[CHIGAN DAILY Established 1890 I I I I By Kathleen Murphy --- =. ,. Y= ----y 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 riot' 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 rateof postage granted by Third 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 Publishers Representatives, Inc., 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylston Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 492x' MANAGING EDITOR..............FRANK B. GILBRETH CITY EDITOR.........................KARL SEIFFERT 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. Pritchard, Joseph W. Renihan, C. Hart Schaaf, Brackley Shaw, blenn R. Winters. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Fred A. Huber, Albert Newman. REPORTERS : Edward Andrews, Hyman J. Aronstam, A. Ellis :Ball, Charles G. Barndt, James, Bauchat, Donald R. Bird, Donald' F. Blankertz, Charles B. Brownson, Arthur W. Carstens, Donald Elder, Robert Engel, Ed- ward A. Genz, Eric Hall, John C. Healey, Robert B. Hewett, Alvin Schleifer, 'George Van Vleck, Cameron Walker, Guy M. Whipple, Jr., W. Stoddard White, Leonard A. Rosenberg. Eleanor B. Blum, Miriam Carver, Louise Crandall, Carol J. Hannan, Frantees Marichester, Marie J. Murphy, Margaret C. Phalan, Katherine Rucker, Marjorie West- ern and Harriet Speiss. BUSINESS STAFF T'elephone '24214 ' BUSINESS MANAGER.............BYRON C, VEDDER CREDIT MANAGER ...................HARRY BEGLEY WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER........DONNA BECKER DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Advertising, 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: Theodore Barash, Jack Bellamy, Gordon Boylan, Charles Ebert, Jack Efroymson, Fred Hertrick, Joseph Hume, Howard Klein, Alen Knuusi, George Laurie, Charles Mercill, Russell Read, Lester Skinner, Joseph Sudow and Robert Ward. Betty Aigler, Edna Canner, Genevieve Field, Ann Gall- meyer, Doris Gimmy, Billie Griffiths, Helen Grossner, Kathryn Jackson, Dorothy Laylin, Virginia McConb, Caroline Mosher, Helen Olson, Helen Schume, May See- fried, Kathryn Stork. Ruth Pfohl, who has joined the faculty of the School of Music as instructor in Harp, will make her first public appearance in ;Ann Arbor, at the faculty concert in Hill Auditorium, Sunday after- noon, October 2. Others on the program will be Arthur Hackett, tenor; Wassily Besekirsky, Violin- ist, and Joseph Brinkman, Pianist. An interesting and varied program of songs, harp numbers and a Sonata for violin and piano, by Cesar Franck, will be given. Miss Pfohl comes from North Carolina, where she has made a fine reputation, as harpist. She was educated in Boston and other eastern cities and has also done special work in music at the University School of Music. Her coming to Ann Arbor will expand the School's general music fa- cilities. Professor Hackett, who has been at the head of the voice department for two years, is a renowned a r t i s t, having toured extensively throughout America and Europe. Professor Besekirsky has won distinction as soloist, ensemble player, and orchestral player, while Joseph Brinkman, as pianist, is well known by reason of his many ap- pearances. Other faculty concerts will be announced from time to time. Recit. "Deeper and Deeper Still" fron "Jephtha"..,.....................Handel Aria, "Waft Her Angels" from "Jephtha" ..........-. ..'... Handel Arthur Hackett Prelude in C Minor ..................... Chopin Mirage ................................Salzedo Lamento ........................ Hasselmans Ruth Pfohl La Fontaine De Caraouet ..............Letorey Trois Jours De Vendanges ................ Hahn La Procession ...... .................Franck Sur La Mer ........................... Gaubert Le Ciel Est Gai. ................ Gaubert Arthur Hackett Sonata for Piano and Violin .......Cesar Franck Allegretto ben moderato Allegro. Recitative-fantasia Allegretto poco mosso. Wassily Besekirsky and Joseph Brinkman THE THEATRE= B3yGeorge Spelvin WOULD YOU MIND REPEATING THAT STATEMENT, MR. FRIEDBERG? A General Rebuttal, Though Goodness Knows Mr. F. Didn't Get Around To Saying Very Much, Somehow To our public, we must issue a warning at the beginning: don't expect anything about drama- ties in today's column. You'd better turn to something else. This is a private argument between Mr. Saul Friedberg (a former Daily critic) and your Uncle George about 'Mr Friedberg's Campus Opinion letter of Sat- urday. Private-because I suspect Mr. F. and I were the only people on campus that read what he wrote all through. If any of you really did read it, you might tag along, though, and see how things come out. It ,must be admitted that I feel somewhat at a disadvantage in a debate against Mr. Friedberg- because what Mr. Friedberg says is so often in- coherent and because what I say is so often clear. If I am a fake, it will not be hard to discover. Mr. Friedberg's case will take an amount of exca- vation. Hence, I intend to disarm Mr. Friedberg by summarizing, briefly and impartially, what he said-though perhaps I am rather unkind in ex- posing what he has spent so much time covering up. THE MICHIGAN DAILY- lieve whimsy expresses a certain philosophy that Mr. Friedberg hasn't hit upon yet. 3 At this point I must paraphrase from mem- ory a paragraph of George Bernard Shaw's. Mr. Friedberg may not accept Shaw as a reputable source (Mr. Gorman once said to me his very own self that Shaw was a failure, and Mr. Friedberg is well known as the St. Steven of the Gorman cult on campus). But here it is, anyway: people, ' when confronted with a dangerous truth, will laugh and call the author of it a droll fellow (in this case the word is the more vehement "don- key"). The amused shrug-of-the-shoulders atti- tude will, I hope, hardly be accepted by intelligent people as a complete dismissal of this case. I might have passed Mr. Friedberg's irrelevant let- ter off with the statement that it was its own re- buttal;'* it is. I didn't, partly because as Shaw points out that sort of defense is usually a sign that the defender has been wounded. The real - reason was, I'm afraid, that Mr. Friedberg offered such a splendid opportunity for all this fun. 4 I doubt that my views on those blood-thirsty Socialists or those luxury-jaded Capitalists can be gotten into a dramatic column. Suffice it to say that Mr. Gorman has never come very close to them. 5 There is no way of proving to Mr. Friedberg that he's wrong about my rosy outlook and the sP clambake and whatnot. He'll simply have to take my word for it, I'm afraid. My quarrel, as I re- member, was not with Mr. Gorman's individu- ality. He should have had more. SP *. And the children voted it the loveliest picnic Miss Murgatroyd's class had ever, ever had. Student HealthMR Fri SKIN TEST FOR TUBERCULOSIS By Dr. Margaret Bell Attend The Union Political Forums .. . WHEN HENRY T. RAINEY comes to the Union on Wednesday' to ad- dress a luncheon and student forum, he will in- augurate for this year the series of political dis- cussions started a year ago by the Union. Rainey is the Democratic floor leader of the House of Representatives, and if the Democrats win the November election he will in all probabil- ity be the next Speaker. A man in his position should be interesting to a student audience in any year, but in this election year what he says is of the utmost importance. In England and on the continent students are not so blase about their political affiliations as most American students. The most famous de- bating club in the world is the Oxford Union, an organization that heatedly argues political policies of the British Empire and on the floor of which many of England's greatest statesmen have made their maiden speeches..., In France, as well, political affiliation is not a casual matter to the student. In such Univer- sities as the Sorbonne in Paris, students choose their rooming houses by their political viewpoints, the socialists, liberals, conservatives and other parties. In a country where a great part of the citizenry do not know that they cannot .split their ticket on a primary election ballot and cannot under- stand why they are not allowed to-as happened in the recent Michigan primaries--there is cer- tainly room for a little more of this rabid parti- sanship on the part of the students. The Union, in bringing to Ann Arbor these men prominent in the political limelight, is attempting to arouse on the campus a little more interest and enthusiasm in government and its efforts deserve the co-operation of the entire student body. An intelligent interest in the government is the duty of every citizen and the only method of de- veloping such an interest is to gain a knowledge of the problems that face the law-makers. Rainey is here for the express purpose of informing the students what these problems are. Attend the Union political forums! THE FRIEDBERG PRONOUNCEMENT1 NOT A LITTLE CONDENSED J An attitude of whimsical flippancy ap- peared in Gargoyle two winters ago. 2 The Gargoyle aesthetes did not take ex- aminations, Life, or Corman seriously, nor did , they understand their own peculiar philos- ophy. 3 That attitude has spread to the Daily. Splevin is a donkey and his recent essay on Gorman is not worth refuting. 4 Gorman is really, being like him a loyal child of Capitalism, partly an apostle of Spel- vin's ideas and Spelvin therefore is silly in fighting him. .5 Spelvin is only an eccentric Babbitt, thinks life is rosy, bows down to campus shib- boleths, and dislikes Gorman for not doing so. There is the whole business in a tenth of the space. For the rest, Mr. Friedberg talked about many things literary and political which seemed beside the point. He also indicated that your Uncle George is dishonest, plays bridge and at- tends clam-bakes (all of which I indignantly deny -imagine a dishonest person at a clam-bake); that your Uncle George drinks tea and is lazy (matters that I'd rather not discuss). WILL SOMEBODY HOLD OUR COAT PLEASE? Though there is nothing your Uncle George likes quite so much as talking about himself, I do feel that Mr. Friedberg erred in putting the dis- cussion on so personal a basis. Had he discussed the value of my criticism rather than attempting to invalidate it by calling names, I should be able to fill the present column with a discussion on dramatics. As it is, my only recourse is to refute those personal references. I might, of course,, come back with a discussion of Mr. Friedberg's work on the Daily, if I could remember what it was like. I can't seem to, though. So you'll pardon me while I talk about myself. The points are taken up as they are numbered above. F1 You bet it did. Mr. Friedberg (always the past coming between!) wrote for Gargoyle at the time, but the languid humorousness of it all frightened him away. 2 "Aesthetes," indeed! If there was anything aesthetic about Gargoyle under Paul Showers I'll eat Mr. Friedberg's next Campus Opinion manu- script. Mr. Friedberg, in condemning the whimsical This article is written in an effort to make clear to the students, especially the freshman women who have had the advantage of this test, its value in the prpevention of tuberculosis. It is well to remember that the key-note of the Health Service work is prevention. A very serious and enlightened effort is made to use every device to anticipate and eradicate disease. In such a program it immediately becomes obvious that the shortest course to success is the accurate education of the student in preventive measures. The skin test coupled with the x-ray is at present the most refined and only way of recog- nizing the very earliest stages of this disease. Obviously this becomes an expensive method when carried out on a large group of students and nec- essarily is of great advantage to such a group. This test was given to women students because young women of college age represent the group that is most susceptible to pulmonary tubercu- losis. For the first time in September, 1931, this skin test was incorporated in the women's entering medical examinations. The 871 entering women were given this test and a preparation called tuberculin was injected into the skin of the arm. If a red halo appeared in 48 hours, the test was read as positive. If no halo appeared or there was no reaction, the test was read as negative. Each individual who had a positive reaction, and 38% or about 300 of these women so tested, was x-rayed. Of the total number x-rayed, six were regarded as deserving special care as they had had tuberculosis in the lung tissue in a mild form. Twelve of the cases were set aside for observa- tion and no diagnoses were made. The meaning of a negative reaction is simply that that individual has never been infected with the Tuberculin Bacillus. There are certain rare exceptions which do not concern this group. The meaning of a positive reaction is that that indi- vidual has at some time during life, from infancy on, been infected with the tuberculin bacillus. It does not mean tuberculosis, it does not mean disease of any sort, it simply means previous infection by one means or another. It may have been from a bottle of milk from infected cows taken during infancy, or the chance contact with a carrier of the disease in school, the theatre or elsewhere. It does not mean susceptibility to this or any other disease; in fact. it may mean a certain degree of immunity to tuberculosis. For, on the face of it, if a person is known to have been infected and is now known to be healthy, that person must have sufficient immunity or resistance to have prevented the infection from spreading. The harmlessness of. the test has been demonstrated over and over again on many hun- dreds of thousands of children in this country and the world over. Two or three weeks after the infection takes place certain changes occur in the body which makes the skin sensitive to tuberculin and this sensitiveness persists through life with exceptions. When infection takes place we known that over 90% of it localizes in the lungs and that lung disease is the most serious aspect of tuberculosis. Therefore, in all positive reactions, an x-ray of the lungs is taken and the presence or absence, extent, localization, and character of the infected focus is searched for. In Dr. Chadwick's experience with school chil- dren about 30 out of every hundred showed evi- dence of infection, and about five had signs of its localization in the glands in the chest, while one in every two hundred had definite tuberculosis of the lungs that needed immediate treatment. There is no other way of being sure to find this one diseased student among two hundred. In other cases, one finds enough old healed tuberculosis to be able to advise the student about her future life, that she might avoid awakening a dormant disease focus. This is simply taking the bull by the horns, instead of waiting until the disease becomes, disabling. It means that the healthy have to go through a lot of seemingly unnecessary examinations to protect the few. But there is no other way of separating the many from the few. It is found in the apparently healthy as often as in the obviously diseased. With these facts in mind, it is interesting to realize that while relatively few infants present readings of positive tuberculin that with each added year an increasing number show positive reaction., Now it is obvious that if the infection is found in larger and larger percentages as students grow older, it is not enough to content one's self with one examination at the age of 18. If one is negative at 18, one might as easily become posi- tive at 19 or 20 as the other had become positive before 18. In fact, the older one gets and the wider contact one makes with life, the more op- portunity there is for infection. Therefore, it is important that those who are negative this year be re-tested next year to determine if infection Phone 2-2757 208 Michigan Theatre Bldg. -i 24214 It's a good number to keep in mind. You'll want it if you've LOST a book, or key -i or fountain pen, then if you've by chance FOUND a coat, a badge, or hat 24214 will help to find the owner. But that isn't all. If you would like to RENT a room, or have one rented, the same little number will do it. A lot of other things too . . . try it Miehiaii Daily 9( Classfied CONCERTIS CHORAL UNION SERIES Oct. 25, BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY, Conductor. Only Mich- igan concert of America's premier orchestra DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS PAY Nov. 2, LAWRENCE TItBBETT PRINCE OF BAR ITONES Nov.30, DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA OSSIP GABRILOW ITSCH, Conductor. Only Ann Arbor appearance this season Dec. 12, EFREM ZIMBALIST DISTINGUISHED RUSSIAN VIOLINIST. Jan. 16, NATHAN MILSTEIN SPECTACULAR RUSSIAN-SOVIET VIOLINIST. In Ann Arbor debut. Jan. 27, MYRA HESS Acclaimed "World's foremost woman pianist.. Feb. 8, BUDAPEST STRING QUARTET Jose Roisman, first violin; Alexander Schneider, second violin; Stephan lpolyi, viola; Mischa Schneider, 'cello. Ann Arbor debut of "Europe's finest quartet." Feb. 15, SEGRID ONEGIN Ann Arbor debut of outstanding contralto, both in opera and concert. Mar.6, VLADIMiIHOROWITZ Eminent Russian pianist in third Ann Arbor appearance. Mar, 15, PADEREWSKI "King of Pionists" in eighth Ann Arbor concert during a period of 41 years, beginring Feb. 15, 1893. The Depression Hits Collegiate Drinking. .. { T HE depression has been used al- most an infinite number of times during the past year as an alibi for shortcomings. It is with genuine pleasure, therefore, that we point to certain improvements in social conditions, brought about either directly or indirectly by the modern under-dog. .. We refer to the apparent lack of intoxication, especially among students of high school and col- lege age, at the football game yesterday. Never, in recent years, has there been a more orderly