o THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAV. A'PPIT. A 1411 blished every morning except Monday during the University Y the Board in Control of Student Publications. ember of the Western Conference Editorial Association. C Associated Press is exclusively entitled tothe use for re- ion of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise in this paper and the local news published herein. tered at the. Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second atter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant ster General. traditionally consider their right. No particular good will come of that. Until students can be made to feel the responsibility for their own actions outbreaks will cotinue on every campus in the United States. Since it is fairly clear that the outbreak here could have started only among fraternity men, we believe it specifically the duty of a student body, the inte,- fraternity council, to investigate the matter and o provide a suitable remedy. __ _ _ _ W~zairt1Th aV A tlx-ir L , l: a) ,.. 1I:.., .v w . .a-. ;'f .:c. Sn .'ixa$..r m' i@t:,C.d-. r i - __________________________ '+ .. ecr of Sorm~ ho> inexpensive! every college girl! Have you tried _he new bscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4 ices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard an. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Euriness, 21 EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4325 MANAGING EDITOR RICHARD L. TOBIN ditor............................... litor ......... ................. 1 Director.....,...................... E3ditor..............................S 's Editor.................. .Mai it News Editor;........................ B. Gilbreth Roland A. Karl NIGHT EDITORS J. Cullen Kennedy Goodman Jerry E. Seilfert George A. St n W. Jones ley W. Arnheim Lid F. illankertz, ard C. Campbell nas Connellari rt S. Deutach Lm Carver ice Collins sF Crandall Feldman Sports Assistants John W. Thomas REPORTERS Fred A. Huber I arold F. Kute 1,i S Marshall Roland Martin IIr'iry Meyerr Albert 13. Newman ;. Ierome Pedlit Prudence Foster Alice Gillbert 1ranwes ;Manchester F~lizabeth MIann Joh Jos C. 1 13ra Parl Afar lev Alin Jose .50 A MATTER OF ETHICS i Street, Ann Arbor, (Penn. State uoilegian) 1214. It is difficult to understand the average college man's conception of ethics. He would scorn to rob a bank, he would frown on refusal to pay honest debts, and yet he blatantly displays towels and silverware .. David M. Nichol "lifted" from hotels and other establishments he has .Carl Forsythe visited. Beach Conger, Jr. Perhaps it is a feeling that such items as towels heldon C. Fullerton and silverware are common property. But a little garet M. Thompson thought will show that they are rigidly on a par with any other form of private property and, as such, James Inglis should be viewed with all due respect to the owner's Rosenthal rights. iiia Gate-crashing is another collegiate breach of ethics. Some college men boast openly of the num- Charles A. Sanford ber of dances they have crashed, much as the Indian would flaunt his scalps and take pride in the heap n W. Pritchard he had been able to capture. Particularly proud is eph Rerihan the collegian who discovers some new and novel Hart Schaaf eklcy shaw means to thwart those who would make him pay ker Snyder or show proper credentials before entering a dance. nno . Winters The Daily Californian, student newspaper at the University of Southern California, reports: 'Frater- garet 0' ri:°n erly Stark nity men were arrested recently for taking thirty-five la WXadsworth elcrclhtbbsfo phine \Vodhams electric light bulbs from local establishments for their house dance. Their stunt was collegiate andj clever, and would have been lauded by upperclass Business Manage, brothers who sent them on the escapade had they, Assistant Manager been skillful enough to complete their errand." This points to another of the many inconsisten- ..Vernon Bishop i nda1tesmetmet 4 Harry R. Begley cies in collegiate ethics, and at the same time toa Byron C. Vedder likely means of bringing these standards up to a William T. Brown Richard Stratemeir plane where society wil respect them. When college; Ann W. Vernor men come to view successful and unsuccessful esca- pades from the same angle, they will have created a ald A. Johnson, 11 2onsistent code of ethics that brands towel-lifting n Turner Lyon as robbery and places gate-crashing in the category ard ii. Good of criminal behavior.' BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 i I RLES T. KLINE ...................... RIS P. JOHNSON ................... Department Managers tiing.. ............................. tising Contracts.......................... tising Service........................... ations................................ nts ............................... n'S Business Manager................... ROULETTE P UR'1S E? CL ES . tai W e %...a W\Ve have made i our usiness to find the best possible mehod. and natur- aUly have achieved Ahs best possb-e results PHONE 4W1 yy Y 1. r E .i \ r , T ' , - ' , b ' , h ._tirr - s. / R S.r a 1 _ ,r-- . _ / - r,. , c ', , 1 \4 (r, w J; I or a Scarf -Vest Jst a large triangle of gay printed silk with a slash for the neck. You tie the ends at the neck and at the waist and presto! You have the smartest thing in a vest! They'll add a brilliant splash to any dark suit. They're only s 0 / "' 4 ' ,, ; " " 1 _ ,+ s'{ . . 2 3 z .' " , , . T '7^ ++995d The chicest thing in handbags. fashioned of calf in a choice cf black;, red or brown, with an adjstalccolor feature orna- mem that may be chang- cd by a mere turn to give the bag a new color Aronson rt E. Burslcy Clark rt Finn as Becker ane Fiscgrund Gallmyer Brine ,Jackson thy I,1ayli Assistants Arthur F. Kohn Bernard Sclnacke Grafton W. Sharp McComb f risoliuc Msher hlen Olson I I dl elimScuode Al av Seefried Don I )ean Don Bern helen Spencer Kathryn Spencer Rathryn Stork (Tare Uttegr Mary Elizaheth Watts NIGHT EDITOR-FRANK B. GILBRETH WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1932 l1ary Cut Hoover? LARY cuts seem to be the order of the day uring the present depression both in business in government. An adjustment to the true of values at the present apparently calls forj finite depression from the way most people accustomed to live and spend. n our state government this situation has been I by the governor and probably will be by the lators. An honest and effective porgram has laid down with the view to balancing the ret. Most important perhaps from the stand- t of public opinion and the tax payer's morale >een the Governor's gesture of cutting his own -y fifteen per cent, the same percentage of eco- y which he has recommended to the legisla- as the reduction which must be met by the >us institutions of the state. s a gesture to'the people of the country as a e, why does not President Hoover cut his own y by a substantial amount. It is obvious that >uld afford it and the moral effect on the rest e citizens of the country who have been "hit" it be a salutory tonic. CAMEP US OPNION Letters published in this column should not be construed as rvssing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous com. inications will be disregarded. The names of comnninnicants , however, e regarded as confidential upon request. Contrib- rs are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 ds if possible. FREEDOM OF THE PRESS? he Editor: 'ess reports of the expulsion of Reed Harris, r of the Spectator, from Columbia University areI commentary on the freedom of the press allow- t one of the oldest American universities, of a that highly touted liberal, Nicholas Murray 'r, is president. arris was expelled because he persisted in fight- ditorially about for what he perceived to be the about conditions both in the campus and the campus worlds. ne can only regret that the Michigan campus is sorganized and without true leadership (despite Student Council) that it is impossible for us to with other universities and colleges all over the try in declaring a one-day student strike as a t against Columbia'sunwarranted action. anted: a campus leader ! S. R. The taxing ten per rich in a half GETTING THE GATE (Harvard Crimson) House of Representatives has passed a bill the gate receipts of all exhibitions of spoiL cent. College football, the only amateur sport revenue, is expected to yield about two and million dollars. Nothing could demonsA _ - -_ > - , } s , _, . " : ,_ .: , r. . , , : s ; %- r. ' Glovs for General Wear Good-lookring fabric gloves with contrasting stitching at $1I, or b ege capeskin putllonis at $1.95, will add the finishing touch to many costumes. for Sports Lisle Mesh Hose S srviciable and smant for sports wear. de with the knitted suits or sheer wool- c. s. 'a better how subtly the intentions of the legislators and the theory underlying the tax. Amusement taxes such as this are intended to strike, not productive activities, but the excess in- come used for recreation. They are meant to increase the cost of luxuries while leaving money earmarked for necessities inviolate. This tax, however, will pinch college activities which are now regarded as nccs- sary to the health and welfare of the students. Foot- ball is the support of all other college sports, for it is the only one which draws crowds large enough to pay.. If the new tax is passed by the Senate, the revenues from football will inevitably cr e. t would be unwise to make up the deficit by an inca in the cost of participation in sports. Accordingly, to support the facilities for exercise, the income of ath- letics would have to be increased by money which would otherwise be devoted to strictly academic uses. The new bill places an unfair burden on college athletic budgets. It is intended to tax luxuries, but it taxes what has become a necessity. When the Senate considers the bill, it should, with due regard for the immunity of educational institutions from taxation, make some amendment allowing college sports to go untaxed. I ~ I 'MUORC ad DIAN THE BAND CONCERT A Review By Jerry E. Rosenthal Last night's band concert, although not particu- larly impressive on the whole, gave ample proof of the fact that the value of concerts by local musical organizations is too often hidden by the grandeur and glamor of professional presentations. It is little known by local music patrons that the band, espe- cially in the last few years, has given Ann Arbor its only tastes of the unusual, whereas the various professional programs have been content to present only the standard and the commonplace in a much less impressive fashion. Respighi's "Pines of Rome," of which the band played the fourth movement, "Pines of the Appian Way," is a pertinent example. Although this work is played only by symphonies (and many times at that), it was the band which ventured to give an- other interpretations of it and in this it certainly succeeded. Symphony orchestras, in their rendering of this work, are too temperate and mellow. At least the spirit which Respighi obviously tries to bring out is not wholly present with strings and softer orches- tration. A band, moreover, better portrays the swell- ing expression and grandeur which is typical of the score, and the brass, which is surely more stirring, if sometimes harsh, amply portrays this grandeur. Not that the band presented it perfectly-it could have done better and one felt throughout the num- ber that there was a restraint which prevented a full expression. It was different, however, and although it failed to gain the recognition the "Bolero" did last year, the importance contained in such an adventure as a band interpretation cannot be totally passed by. The Liszt "Les Preludes," which the band has played often, was not the emotional thing it usual' is. Again the restraining influence which marked the Respighi number was present and the symphonic poem, the themes of which have never failed to raise a feeling of exaltation, fell short of its previous hear- ings. Mention must certainly be made of Jan La Rue. the youthful clarinetist who played the difficult sec- end and third movements of the "Concerto in E flat Major." Although a trifle unsteady and uncomfort- able at the beginning, La Rue showed a sincere an surprisingly mature knowledge of his instrument in the third movement. $100 th University Ave. Telephone 4171 Y 713 Nor psi 1400 -. a. c k na ,.. ,_ - : .wc-a , ,.. .a _, .a. m fl ,.a an,+, w . u ata - ea .r a n,.raRC,.ac::._...~ - flnsuwv _______,____._________. < r . _ '{ tea- :.; , .. F" SF. r- p .. i v , F onl Your Vacatl'.Gn Journey Orne -IC WE OFFE2 HUNDREDS OF VOLUMES OF SPARKLING FIC- TION AND NON-FICTION, INCLUDING NEW PURCHASES AT A 15% REDUCTION. ComC in .d select a good book to make your j ornii e y hore more pleasant. DII PGII IIAIIa COMMENT I FODDER FOR CRITICS; (Daily Illini) itics of the modern university have been givenl at deal of fodder lately on which to base their- ks. Gleefully they can point to the University1 issouri where one student is near death as the! t of a feud between college of law and engineer-! tudents growing out of an old campus tradition. can look to the University of Michigan where' itly an election to select four sophomores to} on the student council was declared void when is found that the ballot box had been stuffed. day night a mob of unruly, thoughtless, leader- freshmen turned the eyes of the state to the ersity of Illinois when they staged an unauthor- 1 WOCamps Bokstores Information and tickets for GREYHOUND LINES at desk on floor of our State Street Store. { E + ; { < , ;i