as a whole. ITHE TARIFF Of all the problems of American politics none has been more consist- ently perennial and more perennially, insistent than the tariff. There has not been a single administration since the early part of the nineteenth cen- tury that has not had to deal with the problem in some form and while, the general tendency seems to have been away from protection, it is ex-! SIC'S REPLY To The Editor: May I at this tin' give some of the proper interpretations of my former communication? It was not my intention: 1. To prove that all lynchings are justified. 2. To prove that all Negro men are rapists (Mr. Johnson dissenting, not- withstanding). 3. To prove that the lynching of a guilty moron is good public policy or good criminology. Nor did I have any intention of proving that the earth is flat or that the moon is made of green cheese, but Mr. Johnson failed to infer that I intended to prove these. And one more correction, please. I praised some of the work 'of the Ku Klux Klan and not the organization itself, and anyone who is acquainted thor- oughly with some of the work of that order will join me in the praise of the work done. It was not my intention to attempt to justify lynching, rather it was my intention to show how narrowly some individuals see the problems of their neighbors. It was my intention to show how dogmatic and uncharitable some people are toward the South when they know nothing of the con- dition and circumstance. In regard to the justification of lynchings, I will at this time say a few words although in my former communication I did not intend to justify such procedure, rather I pro- tested against a heartless unchari- table editorial that burned my south- ern heart, even though I realized at the time that it was written by one of a fertile imagination and void of all knowledge of the facts and con- dit ions. From the standpoint of the social group, no deviation from the ordinary established channels of procedural justice is justifiable. The Texas rangers who took the reigns of rule in their own hands and trove the horse-thief out of the state or hanged him on a tree beside the murderer discovered in their midst; the winning groups of some of our western states which quietly extinguished the life I of the thief or murderer discovered in their midst; and even the revolt- ing American colonists attempting to take the reigns of rule and control in their hands, from the established law under which they had come into existence cannot be justified from the standpoint of the larger social group.- And yet in each of these instances a careful examination of the conditions will show that we as individuals prob- ably would have acted about the same way had we lived, there then and under the circumstances. We are all humans. Life is sweet to each in- dividual and there is a strong feel- ing of loyalty to the smaller imme- diate social group. I do not want to MICIIIGAIILVA Listen to this tale of romance, Tale of Indian warriors cold- In the rainy hunting season Came they forth, those warriors mighty, / Scarred from many a campus battle- Student council, Daily, football- Forth they romped to get um pale- face; Paleface who had dared to tres- pass On the ground of happy hunt- ing. Covered with a coppery; brick- dust Carme those screaming, yelling redmen, To the mighty oak of Tappan Where there waited trembling paleface. Icy waters, scourging rawhide, Used they there to test the pale- face While the lowly student body Gathered round to watch their pranking. Seizing then their chastened cap- tives Forth they bore them to the Union, Wigwam of the conquering In- dian. b t . e t'. a !v t k s x I: n T s l a a e x t a , 't t . d of the speaking stage. And no critic can explain why Schumann-leink by w ing a chubby hand at the gallery can create in one the immnortal il- lusion of music-and at the same time bring the audience to its feet in a tribute that I have never seen acord- er another artist in Hill auditorium. . Of course there is nothing of great- er value to -a diva than the traditions that surround her; Madame has fifty glorious years behind her. And after all, it is sentiment that makes the world go round; the boobs eat it, andl the most sophisticated bend in ac- knowledgement to the romance of such a career. Still Mrs. Pat Camp- bell with all the stability of the Eng- lish theatre was damned without mercy for her seasonal revival in New York. The ways of the profes- sion are devious and strange. Her program was simple, and wise- ly so, cdnsisting of two wagnerian arias from the Siegfried cycle (Erda's Warning from "Dan Rheingold" and W a 1 tr aute's "Gotterdaemmerung" ) and four ballots. As a matter of tone, even of technique, there might have been imperfections; but her interpre- tation was faultless, as real and vivid as if the picture stage was actually before the audience. There is some- thing stimulating in statuesque con- tralto with beady black eyes and a calm and Teutonic assurance that i: worth all the sloppy contraltos and dago tenors in the world. PATHS ON THE CAMPU HEADQUART FOR PANAMA Hats that are Gc, Prices that are Ri See us before you Panama and Straw Cleaned and Blo We do regular Factor; Hats properly Bleached Blocked, with all new t look just like new. (No Acids Used Don't have a good hat7 having it done by unski men in cheap cleaning Factory Hat (Where D. U. R. stops MANES IRAN N'S c' MAKE a- t 111111I IlI11111111111111HII113IItIIfIlIlIlIIIIJ IIIRIt 1111111110 1 111111111Ii f111,C Men Wanted We offer ybu the following opportunities: 1. MONEY to carry you comfortably through the school -- - year. A ...... N 2.TRAINING that will insure you profitable employment at:any time. 'ERS - -A S" HATS 3 EXPERIENCE that will be of the greatest value all ght. through life. buy. - N Hats ocked WE PAY WEEKLY SALARY PLUS y Work. aw~ueru ,properly vw~uu -*- rim m ings,_.,. ruined by See Mr. Lewis at Union, room 306, led work- shops. SThursday and Friday. Stte NORTHRIDGE BRUSH CO. at State) Phone- 741" g TYPEWRITING R.W. ROSS J Phone 6293 Typinag Can Be Left atI SWIFT'S DRUG STORE PLEASE DON'T 617 Packard St. Thus there came to Michigamua Heap big campus politician; Heap big publications magnate; Heap big dumb but mighty ath- lete. "Cap Night must be preserved," is the ultimatum issued by the Ann Ar- bor Clothier's unioti. "We shall in- sist upon the complete preservation of the ceremonies, even if we have to build the fire ourselves. All this tommyrot about a fireless celebration ' must be dropped at once." "We're willing to help the Women's League," declared their spokesman, "but we've got to live ourselves." * * * We remember a few of our own unfortunate adventures with the hardy distributors of the pots. We didn't mind it so much when they raised the price on the second one, but when they doubled it over that for the third we almost acrificed our allegiance to tradition by going bare- headed. J-HOP FAVORS HAVE NOT AS YET ARRIVED-BURTON In an interview granted yesterday,I Paul Burton, chairman of the so- called favors committee of the 19281 J-Hop, declared, "As far as I know, the favors have not yet arrived. How- ever I cannot say positively, because there are other members of the com- mittee capable of giving them away." Kernel. * * * Rolls extends thanks and congrat- ulations to the freshmen who coop- erated in making a real event out of the Student Council affair on Ferry field Tuesday night. They did their best, and we'd like them to know that' there's some appreciation for effort on this campus. O * * I;- , A __~~11 11 If tradition shrouded Madame in a final blaze of glory, Howard Han- son's commemorative opus struck another note-one of raw newness, as alien to the master symphonist as a Sandburg blank verse to the ma- jestic bombast of a Shakespearean iaw-bic. The "Heroic Elgy" is in a way a masterpiece. They were all so earnest-from Mr. Hanson him- self in a wild orgy of gyration to the blonde in the second row of the so- pranos--that there must be some- thing in it. It follows strangely in the footsteps of the "Lament": the same awkward dissonance, a mono- tonous repetition of rhythm in the brasses, and an elaborate counter mel- ody for the cornets. Moreover, there is one of the most effective and truly sensational climaxes I have ever ever -heard in a symphony orchestra -a deafening crescendo in full or- chestra that broke without modula- tion i'nto a violin solo. * * * BEETHOVEN Earl Moore, director of the Festi- val, announced the following compo- sitions by Ludwig Von Beethoven for the program of the second concert: LEONORE NO. 3 (orchestral). SCENE FROM "FIDELIO" (the quartet). "MISSA SOLEMNIS" (orchestra, quartet and chorus). The following artists will compose the quartet: Betsy Lane Shepherd, soprano; Elsie Baker, contralto; AR-. THUR HACKETT, tenor; and William Simmons, baritone. The Chicago Symphony orchestra, FREDERICK STOCK, conductor, will present the "Leonore." And the chorus of the "Missa Solemnis" will be by the Uni- versity Choral Union under the baton' of EARL MOORE. More intelligent musicians bow to the messiahship of Beethoven in the - :Aw Mef oF and the joy-frie nd.. Prince Albert t6 WHEN my father was in college, "Put that in your pipe and smoke it!" was considered snappy conversation. I'm ready to take this old line literally when the talk centers around Prince Albert. Because P. A. makes two of what I like in a pipe. All wise-cracking aside, P. A. is the money when it comes to deep-down satisfaction iia smoke. It's got everything! Cool as the trail P. A. a sold everywhere in tidy red tins, ound and half- of the ice-man across the kitchen. Sweet As po n4 tin amidl- and ywith sponge-moistener top.. vacation. Fragrant as a pine forest. -nd always with every bit of bite and parch removed yrmvrceby th rince Albert p cess. Think up your own similes. You'll writetiem all in the column headed "Superlative Degree" when you learn the joys of a jimmy-pipe and Prince Albert. If you don't know this grand old smoke, come around to my room and I'dlgive you a load. Baron Butterfield had quite a dirty' deal with his free show, according to' one of his underlings. "Although they ran us out of Hill auditorium,j we were bound to show the picture somewhere," was the report. "If nec- essary we would have run it on the1 Law building. The Student Council - 1 field of orchestral and choral litera- ture. than to any other. The centen-I I I II -I I I I