THE MICHIGAN DAILY iblished every morning except Monday during the University year e Board in Control of Student Publications. ' ember of the Western Conference Editorial Association. e Assocfated Press is excluively entitled to the use for re- ation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise ed in this paper and the local news published herein. tered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as - second mutter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant aster General, bseription by carrier, $4.00; b mail, $4.50 ices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, an. Phones: Editorial, 4925; business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephoni 4925 MANAGING EDITOR , RICHARD L. TOBIN Al Director ,.............Beach Conger, Jr. Edltor .. ............ ..........Carl Forsythe Editor .....,......... ............ .avId M. Nichol Editor .............................Sheldon 0. Fullerton i's Editor+.........................Margaret -M. Thompson nt News Editor .... ............ ....Robert L. Pierce THROW OUT THE LIFELINE, SAM 11 . ' i$<. ' ' . _ , f1 B. Gilbreth Goodman Karl Seifert NIGHT EDITORS J. Oullen Kennedy James Inglis Jerry E. Rosenthal George A. Stauter Sports Assistants John W. Thomas J. Myers ne y W n E s C 1 sG 1 L,. B. REPORTERS . Arnheim Fred A. Huber Becker Nornan Hraft onnellan Roliind Martin Ellis Henry Meyer, Minkle Marion A. Milezewski Gascoigne Albert H. Newman E. Jerome Pettit rockman Georgia Geis-man arver Alice -Gilbert olins Martha Littleton andall Elizabeth Long man Frances MAnchester Foster Elizabeth Manm John tJ. TownAepd Charles A. Sanford John W. Pritchard Joseph Renihan C. Hart Schaaf Brackley Shaw Parker R. Snyder G. R. Winters Margaret O'Brien Hillary Rarden Dorothy Rundell Elma Wadsworth Josephine Woodhams I,: T C e C Cra BUSINESS STAFF Teleph'one 21214 PLES T. KLTNE Bu.. .......\.... usiness Mauager RIS P. JOHNSON ....................Assistant Manager Department Managers rtising.... . . ...... ....Vernon Bishop rtising Contracts ..........................Robert Callahan rtising Service.............Byron C. Vedder cations ...................................Milliam T. Brown nation ..........................Harry R. Begley ant. ....................................Richard Stratemeir en's Business Manager .. .' ....... ...Ann W. Verner 'Assistants son John Keysee Bursley Arthur F. Kohn Ic James Lowe in Bernard E. Schnacke eker Anne Marsha ne Cissel Katharine Jackson Field Dorothy Layin schgrund Virginia McComb ieyer Carolin Moher inan IHealen Olsen Helen Schmneede. Grafton W. Sharp Donal, Johnson Don Lyon Bernard H. Good May Seefried Minnie Seng Hlelen Spencer Kathryn Stork Clare iUnger Marry Elizabeth Watts ner's) $2.50. If we the students of America, who A White Bird Flying, by Bess Streeter Aldrich., (Appleton) $2.00. Successful Living in This Machine Age, by Edward A. Filene. (Simon & Schuster) $2.50. Wahr's NIGHT EDITOR-JERRY E. ROSENTHAL WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1931 )tU ent Sickness With A Grain of Salt { number of instances have been reported this year of students who have utilized statements 'om the university health service as a means of xcusing themselves from examinations for which ley were unprepared. This frankly illegitimate se of the health service is a problem that comes > light every year and is by no means confined > this institution. The usual comment made upon he situation is that the doctors at the health serv- :e are too gullible in accepting a student's word boat his supposed ailment and that a closer scrii- ny by these doctors would seed out the really! ick patients from -those whose imagined or ficti- .ous disability resulted primarily from an aca- emic deficiency rather than a physiological one. lowever a more intimate examination 'of the prt- sms of the health service seems to throw a greater esponsibility on the professor than haspreviously een supposed, In the first place it should be made clear that he doctors at the health service can not aiid do ot excuse a student from an examination or from ny other form of academic pursuit. All they do! to merely write out a statement of fact. Usually his statement merely says that the student in uestion was at the service at a certain time under reatment, or in case of a student missing classes he day before he went for treatment the dctor ,ay in some cases write a statement that the su- ent's present c9ndition indicates that in all prob- bility he was indisposed on the previous day. 'hese statements, often erroneously called ex- uses, are only facts that the doctor ascertains and an be ;used by the professor for just what he may pink they are worth-and no more. There are other reasons why it is up to the rofessor primarily to take these statements with grain of salt. For the doctors at the health serv- :e to question students as to their motives in oming for treatment would be undesirable as well s impossible. Antagonism developed toward the ervice by questioning a student's sincerity would efeat one-of the very purposes of the institution, hat oif friendly aid to the sick undergrduate. Vhile the very nature of medical science itself' ua es questioning an individual's word about his oterznal pains impossible. No doctor in the woilod as sufficient acumen to discern whether a patient s actually suffering bodily pain or whether he is ring about his condition. Therefore it seems evident that if the preent buses are to be mitigated, and there is ampl vidence that such abuses are wide spread, we nust look to the professors rather than the doc- ors to make the decision as to whether an under- radiate is taking unfair advantage of the system r not. If the professor will take the health service tatement merely at its face value and not As an xcuse, more exam evading hypochondriacs will be riade to talpe their academic medicine. Scaramouche, The King Maker, by Rafael tini. (Houghton Mifflin) $2.50. The Father's God, 0. E. Rolvaag. '(aHrper's) In Defense of Tomorrow, by Robert Douglass den. (MacMillan) $2.00. Cold, by Lawrence McKinley Gould. (Brewer, ren & Putnam) $3.50. The Lindberghs, by Lynn and Dora Haines. guard Press) $2.50. will some day be the intellectuals of the country, refuse to consider planned economy, unemployment relief, and various other needs of a capitalistic organization of today, we .shall inevitably fall into the grasp of a class revolution. If war continues to be an essential instru- ment of capitalistic struggle for markets, if we continue to fall into I' 4 All programs are given in Hill Auditorium u n l e s s otherwise noted. The afternoon concerts are g i v e n without admission charge. THE REVELERS, Jams Melton, 1st tenor, Phil Dewey, baritone, Lewis James, 2nd tenor, Wil- fred Glenn, bass, Frank Black, Director and Pianist, Dec. 3, 8:15. L A U R A LITTLEFIELD, So- prano, December 6, 4,15. THE "MESSIAH" by Handel, University Choral Union, Uni- versity Symphony Orchestra., Soloists'\ Earl V. Moore, Con- ductor, December 13, 4:15. DETROIT SYMPHONY OR- CHESTRA, Ossip Gabrilow- itsch, Conductor, Dec. 15, 8:15. DON COSSACK R US S I A N CHORUS, Serge Jaroff, Con- ductor, Jan. 13, 8:15. DETROIT SYMPHONY OR- CHESTRA, Dr. Rudolf Siegel, Guest Conductor, Jan. 25, 8:15. YEHUDI MENUHIN, Violin, Feb. 4, 8:15. PERCY GRAINGER, Piano, Feb. 19, 8:15. R O S A PONSELLE, Soprano, March 7,8x.15. ORGAN RECITALS every Wed- nesday, 4:15. (Van- periods of severe depression and CAMPUS OPINION Letters published in this column should n6t be construed as expWsing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous communications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will,' however, be regarded as confidential upon re- quest. Contributors are asked to be brief, con- fining themselves to less than 300 words if possible. To The Editor: I am not a Socialist, nor am I allied to any paci- fist group, but since reading the "Campus Opinion" of Kirby Gillette last Saturday I am strongly inclined to join with anti-militaristic forces. Most of his chaos, and if we fail to better those obvious wrongs by proper socialist legislation, let us starid aside acid cheer for the better state by revo- lution. However, the Socialists are Pacifists. They do not want war of any type, and they are working more than any other group in our society for its abolishment. They understand that men will fight na- turally only when they are refused the right of a decent livelihood-if capitalism does not give the work- ers this, they will fight. But the socialists are trying to give them justice through an intelligent, pro- gressive means. However, international war is a different problem. In primitive times, war between tribes was an b Cnl t nP.C"rit fnr f rh h ntli u- ~~2III article was a name-calling revilement of the Social- ation of theciIf acein ists for which he gave no facts or justification or ation of the species. If a certamn band of tribesmen could no longer proof. What few arguments he had were founded obtain game from their own coun- on gross error which is surprising/ in one who has try, it became necessary to conquer been so exposed to higher learning as he has.trsiece . n-essato e o 1. His blanket accusation that the Socialists some new land-but that does not attack any existing condition good or bad, is a gen- trait in the human betig. Nature seralization from the one fact that they criticized his .a.the vua teinstiNctuof . gave the individual the instinct of own particular pet, the military department. i hunger, but the way in which he 2. If "pacifism is not an inherent principle of satisfied his hunger certainly was socialism," I see significance in the fact that sincere not instinctive. Mr. Gillette is ap- persons in all systems of thought are beginning to in confsed onethe term lose faith in the military philosophy and the mnilitary "Human Nature." Today, war ap- method of settling disputes. pears to be only a cultural heritage 3. Has it occurred to Mr. Gillette that perhaps it -not instinctive. We learn that is the anti-militarist forces who are most eager that war is an honorable thing, that the the majority of people "will not. be lead into the greatest deed a man can do it to doing of any rash acts by a group of dissatisfied die for his country whether it be fanatics"? (Note: the military department of Japan right or wrong. When a certain is responsible not to the people or the Diet, but to capitalist loses his investments in the Emperor alone.) Mexicothe cry goes up, "Let's go 4. Mr. Gillette says that it is utter nonsense to dxw , e u eicp, Is ga believe that human nature can be.changed. This is an indcex t an instictivetrait? No, of course his gross error. My authority is Charles Horton it isn't. In 1917, when United Statesj Cooley, ef. seq., and any other authdrities on human declared war on the Central Pow- nature and its evolutioD. True, jealousies, hates, and ers, was it because the American prejudices are characteristics of the human race, but people wanted to satisfy an inborn our conduc~t in response to them is amenable to learn- instinct to kill? The answer is quite ing and will powe'. No change in human nature obvious. Vince mothers threw their children into the mouths Let Mr. Gillette remember that of their warlike gods? Or since captive peoples were I the Socialists are Pacifists not be- sold into slavery? Change is the keyword of allIcause they have inferiority com nature and progress. If "the duty of the military de- plexes, or because they want to partment remains the same throughout the ages" it r any particular institution r s 'E 1 , Let's smoke a SMOKE!0 W HEN the girls begin to cut cor- ners in our cars and do back somersaults in our planes and borrow our cigarettes- then it's time to take to a pipe! Callrit the last stronghold of mas- culine defence-or the one pet diver- sion our little t. friends keep their fingers off. Call it what you will- there's something Her smoke- downright satisfy- a cigareUe! ing, understanding, companionable about a friendly, mellow, MASCU- LINE pipe! It's a real man's smoke! And a pipe's at its best when you fill it up with Edge- worth. There's a rare, mellow flavor to the Edge- worth blend of fine burleys that .:...simply can't be touched. It's cut long-to give you A pipe s a a cool, slow-burn- inan' ssmoke ing smoke. And you'll find it the favorite with smokers in 42 out of 54 colleges. You can get Edgeworth wherever good tobacconists sell smokes. But if you've never tried it, we'd like the fun of treating you to that first satisfying pipeful. Just write to Larus & Bro. Co., 105 S. 22d St., RichmondI, Va. EDG EWORTH SMOKING TOBACCO Edgeworth is a blend of fine old burleys, with its natural savor enhanced by Edge- worth's distinctive f and exclusive elev- - will soon find itself an unjustified impediment to the human race. Mr. Gillete's mistaken fundamentals and un- founded contempt for other courageous thinkers have no place in a sincere search for truth. Joseph F. Griggs, '33M. of society, but because they believe that war is a feature of the pre'sent economic world that can be elim-' inated by proper education of the people K.__._W. - WHAT'S GOING ON WEDNESDAY To The Editor: It seems rather significant that even on this cam- pus Mlilitarism and Capitalism must go so far as to attempt to justify themselves, but certainly justifi- cation cannot be accomplished by slander and name- calling at the Socialists. I might say that if this Mr. Gillette stupidly argues that socialism has no place in this country on the grounds that there is no socialism in America, how does this worthy student Wuerth: Warner Oland and Anna May Wong in "Daughter of The Dragon." Michigan: Ruth Chatterton in I . I I