TE MICHIGAN DAILY THE MICHIGAN DAILY1 _ _ l~~~ plan, in possession of the monthly reports that are to be submitted, its efficiency would clearly be in- creased, to the obvious advantage of the frater- nities. To summarize-establishment of the central agency in the dean's office would mean economy for fraternities, increased efficiency for the dean's office, and no change as far as power is concerned in the relations of the two. We submit this view of the matter to the Inter- fraternity Council in the hope that it may be of use to them. Campus Opinion Letters published in this column 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 titan 300 words if possible. MORE ON TUITION i I. 4~I 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 Big Ten News Service. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED 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 publislhed herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special raterof postage granted by Tird Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $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 DIRECTOR.............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. Hewett, George Van Vleck, 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 McGeachy, 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 Laine, Kathleen MacIntyre, Josephine McLean, Marjorie Morrison, Mary O'Neill, Jane Schneider, Ruth Sonnanstine, Margaret Spencer BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER.............BYRON C. VEDDER CREDIT MANAGERh.........HARRY R. BEGLEY WOMiN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .......Donna C. Becker DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Advertising, W. GraftonSharp 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, AllenCleve- land, Jack Efroymson, Fred Hertrick, Joseph Hume, Allen Knuusi, Russell Read, Lester Skinner, Robert Ward, Meigs W. Bartmess, William 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 Ginimy, Billie Grifliths, Catherine McHenry, May See- fried, Virginia McComb,eMeria Abbot, Betty Chapman, Lillain Fine, Minna Giffen, Cecile Poor, Carolyn Wose. WEDNESDAY, MAY 24, 1933 Central Agency For Interfraternity Plan . . HAVING ratified the national sec- retaries' four-point plan for the economic conduct of fraternities, the Interfra- ternity Council is now considering machinery whereby the plan may be put into operation. The four points call for appointment of a finan- cial adviser for each house, for semester budgets and audits, and for monthly reports indicating whether or not the budget is being adhered to. With regard to enforcement it has already been decided that the monthly reports will be checked by a central agency. If they are not satisfactory the delinquent houses will be reported by this agency to their advisors. Those fraternities in which the undesirable conditions continue un- changed for a period of two months will be re- ported to the Judiciary Committee of the Inter- fraternity Council. This committee, if it finds the financial state of the houses to be as reported by the central agency, will recommend to the Senate Committee on Student Affairs that they be closed. Since there is reason to believe the senate com- mittee would take action on such recommenda- tions, it appears that the plan, although slightly involved, is quite practicable. All of this, as we said, has been agreed to, with the result that only the nature of the central agency is still to be determined. It was hoped that the committee which is investigating this, phase of the subject would have its report ready for the meeting Tuesday. Proceeding with commendable caution, however, it refused to make any recom- mendation then, reserving what it may have to say for a later date. To The Editor: It grieves me deeply to discover that a man of your position and with your ability could repre- sent such important matters (of tuition distribu- tion) to the extentthat you have taken great pains to do. In the first place, let us take up the question of the Health Service maintenance. You make the statement that this fee may be regarded as in- surance. Now I have always been of the opinion that the individual should decide for himself as to whether or not he should take out insurance. Of course I realize that many companies insure their workers as a protection both for themselves and for the workers in case of accident. However I can hardly stretch my imagination to the point where I can picture a student at the University of Mich- igan ruining his health from study alone. In fact, Dr. Sinai in hygiene lecture states that is isn't being done. As for the $25,000 that the Union receives each . year from the students: Where does the rest of itj go? There are approximately 7,000 male students on the campus and if I haven't made a mistake in my mathematics, that should net the Union $70,000. Where does the other $45,000 go? Even if only $5 of the Union fee is used for maintenance, the Union should still receive $35,000, instead of $25,000. If the Union is trying so hard to help the stu- dents as it claims to be, why is the cost of meals so high there that it is necessary to have the Co-op? Why does the Union charge 30c an hour to play ping-pong, when there is no charge at the Women's League. Why does the Union charge more for a hair-cut than any other place in, town? I have been trying to answer such questions for the past four years. Perhaps you can enlighten me on the above points. As to whether or not the Health Service, Union, and so-called athletic fees are optional, let me state right here, that they are not optional, but are absolutely compulsory, except for part time and special students. There is no refund from the' athletic fee, and there is but a $10 refund from' the Union after the end of the fifth year, i.e., the student receives back the Union fee that he paid in at the beginning of the fifth year. The above information was obtained from Vice-Presi- dent ShirleySmith, and so is authentic. In closing, may I point out that Mr. Brown's letter did not advocate the abolishment from the University of the Union, etc., but that it be op- tinal wih the student, whether or not he is to help pay for their maintenance. -Leo M. Johns n, '3SPh. *Approximately 5,000 studenta paid the $10 Union fee this year. IN RESPONSE TO MR. LEVI The letter in The Daily of May 21 concerning Hitler is quite interesting on account of its mis- conceptions and misunderstandings due to faulty information, and for that reason deserves an an- swer. When the writer calls Hitler the most hated of all living men in a position of power, he is bestowing an honor upon him that relatively few men in each generation receive. Napoleon, Bismarck, Lenin, Stalin, and Mussolini have all occupied that position and all have been or are some of the greatest leaders of modern tines; it certainly is no small honor to be ranked with them. As far as the reports of Hitler and his "rowdy" followers, "beating, torturing, maiming, killing, and imprisoning thousands and thousands of the fellow-Aryans" is concerned, no intelligent man would believe them in their entirety even if he had no better information than the news- papers. In the first place, there are less than a million Jews in Germany and it is hardly possible that they have so soon been decimated. There have undoubtedly been some isolated physical in- cidents of the physical maltreatment of Jews by over-zealous so-called patriots and they are in- deed unfortunate. It is also unfortunate that newspapermen are so constructed that they are able to ferret out these exceptional incidents with admirable perspicacity and are unable to see and appreciate the whole movement. I have known one person who lived in a section of Berlin at the same time that American newspapers were report- ing enormous street fights in that section with barricades, machine guns, and many deaths, and yet he said nothing of it. It is true many Jews have been annoyed and discharged from their positions even if they were more competent than their German successors, but this is understand- able, although it is regrettable, too. The same reason is behind it as is behind the fact that American employers discharge colored employees before white one's, namely, race prejudice and, in the case of Germans, a certain uncomfortable feeling that the Jews are superior mentally. In fact, the whole position of the Negro in the United States is worse than that of the Jew in Ger- many. He is discriminated against in employment, in wages, in court, socially, and if the reports of miscarriages of justice in the South in regard to lynching and punishment for minor offenses can if Liberia would ask that we prevent the southern states from lynching Negroes without trial. We consider our government our own business. The burning of books by the Nazis is, of course, rather childish but harmless. It gives the more exuberant ones something to do. It is interesting to note that there is a library committee which looks through every pile to see that no valuable books are destroyed. In the picture section of the New York Times of May 21 is shown a pile of books being examined by two students, and which is quite amusing, the pile seems to consist prin- cipalyl of a magazine or pamphlet called "die Ehe" (Marriage) with very striking pictures on the cover. Very interesting, of course, but hardly any great loss if burned; better books than it have been prohibited in Boston. As far as the three million able-bodied men in Germany who are capable of carrying arms are concerned, there is no great reason to get excited. France and other countries have enormous armies who are already carrying arms. In fact, France has built a whole ring of well-armed nations around Germany. Can Hitler and his "henchmen" be blamed if they, at least, have the German men go through a somewhat useless system of calis- thenics and marching? It seems one really ought to be much more worried right now about the security of the Ger- main civilization than about the French which, I dare say, is quite able to defend itself. The Ger- man figures in literature, art, and science are also some of the most prominent in the world. France probably does have at present more freedom than Italy, Germany, or Russia, for instance, but have Louis XIV's persecution of the Huguenots, 'Na- poleon III's coup d'etat, or the Dreyfus case been forgotten? Germany has just gone through a crisis in which it had to choose between the Nazis and the Communists. The Communist government in Rus- sia, as is known, was established (incidentally principally by Jews) with a great deal of blood- shed and accompanied by the exodus of a large part of their intellectual class. There is no rea- son to believe that this would not also have been the case in Germany, and, although the final re- sult might well have justified the bloodshed, Ger- many would certainly have been placed in a state of havoc even as great as that portrayed now by the newspapers. The conservatives who shudder at the thought of Communism are really the ones who should support Hitler since he embodies the ideals they believe in. The movement which Hitler represents is a direct result of the Treaty of Ver- sailles and for that reason does Hitler have a right to complain. If there had been no such treaty, Germany would not have been in a situation re- quiring a Hitler. --J. V. Wehausen, '35. -Haiz.and~ f orC COMENCEMEN.r There is nothing better in the world than a y GOOD BOOK FOR A GRADUATION GIFT Our large stocks include oil that are new and Excellent of BIOGRAPHY, HISTORY, ART, TRAVEL, POETRY AND FICTION. Gift Editions, Beautiful Bindings. Editions de Luxe-Your order will have our best attention. 3ASreetSOKSTORES 316 State Street Main Street Opposite 'Court House : T"heTheatre A GREAT FESTIVAL OPENS WITH A FINE PLAY "Another Language" may be the long expected Great American Play or it may not-we are in no critical mood so soon after experiencing the emo- tions of its driving third act climax, and cannot say-but there is no doubt in our mind that the Henderson season is the Great American Festival. The critical brotherhood will no doubt spend its time and space this spring allotting to it the usual modest adjectives denoting approbation. Right now, fresh from the thrill of a fine play beauti- fully performed, we want to go on record with the fact that we know of no American dramatic fes- tival which in any way approaches Ann Arbor's. Perhaps when we shall have separated the play from the acting in respect to the total effect on the auditor we shall find that the play was slighter than we found it at first and the acting greater; but the original relationship will remain -a good play with even better production. The Henderson cast is, throughout, on a higher level than the great majority of Broadway productions, and consequently illuminates the complex drama brilliantly. The fact is that Robert Henderson has secured in Edith Barrett, Tom Powers, and the other notables who are to come, actors who are thoroughly incapable of giving their audiences anything but the best. Mr. Henderson is fortunate enough to have under his direction for this sea- son more fine players than any Broadway man- ager could have in a year. In considering "Another Language" as a candi- date for the Great American Play title, it should be remembered that the phrase, when it was first applied by a New York critic, probably had a spe- cialized connotation, or should have. Great, not in the sense of future dramatic importance, but as the play which sums up a period of intense real- istic study of the American home. The accent, then, is not on "great" but on "American." "An- other Language" is not a drama of ideas; its moral situation might be traced to "Candida" and its revolt-of-the-sensitive-soul to any number of other things. Its strength lies in its acute observa- tion and its superb theatricality. Tom Powers' performance as Victor Hallan was one that could not conceivably have been im- proved upon for sheer emotional effect. For two acts he lurked in corners, hugged the scenery, played down; content to establish his character. He refused all the privileges of the star-fitting into the background with all the congruity of a glove on a hand or a Negro in a crap game. When his time came he seized it-this clumsy, unthinking Victor Hallan began to think and feel, and suddenly became the only important thing in the play. Miss Barret's approach to her part was very different, but none the less effective. Her prob- lem was to carry the heavy burden of the show- she must retnain sweet without cloying, temper- amental without being annoying, intellectual with- out losing the emotional side. In short, she had to be just about perfect. She was. The remainder of the cast are deserving of all the fine words an exhausted vocabulary cannot supply: We were particularly annoyed to find that The Daily's Mr. Spelvin forgot Katherine Wick Kelley (she of the wickad eyebrows) in hand- r I '.' ' r - -' R s _. w 4 s, 3} k +!' b.4 _ .114 v C-y'{' y fi :7 xt .,' . It ,F k a'. ,S', .. r , ,,5 ', ' x. r > .-r ' 1 : _ S ', , .7 t ' 4 .. . .,_, - ' t , ry. , In the last issue of the year the retiring staff takes a parting shot at the camrpus and its evils. The tyrants McKay and Rush present their swan: song. If you like the abandon of the last performance of a spicy play, then, by all y ', ,.. , 'rj . t i means, read the June the GARGOYLE. issue of The choice of the Interfraternity Council lies between an adult or group of adults connected with the University, presumably the dean's office; an adult or group of adults not connected with the University; and a student organization. The last of these may be quickly disposed of: the work the central agency will have to perform will be highly technical and necessitate more time and special- ized ability than students are prepared to give. This leaves the choice between a University and a non-University office. There is no reason to believe the quality of the work performed by one would be different from that of the other, so no decision can be reached from this basis. If the work were done outside the University, it would entail considerable expense; if the Univer- sity could be prevailed upon to accept the respon- sibility a substantial saving would hence be made by the Interfraternity Council. Thus on one ac- count at least the University would be the wiser choice. Some fear is expressed that, if the central agency were administered by the University, a dread increase in what is called paternalism must' m AY Featuring: Preposterous People No. 7 Genius Unrecognized k Poetic Justice With benefit of Clergy Camvu Talk r ..o; - aJ V i h I