THE MICHIGAN DAILY [ICHIGAN DAILY Established 1890 Scree Reflons 'IF . '" Four stars means extraordinary; three stars definitely recommended; two stars, average; one star, inferior; no stars, stay away from it. AT THE LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATER ART CINEMA LEAGUE PRESENTS "ZOO IN BUDAPEST"****MINUS J I - -I., . L , YJ;, ' . -.~J'~ r ., I ja Published every morning except Monday during the niversity year and ummer Session by the Board in ntrol of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- mn a - the Big Ten News' Service. -1933 Cnn wn a tiveuc 934 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is °exclusivel:, entitled to t !e use republication of all news dispatches credited to it or t otherwise credited in this paper and the local news bished herein. All rights of republication of special spatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as ond class matter. Special =rate of postage granted by rd Assistant Postmaster-General. 3ubscription during summer bycarrier, $1.00; by mail. .50. During regular etchool year by carrier, $3.75; by ail, $4.25. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, in Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2.1214. Representatives: College Publications Representatives, ., 40 ast Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 )ylston Sireet, Boston; 612 North Michiganx Avenue, ag. EDITORIAL S AFF Telephone 4925 (NG EDITOR..........THOMAS K. CONNELLAN EITOR..............BRACKLEY SHAW TAL DIRECTOR.............C. HART SCHAAF. EDITOR.............ALBERT H. NEWMAN 'S EDITOR....................CAROL J. HANAN NIGHTI EDITORS: A. Ellis Bll, Ralph G. Coulter, Wi- ;iam 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: Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret D. Phalan. REPORTERS: 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, Richard E. Lorch, David G. Mac- Donald, Joel P. Newman, Kenneth Parker, William R. Reed, Robert S. Ruwitch, Robert J. S. Clair, Arthur S. Settle, Marshall D. Silverman, A. B. Smith, Jr., Arthur M. Taub, Philip T. Van Zile. WOMEN REPORTERS: Dorothy ties, Jean Hanmer, Florence Harper, Marie Hed,Eleanor Johnson, Jose- phine McLean. Marjorie Morrison, Sally Place, Rosalie Resnick, Mary Robinson, Jane Schneider. BUVSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER...........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 Cotracts, Jack Bellamy; Advertising .Service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Circulation, Jack Ef- roymson, ASSISTANTS: Meigs Bartmess, Van Dunakin, Milton Kra- mer, John' Ogden, Brnard 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 Gifen, Doris Gimmy, Billie Griffiths, Janet Jackson, Isabelle Kanter, Louise Krause, Margaret Mustard, Nina Polock, Elizabeth J. Simonds. NIGHT EDITOR: A. ELLIS BALL Old Michigan, Mother Of Men. . -4 T WELVE of the University's most prominent alumni have been list- ed by the Alumni Association, according to a story released to The Daily the other day. Among them are a number of famous names; all of them are noted in their fields, and it is probable that they were well chosen from among the University's 90,- 000 or so graduates. However, in a gesture which bears to our edi- torial minds a certain touch of indelicacy, the names of Dr. W. J. Mayo of the Mayo Clinic, Stewart Edward White, and Franklin P. Adams (famous as "F.P.A.") were included. According to an old copy of Chimes, defunct student pub- lication, all three were flunked out of our Alma Mater. Dr. Mayo, we understand got the sack from the medical school, and the two noted au- thors were booted in their freshman years. Just what the significance of this discovery may be is hard to determine. Perhaps it shows that machine education is not suited to men of genius; perhaps it shows that men of genius are at best 1 refractory and hard to handle. At any rate, the incident allows us to point the long boney edi- torial finger at Michigan's Alumni Association and give a soft but distinct hiss. Death- For-Kidnaping Bill Of Rep. Pack. . R EPRESENTATIVE PHIL C. PACK, of Ann Arbor, has prepared a bill providing capital punishment for kidnappers, but fortunately it cannot be introduced at the special session of the Legislature since only topics men- tioned in the Governor's address may be con- sidered. Fortunately, we say, because it seems advisable not to prepare such extremely vital legislation on the crest of the wave of "mobocracy" which has asserted itself in the most widely scattered areas of this country -in Maryland in the East, in Middle-Western Missouri, and in Far-Western California. At the present time the demand for a manda- tory death penalty on conviction of kidnaping might easily be overwhelming, when, upon more deliberate, cooler debate at a later time the same proposal would be deemed unwise. Of course it is unlikely that the kidnaping- death bill would romp through the Michigan Leg- islature, since there is no capital punishment in Zani......... . ........Gene Raymond Eve........ .............Loretta Young The Doctor .. ... .........0. B. Heggie The Art Cinema League is presenting to-night, and Friday and Saturday evenings, "Zoo in Buda- pest", which is well worth seeing. The symphonic accompaniment through-out the picture is unique and helps to add the touch that makes for a first class picture. The events of the picture take place inside the large zoo of Budapest, into which all sorts of people come to see the animals of a thousand dif- ferent varieties; to enjoy a ride on Rajah, or see the swans, or the lions, or the ostriches. The atmosphere of a zoo is amply put across at the beginning and as the -theme develops a closer acquaintance with the various beasts is felt due to the discriminating touch of the director and the careful unwinding of the plot. Next to the fine musical theme is the excellent photography of the animals themselves and one gets a thrill during the last scenes when the lions and tigers get loose in the arena and here the camera catches unusual shots of the terrific struggle to quell the beasts' and return them to their cages. Zani is a boy who has lived in the zoo all of his life and brought up to love and protect the ani- mals; he knows their call and their habits, but he has the habit of stealing furs from ladies visiting the zoo because he doesn't believe in killing ani- mals for such purposes. Eve is an orphan girl from an orphan asylum who is induced to escape by Zani during the course of the several visits made to the zoo under strict supervision of the matron. A little boy doesn't want to go home without having had a ride on Rajah the elephant so he ducks his servant escort and hides in the zoo. Then a search, for the fur thief, the orphan girl, and the little boy begins in the dead of the night climaxed by the disturbance in the arena in which the thrills of the picture polish off this unique composition. You will like: the matron from the asylum as she resembles the ostrich to quite an extent; the old ground keeper who has the gitters and misses his evening meal of fresh carrots; the shots com- paring a complaining old lady with a tiger; the shots in which we learn of the hatred between the different animals; the little boy's expressions of fear; and the final submission of the military character constantly complaining of Zani's con- duct. Best shot; a tiger, Sultan by name, gap- ing hungrily into the camera. Then, as added features, there is a Micky Mouse, "The Klondike Kid", and some swell microscopic photography in "The Fight For Life", a study of the battles between various insects, such as spiders, scorpions, hunting hornets, and the like. -R. E. L. "ZOO IN BUDAPEST" A GOOD PICTURE To the Editor: - The motion picture "Zoo in Budapest" which is now being presented by the Art Cinema League at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater is such an ex- ceptionally fine film that I wish to recommend it to all readers of this column. In superb man- ner the beauty of nature, the intuitive powers of animals, and the instinctive appreciation of all this by naive youth is portrayed. Unexpected ac- cidents in the zoo provides the thrills which many desire. The film as a whole not only revels the sentiment soul of an artist but is one of the most original ones I have ever seen. -Francis S. Onderdonk 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 words if possible. HITLER, INSANITY, AND WORLD UNITY To The Editors: At Tuesday's meeting on Germany's withdrawal from the League of Nations, two experts in the fields of political science and history --Professors Pollock and Slosson - condemned the Hitler gov- ernment; it was regrettable that their sane re- marks were followed by naive opinions of laymen in the audience. The quoted letters of high praise received from German peasants and the fact that the recent German "election" showed such a vast majority for Hitler does not prove that he was' right; it just demonstrates how the complete con- trol of press, radio, cinema, and all other prop-; aganda mediums by a clique of psychopaths can affect mass psychology in the most absurd manner. A member of our faculty who travelled in Ger- many recently stated that he heard Hitler speak at Ulm and his raving typified him as a pyscho- path. Sherwood Eddy termed Hitler the most dangerous man in the world today. The past of the Nazi leaders has been investigated and all have been found to be abnormal with the ex- ception of Herr Strasser. Goering, the governor of Prussia, was formerly an inmate of a Swedish' insane asylum. Goebel's lust for power is based on his subnormal physique. An English critic has seen in Hitler's views all the characteristics of adolescence. The report that the election results were first sent to the propaganda minister and then made public by him, incites doubt as to the correctness' of these figures. A government which encourages the murder of its opponents - such as Professor Koch who had fled to Czechoslavakia and was shot in his villa in Marienbad -will certainly con- opposing candidates are permitted is an insult to the intelligence of mankind. The Nazi's cowardly persecution of Jews ap- pears all the more despicable as, according to Austrian reports, Hitler is of Jewish descent on his mother's side. We must congratulate Amer- ican athletes on refusing to attend the Olympic games in Berlin unless Germany gives Jewish contestants equal rights. Many Americans adopt an attitude of tolerating indifference towards the events in Germany, re- garding them 'as they woul disputes between Presbyterians and Baptists; they overlook the unethical and barbaric attitude of the Nazis. Hitlerite pathologic mentality is best demonstrated by the fact that in an age in which enlightened people in all countries are striving for abolishment of the death penalty, the Nazi government re- introduced Germany's medieval execution method: the head of the condemned is chopped off with an ax. More than thirty Germans thus far have been blessed in this manner by "awakened" Germany; among them four communists who were accused of shooting Nazis in a street battle before Hitler came into power. When we hear that a neighbor is locking a child in the cellar for a year (as occurred in Detroit some time ago), we intervene and forget all cus- tomary ideas of respecting private right. The time has come when outrages committed in for- eign countries are everybody's concern: the fact that they are brought to our attention gives us the moral obligation to intervene or prevent their reoccurrence. Germans and other foreigners were thus fully justified in protesting our legal murder of Sacco and Vanzetti, our near-murder of the Scottsboro boys, and the indefensible incarcera- tion of innocent Mooney. Mankind IS a unit: daily unification progresses by press, radio, cinema, and fast transportation. The barbarous atavism of Hitler and Mussolini is merely post-war brain fever, a mental and moral disease which we must combat as we would cholera, for the infection has spread to many countries, as reports from Hungary, Rumania, Austria, England, etc. prove; in the United States the Silver Shirts are aping Hitler. We all can struggle against this fashionable disease by boycotting German goods (especially when shopping at Kresge and Woolworth). We will thus assist the 60,000 (?) highminded Ger- mans now imprisoned in retention camps regain freedom and hasten the day when the German population -now deluded by diabolical prop- aganda -will send the Nazi leaders to Sanato- riums where a much needed rest is awaiting them. The League of Nations has not been an in- strument to suppress Germany, as several laymen declared at Tuesday's meeting. The League has been occupied with the affairs of 56 nations. Ger- many-like all other nation - has benefited by its activities; for instance many thousands of German prisoners were brought back from Siberia with its aid. True, the League is not so great a power for good as it might have been had the United States joined it. Yet with all its imper- fections, the League has prevented more wars than any other agency in history (Finland: Swe- den; Greece: Bulgaria; Peru: Columbia: etc.); it has established the first permament World Court of Justice and performed innumerable other pre- cious services for the good of mankind (decreas- ing opium-traffic, slavery, white slavery etc.). It should not be forgotten that our own failure to adhere to the covenant of the League was due to the stubborness of a little group who de- feated the will of the majority of the Senate. For the last four years we have been reaping the bitter fruits of the selfish policy of isolation which was then forced upon us. Now that militarist Japan and Germany have withdrawn from the League, it is urgent that the United States should join so as to strengthen those forces which are striving to save mankind from the insanity of another world-war. That the term "insanity" is justified can be seen from Caroline E. Playne's books, "Society at War," etc. Readers who wish to join the local branch of the League of Nations Association should get in touch with Dr. Calderwood (Political Science Department). Letters to President Roosevelt urging immediate adherence to the World Court and the League of Nations are desirable. A QUAKER. Ceollegiate Obse~~krver gyp By BUD BERNARD According to certain professors at the Uni- versity of Washington students who aim for "A" grades are barren of personality. One professor declared that the great horde of "C" students moves the world. Another avowed that the "A" students are freaks. Becoming disgusted because the sophomores of the University of Maryland had abolished fresh- men hazing, the freshmen drew up a set of rules for their "betters" to follow. They included the wearing of frosh pots by sophs, and the address- ing of freshmen as "sir." The sophs replied by calling the freshmen "spiritless amoebae" and reviving the old system because the frosh didn't like to be treated "like gentlemen !" According to a well known professor, a co- ed's vocabulary is smaller than the male stu- dent's. But all she really needs are the four small words: "You are so wonderful." Students at Connecticut College demand half royalties on examination papers which are sold to humor magazines. Once again at Northwestern University the girls are trying to be true to their boys at home by wearing yellow ribbons around their necks to keep other suitors away. The boys who are in a similiar predicament wear bands of black crepe on their arms. FROM OUR CONTEMPORARIES You CanSe11, Buy or Trade thiiro llfh the Michigan Daily WANT AIDS A student wants a used, cof otalekchai-r fo'' his room. . . Have you rn extra chair that you want to d ispose of? USnE THE DjAILY to loeate your ineeds I __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____ __ __ _ __ __ _ __ _ T~me Flies . . ^" Onily a short time left to get yo6ur - Michiganensian at the low price of #3.0-- FULL PRICE " "0 0 0 0 A Make 2nd and 3rdPayments at the II 11