THlE MICHIGAN DAILY MICHIGAN DAILY I -Zz ., ,hed every rofning except Monday during the ty year and Summer Session by the Board In of Student Publiations. er of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- d the Big Teh Ned Service. MArNIEER OF THlE ASSb)CIATFD PRESS ssociated Press is exclusively entitled to the use blication of all news dispatches credited to it or, erwise credited in this paper and the local news d herein. All rights of repubiicaflon of special 'PI.# ce at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as al rate of postage granted by -General. ner by carrier, $1.00; by mai, ow year by carrier,. $4.00; by lons Building. Maynard Street, g reguar s lions Represen tlve8, t, New York City:80 eth Michigan Avenue,j 612 EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 EDlITOR.............P'RAN~K B. GU.LBRETH R... . ..... KARL SEPF'E T ITOR...................JOHN W, THQMAS DITOR ..............MARGARET O'BRIEN WOMEN'S EDITOR....MIRIAM CARVER ORS: Thomnas Connelan, John W. Pritchard, Renihan, C. Hart Schaaf, Brackrley Shaw, Winters. SISTANTS: L. Ross Bah, Fred A. Euber, vman, Harmon Wolfe. : Charles Baird, A. Ellis Ball, Charles G. Ithur W. Carstens, Ralph G. Coulter, Willfai Sidney Frankel, John C. Healey, Robert B.s eor e M. Holmes. Edwin W. Richardson, n Vleck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. ates, Marjorie E. Beck, Eleanor B. Blum, Ellen ley, Louise Crandall, Dorothy Dishmian, uff, Carol J. Hanan, Lois Jotter, Helen Levi-j s J. Murphy, Margaret D. Phalan, Marjorie BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 [ANAGER.............BYRON C. VEPDERB NAGER...................HARRY BEGLEY USINESS MANAGER ........DONNA BECKER1 BT MANAGERS: Advertising, Grafton Sharp g Contracts, Orvil Aronson ; Advertising Merv- rurner: Accounts, Bernard E. Schnacke: Cir- Gilbert E. Bursley; Publications, Robert E. 3: John Bellamy, Gordon Boylan, Allen Cleve- rles Ebert, Jack Efroymson, Fred Hertrick, ime, Allen Knuuisi, Russell Head, Fred Rogers, inner, Joseph Sudow, Robert Ward. Aigler, Jane Bassett, Beulah Chapman, Doris illy Griffiths, Catherine McHenry, May See- passed, was an emergency measure to permit the sale of tax-delinquent property. The fact that it was an emergency measure entitled it to exemp- tion from the general requirement of a delay be- tween the passage of the act and its execution. It was upon this ground, however, that the supreme court made the ruling which it later re- versed, and later developments indicated that during the entire pleading of the case before that tribunal no mention of its all-important emer- gency nature was made. It was the subsequent ex- planation of this point that caused the court to immediately reverse its ruling. Since the fact that the bill was an emergency bill was of sufficient importance to make the court reverse itself after it had once decided against it, it is very obvious that such a point must have been one of the major considerations to be presented in the arguments before the court, and the fact that it was not mentioned at all seems to indicate that the embarrassment of the court may be laid to negligence of the attorneys preparing and pleading the case for the state. We hope that no kind of a precedent will be estab- lished by such a regrettable circumstance. -Th "THREE TIMES THE HOU" Comedy Club's offering of "Three Times The Hour," written by Valentine Davies, a former president of the organization, was well received Thursday evening. A clever plot, a unique time sequence, and an amazing array of characters were the main points of interest to be noted in the play itself. Con- sidering these features as the material in hand, one cannot say that their opportunities were fully realized. Generally speakiig, the tempo was too jerky, too nervous. Much more tension on the part of the adience could have been created had the emotional reactions of the characters been more restrained. The lines were light, witty, satirical and did not warrant the rather heavy treat- ment given them. Yet one would much prefer this extreme to one of immovable dullness. The play l needed quickness. This flaw will undoubtedly be remedied in further performances, as not a few of the actors were laboring under the strain of a first appearance. One appreciated Uldine Hunt's modulated pic- ture of Catherine Blake. She was the balancing factor throughout. A newcomer, Nelson Shaw, showed unusual promise in his portrayal of Del- gado. This characterization was consistent and showed careful preparation. Incidentally, his ac- centing was consistent, too. In fact, it was so con- vincing that other members of the cast seemed to catch the spirit of it, and one could trace its influence here and there. David Zimmerman, as Robert Phillips was another good find. His Hero was one of the very few interesting, righte- ous young men to grace the campus stage this year. With further opportunities, he may become the first in demand for parts of this nature. Ho- bart Skidmore's Davis was very well liked, as was Miles Herbert's Colonel Beauchamp. Alfred Gold was fine as Smith. If one had to choose outstand- ing performances one would suggest Miss Hunt, Mr. Shaw, and Mr. Gold. Clarence Moore's Dey was likeable. Personally, I believe he swore more gracefully than any of the rest. As to Lawrence Blake-must American bankers have deep, gruff voices and indistinct diction? Ann Vernor's Anna, although it might have been improved, was more truly sensuous thany any other co-ed's Anna could have been, to my knowledge. Further refer- ence must be made to Jay Pozz as an adequate Angus McKee. And finally one might thank Miss Carpenter for an interesting bit. In regard to the setting, the reception hall of Blake's residence was handled in a rich, im- pressive manner in which case the upper stories 1 seemed rather out of keeping. Considered sep- arately they were satisfactory. For an evening's pleasurable amusement see "Three Times The Hour" by all means, and while there take particular notice of newcomers. Some showed real ability and should advance steadily. --M. S. Since the purpose of an educational institution is to enlighten its students, it seems to me that the University of Michigan would be making a notable advance if it would abolish the archaic disciplinary system of making inefficient note-tak- ing the average student's only means of getting information from class lectures, and enable stu- dents to get the most out of their courses by mak- ing copies of all formal lectures available. P. S.: If the University fails to act on The Daily's splendid scheme, some unemployed stenog- eaphers might make a living by recording lectures in shorthand, mimeographing copies, and selling them to students. -M. G., '34. BRIGGS BODY STRIKE To The Editor: Almost six weeks ago the men and women em- ployed at the Briggs Manufacturing Company went on a strike because of the low wages and miserable working conditions. Some of the work- ers at the Highland Park plant have returned to work, but the former workers. at the Mack Avenue plant have not gone back. The newspapers have carried little information about this strike, especially during the last two weeks, so I have attempted to present the strik- er's reasons for going on strike and their de- mands. Wages and methods of payment constitute one of the chief grievances. During the past year wages have been cut very drastically until now the strikers claim that many men need the assist- ance of Welfare even though they are working full time. They also say that some of them re- ceived more from the Welfare when they were not working than they did when engaged in full timne work. They have records which show that men earn as low as 4c per hour. There are many others who average 15 and 20c per hour. Their pay is not on an hour basis but the piece rate pay is so low that this is all they can earn. in addition they do not know at the end of a day how much they have earned because they work on a group piece work plan and they do not always know how many men throughout the plant worked! on the particular group. Thus the wages and methods of determining them constitute one grievance. A second grievance is the fact that no compen- sation is made for "dead time." "Dead time" is that time which men spend at the plant while they are waiting for materials. The Briggs Com- pany has insisted that it has abolished "dead time" but the strikers deny this and say that un- less they have a shop committee there is no guarantee that it will not be introduced again, so their third demand is a shop committee which is to act for the workers in presenting complaints and grievances to the employer. This the Briggs people refuse to grant. Other grievances center around conditions of work. The women often work fourteen and fifteen hours per day even though it is illegal to do so. In addition the strikers maintain that many safety regulations are not observed. There are no rest rooms for the women and no cots in case of ill- ness. There is only one wash bowl and one drink- ing fountain in a department in which 300 women are employed. The strikers also complain against payments which they must make for metal badges and tool checks which they occasionally lose. These are the chief grievances and demands of the strikers. To me it seems very significant that in depres- sion times men are willing to strike. Many of these men are without adequate food and cloth- ing; many have no coal or fuel yet they are carrying on their fight. We do not hear much about the strike in the newspapers yet it is grow- ing in importance. The workers in many other plants in Detroit are striking and the entire auto industry in Detroit is feeling the effects of this strike. This means that the Briggs strike is a fight against a further reduction in wages not only in the Briggs plan in Detroit but in all the auto in- dustries and industries in general. As such it should be of importance and interest to all who are sympathetic to the struggle of labor. -Martin Wagner, '33. ~~- *%%L at toni IIORO-W, ITZ the hut HILL AU DITORIM mom 9:00- 12:00h . I O"L do, n c e 4 I come to fingerle's for a real eventing Tickets: $1.00, $1.50 $2.00, $2.50 RUSSIAN PIANIST Inl Monday, March 6-8:15 CIIORAL UNION (ONCER' -11 t I Thte Nicest Gift! CANDY IS EATEN- FLOWERS SPOIL- BOOKS ARE READ- You can't eat this - it can't spoil -- you can only read it bit by bit. It's new every d ay - news also - it saves letter writing. It's classy, -sporty - even :faculty. And it's your best buy for a lastig reasonable gift. Is I $2.75 out of towit - $2.50 in Ann Arbor. Act NOW! CALL 2-1214 FOR YOUR, SECOND SEMESTER SUBSCRIPTION iTO) SATURDAY, MARCH 4, 1933 Union Haircuts The Union is still charging 45 cents for hair- cuts. Every other shop in town is charging 35 cents. The Union, a student club, is a non- profit organization and exists solely for the students. Yet the Union will not meet the town rate. Time Will Take Care Of 'Hell Week'. AS A RESULT of the mildly reprov- ing attitude toward "hell week" assumed by the Interfraternity Council at its re- cent meeting, the problem appears to be discard- ed until February of next year. If the volumes of adverse criticism laid against the probation period have done no good, time alone can accom- plish the necessary extinction. The Council "suggested" that the fraternities tone their "hell weeks" down a bit. "Pillaging" and "disturbing of the peace" were deplored. The inability to enforce a drastic rule except through actual invasion of the several chapter houses lim- ited the Council to this mild action. It looks like a safe bet, though, that the pot and "hell week" will both be a thing of the past in two years at the most. As a famous bibliophile once said, "All human wisdom is summed up in 'wait and hope'!" Picking The Head Cheerleader... THE MICHIGAN DAILY OF ALL THE METHODS of appoint- ing students to leading positions1 in undergraduate activities, that employed in the selection of the head cheerleader is probably the most inefficient and uncognizant of' true merit of any system now in use in the University.; There are nine votes cast in such an election., The captains of the- football, basketball, baseball,, and track teams and the managers of these teams each have one vote. The ninth belongs to the head cheerleader of the preceeding year. The fallacy of the situation lies in the fact; that the majority of those who do the voting have no interest in the outcome, are ignorant of the qualifications of the applicants, and often do not even know the persons for whom they are voting. Such a system is not in accord with the other methods of advancement in undergraduate activ- ities. Usually the other men who have worked with the applicants and are going to continue to work with the one selected are given a voice in appointments. They know the man and his qual- ifications and so are fitted to judge. We recommend that the present plan of selec- tion be amended to give votes to the four sopho- more cheerleaders who have been associated with the applicants for a year, that the captains and managers of the football and basketball teams re- tain their votes, as the head cheerleader of the preceding year should. Under such a system it will be merit and not impulse that will determine which man will be appointed. Th e Sinarer" pCourt Campus Opinion Letters publishedi in this colunin should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous communications will be disregard- ed. The names of communicants will, however, be re- garded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words if possible. PUBLISH LECTURES To The Editor: May reason or economic necessity induce mem- bers of the faculty to publish their lectures and sell them, as suggested in your editorial Sunday, on "Easy Money for Professors"! Common sense demands thatsome such system be adopted. If my history professor believes that his lectures are not sufficiently important for me to read; if' he feels that all I should remember from what he says can be kept in notes, subject to many inac- curacies; if he believes that his lectures do not bear close study-then he is the victim of a se- rious inferiority complex. To say that class lec- tures should not be published for student use is to deny that the naterial contained in them is valuable to the course. We are told that we must take accurate notes on the professors' lectures, and that we should rewrite them while our memories are still fresh. This is always inconvenient and often impossible. When we come to read over our lecture notes, they are incoherent in places, many important names, dates, and formulae are omitted, defi- nitions are incomplete and errors creep in which may later be taken as fact and cause misunder- standings. Inadequate notes leave many gaps in the broader conception of the course; faulty notes lead to erroneous thinking and do the student more harm that if he took no notes at all. Our purpose in attending lecture classes is not to exercise our skill (or lack of it) in taking notes. Note-taking has many uses and is of definite STARS __& SRIPE By Kar Seifert. ODE TO llY DEAR ONE Your face would stop a clock, My dear; Your figure's simply rotten. There's not a brain in your thick head- By God you were forgotten. You are an awful pain, My dear, A little bit inane. My dear. I don't know why You take my yeye- - It must be I'm insane,. My dear. y--Whitey. * * Mussolini's order cutting 70 per cent off rail-. road rates for newlyweds in Italy has resulted in a marked rise in gross passenger figures, ac- cording to a news item. If they'd do that here, with about a 30 per cent increase in the size of the cut, lots of students would take advantage of the plan just for the chance to go home for a week-end. EACH TOOTH WORTH $5, SAYS DENTAL DEAN -Headline That possibly explains why dentists are so willing to help you part with them. Dear K. S.: I see that at some university in rsiifnrn i fov "11P n tllc .t.+ i .lln ore~ie2, FIRST METHODIST HILLEL EPISCOPAL WESLEY HALL FOUNDATION CH U RC H E. W. Blakeman, Director Cor. E. Univ. Ave. and Oakland State and Washington Streets Dr. Bernard Heller, Director Ministers 9:30 A.M. -Class on the Principles of Frederick B. Fisher Jesus with the Director. Peter F. Stair 3:30 P.M.-Oriental-American group. 11:15 A.M-Regular Sunday services Subject: Bulgaria. at the Women's League Chapel. 10:45 -Morning Worship 6:00 P.M.-Student Guild. Program Kurt Peiser, Director of the Jewish of classical music by the kAln Ar- Welfare Federation of Detroit, will "FULFILLING OU DESIRES" bor Community orchestra: Director, speak. Subject: "JEWISH SOCIAL Dr. Fisher Frederic Ernst SERVICE TRENDS" 6:30 P.M4.-Graduate Forum. Contin- 7:30-Wesleyan Guild Lecture 4ing the, discussion on "Non-Vio- S:15 P.M.-open Forum at the Foun- RELTIGION IN CHANGING TIMES" leince a Substitute for War" Gor- dation. Discussion on tZIONISM President Frank L. McVey don Halstead. AND THE JEWISH NATIONAL of the University of Kentucky 7F:00 P.M.-Feowship and supper.UND" FIRST BAPTIST E FIRSTA CHURCH PRES YT ERIAN East Huron, West of State CHRURC H 1. Edward Sayles, Minister CHURC NOTHoward R. Chapman, University Huron and Division Streets DOrNPOa ,tr Merle H. Anderson, Minister °: 30 A.M.-The Church School. Dr. Alfred Lee Kiner.Associate Minister 1EGL ECT Logan. Superintendent. 9:30 A.M. - Student classes at the 10:45 A.M. -Morning Worship. Mr. Church. I UI Sayles will preach on 10:45 A.M. -- Morning Worship. -"JESUS, THE SOUL OF REL IGIOUS CHRISTIANITY" Christian Education Program by members of the Church School. c .-The student group meets ..ACTI V ITUIES)for forty. inuses at Guild House. 5:30 P.M. --Social Hour for Youn; People. 6:00 P.M.--Students at Guild House. A program of special musical num- 6:30 P.M. -- Young People's Meeting. hers, in charge of msic commit- "T'he Church's Challenge to Its hri hreo ui amt Young Pcoplss tee. Social hour and refreshments follow program. ST. PAULS LUTHERAN (Missouri Synod) Third and West Liberty C. A. Brauer,Pastor Sunday, March 5 9:00 A.M -Preparatory Service 9:30 A.M-German Lenten Service ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH Washington St at 5th Ave. S. C. Stellihorn, pastor AM.-Bible School. Lesson Topic: "JESUS GIVING LIFE AND HEALTH" 9 AM. Service in the German lan- guage. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL CHURCH (Evangelical Synod) South Fourth Avenue Theodore Sclimale, Pastor 9:00 A.M.-Bible School I i t