THE MICHIGAN DAILY ... , CHIGAN DAILY. 3~ '-I asserts, "dare not go to their offices except by. stealth." And these words recall President Garfield's dis- gusted exclamation, when the office .seekers began to pour into Washington. "My God,'? he said.. "What is there in this place that a man should ever want to get in it?" Music Evet 4---; NATHAN MILSTEIN PROGRAM _ 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 THlE ASSOCIAITED 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 Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mall, $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. Monday night the brilliant young Russian viol- inist, Nathan Milstein, will appear in the follow- ing program at Hill Auditorium, accompanied by Leon Benditzsky. La Folia..........................Corelli Prelude and Gavotte (violin only) .........Bach Concerto in A minor ..,.. .. .......Goldmark I Allegro moderato IT Andante (aria) III Allegretto Intermission Caprice No. 24 ............ . .....Paganini-Auer Minstrels........ ... Debussy Dance (la vida breve) ........deFalla Berceuse-.. .......................Stravinslhy Flight of the Bumble Polonaise in D Major .... ..........Wieniawski, EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 G EDITOR...............FRANK B. GILBRETH TOR...........................KARL SEIFIERT DITOR......... ...... ..JOH1N W THOMAS, EDITOR...: ... MARGARET OMREN T WOMEN'S EDITOR.......MIRIAM CARVER )TORS : Thomas Conncelian, Norman F. Kraft, Pritchard, JosephCA. Renihan, C. Hart Schaaf Shaw, Glenn R. Winters. ASSISTANTS: L. Ross Bain, Fred A. Huber, ewman, Harold Wolfe. RS: Hyman J. Aronstam, Charles Baird, A. , Charles G. Barndt, James L. Bauchat, Donald rtz, Charles B. Brcwnson, Arthur W. Carstens, - Coulter, William G. Ferris, Sidney Frankel, John C. Healey, Robert B. Hewett, George M. Walter E. Morrison, Edwin W. Richardson, npson, George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whipple,.Jr., lard White. e Anriing, Barbara Bates, Marjorie E. Beck, B. Blum, Maurine- Burnside, Ellen Jane Cooley, Crandall, Dorothy Dishman, Anne Dunbar, Duty, Carol J. Hanan, Lois Jotter, Helen Levi- nces J. Manchester, Marie JI'. Murphy. Eleanor Margaret D. Phalan, Katherine Rucker, Harriet arjorie Western. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 MANAGER.................BYRON C. VEDDER [ANAGER.......... HARRY BEGLEY BUSINESS MANAGER ........DONNA BECKER ENT MANAGERS: Advertising, Grafton Sharp; ng Contracts, Orvil Aronson; Advertising Serv- Turner; Accounts, Bernard E. Schnacke; Cir- Gilbert E. Bursley; Publications, Robert E. Campus Opinion Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous communications wil be disregard- ed. The names of commiunicants -will, however, be re- garded as confidential upon request.-Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words if. possible. "PAUPERIZE OR STARVE" To The Editor: The . economic crisis is here; the Good Will Fund at best is a temporary stop-gap.-t gets to the roots of nothing .and -suggests neither causes nor cures for the deplorable situation in which many students are found. There may be some ex- cuse for inter-student charity, if that is the only immediate relief possible. To pauperize these students is preferable to letting them starve. Those who open their hearts and purses, however, and those who- put their energies into the .;cam- paign must not think that they are helping some great and constructive cause; they have changed nothing, but for a few weeks time. The- deepest of ' capitalist morality" is superficial. - As students we should be able to look deeper. Lhe University and the students are -part and parcel of aninadequate- economic system and an anjust society. But social consciousness is fast .wakening and social morality (such as a sense f economic justice) is a matter of education. The ,ask of constructing a rational and classless so- ciety is not a hopeless one. The University and .he entire educational system can play a decisive part. Imaginative instructors are setting out to d instill social consciousness and a superior social norality. Their students are looking for the new forms and are going outs to build them. UnlesE { exaggerate the possibilities of education, it has a peculiar significance to the state. - Shall the state, by an extension of scholarships, >rdon Boylan, Allen Cleve- 'froyxntson; Fred lHertrick, ~ussell Read, Pred Rogers, low, Robert Ward. , Beulah Chapman, Doris na Hartz Catherine Mc- Schmiude. May- Seefried,a SUNDAY, JAN. 15, 1933 sive influence on Gandhi who urges all his fol- lowers to read it. Lately larger Christian bodies such as the Methodists have taken a definite stand against War. Furthermore in this country a-questionnaire sent out recently to all Protestant clergymen re- - vealed that the majority would refuse military service as well as any moral support of the war machine; while in Europe influential Catholic organizations sponsor the War Resisters move- 1ment. --A Quaker Screen Reflections "Four stars means extraordinary; three stars very good; two stars good; one star just another picture; no stars keep away from it. u AT THE MAJESTIC "KONGO" .* *A JUNGLE TALE OF A WHITE SAVAGE Flint..... .. . .....Walter Huston Tula .......... ........Lupe -Velez Anne,................Virginia Bruce Gregg ....... ......C. Henry Gordon Don't let the title of this picture lead you astray. It is not a. travelogue produced by some Lo( geographical society but instead, a stirring story of a white, half-savage, jungle hermit. In many respects, "Kongo" is comparable to the recent ' "Red Dust," however, without Jean Harlow's out- standing attraction. S{ To fortify himself against the outside world roo and -consequently to seek revenge for- a crippled back received at the hands of an old enemy, Flint do (Walter Huston): has set himself up in the midst of the thick. Congo jungle, and built around his me compound an inpregnable barricade of savage native tribes. Flint has been accepted as a leader fie( of the native tribe, The daughter of his former enemy is brought to: the compound from a convent in Cape Town as Flint prepares his fiendish revenge. Not long after her arrival, a white doctor (Conrad Nagel) who has been driven to chewing beeang root (a potent jungle drug), stops to rest at the. com- pound where he is kept a prisoner. There he falls in love with the white captive, and plots her escape. Flint, however, in a sudden reverse of af- fairs, relieves the doctor of his problem. . Lupe Velez plays no prominent part in the picture. Her use is only to bring out Flint's- hard- ened and brutish character. She is surprisingly missing during the latter part of the film. Con- 'ad Nagel as- the drug addict, Walter Huston as the savage white leader, and Virginia Bruce as the tortured convent girl are all admirably played. Mhere is a faint attempt at comedy through the cockney servant. Added attractions: Hearst News: Andy Clyde comedy, "Boy, Oh Boy!" Speaker Garner is shocked at the irreverence A) the Senate judiciary committee in approving a prohibition repeal resolution-- nt ii harmony Nith the Democratic national platform. But other nspired writings have fared no better at timesTYPW including those inscribed by Moses on tablets of stone. - -Chicago, Daily. News. - - -nderw If beer comes back there will be- millions who p1& can qualify as master brewers- -having- hadI 14 0 Years of "cellar experience." 14 S. -Florida Times-Union The American farmer having been ruined under a national high tariff policy, it is interesting to iote so many doctors prescribing more tariff as a ' ,ure for his ills, -Davenport Democrat By Karl SeiffertT( k sound expert has figured out a sentence withj WT vhich to test one's hearing. Without doubt the eries of words that has revealed more deafness han any other is "Who's going to pay this check?" With regard to investigations being made by he Smithsonian'Institution into prehistoric sea SWISI monsters, a writer declares that much of the in- ormation has been disclosed by fossils. Maybe so, ut it seems as though a famous group of scien- WAI ists deserves a little more respect than -that. CR CR AID TO DEBTORS - UP IN CONGRESS -Headline ALL Good idea-our legislators must be kept solvent at any cost. Political developments, says a news item, have lad the tendency to depress the bullishly inclined tock traders. That isn't true of at least one sen- (P tor with similar inclinations. Mr. Long is fairly evelling in the situation. Mehitabel, a black cat which until Friday was he mascot of an anti-superstition society in Chi- """ ago, has disappeared. The unfortunate beast - >robably neglected to observe the old superstition f walking around an open manhole. C NEWS ITEM: "The hulls of cottonseed, a waste product used only for fuel until their value as cattle feed was discovered, are now worth more a ton than could be obtained for the whole seed 25 years ago." Sure, but that was before prepared:breakfast foods had Graduate Course ng Sing University. 6S "A LL OF THE BEST KNOWN col- leges are represented in Sing -Sing," a statement made recently by the chaplain of that institution reveals, and according to the North Carolina Tar Heel, he is inclined to believe that the majority of the college graduates doing time attribute their crimes to economic conditions. The chaplain has stated that most of the col- lege men are serving sentences for larceny or forgery. Crimes that involve violence, such as rob- bery and murder, are carefully shunned by the college trained criminal, it seems. The Tar Heel points out that the usual crime committed by college men comes as a result of the temptation to take money in the easiest possible way, which is of course, larceny. But forgery is the favorite method, a fact that the chaplain cannot explain, as it is one of the easiest crimes to detect and one in which the chances for a convictior are excellent. In the last analysis, however, the motive for crime among college graduates is probably the fact that, after graduation, when they are on their own for the first time, quite naturally their standard of living must go down, They find it very difficult and inconvenient to adjust them- selves to an income that is far below the pre- graduation allowance from home. Consequently, the great number of larceny and forgery crimes and the absence of crimes of violence. The 'Tar Heel says that only one college man has been electrocuted at Sing Sing in the last 17 years. This is encouraging but not as encouragings as another statement made by the chaplain, to the effect -that he has not -yet observed any college professors among his inmates. Perhaps the professors are smarter than their students and either do not commit crimes or are not caught committing them. At any rate, the Tar Heel points out, this state- ment has redeemed higher education. Roosevelt's Expeditionary Forces Are Rising.. ° Wielp the University-keep.-the best young minds, or hall higher education be reserved for the off- pring of the wealthy? According to Miss Lloyd, 'there is no more reason for- thestate' support of, tudents than- for state support -of all its citizens --an obviously impossible move." I doubt that -iss Lloyd would be opposed to the excellent sys- em of scholarships now existing. The critics of ;he Good Will Fund look toward a radical exten- .ion of this system to -worthy and able students. "his does not mean that anyone could get special upport from the state. by j, calling: himself a student. As Miss Lloyd points out, the state already pays ;wo-thirds of the cost of the University. Certainly tate -education is the most socialistic institution ve enjoy. Does it follow- then that the state should not pay more? Within two years every industrial country hasi >een forced into the "obviously impractical move" f supporting its citizens; even in our own land of ocal charity. An enlightened state would provide .n economic system capable of supporting all of' .ts citizens without pauperizing them. My purpose is not to-quibble with the adminis- tration, nor to agitate against the Good Will Fund (not even to slander the Daily). Personal feuds .md headlines about Communists; cannot cover ;he real issues, for the Campus has discovered .he depression. -Charles A. Orr, Grad. aVARS OF DEFENSE ro The Editor: A. C. T. does not seem to realize that everys Tar conducted in. modern times has been called "a war of defense." The hypocriticalexplanations riven by the Japanese government for each suc- 'essful raid upon China are classic examples of 'defensive" warfare. 3 On the other hand the thousands of civilians tilled when the Chinese army defended Shanghai ;how that only non-violent methods constitute - *eal protection. Readers who consider this .itopian, should compare the fate of Luxemburg -which did not resist invasion-with that of t 3elgium. The discussion between Prof. Levi and A. C. T.1 .gnores the religion of Jesus and the religion' about Jesus. In the first icenturies A. D. the re- HE OTHER FELLOW'S pasture always looks greener than your own. Lots of folks probably would give anything to change places with President-elect Roosevelt or almost any other of the Democrats chosen in last November's landslide. Judging from the statements of some who are in the know, however, the envious would terminate their sighing abrupt- ly if they only knew the real hardships of the situation. The Democrats have been away from the trough for twelve years-and are stampeding back to it with a gluttonous hunger that is as voracious as Igion of Jesus prevailed and the early Christians refused to enter the Roman legions; all the early :,hurch fathers forbade Christians to participate n organized murder and rather than join Caesar's irmy they suffered death as living, torches or :rom wild animals in the arena. When in the -XFORD REVIEW SERIES The books of this series have been designed to give perspective and organization to the College Preparatory Studies and should be helpful for the coming examinations - They comprise. ENGLISH LITERATURE, GRAMMAR, FOREIGN LANGUAGES, HISTORY AND GOVERNMENT, ECONOMICS, MATHEMATICS AND SCIENCE.