HCHIGAN DAILY Established 1890 =" ; '= , _ . '+ -++ . - ==eom: - M-1- 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 aW"1 the Big Ten News Service. $5 acited ioll iate rgs - r1933NaTerHA . RavctE .1934 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED 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 rat of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-Genersdl. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail. $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $3.75; by mail, $4.25. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 21214. RepreseNtatives: College Publications Representatives, Inc., 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylston Stireet, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago EDITORIAL SAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR.........THOMAS K. CONNELLAN EDITORIAL DIRECTOR.............C. HART SCHAAF CITY EDITOR.....................BRACKLEY SHAW SPORTS EDITOR.................ALBERT H. NEWMAN WOMEN'S EDITOR.....................CAROL J. HANAN NIGHT EDITORS: A. Ellis Ball, Ralph G. Coulter, Wil- liam G. Ferris, John C. Healey, E. Jerome Pettit, George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Donald R. Bird, Arthur W. Carstens, Sidney Frankel, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie Western WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Barbara Bates, Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret D. Phalan. REPORTERS: Roy Alexander, John A. Babington, Ogden G. Dwight, Paul J. Elliott, Courtney A. Evans, Ted R. Evans, Bernard H. Fried, Thomas Groehn, Robert D. Guthrie, Joseph L. Karpinski, Thomas H. Kleene, Rich- ard E. Lorch, David G. Macdonald, Joel P. Newman, Kenneth Parker, George I. Quimby, William R. Reed, Robert S. Ruwitch, Robert J. St. Clair, Arthur S. Settle, Marshall D. Silverman, A. B. Smith, Jr., Arthur M. Taub, Philip T. Van Zile. WOMEN REPORTERS: Dorothy Gies, Jean Hanmer, Florence Harper, Marie Held, Eleanor Johnson, Jose- phine McLean, Marjorie Morrison, Sally Place, Rosalie Resnick, Mary Robinson, Jane Schneider, Margaret Spencer. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGERl............W. GRAFTON SHARP CREDIT MANAGER.............BERNARD E. SCHNACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.................. ............................. CATHARINE MC HENRY DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Fred Her- trick; Classified Advertising, Russell Read; Advertising Contracts, Jack Bellamy; Advertising Service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Circulation, Jack Ef- roymson.- ASSISTANTS: Meigs Bartmess, Van Dunakin, Milton Kra- mer, John Ogden, Bernard Rosenthal, Joe Rothbard, James Scott, David Winkworth. WOMEN'S BUSINESS STAFF Jane Bassett, Virginia Bell, Winifred Bell, Mary Bursley, Peggy Cady, Betty Chapman, Patricia Daly, Jean Dur- ham, Minna Gffen, Doris Gimmy, Billie Griffiths, Janet Jackson, IsabelleKanter, Louise Krause, Margaret Mustard, Nina Pollock, Elizabeth J. Simonds. NIGHT' EDITOR : RALPH G. COULTER Not Wanted - Press Dictatorshi1p . . T HE American citizen is the kind of person- who, appealed to on a basis of patriotism or idealism, will sacrifice per- sonal ideals for what he hopes may be the advan- tage of the entire group.' He will do this voluntar- ily. He will do it because the appeal is made to him as a free man, capable of reaching his own conclusions concerning his own, individual affairs. He will never do it because he is told he must. He abhors bureaucracy and red tape and rampant authority. Let anyone attempt to crack down on him, to command rather than to ask, the Amer- ican citizen gets his back up, takes a good hold of his position, and doesn't budge a s'olitary inch. That is what happened in 'this country with intoxicating liquor. It is what is now happening with the NRA. The, administration is attempting to crack down. It has foregone persuasion and substituted orders. The natural result is that the Anierican citizen is no longer the blindly enthusiastic supporter of the NRA he once was. He is beginning to talk about American traditions and ideals; he is beginning to think less of Karl Marx and more of Thomas Jefferson. At no point along the recovery front is this change in feeling more noticeable than it is with newspapers. Newspapers have supported the NRA to the hilt. They have done all that could be ex- pected of them. The time has now come for he adoption of a newspaper code and the licensing of the American press. As an importanat feature of their code the ne.wspaper representatives wish to have incorporated that part of the First Amend- ment to the Constitution which says there shall be "no abridging the freedom of speech, or press." Prof. Lindsay Rogers, who represents the NRA ad- ministration in negotiations for a newspaper code, objects to this clause. He doesn't want it to 'be a part of the code. Professor Rogers argues that the provision is unnecessary. It would be, he says. merely repeti- tious. To this the newspapers can rightfully ask: if it is to no great consequence, why is the admin- istration opposing its incorporation? Certainly if the clause does no harm it should be part of the code. The professor argues, too, that this phrase, in- cluded in the code would distinguish the press from other industries. There is no argument with this statement. Of course such a code would dis- tinguish the press from other forms of industry. It would distinguish it in just such a manner as the founders of the Republic distinguished it when they passed the First Amendment. The press is more than a business. It remains the potential papers. The mere refusal to give a newspaper a blue eagle is a governmental condemnation of a newspaper which should not be tolerated. These attempted restrictions on the press, plus the too evident tendency of the NRA administra- tion to get tough with the individual American citizen, have no part in the American scheme of government. They are alien to our nature, to our. history, to our present needs. They are a little bit of Stalin, mixed with something of Mussolini and rather too much '-of Hitler. They do not belong in this country; we do not want them. That is why the demoeratic New York Times says, ".. . the owners and publishers of newspapers will continue to oppose anything in the newspaper' code which even appears to give to the Govern- ment a semblance of power to dictate to the press what it shall print and what it shall not." Recently we spoke of the pitiful case of a man whose cause has been defeated largely by his own hands. The success of the NRA is imperilled in just such a way. Wy All rThae Rumpus Over Ford? T HE ferocious battle between Henry: Ford and the NRA waged in the Detroit Free Press if not in' any other newspaper, and seemingly about over, has really been quite a foolish slugfest over nothing at all. It was foolish because Henry has said, and it is a matter of his- torical record that he has said, that he would stop manufacturing automobiles if and when the American people repealed Prohibition. Inasmuch as the American people will do the final last touch on the repeal act today, and the formal burial of the Eighteenth Amendment is but a short distance away, it may be readily seen that Henry's days as an automobile man are through. On December 5, the day prohibition is formally repealed, Henry will shut his plants, the trade which would normally go to him will go to his competitors in the low price car field. This will require these competitors to increase production, and this in turn will necessitate the hiring of men laid off by Ford's ;withdrawl - under the terms with which all automobile men except Henry Ford seem capable of complying. And 'Henry may then retreat to the solitude of the northern Michigan woods. Thus it can be seen that the battle was and is of no important future consequence. Or is it just barely possible that Henry can not be taken at his own highly publicized word? THE MICHIGAN DAILY HopwoodPoetr NA ant --- - QA out REVIEW OF TWO POEMS Ne' By E. FLORENCE SWANSON By GEORGE HELM MISS SWANSON'S POEMS reveal a degree of The sensibility and insight sufficient to afford her Clio access to a world of significant images, and these ExP she is almost always capable of phrasing felici- s;- tously (as in the first stanza of "Pity the Dead" and the second and last stanzas of "Windy Eu- charist"). She does not however always as yet successfully integrate separate images and experi- ences into a poem. It is in this respect that "Windy Eucharist," with its more important theme, is inferior to "Pity the Dead," which, per- M( haps because it is shorter, is more coherent, effec- $4 tive expression. The imagery developed in its first two stanzas presents the situation, and suggests the attitude, which the last line of the poem com- pletely expresses as its meaning flashes back to illuminate the preceding imagery itself. "Windy Eucharist" to the extent to which it reveals itself either as meaning or as emotion is r more significant. In it the poet speaks as one ___ straitly bound to earth, reviling its beauty ("earth sweet with springtime," etc.) which she should share but cannot, and crying out for deliverance where deliverance is not to be had, at the same time aware that the fault lies in herself and so condemning the romantic desire for escape. The value of the attitude is put in question however by the fact that the final stanza of the poem may indicate that the condemnation is not maintained, in which case the entire poem would become the expression of something approaching self-pity. The uncertainty of meaning about the poem as a whole is increased by the radical variation of imagery after the fourth stanza, and by the fact that no precise meaning consistent with the rest of the poem is to be drawn from the first line. The rather obvious paradox of I revile Earth sweet with springtime, suggests the source of this confusion: perhaps Miss Swanson is analyzing rather than expressing her emotion. Screen Reflcins Four stars means extraordinary; three stars definitely recommended; two stars, average; one star, inferior; no stars, stay away from it. ii !o a i i Campus Opinion Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous communications will be 'disre- garded. ,The names of communicants will, 'however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contribu- tors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 wvords if possible, LAUDABLE AIMS OF CAMPUS LEFTISTS To The Editor* A few days ago there appeared in your columns a signed articled which purported to illustrate the "liberal situation" here on campus. The author was at some pains to describe how weak and in- effectual were the organizations, in whose hands the liberal (or radical) banner is. All of it is quite true, probably. I have attended a few meetings of the various clubs and share with the occasional puerility of ideas, and the lack of effective organ- ization. But, this is a period in history for which there is absolutely no precedent. It is hardly more than a truism to say that evils and abuses of all kinds are rampant. Let us, face the situation with an open mind. These "leftists" are trying in their own way to bring order out of choas. They seek nothing' for themselves except the satisfaction of having fought for justice. If they fight for higher wages for men working in fraternities, it is not because they are going to get a part of the raised pay. They have merely put themselves in the not too pleasant position of championing' the rights of a group, the part of a greater whole to which Presi- dent Roosevelt's Recovery Administration is ded- icated. No one, if he thinks the thing through clearly and without bias, can condemn the principle of these so-called "radicals." Let us not lose sight of their laudable aims in the confusion and annoy- ance of their methods. -A STUDENT Musical Events MUS z Y . FIRST FACULTY CONCERT Prelude to Die Meistersinger......... Wagner University Symphony Orchestra directed by Earl V. Moore' Procession to the Minster from Lohengrin... ................Wagner University Symphony Orcestra Lohengrin's Narrative from Lohengrin, Act III................ Wagner 'Arthur Hackett, tenor with University Symphony Orchestra Prelude to Act III, from Lohengrin. . .Wagner University Symphony Orchestra Triple Concerto, in C Major, Op. 56.................. Beethoven Wassily Besekirsky, violinist Hanns Pick, violoncellist Joseph Brinkman, pianist with the University Symphony Orchestra ** AT THE MICHIGAN "THE POWER AND THE GLORY" Tom............Spencer Tracy Sally.. .........C.olleen Moore Henry ........... Frank Morgan Director Howard's insertion of dialogue through- out "The Power and the Glory" makes his pro- duction rather unique, but it smacks of many other movies of the "big" men working from the bottom to the top and then falling to despair, ruin or suicide. Frank Morgan's voice and expression in the dialogue that is heard at intervals through the course of the picture is very good and had not the dialogue itself jumped from one stage of Tom Grogan's life back to another and then back again the picture might have been worthy of distinc- tion, and selected as the most original bit so far this season. There is in this picture one original bit that merits attention; the comeback of Col- leen Moore to the screen. You undoubtedly re- member Colleen Moore's silent pictures, the large eyes and the bobbed hair, and if you have formed all opinion of her as such, her part as Sally, wife to Tom in this movie, will stick in your mind as an example of the best acting she has done. She is portrayed as a young school teacher and then a cynical, temperamental, ambitious wife and is sincere in her interpretation of the part. Out- side cf this Spencer Tracy (the better of the two Tracy's) pounds his fist, smokes cigars, and gets old in a good characterization but not, certainly, the best he has done. The only trouble with "The Power and the Glory" is that the constant turning back of the clock is liable to get one confused and in doing this spoil the picture en- tirely. Tom Grogan and Henry grew up together. Tom was a track-walker. Henry was a young business- school man learning to be a secretary. Tom falls in love with Sally, a school teacher who teaches along the route of the railroad, and they get married and she inspires him on and he bie- comes the president of the road. Henry is his secretary. Along comes Helen Vinson (she's get- ting to be a little more obvious every time and we suspect her right at the start), young and beautiful, and a middle-aged man is foiled again. Tom falls in love with her. Things go helter- skelter and many sad occurrences result from the love affair between the middle-aged man and the young, beautiful girl. We hear another dialogue in the Travel Talk short subject and he still says, "And so it is with this thought that we take leave of these quaint, primitive peoples hoping to return once again to their balmy shores." Thelma Todd, get- ting a little worse each time, has a new partner in the comedy and Il Duce has a new police force in the Paramount, Eyes and Ears of the World, news reel. R. E. L. A bicycle club has been organized at the Uni- versity of Alabama, the members of which go on weekly cycling parties. 1. I I Sunday afternoon began the first of the Faculty itself to best advantage in the largo movement; Concert Series, given in Hill Auditorium. This the ensemble work, for which the trio is noted, year's initial program was by the University was best shown in the first and third move- Symphony Orchestra, assisted by members of the ments, particularly in the exciting climax where faculty, under the baton of Earl V. Moore. violin, violoncello, and piano take leave of the Probably the appearance of the solo artists, orchestra and play a solo of their own. Arthur Hackett, who sang the Lohengrin Aria, Dr. Moore has a quite professional group of