THE MICHIGAN DAILY MICHIGAN DAILY Established 1890 fair rushing advantages, are really as guilty of violating the rules as those who ignored the regulations entirely. Will You Elucidate, Mr. Rainey. _ m . _ I , P~' a T 1RM.eCttf.areH:ntt.1FWrH d4 e rv N NYNYAM 6NRt ARRA! Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publicatio S. Member of the Western Con erence Editorial Associa- tion and the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is eclisively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatclhes 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 011ice 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 mail, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Anin Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: College Publishers Representatives, Inc., 40 Ea 't Thirty-Fourth2Street, New York City; 80 Boystoni Street, Boston ; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925, MANAGING EDITOR ..............FRANK B. GILBRETH CTTY EDITOR......................KARL SEIFFERT SPORTS EDITOR........... . .. . . JOHN W. THOMAS WOMEW'S EDI'TOR..........MARGARET O'flRIJ&N ASSISTANT WOMEN'S EDITOR......AELSIEFELDMAN NIGHT EDITORS: Thomas Connellan, Norman F. Kraft, John W. Pritchard. Joseph W. Renihan, C. Hart Schaaf, Brackley Shaw, Glenn 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. Gent, Eric Hall, John C. Healey, Robert Bf. Hiewett, Alvin Schleifer, George Van Vieck, Cameron Walker, Guy M. Whipple, Jr., W. Stoddard White, Leonard A. Rosenberg. Eleanor B. Blum, Miriam Carver, Louise Crandall, Carol J. Hannan, Frantees Manchester, Mariec J. Murphy, Margaret C. Plalan, Katherine Rucker, Marjorie West- ern and Harriet Speiss. BUSINESS STAFF T'elephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER........... ,..BYRON .VEDDEI4 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 Huine, Alien Knuusi, Russell Read, Lester Skin- ner, Joseph Sudow and Robert Ward. Betty Aigler, Doris Gimmy, Billie Griffiths, Dorothy Laylin, Helen Olson, Helen Schume, May Seegfried, Kathryn Stork. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 19 32 An Old Political Game Enters Into Rushing . .. a W HEN Mr. Rainey said that he knew all there is to know about tariff and taxation, many persons present at the Union forum may have expected to hear an enlightened discussion. If they did they were disappointed. It is not our intention to discuss the speech in its entirety, but we do wish to point out a few examples of the speaker's method. Mr. Rainey had a good deal to say about what he termed "strangling foreign trade." The words are certainly effective, but it is our contention that unless the amount of that "strangled" for- eign trade is set forth the matter had just as well be dropped. According to the perhaps sur- prising figures in the 1931 Department of Com- merce Yearbook, almost exactly the same amount of movable goods were exported from this coun- try during the low-tariff year of 1914 as during the high-tariff year of 1929. Mr. Rainey, by his own testimony knows more about tariff than any. other man in the United States. When such an authority comes to Ann Arbor, we would like him to interpret such facts as these: if he would talk "theory," we would like him to make clear to us his factual premises. Mr. Rainey further evinced membership in the factless school in his discussion of "it's the con- sumer who pays." We are ready to admit that it is "the consumer who pays." The point is, who are these consumers? Are they a group large enough to fairly distribute the burden? How much do they pay? And what protection, in the way of salary and occupational choice and securi- ty do they receive? It seems to us that, unless it begins from these and other similar facts, any tariff discussion must be fruitless. We hasten to emphasize that in this and other matters we are learners and not teachers. We wish merely respectfully to make clear our con- viction that statesmanship worthy of the name is not unwilling to face facts when it addresses its public. It has for too long been the custom in the United States to talk of such things as the tariff with a great deal of heat, even more of "theory," and practically no carefully checked figures. We are, of course, aware that the factless meth- od has not been monopolized by the low-tariff group. The pros and the cons have sinned equal- ly. The point we wish to make is that we believe the time has come to do away with the method and substitute in its place the infinitely better one of cool deliberation, which, of course, can only build on the findings of disinterested investi- gation. The Spectator Makes Itself Heard. . DIAGONAL By Barton Kane What The Burglar Missed Painless Treatment Lost-Found Department HOT-SHOT Bob Hilty, who will be remembered as one of the freshmen who kept open dates with fraternities to see which ones served the best meals, went to see his advisor the other day; was told to take all the hard subjects his first year so that he would have easy sledding when he was a senior; took the advisor's advice; went back and asked the advisor how he can get to be a seior if he stays in all the hard courses. r 'HE CHI PHI'S had a robbery the night before last. John Deo, Student Councilman and 'En- sian Businessman, on hearing the news blanched; jittered; rushed up to his room; opened a dawe; sighed with relief. The quarter that he had stored there was still safe. AT LAST, I have discovered the dumbest fresh- man of the year. He comes from Chester, West Virginia, and went through all of the Orient- ation Week marathon with becoming meekness. Unflinchingly he took his medical, examination, and then this- He reported over at the Health Service the other day for a vaccination; the doctor looked at his arm; said, "Why you were vaccinated during the physical examination." Replied the frosh, "Was I? Gosh! I thought they just made the mark where you were sup- posed to insert the needle." (CHARLES KLINE, '32 former business manager of The Daily, sailed recently for Europe. The older I get the more I think that I made a mis- take when I tried out for the editorial staff. 1HE ALPHA DELTA PHIS were handicapped no end during rushing by the fact that their cook had a broken wrist. That is their alibi. This is a fact. One freshman bit into a tough piece of meat; chewed .experimentally; grunted; spit a pivot tooth out on the table cloth. >r > HERE IS a tale about Maurice (Moey) Finkel- stein, who came to Ann Arbor; had a cold; asked to be put to bed; was placed in the psy- chopathic ward; was forced to stay there for three days. FRED WARD, freshman who rides a bicycle, rode it to a fraternity house last night, sup- posedly a place of high ideals and sophistication. When he came out, the bicycle was stolen. Local pickaninny is suspected. GUY M. WHIPPLE, JR., budding campus jour- nalist, lost a coat. Yesterday afternoon, after worrying about it for four hours, he went back to Angell Hall to find it; was told by the custo- dian of the floor that it had been turned in at an office to Miss Grace M. Lister, stenographer and secretary. Whipple went to the office; spent 10 minutes identifying the coat, which was locked up in a storeroom, to the satisfaction of Miss Lister; finally convinced her that he, and none other, was the true owner. Miss Lister went to the storeroom; discovered that she had locked the keys up with the coat; had to get the custodian to pry the door open. Whipple's coat now has a history. HE BETA THETA P'S believe in last minute impressions. Last night, as the period of sil- ence was about to go into effect, two umpty-ump cylinder cars, a Cadillac and a Lincoln, stood in front of the house for the delectation of the de- parting freshmen. Have You Heard MIKE FALK (r," l"H"s MichiganLcagc SPECIAL. TODAY ONLY You buy a Soda We give you one free. BRIGHT SPOT 802 Packard St. I, ,. I 11 Have Your Portrait taken Now, at MACK& . Studio You will be assured of ou standing quality at a big saving. 11 1.1 Ten-Day Special One 8 x 10 only $1.00, or Three 8 x 10, one will be oil painted for this special, only $2.50 Application pictures, 3 for 1 or 12 for 2 MACK & CO. For Portraits 7That Plea.-e- a 11 N the main fraternities have played fairly in living up to the new rush- ing rules this year. However, one notable excep- tion remains as a blot on the fine sportsmanlike record which most of the houses have contributed to. In certain cases houses have resorted to the most despicable form of political trickery, the whispering campaign. This is as old a device as the game of politics itself, and the only protec- tion against it, aside from recourse to the laws of libel, is the intelligence and common sense of the individuals intended as its dupes. The interfraternity whispering c a m p a i g n s which cropped up during the past week naturally enough are based upon the same sort of synthetic slander which characterizes any whispering cam- paign-sly, semi-confidential remarks concerning the personal habits of those against whom the campaign is directed. Competition between the houses for pledges is so intense at times that freshmen must be constantly aware that many remarks, which re: -eeminglv dropped by rush- er in the course of a casual conversation for no reason at all, are made with the deliberate inten- tion of throwing mud and prejudicing the fresh- man against the house which he may be con- sidering., Any wide awake freshman timst be aware of this situation, and we can only point out that such an underhand piece of propaganda must not only be completely discounted by the hearer, but should also react to the disadvantage of the individual or house which perpetrates such a deception. For any effort of a fraternity to tear down the reputation of another fraternity is almost certainly a tacit admission of weakness. A house which cannot stand fairly and straight forwardly on its record and on the record of its members will, it seems, resort to a negative and indirect means of attack. One remark which has been dropped too many times during the present rushing season goes somethiug like this: that crowd over at the so and so house is all right, but they are noted for being an awful bunch of drinkers and rounders. If the smug self righteous spirit behind such a remark is not sufficient indictment of its per- petrator, the freshman must be bound to admit the unfairness and self interest which a statement of that sort involves. The whispering campaign is the cowardly baAk-biting resort of an opponent who is too weak to compete on the basis of ordi- nary standards, and we take this opportunity tc warn the freshman against it. As a guide for freshmen who are about to make out their preference lists, we present the follow. ing percentage rating by which, we believe, house, may be judged: 1. Conduct in rushing 25% 2. General impressions 25% 3. Membership expense 17% 4. Local standing 11% 5. Diversity of interests 9% Slter's Week-Ed .ciI TOOAY AND SATU RDAY New Copper and Bronze Modernistic Student Lamps. Last week our supply lasted three hours, We immediately wired for a new shipment, and are offering them as special values this week-end. Regularly priced Ot$1 .7 today and tomorrow only $1.00. MICHIGAN SEAL STATIONERY regularly priced at $1.00, today and tomorrow 79c THE Columbia Spectator, daily news- paper published by the students of Columbia University, has scored a notable journ- alistic victory. Charging gross mismanagement and corruption in the John Jay dining hall, the paper has, under two managements, driven its case through to a forceful and dramatic conclusion, climaxed by the admission of the investigation committee .that three of its five charges are indeed true. A subsi- diary committee for further action is also to be appointed, this, too, as a result of the Spectator's admirable crusade. The Spectator is to be congratulated on the continuance of its aggressive policy even after the demise of Reed Harris. It is, too, a partial vindi- cation of Harris' long list of accusations, and something of a whitewash of his methods. The Spectator has shown itself to be free of two common faults of University newspapers -- the faculty for being lulled into submission by censure threats, and l.he periodic flare-up which is left high and dry the next day. This paper, at least, carried its policy through to a most satisfacory finish. i yY 4, } Se Reflections Four stars means a s.uper-piclture; three stars very good; two stars good; one star ;just another picture; no stars keep avay from it. Slater's Two CampusBook ctresl State Street East University Avenue Editorial Coment KEEPING UP WITH TIHE JONESES IN ARMAMENTS National prides and jealousies are queer. lor' almost a century France and Germany have becen at each other's throats. In the open feuds th t have broken out from time to time the number of 1 wins and losses are divided more or less equally, And despite the tragic leson taught between the1 years 1914 and 1918 they are still at it. No blood- shed, to be sure, but with the same old feeling of bitterness.£ The latest move has been Germany's plea for equal armaments. For some reason the action was taken to France instead of the League of Nations which presumably controls such things. France harked back to the "victory" of 1918 and the Ver- sailles treaty. She pointed out in words more or less veiled that at the time the nations in question branded the Fatherland as "Public enemy number one." And that as such it should forever be shorn of its power to hurt. The treaty is recognized byevery country with the exception of France, as immen- sely unfair. Made in a bitter aftermath of the war it could not have been otherwise. Germany on the other hand, rallying from the terrible blows which shattered her strength in the last war, feels more intensely than ever the bitter sting of defeat. Her national pride is continually gnawed by the bullying France. And one of the AT THE MICJIW'AN I *4 4 "MR. ROBINSON (ARUlOE" There couldn't be such a picture, possibly, But there is; and you can't afford to miss it. Doug Fairbanks is now 45 years old and class- ed as one of the tliree greatest present-day box office attractions (the other two are Marie Dress- ler, 63 years old, and John Barrymofe, 51 years old). And, though he doesn't jump around quite as much as he did in the old days, a few more years don't seem to have taken from him one whit of that magnetic personality which so al- lured us back in the days of "The Thief of Bag- da4" and "Robin Hood." Somebody modeled "Mr. Robinson Crusoe" after "Bird of Paradise," or vice versa. Anyway, they're very much alike-and totally different. Doug Fairbanks and Joel McCrea both su1ddenly leave their respective parties of wealthy young ;pots- men in the South Seas and go native. Both Doug and Joel eventually and inevitably meet a native girl. But Joel's walks into a volcano and Doug's ends up in the Follies. And thereby hangs a tale; for that one ending explains the entire show. Fairbanks is his same old happy-go-lucky, adventurous swashbuckling self. And he does the most amazing things. We thought the whole thing was a fake when we saw a fade-in on the tools and houses he had built himself in his first three weeks on the island. By the middle of the show we knew it was, and we were in love with it. For there is not a rational thing about "Mr. Robinson Crusoe." You'll like the antimal shots, which incidental- ly are among the nicest we've seen. Doug's par- rot, saying "0 K," his goat operating a treadmill to escape from his barking Airedale, and his monkey turning on the home-made radio to frighten away the head-hunters with the cheers of the crowd at an American football game are swell, positively swell. And the photography is superb.. !R _ _ _ ,._ ... _ _ __ __ ___ ._ _ _. ._. __ e _ _ __:, - ., H liiiusual- Proo'ram - Nehw fLow Picefs i LOWELL THOMAS ARVE1 W EL Subject: Subject: "TF-r 5SinafonnvP to Manralav" "Noah's Home Town" 11 11 I