THE MICHIGAN DAILY [ICHIGAN DAILY unmixed in separate choirs, as pure in quality as primary colors. When one is young, right is "good" xU I I -~ r 4r7 1I ':- Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- tion and the ig Ten News Service. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATE) PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postiaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mall, $4.50. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone 2-1214. Representatives: College Publications Representatives, Inc.. 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylston Street. Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. National Advertising Service, Inc., 11 West 42nd St., New York, N. Y. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR.........THOMAS K. CONNELLAN EDITORIAL DRCTOR ..............C. HART SCHAAF CITY EDITOR......................BRACKLEY SHAW SPORTS'EDITOR.................ALBERT H. NEWMAN WOMEN'S EDITOR....................CAROL J. HANAN NIGHT EDITORS: Ralph G. Coulter, William G. Ferris, John C. Healey, Robert B. Hcwett, George Van Vieck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. Barbara Bates, Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret Phalan. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Donald R. Bird, Arthur W. Carstens, Sidney Frankel, Marjorie Western. REPORTERS: Caspar S. Early, Thomas Groehn, Robert D. Guthrie, Joseph L. Karpinski, Manuel Levin, Irving F. Levitt, David G. Macdonald, S. Proctor McGcachy, John O'Connell, George I. Quimby, Floyd Rabe, Mitchell Raskin, Richard Rome, Adolph Shapiro, Marshall D. Silverman, L. Wilson Trimmer, William F. Weeks. Marjorie Beck, Frances Carney, Dorothy Gies, Jean Han- mer, Florence Harper, Marie Held, Margaret Hiscock, Eleanor Johnson, Hilda Lame, Kathleen MacIntyre, Josephine M'cLean, Marjorie Morrison, Mary ONeill, Jane Schneidr, Ruth Sonnanstine, Margaret Spencer. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER................BYRON C. VEDDER CREDIT MANAGER..............HARRY R. BEGLEY 'WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ...... Donna C. Becker 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. Finn. ASSISTANTS: John Bellamy, Gordon Boylan, Allen Cleve- land, Jack Efroymson, Fred Hertrick, Joseph Hume, Allen Knuusi, Russell Read, Lester Skinner, Robert Ward, Meigs W. Bartmess, Willia B. Caplan, Willard Cohodas, R. C. Devereaux, Carl J. Fibiger, Albert Gregory, Milton Kramer, John Marks, John I. Mason, John P. Ogden, Robert Trimby, Bernard Rosenthal, Joseph Rothbard, Richard Schiff, George R. Williams. Elizabeth Aigler, Jane Bassett, Beulah Chapman, Doris Gimmy, Billie Griffiths, Catherine McHenry, May See- fried, Virginia McComb, Meria Abbot, Betty Chapman, Lillain Fine, Minna Giffen, Cecile Poor, Carolyn Wose. SATURDAY, MAY 20, 1933 Roosevelt Fulfills Platform Promises. . . IN A HIGHLY reassuring article in the New York Times, Mr. R. L. Duffus points out that action has been taken by the Democratic administration on 14 of the 17 planks that the party adopted as its platform last June in Chicago. Four of the planks have already been ratified by Congress, the President has taken steps to carry out six others, and three more are implicit in the policy the administration is following. Of the four remaining planks one was partially effected before March 4, one required no legislation, one pertains to state rather than national action, and the fourth is a reform that has little or nothing to do with the present emergency. The four steps already ratified pertain to gov- ernment economy, the budget, Prohibition, and farm relief. Promises have been kept by the enact- ment of the economy bill, by reasonably certain indication that next year's income and expendi- ture of the government will balance, by passage of the beer bill, and by the measures for farm relief that have been adopted. Steps that have been begun have to do with the establishment of more practical tariff laws, the reduction of unemployment, the reduction of army and navy expenditures, protection of the in- vesting public, banking reform, and the adoption of a "firm foreign policy." Platformpromises that are implied in the policy of the government pertain to the preservation of a sound currency, the enforcement of anti-trust laws and the development and conservation of the nation's water power, and justice to all vet- erans actually hurt in the War. Thus we have a spectacle to which the Amer- lcan people have not been treated for some time- a sincere endeavor to effect the major part of a national political platform. Such being the fact, we may rest assured that leadership in the battle against depression has been entrusted to hands that should win success if success is possible. and wrong is something to get spanked for-and an oboe tone is not to be confused with a viola quality. We lost the glitter off our gold a century or so ago-but perhaps it is easier to appreciate what one doesn't have than if we had not become the psychological creatures of a scientific age. The voice of Rose Bampton is as fresh and lovely as her own charming self. A contralto who has no "ranges" because of the single even quality of the whole instrument, a production that is consistently out and up, and a musicianship that needs no straining for effects to make it evident, are factors that should make this one of the mem- orable voices of our time. She is young for a contralto, but age can only mellow a voice that has everything all ready. Mr. DeLamarter's appreciation of the nuances of tempo markings was one of the most enjoyable contributions to this concert. Few conductors seem to realize that Vivace, Adagio, and Presto are only relative markings after all. And his "Marriage of Figaro" overture gained a precision and clarity that would have been lost in the hurried speed of the more usual interpretation. The gracious conductor of the chorus, Miss Juva Higbee, is to be thanked for the pleasant and charming picture which she and her young people presented. A teacher who is as beloved as this music supervisor must be a very happy person. She should be, for among the audience of mothers and fathers and in the white-clad chorus upon the stage were a great many proud and delighted faces that were all due to the earnest efforts of this lady. -Kathleen Murphy FOURTH FESTIVAL CONCERT- A "PERFECT WAGNERITE"- Wagner has been dead for only fifty years- and yet he is as out of date as last year's spring hat. Luxury is a thing that we can no longer in- dulge in-even though it is an abundance of sound that he has left to us rather than piles of the silks and satins or flasks of the perfumes of which he was so inordinately, to our eyes, fond -the heritage is just as out of place in our demo- cratic civilization. Wagner was a man of his age. Happily for our complacence of mind, history has no record of the number of geniuses that have been lost in oblivion simply because they were born out of time. But the author of "Art and Revolution" is at once the culmination and the culminator of his period. For, granted that he lived in an unsettled environment inspired by the reforming idealism of the romantic period, the very energy, almost the dynamic waste, of his na- ture was typical of that excessive time. The last of the "Super Men" is as archaic as a pre- historean monster in an age of socialism. And yet -try to explain him away-laugh at his obsolete theories of art as you will-Wagner will be im- mortal as long as the emotions of minkind exist. Before him there was "Art"-and after him came "Revolution." We can equally thank the cycle of time that brought him around to us, and be very grateful that there was only one of him. Wagner is wearing. The floods of sound that spray and engulf one in a warm tide of surging tones has nearly drowned many of his most ardent en- thusiasts-witness our latest visitor, the bearded gentleman of the British Isles. But the essence of the "Flying Dutchman," "Siegfried," and "Tris- tan" is too rare even to be lost in luxury. Grete Stueckgold proved once and for all that Wagner can be sung in tune. She is a woman worthy of Wagner himself-vital, lovely, sensitive to all the finest shades of his expression. And she is as simple as the outrageously primitive man that made love to the wife of his friend. Her voice has not the large throaty tones that have unfortunately grown to be expected of the true "Wagnerian" singer. Miss Stueckgold is an artist that would have gladdened the exacting heart of the composer himself. --Kathleen Murphy So let's consider a hypothetical case. Suppose you are a young man of poor but honest parents and you have become possessed of the idea that these professors at Michigan have some small scraps of knowledge you haven't yet found on the farm or in the city dumps. As a result you trot to Ann Ar- bor with all the money you can lay your hands on. We won't mention the amount, but believe rme, brother, I understand. Now you don't contemplate sleeping in [e streets-or the library--while at the University and you have a real desire to eat something occa- sionally during your climb into the tree of knowl- edge. So that money of yours must go a long long way. And right away you are hit by a rubber stamp that puts $98 in one corner of all those coupons you filled out the very first day. Noth- ing said about rebates either. But before you have attended a single class you find yourself shunted around to a place where there's a lot of signs saying, "Strip to Waist Here," "Put Your Clothes in a Paper Bag," "Remove Shoes Here," etc. Then Doc May looks you up and down the back and you feel pretty good. After this you get a book of numbers and a lot of football application blanks until you feel that you can get into everything there is just by showing one of those coupons. You're not through yet, however. Over at the Union they'll put a pin in your. coat and give you a membership card if you really demand it--but don't bother. They'll let you in without those de- tails as long as you have money to pay for what you'll get there. And since the card doesn't get you any reduction in prices just forget it. Time goes along and along about the middle of the year you are pretty nearly out of money. I know those books were more expensive than the catalogue suggested they might be-but you hadj to buy them at the bookmaker's price. The room rent was high, too, but the landlady got pretty nasty that time you were two weeks behind. I re- member that you quit eating in restaurants right after Christmas and thereafter consumed a lot of bread and milk in your room. It must have been about this time you got to thinking about where your money went. -And by the way-how many times did you go to the Union? You ate one meal in the tap room, did you? - So did I. You felt proud that time, eating in your own club, didn't you?-Until you saw the check! And have you met the pretty nurse-the $15 one-over beyond the museum yet? Oh you saw her once when you went in the building just to see what it was? So did I! And those football games? Pretty cool sport, eh? Benches hard in that end section? I found them so. Do you remember whom you yelled for? Neither do I. Now just between you and me, how long can you stay in college with the money you have left? Only a week? That's bad! $30 would just about see you through, wouldn't it? All right, add these up: $15 Health, $10 Union, $7.50 Stadium. $32.50? That's right. More than enough. But can you get it? No sir you can't! Not one cent. So you must go home? Sorry old man. Just when you were really getting a worthwhile return on that $65.50 flyer in Professors Preferred, too! When you go home who will watch your health? Provide a club- house? Keep that seat for you at the ball game? Have to give all that up? That's tough. At home you'll have to take a chance on your health with no money for doctors. Maybe you'd rather have the $32.50 for food right now and take a chance on your health here since you'll be taking a chance anyway? Of course you would, for then you could salvage some of that rocky Professor gamble! As it is you stand to lose everything-all for a game of checkers in the Union, a glance at a nurse, and a sliver in your pants off that sta- dium seat. Well, Good-bye if you must be leaving. Better luck next time. At least you'll escape buy- ing the Summer Daily whether you want it or not if you go home now. Don't break your thumb jerking a ride. So long! I hope most of my readers get the point thus far. Be it known, however, that I deem the Health Service essential to the University. The Union and Athletics are fine for those who use them. But their should be the sole pleasure of paying for them. I insist that a man comes to college pri- marily to attend classes so that $65.50 charge is O.K. He gets what he asked for there. But the other things are for those who want them and can afford to pay. Raise the $65.50 if you must for it is an honest fee but in any event make the Health Service, the Union, and the Athletic fees all optional. And if the girls get up courage to fight for it, make the League fee optional too. All these things are nice-for some people. I've paid these fees for five years and, two summers (no re- fund from the Union either) and they haven't been worth a dime to me. So get out the feather duster, shine up this new-fangled tradition of making students pay for things they may not want and push it into the river. Thomas M. Brown, Grad. iT A LADlS--Advertise your rooms InI the classified cohrnm1s of our Special Sinday Sutinnier 0 1SectionThis scetion offers vou a rare O})pOtu11ity to galn IrJORltS frolm ithe many students who are planning to go to Summer School. Call AL the AD-TAKER r-rn 2-1214 II ___ _ 0KSNEW AND TIMELY LANGSAM - The World Since 1914....... SUNDERLAND - India in Bondage, new edition........... STRACHEY - The Coning Struggle for Power............ JEANS - The New Background of Science. ROOSEVELT - Looking Forward..... MOWRER -Germany Puts the Clock Back. LOCKHART - British Agent.... . SFORZA - Makers of Modern Europe. SCHOONMAKER - Our Genial Enemy, France. GIBBS - The Way of Escape ... .... SIMONDS - The A.B.C. of War Debts.............. . .. $4.00 $2.00 $3.00 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.75 5.00 2.50 3.00 1.00 HENDERSON - The Economic Consequences of Power Production 1.75 COLT AND KEITH - 28 Days, A History of the Banking Crisis . $1.00 BERTRAND RUSSELL-Education and the ModIern World 2.50 WATERS - B.E.F. The Whole Story of the Bonus Army ... 2.50 RICHARDSON - Will They Pay? . ....... .....1.00 SPECIAL PRICE TO LIBRARIES AND READING CLUBS -at WAHR'S BO-OKSTORES, 316 State Street Main Street Opposite Court House Campus Opinion Letters published in this column should not be construed as expresing 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. WHEN IS TUITION NOT TUITION? To the Editor : In view of the rumored tuition increases at Michigan in the near future I wish to set forth some suggestions which everyone, the Student League included, seems to have lacked the perspi- cacity to grasp. It is no mystery (consult your catalogue) that of the $98 which a male resident of Michigan pays each year as "tuition" only $65.50 ever gets into the fund which may go, to provide the student with classroom facilities. The remaining $32.50 is divided as follows: $15 to the Health Service, $10 to the Union, and for Athletics, $7.50. Now here you are, Gentlemen! It's bargain day at Mich- igan! All goods clearly labeled with their lowest prices and only one of a kind to a customer! Health, $15! A fine big clubhouse $10! Football $750! And a nice lot of professors at $65.50! Step right 'up and take your choi-, There, I almost said it! But you and I know there is no choice. You buy out the shop. or you don't come in the door of this University! You may think (and I did) that the professors are a genuine buy at $65.00 for the pile. Or you may be sure that that pretty nurse over at the Health Service needs $15 more than you do. Then you might do a little arithmetic and figure that it takes 700 students at $10 a head to pay $7,000 per year to somebody over at the Union. You tell me what he does! I don't know. But anyway you might feel sorry for the man and be willing to donate $10 to keep him off the welfare. Well and good if you do, but don't expect a letter from him thanking you for it. And don't think you'll get a cheap haircut or a meal at reduced prices in his establishment. And don't play with those clever little billiard balls either unless you are prepared to pay every time Religous 'Activities ZION LUTHERAN FIRST METHODIST CHURCH EPISCOPAL Washington St. at 5th Ave. CHURCH E. C. Stolhorn, pastor State and Washington Streets A TEND 9 A.M.-Bible School. Lesson Topic: ATTEND "JESUS ANSWIRS HIS ADVERSARY" Ministers FrederickB.Fisher CH URCH 9:00 A.M-Service in German. I Fredric B. ishr '--E'~ ~Pastor will speak on: Peter F. Stair "PRAYING IN JESUS' NAME" 0REGULARLY 10:30 A.M.--Service with sermon by 10:45 - Morning Worship. Rev. M. W. Brueckner of Chelsea. "BELSHAZZAR'S FEAST" 2:00 P.M.-Service with address by Rev. George Hueter, missionary to Dr. Fisher New Guinea on furlough. 4:30 P.M.-Student Club will as- No sem service. bie at the Trinity Lutheran L\Ci1ii~Church to leave for an outdoor meeting. ~" - THE FIRST HILLELFIRST BAPTIST PRESBYTERIAN FOUNDATIONFCHURCH CHURCH CHURCH Cor. E. Univ. Ave. and Oakland East Huron, West of State Huron and Division Streets Dr. R. Edward Saylcs, Minister Merle i. Anderson, Ministerreoward R. Chapman, University Alfred Lee Klaer, Associate Minister Pastcr .s s * 9:30 A.M. - Stuldent Classes at the 9:30 A.M.-The Church School. Dr. Church House. Albert J. Logan, Superintendent 10:30 A.M.-Morning Worship. 11:15 AM.-Regular Sunday morn-orship Dr. Anderson will preach on: ing service at the Women's League M. y worshp: "'I OIDSSN"Chapel. Mr. Sayles will preach. Subject: "TEMPTATIONS UPWARD" Rabbi Bernard Heler will speak on: 5:30 P.M.-- SoclaI Hour for Young "EXAMINATIONS AND SELF- 12:00 M.-The student group meets people.EXAMINATIONS" Mr. Chapman at the Guild House. 6:30 P.M -Young People's Meeting . :15 P.M.-Annual Hillel Banquet at 6:00 P.M.-Student nieting at Guild Tic 0or discussion:I lhe Michigan Uniion. Many prom- HouseReHoward R. Chapman IN ANN ARBORTU inent speakers will attend. BET H LE HEM ST. PAUL'S T EEVANGELICAL L UT HE RAN aCH URC H (Msouri Synod) DO C U C Third and West Liberty NOT (Evangelical Synod) C. A. Brauer, Pastor South Fourth Avenue Sunday, May 21 N EGLECT Theodore Schmale, Pastor 9:30 A.M.-Service in GermanY Sunday, May 21 YOUR 9J:00 A.M. -Bible School. 10:30 A.M.-Pre-ConfirmatiOn Serv- ice. P If~1 Musical Events THIRD FESTIVAL CONCERT- AN AFTERNOON OF MAY- The clarity of children's voices, the fresh greens of a day in Spring-and a Haydn Symphony. The immortal youth of Mozart and a voice that is as natural and as great as childhood. Such were the parts that went to make up the Friday after- noon children's concert. A lot of lovely sentiments have been strewn around about "Youth"- "Long, long thoughts"-and the "happiest time of life" -and the frank young persons of today are the i i r l 7 v (_ TWO PIANOS AT DRAMATIC FESTIVAL One of the surprises, it is understood, for the opening night of the Dramatic Season on Mon- day evening in the Mendelssohn theatre will be the entre-acte music presented by Paul Vellucci and Thomas Richner, of New York city. Mr. Rich- ner and Mr. Vellucci are the assistants of Mr. Lee Pattison at the Sarah Lawrence College in New York, and will play on the two Steinway grand pianos in the orchestra pit during the productions of the theatre festival. They will appear twice during each play, play- ing an overture before the play begins; and ap- pearing again between the second and third acts. Their style is not dissimilar to that of Jacques Fray and Mario Braggiotti, who accompany Mau- rice Chevalier so smartly during his recitals. Mr. Richner is a pupil of Harold Morris of New York and is also a student of Lee Pattison. He received his B.M. degree in piano at the West Virginia State University, and this year gave three recitals in New York city. Mr. Vellucci, who is the elder of the two, (forj Mr. Richner is only nineteen), is a pupil of Avis Bliven-Charbonnell. He has studied abroad with The Theatre