ofTR THE MICHIGAN DAILY is, CHIGAN DAILY Established 1890 I ...-' . 1I '1 ' : :- §C 'l' J Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Memhber 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 ue for republication ofrall news dispatches credited to itor not oherwse credited in this paper and the local news ptblished herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Etered at the 'Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription duringsummer bycarrier, $1.00; by mail, "$1 $ S'During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mall, $4.50. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbpr,; Mihigan. Phone:-2-1214. Representatives: College Publishers Representatives, 'Ine~ .40 East Thirty-Fourth Street New. York City; 80 Boylston Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR........FRANK B, GILRETH CITY EDITOR.. ........... ..... KARL SEIBEET SPORTS EDITOR................JOHN W. THOMAS WOMEN'S EDITOR.................MARGARET O'BRIEN ASSISTANT WOMEN'S EDITOR........ELSIE FELDMAN NIGHT EDITORS: Thomas Connellan, Norman F. Kraft, John W. WPrichard, Joseph W. Renihan, C. Hart Schaaf, Braickley 'Shaw, Galenn R. Winters. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Fred A. Huber, Albert Newman. REPQRTERS: Edward Andrews, Hyman J. Aronstam, A. REi Ball,DCharles G. Barndt, James Bauchat, Donald R:: Bird, Donald F. Blankertz, Charles B. Brownson, Arthur W. Carstens, Donald Elder, Robert Engel, Ed- wrd A. Gent, Eric Hall, John C. Healey, Robert B. Hett Alvin chleifer, George Van Vlek, Camern W'alker, Guy M. Whipleg Jr., W.n StoddardC White, Leonard A. Rosenberg. Eleanor B. Blum, Miriam Carver, Louise Crandall, Carol J. I annan, Frantees Manchester, Marie J, Murphy, Margaret C. Phalan, Katherine Rucker, Marjorie West- ern and Harriet Speiss. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER....BYRON C. VEDDER CREDIT MANAGER..............hARRY BEGLEY WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ...... DONNA BECKER LEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Advertising, Grafton Sharp; Adyertising Contracts, Orvil Aronson; Advertising Serv- ice,-Noel Turner; Accounts, Bernard E. Schnacke; Cir- culation, Gilbert B. Burley; Publications, Robert E. Finn. ASSISTANTS: Theodore Barash, Jack Bellamy, Gordon Boylan, Charles Ebert, Jack Eroymson, Fred Hertrck, Joseph Hume, Allen Knuusi, Russell Read, Lester Skin- nr, ,Joseph Sudow and Robert Ward. Betty Alger, Doris Gimmy, Bilie Griffiths, Dorothy Laylin, Helen Olson, Helen Schume, May Seegfried, KathrynStork. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1932 The College Student Aud Politics. . EDITOR'S NOTE: Following is the first install- nmentof an essay on economic issues in the coming presidenial campaign, written for The Daily by Kurni Tonian, senior in the School of 'Business Administration. The article will be continued in to- morrow's Daily. -COLLEGE students have been ac- (.1 cused of indifference to political problems. They have been branded as drifters without logical opinion. Yet when some of them go out of the way to seek information concerning an important question in current politics they re- c",ye the same old, familiar, vote-getting answer that the uninformed laymen gets. Last week after the speech of Rep. H. T. Rainey, many students were disappointed because he did not give sufficient factual material on the tariff question to enable a student to arrive at a sound conclusion on the subject. Besides, the facts that he presented were so mixed with political attacks that the issue was confused. In his opinion, which denounces the high protective Republican tariff, he Is in accord with the overwhelming majority of economists of the country; yet, to the average student, in his speech he was just another poli- tician. Conseqently, the student tends to kick the question overboard rather cynically and con- cern himself with things which are more relevant to his daily work and environment. Thus he finishes not far from where he started in his inquiry, while the giant, Politics keeps on marching and fighting in the battle for victory. But should the student continue to have no genuine concern for crucial political problems which sooner or later will affect his economic status? The questions of a recent Daily editorial show that the student interest in politics exists but that the student mind refuses to be satisfied with generalities designed to get the vote of the uninformed layman. Now "politics" is on the go, and the competitive party system, as it exists to- day, does not permit the leaders to pause for scholarly and comprehensive answers to every question raised by the student. Hence the student must resort to some other sources of information. With respect to the tariff issue, it is clear that the subject is more in the realm of economics than of politics, and to the economist we should turn for an answer to the questions raised by The Daily. Unfortunately, however, even the government and the p r e s e r t administration ignored the opinions of economists in passing the Smoot- hawley tariff bill. Perhaps we can safely attribute our failure to meet satisfactorily many national and international problems to the dominance of politics over sound economics,.it is high time to realize that conferences on armament reductions, and the glib talk of peace, will not get us to first ~ase as long as the basic problems of trade and finance lie in a bewildered tangle, and as, long as tariff wars keep up the suicidal economic struggle between nations. rnntatina on the tariff issues. we find the Musical Events SUNDAY'S FACULTY CONCERT This might well be subtitled "Lost in the Wild Wastes of Hill Auditorium" for, in- spite of a sum- mer warm sun and a sky piled high with clouds, Sunday afternoon was rather a forlorn affair-to the listener, at least. One had the bewildered feeling of not quite being able to catch up with what was going on. Chamber music in Hill Audi- torium is as futile as a poetry recital in Madison Square Garden-among all the battling echoes, overtones and cavernous depths, the actual sounds are completely drowned and the result is-some- what distorted. Chamber m u s i c is essentially "friendly" music-music whose subleties must be close-heard to be appreciated-and, while un- doubtedly a very worthy edifice, intimacy is not one of Hill Auditorium's points. The first of the bread to be cast upon the unap- preciative waters was the beautiful "C major trio" of Brahms, a relatively late work in which he dis- plays nearly all of his mature characteristics. It consists of three movements on the largest pos- sible scale and a short finale. There is a unity and a cohesion about the work that makes it as organic as any of his symphonies. Mrs. Littlefield opened her group with Brahms also. This composer's fondness for the German folk songs was here shown in an obvious contra- diction to the complex counterpoint of the previ- .ous instrumental score. The two "Volks lieder" on this program were splendid- examples of his ro- mantic lyricism, which is as Teutonic as that of Shubert and yet so very different. The Carpenter son was the lullaby type of thing in a new setting and charmingly done with the clearest of diction.; Horsman's "Bird in the Wilderness" seemed to have been very much lost, for it demanded an al- most constant forte which must have been very taxing on the voice. The encore, an old English ballad, was beautifully sung with a rare sympathy on both the part of singer and accompanist. The performance of the Tansman opus gave Ann Arbor one of its all too few opportunities to; hear modern music. The School of Music trio is1 to be highly congratulated for its readiness to in-i troduce new works to local audiences-and doubly so because of the great difficulty of the music, both from the standpoint of the ensemble and the individual parts. It is an interesting thing with places of decided inspiration balancing other spotsf where the continued repetition gives a grind- organ effect.t The "introduzione" starts with one of the finesti moments and then, after the intriguing beginning, the bottom seems to drop out of it. After the vacant middle section, the main subject is heard again with even more liking and then is extended, drawing to an unexpectedly conventional tonic close. The allegro is rhythmically amusing with its emphasized pizzicati. The fugue feeling at the last gives it a jagged skyscraper outline. Of the three main movements, the "canzone" is the most original, beginning as it does with the high sus- tained pedal point in the violin over the plucked cello notes. The simple melody which follows this, constituting the chief subject, seems too clear for the shifting complexities of the accom- paniment. The skilful way in which a climax is avoided gives this movement a more definite mood and unity of shape than any of the others. The scherzo is built out of jazz rhythms and would have been clever except for the great deal of repe- tition which makes it something that should be ground out by a machine rather than played by musicians. The technical demands that it makes of the players must be very great-one wonders if perhaps they aren't more than the music actu- ally warrants. 1 -Kathleen Murphy G- 51 Screen ReflectionsI F I Four stars means a super-picture; three stars very good; two stars good; one star just another picture; no stars keep away fromn it. AT THE MICHIGANl "A SUCCESSFUL CALAMITY" In the cast: GEORGE ARLISS, Mary Astor, Evalyn Knapp and Hardie Albright. Best shots: George Arliss attempting to getf comfortable amid the modern furniture in his "done-over" room; the young swain and his blue- prints which form the strong point of his pro- posal to blonde Evalyn Knapp; the Russian after- noon-musicale pianist. Added attractions: A Flip-the-Frog cartoon (good, but not equal to the "Bears and Bees" which you may have seen at the Michigan re- cently); a ZaSu-Thelma Todd comedy which is nothing if not painful; Paul Tompkins at the or- gan in a program of popular songs; newsreel. The program in brief: "A Successful Calamity" is one of the series which Hollywood is issuing in an effort (sometimes worthwhile, sometimes not) to capitalize on some current feature, as the de- pression, the newspaper columnist, tabloid jour- nalism, the political race, and many others. George Arliss is impeccable, suave as ever. Mary Astor is sympathetically appealing and charming, Evalyn Knapp a little too sugary as daughter. You may feel that it is worth 50 cents to see the Russian pianist play his "Skyscraper Symphony" in which you hear the hammer, the saw, and the riveter. We did. The West-Coast moguls have yet to learn that players are shunted into a newreel stadium by the synthetic methods described above, and in "A Successful Calamity" the polo injury scene, which shows the juvenile lead riding into danger (in the peace and quiet of the studio. We recommend this latest George Arliss picture, especially for the Arliss school fan. And the whole is a well-rounded, fresh, and entertaining attrac- tion. The comedy is a stock-situation pushover, as we have already hinted. Thelma and ZaSu are doing a series, and are evidently making the rounds of the pie-slingers gallery. -G. M. W. Jr. ______________ ___ - -__________ _______ I OtherCollege CAMPUSES By WOOD CONWAY TEXT book revisions are even more vogue in this year of depression than they ever have been before, according to a survey of book stores near the University of Minnesota campus. Dur- ing the past summer, states a report of the sur- vey, more authors have rewritten their texts than in previous years. This works a double hardship on most students, for besides paying top prices for new texts, they must discard their old books at a total loss. * * * FOLLOWING a vote of the undergraduate coun- cil at Johns Hopkins University, no woman will be allowed to take part in any campus activity in the future. The action was the result of objec- tions from students, alumni, and activity heads after a woman had been chosen editor-in-chief of the campus magazine, NWYORK University freshmen made an at- tempt last week to discard the orange ties and purple caps which first-year men are required to wear. The class of '36, aggravated by upper-class ridicule, held a mass meeting. Several sophomores appeared and the scuffle that ensued brought po- lice to the sene. The officers subdued the group in a few minutes and then left. When the fresh- men declared themselves victorious, however, the class of '35 once more started a free for all fight. This time the youngsters gave the sophomores such a severe beating that there was no doubt, even in the minds of the second-year men, as to whom the victory belonged. The Frosh finished things up by marching across the campus, cheer- ing their class and throwing away the hated ties and caps. ~i A Washington By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON -When Senator George Moses of New Hampshire came down to New York long enough to predict that the re- publican ticket would sweep unchecked "from Maine to Maryland," word that Al Smith would campaign personally in four of those states had not yet been noised about. - :, "Friend Al" was as yet a man of mystery, so far as his part in the election doings was con- cerned. It would be interesting to ? Q $&&% know if Moses would care to repeat his prediction and take in quite as much territory in the face of the forecasts of Smith's actual participation in the national campaign in New York, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Con- necticut. Proper Treatmenut 01- You~r Clothes*. is as important a feature of the Varsity's laundering service as thorough washinr. In sendingyour clothes to the Varsity you are assured of their return to you in perfect condition. PHONE 2-3123 For Call and Delivery Service 300 South Fifth I MICHIGAN DAILY ADVERTISEMENTS PAY On Sale at School of Music A e e LAYING BATTLE LINES There can be no doubt that the former gover- nor's aloofness from the Roosevelt-Garner cam- paign up-to that point has been among the im- portant factors entering into the calculations of both campaign organizations in reckoning their electoral chances on the eastern front. "Big Jim" Farley, democratic national chair- man, said that right out loud in his address to the democratic faithful of Rhode Island. The Smith- Roosevelt rapprochement at Albany, he said, was the "greatest event in the campaign thus far." But be the electoral effect of Al Smith's active intervention in the campaign what it may, the an- nouncement of his four-state stumping program and that he will crowd much of it in that last week in November before election day serves to emphasize that tle eastern front is going to be a lively place that week, and for several weeks be- fore that. Why not? Take that Maine-to-Maryland sweep of which Mr. Moses speaks. It includes some 108 of the 531 electoral votes to be decided November 8. That is a solid chunk of political power. BIG GUNS COMING UP President Hoover is to deliver an address in New York city. That was the first step of his personal campaign decided upon, although he probably will take it last, or near the last. Governor Roosevelt has shaped his touring so as to close his campaign in his home state on the SEASON TICKETS 10 All-Star Concerts $6.00 - $8.00 - $10.00 - $12.00 TICKETS for SINGLE CONCERTS $1.00 -$1.50- $2.00 -$2.50 4 Oct. 25 Nov. 2 Nov.30 Dec. 12 Jan. 16 Jan, 27 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ege Koussevitzky, Conductor LAWRENCE TIBBETT, Distinguished Baritone DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, Ossip Gobrilowitsch, Conductor EFR EM ZIMBALIST, Distinguished Violinist NATHAN MILSTEIN, Rissiran Violinist MYR A HESS, British Pianist Feb. 8 BUDAPEST STR I NG QUARTET Jose Roisman, fi rst violin Alexander Schneider, second violin Stephon ipoIyi, viola Mischo Schneider, 'cello Feb. 15 SIGRID ONEGIN, Leading Contralto 4d k A ~'112 A M ALI lr ffNI-&%l* rV~w