THE MICHIGAN DAILY E M A B1 cl m V: M El A fa 'a U* * * Published every morning except Monday iring the Universityoyear by the Board in >ntrol of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial ssociation. The Associated Press is exclusively en- led ;to the use for republication of all news spatches credited to it or not otherwise edited in this paper and the local news pub- led herein. Entered at the postoffide at Ann Arbor, ichigan, as second class matter. Special rate postage granted by Third Assistant Post- aster General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, .50- Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- rd Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR JO H. CHAMBERLIN ditor.....................Ellis B. Merry ditor lichigan Weekly..Charles E. Behymer aff Edlitor............ ..Philip C. Brooks ty Editor............Courtland C. Smith omen's Editor..........Marian L. Welles >orts Editor............Herbert I;. Vedder heater, Books and Music.Vincent C. Wall, Jr. sistant City' Editor... lchard C. Kurvink Night Editors obert E. Finch F. Thomas McKean Stewart hooker enneth G. Patrick aul J. Kern Nelson J. Smith, Jr. Milton Kirshbaum Reporters sther Anderson i'ohn H. Maloney" argaret Arthur Marion McDonald lex A. Bochnowski Charles S. Monroe an Campbell Catherine Price ',;ie Churrh. Harold L.. Fassman anchard W. Cleland Morris W. Quinn larence N. hoeleso" tkita 'Rosenthal argaret Gross Pierce Rosenberg alborg Egeland Eleanor Scribner arjorie F>Ilmer Corinne Schwarz mes 1. Freeman Robert G. Silbar :oert J. Gessner Howard F. Simon lame E. Gruber George E. Simons lice Hagelshaw Rowena Stillman seph 1;. Howell Sylvia Stone Wallace Hlushen George Tilley harles R. Kaufman Bert. K.Tritscheller 1 illiam F. Kerby Edward L. Warner, Jr. awrence R.Klein Benjamin S. Washer onald J. Kline Leo J.' Yoedicke illy Knox Joseph Zwerdling , ick L. Lait, Jr. BUSINESS STAFFr felephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER. WILLIAM C. PUSCH sstant Manager... George H. Annable, Jr. dvertising... .....Richard A. Meyw dvertising ............Arthur M. Hinkley dvertising... .... ..Edward L. Hulse dvertising............John W. Ruswncel ccounts........... ...... Raymond Wachiter irculation..... ....George B. Ahn, Jr.- ublication............ ,Harvey Talcott Assistants 'eorge Bradley Ray. Hofelicb arie Brummeler Hal A. Jaehn mes Carpenter James "Jordan harles K. Correll Marion Kerr arbara Cromell Thales N. Lenington Ta DTively Catherine,-McKinven essie V. Egeland Dorothy Lyons IU, Iewer Alex K. Scherer atherine Frohne George Spater ouglass Fuller Ruth Thompson eatrice Greenberg H-erbert E. V rnum elen Gross Lawrence WValkley . hammer Hannah Wallen art W. Hammer SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 1928 Night Editor-K. G. PATRICK tion circles. When a raging blizzard this week threatened to cut off im- mediate aid for suffering inhabitants in the upper peninsula villages above Sault Ste. Marie, the Douglas trans- port plane which spent the night at Selfridge field, Mt. Clemens, was en- listed as one of the few remaining means of getting relief to the district. Last word was that the plane, carry- much needed supplies, had success- fully completed the first lap of the hazardous trip, and was preparing to transport mail and food into the thick of the storm region. With the situation so tense that all highways have been blocked for 15 days, and. with plows, trucks, and sleighs powerless to cope with the situation, the army transport plane, piloted by Lieutenants Joseph J. Soper and Keith Roscoe, has rendered a needful and significant service to the inhabitants of northern Michigan. Whatever may be the final outcome of the relief expedition, the flight will stand as a sterling example of prac- tical aviation. COM[ENDABLE It is with heartfelt felicitation for the Union management that the stu- dent body will greet the announce- ment to the effect that the Union, dur- ing the first semester of the current year fared better financially than it has in many years past. The report shws not only that greater care has been exercised in operating the insti-. tution, but that student patronage, especially at the dances and at the plays given by Mimes, has been ex- ceptionally fine. Though the accomplishments of the Union management have been note- worthy, there still remain a number of minor things which deserve to be corrected with the increase in rev- 'enue, and first of these is the situation at the Friday and .Saturday night dances. Though the student patronage of these functions has shown tre- mendous increases in the past year, some of the accommodations for the affairs, notably those at the men's check room on the first floor, have remained the same as in the past, and have become woefully inadequate. Lines 15 minutes to half an hour long are common at these check windows following the Union parties, and af- ford extreme inconvenience to those attending. Another accommodation which has similarly become inade- quate for the Union dance crowds is the seating facilities at the dances, an extremely annoying situation. If a surplus is available for im- provements, also, it could be used in spectable Jefferson street entrance for the Mimes theater. At the pres- ent time wet weather makes a mass of half-submerged planks, puddles, and soft mud out of what is never better than a dusty path of access. Perhaps this project is included in the plans for paving the Union mall, which Union officials have under considera- tion at present. o EDROLLA FAMILY SKELETON THE SECRET IS now told in The Daily feature on; the Union which ap- peared recently. It seems that the idea of a union was born in the minds of a group of men who were seated around a table in Joe Parker's. * * * FOR THOSE OF you who think that Parker's was always a place where steaks were served we wish to say that it was once a place where they gave lunches away. The only thing was that you had to buy beer or, something like that to get the free lunch. Yes, it was a saloon, but not today. NOW WHEN IT is mentioned that the idea of the Union was' born at Parker's we begin to think. Were the fellows tseated on chairs or on the floor? Were they conscious? Were they, in other words, sober? Well, personally, we can't see what busi- ness a sober person had down at Parker's. ALL THIS LEADS us to a belief that the Union was founded by per- sons under the influence of liquor and now if you even have the smell of, liquor on your breath (where did you get it?) they bounce you out. Well, times have changed. AT LEAST, IF you ever feel like tearing the Union down just stop and consider the condition of those who started it, and you will excuse T HEAT-ER BOOKS MUSIC . I all blunders and damages. * * * THE HAPPY COLLEGIANS 'By Hot Stuff. Chapter II Well, there we are perched in canoe, cursing the day we were and the stork that brought us. I that born rolls WELCOME, HARVARD )liclhigan takes pleasure in wel- coming to Ann Arbor the Harvard trackmen in their first encounter with the Wolverine' representa- tives. Without doubt, the contest. tonight will prove to be an inter- esting and sportsmanlike exhibi- tion of track and field ability. With the same sincerity of its welcome, Michigan hopes that that that competition imay mark the beginning of a continued athletic relation between the two institu-' tions. ,R NITTI, M'CLURE Debate is a poor way to settle any question; but debate is an excellent way to bring out both sides of a con- troversial problem; and the more able the antagonists in the debate the more valuable the discussion will become. On this basis it may be rather safely concluded that the debate arranged by the Oratorial association for Tues- day night between two internationally prominent editors-Vincent Nitti and S. S. McClure-will be one of the most worthwhile programs presented here in recent months. Nitti is a born and bred anti- Fascist, son of a prime minister who is now in exile for opposing the Duce. McClure represents, in a manner, what is probably the dominant Ameri- can opinion, that Fascism is a worthy experiment. The two views are dia- metrically opposite, and the direct clash of issues cannot possibly leave any bit of evidence or argument un- turned. "The one harsh voice in Italy which harps and caws at Fascism and its Duce-the voice of the Black Bird" is the name which Nitti has gained for himself from theAmerican press. McClure believes there is virtue in Pascisin, to which Nitti replies "The wealthy class of America believes in Fascism.......- but they do not know!" The debate to -be held here Tues- day night offers an exceptidnal oppor- tunity for a local audience to learn first hand, from men close to the sit- uation, the facts about a social and economic and political situation which is fast becoming an interna- tional concern. It will afford an op- II ,. I EDITORIAL COMMENT PUBLICITY, GOOD AND BAD (The Daily Illini.) One of the most exploited words in modern day usage is that of publicity. There is no telling what effect it has on the actions of a large number of individuals; it prompts many to noble deeds and discourages others from li- centious commitments. Love of praise or fear of condemnation are indeed guiding forces in the lives of most people. It is getting to be extremely diffi- cult for the average person to be able to differentiate between publicity ma- terial and impartial, unbiased infor- mation. Civic and industrial enter- prises of all kinds are expending large sums yearly to advance their own particular views and to cause the pub- lice to think the way they would have them think. The result is that the mails are full of propaganda, the press is swamped with request ma- terial from outside organizations, and the reading public is submerged in colored and "doctored" literature. The publicity agent has a place in the world, to be sure, but should he not give the public what it ought to have and what it needs? Much of our information is dependent on special- ized experts who are employed by worthwhile organizations, and to that extent, the work of these men ful- fills a distinct need. It would be hard for the newspaper, and other agencies for the dissemination of information, to supply all the facts without the help of some outside organization to cooperate with them in the work. But it is the publicity seekers and much of their trash that the public is beginning to resent. People are"forced my glass eye over Stuff's way and sees him and his date. hunched over despairingly. I looks over to where the whole U. S. Navy is bearing down on us. They're about as far away as a para- lytic can thrown Betsy Barbour, so I crosses myself, throws the chaperon overboard, kisses the girl a last ling- ering good-by and settles' back to wait, idly humming this ditty: I didn't raise my boy to be a sttu- dent. I just wanted him to go to Michi- gan He told me he'd be good and wise -and prudent But that was long before canoe and auto ban. I didn't raise my boy to be a jail bird I just wanted him to go to Michi- gan But now I guess he's done it- take my word He'll sing his alma mater now from a paddy van. Just as I'm giving my Adam's ap- ple a final wind-up, trying to reach the last high "C" clopslooey!-I feels the canoe being raised in the air. About thirty seconds before I'm get- ting ready to dodge the North Star and say howdyedo to the man in the moon we stops with a jolt that knocks out my latest filling-and there we are resting high and -iry as a fra- ternity house on the back of a sub- marine. "Ahoy, there" sings out an air cooled voice from somewhere. I low- ers my haughty head and spies the boy who manipulates the dry Martini tones peeking out at me from a con- ning tower. "Peek-a-boo," says I. Then I rises and bows. The head went out of sight and the sub started to skip for the shore. I just has time for one last look be- fore we slides into port, and in that eyefull, doggoned if I doesn't see a familiar black mass bob up in the middle of the Huron. Can you guess? Yep-it's the chaperon coming up for air. (To Be Cqntinued) * * * We Don't Know Many Junior Girls But{ We Hear That Many Of Them Do Follow Your Suggestion Has it occurred to you how the Junior Girls are missing their great opportunity to score an unprecedented hit in local dramatic (?) circles by using such a misleading title when we all know that they meant to leave the "e" off the end of "For The Love Of Pet-e." Think of the great re- sponse the public would make to this THIS .AFTERNOON AND TO. NIGHT: The Rockford Players pre- sent "Hedda Gabler" by Henrik Ib- sen in the Whitney theater at 2:30 and S o'clock. After all Hedda-"she devil, witch woman, mighty huntress of men" and all that-remains Hedda Tesman until the revolver 'shot that ends her at- tempt to dominate someone-anyone, even herself. Poor Hedda probably didn't know what was the matter with her; as Miss .Kearns so charmingly remarked after the performance last night, if she had lived her life today instead of in the shadow of Victorian Christiana, all she would have had to have done would have been to go to any first rate psychiatrist and he could have fixed her up beautifully. As it is, she is subtle, fascinating, cruel; .a woman of conflicting and contradicting emotions; perhaps a woman without a soul; perhaps a woman with too much soul; a woman whom the audience doesn't under- stand, and who doesn't understand herself. All of this discussion of the char- acter has been occasioned this week by the appearance of a small, red- haired woman with icy blue eyes, who is acting the part at the Whitney thea- ter for the last two times today. Elsie Herndon Kearns has made the pro- duction of "Hedda Gabler" successful through sheer virtuosity of acting. There are flaws a-plenty in the work of the others; but she made Hedda something which Ann- Arbor won't forget-something that cannot be ef- faced even by succeeding floods of Patsys and Home Towners. THE CAMPUS, by Robert Cooley Angell; 239 'pages; D. Appleton and Co.; 1928; $2.50. Quietly refreshing but conservative -honest observations duly offered-a winning and easy style-this is The Campus in a few phrases. To those who know Professor Angell it is sim- ply a cdse of the man in the book and to those who know him this is a rec- ommendation. Despite the almost blatant advertising tactics of the pub- lishers, the volume is not one of de- nunciations, of extreme or reactionary ideas. The reading of it is a sort of check and balance operation, the points occasionally jar the pride of the common assumptions, but a speedy checking with the facts proves the truth. Briefly the work s just what it pro- claims to be: a study of contemporary undergraduate life in the American university, that much-maligned and exploited institution of today. There is in its discursive sociological .treat- meit very little assumption, especial- ly of a radical nature. The Campus will attract readers of the professorial class, and after that those who play in the backyards of the university in their various capacities. It will. at- tract students of the general and ad- vanced type, . and sociologists as a matter of course. The rest of the mob are already proclaiming it a disap- pointment. The author quietly wiggles his fingers at these latter with several well-balanced phrases. A glance at the chapter headings reveals an ambitious field of endeavor to one who is acquainted with a uni- versity, for such things as fraternities, student self-support, campus activi- ties, intercollegiate and intramural athletics, and religion have served to bring many a thinking man to figura- tive tears in the immediate past, and the problems growing from them oc- cupy every day a more imminent po- sition in the discussions regarding higher education. However everything is given its place and its credit, there are no instances where both sides are not heard. The main fault probably lies in the lack of decisions given by the writer; lie refrains from attacking any but the baser tendencies or cur- rents of activity. Acting as a pole around which his conclusions are drawn is the somewhat wistful desire { for a greater consecration of knowl- edge. Professor Angell, like many before him, asks the question, "Which way are we going? Should the accept- ed value of extra-curricular activities, the commercial enterprise of highly- organized athletics, the restless en- ergy of American life lead us away from the goal of education? Or have we been supposing wrongly that the goal lies elsewhere?" After thnoue- Vacation in Europe!".I All Expenses Paid NE day next summer you will watch the fading sky I E E ' Line of New York from the deck of a great oceanI- liner. It will carry you to the port of Liverpool - fronm which you will speed over the English dowvns to Chester. rom there by motor to Leamington, the Shakes peare Country, Oxford. Then after two days in London v spent between Westminster Abbey and the Tower of Lon- W don (not forgetting "The Cheshire Cheese"), you go to -r- The Hague, famed as "The Smartest.Capital in'Europe." I, g . tTo Amsterdam, "The Venice of the North." Next to - °' F r IBru ssels with its medieval guild houses and the colossal pi rlioteld Ville, the largest municipal structure in Europe. On to Cologne and up the swift coursing Rhine to an- A - xdcient Mainz. By train up the steepening Rhine valley to 3 - Switzerland, "The Roof of the World." Then a week of w o motoring through glorious Alpine scenery. At last to1- Paris, with four days in which to wander through the Louvre, shop in the Rue de la Paix, and "debauch" atop Montmartre. Then homeward on the Homeric, Cal- - fornia or Majestic, a wek's vooge in the keen North Atlantic air, while quickened appetites respond to o three smashing meals and many a hearty 'tween-mneals snack. Ilorne-after the vacation of a lifetime. o r~ TIME-The Weekley Newsmagazine-Offers You This Vacation. r li in return for yourswork this spring as TIME'S subscription representative. This is not a contest. Special ar- " 0 rangements made with Thos. Cook & Son make possible this amazing generous reward for your efforts. Writep En Z for details today e ,. The "Tip and Turn" Toaster is a brightly nickeled Manning - Bowman. The toast turns itself over-just tip the door down.-No burned fingers or injured dispositions. A square- shaped Toasted Sandwich Service of "Golden Glow" Limoges china, seven pieces, decorated modishly with delicate poppies, goes with the