I 4 % k LY feasible to any extent, the University in general and the sociology department in particular should 4 follow the trend toward education in sex rela- tionships. So vital indeed, is this subject, that an entire social system can stand only with an ade- quate knowledge of the underlying principles. a Marital relationships, psychological and physi- ological problems, eugenics, and child guidance, all thickly veiled in the past under the stigma of "sex," need to come into prominence in the edu- cational world typified by the university. The Stu- dent Christian Association may have taken a most r i significant step in this direction. THE MICHIGAN DAI flation is bound to be squeezed out. Unfortunately the grip on non-essentials is so strong that some of the vital necessities of education may go in- stead of the better protected bilgewater of "brain" bureaucrats. -Daily Iowai. Scre e n Re fl e ctfion~s 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 ILY GOT every morning except Monday during the ear and Summer .Session by the Board in tudent Publications. the Western Conference Editorial Assocla- eBig Ten N'ews Service. BEn OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ated Press is exclusively entitled to the use tion of all news dispatches credited to It or e credited in this paper and the local news rein. All rights of republication of special e reserved. the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as matter. Special rate of postage granted by" ant Postmaster-General. n during summer by carrier, $1.00; by' mail, g regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by ident Publications Building, Maynard Street, Michigan. Phone: 2-1314. tives: College Publications Representatives, t Thirty-Fourth Street, New Yoric City; 80 'eet, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 EDITOR...............FRANK B. GILERETH R..KARL SEIFFERT TOR..................JOHN W. THOMAS DITOR.................MARGARET O'BRIEN WOMEN'S EDITOR........MIRIAM CARVER 'ORS: Thomas Connelan, John W. Pritchard, Renihan, C. Hart Schaaf, Brackley Shaw, One-Way Round Trips To Europe * * It. T HOUGH the days of easy money seem to have passed for most of us, the lure of getting something for nothing con-' tinues to attract gentlemen of light fingers and lighter ethics into competition with every legiti- mate business. We are often inclined to regard world travel as the soundest investments, but now the fly- by-nights have extended their operations even to this field. Before the travel season opens, dozens of questionable bureaus and spurious transporta- tion lines spring up. Even experienced tourists will tell you occasion- ally of arriving at the dock equipped with pass- ports, reservations, and all the necessary para- phernalia, only to find themselves without trans- portation. So the students, who are regarded as legitimate game for almost any kind of racket, should be especially wary of frauds. Students have in some cases unwittingly be- come even agents for dishonest transportation firms. Promised fat commissions for selling tickets, they help to defraud their acquaintances and friends of the cost of an ocean trip. Whether you're buying or selling, be careful ! And it isn't necessarily the travel bureau that tries to put wings on your almighty dollar: some- times an honest dealer in transportation finds himself at the last minute holding the bag for a fraudulent steamship company. So, if you're planning a tour for next summer, or going home to China or Hungary or any of the numerous places one might be going home to, make sure of your travel bureau and check up on the firms it is representing. A dollar in the pocket is worth any number of steamship tickets if there isn't any steamer. Editorial Comment it ASSISTANTS: L. Ross Bain, Fred A. Huber, Newman, Harmon Wolfe. RS: Charles Baird, A. Ellis Ball. Charles G.' Arthur W. Carstens, Ralph G. Coulter, William is, Sidney Frankel, John C. Healey, Robert B. George M. Holmes. Edwin W. Richardson, Van Vleck, GuV M. Whipple. Jr. Bates, Marjorle E. Beck, Eleanor B. Plum, Ellen ^ooley, Louise Crandall, Dorothy Dishman, Duff, Carol J. Hanan, Lois Jotter, Helen Levi trle J. Murphy, Margaret D. Phalan, Marjorie "(HE WAS HER MAN-BUT) SHE DONE HIM WRONG" ***DCIDDLYNOT FORITHE W. C. T. U. Lady Lou ................ .Mae West Cummings ................ Cary Grant Chick.................Owen Moore Dan Flynn..............David Landau Gus...................Noah Beery Spider ................Dewey Robinson Serge ...................Gilbert Roland Do you remember the days when being a street- cleaner was a real job? The days of the old sa- loon, with its free lunches, pictures in the nude, Frankie and Johnnie renditions, and gilded ladies with narrow waists and accentuated busts? If you remember these days with a tearful sigh, "She Done Him Wrong" and Mae West as Lady Lou will provide a roseate hour and a quarter; but if those years just before the naughty naughts bring a reproving frown, keep yourself and the children away from Mae. "She Done Him Wrong" has a flavor half way between hock beer and pretzels-that is, those who are in the know about such things say so. It presents ward heelers, a dope fiend, many ladies of the ensemble, counterfeiters, and most of all, Mae West, who symbolizes both quantity and quality, But then, in the nineties, quantity was a prerequisite. Mae West's vehicle is about as elevating as the barroom floor on which the characters spend their time. For that same reason it is appealing to many. The story is that of Lady Lou, whohas a dia- mond souvenir for each male conquest, but be- yond Lou and her singing of "Frankie and Johnnie" there is little but the aforementioned counterfeiting and a detective round-up to keep "She Done Him Wrong" thematically alive. The closing moments are accelerated to a high degree, possibly a bit too much for the rather slow unrav- eling of the greater part of what little plot there is. Suggestive humor, which seems a perennial success in Ann Arbor, puts an otherwise shaky drama over-and here there are plenty of pointed jokes, smiles, and eye-rollings, executed by Mae West to the manifest delight of the audience. Added attractions: Wille Hoppe in "Chalk Up" -a pleasing short of championship three-cushion billiards; Paul Tompkins, a success at the organ; and Paramount News. --G. M. W. Jr. 01' A COAT or' A CAiMERA? A CAT BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 .RRC............ ..B O0 VEDDER L.... .HAR1Y BEGLEY 3S MANAGER......DONNA BECKER AGERS: Advertising, Grafton Sharp acts, Orvil Arouson; Advertising Ser- Accounts, Bernard E. Schnacke; Cir- E LBursley; Publication%, Robert E. T7 -.1 SISTANTS: John Bellamy, Gordon .Boylan, Allen Cleve- And, Charles Ebert, Jack Efroyinson, FrelHerrick, oseph Ifume, Allen Knuusi, Russell Read, Fred Rogers, ester Skinner, Joseph Sudow, Robert Ward. lizabeth Aigler, Jane Bassett, Beulah Chapman, Dors iroy, BillyCGriffiths, Catherine McHenry. May See- mjed. Virginia McContb. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1933 Union Ilaircuts The Union is still charging 45 cents for hair- uts. Every other shop in town is charging 35, ents. The Union, a student club, is a non- rofit organization and exists solely for the tudents. Yet the Union will not meet the town ate. nester Plan Tuition. . 0 F OR THE PRESENT at least, thet problem of the "sixty-forty" de- ferred tuition notes has been solved. By declaring a moratorium on debts due, the Regents have al- lowed approximately 300 students to remain in the University for the rest of the year. The Regents now should consider, as they doubtless will, some new plan of procedure to fol- low in the future. The "sixty-forty" notes are a poor business proposition from the standpoint of the University because they do not pay for them- selves, there is excessive clerical work necessary in the granting of the loans, and the number of stu-. dents applying for them is rapidly increasing. The 1,541 students ,taking advantage of the "sixty-forty" plan this fall represent a 100 per cent increase over last year's number, and it i entirely possible that this number will show an equal increase next year. The logical step, then, is the payment of tuition in semester installments. This plan is thought by some to be impractical because there are many costs included in the tuition which are unequal during the two semesters. ., However, the majority of other state institu- tions are employing the plan with reasonable suc- cess and there is no reason why Michigan could not work out some similar scheme. Payment of tuition in semester installments would not only be a godsend to economically pressed students but would be an intelligent and businesslike move. Its adoption might require add- ing a dollar to the total tuition, but this would be a small price compared to the benefits received. Students planning to be in school for only one semester in the year would get much fairer treat- ment than they do under the present plan since they would not be required to pay 10 per cent more than half of the year's tuition. Finaly, and perhaps most important, there would be no deferred tuition notes falling due in the middle of the year. WHY NOT TEST THE REAL PEACE MACHINERY ON JAPAN? It seems likely that Japan will withdraw from the League of Nations and continue her endeavor to bite off as large a chunk of North China as she can get. As we indicated in a recent editorial on the subject, United States is less interested in the violation of its rights as a neutral (which will in- evitably take place) than in observing the strength of the world's peace machinery under the strain of the Japanese aggression. The danger is that we will continue to "ob- serve" the peace machinery in this crisis, rather than lend our strength to its successful operation. Kirby Page, when he spoke on the campus not long ago, stated explicitly the steps which we can take in halting Japan. If Japan withdraws from the League when that body orders it to cease its advance into China, the members of the League and United States can withdraw their diplomatic' representatives from Tokyo. This would affect the Japanese yen adversely on the foreign exchange, increase the strain on governmental finances, and bring to a fore the opponents of the government policy. It is very likely that this step, because of the actual pressure it would involve and because of the firm attitude it would indicate, might cause the downfall of the militarist clique in the Jap- anese government. If it did not succeed, the na- tions would still have at their disposal a more effective weapon. The oft-proposed economic blockade, i. e., a refusal to ship any goods to Japan or receive any Japanese exports, would quickly bring the island empire to terms. It would cause intense suffering within Japan, and the au- thorities would have to treat with the other na- tions in order to prevent revolution. There is a great deal of loose talk about the weakness of our peace machinery. If one thinks of peace machinery as nothing more than, written or oral admonitions, such contempt may be jus- tified. But peace machinery should consist of va- rious steps of non-military coercion, progressing in severity. The mere threat of the final step, eco- nomic boycott, would check the invasion of north China and would force Japan to treat peacably with the rest of the world. If the United States and Russia will co-operate with the League in threatening Japan with such a measure, the world will have a convincing demonstration of its own power to preserve peace. And unless the Japanese people have the same quality popularly ascribed to the Bourbon dynasty, inability to learn, one demonstration should be enough. - - ., & STRIPES By Karl Seiff er SUR LA SEMAINE A L'ENFERS A strange old retention Of outworn convention This business called "hell week" is still going strong With no explanation Except the deflation Of freshmen whose playfulness gets them in wrong. S0TARS for' 01.7 A CAM~,ERA A COAT A soph is regarded A trifle retarded In spirit if he doesn't follow the rest And leap to the battle With deftly-aimed paddle. Ferocious abandon, and unbounded zest. or A CA It's not to be doubted- No question about it A student at times seems to need a good nurse, But why so beleaguer The neophyte's meager Conceit when his seniors are all so much worse? At last the freshmen are getting their in- nings, which will bear several interpretations, by the way, but anyway we had just affixed the final interrogation point to the above when the mailman left the at our door: Dear Uncle Karl- If you ever get extra hard up, here 'tis . . TO MY BEST-BELOVED FRESHMAN Our kitty sometimes catches mice; I watched her with one yesterday, And didn't think it very nice, The game she seemed disposed to play. WATCH FOR SWAP ADS IN THE DAILY CLASSIFIED COLUMNS S. C. A. Married Life C ou .rse.. . T HE STUDENT CHRISTIAN ASSO- CIATION'S move to further the. psychological, physical, and sexual well-being of the student body is deserving of commendation. Under the Association's plan a series of eight lec- tures, designed to enlighten certain "serious stu- dents" both married and unmarried, will be de- livered here by guest speakers who are acknowl- edged experts in their line. A good turnout may be well expected for the lecture series. Just what the student reaction would be to inclusion of a "sex course" in the so- -Minnesota Daily BRAIN BUREAUCRACY? It is not bad luck to spill copious quantities of salt while reading Henry Louis Mencken-like nuts, his writing is better digested with grains of salt. This applies to his American Mercury attack on the high cost of public education. He contends that "the pedagogues began to fall upon the tax- payer in real earnest, and presently they had him down and were turning his pockets inside out"-- all for "an immeasurable ocean of buncombe." But even when salted down the exaggeration of' caustic Mr. Mencken remains an impressive chal- lenge to education, which in its aping of Big Busi- ness has become as inflated as many another brand of mass production. There exists an edu- cational hierarchy which assures its self-perpet- uation by prescribing requirements for teachers and teaching, from principles of measuirement to. I see, at quite another time and place, That very same expression on your face. -Christopher. Well, you can be just as poetic about the thing as you like, Christopher, but all the lady-freshmen (and we presume that's what you mean)- we've noticed this year remind us somehow very strikingly of Easter bunnies rather than cats. Have you ever noticed, Imerely as a zoological observation, that the cat is really rather an intelligent beast? And by the way, come out and reveal yourself: all this anonymity makes us nervous. NEWS ITEM: Twenty-six men aboard the $15,- .Call Al the Ad -Taker She'd almost let him go, and then, Recapturing her errant prize, She'd sweep him off his feet again- A curious look was in her eyes. 92-12I41 and Let Him Find Valuable Trades for Your Unwanted Articles '''It'