THE MICHIGAN DAILY DAILY r' ,I Wt= ML. ' w" r Published every morning except Monday during the University yearand Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- tion and the Big Ten News Service. MEMBumER 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 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 Postm'aster-.General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mral, $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 2nd St., New York, N. Y. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ......... THOMAS K. CONNELLAN EDITORIAL DRECTOR.............C. HART SCHAAF Sf Y .EDTOR'0, ,...............BRACIXLEY 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, 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. Macdonsid. 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 Hm- mer, Florence Harper, Marie Heid, 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 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, William B. Caplan, Willard Cohodas, R. C. Devereaux, Carl J. Fibiger, .Albert Gregory, Milton Kramer, John Marks, John . Mason, John P. Ogden, Robert Trimby, Bernard Rosenthal, Joseph Rothbard, Richard Schiff, George R. Williams. Elizabeth Aigler, Jane Bassett, Beulah Chapman, Doris iGimmy, Billie Griffiths, Catherine McHenry May See- tried, Virginia McComb, Meria Abbot, Betty Chapman, Lillain Fine, Minna Giffen, Cecile Poor, Carolyn Wose. TUESDAY, MAY 30, 1933 Memorial Day. LAGS FLYING, drums beating, sol-. diers marching. "Honored dead have not died in vain." "Foght to make the world safe for democracy." "In de- fense of a great ideal." "It was a war to end war.", Thus, with the usual claptrap and speech-making the nation celebrates Memorial Day, belying the very title which the holiday bears. If we really stopped to refresh our memories on May 30, we would see: the propaganda which flooded the country before our entrance into the war; "children murdered by the bloody Boche"; the hysteria which these frightful lies raised in the national mind; the millions of lives consumed in useless holocaust; the maimed and shell- shocked figures which emerged from the slime and filth of the trenches; the anxious days of waiting in thousands of American homes; the heartaches of parents, sweethearts, children. Instead of trying to remember on Memorial Day we try to deceive ourselves. We try to think that' the flag-covered graves represent a forward step in the march of progress, that their occupants took part in a noble crusade-when we know that all this is not true. We need only to look at the world of today to realize that the ideals of yesterday were fan- tasies, cruel falsehoods created for a selfish pur- pose. We can see now that these "honored dead" did die in vain, that they burned themselves up in the fires of a war that accomplished nothing, when they might have rendered constructive serv- ice to their nation and to their world. We can see that democracy was not preserved, that, in- stead, new forms of autocracy were born in the war. We can see that war was not abolished, for it rages upon the Asiatic continent today, while it threatens ominously to appear- again upon the soil of Europe. From the day of armistice, we have seen that the supposedly high ideals of our allies were noth- ing but shams. At the treaty of Versallies, we saw them jump in to divide the spoils. We saw them quench their greed upon the prostrate German nation. Have we learned? Or do we continue the false ideals of that war, of all war, in the very ritual of Memorial Day? 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 than 300 words if possible, DOWN WITH HITLER In his comment on my communication in The Michigan Daily on Hitler, Mr. Wehausen ques- tions the reliability of my information. As I stated in my communication my information comes from eye-witnesses and from the reports of those who wa r A m.uth hdi Q1-ir.ieneltv h fthe Na.i Tn Clock Back, and Hitler, Menace to Mankind, by Sidney Wallach. Mr. Wehausen considers it an honor for Herr Hitler to be the most hated in- dividual. Just what meaning Mr. Wehausen at- taches to the word honor, I do not know. According to Mr. Wehausen, Hitler ranks with Napoleon, Bismarck, Lenin, etc. Yes, the Nazis rank him with those men-no sane person does. I think it is Brailsford, the brilliant English writer, who called Hitler a criminal lunatic. Dur- ing his recent visit to the United States, George Bernard Shaw likened Hitler to an officer in the army who defeats his career by cheating at cards. Here it is worth while quoting a conversa- tion that recently took place in London between the Countess of Oxford and Asquith, the widow of the late Prime Minister, and Hitler's personal rep- resentative Dr. Alfred Rosenberg. "We have been too occupied," said Mrs. Asquith, "with our own troubles and affairs to realize all that has been taking place, but with the advent of Adolf Hit- ler's government, there has been the most com- plete change of opinion that I have ever known in the political history of this country. Every one knows what Herr Hitler has accomplished in less than three months, but what none of us knows is how much the Germans approve the Jew bait- ing and quite unnecessary follies and cruelties that have happened in their country."-Mrs. As- quith continues, "I asked Dr. Rosenberg if Chan- cellor Hitler had no God, and if that was so, why he could not leave those who had alone." Upon the remark by Dr. Rosenberg that the men in Germany today were all in line-busy, happy, and full of zeal, Lady Asquith replied that this was not true of Germany's great men, only of her, sheep. What about her men of science, med- icine, law, music and literature-in fact, all that had made Germany the great nation she was?- "I said fear was not unification," continues Lady Asquith, "and I should tremble if I were in Ger- many today."_* * "I said brains, after all, were what made a country great, and if Germany got rid of all of her brains just to shout 'Hail Hitler!' she would make herself ridiculous." * * * Again "I said that of all the contemptible things I knew, beating, baiting, and imprisoning men because of their religion was the lowest. I said I hoped to be invited when Heine's works, among other great Jewish books, were burnt, and that putting stu- dents against their teachers and turning men out to starve or commit suicide would never convert any one to Hitlerism." She also said, "Merciless persecution of big and small men because of their faith can never be a step forward, and, as I told Dr. Rosenberg, will isolate Germany forever from countries who do not want to 'hail' any man, but only to pray for peace and good-will among the nations of the world." (The New York Times, May 13, 1933). In connection with the beating, maiming, killing and imprisoning of thousands and thousands, Mr. Wehausen wishing to make a point with reference to fellow-Aryans, gets away from his subject by talking about the Jews. Next Mr. Wehausen places implicit reliance upon a report of an acquaintance in Berlin. Ac- cording to that all is quiet in the best of German cities. Evidently that acquaintance has not seen the blood-stained walls in certain secret places in the Friederichsbrasse and elsewhere! Mr. Wehausen refers to the discharge from their pcsitions of numerous eminent Jews without giv- ing the reason why they were discharged. The rea- son is well-known. It is that Hitler's henchmen were promised 'work and bread' and so this fa- mous (!) man ousted practically all competent Jews and handed their positions over to the hungry Nazi's. Mr. Wehausen tries to bolster up his point by referring to the treatment of the Negroes in the United States. The difference be- tween the situation of the Negroes in the United States and the Jews in Germany is that in Ger- many it is the government which has inaugurated these cruelties. Mr. Wehausen makes mention of the burning of books by German students as of small consequence. Among prominent Americans whose books were burnt there is Miss Helen Keller who when she learned of the honor to be bestowed upon her, addressed the German students as fol- lows: "Better were it for you to have a millstone hung around your neck and sink into the sea than to be hated and despised of all men." (Mr. Wehausen considers it an honor to-be so hated)! When Mr. Franz Boas, professor of anthropology at Columbia, was to undergo the same consecra-? tion, all he said was this: "When people want to be crazy, let them be crazy." And yet this man Hitler talks about liberty while establishing what amounts to an Index Hitlerians! Mr. Wehausen dwells upon what he calls the useless (?) System of Calisthenics used by the Germans. It is well known that all Germany was getting ready for another day when, fortunately, just in the nick of time, President Roosevelt threw a bombshell into German militarism. Mr. Wehausen dwells upon the necessity of pre- serving German civilization. What he probably means is that the civilization has. sunk to the lowest depths under Hitlerism and consequently is in imminent danger of complete collapse. Let us all work to save it from Hitlerism! No country can boast of greater freedom than France and there is no country today in which there is les freedom than in Germany, where all human rights are being trampled under foot by an Austrian upstart and his henchmen. Instead of being ranked with Bismark, Hitler should be ranked with Genghis Khan, Tamerlane, Attila, Ivan the Terrible, and some other dark charac- ters which have impeded the progress of man- kind. --M. Levi. The Theatre STAINED GLASS ATTITUDES The first of Angna Enters' two recitals, given before a capacity house at the Lydia Mendelssohn last night, proved what might be mildly termed a revelation to those who had not seen her before, ourselves included. It was pleasing to find in Miss Enters the here- tofore unknown sense of humor in dancers. Mar- thaGraham in her Four Insincerities presented an amusing interlude-amusing largely by con- trast to the severity of her other numbers. Kreutz- berg was gay and bouyant at times. But Miss Enters is our first experience with a dancer who knows how to be really funny. Perhaps most danc- ers are inclined to grit their teeth a bit too much. A logical reaction to this is doubt as to whether Miss Enters can be serious or not. And in that re- spect, it is very difficult for the critic to decide where her satire leaves off and her seriousness begins. Her Pavana, Feline, and Boy Cardinal, while powerful and macabre, still are ironical; probably the Auto de Fe and the two Madonna dances are sincere. As far as meaning goes, the excellence of those numbers prove that Miss En- ters is a serious dancer too. If there is any adverse criticism to be made of the recital, it is that those serious numbers were at the same time the most inactive ones; that the recital, as an introduction to Miss Enters, was incomplete in that there was very little real dancing of the sober type. Miss Enters' recital was, in short, a triumph in the comic field. She has a fine eye for types and mannerisms, her pantomimic technique is subtle and yet absolutely expresive. It was also a triumph of versatility. The realization, after it was over, that this one person had kept an audience com- pletely amused and satisfied for two hours, alone on the stage and without the aid of her voice, was rather staggering. No other dancer we know has quite done that. -P. M. FRANZ MOLNAR, AND "THE PLAY'S THE THING" By DAVID MOTT Surely any season which would bring us a com- edy by Molnar must be termed particularly lively. So it is with the delight of great anticipations that ,xe look forward to this first play of the Michigan Repertory Players' season. Molnar is a genius when set loose on a comic idea. He sees in a situation a wealth of comic im- plications which to a person of less insight would be totally unnoticed. He has such a flare for twisting a comic sally that it becomes in his hand a perfect champagne of bubble and brilliance. Simply, his wit consists in taking a sentimental idea, and carrying that sentimental idea, play- fully, to the ridiculous consequences that no one else in the world would ever think of carrying it to. That the attitude be easily cynical, the idea sentimental, and the treatment playful, are points of importance; they are the manner of Molnar in a nutshell. If he is not sentimentalizing about "the play" as he does in "The Play's The Thing," he's senti- mentalizing about something else. But always cyn- ically remember! In "The Good Fairy," which made such a tremendous hit a year ago with Walter Connolly and Helen Hayes, he was senti- mentalizing about a poor little work-a-day girl who "wanted to make everybody happy," and a muddle-headed old lawyer who had "principles." In "The Guardsman" he's sentimental about mar- ried love; in "The Swan" and "Olympia" about royalty; in "Liliom" about the rough-neck. And these ideas are always expanded like a conceit to a ridiculous and comical far-fetchedness. His plays have been among the most interesting produced in America in the past ten years. The Guild, Miss LeGallienne, Gilbert Miller have pro- duced them successfully on Broadway; and they have found a tremendous reception from local theatres in the provinces. Screen Reflections Four stars means extraordinary; three stars very good; two stars good; one star just another picture; no stars keep away from it. AT THE MICHIGAN "SWEEPINGS" **LIONEL OF THE BARRYMORES DOES A NICE CHARACTERIZATION As an enterprising, hard-working man who steps from a small private store proprietorship into the role of wealthy merchant prince, Lionel Barrymore does an excellent piece of character portrayal in "Sweepings." It is always interesting to follow the appearances of characters in a show such as "Cavalcade," wherein years aie but screen months and age comes rapidly. Barymore does his "ageing" in "Sweepings" just about as smooth- ly as it is possible to imagine. The balance of the cast in "Sweepings" are not lacking in their respective positions. Alan Dine- hart is as good as usual and Gloria Stuart, though she has a terribly poor part, is not to be espe- cially criticized. Eric Linden is himself, as we fear he always will be. Nevertheless, something is miss- ing from "Sweepings." It may be that the story is not strong enough for Mr. Barrymore's talents, or perhaps it is because it is such a slow-moving tale, that we were not swept off our feet by the picture. Certainly it is not up to the calibre of the usual Barrymore vehicle. We very much suspect that "Sweepings" is an attempt at an American version of "Cavalcade' and this may be one of the reasons why it is not a better movie. "Cavalcade" was a picture in a separate realm; producers should leave it and "The Birth of a Nation" alone for awhile. "Sweepings" is an entertaining picture though and you should enjoy it. The Zasu Pitts-Thelma Todd comedy, which is billed with it, is a little sillier than usual but the cartoon is amusing. The news reel, for some strange reason, is out of the question. And with so many important things happening in the world too! -E. J. P. If the new legal beer seems weak, as it does to i ,. hay be obtained at the Student Publications Buldin Maynard"Strt BRING YOUR STUBS There are a few copies that may be purchased f r $5.00 Being Released... Wise Merchants ae pre- 3] parngfor Inecrea s .e. Sale by having More Adverts- ing Released! The Michigan Daily offers the Best Means of1 reach-m mo' Ann Arbor's Better Buying Public. Musical Events MISS MARGARET SIEWERS- Miss Margaret Siewers, Grad., pianist, pupil of Professor Joseph Brinkman, of the School of Music, will give the following graduation recital, at 8:15 p. m. Wednesday in the School of Music Auditorium, to which the general public with the exception of small children is invited: Chromatic Fantasie and Fugue .......... Bach Snnata .nOuR1A----------------------Beethoven