THE MICHIGAN DAILY N DAILY _ _ , =- Published every morning except Monday during tn )niversity year and Summer Session by the Board it ontrol of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Associa on, and the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively_ entitled to the us( r republication of all news dispatches credited to it o ot otherwise credited in this paper and the local new ublished herein. All rights of republication of specia ispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, a con class matter. Special rate of postage granted P3 'ird Assistant Posttlvaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail 150. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; b3 mil, $4.50. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street nn Arbor. Michigan. Phone 2-1214. R~epresentatives: College Publications Representatives .ic., 46 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 8 oylston Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue hicago. EDITORIAL STAFF 'telephone 4925 [ANAGING EDITOR...............FRANK B. GILBUETI ITY EDITOR...........................KARL SEIFFERI TORTS EDITOR .................... JOIIN W. THOMAti VOMEN'SEDITORC..............=MARGARET O'BRI SSISTANT WOMEN'S EDITOR.......MIRIAM CARVED IGHT EDITORS: Thomas Connellan, John W. Pritchard Joseph A. RHenihan, C. hart Schaaf, Brackley Shaw Glenn It. Winters. PORTS ASSISTANTS: Fred A. Huber, Albert Newman ,EPORTERS: Charles Baird, A. Ellis Bll, Donald R Bird, Rchrd B~oeb~el, Arthur W. Cartitenis, Ralpsh G Coulter, Harold A. Dalheh, .spar S. Early, Waldrot: Eldridge, Ted Evans. William G. Ferris, Sidney Frankel Thomas Groehn. Robert D. Guthrie. John C. Healev had been won but equal consideration when there was a job to be done was not given. Howcver, President Roosevelt's new- deal has most decisively included women. Frances Perkins has been appointed Secretary of Labor, Ruth Bryan Owen has been made Minister Plenipoten- tiary, and Nellie Tayloe Ross seems slated for an administrative position. President Roosevelt's se- lections have not only opened the way to new consideration of women for their ability but have definitely removed the "first woman to hold . . ." idea which formerly followed the usual run of appointments of prominent women. There are two explanations for the President's attitude. First, he had several under officers while he was governor of New York who were women and proved 'capable. Second, in his homelife he has been associated with women whose abilities n have taught him to meet them on an equal ground, neither discounting their ideas or catering - to their femininty. It is with the advent of President Roosevelt that or the ideals of the original suffragettes were at s last attained. The period in which their votes were wanted more than their intelligence is past. G Presidential Pandidates of the future will not make y the mistake which Hoover did by making special , pleas to women when rivals are talking to them on equal grounds with men. There is absolutely no reason why the country should not benefit by the experience and abilities of women and now that they .have won the respect of President Roosevelt their political futures are assured. [ ' S 3; i , 1. 1 L. x. Y1 Z, i7, Screen ReflctiOns Four stars means exitordinary; three stars veir7 , good; two stars good, one star just another picture; no stars keep away from it'. [i1I'.Karpi11- qam-icl Lavin, ,%r Mc~eachy, tum, Floyd rdsaawr, Rich- Shapiro, MarshallkD. S1 irmqn. Wilson L..Trimmer, George Van Vle'ck, Philip Thylor Van Zile, William Weeks, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. Dorothy Adams, Barbara Bates, Marjorie Beck, Eleanor B. Blum, Frances Carney, Betty Connor, Ellen Jane Cooley, Margaret Cowie, Adelaide Crowell, Dorothy Dishman, Gladys M. Draves, Jeanette. Duff, Dorothy' Gies, Carol J. Hanan, Jean Hanmner, Florence harper, Marie Heid, Margaret Hiscock, Eleanor Johison; Lois Jotter, Hilda Laine, Helen Levison, Kathleen MacFntyre, Josephine McLean, Anna Miller, Mary Morgan, Marjorfe Morrison, Marie Murphy, Mary M. O'Neill, Margaret D. Phalan. Jane Schneider, Barbara Sherburne, Mary E. Sipskon, Ruth Soinanstine, Margaret Spencer, Miriam 1°. Stark, Marjorie Western. BUSINESS STAF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER................BYRON.C. VEDDER CREDIT MANAGER.................. HARRY R. B3EGLEPY WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER......l.Donna C. Becler. DEPARTMENT MANAGERS Advertising, W. Grafton Sharp Advertising Contracts, Orvil Aronson; Advertising Serv- ice, Noel Turner; Accounts, Bernard E. Schnacke; Cir- culation, Gilbert E. Bursley; Publications,' Robert E. ASSISTANTS: John Bellamy, Gordon Boylan, Allen Cleve- land, Jack Efroymnson, Fred Hertrick, Joseph Hume, AlenW Knmusi, Russell Read, Lester Skinner, Robert Ward, Mcigs7 W. Bartmness, Williamv B. Caplan, Willard Cohodas; R. C. Devereaux, Carl -J. Fibiger, Albert Gregory, Milton Kramer, John Marks, John I. Mason, John 'P. Ogden, Robert Trinby, Bernard Rosenthal, Joseph Rothbard, Richard Schiff,-George R. Williams.' Elizabeth Aigler, Jane Bassett, Beulah Chapman, Doris Ginimy, Billie Griffiths, Catherine McHenry, May See- fried, Virginia' McComb; Meria Abbot, Betty Chapman, Lillain Fine, Minna Gifen, Cecile Poor, Carolyn Wose. THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1933 i i6 f +, 1 E f 4. r t v r r. n a 3. 1. G . ; AT THE MAJESTIC A DOUBLEFFEATUREI "PAYMENT DEFERIbED" with Charles Laughton I TENSE TRAGEDY "FACE IN THE SKY" with Lee Tracy **GOOD COMEDY' The two shows which the Majestic manage- went has chosen for this double feature could not be more different. They are Charles Laughton in the grim "Paymerlt Deferred" and Lee Tracy in the story of the traveling sign-painter- 'who married, the farmer's daughter, "Face in the Pudgy Charles Laughton is a very fine charac- ter actor.: He gave a remarkable performance as Nero. in. "The Sign of" the Cross," but this pie- ture would be better if there were- a ;little less of Mr. Laughton. He is very good at registering the various emotions but ;so much of the picture is given to his registration that; it. becomes a little. monotonous before the.end. The story is a, psychological study of an ordi- nary citizen who commits a surderto providerthe necessities for his family. His _wife finds. out about it ands also finds out that, he has been misbehaving with a French woman who lives around the corner. She commits suicide and he! is blamed for her murder so that, while payment for the original murder was. deferrecl, it eventually is -demanded. While. during the course of this picture Laugh- ton has to. attain most of. the degrees of. most of the emotions andhe only has-one face to do it- with, it does seem that he could have looked a little less nunfb at some of, the points in the picture. He is Charles Laughton .throughout the show and no one else. "Face in the Sky" on the other hand, is a com- ical picture pf the man who rpaints the signs on Karns, Lee Tracy, and his pal, Stuart Erwin. Tracy has big designs for his life-he is going to marry a girl with lots -of culture whose father owns a railroad-until he arrives, at a farm where the brutal father and son are planning to make the beautiful ward ,marry the son. ,His protective in- stincts aroused, he steps to her aid and finally takes her off with him when they leave the farm- precipitately. The farmer catches them, however, and takes the girl back to the. farm to marry the cloddish son while Tracy goes on to New York. She escapes and comes on to the big city where she finds him at just the proper moment. It's a funny show and the authors have invented quite a few new gags. Artistically "Payment Deferred" is the better of the two shows, but "Face in the Sky" is the more fun to watch. -B. S. The Theatre parts in "Journey's End" require the use of Eng- lish-English, that is, as it is spoken in England. Whereas the entire cast rendered the language with more or less success, Mr. Pribil, with a part of not more than a dozen speeches. stood out clearly and sharply for the charm and smooth- ness with which he read his lines. That is, he stood out from everyone but Mr. Crandall, but then we suspect that Mr. Crandall learned Eng- lish where English is spoken. r Editorial Comment 1 'EDUCATION CONSCIOUS ALUMNI' The tune is changing from yarns about college graduates suffering less than others from unem- ployment, to the admission that this is the most seriously affected group in the country. Some fragmentary figures report that there are at least 75,000 unemployed school teachers in the country and that in New York City alone there are more than 5,000 unemployed engineers and 1,500 jobless journalists. The American Library association admits that there are 14 unemployed librarians to every one employed. While Congress concerns itself with banks, rail- roads, war veterans, farmers and others who re- quire aid, not one legislative proposal has yet been brought forward in an attempt to cope with the problems which have overwhelmed a large part of the current generation of college alumni. The only effort at organization is the Associa- tion of Unemployed College Alumni which recently came into being at New York City. This group is swinging into action with an assembly which was held May 2 and 3 in Washington to discuss a leg- islative program ad to call the attention of Congress to the situation. Heretofore, while other groups were organizing to compel national attention to their situation, college and professional people have remained aloof, each individual trying to work out his own salvation. If any individuals in the country are capable of working ''for a program designed to eininate ;the causes of, unemployment," it cer- tainly would be those citizens who have had the advantage of college training. .-Minnesota Daily. Musial Eents DALIES FRANTZ-; The significance of Dalies Frantz lies in the fact that he is no longer a brilliant pianist. Bril- liance, is a shiny surface luster that is applied from the outside like varnish. Mr. Frantz has outgrown it along with all the other attributes of the performer. A creative ability like his needs no Christmpas tree ornaments. He has passed be- yond the limits of his instrument, beyond the edges of his medium, into the infinity of art itself. His playing has gained a perspective-it has both a foreground and a background-and the strong black and white lines that characterized his in- terpretations have been merged and extended into a broad outline that includes the whole of life within its sweep. Great art necessitates great people behind it. We are too close to view him in proportion but in the mildest of terms, he has a great talent, and to the enthusiast, he has genius. We have had pianists who tossed their long hair over the keyboard-we have unbelievably perfect performers whose calm is almost unearth- ly-but the simplicity with which he played is unique. The quiet strength of his Bach-the warm beauty of the Brahms E major Intermezzo-and the control of his Chopin, while consistent with the traditional performances, had a vitality that was his own. His is no sterile Christian art. The thump of skin stretched tom-toms and the brassy beat of cymbals sounded behind the primitive sav- agery of the Prokofieff and the De Falla dances and the dry gray humor of the Poulenc Perpetual Motion had a laugh like a gargoyle's grin. Please Heaven may he never become bored and sophis- ticated! -Kathleen Murphy. STARS - & STRIPES By Karl Seiffert __- i I -_. MRS td OIL TREATMENT HAIR TRIM SHAMPOO AND PE RMANENT 7' II . Ba BrooklynMa de DOWN- STAIRS EN GRAING Bring us your order for We are offering-- Plate and 100 CARDS for ............. $2.50 and Up 100 CARDS from your plate ................ .$1.50 100 CARDS (Process Engraving) .............. $1.75 All Work Guaranteed - Leave Your Order Early! AH R'S UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE ALl. FOR $6 , Sun and als Expert operators. Immediate service. Nothing extra to pay. Childrens' Permonents TH E STODDARD BEAUTY SALON INTRODUCING A SERIES OF NEW SMART STYLES $1.00 $1.24-$1.49-$1.79 I 317 S. State Phone 2-1212 An extremely youthful fashion for immediate and summer wear. All white or white and pastel combinations. Featured in the MICHIGAN D AILY DOWNSTAI RS STORE CLASSIFIEI) ADS DO PAY! e I-= 0 I I i ", W.-I '' I , , - I 0 m Z' r Peaceful May Pay Marks Decline Of Agitators. C OMMUNISM used to be a horrida word in the United States, but 'r somehow less is heard lately of the radicals who 1 jump up on street corners and shout, "Down with 1 everything."s For, whether the intelligent communists like it I or not, the movement in America has -come to be 1 associated with .senseless anarchy. The I. W. W. and other similar groups have become character-t ized as the type of anti-social groups who seeks to destroy without any very good cause.a Monday was May Day-the traditional day on which the radicals got together in the past and marched to the town hall to throw bricks throughc the mayor's window. But Monday there were no serious riots in any part of the country and int Detroit, which, with its many large factories, is,;f usually a center of radical activity, a large groupv of workingmen quietly gathered in Grand Circus Park, listened peaceably to a number of speeches by socialist and communist leaders, and as quiet- ly dispersed. The people of the United States, even the labor- ers, are. growing intolerant of the nihilists. An ex-, cellent example is provided by the Briggs body strike last winter when the leaders of the strike became indignant at finding some com- munists anong the striking workmen. Another inztance was provided by the action of the B.E.F last year -when red agitators were thrown out of the camp by the sincere members of the "army."- The Detroit Leader,a- a newspaper founded last fall in. Detroit under ostensibly socialistic aims and which eyen has had signed stories by Norman Thomas but which devoted most of its space to diatribes against every manifestation of the exist- ing system, has recently. suspended publication. This is unquestionably another evidence of the declining interest of the public in the policies of the more violent reds. Socialism is a much less horrid word than com- munism and the principles -for which, the so- cialists stand are beginning to find a new favor in American eyes. Their policy of peacably going about their own business and quietly ,altering the business of government from the top rather than overturnng everything and beginning over is more popular. The socialists who follow in the steps of Nor- man Thomas are taking over the territory former-+ ly occupied by the communists and their' program of peaceful reform is maore likely to succeed than the red program of anti-everything. The P-pde nmt ARILYN'S SEMI-ANNUAL COATS AND SUITS "JOU1RNEY'S END, ---- ---- - ATJ THE LABOATO~RY By GEORGE SPELVIN It is almost impossle. to -tinate a student; dramatic production without tacitly admitting the undeniable fact tliat anatcurs do not act lik professionals. Last night in Laboratory Theatre .it was at times hard to-realize that Play -Produc- bion's "Journcy's- End" company was, composed entirely of students., Theie: were m ments, par- ticularly during the best scenes of Frederick Cran- dall and Edward .PQzz, when the dialogue :and action were definitely transported out of the field of merely remarkable student dramatics to a plane that would. make them .acceptable as .fine acting anywhere. In light of his excellent work in "Hay Fever" earlier in the season, Mr. Crandalls performance as Lieutenant Osborne last- night proves him a capital actor and one., who has already achieved an astonishing ability to play parts with brilliance that call for the maturity of middle age, and its dignity, poise, and self-assurance. As Captain Stanhope, the 21-year-old com- mander of a front-lie company, Mr. Pozz, aided and abetted by his striking appearance, played the part as though it. had 1geen writte.n for him. Both in the high emotional scenes and in the more restrained moments his work was consistently and satisfyingly convincing. He was always powerful; his interpretation of the part brought to the audi- ence the complete conviction of prematurely aged youth fighting :despair- and horror. - Detroit's Mayor Murphy is likely to roturn from his new job as governor-general of the Philip- pines soon in search of a seat in the Senate, ac- cording to a writer. Of course there's -always the chance that he'll find himself just a political strap-hangcr. - - . .* * * GANMIll STALRT'iS PIQTIST. F4A3T -Headline That's the stuff; get in there quick. 'j * -'- CLASSIFIED AD: Get rid of your bedbugs with perfect bug. illei, sstainless; mney-back guar- antee. Now lissen here-they're our bedbugs and we'll do what we, want with them. .... * * * SINISTER THREAT DEPT. "Deliberate absence from the Cat s Meouw con- ference is- a mistake that cannot be rectified," declared the cunning Cat last night as she checked over the list of those who had not yet answered her summons.-Purdue Exponent. Trying to make a farce out of this thing, eh? * * * Few of the present generation are aware that Boston, Mass.. was -once the capital of New Jer- sey.-News Item. Fewer care. * * * GEN. CUSTER'S OLD SCOUT, BEAR'S .BELLY, DIES AT 78 -Headline Musta caught cold, huh? . P :i it WE MAKE THESE SENSAT I ONAL OFFER I NGS NOW!' There are months of Wear in these COATS AND SUITS .-" '?; , '> , ,+1 1° /!//r f '',r it r ,;;; : r '' . " g but- C HOICE OF 56 COA TS (UNTRIMMED) CHOICE OF 26 SUITS $3.80 C'.. eC ~3,80 . 4i19? 4 '